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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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them into the lap of his mercy But what is repentance not a knock on the breast a sigh a sob a teare only but a changing of the minde a forsaking of sin and an imbracing of vertue declinare à malo facere bonum that is repentance He hath not repented of his drunkennesse that is sorry for it to day and goes to it againe to morrow he hath not repented of his uncleannesse that grieves for it a time and returnes with the Swine to the wallowing in the mire He that forsaketh his sin shall have mercy Rahab had beene an Harlot before her conversion but she was none afterwards if shee had continued an impure Harlot still the Holy Ghost would not have honoured her so highly as to put her in the Catalogue of them of whom our Saviour descended Such were some of you sayes S. Paul but ye are washed c. I was a persecutor I was a blasphemer sayes S. Paul but now I am none So a good Christian must say I was a ruffianly swearer but now I am none I use the Name of God with reverence in all my speeches I was a Thiefe secret and open too but I thanke God I am none now I would not defraud a man of a penny to my knowledge though I might get a world by it I was a covetous Miser glued to my wealth it went to my heart to part with a penny to any good use but now I can honour God willingly with my riches I was an adulterer I thought my selfe in heaven when I was with Whores and Harlots but now I thinke it to be another hell Happy are they that have beene harlots and now are none as Rahab was What became of this Harlot She perished not neither temporally nor eternally with the rest of Iericho which are branded with a marke of disobedience They would not obey God they stood out with him at the staves end would not yeeld themselves to the Israelites as God had appointed Therefore they were all put to the sword Rahab in faith obeyed the wil of God submitted her self to him therfore she perished not in the common destruction of the City the Lord knows how to deliver the righteous and to reserve the wicked to the day of wrath The world was drowned but Noah was saved the Sodomites were destroyed but Lot was preserved all Iericho went to the pot but Rahab perished not with them Thus graciously dealt the Lord with his children But was Rahab alone preserved No verily but all that were in the house with her her father kinsfolke c. What had they all faith as well as she that they perished not That cannot be collected out of the Scripture Rahabs faith is commended not a word of theirs yet they were exempted from the temporall calamity for her sake The justmust live eternally by his own faith yet for outward externall blessings they may fare the better for the faithfuls sake Cursed Cham was saved from drowning for Noahs sake God blessed the house of the Egyptian for Iosephs sake All that were in the Ship though some prophane Mariners were in it were saved for S. Pauls sake Behold then what a blessed thing it is to be in the families of good Men and Women You may escape many fearefull calamities for their sakes GOD will not only extend his mercy to them but to all that be in their houshold whereas it is dangerous being with the wicked and irreligious S. Iohn would not goe into the Bath where Cerinthius was But why did they not put her to the sword as well as others what induced them to spare her Surely their owne Promise which they had given her ratified with an oath Ioshua had a speciall care of that Iosh. 6.22 Which may be a fruitfull caveat to us all to make conscience of our words and promises Promise is a debt and every honest man will have a care to pay his debts Though that be counted a ceremonie now a dayes yet the Israelites according to promise tooke Rahab set her safe out of the Citie before they slew the rest Regulus a Heathen man kept his word with his enemies though it cost him his life but we that be Christians will not keepe our words with our friends Especially if our promise bee bound with an oath as theirs was let not a world make us to breake it Iuramentum est res sacra Let not that be violated But must all oathes bee kept because Herod swore to give the Damosell whatsoever she asked did he well for his oaths sake to give her Iohn Baptists head No verily There be two that may be hindred by our keeping of our oathes God and our selves If we have sworne though it be to our own hindrance let us keepe it but if it be to GODS hinderance to the dishonour of God let us not keepe them Hast thou sworne in an anger never to come at such a Mans house be sorry for it Hast thou sworn in a fury to kil a man grieve for it and breake that oath But is it a lawfull thing which thou hast sworne tending to GOD's glory and the good of thy brethren Thou art now in an holy bond the breach whereof God will revenge Therefore looke to it let nothing cause thee to infringe thine oath Yet now adayes oathes are nothing men are become meere Atheists they think there is no God they may sweare for sweare abuse his Name at their pleasure tush God sees it not A monstrous height of impiety whereunto we are growen Words writings bonds oathes are nothing if there be no law to compell us to the keeping of them Hast thou sworne and that before a Iudge which is a certaine god on the earth to say the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth So God save thee by Iesus Christ discharge that oath with feare and reverence Have we in England taken the oath of allegiance to be true to the Kings Majestie his Crowne and Dignity not to conspire with the Pope or any forreigne Power against the flowrishing State of the Realme Let us keepe this oath not for feare but for conscience sake An oath is an edge-toole dally not with it GOD was revenged on the house of Saul because of the oath broken with the Gibeonites therefore the Israelites would not break their oath to Rahab they did not here pretend the Papists rule Fides non est servanda cum haeretico Rahab is a Cananite therefore let us not keepe our oath with her The cause of her preservation was the peaceable entertaining of the Spies which was a lively demonstration of her faith shee knew them to bee their enemies yet shee shutteth not the doores against them hence ye villaines ye come to espie the weaknesse of our Citie yee shall not set a foot into my house but readily and willingly she takes them in there she hides them from the cruelty of the King she conducts
299. our comfort thereby 299 Christs body a Tabernacle so is ours 310 311. Christ is the sole Mediatour 361. so long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare 369. Christs second comming notably described 376. Christs flesh called a vaile why 404. Christ more manifest to us than to those of old with the use of it 534 535 Christ his death a cruell death in three respects 541. hee suffered foure kinde of wayes ibid. None so spoken against as he 543 Christians All Christian souldiers especially Christian Ministers 6 7. Reasons why one Christian should be deare to another 28. how and wherein wee are Christs fellowes 67 wee are called Christians of Christ. 68. a Christians dignity 92 93. they should not feare death 95. they are the house of God 121 122. their dignitie 138 139. their dutie ibid. Christians must be simple not subtill 30● cunning cruell Christians are like dogges that will bite before they barke 30● they must be undefiled 302 303. as soone as we become Christians we must looke for afflictions 428. Christians must not be cowards 430 Church how a house or household may be called a Church 7.8.119 All true Churches agree in substance of Religion though not in ceremonie 328. the Arke a lively representation of the Church 334. the Churches protectors and protection how shaddowed out 335. the uses of it 335 336. the Church is Gods house 406. the Ministers are in some sort over it ibid. Vniversalitie no necessary note of the Church 451 452. the Church is compared to a mountaine 572. to a city 573. the Churches universality dignity and stabilily well handled 579 580 c. City the Church compared to a citie 573. Heaven is a city which how we have already see 574 Cloud Its properties applied to the faithfull 536 Comming Christs second comming notably described 376. the joy conceived by Christs comming 390 the differences of Christs commings ibid. the comming of Christs day is fearefull to the sinfull joyfull to the Saints 419 Compasse there are two compassers 539 Condemnation many things condemne a man 452 Conscience It is the soules register to keepe a note of all our sinnes 344. what can secure our consciences ibid. no outward thing can purge the conscience 345. the sting of conscience is grievous 356. there is a conscience in every man what it doth with its divers kindes 385 386. Ministers ought to have a good conscience 635 what a good conscienc● is 635 636. divers definitions of the word 636. Wherein a Minister should examine his conscience 637. a good life is the meate of the conscience 644 Consideration the greatnesse of the word 116. it must goe before provocation 411 Constancie Christians must be constant 622 675. Foure impediments to constancie 677 678 Covetousnesse all a mans doings smell something of it 915 reasons against it 616 remedies against it ibid. a covetous man is never contented 7●4 Countrey how sweete a mans owne country is to him 455 Abrahams forsaking it was a great triall ibid. we must not forsake it without a calling ibid 456. the world is not the Saints countrey 469 Creatures All Creatures are servants to Gods children 510 Cow a red cow in the sacrifice what it signifieth 354 a tipe of Christ. 