Selected quad for the lemma: church_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
church_n apostle_n call_v evangelist_n 3,049 5 9.9516 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

who is mentioned Ch. 4.17 and that Epaphras one that was borne amongst them being instructed by Paul was sent thither to build them vp further For the second the Occasion of this Epistle was this After that there was a Church here gathered by the power of the Gospell Sathan after his wonted manner stirred vp corrupt teachers who by crosse and contrary teaching did mightily labour to disgrace the Ministerie and hinder the efficacie of the doctrine of their faithfull Minister these men taught Philosophicall Positions and vaine Speculations vrged the Ceremonies of the Iewes and brought in praying to Angels and such like infectious stuffe Epaphras herevpon being oppressed with the madnesse and fury of th●se Impes of Sathan resorts to Paul who lay in prison at Rome and acquainting him with the state of the Church procures him to write this Epistle Thirdly the Treatise it selfe stands of fiue parts first an Exordium ch 1. to v. 12. Secondly a Proposition liuely expressing the doctrine of Christ and his Kingdome from v. 12. to the 23. Thirdly an Exhortation containing a perswasion from v. 23. of ch 1. to v. 8. of ch 2. and a disswasion from v. 8. of ch 2. to the end of ch 2. Fourthly an institution of manners giuing rules first in generall ch 3.1 to 18. secondly in speciall from v. 18. of ch 3. to v. 2. of ch 4. And lastly a Conclusion from v. 2. of ch 4. to the end Or briefely thus setting aside the Entrance and the Con●lusion the Apostle entreates of matters of Faith in the first two Chapters and of matters of Life in the two last And thus in generall of the whole Epistle with the persons to whom and the occasion thereof The first part of the Epistle is the Exordium and it stands of two members a Salutation and a Preface The Salutation ver 1.2 and the Preface from vers 3. to the 12. In the Salutation I consider three things first the persons saluting secondly the persons saluted thirdly the Salutation it selfe The Persons saluting are an Apostle and an Euangelist the Apostle is described by his Name PAVL by his Office an Apostle by the principall e●●icient that preferred him to that office and both appointed him his seruice and protected him in it viz. IESVS CHRIST and lastly by the impulsiue cause viz. the will of God The Euangelist is described first by his name TIMOTHY secondly by his adiunct estate a Brother First of the words that describe the Apostle and heare first the meaning of them and then the Doctrines to be obserued out of them Paul The Apostle at his Circumcision was called Saul For being of the Tribe of Beniamin it seemes the men of that Tribe did in honour of their King Saul who was the first of all the Kings of Israel and by a kinde of emulation to retaine the first glory of their Tribe more respecting the outward honour of Saul in that hee was a King then the curse of God in his reiection did vse to giue the name of Saul to their Children very often as a name of great honour And not vnfitly did this name light vpon this Beniamite both if wee regard him as hee was before his calling or after before his calling as the olde Saul persecuted Dauid so did this yongling Saul comming freshly out of the mint of a Pharise persecute Christ who came of Dauid And after his calling as it was said of olde Saul by way of Prouerbe Is Saul also among the Prophets So may it be said of this Saul by way of honour Saul is among the Apostles and that not the least of the Apostles for hee laboured more abundantly then they all Concerning this other name PAVL Writers are diuersly minded Some thinke that thirteene yeeres after Christ by the condict of the Apostles he receiued both his Apostleship ouer the Gentiles and this name Others thinke that hee tooke vnto himselfe this name of Paulus to professe himselfe the least of all Apostles Others thinke the name was giuen him for some eminent prayse of some qualitie or action as Peter was called Cephas and Iames and Iohn called Boanarges and Iacob called Israel Some thinke he had two names as Salomon was called also Iedidiah and Mathew called Leui and these should seeme to be giuen by his Parents to professe his interest amongst both Iewes and Romanes Among Iewes by the Hebrew name Saul and among the Romanes by the Latine name Paulus Some thinke it is but the varying of the language as Iohn Iothanan Iehar and Iohannes all are but differing