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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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be preserved so long seeing Lazarus his body and our bodies in that time enter into many degrees of it Ans Christ was indeed balmed and sweetned with Odours but all this could not have preserved him if his soul and body had not now been ●aced from sin the mother of corruption Obj. But he had sin imputed unto him Ans Yea but he had overcome all that and slain it on the Crosse for had he not destroyed it himself had been destroyed by it and subdued for ever under the corruption of it In all which regards that is verified which himself being risen affirmed Luke 24.46 Thus it is written and th●● it beh●eveth Christ to suffer and to rise again from the dead the third day Other things the Evangelists observe in this circumstance as that it was the first day of the week that is the first day wherein hee had created the Heavens and the Earth and wherein he would create now a new Heaven and a new Earth and as before he had set up a marvellous frame of the world but sin●e exceedingly shaken and defaced by sin he would now restore the world again and repair the ruines of it by abolishing sin as formerly he had filled Heaven and earth with the glory of his power in Creation so would he now fill them with the glory of his power in Redemption which is a second creation Hence is it that that day is now converted into the Christian Sabbath and called the Lords Day Revel 1.10 or if you will Sunday but not as the Heathen Christ rose early and what we learn thence in honour of the Sun but as Christians in honour of the Sun of righteousnesse Again the Gospel noteth that this our glorious Son ●●s● about Sun rising early in the morning or a little before it Matth. 28.1 To shew unto us 1 The power of his God-head who could while his body was dead perform the promise which he had made alive even in the instant of which hee had spoken 2 The impotency of his enemies who although they watched him f●●l●●● him up laid an heavie stone upon him were every way cautelous to keep him d●wn till the third day was past and he not stealing away secretly in the d●●d time of the night but ●ose with noyse and warning even in the morning ye● could they no more stay him than they could the Sun from rising and running his course 3 The benefit which the world of beleevers obtain by his rising again set down by the Evangelist Luke 1.78 Through the tender mercy of our God the day-spring from an high hath visited us 79. To give light to them that s●● in darknesse and to guide our feet into the way of peace The Chronologers further observe that this was the day wherein Moses led the Israelites through the Sea wherein all the troops of Pharaoh and his Host were drowned Even to our Lord Jesus this third day led all the Israel of God out of the spiritual Aegypt of blindnesse and filthinesse but gloriously triumphed over all the bands of Satan Sin and Death all which were sunk like a stone into the bottomless pit of Hell Other observations concerning this day might be inserted out of Authors which because I see no sound ground for them out of the Scriptures I will omit them that I may now come to the lessons which out of this circumstance we may draw for our further instruction First we learn hence All the promises of God are accomplished in their du● season that all the promises of God shall be in due season accomplished whatsoever may seeme to come between them and us For seeing Christ being dead both could and did perform his promise to his Church will not hee much more being alive and in his glory doe it The Israelites had a promise of a good Land they must in the mean time suffer much oppression in Aegypt for the space of four hundred and thirty years together but the self-same night Exod. 12.41 when the term was expired they went out against the heart and yet at the entreaty of Pharaoh and his people In like sort Joseph had a Dream that the Sun and Moon and the twelve Starrs should worship him in the mean time he must be cast into the Pit and Dungeon where hee can see neither Sun Moon nor Starre many days and years passed wherein he saw nothing but the clean contrary and yet in the due season of it this dream was accomplished And the reason is because 1 God is true of his word he cannot lye nor repent and 2 He is able to fulfill whatsoever passeth from his mouth for shall any thing be hard or impossible to God or shall any power or death or the grave it self falsifie it Lean thy self then upon this truth of God hast thou a promise of outward or inward peace health wealth or any other good thing which thy heart can wish hold this promise fast in the midst of thy heart wait for the accomplishment of it it shall not fail thee so farre as thy Father seeth good for thee if it be delayed and deferred even this also shall turn