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

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permission yet none at all over our Souls c. Vse 2 Use 2. See that we are not to judge any to be rejected or forsaken of God though they be much abused disgraced and persecuted by the Wicked in this Life For God often permitteth the Wicked thus to have their Wills of his dearest Saints and Servants in respect of their bodies and outward estate c. And if we should so judge we should condemn the holy Prophets Apostles Martyrs yea Christ himself Observ 3. See here the extream rage and malice of the Wicked against the true Saints and Servants of God in that they do not onely hate them and set themselves against them as Enemies but also do desire and seek to have their Wills of them that is to satisfy their own malicious Minds and Wills in abusing and wronging them all manner of wayes so far as God permitteth them They do not desire or care to do what is just and equall to them but what is pleasing to their own malicious Wills to do even what they list unto them that is to spend the utmost of their malice upon them and against them Thus Herod and Herodias did even what they listed to John Baptist they even fulfilled their own malicious Wills against him and upon him in imprisoning and putting him to Death Psal 12. 4. David's Enemies resolve with themselves that with their Tongues they will prevail against him c. So the wicked Jews though they could all edge no just cause unto Pilate why our Saviour should be condemned and crucified yet to satisfie their own malicious Wills against him they would needs have it done that by this means they might wreck their malice and envy upon him to the full So the persecutors of the Church c. And such is the malice and outrage of the wicked often against the Saints of God that they desire nothing more than to satisfie their own malicious Minds and Wills by offering unto them the greatest wrongs and abuses which they are any way able Vse Vse This should move us to acknowledge and magnify the goodness of God in curbing and restraining this extream rage and malice of the Wicked against his Saints and not suffering it so far to break out as otherwise it would It is God's great mercy to set bounds and limits to this malice of the Wicked which of it self is boundless having no measure For although the Lord do suffer the Wicked sometimes to satisfie their own Wills and malicious Desires and Purposes against his faithfull Servants yet he doth not alwayes suffer this neither doth he at any time absolutely give up his Servants unto the malicious Will of their Enemies but he so limiteth and restraineth the malice of the Wicked that they go no further in shewing the same against his Saints than he doth think good to permit and suffer them Were it not for this mercy of God in restraining the outragious malice of the Wicked they would soon devour and utterly root out the true Church of God from the face of the Earth Let us therefore bless God and be truly thankfull for this his goodnesse and mercy Now followeth the Ground or Reason of John Baptist's coming viz. The testimony of the Scriptures which fore-told it As it is written of him That is As it was fore-told or testifyed before of him in the writings of the Prophets in the old Testament Now these words seem to have relation chiefly to the coming of Elias or John Baptist mentioned by our Saviour in the first words of this verse and not so much unto those things which he had suffered at the hands of his wicked Enemies For we do not read in the Prophets of any expresse mention made of the Sufferings of John Baptist which he should suffer at his coming but his coming we find to be expresly foretold by the Prophet Malachi Chap. 4. 5. Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet c. that is John Baptist in the Spirit and Power of Elias c. Observ Observ In that our Saviour here affirmeth that the Prophecy of Malachi touching the coming of Elias or John Baptist was already fulfilled and accomplished that John Baptist was indeed come and had fulfilled his Ministery as was written of him c. Hence gather That the Scriptures are the true and undoubted Word of God and not Men's writings only Inasmuch as the Prophesies contained in them concerning things to come have been truly and certainly fulfilled in their due time though many hundred years after as here the Prophecy of John Baptist his coming before Christ c. So also the Prophecy of Christ's coming in the Flesh and of his Sufferings The Prophecy of calling the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospel The Prophecy of the Jews Captivity in Babylon and of their Deliverance by means of Cyrus King of Persia after seventy years The Prophecy also of the Destruction of Hierusalem and the Temple by the Romans fore-told by our Saviour Matth. 24. All these and many other have been already fulfilled in their due time though long after they were fore-told which is one speciall evidence to prove the Scriptures to be the true and undoubted Word of God indited by his Spirit for none but God himself could fore-tell those things which are fore-told in Scripture and which have been hitherto fulfilled so certainly in their due time This therefore must strengthen our Faith in this main Point touching the truth of the Scriptures to be the very Word of God himself and cause us undoubtedly to believe all things contained in them And in particular it serves to strengthen our Faith touching the fulfilling of those Prophesies of Scripture which are yet unful●●lled as namely touching the calling of the Jews the destruction of Antichrist the generall Resurrection of Bodies and coming of Christ at the last Day to Judgment c. Mark 9. 14 15. And when He came to his Disciples c. Janu. 28. 1626. HEre followeth the second general part of this Chapter containing the History of a great Miracle wrought by our Saviour in curing a lunatick Child and in casting the Devil out of the same Child being possessed therewith This History is laid down from the 14. to the 30. verse of this Chapter In which we have to consider three things 1. The Antecedents or Occasions of this great Miracle which went before and made way unto it ver 25. 2. The manner of our Saviour's proceeding in the working of the Miracle ver 26 27. 3. The Event or Consequent which followed ver 28 29. Of the first The occasions of the Miracle are sundry 1. Our Saviour's returning or coming back to his Disciples after his Transfiguration in the Mount together with some speciall Events or Accidents which happened at his return as that he found a great Multitude with his Disciples and the Scribes questioning with them c. ver 14 15. 2. His questioning with the Scribes touching the
and compassion toward his Child as appears by his manner of speaking to Christ so he shewed his care in bringing him to Christ and making sute to him to dispossess and heal him See before on the 26th Verse of the 7th Chapter Use 1 Vse 1. For reproof of such unnatural Parents who are not so affected with the outward miseries of their Children as they should be neither are they careful in using means for their relief and help but let them alone in their miseries neglecting the means appointed of God for their Childrens good Some are so hard-hearted as to see their Children lye sick and in pain and will scarce be at the trouble and cost to send to the Physitian for them nor to the Chirurgion when their Children are lame or impotent c. Others can see their Children to be in want of necessary Food or Rayment and have little care to provide for them as is fit and according to their ability and means Yea some Parents are worse who in stead of using means for the help and relief of their Children in such miseries do add affliction to the affliction of their Children by unjust provoking and grieving their Children in their sickness weakness c. How unnaturall are such Parents Worse than brute Beasts in this respect Let such know that this want of natural Affection is condemned by the Apostle Rom. 1. 31. among the sins of the profane Heathen and therefore should be far from Christians Vse 2 Use 2. If Parents ought to be affected with the bodily Afflictions of their Children and to use the best means for their help and relief therein then how much more in their spiritual Miseries and Necessities c. Se chap. 5. 23 24. Now followeth the Motives and Reasons which the father of this child useth to move our Saviour to take pitty of his child And 1. He alledgeth the lamentable affliction and misery in which his child now was being possessed with a Devil which misery of this child he further amplyfieth and layeth open to Christ in the verse following by relating the particular manner of the Devils taking and tormenting of his child by fits and at certain times Who hath a dumb Spirit His meaning is That he was bodily possessed with an evil Spirit or with a Devil which was entred into him and held possession of the powers of his body See before chap. 1. 23. how the Devil is said to enter into Men Which also had stricken the child with dumbness depriving him of the use of his Speech for which cause he was called a dumb Spirit And ver 25. he is called a Dumb and Deaf Spirit which shews That this evil Spirit being entred and having gotten possession in the body of the child had also stricken it both Dumb and Deaf Matth. 17. 15. He is said to be lunatick now lunatick persons are such as are stricken in their senses or taken with some kind of frenzy or madnesse at certain times of the Moon whence they are called Lunaticks from the latine word Luna signifying the Moon and such lunatick fits do proceed from the distemper of the blood and naturall humours of the Body Hence therefore it may be gathered That this child was not onely possessed with a Devil which made him both Dumb and Deaf but also that he was distempered with a lunacy or kind of madness which took him by fits at certain times of the Moon and was caused partly by the distemper of the natural humours of the hody and partly by the Devil's power stirring up and working upon those humors of the Body Now followeth the Points of Instruction in which as also in those that are to be gathered from the residue of the History of this Miracle I purpose to be the more brief because many of them I have had occasion before to speak of in handling the like Miracles of our Saviour Observ 1 Observ 1. That the Devil by God's permission hath Power really to enter into the Bodies of mankind that is to say into the bodies of Men Women or Children and to hold possession in them working and moving in them at his Will and Pleasure yea in the Bodies of good men and women and of the children of such So he entred into the body of this child and held possession in it So in the bodies of many others especially in our Saviour Christ's time and in the dayes of the Apostles in which times the Lord did permit and suffer the Devil to have this Power more commonly and ordinarily than now he doth and that for speciall cause that there might be the more occasion for our Saviour Christ and his Apostles and some others also who had the gift of working Miracles to exercise shew forth the same in the casting out of Devils from such as were possessed and that for the confirmation of the Doctrine of the Gospel And although this possession of mens bodies by the Devil was most frequent and usuall in those times of our Saviour Christ and the Apostles yet in the Times and Ages succeeding even unto this Day the Devil hath sometimes had and exercised this Power over the bodies of men by God's permission as may appear in Histories of the Church See before upon chap. 1. ver 23. Use Use See what cause for us to be thankfull unto God for that he hath appointed us to live in this age of the Church in which this Power of the Devil is much restrained so as he doth not so commonly exercise and shew it as heretofore and for that the Lord hath hitherto kept us and ours from this Power of the Devil not giving up our bodies to be possessed of him Especially we shall find cause to be thankfull to God for ●his mercy if we consider that our sins do deserve that he should even now give up us and ours to this Power of Satan as he did so many of the Jews in our Saviour's time our sins as are great as theirs c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that this evil Spirit which was in the Child is called a dumb Spirit because he had stricken the Child with dumbness depriving him of the use of his Speech Hence we learn That the Devil hath Power by God's permission not only to enter into the bodies of men or children and to possesse them but also being in them to annoy and hurt the powers and faculties of nature in them hindring the operation and working of them he hath power to strike them in their bodily senses and to deprive them of the use of them and their Speech c. But of this there will be more fit occasion to speak afterward ver 25. It followeth Ver. 18. And wheresoever he taketh him c. Here the father of this possessed and lunatick child doth further lay open unto our Saviour the wofull misery and affliction of this child by relating the particular manner and circumstances of the Devil 's taking and
Where note four things especially 1. That it is an abstinence from bodily Food viz. a totall abstinence for a time against the Papists who make it to consist onely in choice of meats as in abstaining from Flesh and eating Fish On the contrary Hester 4. 10. She requireth the Jews neither to eat nor drink for three dayes space during the Fast 2. It is not onely a refraining of bodily Food but of other outward delights and comforts of this Life as of brave and costly Apparrel Recreations c. Therefore in ancient Times the People of God used in time of their religious Fasts to lay aside their best Apparrel and to put on Sackcloth c. See 2 Sam. 12. David's practice 3. It is a voluntary abstinence freely and voluntarily taken up and used by the People of God upon special and extraordinary occasions not forced upon them by compulsion as amongst the Papists who impose the outward abstinence as a matter of absolute necessity at sett and ordinary times holding the contrary a mortal sin c. 4. Such an abstinence as is so used to a religious end and purpose viz. as a help and furtherance to us in the more zealous and devout performance of some religious Duties of God's Service as prayer hearing the Word of God practice of Repentance and humiliation of our selves for Sin c. Now a religious Fast is either publike or private c. Of the second The causes of taking up and using this religious exercise of Fasting are three especially 1. Some grievous sin or sins of our own or others for which we have need to sue earnestly unto God for pardon 1 Sam. 7. 6. The Israelites having provoked God by Idolatry kept a publike Fast So Nehem. 9. 1. 2. Some grievous Calamity or Judgment of God which is either upon us or justly feared to come upon us or upon the whole Land for our Sins which we desire to have removed or turned away Joel 1. 2. chapters The Jews are called to publike Fasting to turn away the Judgments of Famine and Sword threatned against them So the Ninivites Jonah 3. when the Lord threatned Destruction against their City c. 3. Some great and extraordinary blessing which we or the whole Church doth stand in need of Dan. 9. to obtain deliverance from Captivity c. Ezra 8. 21. To obtain a prosperous Voyage in their return c. So here our Saviour shews that for the obtaining the extraordinary Power of casting out Devils fasting was necessary for his Disciples Now followeth the particular Instructions from the words Observ 1 Observ 1. That for the obtaining of great and extraordinary benefits and blessings from the hands of God not onely prayer is necessary but also special and extraordinary prayer joyned with great and extraordinary fervency and earnestness yea prayer joyned with fasting as a help and furtherance to it the better to stir up the fervency thereof Such is the prayer here required by our Saviour in the Disciples for the obtaining of this extraordinary Gift and Power of casting out this worst kind of Devils from the possessed So Jam. 5. 16. The effectuall fervent prayer of a Righteous man c. And this may appear by that which we have heard before touching the causes of a religious fasting in that one special cause thereof is for the obtaining of such great and extraordinary blessings as we or others do stand in need of Vse Use See what we are to do in this case if at any time we do feel the want of any great and extraordinary blessing either Spiritual or Temporal viz. To betake our selves not onely to the exercise of prayer but to extraordinary and most fervent prayer yea to joyn prayer with fasting therewith as a means to humble us the more and to quicken and stir up to greater fervency in prayer for the obtaining of such great blessings as we stand in need of To this end labour to be touched with lively feeling of our want of such blessings as we sue for c. Observ 2 Observ 2. See here the excellency of the exercise of religious fasting being rightly used in that it is a special help and furtherance to us in the duty of prayer serving to stir us up unto the greater fervency therein and so to make our prayers the more effectual and powerful to prevail with God for the obtaining of those things which we sue for whence it is That prayer and fasting are so often joyned together in Scripture to shew that fasting is a special help unto fervency in prayer Therefore we find them so often joyned together As Luke 2. 37. Anna served God in the Temple with fastings and prayers Night and Day Acts 10. 30. Cornelius joyned them together 1 Cor. 5. 7. Man and Wife are sometimes to refrain the society of the marriage Bed that they may the more freely give themselves to fasting and prayer So in many other places fasting is joyned with prayer as a special help and furtherance to the more fervent and zealous performance of it And for this cause some of the antient Fathers do call fasting the wing of prayer by which it doth the more swiftly and forcibly ascend up to Heaven and come before the Lord to prevail with him Reason Reason The outward abstinence from bodily Food and other Comforts of this life is a means to affect us the more with the sense and feeling of our wants and to make us pray with greater feeling and fervency And as Fasting is a help to Prayer so also to all other duties of God's Worship Vse Use This should encourage and move us to take up and use this excellent religious Exercise of Fasting joyning it with Prayer and other Duties of God's Worship so often as God doth give us just cause or occasion either publickly or privately not doubting of the good issue and success thereof being rightly performed in truth of heart Mark 9. 30 31. And they departed thence and passed into Galilee and he would not that any man should know it June 24. 1627. For he taught his Disciples and said unto them The Son of Man is delivered into the hands of men and they shall kill him c. HItherto of the second general part of this Chapter viz. The History of the Miracle wrought by our Saviour upon the lunatick possessed Child in casting the Devil out of him and healing him Now followeth the third part of the Chapter laid down in these Verses which contain in them our Saviour Christ's Prediction or Fore-telling unto his Disciples of his future Passion and Resurrection which was not long after to be fulfilled This he foretold them before in the 31. Verse of Chap. 8. and now he doth it again In the words three things are contained 1. The Occasion of this Prediction or Repetition of the Doctrine of Christ's Passion and Resurrection viz. His departure with his Disciples from the place where he wrought the former
and hindering their attention 3. By blinding their minds that they may not understand the doctrine of the Word 2 Cor. 4. 4. The God of this World that is Satan hath blinded the minds of them which believe not lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ should shine unto them 4. By labouring to hold them in infidelity that they may not believe and apply the Word unto themselves as he laboured to bring our first Parents to call the truth of the Word of God into doubt and question 5. By using means to thrust the Word heard out of their minds that they may not remember it as by stirring them up to think and talk of worldly matters so soon as they have heard and are out of the Church door c. 6. By keeping them from yielding obedience to the Word c. Reason Reason The Word preached is an enemy to Satan a most powerful means and mighty through God to overthrow the strong holds of sin in men 2 Cor. 10. 4. and so to beat down the Devil's Kingdom The ordinary means to translate men from the power of Satan to Gods Kingdom Act. 26. 18. This is that that makes Satan fall from Heaven like lightning as at the preaching of the 70 Disciples Luke 10. 18. Therefore is the Devil so great an Enemy to the fruit and profit of the Word in those that hear it He knowes well that the more are converted by it the more is his Kingdom of darkness diminished Use 1 Use 1. To commend to us the Excellency and necessity of this duty and part of Gods Worship the hearing of his Word for the more Satan opposeth it the better and more excellent we may be sure the duty is As it is in other excellent Duties as Prayer the more Satan labours to hinder it the better the duty c. else he would not so eagerly and mightily oppose it Use 2 Use 2. Strive the more earnestly unto all diligence in this duty of hearing the Word and be the more careful to hear in due manner and to profit by this Ordinance of God The Devil's opposition of this duty must not discourage but set an edg upon us to use the more pains and care and conscience in hearing that we may reap fruit by it that Satan may not have his purpose and will of us in depriving us of this pretious fruit of the Word Vse 3 Use 3. See what need we have to be watchful over our selves and against Satan and his practises when we are to hear the Word How needfull to watch before we hear that he may not lay blocks in our way to hinder us from hearing How needfull in time of hearing to watch against Satan that he hinder not our attention by suggesting to us roving thoughts How needfull to pray unto God not to suffer him to blind our minds or harden our hearts in unbelief that we may not understand or believe the Word How needfull also to watch against Satan after we have heard that he do not quickly thrust the Word out of our minds and memories Look to these things therefore every one that would profit by hearing The more malitious and politick Satan is to hinder us from profiting the more wise must we be and carefull to disappoint him of his purpose Use 4 Use 4. See what they are that are hinderers and enemies to the preaching and hearing of the Word and to the fruit of it they are herein like unto Satan and bear his Image yea they are his Instruments yea his children See Act. 13. 10. Elymas resisting Paul's Ministery and labouring to hinder the Deputy Sergius Paulus from hearing and believing his doctrine is called The child of the Devill and enemy of all righteousness c. Mark 4. 15. But when they have heard Satan cometh c. April 23. 1620. IN this Verse we considered two things 1. The property of the first sort of unprofitable hearers resembled by the way-side That they are outward hearers of the Word The Word is sowen upon them 2. The issue or consequent of their hearing Satan cometh c. Of the former we have spoken Touching the latter which is the consequent of their hearing we considered two things 1. Who it is that depriveth them of the Word Satan 2. description of Satan by a two-fold practise 1. He cometh immediately after they have heard 2. He taketh away the Word sowen in their hearts Touching the Person which depriveth them of the Word namely Satan we have spoken Now to speak of his Practises 1. He cometh immediately The meaning of the words was shewed before Satan is said to come not in bodily shape or in visible or sensible manner but by his suggestions and temptations labouring and using means to hinder them from profiting by the Word Observ 1 Observ 1. In that it is said that so soon as they have heard Satan cometh and presenteth himself to them by his temptations we may gather That the Devil can and doth speedily convey himself from place to place that he may in those places follow men with his temptations either entising them to sin or hindering them in good duties Job 1. 7. He tells the Lord that he came from going to and fro in the earth and from walking up and down in it 1 Pet. 5. 8. He walketh about as a roaring Lyon seeking whom he may devour He being a Spirit hath by reason of his spiritual nature a wonderfull agility and swiftness in conveying himself in a very short time from one place to another yea he can go throughout the whole Earth and tempt men in sundry places in a short time yea further he is able not onely to go swiftly to many places in a short time but also to tempt sundry persons in sundry places at one and the same time Quest. Quest How can this be seeing he cannot in a moment convey himself from place to place and therefore cannot at the same instant be in sundry places at once Answ Answ He cannot by himself alone be in all or in many places to tempt men at once yet by the help of other wicked spirits which are his Ministers or servants he can do this For though there be out one Head and Chief among the wicked spirits who is usually called the Devill and Satan and Beelzebub yet there are a great number of other wicked spirits which are his underlings and servants attending on him and helping him in tempting men unto sin in all places yea it is probable that there are as many of these wicked spirits to tempt as there are men and women in the world at any one time to be tempted See Mr. Perk. on Matth. 5. 37. Vse Use This must teach us and stirr us up to be watchfull against Satan in all places where we become in publick and private in company and alone by our selves at home in our houses and abroad in the fields or by the way side there is no
we see among the Papists how the great Doctors and Masters in that Church of Rome as their Popes Cardinals Bishops c. do busy and trouble themselves and others about a number of babish toyes and childish Ceremonies as Crosses Holy-Water Beads baptizing of Bells hallowing of Churches and Church-yards Mitres Monks-hoods c. So in their idolatrous Masses how many foolish Ceremonies have they So in the Sacrament of Baptism c. See how superstition doth besott and infatuate such as are given over unto it making them so foolish and childish and so troublesome to themselves and others without cause for matters of nothing c. Physitians say it is one symptome of a Frenzy in a man to begin to busy himself much about trifles as in picking up Strawes c. So it is a mark of such as are become foolish and frantick in Superstition to busy and trouble themselves about such toyish Ceremonies as the Papists do c. So much of the superstitious Practice of these Scribes and Pharisees Now follows the Ground of their Practice which was The Tradition of their Elders which they held fast and maintained So in the fourth Verse many other things they have reteined to hold that is by Tradition from the Elders Holding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies properly Holding fast even by force and strength Vide Bezam in locum So that this word implies That they were greatly addicted to this Tradition Tradition This word is taken two wayes in Scripture 1. Sometimes to signify some Doctrine of God first taught and delivered to the Church by word of mouth and afterwards written and set down in Scripture by the Pen-men of it as 2 Thess 2. 15. Hold the Traditions which ye have been taught whether by Word or by our Epistle 2. Sometimes it signifies Such humane Ordinances as are not expresly written or prescribed in the Word of God but onely delivered from Man to Man by word of mouth or otherwise And these are of two sorts 1. Such as are agreeable to the written Word and have warrant from it though not expresly yet by Consequent So 1 Cor. 11. 2. 2. Such as are not agreeable to the written Word nor have any Ground in it or Warrant from it Such was this Jewish Tradition here spoken of and many other which they kept and observed See the 8th Verse Of the Elders That is Of their ancient Fathers and Predecessours which had been Teachers in the Jewish Church Mat. 5. 21 Such as were of old time that is ancient Teachers in the Church of the Jews viz. Scribes Pharisees c. So much of the sense of the words Observ 1 Observ 1. In that here is mention made of a Jewish unwritten Tradition touching external washing of hands which Tradition the superstitious Ancestors of the Jews had brought in and these Scribes and Pharisees did maintain and hold as necessary to be observed This teacheth us whose property it is to add unto the written Word of God by bringing into the Church any Doctrine● Decree● and Ordinances not prescribed or warranted in the written Word It is the manner and property of superstitious Hypocrites to bring in such unwritten Ordinance● and Constitutions into the Church such Hypocrites were these Scribes and Pharisees which brought in and maintained so stifly this and sundry other unwritten Tradition So afterward in this Chapter our Saviour ver 8. 13. tells them of many such like unwarrantable Practices they used which were grounded onely upon Tradition and ver 11. he mentioneth and reproveth in particular an unwarrantable Tradition and Doctrine of theirs touching the duty of Children to their Parents So Mat. 5. and Mat. 23. our Saviour reproveth and confuteth sundry other unwritten Traditions of theirs both in matter of Doctrine and of Practice Use Use See then what to judge of the Popish Church which bringe●h in so many unwritten Traditions and Ordinances beside the Authority yea contrary to the Authority and Prescript of the written Word This proves them to be a superstitious Company resembling the Scribes and Pharisees yea the very Children of those Jewish Fathers c. But of this we shall have fitter occasion to speak upon the seventh and eighth Verses Observ 2 Observ 2. Further in that these Scribes and Pharisees grounded their superstitious washings upon the tradition and authority of their Ancestors whose Doctrine and Practice herein they followed This shews us that it is the manner of superstitious Persons to be greatly addicted to the Opinions and Practise of their Ancestors and Fore-fathers in matters of Religion and to ground their own opinion and practise thereupon This we may see in that woman of Samaria who though upon Conference with Christ she acknowledged him as a great Prophet yet discovers her superstitious affection to the place where her Ancestors had served God Joh. 4. 20. Our Fathers worshipped in this Mountain c. So many Papists now adaies plead this as one of the best Arguments they have to defend their Religion that their Ancestors were of that Religion c. So also some ignorant superstitious People amongst us are ready to plead the Practice of their Fore-Fathers for maintenance of some profane and superstitious Customs as for using vain sports upon the Sabbath for ringing Bells superstitiously at Burials with opinion of profiting the dead for keeping Revels or other Feasts upon the Sabbath c. But we must know that the Example of Fore-Fathers is of it self no sufficient Warrant or Rule for us to walk by further than their Example and Practise is good and warrantable by the word of God Isa 8. 20. To the Law and to the Testimony c. and 2 Pet. 1. 19. We have a sure Word c. This rule of God's word must we square our lives by and not by Example of men that have gone before us Again we must consider in this case what kind of Persons our Fathers and Ancestors were and whether fit to be followed of us It may be they were ignorant superstitious c. Shall we then follow them so the blind being led by the blind may fall both into the ditch Again suppose our Fore-Fathers were religious and holy yet it follows not that we are to imitate them in all that they did they might in some things do amiss of Ignorance or Frailty c. Hitherto of the reason of the Scribes and Pharisees exception taken against Christ's Disciples for eating with unwashen hands which Reason is drawn as we have heard from the superstitious Custome and Practice of the Jews grounded on the Tradition of their Elders Now in the next place to speak of the manner of their urging the foresaid Cavill and Exception against the Disciples set down Ver. 5. Where the Evangelist shews the manner of their cavilling and excepting in that they came to Christ himself and accused his Disciples unto him as Transgressours of the Tradition of the Elders for eating with unwashen hands Which Accusation they
