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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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Apostle here exhorteth and withall we should bring with us faith to beleeve that God● word shall turne to our nourishment Shall we trust nature for the goodnesse of milk and shall we not trust God for the efficacy of his word when he tels us it will nourish like milk And the rather should wee make our recourse with gladnesse to the word because it is so cheap a food we may buy this milke without money that is without merits only if we will heare our soules shall live Esay 55.2.4 yea let us for ever be thankfull to God for his word in this respect Was it so great a blessing that God brought the Israelites to a land that flowed with milk and hony for their bodies for the greatnesse of which blessing God doth so often put them in minde of it How great then is the marvellous goodnesse of God that hath made us to live in these times of the Gospell when the Land flowes with this spirituall milk and hony Let us labour to be thankfull and bring forth fruits worthy the bounty of God left the Lord send the men of the East to dwell in these palaces and to eat our milk and wee be cast out as it was said in the Letter Ezech. 25.4 Oh that we could see our happinesse in these daies of salvation this is that milke of the Gentiles prophecied of which wee enjoy and sucke now from the breasts of Kings living under Christian Magistrates that command the preaching of this sincere word of God Esay 60.16 Sincere The word may besaid to be sincere in two respects First in it selfe secondly in effect in it selfe it is sincere because it is without error without sinne and there is no deceit in it at all Prov. 8.7.8 Psalm 19.8.9 And because it hath no composition in it but is the very pure word of God as it came from God himselfe at first there is not a word in it but it was written by men inspired immediately by the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 1. ult And as it is in it selfe so it is by effect It makes men sincere It makes crooked things straight It purgeth out hypocrisie and all leaven out of the minds and hearts of men it both teacheth and worketh in the godly a spirit without guile Psalm 19.8.9 The Use may be both for instruction and reproofe For instruction both to the people and to Ministers To the people and so men should here learne First to love the word and long after it for this very reason because it is so pure and sincere so void of harme or danger so did David Psalme 119.146 Secondly when we finde our natures crooked and corrupt and deceitfull and tending to hypocrisie we should bring our hearts to the word to be mended For this you see is a property of the word it will make men sincere Psal. 19. 8 9. and 119. Iohn 17. 20. and as any men have more betaken themselves to the word the more sincere they have alwayes growne Thirdly to receive the word with full assurance we may trust upon it it cannot deceive us what we finde for comfort or directions in Scripture we may build upon it Never man was disappointed of his expectation that trusted upon the word of God but in God they have ever praised his word 2. Pet. 1.20 Psal. 56.10 and 10.1 Fourthly as the Ministry of Gods servants doth more declare the sincerity of the word so we should bee more in love with it wee should like praier preaching I meane not witlesse and unlearned preaching but such preaching as maketh demonstration to the conscience out of the pure word of God in things that concerne the good of the soules of men and the glory of God the word doth ever profit men most when it is most sincere that men onely speake the words of God Fiftly to stick to the word of God without going to the right hand or the left there can be no sinne but what is condemned in the word nor can there be duty not commanded therein nor can there be matter of faith not propounded therein Oh how happy were we if we could stick to the old foundation even the sincere word of God and not adde nor diminish the hatefulnesse of departing from the word on the left hand is in most places discovered But Oh the deceitfulnesse of mens hearts and the wretched pronenesse of men to sinne by finding out many inventions Men runne out and that very fast on the right hand we have new opinions and strange fancies coyned every day Little doe the better sort of people many of them think of traditions on the right hand their faith is led into bondage when they can yeeld no better reason than it is such a mans judgement or else he thinketh so himselfe or the reasons brought are urged without any demonstration from the word of God and Scripture Happy above the most Churches under heaven were this nation if this point were understood and carefully observed if we could sticke to our first grounds in parting from the Church of Rome viz. to admit no opinions nor charge our conscience with more obligations but out of the word of God Ministers also may learne from hence what and how to preach that is the best preaching which is eminent for two things First that tends to beget sincerity clearnesse of judgement distinct evidence of assurance and strict holinesse of life in the hearers Secondly that shines in the native lustre of the word in it selfe without mixture when men know no matter no stile no wisdome comparable to that which may be had in the word This also may serve for reproofe First of such Ministers as preach not sincerely and such are they that preach for corrupt ends though they preach true doctrine Phil. 1. 17. and they that preach obscurely and carelesly and strive not to set out the glory of the truths they propound and they that are like lewd Vintners which mixe the word with the errour of their owne braines or with the tradition● of men or with a manifest strife to bring in mans wisedome to Gods word more desiring to shew their owne wits and learning than the glory of the scriptures 2. Cor. 4. 2. and 1. Cor. 1. 17. and 2.4.5.13 2. Of the people for that great wan● of appetite to Gods pure word and the plaine preaching of it Thus of the second reason the third is taken from the effect and the profit which will follow viz. they shall grow thereby That ye may grow thereby This point of the growth of a Christian is of singular use and meet to be fully and particularly opened and therefore I will observe five things concerning it more especially First that we ought to grow in grace Secondly in what things we should labour to grow and abound Thirdly what are the rules to be observed that we might grow Fourthly the signes of growth Fiftly the uses of the whole First for the first Christians
in ●he thing● of the kingdome of God This is an admirable grace and such as attaine it and grow in it how precious are they amongst the Saints Tenthly in that 2. Cor. 8.7 You may see two other things wee should increase in The one is in all diligence we should more and more every day cast about how we might take more paines to doe good and bee more profitable to others and for our owne soules wee should increase our paines Eleventhly the other grace we should grow in there mentioned is the love to our teachers as God abounds towards us in the profit of their pain● so wee should grow in affection to them till wee get that singular love of them which the Apostle speaketh of 1. Thes. 5. Twelfthly now there is one thing more which being added would make us wonderful compleat Christians glorious shining lights in the world that hold forth the life and power of the word in the midst of crooked and perverse multitudes of men and that is contentation Oh the gaine of godlinesse if we were setled and contented with that we have and could learne of the Apostle in all estates to be content To have the skill to want and to abound and yet by Christ to doe all things this would finish the glory of the whole frame of godlinesse and be like a crowne to all other gifts and graces 1. Tim. 6.6.7 Philip. 4.11.12.18 Now for the third point namely the rules to be observed that we may grow They may be referred to these heads First we must be diligent and conversant in searching the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in the ●ame of Jesus Christ as the chiefe cornerstone and then the promise is that our hearts shall be so sweetned and seasoned with these divine knowledges that God himselfe shall bee with us and dwell in our hearts as a holy temple and we grow more and more in acquaintance with God Eph. 2.20.21 Secondly we must bring so much sincerity to the grace of Christ and the use of the meanes as to resolve to seeke growth in all things as well as one setting our hearts wholy upon the kingdome of God we must not goe about godlinesse with a divided heart wee must grow up in all things or else in none wee shall not prosper if wee bee false-hearted in any part of Gods service Eph. 2.15 Thirdly we must in all things depend upon God and seeke to him by daily prayers for a blessing upon our desires and the meanes and our endevours For else Paul may plant and Apollo may water but it is God that must give the increase 1. Cor. 3.6 Fourthly we must be carefull to imploy the gifts we have and to practice as fast as we heare For to him that hath for use shall be given but from him that hath gifts and will not use them shall be taken away that which he hath Matth. 13.11 Fiftly we must get an humble heart and preserve in us the sense of our owne vilenesse and a lowly minde and conceit of our selves accusing our every-daies evill waies before the Lord. For Gods promise is to giue more grace to the humble Iames 4.7 Sixtly it is a great occasion of increase when a man doth Gods worke with as much cheerfulnesse as he can God loveth a cheereful giver and will make all grace abound to them that strive to live to be his servants 2. Cor. 9.7.8 Seaventhly You must pray that your masters or if you will Ministers may have their hearts enlarged and made fat and that they may come unto you and convert you with aboundance of the blessings of the Gospell For if there be famine or scarcity and barrennesse in Gods House you will not thrive well at home Rom. 15. 29. Eighthly we must take heed of all such things as hinder our growth as namely 1. Hypocrisie when men advance a profession of Religion onely for carnall ends and seeke more the praise of men then of God These mens hearts will be fearfully blasted 2. Errors in opinion of strange doctrines 2. Pet. 3.17.18 Hebrewes 13. c. 3. Spirituall pride 2. Cor. 12.6.7 For God gives grace to the humble Iames 4.7 4. Headstrong affections as the passions of anger or the like these pull men backe and hinder the growth marvelously 1. Cor. 3.2.3 Eph. 4.30.31 5. Living in places where we have not powerfull meanes for our soules Eph. 4.13 For where vision failes they perish must needs saint and bee starved in the famine of the word 6. Discord with such as feare God For if we grow we must grow up in love holding communion with the body of Christ Eph. 4.15.16 7. Domesticall unquietnesse and disorder for that will hinder not onely prayer 1. Pet. 3.7 but all other parts of piety 8 Worldlinesse This was the sinne did undoe Demas 9. Sinister judgement of our owne practises in godlinesse when wee are either just overmuch that is thinke too highly of what we doe or wicked over-much that is thinke too vilely of the grace of God in us or the good we doe both these hinder Christians extreamely 10. The love of any particular sinne For if once wee dally with any corruption grace is dulled and the spirit of grace grieved and vexed in us Now for the fourth point we may know whether we grow or no by diverse signes First i● we be planted neere the rivers of water if the Lord make us happy in living in such places where the meanes of grace abound and the ordinances of God flourish in their life and power Psal. 1.3 Eph. 4.13 Else if a good tree be planted in a dry heath far from water or raine no marvell if it grow not And when the Lord doth make the meanes plentifull hee doth usually make his grace plentifull in so many as are ordained to life Secondly and especially if wee be conscionable in the use of the meanes if we measure to God in sincerity in hearing praying reading and receiving the Sacraments c. there may bee no doubt but God will measure to us in the plenty of his blessings if we sucke the milke of the word with desire we shall grow We need no more doubt whether our soules grow in grace if we can bring constant affections to the meanes than wee would whether the bodies of our children would grow if they have good nurses and doe sucke the breasts well Thirdly grace growes in us as humility doth grow God will give more grace to the humble Iam. 4.8 And looke how wee thrive and continue in true humility so wee thrive in grace and contrariwise as pride and conceitednesse growes in us so doth true grace wither And the like may be said of meeknesse which is a grace that orders the affections as humility doth the minde Fourthly wee may try our growth by our love to the godly the members of the mysticall body for the body of Christ increaseth in the edification of it selfe through love
beare it 396 The wicked usually speake Evill of the godly 456 Example Excellent documents from the word Example 519 520 Ten things for us to follow in the Example of Christs sufferings 521 In what cases Christs Examples binde not 522 Two singular vertues in a good Example 620 When an Example binds 621 Excell The godly Excell others in divers respects 313 F FAith It doth ten things to further our preservation 45 46 What Faith will not preserve us 47 How to shew it in affliction 65 The praises of it then ibid. Seven things should move us to trust on God in affliction 60 Faith is onely seated in the hearts of the Elect 155 God is the object of our Faith and that not only in his nature but in his mercies and promises also 156 It is Faith that makes difference among men before God 282 Its necessitie ibid. Markes of true saving Faith 290 Signes of a true though weake Faith in a weake Christian 291 The Christians continuall use of Faith 157 What we should doe for comfort when the sense of Faith is gone 158 Seven rules for the daily use of Faith ibid. The difference between Faith and Hope 160 Helpes to continue in the Faith 161 All Faith and Hope in other than in God i● vaine 162 Faithfull The life of the Faithfull is a joyfull life 54 Seven things should move ●● to be Faithfull in affliction 66 The Faithfull bow precious in Gods sight ibid. Familie Vide Houshold What makes a Familie happie 484 We are bound of God to care for Familie duties ibid. Why inferiours are first commanded Familie duties 485 Fashion Fashioning our selves to sinne hath seven things in it 115 Father How God is a Father to Christ Angels and Man 11 12 His affection is Fatherly that is first Free secondly Tender thirdly Constant 12 So i● his provision both in respect of first Attendance secondly Diet thirdly Preservation in trouble fourthly Portion ibid. Of what excellencie Gods Fatherly love i● first 〈◊〉 godly men secondly to carnall men thirdly to earthly Fathers 13 14 The name of Father given to divers sorts 492 Feare Three sorts of it first worldly secondly servile thirdly filiall 134 Our conversation must be coupled with Feare ibid. The Feare of God what 480 Sixe things in God of which we are to stand in awe 480 481 Motives to get this Feare 481 What kinds of men doe not Feare God 481 482 The signes of it 482 Reasons why wicked men are stricken with a servile Feare 597 598 A conversation coupled with Feare required of all Christians 598 599 How we should shew this Feare 600 What sorts of men have not Gods Feare 601 Wherein wives should shew Feare to their Husbands 601 602 Fight Vide Warre The Flesh fighteth against the Soule five waies 384 Why God doth suffer this Fight 385 How we may get victorie in this Fight 387 Flesh. Lusts are Fleshly in divers respects 365 Eight evill properties and effects of the Flesh ibid. How they hurt the soules of wicked men 366. as also of the godly ibid. The Flesh fights against the Soule five waies 384 Fooles Unregenerate men are Fooles 459 Signes of spirituall Follie ibid. Wherein godly men sometimes shew Follie 462 463 Fore-knowledge Vide Prescience 3. Vide Foresight 149 Fore-sight Vide Fore-knowledge 8 Three kinds of Fore-sight 149 150 Foundation diversly accepted 151 Christ the maine Foundation of all grace and holinesse 247 With the use of it ibid. c. The only Foundation of his Church 250 That Christ is laid as a Foundation stone imports many things 276 Freedome Vide Libertie From what Christ is made Free 467 To what a godly man is made Free 468 The Freedome of the Old and New Testaments 469 In what respects we are But as Free 469 470 Hypocrites in bondage whilst they seeme Free-men 471 Frowardnesse Reasons against Frowardnesse both in Masters and Servants 494 495 Helpes against it ibid. Frowardnesse how odious shewed by the causes and effects 615 G GEneration It is threefold first corporeall secondly metaphysicall thirdly singular 30 Three things wherein Christs and our Generation is not alike 31 The acceptation of the word Generation 316 Onely Christians come of the best Generation 317 Gentiles Of the Calling of the Gentiles in generall 345 Gird We must Gird up our minds and that divers wayes 103. c. Eight rules for it ibid. Glorie Glorifie How God is glorified by himselfe 404 How of us in generall how in particular 406 Motives to the care of glorifying God 408 409 Helpes thereto ibid. The thoughts of Gods glory two wayes established 411 Foure caveats for making others to Glorifie God ibid. c. Vaine-glory wherein it is seene 512 Wherein true Glorie doth consist ibid. The Glory of man but vaine in sixe respects 196 What is his true Glory 197 God Of his fore-knowledge 8 9 10 How a Father to Christ Angels and Men 11 12 Gods power in keeping us 43 Excellent uses of it 44 Wherein Gods graciousnesse is seene 238 By what meanes God may be brought to our minds 410 Helpes to conceive of God aright ibid. By what meanes he is to be magnified in our hearts 411 God is a Iudge 529 And thereby terrible to wicked men 530 Comfortable to the godly 531 Rules of committing our selves to God ib. Godly The Godly dispersed and the good that comes thereby 6 The Godly are Priests in many respects 264 The Godly excell others in divers respects 313 314 How the Godly come to be Gods heirs 645 That the Godly are Brethren 178 Godlinesse It hath many lets 102 The use of it ibid. Foureteene internall lets of Godlinesse 102 103 Gospel The word taken divers wayes 90 91 Eight effects of this Gospel 91 Eight things required of every one that would have part in it ibid. How it differs from the Law 92 Excellent uses of it both to Priest and People 92 93 Grace what and how it and Peace is multiplied 27 28 What we must doe that it might be multiplied 28 That we may not faile of the Grace of God we must doe foure things 8 How we frustrate the grace of God ibid. We must labour to walke worthy of that grace by doing foure things ibid. c. The divers acceptations of the word Grace 109 The glory of heaven called Grace in three respects 110 111 Seven things in which we should imitate Gods Grace in shewing mercy 111 Why God giveth not heaven as soone as he giveth Grace 112 Wherein Gods Graciousnesse is seene 238 The state of such as have but temporary Grace 338 Grace is either a gift in us or an attribute in God 665 Grace as it is in God considered two waies 666 What priviledges such have as enjoy Gods Grace ibid. Men transgresse against the Grace of God many wayes 667 Grasse Mans life is but Grasse 193 194. c. Grow Growth Divers kinds of it 232 In what graces Christians ought to grow 233 234 Helpes thereto 234 L●ts
the 〈◊〉 use of t●th Vse Vse Doct. 1. Vse Doct. Vse Doct. Vse Doct. The glory given to Christ after his resurrection shewed in 8. things Vse Difference betweene faith and hope Doct. 1. Vse Divers questions and doubts resolved Ten things that assault faith against which we should be armed Doct. 2. Vse Doct. 3. Vse A large explication of the ceremonies about the clensing of the Leper as it concerns the sanctification of the sinner Vse Vse Rev. 2.22 Iam. 4.8 8. Things to be done to get a cleane heart What truth is What it is to obey truth How our hearts are purified in obeying the truth Vse Vse Vse Vse 8 Things for the discovery of hypocrites How men may know their obedience be right or no. Doct. In 8 things the Spirit worketh our obedience Vse Vse Doct. Vse How we may know who are godly The good men may get by conversing with the godly Why the most men have no mind to converse with the godly Doct. Vse ● Signes of unfained love Vse The impediments of brotherly love Of purity of heart both as it respects God and man How we may know that our hearts are pure towards others What we must doe to get and increase purity of heart How the ferventnesse of love may be discerned 7. Signes Nine causes of want of fervent love What must be done that our love might be fervent 〈…〉 new birth Wh●●●● diff●rences between true repentance and false Vse Why it is needfull to be often put in minde of our new birth The lets of the new birth Vse Vse 1. Foure degrees of immortality Vse Vse The differen●e between true 〈◊〉 and temporary joyes Esay 4.6 Tit. 2.5 Vse Vse 8 Thin●s to be observed if w● will heare th● word as the w●rd o● God How the word may be said to live Vse Six waies to shew the life of the word in our conversation Mat. 13. Doct. Vse Mat. 6. Ioh. 1.12 2 Cor. 5.1 Gal. 5.24 Gal. 1.10 Psal. 16 10. Prov. Psal. 49. Ps. 92.6 7. Vse Ier. 9.24 P●al 49. Dan. 2.37 Phil. 2.3 1 Thes. 2.6 ● Cor. 11 18. Esay 8.7 Doct. Mans glory vaine for six reasons Eccles. 5. What is mans true glory The inconveniences men bring upon themselves by forgetting death Quest. Answ. Esay 21.9 Quest. Answ. Doct. Ioh. ● 31 c. Vse The coherence The Analysis of the first part of this chapter 5. Things to be avoided if we would profit by the word Generall observations The benefit of briefe catalogues of sins or duties or graces How many wayes the sins ●ere mentioned doe hinder the word Of Malice Acceptation of the word Signes of malice Reasons against malice From the causes From the effects 1. In us 2. In God Vses Aggravations of malice Note Remedies for malice 1. In our selves Note 2. In others Of Guile The acceptation of the word Object Solut. Why Guile is to be avoided Vse● The misery of deceitfull persons The ●g●●ava●ons of the sin of d●●●it 1. The maner of deceiving 2. The persons upon whom it is p●actised 3. The time Object 1. Solut. O● the misery of such as 〈◊〉 by d●●●●● Note Object 2. Solut. Servants must not use lying and deceit to please th●● mast●●s Object 3. Solut. Of 〈◊〉 c●● 〈◊〉 Object 4. Solut. Vse 2. The iniquity of the time Vse 3. Against ●quivocation Vse 4. The signes of a man without guile Incouragemēts to such men Note that he sayes all malice and all Guile How many wayes men commit Hypocrisie 〈…〉 〈…〉 What may befall him What will befall ●hem The objections of hypocrites removed Vses For information Note For instruction The sorts of Hypocrisie we are most in danger of Preservatives against Hypocrisie Note Object Solut. About censuring other men for Hypocrisie Quest. Answ. How an open hypocrite may be discerned Object Solut. What makes an hypocrite Vse 3. Quest. Answ. First when a man had rather be good then seeme so How a man may know that he is not an hypocrite The ha●●fulnesse of the 〈◊〉 of envy Signes of a man free from envy The aggravation of evill speaking R●asons to disswad● from Evill speak●ng Note Rules against evill speaking What we should doe to avoid evill speaking in others 5. Generall doctrines Note For tryall How we may dis●e●ne our desire and affection after the word Note Other signes of true desire Impediments to true desires externall Inwa●d 〈◊〉 wicked m●n 〈◊〉 of affection in the godly Meanes to get true desires ●o the word Rules for the preserving of good desires Rules for such as be afflicted with melancholy The Motives The causes why the most are but babes in religion Note Speciall duties of such as be but new borne babes Speciall praises in children by nature to be expressed by us Priviledges of weake Christians How far wicked men may desire after the word Note Note Divers kindes of growth In what graces christians ought especially to grow Philip. 1.10 1. Thes. 3.12 Philip. 2.13 Ephes 4 3.4 Rules to helpe our growth Impediments of growth Signes of growth Vnprofitablenesse of life aggravated in many respects Apostasie is twofold Encouragement for weake Ch●istians Wherein Gods graciousnesse is ●cene What we must doe to taste the goodnesse of God Doct. 2. Note A true taste is scene by the cause and effects of it Wherein the taste of wicked men and the godly differ How far the taste of wicked men may goe Vse Divers things noted for clearing the sin against the holy Ghost Doct. 4. The causes why so many have little or no taste of the word Christ is diversly described by the Apostle Eph. 1.7 Christ doth many waies excell earthly Lords towards his servants Christ is three waies called a stone 〈…〉 1 Cor. 7.8 Matth. 16.18 What kind of men disallow Christ. Christ chosen of God diversly Christ is precious many ●●yes Causes why Christ is no more precious with men Pro. 8.11 16. Five points in generall We come to Christ many 〈◊〉 Esay 9.6 In what manner we must come to Christ. Psal. 40.7 Many are the reasons why we should come to Christ. Matth. 22. In what respects the godly are likened to stones Reasons why we ought to be lively stones How vve 〈◊〉 our livelinesse What vve must doe to quicken our hearts Means to build up a Christian. Prov. 24.17 Luke 14. 23. Causes why many are so little edified Ioh. 13. 21. Christ hath a five-fold Tabernacle Esay 40. 22. A godly man like the Tabernacle in divers respects Godly men are Priests in many respects Exod. 29.21 Vses Divers sorts of sacrifices for Christians Mark 8.34.35 1 Ioh. 2.2 Rom. 3.25 Prov. 23.26 Speciall la●es to be observed in offering up our sacrifices What we must doe to get our works acceptable to God What is meant by Scripture and why it isso called Wherein the Scriptures exceede all other writings Malach. 3.1 Esay 55.4 Esay 62.11 Math. 4.11 Vse That Christ is laid as a foundation-stone imports many things The Church is like Mount Sion in
second thing and that is what we must doe that we may profit by the word namely that we must get tender and constant affections to the word if we would ever grow by it in knowledge and grace and this is set out metaphorically by the comparison of appetite and desire in new borne babes unto milke The meaning is that Christians that would profit must be like children in their affections to the word they must love it and long for it and delight in it and have their hearts set upon it as affectionately as children doe naturally thirst after the brest This is a point of singular use and such as all of us ought to take notice of to get our hearts rightly framed and firmed herein The disease of the most hearers lieth in the defect of this and the happinesse of such as doe thrive apace in godlinesse is to be ascribed to this affectionate love of the word There be three things about these desires for matter of observation must be distinctly noted The first concernes the necessity of this desire The second the utility And the third the true nature of this holy desire For the first It is evident from hence that all that come to the word It is indispensably required that they come with appetite men must bring affection and desire after the word if they would ever grow by it If we would ever drinke freely of the water of life we must be such as thirst after it Revel 21.6 If we would have God to feed with milk and wine we must be such as have a true thirst after it Isaiah 55.1 If we would not have all successe blasted in us we must take heed of loathing the meanes that is despising prophecie 1. Thes. 5.21 For the second It is likewise evident from hence that though wee have many wants and ignorances and weaknesses yet if we have affection to the word we shall never be destitute of some happy successe in the vse of it The former places assure Gods blessing and confirme it that God will not be wanting to any that hath this appetite It is all that God stands upon Every one that thirsteth may come and buy and eate annd drinke aboundantly Isaiah ●5 1.2.3 Let us be carefull of the condition to desire the word as the child doth the milk and God will not faile to give the successe we shall grow by it Now for the third point It is here to be carefully noted what kind of desire of the word is that to which this promise is annexed The true desire after the word hath chiefly foure distinct things in it First Estimation of the word above all other outward things When wee can account it a great blessednesse to be chosen of God to this priviledge to approach unto him in the courts of his house Psal. 65.4 Psal. 119.127.128 When we can say with David Oh how amiable are thy tabernacles and think it better to be a doore-keeper in Gods house then to dwel in the tents of wickednesse Psal. 84.1.10 When we esteem the directions and comforts of Gods word above Gold and silver Psal. 119.127 and with Paul account all things but losse in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Christ which may bee heere had Philip 3.9 Secondly Longing and appetite after it as true and certaine as the very appetite of a child is to the brest this is expressed by the similitudes of panting thirsting and watching after the word in divers Scriptures and when this longing is more vehement it is set out by the passion of fainting for it and of the breaking of the soule for it Psal. 42.1 84.2 119.20.40 131. Thirdly Satisfaction and contentment when we speed well in the word as the child is quieted and sleepeth in the rest and vertue of the milk it hath received David saith his soule was satisfied as with marrow Psal. 63.1.5 and is graunted of all the godly and chosen ones Psa 65.4 When it is sweet like hony to our taste Psa. 119.103 Fourthly Constancy and the renewing of affection A childes appetite is renewed every day though it seeme to be full for the present and such is the true desire of the godly It is not a desire for a fitt but is renewed daily as the appetite to our appointed food is Iob. 23. He that hath this desire may bee found daily waiting at the gates of wisedome Prov. 8.34 Vs● 1. The vse of all may be chiefly threefold For First it may serve for tryall we should every one examine our selves whether we have this true desire after the word or no. For if we finde this wee are sure to prosper and if wee find it not wee are nothing but starvelings in matter of godlinesse Question But how may we know whether we have this estimation longing after and constant affection to the word Answ. It may be known divers waies especially if our affections be grown to any good ripenesse and tendernesse in the measure of them For it may be evidently discerned First If we seeke the blessing of the word of God as a chiefe happinesse we would desire of him in his speciall mercie to give it unto us Psa. 119.68 132 144 155. and so by the constancy of prayer we may also discern the constancy of our appetite Secondly if we can be diligent and content to take any paines or be at any cost that we may be provided of this food that perisheth not Iohn 6.27 Thirdly if wee can hoord and hide up the word in our hearts as worldly men would doe their treasures Psal. 119.11 ●oying in it as much as in all riches Psal. 119.14.162 especially if we can batten and wax fat by the contentments of it as carnall men doe when they live at hearts ease Psalme 119.70 Fourthly if it will still our crying that is if it will comfort us and quiet our hearts in all distresses Psal. 119.50 143 92. so as nothing shall offend us verse 16● Fiftly If we make haste and come willingly at the time of assembling Psa. 110.3 But especially if we make haste and not delay in practising what we learne thence Psal. 119.60 Sixtly if wee be thankefull to God and abound in the free will offrings of our mouthes for the good wee get by the word Psal. 119. 7 108.164 171. Seaventhly if we can be truely grieved and say with David Sorrow takes hold on us because the wicked keepe not Gods law 119.159 Eighthly If we delight to talke of Gods word and to speake of his wondrous workes discovered in his word Psal 119.27 172 c. These things and the like are in them that have their affections tender and striving in them Now whereas many of Gods children may have true desire to the word and yet not find evidently some of these signes therefore I will give other signes of true affection to the word though there be not alwaies such delight in it as they desire The lesser