to thy best Hast thou a promise of life everlasting hold it by the faith of thy soul as the aym and end of all thy faith and religion for all the miseries of this present life shall not be able to defeat thee of it Hast thou the promise of the resurrection of the body after death stick to this Article of thy faith also nothing could hinder the rising of thy head no more can let but the members shall be where the head is not the grave not fire not water not the bellies of beasts or fishes but they shall give up their dead and further the accomplishment of the word of their Creator The second observation is The L●●● denieth n t to help his children although he delay them till his own due time be come that as the Lord of life raised not his Son as soon as he was dead but he must lye in the grave two days yea and the third also till his case seemed desperate to the Disciples themselves even so may the members of Christ lye long in the graves of their misery yea so long as their case seemeth desperate and all that while the Lord not only deferreth but seemeth to deny their help and utterly to neglect them Abraham had the promise of a Son by Sarah he looked every year for him ten twenty years together nay till the thirtieth year till it was not with Sarah as with childing-women in so much as she laught when she heard it the case in nature was desperate who would have thought but that God had forgotten his promise which Abraham himself in all that time if God had not shoared up his faith might have forgotten but though long first yet at length the Lord found out a time fit enough to bring his word to passe David in like
in their worship and yet if our righteousness exceed not theirs wee can never enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 5.20 3 The righteousness of God goes beyond all civil and outward righteousness it is inward in Spirit and truth It cuts off not onely outward acts of Murder Uncleanness Theft c. but inward motions of Hatred Wantonness Covetousness It strikes at roots and branches and hates the least and secretest evil which civil righteousness makes no bones of Object 2. But this circumspect and strict walking is taken up but by a few and those of the meanest some men of great wisdome place and learning favour it not but scorn and oppose it Answ 1. Christianity was ever hated by the most of the world because of the Cross the Church is black because the Sun looks on her Cant. 1.5 but comely to God and his Angels and this makes few enter that way 2 The Apostle directly meets with this Objection 1 Cor. 1.27 Not many mighty not many noble not many wise but God hath chosen a few poor people Zeph. 3.11 and they shall call upon his Name And why not many of those Because they cannot so easily deny themselves and this evil world which they must do that will bee saved 3 Let us not wholly cast our eyes upon the examples of the world now declining and at last so at worst but upon such as formerly have been set as eye-marks in the Scripture and wee shall finde some both great and noble and learned going before us in strict and circumspect walking The holy Patriarchs Noah Abraham Isaac Jacob godly and zealous Kings David Solomon Josiah the holy Apostles who endeavoured alwayes to have a clear conscience before God and all men Act. 24.16 Yea the most wise noble and learned that ever was the Son of God whose conversation was such as none could accuse him of sin These are the cloud of witnesses which wee must follow in running the race set before us Heb. 12.1 Object 3. But what an impossible Commandement is this and who can bear it Can wee bee Saints in this world thus to order our selves in every thing Wee are sinners and must bee sinners and cannot bee thus strict as you require Wee hope we generally mean well and God wee hope will supply the rest Answ 1. The scope of this plea is to give over all because they cannot attain all which is but a false fire by which the Devil discourageth many from the narrow way and the narrow looking to their own way For true it is that wee call with the Scripture for a keeping of all Gods Commandements alwayes and to live with God and walk with him but with Evangelical interpretation which accepteth the will desire and endeavour to walk with God in every thing which cannot but in some measure bee found in a true beleever and cannot but in Christ bee accepted where it is true and hearty Thus the Scriptures interpret themselves 1 Chron. 