have her Daughter possessed of a Devil and much greater that in this Affliction Christ refused to hear and help her yea giveth Reasons why it was not fit for him to grant her sute But behold here is yet a further Triall and Affliction that Christ doth seem to reproach her with the odious Name of a Dogg c. Hence then we may learn that the Afflictions of God's Children and Servants do many times grow greater and greater when their deliverance is neerest See the fiftieth Verse of the sixth Chapter Mark 7. 28. And she answered and said unto him Yes Lord yet the Dogs under the table eat of the Childrens July 21. 1622. Crums IN the former Verse we heard our Saviour's Answer to the sute and Petition of the Woman of Syrophoenicia in behalf of her afflicted Daughter in which he denied to grant her Request Now followeth her Reply unto that Answer of Christ in which she sheweth a great measure of Faith in that she was not discouraged with the words of Christ though they seemed to tend wholly to the discomfort of her but she is so far from being dismaied with his denial of her sute and so far from giving it over and from casting away her confidence in the power and goodness of Christ that she takes occasion even from the words of his deniall to renew and further to urge her sute unto him c. Herein I say she shewed an excellent and singular degree and measure of Faith and therefore our Saviour Mat. 15. 28. upon this her Reply unto him doth break out into this high commendation of her Faith saying Oh Woman great is thy Faith In the words consider two things 1. A concession or granting of the truth of Christ's words and Answer given unto her Truth Lord or Yes Lord q. d. I acknowledge my self to be of my self by Nature a Dogg that is a profane Gentile c. and that it is not fit for the benefits of the Messiah being in some sort peculiar to the Jews to be as yet made common to the Gentiles forasmuch as the time of the generall calling of them is not yet come 2. A limitation or restraint of the sense of Christ's words shewing how they were to be understood viz. not absolutely and generally but with some exception That although it was fit the Jews should first be filled that is plentifully fed with the spiritual Bread as it were of Christ's benefits and though it was unfit for this Bread to be as yet cast to the Dogs that is made common to all or the greater part of the Gentiles yet this hindred not but that the Gentiles might in some measure taste of this Bread of Christ's Doctrine and Miracles and that some few of them at least might be refreshed with the Childrens Crums which they suffered to fall under the Table that is reap fruit and benefit by Christ's Doctrine and Miracles which the Jews so much contemned and set light by Observ Observ In the first part of the Reply in that she doth acknowledge her self to be a Dog that is a profane Gentile by Nature and in respect of her former condition before her Calling hereby she discovereth a great measure of Humility From whence therefore we may learn that true Faith is alwaies accompanied with Humility and where the greatest measure of Faith is there is ever most Humility As the Faith of this Woman was eminent so her Humility See this in other Examples Abraham a man of great Faith even the Father of the Faithful was a man of great Humility Gen. 18. I am but dust and ashes c. Job a man of great Faith as appeareth Chap 13. 15. Though he kill me I will trust in him c. and withal a man of great Humility Chap. 40. 4. Behold I am vile c. So that Centurion Matth. 8. whose Faith is so highly commended by our Saviour how great also was his Humility he thought himself unworthy that Christ should come under his Roof c. So that sinful Woman Luke 7. 38. as she shewed great Faith in Christ by the abundant fruits of love to him so also great Humility in washing his feet with her tears c. So Paul a Man of extraordinary Faith and likewise of great Humility 1 Cor. 15. 9. I am the least of the Apostles c. Reason Reason True Faith apprehends the Mercy of God in Christ for pardon of Sin and for the Salvation of the Soul and the more this saving Mercy of God is felt the more Feeling there must needs be on the contrary of our sins and misery by Nature without this Mercy Now this true sense of our misery cannot but work great Humility in the heart See this in Paul 1 Tim. 1. 13. Vse 1 Use 1. See what to judge of proud and haughty Persons puffed up with conceipt and opinion of their own goodness excellency c. like that Pharisee Luke 18. exalting himself before God and despising the poor humble Publican Such as this proud Pharisee in whom such Pride and Self-conceit reigneth and beareth sway are destitute of all true Faith for if that were in them it would work a sense of their sins and misery by Nature and so humble them before God and towards their Brethren it would pull down all high conceipts of themselvs See then that the Papists those proud Phari●aical Justiciaries cannot have true Faith no more can any that are like them They may think they have it and boast of it but the truth is they are void of it Pride cannot stand with Faith See Hab. 2. 4. Vse 2 Use 2. See how to know an eminent Christian for Faith look how humbly he carries himself before God and towards his Brethren if he shew humility it is an evideence of much Faith and of an eminent Christian On the contrary if he shew little or no Humility let him profess what he will and have never so good gifts in some kind yet he cannot be an eminent Christian unless he excel in Humility yea if he want all Humility he wants all Grace and so is no good Christian at all c. The most excellent Christian is he that most resembleth Christ and he is most like Christ that is most humble Matth. 11. Learn of me c. Use 3 Use 3. Examine our Faith and the measure of it by our true Humility before God and towards our Brethren Would'st thou know whether thou hast true Faith Look what Humility it hath wrought in thee what sense and feeling of thy own Sin and misery by Nature without Christ what deniall of thy self and of all thy own Goodnesse Holinesse Excellency in thy self c. So Would'st thou know what measure of Faith is wrought in thee Look how much Humility is in thy heart and in all thy carriage before God and Men. Use 4 Use 4. Seeing true Humility is a companion and evidence of Faith let us every one labour more and more for this
2 Observ 2. That there is a distinction of Persons in the God-head Though there is but one God and one Divine Nature and Essence yet this one Nature is distinguished into several Persons There is the Father who is the first Person and there is the Son the second Persion who is partaker of one and the same Glory with the Father as our Saviour himself here sheweth So also there is the Holy Ghost the third Person in the God-head as appeareth by other places of Scriptures although he be not here expresly named 1 Joh. 5. 7. There are three which bear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one Note that though these three Persons be truly and really distinguished one from the other and have distinct and incommunicable properties by which they differ so as the Father is not the Son or the Son the Father c. yet they are not divided or separated one from the other but are most nearly united together within themselves being all but one and the same Nature and Essence But I will not here insist further upon this Use Use To confirm our Faith in this Mystery and Doctrine of the distinction of Persons in the God-head and to teach us how to conceive of God in our prayers and other Worship which we perform unto him namely as one God in Essence and Nature distinguished into three persons c. Thus labour to think of God yet withall take heed of troubling and distracting of our thoughts in time of prayer or other religious Duties with curious speculations about this distinction of Persons in the Trinity lest it hinder our Affections in prayer c. It followeth With the holy Angels Observ The excellent nature and quality of the good Angels that they are most holy and pure Creatures perfectly holy and free from all spot of Sin and that by vertue of their first Creation Acts 10. 22. Cornelius was warned from God by an holy Angel Therefore they are sometimes called Saints Deut. 33. 2. The Lord at the giving of the Law came from Mount Sinai he came with ten thousands of Saints c. So Jude ver 14. For this cause they used to appear in white Apparrel to shew the purity of their Nature c. Use 1 Vse 1. See the excellent state of the Saints after this Life Eph. 5. 27. like the Angels free from sin c. Matth. 22. 30. Long for that estate to be rid of Sin So Paul Rom. 7. 24. Vse 2 Vse 2. See the excellency and dignity of the Saints of God in this Life in that they have these holy Angels to attend upon them for their good and to protect them from evil Hebr. 1. ult Are they not all ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be Heirs of Salvation See Psal 34. And Psal 91 Great comfort to the Godly against the contempt of the World c. Psal 16. The excellent of the Earth Use 3 Use 3. Teacheth us to imitate this holiness and purity of the Angels striving to resemble and become like unto them in some measure even in this Life that so we may be perfectly like unto them after this Life in Heaven which otherwise we cannot be we must first be Saints on Earth before we can be Saints in Heaven Labour therefore to know and feel our selves in some measure truly sanctified in this Life and to shew forth the Fruits of Sanctification in our Lives purging our Hearts and Lives more and more from the corruption of Sin 2 Cor. 7. 1. Let us cleanse our selves from all Filthinesse of Flesh and Spirit perfecting Holinesse c. The more we do this the nearer we come to the holy Nature and Life of the Angels in Heaven We pray that we may do God's Will on Earth as it is done in Heaven by the holy Angels and Saints and this is one principall part of the Will of God that we should hate sin and be holy in all manner of Conversation 1 Thess 4. 3. This is the Will of God even your Sanctification c. Use 4 Use 4. For admonition to look to our outward carriage and behaviour at all times that it be holy and religious forasmuch as we are before the Angels of God which pitch their Tents round about us and do take notice of our outward behaviour what it is Now they being so perfectly holy and pure cannot but hate all sin and profaness in word and deed therefore take heed of such carriage lest we grieve and offend the holy Angels They are said to rejoice in the conversion of a Sinner therefore they are grieved to see sin committed c. Take heed therefore of all profaness in word and deed be careful to carry our selves in all holy and seemly manner considering that the Angels of God which are perfectly holy and pure do continually behold our outward Conversation If we could with bodily eyes see those glorious Creatures the holy Angels which encamp about us how would their presence curb us from Sin and cause us in all holy and reverent manner to carry our selves wheresoever we become Now it is as certain That they are about us and do take notice of our wayes as if we did see them in bodily shapes Therefore look to our behaviour before them c. Especially in the publick Congregation where they are in special manner present to behold what is done 1 Cor. 11. 10. Women must be decently covered because of the Angels Finis Octavi Capitis CHAP. IX Mark 9. 1. And he said unto them Verily I say unto you that there be some of them that stand here which shall Mar. 19. 1625. not taste of Death till they have seen the Kingdom of God come with Power THE principall parts of this Chapter are these 1. The History of our Saviour Christ's transfiguration before certain of his Disciples in the Mount unto ver 14. 2. His miraculous casting of the Devil out of a Child that was possessed from ver 14. to the 30. 3. His foretelling of his Passion and Resurrection to his Disciples from ver 30. to the 33. 4. His private teaching of the Doctrine of humility to his Disciples from ver 33. to 38. 5. Lastly A further discourse which he made to his Disciples teaching them sundry other points of Christian Doctrine and Practice from ver 38. ad finem Capitis Concerning the first The Evangelist mentioneth 1. Our Saviour's prediction or foretelling of his transfiguration ver 1. 2. The actual accomplishment of it ver 2 c. And he said unto them c. These words have dependance upon the latter end of the former Chapter being the conclusion of that excellent Speech or Doctrine delivered by our Saviour unto his Disciples and the Multitude touching the bearing of the Crosse in this Life for Christ's sake For having taught them the necessity of the Crosse and used forcible Reasons to move them to take
betray the Truth and professors of it into the hands of wicked Enemies and Adversaries What is this but to betray the cause of God yea what is it else in effect and upon the matter but secretly and indirectly at the least to deny the Truth of God when being called to profess it and to speak in defence of it and of the Professors of it they are silent and hold their peace See 2 Tim. 4. 16. Let every one take heed of such untimely silence in the cause of God and of his Truth remember that fearfull threatning of our Saviour Matth. 20. 33. Whosoever shall deny me before men c. Now this is one kind of denyall of Christ when we see his Truth and Gospel and the Professors of it opposed and disgraced by the Wicked and do not open our mouths in the just defence both of them and the Truth Take heed of being guilty herein and on the contrary pray for zeal and courage to stand for the Truth of God and to open our mouths in defence of it when we shall be called to do it Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour did thus expostulate with the Scribes not onely in way of defending his Disciples and the Gospel it self which the Scribes went about to disgrace but also for the better convincing and reproving of the Scribes and to stop their mouths Hence we may learn That it is our duty not onely to maintain and defend the Truth of God but also to use the best means we can for the convincing and stopping of the mouths of such as are Enemies to the Truth Especially this concerneth Ministers of the Word But of this see before upon ver 13. Mark 9. 17 18 And one of the Multitude answered and said Master I have brought unto thee my Son which Febr. 18. 1626. hath a dumb Spirit c. OF the two first occasions of the Miracle we have heard before viz. 1. Of our Saviour Christ's returning back and coming again to those nine Disciples of his whom he left behind him when he went into the Mount to be transfigured 2. Of his Question or Demand put unto the Scribes touching the matter or cause about which he found them disputing with his Disciples Now followeth the third occasion of the Miracle viz. The sure or supplication made unto Christ by the Father of the Child that was possessed with the Devil in behalf of his Child which sute and request he put up unto Christ in way of Answer to that Question moved by our Saviour unto the Scribes in the former Verse For he asking the Scribes what was the matter about which they were then reasoning or debating with his Disciples and both the Scribes and the Disciples being hereupon silent and answering nothing as it seemeth presently the Father of the possessed Child being much affected with his Child's case makes haste to speak and to make sute to our Saviour in behalf of his Child and withal by way of Answer unto Chri●t's Question moved to the Scribes doth imply what the matter was about which they disputed with the Disciples namely about the casting of the Devil out of his Child which he saith he had sought to the Disciples to do and they could not effect it Now in this sute or supplication put up here unto Christ by this party in the behalf of his afflicted Child two things are to be considered 1. The manner of his speaking In humble and reverent manner expressed by this honourable title which he gives to Christ calling him Master 2. The matter of his Speech or Supplication which consisteth of two parts 1. He doth acquaint our Saviour that he had brought unto Him his Son 2. He useth a two-fold Motive unto Christ to shew mercy on his Child 1. From the grievous Misery and Affliction of his Child which he layeth open unto Christ certifying him that he had a Devil and relating the pitiful manner of the Devil 's taking and tormenting him 2. From the unability of the Disciples to cast out the Devil in that he had sought to them to do it and they were not able Of the first The manner of his speaking Master or Lord Matth. 17. 15. A title of honour and reverence by which he testifieth his Humility and Reverence toward the Person of Christ Matth. 17. 14. it is said he fell upon his Knees before Christ which it is likely he did not onely in way of civil reverence but as a Token of some religious honour and worship which he shewed toward the Person of Christ For although it is probable that he was not yet throughly instructed in the God-head of Christ yet it is likely that he did in part believe it being perswaded that he was more than a meer man and that he had a Divine Power and Ability to work Miracles for otherwise he would not have thus made sute to Him for his Child Observ Observ In that the Father of this possessed Child though not as yet throughly instructed in the God-head of Christ but in part onely believing it and being perswaded of his Divine Power did nevertheless behave himself in such humble and reverent manner before Christ when he made sute to him for his Child Hence we may learn that we ought much more to carry our selves in all humble and reverent manner in time of Prayer whensoever we put up our sutes and supplications unto God and unto Christ being now in Heaven c. Our hearts must be inwardly affected with due reverence of the Majesty of God and of Christ in time of Prayer and we are also to expresse it by outward reverence in our words and gesture● c. But of this I spake lately upon the Preface of the Lord's Prayer See also before in Ver. 40. of Chap. 1. and Chap. 7. Ver. 25. Now followeth the matter or substance of the Speech and Supplication of this party unto Christ for his afflicted Child Wherein he acquainteth our Saviour that he had brought unto Him his Son I have brought unto thee my Son His meaning is that he had brought him to some place near to or not far off from the place where Christ now was for he had not yet brought him before Christ or into his sight and presence as may aappear by that which followeth Ver. 19 20. Luke 9. 38. he calls him his onely Child whereby he doth amplify the matter aggravating his own sorrow the more to move our Saviour to shew mercy to the Child being not only his Son but his onely Son yea his onely Child as is probable Matth. 17. 15. Lord have mercy upon my Son c. Observ Observ Parents ought not only to be affected with the outward bodily Afflictions and Miseries of their Children but also to take special care of them using the best means for their help and relief as in sickness pain necessity c. So did the Father of this possessed Child as he was much affected with grief
tormenting of him by fits and at certain times shewing how cruelly he used to torture the child Wheresoever he taketh him That is in what place or at what time soever the evil Spirit doth enter into the childs body c. Now by these words it may appear That the Devil did not keep a continuall hold or possession in the childs body but that he used to take him or sieze upon him by fits entring into him as is probable at some certain times of the Moon and so bringing his lunatick fits upon him and then departing from him again for a time And this is further confirmed by the words of our Saviour ver 25. Charging the evil Spirit to come out of the Child and not to enter any more into him which argues That the Devil had formerly used to enter into him again and again after his departure out of him He teareth him Or renteth his body or breaketh him in pieces as it were as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signify So Luke 9. 39. He is said to bruise him which are Metaphoricall Speeches used to express the grievous pain and torment which the Devil did put this child unto Matth. 17. he is said to be sore vexed And he fometh and gnasheth c. These Effects which used to follow upon the Devil 's tormenting the child in his fits are also mentioned by the father of the possessed child the more to amplify and set forth the extremity of pain which his child suffered in his fits and consequently the wofull misery and affliction of the child and so to move our Saviour the more unto pity and compassion towards him Now because these Effects of foming at the mouth and gnashing with the teeth as also that which is afterward mentioned ver 22. Of his casting him into the Fire and into the Water are usuall Effects and Symptoms of the Disease which is called the Falling-Sicknesse therefore some are of opinion That this child was stricken with that Disease and that by the power of the Devil But this I leave as a matter uncertain And he pineth away This is also added to shew the extremity of pain and torment which the Devil put this child unto in his fits which pain and torture was so great That therewith the body of the child and the natural strength of it did wast and consume away by degrees Mark 9. 18. And I spake to thy Disciples that they should cast him out and they could not Febr. 25. 1626. Observ 1 NOw follow the Instructions Observ 1. That the Devil hath power not onely to enter into the bodie of men or children and to hold possession in them but also being in them to afflict and torment them with grievous pains and tortures to tear and rend their bowels and other parts of their Bodies to rack their joynts to cause in them strange convulsions of the sinewes c. Thus he tortured and racked this child with such extremity of pain That he caused him to some at the mouth to gnash with his teeth yea by these tortures and pains he caused the naturall strength of the child's body to wast and brought him into a kind of consumption Yea further the Devil hath power by God's sufferance not onely to torture the bodies of such as are possessed by them but also to cause them to afflict and torture themselves as we heard before Chap. 5. ver 5. The man that was possessed with a Legion of Devils did cut and wound himself with sharp stones in the mountains where he was abiding Observ 2 Observ 2. Here also we are to take notice of the extream hatred and malice of the Devil which he beareth against us and against all mankind in that he seeketh by all means to do hurt and mischief not onely to our Souls but to our Bodies as he did here to the Body of this Child by tearing and renting it c. But of this I shall have more fit occasion to speak afterward upon the 22. verse Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Devil being entred into the body of this Child and possessing the same did deal so cruelly and unmercifully with it racking and tormenting it with such extremity of pain c. we may learn That it is one peculiar property of the Devil to be cruel and unmercifull yea to delight in the exercising of cruelty upon such as are under his Power and Tyranny yea he causeth them sometimes to use cruelty to themselves as we have heard chap. 5. ver 5. Therefore Joh. 8. 44. The Devil is said to be a Murderer yea to have been so from the beginning for all cruelty is a degree and kind of murder This cruelty the Devil practiseth both against the Bodies and Souls of Men. Against their bodies by racking and tormenting them with grievous pains or causing them to torment themselves as we have heard But especially against the Soul● of men the Devil delighteth to practise cruelty and murder This he doth by continuall labouring and seeking by his wicked Suggestions and Temptations to draw men to Sin and so to destroy their Souls 1 Pet. 5. 8. As a roaring Lyon he walketh about seeking whom he may devour Yea further the Devil is so delightfull in cruelty That he desires to exercise it not onely upon Men but even upon brute Beasts as upon Job's Cattel in burning them up and upon the herd of Swine in carrying them violently into the Water and drowning them ut suprà chap. 5. Use 1 Use 1. See what to think and judge of such persons as are given to cruelty and unmerciful dealing with others they do resemble Satan and are like unto him who is the Father of all Murderers and cruel Persons This is true not onely of such as shew cruelty to the Bodies of others by striking hurting maiming or killing out-right but also of such as cruelly oppresse others in their outward estate as of rich men grinding the faces of the poor c. Masters which deal cruelly with Servants by unmercifull correction excessive labours c. Vse 2 Use 2. To move us to abhorr and detest all cruelty and unmercifull dealing against others as the Devils peculiar sin wherein he delighteth let it then be far from us to imitate him herein As we abhorr the Devil so abhorr the Devil's proper sins as this of cruelty and unmercifulness Take heed of all kinds and degrees of it and of all occasions of it as rash-anger wrath c. not onely of actuall murder or hurting others bodies but of all other cruell and hard-dealing with others any way Take heed of cruell oppression of others in bargaining or otherwise especially of oppressing the poor and dealing hardly with them Take heed of cruel u●age of Servants or Children by unmercifull correction or by wearing out Servants with unreaso●●ble and hard Labour c. Remember whose property it is to delight in cruelty the Devil's property and the mark of the wicked