in seuerall languages Lastly it is most likely hee was called Paul for memory of the first spoyles hee brought into the Church of Christ not the head but the heart of Sergius Paulus that noble Romane and this is more probable because in all the Chapters before hee is neuer called Paul Apostle This word in the generall signification importeth one that is sent and so Epiphroditus is called an Apostle but the Etimologie of the word is larger then the vsuall application of it for it is vsually giuen to the twelue principall Disciples and to Paul and Barnabas and so it is vsed as a tearme of distinction from other Church-Officers for they had their Widdowes for the sicke Deacons for the poore Doctors for instruction Pastors for exhortation and these were standing and ordinary Officers Now there were extraordinarie viz. Apostles and Euangelists the Apostles were men immediately called by Christ and had generall charge ouer all the Churches for planting and gouerning them the Euangelists were called most by the Apostles and sent with spirituall charge whither the Apostles saw most conuenient Iesus Christ. These title giuen to the Messias are not in vaine vsed or ioyned together for by these names both his Office and his Worke are described In the one name CHRIST shewing what he vndertooke to be in the oth●r shewing what hee was viz. IESVS a Sauiour the one Name viz. IESVS an Hebrew word is for the Iewes and the other Name CHRIST a Greeke word is for the Gentiles the one shewing that hee was God for besides mee there is no Sauiour the other shewing that he was Man viz. Christ the annoynted For in respect of his humane nature is this annoynting with graces or gifts attributed to Christ. Againe Christs were of two sorts viz. false Christs Mat. 24. and true Christs the true were eyther Typicall and so the Prophets Priests and Kings were annoynted hence in the Psalme Touch not my Christs c. or Essentiall and so onely the Sonne of Mary By the will of God These words are expounded Gal. 1.1 where hee is said to be an Apostle not of men as Princes send ciuill Embassadours or as the Iewes sent false Apostles nor by men as Timothy Titus Luke c. who were ordayned by man and as Titus did ordaine Elders Or else not by the
might be grounded and stablished 147 What a free spirit is 147 Why many after so long profession are so vnsetled 147.148 Concerning Hope 1. what Hope is not true Hope 2. what persons haue no Hope 3. what are the effects and properties of true Hope 149 How the Gospell is preached to euery creature 151 Why godly men are so chearefull in affliction 153 How Paul was said to fulfill the rest of the affliction of Christ. 154 How our afflictions are the afflictions of Christ. 155 Twelue Arguments against the Crosse. 157 How we may know wee are of Gods houshold 158 What good men get by their Ministers 159 How many wayes the Gospell is hidden 161. and how reuealed 165 What a ciuill honest man wants 165.166 What we must doe to preserue affection to the word 167 The Gospell is a glorious Mysterie 168 Nine Vses of the Doctrine of the calling of the Gentiles ibid. How Christ is conceiued in the soule of the faithfull 170.171.172 How we may know that Christ is in our hearts 170.171.172 The Benefits that come by the inhabitation of Christ. 170.171.172 What entertainment we ought to giue him 170.171.172 Who haue not Christ in them 170.171.172 The honour dutie and reproofe of Ministers 173 Reasons to perswade vs to suffer admonition 174 How wee are perfect in this life 176 The chiefest Typographicall Errours ERRATA IN the Epistle to the Reader line 6. for counsell reade consent l. 21. for Dedicatory r. Dedication p. 3. l. 41. for Iothanan Iebar r. Iochanan Iehan p. 10. l. 4. for order r. ardor ibid l. 28. for all r. at p. 25. l. 13. for definitions r. definitiues p. 35. l. 47. as loue for all loue p. 41. l. 47. holy life for holy loue ibid. l. 49. loue for Lord. p. 51. l. 27. straying for strange p. 60. l. 23. salutiferans for salutiferous p. 62. l. 48. guilefull for gaulefull p. 63. l. 1. modest and for modest and. l. 6. this for his p. 69. sent forth for send forth p. 73. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 88. l. 13. any for and. p. 92. l. 53 our for one p. 113. l. 13. of God for sonne of God l. 20. and the very bottome for out of the very bosome p. 114. l. 46. decree for decreed p. 122. l. 49. seruice for Sauiour p. 129. l. 27. repayes for repayres p. 140. l. 39. it is not for is it not AN EXPOSITION VPON THE WHOLE Epistle to the COLOSSIANS COLOS. 