28.7 If Solomon shall endeavour to keep my Commandments c. Hos 6.3 We shall endeavour to know the Lord. What can God accept less or a good heart tender less than hearty wishes where strength is wanting to please God in all things 2 Let us by the strictness of the Commandement consider whence wee are fallen and see our impotency and confess our failings but not therefore allow our selves in any evil or venture on any sin which we might by this Circumsspection avoid or remit our endeavour in respect of all Gods Commandements 3 For such as think it sufficient to mean well in general Consider this that as no Master is pleased if his steward bring him in a general Bill of great summes spent wherein hee may hide much deceit but sets down no dayes accounts or weeks bills of parcels no more in the matter of heavenly treasure is it enough to hide himself in general good meanings but in every particular to avoid deceit and suspicion of it And as it is with a Traveller in an unknown way who will not go at random nor count it a sufficient direction to bee set Eastward or Westward but hee will ask every man of every Town and take good heed of every mark to pass him from one place to another so in this our passage to heaven wee must keep our special directions and walk with God in every thing if wee will happily pass unto heaven Object 4. But what need such daily and continual troubling of our selves What was the Sabbath made for but for Gods service and wee keep our Church as well as any but for the week-dayes wee have Callings to follow and cannot intend such things and it were better if some of these nice fellows were more diligent in their Calling as wee be● Answ 1. Seeing the Rule by which wee must walk is to serve God i● holiness and righteousness all our dayes Luke 1.75 wee have no liberty to part the week between God and us Neither must wee put on holiness as an holy-day garment to put it off at night neither may wee bee less holy on other dayes than on the Sabbath howsoever wee must exercise our holiness in the publick worship of God on that day and in the private worship and in the p●rsonal Callings on the other dayes 2 Hee is a good Christian that keeps a perpetual Sabbath and is not onely one on the Sabbath day The trial of soundness is at home Psal ●01 2 in the midst of a mans house and not at Church where the Phariseee is often above the Publican 3 Thou hast a Calling on the week-day in which thou must sweat and abide who ever thou art but thou must not so play the good husband as to become a worldling Vse the world as not using it 1 Cor 7 31. as not affecting it and acknowledge thy special and personal Calling to bee subordinate to the general for in the whole exercise of thy special Calling thou must shew forth thy knowledge and religious keeping of a good conscience once divorce these two and never look for success on thy labours Object 5. But this is fitter for Ministers and cloystered persons who have given themselves to continual devotion than for ordinary and common men who are not acquainted with such novelties Answ 1. If all Christians bee alike subject to sin all have need to bee continually alike fenced against it If all have the same enemies all had need stand upon their ground If one mans heart bee as wicked as anothers every man had need set a watch round about himself And if any have more need than other it is unlearned and simple persons who want such means of helping themselves as learned Preachers have 2 As for the novelty of this Circumspect course wee must needs say it is so to such as are of Festus his suit who thinks Paul learned even to madness to call him to such strictness or Gallio his Disciples Act. 18. who
doctrin For never was any device so powerfully confirmed as the Doctrin and Religion of Christ which we profess For as it is said of Pharaohs Inchanters Exod. 8.17 after that Moses had brought the Lice that they assayed to doe the like but could not so in admirable wisdome hath the Lord put forth his mighty power in effecting such Miracles for this doctrin as he never suffered to bee wrought for any other For this only hath he stayed and pulled back the course of the Sun in the Heavens letted the fire from burning divided the Sea and made it stand as a wall raised not the sick only to health but the dead to life strengthned decrepit persons to beget and conceive yea more set apart a Virgin to bear a Son Let Popish impostors leave to bragge of Straw-miracles such as was taken up at Garnets execution and their childish Miracles as their late London Boy and shew us such as these Let us hear but without imposture of such as speak with new tongues drive away Serpents and drink deadly poyson and hurt them not but never was any other doctrin thus confirmed and whatsoever Signs and Wonders are wrought to weaken any part of this truth or establish any doctrin not grounded therein as we are commanded so wee hold them all accursed Vse 1. In that Christ went about doing good we note Christs life was not monastical but he conversed with men to doe good unto them that as his person was a perfect mirrour of all goodnesse so his life was no monastical or cloystered life but his delight was with the sons of men hee eat with them drunk with them more familiarly conversed with them than John did that hee might still take occasion to doe them good and communicate unto