doth not hinder him from doing good to them and amongst them by working of this Miracle but he shews himself ready and forward to perform this Work of Mercy to the Child and therefore bids them bring him unto him that he might heal him Hence we may learn that although we may and ought to be grieved and offended at the sin● and corruptions of those with whom we live yet this must not hinder us from doing good or shewing mercy to the Persons themselves but we must be ready to do them all the good we can as occasion is offered So our Saviour here and at other times though he were much offended at the sins of the Jews and especially of the Scribes and Pharisees yet was he ready to do them good by his Doctrine and Miracles so far forth as they were capable of good thereby So Chap. 3. 5. he looked about angerly upon the Scribes and Pharisees being grieved for the hardness of their hearts and yet he did vouchsafe to work a Miracle before them immediately by curing him that had the withered hand This must teach us after his Example so to be offended and displeased at the sins of others that withal we be not the more backward but rather the more forward and ready to do good and shew mercy to the parties against whose sins we are offended And by this we may try our Anger against others whether it be holy and good or whether it be carnal and sinful If it do not hinder us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 any duty of Love and Mercy to the party offending us but rather stirs us up the more to desire and 〈◊〉 good this shews it to be holy Anger Contra if it hinder us or cause us to be the more backward or unwilling to do good to the party it is carnal and sinful Anger Therefore take heed of such anger and displeasure against others and labour to have all our anger joyned with love and to proceed from love to the Persons offending that so it may make us never the less careful but rather the more forward to do all the good we can both to their Souls and Bodies Mark 9. 20. And they brought him unto Him and when he saw him straightway the Spirit tare him and he fell April 15. 1626. on the ground and wallowed foming IN the former Verse our Saviour Christ commanded the Father of the possessed Child and others that were present to bring the Child unto him that he might at the sute of his Father dispossess him of the Devil Now in this 20. verse the Evangelist mentions the bringing of the possessed child unto Christ upon his Commandment together with the Event or Consequent happening thereupon viz. That upon the sight of Christ presently the Devil did cast the child into a sharp and grievous fit of possession tormenting and abusing him in a pitifull manner When he saw him straightway the Spirit tare him c. First to speak of their bringing of the child to Christ They brought him unto him To be understood of the father of the Child assisted as it seemeth by some other Friends that were present who being willed by our Saviour to bring the child unto him that being present he might cast the Devil out of him they shew themselves ready and forward to perform this work of mercy Observ Observ That we ought to be ready and forward to perform works of mercy to and for such as are in misery and affliction taking all occasions and opportunities to afford unto them our help and relief as we are able Rom. 12. 8. Mercy to be shewed with chearfulness Especially to such as we are nearly tyed unto by speciall bond of Nature Kindred Acquaintance So here the father and other friends of the possessed child do shew their readiness to perform this work of mercy for the child in bringing him to Christ taking occasion to do it without delay so soon as they were willed Job 6. 14. To him that is afflicted pity should be shewed from his friend And Prov. 17. 17. A brother is born for adversity Gal. 6. 10. As we have opportunity let us do good to all c. Use Vse Let us then be ready and forward on all occasions thus to afford our help and relief to such as are in misery and affliction either outward or inward Especially to those whom God hath knit unto us by any speciall bond and to such as are most near and dear to us any way and to such as are of our charge as Wife Children Servants c. And that we may shew our selves thus ready to help them we must put on the bowels ●of mercy towards them labouring to be truly sensible of their miseries and to be affected with them as if they were our own Rom. 12. 15. Weep with them that weep Jam. 3. 17. The Wisdom from above is full of mercy c. Now followeth the Event or Consequent which happened upon their bringing of the child unto Christ So soon as he saw Christ the Devil cast him into a grievous fit c. When he saw him So soon as the possessed child or the evil Spirit in him did behold Christ Luke 9. 42. It is said This happened as he was yet coming to Christ which shews the Devil's eagerness and greedy desire to torment the child Straightway the Spirit tare him Or rent his Body that is racked and tortured it with most grievous pains as before we heard ver 18. that he used so to do in his ordinary fits But it is likely That this was an extraordinary fit and more sharp and grievous than they used to be And he fell on the Ground Luke 9. 42. It is said The Devil threw him down And wallowed foming This shews the lamentable manner of the Devil 's abusing the body of the child in that he did not onely cast him violently to the Ground but also kept him or held him there causing him to lye wallowing and tumbling on the Ground as half dead and foming at the mouth through extremity of pain Quest 1 Quest 1. What speciall cause was there of the Devil 's tormenting him with this sharp and cruel fit at this time Answ Answ It is most probable That upon the sight of Christ he began to apprehend and feel his Divine Power and so suspect that he should now be dispossessed of his hold therefore fearing that his time of possession should now be but short he laboured to shew his rage and cruelty so much the more so long as Christ suffered him Quest 2 Quest 2. Why did our Saviour Christ suffer the Devil even in his presence thus cruelly to torment and abuse the body of the child seeing he could have hindred it Answ Answ Not of weakness nor because he was delighted in beholding it But 1. For the greater tryall and exercise of the Faith of the father of this child therefore he doth not only deferr to cast out the Devil
are upright before him ayming at his glory in all that they do In this case he accepteth the will for the deed in them 2 Cor. 8. 12. Though we make but a weak and timorous profession of hi● Name yet if it be in truth and sincerity he accepteth it and doth account us in the number of his disciples Earthly Masters will not entertain or keep such a servant as is ashamed openly to acknowledg his Master before others But Christ our heavenly Master is more gracious in bearing with us though we be ashamed oftentimes to profess him and his Word before men so openly and boldly as we should do This may greatly comfort us against our weakness and timorousness in the profession of Christ and against all the imperfections of our obedience to his Will Onely take heed that we do not please our selves in these our wants and failings but that we be daily humbled for them and strive against them labouring to grow more and more zealous in all duties of obedience and service unto Christ Then may we have true comfort in the midst of all our failings and infirmities when we consider what a gracious and merciful Lord we have who doth so well accept of our imperfect services This being thought upon will comfort us both in life and death Ambros Non sic vixi ut vivere me pudeat nec mori timeo qua bonum Dominum habemus Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour saith He that is not against him is on his part and consequently that whosoever is not on his part is against him hence we may gather That in Religion and in the profession of Christ and the Gospel there is no mean or middle sort of persons between friends and enemies of Christ but all are either friends or enemies He that is not the one is the other He that is not an enemy is a friend to Christ and the Gospel and on the contrary he that is not a friend must needs be an enemy This is proved by comparing this place with that Matth. 12. 30. Use Use See what to think of such as professe to be of no side in the matter of Religion neither Papists no● Protestants neither with Christ nor against him This cannot be and therefore the truth is such Ne●trals are very enemies of Christ and of the Gospel For one of the two they must needs be either enemies or friends to Christ But friends they are not they do not stand for Christ therefore they are against him God alloweth no spectators in Religion All are actors either on Christ's part or against him Let us then take heed of halting between two Opinions in Religion If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal then follow him as Eliah warned the idolatrous people 1 King 18. 21. We read Levit. 19. 19. that ●ods people were forbidden in time of the Law to sow their ground with mingled seed and to wear a ga●●ent of ●nnen and woollen to shew that the Lord would not have them to be of a mingled or linsey-woolsey Religion that is of no Religion in truth but rather enemies to it And Revel 3. 16. the Church of Laodicea is threatened for being luke-warm neither hot nor cold in Religion Take heed it be not so with any of us lest the Lord do spew us out of his mouth The Lord doth loath and detest such luke-warmnesse and halting in Religion See therefore that we do not onely make shew to be no open or direct Enemies of Religion and the Gospel but that we do approve our selves to be true friends and favourers yea zealous and forward professors and maintainers of the same for else it is certain that we are enemies and adversaries unto it whatsoever shew or pretence we make of the contrary There is no middle way between these two as hath been shewed Mark 9. 41. For whosoever shall give you a cup of water c. Sept. 23. 1627. IN the three former Verses as we have heard the Evangelist mentioned a Conference between our Saviour Christ and his Disciple John concerning the prohibiting of one whom they saw casting out Devils in Christ's Name In which Conference our Saviour forbade them to hinder that party alledging reasons thereof c. Now from this 41. Verse to the end of the Chapter the same Evangelist setteth down unto us some special Points of Doctrine or Instruction which our Saviour took occasion to teach unto his Disciples at the same time as is probable Of which Points of Doctrine we shall hear in their order as they lye in the residue of this Chapter The first Point of doctrine is touching works of Charity to be performed unto good Christians which our Saviour commendeth by the reward which he promiseth to every one that doth perform such work of charity Verse 41. For whosoever shall give you a cup of water c. Touching the particular dependance of these words on that which goes before it seemeth most probable that our Saviour having before Verse 37. begun to commend unto his disciples the practice of love toward such good Christians as do resemble little children in humility and then being interrupted by John's relating unto him the matter of him that cast out devils in his Name now having made answer unto John he returneth to speak again of the same matter which before he began to intreat of Verse 37. touching the practice of love toward good Christians Sic Illyric The words of this Verse considered in themselves do contain a commendation of the practice of love to good Christians by an excellent promise of reward made unto such persons as shall perform any work of charity though never so small unto such good Christians Where three things are to be considered 1. The Persons to whom this promise is made Whosoever shall give you a cup of water to drink 2. The Ground or Motive which should move them to perform this work of charity to Christ's Disciples viz. the Name of Christ and because they did belong to him 3. The promise it self Verily I say unto you he shall not lose c. Of the first Whosoever shall give you a cup of water That is shall perform the least work or duty of love one of the smallest and easiest duties of love viz. the giving of a cup of water to drink unto one that is thirsty being named instead of all other duties of charity And our Saviour nameth this particular work of charity in giving a cup of water c. because it was an usual and common courtesie to do this in those times and in that hot Countrey of Judea in which their common and ordinary drink was water especially for the poorer sort To you That is to his Disciples or to any other true believers and professours of his name such as they were Observ 1 Observ 1. To shew love and kindnesse to good Christians believing in Christ and professing his Name is a duty very
this place that they should have peace one with another not onely as they were Christians but as they were Ministers of the Gospell So Paul gives the like Precept unto Timothy not onely as a Christian but as a Minister 2 Tim. 2. 22. Follow Peace with them that call on the Lord c. And ver 24. The servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all men c. Reas 1 Reas 1. They are called to Preach the Gospell of peace and they are by their Doctrine and Ministry to teach and perswade others to brotherly unity and peace Therefore they themselves ought much more to be maintainers of this Peace that so they may not onely by their Doctrine but also by their life and example teach others to be peaceable Reas 2 Reas 2. The maintaining of Peace and unity amongst the Pastors and Ministers of the Church is a means to further the work of the Ministery For so long as there is mutual peace and brotherly agreement amongst them they will be the more carefull and forward to joyn together and help and incourage one another in all Ministerial duties As it is with many workmen appointed to build up one and the same house the better they agree one with another the better the building goeth forward on the contrary if they be at odds and disagree this hinders the work So here c. Vse 1 Use 1. This should move all such as are called to this office of the Ministery to make Conscience of this duty of maintaining outward peace and unity both among themselves and with other Christians and especially with those of their own charge being carefull to teach them the practice of brotherly unity and peace not onely by their Doctrine but also by their example c. Vse 2 Use 2. Seeing the maintenance of peace and unity amongst Ministers of the Word is one means to further the work of the Ministry this should move the people to pray for the Ministers of the Church that they may live in unity and peace together that so by this means the work of the Ministry may go forward the better Finis Noni Capitis CHAP. X. Mark 10. 1. And he rose from thence c. Jan. 20. 1627. THe principall matters Recorded by the Evangelist in this Chapter are these 1. Our Saviour's disputation with the Pharisees about Divorcement of Wives together with the conference he had with his Disciples touching the same matter unto ver 13. 2. His gracious entertainment of the young children which were brought unto him from thence to the 17th verse 3. The History of the Rich man who came to Christ to know what he should do for the obtaining of eternal life from thence to ver 28. 4. The answer which our Saviour made unto Peter telling him that he and his fellow Disciples had forsaken all they had to follow him from thence to ver 32. 5. A Repetition of his former Prediction of his future Passion from thence to ver 35. 6. His rejection or denyall of the ambitious sute made unto him by James and John the sons of Zebedaeus touching the highest places of honour about him in the glory of his Kingdome from thence to the 46th verse Lastly A Miraculous cure wrought by him in restoring blind Bartimaeus unto his sight from thence to the end of the Chapter Of the first 1. Is set down his disputation with the Pharisees about Divorces 2. His conference with his Disciples about the same ver 10 11 12. In the story of his disputation with the Pharisees two things are set down 1. The Antecedents or occasions which made way to it ver 1. 2. The disputation it self from ver 2. to ver 10. The occasions are three 1. Our Saviour's departure out of Galilce where he was before and his comming into the coasts of Judea which was the place where this disputation happened And he rose c. 2. The concourse or flocking of the people unto our Saviour in that place And the people resort unto him again 3. His carefull and diligent instructing of them according to his wont And as he was wont c. And he rose from thence From that part of Galilee where he was before as may appear Matth. 19. 1. where it is said He departed from Galilee and came into the coasts of Judaea And commeth into the Coasts of Judaea This is to be understood of that part of the Countrey which was most properly so called for otherwise the whole Countrey then Inhabited by the Jews is sometimes in a large sense called Judaea including both Galilee and Samaria in it By the farther sid● of Jordan Not that Judaea was on the farther side of Jordan in respect of Galilee for both Judaea and Galil●e did lye on the same side of Jordan but it is to be understood in respect of that part of the countrey which lay on the other side of Jordan or else that our Saviour in passing from Galilee to Judaea took occasion to go over the River Jorda● and so passing through some part of the Countrey that lay beyond the River did come back over the same River again and so went into the Coasts of Judaea Vide Casub Annot. in hunc locum et Bezam et Maldonat in Matth. 19. 1. The reason of our Saviour's departure at this time from Galilee into the Coasts of Judea was That he might there do good by his Doctrine and Miracles as he had done before in Galilee Besides that this was in his way to Jerusalem whither he was now going as is probable See Verse 32. hu●us Capitis Observ Observ The great labour and pains which our Saviour did take in the exercise of his Ministery while he was on earth in that he travelled and journeyed and that on foot usually in that hot Countrey to so many places and those oftentimes far distant to preach the Gospel and to work Miracles This he could not do without much labour pain and weariness oftentimes Joh. 4. 6. it is expresly said that he was wearied with his journey from Judea to Samaria And so no doubt but he was at many other times c. And that it is a wearisom and painful thing thus to travel many and long Journeys especially on foot may appear in that Paul reckoneth journeyings amongst his afflictions 2 Cor. 11. 26. In journeying often And Verse 27. he sayes he was in weariness and painfulness Yet our blessed Saviour refused not to suffer this pain and wearinesse in journeying from place to place and that on foot to preach and work Miracles for confirmation of his Doctrine while he lived on earth which should teach u● after his example to be content and willing to suffer pain and labour even unto much weariness in the duties of our calling and of the service of God knowing that this is Gods Ordinance That every one of us should feel the burden of our calling and the painfulness of it and
needs be the cause of all cowardly fearfulness in times of distress Vse 1 Use 1. See the reason why the wicked and unbelievers are so cowardly and timorous in times of trouble and danger befalling them as we see in Cain Gen. 4. 14. and in Belshazzar Dan. 5. 6. Yea sometimes when there is no danger they are fearful Prov. 28. 1. The wicked fleeth when none pursueth And Levit. 26. 36. The sound of a shaken leaf chaseth them c. The reason of this their timorousness is their want of faith They have no assurance of Gods mercy to them in Christ nor of his special protection in times of danger therefore are their hearts thus overcome of fear and terrour They are sometime at their wits end This shall make the hearts of the wicked to fail them for fear at the day of Judgment because they shall want faith c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See also the cause of much timorousness even in good Christians in times of trouble The weakness of their saith is the cause of it as it was here in Christs Disciples And we are not to marvail that the best Christians are subject to this infirmity of timorousness more or less seeing there is some weakness and imperfection of faith in the best Vse 3 Use 3. Hence gather That excessive fearfulness in time of danger is a sin because it is a fruit of infidelity But of this before Use 4 Use 4. This sheweth us further what to do that we may be kept from this immoderate fear and timorousness Labour for true faith and for a further growth of it in us Such as never had faith must use all good means to attain some measure of it And such as have it in some measure already must labour for a further increase of it The more faith the less fear as on the contrary the less faith the more fear Pray unto God to give thee faith and to increase it in thee This will expell fear out of thy heart and make thee couragious in times of greatest distress and danger as Job 13. 15. Though he slay me yet I will trust in him And Paul Rom. 8. 38. I am perswaded that neither death nor life c. shall separate c. So Hebr. 11. 34. it is said of Gedeon Barack Sampson c. that by faith they stopped the mouths of Lyons quenched violence of fire c. out of weakness were made strong waxed valiant in fight c. So the Martyrs were couragious at the Stake and in the fire because they had special strength of faith given them Especially let such labour for faith who are called to go through great dangers as Souldiers Mariners Women that bear Children c. 1 Tim. 2. ult Verse 41. And they feared exceedingly c. The Evangelist layeth down a second consequent of this Miracle namely the effect which it wrought in the Disciples and others Which effect is twofold 1. Inward They feared exceedingly 2. Outward In that they do by their words one to another acknowledg the power of Christ and profess their admiration of it They feared c. This is to be understood not onely of the Disciples of Christ but of others also of the people who were present in other ships and saw the Miracle as may be gathered from Matth. 8. 27. where it is said The men marvailed c. Now if none but the Disciples had wondred and feared it is likely the Evangelist would not have spoken so generally saying The men marvailed but rather The Disciples marvailed Quest Quest Why did they so exceedingly fear seeing the storm being now laid the danger was past Answ Answ The Evangelist doth not here speak of their fearing of the danger in which they had been and from which they were now escaped but of that fear and reverence of the Power and Majesty of Christ with which they were stricken and moved in heart at the sight of this great Miracle And this fear was the greater in the Disciples because they now saw and considered their own weakness and infidelity for which Christ had reproved them Thus then the consideration of Christ's wonderfull power and their own weakness moved them thus exceedingly to fear and reverence the Divine Majesty of Christ And this was a good kind of fear in them whereby they so feared the power and Majesty of Christ that they were carefull not to offend him as they had done before by their timorousness and infidelity Observ Observ Hence gather That we ought to be affected in heart with great fear and reverence of the Majesty of God when we see or take notice of his great and powerful works the consideration of his wonderfull works should move us greatly to fear him Thus the Disciples and others at this time by seeing this great Miracle of Christ were moved to fear him exceedingly So Peter and others Luke 5. 8. So the Centution and they that were with him at the time of Christ's death when they saw the Earth-quake and other great Miracles wrought they feared greatly c. Matth. 27. 54. So should we be moved greatly to fear and reverence the Majesty of God when we consider his mighty works Jerem. 5. 22. Fear ye not me saith the Lord Will ye not tremble at my presence which have placed the sand for the bound of the Sea c. Hab. 3. 16. when the Prophet heard of the great Judgments of God threatned his belly trembled c. Now this fear must not be servile but a fi●iall fear joyned with love of God which must make us afraid and loth to offend him Psal 4. 4. Vse Vse This condemneth the blockish security of many who when they see or hear of Gods great and miraculous works of Justice or mercy shewed upon themselves or others yet are little or nothing at all moved in heart to fear and reverence the power and Majesty of God This argueth great and fearfull hardness of heart Such are worse then Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3. 24. and Felix Act. 24. 25. This want of fear and reverence of Gods great works is an effect and sign of Atheism in such And said one to another Who is this c. By these words the Disciples and the rest do profess their admiration of the Divine power of Christ and withall do imply a confession and acknowledgment that he was more than a meer man even the Son of God himself Quest Quest Did not the Disciples know and believe before that Christ was the Son of God Answ Answ Yes they knew it in part by his former Miracles but their knowledg and faith in this Point was further confirmed by this Miracle Observ 1 1. Observ In that the Disciples and others with them are not only affected with fear and reverence at the sight of this Miracle but do also take occasion to acknowledg and magnifie the Divine power of Christ who was able to command the Wind and Sea hence we learn That we should not onely be
21. If a man take his brother's wife it is an unclean thing c. Object Object Deuter. 25. 5. If Brethren dwell together and one of them dye and have no child the Wife of the dead shall not marry without but her husband's brother shall go in unto her c. Answ Answ 1. That Law is to be understood not of marrying the Wife of any brother deceased but of marrying the Wife of such a brother as deceased without children as the words of the Text shew plainly But Herod's brother Philip if he were now dead as it is most likely he was and as Josephus writeth of him Antiquit lib. 18. cap. 6. et 7. yet he dyed not without Issue for Verse 22. of this Chapter there is mention of the daughter of Herodias which no doubt she had by her former husband Philip therefore that Law gave no liberty at all to Herod to marry his brother wife seeing his brother dyed not without Issue 2. Some think that Law is to be understood not of the natural brother born of the same Parents but rather of the Cozen-german or some other Kinsman nearest unto the party deceased for so sometimes after the Hebrew phrase Kinsmen are called Brethren Sic Calvin in locum 3. Others rather understand it of natural brethren born of the same Parents and that it was a special exception of that general Law given Levit. 18. which exception belonged peculiarly and only to the Israelites being granted to them upon special cause viz. That when the elder brother dyed without seed the name of the first-born might not be blotted out but the Family might be preserved in that name c. And this was ceremonial signifying typically Christ the first-born of God c. See Mr. Perkins Oeconom Chap. 5. pag. 677. Jun. in Deuter. 25. 5. Bucan loc com pag. 118. Observ Observ Here we learn that Incestuous Marriages are unlawfull and condemned in the Word of God so John told Herod plainly ver 18. That it was not lawfull to have his brothers Wife This was one kind of Incestuous Marriage Other kinds see expresly named and forbidden Levit. 18. In general note here that an Incestuous Marriage is that which is made between persons that are too near of kindred that is to say such as are within the degrees of kindred prohibited in that Chapter Levit. 18. from whence we may gather also that not onely the degrees there named but all other which are as near as those that are there named are also by proportion condemned as unlawfull Such Marriages were condemned even by the Heathen themselves as the Apostle employeth 1 Cor. 5. 1. when he saith That the Incest of him that had his Fathers Wife is such a sin as was not named among the Gentiles that is to say not approved but abhorred of the best of them even by the light of Nature Besides the Word of God denounceth great and heavy punishments to be inflicted on such incestuous Marriages as we may see Levit. 20. 11 c. where it is appointed that such as did so Marry should be punished with death and dye childless The consideration of these things must move all Christians to abhor and take heed of such Incestuous Marriages So much of the sin reproved Now followeth the reproof it self ver 18. John had said to Herod It is not lawfull for thee c. Whether he reproved Herod in publick or in private is not expressed Some think it was in his publick teaching But it seems more probable that it was in private because he speaks to him so particularly It is not lawfull for thee c. which it is not likely he would do in publick Vide Kemnit Observ 1 Observ 1. Here then we learn That Ministers of the Word ought not to wink at sin in those of their Charge nor to be silent at the committing of it but to admonish and reprove the same as occasion is offered in publike and private This is a part of the Minister's Office not only to Instruct Exhort and Comfort such as have need of instruction c. but also to admonish and reprove such as offend Every Christian in his place is to do this as just opportunity is offered 1 Thess 5. 14. much more therefore Ministers 2 Tim. 4. 2. Preach the Word in season c. Reprove rebuke c. Tit. 2. 15. Rebuke with all authority Ezek. 3. The Watchman must give the wicked warning to turn from sin c. or else their blood will be required at the Watchman's hand Observ 2 Observ 2. Further Ministers may learn here of John Baptist to deal unpartially in admonishing and reproving sin even in the greatest persons that are of their charge and so far as they have a calling to do it They must reprove sin not only in mean persons but in the great ones even in Kings if they be called to do it as John was to reprove Herod for even Kings must be subject to the Word of God and the Ministery of it though they be far above the persons of Ministers in authority and power Thus Elijah reproved Ahab the King of Israel 1 King 18. 1 King 21. Thus Nathan also reproved David 2 Sam. 12. A Minister must not be a respecter of persons in his Ministery but he must in this be like our Saviour Christ who cared not for any man nor regarded the persons of men Matth. 22. 16. To this end he must labour to pray unto God for spiritual courage and constancy in discharge of this part of his duty that he may not fear the faces of the greatest persons but may boldly and freely reprove sin in them Jer. 1. 8. Be not afraid of their faces for I am with thee c. and Verse 10. See I have this day set thee over Nations and over Kingdoms to root ou● and to pull down c. Ezek. 3. 8. Behold I have made thy face strong against their faces c. As an adamant harder then flint have I made thy forehead c. Ministers have need to pray unto God to arm them with such courage constancy and boldness of spirit Vse Use This teacheth even the greatest Persons to suffer the word of reproof and admonition at the hands of Gods Ministers and not to think themselves too good c. How much more then should meaner persons submit to such reproof c. Psal 141. 5. Observ 3 Observ 3. Again in that John did so plainly tell Herod That it was not lawfull for him c. We may gather That such as have a Calling to reprove sin in others should do it plainly and directly shewing them their sin and the danger of it by the Word of God in such sort as they may be in Conscience convinced of it Levit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy Brother in thy Heart but shalt plainly rebuke him c. Thus Eli●ah did plainly reprove Ahab and Nathan though he began with a Parable yet at