1.1.2 Verse 1. Paul an Apostle of IESVS CHRIST by the will of God and Timotheus a Brother 2. To them which are at Colosse Saints and faithfull Brethren in CHRIST Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and the Lord IESVS CHRIST TWO things are worthy our consideration in this EPISTLE the Author and the Matter the Author was PAVL concerning whom memorable things are recorded hee was an Hebrew of the Hebrewes of the Tribe of Beniamin a Pharise the Sonne of a Pharise borne in Tharsus of Cilicia circumcised the eight day brought vp in the knowledge of the Law and Pharisaicall institutions by Gamaliel a great Doctor among the Iewes acquainted also with the Languages of forraine Nations as his quoting of the authorities of Greeke Poets shewes and in his youth for the righteousnesse externall which was after the Law he was vnrebukeabl● and full of zeale but withall a violent and blasphemous persecuter His Calling was exceeding glorious his Office vnto which he was called was great and honourable viz. to be the Legate of CHRIST the Doctor of the Gentiles the Minister of God of Christ of the Spirit of the new Testament of the Gospell of reconciliation and of righteousnesse Hee was famous for his labour in the Word by which hee caused the Gospell to runne from Hierusalem to Illiricum with admirable swiftnesse as also for his faithfulnesse of minde for his pure conscience for his affection to the faithfull for his humanitie and curtesie for his continencie for his humilitie for his care for the Churches for his honest conuersation innocencie and constancie hee was of nature earnest acute and heroicall Adde vnto these the praises of his sufferings what reproach what stripes what imprisonments what beating with rods and such like wrongs did he endure fiue times of the Iewes receiued hee fortie stripes saue one once was he stoned thrice hee suffered shipwracke night and day was hee in the deepe Sea in iourneying often in perils of waters of robbers of his owne Nation of the Gentiles in the Citie in the Wildernes in the Sea and among false brethren how hee was daily pressed with wearinesse painefulnesse watchings hunger thirst fastings cold and nakednesse besides the incombrances and cares for the businesse of the Churches Finally we may consider the testimony giuen to his doctrine to proue it to be without all mixture of error And this Testimony stands of foure branches 1. His immediate calling 2. His immediate instruction and information 3. The visible donation of the holy Ghost which was not onely giuen to himselfe but he also conferred it by imposition of hands to others 4. His working of Miracles for so he saith of himselfe The signes of an Apostle were wrought among you with all patience with wonders and great workes hee raised a man from the dead Neyther could the miracles wrought by him be small when Handkerchiefes were brought from his body to the sicke and their diseases departed from them yea Diuels went out of them Lastly this noble Iew more famous among the Apostles then euer the great Saul was among the Prophets was beheaded by the Emperour Nero the 29. of Iune in the 70. yeere of the Lord. And all this should cause vs with all reuerence both to teach and learne the Celestiall doctrine deliuered in writing to the Churches by him Thus of the Author the M●tter followeth I meane not to search after the def●ants and conceits that some obserue concerning the workes of this Worthy as that he should write ten Epistles to the Churches to answere the number of ten Commandement and foure Epistles to particular persons to expresse his agreement with the foure Euangelists onely this in generall for his hearers or Auditorie hee had the Romanes the greatest in the earth for power the Grecians the most famous for wit and learning and the Iewes or Hebrewes of greatest note for diuine vnderstanding of the Law of God But to leaue this I come to the Matter of the Epistle and obserue three things 1 To whom he writeth 2 Vpon what occasion 3 The Treatise it selfe For the first Colosse was a Citie in Phrigia in Asia the lesse neere to Laodicea and Hierapolis The Church in this Citie was not first gathered by Paul but as some thinke by Epaphras whom they take to haue been one of the seauenty Disciples and an Euangelist Some say they were first conuerted by Archippus