verse 7 this effect is both propounded and amplified propounded in those words The tryall of your faith amplified 1. by comparison with go●d tri●d in the f●rnace 2. by the event it will be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The second objection might be made thus Wee know not whether the former comforts belong to us to which the Apostle answers by giving three signes by which men may try themselves 1. The love of Christ whom they have not seene 2. Beleeving 3. The unspeakable and glorious joyes of the Holy Ghost verse 8. The end of all which is the salvation of their soules verse 9. Thus of the Prolepsis the testimonie of holy men fo●●owes where consider five things 1. Wh●●e s●●i fie In generall Prophets In speciall those Prophets which were app●●●●ed to testifie of the grace that should come unto us Christians 2. 〈…〉 prec●●●nes to furnish themselves for the knowledg of the things they testified They searched inquired diligently 3. The question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall 〈…〉 of salvation verse 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. The 〈…〉 them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the Holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow 5. The successe and that is that they were answered of God where observe two things 1. The manner of the giving the answer it was by revelation Unto whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which concernes both Persons and Things The persons are considered negatively and so they were resolved that they themselves were not the men to whom those glories did belong and affirmatively that they did minister those things unto us Christians Now the things promised are not onely propounded but commended and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes which were lesse principall the Apostles and more principall the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels which things the Angels desire to looke into Hitherto of the consolation The exhortation followes from ver 13. to the end where observe 1. The things unto which they are exhorted verse 13. 2. The reasons by which the exhortation is inforced The things to which he doth exhort are three 1. The first concernes the renovation of the mind Girde up the loynes of your minde 2. The second concernes the moderation of life be sober 3. The third concernes the confirmation of their hope Trust perfectly upon the grace to be brought c. ver 13. The reasons follow and they are 6. in number taken from the consideration 1. Of the Image of God verses 14 15 16. 2. Of the judgement of God verse 17. 3. Of the redemption in Christ verses 18 19 20 21. 4. Of the relation to the godly verse 22. 5. Of the immortality of the soule verse 23. 6. And sixtly of the mortality of the body verses 24 25. The first reason taken from the Image of God is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children expounded two waies 1. by description 2. by testimonie By description 1. negatively shewing what they should sh●nne Not fashioning your selves to the lusts of your former ignorance ver 14. 2. He sets it out affirmatively both by shewing the patterne to be imitated viz the holinesse of him that called them and also the manner of imitation viz to be holy in all manner of conversation ver 15. In the testimonie two things are to bee noted 1. Whence the proofe was fetched in these words As it is written and 2. what was alledged viz Be yee holy as I am holy ver 16. The second reason is taken from the judgement of God where note 1. The proposition of the reason viz Hee that yee call upon as Father c. 2. The inference or use of the same viz Passe the time of your sojourning in feare In the proposition consider 1. Who shall be judge viz he that was called upon as a Father 2. How he shall judge viz without respect of persons 3. Whom he shall judge viz every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz according to their workes verse 17. The third reason is taken from the consideration of our redemption and this reason should move the more 1. Because all the precious things in the world could not redeeme man verse 18. 2. Because the deliverance from our vaine conversation was one of the maine ends of our redemption verse 18. 3. Because our redemption was effected by a matchlesse price viz the passion of Christ which is increased 1. In that it was a suffering even to the effusion of blood 2. that it was a suffering of one that was so infinitely pure without spot or blemish verse 19. 4. Because our redemption was ordained in Gods counsell ver 20. 5. Because the honor of manifesting Christ in the cleare preaching of the Gospell is done now to us Christians and not to the Fathers of old verse 20. 6. Because our redemption was ratified by God the Father and that two waies 1. By raising Christ from the dead 2. By giving him glory verse 21. 7. Because all this was done that our faith and hope might be in God verse 21. The fourth reason is taken from our relation to the godly ver 22. In which reason observe 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. An exhortation by way of use The proposition in it selfe properly concernes sanctification which is described 1. By the nature of it imported in the m●ta●horicall terme purified 2. The subject of it your soules 3. the forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it the spirit 5. The end of it which was brotherly love amplified by the property of it unfained The exhortation is therefore to love one another with a pure heart fervently The first reason is taken from the immortalitie of the soule which is considered two wayes 1. In respect of the fountaine of it which is the new birth 2. In respect of the meanes of it which is set downe 1. negatively not of corruptible seede 2. affirmatively where consider what the meanes is and by what it is What it is viz incorruptible seede By what it is the word which is praised for three things 1. It is of God 2 ●t liveth 3. It abideth for ever ver 23. The sixt reason is taken from the mortality of the body compared with the eternity of the word of God ver 24 25. Of the vanity of man ver 24 which is ●●th propounded and repeated propounded as it concernes either the person of man All flesh is grasse or the condition of man All the glory thereof is as the flower of grasse The rep●tition ●s it concerns both is in these words the grasse withereth and the flower falleth away The eternity of the word of God is propounded in
God hath given of his free grace and shall be fully brought upon you at the last day when Christ shall bee shewed in his glory to the world Now there are six reasons which may induce you to the care of a holy conversation intended in the former dutyes 1. The first concernes the image of God ye are the children of God and therefore you should live so as becomes Gods children and expresse in your cariage the resemblance of the nature of God not given your selves over on● of the liking of sinne to the service and obedience of any of those corruptions which either your selves lived in before your calling or are usually found in such onely as know not GOD. But as God who by the power of his word hath converted you is holy so should you strive with respect of all his commandements to resemble the praises of God in all your car●age striving in every duty to follow your patterne And the rather because this hath beene anciently required in the old Testament of Gods people to propound unto themselves the imitation of Gods holinesse and to detest sinne because they would not be unlike to God 2. A second reason may be taken from the judgment of God For the time must certainly come when God whom we call a Father and call upon as a Father in this life will summon us before his Tribunall certainly and speedily and then no man shall escape but shalt be dealt with without partiality or any corrupt respect according as mens workes have beene either good or evill and therefore it behoves us that are in this world but as sojourners for a time to spend our daies in all carefulnesse and godly feare 3. A third reason may be taken from the consideration of our redemption which hath many important motives in it For it cannot bee but yee all know that your misery by nature was so great that yee could not be ransomed if all the treasures of gold and silver in the world had been given for you and when you were redeemed a chiefe respect was had to the freeing of you from the viciousnesse of your conversation in which vainely yee spent your times and which corruption in many things yee sucked in from the sinfull examples and precepts and ill education of your Parents and ancestors But especially if yee consider what a matchlesse price was given for your ransome even the pretious blood of Christ who as a most absolute sacrifice for our sinnes was without all soule of nature or life and so the full substance of all the ceremoniall sacrifices and in particular was the true lambe without blemish or spot that makes attonement for the sinnes of the world And the rather if yee consider that from all eternity God had ordained that Christ should dye for you and when the fulnesse of time came that God was to reveale his Sonne as the Saviour of the world hee shewed him in the flesh and caused him to be preached unto you and for your sakes with far more evidence and clearnesse than in for●er ages To you and for your sakes I say that doe constantly put your trust in Gods mercy through his merits that God that to shew he was fully paid the uttermost farthing of our debts came to the prison doore and let him out which he did when he raised him from the dead and besides exalted him to wonderfull glory when hee ascended up into heaven that so for the time to come you might beleeve and trust upon Gods goodnesse and favour to you without all feare or doubting 4. And the rather in the fourth place should you be carefull of the former exhortation if you consider your relation to the godly to whom ye are 〈◊〉 For seeing that by the spirit of God your soules are purified from the leprosie of inward evills by the holy course you have held in clensing your hearts of those evills which might hinder your internall sanctification in that obedience you yeeld to the truth of God and inasmuch as the end of all this reformation was that there might be a holy communion and affection without hypocrisie and dissembling among such as feare God who are all the children of one Father therefore see to it by any meanes that yee order your lives and hearts so that you may love one another both with ardent affection pure sincere hearts which you never doe unlesse you gird up the loines of your mindes and live soberly be setled in the assurance that yee shall altogether one day raigne in heaven 5. And fiftly the immortality of your soules should perswade with you you were made new men not as you were made men by a naturall propagation but inspired with a life that should never cease having the seed of this eternall life cast into your hearts by the word of God which in it selfe and by effect in you liveth and abideth for ever And lastly if you consider the mortality of your bodies All in a mans outward estate is but vaine and transitory the bodies of all men are but as the grasse which is to day and tomorrow is cut downe and cast into the oven Man is quickly and suddenly gone nor is the glory of mens outward estate better than their bodies For all the riches pleasures c. of this life in which men glory most they are but as the ' flower of grasse His body withereth like the grasse decaying in a short time till he have nothing left but the very roote of life and as for his riches and pleasures they like the flower fall off so as they are never recovered againe many times in this life but alwaies in death But on the other side the word of God upon which men should set their hearts continueth in the efficacie of it in the sense of it and in the fruit of it for ever and that you may not be mistaken this is that word of God which is daily preached unto you AN EXPOSITION OF THE FIRST EPISTLE generall of PETER CHAP. I. verses 1 2. 1. Peter an Apostle of Iesus Christ to the strangers that dwell here and there throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bithynia 2. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father unto sanctification of the spirit through obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ Grace and peace be multiplied unto you THe purpose of the Apostle in this Epistle is to confirme the Christians to whom he writes in the faith and to assure them that it was the true grace of God they had received and to perswade them to all possible care of sincerity of life becomming the Gospell and to constancy in tryalls The Epistle stands of three parts 1. The salutation Chap. 1. ver 1 2. 2. The body of the Epistle Chap. 1. ver 3. to Chap. 5. ver 12. 3. The Epilogue or conclusion Chap. 5. ver 12.
two should suffer with him per compassionem mentis and by the scarlet should be meant the theefe that suffered with him per compassionem carnis Some thinke that the Cedar-wood is hope that dwels on high and will not be putrified Hysop is faith a low growing herb that fastens her roote upon the rocke scarlet is charity Others understand by the Cedar contemplation by the hysop humility and by scarlet twise dyed charity which is twise dyed viz. on the one side with the love of God on the other with the love of our neighbour All these must burne in the Lords passion but I thinke that hereby may be noted that three things arise out of the passion of Christ 1. th● 〈◊〉 of immortality 2. the hysop of mortification For so the word purge applyed to hyssop Psal. 51. doth import 3. the scarlet is the blood of Christ which is twise dyed in that it is twise applyed once for expiation 600. yeares agoe and then againe for justification of every particular beleever 17. The impurity of the Priests mentioned verses 7 8. might prefigure the impurity of the Jewish Priests till they were washed by conversion from their sinne in killing Christ of whose conversion is mentioned Act. 6. But rather hereby may be gathered as the Apostle doth gather it the great excellency of Christs Priesthood above all those legall Priests For they in their solemnest sacrifices were impure themselves and needed cleansing but Christ was not so Heb. 10. Quest. How could the Priests be made uncleane by that which did purifie the people Answ. Uncleanenesse was two wayes contracted 1. First by the foulenesse of the things touched and so he that touched a dead corps was uncleane 2. Secondly by the unworthinesse of the man touching and so it was here He must professe himselfe unworthy to touch so sacred an expiation we had need to take time even till the evening to humble our soules and bewaile our unworthinesse of the blood of Christ. 18. Now after the death of the Heifer it is said Verse 9. that a man that is cleane must gather up the ashes of the Heifer and lay them up without the Campe in a cleane place This man that is cleane is the Gentile purified by faith For this is after the death of Christ The gathering of the ashes is the applying of the merits of Christ and laying hold of the mysteries of his kingdome The laying up of the ashes imports the Christians accounts of Christs merits as his chiefe treasure The cleane place is the cleane heart for the merits of Christ belong not to all Gentiles but to such as have a clean heart and will keepe the mystery of faith in a pure conscience Without the Campe notes the native condition of the Gentiles who were without the law strangers from the common-wealth of Israel and from the covenant of promise without sacrifices and out of the Synagogue of the Jewes 19. These ashes are kept for the congregation to note that there shall never be want of merit to any Christian to any member of the congregation of Christ when he saith it is to make a water of separation it notes what our sins bring upon us by nature we are separate and cast out of Gods sight and need the blood of Christ to recover us from our separation This water was made of the ashes of the Heifer and running water to note that after separation to cleanse us again we must be sprinkled with a water made of the ashes of Christs merits and the water of the grace of the holy Spirit of God This is the perpetuall way of purification for sin and in that it must be sprinkled upon us with Hyssop it notes that we can have no comfort either of the merits of Christ or the grace of the Spirit without the hyssop of true mortification 20. He that gathereth the ashes must wash his clothes and be uncleane till the Even to note that even the neerer a Christian comes to the merits of Christ the more he is affected with the sense of his owne uncleanenesse he that hath the strongest faith doth most wash his clothes yea he retaines the sense of his uncleanenesse till Even that is till death as some interpret it Thus much of the sprinkling of the blood of the Heifer In the sprinkling that was used about the passeover there are not many things which need expounding The Lambe for the Passeover is Christ the lambe of God the blood is the blood of Christ. The sprinkling of the blood is the application of the blood of Christ. The sprinkler is the Minister The hyssop wherewith it is sprinkled is the word of mortification The people are the faithfull The house is the soule of man The doores of the house are the eares eyes and mouth of man The benefit is deliverance and protection from the destroying Angell In the narration of the sprinkling of blood used at the ratification of the covenant The sense of the most things may be briefly touched The altar under the hill is Jesus Christ ready to succour and sanctifie those that are afflicted in spirit with terrors of conscience in the sense of the law given on the hill Sina The pillars are the faithfull that stand before and beare witnesse to the comforts expected or felt for the sacrifice of Christ and they are 12. to note out the 12. Tribes and in them all the faithfull The young men and the first borne of the children of Israel were types of the Elect in visible Churches borne againe to God his first fruites of the multitude a people consecrated to God as his onely portion These offer to God two kindes of sacrifice the one was the Holocaust or the whole burnt offering even the dedication of themselves wholly even of their lives unto the death for the service of God and the practise of godlinesse The other was the pea●e offerings which were sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving The blood was the blood of Christ. The basons that received the blood are the word and sacraments The Altar sprinkled with blood is Christ truly suffering and truly retaining in himselfe all sufficiency of merits The other part of the blood sprinkled on the people notes the application of the merits of Christ to the faithfull and of his graces without diminishing from the fountains of excellency of merit and grace in himselfe The meanes by which it is sprinkled is to be supplyed out of the Heb. 9.19 viz. the hyssop of mortification and the scarlet of charity and the Christian love 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 against sin and ●ervent desire of piety The benefit is the reconciling of the people to God and the establishing of the covenant In the aspersion of blood mentioned Levit. 16. I note onely foure things 1. The benefits that come by it which are first entrance within the vaile even the right to the kingdome of heaven 2. The assured procurement and continued establishment
of mercy from God noted by the sprinkling of the mercy seate 7. times 2. The intercession of Christ noted by the incense heated by the burning coales of his owne ardent affection Ver. 12 13. 3. The perfection of Christs mediation in that no man is joyned with him nor must any man be present Ver. 17. 4. The extent of the benefits to all the Elect noted by the sprinkling of the blood upon the foure hornes of the Altar The Use of all may be briefly both for instruction and consolation For instruction 1. To the people who should be above all things carefull to seeke the comfort of the application of Gods favour in Jesus Christ oh wee must above all things by faith keep this sprinkling of blood as is said of thē Heb. 11.28 2. Ministers should hence take notice of the maine end of preaching which is to sprinkle blood upon the hearts of the people that they may both be setled in the knowledge and assurance of their right in Christ and the covenant of grace and likewise purged in their consciences from dead workes we doe little by preaching if we beget not reformation and assurance in the hearts of the people he preacheth not that sprinkles not 2. For Consolation Be not fearefull Christs blood will protect thee as safely as ever did the blood of the paschall lambe the children of Israel Be not doubtfull of the efficacy of it For if the blood of buls and goates c. could purifie in respect of legall cleansings how much more shall the blood of Christ who by the eternall spirit offered up himselfe to God purge thy conscience from dead workes and make attonement for all thy sins cleansing thee from all unrighteousnesse Heb. 9.13 14 15. 1 John 1.7 Be not discontent with thy condition thou hast what was merited and purchased with blood how little soever it seeme in thy eyes But especially be not unthankfull for such a singular way of mercy but with all gladnes of heart rejoyce above all things in Christ him crucified for thee Hitherto of the persons saluted the forme of the salutation follows Grace and peace be multiplied to you It was the maner in their salutations to wish to their friends that which they accounted a chiefe happinesse to them So doth the Apostle here wishing the multiplying of grace and peace Grace and peace Grace must be considered two wayes 1. First as it is in God and so it is his free love and gracious disposition to shew mercy in Christ. 2. Secondly as it is in man and so it notes either the gifts of their minde or their condition or estate in Christ and so the faithfull are said to be under grace and not under the Law Peace is both inward and outward Inward peace consists in the contentation and rest of the soule and so it is both the rest of the conscience from terrors and the rest of the heart from passion● and perturbations Outward peace is nothing else but prosperity or an estate free from unquietnesse and molestation and adorned with needfull blessings Grace and Peace are the two principall things to be sought and wished in this world when Christ comes to inrich the world hee comes with grace and truth Iohn 1. he cannot be miserable that hath th●se two nor happy that wants them altogether Which may be a singular comfort to a Christian in grace and peace is his portion and he may goe boldly to the throne of God in the intercession of Christ to beg either of these in his need Heb. 4. ult God may deny him other things but he will never deny him grace peace And therefore also Christians should joy in the grace of God wherein they stand Rom. 5.3 and be resolved in themselves that the grace of God is sufficient for them 2 Cor. 12.9 Especially they should praise and esteeme and glorifie the grace of God It is all God askes for as it were at our hands even to honour him by praising his grace and free love to us Ephes. 1.6 Woe unto wicked men that neglect the grace of God what shall it profit them to gaine the world which yet they doe not and want grace and peace but especially why doe they not let Christians alone with their portion why doe they trouble them in their peace and despight them for their grace can they not follow their pleasures lusts profits honors c. and let Christians live quietly by thē who desire but liberty to enjoy grace with peace There is something also to be noted from the order of placing grace must bee had before peace there can bee no peace to the wicked and hee is undoubtedly wicked that hath not the grace of God Be multiplied Grace and Peace is multiplyed 1. First when the number of gracious persons is increased This is to be sought and prayed for 2. When the kindes of grace and peace are all had For there is the manifold grace of God 3. Thirdly when the measures and degrees are augmented The Husbandman would faine have his seed increase and the tradesman his trade so would the ambitious man his honors and preferments c. Even so should the Christian be ambitious and covetous in his desires that his grace and peace might increase Quest. What should we doe that grace and peace might be multiplied Answ. 1. Be sure it be true grace else it will never increase 2. Thou must increase in ●eeknesse and humility For God will give more grace to the humble Iam. 4.8 and the meeke shall have abundance of peace Psal. 37.6.11 3. If thou wouldest have thy grace and peace increase thou must be constant much in the use of all the ordinances of God which are the meanes of grace and peace As thou measurest to God in the meanes so will God measure to thee in the successe thou must be much in hearing For grace is in the lips of Christ Psal. 45.3 and much peace shall be to them that love Gods lawes Psal. 119. and thou must goe often unto God by prayer who gives grace and glory and will withhold no good thing Psal. 84.12 2 Thess. 1.11 12. Runne by faith to Christ who is the Prince of peace Esay 9.6 and stirre up the grace of God that is in thee For thou hast not received the spirit of feare but of power 2 Tim. 1.7 4. Thou must not perplex thy heart with the cares of this life but in all things goe to God by prayer and cast all thy care upon him so shalt thou have peace that passeth all understanding to keep thy heart and minde Phil. 4. 6 7. Thou must make much of the beginnings of desires joy liking and care of the meanes of godlinesse and not let them goe out so as thou shouldest fails of the grace of God or receive those graces in vaine 6. Thou must be resolved upon it to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live righteously and religiously
but rather be still providing for the war againe Secondly that Gods children have a garrison to defend them Now if any would know distinctly how this is true I will endeavour to shew it to be true five wayes 1. For first we see that sometimes they are fenced and protected by the godly who as an holy army rise up in their defence to help them either by Apologie succour or prayers 2. Sometimes the unreasonable creatures protect and avenge the righteous God can send the armies of silly creatures as a valiant garrison to defend Israel and offend Pharaoh and they are strong that doe Gods worke 3. It is sure that the Angels are alwayes in garrison for the Elect pitching their tents round about them that feare God That which Elisha and his man saw with bodily eyes every beleever may be assured of by faith 4. God can raise up in them even an army of powerfull thoughts and meditations so as their very inward tranquillity arising from the testimony of a good conscience and the knowledge of Gods excellent love can make and keepe them secure and sound 5. But lastly in all these and above all these God himselfe is the Christian mans garrison as David saith God is his rocke his fortresse his strength his buckler his high tower and his deliverer All this may very fitly serve for two uses 1. First for consolation to the godly and that two wayes First if they consider how carefully God hath provided for their safety and that he is faithfull and will doe it Secondly if they observe what is implyed hereby for in that God plants a garrison about his people it imports that they are wonderfully deare unto him Jewels of great price which God would by no meanes lose yea great Princes that are preserved with such a continuall guard If Gods government towards his people were every way visible and manifested the meanest Christian would appeare to be no whit inferiour to the greatest Monarch 2. Secondly this implies terror and amasement to all the wicked For it imports that God cares not for them and takes no charge of them yea thathe accounts them as enemies and yet they are not without their ●●●rison neither But what is it they have their hearts kept by the devill as a strong man armed for their ruine and the law keepes them with a strong guard till the day of Christ. By the power of God The word translated power is rendered mighty workes sometimes miracles c. but ordinarily it is meant as here power The maine doctrine is that the preservation and keeping of the faithfull depends upon Gods power Now for explication of this doctrine I must answer divers questions First some one might say doth it follow God hath power to keepe us therefore he will It doth not simply follow but in two respects 1. First in respect of the intercession of Christ he hath mediated for our preservation and the father will grant what he askes and therefore so long as he hath power hee will continually doe it 2. Secondly in respect of Gods promises he hath promised to use his power for our preservation and therefore as sure as God hath power so sure are we to be preserved Quest. Now if any aske how it may appeare that Gods power is engaged to keep us Answ. I answer it may appeare evidently by these scriptures 2 Cor. 12.9 1 Cor. 4.8 Heb. 1.3 Ephes. 3.20 Heb. 7.16 Mat. 6.13 Rom. 1.4 Iude 24. Quest. Now if any yet ask which way God doth shew his power in our preservation Answ. I answer the Lord doth exercise his power in keeping us three wayes 1. In his word making that a glorious instrument to keep us to salvation it is as it were the arme of God it is called expresly the power of God unto salvation For by the word is the demonstration of the spirit and of power as the Apostle speakes and thus Christ liveth still on earth by the very power of God in the word yea there is an effectuall working of power given to the word 2. The Lord exercises his power in keeping us by the grace of his spirit in us by making grace to be sufficient for us strengthening our saith and establishing us with every needfull grace especially in times of tryall For a Christian hath received the spirit of power and of a sound minde 3. In the workes of his providence by his disposing and raising meanes to protect and uphold the faithfull against in or out of all troubles c. Quest. But may some one say Is the promise of Gods power in the preservation of the faithfull so absolute as doe what they will Gods power will keep them Answ. No For if Christians would have God to keep them they must themselves keepe that which is committed to them they must keep the word even the patterne of wholesome words in faith and love they must stirre up the grace of God in them and waite upon God by prayer and the constant use of all the meanes and here they must live by faith they must keepe themselves in their wayes or else they must not wonder that the Lord doe as it were tumble downe the wall of their protection and seeme to leave them to themselves The use hereof is divers 1. First it may serve for confutation of that false opinion of the Papists about their doctrine of free-will For marke it The very Saints have not power to keep themselves no not after calling and therefore much lesse before calling 2. And further it may confute the very confidence of all the adversaries of Gods people they insult many times over the godly because they are so few so meane persons so simple and weake and pride themselves in the conceit of their owne greatnesse and power to compasse all their plots and malicious intendments against the godly But they doe notably deceive themselves For godly men are preserved not by their owne might or meanes or friends or sufficiency but by the power of God grossely therefore are they deluded if they thinke to prevaile finally against them 3. Yea this might fully and at once confute the objections of the weake Christian Oh he hath so many infirmities and temptations and allurements and corrupt inclinations so many lets and discouragements and so wanteth the meanes that hee can never persevere to the end these are his feares and this workes his unbeleefe But all this is soone answered Thou standest not by thine owne strength but by the power of God and therefore I must apply that speech of Christ to the Sadduces to them a little turning them you erre not knowing the promises of God in the scriptures nor the power that is in Gods nature Secondly this may serve for information For it may shew us the impotency of all earthly things nothing but Gods