them of his fulnesse of grace Neither was his life an idle delicate or pompous life neither swelled he with abundance and wealth but poor mean industrious and painful he continually went about doing good From whom how many Ministers are degenerate who professing themselves servants would bee loath to be as their Lord was some setting up themselves as it were a fatting in a course of case and delicacy feeding themselves not the flock without fear others climbing with restless desires to honours and preferments others incessantly thirsting as if they had a Dropsie after mony and profits serving their Master only to carry the bagge others are doing perhaps but little good they doe in their places their doctrin is so cold so indigested or their lives so scandalous so offensive or their hearts so corrupt and cankred as they rather oppose themselves to the doing or doers of good amongst all whom the Master is out of sight and out of mind 2 Seeing Christ by this going about and doing good shewed himself to be that Prophet whom God would raise like Moses mighty in word and deed Deut. 18.15 We are hence bound to beleeve him and his holy Doctrine so surely confirmed by so many and mighty Miracles that so wee may avoid that fearful hardning so long before Prophecied to befall the Jews Who though he had done many Miracles before them Read John 11.37 38. yet beleeved not they on him and attain also the blessednesse of those that beleeve without desiring to see any more new Miracles For is not the doctrin wee professe sufficiently confirmed already The ancient doctrin of the Church needeth no new Miracles to confirm it an Indenture once sealed is confirmed for ever and needeth no new seals to be set to it Men doe not ever water their plants but only till they be rooted even so the Lord out of his wisdome would water with Miracles the tender plant of his Church till it was rooted in the world and brought on to some strength and stature but afterward thought all such labour neednesse If men will broach and bring into the Church new doctrins and devises of their own as the Romish Church doth at this day it is no marvail it they seek after new Miracles to obtrude them withall but if men will professe the ancient doctrin of the Prophets Apostles and Christ himself to gape after new Miracles were too lightly to esteem of the old and account of these powerful works of Christ himself and his servants no better than some nine days wonders Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 3 As Christ went about doing good so must wee also imitate his worthy example taking yea seeking occasions to doe good unto all and that readily seasonably cheerfully to our power yea and if need be beyond it 2 Cor. 8.3 And to spur us hereunto besides this example of Jesus Christ wee have 1 The Commandement of God charging us not to forget to doe good and distribute Heb. 13. with which sacrifices he professeth himself to bee well pleased whose children if we would be we must let the streams of our fountain also run to the refreshing and releeving of others as hee being the fountain of all good causeth his Sun to shine and rain to fall upon the good and the bad Secondly we are every way fitted to doe good having 1 Callings wherein to abide to the good of others as well as our selves 2 Our Lives further leased and lengthned unto us that in them we should glorifie God in making our election sure and furthering our own reckoning by doing good unto others 3 A most precious time of liberty peace plenty and prosperity that unlesse we bind our own hands we cannot but be doing good unto all especially the houshold of faith Gal. 6. 4 Fit objects of doing good are never wanting unto us For 1 The poor we have always with us the ministers of Jesus Christ and other his members that stand in need of us and many of Gods dear ones are oppressed and distressed that we might never be unmindful of the afflictions of Joseph 2 We have with us store of good men who have most right to our goodnesse the Sons of God the members of Christ the Temples of the Holy Ghost to whom whatsoever we doe the Lord doth accept and account of it as done to himself 3 We have in the worst of all Gods Image which is lovely our own nature which should draw us to respect if not the man yet man-hood or humanity in him and for ought that we know to the contrary by the rule of charity we must hope that they may participate in the death of Christ as well as our selves Lastly we are provoked to doe good by that blessed reward which God of his mercy hath promised to all those good and faithful servants who when their Master shall come shall be found well doing And healed all that were oppressed of the Devil for God was with him THe Apostle proceedeth to prove that Christ was anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power because he was able to rescue out of the hands of the Devil such as he oppressed and played the tyrant over