355 D. DAy how the word to Day is taken 127. Festivall dayes warrantable 333 Dead Dead things and dead workes compared 357 Death good Christians should not feare death 95. there are three that have the power of death 1. God 2. Man 3. the Devill 108 Death is a Serpent without a sting 110. Death common to all men 372. 37● the use of it ibi why the godly should die seeing Christ died for them 373. death is a bitter cuppe but sugared by Christ 374. two benefits come by death 374. after death comes judgement 375. an instance of sudden death 377. they are oft deepest in Gods bookes that are soonest taken away an instance of it 443. Death cannot hurt the godly it rather benefitteth them 4.65 yet the thought of it is bitter to some 469 happy they are that die in the faith 466 a patterne of our behaviour in death 486 487. Death a pretty story against the feare of death 574 Debts they are to be paid before we be too forward in the charges of sacrificing 37. there is little quiet in the honest debter ibid. wee must be marvellous carefull how wee come in debt for others ibid. what debt wee owe to our Ministers 38 Deceive Deceivers there are many 137. sinne deceiveth us many wayes ibid. Deliverance what it is and whom Christ delivereth 109. God doth deliver three wayes 434 Desperation we must beware of it 517 518 Despise Christ is despised two wayes 590 Devill why God suffers the devill to walke up and downe like a Lyon 109 Diligence wee cannot goe to heaven without diligence 231. to diligence we must adde perseverance 232 Diotrephes his name interpreted with the use of giving of names 997 998 Doctrine we must not looke for any mint of new doctrine 55 Doubt Christians must keepe a meane betweene doubting of their salvation and presuming 139 Draw Draw neere the vertues whereby we must draw neere to God 381. what this drawing neere is and how we must doe it 407. Christians must be no with-drawers except it be from the wicked 435 Drunkennesse it pulls on fornication 565 Dulnesse the causes of Dulnesse in hearing 203 E EArth man compared to earth 220 Education wherein childrens Education doth consist 668 Elect Election God hath his chosen among all 25 Enoch of his person and translation to heaven with many cirstances thereof 441 44● c. Esau his Acts especially that of selling his 〈◊〉 right 564. his punishment 566 Erre Errours how Israel Erred 131 Evidence Faith is our Evidence and we must make much of it 431 Evill it is soone imitated 706 what we must doe that are compassed about with Evill men ibid. c. Examples they are more avayleable than precepts 17. we must make use of the Examples of old 134. if good then to be followed 179. Patternes how prevailent 233. wee must follow our Patterne in goodnesse 314. even in all good ibid. three Reasons of the prevailencie of Examples 536 537 Excommunication its definition 705. to be excommunicated is a fearefull condition ibid. Exhort we should mutually Exhort one another 136. Exhor if it be timely taken it will awaken us out of sinne 136 F FAlling whether every falling away be a sin against the Holy Ghost 215 216. the conditions of that falling away 216 Fame of both good and bad with their feete and wings 134. it is compared to a Shippe receiving all passengers 688 Father our Fathers must not bee a Rule for us alwayes to follow 127. foure speciall duties wee owe to our spirituall Fathers 629 630 Faith it is its property to apply God to our selves 11. A justifying Faith cannot be without love 15. unto Faith must bee annexed Hope 122. we must
commended for her Fact 520 521 Raine the Word of God compared to Raine 220 221 Rebuke to rebuke a minister is the sinne of sinnes 333. what honor they bring 501. our impatience of Reproofe 652 Reconciliation It ought to be among Christians for divers reasons 27. Redemption it is plenarie 353 354. the end of our Redemption is to serve God 358 Reformation there is 1 a formation 2 a deformation 3 a Reformation 346 347 Reliques the Iesuits wrong ground of Reliques 332 Popish Reliques foolishly collected out of Scripture 488 Religion It doth not evert pollicie 26. wee must both openly and constantly professe it 409. two things hinder it ibid. c. 430. our reward for our constancie in Religion is great in many respects 431 Remember Remembrance wee have sundry remembrancers 387. There are three things that we must remember 427 428 Good things and good men must be remembred 619. how 620 Repentance it hath two parts 208. its power 217. God cannot Repent 293 Rest A double rest 133. the cause why Israel was deprived of their rest ibid. the Rest of Gods people is unexpressable 154 we must labour for that Rest. 155 Restitution the kindes of wrongs whereof restitution must bee made are 4.1 of the Goods 2 of the Mind 3 of Fame 4 of Fortune 36. to whom Restitution must bee made ibid Resurrection 4 pillars on which the proofe of resurrection leane on 210 211. Our hopes strengthned by faith in the resurrection 479. The strong inducements we have thereunto ibid. c. A good consideration of it 480. All shall Rise 530 Revenge none may revenge but God 425 Reward our constancie in Religion shall bee rewarded 431. yet that reward is not merited ibid. but of Mercy 445. the reward how to be looked unto 501 502.675 676 Riches they are Gods good gifts yet are to be forsaken for Gods sake 496 S SAbbath some workes a●d what they are that ma●t bee done on that day 515 Sacraments how they sanctifie 384 Sacrifice the Sacrifices that ministers now offer are either common or proper 195. of spirituall Sacrifices ibid. All Priests have their Sacrifices so must all Christians 311. the Sacrifice of Christ is termed Sacrifices and why 65. the weakenesse of the Legall Sacrifices 378. and the power of Christs Sacrifice 378 379. the impossibility of Sacrifices to take away sinne till Christ was Sacrificed 388 foure things commend Christs Sacrifice 396. externall Sacrifices of Religion are to be done 440 Saints Papists beleeving in the saints confuted 13 14. the saints dignity is to bee Gods He●res 24● they are but strangers and must so carry themselves 467 468. the world is not their Country 469. how Saints departed are to be remembred and had in honour 620 Salutation the great Salvation comes by preaching 81 82. it is made sure by Gods owne oath 241. A hard thing to be saved 452. assurance thereof how had 581 Salvations they are commendable 44. the Anabaptists unchristianlike herein 44 45. examples hereof 45. whom we must salute ibid. c. whom not 679. examples ibid. c. Sampson his Faith Facts and Fame 523. A censure of his selfe-slaying 524 Samuel his Faith Facts and Fame 525 Sanctification how the Sacraments sanctifie 384. A twofold sanctification 424 Sanctuary the word how used 309 Sarah of her faith and facts 461 462 c. her laughter condemned 461 Scriptures the Holy-Ghost is the Author of them 124 All the scriptures are called but one book 392. Christ is to be found only in the scriptures 393. how the scriptures speake 547 548. they are not to be reade carelessely 592 Searching what it requires 205 Seeke Rules for seeking of God 445 Servants they must not be detained without their Masters liking 29. an absurdity of Papists in this point ibid Serve the end of our redemption is to serve God 358. and how ibid. It is the most excellent service ibid. c. Shaddow what it doth and how discerned with an application thereof 383. little else but shaddowes among some 384 Shame we must not be ashamed of our Religion 410 Sheapheard Christ is our Great Sheapheard 648. how and wherein we are resembled to Sheepe ibid. how Christ became our Sheapheard ibid c Simple Christians must be simple not subtile 301 Simonie well defined 638 639 committed foure wayes 639 6●0 Sion Its interpretation 57● Sinne God is not the author sed Ordinator peccati 31. Others sinnes must not be Aggravated but Extenuated rather 32 Christ hath purged us from all our sinnes 60. the use of it 61. sinne deceiveth us many wayes 137. the sinne against the holy Ghost discribed 214 our best workes are defiled with some sinne 25● 253. there is none that sinneth not 339. sinnes called Dead workes 356. sinnes well tearmed dead workes 357 358. So long as Christ doth appeare in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare 369 the difference of sinning volens and voluntary 416. three wayes of striving against sinne 547 sinne is a bitter thing 562 563. It must be suddenly stopped in the very beginning else it will spread 563 Sit the comforts of a beleever from Christs sitting at the Right Hand of God 62 63 Sonne the difference betweene the sonne and the servant Christ and Moses 120 Souldiers All Christians are Souldiers 6 7. and as souldiers we should stirre up one another 136 Soule how they are made 149 Speech our speech must be savory especially towards our death 489 Sprinkling the blood sprinkled on the people significant 364 Starres some Mathematicians undertake to number the starres 462 Steppes straight steps what and how made 558 Stranger we all confesse our selves so to be and must so carry our selves 467 468. wee should be kind to strangers 693 Study we must study to enter into eternall rest 155 156. the manifold circumstances of this study 156. this rest is worth our study 157. Reasons to spurre us to this study 157 158 Suffer Christ suffereth with his 189 Sweare how God doth sweare and how we may doe 132. two things cause him to doe it ibid. vid. Oath of swearing on the Bible 240. we may sweare by no Creature ibid. there be three principall things that God sweareth in his Word 292 T TAbernacle how interpreted and applyed 309 310 Christs body called a Tabernacle so is ours 310. different from houses 311. how the Tabernacle is applyed to Christ 326. why it is called a worldly Tabernacle or sanctuary 327. what is meant by the first Tabernacle 347 348. As Christ body is a Tabernacle so is ours 349. the differences betweene an house and a Tabernacle ibid. c. Teachers a warning to beware of them 672. their quality and marke 673. how to Arme our selves against them 674. reasons for it ibid Teares many sorts of them 568 Temptation comforts in it In and through Christ. 113. God is Tempted divers wayes .128 three Tempters 1. God 2. Divell 3. Man c. 473. Gods servants have their Tryalls 474. we must
Gods Councell as the Preachers be at this day the Iewes were honoured that God would speake to them by them but to us hee hath spoken by his onely Sonne therefore our honour is the greater we are set in an high chaire of dignity above them happy are the eyes that see that which we see Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see these things which we see and have not seene them God give us grace to use our happinesse to his glory and the salvation of us all In this the Old and New Testament are equall God is the Author of them both God spake by the Prophets then and he speaketh now by his Ministers The word of the Lord the burthen of the Lord thus saith the Lord. These were the preambles of all the Prophets God spake by the mouth of David as he spake by the mouth of all his Prophets So God speaketh by the mouth of the Preachers at this present day It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you Wee are the Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us When we teach God teacheth when we exhort God exhorteth when we reprove sinne God reproveth sin It makes no matter what the man be that speaketh so as he be the lawfull Minister of Christ God speaketh by the man when the man speaketh Gods word When the Ambassadour of the King of Denmark of France or any other Countrey speaketh in the Court the King speaketh whose person he doth represent when my Lord Chiefe Iustice gives the charge at the Assizes the King gives the charge for he sustaines the Kings Person and is a Commissioner for the King so when the Preacher speakes in the Pulpit when he in Gods name gives a charge against pride malice c. God himselfe speakes and gives the charge Oh that this were imprinted in the hearts of all that come to Church the Preacher is a man as thou art but God speakes by him and if thou despise him thou despisest God that speakes in him VERSE 2. WE have seene the estate of them in the time of the Law Now let us take a view of our condition under the Gospell Theirs were the first dayes ours be the last In those that were the first dayes some new Doctrine was daily to be expected but in these last dayes GOD hath opened to us his whole counsell there is no mint of any new Doctrine to be looked for now nothing but the second comming of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is to be expected which hath revealed the whole will of his Father to us If an Angel from Heaven preach any other Doctrine than that which wee have received in these last dayes let him bee accursed 2 In the last dayes there is greatest aboundance of knowledge In the last dayes I will powre out my Spirit on all flesh GOD then was sparing of his Spirit he sent it downe by drops but now he powres it out upon the Church they had the Moone-light we have the Sun-light Therefore if we be ignorant our condemnation shall be the greater as GOD knowes a number of ignorant persons are in this glorious light of the Gospell yea in those Towns where the Candle of Gods Word hath shined brightly these many yeares together The preaching of the Word is a well of water but we will not come with our buckets to fetch water at this Well or if we doe we come with riven buckets the water runs out by and by 3 These last dayes wherein we live are the most dangerous sinne overfloweth with a full streame In the last dayes perillous times shall come Never did sin shew her selfe with such a brazen face as it doth now Men now stick not to set themselves against the Word of GOD it selfe to call the authority of the Scripture in question whether all things be true in it or not To band themselves against the Preachers if not openly yet secretly and to pull downe if possible the Church it selfe these be the last times wherein we live GOD keepe us in them by his holy Spirit 4 Seeing they be the last dayes let us not be so much in love with them Will any be bestowing great cost on his house the last day when he is to goe out of it These are the last dayes of the world wherein we are ready to be turned out of the house of this world therefore let us not be inflamed too much with the love of it In the first dayes when they entred first into the farme of the world they might be merry and jocund we live in the last dayes when we cannot have long to tarry in it therefore let us not be glewed and wedded to it let us use this world as if we used it not for the fashion of this world fadeth away in these last dayes let us so live that whensoever Christ comes to judgement we may meet him joyfully in the Ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory Spoken unto us 1. To the Apostles first that saw and heard him then to all Christians His must be understood Mat. 21.37 But last of all he sent unto them his Son in his Sonne Col. 2.9 For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily The which Sonne speaketh to us by his Ministers to the worlds end they had servants to speake to them but God hath spoken to us by his Son yet even his Son is little regarded Many of the Pharisies knew him to be the Son of God this is the Heire yet they said come let us kill him I am perswaded if CHRIST were now alive and preached many yeeres together in this Towne yet there be some so maliciously set against the Word and the preachers of it that they could finde in their hearts to kill him Hee that heareth you heareth me and he that goeth about to kill them goes about to kill CHRIST too What a vile age doe we live in What manner of Son not adopted but naturall 1 Heire The Son is the Fathers Heire he hath a right and interest to all his Fathers goods and lands when his Father is dead he hath the same power lordship and authority over all that his Father had So Christ Psa. 2.8 Iohn 16.15 Ioh. 17.10 Yet God his Father never dieth He is Heire as God and Man the King and Mediator of the Church All power is given unto mee in Heaven and Earth God appointed Him He did not intrude Himselfe He was not appointed Heire because being in time made He deserved it by His holy life as Photinus said not only Heire in time but with the Father before all times Of all Of all persons as well as of all things CHRIST hath a right to all he that taketh away any thing bequeathed to the Heire by the Will and Testament of his Father robs the Heire and is guilty of theft if we goe about to take