carefull to prevent these it shewes that it is needfull mens objections should be answered and to that end if the Lord doe not answer otherwise men should not represse and smother them but propound them by seeking resolution These sparkes not quenched may breed a great flame these drops of poyson may infect the whole soule a little leaven may sower the whole lumpe Fiftly A question may be here demanded and that is why the Lord here and in many places of Scripture else doth expresse the answer and suppresse the objection For answer hereunto divers things may profitably be supposed 1. First the Lord hereby shews unto men in their owne experience what a divine light is in the Scpiptures that can thus discerne the hidden things of man 2. Secondly it may be the objections are suppressed lest men hearing the objections should learn to object 3. Thirdly the Lord hereby shews mans nature who usually will not say so much yet the Lord saith they doe thinkeso 4. Lastly I thinke for the most part the Lord doth it out of his compassion and tendernesse towards his people these things arising out of mens frail●y he is willing many times to lay to the plaister and yet not uncover the soare and for feare of discouraging them hee rather implies their weaknesses then expresseth them that they might be assured that he is inclined rather to pitty them than to hate them rather to succour them than to reprove them And thus of the generall Wherein yee greatly rejoyce The maine thing that I observe out of these words is that converted Christians though they have many afflictions yet they are greatly solaced and finde great joy even in this world Now because this point is not believed by the most who are loath to acknowledge so much gaine in godlinesse and because also many Christians are not wise either to discerne or to make use of their owne felicity herein I would before I come to the use of this doctrine for explication propound three things 1. How it can be made manifest out of Scripture that a Christian life is such a joyfull life 2. What are the particular waies whereby Christians can meet with such a joyfull life and comfort as by Scripture is proved they might have 3. And in the third place I answer an objection or two For the first The Scripture instanceth in nine things all which doe manifestly import that such as feare God may have exceeding much joy 1. For first God commandeth his servants to rejoyce yea hee commandeth his Embassadors to comfort them 2 God is bound by promise to give them joy For besides that the Gospell in generall is a doctrine of glad tidings there are particular promises for joy as the places in the margent shew 3. Thirdly joy is one of the expresse fruits of the Spirit 4. Fourthly it is a maine part of the Kingdome of God 5. Fiftly God threatneth his when he finds them without it as is manifest in Deut. 28. this was one cause of his displeasure that they did not serve him with joyfulnesse and a glad heart 6. The Scripture is plentifull in the examples of men that have found exceeding much joy in the waies of God some few places I instance in the margent 7. If a temporary faith finde such joy in the word how much more a justifying faith 8. The nature of God is such as hee is as willing to communicate joy as well as other graces 9. Lastly this is most apparant by this that the Scriptures shew that God hath provided joyes for his servants in such things as might seeme most to crosse them or their contentment as in tribulation yea and in affliction of conscience it selfe Now if we can beleeve it of them in such times then wee need never doubt of it but they either have or may have great joy But some one may say Which way can they finde such great joy what meanes is there for their consolation I answer They finde joy nine waies 1. They have in them the Spirit even him that is called a Comforter which no wicked man hath and this Spirit of God is an everlasting spring of joy 2. Gods ordinances are unto them as wells of joy the word is a well so is prayer reading the Sacraments and conference 3. They have their right to all Gods promises to comfort them and certainly the Gospell is a deepe well 4. They have the presence of God ●●ke the sunne to refresh them 5. They finde secret joy in the communion of Saints both to hear of them absent and to have fellowship with them present and that both publike and private For if this be a great part of the joy of heaven then may it be some part of a Christians joy on earth 6. There is joy in the graces of the Spirit to see the buds of the Lord grow in the garden of their hearts and the weeds of sinne to be rooted out yea great is the content of grace and well-doing 7. There is joy in the meditation of the misery they are delivered from 8. They are not barred from the joy in outward things which is all the joy wicked men have and in these the worst Christian hath more right to rejoyce then the best carnall man 9. Lastly they find much joy even of the hope of the joy they shall have in heaven Ob. But might some ungodly person say Wee see no such matter in them Sol. The stranger shall not meddle with their joy Ob. But might some scorner say If any have found such joy in following the word and godlinesse it hath beene such as have had nothing else to rejoyce in Sol. That is false The Psalmist shewes by prophesying that even Kings that have abounded in outward things yet comming to taste the excellency of the comforts of godlinesse and to feele the power of Gods word should sing for joy of heart and greatly acknowledge the exceeding glory of God and godlinesse Ob. But might some others say Wee have beene hearers thus long and have followed godlinesse and yet can find no such comfort in it Sol. I answer it may well be so but then lay the blame where it is to be laid let men examine thēselves concerning the cause For if thou find not much joy in godlinesse it is either because thou hast not sorrowed for thy sinnes or thou hast not seriously sought the pardon of thy sinnes or thou sowest not good seede thou art not conscionable in practice If men were more fruitfull in well-doing they would finde more ioy or thou livest not in peace or thou art not much in prayer or thou receivest not the law into thy heart or thou art intangled with some grosse sinne or thou art intemperate in thy earthly pleasures or thou art not in all things thankfull This
past or to make tryall of some grace of God in us It is a comfort that God will not afflict us till there be need Thirdly In some crosses Christians need not be in heavinesse so was it with Iob and the Apostles in their sufferings and that is first when we find the sense of Gods love secondly while we keep our uprightnesse Through manifold tentations There are foure kinds of tentations First there is the tentation of persecution and well may persecution be called tentation For it is a property in most persecutors to tempt and intice that they may seduce and besides the Lord hereby doth try the faith of men for in the time of this tentation the temporary faith will faile Secondly there is the tentation of affliction afflictions in generall are called tentations in divers places and they may well be called so either because they tempt or because they try They tempt and that either to vice or despaire To vice for afflictions they tempt men to lying deceit stealing swearing oppression usury filthinesse idolatry carnall shifts breach of Sabbath passion bitter words inordinate desires c. yea and in some men they tempt to despaire and the blasphemy against Gods mercy as in Cain and Iudas This should teach us to watch over our selves in our troubles that we be not led aside with the tentations of afflictions and we should account it a great mercy of God to get out of our trouble free from the infection of any of the former or the like vices and let wicked men know that to be taken with the tentation of the crosse is worse than the crosse it selfe deceit is worse than want of trade c. Now afflictions are said to be tentations also because they try men For they try our faith and patience and the constancy of our obedience to God But of the tryall of crosses in the next verse The third kind of tentations is the tentation of concupiscence of which Iames speaks when he saith a man is tempted when he is drawne away of his concupiscence Observe a plaine proofe that the internall evils that arise from corruption of nature are called tentations The last kind of tentations is the tentation of Sathan and this is usually understood when we name tentations Of the first and second kind I have intreated before of the third I shall speak in the handling of the common place of tentations of the fourth kind Concerning then the tentations of Sathan chiefly I propound five things First how many wayes Satan doth tempt men Secondly how many degrees there be of his tentation Thirdly what the difference is betweene the tentation of concupiscence and the tentation of Sathan Fourthly what comforts there are against tentation Fiftly what rules we are to observe either for the preventing of them or deliverance out of them For the first Sathan doth tempt men five waies 1. By causing men to tempt Thus he caused Peter to tempt Christ and so he doth commonly stir up wicked men in all ages to be his instruments for tempting 2. By assuming to himselfe some outward shape or likenesse and therein vocally to allure and beguile men thus hee tempts witches and some monstrous offenders 3. By presenting objects to our senses that may tempt us therefore Iob said he would make a covenant with his eyes 4. By enflaming the corruption of our owne nature to evill For when evill is hatched in our mindes if it work there strongly it will have some effect upon the body in some part of it and thereby Sathan knowes the fire that is in us and then hee comes to us and blowes all those coales with all cunning and fury to provoke us yet more and more unto sinne 5. Lastly hee tempts us by injecting evill into our mindes but how hee doth this is unknowne and this last is that which usually wee thinke of when wee speake of the temptations of Sathan Now for the second there are in all thirteene degrees of the temptations of the devill 1. The first is the evill motion it selfe barely considered as it is cast into the minde 2. The second is the liking of it when our concupiscence upon the discerning of the evill thought doth yeeld a kind of approbation we being content that such an evill thought should be there 3. The third degree is delight when we please our selves with contemplative wickednesse taking a kind of contentment in musing upon such evill things suffering our thoughts to feed themselves in the delights of such imaginations where we suppose the practice of evill though as yet we have no resolution any way to give our selves liberty to doe as we thinke 4. The fourth degree is security or the willing omission of all such duties or services to God as might hinder that contemplative wickednesse this is when we are unwilling to pray or heare or reade especially any thing that might put us out of that liberty of thinking evill now are wee drawne away with the temptation as the Apostle speaketh 5. The fift degree is ensnaring when a man that all this while had no purpose to doe the evill let his thoughts yet runne upon it and hee findes himselfe now so intangled that he doubts he shall be carried into the practice of it whereupon he struggles within himself a●d would fain resolve not to doe it but yet finds himselfe like the fish catched with the hook so as hee cannot get off but is strongly entised to yeeld to seeke all that pleasure or profi● or honour or revenge of which he hath mused Thus for some time continue men in this degree faine they would not doe the sinne outwardly yet they feare they shall doe it They could now wish they had not given their thoughts that liberty For now they are so fiered they cannot tell how to be delivered from them 6. The sixt degree is Consenting For at length the devill overcomes through the flames of concupiscence so as hee now resolves hee will practice it and give his full consent to attend the opportunity to commit the evill as supposing to finde to himselfe great content that hee never had such is the old fraud and murtherous lying of the Tempter This is called the conceiving of sinne 7. The seventh degree is Practice or the birth of sin and this is when a man overcome within as before now committeth his intended evill 8. The eighth degree is custome when a man now lesse fearfull of sinne doth often commit it and yeeldeth himselfe over to the continuall practice of his wretched evill 9. The ninth degree is inward Apostacy that is departing from God with an evill and unfaithfull heart as it is called Heb. 3. this is when a man confirmed in the custome of sinne resolves to give over all care of godlinesse and accordingly by the working of Sathan hath his heart filled with all sorts of vicious inclinations and is so obdurate that hee beleeves or cares
he gives but a little help Dan. 11.34 6. Sixtly when hee leaves us to our selves and withdrawes the speciall working of his spirit 2 Chron. 32.31 7. Seventhly when he suffers us to fall into the same miseries that wicked men doe yea sometimes making our condition to be as the beasts of the field Eccles. 3.17 18 19. Now the consideration of this doctrine of Gods melting and trying men may serve for foure Uses 1. First there is a great comfort in it and that foure waies 1. For first it is a comfort that God makes so much account of men as to think them worthy the melting or trying even this favour Iob wonders at Ioh 7.18 2. Secondly it is comfortable that it is Gods wont to try his servants it hath been Gods custome to doe so It is no strange thing if he try us hee doth no more than what hee hath done to them that were deare unto him Heb. 11.36 3. Thirdly it is especially comfortable if we consider out of other Scriptures the manner of Gods compassion and care for his people when they be in the furnace For First he appoints their time how long they shall tarry there and beyond that time they shall not be in the furnace Dan. 11.35 Secondly the Prophet Malachy saies he sitteth down himself by the furnace to tend it and to look to them Mal. 3.2 or if he be upon any occasion urged to be absent the Prophet Esay saies he flies and returnes Esay 31.9 and ult c. Thirdly if they have any sute to God or make any moane while they live in the furnace they are sure to be heard no time like it for the hearing of prayer Zach. 13.9 Fourthly if the fire be too hot for them he will defer his wrath and refraine from them Esay 48.9 10. Fiftly he will take notice of a little grace in the midst of a great deale of drosse if there be but a sigh a good thought a holy desire in the midst of a great deale of ignorance and perturbation he will accept it and account of it Rom. 8.27 4. Fourthly it is a comfortable doctrine to Gods children if they consider but the effect of this melting and that either the present effect or the future The present it is to try them not to consume them or to make a full end of them it is to refine them not to destroy them Dan. 11.36 Ier. 46. ult and they shall come out as Iob saith as the gold Iob 23.10 And besides for the time to come it is certaine the Lord tryes them that hee may doe them good at their latter end Deut. 8.14 15 16. and after they are tryed they shall have a crowne of life Iam. 1.12 And thus of the Use for consolation Secondly this doctrine is a terrible doctrine too terrible I say in generall to all such as will not be purged by affliction such as will not be made better by their crosses Let them consider that it is the Lord that cast them into the furnace and seeing they mend not one of these two evils will befall them Either the Lord will give them over as altogether drosse and so they shall never be purged or else since they will not mend by the beginnings of his displeasure he will cause his fury to rest upon them as the Prophet speaks Ezech. 24.13 14. and in particular woe to all wicked men that nourish themselves in sinne because they are inward or secret sinnes Little doe they know or thinke that God will search Ierusalem with lights even all them that be frozen in their dregges or setled on their lees Z●ph 1.12 When the Lord will search for them it is not the top of Carmell nor the bottome of the sea that shall hide them c. Amos 9.2 3. And in speciall woe is to all hypocrites they are fallen into Gods hand that compasseth about all their waies there is not a thought in their minds but God seeth woe to carelesse professors the Lord will make all the Churches to know that hee searcheth the heart and reines Rev. 2.23 Thirdly this doctrine may teach us two things 1. First to be more carefull of in ●ard uprightnesse seeing it is God that tryeth us who tries the heart as well as the life 1 Chro. 29.19 2. Secondly in all the wrongs and aspersions of wicked men to put our selves upon Gods tryall Psal. 7.9 Ier. 11.20 1 Thes. 2.4 Of your faith Two things I note here 1. First that where God gives faith he will try it where he bestowes the assurance of his favour let men looke for it For certainly hee will melt them God will try our faith for divers reasons he will thereby melt off the rust of antiquity There be certaine odde and old opinions and conceits in men at their first conversion and it is Gods manner to schoole men by afflictions and many times a Christian in a few daies of adversity learnes more true knowledge then otherwise hee would doe in many weekes Againe there are dregges of unbeliefe in the best and these need to goe into the furnace to get them off Besides by affliction God doth shew the truth of his owne grace from that which is but counterfeit in wicked men The furnace manifestly puts a difference betweene a justifying faith and the best of all other faiths to wit temporary faith this may serve to confute their folly that think themselves happy because they are not in trouble as other men But contrariwise this is an ill signe many times that they are miserable and have not any faith that would endure the tryall This should also teach us so to seeke assurance of Gods favour or so to hold the possession of it as to looke for assaults and tryals while we are in this world more or lesse 2. Secondly that of all other graces God stands most upon faith in affliction and this is so both because it brings more glory to God for to live by faith is to yeeld an immediate glory unto God as also because it is of most principall use for the good of Christians For faith doth in the midst of all stormes and the waves of adversity set a Christian on a rock it doth give him ground to be established upon so as he needs not feare drowning hence the Metaphors of grounded and stablished are given to faith Againe Faith delivers from the curse of the law so as what afflictions break in upon a Christian they are not curses but chastisements which may be a great hearts ease in all temptations or tryals Againe Faith quiets a mans heart and works peace and inward tranquility for against the force of the curse it gives a man accesse to the view of the glo●y of heaven yea it doth as it were give a being to things which are not it makes the glory of heaven as it were present it laies hold on eternall life Lastly faith is many times the very condition of
a while and heard her speak with such affection and admiration they are turned and will now goe seek Christ as well as shee Cant. 5.9 to the end and 6.1 3. Thirdly such as have felt this love of Christ should be carefull to keep it now there are seven things to be observed if wee would preserve the love of Christ in our hearts 1. First we must establish our assurance of both our loves to Christ and his love to us we must labour our owne edification in the faith if wee would keep our selves in the love of God Iud. 20. 2. Secondly if we would preserve this love we must keepe uprightnesse For if we relapse to the love of sin the love of Christ will decay in us 3. Thirdly we must keep our selves out of the company of such as might intice us from the love of Christ namely out of the company of Idolaters and all profane persons 4. Fourthly we must take heed of worldlinesse for the love of God and the love of the world will not stand together The cares of this life will be a snare and bait to draw us away 5. Fiftly we must take heed of security after feelings For if the Church be so sleepie after communion with Christ that when he comes again she will be slumbring and not rise when he calls Christ will be gone and not answer no though afterwards she call Cant. 5.2 6 7. 6. Sixtly we must walke in the steps of the flock and feed our kids neere the tents of the shepheards we must converse with holy Christians and keepe our selves under the powerfull instructions of profitable Ministers Cant. 1.7 c. 7. Seventhly wee must be much in the preparation for the second comming of Christ. To be much in thinking of or praying for the comming of Christ will preserve us from declination in our affection to Christ Iud. 20 21. The doctrine implyed in these words is that when we shall come to heaven and shall see Christ face to face we shall love him and admire him wonderfully For the Apostle takes it for granted that it is no hard thing to love Christ if we once saw him And thus of the first signe The second signe is the joy of the holy Ghost expressed in these words In whom though you see him not yet beleeving ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious There are six kind of joyes 1. Some are unnaturall such is the joy of those mentioned Iob 3.22 that are glad at heart to find the grave 2. Some are naturall such are the joyes Solomon commends Eccles. 8.15 Prov. 15.13 3. Some are sensuall such are the joyes Epicures conceive in the pleasures and sports of this life Eccles. 11.9 Iob 21.12 4. Some are fantasticall when men rejoyce upon meere conceits and fancies without any ground For as in some diseases there are abundance of sorrowes without cause so are there also joyes without reason in divers 5. Some are diabolicall and there are three sorts of devilish joyes 1. The first is to joy in sinne 2. The second is to joy in the misery of Gods people Ezech. 25.6 3. The third is the joy we call illusion when Sathan to feed the security of men doth tickle their hearts with a great deale of joy and ravishing of the heart 6. Lastly some joyes are spirituall joyes and these are either 1. Temporary or 2. Eternall Temporary joyes are those which wicked men may feele in the hearing the word Mat. 13. Eternall joyes are such as onely the Elect feele I call these Eternall not because they are felt without interruption for ever but because they are so now in the hearts of Gods children that they shall never either totally or finally be lost but shall be felt againe Now there are two sorts of this joy in Gods elect The one is a duty the other is a signe the one man brings to Gods service the other God gives as a token of his acceptance of mans service The joyes given of God are here meant these are here called unspeakable and glorious But how may we discern these joyes of the holy Ghost from all the other sorts especially the temporary joyes and illusions of Sathan The true joy in the holy Ghost may be known by these marks 1. It is given of God in the due use of some ordinance of God the soule being retired into Gods presence especially these joyes are felt in prayer this joy is drawne out of the wells of salvation 2. It usually follows humiliation for sin Esay 6.2 3. Ioh. 16.20 22. 3. It may be felt in adversity as well as prosperity Hab. 3.17 18. Rom. 5.3 Phil. 2.17 4. It is accompanyed with righteousnesse It can never be felt of any in whom the love of any sin raignes Rom. 14.17 5. It ratifies the written promises and doth assure nothing but what the word assures Eph. 1.14 6. It is kindled upon the sense of Gods favour it followes here bele●ving 7. It is unspeakable and glorious above all carnall or earthly joyes it doth ravish the heart as if a man were already in heaven 8. Lastly it may be knowne by the effects For 1. It will make a man more humble and apt to acknowledge his owne vilenesse and unworthinesse 2. It will make a man lesse censorious of others and with more compassion to tender the wants and sorrowes of others 3. It will marre the taste of carnall joyes it causeth us to find lesse rellish in the taste of earthly delights 4. It breeds a great love of God and godliness and quickens to diligence in well-doing Whereas the joyes that are illusions or temporary joyes will make men more proud and carelesse and contemptuous and more negligent in the use of the meanes and the care to doe good But are these joyes felt of every Christian Distinguish of Christians and of feeling and of joyes 1 Some are Hypocrites and so have not any power of godliness at all but onely a shew 2 Some have temporary grace onely these have joy but not such as will abide the tryall For 1 These joyes are not accompanyed with humiliation for sinne or not for all sinne 2 They arise not from any grounds of particular assurance 3 They are not felt in the time of temptation 3 Some Christians are alwayes diseased with some spirituall malady and that many times till death as with passion or with strange effects of melancholy these may possibly dye without any evident comfort Some fall after calling into some grosse sinne for a time and these may so lose the joy of their salvation as they may never recover it till their very end Againe distinguish about feeling 1 Some have those joyes but observe them not eyther through ignorance of the doctrine of the joy of the holy Ghost or through neglect 2 Some haue this joy and observe it and are affected established with it for the time but presently eyther forget it or
may hence note one excellent pledge of Gods love and goodnesse he is not bound to give us any wages till the end yet see his mercy he doth recompence us every day 4. Fourthly woe unto wicked men their end is shame and confusion even the fruit of all their evill waies or as the Apostle saith their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 The salvation of your soules The soule is a spirituall substance within us by which we resemble God it can subsist of it selfe it hath neither matter nor end it was created of God of nothing and united to the body that God might be rightly knowne and worshipped The soule is a kind of picture of God within us that can live though the body were not when I say it is void of matter I meane it is not made of any other thing as our bodies be there is no metall as I may say of which it may consist and it is such a divine creature as it cannot die as the body doth and it was of purpose put into the body that so amongst the visible creatures God might be known and worshipped For if we had not a soule within us we could never attaine to any knowledge of God more than the bruit beasts For God cannot be knowne by bodily senses Now for the union how the body and soule are knit one to another I cannot expresse it Salvation notes especially that estate of excellency and glory which the faithfull have in another world though properly the word notes but onely what we are delivered and saved from in heaven This salvation excludes all misery and includes all happinesse All misery may be referred to foure heads 1. Sinne. 2. Infirmities 3. Adversaries And 4. Death none of these shall be in heaven All happinesse likewise may be referred to foure heads 1. Perfection of nature 2. Communion with the blessed viz. God Christ Angels and just men 3. And a glorious inheritance in the heaven of the blessed And 4. Immortality all these shall be enjoyed in that other world Now though the soule be taken synecdochically for the soule and body yet the salvation of the soule is principall and more glorious The use may be threefold 1. For information 2. For instruction 3. For reproofe 1. There are three things we may be informed in from the consideration of the salvation of the soules of the faithfull 1. First that godly men are in a wonderfull happy case whatsoever their outward estate be because their soules shall be saved there are springs of joy in the very hope of this immortall happinesse this salvation is so great a mercy as we may truely say his reward is with him 2. Secondly that there is a matchlesse love in God to man not onely in that he provides such an estate but first that he doth it freely without all respects of merit Tit. 3.4 and secondly because he sends up and downe the world to offer this salvation From hence ariseth the Phrase my salvation is gone forth 3. Thirdly that faith is wonderfull precious that brings us such a salvation 2. Further for the second there are divers instructions may be deduced from this doctrine as 1. First it should teach us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts Tit. 2.12 the very thought of going to heaven should extinguish the desire of sinning 2. Secondly we would make God all our trust and our expectation Psal. 62.5 We should resolve to rest upon God For none else either will or can doe so much for us as he can Hee is well said to be the hope of Israel none have so great hopes as the faithfull 3. Thirdly we should labour for the assurance of salvation and lay hold upon it striving to get evidence for it Heaven should suffer violence seeing it may be had we should never be quiet till we can get it 4. Fourthly and lastly such as have attained some assurance of their salvation should looke to foure things 1. First they should strive for large affections to expresse the sense of so great salvation It is such an incomparable benefit as wee should be alwaies praising c. 2. Secondly it should quicken them to good works the remembrance that we shall be saved should be like a fire within us to inflame us to all possible care to please God and to be fruitfull in all well-doing Salvation should be as a burning lamp within us a Christian should never be without fire in his heart in respe●t of his care to maintaine good works 3. Thirdly shall wee not be content with any condition in this world seeing wee are so well-provided for in a better what should trouble us if we can remember that after a short time our soules must be saved 4. Fourthly shall we be so glorious in heaven why then our conversation should be in heaven we should be alwaies thinking of heaven our mindes should run upon it 3. Now as this doctrine may informe and teach so it may reprove whole troops of carnall Christians that never labour after this glorious estate that scarce ever aske what they should doe to be saved but sleepe it out in a Lethargie and never aske after nor remember their latter end Thus of the 9. Verse and so of the confirmation by prolepsis or the answer of their objections Verse 10. Of which salvation the Prophets searched and inquired diligently which prophesied of the grace that should come unto you THe consolation propounded verses 3 4 5. is confirmed first by Prolepsis or the answering of Objections verses 6 7 8 9. secondly by testimony of worthy and holy men verses 10 11 12. So that these words make good the consolation of Christians by setting before us what witnesse holy men of old have given of our happinesse that live now under the Gospell In the words five things are particularly to be noted 1. First who testifie or who are Gods witnesses and these are described 1. first more generally and so they were Prophets 2. secondly more specially and so they were those Prophets that were appointed of God to prophesie of the gracious priviledges should come unto us Christians 2. Secondly their adjunct paines and endeavors to furnish themselves in the knowledge of those things that concerne us They searched and inquired diligently 3. Thirdly the question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall it was of salvation ver 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. Fourthly the occasion that fiered them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow Now they rightly conjectured that this glory did import some excellent estate of the Church then and that they would faine have knowne 5. Fiftly the successe and that was they were answered by revelation which answer is set downe verse 12. Prophets God hath revealed his will three waies 1. First