remembrance of their so cruel and wicked a fact if they had been so plainly and sensibly convinced of it Answ Wee may not suffer our folly to prescribe to the Wisdome of God Christ most not shew himself so openly as to all the people after his resurrection Why. whose waies are not our waies The foolishness of God is wiser than men and the weakness of God is stronger than men And there bee sundry just reasons why Christ neither would nor did so openly shew himselfe For 1 Hee declareth hereby that his Kingdome is not of this World for then hee would have shewed himself unto the World whereas after hee rose from death hee would not shew himself but to those of his own Kingdome Neither needeth hee for the furthering of his Kingdome the help or witness of the great ones in the world for then would he not have passed by the Scribes and Pharisees the Doctors and great Rabbies whose words would easily have been taken and shewed himself to a few poor and abject men and women Neither cometh his Kingdom with outward pomp and observation Luk. 17.21 as Humane Kingdomes do his triumph is correspondent to his conquest both of them spiritual and inward not discernable but to the eye of the soul 2 The time was now come wherein Christ was not to bee known any longer according to the flesh 2 Cor. 5.16 the World that had so known him before must know him so no more but onely by dispensation for the time that such as were to witness of him might take the better notice of him 3 The wicked had made themselves unworthy to see him any more and this was a part of the just judgement of God upon them who had so despighted him they saw him once and were sufficiently convinced by the Scriptures by his Miracles his Life and his Doctrin all which because they despised and wilfully thrust the Kingdome of God from them they are justly left of God and Christ and permitted to bee further blinded that they may up-heap the measure of their sins 4 As for the godly the Lord would not have their Faith to depend upon the witness of the eyes and sight of the wicked and ungodly but upon a Divine testimony namely upon such as were appointed of God for it and this is a sure ground of Faith 5 If Christ had openly appeared to all the people hee had falsified his own word who had threatned them that because when hee would have gathered them as an Hen her Chickens under her wing but they would not Matth. 23.39 they should not thenceforth see him till they could say Blessed is hee that commeth in the name of the Lord. As if hee had said from henceforth namely after you have crucified me yee shall not see me till the end of the world when I shall come again which coming some few of you namely that are elect shall gratulate unto me and say Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord. And perhaps as some interpret it all you who now reject me as a vile person will then but too late and to no profit of your own either by force or in imitation of the godly acknowledge me the blessed that cometh in the name of the Lord and to this also maketh that Matth. 26.64 where giving a reason of his confession to Pilate that he was the Christ the Son of God he telleth them that they shall hereafter see the Son of man but not before he be sitting at the right hand of the power of God and coming in the Clouds of heaven 6 It appeareth that many more of the Jewes were more convinced in their Consciences and pricked in their hearts for crucifying the Lord of glory by the preaching and ministery of the Apostles than they would have been by the sight of Christ himself In the second fourth fifth and seventh Chapters of the Acts it evidently appeareth how by the Apostles direct dealing against their sins many thousands were converted at some one Sermon and how many were daily added unto the Church whose faith was farre more sound in that they attained the blessing which Christ pronounced upon those that beleeved and yet had not seen All which teacheth us that in matter of Divinity wee must always subscribe to Gods wisdome shutting up our own eyes If we have a word to beleeve any thing or to doe any thing although our reason bee utterly against it though custom though example yet must we follow our direction esteeming the word as our pillar of the cloud by day and our pillar of fire by night to guide all our motions while we are wandring in the wilderness of this world and even till we attain the rest which is prepared for the people of God But unto the Witnesses chosen before of God Sundry sorts of witnesses of Christ his resurrection We read of many and sundry sorts of Witnesses of Christ his Resurrection and therefore it is worth inquiry which of them are here to bee understood 1 There was a Divine witnesse of the Angels Luk. 24.6 Why seek yee the living among the dead he is not here but is risen Secondly there was a real witnesse of the Saints that rose again with him and appeared to many to the end that they might testifie of his resurrection which we doubt not but they did both by their appearing and by word of mouth also Thirdly there was a forced testimony of the Souldiers Matth. 