Christ feed the Souls of men spiritually unto Life eternal Answ Answ 1. By the merit of his Death and Sufferings indured for us in his humane Nature whereby he hath purchased both the spiritual Life of Grace and also that eternal Life of Glory for the Elect. Joh. 6. 51. The Bread that I will give is my Flesh that is my whole humane Nature Soul and Body which I will give for the life of the World And Ver. 55. My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed Hereof the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper is a Pledge and Seal to the faithful 2. By the Power and Efficacy of his Divine Spirit working in them all spirituall and saving Graces as Faith Repentance c. which Graces are in Scripture compared unto Me●t and Drink as Joh. 6. 27. Labour for Meat which perisheth not c. And Joh. 4. 10. our Saviour tells the Woman of Samaria that he was able to give her living Water that is the saving gifts of his Spirit c. So Isa 55. 1. Hoe every one that thirsteth c. 3. By the outward Ministry of the Word and Sacraments which are the ordinary means of our spirituall Nourishment being ordained of Christ to this end to work and encrease Grace in us and so to feed and nourish us to eternal life In which respect the Word and Sacraments of Christ are resembled unto bodily Food as 1 Pet. 2. 2. Desire the sincere Milk of the Word c. And 1 Cor. 10. 3. The Sacraments of the Israelites are called their spiritual Meat and Drink Obj Ob●ect Ministers of the Word are in this sense Pastors and Feeders of mens Souls with the Word and Sacraments Answ Answ They have only a ministerial Power to distribute these means of spiritual Nourishment but Christ alone is able to make them effectual to nourish spiritually c. Vse 1. See then the miserable condition of all that are without Christ having no Union with him by Faith such cannot be spiritually fed by him unto eternal Life Faith being the only means by which we receive spiritual Nourishment from Christ therefore miserable is the case of all Unbelievers Being destitute of Faith they are destitute of Christ and being destitute of him they are destitute of all spirituall Nourishment whereby their Souls should be fed to everlasting life therefore their Souls must needs be famished unto everlasting Death if they continue in that case living and dying without Faith in Christ c. Though they have never so much Provision of Meat for the Body yet if Souls be not fed c. Use 2 Use 2. See where to seek spiritual Food and Nourishment of our Souls Seek it in Christ and from him He only is the Bread of Life He only can give us the Meat which perisheth not and those living waters of saving Grace which shall never be dried up in us Labour therefore truly to hunger and thirst after this spiritual Food and seek to Christ to be fed of him with it Pray unto him daily to feed our Souls Say unto him as the Jews did Joh. 6. 34. Lord evermore give us this Bread Desire him to give us Faith whereby to feed on him that is on the merit and efficacy of his Death c. unto eternal life Pray him also to work in us all other saving Graces c. Neither must we only desire and pray him thus to feed us spiritually but we must withal willingly submit our selves to be fed of him resorting duly to the outward means of our spiritual Nourishment as the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments To come to these is to come to Christ's Table yea to be fed by him at his own Table And what a Priviledge is this How great a favour do we count it if a great man invite us to his own Table Behold Christ Jesus the Son of God inviteth thee to his Table to be spiritually fed by his Word and Sacraments and wilt thou not come cheerfully Take heed thou refuse not lest for this contempt he do for ever barr thee from tasting of the spirituall and heavenly dainties which he hath prepared as he did those that refused to come being invited to his great Supper Luke 14. Mark 6. 45 c. to 53. And straightway he constrained his Disciples to go into the Ship and to go over to the othe Nov. 18. 1621. side before unto Bethsaida c. THe Evangelist having from the 35. ver hitherto laid down the History of that great Miracle of Christ which he wrought in the Wilderness of Bethsaida in feeding 5000 men beside Women and Children with five Barley-Loavs and two little Fishes Now in these Verses he layeth down two other Miracles of Christ which he wrought the night following upon the Sea of Galilee which two Miracles he wrought together about the same time of the night one immediately after the other The one of these Miracles was His walking upon the Sea to his Disciples as they were rowing in a ship upon the waters and were greatly troubled in rowing by reason of a tempestuous wind which arose against them The other Miracle which immediately followed the former was his stilling or appeasing that tempest of Wind suddenly so soon as he was come up into the Ship to them And the History of these two Miracles is the fifth generall part of this Chapter In the History of these Miracles consider 1. The Antecedents going before them Ver. 45 46. 2. The speciall occasions of them set down Ver. 47 48. 3. The Miracles themselves Ver. 48 51. 4. The Effects and Consequents Ver. 49 50 51 52. Touching the Antecedents they are three 1. Our Saviour's forcing his Disciples to take Ship and to go over the Sea of Galilee before him to Bethsaida 2. His dismissing of the People 3. His withdrawing himself into a Mountain to pray And straightway That is immediately after he had wrought the former Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes He caused his Disciples c. The words are better translated thus He constrained or forced his Disciples to get into the Ship And yet though unwilling at first they do at length obey Christ c. This shews that they were unwilling to part with Christ and to passe over the Sea without him And to go before to the other side Not directly crossing over the main Sea of Galilee but only an Arm of it See before Ver. 31. 32. Vnto Bethsaida This was one of the chief Cities of Galilee called the City of Andrew and Peter Joh. 1. 44. of which City also Philip is there said to have bin In which City Christ wrought many Miracles as may be gathered from Matth. 11. 21. See Mark 8. 22. Object Object Joh. 6. 17. Towards Capernaum Answ Answ Bethsaida was in their way to Capernaum so they came first to it and then to Capernaum In the words consider two things 1. Christ's dismissing his Disciples to Bethsaida 2. The manner by
the cause of so many other sins Think also how unbeseeming it is for Christians who should shew all meeknesse and patience toward others c. 4. Lastly Such as find themselves given to rash anger let them daily pray against it desiring God to mortify in them this sinfull passion c. So much of the case of Conscience supposed by the Scribes and Pharisees touching such Children as had in their rage and anger sworn that their Parents should have no profit by them Now to speak of their Resolution given of this Case and Question which was this that in this Case a Child was not tyed to Honour his Parents by doing them Good but was free from sin though he refused so to Honour them That this was their resolution of the Case may appear by these last words of the Verse He is free or shall be free And the same is further declared in the next Verse as we shall hear when we come unto it Now the ground of this their corrupt Doctrine was a grosse error holden by them touching an Oath for they held that an Oath once solemnly taken did absolutely bind the party that had taken it to the performance of what he had sworn though it were a thing in it self unlawfull yea they put great Religion in the keeping of a Oath though it were taken to do that which was evil and sinfull See Matth. 5. 33. where our Saviour sheweth That it was the Doctrine of the Jewish Teachers that men were very strictly bound to keep their Oaths which indeed is true of all lawfull Oaths but not of unlawfull Observ 1 Observ 1. Here we see that the Scribes and Pharisees under colour of religious keeping of an Oath once taken did excuse and allow of the sin of Children in dishonouring Parents which shews us That it is the property of Hypocrits and wicked Persons such as these Pharisees were to maintain and defend sin in themselves and others under pretence and shew of Religion and Conscience See before Chap. 6. 26. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that these Scribes and Pharisees did by their Doctrine free Children from Duty to Parents in case they had sworn not to help or profit them We may learn That it is the property of corrupt Teachers in the Church to teach Doctrines of Liberty and Freedom for practise of sin which God hath forbidden and for omission of Duties commanded They give Liberty for practise of sin where God hath given none letting loose the Rains and Bridle to sin where God would have it held in strait Thus did the Scribes and Pharisees they taught many licentious Doctrines opening a wide Gap unto sin as we may see Matth. 5. For example they taught that it was lawfull for a Man to put away his Wife by divorce for small matters That it was lawfull to swear in ordinary Communication if a Man did not forswear That it was lawfull to seek private revenge requiring an eye for an eye That it was lawfull for a Man to hate his Enemies so that he loved his Friends c. Use Use See then a Rule or Touch-stone by which to try and know the corrupt Doctrine of false Teachers Look whether their Doctrine tend to liberty in sin and unlawfull practises or to the omission of necessary Duties commanded of God If it do it is corrupt and unsound Doctrine and to be rejected and taken heed of such are many Doctrines of the Church of Rome as their Doctrine of tolerating Fornication under penalty of money their Doctrine of Pope's pardons granted for money to forgive sins not onely past but for many years to come Their Doctrine of Equivocation of exempting their Clergy-Men from Subjection to the Civil Power of Magistrates Such also is the Doctrine of those which deny the morality of the Sabbath On the contrary that Doctrine which tends to the restraint and beating down of sin is good and sound and to be imbraced Observ 3 Observ 3. If the Scribes and Pharisees made such accompt of an unlawfull Oath that they would by no means have it broken by Children no not if they had sworn against their own Parents much more accompt should be made of a lawfull Oath taken to do things lawfull and good How great care should every one have to keep such an Oath Psal 15. 4. It is said to be one mark of him that shall be saved that having taken an Oath he keeps it though it be to his hinderance Therefore great and fearfull is the sin of those who having taken lawfull Oaths make no conscience to keep them such little think how fearfull the sin of perjury is by which they lay themselves open to the Curse of God unto which every one binds over himself by taking an Oath if he do not conscionably perform what he hath sworn unto being a matter in it self lawfull to be done Mark 7. 12 13. And ye suffer him no more to do ought for his Father and Mother Making the Word of Mar. 31. 1622. God of none effect through your tradition which ye have delivered and many such like things do ye IN the former Verse our Saviour alledged the corrupt Tradition or Doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisees concerning the Duty of Children to Parents in helping them in their necessities viz. That in case a Child had sworn or rashly vowed that his Father or Mother should have no profit by them then he was not tyed in conscience to relieve them but was free from guilt of sinne though he refused to do them Good Now in these two Verses he further sheweth the hurtfull and dangerous Effects and Consequents of this their corrupt and wicked Doctrine Which Effects are two 1. That by this Doctrine they hindred the Child from doing good or affording help to his Parents when he had thus sworn the contrary Ver. 12. 2. That by this Tradition they made Voyd the Word of God Ver. 13. Then in the end of that Verse he briefly chargeth them with sundry other corrupt Traditions which they maintained besides the former of exempting Children from Duty to Parents Ye suffer him no more c. It may be they did not plainly or flatly forbid the Child in this Case to do Good to his Parents but because by their corrupt Doctrine they gave liberty to a Child to refuse to relieve his Parents when he had sworn the contrary therefore they are said Not to suffer him to do ought for them To do ought That is to do any good or afford any help or profit to his Parents or any relief in their necessities Where note that our Saviour imputeth the sin of such an undutisull Child to the Scribes and Pharisees as the causes of it by their Licentious Doctrine c. Observ 1 Observ 1. Here first we may gather That corrupt Doctrine is the cause of corruption and wickedness in Life and Practise The Scribes and Pharisees by their wicked Doctrine exempting Children from helping Parents were the
stead of all Who hath not heard of the many and grievous Afflictions of Job both inward and outward in his Body Goods Wife Children yea and in his Soul and Conscience too So how grievous troubles did the Lord lay upon Joseph David Jeremy Jonah Lazarus Paul and many others of his most excellent Servants mentioned in Scripture In a word Whom do we read of among all the Generation of the Righteous whom the Lord did not one time or other exercise with grievous Crosses and Afflictions in one kind or another though not all in like measure Hebr. 11. We have a Cloud of witnesses to confirm this Point to us Many Reasons why the Lord thus grievously afflicteth his own Children The principall whereof are these 1. To make them conformable to Christ Jesus their Head and Saviour who was a man of sorrows consecrated through many and grievous Afflictions c. 2. To make thorough-proof and trial of his own Graces in them especially their Faith Hope and Patience and to manifest the truth and soundness of these graces in them So saith Job Thou hast tried me and I shall come forth as the Gold And hence it is that Afflictions in Scripture are so often called Tentations or Trials See Deut. 8. 2. 3. To humble them for sin and to bring them to a thorough-sight of it and withal to cause them to renew their Repentance for such sins into which they have fallen after their Calling through Ignorance Infirmity or Presumption This we see in Joseph's Brethren and in David Psal 119. 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray c. 4. To restrain and keep them back from sin for time to come making them more wary and fearful of it because they have so much smarted for it Job 33. 16. He sealeth the Instruction or Correction of Man that he may withdraw him from his evil purpose and hide Pride from him He keepeth back his Soul from the Pit c. 5. To wean their hearts from the World and to stir up in them a sighing and longing after Heaven and that blessed rest which there is prepared for them in which all tears shall be wiped from their eyes and all troubles shall cease c. Use 1 Use 1. Take heed how we censure any to be wicked or out of God's favour because we see or hear that they have grievous Afflictions laid on them by the hand of God for so we may condemn ●ob David and the whole Generation of the just yea Christ himself But know this that one may be exercised with sharp and grievous troubles and yet be dearly beloved of God and in high favour with him So was ●ob David c. Heb. 12. Whom the Lord loveth he chastiseth c. yea he doth it out of his Love and for their great good Use 2 Use 2. This may greatly comfort God's Children when they meet with sharp and grievous troubles imposed on them of God There is no cause for them to be discouraged or faint under them seeing God deals no worse with them than he hath done with his most excellent Saints and Servants formerly who have drunk as deep of this bitter Cup as themselves Therefore think not strange though God try and exercise us with grievous troubles inward or outward This is no new thing for the Lord thus sharply to chastise his own in this life but it is the ancient course which he hath alwayes used to take with them See 1 Pet. 4. 12. Consider also that the Lord doth thus sharply chastize us for our great good Vse 3 Vse 3. It must teach all God's Children to make accompt before-hand of taking up their Cross and to prepare and arm themselves to bear troubles yea heavy and grievous Afflictions Now in time of peace and prosperity prepare for the evil day and while it is calm prepare for storms hereafter to arise and beat against us else we shall never be able to bear it when it comes upon us but must needs faint in the day of Adversity and sink under the burden of the Cross Oh therefore let us now before-hand think of troubles which may come and make them present to us and arm our selves with Faith and Patience to bear them when they shall come Especially labour for Faith in God's speciall Love and Mercy to us in Christ forgiving our sins and accepting us as his Children that being assured hereof we may patiently and obediently submit to his hand in the most grievous trials which he layeth on us then shall we say with Job Though he kill me I will trust in him Hab. 2. The just shall live by Faith This is true especially of the time of Affliction when God's hand is most heavy on us Faith will sustain and comfort us in the greatest and heaviest troubles that can come On the other side without Faith the leightest Affliction will dismay us and cause Impatiency Pray therefore for more and more strength of Faith against the evill day the want of this is the cause that we are so unfit to bear crosses when they come especially heavy and grievous trials that either we faint under them or grow to inward murmuring or impatiency or to use unlawfull means to come out of trouble c. Again if we would be fit to bear grievous Affliction when they shall come let us now in the mean time enure and frame our selves to the patient suffering of lesser troubles c. Mark 7. 25. For a certain Woman whose young Daughter had an unclean Spirit c. June 23. 1622. Observ 2 OBserv 2. In that this heavy Affliction laid upon this Woman is here mentioned as the cause moving her to come and seek to Christ for her Daughter we may learn that Afflictions sanctified are excellent means to stir up and quicken to Prayer and earnest seeking of God Hos 5. 15. In their Affliction they will seek me early Isa 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they powred out a Prayer when thy chastening was upon them Job 33. 26. The Sinner that is chastened of God upon his Bed shall then pray unto God c. Example Manasseh 2 Chron. 33. The Saints of God have never been so forward and diligent in Prayer never so fervent in it as in time of greatest trouble So David being in the deep cryed unto the Lord Psal 130. 1. and at other times often So Hezekiah in his dangerous sickness Isa 38. Jonah in the Whale'● belly Jeremy in the Dungeon c. Lam. 3. The Israelites Psal 107. See before in the 22. and 23. Verses of the fifth Chapter Use 1 Use 1. See by this how good and profitable it is for God's Children to be exercised with many and great troubles in that these being sanctified are such excellent means to quicken unto that Duty unto which by Nature and of themselves they are so dull heavy and backward that is to the exercise of Prayer Le● us then be willing to suffer
the Faithfull and their Seed c. Let such therefore be truly thankfull c. Use 3 Use 3. Admonition to all Parents to repent of their Sins and to beware of giving ill example to their Children considering how apt they are to follow them How soon do they learn of Parents to swear to lye to speak filthily to pilfer and steal to be touchy froward c. Take heed then of giving such wicked Example Endanger not thine own Soul and the Souls of thy Children together lest hereafter they have cause to curse the day in which they were begotten or born of thee Leave not the cursed Inheritance and Patrimony of Sin to thy Child but on the contrary labour for the true fear of God in thy heart and shew it by giving a holy and religious Example to thy Children that they may be Heirs of thy Graces not of thy sins So much of the first part of Christ's Answer to the Pharisees Now followeth the second His denial of their sute Where 1. Consider the manner of denying with an Asseveration c. 2. The matter or denial it self There shall no Sign be given c. Verily I say unto you Observ It is lawful sometimes to use more than bare and naked assertions or denials in our Speech to others adding some such earnest Asseveration as Verily truly or in truth c. Provided that it be not commonly or ordinarily but in serious matters and of much weight and moment which we deny or affirm Otherwise in common matters Yea and Nay must suffice Mat. 5. 37. See before Chap. 3. ver 28. There shall be no Sign given c. Quest 1 Quest How is it said no Sign should be given them seeing Mat. 16. it is said No Sign but that of the Prophet Jonas that is to say The great Miracle of Christ's Resurrection from the dead upon the third day figured in the rising of Jonas out of the Whale's Belly Answ Answ The meaning here is this Not that no Sign at all should be given but 1. That no such Sign or Miracle as they would have 2. No Miracle at all should be wrought at their motion and sute or to gratify them or to do them good because they were not fit to receive good by any c. As for that Miracle of Christ's Resurrection figured in Jonas it was not given at their sute or for their sakes or to do them any good but to convince them of Christ's God-head and so to condemn them and leave them without excuse for not believing in him Quest 2 Quest 2. Why is it said No Sign should be given but that of Jonas seeing our Saviour did after this Conference with the Pharisees work many other Miracles Answ Answ They were not wrought at their motion or sute nor yet for their good who being wilful Contemners were not likely to profit by them neither did they but they were wrought by our Saviour of his own accord and Will by vertue of his Calling and for the good of them who were fit to make use of them Quest 3 Quest 3. Why would not our Saviour work such a new Miracle as they would have at their Request seeing he might by that means have shewed his Power for the convincing of those Pharisees and for confirmation of his Disciples Faith Answ Answ 1. Because it was needless at this time for him to work any such Miracle seeing he had before wrought so many and some of them but newly which were sufficient both to convince the Pharisees and to confirm his own Disciples 2. Because they sought such a Miracle for an evill end viz. to tempt Him c. as we have heard before Therefore he would not grant their sute lest he should by yielding to them seem to favour them and so harden and confirm them in their Hypocrisy and Unbelief 3. Because He saw they were wilful Contemners of his Doctrine and Miracles and therefore not likely to profit by such a Miracle but rather to abuse it to the dishonour of God by cavilling or taking exception at it c. Observ Observ That the Ordinances of God and means of Grace and Salvation ought not wittingly and willingly to be given or tendred to such as are not likely to profit by them but rather to profane and abuse them to the dishonour of God and their own greater damnation For example not to obstinate and open Contemners nor to profane scoffers at holy things c. To such as these we ought not willingly and wittingly to offer or tender the holy Ordinances of God as the Word Sacraments or other holy Rights and Priviledges of the Church and means of Salvation Matth. 7. 6. Give not that which is holy unto Dogs neither cast your Pearls before Swine c. Our Saviour would not give a Miracle which was ordained for confirmation of the Faith of God's Elect to these obstinate Pharisees c. No more should the Word or Sacraments be given or offered to such as openly and wilfully contemn them or scoff at them so long as they remain such Reasons Reasons 1. These Ordinances are the peculiar Rights of the Church therefore not to be made common to such open and wilful Contemners who either are or ought to be shut out of the Church by Excommunication They are the Childrens Bread therefore not to be given to Doggs c. See before on the 27th Verse of the 7th Chapter 2. It is a high dishonour to God and disgrace to his holy Ordinances to be tendered to such as are more likely to abuse them by further contempt than to profit by them Use Vse Admonition to all Christians to take heed of giving holy things to such profane Dogs and wilfull Contemners This chiefly concerneth Ministers of the Word to whom is committed the dispensation of the Word and Sacraments Yet in some sort also it concerns other Christians to beware of profaning holy things by offering them rashly to such open wilful Contemners as holy Instructions holy Exhortations Admonitions out of the Word c. Ver. 13. And He left them c. Here is shewed what followed upon our Saviour's Answer to the Pharisees He perceiving their Obstinacy that they wilfully blinded and hardned themselves in Unbelief doth leave them to their own hardness of Heart not using any further means of Admonition or Instruction or the like to do them good He departed to the other side that is To thher side of the Se a of Galilee opposite to the parts of Dalmanutha where he was before Observ Observ The just Judgment of God upon obstinate wicked men which do willingly and wilfully go on in sin hardning themselves therein against the light of their own Conscience The Lord doth usually give over such and leave them to their own hardness of heart and to finall Impenitency Isa 6. 9 10. Go and tell this People Hear ye indeed but understand not See ye indeed but perceive not Make the Heart of this