by the light of nature imprinting in man certaine common notions or small sparkles of divine light 2. Secondly by the booke of the creatures by these he did blow and nourish and more kindle the sparkles infused by nature 3. Thirdly when both these proved insufficient by mans sin God revealed himselfe by his word but after divers manners Heb. 1.1 Sometimes by dreames when men were asleep Sometimes by Visions when men were awake Sometimes by types and resemblances Sometimes by Christ the Son of God and so sometimes in the likenesse of a man and in the last age of the world in a true humane nature Sometimes by Angels But most usually by the ministery of man Now the men imployed to reveale Gods will were called either Extraordinarily as Prophets and Apostles or Ordinarily as the Priests and Levites under the Law or the Ministers now under the Gospell So that we now see who these Prophets were It is true that the word Prophet or Prophesie is diversly taken Sometimes more generally for any that foretell things to come so every Preacher is a Prophet and to preach is to prophesie 1 Cor. 14. sometimes it is taken more restrainedly for those that foretell by inspiration or speciall revelation these were called in old time SEERS Those students in the ancient Colledges that were of speciall gifts and more hopefull were called Prophets not that they did all prophesie but because the Spirit did use to fall upon such men Those called children of the Prophets were yonger students that attended upon and were directed by those grave and more ancient Divines Through the abuse of the succeeding time those that were taken out of these Colledges to serve Princes though many times they were men most ambitious and covetous yet were called still Prophets But the Prophets here meant were onely those holy men that by the immediate inspiration of the Spirit of God did foretell things to come concerning the Church and kingdome of Jesus Christ. Now in that the Lord refers us to the testimony of the Prophets it may serve for divers uses 1. First it shewes the excellency of Theologie or the truth according to godlinesse in that it is penned and confirmed by such admirable instruments 2. Secondly it shews that in matters of religion men must have recourse to the testimony of the Prophets their writings are the true touchstone a●d square And so in matters of consolation if the Prophets speak comfortably to our hearts it matters not what all the world besides saies or thinks of us sure it is that Christ came not to destroy either Law or Prophets and therefore by them we shall be tryed whether we will or no. 3. It should quicken us to study the writings of the Prophets wee cannot receive their persons now into our houses nor build tombs for them but wee may receive their writings into our hearts and it will be made good that hee that receiveth the writings of one of these Prophets in the name of a Prophet shall have a Prophets reward In the meane time wee have a sure woid t● which we may doe well to trust without all wavering Which prophesied of the grace that should come unto you By grace to come he meanes those excellent priviledges that God of his free grace would bestow upon the Christian Churches more than upon any Churches before The Prophets then did foretell of certain great prerogatives with which we Christians should be honoured But what were those priviledges in particular There are an eleven prerogatives of the Christian Church wherein God hath dealt wonderfully graciously with us 1. The exhibiting of Christ in the flesh 2. The freed●me from the bondage of the ceremoniall law Gal. 4.1,2.2 ● The admission of the Gentiles to be copartners with the Jewes Eph. 2. 3.2 to 7. 4. The multitude of beleevers in comparison of former ages Esay 54. 1,2,3 5. The more evident vision or manifestation of Gods speciall favour and k●●dnes●e in Christ Jesus testified more fully both by the word and spirit The Lord i● now fond over the Christian Churches and doth more famil●●rly reveale his love n●w Eph. 2.7 6. The m●re evident clearing of our release from the morall law in respest of the rigorous perfection of it we are not now under the law but under grace so that if sinne have not dominion in us our obedience will be accepted Rom. 6.14 7. A large extent in the proclamation of pardon and forgivenesse of sins so as now any man may get a pardon that will seek it out in the name of Christ Act. 10.43 8. The powring out of the holy Ghost and that either extraordinarily as in the primitive Church or in the measure of ordinary gifts as in utterance knowledge c. 1 Cor. 1.4 5 6. 9. The eminencie of holy life and that in the meaner sort of Christians as well as the greater This is onely true of a remnant that are of the election of grace and so for the power of practice that never age saw it more lively than it is now in many of all conditions that truely feare God Esay 35.8 10. Abundance of outward blessings This God hath promised Esay 60.15,17 and performed in severall states of the Church in divers ages 11. Lastly the more manifest revelation of the doctrine of heaven and eternall life immortality being brought to light by the Gospell so as now wee need not to be taught by the dark shadowes of temporall and earthly ceremonies Now since the holy Ghost hath made us to know that these are times of such excellent graces it may instruct us diversly For in some things it may order us toward our selves and in some things toward others There are foure things we may learne for our selves First let us take heed lest any man faile of the grace of God For wofull experience shews that many thousands even in this light are as destitute of this grace as ever Jew or Gentiles were Now that we may not faile of the grace of God we must doe foure things 1. We must be subject to the Gospell For the Gospell is called the Gospell of the grace of God 2. We must take heed of resisting grieving and despighting of the spirit of grace 3. We must take heed we doe not frustrate the grace of God Gal. 2.21 and so men doe 1. By seeking justification in their own works 2. By neglecting it when it is offered by the word and spirit of God 3. By turning the grace of God into wantonnesse as they doe that make the promises of God and our liberty in Jesus Christ a bawd and cloak for sinne 4. We must goe to the throne of grace and beg grace of God with all importunity giving him no rest till he heare and shew mercy Heb. 4. ult Secondly the consideration of these times of the speciall and plentifull grace of God offered in the Gospell should teach us not onely to get knowledge and grace but
to abound in these For now is the time when God is willing to make all grace to abound that wee might abound unto every good worke 2 Cor. 9.8 and we might all of us know the Lord from the least of us to the greatest Ier. 31.33 Thirdly since the Prophets testifie of this grace it should teach us to try our gifts and graces by the writings of the Prophets for so we may know whether it be the true grace of God or no. Fourthly we should labour to walk worthy of this grace that is come unto us and that we cannot doe unlesse we doe foure things 1. That wee be exceeding thankfull and set out the glory and praise of Gods grace 2. That we abound with peace and joy in beleeving 3. That we be fruitfull in good works 4. That we stand in the grace received and not fall from our sted 〈◊〉 nor receive Gods grace in vaine Rom. 15.8,9,10,13 Col. 1.9,10.2 Pet. 3.18 Gal. 5.1 2 Cor. 6.1 Now concerning our respect of others 1. First Ministers should be encouraged to endure any thing since they have so honorable a function as to dispense the Gospell of the grace of Iesus Christ Act. 20.24 2. Secondly the people should esteeme worthy of all honor such eminent persons and Christians upon whom we see this grace of God prophesied to come yea such as abound in knowledge and p●ety of life wee should wonderfully honor as being the persons the prophesie ran of 3. Lastly this should be our great desire and prayer for others that the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ might be with them They inquired and searched diligently Two things are here affirmed of the Prophets 1. First that they searched and inquired 2. Secondly that they did it with great diligence and paines Where did the Prophets search and inquire 1. First they inquired of God by prayer 2. Secondly they inquired and searched in the writings of the first Prophets Iacob Moses Samuel David c. 3. Thirdly they searched and inquired by meditation studying their own prophesies into which they were carryed by the Spirit of God that they might see whether they could find out this glorious salvation especially for the time and manner of it The Use is for wonderfull great reproofe of thousands amongst us that neglect so great salvation did the Prophets search and inquire and can it be safe for us to be secure What should be the reason that multitudes of men have so little mind to inquire about their salvation 1. Men are diseased after an unexpressible maner with a spirituall Lethargie when there ariseth any thought of the kingdome of God 2. Salvation is far off and unlesse the Lord by the spirit of wisdome and revelation inlighten the eyes of mens minds they cannot discerne the glory of it or the need of it Eph. 1.18,19 men onely see things that are neerer so purblind we are 3. The most men are drowned and distracted with the cares and pleasures of this life 4. Lastly this comes to passe by the effectuall working of Sathan who daily and mightily labours to hide the Gospell from mens souls and to hinder the care of a better life This is his every dayes work But for hereafter let us all be admonished by this example of the Prophets to devote our selves to the study of salvation especially 1. To seek the grant of it from God 2. To seek the evidence of it in the word of God 3. To seek the signs of it in our own hearts 4. To seek a way that leadeth thither in our practice and conversation Now whereas it is said the Prophets searched and inquired diligently that should also fire us and still stir us up not onely to study and inquire but to doe it diligently also Now to inquire and search about salvation diligently imports five things 1. First that we should refuse no paines or labour or care to attaine it 2. Secondly that we should doe it daily and constantly Hee that is in a journey doth not thinke it enough to aske his way the first day Oh Lord how are wee guilty in thy sight that inquire so seldome for the way to heaven 3. Thirdly that we should practice the directions which are given us out of the wnrd Else to inquire a way of God and not to follow it is greatly to provoke God Ezek. 14.3,4 Ier. 42.2,3 c. 4. Fourthly that we should seek affectionately as David saith with our whole hearts Psal. 119.2 as they did that asked their way and went weeping as they went with their faces thitherward Ier. 50.4,5 5. Lastly that we should seek help from all the ordinances of God labouring to further our salvation by all meanes both publike and private Thus of the second part The third is the subject matter which in generall is salvation and in particular the time and manner of the time Of which salvation By salvation may be meant all that which befalleth Christians after the time of their calling For as true grace is the beginning of it and perfect glory the full consummation of it so all the meanes that work either are comprehended under this name yea the very sufferings of the godly are a part of their salvation because they worke unto them an eternall weight of glory yea so should all the godly be disposed as they should make salvation the end of all their actions we should doe nothing which should not some way tend to further our salvation Three things may be here noted First that the doctrine of salvation of Gods people is a subject able to fill the contemplation of the divinest and wisest men The Prophets have a subject able to fill them yea more than they are able to conceive of to the full which may serve for two uses First for humiliation that we should be so barren-hearted and able to conceive so little of so divine a subject seeing the Prophets are so taken up with continuall study and care about it Secondly for singular consolation to the godly For by this it appeareth that they have an admirable portion in that such worthy men so much admire it Secondly that as any have more grace so they are more heartily affected with the estimation and desire after the salvation of Gods elect The Prophets foresaw the rising of many great Kings and Monarchs that should afterwards in severall successions enjoy a marvellous glory in this world yet they leave looking and wondring at them and are now taken up with the consideration of the glory of the abiect Gentiles as finding more perfection in their calling into the kingdome of Christ then they could behold in the greatest Princes of the earth Certain'y so long as we can admire any thing more than the grace of God to his people our hearts are void of grace Thirdly that when we goe about any thing that concerns salvation especially our own salvation we should here learn of the Prophets to doe it with all
For I meddle not with Pagans or Antichristians 1. The first is of Christians in name such as are so onely in appearance or profession or the account of man 2. The second is Christians in signe that is such as are so onely by baptisme that have onely received the outward badge of Christianity 3. The third i● such as are so indeed and such onely are they that beleeve in God and that by a lively saith in Christ Jesus 2. Doctrine i● that every one that doth beleeve is redeemed Iohn 3.16 Heb. 10.39 The Use is First for comfort to the abject God accepts not persons it matters not what money meanes clothes dyet thou hast onely if thou beleevest be of good comfort Ob. The devils beleeve and yet are not happy Sol. They beleeve that Christ is but they beleeve not in Christ they trust not in him or they beleeve that he is their Judge but not their Saviour Ob. But divers in Iob. 2. beleeved and yet Christ trusted them not Sol. They beleeved his doctrine but they trusted not on his merits they had historicall but not justifying faith Ob. But those that received the word with joy beleeved and yet fell away Mat. 13. Sol. They had a temporary faith but not a saving faith they could neversuffer for his sake nor were they ever new creatures to desire to be rid of all sinne nor did that joy arise from a particular application The second Use is not to have the glorious faith of Christ in respect of persons Iam. 2.1 2. c. Thus of the generall Now in particular concerning faith five things may be here noted 1. The subject of faith viz. you that are begotten againe 2. The object of faith viz. God 3. The nature of faith viz. to beleeve in God 4. The cause of faith viz. Christ by him you beleeve c. 5. The time of the exercise of faith Doe beleeve For the first when he saith for you he meaneth such as he had described before verse 3. so that the doctrine is that faith is seated onely in the hearts of regenerate men onely in the godly It is called the faith of Gods Elect. Tit. 1.1 and their hearts are purified tha● have faith Act. 15.9 they are turned from darknesse to light Act. 26.28 1. This doctrine shewes us a way how to try our faith whether we have faith or no namely by the tryall of our regeneration as 1. If our hearts be purified Act. 5.9 that is if wee have been humbled for secret and inward sinnes so as the filthinesse of them is abated and washed away 2. If we have overcome the respect of profits and pleasures of the world so as we can use them as if we used them not 1 Ioh. 5.4 3. If we love our kindred in grace best Gal. 5.6 1 Ioh. 3.14 4. If we find the new gifts of the spirit for faith alwaies dwelleth amongst them Gal. 5.22 2. This doctrine shewes againe the true Christians prerogative God hath dealt better with him then with other men It is no matter if God have not given them so much money or meanes or credit or health as they it is enough God have given them faith 3. It should awaken wicked men in the midst of all their pleasures and riches if they misse faith it should tame their jollity if they consider that they must perish for all those things what hope or comfort can they have when God shall take away their soules Ob. But might some of these say It seems the Lord puts a difference and shuts out men from faith and keeps them without it Sol. 1. The condemnation of the unbeleeuer is of himselfe Iohn 3.20 2. The Lord commands all to beleeve even every creature Mar. 16. 1 Ioh. 3.23 3 He sends the Word to offer grace to all the proclamation is generall and no man excepted that hath desires after God Esay 55.1 4. We see of every condition of men God retaines some to mercy and that shews he takes no pleasure in thy death and that he would have all men be saved Yea 5. the Lord doth beseech men to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.20 For the second The object of faith is God God is the object of faith not generally in his nature but particularly in his mercies and promises of grace in his word of truth the Go●pell When I say God is the object of faith I meane hee is that which faith both looks upon 〈◊〉 relies upon Faith is alive when it beholds Gods face in Christ. It thinkes of God it admires God it longs for God it trusts onely upon God it carries us unto God it is imployed for God it is contented with God it desires no more but God Ob. But what reason hath man to beleeve in God For God is terrible in his nature he abhors sinne and revengeth it with all severity it is hee that will judge men for sinne yea it is hee that woundeth the very particular sinner c. Sol. Yet faith carries men unto God because of his own commandement that men should beleeve because of the gracious promises he hath made to beleevers because of the experience of as miserable sinners as he have beleeved and were not disappointed because faith stils Gods displeasure and makes the Lord put on the bowels of tender kindnesse yea here appeares the wonder of faith that though it know that it is Gods own hand that fighteth against sinne yet it will run onely to God to heale them againe Hosea 6.1 Ob. But must we not beleeve in Christ as well as in God Sol. If by this title of God wee understand the essence of God then CHRIST is included for wee beleeve in the promises of the whole Trinity and so in Christ who is the second person But if by God wee meane the first person in the Trinity and the holy Ghost then it is spoken to our capacitie the more fitly to expresse the meanes of our reconciliation which is by the mediation of Christ the middle person of the Trinity so that the word God doth not exclude Christ from being the object of our faith with the Father but it includes that Christ is more then the object for he is a meanes of our acceptance with the Father c. The Use is twofold 1. Here againe we may take occasion to try our faith If thy faith be a true faith thou maist know it by the object of it if it set thy thoughts and affections on God if thou canst say as David Psal. 73.25 then certainly thou hast faith and so contrariwise 2. Is God the object of faith then be of good comfort hee will never deny his promise Tit. 1.2 Hee is able to keepe what thou committest to him 2 Tim. 1.12 He is an Ocean able every way to fill thee with all sufficiency and happinesse The third thing followes viz. the nature of faith which is to beleeve in God To beleeve is more then to understand
and judge of their estate by what it was before Thirdly they may bee infallibly assured that they are in a right way because they desire to live uprightly and to forsake the corruptions that are in the world Fourthly they must know that it is a greater glory in faith to beleeve now when they feele not then to beleeve when the heart abounded with joy Fiftly they may judge of their affection to the word by their preparation before they come and by their onely liking of such as love the word and by their constant frequenting of it and by their sorrow for their dulnesse and unprofitablenesse Hitherto of the duty to which hee exhorteth the motives follow and they are some First ye are new borne babes Secondly the word is sincere milk Thirdly ye may thereby grow Fourthly ye have tasted the sweetnesse of the bounty of God in his word already The first reason tels what they are the second what the word is the third what they shall be the fourth what the word hath beene As new borne babes These words are taken in diverse senses For properly they signifie infants while they are tender and unweaned from the breast Sometimes they signifie unable men and such as have no fitnesse for their callings so Isay. 3.4 Sometimes they signifie such as be weake in saith and in the gifts of the spirit whether they be newly regenerated or lying in sinne 1. Cor. 3.1 Heb. 5.13 and so it is taken here And so the words are a reason to induce them to an affectionat● desire after the word in as much as they are so weake they can no better live without the word then the childe in nature can live without milk Divers things may be from hence noted First that grace is wrought in Christians by degrees Christ is revealed in us by foure degrees First as a childe or little babe new formed and borne Secondly as a young man in more strength and vigour and comelinesse and activenesse Thirdly as a father or old man setled with long experience these three are in this life and mentioned 1. Iob. 2.14 Now the fourth is when Christ shall appeare in us as the Ancient of daies like God himselfe in a marvelous glorious resemblance of the holinesse and properties of God And this shall be in another world The use should be both for thankfulnesse if Christ be formed in us to any degree and to in●i●e our industry in all the meanes appointed of God seeing we receive gifts by degrees and not all at once Secondly that true grace may stand with many weaknesses A childe doth truely live and yet it is very ignorant and infirme and wayward and fit for little or no imploiment such may Christians be for a time such were the very disciples of Christ for a time such were the Corinthians 1. Cor. 3.1 and the Hebrewes Heb. 5● 3 The use should be to restraine censuring of others because of their infirmities to have no grace at all Whereas wee should rather bear with them and beleeve all things Rom. 15.2 1. Cor. 13.5 And besides those that are distressed in minde should comfort them-selves with this they may bee full of weaknesses and very unprofitable and yet have the true life of Christ in them Thirdly that the most Christians are but new borne babes infants in grace not only such as are newly converted but such as have spent a longer time in the profession of godlinesse the Apostle here takes it for granted that all they to whom he writes were little better or stronger and so it is usuall in all times and places Question How comes it to passe that the most Christians live still but as weak ones and babes in Christ especially why thrive they not according to the time of their age in Christ. Answer In nature a child gets out of his childhood as his yeares grow upon him but in religion and grace it is not so It is not time brings any of necessity out of the cradle of Religion Now the cause why the most are but babes and that after a long time may be such or some of these First some as soone as they are borne are destitute of the breast have no nurse are taken away from their meanes and deprived of the powerfull preaching of the word which did beget them unto God this comes to passe sometimes by the violence of others or by the afflicting hand of God upon their bodies or sometime by their owne carelesnesse that for worldly respects remove to places where they have not the meanes to build them up Secondly some are infected with some bitter root of passion or envy or malice which was left behind in their repentance not fully subdued and this holds them so downe that they cannot thrive but are stocked in godlinesse that after many yeares they shew little bigger or better then they were in knowledge or grace 1. Cor. 3. 1.2.3 1. Pet. 2.1.2 Eph. 4.15.16 ● Pet. 3. 7. Thirdly others at their first setting out are intangled with doubtfull disputations and carried about with odde opinions or strange doctrines and so insnared with controversies about words or things of lesse value that misplacing their zeale and mis-led in their knowledge they thrive little or nothing in the maine substance of godlinesse but need be taught the very principles Rom. 14.1 Heb. 13.7 2. Pet. 3.17 Especially when they be apt to receive Scandall and admit offence such were the beleeving Iewes the most of them Fourthly some are meerely held back by their worldlinesse they relapse to such excessive cares of life and so devour up their time about earthly things that they cannot profit not prosper in better things Fiftly many thrive not or not sensibly being hindred by the ill company which either voluntarily or necessarily they are plunged into and cheefly for want of fellowship in the Gospell with such as might bee patterns to them in knowledge and the practice of faith and piety Sixtly spirituall lazinesse and idlenesse is the cause why many grow not They wil take no paines but after they have repented and beleeved in some measure Heb. 5.13 and be gotten a little whole of the wounds they were diseased withall in their conversion they fall into a kinde of security and rest in the outward and formall use of the meanes and neglect many precious things which from day to day they are moved and counselled to by the word and spirit of God and this disease is the worse when it is joyned with spirituall pride and that vile conceitednesse which is seene to come daily in many Seventhly some Christians after calling are insnared and deceived by the methods of Satan and so live in some secret sinne against their own knowledge In f●vour of which they forbeare the hearty regard and use of Gods ordinances and so dangerously expose themselves to the raigne of hypocrisie These are wonderfully stocked and grow worse and not better These are the reasons why
As the love of Gods children growes or decayes in us so doth grace grow or decay Eph. 4.15 16. This love is the bond of perfectness Col. 3.13 Fiftly we must try our confidence in God and the assurance of our faith For as grace growes so doe wee grow more established and setled in God and the hope of his kingdome This is to abide in Christ and thus to trust in the Lord hath a promise of such a blessing as that man shall not wither Ier. 17.7 8. Sixtly we may discerne our growth by the decay of taste in sinne and the world As the violence of temptation and the admiration of the pleasures and profits of this life goe out of us by the same degrees doth the holy Ghost get the victory and the Spirit settles the possession of grace in us c. Seventhly wee may discerne it by our teachablenesse and honouring of prophecying when our Teachers according to their lines may bee inlarged and live without suspition or censure when wee can beleeve them and rest in their testimony above the whole world 2 Cor. 10.15 2 Thes. 1.10 Eighthly we may easily discerne it by our constancy and frequency in good workes either of piety or mercy or righteousnesse either at home or abroad For to such as have for use it is certain more is given Mat. 13.11 Ninthly wee may know it by the frequency of our communion with God If the Lord daily dwell in us or with us and reveale himselfe to us by the signes of his presence there is no doubt to bee made of our growing The heart of a christian is Gods Temple and you may be sure all prospers well in the Temple when the cloud sits there or often appeares there Eph. 2.20 21. Vse The use of this whole doctrine concerning growth may serve first for humiliation and so in many things First our hearts should smite us for our ignorance There are many things of excellent fruit and praise which we have not at all laboured in divers of the twelve things before Secondly for our deadnesse of heart and unprofitablenesse of life which is aggravated against us 1. VVhen God give us much meanes 2. VVhen we are insensible or at least incorrigible know all is not well and feele our selves to bee lashed and yet mend not 3. VVhen we are slothfull and weary will not stirre up our selves nor receive direction for the making up of what is lacking to our faith or to any other gifts especially when wee are weyward and will goe about rather than be at the tryall of direction or asking the way Ier. 31.21 3. Much more to such as are so farre from growing that they fall away and decline lose their first love and what they have wrought begin in the Spirit and end in the flesh This much vexeth God and is extremely dangerous to the parties Esay 1.4 Ier. 7.24 and 15.6 2 Pet. 2.20 But that this may not either pearce too farre or fall too deadly or flat upon any that are guilty we must knowe there is a double declining or apostasie the one inward the other outward First the inward is when a mans heart is falne off from the care of godlinesse and the meanes of it and regards iniquity constantly being possessed of the raigne of habituall hypocrisie and this may be in men that outwardly frequent the meanes and make a shew of godlinesse Secondly the outward declining or Apostasie is when men outwardly live in grosse sinnes or follow scandalous courses and are at last relapsed to the violent courses of the world so as the meanes of godlinesse is neglected Againe declining is first either totall secondly or in part First totall when we fall off from all godlinesse and all the meanes of it and so onely they fall that sinne against the holy Ghost Secondly in part is when men fall into some sinne or error and not lose all conscience of well-doing and such is their Apostasie also that fall off from the care of some of the ordinances of God as when men use the private and neglect the publique or use the publique and neglect the private c. Question But what shall a man doe to helpe himselfe that finds he hath declined c. Answer He must take unto himselfe words and confesse his sinne to God and returne to the Lord heartily hee will heale even his backsliding Hose 14.3 4 5. Vse 2. Secondly for instruction and so it should perswade with us mightily to hold on and never faint in the way but strive to the perfection of every good gift of God not being weary of well-doing knowing that it is a shame still to be children and that God doth require a righteousnesse of us that should exceed the righteousnesse of all the Papists and Pharisees in the world and to this end we should preserve in us this desire after the sincere milke of the word and watch against security and slothfulnesse the dangerous moaths of godlinesse Vse 3. Thirdly such may be much encouraged who have their hearts set upon growth and doe prosper in Gods worke though otherwaies they have many afflictions or infirmities yea such as with true hearts doe mourne for their not growing as they think may consider of many comforts to uphold themselves by as 1. Our Saviour Christ had not all degrees of grace at once but grew in grace by degrees 2. Though thy gifts be small and grow in thee like a graine of mustard-seed yet it may grow to a marvelous increase Matth. 13. 3. Though thou have many infirmities yet thou maist beare abundance of fruit as the vine which is the weakest plant yet is not therefore barren Isaiah 27.2 4. Though thou have little meanes to help thy selfe by yet thou maiest by the blessing of God grow the lilies spin not and yet are gorgeously cloathed Matth. 6.28 5. If wee sowe good seed it is certaine the Lord will give increase 1 Cor. 9.10 11. 6. Though we sowe in teares we shall reape in joy Psal. 126.5 6. yea though we be extremely oppressed and reproached as the Israelites grew even the more they were hated and oppressed in Aegypt Mark 4.8 7. Wee have great helps the word is more effectuall to the soule then milke to the body and we receive influence from Christ our head Coloss. ● 19 and every member of the mysticall body makes some supply to further the growth of the whole body Eph. 6.16 Verse 3. Because ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious or bountifull THese words containe the fourth reason to perswade to the desire after the word and it is taken from the experience they have had of the goodnesse of God comforting them in the word If ever they tasted the sweetnesse of the word they must needes have an appetite to it In these few words there are divers points of Doctrine to bee observed and explained as namely First that God is gracious Secondly that God doth graciously