many soft pillowes feather-beds and beds of dowlne to rest our selves upon many pleasant Orchards and Gardens faire and beautifull houses wherein we may rest but nothing comparable to that rest the bosome of Abraham where the soule of Lazarus resteth We must not thinke to goe to heaven without study bare wishing will not serve the turne It is not enough to say with Baalam O that my soule might dye the death of the righteous and my last end be like his Num. 23.10 We must first studie to live the life of the righteous It is not sufficient to say oh that I were in heaven but we must study to goe to heaven Now in all studying these things must concurre 1 There must be the party that studieth and that is every Christian high and lowe rich and poore of what estate or condition so ever The King and the subject the Ministers and their people the Master and the servant the Father and the childe the Husband and the Wife the Merchant and the clothyer the Gentleman and the Yeoman the Divines Lawyers Physitians Husbandmen c. all must study to enter into this rest 2 There must be a closet or a place to study in that is the chamber of our owne hearts Enter into thy closet sayes CHRIST We must goe often into the chamber of our owne hearts call our selves to an account examine what sinnes we have what courses wee take whether wee bee in regia via or not that leadeth to heaven 3 There must bee a booke to study on every Student must have his bookes There can be no workeman without his tooles nor no Scholler without a library Now the LORD will not trouble us with many bookes as CHRIST sayd one thing is necessary So one booke is necessary the booke of bookes the sacred booke of holy Scriptures Let us study that throughly and learne the way to heaven 4 There must bee a light to study by no man can study in the darke either he must have day light or candle light The light whereby wee study is the light of GODS Spirit who must enlighten our eyes that we may see the wonders of GODS Lawes and direct us to this heavenly rest Let us therefore pray to GOD that His Spirit may be with us in all our study as Acts 8.31 Lord take not thy Holy Spirit from mee let him accompany mee continually 5 There must bee diligence in study every Student must be diligent Learning is not gotten without paines The students in the Vniversity study day and night So doe the Lawyers at Innes of Court if they aspire to any fame in the Law So we that be Christians must bee diligent and painefull in our study 2 Pet. 1.10 use all diligence We must not study by fits a start and away but we must lie at it if by any meanes we may come to this rest 6 There must be a time to study in Now this time is the terme of our life from infancy to old age from the cradle to the grave so farre as is possible Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth Wherewithall shall a young man clense his wayes Psalm 119.9 A young man said of the tenne Commandements all these have I kept from my youth upwards Mark 10. Young men may die in the flower of their yeeres as Absalom did therefore let young men even in the flourishing time of youth study to enter into this rest And let old men likewise study it In matters concerning the world there bee emeriti milites a man at sixtie yeares of age is exempted from warfare aptissima arma senectutis artes exercitationesque virtutum The Levits were priviledged from the service of the Temple at fifty and some Schollers are so old that they can studie no longer not so here wee must all studie so long as we live yea in the time of old age hic opus est animo magis quàm corpore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cato learned Greeke when he was eighty yeeres old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solon So though we be fifty sixty eighty a hundred yeeres old yet we must alwayes be studying to enter into this rest And it is worth our studie 1. We shall rest from sinne here we sinne daily the best of us all the just man falls seven times a day Sinne makes the godly to cry out like tyred porters ô miserable men that we are who shall ease us of this burden Then we shall be like the Angels in heaven and sin no more 2. Wee shall rest from the workes of our calling The Merchant shall bee no more tossed upon the Sea the clothier bee no more riding up and downe for Wooll nor in the sale of clothes The magistrate shall be no longer molested with hearing of causes from morning to night as Moses was The Father no more caring for his Children c. we shall have all things without care and labour O happy rest let us study for it 3. Wee shall rest from all griefe paine and misery No more sicknesse crying and weeping all teares shall then bee wiped from our eyes Oh blessed rest who would not study for it Notwithstanding it is a wonder to see how this study is neglected We study to get money to hoord up gold and silver to buy houses and purchase lands Some will studie to get to great preferment how to climbe to this or that office but the maine studie of all is set aside What advantageth it a man to winne the whole world and loose his owne soule therefore especially study to enter into this rest where our soules and bodies shall remaine in happines for ever One Pamb was studying the first Verse of the thirtie ninth Psal. 19. yeeres and yet studied it not enough We must be studying this lesson to enter into this blessed rest the terme of our whole life and yet all little enough we must studie as they that feare to bee deprived of a thing Verse 1. If you are afraid to be deprived of your house and land by some false pretended title you will study hard to defend your selves even so doe you study for heaven that yee be not defeated of this rest Let us study earnestly to enter into his rest that when the few and evill dayes of our Pilgrimage bee ended wee may rest with Christ in the world to come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayes Chrys. and without wee cannot be saved yet that alone is not sufficient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If they could not get earth without much diligence how shall we heaven Especially 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indifferenter ac socorditer 1. Reason or spurre to prick us on to this heavenly and earnest study and meditation is taken from a terrible example as good men as we in outward appearance have fallen from this rest therefore let us take heede that the like happen not to us If you fall as they did you shall sinke into the same bottomlesse pitt that they
darke night wee may imagine a tree to bee a man but when the day comes it is easily discerned So the Word of GOD is the bright day and glorious sun-shine whereby we discerne truth from false-hood sound doctrine from that which is corrupt and hereticall Therefore let us exercise ourselves in Gods Word continually that we may discerne betweene the purity of the Gospell and the impurity of Popery and all Errours and Heresies whatsoever that being enlightned by the candle of the word we may see and take the way that leadeth to the kingdome of heaven CHAP. 6. BEfore wee had Saint Pauls objurgation that they were so great non proficients in the Schoole of Christ. Now follows an exhortation to pricke them forwards to greater perfection in Religion Where 1. The substance of the exhortation 2. The pressing and urging of it by foure arguments 1. A ridiculo 2. Ab exemplo 3. A Deo 4. A periculo 1. From a ridiculous absurditie set forth by a comparison 2. From an enumeration of the chiefe rudiments which they are to leave 3. From the efficient cause of the spirituall progresse which they are to make namely God 4. From a fearefull danger that will ensue if upon a carelesse neglect or contempt of the heavenly doctrine they stand at a stay and goe not forward by that meanes they may goe backeward and at the length may fall into the sin against the Holy Ghost Therefore it stands them in hand in feare and humility to aspire to perfection dayly more and more VERSE 1. THe exhortation hath two branches 1. What they are to leave 2. What they are to contend unto 1. Terminus à quo 2. Terminus ad quem Seeing it is a shame alwayes to be babes let us as men growne seeke after stronger meat The principles .i. that which begins us and enters us into Christianity leaving that How Not casting it for ever behinde our backes suffering it quite to slip out of our memories never thinking of it any more we must remember even the principles of Religion to our dying day but wee must not insist in those and set downe our staffe here but as good travellours goe on forwards As if one should say to a Grammer Scholler leave thy Grammar and goe to Logick Rhetoricke Philosophie to more deepe and profound points of learning his meaning is not that hee should leave his Grammar quite and never thinke on it any more but that he should passe from that to greater matters As if one should say to a Traveller going to London that sits eating and drinking at Colchester leave Colchester and goe on to London So leave this doctrine of the beginning of Christianity leave your A. B. C. be not alwayes beginners but proceede till ye come to some maturity Let us goe on to perfection with all cheerefulnesse and celerity Both we that are the teachers and you that are to be taught by us that we may aspire to perfection dayly more and more Wee cannot goe of ourselves we must be led namely by the hand of GOD Almighty as little Children cannot goe unlesse their mothers and nurses lead them Let us therefore intreat the Lord to lead us forward by the hand of his spirit