is there in many now adayes Some being so far from shewing speciall and singular love to their own Pastor that they scarce shew him ordinary or common love will scarce do him an ordinary kindness without grudging they carry themselves as strangers to him scarce vouchsafing to speak to him c. others shew love for a time but not constantly so long as they may gain by their Ministery no longer Others instead of love bear hatred and grudge against their Minister because he admonisheth them of their sins So for the other duty of reverence and due respect to God's Ministers how many also fail in this Do not many contemn and set leight by their Ministers even by such as labour amongst them in the Word and Doctrine whom they ought to esteem highly of and to accompt them worthy of all honour c. yet they stick not to think and speak sleightly of them as of ordinary persons yea to despise and reproach them to their faces quite forgetting that of our Saviour Christ Luke 10. 15. He that despiseth you despiseth me c. Let such as are guilty of this sin take notice of it and be truly humbled and repent of it lest otherwise the contempt of the Minister's person do at length and by degree bring them to a contempt and lothing of his Doctrine and Ministery and then little hope will there be of their profiting by the same Observ 2 Observ 2. See here also in Christ's example the duty of all Pastors and Ministers of the Church viz. to endeavour so to carry themselves both in their Doctrine and Ministery as also in their Life and Conversation that they may procure truel love and reverence from their People Thus did our Saviour while he lived on Earth so carry himself both in his publike Ministery and in his whole Life and Conversation that he was both loved and reverenced of the People as here we see So likewise ought all God's Ministers And to this end they must not onely be diligent and faithfull in their Ministery but withall labour to go before their People by the holy example of their own Life and Practice This is the best and onely way to procure both love and reverence from their People and to maintain the authority and credit both of their Persons and of their Ministery which every Minister of God ought most carefully to do 1 Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be thou an example of the Believers in Word in Conversation in Charity in Spirit in Faith in Purity Thus did John Baptist maintain the credit of his Ministery and procure both love and reverence even from Herod himself Mark 6. 20. Herod feared John knowing that he was a just man and an holy c. and heard him gladly It followeth Ver. 16. And he asked the Scribes c. The second speciall or principall occasion of the Miracle following is Our Saviour's questioning with the Scribes about the matter or cause of the disputation between them and his Disciples For he finding the Scribes disputing or reasoning with his Disciples turned himself to them expostulating thus with them What question ye with them That is what is the matter that ye are disputing or debating with my Disciples Some read the words thus What question ye among your selves And if we so read them they are to be understood a spoken both to the Scribes and to the Disciples though chiefly to the Scribes But the former reading seemeth best and fittest and therefore I follow that Now our Saviour did not ask this Question of the Scribes as if he were ignorant of the matter for he knew well enough before he asked what it was which they were debating with his Disciples but for other cause and ends As 1. That he might hereby shew that he took upon him the defence of his Disciples and of their just cause and of the Truth and Gospel it self against the cavils of the Scribes 2. That he might by this Question convince and reprove the Scribes and put them to silence 3. That he might give occasion to the Father of the possessed Child to make suit to him for his Child as he doth verse following and so make way unto the working of the Miracle Observ 1 Observ 1. That we ought to be ready on all good occasions to speak in defence of the truth of God and of his faithfull Servants which profess and maintain the Truth against the Enemies thereof Thus our Saviour Christ at this time was ready and forward to speak in defence of his Disciples and of the Truth it self which the Scribes laboured to oppose and disgrace So at other times when the Scribes and Pharisees cavilled and took exceptions wongfully against his Disciples labouring to disgrace both them and the Gospel it self which they professed our Saviour took upon him their defence and was forward to speak in their just cause So before we heard Chap. 2. 25. when they cavilled at them for plucking ears of Corn on the Sabbath to quench their present hunger Christ spake in their defence c. So in the same Chapter ver 19 c. when they took exceptions at his Disciples for not fasting as John's Disciples did he answers for them In like manner ought we to be ready on all occasions to speak in defence of the Truth and of such as professe the same when we see them and the Truth it self to be opposed by the adversa●ies thereof as by false Teachers Hereticks Papists Anabaptists c. Thus did the blessed Martyrs By this we shew zeal for God's Glory Especially this Duty is required of such as are in publike Place and Authority in the Church as of Magistrates and Ministers of the Church These above all other should be forward to speak in defence of the Truth and of the true faithfull Servants of God which professe it when they see them to be opposed by the wicked Enemies of the Truth 2 Cor. 13. 8. Paul saies We can do nothing against the Truth but for the Truth which shews what is the duty of all Pastors and Ministers of the Church viz. To stand for maintenance of the Truth and therefore to be ready and forward to speak in defence of it when occasion is offered This was co●●endable in Gamaliel though a Pharisee and as yet no true friend to the Gospel when the Apostles and their Doctrine was opposed and persecuted by the High-Priest and Council of the Jew insomuch that they conspired together to put the Apostles to Death for preaching then did Gamaliel stand up and speak in defence of the Apostles although he did not so thoroughly defend their cause as he should have done Acts 5. 34. Use Use For reproof of such as are slack and backward to speak in defence of God's Truth and of his faithfull Servants professing the same when they see them opposed or like to be disgraced by wicked men and in ste●d hereof do by their silence
with the loss or want of many excellent favours priviledges and comforts in this life which otherwise thou mightest enjoy Contrariwise pray and labour daily for more encrease and strength of Faith whereby to believe in God and in his Word and Promises that so thou honouring God by Faith and stedfast belief of his Word he may honour thee by bestowing on thee and continuing to thee all those excellent benefits and priviledges which belong unto his true Saints and Servants both in this life and in the life to come Mark 9. 19. He answereth him and saith O faithless Generation c. Mar. 11. 1626. IN the two former Verses we heard of the sute or supplication made unto our Saviour Christ by the Father of the possessed Child in behalf of his Son Now in this 19th Verse the Evangelist setteth down the Answer of our Saviour unto that his sute which consisteth of two parts 1. A sharp Reproof of the Incredulity or Unbelief of the Nation or People of the Jews O faithlesse Generation c. 2. A Precept or Command given to the Father of the possessed Child and to others which stood by to bring the Child unto him Of the first He 1. Propounds his Reproof briefly calling them a faithless Generation yea crying ou● against them for Unbelief O faithless c. 2. He further urgeth his Reproof by a vehement or earnest expostulating with them in these words How long shall I be with you c. Of the first He answereth him that is The Father of the possessed Child or young man Now this Answer is so directed to him that in it our Saviour takes occasion also to reprove others for their Incredulity even the whole Nation of the Jews as the words following shew O faithless Generation By these words our Saviour Christ understandeth the Nation and People of the Jews in his time who were a faithless or incredulous People for the most part not believing in Christ or his Doctrine but rejecting the same but especially he aimeth at the Scribes and Pharisees who were most of all tainted with the sin of Unbelief and did obstinately persist in the same which also they had now newly testified and shewed by their malicious opposing of Christ's Disciples and going about to dilgrace both them and their Doctrine because they failed in working this Miracle upon the party possessed And he calls them a Generation of faithless People to shew that they followed their Ancestors in this sin of Unbelief Now in this Reproof as our Saviour doth most directly tax the Nation of the Jews in general and especially the obstinate and malicious Scribes and Pharisees for their gross Unbelief so withal he seemeth indirectly and covertly to blame and find fault with the Father of the possessed Child yea and with his own Di●ciples likewise for that weakness of Faith which he perceived and knew to be in them at this time Quest Quest Why doth our Saviour at this time so sharply reprove the Nation of the Jews especially for the Scribes and Pharisee● and in some sort also the Father of the Child and his Disciples for this particular sin of Unbelief above other sins seeing they were tainted with many other Sins as well as this Answ Answ 1. Because this was a main and principall sin which they were now guilty of and one chief cause and root as it were from whence other sins with which they were tainted did spring and flow 2. Because this Sin of Unbelief was the main impediment which had hitherto hindred the working of the Miracle by the Disciples Quest Quest How did Unbelief hinder the Miracles Answ Answ Sundry wayes 1. In respect of the Scribes and Pharisees and other unbelieving Jew s who being void of all true Faith yea Enemies of Christ c. were unworthy to behold the Miracle and unfit to profit by it 2. In respect of the father of the child who by reason of weak Faith was not as yet capable of this great benefit which he sought for his Son and therefore the Lord did with-hold it from him a while longer 3. In respect of the Disciples themselves as we have heard in the former verse who by weakness of Faith disabled themselves c. How long shall I be with you c A further urging of his Reproof where he amplifieth their sin of Unbelief c. The words being explained consider in them these Particulars in order 1. The person reproving our Saviour Christ 2. The manner of reproving being sharp and vehement by way of Rhetoricall exclamation O faithless c. 3. The persons reproved viz. 1. The Nation of the Jews and especially the Scribes and Pharisees Called a Generation of faithless People 2. The father of the possessed child and the Disciples also who are in some sort here taxed and blamed for weakness of Faith 3. The special Sin for which they are reproved Unbelief 4. The amplification of their Sin 1. By the means which he had so long used to reform it in them in that he had so long conversed with them and exercised his Ministery c. 2. By his patience towards them c. Observ Of the first Observ In that our Saviour Christ perceiving the obstinate incredulity of the Jews in his time and especially of the Scribes and Pharisees doth not wink at it or let them alone in this sin without Ad●onition or Reproof but having fit occasion and being thereunto called by vertue of his ministeriall Office he doth plainly reprove them for the same calling them a faithless Generation Hence gather That it is one speciall part of the duty of all Pastors and Ministers of the Church to reprove sin in others that is to say in those of their charge and that upon all good occasions offered both publikely and privately c. See before chap. 8. 33. Of the second The manner of our Saviour's reproving of the incredulous Jews c. in sharp and ve●ement manner crying out against them for their unbelief O faithless c. yea further he calls them a perverse Generation Matth. 17. 17. Observ Observ That it is sometimes fit and necessary for Ministers of the Word to use sharpness and severity in reproving the sins of those under their charge Though they are not alwayes to do this but rather on the contrary to use mildness in reproving sin so far forth as that is most likely to prevail as it is usually and for most part with such as are tractable yet sometimes yea oftentimes it is both necessary and fit for them to deal more sha●ply and severely Tit. 1. 13. Rebuke them sharply c. 1 Cor. 4. 21. Shall I come unto you with a Rod or in love c. By the Rod he meaneth sharp and severe reproof which he intimateth to be ●on ●●imes necessary for him to use And so is it for all other Ministers of God Quest Quest When is this sharpness to be used by Ministers in reproving sin Answ
when she would have Christ to cast the Devil out of her Daughter prayeth him to have mercy upon her self And ver 25. She came and Worshipped saying Lord help me So David 2 Sam. 12. 22. Who can tell whether God will be gracious to me that the child may live Children are not onely near and dear to their Parents but a part of them as it were in that they do receive their natural life and beeing from them and therefore when any Parent doth see God's hand upon his child by any affliction as sickness pain c. he should acknowledge that God doth correct him in his child and accordingly should be affected with his child's affliction as his own the rather because the Lord may and doth oftentimes visit the sins of the Parents upon their Children as he threatneth in the second Commandment which moved the Widow of Zarephath 1 King 17. 18. presently to apprehend and acknowledge her own sins when God did smite her child with Death Mark 9. 23. Jesus said unto him If thou canst believe c. May 6. 1627. THE third part of the Conference between our Saviour Christ and the father of the Lunatick child viz. Our Saviour's Reply unto that Answer which the father of the child made unto his Question touching the time How long his child had been in that case as we heard in the two former verses The Answer of the father was That his son had been so from a child or from his infancy And withall in hi● Answer he took occasion as we have heard both to lay open further unto Christ the misery of his child ●●d also to renew his earnest suit and prayer for the dispossessing and healing of him Now to that prayer or petition our Saviour here replyeth yielding and promising that his petition might and should be granted conditionally that he could believe and for confirmation hereof he takes occasion further to set out the Power and Vertue of Faith affirming that all things are possible unto him that believeth In the words two things are contained 1. The condition which our Saviour requireth of this man for the obtaining of his request and prayer for his son viz. That he should believe If thou canst believe 2. A further declaration of the Power and Efficacy of true Faith in that he saith All things are possible c. Of the first If thou canst believe That is by true Faith rest perswaded of my Power and willingnesse or readinesse to help thy son by working this Miracle upon him Here note That our Saviour doth not speak properly of justifying Faith or of Faith as it doth justify that is to say as it doth apprehend the main promise of the Gospel touching forgiveness of Sins and Salvation by Christ but of that Faith which is by Divines called the Faith of Miracles which is no●hing else but a belief of the Divine Power of God or of Christ for the effecting of some miraculous work And yet our Saviour doth not here exclude justifying Faith but include it rather especially in the words following forasmuch as it is one and the same Faith in general by which true Believers do apply the promise of remission of Sins and Salvation and by which they do believe the Power of God for the effecting of some miraculous work onely it is distinguished in regard of the object for the general object of Faith is the whole word of God and every Divine Truth revealed And there is no doubt but the father of this child did in some measure believe both though but weakly as yet Fides ●ustificans fides Miraculorum est eadem genere non specie Paraeus de Justif lib. 1. cap. 5. pag. 87. Quest Quest Why doth our Saviour speak thus conditionally or doubtfully If thou canst believe c. seeing he was not ignorant that he did already in some measure believe Answ Answ 1. To put him in mind of the weakness of his Faith and to stirr him up to labour and strive for more strength of Faith as we see he did presently hereupon ver 24. 2. Because in his prayer or petition he spake doubtfully of Christ's Power If thou canst do any thing c. thereby seeming to impure the matter unto some weakness in Christ if his child were not healed therefore our Saviour answers him with this conditional Speech touching his own Faith saying If thou canst believe thereby implying That the onely cause that could hinder the working of this Miracle upon the child was the weakness of his own Faith and not any unability or weakness in Christ himself Note further That when our Saviour saith If thou canst believe Here seemeth to be an Eclipsis or defect of something which is to be supplyed to make the sentence full q. d. If thou canst believe that which thou desirest shall be done for thee See Piscator in locum All things are possible c. The more to stirr up and strengthen the Faith of this father of the child our Saviour takes occasion to set out unto him the excellency and power of Faith Now these words are not so to be understood as if Faith did inable the Believer to do all things of himself or by his own power but that it is a means by which the Believer is inabled to procure or obtain all things to be done for him by the Power of God See Piscator and Marlorat in locum Neither is it to be understood of all things simply and absolutely but of all such things as are agreeable to God's revealed Will and do make for his Glory and for the good of the Believer All such things are possible to the Believer that is the Believer is able by Faith to procure or obtain them to be done for him by the Power of God Observ 1 Observ 1. When we want any blessing or benefit which we desire and are hindred and kept from enjoying it longer than we desired the fault is not in the Lord but in our selves either because we want Faith to believe God's Power and Goodness towards us or because we do not so earnestly pray and seek to him for such Blessings as we should or by reason of some other sin which remains unreformed in us and so doth hinder and keep us from enjoying such or such Blessings which we desire The father of this lunatick-Lunatick-child seemeth in the former verse to lay the fault upon Christ himself imputing the matter to some weakness in him if his child should not be healed but our Saviour here plainly tells him that the fault was in himself even the weakness of his own Faith which therefore he useth means to stirr up and strengthen This shews where the fault is when we do at any time want any Blessing which we desire for our selves or those which belong to us as our Children Friends c. It i● not in God but in our selves Mark 6. 5 6. Our Saviour could do but few great work● at Nazareth
is good for him and stands with the Will of God yea it is a powerfull means for the obtaining not onely of ordinary favours but also of extraordinary and miraculous Benefits and Priviledges at the hands of God and that both Spirituall and Temporall Touching Spirituall it is a means to obtain pardon of sin and God's favour justification and eternall Life at the hands of God For all these are in Scripture promised to such as believe as we have heard before Touching temporall Favours and Priviledges of this Life there is none so great or hard to be obtained but Faith is able to procure for the Believers good Hebr. 11. The Apostle reckoneth up sundry great and excellent Benefits which Believers obtained at the hands of God by means of Faith as that by it the Israelites obtained safe passage through the Red-Sea as on dry Land ver 19. So ver 33. By Faith they subdued Kingdoms obtained the Promises of God stopped mouths of Lyon quenched violence of Fire c. And ver 35. Women received their Dead raised to Life again c. By Faith the Apostles of Christ obtained the extraordinary Power and Gift of Miracles in those times as of healing the Sick raising the Dead casting out Devils c. And by the same Faith they should have been inabled to work other Miracles besides those they did work if it had made for God's Glory Matth. 17. 20. Verily I say unto you If ye have Faith as a grain of Mustard-seed ye shall say unto this Mountain remove hence c. and it shall remove and nothing shall be impossible unto you So Luke 17. 6. Reas 1 Reas 1. By Faith a Believer doth honour God believing his Word Power c. Therefore God doth honour him 1 Sam. 2. 30. Reas 2 Reas 2. It helpeth and inableth us to pray unto God earnestly and effectually in all our Necessities and so to obtain all things of God which tend to his Glory and our Good Jam. 5. 16. The effectuall fervent prayer of a righteous man prevaileth much that is the prayer of Faith as he calls it before ver 15. Oratio fidei omnipotens Luther Vse 1 Vse 1. See the excellency of this Grace of true Faith worthily called precious Faith 2 Pet. 1. 1. in that it is so powerfull and effectuall to prevail with God for the obtaining not onely of some but of all Blessings and Benefits needfull and profitable for us By Faith Jacob wrestled and prevailed with God and obtained a blessing Gen. 32. 28 29. And by this as by a powerfull instrument or means we prevail with God for the obtaining of all blessings Spirituall and Temporall especially Spirituall This makes all things possible to be obtained for us at the hands of God yea by it we do actually come to receive from God whatsoever is good for us The hand of our Souls by which we lay hold upon all the blessings of God and reach them to our selves though they be never so hard to be obtained though they be never so far removed from us c. A strange and wonderfull Instrument or Engine it is by which we are inabled to reach up to Heaven and to pull down from thence all things which we stand in need of all blessings and good things all deliverances from evil c. Use 2 Use 2. For the comfort of all true Believers who are indued with any measure of this excellent and powerfull Gift of Faith which is able to work so great matters and to prevail so much with God Great is the Priviledge and Happiness of such as are partakers of this Grace for having Faith they either have or may have all things in Heaven and Earth that are good and necessary for them All Spirituall blessings as pardon of Sins God's favour c. All Temporall blessings of this Life as Health Wealth and outward Prosperity so far as is good and fit for them and so far as stands with the Will of God 1 Cor. 3. 22. All things are yours and ye are Christ's c. Hieronym Fideli homini totus mundus divitiarum est Object Object But do we not see that the Faithfull do want many good things in this Life especially Temporall things c. Answ Answ 1. They want nothing that is good and profitable for them to further their Happinesse and Salvation Psal 34. 10. They that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing 2. If they do want any Blessing it is their own fault because they do not stirr up and exercise their Faith in depending upon God and praying to him so often and earnestly as they should Vse 3 Use 3. See what cause for us to labour for this excellent Grace of Faith as we were before exhorted c. Mark 9. 24. And straightway the Father of the Child cryed out and said c. May 13. 1627. IN this verse and the three next going before as ye have heard is laid down to us a Conference holden between our Saviour Christ and the Father of the Lunatick Child which Conference consisteth of four parts 1. A Question moved by our Saviour to the Father of the Child How long his Son had been in that case 2. The Answer of the Father in which he doth not onely certify our Saviour how long his Son had been so even from his Childhood or Infancy but withall takes occasion further to lay open the misery of his Child and to renew his earnest sute and supplication unto Christ for his Son 3. Our Saviour's Reply which he made to that Answer and particularly to the Petition or Sute made to Him by the Father of the Child In which Reply he doth seem to yield and grant his Request conditionally that he could believe that is by Faith rest perswaded of his divine Power and Mercy and depend on it for the working of this Miracle on his Child 4. The Answer of the Father of the Child unto that Reply of Christ Touching the three first parts of this Conference I have spoken already Now followeth the fourth and last which is set down in this 24th Verse now read viz. The Answer made by the Father of the Child unto Christ's Reply in the former Verse requiring Faith of him to believe his Power and Mercy if he would have this Miracle wrought for his Child To this he now answereth in these words which do contain in them nothing else but an earnest Prayer or Supplication made by the Father of the Child unto our Saviour Christ in which as he doth make open Profession of his Faith so withall he prayeth for further encrease of it In the words consider three things 1. The time when he made this Prayer to Christ Straightway that is immediately upon those words of our Saviour used to him in the former Verse in which he assured him that If he could believe all things were possible c. 2. The manner of his praying or making Supplication to Christ which consisteth
humiliation for sin tears do usually follow more or less Mark 9. 24. And straightway the Father of the Child cryed out and said c. May 20. 1627. THese words as ye have heard contain an earnest prayer or supplication of the father of the Lunatick child which he offered up to our Saviour Christ for himself In which prayer three things were propounded to consider 1. The time when or how soon he made this prayer straightway after our Saviour had in the former verse promised to grant his petition for his son upon condition of his Faith 2. The manner of his praying 1. With earnestness Crying out 2. With much humiliation Expressed by tears 3. The matter of his prayer containing two things 1. A profession of his Faith Lord I believe 2. A petition for help against his Unbelief Of the two first Points I have spoken viz. The circumstance of time and manner of his praying Now followeth the matter And first the profession of his Faith Lord I believe Our Saviour requiring in the former verse that he should believe that is by true Faith rest upon his Power and Goodness for the working of this Miracle in casting the Devil out of his son here-upon feeling some Faith in his own heart though but weak as yet he now takes occasion to profess this his Faith unto Christ And this confession no doubt he maketh out of a true feeling of the Work of Faith begun in his heart Observ 1 Observ 1. Wheresoever true Faith is in any measure wrought there it is sensibly felt and perceived by those in whom it is so as by experience they do know and are able truly to professe that they do believe yea though his Faith be but newly begun in them and as yet very weak yet upon tryall and examination of their own hearts they do find and feel it in themselves and are able truly to professe it So here the father of the Lunatick child though Faith was but newly conceived in his heart and as yet very weak yet being occasioned by the former words of Christ to examine his heart he doth there find and feel it in some measure and is able truly to profess it to be in him 2 Cor. 4. 13. The Apostle saith We believe and therefore speak which shews That himself and other true Believers do know know and feel their own Faith and are able out of true knowledge and experience to profess it to others 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed c. If he knew whom he had believed then he must needs know his own Faith by which he did believe Now this Point must be understood with some exception or limitation For although true Faith is felt and known of those in whom it is yet not at all times for sometimes it may and doth lye hid and is not perceived by those in whom it is As 1. At or about the time of a Christians first Calling or Conversion when Faith is in the seed or first conception as it were In this case sometimes it is so weak and in so small a degree That it is hardly or not at all perceived by the Believer As the faculty of reason in an Infant c. 2. In time of some great inward tryall and temptation when Faith is much assailed with contrary doubtings and unbelief which do sometimes so prevail against it for a time that it is not for the present felt or perceived by those in whom it is as in Job David c. 3. At such time as a Christian hath been or is negligent in searching and examining his own heart to find out his Faith and come to the feeling and discerning of it In this case it often lyeth hid and is not sensibly perceived for the present But at all other times ordinarily he that hath true Faith in his heart in any measure doth know and feel that he hath it and can truly affirm and profess the same Use 1 Use 1. To confute the Papist's teaching that a Christian in this Life cannot by an ordinary Faith without special Revelation know or be assured that he is in the state of saving-Grace But if it be so that every true Believer either doth or may know and feel without extraordinary Revelation his own Faith then may he know and be assured That he is in the state of Grace and Salvation Use 2 Use 2. This should teach us not to rest in a bare opinion or profession of Faith as many do but 2 Cor. 13. 5. to examine our hearts what experimental knowledg and feeling we have of that Faith which we profess or think to be in us If none at all then is there no Faith in thee for where true Faith is it is alwayes felt and sensibly perceived by the person that hath it more or less and at one time or other as all saving-Grace So Faith is of the nature of fire or light which cannot be altogether hid or smoothered so as it be not perceived A Christian cannot have Faith in his heart and not feel it more or less one time or other at least when he doth enter into a thorough search and tryall of his heart to find out and discover it See then that thou so do not thinking it enough to have Faith but labour to feel it in thy self and the work of it for it is a working Grace 1 Thess 1. 3. without this no comfort in having it Observ 2 Observ 2. True Faith ought not to lye hid or buried in the heart but to shew it self by outward profession with the mouth as occasion is offered See before chap. 8. ver 29. Vse Use See by this the truth and soundness of our Faith Look whether we be ready and forward on all good occasions to profess and testify our Faith outwardly to the Glory of God and Edification of others by our example If no care or conscience to do this at due times and when thou art called and mayst do good thereby then is there no Faith in thee Now followeth his petition for increase of his Faith Help thou my Unbelief That is Do thou by thy Divine Power confirm and strengthen my weak Faith For so by Unbelief he doth understand not a totall want of Faith for then he should contradict and confute himself by denying what he had before professed touching his Faith but a weak feeble and imperfect Faith which he yet felt in himself not such Unbelief as did prevail against Faith but such as was resisted and opposed by Faith Observ 1 Observ 1. True Faith may stand with some degree of the contrary sin of Unbelief yea it is allwayes joyned with it as it was with this party so with all other Believers Faith and Unbelief are mixed together in them Even in the Apostles themselves as appeareth by our Saviour's reproving them for their weakness of Faith Matth. 8. 26. O ye of little Faith Yea in Peter himself Matth. 14. 31. And