28.11 They came into the City and told all things that were done whos 's first report was a main proof of the truth of the thing howsoever after they were hired to turn their tongues Fourthly there was the witnesse of the Disciples and followers of Christ and this was either private or publick The private witnesse was of many private Christians not only men but women also who followed Christ who also were by Christ vouchsafed to be the first preachers of it even unto the Apostles themselves as wee read of Mary Magdalen Mary the Mother of Joses Salome Joanna and divers others Such was the testimony of the two Disciples who went between Jerusalem and Emans Luk. 24. to whom Christ made himself known the very day of his resurrection and yet were no Apostles Thus were many other private Christians undoubted witnesses of the resurrection who no doubt saw and heard him in many of his apparitions as well as the Apostles themselves in so much as Paul saith that hee was seen of more than five hundred brethren at once 1 Cor. 15.6 But the text is not meant of any of these sorts but restraineth it self to the publick witnesses even the twelve Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What these ch●sen witnesses were who were to carry the tidings of this with the other Articles of Christian faith throughout the whole world For 1 These witnesses are said to bee chosen of God which word is borrowed from the elections of men who were set
in prison and at length they see there was no heavenly husbandry in all this Thirdly In confessing our sin and pleading guilty Prov. 20.13 this is the covenant that whereas he that hideth his sin shall not prosper he that confesseth shall finde mercy Psal 32.4 I said I will confesse mine iniquity and thou forgavest me the punishment of my sin Job 31.33 It is too neer joyned to our natures to hide our sin with Adam and conceal it in our bosome or else to sum up all in a word without special grief for any special sin and herein they think they have peace which is but unfeelingnesse But those that belong to God he bringeth them to found humiliation he maketh them sick in smiting them and setteth their sins in order before them like a bill of parcels to the breaking of their hearts and the utter acknowledgement of themselves to be miserable bankcrupts For this purpose he maketh their own Consciences also to be judges of their actions pronouncing sentence of guiltinesse and death against themselves As David Against thee against thee have I sinned and again I am the man and again I have done very foolishly but these s●eep what have they d●ne The penitent Thief thus judgeth himself we are righteously here To conclude this point he was never truly humbled nor ●ver aright judged himself that is more ashamed to confesse than to commit sin Fourthly After pleading guilty in pleading for pardon as for life and death and as the poor Malefactor condemned to dye c●ys for mercy and all his hope and longing is for a pardon even so this is noted to bee the practi●e of the Church Hos 14.2 3. Oh Israel return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take unto you words and turn to the Lord and say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously And which of the Saints have not placed all their happinesse in the pardon of sin or have not preferred the shining of Gods countenan●e upon them above all the outward happinesse that the earth affordeth Now in the seeking and suing for pardon because God will not hear him that regardeth wickednesse in his heart for wicked Esau shall finde no repentance nor favour with tears therefore thou must forth-with cease to doe evil as being ashamed of it and learn to doe well lay Laws upon thy self be more severe against thy self in the things wherein thou hast displeased thy God watch diligently over those corruptions which have most foyled thee this is the way both to make and preserve thy peace Bring thy self then with fear and trembling before Gods righteous Judgement accuse thy self and bewayl thy sins bee not ashamed to confesse but to commit them again be so farre from purposing any wickednesse in thy heart as rather thou bee strongly armed with full purp●se against it And thus remembring thy sins God will forget them thus wi●●ing them deep in thine own books God will blot them out of his Thus if thou hide them not but cast them out of thy heart and life he will hide them for ever and cast them utterly out of his sight so that if thou canst thus judge thy self afore-hand thou shalt never be judged of the Lord. Vers 43. To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe Apostle Peter although he hath sufficiently proved whatsoever he hath