to perfection dayly more and more Wee cannot climbe up to the highest staire of the ladder of perfection in this world we must be climbing all the dayes of our life Saint Paul was rapt into the third heaven yet he professed he was not yet perfect We know in part we believe in part and we must be as Schollers learning of our part so long as we live Though with Moses wee have beene brought up in all the learning of the Aegyptians though wee bee as perfect Scribes in the law of GOD as Ezra as eloquent and mightie in Scripture as Apollos though wee have as many tongues as Saint Paul who spake with tongues more than they all did yet wee must bee carryed on still to perfection wee must be as Travellours that are ever walking and going on and on never resting till wee come to our journeys end which will not bee till death it selfe shall come Our SAVIOUR himselfe as hee was a man did grow up in wisedome and shall any of us thinke our selves so wise that wee neede not to grow in wisedome Let us all goe on forwards to perfection every day more and more The first reason is taken from a ridiculous absurditie set forth by a comparison Not laying againe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because foundations are layd exceeding deepe in the earth All men laugh at those builders that are alwayes laying the foundation but never set up the Walls lay on the roofe tyle and glaze the house c. but every day are laying the foundation Those bee foolish builders So we that be Christians must not always be laying the foundation of religion but wee must build up ourselves as a glorious house to the Lord. Then hee sets downe the particular stones of this foundation which wee must not ever bee laying hee reckons up the chiefe points of the Christian catechisme which all ought to have at their fingers ends which it is a shame to be ever learning Of these some concerne this life some the life to come they that appertaine to this life are private or publike 1. Repentance which is illustrated by the things we are to repent of There be living workes which we doe when CHRIST liveth in us these are not to bee repented of but to be practised by us and there bee dead workes which be sinnes and are so called 1. Because they come from dead men that are dead in trespasses and sinnes 2. Because they tend to death and destruction the wages of sinne is death All sinnes are dead workes covetousnesse malice pride drunkenesse uncleannesse lying swearing c. are dead works therefore let us have nothing to doe with them Men are afraid to touch dead bodies or to come neere them we flye away from a dead and stinking carkasse Every sin is a dead carkasse that sends up an unsavory smell into the nostrills of God therefore let it be abhorred by us all let us turne away our eyes and hearts too from all dead workes Repentance hath two parts th● mortification of sin and vivification to newnesse of life Isa. 1.16 Zacheus repented him when he left his peeling and griping and became a liberall man made restitution to those whom hee had defrauded and gave the one halfe of his goods to the poore Peter repented of his denyall of Christ when he did not only weepe bitterly for it for a time but stood in defence of Christ to the very death Then an adulterer repents of his adulterie when hee leaves quite his Whores and harlots and possesses his vessell in holinesse and honour Repentance is a forsak●ng of the sinne and an imbracing of the contrary vertue It is not the laying aside of sinne for a time
of sores at his gate ever under one Crosse or another If there were no resurrection where this should be righted that sentence of the Psalmist might bee inverted verely there is no reward for the righteous verily there is no God that judgeth in the earth The third pillar is the Solemne funeralls that be in all nations All which are so many glasses wherein wee may behold the resurrection When we goe to a buryall we goe to a sowing the seede that is sowen lies covered in the earth all winter in the spring it shoots up againe and a goodly harvest ariseth of it So the body is sowne in corruption it rises in incorruption more beautifull then ever it was before The fourth pillar is that which Saint Paul urgeth to Christians 1 Cor. 15.12 Christ is risen therefore we shall ryse As Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly So Christ was three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth on Thursday he kept his Maundy he eate the Passeover and supper with his Disciples on good Friday he suffered and was crucified all Saturday being the Iewes Sabbath he lay in the earth on Sunday morning the first day of the weeke the Lords day the Lord Iesus rose triumphantly from the dead and this is the day of his resurrection on this day hee rose victoriously from the dead This is the day that the Lord hath made let us rejoyce and hee glad in it for Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours The first fruits are in heaven therefore the second fruits shall be there the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be there The Husband is in heaven therefore the Wife shall bee in heaven also we shall mee●e him with joy in the clouds and be translated with him into the kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever After the resurrection comes judgement it is appointed to men once to dye and then commeth the judgement Death were nothing if there were no judgement The Assi●es were nothing if there were nothing if there were no Gallowes no execution but as we must arise so wee must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it be good or bad Let us all thinke seriously of this eternall judgement It is called eternall judgement 1. Because it is of things eternall eternall life or eternall death 2. Because the sentence of that judgment is eternall the force and power thereof remaines ever both to the elect and reprobate they all goe eternally to the place appointed by the Iudge 3. Because the Iudge is eternall 4. Because the persons judged are eternall Some are to enjoy eternall happines some to suffer eternall punishment The judgement it selfe is not eternall that lasteth not ever but the fruit and event of it is eternall Oh that the cogitation of this judgement were deeply fixed in the harts of us all A great number even in the lap of the Church laugh at it in the closet of their hearts the Preachers talke much of a generall judgement that shall be after this life but if God let us alone till that day we shall doe well enough GOD grant we may escape the judgements here a flie for that judgement Yet Felix himselfe trembled at 〈◊〉 when Saint Paul spake of righteousnesse and the judgement to come though he were a judge himselfe he quaked at it Let us all feare this eternall judgement after an holy and religious manner and tremble at it In these judgements we may have Lawyers to plead for us then none shall be for us all against us especially our owne consciences as a thousand Lawyers and witnesses if our sinnes are not washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Therefore let us judge our selves here that wee bee not judged by the Lord hereafter let us bewaile our sinnes here that wee come not into the place where is weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for ever Let us remember this eternall judgement that it may bee as a bridle to restraine us from sinne That godly Father St. Hierome professed of himselfe whether he did eat or drinke or whatsoever he did this trumpet rang alwayes in his eares surgite mortui venite adjudicium When wee goe to bed in the evening when wee arise in the morning when we are about the affaires of our calling when Satan provokes us to stealing lying coofening purloyning c. Let us remember this eternall judgement let us call our selves to an account for our sins in this world repent seriously of them let us cast away our sins not as we do our coates when we goe to bed and put them on againe in the morning but throw them away and have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darknesse then wee shall have fellowship with Christ both in this life and in the life to come then we shall not need to feare this eternall judgement The Iudge is our SAVIOUR our elder brother our head our husband to whom we are married therefore we may lift up our heads at that day because our redemption is at hand we may rejoyce at his comming for we shal sit on the bench with him and judge the world and reigne with him for ever The Iesuits collect from hence that the Christians had a Catechisme delivered to them by tradition which they learned before they were acquainted with the Scriptures If every one should pick his faith out of the Scripture there would be madd rule Indeed if they had such heads as the Papists have that are bold to call the Scripture a nose of Wax But to answer 1. These Hebrewes to whom St. Paul writeth were exercised in the Scripture for Rom. 3.2 Vnto them were committed the oracles of God 2. Here is nothing in this Catechisme but is derived out of the Scripture 3. How shall men picke their faith out of the Pater-noster Ave-Mary c. being in an unknowne tongue Here wee have a short Catechisme consonant to the Scripture that was used in the Primitive Church Such as is at this day the Lords prayer the ten Commandements and the Articles of our beliefe These be profitable points but we that professe the Gospell must not always be in these they are to be propounded continually in the Church unto Children to them that bee rude and ignorant but Christians must not dwell in these wee must bee carryed to perfection till wee come to a ripe age in CHRIST IESUS wee must be able to answer all Heretickes and gaine-sayers and to defend the sacred truth of Christ his Gospell against them all VERSE 3. LEst hee should seeme to have presumed upon his owne strength when he said let us be lead forward to perfection here he referreth all to God that must be the leader of us all hee must give us feet to walke to perfection by Wee both we that are to teach and you