as that which is done to him is accounted as done to Christ himself Therefore we are to do service to our neighbour by love Vse 1 Use 1. To reprove such as disdain or think much to do any mean or base office of love to their brethren especially to those of the meaner sort As to visit them in sicknesse or other distresse to relieve and help them in their miseries and necessities c. Many think it a disparagement to them to stoop so low as to perform these and such like offices of love and mercy to others But this shews want of true humility and charity which if it were in them at least in that degree as it should be it would cause them to think no duty of love too mean or base for them to perform for the good of their brethren Others again are all for themselves so given to serve themselves and their own turn to seek their own profit c. that they regard not to serve others by love The common sin of these times Vse 2 Use 2. It must teach and move us willingly to humble and abase our selves so far towards others as to make our selves their very servants in humility and love being ready and forward at all times to do the meanest office and duty of love and mercy for the good of our brethren especially if it be to further the spiritual good and salvation of their souls To this end consider that God hath created us and sent us into this world to this end that we should not live to our selves or serve our selves and seek our own good onely but that we should serve God in serving our brother and neighbour See therefore that we make conscience so to do Shall Christ Jesus the Son of God so far abase himself as to become a servant to us for our good and salvation and shall not we much more become one anothers servants in humility and love Mark 9. 36 37. And he took a Child c. Aug. 12. 1627. IN the former Verse we heard how our Saviour did by way of Precept or Admonition teach his Disciples the practice of true Humility shewing what was to be done of them if they desired to attain to true honour and preferment above others viz. That they must abase and humble themselves one below another by the practice of Humility c. Now in these two next Verses he confirmeth the same Doctrine by a reall Type or example of humility which he took occasion to set before their eyes viz. the example of a young Child which he took and set in the midst of them that by beholding him they might be the more moved and perswaded to labour and strive to the true practice of humility one towards another Quest Quest Why did he propound and set before them this example or pattern of Humility in the young Child Answ Answ Because he knew that it was the nature of man to be much more moved and affected with visible and ●ensible example● set before them than with bare words or Precepts onely when they are to be taught any point of Christian Doctrine or practice and therefore this Doctrine of Hu●ility being a Doctrine so needfull for them as we have heard before and yet so hard to practice he doth teach it and urge it to them not onely by Precept but also by this visible example of a young Child set before them Observ Observ Hence gather the excellent use of the Sacraments of the Church for the better confirming of our Faith in Christ in that those sensible signs and Seals of Gods Covenant being added to the Word are more apt to affect us then the bare Word and Doctrine of Christ alone For by the Sacraments the Doctrine of the Word is made sensible not onely to our ears but even to our eyes hands taste c. and so is the more apt to affect us and to confirm Faith in us Therefore here take notice of the goodness of God towards us who knowing how apt we are to be led by outward sense and how hard we are to believe his Promises unless we do after a sort outwardly see and taste and handle them as it were therefore he hath herein condescended to our weakness in giving us not onely his Word but also his Sacraments as outward sensible signs and seals of the truth of his Word the more to help our Faith Let us be truely thankfull for this mercy and shew it by our reverent estimation of the Sacrament● and by our Religious and Conscionable use of them as occasion is offered Now more particularly in the words consider two things 1. Our Saviour's propounding or setting before h●● Disciples this lively pattern of humility in the young Child which he took in his arms c. 2. His application of that example or making use of it to his present purpose for Instruction of his Disciples In that he takes occasion thereby further to commend and urge unto them the practice of true humility ver 37. Of the first In propounding this example to them he used a twofold action or gesture 1. He took the child in his arms 2. He set it in the midst of them He took a Child It is most likely it was some Child that was in the house where our Saviour and his Disciples now were in Capernaum Now he took the Child into his arms as appeareth in the words following which seem to be spoken by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Evangelist mentioning that last which was done first for he did first take the Child in his arms and then set him in the midst of them Now in that it is said he took him in his arms this shews it was but a small and young Child and so he is Called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little Child Matth. 18. 2. yet not so little or young but that as it seemeth he was able to stand and to go alone for in the s●me place of Matthew it is said that our Saviour called the Child unto him and set him in the midst of them Observ 1 Observ 1. Christ's special love and Affection to Mankind which was so great that he testified and shewed it even to young Children as here and at other times by admitting them into his presence and company setting them beside him Luk● 9. 47. taking them up into his arms and putting his hands upon them and blessing them as cap. 10. 16. And ver 14. he was much displeased with his Disciples for going about to ●inder the young Children from being brought unto him All this shews his great love and affection which he did bea● even unto little Children much more unto man-kind in general but especially unto his true Church This love to mankind and especially to his Church Christ Jesus shewed by manifold effects of it while he lived on Earth but especially by laying down his life for us Joh. 15. 13. So 1 Joh. 3. 16. Hereby perceive
of Heaven Use 2 Use 2. To stir us up every one to labour and use all means to attain to this excellent Grace of true Humility that by it we may become like unto Children yea to little Children resembling them in the practice of Humility and in all the properties thereof in thinking meanly of our selves and well of others in being contented with our present estate and degree and not ambitiously seeking after higher place or dignity than doth belong to us c. Consider the great necessity of this Grace of Humility and that we should by it resemble little Children Unlesse it be thus with us we are unfit for the Kingdom of Heaven and can never be partakers of it Matth. 18. 3. ut supra Contrà as is there shewed the onely way to be great in that heavenly Kingdom is first to become truly humble in our selves as little children c. Helps to attain to this humility 1. Pray unto God c. 2. Labour for a sight of our sins and infirmities c. 3. Look at Christ's example Matth. 11. 19. 4. Excellent Promises made to such Esay 57. 15. 1 Pet. 5. 5. Observ 4 Observ 4. In that our Saviour sets a little child before his Disciples to teach them humility we may learn this That we ought not to disdain or refuse to learn the practice of Religion and grace of the meanest Teachers no not of young Children but we must be content to be set to School to them as it were to learn some Christian graces and vertues as here the grace of humility and in other places of Scripture we are called to learn of them the practice of innocency and freedom from malice 1 Cor. 14. 20. of love and desire to the milk of the Word c. 1 Pet. 2. 2. yea in Scripture we are set to School to the brute beasts as to the Ox and Ass Esay 1. 3. to the Fowls of the ayr to the Lilies of the field Matth. 6. to learn faith in God's providence and to moderate our cares for things of this life So to the Pismire Prov. 6. 6. to learn diligence in our Calling and provident care for time to come Vse Vse See then that we refuse not to learn the wayes of God and the practice of Christian Duties even of the meanest Teachers which God hath appointed to instruct us no not of our young Children nor of brute beasts Fowls of the ayr grasse of the field c. all which in their kind may serve to instruct us in the knowledg of God's Will and obedience to it Observ 5 Observ 5. In that our Saviour took this little Child and imbraced it in his arms and did also set it beside him as St. Luke saith Luke 9. 47. shewing thereby his special affection unto it and especially to such as do resemble such children in the grace of humility hence we learn further That Christ Jesus doth bear a special and singular affection of love unto such persons as are truly humble and do herein resemble little Children As the grace of humility is most acceptable and pleasing unto him so all that are indued with it John was the beloved Disciple of Christ above all the rest And it seems probable that one special grace for which he was so beloved was his humility and that he excelled in this grace may appear by his modest and humble manner of writing of himself Joh. 21. 24. Luke 7. 14. see what love and respect Christ shewed to that humble woman who washed his feet with her tears c. preferring her before Simon the proud Pharisee c. See also Luke 18. Reason Reason Humble persons do in special manner resemble Christ himself Matth. 11. 29. Learn of me for I am lowly Therefore he cannot but affect them with singular love Similitudo morum conciliat amicitiam as Philosophers teach So here between Christ and humble Christians Vse 1 Use 1. To comfort humble Christians which feel this excellent grace wrought in themselves in any measure Though the world hate despise and trample them under foot as oftentimes it comes to passe yet this is enough to comfort them that they are beloved of Christ himself in special manner and in high favour and account with him Set this against all contempt of the world See Esay 66. 2. To him will I look c. Esay 57. 15. He dwells with an humble spirit c. Vse 2 Use 2. If we desire to be interessed in the special love and favour of Christ Jesus the Son of God our blessed Saviour then labour for this excellent and pretious grace of true humility by which we may become like unto such little children as he so lovingly imbraced in hi● arms yea by which we may resemble and shew forth the image of Christ himself Then the more like we are unto him the more he must needs love and affect us and the more he will shew his singular love to us by all fruits of it as by communicating himself to us by revealing the secrets of his Will to us c. Psal 25. 9. The meek or humble will he teach his way Use 3 Use 3. Hence gather on the contrary That proud and haughty persons are hateful and abominable unto Christ Jesus Prov. 16. 5. Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord. This hatred and detestation of proud persons our Saviour shewed by opposing himself so much as he did both in his doctrine and practise against the proud and self-conceited Pharisees Luke 18. 9. He spake a Parable to certain which trusted in themselves that they were righteous and despised others c. So at others times he sharply reproves them for their pride and hypocrisie shewing his detestation of it Use 4 Use 4. Seeing Christ our Saviour doth bear such affection to humble persons this should also move us to have such in singular love and estimation in and for Christ's sake c. But of this more in the Verse following Mark 9. 36 37. And he took a Child c. Aug. 19. 1627. IN these two Verses the Evangelist shews how our Saviour took occasion to teach his Disciples the practise of humility by a reall type or example of a young Child which he called to him took in his arms and set before them Where 1. is set down our Saviour's propounding of this example In taking the young child c. 2. His applying of it to his purpose in that he takes occasion thereby to commend and urge the practise of humility un●o his Disciples Of the former I have spoken Now followeth the latter viz. The application of the example of the young Child In that our Saviour takes occasion from thence to perswade and stirr up his Disciples to the practise of humility This he doth by shewing how dear and pretious in his account such Christians are who do resemble little Children in humility which he sheweth by this That whatsoever love and respect
is shewed u●to such he taketh it as shewed unto himself Whosoever shall receive one of such children in my Name receiveth me And this is further amplified by a comparison from the lesse to the greater In that the love and respect which is shewed to humble persons is not only shewed to Christ but also to God the Father who sent him Whosoever shall receive me receiveth not me but him that sent me Whosoever shall receive That is perform any duty of love and good respect to such One duty of love viz. loving and respectful entertainment is put for all other duties of love and respect One of such children This is not to be understood properly of children in age although our Saviour would have them also to be lovingly and respectfully used as we have heard before and as he shewed by his own practise but of such persons as do resemble and are like unto little children in the grace of humility Verse 42. he saith on the contrary Whosoever shall offend oneof these little ones that believe in me c. Now little children cannot be said properly to believe in Christ by actual faith In my Name That is for my sake or for this cause and in this respect that he doth believe in me and is my disciple or doth belong to me as it is explained Verse 41. Receiveth me Sheweth the same love and respect unto me Observ 2 Observ 2. Christians ought not only to be truly humble in themselves but also to shew special love and respect unto such as do resemble young children in humility This our Saviour here teacheth us in that he did not only set a young child before his disciples as a pattern of humility to teach them to be as humble as children in themselves but also taketh occasion withall to perswade and move them to receive such humble Christians in his name that is to shew all love kindnesse and good respect to them for his sake affirming that in so doing they should shew love and respect to himself yea and to his heavenly Father that sent him This shews that he would have his Disciples and all other good Christians not only to be like unto children in them●elves by the grace of humility but also to love and esteem well of such as are like children in humility and to shew it by all fruits of love and good respect towards such Reas 1 Reason 1. God himself sheweth special love and respect to such as are truly humble Esay 66. 2. To him will I look that is of a poor and contrite spirit c. and Esay 57. 15. He professeth that he doth dwell not only in heaven but with him also that is of an humble and contrite spirit Reas 2 Reas 2. Christ Jesus our Saviour was not only truly humble in himself but did also shew special love and respect unto such as were humble when he lived on earth as we heard upon the former Verse Therefore we ought herein to follow his practise Reas 3 Reas 3. Humble Christians do in special manner resemble Christ Matth. 11. 29. Learn of me c. Therefore we ought to shew special love to such Use 1 Use 1. See how contrary the practise of the world is unto that which God requireth of us in his Word For whereas the Lord requireth of us to shew special love honour and respect to humble Christians it is so for the most part that in the world none are more hated despised and set at naught then such as are most humble and most like unto children in thi● grace of humility and in practise of it None more contemned and vilified by the profane and common sort than these who carry themselves most humbly and lowly even as little children in their behaviour See how contrary the practise of the world and of the common sort of men in the world is to the rule of Gods Word which therefore must teach us to beware how we make the example of the world that is of the profane or common sort in the world the rule of our practise either in this or in any other matter Rom. 12. 2. Be not conformed to this world c. Use 2 Use 2. Let us not think it enough to be humble in our selves like little children but withall see that we do shew special love and respect unto all humble Christians who do truly resemble children in humility and the more humble they shew themselve the more let us shew our love and respect towards them by all fruits and tokens of it by receiving and entertaining them lovingly and respectfully both into our company and into our houses as occasion is offered and by our readiness to help relieve and comfort such in their troubles and by doing them all the good we can Seeing they are so belov●d and respected of God himself and of Christ Jesus let them be also loved and respected and honoured by us and that in special manner let us esteem them as the ●ittest objects of our love and respect Whom should we so much love and honour as those whom God himself and Christ Jesus doth love and honour Whom but such as are most like unto Christ himself And who are th●se but humble Christians who are most like unto little children in this grace The rather le 〈…〉 love and honour such because they have so much need of our love and respect being as they are for most part so apt to be despised and trampled under feet in the world yea the more they are con●emned in the world the more ought we to love and honour them for the Lords sake c. Observ 2 Observ 2. That whatsoever duties of love and good respect we do perform toward good Christians being believers in Christ and truly humble the same doth Christ Jesus accept as done unto himself Whosoever shall receive one of such children receiveht me c. So Matth. 10. 40. He that receiveth you receiveth me c. And Matth. 25. 34 c. Come ye blessed of my father c. For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink c. Verse 40. Ver●ly I say ●nto you in as much as ye have done it to one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto Me. Reas 1 Reason 1. There is a most straight union between Christ and true believers They are one with him and he with them 1 Cor. 12. 12. As between husband and wife and as between the Vine and the Branches c. Joh. 15. 5. Reas 2 Reas 2. Christ going up into heaven did leave the Saints and faithful upon earth as Deputies or Substitutes in his room and place to the end that in them we might shew our love to him being absent Matth. 26. 11. Ye have the poor alwayes with you but me ye have not alwayes Understand it chiefly of the poor Saints and believers in Christ Use 1 Use 1. How should this perswade
of God to such as perform works of charity or mercy to the Saints of God in this life It is a sure and certain reward which shall be most certainly given to them of God neither can they lose or be deprived of it God having promised it unto them he is most true and faithful in keeping promise and withal of absolute power able to perform what he hath promised Use Use To strengthen our faith and hope in this excellent reward promised to such as shew love and mercy to the Saints of God and so to perswade and encourage us the more to forwardnesse in the works of charity and mercy to the Saints of God and to good Christians being assured of this both upon the promise of God and restimony of Christ himself sealed with an asseveration and with his own immediate authority that we shall not lose our reward Therefore let us build upon this Word and Promise of Christ and make sure account to be richly rewarded of God himself both in this life so far as shall be good for us and especially in Heaven with the crown of everlasting life for all the love and mercy which we have shewed here to good Christians Though as yet the reward be deferred and in the judgment of carnal reason we see nothing less than any sign of recompence but all the liberality and kindness we have shewed to the Saints of God seemeth to be utterly lost and cast away yet labour by the eyes of faith to see the reward promised and by assured hope to wait for the obtaining of it in due time In the mean time remember that of the Apostle before mentioned Let us not be weary of well-doing For in due season we shall reap c. Mark 9. 42. And whosoever shall offend one of these little ones c. Octob. 7. 1627. VVE heard in the former Verse how our Saviour commended the practice of love and mercy toward his true Disciples by rpomising an excellent and most sure reward to all those who perform but the least work of charity to such Now in this 42. Verse he doth on the contrary threaten a grievous Judgment or Punishment against such as shall offend any that are good Christians or his true Disciples Where consider 1. The persons against whom this punishment is threatned described by their sinne which they commit and for which they are threatned Whosoever shall offend c. 2. A description of the persons offended which are good Christians or Christ's true Disciples 1. By the name or title given them called little ones 2. By one special property such as believe in Christ 3. The Judgment or punishment threatned against those that shall offend such Which punishment is set forth by a comparison from the less to the greater Compared with the puinshment of such a one as is cast into the Sea to be drowned and that with a milstone about his neck and affirmed to be more grievous It is better for him c. First to clear the meaning of the words Whosoever shall offend The word in the Original Text doth properly signifie to lay a stumbling block before another to cause him to stumble or fall and so to hinder him from going on in his way Now from hence it is borrowed and applyed oftentimes in Scripture to such as do use any means whereby to hinder or discourage others in their Christian course Which is done two wayes 1. By evil example of life giving occasion to others of stumbling or falling into sin and so hindring them in their Christian course and in the way unto eternal life and salvation either by doing things unlawfull or by abuse of liberty in things indifferent Rom. 14. 13. Judg this rather that no man put a stumbling block or an occasion to fall in his brothers way So 1 Cor. 8. ult If meat do make my brother to offend or scandalize him c. 2. By any external wrongs injuries or abuses offered to others in word or deed whereby they are offended hindred or discouraged in their Christian course And in this latter sense we are to take the word offend in this place Sic Maldonat Musculus Winkelman Chrysost Enthym c. That this is the meaning may appear by the opposition which is between these words of our Saviour and those which went before in the former Verse For having promised reward to such as shew love to good Christians now on the contrary he threatneth Judgment against such as offer wrong or injury to such But more plainly this opposition is expressed Matth. 18. 5 6. One of these little ones This is not to be understood of children in age but of such good Christians or true Disciples of Christ as do resemble little children in the grace of true humility or lowliness of mind So before Verse 37. And this to be the meaning appears by the words following in that they are said to be such as believe in Christ which cannot be said properly of little children in age who wanting knowledg and discretion are not capable of actual faith though they may have a seed of faith wrought in them secretly by the Holy Ghost Quest Quest Why doth our Saviour here mention this property of humility c. Answ Answ 1. To commend it the more 2. Because he knew that the humility of his disciples would expose them to contempt and injuries That believe in me That is do not onely believe me to be the true Messiah and Saviour of Mankind but also do by true faith rest and rely upon me for eternal life and salvation This is added to set forth the dignity and excellency of Christ's true Disciples and so to aggravate the sin of such as should contemn or abuse them It is better for him that a milstone were hanged c. For the better understanding of these words we must know That St. Hierome writing upon that place Matth. 18. 6. doth observe That it was a custome among the ancient Jews to put some Malefactors to this kind of death viz. to ●ye a great stone about them and so to drown them in the water And the like punishment was in use also among the Grecians as Casaubon observeth out of Diodorus Siculus and Athanasius for they used to put some Malefactors into a Vessell of Lead and so to cast them into the water and drown them Casaub Annot. in Matth. 18. 6. This being so it is very probable that our Saviour here alludeth to this kind of punishment used for great offenders either among the Jews or other Nations and his purpose and meaning is by this bodily punishment inflicted upon malefactors in those times to set forth the grievousnesse of the sin and of that eternal Judgment and punishment in Hell which shall be inflicted of God upon such as do offer wrong or injury to good Christians It is better for him c. That is if he should have a milstone hanged about his neck and so be
after this life Oh then give all diligence to make thy calling and election sure in this life as the Apostle exhorteth 2 Pet. 1. 10. that thou mayst in this life come to be assured that thou shalt after this life be partaker of eternal life and glory in Gods heavenly Kingdom for otherwise it is most certain thou must be cast into hell-torments for ever There is no third place or estate for thee or any other to come unto after this life Therefore look unto thy self and be diligent to save thy soul eternally c. When a Town or City is like to be sacked by the enemies and all the Inhabitants like to be massacred except such as can by some means escape Oh what shift will every one make to save his bodily life that he may be in the number of those that escape c. How much more ought we to be careful and diligent in providing for the eternal salvation of our souls at that day of Judgment when all the world shall be ransacked and every man woman and child in the world either be eternally saved or eternally damned c. Mark 9. 43. unto the 49. And if thy hand offend thee c. Decem. 2. 1627. NOw followeth the third and last thing contained in these Verses viz. A description of the state and condition of the damned in Hell 1. By the grievousness of the torment and punishment which they shall suffer there which is set forth by a double comparison 1. Unto the pain or punishment of such as have their bodies burned in the fire 2. To the pain which those do suffer who have worms gnawing upon their bodies being alive in these words Where their worm dyeth not For although he doth allude to that place Esay 66. ult where the Prophet speaks of such worms as gnaw upon dead bodies yet our Saviour from hence takes occasion to compare the torments of hell to the pain of worms gnawing on a living body 2. By the continuance thereof which shall be for ever In that it is said Their worm dyeth not and the fire is never quenched The meaning of the words see before explained Now from the words two Points of Instruction are to be gathered touching the state of the damned in hell after this life 1. That the punishment and torment of hell prepared for the wicked and damned Reprobates is most terrible and grievous to bear 2. That it is everlasting and without end In handling these two Points I will first prove and clear the truth of them severally and then make use of them both together Of the first The grievousnesse of the torment and punishments of the damned in hell may appear 1. By the manner of speaking used in Scripture to describe and set forth that misery and torment in that it is described to us in most terrible manner and set forth by comparison to such things as are most terrible and grievous as in this place it is compared to the burning of the body with fire which of all bodily pains is the most sensible and grievous Also to the pain caused by worms gnawing on the body It is elsewhere compared to burning with fire and brimstone Rev. 21. 8. Hell is called the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone by way of allusion to the Lake of Sodom which heretofore did burn with fire and brimstone sent from heaven The Scriptures also elsewhere do set forth the grievousness of that torment by the grievous effects which it shall bring forth in the damned viz. weeping and gnashing of teeth Matth. 8. 12. See also Esay 30. 33. 2. It may further appear by considering wherein that misery and punishment shall consist and in which it shall stand viz. In two things especially 1. In the losse and deprivation of all things which might make them happy or add to their happinesse as 1. In the losse of the blessed sight and presence of God and of Christ Je●us yea of the whole Trinity of persons 2 Thess 1. 9. The wicked shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power and Matth. 25. 41. The Lord shall say unto them Depart from me ye cursed c. 2. In the losse of the society and fellowship of all the blessed Angels and Saints glorified Luke 13. 28. There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when ye shall see Abraham Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and your selves thrust out 3. In the losse of that heavenly glory which the Saints shall be partakers of 4. In the losse of that fulnesse and perfection of heavenly joyes which the Saints shall enter into after this life Now all this is called poena damni The second main thing in which the misery and punishment of the damned in hell consisteth is the sensible feeling and apprehension of the wrath of God which shall cause most exquisite and grievous pains and torments both in their souls and bodies and in all the parts powers and faculties of both both inward and outward And this is called by the Schoolmen Poena sensus Where also is to be noted That this pain and torment shall be such and so great that it shall admit of no ease mitigation or intermission at all Luke 16. the rich glutton being in hell-torments could not have so much as one drop of water to cool his tongue See Rev. 14. 11. Lastly The grievousnesse of the punishment of the wicked in hell may farther appear and is much aggravated by some Circumstances accompanying the same especially by these 1. By the condition of the place where they shall suffer it viz. Hell it self which is a place of extream darkness and so most dismal and uncomfortable Matth. 8. 12. They shall be cast into utter darkness c. and Jude 13 Verse To them is reserved the blacknesse of darkness for ever 2. By the company which they shall there have being none but devils and damned Reprobates Matth. 25. 41. 3. By the continuance or eternity c. But of this in the next Point Of the second That the punishment and torment of the damned in hell shall be everlasting is thus proved It is said here that their worm dyeth not and the fire never goeth out but is unquenchable So Matth. 25. 41. Depart ye cursed into everlasting fire c. Revel 14. 11. It is said of those that worship the Beast and receive his mark that the smoak of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever They shall be ever dying and yet never dye Erit in eis mars sine morte finis sine fine defectus fine defectu Dionys Carthus de 4. novissimis Part. 3. Artic. 7. Sic Bernard p. 1719. sine morte morientur Reason Reason 1. God himself who doth inflict this punishment on the damned in hell is eternal his power and Justice continue for ever and consequently the torments of the wicked in hell must