fully cleere the secret of that place about the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore wish that these things be observed First that it doth not follow necessarily that whosoever hath that taste there mentioned shall not be saved for men may have that taste and finding it ineffectuall goe on till they find a true taste That taste is dangerous if men fall away else there may be good use of those tastes For it brings men neare the kingdome of God and makes preparation for true Grace Secondly that the sinne against the holy Ghost cannot be committed but by such as have beene enlightned and have set themselves to attend upon the Word either by solemne profession outwardly before men or by inward attendance upon it Two sorts of men in our times are in danger of this sin that is Hypocriticall professors and those they call the wits of the World who afterwards fell to all Epicurisme Thirdly that the failing away there mentioned is not to bee understood of any particular falling into some one or a few sinnes but of an universall falling away from the care of all godlinesse and into such a condition as to dislike no sinne as it is sinne and to believe from the heart no part of the Gospell nor be afraid to wallow in the sinnes which formerly hee in a sort repented Fourthly there is in them a personall hatred of the Sonne of God they doe with the Iewes as much as in them lieth crucifie him againe loathing him and inwardly swelling or fretting against the doctrine of Christ and striving as farre as they dare in his Ordinances and people to put him to shame by scornings and reproaches or what way else they can Heb. 6.6 and Chap. 10.29 Fiftly they abhorre from their hearts the graces of the Spirit and loath them in the godly despighting the Spirit of grace Heb. 10.29 so as they persecute to their power the truth being carried with incurable malice against it And thus of the third Doctrine The fourth Doctrine that may be gathered out of these words is that it is but a taste of the sweetnesse of God we can attaine to in this life we cannot reach unto the thousand part of the joyes of Gods presence and favour in this world These are part of his waies but how little a portion is heard of him Iob. 26. ult Eye hath not seene nor Eare heard nor heart of man perceived the things which God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2.9 The comforts we feele in this life may well be likened to the taste both because wee have them but in small quantity and because they are quickly growne out of sense they are but of short continuance There may be three uses made of this point First it may quiet them that complaine out of Scruple of Conscience that their joyes they have be not right because they are so quickly lost whereas they must bee informed that the comforts the best men can get in this World are but a little 〈◊〉 given out of the Rivers of Gods plea 〈◊〉 Secondly it should make us the more out of love with this life and kindle in us the love of the appearing of Jesus Christ. Why desire wee to live so king o● Earth where we must drinke downe continually the bitter 〈…〉 and ●o●row and can get but now and then the taste of the comforts of a better life Why long we not to enjoy those pleasure● for evermore Psal. 17. ult Yea we may know how good it is to be in Heaven by the taste we have sometimes on Earth If it doe us such unspeakable ease and joy to 〈◊〉 of the s●eetnesse o● God for a little moment Oh how great then is that goodnesse God hath 〈◊〉 up from them that feare him Psal. 31.19 The smalnesse of the quantity and shortnesse of the continuance of our tast of the graciousnesse of God on earth should make us to use the meanes of communion with God with so much the more servency and frequency and humility Doct. 5. A fifth doctrine is that many in the Churches of Christians never so much as tasted of the sweetnesse of Gods grace and word and that may bee a cause why the Apostle speakes with an If as knowing it was a great question whether many of them had had experience of the sweetnesse of the Word Question Now if any aske what should be the cause that many Christians have so little sense of the sweetnesse of the word and Gods graciousnesse and goodnesse in the Word Answer I answer that it is First with many so because they want the ordinances of God in their power and life of them They want powerfull preaching some congregations have no preaching at all and many that have preaching have it not in the life and power The spices of the word are not beaten to the smell as they should be 2 Cor. 2.15 16. Secondly In others because the tast of the pleasures and profits and lusts of the world are in their hearts when they come to the word and so by the cares of life all sense of sweetnesse is beaten out Mat. 13. Luke 14.24 Thirdly It is in the most because they consider not their misery in themselves nor remember their latter end A man never knowes the sweetnesse of Christ crucified till he be pricked in his heart and afflicted for his sinnes and forlorne estate in himselfe by nature and till men know how to number their dayes they will never apply their hearts to wisdome Psal. 90.12 Fourthly some men are infected with superstition and the love of a strange god They prepare a table for the troope and therefore are hungry when Gods servants eat and vexed when they sing for joy of heart They cannot feele the sweetnesse of the Gospell their hearts are so poisoned with secret popery Esay 65.11 13. Fiftly Some men tast not of wisdomes banquet because they leave not the way of the foolish All sense is extinguished by the evill company they keep Prov. 9.6 Sixtly Too many Christians are poisoned with some of the sins mentioned in the first verse of this Chapter and that destroyes both tast and appetite in them Seventhly Some are fearefully delivered to a spirituall slumber the Justice of God scourging their impenitency and disobedience that made no use of his judgements and the remorses they felt before and so are in the case of the Jewes Rom. 11. Eighthly Because God doth for the most part reserve these tastes as the onely portion of his owne people and therefore never wonder though the common multitude attaine not to it Psal. 36.8 9. Lastly the best Christians are often much restrained in their tast of the sweetnesse of Gods favour and presence because they are not carefull enough to attend upon God in his ordinances they doe not seeke God and strive to finde Gods favour and presence in the meanes they heare and pray loosely with too much slacknesse and remisnesse
thing is Wee must be a holy Priest-heed unto Christ which is amplified both by the labour of it To offer sacrifice and by the honour of it acceptable to God through Iesus Christ. Here are many things to be noted The first is that Christians are Priests before God and Iesus Christ This is acknowledged in other Scriptures Revel 1.5 Exod. 19.6 The meaning is that they are like to the Leviticall Priests and that in many things First in respect of separation they are Gods portion given him out of all the people so are the godly all the portion God hath in the world They are said to be the ransome of the children of Israel Numbers 8.9 Secondly in respect of cōsecration The oile of God is upon the godly and as it was powred out upon Aaron his Sons The oile of grace and gladnes powred out upon Christ our true Aaron hath runne downe upon his garments so as all his members are Christians that is anointed with him Psal. 133. 2 Cor. 1.22 1 Ioh. 2. The holy Ghost is called the anointing in this respect Thirdly in respect of the substance of the ceremonies in their consecration for First as it was required in the Law that the Priests should be without blemish Levit. 21.17 so is it required of Christians Col. 1.22 Secondly as the Priests were washed in the great laver of water Exod. 29.4 Levit. 8.5 6. so must Christians be washed in the laver of Regeneration Eph. 5.23 Titus 3.5 Thirdly as the Priests had their holy garments beautifull and goodly ones which they called their Ephods so doth the Queene the Church stand at Christs right hand in a Vesture of Ophir Psalm 45. Thus Iosuah hath change of garments mystically given him Zach. 3.4 Those garments are promised to such as have had a spirit of heavinesse Isaiah 61.3 called garments of salvation verse 10. and royall garments and like the new wedding garments of the Bride Isaiah 62.5 7. Those garments signified either the singular glory and joy of Christians Esaiah 61.3 or the righteousnesse of Christ imputed Revel 19. or the excellent divine gifts and graces bestowed upon them Fourthly The Priest must have blood sprinkled upon his eare and upon his thumb and upon his toe to signifie that our hearing practice and progresse must be all sanctified to us by Christ and that the maine thing Christians should expresse and attend to should be Christ crucified and that Christ by his blood hath consecrated them in all these respects so as their hearing and practice and progresse shall all be blessed unto them And thus of the ceremonies of their consecration Fourthly Wee should be like the Leviticall Priests for knowledge the Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seeke the Law at his mouth Malac. 2. And it is true of Christians that they are a people in whose heart is Gods law Esay 57.7 Hebr. 8. Ierem. 31. Fifthly Wee should be like the Priests in respect of the worke they did For First It was the Priests office to carry about the Arke of the Lord when it was removed upon their shoulders What is the Arke to be carried but the doctrine of Christ and the Church Christians must carry about the Word of God and hold it forth in the light and life of it as lights that shine in the dark places of the wildernesse of this world Philip. 2.15 Secondly It was their office to blow in the silver trumpets and that upon foure occasions as you may see Num. 10. First The one was to assemble the congregation or the Princes to the tabernacle Secondly The other was to give an ala●●n when there was any remove of the campe Thirdly The third was in the time of Warre when they mustred to battaile Fourthly The fourth was for joyes sake at the time of solemne feasts and for thanksgiving to God and in all these we should be like the Priests Wee should be as trumpets to call one upon another to goe up to the house of the Lord Esay 1.2 Secondly We should every where proclaime mortality and signifie that the whole hoast must remove wee must cry All flesh is grasse 1 Pet. 1.23 Thirdly Wee should also blow the trumpet of defence and arme our selves in the spirituall warfare and call upon God to save us from our enemies and stirre up one another provoking to love and good works 1 Pet. 4.1 2. 2 Tim. 2.3 4. 2 Cor. 10.4 5. We should cry alowd like a trumpet in reproving the transgressions of men and opposing the sinnes of the time Esay 58. 1. Ephes. 5. Lastly We should trumpet out the praises of God for all the goodnesse he hath shewed unto us we should blow as in the new Moone Psal. 81.3 But then in all this we must remember that wee blow with a silver trumpet that is with all discretion and sincerity c. Thirdly A speciall worke of the Priests was to blesse the people and to put the name of God upon them The former whereof is prescribed Numb 6.22 23 24. and so should we all learne the language of Canaan or the language of blessing we must blesse and not curse for we are thereunto called 1 Pet. 3.9 Lastly Their principall worke was to offer sacrifices of which in the next words The Uses follow First For reproofe For there are many faults in Christians whereby they transgresse against their spirituall Priest-hood as 1. When men are yoaked with unnecessary society with the wicked for hereby they forget their separation to God c. 2. When men neglect the finishing of their repentance and assurance they looke not to their anointing 3. When men are scandalous of their indiscretions and faults they forget that such as have any blemish must not offer the bread of their God and forget their washing from their old sinnes 2 Pet. 1.7 4. When men are barren of good works or are uncheerfull and dull they leave off the Priests garments of innocency and gladnesse 5. When the lives and behaviours of men savour of vanity and worldlinesse they remember not the blood of sprinkling 6. When men are ignorant and idle seeke not knowledge or doe not teach and instruct and admonish How doe the Priests lips preserve knowledge or how doe they beare about the Arke of the Lord 7. VVhen Christians are fearefull and irresolute and colde and not frequent in the praises of God how doe they blowe in the silver trumpet 8. VVhen Christians are bitter-hearted and accustomed to evill-speaking how doe they forget their duty of blessing To omit the neglect of sanctifying till I come to handle it in the next place Vse 2. Secondly For consolation to all godly and mortified and inoffensive Christians they should be wonderfull thankfull to God that hath made them partners of this holy Calling howsoever the world conceives of it God promiseth it as a great mercy to his children that they shall be called the Priests of the Lord Esay 61.6 and the
unto them yea unsearchable riches Eph. 3.6 All ages ought to wonder at the riches of Gods kindnesse to the beleevers in Jesus Christ Eph. 2.7 Christ in us is our riches Col. 1.27 and thus he enricheth us with the favour of God his own merits and righteousnesse the grace of the Spirit and the promises of the Word and the hope of glory The Uses are many Vses First woe to the rich men of this world that are not rich in God and Christ Luk. 12.16 21. Let not the rich man glory in his riches Ier. 9.24 Secondly let the brother of low degree rejoyce in that God hath thus exalted him I●● 1.9 For godly Christians a●e the richest men in the world for their possessions are greatest because the● possesse Jesus Christ and his treasure● Iames 2.5 For God is rich to all t●at call upon him Hee cannot be a poore man that can pray Rom. 10.12 Christ makes amends to the poore Christian for all his wants Thirdly hence we may gather anoth●r signe to try our faith by If Christ be more precious to us than all the world besides it is certaine we are true beleevers For Christ is precious to 〈◊〉 but beleevers Phil. 3.9 8. Fourthly we should strive with all ●hankfulnesse to admire and praise the grace of God that hath bestowed such riches upon us in Christ Eph. 1.7 Fiftly we should hence learne to ●ake more account of our faith which is therefore precious because it applie● Christ unto us Hence poore Christians are said to be rich because they have faith and assurance of faith and hee calleth it all riches of full assuranc● Col. 2.2 2 Pet. 1.4 Iam. 2.5 Sixtly we should live securelesse Men would promise to live at all hearts ease if they were rich enough why Christians are exceeding rich and possesse more treasure than all the wo●ld besides and therefore should live henceforth by the faith of the Sonne of God which was given to them Gal. 2.20 Seventhly looke to it that thou keepe Christ whatsoever thou losest resolve to lose father mother wife children friends house lands yea and life too rather than lose Christ who is so precious Eighthly we should shew it th●t wee account him our greatest riches and that we shall doe first by estee●ing the Gospell that brings us daily tidings above gold and silver Secondly by oft receiving of the Sacraments we should account the Word and Sa●raments as Gods Exchequer whither we alwaies come to receive more treasure Thirdly by making much of them that resemble his vertues Fourthly 〈◊〉 longing for his appearing Thus as Christ is our riches Now secondly he is precious in that he is an honour unto us and so some translate it Christ then is a singular honor to every beleever and he is so both in heaven and in earth First in heaven he is an honour to us because he graceth us before God and the Angels covering our nakednesse with the rich garment of his owne imputed righteousnesse and making daily intercession f●r us to God and covering our imperfections and presenting our works and prayers to God and giving the Angels a charge to look carefully to u● Secondly And so he is an honour to us on earth both amongst the godly and amongst the wicked First Hee graceth us amongst the godly by giving 〈◊〉 room in their hearts causing them to love us and honour us even for Christ onely whom they discover in us by our love to Christ and faith in his name and imitation of his vertues Secondly and he graceth us also amongst the wic●ed by protecting and acknowledging us in times of greatest distresse and by washing out the blemishes which our owne indiscretions at any time brought upon us and by cleering our innocencies from their unjust aspersions The Use may be first for confutation of their folly and madnesse that account it a course of abasement to follow Christ and leave the vanities of the world Godly ●ourses are honorable courses No man ever lost honor by cleaving to Christ and living so as might become the faith and love of Christ. Secondly and withall we may hence be informed that all the honor that is without Christ is but obscure basenesse no man can be truely honorable without the faith of Jesus Christ in his heart Thirdly we should hence be resolved to make more account of the godly because Christ is to them all honour they are the onely excellent ones in the world Fourthly we should labour also to be an honour unto Christ and to the faith and profession of his name and service we must remember that he is our surety to God for us and hath undertaken for our good behaviour and therefore for that reason we should be carefull of our duties and besides wee see that the disorders of great mens servants leave an imputation on their master and so it is with us and Christ. If we live righteously and soberly and religiously we honour Christ our Master but otherwise if we be scandalous we dishonour Christ and therefore had need to look to our waies And lastly we should account Christ sufficient honour to us and not regard the scornes and reproaches of the world but rather with Moses esteeme the reproaches of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Aegypt Thus of the consolation to the godly The terrour to the unbeleevers is exprest first partly by charging upon them their offence secondly and partly by describing their punishment Their offence is disobedience To them that are disobedient All unbeleevers stand indicted of disobedience and that in three respects For first they are guilty of Adams disobedience For by the disobedience of one man many are made sinners Rom. 5.19 Secondly they are guilty of disobedience against the morall Law which they have broken by innumerable offences and in respect thereof are liable to all the curses of God Deut. 28. Thirdly they are guilty of disobedience against the Gospell For there is an obedience of faith Rom. 1.5 and the Lord complaines that they obeyed not the Gospell Rom. 10.16 and for this disobedience God will render vengeance in flaming fire at the day of Judgement 2 Thes. 1.8 Now men disobey the Gospell not onely when they are bewitched to receive false opinions in religion Gal 3.1 but also and chiefly when they beleeve not in Jesus Christ but live in their sins without repentance Vses The use should be for humiliation unto impenitent sinners they should take notice of their indictment and make haste to humble themselves before the Lord lest sentence come out against them and there be no remedy and the rather because God will aggravate against them their disobedience Now there are many wayes by which a sinner may take notice of the aggravations of his disobedience as First by the number of his offences if hee consider that he hath made his sins like the haires of his head To be guilty of treason but in one particular should occasion
all worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Sixthly the entertainment which God gives unto his servants in the meanes of communion with God For when we meet with God familiarly and continue in his ordinances that is an infallible signe and note of Election as when a man findes constantly the pleasures of Gods house Psal. 65.4 power and much assurance in hearing the Word 1 Thess. 1.4 5. an inward sealing up of the comforts of the covenant in receiving of the Sacraments testified by the secret and sweet refreshing of the heart in the time of receiving the conscience being comforted in the forgivenesse of sinnes past Matth. 26.28 an answer and assurance that God hath heard our prayers and beene with us in his service Ioh. 15.15 16. and the like Use 2. The second use should be to worke in us a care to live so as may become the knowledge remembrance and assurance of our Election and so wee shall doe First if we stirre up our hearts to a continuall praising of God for his rich and free grace herein Ephes. 1.3 6. Secondly if we strive to joy and glory in it continually Psal. 106.5 6. Thirdly if we love one another Ioh. 15.17 and chuse as God chuseth Eph. 1.4 not despising the poorest Christian Iam. 2.5 Fourthly if we set up the Lord to be our God to love him with all our heart and to serve him and in all things to shew our selves desirous to please him and to be resolved to please him and his truth and to his glory c. Deut. 26. Esay 44.1 5. Fifthly if we confirme our selves in a resolution to have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darkenesse nor to suffer our selves to be unequally yoaked but since God hath chosen us out of the world to keepe our selves from needlesse society with wicked men Sixthly if we continue in the Word and be patient in afflictions and shew contentations in all estates as knowing that it is our Fathers pleasure to give us a Kingdome Luk. 12.32 and that all shall worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 and that the very haires of our heads are numbred Matt. 10. and that nothing can be laid to our charge to condemne us Rom. 8.33 and that God will never cast away his people whom before he knew Rom. 11.2 because his foundation remaineth sure and hee knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 Seventhly if we strive to live without blame and offence that God may no way suffer dishonour for our sakes Eph. 1.4 Thus of the election The next thing by which they are commended is their kinred and generation This word generation signifies sometimes an age or succession of men or so many men as live in the world in the age of one man so one generation passeth and another commeth c. Eccles. 1. Sometimes it signifies a progeny or off-spring that is so many as doe descend out of the loines of such a one as the generation from Abraham to David Mat. 1. Sometimes it signifies a kinred or stocke and so not onely carnall but spirituall and thus wicked men are said to be an adulterous and untoward generation Mat. 12.39 faithlesse and perverse Mat. 17.17 so it is no priviledge to be one of that generation but we are called upon to save our selves from this untoward generation Mat. 12.40 so that it is a priviledge to be one of this sort or kinred They are the generation of vipers Mat. 3. Now there is another kind of spirituall alliance and that is it whereby all Christians are a-kin one to another through the blood of Christ as they all descend of the second Adam and of this it is that the Prophet speaketh Esay 53.8 when admiredly he faith of Christ Who can tell his generation And thus the godly are begotten of the best blood in the world because they are begotten of the blood of Christ Ioh. 1.13 The doctrine then is That godly men are the happiest men in the world in respect of their kinred and alliance None come of so good a kinred as godly Christians which may appeare by divers reasons First because they descend of the best blood being the generation of Christ the second Adam and so are better borne than they that can tell of their great Nobility and Blood both by the fathers and mothers side Ioh. 1.13 Secondly because they are a chosen picked chilren or kinred all the kinred culled out of all mankind and so is no kinred in the world For in all other kinreds are all sorts of persons to be found good and bad vertuous and vicious but of this kinred are none but good Thirdly because the whole kinred is royall they enjoy all great preferments whereas there be few kinreds in the world but there are some poore in it but this generation hath not one poore man in it all the kinred are Kings Fourthly because all are fit for imployment all the kinred are Priests and can sacrifice which was not true of the very Tribe of Levi. There is not one Christian but he can perform the worke of the Priesthood doth in his order Fifthly because there are so many of the kinred The meanest Christian is a-kinne to all the Saints in heaven and to all the godly in earth or on earth and there is no kinred in the flesh that can attaine to the like number of kinsfolkes in any degree of comparison worth the speaking of Sixthly because they are all accepted into high favour with the King of Kings Though a King on earth out of his love to one person would do much for many of his kinred yet it is never seen that all the kinred universally are preferred and entertained into speciall favour with the King yet so it is with all the godly it is true of all of every one that they are his peculiar treasure Seventhly because all our kinred will doe for us there is none of them but are able to pleasure us whereas in carnall kinred one may bee a-kinne to so great persons that they will do nothing for them Eightly because other kinred may and will die and leave us but all this generation lives for ever Uses The consideration whereof may serve for divers reasons First hence godly Christians may gather comfort against the best of their kinred in the flesh whether they be lost by displeasure or by death for God here makes a supply of better kinred It should not therefore be grievous to the godly to forsake their fathers house Psal. 45. Secondly hence we should learne how to esteeme of godly Ministers for hereby is implyed that they are the Fathers and Princes of the Tribes in this holy Nation Thirdly it should teach us many duties concerning the godly to whom we are allied First to study our genealogie and get the knowledge of as many of our kinred as we can Secondly to glory in our kinred to joy in our happinesse herein Thirdly to do all good we
are to be disliked so are dumbe Christians too Secondly it should teach Christians to strive to be of an harmelesse and inoffensive disposition The Priests in the Law of God were men without blemish and so should Christians in the Gospel Phil. 1.2 15. Thirdly we should hence learne to set the Lord alwayes before us and to walke before him seeing it is our office to keepe in the Temple and to bee neere the Lord. Fourthly it should compell upon us a care of our sacrifice The maine worke of the Priests was to offer sacrifices Now our sacrifices are principally prayers and good workes as more at large is shewed on the notes of verse 5. and in these we must be daily imployed But then we must in all our services looke to the rules of sacrificing which ●as I ●aid● I have handled at large vers 5. onely for the present remember these few things First that their sacrifices are worth nothing without an Altar to sacrifice them on and this Altar is Jesus Christ Heb. 13.10 Secondly that thou must have fire to burne the sacrifice on the Altar and this fire is holy affections Mark 9. Thirdly that in all thy sacrifices thou must keepe out leaven now the spirituall leaven that marres thy sacrifices are first malice secondly any notable wickednesse thirdly evill opinions fourthly worldly griefe and passions which like leaven sowreth the sacrifice Thus of the secon● principall use Use 3. This may serve for reproofe of divers sorts of men as First of the Papists They have fire but no Altar and therefore cannot sacrifice they have zeale but not knowledge as was said in the case of the Jewes who knew not the righteousnesse of Christ. Secondly of the carnall Protestants They have an Altar in that they professe justification by Christ but either they have no sacrifice or no fire The rich among them bring not their sacrifice of almes and all sorts neglect prayer and good workes or if they doe any service to God there is no fire to burne the sacrifice they serve God without zeale and holy affections Thirdly hypocrites are here rebuked They bring for matter the right sacrifices sometimes and they have fire too but it is strange fire many times they have zeale but it is rash and unwarranted they doe good duties in an ill manner or spend their zeale on traditions either on the left hand or on the right Fourthly fearfull Christians are here reproved because when they have sacrifices and an Altar and fire too yet they beleeve not the attonement may come by it or the acceptation of them from God Thus of the fourth point An holy Nation The holinesse of a Christian is his fifth prerogative wherein he excels all other people and the godly are holy many wayes Some are lesse principall some are more principall First they are holy in respect of Gods appointment and calling God hath decreed them to holinesse Eph. 1.4 and created them to good workes Eph. 2.10 and called them to be Saints 1 Cor. 1.16 Secondly they are holy in their sect or kinred They are of an holy kinred for their Head Christ Jesus is infinitely holy and their brethren are holy brethren Heb. 4.1 Thirdly they are holy in their Lawes No people have so holy just and exact Lawes there is no defect or error in them The word of God is perfect Psal. 19. Prov. 8.5 6. Fourthly they are holy in their signes they weare the badges of righteousnesse The uncircumcised were accounted unholy and the Jewes a holy nation because being circumcised they had the signe of righteousnesse so are Christians holy by Baptisme sacramentally Fifthly they are holy in regard of separation from the wicked and the world A thing was said to be holy in the Law which was separated from common uses to the use of the Tabernacle so are the godly holy because separated from the unholy But chiefly the godly excell for holinesse if we respect the holinesse First of justification they are holy by the imputation of the perfect holinesse of Christ and so are they as holy as ever was Adam in Paradise or the Angels in heaven Secondly of sanctification they have holinesse in their natures and they practice holinesse too and thus they are holy in heart and by inchoation They have grace in all parts though not in all degrees and they are not destitute of any saving or heavenly gift 1 Cor. 9.11 And this kinde of holinesse must not be slighted or meanly accounted of for first it is a holinesse wro●ght by the holy Ghost Secondly it is presented to God by the intercession of Christ whereby all imperfections are covered And thirdly it is acknowledged in the covenant of grace which admits of uprightnesse and sincerity instead of perfection which in the other covenants were required Thirdly they are holy in hope because they looke for perfect holinesse in nature and action in another world There is a righteousnesse which they wait for that exceeds all the righteousnesse that ever was in any man in this world Christ Jesus excepted But I conceit it is the holinesse of sanctification which is here meant Now this holinesse consists either of mortification or vivification Mortification is imployed about the subduing of corruptions and vivification about qualifying the heart and life of the beleever with holinesse Vivification also is exercised either about new grace in the heart or new obedience in the conversation I take it the later is here meant and so the Apostle intends to say that no people are like the beleeving Christians for the holinesse of their conversation Uses The use of this point may be first for great encouragement to the true Christian notwithstanding all his infirmities with which hee is burdened and therefore hee should take heed that hee be not wicked over-much Eccles. 7. that is he should not thinke too vilely of himselfe For though hee be guilty of many sinnes yet he is truly holy and that many wayes as was shewed before God hath done great things for him that hath given him a holy head and a holy calling and especially that he hath already made him perfectly holy by justification and will make him perfectly holy in sanctification in another world yea hee ought to take reason of comfort for his holinesse of sanctification as for the reasons before so the very holinesse of his conversation is much more exact than is the conversation of the wicked or than was his owne before his calling And withall this should much stirre up godly men to the care of sound holinesse in their conversation the rather because first they were redeemed from a vaine conversation by the blood of Christ 1 Pet. 1.18 Secondly they should much thereby advance the profession of true Religion Phil. 1.27 Thirdly because a holy conversation is a good conversation God requires nothing of us to doe but it is all faire worke and good for us whereas when wee have done the divell the world and