form●rly delivered concerning the Doctrin and Miracles Life and Death Resurrection and Ascension and the coming of Christ again unto Judgement yet as though no proof could be too much or as if he could not satisfie himself in enforcing this holy doctrin and binding it upon the consciences of his Hearers he shutteth up his Sermon in this verse with another assured testim●ny above all exception drawn from all the Prophets who all consent and conspire with the Apostles in all their doctrin concerning him the sum and main end of all which is that through beleeving in his name the elect should receive remission of sins which is the sum and effect of this verse Where first may be asked Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies concerning Christ Reasons why doth the Apostle induce so many testimonies one in the ne●k of another In the answer whereof we shall see that none of them are needlesse or superfluous For 1 All the points of Christian religion are above and against corrupt nature as appeareth in the Heathen wh● still esteemed the preaching of Christ foolishnesse 2 Corin. 2.23 and in the Athenians who when they heard Paul preaching of the Judgement Day and Christs Resurrection from the dead they mocked him Acts 17.32 The hardened Jews at this day on whom the Wrath of God is 〈◊〉 me to the uttermost doe the like and well it were for many if professed Christians in the midst of such a light made more reckoning of our painful preaching of Christ who teach the same points than some of the former which were they so slight matters as most account them what need they be so enforced We are therefore hence fitly enformed both to make more high account of such great Mysteries which the Spirit of God is so careful t● commend unto us as also to bewayl the infidelity of our hearts that need so much working upon them to entertain such necessary truths as these be 2 Because although he was an Apostle yet would he shew his care that in all his Sermon he taught nothing of his own which the Prophets had not formerly taught Which teacheth all Ministers much more to beware lest in any of their Sermons they broach such doctrin or bring in such stuff of which they cannot prove the Prophets and Apostles to bee Patrons and Publishers For this was the commandement of the Apostles that wee teach no other doctrin 1 Tim. 1.3 neither contrary nor diverse from it no private opinions which are the causes of Schisms and Heresies nor vain conceits or jangling which breed questions but no godly edifying 3 It was not only their precept but practise also as Act. 26.22 Paul spake no other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should bee the first that should rise from the dead Nay the Lord of the holy Apostles Jesus Christ himself preached no other Doctrin of whom it is said Luk. 24.27 that be began at Moses and all the Prophets and interpreted unto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him shall the Son of God who might have made every word hee spake Scripture tye himself to the Scriptures and make them the ground of all his Sermons and shall not weak men who cannot without error depart an hair breadth from them be careful to contain all their doctrin within the limits of them especially seeing nothing else bindeth the conscience of the hearer 3 The Apostle knew
another as brethren bee pitiful 1 Joh. 3.17 Hee that hath this worlds good and seeth his brothers need and shuts up his compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him To stir us up hereunto consider these Motives 1 Say with thy self Motives to the former duty What am not I a member of the same body with him Is not hee of the same family and houshold of Saints This is the Apostles argument Especially do good to the houshold of faith 2 What shall I gain if by word or deed I shall make sad the hearts of good and godly men Cain cast down he looks but God looks on it Cannot Ishmael laugh at Isaac but the Lord arraigns and condemns him of high per●ecution Surely then cannot I carry the like indignities scot-free 3 Do I read Meroz accursed because shee came not out to help the people of God though shee had no hand against them Judg. 5.23 Surely I must not onely have a hand against good men but I must set my hand to help them else is not my heart so right as it should Pilates wife wished her husband to have nothing to do against that just man But happy had Pilate been who was not violent against Christ to have been earnest and resolute for his deliverance the defect whereof was his overthrow And so it shall bee heavy enough in the day of judgement that wicked mens hands have not helped the godly seeing the sentence shall not run because they had hurt them but because they helped them not CHAP. XXX Rules how to walk wisely towards evil men First In general THE general Rule is in Col. 4.5 Rules of wise walking towards evil men Walk wisely towards them that are