wife as well as Adultery Answ Answ Because none other sin whatsoever doth so directly violate the marriage-Covenant and so dissolve the Marriage-bond as Adultery doth Quest 2 Quest 2. What need is there for divorcement to be permitted in the case of Adultery seeing that sinne ought by the Law of God to be punished with death Levit. 20. 10. Deut. 22. 22. Answ Answ Because humane Laws are often too favourable unto this sin not punishing it so severely as they should therefore where that penalty of death is not inflicted through the defect of humane Laws or negligence of the Magistrate there divorce is permitted and may take place if the innocent party desire and seek it by a lawful and orderly course Vse 1 Use 1. See by this the haynousnesse of the sin of Adultery properly so called viz. the incontinency practised by married persons in that it is of force to break and dissolve the most strait and near bond between man and wife c. See before Verse 8. Vse 2 Vse 2. Seeing the Word of God doth not permit or allow of divorcement or final separation between man and wife in any case or for any cause except adultery this should teach every Christian married couple to be the more careful so to live together and so to carry themselves one toward the other by mutual performance of all marriage-duties that they may find true comfort and good contentment in each others society and in dwelling and living together Seeing they cannot nor may not be parted or separated by divorcement for any cause except only for Adultery which breaketh the Marriage-bond therefore how needful for them to labour and pray for such true marriage-love and delight in each other and to make conscience of all duties of love c. that they may not desire to be parted asunder or have cause to desire it Therefore as they ought to be exceeding careful to shun the foul sin of adultery that so the marriage-bond may not be broken but remain inviolable between them so should they be no lesse careful so to live together that they may have comfort in living together c. Use 3 Use 3. Seeing man and wife being once joyned in marriage cannot afterward be separated untill death for any cause except for adultery this should teach such as are hereafter to enter into the married estate to be careful to make choyce of such persons to joyn themselves withall in the married estate as they may truly love and affect and so may live comfortably with them in that estate c. Observ 2 Observ 2. It is unlawful for such as are unjustly divorced that is for any cause except adultery to marry again during the life of their former wife or husband yea It is a great sin so to do even the sin of adultery and they adulterers that practise it So our Saviour here affirmeth expresly Reason Reason They break the Marriage-Covenant and bond by joyning themselves with others besides their own lawful wife or husband and this is adultery Vse Use Hence gather on the contrary That after divorce for adultery it is lawful to marry again especially for the innocent party and for the other too rather than live in fornication c. vide supra Observ 3 Observ 3. Contra Papists committeth adultery against her c. See here that the adulterer sinneth against many persons at once First against himself that is against his own soul and body Then against the party with whom he committeth the sin As also against her husband if she have any living And further as we see here he sinneth also against his own lawful wife by breaking his Marriage-Covenant with her And as this is true of the adulterer so of the adulteress So that this sin of adultery is committed against four or at least three persons at once which shews the haynousness and detestableness of it c. Though single fornication be a foul sin yet adultery is in this respect much more foul and odious Observ 4 Observ 4. And if a woman shall put away her husband c. See here that the wife hath equal power and right with the husband as touching divorcement in the case of adultery that is to say she may as lawfully desire and seek to be divorced from her husband as the husband from his wife for the sin of adultery Provided that she do it in such a manner and with such Christian modesty as becometh a wife being forced or urged in that case to proceed against her own husband for a crime of this nature 1 Cor. 7. 4. The wife hath as much power over her husband's body as the husband over the wifes by vertue of the Marriage-Covenant Therefore in case that Covenant be violated by adultery she hath as much right to be separated from him as he from her by divorcement Mark 10. 13 14. And they brought young children to him that he should touch them and his Disciples May 4. 16●8 rebuked those that brought them c. HItherto of the first part of this Chapter viz. the Disputation of our Saviour in publike with certain of the Pharisees touching Divorcement together with his private Conference with his own Disciples about the same matter Now followeth the second part of the Chapter from this 13. Verse unto the 17. Verse In which the Evangelist recordeth our Saviour's gracious entertaining and blessing of certain young Children which were btought unto him to that end notwithstanding that his Disciples would have hindered them from being brought Where three things are to be considered 1. The fact of those that brought the children to Christ together with the end of it They brought young children to him c. 2. The fact of the Disciples Reproving those that brought them 3. The carriage of our Saviour both toward his Disciples and toward the children 1. Toward his disciples He was displeased with them and warned them to suffer little children to come unto him and not to forbid them yielding a reason a hereof because of such is the Kingdom of God 2. Toward the Children He took them in his arms c. Of the first They Who they were in particular that did this is not expressed by the Evangelist but most likely it is they were the Parents or other nearest friends of the children and it is also probable that they were of the better and more religious sort of people being well-affected to Christ's Person and Doctrine Brought young children to him Or Little children yea Infants as they are called Luke 18. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That he should teach them That is desiring him to touch them or to put his hands upon them as it is Matth. 19. 13. Yet this was not all they desired but that he should also pray for them as appeareth in the same place Matth. 19. 13. And this latter seems to have been the chief end for which they brought their children unto him and for which they
seems to be implyed because the promise was to them and to their children See Perk on Gal. 3. 27. pag. 305. This Truth we are to hold and maintain against the Anabaptists who deny Baptism to Infants because they want knowledg and so cannot have actual faith which is in Scripture required of those that were to be baptized as Act. 8. 37. and elsewhere But to this we answer That where actual faith is required of such as were baptized it is to be understood of those who were of years of discretion at the time of their baptism and so were capable of actuall faith But as for Infants born in the Church it is sufficient to make them capable of Baptism that they are within Gods Covenant as hath been shewed c. And that Infants born in the visible Church have right to Baptism it may further appear two wayes 1. By the practice of the Apostles baptizing sometimes whole Families in which it is most probable that there were some Infants or little children See Act. 16. 2. By the Sacrament of Circumcision in the Old Testament which was by Gods Commandement to be received by Infants the eighth day after their birth Gen. 17. 10. Now Baptism succeedeth in the room of Circumcision in these times of the New Testament Col. 2. 11 12. Therefore c. Here note That though Infants born in the Church have right to Baptism and ought to be Baptized yet their salvation is not absolutely tyed to the outwatd Baptism but they may be saved without it in case they be prevented by death c. Necessitas duplex 1. Praecepti 2. Medii c. By the first Baptism is necessary Not absolutely by the second c. Use 2 Use 2. See that we are not to despise little Infants or Children born in the Church but to esteem well of them and to shew it by our loving and respectful usage of them seeing they belong to Gods Covenant yea to his heavenly Kingdom for ought we know c. Use 3 Use 3. To move Christian Parents to be careful of the Religious Education of their Children that so they may be fit to be partakers of Gods Kingdom seeing they have right to it in regard of Gods Covenant c. Use 4 Use 4. Comfort to Christian Parents when God takes away their Children in Infancy or young age by death they have cause to hope well of them especially if themselves be believers Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour doth not say Of these is the Kingdom of God but Of such c. meaning not only Infants or little Children but such also as do resemble young children in disposition and qualities hence gather that the Kingdom of heaven doth belong not only to young Children born in the Church but also to such as resemble little children and are like unto them in disposition and qualities c. But of this afterward in the Verse following Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the estate of eternal life and glory in heaven is here called the Kingdom of God we are to take notice of the excellency of that estate of glory prepared for the Saints in heaven being compared to a Kingdom and called The Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of heaven in this and many other places of Scripture But of this see before Chap. 9. 43 c. Mark 10. 15 16. Verily I say unto you Whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child May 25. 1628. he shall not enter therein c. OUr Saviour having alledged a Reason why his Disciples should not hinder little children from being brought to him viz. because the Kingdom of heaven belongeth to such that is not only to children but to such as are like unto them c. Now Verse 15. he further confirmeth the truth of that reason viz. That Gods Kingdom belongeth to such as do resemble little children in qualities and properties This he confirmeth by shewing how great necessity there is for every one that would be partaker of Gods Kingdom to become like unto a little child in that none but such shall enter into that Kingdom and this our Saviour avoucheth with his usual kind of Asseveration Verily adding also the weight of his own authority unto it I say unto you the more to confirm the truth and certainty of the matter In the words there are two things to be considered 1. The manner of our Saviour's avouching or affirming that which he speaketh here Verily I say unto you 2. The matter avouched That whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child c. Of the first see before Chap. 3. 28. Of the second By Kingdom of God understand that estate of glory in the life to come which God hath prepared for his Elect. As in the former Verse To receive the Kingdom of God is To be partaker of it after this life Whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child That is whosoever shall not in this life resemble and become like unto a little Child or Infant in qualities and disposition that so he may be fit to be partaker of Gods Kingdom after this life in Heaven He shall not enter therein He shall never be made partaker of that estate of eternal life and glory in Gods heavenly Kingdom Doctr. 1. No●e shall be partakers of Gods heavenly Kingdom in the life to come but such as are first qualified and become fit for it in this life Our Saviour sayes here That whosoever doth not receive the Kingdome of God as a little Child that is whosoever doth not in this life become like unto a little child that so he may be fit to receive the Kingdome of God he shall not enter into it Col. 1. 12. Giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the Inheritance of the Saints in Light Thus it must be with all Christians that desire to be partakers of that heavenly Inheritance they must first be made meet for it in this life Quest Quest How must Christians be qualified and fitted in this life for Gods heavenly Kingdome c Answ Answ By such Spiritual Graces as are requisite to make them fit We must first be partakers of the Kingdome of Grace As 1. By the Grace of Repentance and true Conversion from their sins unto God Matth. 18. 3. Except ye be Converted and become as little Children c. Called Repentance unto Salvation 2 Cor. 7. 10. And Repentance unto life Act. 11. 18. 2. By the Grace of effectual Calling whereby they must be actually separated in heart and in their course and manner of life from this World that is from the profane and wicked and must be joyned to the true Church of Christ and become subjects of his Kingdome of Grace 2 Pet. 1. 10. Give diligence to make your Calling and Election sure c. For so an entrance shall be ministred to you c. Rom. 8. 30.
Whom he Called them he Justified and Glorified 3. By the Grace of Justification applyed unto them by Faith having their sins forgiven and being accepted of God as Righteous by the perfect Righteousnesse of Christ applyed by faith Rom. 8. 30. Whom he justified them he glorified Act. 26. 18. That they may receive forgivenesse of sins and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me 4. By the Grace of true Sanctification wrought in them by the Spirit of God whereby the corruption of sin must be mortified and the Image of God standing in Holinesse and Righteousnesse must be restored in them in part Hebr. 12. 14. Without Holinesse no man shall see the Lord. Rev. 21. 27. More particularly there are some special sanctifying Graces required to make us meet partakers of God's Kingdome viz. such as make us like to little Children but more of these in the next point of Doctrine Use Vse This teacheth us what to do if we desire to know and be assured that we shall be partakers of God's heavenly Kingdome after this life we must examine our selves whether we be first qualified and made fit for it and capable of it in this life in such sort as we have heard Do we feel the work of Repentance and true Conversion from our sins unto God wrought in us have we truely left and forsaken our old sins c. Are we called and separated from the profane world in heart and life not living after the course of this World c Ephes 2. Do we by Faith feel our sins to be forgiven and that we are in Christ accepted of God as Righteous c. Do we feel our selves in some measure sanctified by the Spirit of God the corruption of sin killed in us and Gods Image of Holiness renewed in us c. If it be thus with thee thou art a fit and meet person to receive the Kingdome of heaven thou art capable of it yea thou shalt most certainly be partaker thereof actually On the contrary if thou be not thus fitted prepared and qualified for that Kingdome in this life never look to be partaker of it after this life Thou must here make entrance c. 2 Pet. 1. See Mr. Hieron's Sermon upon Mark 10. 5. called The Minority of the Saints Doctr. 2 Doctr. 2. See what is one part of that qualification and fitnesse required in all such as shall be partakers of Gods heavenly Kingdome they must be qualified like unto little Children they must resemble little Children in disposition and qualities Our Saviour affirmeth here That Whosoever receiveth not the Kingdome of God as a little Child shall not enter therein So in the former verse Of such is the Kingdome of God Matth. 18. 3. Except ye be Converted and become as little Children ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of Heaven Quest Quest In what qualities or properties especially must such resemble little Children Answ Answ Not in all properties 1. Not in ignorance 1 Cor. 14. 20. 2. Not in inconstancy or variablenesse Ephes 4. 14. But in such Christian Graces and vertues whereof they have a lively Image and example in little Children especially in these properties 1. In Holinesse and Innocency of life 1 Cor. 14. 20. In Maliciousnesse be Children 2. In true humility and lowlinesse of mind thinking meanly of themselves and well of others yea of their infetiours Thus little children do So David Psal 131. 1 2. Lord My heart is not haughty mine eyes are not lofty c. Surely I have behaved my self as a Child that is weaned from his Mother c. Little Children do not mind high things but have low conceipts of themselves not swelling with Pride against others If two little Children be together one the child of a Rich man the other of a Poor man c. 3. In being void of malice and envy against others and on the contrary being of a loving and kind disposition Thus it is with little children they do not malice c. they soon forgive wrongs c. And so must it be with Christians 1 Pet. 2. 1. Laying aside all malice guile hypocrisies envy c. As new born Babes desire the sincere milk of the Word c. 4. In being teachable and tractable towards God their heavenly Father as little children are towards their earthly Parents A little child is apt to be taught and easily reclaimed from a fault by admonition or correction So must it be with Christians c. Hebr. 12. 9. We have had Fathers of our flesh which corrected us and we gave them reverence shall we not much rather be in subjection to the Father of Spirits and live 5. In being contented with their outward estate in the World and not ambitiously or covetously seeking after higher or greater estates The poor mans little child is as well contented with his estate as the rich mans So should it be with a Christian as Paul Phil. 4. 11. I have learned in whatsoever state I am c. therewith to be content I know how to be abased and how to abound c. 6. In faithfull dependance upon God's providence without distrustfull or distracting cares for things of this life Little children depend upon their Parents for Provision of things necessary for them as meat drink c. The Infant hangs upon the Mothers breast without taking further thought c. So must it be with Christians that look to be partakers of Gods Kingdome they must herein resemble little children Matth. 6. 31. Take no thought saying What shall we eat or what shall we drink c. For your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things Vse Use 1. See how to try and know whether we be fit for the Kingdome of Heaven and capable of it and whether we shall indeed be partakers of it after this life examine whether we be as yet become like unto little Infants or young Children in those properties before set down Thou that professest thy self to be a Christian and hopest for eternal life and a part in God's heavenly Kingdome examine thy heart and life look whether thou be fit for that Kingdome and capable of it canst thou receive it as a little child dost thou feel thy self so converted turned and changed that thou art indeed like unto a little child in disposition and qualities in Innocency of life humility love tractableness contente dness with thy estate c. If it be thus with thee it shews thee to be fit for the Kingdome of heaven and shalt be indeed partaker of it On the contrary if thou be not yet like unto a young child in these properties and Christian Graces thou art not capable of Gods Kingdome c. Try thy self therefore and that diligently and thorowly compare thy self with such little children to see how like or unlike thou art unto them Vse 2 Vse 2. See what we must do if we desire to be fit for the Kingdome of
was an occasion of his covetousnesse Joh. 12. Caution Caution This is not so to be understood as if riches of themselves were the occasion or cause of covetousnesse but by reason of the corruption of Nature being so prone and apt to love and affect worldly goods too much and so much the more by how much the more plenty and abundance of them is enjoyed Use 1 Use 1. See by this the great corruption of our Nature in our selves in that we are so apt to pervert and abuse such things as are good in themselves as occasions of sin As to abuse wealth and riches which in themselves are blessings of God as an occasion of covetousness unjustice and oppression of others so to abuse spiritual gifts as an occasion of pride prosperity as an occasion of security c. This is the great corruption of our Nature which makes us turn those blessings and good things to Gods dishonour which he hath given us to honour him withall This corruption of our Nature we are to lament and to be more and more humbled for it Vse 2 Vse 2. See how dangerous a thing it is to possess and enojoy great worldly wealth and riches without the special grace of God given to a man to use his riches well and to the glory of God forasmuch as otherwise they are such an occasion of the dangerous sin of covetousness c. But more of this afterward in the Verse following Use 3 Use 3. For Admonition to every one of us but especially to such as have store of this worlds goods and do grow in wealth to remember and practise that counsel given us by the Prophet David Psal 62. 10. If riches increase set not your heart upon them The more wealth the more matter and occasion of covetousness and the more we lye open unto it and so the more need have we to be watchful against this sin and to pray unto God to keep our hearts from being entised and drawn away by it As they that have much flax or gunpowder in their houses had need be very careful to keep fire from it so a Christian who enjoyeth great store of worldly wealth had need to look to his heart that the natural corruption thereof do not like wild-fire take hold of his wealth and riches and so kindle and break out into a dangerous ●lame as it were of Covetousnesse Mark 10. 23 24 25. And Jesus looked round about and saith unto hid Disciples How hardly shall they Octob. 12. 1628. that have riches enter into the Kingdom of God c. IN the former Verse the Evangelist as we have heard setteth down the first Consequent that followed upon the Conference between our Saviour and the young Ruler touching the obtaining of life eternal viz. The Effect which the words of Christ wrought in him causing him to go away sorrowful c. Now followeth the second Consequent of that Conference which is this That our Saviour hereupon took occasion to instruct his own Disciples touching the difficulty of rich mens entring into God's heavenly Kingdom and consequently touching the danger of worldly riches from Verse 23 to 28. Where consider 1. The Doctrine it self which our Saviour taught his Disciples 2. The Effect which the teaching of it wrought in them Of the first The doctrine is 1. Propounded or laid down briefly together with the gesture used by our Saviour in propounding it Verse 23. He looked round about and saith to his Disciples How hardly c. 2. It is repeated and further expounded and cleared Verse 24. by shewing of what so●● or kind of rich men especially it is to be understood viz. of such as trust in Riches Jesus answereth and saith Children how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the Kingdom of God 3. I● is further urged and pressed by an Argument taken from a comparison of the lesse to the greater which is laid down by a proverbial kind of speech Verse 25. It is easier for a Camel c. Of the second The Effect which this Doctrine wrought in the Disciples is two-fold 1. Great astonishment or admiration which is mentioned more briefly in the beginning of the 24. Verse and afterward repeated and amplified by the greatness of it Astonished out of measure c. The second Effect is That hereupon they were moved to que●ion among themselves Who then could be saved Un●o which quest●on or doubt the Evangelist shews what answer our Saviour made and how he resolved the matter Verse 27. To begin first with our Saviour's brief propounding of the Doctrine which he teacheth his Disciples Verse 23. Where consider three things 1. The gesture used by our Saviour at the time of teaching this doctrine He looked round about 2. The Persons to whom he taught it His Disciples 3. The Matter or Doctrine it self How hardly c. Of the first He looked round about Viz. upon his Disciples as the words following do imply And Verse 27. it is expresly said so Now this gesture he used as is probable the better to stir up their attention and to cause them to be the more affected with the Doctrine which he was about to teach them as being a matter of great weight and moment Observ Observ Even the best Christians are dull of hearing Heb. 5. 11. that is slothful and negligent in hearkening to the doctrine of Christ when it is taught them either by Himself immediately or by his Ministers and not only so but hard to conceive and understand that which is taught and to be affected with it as they ought to be Which shews how needful it is for the Ministers of God to use all good means to quicken and stir up both the attention and affections of their people in the time of teaching and hearing of the Word in publike c. Now followeth the persons to whom he taught this doctrine touching the difficulty of rich mens obtaining eternal life His Disciples Or Apostles which were his ordinary followers and his special charge as being his own family as it were These he was especially ●are●ul to instruct upon all occasions in such spiritual and heavenly doctrines as were needful for them to learn the better to fit them for future execution of their Apostolical Office and the rather because they were of all other his hearers most teachable and forward to learn most ready to submit to his doctrine Observ Observ Such as have charge of others ought especially to be careful to instruct and teach those of their own charge in the doctrine of the Word of God and in knowledg of heavenly things So Ministers of the Word are chiefly to apply themselves and make conscience to feed their own flock which dependeth upon them 1 Pet. 5. 2. So Christian Parents and Masters of Families to instruct and catechise those of their family and especially such as are most teachable and forward to learn of all others to be most ready