and not in his heart It hath beene an ancient custome in the Church of Rome to sweare by Saints and by their relikes But consuetudo sine veritate erroris est vetustas Cypr. l. 2. ep 3. The laying on of the hand on a Bible or a testament when we sweare This may bee excused for properly to speake wee doe not sweare by the Bible it is only an obtestation as the words of this bible are most true so is that which I sweare and it is an outward token whereby wee declare to the world that wee sweare by him which is the authour of the Bible or because in this booke are contained the promises and threatnings of the LORD to them that sweare truly and against them that sweare falsely so among the heathen they touched the altar when they swore yet they swore by him whom they worshipped on that altar for they would lift up their hands to heaven when they swore denoting by that bodily gesture of theirs that they did sweare by God alone who made the heavens We may sweare by God primariò principaliter but we may sweare by the creatures Secundariò This is but a meere shift and fond evasion Zephan 1.5 for they sware by the Lord primarily by malchum secondarily yet God was offended with them Besides there is none greater than man but God The Angels are creatures as well as we they are our fellow-servants and one fellow-servant must not sweare by another therefore we that be creatures must sweare only by the Creatour 3. Here wee see what a reverent estimation wee are to have of an oath it must be the end of contradiction after men have sworne wee should be as mute as fishes not have a word to say An oath was sacred among the heathen 1 Sam. 30.15 Abimelech and Phicol his Captaine were satisfied when they had Isacks oath Gen. 21.22 but with us small credit is to be given to oathes the oath of a Christian is no sure foundation to build upon Iesabel had false witnesses at her elbow to condemne Naboth withall the Pharisees had two false witnesses in a readinesse to sweare against our SAVIOUR CHRIST And now a dayes such is the corruption among Christians that small credit is to be given to many mens oathes for they say it is an easie matter in London and I would to God it were not in the country to procure men to sweare to what they will So that now a dayes an oath is rather the beginning then the end of controversies whereupon so many perjuries are found in the land a manifest argument that Atheisme growes among us The foole that is the wicked man sayes in his heart there is no God and I thinke many sweare by God if there be a God but all false swearers shall one day know to the terrour of their conscience that there is a God who will be avenged on them for abusing his name Let an oath be such an holy thing with us that there may be no more controversie after we have sworne Then why should we doubt of our salvation God hath bound himselfe by oath and promise to bring us to his kingdome and shal wee bee as reeds wavering with the winde I for our salvation dependeth in some sort on our workes pendet ex certitudine operum quae conjectu ralis atque imperfecta certitudo est It dependeth on works not as causes but as inseparable effects of faith not upon their dignity or perfection but upon their being with faith Be faithfull to the end and I will give thee the crowne of life I but who can tell whether he shall persevere to the end or not We may be good to day and bad to morrow Noah David Peter fell Yes we may be comfortably sure of our perseverance for hee that hath begun a worke in us will finish it to the day of Christ and though we fall yet we shall rise againe for the Lord putteth to his hand whom he once loveth hee loveth to the end and never forsakes them till hee have brought them to his kingdome Onely let us not bee rocked a sleepe in the cradle of security but work out our salvation with feare and trembling VERSE 17. Ἐφ ' ῷ̔ wherein in the which thing or in the which oath or for the which cause God did it willingly not by constraint none could enforce him to it More abundantly then was necessary for his bare word had beene enough save that the weakenesse of man required it See here GODS dealing with us after the manner of men To shew that is to make a lively and evident demonstration Vnto the heyres of promise not to Abraham alone but to all the faithfull The immutability which cannot be transposed or altered Not of his promise but counsell arguing that it was no sudden or fickle promise but such as proceeded from wise and deliberate counsell and the counsell or decree of God standeth for ever That of Hezekiahs and the Ninevites had a secret condition unlesse he had prayed earnestly for life and the others repented Ier. 18.7 8. or it was rather a commination then the pronuntiation of a decree or counsell Interposuit se as if CHRIST the Mediatour had made this oath and interposed himselfe in it betweene the father and us for the greater ratifying of it Oecumen Annexed to his promise Here we have the dignity of the godly they are heyres not of a Knight of a Lord a Duke c. but of God and the promises that is of the joyes of heaven which GOD hath promised to them in his word The kingdome of heaven belongs to Children not to servants the faithfull are the Children of God and joynt heires with Christ so that the inheritance of the celestiall Canaan pertaines to them how then dare you despise the lest of the heyres of promise 2. This may comfort us against the crosses of this life Art thou a poore man hast no money in thy purse to relieve thy selfe and thy family withall as Peter and Iohn had not hast thou not a bed to rest thy weary body on nor an house to hide thine head in as Christ had not the foxes have holes and the birds of the ayre have nests but the Sonne of man hath not whereon to lay his head yet faint not neither be discouraged for thou art an heyre of promise and shalt one day have a full fruition of the heavenly inheritance prepared from before the foundations of the world were laid The heyre of a Gentleman is kept under Tutors and Governours in the time of his nonage but as soone as that is expired he is at liberty and free from all so though we be the heyres of God yet in the time of our minority and nonage in this world we are kept under many austere masters yet the day of our redemption drawes nigh when as all teares shall be wiped from our eyes and we shall have full
envy them that be adorned with better gifts then we nor to contemne them that have lesser to checke them by their wants and infirmities to prie into them with a curious eye but to the whetting and sharpening one of another to be as spurs and whetstones one to another To love the badge of Christians Gal. 5.6 And to good workes It is no love that hath no good workes 1 Ioh. 3.18 This stirring up of our brethren must not be done rashly or unadvisedly but with due advice and wise consideration therefore sayes he consider one another First wee must consider then provoke we must diligently consider when we come to the performance of this duty Wee must consider in what case our brother is touching his soule whether hee lye in ignorance or not Whether hee goe forward or backeward whether hee bee cold in his profession or not As we finde his wants so we must make supply by a godly provoking of him Wee will consider one anothers wealth how many faire houses hee hath how much land hee purchaseth how many cloathes he makes and if hee bee before us in the world wee envy him We will consider one another to doe our neighbour a mischiefe if we can to sit on his skirts at one time or another as Saul had an eye to David and the Pharisees watched our Saviour Christ. But we will not consider one another to further them towards the kingdome of heaven The end of our consideration must bee to provoke to goodnesse First to love as the fountaine then to good workes as the streames flowing from it Faith that