to bee considered of Concerning which I propound these things to bee handled First who are the combatants Secondly by what wayes and meanes the soule is assaulted and opposed Thirdly why God would suffer the soule to be thus assaulted Fourthly what reason Christians have to be carefull of themselves and provide against this warre Fifthly by what meanes we must resist and defend the soule Sixthly what hope there is of victory Seventhly how many waies we may obtaine victory Eighthly by what signes we may know that we are not overcome And then the use of the whole For the first there are foure kindes of warre waged against the soule as it is encountered by foure sorts of adversaries For both God and the world and the divell and the flesh warre against the soule of man briefly of the three first God warres against the soule either in earnest and in deed or in shew and appearance and not as an adversary in deed In earnest God fights against the soule by the threatnings and rebukes of his Word when he smites and beates men downe by the word of his mouth Esay 11. and also by torments of conscience powred out upon the wicked men and so he fought against Cain and Iudas Sometimes God is but a purative adversarie and doth but seeme to fight against them and so he warreth against his owne servants either by outward crosses or by desertion or by feare and terrour and thus he fought against Iob. And in this case God is like a Captaine training his souldiers or like a Fencer teaching his scholar to fight The world warres against the soule two waies by the inticements of profits pleasures honours evill coun●ell or example and by persecution either of the tongue or hand The divell warres against the soule by evill doctrine or temptations or illusions But none of these three are principally intended here it is the flesh that maketh warre against the soule that is here meant By the flesh is meant the corruption that is in the nature of man called the old man and the Law of the members By the soule is here meant the spirit or regenerate man the new man the grace of Christ in the soule Thus of the first point who are the combatants the flesh is the assaylant the spirit the defendant For the second point the flesh incounters and warres against the soule divers waies and by strange kindes of fights as 1 By mists of ignorance it casts mists before the eies of the soule that it might be blinded for there is a manifest combate betweene the naturall understanding and the regenerate minde carnall reason and saving knowledge often fights it out within a man 2 by doubtings and distractions and so the flesh casts ou● such questions as these as so many darts into the soule Whether there bee a God or the Scripture bee the Word of God Whether Christ bee the Sonne of God and our Mediator Whether it be the true Church we are in or whether our sinnes be forgiven or we be in the state of grace Whether there shall be any resurrection or heaven or hell or immortall beeing of the soule Against all these the soule is driven to make often defences and drives them out with hard conflicts 3 By rebellious deniall of obedience to the law of the mind exalting it selfe against the obedience enjoyned by Christ to the soule Rom. 7. 2 Cor. 10. and ●asting out resolutions of deniall and thoughts that say they ought not or will not obey 4 By hindring the worke of the soule that overcomes the former resolutions and will obey and that it doth by making evill present when she should do good or by hindring and dulling of the affections of the heart or by casting-in of other projects of purpose to breed distractions in the time of doing good duties Rom. 7. 5. By lusting that is by bringing-in of contrary desires evill concupiscences longings after forbidden things and in these lusts usually the flesh combines with the outward adversaries of the soule the world and the divell and kindles the fire of those inordinate desires by dalliance with the world or the divels temptations And thus of the second point The third thing is a question Why God should suffer the soule to be thus annoyed by the flesh saying He could have made man again in Christ as he made Adam in Paradise and so have utterly abolished the flesh For answer hereunto three things may be said First that we are bound with all thankfulness to praise God for that grace he hath given us in Christ though it bee not full perfect and so ought not to reason with God why he gave us not more grace and the rather because wee look for a time when wee shall bee more happy in that respect than ever Adam was and besides though grace given us bee imperfect in respect of degree and so lesse than Adam's was yet it is perfect in respect of continuance and so it is better than Adam's Thirdly there may be divers reasons assigned why God did suffer the flesh to remain in us after calling for a time that is while wee warre in this world For 1. It shewes the greatnes of God's power that can keep us notwithstanding such continuall danger we are in 2. By this conflict divers graces of the Spirit are raised up and exercised which else were of little use as godly sorrow poverty of spirit desire of death and faith also hath much imployment about this combate 3. By this combate all the graces of God's Spirit are proved to be right and not counterfeit in the true Christians for no man can constantly beare armes against the flesh but hee is a new creature This combate then serves for the triall of the gifts and graces of Christians 4. By this combate wee are cured of the horrible disease of self-love pride in our selves and made more to love God and trust in him as knowing that we deserve no favour at his hand nor can be strong in our owne might 5. It is equall we should war before we triumph that wee should fight in the battels on earth before we raign in heaven Lastly it makes heaven grace more precious in our sight and breeds in us a desire to be dissolved and so warns from the love of this present evill world In the fourth place we must consider by what means the soule may preserve it self against the treacheries and assaults of the flesh and so the means is to be used either before the conflict or in the conflict or after the conflict Before the conflict if wee would take a sound course to bee preserved against the danger of the flesh we must look to these things 1 We must stand upon our guard and keep a daily watch over our hearts and waies and not be retchlesse to despise our own waies or never take notice of our hearts he lives dangerously that lives securely we must take a diligent
appointed so Num. 16.29 But it is not the common visitation is here meant Gods speciall visitation of some men is when in a speciall providence he takes notice of certain men and comes among them to work the redresse of sin and that is here meant And this visitation must be considered either according to the kinds of it or according to the time of it here called The day of visitation For the kindes God doth visit men either with the visitation of justice or with the visitation of mercy in wrath or in grace and the former words of this Text are true of either of these kindes For if God visit wicked men by his speciall judgements they will then give glory to God and commend godly Christians whom before against their consciences they spake evill of which they will also doe much more if God visit them with his grace and convert them First then of the visitation of justice and so the point to be here observed is That though God may spare wicked men long and seem to wink at their faults yet hee will find a day to visit them for their sins he will hold a visitation for their sakes he will discover their wickednesse and avenge himselfe on them Psal. 50.20 Eccl. 8. Ps. 37.13 Iob 18.20 As they have had their daies of sinning so will he have his day of visiting and that not onely at that day of the universall visitation in the end of the world but even in this life also Use. And this doctrine should especially humble wicked men and awake them out of their security and the rather if they consider seriously of divers things about this day of their visitation First that it shall certainly come upon them Rom. 2.5 Secondly that when it doth come it will bee a marvellous fearfull time with them for 1 God will then discover their sins and make their wickednesse manifest in the hatefulnesse of it Lam. 4.22 2 God will inflict sore punishments upon them hee will be avenged on them The day of their visitation will be the day of their calamity Ier. 46.21 3 The punishments determined cannot be resisted there will be no helpe Esa. 10.3 and 29.6 and 26.14 4 God will not then respect their strength but their sinne He will recompence them according to all that they have done Ier. 50.29 31. 5 If they escape one judgement another will light upon them Ier. 48.44 6 God will give them the repulse in all they do even in his service he will not accept them Ier. 14.10 7 It will be a time of great perplexitie and counsell will perish from the prudent Mic. 7.3 4. Ier. 49.7 8. 8 God will declare himselfe to be in a speciall manner against them Ier. 50.29 31. Hos. 9.7 Quest. But what sort of men are in danger of such a fearfull visitation Answ. All men that live in any grosse sinne against their knowledge such as are the sinnes of blood whoredome deceit swearing profanation of the Lords day reproaching of Gods people and the like Ier. 5.9.29 and 9.9 especially where all or any of these things be found in them First extreame security in sinning God will surely visit such as are settled in their lees Zeph. 1.12 Secondly such as place their felicity in offending such as love to wander Ier. 14.10 such as do evill with both hands earnestly as the Prophets phrase is Mic. 7.3 4. Thirdly such as continue and persist in wicked courses such as cast out wickednesse as a fountaine casts out water as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 6.6 Fourthly especially when men are shamelesse and impudent in offending Ier. 6.15 and 8.12 Use 2. And therefore men should be instructed and take notice of their condition and danger and foresee this day and use all means to prevent it for if men would turn unto God speedily repent with sound sorrows for their sins the Lord would perhaps be intreated and forgive the punishment of their sins Ier. 6.6 Thus of the visitation of justice The visitation of mercy followes The visitation of mercy is when God comes amongst men to shew some speciall mercy and so hee visits either about temporall or about spirituall things In temporall things hee visits either in the case of blessings or afflictions In respect of temporall blessings he visited Sarah Gen. 21.1 when hee gave her a sonne In respect of afflictions God visits first when he sends such crosses as do trie the innocencie and sinceritie of his servants so Psal. 17.3 Secondly when he lets his people know that hee takes speciall notice of their distresses and sorrowes so Exod. 4.3 Thirdly when he sends his servants speciall deliverances and so to visit is to deliver Thus of the visitation in temporall things which is not here meant The visitation in spirituall things is the gracious providence of God revealing his marvellous and everlasting mercies unto his Elect and so he visits man either by Christ or by the Gospel He visited his people when hee sent his Sonne to redeeme them Luk. 1.68 78. and 7.16 And so he doth when he sends his Gospel by his servants to this end to reconcile the world to himselfe in Christ and thus God visited the world when he sent his Apostles unto all Nations preaching the Gospel And thus he doth visit a Nation when he sends the Gospel thither or a Congregation when by the preaching of the Gospel he gathereth a people to himselfe There is also a personall and particular visitation when God singles out this or that man from the rest and converts him And so in this place to visit the Gentiles is to gather out of the Gentiles a people to his Name as in the case of this Apostle is said Act. 15.14 Which place may well expound this So that the day of visitation if we respect whole congregations is the time when God sends them the powerfull preaching of the Gospel and doth thereby muster and presse a people to himselfe And if we respect particular persons it is the day when God effectually calls them and converts them Six things may be observed here concerning this visitation of grace Doct. 1. First that till God do visit wicked men with his grace from heaven there will bee no sound reformation in them Their naturall conscience the shame and punishment of men with the Laws of Princes or Churches may restraine somewhat of the excesse of sinne but it is Gods visitation only that can worke a sound and thorow reformation There is little hope these Gentiles which speake evill of Christians will ever cease till the day of this visitation and the reason is plaine because the lawes and punishments of men cannot give a new nature to the offenders which God in his visitation doth Use. The use is therefore to confirme the patience of the Saints They have endured and must endure the evill words of wicked men and if any be weary of their injuries they must pray
earnestly for their conversion The wolfe doth not alwaies devoure nor the foxe alwaies deceive nor the dogge alwaies barke but yet so long as they keepe their natures they will occasionally discover themselves And therefore also Christians should learne discretion not to trust worldly men over-farre upon new pretences Doct. 2. Secondly hence we may note that God hath his time wherein hee will certainly visit his people hee hath his day of visitation All that God hath given unto Jesus Christ shall be gathered in Gods due time That which was beleeved concerning the gathering of the Israelites out of Egypt into Canaan that God would surely visit them and bring them out Gen. 50.24 25. is much more certainly to be beleeved of the spirituall gathering of the elect out of this world into the Canaan of God And the reason is because their conversion d●pends upon Gods eternall decree and the foundation of God remaineth 〈◊〉 and hee knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 and not one of them shall be lacking in the season of their calling Ier. 23.3 4. The use may be for the confirmation of our faith concerning the calling of such Jewes Gentiles or Christians as yet sit in darknesse and want the meanes of their calling God hath his day and he will provide for the calling of all his Elect how unlikely soever the worke seeme to us Doct. 3. We may hence note that when God hath visited a man with his grace he is suddenly become another man he is wonderfully altered from that which he was before Use. The use should be for triall No Christians can have comfort that they are visited with the grace of God if old things be not past with them and all things become new For every man that is visited with true grace First hath a new Master Hee will no longer serve any strange Lord for he hath covenanted firmly with God to worke righteousnesse Rom. 6.16 18. Secondly hath new acquaintance He that was wont to walke onely in the way of the wicked is now a companion onely with them that feare God all his delight is in them Psal. 16. and 26. Thirdly hath a new language he speaks not as he was wont to do For first his Mother-tongue he hath utterly forgotten He cannot curse and lie and sweare and raile and speak bawdily as he was wont to do which the coherence shewes here Secondly in divers things he is furnished on a sudden with language he could never speake before as in the gift of prayer he can now speake to God and discourse with him that before was dumbe and opened not his mouth Zeph. 3.9 Fourthly he hath a new heart Zech. 36.27 Which appeares in what hee hath not which was wont to be in his heart and in what hee hath which was never there before And for the first branch there is not in him any of these things following by the way understand that these things are not in him as they were wont to be that is they raigne not or they lie adying and so 1 There is not guile there his spirit is without guile Psal. 32.2 which he shewes in that he avoids lesser sinnes as well as greater is good in secret as well as in company and serves God in his spirit as well as his body and is more desirous to be good than to seeme so 2 There is not malice and passion there Esa. 11. His outragious and boisterous passions are subdued of a Lyon he is become a Lambe 3 There is not covetousnes or the love of the world there 1 Ioh. 2.14 Iam. 4.3 hee useth the world but he admires it not His taste in earthly things is lost he savours them not as he was wont to do Rom. 8.5 And as in these things he is new so in the furniture of his heart he is in many things new for First hee hath a new minde he is renewed in the spirit of his mind which appeares first by his capablenesse in spirituall things Hee that lately could not perceive the things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 now heares as the learned he sees in a mirrour he lookes and wonders The vaile is taken away that before covered him 2 Cor. 3. Secondly by the transcendencie of the things he knowes he can now looke upon the very Sunne hee knowes God and Jesus Christ and the glory to come and the excellent things given of God which the heart of the naturall man never perceived Ioh. 17.3 1 Cor. 2.9 10. Thirdly by the instrument by which he understands hee sees by faith and not by reason in many things hee is fully assured in divers mysteries where sense and reason can give-in no evidence Secondly he hath new affections I will instance but in two of them sorrow and love He is another man in his sorrowes which appeares both in the causes and in the remedies of his sorrowes For the causes he was wont never to be sorry for any thing but his crosses now hee is seldome sorry for any thing but his sinne And for the remedies he was wont to drive away his sorrowes with time sleepe merry company but now nothing but good words from God will ease him His love may be tried by the objects and so whom he can love truly or whom he doth love vehemently He can love his very enemies which hee could never doe before And he doth love Jesus Christ though hee never saw him 1 Pet. 1.9 and so fervently as hee accounts all things in the world which hee was wont so much to dote upon but as losse and dung in comparison of Jesus Christ Phil. 3,8,9 Fiftly hee hath a new behaviour with him hee is wonderfully altered in his carriages which appeares in divers things First in respect of the rule of his life he walkes by rule Gal. 6.16 He commeth daily to the light to see whether his workes be wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 This is a signe given by our Saviour Christ in that place Hee is carefull to order his behaviour by the warrant of the word Phil. 2.15,16 Secondly in respect of the meanes he useth for the ordering of his conversation And so he taketh presently hold on Gods Sabbath he is carefull to keepe the Sabbath honouring that day above all others and esteeming and desiring it for the imployment thereof Thus the Lord of the Sabbath saith that it is a signe by which hee knowes the people whether they be truly sanctified or not Exod. 31.13 Esa. 56.2.6 Thirdly in respect of the things he imploies himself in he chooseth the things that please God Esa. 56.4 his desire is now in all his waies to do such things as might be acceptable to God whereas before he was most carefull to please men or to satisfie his owne lusts Fourthly in respect of the manner of his conversation In which foure things especially shine first humility He shewes that the great opinion of himselfe is taken
fashions in him the Image of Jesus Christ and so reveales Christ in him Colos. 3.10 Galat. 2.20 Sixtly in that day he gives him the holy Ghost never to depart out of his heart Gal. 4.7 Seventhly in that day he makes him free so as hee is inrolled amongst the living and acknowledged particularly of God amongst the Saints Hee is written in the writing of the house of Israel and is free from all the miserie and bondage he was in before or was in danger of and hee is henceforwards free of the house and presence of God Hee may feede at his Table and eate the food of life He hath accesse with boldnesse at all times into the presence of God with any suites He is also free to the Communion of Saints and is restored to the free and lawfull use of the creatures in generall Psal. 87.5 Esa. 4.4 Rom. 8.1 Gal. 1.6 Esa. 25.8 Mark 11.24 Eph. 2.20 21. Mat. 5.5 Eighthly he sets a guard of Angels about him to attend him all the dayes of his life Heb. 1.14 Psal. 34. Ninthly in that day he is received into Gods protection in respect of afflictions which protection containes in it foure things First the withholding of many crosses which doe fall upon others God spares him as a man would spare his onely sonne Mal. 3.17 Secondly the bounding of the crosse so as God appoints the measure which is ever with the respect of the strength of the party Esay 27.7 8. Thirdly the sanctification of the crosse so as all shall work for the best Rom. 8.28 Fourthly deliverance out of trouble in due time Psal. 34.17 Tenthly he assures and estates upon him the evidence of an inheritance that is immortall undefiled that withers not reserved for him in heaven 1 Pet. 1.3 The use should bee chiefly to move godly men to the exact study of those things and to all possible thankfulnesse for Gods visitation and they should with much joy remember the very time if it may be when God did so visit them and if the men of this world keepe commemoration yearely of the dayes of their birth or marriage how much more cause hath a Christian to preserve in himselfe and to speake of it to the praise of God the very day and season when God did first reveale his grace unto him Let none mistake me I meane it not of all Christians for many Christians did never observe or know distinctly the very first day of their conversion being not called either by ordinary meanes or not in such a sensible manner as some others were or stood for a time in temporary grace yet unto all the counsell is profitable that taking a day in the sense as it is here they should often thinke of with gladnes the season of their conversion or at least magnifie God for the thing it selfe that they are converted And besides all such as enjoy the meanes of grace and yet have not felt this visitation of God should be much allured to the care of attending upon the meanes and be made desirous to receive the grace of God and that effectually it should much move them that God hath now sent them the means and keepes his publique visitation and that God stands not upon desert nor doth he make exception of them but offers his grace unto all and desireth not the death of any sinner yea beseecheth them to be reconciled and to that end hath committed the Word of reconciliation to his servants with expresse commandement that they should be instant and with all patience instruct men and call upon them and perswade them to save their soules Doct. 7. We may yet further from hence observe That before calling the very Elect of God may be as bad as any other as here till God visited those elect Gentiles they were railers as well as others so were the former sinnes mentioned 1 Cor. 6.9 found in the very Elect as the eleventh verse sheweth This appeares by the example of Manasses Mary Magdalene Paul and the theife on the Crosse see further Tit. 3.3 And the reasons may be easily assigned For first the very Elect before calling have the same corruption of nature that other men have and so all have sinned and are deprived of the glory of God so as there is not one of them doth good no not one Secondly they have the same occasions to sin from the Devill and the world Thirdly and were their natures somewhat better than other mens yet they would have bin leavened as they were a part of the lump of infected mankind This may both informe us and teach us in divers things It may informe us in three things viz. about our election and our justification and about the Gospell as the meanes of our vocation For election this point proves it must be free seeing there was no goodnesse in the very elect more than in the reprobate in the estate of nature And for Justification the Apostle Paul useth the consideration of this doctrine in the third Chapter to the Romans to prove it cannot be by workes And for the Gospell wee may here see the mighty power of it it may well be called the Arme of the Lord and his power to salvation that can thus mightily and suddenly change men And it should teach us also divers things as it concernes either ourselves or other men or God 1. For our selves it should teach us to walke both more humbly all our dayes seeing wee have beene vile as well as others and also more watchfully seeing wee carry about us a nature that hath beene so rebellious against God and besides wee should resist the beginnings of sinne in us as having knowne by experience whither sinne will lead us if wee give way to it and dally with it 2 For others not yet called it should teach us both compassion of their miserie it having beene our owne case and a care to shew all meekenesse to all men in waiting for their conversion and patience in bearing their wrongs 3 For God how can we ever sufficiently love him that hath shewed such love to us even when we were his enemies Yea wicked men that are smitten with terrors for the hainousnesse of their sinnes should hence confirme themselves against despaire seeing they may hence learne that as great offendors as they have beene converted and saved 2 Tim. 1.15 There is one thing that from hence men must take heed that they doe not learne that is that they abuse not these examples to confirme themselves in sinne for there is matter to daunt them and fright them from this presumption For first not all that have lived licentiously but some few onely have beene saved the rest perished in their owne wickednesse Secondly of those that were saved none were saved without amendment of life and regeneration and therefore so long as thou livest in thy sinne so long their example fits thee not The last Doctrine that may from hence bee made is
delay but with heart and readinesse finish his worke This is to seeke righteousnesse and to haste to it Esay 16.5 Amos 5.14 Thus he must observe to doe as the phrase was Deut. 5.22 Eighthly it will be a great helpe unto him if he get into the way of good men and walke with the wise sorting himselfe with discreet and sincere Christians Pro. 2.20 Ninthly he must keep his heart with all diligence for thereout commeth life He must carefully resist the beginnings of sinne within and avoid those secret and spirituall dalliances of the soule with inward corruptions and temptations and withall take heed of secret hypocrisie in suffering his heart to be absent when God is to be served Pro. 4.23 For thereby hee may lose what he worketh if his spirit be not without that guile Tenthly all that know the happinesse of a righteous life should strive to amend those defects which are found even in the better sort of people that so their life at length may answer to the end of Christs death and therefore wee should examine our selves throughly The defects and faylings found in the lives of righteous men may be referred to two heads First for either they faile in the parts of righteousnesse Secondly or in the manner of well-doing In the parts of righteousnesse there are great failings whether we respect the first or second table I will briefely touch the principall defects which are observed and complained of in Christians in both tables In the first table men faile either in the knowledge of God or in the affections to God or in the service to God First for knowledge how little do many men know of Gods praises and glory that might be knowne and how farre are many from a right con●eit of God when they come to thinke of him or to worship him Secondly in the most there is a great want in the exercise both of the fear of God and trust in God men have not such awfull thoughts of God as they should have nor doe they tremble so as they should at his judgements that are in the world Psal. 4.4 Heb. 2. ult Dan. 6.26 And for the trust in God men are specially faulty that they doe not commit their waies daily to God for assistance and successe in all estates resting upon him alone as they ought to doe Thirdly joying and delighting our selves in God is hardly found in any and yet no wife should take such continuall delight in her husband to solace her selfe with him as a Christian ought to doe with God Psal. 37.4 and 68.3 4. Phil. 4.4 Fourthly in the service of God there are divers defects as 1. Some neglect the private reading of the Scriptures who ought to exercise themselves therein day and night Psal. 1.2 2. In prayer some have not the gift of prayer nor seeke it and prayer for others is extremely neglected contrary to Gods expresse commandement that enjoynes us to pray one for another in many Scriptures 3. Praising of God in our discourses as becommeth his great glory in his workes where is this found and yet required at our hands and at the hands of all people and that which we should doe with a whole heart and while we live Psal. 96.6 7 8. and 63.4 and 9.1 and 67.2 4. Where is that walking with God required in Scripture Who doth alwayes set the Lord before him Where are those soliloquies betweene the soule and God Are not many content to goe weekely and monthly without speaking to God And thus of the defects concerning the first table In the second table divers things may be noted as were defective in the parts of righteousnesse as First there is a generall defect of mercy men doe exceedingly faile in that liberality to the distressed and poore servants The bowels of mercy are every-where shut up either altogether or in the neglect of many degrees and duties of mercy Secondly in many Christians there is a fearfull want of meekenesse they being guilty of daily sins of passions and worldly vexations and that many times with a kind of wilfulnesse against knowledge and conscience Thirdly the car●● of life and worldlinesse doe strive and blemish the conversation of many and discover a strange defect of that contempt of the world should be in them Fourthly domesticall disorders doe even cry to heaven against many husbands for want of love and of most wives for want of obedience and of servants for want of diligence and faithfulnesse in their places And thus men faile in the parts of righteousnesse In the manner of well-doing many things are wanting first both in the generall well-doing of good duties secondly and in speciall affection to God thirdly and in the manner of Gods service In generall First zeale of good workes is exceeding defective in the most Tit. 3.14 Men shew not that willingnesse and fervency of affection should be shewed in all parts of righteousnesse men doe not lift up their hearts in Gods waies Gods commandements are usually grievous and tedious Secondly there ought to be a holy feare in the practice of their good duties 1 Pet. 3.2 which is u●ually wanting men doe so much trust upon themselves and doe duties with such boldnesse and neglect of their wayes whereas they should feare alwayes Pro. 28.14 Oh that meeknesse of wisedome required Iames 3.9 where is it to be found Thirdly men are not circumspect to make conscience even of the least duties as they ought and to observe to doe them even to watch for the opportunity of well-doing and to looke to the meanes of the performance of every duty and to abstaine from the very appearance of evill and to be discreet in looking to the circumstances of time place persons c. Eph. 5.15 Deut. 5.32 Fourthly there is great want of moderation in Christians for either they are just over-much in conceiving too highly of themselves for what they doe or else they are wicked over-much in thinking too vilely of their workes Eccles. 7. Fiftly men are strangely negligent in the growth of grace and knowledge men stand still and doe not prosper and strive to increase in every good gift as they ought 2 Pet. 3.18 Many graces are not strengthened and many workes are not finished Secondly in mens affections to God how are men defective Where is he that loves the Lord with all his heart and all his might and all his soule Deut. 30.6 and 6.3 Thirdly in Gods worship these things are in many wanting 1. Reverence and that holy feare which should be shewed when we appeare before the Lord Heb. 12.28 2. Men usually forget to doe all worship in the Name of Christ Colos. 3.17 3. The care of praising of God that is of looking to Gods acceptation in all service is much forgotten Heb. 12.28 4. The desire of unity and consent in judgement among our selves when we worship God is miserably neglected and rejected by divers wilfull Christians Zeph.