19. 28. Ye which have followed me c. Reason Reason That by following Christ and conversing with him they might be fitted and prepared in time for their Apostolical Office c. Vse Use To confirm our faith in the doctrine of the Gospel taught and delivered to the Church in writing by the Apostles assuring us that it is indeed the doctrine of Christ himself which they received from his own mouth in as much as it is delivered to us by such as lived with Christ and were ear-witnesses of his doctrine and beholders of his Miracles by which it was confirmed Luke 1. 2. They delivered them unto us which from the beginning were eye-witnesses and Ministers of the Word This maketh much for the credit and authority of this doctrine of the Gospel 1 Joh. 1. 1. Now from that which is evil and discommendable here in Peter and the other Disciples Observ 1 Observ 1. That the Saints of God in this life are not free from all corruption of sin but are tainted with remnants of sin left in them after regeneration The disciples of Christ do here discover the corruption of heir Nature and some sinful infirmities as we have heard as spiritual pride and a mercenary mind c. Jam. 3. 2. In many things we offend all And Chap. 5. 17. Eliah himself was a man subject to passions c. Rom. 7. Paul complains of the corruption of sin dwelling in him after regeneration c. But of this often before See Chap. 3. 31. Use 1 Use 1. See the rashness of such as censure all for hypocrites who do discover some sinful corruptions or infirmities c. Vse 2 Use 2. Comfort to good Christians feeling and complaining of their sinful corruptions so they be truly humbled for them and daily strive against them c. From these they cannot be perfectly freed till death free them c. Observ 2 Observ 2. More particularly here in Christ's Disciples we are to take notice of some special corruptions which are natural to us all even to the Saints of God so far forth as they are in part unregenerate and carnal As 1. That by nature we are apt to think too well of our good works and obedience performed to God to be too well conceited of our obedience thinking better of it than it doth deserve or that we have done more than indeed we have in the service of God as we heard before of the young man Verse 20. He thought he had kept the Commandements c. Even Christ's Disciples here do speak of their good works and obedience with a kind of ambitious boasting c. 2. That we are by Nature apt in our obedience and good works performed to look too much at the reward or recompence to be given unto us for the same either in this life or after this life So here the Disciples For to this end as we have heard they make mention of this their obedience in forsaking all c. that they might know what Reward should be rendred to them for so doing And this is a natural corruption and fault in every one of us too much to look at the reward of our good works and obedience to God's Will and Commandment and to be too sollicitous about that reward The Devil knew this and therefore accused Job though falsly that he did not serve God for nought but because he made an hedg about him c. Job 1. 9. Reason Reason We are by Nature full of self-love which makes us so apt to seek our own good and benefit more than Gods glory Phil. 2. 21. All seek their own and not that which is Jesus Christs Not that it is simply unlawful to look at the reward of our obedience but that our fault is to look too much at it that is only or principally which is mercenary obedience Whereas we ought to obey and serve the Lord for his own sake though there were no reward promised 3. That we are also apt to be too hasty after the reward which God hath promised us for our obedience in this life and after this life We are apt to desire it too soon before the due time appointed To desire our wages before we have done all our work to triumph before the warfare be ended to sit down and rest before we be come to our journeys end Mark 10. 37. The sons of Zebedee were too hasty to be glorified with Christ and therefore he puts them in mind of suffering asking Whether they could drink of the Cup c. Contrà Esay 28. 16. He that believeth shall not make haste Vse Use The more natural these corruptions are unto us the more must we labour to see and be humbled for them and especially to resist and strive against them in our selves by all means as by prayer meditation in the Word of God c. Mark 10. 29 30. And Jesus answered and said Verily I say unto you There is no that hath left house or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or Lands for my sake and the Gospels But he shall Dec. 7. 1628. receive an hundred fold c. IN the former Verse we heard how Peter speaking in the name of all the Disciples made profession unto our Saviour of their obedience in forsaking all and following him which he did to the end he might know what reward they should have for so doing Now the Evangelist setteth down Christ's answer unto Peter professing their obedience in forsaking all c. and demanding what reward should be given them The answer consists of two parts 1. A promise of a rich reward which our Saviour maketh both to his Apostles and to all others that had forsaken any thing that was dear to them in this world for his sake and the Gospels Verse 29 30. 2. A Prophetical Admonition touching the apostacy of some that had seemed forward at first in profession of Christ and touching the Calling and Conversion of others who seemed farthest off from the Kingdom of God Verse 31. Of the first part The promise Consider 1. The manner of our Saviour's propounding it to Peter and the rest 1. With his usual Asseveration Verily The more to confirm their faith in the promise c. 2. Avouching it in his own Name and Authority I say unto you 2. The Matter or Promise it self in the words following Of the first we have often heard before Of the second The Promise it self The sum is this That whosoever he be that hath forsaken any thing that is dear to him in this world for Christ's sake and the Gospels shall be richly and plentifully rewarded of God both in this life and after this life First I will explain the words There is no man No Christian whatsoever man or woman of what estate degree or calling soever That hath left Or forsaken or been content to part with House or brethren c. That is any thing whatsoever which was dear unto him
it is the cause and fountain of all blessings so of deliverance in trouble Phil. 2. 27. Epaphroditus being sick God had mercy on him c. Use Use To stir us up to desire and seek this mercy of God in all our necessities and miseries yea in the first place and above all other things as the only remedy to help and cure us of all and without which we can never be truly helped or delivered Therefore first and principally pray and labour for God's mercy in Christ who is the ground of it to have part in it that so this may move him to hear us in our prayers and to help and deliver us out of our troubles or at least to sanctifie them to us Seek God's mercy more than outward ease or deliverance that being the cause of this c. And to this end labour for a true sense of our misery and wretchedness in our selves especially of our spiritual misery in regard of our sins c. that this may move the Lord to shew mercy and to help and deliver us Deny our selves and all our own merits and worthiness and fly to Gods mercy alone as the ground of all our comfort and hope of deliverance in time of affliction and misery Observ 2 Observ 2. See whereupon we are to ground our faith and confidence to be heard in prayer viz. upon God's free mercy and grace who is ready to hear and help us in our necessities not upon our own merits or worthiness Dan. 9. 18. Not for our own righteousness but for thy great mercies So David Psal 51. 1. and the Publican Luke 18. God be merciful to me a sinner Use 1 Use 1. To condemn Popish prayers made with opinion of Merit like that proud Pharisee Luke 18. Vse 2 Vse 2. Labour for the feeling and apprehension of God's free mercy toward us that upon this we may build our faith and confidence in our prayers c. not upon any merit or worthiness in our selves c. Mark 10. 48 49 50. And many charged him that he should hold his peace c. Aug. 16. 1629. OF the first Antecedent or Preparative going before this Miracle of Christ wrought upon the blind man I have spoken viz. of the means used by the blind man for recovery of his sight viz. his Supplication to Christ for mercy Now followeth the second Preparative to the Miracle viz. the outward impediment by which his faith was opposed in that the multitude charged him to hold his peace Many charged him c. Luke 18. 39. it is said They which went before rebuked him c. This may seem strange that such as followed Christ and were desirous to partake in his Doctrine and Miracles should go about to hinder this poor blind man from making sute to Christ for mercy And there is no doubt but it was ignorantly and rashly done by them although it is probable that they might do it for a good end viz. lest the clamour or crying out of the poor man should be some trouble or hinderance to Christ being hasty in his journey Now this was a great tryall to the blind man and a great means to hinder and discourage him in his sute to Christ if he would have been discouraged especially seeing our Saviour was also silent and gave him no answer at first to his Petition which was another great discouragement to him c. Observ Observ The Lord suffers the faith of his Saints to be opposed with great discouragements and hinderances in this life which are means to hinder and discourage them from believing in Christ and from shewing their faith in prayer by seeking and suing to him for help in their necessities and miseries Thus the Lord suffered the faith of this poor blind man to be opposed with great difficulties and discouragements partly from the multitude forbidding him to cry after our Saviour and partly from Christ himself being silent at first and seeming not to hear or regard his cry and supplication to him Thus was it also with the faith of divers others that came to Christ for help and relief in their necessities when he was on Earth as the Woman of Canaan Matth. 15. who coming to Christ for her Daughter found no small discouragements to hinder her faith but many and great as that our Saviour at first answered her not a word that he called her dogg and told her It was not fit to give the childrens bread to such and the Disciples also desired Christ to send her away c. So the faith of those that brought the sick of the Palsie to Christ to be cured was opposed with a great difficulty and discouragement for the preasse was so great that they could not come near to Christ c. as we heard Chap. 2. 4. So the faith of those that brought their children to Christ to be blessed by him was also opposed with a great discouragement in that Christ's own Disciples did rebuke them for so doing as we heard Verse 13. of this Chapter So the faith of Zacheus Luke 19. Reason Reason The Lord suffers the faith of Believers to be thus opposed to the end it may by this means be throughly tryed and exercised and so the strength and vertue of it may the more evidently appear More particularly the Discouragements with which the Lord suffers the faith of his Saints to be opposed are of two sorts First Inward arising from the inward corruption of their nature which is a main enemy and hinderance to the work of faith in them Secondly Outward from outward causes and occasions As 1. From Satan who useth all the means he can to discourage and hinder us from believing in Christ Luke 22. 31. Satan hath desired to winnow you c. 2. From the World and from Men who are oftentimes a means to hinder and discourage us in the practice of faith as here we see in the multitude forbidding this blind man to cry unto Christ for mercy c. So Psal 3. 2. David's Enemies said There was no help for him in his God 3. From God or from Christ himself after a sort in that the Lord doth sometimes hide his face and favour for a time from his Children and seems not to regard them or their prayers but rather to be angry and offended at that time which is the greatest difficulty and discouragement of all other with which the faith of true Believers is or can be at any time opposed Thus was the faith of Jacob opposed when he wrestled with God himself c. So the faith of Job David c. Use 1 Use 1. This teacheth us and all Believers in Christ to make accompt to have our faith opposed with many and great discouragements and hinderances and to prepare and arm our selves before-hand to meet with such discouragements Praying daily for more strength of faith to overcome and break through all difficulties and impediments that we be not dismayed by them or hindered in
25. That your Father also which is in Heaven may forgive you your trespasses May 16. 1630. NOW followeth the Author or efficient Cause of this benefit of Forgiveness of sins here promised to such as forgive others God himself Described 1. By a relative Title in that he is called their Father 2. By the special place of his abode which is Heaven That your Father which is in Heaven c. Observ 1. In that forgiveness of sins is here ascribed unto God their heavenly Father as his proper Act Hence gather that it is God alone that can and doth forgive sins This is his proper Act or Work not communicable to any Man or Angel Isa 43. 25. I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake and will not remember thy sins Exod. 34. 6. Mich. 7. 18. Who is a God like unto thee that pardonest Iniquity and passest by the transgression of the Rem●ant of his Heritage c. Yea the Scribes and Pharisees knew this Mark 2. 7. Who can forgive sins but God onely and therefore they accuse our Saviour of Blasphemy because he took upon him to forgive sins being but a meer man as they falsly supposed Quest Quest How can God forgive sins being just Answ Answ There is a satisfaction made to his Justice by the Death and Passion of Christ and so in him He forgiveth c. Quest Quest How then doth he freely forgive Answ Answ Because he freely gave his Son c. Reas 1 Reason All Sin is an Offence to God and a breach of his holy Law 1 Joh. 3. 4. therefore he onely can forgive it This is true even of those sins which are committed against men even these are first and principally against God Psal 51. 4. Against Thee only have I sinned c. yet he had sinned against Uriah and against Bathsheba Reas 2 Reas 2. Onely God can infuse Grace into the Sinner Now this goes alwayes with Forgiveness of sins Vid. Aquin. Object Object Joh. 20. 23. Whose sins ye remit they are remitted c. Answ Answ God's Ministers are said to remit sins not by any Judicial Power or Authority of their own but ministerially onely by pronouncing declaring and applying forgiveness of sins to the penitent in the Name of god and of Christ Use 1 Vse 1. To confute the gross Errour of the Papists touching the Pope's Power to pardon sins which is God's peculiar Office not communicable to Man or Angel which shews also the Pride and Presumption of that Antichrist of Rome thrusting himself into God's Office c. yea they challenge and ascribe this Power to their ordinary massing Priests c. Wherein they shew themselves more blind than the Scribes and Pharisees who confessed it to be God's priviledge alone to forgive sins Vse 2 Vse 2. See what to do if we would have our sins pardoned and have inward peace and comfort in our Consciences Seek to God in Christ for mercy and pardon humble thy self to him confess thy sins and sue to him most earnestly for pardon and mercy c. This is the onely way to obtain pardon and inward peace and there is no other way in the World Him thou hast offended and he onely can forgive thee and it is his mercy alone in pardoning thy sins which can cure and heal thy wounded Conscience and give thee true inward comfort and peace It is not carnal Mirth or Company or following the World that can ease or pacify a wounded Conscience guilty of sin but God's mercy alone pardoning it in Christ and assuring us in Conscience of it Quest Quest Are we not to ask forgiveness of men also Answ Answ Yes so far as we have by any sin offended or scandalized men but first and principally we are to humble our selves to God and make our peace with him See before upon the 7th Verse of the 2d Chapter Observ 2. From the Title Father given to God in respect of the Disciples of Christ being Believers We may gather the great and excellent priviledge of true Believers in that they have God to be their Father and they are his Children by the Grace of Adoption in Christ though by Nature they are Children of Wrath as others Joh. 20. 17. I ascend to my Father and your Father to my God and your God Joh. 1. 12. As many as received him to them he gave Power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Gal. 3. 26. Ye are all the Children of God by Faith in Jesus Christ Use Use This is matter of great comfort to the faithful for God being their Father cannot but love them dearly as Children and shew his love by all fruits of it He cannot but take care of them and provide for them all things needful for Soul and Body He cannot but shew pity and compassion towards them in their afflictions and miseries Psal 103. 13. like as a Father pitieth his Children c. He cannot but bear with their Infirmities and pardon their failings in Duty Observ 1 Observ 3. In that God is said to be in Heaven above all other places by his special presence this may teach us a two-fold Duty 1. That we should labour to be heavenly-minded and affected that so where God our portion and chief treasure is there may our hearts be also Col. 3. 2. Set your affections on things that are above c. Phil. 3. 20. Our conversation is in heaven viz. in heart and affection by heavenly meditations and affections carried towards the things that are above where God our Father is we should therefore labour to be with him there in mind and affection as much and often as is possible even while we live on earth We should often meditate of God that is of his Nature Essence and Divine Properties and of his love and favour toward us as David Psal 73. 25. Whom have I in heaven but thee c. We should also often meditate of the nature and excellency of that life to come and raise our hearts and affections to the love and desire of these heavenly things c. weaning our hearts from this world and using it as if we used it not 2. This should teach us to be willing yea desirous to be gathered in due time to that excellent place where God our Father is that where he is we may be also immediately joyned to him and seeing him as he is face to face A true loving Child desires to be with his Father in his sight c. So should we c. See how willing we should be to dye when God calls us to it as Paul Phil. 1. 23. and 2 Cor. 5. 8. that we may go to our Father Joh. 20. 17. Also to love the appearing of Christ at the last day Verse 26. But if ye do not forgive neither will your Father c. The second Reason used by our Saviour to move his Disciples to free forgiving of enemies
every true child of God 1. Pray unto God to work and increase in us this holy affection 2. Labour for a true feeling and assurance of Gods love to us in Jesus Christ that this may cause us truely to love him again and to be zealous for his glory being offended when he is dishonoured by the sins of others 3. Labour to mortify all corrupt carnal and sinfull anger in our selves and in our own cause which is a hinderance and enemy to this holy anger Col. 3. 8. Put off all these anger wrath malice c. Ephes 4. 26. Now lest we offend in our anger against the sins of others as it is easy to do these Rules or Cautions are to be remembred by us 1. That our anger conceived against the sins of others must be upon good and sufficient ground that is upon notice taken of some manifest or known sin in others not upon a bare suspition without good ground neither must it be for trifles but for some great offence to God 2. Our anger must be so directed against the sin that it be not against the person offending unlesse it be with relation to the sin and in that respect onely We must here carefully distinguish between the person and the sin 3. Our displeasure must be joyned with love to the person against whom we are offended neither must it hinder us in doing any duty of love to the party but rather further us therein as in praying for the party in admonishing him c. Exod. 32. 32. Though Moses were angry at the peoples Idolatry yet he prayed for them 4. It must be joyned with sorrow and grief for the offence and dishonour of God So Mark 3. 5. Our Saviour looked angerly upon them mourning for the hardness of their hearts 5. Our anger and displeasure must be moderate not exceeding due measure either in regard of the passion or affection it self or in regard of the continuance of it Ephes 4. 26. Be angry and sin not Let not the Sun go down c. Neither must our anger be such as to distemper us or make us unfit for good duties either of God's worship or of our particular Callings neither must it cause us to break out into any undecent behaviour 6. Our displeasure against the sins of others must be joyned with indignation also against our own sins and that first and principally Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour was displeased at this fault and offence even in his own Disciples which were near and dear unto him we may learn that we should be offended and displeased at sin even in our best friends even in such as we most love and affect We must not respect persons in our anger against sin but be unpartial in it being offended at sin wheresoever we find it and in whatsoever persons though in our dearest friends kindted acquaintance c. Our Saviour was offended at Peter himself calling him Satan Matth. 16. when he went about to perswade him that he should not suffer death Moses was very angry at the people of Israel for their sin of Idolatry as we heard and yet he loved them so dearly that he wished himself to be blotted out of God's Book if it had been possible rather than their sin should not be forgiven Exod. 32. Job shewed himself offended at his own Wife calling her foolish woman Job 2. Love to our friends must be no hinderance to our holy anger and displeasure against their sins but rather a help and furtherance for this affection ought to come from love to their persons and to be joyned with it as we have heard and so the more we love them the more we should be affected with indignation against them when they dishonour God Use Use To reprove such as can be angry and displeased at sin in their enemies or in strangers but not in their friends kindred familiar acquaintance c. whom they love and affect They can bear with grosse sins in such and wink at them and are not moved to displeasure They can like and approve of the faults of such and be well enough pleased with them yea they can commend and justify the faults of such as if they were vertues c. But this is carnal love which hinders them from being displeased at the sins of those whom they affect and it is also a plain argument that the anger they shew against the sins of others whose persons they affect not is also a carnal and sinfull anger and nothing less than that true holy zeal and indignation against sin which should be in them For if it were a holy anger they would be moved against the same sins in their friends as well as in their enemies Observ 3 Observ 3. In that our Saviour was not onely displeased but much displeased or offended at his Disciples for this fault and sin of hindering the little children from being brought to him we may gather that it is a great sin any way to hinder the Spiritual good and Salvation of Infants or little Children yea though it be unwittingly or of ignorance as it is probable this was done by the Disciples much more then to do it willingly or against knowledg Christ is much offended still at such Now the Salvation of young Children is hindered when the means of their Spiritual good and Salvation is neglected As when they are kept or withheld from the Sacrament of Baptism which by the way shews the sin of such Parents as do neglect or defer it too long and especially the sin of the Anabaptists utterly denying that Sacrament to Infants c. Also by Parents neglecting to pray for their Children and to train them up Religiously so soon as they begin to have understanding and to be capable of Instruction c. Great is the sin of such Parents who thus neglect the means of the Spiritual good and Salvation of their children and so as much as lies in them do hinder their Salvation They are Spiritual Murtherers of the Souls of their own Children Let all Parents be admonished to take heed of this grievous sin that they be not guilty of it Mark 10. 14. But when Jesus saw it he was much displeased and said unto them Suffer the little children May 18. 1628. to come unto me and forbid them not for of such is the Kingdom of God HEre it followeth how our Saviour shewed his displeasure by his words to his Disciplas commanding them to suffer little children c. This Commandment hath also the force of a reproof whereby he blameth them for not suffering but rather hindering the children from coming to him Where 1. Consider the Precept or Commandment it self which is given both affirmatively Suffer little children to come unto me and negatively Forbid them not 2. The Reason of the Commandment why they should suffer little children to come to him c. Because of such is the Kingdom of God 3. A confirmation of that reason
Verse 15. Of the first And said unto them It is most probable that he spake these words to his Disciples publickly and openly before the rest of the people then present so that as they had openly or publickly offended in reproving and hindering those that brought children to Christ so he doth by these words publickly reprove them Suffer little children to come c. and forbid them not He gives them a double Precept or Injunction the one affirmative the other negative both to shew the weightiness of the matter enjoyned and also to affect and move them the more to yield obedience and to aggravate their fault and sin in going about to hinder such little children from coming to him Observ 1 Observ 1. It is fit for us not only to be inwardly moved with a holy anger and displeasure at the sins of others but also to shew it outwardly by the signs and testimonies of his displeasure as either by admonishing or reproving such as offend so far as our Calling will permit especially those of our charge or at least by our outward gesture and behaviour as by a sad or angry countenance as our Saviour did Mar. 3. 5. looking angerly upon the Scribes c. or by departing out of the company Some way or other it is fit for us to shew our dislike and indignation against the sins of others especially against gross and notorious or open sins by which God is much dishonoured It is not enough to be offended at such sins in others but to shew our selves displeased And this we are to do for a twofold end or reason 1. To testifie hereby our zeal for Gods glory 2. That by this means we may bring the parties offending to the sight of their sins and consequently to shame and repentance for the same if it be possible Observ 2 Observ 2. Publick faults and offences may and ought to be publickly and openly reproved by such as have a calling thereunto By publike offences understand such as give publick scandal c. The disciples here offending in publick by hindering such as have brought their children to Christ he did openly reprove them and shew his displeasure against them for this sin before all the people then present 1 Tim. 5. 20. Them that sin rebuke before all that others also may fear He speaks of the Elders of the Church Understand it of such as sin openly or in publike and notorious manner Gal. 2. 14. Paul reproved Peter openly for his open dissimulation c. Yea though the parties offending be of eminent place or dignity yet if they give publick scandal they may and ought to be publickly reproved by such as have a Calling to do it Our Saviour did not spare his Disciples here because of their dignity or Apostolical Office Use Use To confute such as think they may take liberty to sin openly and so give publick scandal and yet think much to be openly reproved for such sins either by the Ministers of God or other that have a calling to do it They think they should rather be admonished privately that so their good name and credit may be preserved On the contrary such are to know that Gods glory is to be preferred before their credit and therefor● if they sin openly and give publick offence to others they are openly to be reproved though it tend never so much to their discredit rather than by winking at such gross and scandalous sins Gods Name be dishonoured ●nd the Gospel evil spoken of Observ 3 Observ 3. It is the Will of Christ that Infants or young children should be admitted to the Sacrament of Baptism for this is one way of bringing them to Christ as we have before heard But of this more upon the words following For of such is the Kingdom of God The Kingdom of God is in the New Testament taken diversly Not to speak of all the different acceptations of it there are two very usual and common among the rest 1. When it signifies the state of grace in this life in which God doth raign in his Elect by the power of his Word and Spirit Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is righteousness peace c. 2. When it signifies that estate of glory and happiness prepared for the Elect of God in heaven after this life in which God shall raign in them and with them for ever Joh. 3. 3. The unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God In this latter sense we are to it take in this place Of such is the Kingdom c. That is Eternal life or that estate of glory in Gods heavenly Kingdom doth of right belong unto such as these young Infants or little children He doth not say Of these is the Kingdom of God but Of such c. Thereby implying That this Kingdom of God or state of eternal life in Heaven doth belong not only to the Infants or little Children themselves but also to such as do resemble and are like unto young children in disposition and qualities Observ 1 Observ 1. Infants or young Children born in the Visible Church do belong to Gods heavenly Kingdom and have right to eternal life as well as elder persons The doctrine of our Saviour in this place Reason Reason They are within the Covenant of God which he hath made with the faithful and with their seed Gen. 17. 7. God sayes to Abraham I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee c. to be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee And Act. 2. 39. The Promise is to you and to your children yea to many generations as in the second Commandment Now if they be within Gods Covenant then they have right to the Blessings promised in that Covenant especially to eternal life which is the chief of those blessings Caution Caution This is not so to be understood as if all Infants born in the Church must needs be actually saved but such only as belong to Gods Election of grace Though all that are born in the Church have a kind of right to eternal life in regard of being within the general Covenant of God yet it followes not that all have a true and absolute right so as to be actually partakers thereof Gods Election is free and not tyed to all that are outwardly within the Covenant quoad nos Therefore though we are to hope well of such as are born in the visible Church yet c. Use 1 Vse 1. If Infants born in the Church do belong to Gods Kingdom and have right to eternal life by vertue of Gods Covenant then hence it followes that they have also right to the Sacrament of Baptism be-being one of the seals of Gods Covenant and such a seal as Infants are capable of and a means to help and further them toward the Kingdom of heaven Act. 2. 38. Peter brought this argument to move the Jews to be baptised together with their children for that also