worketh by love no love no faith If yee be my Disciples love one another he that hateth is a man-slayer We must say you are members of the same body whereof Christ is the head therefore love you one another Abraham said to Lot I pray thee let there be no strife betweene us for we be brethren So let one neighbour say to another let no strife be among us for we are brethren in the LORD IESUS We have one faith baptisme SAVIOUR one inheritance one Father therefore let us love one another If this were practised by us there would not bee such heart burning betweene neighbour and neighbour such uncharitable suspicions such brawlings and contentions even about trifling matters as there be Many are so farre from provoking to love as that they kindle the fire of contention and sow the seed of discord and variance where they dwell Now love is not without good workes No good workes no love 1 Ioh. 3.18 Let us not love in word neither in tongue only but in deed and in truth We must provoke one another to be pittifull to the poore to be liberall to all good uses to adorne the Gospell by good workes The woman of Samaria said to her townesmen come goe with mee and I will shew you the Messiah So must wee goe to our neighbours and say come let us goe to Church and heare Divine Service and Sermon Let us carry our servants with us Let us goe together about the towne Let us see in what estate the poore bee who wants bread meate cloathes lodging c. Let us goe to the Alehouses and other suspected places and see what disorders there be there Let us reproove drunkennesse let us compell them that bee idle to fall to worke and to get their bread with the sweat of their browes Let us see harlots and adulterers punished that are a disgrace to the towne Come let us not be so glewed to our mony let us give cheerefully to the preaching of the word and to all good uses Oh that this were practised by us that we had some sounding bels and trumpets in the parish to toll on one another to the kingdome of heaven especially if the chiefe men and women in a towne which are the bell-weathers of the flocke if they would shew themselves to be good fore-horses what a number might they draw after them Monica Augustins mother said volemus in coelos ô that wee were like her yron sharpeneth yron so doth man sharpen the face of his friend Let us sharpen one another to good workes that wee may say at the day of judgement here am I and the neighbours thou hast given me But I would to God there were not some that draw backwards that pull their neighbours from love and good workes Wilt thou give to the Preacher wilt thou bee so forward in towne matters thou shalt get nothing by it These are wretched men and are to answer for the spoyling of themselves and others at the day of judgment Strengthen thy brethren said Christ to St. Peter Luke 22.32 So we must comfort and exhort our brethren Rom. 16.3 They were no Ministers yet St. Paul calls them his fellow helpers because they did helpe on their brethren they helped on Apollos Act. 18.26 The thiefe on the Crosse would have provoked his fellow to love and good workes Fearest thou not God and shall we be worse than he Let us stirre up one another hast thou no feare of God no love to religion They that convert many shall shine as the Sunne in the kingdome of heaven not minister only but all others that are the meanes of the conversion of any It belongs to all to save soules Iac. 5. ult Wee are not borne for our selves alone as the heathen could say it was the bad speech of wicked Cain am I my brothers keeper I verily thou art thy brothers keeper and if he perish through thy default thou shalt answer for him at the latter day Therefore let us provoke one another to all good duties in this present world that we may al one with another live with CHRIST our blessed Saviour in the world to come VERSE 25. THe gathering together unto that is to Iesus Christ 2 Thes. 2.1 We must not shut up selves in Cloysters with monkes nor with Diogenes in a tunne Wee must love the company of the Saints All our delight must be in them Especially we must beware how wee forsake the publike assemblies where is the word and Sacraments with the joynt prayers of the Church Some did it in the Primitive Church for feare of the enemies loath to joyne with them for feare of loosing their goods honours life liberty And now some forsake them in pride and in an high conceit of themselves depart from us we are holyer than you As it is some mens custome A bad custome yet hee names them not Call one to another And by so much the rather as yee see that day drawing neere We have not a long time to exhort in therefore let us exhort That day which in Scripture is called the day of the Lord when wee shall bee rewarded for our well doing and they punished that contemne our exhortations Luk. 21.34 Yee see with your owne eyes by plaine and evident tokens it is neere at hand The meetings of Christians are private or publike
of them if that be not permitted as it is not by the Papists who are more cruell then Nero himselfe for under him Saint Paul when hee was at Rome had all his acquaintance to come to him and were not forbidden Yet if wee cannot doe that let us send reliefe to them as Onesiphorus did to S. Paul Let us speake for them as Pilats wife did for Christ. Let us write for them as Lysias did for Paul If none of these lye in our power at the least let us pray for them All the Tyrants in the world cannot hold us from that at the least in heart to commend them to the LORD When S. Peter was in prison Earnest prayer was made of the Church for him Let us pray earnestly for them that be in prison for the profession of the Gospell Though there be none in England in these happy dayes of prosperity yet there be Christians in bonds in Turkie in the unholy-house of Rome and such like places Let us remember them to the GOD of Heaven If wee were in prison we would be glad to be remembred so let us remember others But alas we heare often the lamentable cry of poore prisoners and it pierceth us not like Pharaoh's Butler we forget the affliction and imprisonment of Ioseph And them that are evilly intreated namely in the body as appeareth by that which followeth whether they are afflicted with poverty with want of meat drinke cloth and other comforts or with sicknesse that puts them to much paine let us remember them as being our selves also in the body that may well bee supplied Some supply the word afflicted Others interpret it of the Mysticall Body as being of the same body that they are of Some understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that is boldnesse The words may be taken as they be 2 Cor. 5.6 Being in the body subject to like calamities that they be They are poore so we may be They are sick so may we be The nayle in the wheele that a while agoe was aloft is now below in the myre and dirt so we that are now at liberty and enjoy prosperity may on the turning of an hand be evilly entreated This is the reason why we are so little affected with the miseries of our brethren because we poste light by it What is that to us said the Chiefe Priests and Elders to Iudas So when one tels us such an one in the Towne wants bread for him and his children What is that to us Such a family is grievously visited the man wife and children are all downe at once I am well a flye for it Thou hast no charter of thy health what a shame is this Who is weake sayes S. Paul and I am not weake So we should say who is poore who is sick in all the Towne and I am not sick If the goute be in the feet shall the head say what is that to me if the head ake shall the foot say what is that to me The affliction of our brethren should be our affliction Let us in pitty remember one another that GOD in mercy may remember us all VERSE 4. IN the former Verses the Apostle hath commended three vertues to us charity hospitality pitty and compassion over the afflicted In this Verse he comes to the fourth which is chastity shewing the meanes whereby we may keepe our selves chaste and the judgement of God against all unchaste persons So that this Verse divides it selfe into two parts 1. A commendation of mariage 2. A condemnation of all uncleane persons that neglect or violate mariage In the former first the estate is commended secondly the bed is defended The commendation of the estate is in these words mariage is honorable in all where three points are to be considered 1. The subject what mariage is 2. The attribute why it is called honorable 3. The persons among whom it is Honourable Mariage hath three names in the Latine Tongue Nuptiae à nubendo because at the solemnization of the mariage the maried parties in token of modesty were wont to be covered Conjugium à conjungendo of the joyning of them together matrimonium quod à matre nomen accepit either quasi matris munium the office of the mother because the mother is most occupied about the children when they be young or quasi matrem muniens