sake that he may see it comes from the force of religion in her a good wife discreet provident carefull to please meeke such an one as his heart may trust in her and delight in her Wives that be foolish wastfull idle froward or busie-bodies if they have never so much shew of religion yet they are not fit for this worke to win any body much lesse their husbands Secondly she must looke to her conversation in things of her religion that therein she behave her selfe as becommeth religion Tit. 2.3 and so she must take heed of conceitednesse and contempt of others or neglect of her calling upon pretence of duties of her religion and looke to it that she be not her selfe guilty of any knowne fault unreformed and withall she must strive to shew the power of her godlinesse in good fruits labouring to abound in good workes 1 Tim. 2.10 both at home and abroad being pitifull mercifull ready to help them that are in misery according to her power and in the things she hath liberty to dispose of Other things follow in the three next verses Verse 2. While they behold your chaste conversation coupled with feare IN these words is contained the second thing the Apostle chargeth upon wives in his exposition viz. A chaste conversation with feare so ordered as their husbands may daily behold it and observe it in them Where the Apostle implies what the husbands will doe viz. they will observe the conversation of the wives and expresseth what the wives ought to doe viz. in conversation to shew chastitie coupled with feare First then we are to consider of that which is implied viz. what the husband will doe and this is imported in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 While they behold While they behold The originall word signifies to observe and prie into a thing to finde out the secrets of it and so it notes That carnall men such as these husbands were doe watch and marke the conversation of such as be religious to observe all they can in them that professe true religion Thus they watched David and Christ and Daniel and so doe they all the godly and thus they imploy themselves in spying and marking the wayes of the godly sometimes out of the naughtinesse of their hearts supposing godly men to be like unto themselves and therefore hope to find out wickednesse in their practise sometimes out of malice lying in wait to find out any fault in their carriage of which they may accuse them and vilifie them in the world and sometimes they doe thus as compelled by the force of their naturall conscience which gives glory to the graces of God in the conversation of true Christians while they observe in them that holinesse which they find not in themselves or other carnall men And therefore the Use should be to teach all that professe religion to looke carefully to their waies and walke circumspectly that they give not occasion of offence but rather carry themselves so as to make proofe of their sincerity and good conversation by their workes Secondly from hence we may gather also That a Christian must looke to his justification before men as well as to his justification before God for as God beholds his waies so doe men and he is bound to seeke his justification from men as well as his justification from God And therefore as the Apostle Paul had taught the justification of a sinner before God so the Apostle Iames urgeth the justification of the godly man before men which this Apostle imports in this place when he requires such a conversation as may compell carnall men to say they are just men So our Saviour Mat. 5.16 Quest. What can carnall men see in the conversation of the godly to make them give glory to God or the truth Answ. By the good conversation of true Christians they gather the goodnesse of the law or religion which they professe And besides they thence gather that they are not hypocrites but are religious indeed whence they see what power their religion hath over them in all their waies And further the scandall of reproaches cast upon the godly is often by the observation of their conversation utterly removed in the hearts of such carnall men as set themselves throughly to observe and marke the course of the godly Your chaste conversation The word here translated Chaste in all other places of the New Testament is translated Pure and so shewes that it ought to be accepted here in a larger sense than the word chaste doth import yet so as chastity is a part of the purity of a Christian. Doct. A pure conversation is required in all true Christians yea even in women as well as men That purity is required is manifest by divers Scriptures yea to be examples in purity 1 Tim. 4.2 It is the chiefe fruit of the wisedome is from above Iam. 3.17 A pure heart is required 1 Tim. 1.5 and a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 and pure hands 1 Tim. 2.8 And that it may be had is apparent for our Saviour saith Yee are all pure Iohn 15.3 Quest. How can a man in this world be pure can any man be without sinne Answ. No there is no man that sinneth not In many things wee sinne all James 3.2 Who can say I have made my heart cleane and am pure from my sin Pro. 20.9 And If any man say he hath no sin he is a liar and the truth is not in him 1 John 1.10 And yet though in that sense no man is pure yet in other senses the godly man may be called pure and is bound even by the Gospel to purity as 1. In respect of some particular offence A godly man may be so pure as to abide the triall of God himselfe as David wills God to judge him according to his righteousnesse and the innocency of his hands meaning in that point of false or treacherous dealing against Saul which was charged upon him Psal. 3.4 5. 18.15 2. In respect of imputation every beleever is perfectly pure all his sins are as if they had never beene and Christs righteousnesse is his and in that righteousnesse of faith he is perfectly pure before God himselfe Rev. 19.8.14 3. In respect of men he may be pure in conversation though not in respect of God and so he is pure when he is unrebukeable and unblameable amongst men And this ought to be found in the conversation of every Christian to live without offence and without rebuke Phil. 2 15 16. 4. There is a pure conversation in respect of God not that we can converse without sin but God is pleased for Christ his sake to account our conversation pure when it hath divers prints and markes of his true grace in us And so Christian purity hath in it many things 1. Separation from impure men Psal. 1.1 2 Cor. 6.17 2. The desire of purity in the perfection of it God accounts his servants pure because
take oft our affections from all things that may offend as resolved if our right eye offend us to plucke it out and if our right hand offend us to cut it off that is to deny all sinfull things though they were as deare to us as our right hand or right eye Mat. 9.45 Secondly we must be such as yeeld our selves to obey the voice of Christ and to bee ruled by him Hee gives eternall life to his sheep we must bee sheepe then for hearing his voice and tractablenesse Iohn 10.29 Thirdly wee must give glory to God and rely upon his promise of grace in Jesus Christ wee must be beleevers Iohn 3.16 Fourthly wee must by patient continuing in well-doing still seeke immortality Rom. 2.7 Thus of the first use Use 2. Secondly seeing the portion of the godly lies in incorruptible things wee should not be much troubled for the wants or losses in corruptible things Wee have so large an inheritance in things that will last for ever that it should be no grievance to us though we should want those transitory things 〈…〉 world Use 3. Thirdly for this reason such as abound in earthly things should bee 〈◊〉 more willing to distribute them and give them for good uses seeing those things are not th●ir portion and therefore they need not be overcarefull for the keeping of such things Use● Fourthly hence wee may gather infallibly That the godly can never fall from grace for Gods mercies cannot corrupt or fall away and his gi●ts are without repentance If they could be lost then they were corruptible as well as earthly things But this is a comfort that must not bee taken away that God will establish Sion for ever Psal. 48.8 and though the 〈◊〉 passe away and the lusts thereof yet he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 Iohn 2.17 and though the servant may be cast out of the house yet the sonne abideth for ever Iohn 8.35 Lastly we should the lesse feare de●th seeing hence we learne that we have many things that will last with us even after our bodies be rotten in the grave Thus of the third doctrine Doct. 4. Now a fourth point is also cleare and that is That incorruptible things doe wonderfully adorne and make men comely This is the maine scope a●d drift of the Text and therefore we should the more seeke after th●se things for if wee could see the beauty of the inward man as it is adorned with grace wee would bee wonderfully enamoured and in love with it No comelinesse of the body can so allure as would this inward beauty of the man of the hear and therefore againe we should hence learne to make the more account of poore Christians There are no persons in the world so comely as they if wee knew the worth and ornament of true grace And so in generall we should love the godly above all people because they are the fairest and best adorned of all the men and women in earth and in particular those husbands that have gracious wives should learne so much religion as to love them entirely even for the beauty of the man of the Heart though they wanted the outward ornaments of riches or extraordinary comelinesse of the outward man Women also should especially hence learne to get grace and knowledge and holinesse into their hearts for their best handsomnesse is in their qualities and gifts 'T is not their cloathes but their manners and disposition that becomes them or disgraces them A faire body doth commend little if the heart bee fowle it is a small praise to have a good face and an ill nature Some women are like Helen without and like Hecuba within Thus of the adorning of the man of the Heart in generall Now followes the particular ornament which the Apostle commends by name and that is a meeke and quiet spirit Of a meeke and quiet spirit Quietnesse is added to meeknesse lest by mistaking the definition of meeknesse they should not understand the Apostles meaning Now the doctrine hence to bee gathered is That amongst all the particular vertues required in Christians meeknesse and quietnesse of nature and spirit is a speciall vertue and carefully to bee sought and in particular by Christian wives as this and other Scriptures shew Eph. 4.2 Mat. 11.28 Zeph. 2.3 Col. 3.12 Before I make use of this point I must consider what is comprehended in those termes of a meeke and quiet spirit and first we must know before hand what it doth not comprehend It doth not require that women or men should be so quiet as not to be troubled for their sinnes or not to humble their soules for sinne or that they should bee carelesse of their callings either generall or particular or that they should not admonish or reprove sinne in others when they have a calling and fitnesse But unto the constituting of true meeknesse and quietnesse of spirit is requisite 1. Freedome from the evils that disquiet and molest the spirits of men such as are first anger frowardnesse fretting and peevishnesse secondly worldly sorrow crying and aptnesse to take unkindnesse and fullennesse thirdly distrustfull cares of life arising from covetousnesse 1 Tim. 6 10 11. fourthly rash zeale and fiercenesse or inordinate striving and wilfulnesse as may bee gathered in the case of a Minister 2 Tim. 2.24 25 26. fifthly contention and evill speaking or ill language as may bee gathered from Tit. 3.2 and stirring up contention or brawles sixtly all inordinate desires and raigning heart-sinnes whether sinnes of ambition lust malice or the like Iam. 1.21 seventhly unconstancy and levity of minde Especially it crosseth those evils which are noted to be most usuall in women such as are fretting crying taking unkindnesses unconstancie wilfulnesse complaining of their husbands or the like 2. A kind of peacefull contentment when Christians are habitually well pleased with their condition 3. A gentle behaviour in case of wrongs or faults from or in others so as to be first able to beare them secondly not to render evill for evill but rather to overcome evill with goodnesse thirdly ready to forgive fourthly not provoked to anger 4. A harmelesse and innocent behaviour Zeph. 2.3 5. The fixing of the heart by trusting upon God and living without care like a little child that beleeves his father will provide for him Mat. 18. 6. Lowlinesse of mind thinking no great thoughts of our selves and esteeming the gifts of God in others and accounting others better than our selves and therefore is lowlinesse so often added to the word meeknesse to explaine it 7. Silence from many words from vaine and rash speeches especially provoking termes 8. Retirednesse when a Christian is no busie-body in other mens matters and his feet will be kept out of his neighbours house and refuseth to have to doe with the strife that belongs not to him 9. Tractablenesse and easinesse to be directed or appointed and governed as in relation to God it is meeknesse to take
rule Gal. 6.16 and do all in faith Heb. 11.6 4. We must serve God in our spirits as well as in our outward man not as men-pleasers or with eye service or with outward worship but from the heart and with the spirit Rom. 2.28 29. Eph. 6.5 6 7. 5. We must make conscience of the least sins to avoide them and of the least Commandements to obey them if we would be great in heaven Mat. 5.19 Divers of these are exprest in one sentence Micah 6.8 Hee hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to doe justly and to love mercy and to humble thy selfe to walk with thy God 6. We must avoide those sins that God especially hates such as are swearing Commandement 3. Deut. 28.58 lukewarmnesse in religion Rev. 3.15 16. persecuting such as feare God 1 Thes. 2.15 16. wilfull fashioning our selves after this world Rom. 12.1 2. to blesse our selves in our hearts against Gods curses Deut. 29.19 through impatience or unbeliefe to withdraw our selves in adversity Heb. 10 38. and in generall all grosse sins Rev. 22.15 Doct. 3. The best riches a Christian hath are his vertues and gifts of his mind and therefore he saith here they are rich in Gods sight Now they are his best riches in divers respects 1. Because they are riches in Gods sight whereas all worldly treasures commend not any man to God Gal. 3.28 He gives us naked into the world and takes us himselfe naked againe 2. Because they furnish the best part of man viz. his mind wh●●eas worldly riches doe only furnish mens houses or bodies 3. Because no violence can take these treasures away A man may be vertuous spight of the hearts of all the Divells in hell or divellish men on earth whereas worldly treasures may be many waies lost 4. Because those things doe make a man rich to immortality whereas worldly riches can serve at best but for a mortall life And therefore this point shewes that godly men that seeke vertue and grace have chosen the better part and that we should all covet spirituall gifts with more earnest affections than worldlings doe outward riches And it shewes the happy estate of poore Christians they may be very rich for all their poverty outward Rev. 2.8 Neither may hypocrites please themselves with saying they are rich Rev. 3.17 for God will discover their counterfeit wares And in generall we may hence gather that the richest men in the Parish are vertuous men Doct. 4. It is evident from hence that God sees the spirits of men our hearts are all open and manifest before him Ier. 17.9 1 Kings 8.39 1 Sam. 17. Heb. 4.13 And this must needs be so because God is omniscient all eye and sees all things The Sun may cease shining but God cannot cease seeing Secondly because God formed the hearts of all men and therefore must needs know them Psal. 33.15 Thirdly because God by his providence doth specially watch over the world of spirits add daily visits mens hearts Iob 7.18 Psal. 17.3 and receives presentments of all abuses He daily tries the hearts and reins and weighes the heart of man Pro. 21.2 And therefore the Use should be divers first to reach men to labour for inward and secret goodnesse as well as outward and open conformity and to be afraid of sin in secret for no darknesse can hide from God the day and night are all one to him and though no eye of man see thee yet art thou alwaies before the eye of God We should therefore keepe our hearts with all diligence Pro. 4.23 And it may be a great comfort to the godly against all the scornes and censures of the world that traduce them as hypocrites for God sees their hearts yea it may comfort them against the imperfections of their workes for God seeth the preparations and desires of their hearts and that they would faine doe better But especially this is terrible to wicked men for if God see the hearts of men in what case are they that have such evill hearts Ob. Why will some one say what fault can God find with our hearts Sol. God sees the deadnesse and dulnesse that is in thy heart in his service He sees thy directions and how far off thy heart is from him when thou drawest neere to him with thy lips he sees thy hypocrisie and securitie and thy double and divided heart he sees thy carnall cavils and the boiling risings of thy heart against him and his truth he sees thy f●●●fulnesse and unbeliefe and the uncircumcision of thy heart thy unre●●h●blenesse and forgetfulnesse he sees all the vanities and errours of thy imaginations all thy lusts and passions and wicked desires and all th●● fram● of thy imaginations that are only evill continually he sees thy filthy nakednesse and all the Idols thou entertainest in thy heart and therefore if thou wilt not perish in the eternall abomination of God make haste to wash thine heart from wickednesse and seriously to repent of the sins of thy spirit Lastly the scope of this place teacheth us distinctly That God makes a great reckoning of such men and women as have meeke and quiet spirits There is reason for it because a quiet mind is like to Gods mind which is never stirred nor moved from everlasting to everlasting but is alwaies the same and because where the spirit is meeke and quiet there all sin is mortified and every good gift and grace doth prosper And this should be a great encouragement to all Christians and in particular to Christian wives that are meek and live quietly with their husbands for though their husbands should not love them the more or esteeme of this grace hence they may see that God will like them much the better for it and they are very comely and richly cloathed in Gods sight Ver. 5. Por even after this man●r in times past did the holy 〈◊〉 which tr●sted in God 〈◊〉 themselves and were subject to their husbands Ver. 6. As Sarah obeyed Abraham and called him Lord whose daughters ye are while ye doe well not being affraid of any terrour IN these two verses is contained the confirmation of the Proposition exhorting wives to be subject to their owne husbands ver 1. And this is made good by two reasons both taken from example the one in generall from the practice of holy women of ancient times that did so carry themselves towards their husbands ver 5. the other in particular from the practice of Sarah the mother of faithfull women ver 6. The example generally considered ver 5. is described and commended sixe wayes First for the maner of it it was in this maner that is just according to the precept now given by the Apostle Secondly for the an●iquitie of it it was so in old time Thirdly for the subject persons in whom it was found viz. not only women that did so but the holiest women Fourthly for the cause of it viz.
free women altogether from sin in these frailties because since the fall the naturall defects are tainted and there is in them a speciall kinde of defectivenesse or infirmity which cleaves to their sexe which is not so usually in men or not accompanying the nature of men Quest. What are the things wherein women are more usually fraile or defective or infirme than men 1. In capacity and judgement They are not capable of so large a measure of knowledge as men in equall comparison nor so able to teach the depths and mysteries of knowledge 2. In respect of their insufficiencie for the greatest imploiments of life as that sexe is not ordinarily capable of the great services of God in Church and Common-wealth the workes cannot be done by women 3. They are apter to be seduced than men as the Apostle implies in the case of all women as well as Eve 1 Tim. 2.14 4. In respect of dependancies They cannot make shift for themselves their desire is naturally subject to men in respect of depending upon them for provision and protection Gen. 3. This weaknesse is stamped upon the whole sexe 5. In respect of their aptnesse to feares and amazement and other perturbations more unconstant and not so stable in heart as man 6. In respect of the discovery of their hearts and natures whether in good or evill It is harder to find out throughly the perfect disposition of a woman in good or evill than of men Solomon could find out the temper of one man among a thousand men but not the heart of one woman among so many and that I take to be the true sense of that place Ecol●s 7.28 29. compared with ver 25.27 7. In respect of their pronenesse to vanity and pride in apparell which I gather from this that all the expresse directions about apparell that I remember in Scripture are given rather to women than to men especially in the New Testament as 1 Tim. 2.9 1 Pet. 3.3 The Use may be first to give us occasion to magnifie the power and mercy of God His mercy that despiseth not his weake creatures but bestoweth the grace of life upon them His power in that he keeps them in life and preserveth his owne worke of grace unto the possession of eternall life Secondly it should stirre up women so much the more to use all the Ordinances of God and all helps to make themselves strong in the power of the gifts of grace especially they should get a strong faith in God that they may trust in the power of God that giveth strength to the weake Esay 40.29 31. 1 Pet. 3.5 It will be their greater glory if they can overcome their naturall weaknesses especially if they can excell men in the things of the kingdome of God as many times it comes to passe Thirdly all Christians should have those women in great estimation that have overcome their frailties and doe excell in knowledge and piety and mercy and trust in God Fourthly all women should be therefore the more humble and apt to feare and judge themselves and more willing to be taught or admonished and more frequent in prayer to God to help them and keep them and in particular they should be the more willing to be ruled by their husbands as knowing it is a mercy of God considering their weaknesse to give them husbands to support them and provide for them And finally they should be the more faithfull and diligent to doe all the good they can in domesticall affaires seeing by nature they are not fit to manage the greater and more publike services of God The third Doctrine concernes husbands and so they are taught from hence to give the more honour to their wives because of their naturall weaknesse For as it is in the naturall body those members of the body which we think lesse honourable upon them we bestow the more aboundant honour 1 Cor. 12.23 24. so it should be in the Oeconomicall body for the wife is unto the husband bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh and this honour he should give her and shew it both by taking the more care to provide for her and by cherishing and encouraging her the more and by hiding and covering her frailties as much as he may and by not exacting more from her than she is able to performe and by helping her all he can by instruction or otherwise Only we must note that he is not bound to honour her the more for sinfull infirmities but for naturall defects How he must carry himselfe towards her in respect of sinfull infirmities or personall faults hath beene shewed before in the maner of his carriage towards her as a man of knowledge And thus of the first reason As being heires together of the grace of life In these words is contained the second reason taken from the generall dignity of Christians which also extends to Christian wives And concerning the dignity of Christians five things may be noted out of these words 1. The title of their dignitie They are heires 2. What they inherit Life 3. What the cause of this dignitie is viz. Grace 4. In what maner they possesse it viz. Together 5. The persons capable of it Woman as well as men From the coherence we may note That if women will have their husbands to honour them they must be religious women and true Christians that have grace as well as worldly portion God requires religion and grace in all wives and the rather should they be carefull to get grace and become truely religious because it was long of their sexe that sin came into the world and as by one womans bearing of a child salvation was brought againe into the world so should they every one in particular strive to recover their honour by expressing the sound power of a religious life in all faith and charitie and holinesse and sobrietie 1 Tim. 2.14 15. And besides what shall it profit wives to get them jointures on earth and husbands to provide for them while they live here if their soules and bodies perish when they die and lose the inheritance in heaven and perish they will if they get not true grace And further if they be gracious women if their husbands be so profane as not to make much of them yet they shall be greatly set by of God as was shewed vers 4. But on the other side if they be ignorant and irreligious women it is just with God to deprive them of the comforts of this life and to let their husbands neglect them or abuse them For though their husbands sin in so doing yet God is just in permitting such a thing for their punishment Secondly another doctrine may be noted from the coherence and that is That inheaven there shall bee no difference betweene husbands and wives but they shall bee all one in Christ alike heires of eternall life Which is to be noted the more to perswade them to submit themselves and
endure to be under the rule and authority of their husbands in this world for that estate of inferiority shall not last ever for in heaven God shall be all in all they shall be ruled by God and the Lambe Thus from the Coherence The first thing to be observed about the dignitie of Christians in generall is That they are heires Heires The doctrine is That all true Christians are heires Now for the opening of this doctrine two things must be considered 1. How they come to be heires 2. What their glory is in being so For the first Christians are not borne Heires I meane not heirs to God as is intended in this place but have it by the grace of adoption God hath but one Heire by generation and that is Christ all his other heires are by adoption such as hee chooseth of his meere Grace and makes them his heirs Now the mysterie of our adoption must be considered of in this manner A Christian by the Gospel is made a believer Now saith after an unspeakable manner engrafts him into the body of Jesus Christ Now being engrafted into Jesus Christ who is Gods Sonne hee thereby comes to the power to bee the Sonne of God and to be an heire with Christ. Christ is Gods Heire and so is all that is grafted upon Christ Ioh. 1.12 Now there is a double adoption the one imperfect in this life the other perfect which wee shall have after the Resurrection of the dead By the one wee have the promise of inheritance and by the other we shall have full possession Of the first is mention made Rom. 8.15 and the other Rom. 8.23 the first adoption is meant here For the second Adoption is called a glory by an excellence because there is no glory like to it even the adoption to be heires as it is in this life is the greatest glory in the world Now the glory of our adoption may appeare to be very great if we consider 1. By whom we are adopted viz. God If is be such a glory to be the Heire to any great Prince in the world what a surpassing glory is it to be the Sonne and Heire of God Rom. 8.17 and that if we respect either the excellence of God who is the King of all the earth and a●ove all kings or his eternitie he is such a Father as lives ever Hos. 1.10 An everlasting Father Esay 9.6 Other fathers that adopt may die before they passe the estate or at the best it is a kind of infelicity to enjoy the inheritance without the presence and love of the Father But not so here 2. The great price was laid downe to make us capable of this honour to be Gods Heires viz. the blood of Christ. There was never so much paid for all the inheritances in the world besides Gal 4.4 5. Heb. 9.14 15. 3. The great things we are heires to which I will but briefly touch here we are heires not only to all our eyes can see but to all things our hearts can thinke of Wee shall inherite the earth Mat. 5.5 Wee shall bee heires of the world Rom. 4. God will give us all the world yea we shall inherite eternall life as is to be shewed afterwards yea we are coheires with Christ Rom. 8.17 And what would we aske more 4. The great priviledges which Gods adopted children doe enjoy even in this life as 1. They have within them the spirit of Christ in their hearts therefore called the spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 16. Gal. 4.6 The spirit of Christ I say to drive away regall terrours and to testifie to their spirits that they are the sons of God and that he hath adopted them to heaven and to make them able to treat with God as a Father by affectionate prayer and as other Scriptures shew to lead them into all truth and to be the guide of their lives to tell them when they goe our either on the right hand or on the left And lastly to be their continuall comforter Iohn 16. Esay 30. 2. By the right of their adoption in Christ both their persons and their works are accepted before God so as they stand alwayes high in Gods favour howsoever they are entertained in the world Eph. 1.6 3. They have a name and honour shall never be taken from them an everlasting name no preferment so high as theirs Esay 56.4 5. And this is the greater priviledge because no meannesse or contemptiblenesse of condition on earth can bar them from the enjoying of this prerogative as the coherence of that place shewes 4. They have the Angels of heaven to attend them God shewes by that that he will have them looked unto as his sons and heires Heb. 1. ult 5. They may aske whatsoever they will of God and are sure to have it that may get any suit of God and he is so far from not granting that he rather complaines that they will not aske him often enough Iohn 16.23 6. If at any time they fall into distresse they have such interest in Gods speciall providence that a haire of their heads shall not fall to the ground without the providence of their heavenly Father And besides God will make himselfe marvellous in their deliverance if all worldly helps faile Esay 43.18 19 20 21. 5. If we consider the wonderfull maner of their communion with Christ and that foure wayes For first we have communion of nature with him and that by his Incarnation for he tooke our nature and so became our Brother And this doth nothing at all belong to Reprobates because Christ tooke not nature polluted with sin Heb. 2.14 Ye● we have communion with him in his divine nature as that nature doth dwell graciously in us and we are made like unto it 2 Pet. 1.4 Secondly they have communion of state with him which the Scripture acknowledgeth as a great mysterie for so they are said to live with him to suffer with him to die with him to be buried with him yea to rise with him to ascend to heaven with him and to sit together with him Eph. 2. yea to judge the world with him only preserving the difference betweene the head and the members in all this Thirdly they have communion of offices with him for he hath made them Kings and Priests with him The oile that was poured on his head hath run downe upon his members Rev. 1.5 6. so that Gods heires are all Kings and Priests A royall nation and a kingdome of Priests 1 Pet. 2.10 Fourthly they have communion in benefits with him for God as a Father hath blessed them in him with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things Ephes. 1.3 Communion they have with him in grace in this life and in glory in the life to come Lastly if we consider the assurance that Christians have given them for their right of adoption for first they have an Act for it in Gods eternall councell Eph. 1.5 Men that have an Act of