without that is the Gentiles who were not converted without the border of the Church for even in the Church some are of Gods domesticks some without as strangers that want faith as yet And godly men must walk so much the more warily not onely because they have Gods eye and godly mens eyes on them but even eyes of men y●t unconverted who must n●t bee cast back or confirmed in their errour or hardened against the truth but by all wi●e walking if it bee possible won to the love and liking of it Now towards all unbeleevers and unconverted men in general these particulars are worthy observation 1 Avo●d all just causes of s●andal 1 That every Christian avoid all known evils and offences by which evil men might bee occasioned to abide out of the Church The Law is Thou shalt put no stumbling block before the blinde For this is a fearful judgement of God on men unconverted they would willingly bee blinded and hardened in their natural estate Now our Rule is being our selves pulled out of danger to help others out also nay our light must reprove their darkness their covetousness by liberality their pride by humility their impatience by patience c. 2 All unconverted men hate the light and are prone to blaspheme the Gospel 2 Stop mouths of evil men and to reproach the holy profession of it Wise Christians therefore must cut off occasions from them and take heed of defiling their own nest 1 Tim. 5.14 Give no occasion to the adversary to speak evil And David prayeth that none might bee ashamed because of him Ezek. 36.20 the Lord complains that the Israelites among the Heathen polluted his Name and made them say These are the people of the Lord and are gone out of his land A lend childe saith Solomon dishonoureth the whole house Nay on the contrary the meanest Christian in his place by his wife and Christian walking must adorn the profession of Christ so the Apostle to Titus 2.10 Servants must bee no pickers but shew all good faithfulness to adorn the Gospel of the Lord Jesus An holy course of life will make the Gentiles say as they in Isa 61.9 They are the seed of the blessed of the Lord. 3 Seek to win them 3 All unconverted men esteem of doctrine by the life and the profession by the practise of Professors for they have no taste of the Doctrine in it self and therefore in the carriage of our profession wee must apply our selves if it bee possible to win them So the Apostle 1 Pet. 2.12 wisheth the Jews to have their conversation honest among the Gentiles that they might glorifie God in the day of their visitation And women are commanded so to watch their whole behaviour as their husbands might bee won by their godly conversation Private men must convert others by their private conversation Motives Motives so to do are these 1 Christians are on a Mount set on a Scaffold nothing they do escapeth sight and censure all is marked they stand or fall not alone but to many 2 They have a light with them which draws all eyes upon them and discovers all 3 The eyes of the wicked are not on others but on them to disgrace them and through them to smite Christ himself 4 The will of God is By well-doing to ●lance the ignorance of foolish m●n 1 Pet. 2.15 5 What a glory is it to slaughter envy it self to stop an open mourh and cloathe an adversary with his own shame that he that would accuse us must accuse the Sun of darkness when it shines 6 Hereby wee shall bee conformable to Christ whom when Satan came to sift hee found nothing in him Wicked men shall say as Saul said to David Thou are more righteous than I c. 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXI Rules how to walk wisely towards evil men in special And first for Scorners NOw wee come to special Rules concerning special sorts of evil men of whom some are exceeding evil in themselves some are evil also to good men Of the former rank are scornful persons Of the latter hurtfull For Scorners observe these Rules 1 If wee know men to bee so far naught as they scorn goodness Rules how to carry our selves towards scorners 1 Avoid them good men and good things wee must avoid their company so much as wee may For what comfort can a godly man take in such company where all good and godly communication must either bee banished or derided There is no hope of doing good there is danger of taking harm 2 If wee bee by occasion beset 2 If cast into their company observe five Rules or cast into the company of prophane brutish and scornful persons then observe these Rules First Grieve thou wast not better directed Psal 120.5 Wo is mee that I remain in Meshec and dwell in the tents of Kedar Secondly Bee sure though thou seest no place or opportunity of good that thou hast no fellowship with them in any of the unfruitful works of darkness If they will bee no cleaner by thy company bee not thou defiled by theirs If they will not consent to thee in good consent not thou to them in any sin Thirdly Please them not by