mariage is a defence to the woman she gets a husband that is a vaile to her eyes or quasi matrem monens putting the woman in minde of her duty to her husband and children It may be thus defined Mariage is a copulation of one man and woman together for GOD's glory and the comfort of them both The first man that had two wives was a wicked man The Patriarks Abraham Isaac Iacob sundry holy Kings as David and Salomon had many wives That was ex dispensatione non ex institutione howsoever it was winked at by God yet it was an aberration from the first institution ab initio non fuit sic and if ever there was any necessity of many wives it was at the foundation of the world for propagation c. God might dispense with a man to have many wives but hee cannot dispense with a woman to have many husbands sayes Bellarmine l. 1. de Sacr. Mat. c. 11. No though there were but one woman in all the world This is strange may the Pope dispense with all the ten Commandements and shall Gods hands be tyed up from dispensing but in very truth by Gods appointment mariage is only betweene two There may come no more into this yoke save two at once God gave but one wife to Adam yet there were plures costae in Adamo as Tert. indefatigabiles manus in Deo there were many ribs in Adam and power in God to make moe wives if it had pleased him The first mariage being of GOD's owne making must bee a president to us all Among the Turkes it is lawfull for a man to have as many wives as he can keepe yet he must have but one at once with him in his house Christians doe abhor it we have a sharpe yet a wholesome statute against it of late in England Mariage then is the conjunction of a Man and Woman together after a comely and religious manner in the publike face of the congregation that the Church for avoiding of offence may take notice of it and that all things may be done in order as the Apostle speaketh this here is termed honourable He doth not say mariage is lawfull good it is a convenient thing but honourable Vertue is laudable said the Philosopher but felicity onely is honourable This is the highest title of all it is to be had in great price honour and estimation it is honourable before God his Saints and Angels Some honour it too much as the Papists that make a Sacrament of it Sacramentum hoc magnum est Eph. 5. Yet the Greeke word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
goodnesse let us not fret at it carry a spight against the Preacher but let us say blessed be thou ô man of God and blessed be thy Counsell blessed be God that sent thee to us c. Thus we should suffer even with thankesgiving the word of exhortation The reason is because he hath beene briefe in it I have not beene long rubbing of your soares I have told you of it in a word Therefore suffer it rather Yet now adayes some unwise hearers commend longitude hee stood upon it long againe and againe he was an houre two three houres peradventure he might have spoken as much in a quarter of an houre A wise and pithy brevity should be more welcome to us if wee were judicious hearers Suffer them that wisely in a few words in the spirit of love and meekenesse exhort you to that which is good VERSE 23. GOod newes He is set at liberty that is loosed Timothy which by the mother is an Hebrew Acts 16.1 he was in bonds somewhere though it bee not expressed in 〈◊〉 Scripture for the which they sorrowed therefore he signifies 〈◊〉 to them With whom if he come shortly I will see you Why he was in bonds at this time Heb. 10.34 1. He might 〈◊〉 there bonds past not present 2. This may bee spoken with a ●●cret condition understood though not expressed If I bee de●●vered too When we heare of the deliverance of our brethren out of any ●anger wee should be glad of it If the foote bee delivered of a ●orne that was in it the head rejoyceth at it Wee are members 〈◊〉 of an other let us rejoyce at the deliverance one of another Doe 〈◊〉 heare that any was greivously sicke and is delivered let it doe 〈◊〉 hearts good Doe we heare of the delivery of any Christians 〈◊〉 of the hands of the Turkes Papists and other enemies of the ●ospell let it be joyfull and acceptable to us To this end would 〈◊〉 have them to take knowledge of Timothies deliverance and so ●ould we doe VERSE 24. WHom they should salute 2. From whom they should receive salutations 1 Their Spirituall Rulers and Governours then 〈◊〉 whole body of the Church Not onely they in Rome but in all ●ie that professe the Gospell of CHRIST Salutations are 〈◊〉 of love now the Ministers and Preachers of the Word are be love above common Christians we should have them in sin●●r love for their worke sake therefore they are to bee saluted 〈◊〉 others If ye send Commendations to a Towne especially member the Minister Salute all unlesse they be professed ene●●es to CHRIST and the Gospell bid them not then God speede ●therwise salute all but chiefely them that have the oversight of 〈◊〉 people they must have the first place in our salutations VERSE 25. HEE concludes with a blessing The grace of our LOR● IESUS CHRIST that is the love and favour o● Christ be with you all Amen Even so in the shutting up of this Epistle doe I take my leav● of you Many excellent points of Doctrine many necessary an● profitable exhortations have beene delivered to you out of it it 〈◊〉 even the body and marrow of religion Now the Grace of GO● bee with you GOD give you grace from His Spirit to think on them to practise them to His glory in this life that yee ma● bee partakers of His everlasting glory in the life to come Amen A COMMENTARIE VPON The second Epistle of St. IOHN VERSE 1. THat these two Epistles be S. Iohns as well as the former the similitude of style and of affection doth evince the style is S. Iohns and they be written with S. Iohns affection The three Epistles differ thus In the first he entreats of the love of God and our neighbour joyntly together In the second of that to God more specially by it selfe In the third of our love to our neighbour more particularly The first was written to all Christians in genreall the second to a woman the third to a man The parts of this Epistle are these 1. The inscription of it 2. The contents of it verse 4. The inscription conteines a description in the 2 former verses a precation in the third In the description 1. He describes himselfe which is the writer 2. The persons to whom he writeth he describes himselfe by his office The Elder the persons to whom he writeth are the mother and the children He describes the mother severally 1. By her inward estate elect 2. By her outward a Lady He describes them both joyntly together by his entire love to them which is first averred in regard of himselfe 2. Enlarged in regard of others in this verse 3. Illustrated by the procreant cause of it in both verse 2. THE ELDER THere was another called Iohannes presbyter Iohn the elder to whom some ascribed both these Epistles So writeth Hieronymus de viris illust yet he himselfe is not of that opinion Nay citing a testimonie out of these Epistles he doth in plaine termes attribute them to S. Iohn the Evangelist Clangat tuba Evangelica filius tonitrui quem Iesus amavit plurimùm qui è pectore salvatoris doctrinarum fluente potavit Let the Evangelicall trumpet sound the Sonne of thunder who from the breast of our Saviour drunke in abundantly as it were rivers of heavenly doctrine He doth not entitle himselfe an Apostle but an Elder 1. Because he speakes not with authority like an Apostle but talkes with her familiarly as a father with his daughter 2. Because he was knowne throughout all Asia after a kinde of excellencie by the name of Elder He hath the title of an Elder 1. for his age in outliving all the Apostles 2. for his Wisedome that commonly accompanieth old age the Senate was termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an assembly of auncient men 3. for his grave and discreete carriage 4. and chiefely for his office in the Church Ministers are usually called elders St. Paul left Titus in Creta to ordaine Elders in every Citty The Elders that rule well are worthy of double honour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a young plant may not be made a minister but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a young man may Though he be a young Timothy yet he is an Elder and to be honoured for his office much more the reverend Prelats of the Church Alexander the mighty Monarch did great honour to Iaddus the high Priest Constantine the religious Emperour esteemed highly of the Bishops at the Councell of Nice he made them his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he would have them sit downe by him and placed them at his owne table Valentine the Elder called Ambrose his father Ambr. de vita valent Valentine the younger though an Arrian rose up to him in token of reverence when he came into the consistory No doubt but this Laay honoured Iohn with her heart so ought wee to doe the Elders of the Church If they be