the dead that Christ might give them this light of life How should they unchangeably resolve to seeke Gods kingdome first above all things and above all gettings strive to get understanding What shall it profit them to win the whole world and lose their owne soules But especially the doctrine of life should melt the hearts of all the godly and imprint upon them the care of many duties as 1. They have cause to wonder at the exceeding riches of Gods kindnesse to them in Jesus Christ in providing such an inheritance for them Ephes. 2.7 2. They should pray earnestly to God to open their eyes more and more to see the glory of this life and effectually to take notice of the high dignity of their calling and riches of their inheritance in life Eph. 1.19 3. This should marvellously wean their hearts from the cares of this present life and from the love of earthly things seeing their inheritance lieth in spirituall and eternall life 1 Cor. 7.38 Heb. 13.4 5. 11.13 Col. 3.1 2. Phil. 3.20 4. Since they have found this precious life by the Gospel they should therefore take heed they be not carried about with divers and strange doctrine nor trouble themselves with doubtfull disputations or unprofitable questions They have found the words of eternall life and whither else will they goe Tit. 3.7 9. Heb. 13.9 5. This should make them love one another as such as shall be companions in life for ever Yea they should receive one another as Christ received them to glory Iohn 13.34 Eph. 4.2 5.1 Rom. 15.7 And in particular husbands should make much of their wives and masters of such servants as are heires with them of the grace of life as this Text shewes and Col. 3.14 6. They should strive to shew the power of this life and how much it excells naturall life and therefore the fruit of the Spirit should be in them in all goodnesse righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.9 and they should so hold forth the Word of life that they should think on whatsoever things are true honest just pure lovely and of good report and if there be any vertue or any praise they should strive to act that being carefull in all things to maintaine good workes Phil. 4.8 Tit. 3.7 8. Oh what maner of persons should they be in all maner of good conversation 7. They should lift up their heads with joy and be alwaies comfortable considering the assurance they have of eternall life they have the spirit of glory resting upon them One would think they should be alwaies singing and making melodie in their hearts though they have crosses and wants in this life yet is not God their portion and is it not enough they are provided for in respect of eternitie and is there any comparison betweene the afflictions in this world and the glory to be revealed Grace Thus of the matter of their inheritance The cause followes and that is grace Grace is either a gift in us or an attribute in God Sometimes by grace is meant the gifts God bestowes upon men and if grace were so taken then would be implied this doctrine That dead men may have the grace of God There may be grace in men without life yea men may have excellent gifts and yet be not alive spiritually as gifts of government from the Spirit of God as Saul had and gifts for edification in the Church A man may be an excellent Preacher as Iudas was and may have the gifts of prophecying and working miracles as the Reprobates mentioned Mat. 7.21 a man may have the gift of knowledge of the Scriptures as St. Paul imports 1 Cor. 8.2 Heb. 6.4 a man may confesse his sins as Pharaoh and Saul did a man may be much grieved and sorrow and humbled for his sins as Ahab and Cain and may repent too as Iudas did and may make a great profession of true religion and be very forward as Demas and Hymeneus and Phyletus did a man may be very zealous for the truth as Iohn and the Galatians were a man may pray and cry hard and often to God and be heard of God as the Israelites were in their distresses many times a man may be of an unrebukeable conversation amongst men as Paul was before his conversion and such as have sinned may reforme their lives in many things as Herod did finally a man may have faith to beleeve Gods Word as the Divels doe and to beleeve Gods promises as they that have a temporary faith doe after a sort and may joy much in the comfort of them as they concerne the godly and yet in all these gifts there was no life Another point in that sense is this That there are gifts of Gods grace bestowed on the Elect which are ever accompanied with life so as their grace is the grace of life And both these points should wonderfully awaken all sorts of Christians to looke about and trie their estates and weake Christians should diligently studie their booke of signes of true grace and marke how the Scripture proveth all those saving graces to be such as can be found in no reprobate But because I think Grace in this place cannot be taken for the gifts of grace in men I passe from these points By grace then here is meant the glorious attribute of goodnesse that is in God by which he freely sheweth his love and mercy to his creatures And that it must be taken in this sense I gather from the third of Titus v. 7. where the sentence being like grace is called there His grace we are justified by his grace and made heires of eternall life Now this grace of God as it is in God I consider of two wayes first as it is in relation to this spirituall and eternall life of Gods heires and then secondly as it is in it selfe generally considered In relation to spirituall life I consider of it both in what it excludes and what it includes Grace excludes both nature and the workes of the Law It excludes nature from this life in three respects first in respect of propagation This life cannot be propagated by naturall generation we are not borne heires of life and so the sons of God we are borne only the sons of Adam not of God They that are borne after the flesh are not the seed Rom. 9.8 Secondly in respect of priviledge By nature we are the children of wrath and therefore cannot be the children of promise Eph. 2.3 Thirdly in respect of the works of nature for by nature we doe such workes as proclaime us to be children of disobedience and children of the Divell and therefore cannot be heires of life by any workes done by nature since the fall And as it excludes nature so it excludes the workes of the Law not in respect of the obedience to the Law but in respect of the merit of life so as the inheritance cannot be had but by the workes of
the Law Rom. 4.4 11.16 nor can our best workes after calling deserve life and salvation Tit. 3.4 5. And on the other side the grace of God includes all things in life as wholly caused by Gods free favour to us in Christ. For first our election to life is from the meere grace of God Eph. 1.4.6 Secondly the meritorious cause of life is by grace Gal. 4.4.5 Thirdly the promise of life is by grace Rom. 4. 14. Gal. 3.18 Fourthly the inchoation of life is from grace whether we respect vocation Gal. 1.15 or justification Tit. 3.7 Gal. 2. ult Lastly in respect of the consummation of it in the perfection of glorie in heaven Rom. 6. ult Thus of grace in relation to life In it selfe grace is a most amiable attribute in God extending his goodnesse unto the creature without respect of deserts And that we may the more admire the glorious grace of God it will be profitable to give a touch of the fruits of it unto man upon whom he sets his favour for looke what men have interest in the grace of God these things flow upon them from the beames of that grace 1. God knowes them by name Exod. 33.12 2. When God is angry with all the world and about to declare his wrath by terrible judgements yet still they finde favour in his sight Gen. 6.8 19.19 3. When they offend and are sorrie for their offences and seeke for mercy he pardons iniquitie and takes them for his inheritance and repents him of the evill Exod. 34.9 Ioel 2.12 13. 4. He will with-hold no good thing from them Psal. 84.12 and bestowes of his best gifts upon them liberally in all sorts of gifts 1 Cor. 1.4.5 5. He will give them any thing they aske of him without hitting them in the teeth Iames 1.5 Lastly we see by this Text he gives them the inheritance of eternall life and all things that belong to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. ● 4 The Use should be to teach us many things as 1. To celebrate the praise of this graciousnesse of God seeing God doth all things so freely he stands upon it greatly to have this glory in his nature acknowledged Psal. 111.1 149.3 4. Eph. 1.6 2. To acknowledge that all good things we enjoy either in temporall or spirituall things we receive from his free grace Psal. 44.4 Eph. 2.8 for by the grace of God we are that we are 1 Cor. 15.10 3. When wee would wish the best good to others either in publike to the Churches of Christ or in private at home or abroad to any that are deare to us our cry should be Grace Grace to them Zech. 4.7 4. We should especially be moved to seek this grace of God to our selves as the sufficient and the only happinesse in the world Col. 1.6 Now that this point may the more effectually be understood I will shew you how this grace of God comes to men and then what we should strive to be that we may be sure to receive the comfort of it that God is gracious to us For the first we must know that all grace from God is given to Jesus Christ and comes by him Iohn 1.17 and therefore called The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ in the blessing at the end of the Epistles Without Christ no grace can come to sinfull men Further we must againe know that the grace of God is extended unto us from Christ by the Gospel that brings the doctrine of it to us therefore is the Word called the Word of his grace and the Gospel the Gospel of the grace of God And yet further we must know that there must be wrought in us that supernaturall gift of faith by which only we can be capable to receive this grace of God we have our accesse only by faith Rom. 5.2 Now for the second point There are many things God stands upon to finde in the persons that should receive the comfort of his grace not for the merit of them but for the honour of his owne grace that it be not abused as first we see by that which went before we must have faith to beleeve and apply to our selves the doctrine of Gods grace Secondly we must be good men not such as are men of wicked devices or such as make a mocke of sin but such as are carefull in all their waies to avoid what may displease so gracious a God Pro. 12.2 14.9 Tit. 2.11 12. Thirdly we must be lowly and humble persons that attribute nothing to our selves but all to Gods goodness Pro. 3.34 Iames 4.6 1 Pet. 5. And therefore it concernes all Christians to take heed that they rest not in the hearing of the doctrine of Gods grace but must labour truely and effectually to know Gods grace to themselves Col. 1.6 5. This doctrine of Gods grace may wonderfully comfort the godly and establish their hearts in the assured expectation of heaven when they die for nothing can hinder their comfort and hope herein but only their unworthinesse and that is removed by this doctrine of Gods grace thus the Apostle faith We have good hope through grace 2 Thes. 2.16 and againe We have accesse unto this grace by which we stand and rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God Rom. 5.2 6. It may wonderfully embolden us in our suits and requests to goe to Gods Throne seeing it is a Throne of grace where petitions are granted freely and great suits as easily as lesser Heb. 4.16 7. Men should be warned to take heed that they doe not transgresse against this doctrine of the grace of God And men sin against the grace of God fearefully foure wayes First when they frustrate it in the doctrine of it which they doe partly when they receive the doctrine of it in vaine and faile of the right knowledge of it 2 Cor. 6.1 Heb. 1● 15 partly when they trust upon the merits of their owne workes Gal. 2. ult Secondly when they fall away from grace either by relapsing to the world by entertaining the corruptions they had forsaken or by removing the sincere doctrine of Gods grace Gal. 5.4 Thirdly when men turne the grace of God into wantonnesse and draw wicked and licentious conclusions from the pure doctrine of Gods grace making it a cloake for their sinfull liberties Iud. 1.4 Rom. 6.1 Fourthly when men despite the spirit of grace that shewes it selfe either in the power of Gods ordinances or in the practice of true Christians Heb. 10.29 8. It should be a wonderfull comfort to a Christian against his owne frailties and daily infirmities according to that of the Apostle We are not under the Law but under Grace Rom. 6.14 15. Lastly even the more gracious God is the more carefull we should be to walke worthy of his grace for as the Apostle saith The grace of God that bringeth salvation unto all men teacheth us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live righteously and soberly
as God can curse the very blessings of the wicked so can he and doth blesse the seeming curses of the godly All shall worke together for the best to them that love God Rom. 2.28 All things are to bee measured for good or ill according to the use of them to us That which doth us hurt cannot be a blessing and that which doth us good cannot be a curse Now for the particular unfolding of this blessing they inherit we must know that godly Christians inherit blessing divers wayes 1. From other men and so the poore blesse them for their charity The blessing of him that is ready to perish many times comes upon them Iob 29.13 Their very loynes blesse them Iob 31.20 and their neighbours blesse them for peace making Mat. 5.8 and the godly blesse them for their gifts of grace and pray for Gods blessings upon them Psal. 134.3 and if they have any publike employments for God in Church or Common-wealth the eare that heareth them blesseth them Iob 29.11 And at some times God doth so guide and prosper the wayes of his servants that all sorts of men doe acknowledge them for the seed which the Lord hath blessed Esay 61.8 2. From their owne consciences if the world at any time testifie against him or revile him yea if Divells and men set against him yet he inherits this blessing that his owne conscience will witnesse for him to his singular joy 2 Cor. 1.12 The daily encouragements of a good conscience are like a continuall fea●● within 3. From God and so they have Gods blessing certaine and this is a great inheritance and hath so much happinesse in it as it should swallow up all the grievance of afflictions and the contempts and scornes of the world It is enough if we have Gods blessing Now that this point may be distinctly beaten out we must understand that true Christians may be said to inherit Gods blessing first in a more restrained sense and then in a more large sense In a restrained sense blessing may here be taken for Gods comfortable speaking for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies blessing by words and so it answers to the coherence If they will use good words to men God will speake good words to them And in this sense we may hence gather That Gods naturall language to the called of Jesus Christ is blessing or comfortable words God will speake to his people peace Psal. 84.5 and therefore he gives a charge to his Ministers to speake comfortably to Jerusalem Esay 40.1 2. Secondly that Gods Elect never find this till they have their calling Thirdly that it is a great inheritance in this life to have God to speake well to us Fourthly that if the fault be not in us we shall never have God speake otherwise It is our inheritance to comfort us against all the miseries of life And therefore Ministers that are the mouth of God should studie comfort much and those Christians that desire to have the fruit of their inheritance in this thing should provide to live in such places where God speakes to men And those Ministers have a great account to make that set themselves to speake disgracefully and terribly to such as feare God striving to discourage their hearts and to strengthen the hands of the wicked Thus of the restrained sense onely note by the way That God speaks good words both for his people behind their backs and to his people before their faces They inherit Gods good word for them in their absence Thus God speakes excellently in the praise of Iob to the Divell before the Angels Iob 1. 2. and thus he can speake in the consciences of the greatest on earth in praise of his people as Esay 41.9 Now in the generall sense Gods people enjoy this blessing many waies and that both in this life and in the life to come In this life they have his blessing 1. In temporall things of all sorts he makes the earth blesse them and the heavens and the waters Gen. 49.25 he blesseth them in the Citie and in the field in the fruit of their bodies and of the ground and of their cattell in their basket and in their store when they come in and when they goe out yea God will command the blessing upon them in their store-houses and upon all they set their hands to and he will open his good treasures unto them and blesse all the worke of their hands Deut. 28.2 3 4 5 6 8 12. And if they enjoy not so much in quality of these things as some wicked men yet they have a faire portion and a good blessing because that they have is blessed both in the originall of it and in the nature of it and in the use of it and in their right to it 2. In the meanes of grace and salvation and so they enjoy the blessing of God in his house-keeping and great is that blessing wherewith God blesseth his people in his house on his holy hill and round about The Lord hath long since promised to make all the places about his holy hill blessings Yea there Gods people doe receive showers of blessing every powerfull Sermon is a shower of blessing every doctrine being as a blessed drop of instruction or comfort Ezek. 34.26 Exod. 20.24 Psal. 132.15 3. In the gifts of grace and so he hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things A poore Christian carrieth about with him in his heart more treasure than all the Monarchs of the world being not true Christians can any way possesse or command Eph. 1.3 Thus of Gods blessing in this life After this life who can recount the glory of their inheritance in the blessing they shall have then from God Oh that our hearts could be enlarged to thinke of the power of these words of Christ at the last day Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the kingdome prepared for you before the foundation of the world The Use should be for great comfort to all true Christians They have great cause to rejoyce in their fathers blessing all their dayes and the rather if they consider that Gods blessing as a Father is better than the blessing of any earthly father for an earthly fathers blessingis most an end but verball in words Gods blessing is reall indeeds A father on earth cannot derive blessing to his child from himselfe but from God whereas Gods blessing is from himselfe Besides if an earthly father would blesse his childe yet he wants power to give him what he desires but God our Father is Almighty able to give as much as he wisheth Gen. 28.3 Finally an earthly fathers blessing may be lost as Chams was but Gods blessing cannot be lost he will blesse with everlasting mercy Secondly such as yet enjoy not the priviledge of Gods called ones should be greatly stirred up with desire to get this blessing even to have Gods blessing Let no man be
to carry themselves to God 351 352 How many wayes Gods People are the only beloved one●● 361 S. Peter what he was by name and office 1 2 Plagues Spirituall Plagues are worse than ●●mporall 〈◊〉 for 〈…〉 reasons 302 Power Questions concerning Gods Power in keeping of us 43 Excellent uses of it 44 Prayer What we must doe that God may answer our Prayer 85 Prayer how it may be hindred both in the bearing and making of it 671 The excellencie of Prayer in 〈◊〉 respects 669 From whence its 〈◊〉 doe arise 670 Praise Wherein it is unlawfull to seeke the Praise of men 448 If 〈…〉 would be praised they must doe well 449 〈◊〉 to get Praise from men 450 P●ecious Christ is so 〈…〉 wayes 254 255 The reasons why he is 〈…〉 with men ●55 What uses are 〈…〉 〈◊〉 256 Prescience Prescience 1. Absolute 2. Speciall 3. Of approbation 8 How God for●knoweth 9 How his Foreknowledge may comfort us in our distresses 9 10 What it may teach us 10 Terrible to the wicked in foure respects 11 Preservation Faith doth ten things to further our Preservation 45 46 Presumption How to know whether we sin presumptuously or no 115 Priests The godly are Priests in many respects 264 265 The uses of it 265 The Priesthood of Christians is a singular priviledge 320 Princes All good Christians must be obedient to their Princes 422 Ministers should teach and presse this duty 423 The submission that belongs to them hath sixe things in it 425 Pure In what respects godly men may be said to be Pure 597 A Christians Puritie hath in it many things 597 598 Q QUicken What we must doe to Quicken our hearts 260 Quiet Sixteene helps to a Quiet life in marriage 576 Five speciall causes of their unquietnesse 577 Helpes to cause them to bee Quiet 578 Helps to attaine quietnesse 616 〈◊〉 things of singular use to keepe us quiet in trouble 673 R RAiling Reviling The wicked are prone to it 687 It is a great sin ibid. Though we be reviled we must not revile againe ibid. Excellent uses of it ibid. c. Reason The facultie of Reason in the soule and wherein it excels 382 Recreations Rules for them 104 105 Redemption Of all other doctrines we must be sure to know the doctrine of our Redemption 137 138 Wee are redeemed from sixe things 139 Five degrees of Redemption from vaine conversation 141 Seven signes of it ibid. Two wayes our Redemption is ratified 159 Refuse Christ many waies refused 298 Regeneration How it depends on Christs resurrection 38 Rejoice Rejoicing Vide Joy 54 55 56 72 c. Religion How hard a thing it is to reduce a man from his Religion though it be never so absurd 390 A religious life is the best life 541 Repentance Against such as presume on late Repentance 417 Their vaine objections for it answered ibid. c. Repentance of sin doth in divers respects kill a man 538 Divers things in Christs death which ought to be in our Repentance 539 Why Repentance is called a new birth with five differences betweene false and true Repentance 184 Report The lot of the righteous is to be evill spoken of 393 The causes and causers ibid. c. How hurtfull it is to report evill of the good 394 Reasons against it ibid. c. In what cases it is odious 395 Helps to beare them 396 To have a good Report among men is a great blessing of God 447 Reproaches They are to be avoyded as much as in us lies 457 That onely fooles reproach good men 465 Reprobation Proofes of Reprobation 311 Observations for consolation in the point of Reprobation 312 Resurrection Foure benefits of Christs Resurrection 35 Christ risen in the Old Testament three waies 37 How our regeneration depends on Christs Resurrection 38 It is a great wonder with an excellent use thereof 159 The glory given to Christ after his Resurrection shewed in eight things 160 Revelation A twofold Revelation of Christ 69 God hath revealed his will three waies 1. By the light of nature 2. By the booke of the creatures 3. By his word 77 And by that many wayes ibid. Distinctions of Revelations 86 A difference betweene Revelation and Knowledge ibid. We have sixe sorts of Revelations under the Gospel 87 Why the day of judgement is called The Revelation of Iesus Christ 111 Revenge It is unlawfull 686 Reviling What it is 526 Who are guilty of it 527 Not to render Reviling for Reviling 528 Rich Riches The wofull estate of Rich men 138 139 Vertue and grace are a Christians best Riches 618 Righteous Righteousnesse Signes that desery a Righteous man in himself 542 Sixe other signes of Righteousnesse as it groweth 543 How the Righteousnesse of a Righteous man differs from the Righteousnesse of a Pharisee ibid. Why so few embrace Righteousnesse 544 Helps thereunto 545 Defects of Righteousnesse 546 Defects in the manner of doing Righteously 547 Royall Christians are Royall many wayes 318 S SAcrifices Christians have divers sorts of Sacrifices 266 Speciall lawes to be observed in offering our Sacrifices 268 269 The use of it ibid. What to doe to make our Sacrifices acceptable 270 271 Three comforts from an acceptable Sacrifice 271 Saints Saints are strangers 4 In foureteene things they should be strangers 4 5 See more 132 Salvation What it imperteth in the originall 48 Salvation may be said to be prepared for us five wayes 49 50 To whom revealed 50 In the last day revealed three wayes ibid. Excellent uses of this revelation of Salvation ibid. c. Foure signes of the perswasion of our Salvation 75 76 Such as have the Assurance of Salvation should looke to foure things 77 Why such a multitude of men enquire so little after Salvation 81 We ought to devote our selves to the study of it ibid. We must study our Salvation with diligence 82 Divers wayes from God to further our Salvation 594 Salutation Of the usuall forme of Salutations 27 Sanctification Man is sanctified three wayes 1. Ex non sancto privativè 2. Ex minùs sancto 3. Ex non sancto negativè 14 What need our spirits have to be sanctified 15 This lyeth in two things 1. In cleansing it from sin 2. In adorning it with grace ibid. The Spirit is cleansed by eight things 16 Three things which adorne the mind in Sanctification 1. A heavenly light 2. A humble mind 3. A pure imagination ibid. The nature subject forme cause and end of our Sanctification 162 163 164. c. Two things in our Sanctification 1. Healing 2. Cleansing 164 Scandall It is defined 302 Christ a Scandall to the wicked many wayes 304 Wherein we are not to regard the offence of wicked men 305 In what things we may be guilty in giving Scandall to wicked men 306 Rules for the preventing of a Scandall ibid. c. Rules for it in matter of Ceremonies 436 Scripture Proofes of doctrine are to be fetcht from Scripture 124 The Scripture why so
called 272 Wherein it exceeds all other writings ibid. Servants Service How we are to serve God 473 Who are rejected from the number of Gods Servants 474 It is an excellent freedome to be a Servant of God 475 Their prerogatives ibid. Servants are of divers sorts 486 For what cause Servitude came in ibid. How a godly Servant may comfort himselfe in his estate 488 They must be subject three wayes 490 Helps in their subjection ibid. They are to shew their feare of God in their callings 492 Their feare towards their Masters shewed divers wayes 493 Sheep Signes of a lost Sheep 557 Hopes of returning 558 Motives to returne 559 The time when the number and meanes 560 The maner and signes of returning 561 The lets 562 Shepherd What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepherd 563 564 He is the one true great and good Shepherd 564 The happinesse of such as live under this Shepherd appeares in ten things 565 Shew Seven wayes whereby we may offend by outward Shewes 333 Motives to the Shew of vertue 334 Sicknesse Vide Healing How it comes into the soule 548 The Sicknesse of the soule grievous many wayes 549 Why many feele not the Sicknesse of the soule ibid. Silence To put to Silence is diversly accepted 455 Sin Sixe wayes by which one mans Sin is derived on another 141 How many wayes Sin hinders the growth of the word 200 A man may be said to make Sin many wayes 522 523 How Christ had no Sin 524 Inwhat respect Christ bare our Sins 531 His sufferings fitted to our Sins 532 Men are said to be alive in Sin many wayes 535 Their miserie great that so doe ibid. Sinner To be a worker of Iniquitie what and three wayes manifested 397 Sion The Church is like Mount Sion in many respects 276 How the Citizens of this City may be knowne 277 Their speciall priviledges 279 Sober Sobrietie A fixefold Sobrietie 104 Sojourners Vide Saints and Strangers 4 5 132 Soule What it is 76 Soule taken many wayes 367 Its description ibid. Seven things considerable in it ibid. c. It is a substance but not bodily 368 It is immortall 369 Its originall 371 Anima non est ex traduce 372 God creates the Soule 373 374 Objections against it answered 374 375 Of the union of the Soule with the body 376 Shewed by many similies 377 By what band the Soule is bound to the body ibid. The faculties of the Soule 378 Its five senses 379 The inward senses three 380 The Soule gives to the body a threefold motion 311 The facultie of reason in the Soule and wherein it excells 382 The end of its creation 383 Foure kinds of warre against the Soule 384 The Flesh wars against the Soule five wayes ibid. How the Soule comes to be diseased 548 The sicknesse of the Soule grievous many wayes 149 Many feele it not ibid. The Soule synechdochically signifieth the whole man 17● Speaking Vide Evill-speaking and Report Spirit What need our Spirit● have to be sanctified ●5 In what its sanctification consisteth ibid. Eight things belong thereto 16 Why the Spirit is called the Holy Ghost 93 Why the Holy Spirit ibid. Sprinkling The meaning of that ceremonie of Sprinkling Christs bloud 22 A fourefold legall Sprinkling 22 23 c. The manifold passages of Sprinkling the Passeover opened 25 26 Statutes God hath foure Statute books 149 Foure praises of those Statutes ibid. Stone How Christ is said to be first a Stone secondly a living Stone 249 250 This Stone disallowed how and by whom 251 252 Wicked men compared to Stones in many respects 258 So the godly also ibid. Reasons why we ought to be lively Stones 259 That Christ is laid as a foundation Stone imports many things 276 A corner Stone 282 Elect and precious ibid. Strangers Who and why man is a Stranger even in five respects 3 4 The Elect are Strangers 4 And in foureteene things they should be like Strangers 4 5 The word Stranger literally and mystically taken 132 Prettie allusions from Israels being in Egypt 132 c. We should carry our selves as Strangers 364 Submission The Submission which belongs to Princes and Magistrates hath sixe things in it 425 Objections against this Submission answered 427 Suffer The markes of such as truely suffer with Christ 315 Divers wayes of Suffering 514 Christ Suffered for us in divers respects 517 518 His Sufferings were for our examples 519 Ten things to be followed by the examples of Christs Sufferings 521 Christs Sufferings 〈…〉 532 He suffered in his body and soule 533 Why he suffered on a tree 534 T TAbernacle Christ hath a fivefold Tabernacle 261 A godly man like a Tabernacle in many respects 262 Excellent uses hereof 263 Taste What will bring us unto a good Taste of Gods goodnesse 239 240 Our true Taste is seene both by the causes and effects 241 Wherein the Taste of the godly and wicked differ 242 How far the Taste of the wicked may goe 243 The uses of it 243 244 We can have but a Taste of Gods sweetnesse in this life 244 The uses of it ibid. The true causes of the want of Taste to the Word 245 When we have tasted of it we must not lose our Appetite 246 Temptation Foure sorts of it 57 Sathan tempts five wayes 58 Thirteene degrees of it ibid. c. How Sathans Temptations differ from our owne concupiscence 59 60 Comforts against Temptation 60 Twelve rules in Temptation 61 God tempts man sixe wayes 62 Seven wayes in affliction 62 63 Testimonie The Scripture is our sure Testimonie and thence how our Testaments are to be fetcht 124 125 Time Times Foure sorts of men have enquired about Times 1. The curious 2. The weake 3. The superstitious 4. The wise 83 Tradition The word is taken five waies 89 90 How many wayes children are infected by the Tradition of their fathers 142 Why those Traditions should be so infectious ibid. c. Trust. Five things pertaining to a perfect Trust 105 Nine wayes to shew our Trust 108 Truth What it is 175 What it is to obey the Truth how 176 V VAine-glory Wherein it is seene 512 Verily The word oft used in Scripture and that for three speciall causes 150 151 How many wayes we shew forth the Verilies of Christ 332 333 Why the Verilies that are in us are called Christs Verilies 334 Vertue How the word is taken in the Originall 327 Nine Vertues in Christ which we should shew forth 329 Vertue and Grace are a Christians best riches 618 Vessell The word Vessell diversly taken 642 Visit Visitation Men are said to visit diversly 412 So God also ibid. c. First in judgement 413 Secondly in mercy 414 Signes of such as he visits in mercy 415 What glorious things the day of Visitation brings forth 419 Uncleannesse Two waies contracted 25 Unitie Of Unitie in mind or judgement 674 675 Helpes thereto 676 Aggravations against discord in opinion 677 Many ill causes of
doctrine may serve for three uses First It may confute that cavill of carnall men that Religion will make men dumpish and melancholy whereas the cleane contrary we see here is true 2. It greatly reproves the uncheerfulnesse of many professors who doe thereby greatly darken the glory of Religion and cause the way of God to be evill spoken of besides the hurt they doe themselves through unthankfulnesse and unbeleefe exposing themselves to the tentations either of sinne or apostasie together with a continuall unfitnesse to all duties of piety and this ariseth out of aptnesse either to passion of anger or worldly griefe 3. It may teach us to seek the ioyes of God and having found them to be carefull by all meanes to preserve them But what shall I doe to preserve the ioyes of God in my heart First keep thy self free from the allowance of the least sin violate not the peace of thy conscience Secondly digest the promises concerning infirmities after calling Thirdly take heed of omission or carelesse use of Gods ordinances Lastly care not for the world but retire thy selfe else from thence will flow unavoidable unrest Before I passe from these words yet two things more may be briefly touched First in that he ●aith yee rejoyce he seemeth to import that true ioy is onely in converted Christians For as for the ioyes that the men of this world have they are not true For besides there is much vanitie and madnesse in them there is also much danger in them for they breed security and men shall be called to account for them yea men may lose their soules for them Secondly where he saith wherein hee meanes in which benefits of regeneration glorification preservation c. whence may be briefly noted that the chiefest ioyes of Christians are in spirituall things it ill beseemes Christians to set their hearts on earthly things But is it not lawfull to delight our selves in earthly pleasures It is with these rules First thou must be sure thou hast repented of thy sins before thou allow thy selfe liberty for pleasures 2. Thou must not make a vocation of recreation 3. Thou must spend onely thy owne time upon them not the Lords 4. Thou must avoid scandalous delights and such games as are of evill report 5. Thou must watch over thine owne heart that thy recreations steale not away thine heart from the delight of better things but be used rather as an helpe unto them Lastly note from hence that they onely are fit to give testimony of the ioyes of a converted estate that have had experience of it themselves trust not the iudgements of carnall persons for the dignity utility and durablenesse of the graces of godlinesse And thus of the first reason Though now for a season you are in heavinesse There are divers sorts of heavinesse 1. There is the heavinesse of the desperate such was that in Cain and Iudas 2. and the heavinesse of the disappointed such was the heavinesse of Haman Ahab and Ammon when they could not compasse their ambitious covetous and voluptuous ends 3. And there is the heavinesse of the melancholy and of the scandalized 4. There is the heavinesse of the penitent for sinnes 5. and of the afflicted for crosses 6. There is a heavinesse in Gods children after calling for spirituall respects as for corruption of nature for absence of Christ for want of the meanes for the dishonour of God in publike abominations for the miseries of the Church for Gods threatnings and anger for the desire of death for hardnesse of heart and for speciall sins after calling Quest. But may not Gods children be heavy for crosses Answ. They may and I think that may be meant here but then these rules must be noted First that their heavinesse be rather for some sinne in themselves which might cause the crosse then for the crosse it selfe Secondly that their heavinesse be moderate Quest. But when is sorrow for afflictions moderate Answ. First when it exceeds not the measure of sorrow for sin 2. Secondly when it withdrawes not the heart from God and holy duties through passionate and incredulous perturbations but it is to be noted in the generall that the Apostle is very loth to grant them liberty for heavinesse but it is with many limitations as 1. it must be but a little season 2. they must be sure need doth require it 3. it may not be allowed for many crosses that will not be allowed for lesser or fewer tentations For a season The troubles and griefs of Gods children are but for a season for a moment God hides his face but a little while and the reason is because afflictions are used of God but as plaisters or medicines or as a ●urnace Now in as much as the godly will quickly judge themselves and make their peace therefo●e the Lord will soone draw off the crosse the plaister shall lie no longer than till the sore be whole and the goldsmith will let his metall lye in the fire no longer than till the drosse be● melted off or it be fit to be wrought upon Now if crosses should continue long in our reckoning say it were the whole life of a man what is mans life even a vapour that appeareth a little time Besides what can thy longest crosses be in comparison of the paines of the damned from which thou art delivered or of the joyes and glory of heaven which thou shalt possesse Yea what is that thou dost suffer in comparison of what thou deservest but yet I say it is but a season as wee account seasons even a small part of the life of the godly For either the Lord removes the crosse or takes away the sting of it or sweetens it with his mercies The Use may be to teach us to check the unquietnesse and failings of our hearts and to be ever ashamed of our selves that we should make so much of our crosses and so little of Gods mercies we should learne seeing they are but for a season to hold fast the confidence of our hope and live by faith and if the Lord be angry to hide our selves for a little season till his indignation be past If need require Here three things may be observed First that Christians man● times make crosses to themselves and draw heavinesse upon their hearts through feares and suspitions and unquietnesse where there is no need this is a great fault and usually is a great scourge For by such distempers they many times lessen the comforts of God and their credit with Gods children Secondly crosses and griefes are sometimes needfull needfull I say to hide our pride to weane us from the world to put us in minde of death to make us desire heaven to drive us to seeke more grace and holinesse to prevent sinne to come to humble us for sinnes