Commendation paines or instruction of any man Thus farre of the meaning of the words The Doctrines follow Paul an Apostle Here three Doctrines may be obserued first great sinners may proue great Saints a great enemie of sincere Religion may proue a great founder of Churches a great oppressor of Gods Seruants may proue a great feeder of Gods flocke In a word a persecuter as wee see here may be an Apostle This Doctrine as it doth excellently sample out Gods vnsearchable mercy so it teacheth vs not to despayre of any but to continue to pray for euen the vilest and most spitefull aduersaries and the most open oppugners and vsuall traducers of Gods causes and people and to way●e vpon God to see if at any time hee will giue them repentance to build that they haue destroyed and to gather that they haue so much striuen to scatter Secondly this Doctrine is of singular vse in the cure of the hardest of diseases viz. affliction of conscience for in some of the deare Seruants of God that haue appearing vpon them some signes of effectuall Calling a right euidence of hope from Gods promises sweet pledges and signifying seales of Gods fauour by the witnesse of the Spirit of Adoption yet there ariseth some scruples about eyther the multitude or greatnesse of their sinnes and a healing of their errors and vncomfortable mistakings doth most an end arise from the right application of such examples as this I say a right application for the most men doe dangerously and damnably mistake in alleadging the instances of the great sinnes of Gods Seruants But if thou obserue these foure rules thou canst not mistake or misapply First if thou bring not in the examples of Dauid Peter Paul or any other to patronize thy sinne or to defend and nourish thy selfe in a sinfull course Secondly if thou alledge them not to wrest Gods promises as to make the promises of mercy generall when they are restrayned with their seuerall limitations Thirdly when they are not brought out to fortifie a prophane heart against the ordinances of GOD as reproofes eyther publike or priuate Fourthly when thou dost aswell vrge vpon thy selfe the necessitie of the repentance was in them as seeke the comfort of the remission of so great sinnes committed by them These rules being obserued the example of Pauls sinnes may with comfort be applyed as hee himselfe testifieth 1 Tim. 1.16 Secondly the Apostle to bring his doctrine into greater request doth in the entrance of the Epistle insinuate himselfe into their respects by setting downe the authoritie and praises of his office and person which sheweth vnto vs that vsually where the persons of the Ministers are not regarded their Doctrine worketh little The Doctrine is not long in credit where the person and function it selfe is contemned And this yeelds vs one Reason why a number of prophane men get so little by the doctrine they so ordinarily heare And the ca●se is they are contemners and scoffers and reprochers of Gods Ministers and therefore God will giue them no blessing by their Ministerie Againe it shewes how heauie and hurtfull a sinne it is to detract from the name and good esteeme of Ministers by tales lyes and slanders for though men beleeue thee not in thy slanders yet it is the propertie of most defamations that they leaue a kinde of lower estimation many times where they are not beleeued Thirdly it serues to teach all Ministers and others that are in gouernment to preserue by all lawfull and holy endeauours the authoritie and credit both of their Persons and Callings There is no doubt but the base carriage and indiscreet and sinfull courses of many Ministers haue brought a contempt and barrennesse vpon the very Ordinances of God they can doe no good with their doctrine they are so wanting to that grauitie and innocencie that should shine in the lights and lamps of Christ. Lastly here may be obserued that he that will beare rule ouer other mens consciences must be an Apostle lesse then an Apostolicall man cannot prescribe vnto other mens consciences and therefore it is a prophane insolencie in any whatsoeuer to vrge their fancies and deuises and to presse them ma●●er-like vpon the iudgements or practises of their brethren when they are not warranted in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles Of Iesus Christ. No knowledge can be auaileable to saluation without the knowledge of Christ and therefore the Apostle in the very forefront of the Epistle professeth to teach the doctrine of Christ and to ayme at such a course of framing of doctrine as aboue all things Christ Iesus may sound in his instructions and be receiued into honour application and practise And hee doth in the very entrance intimate what the corrupt teachers must looke for from him viz. that hee will batter the whole frame of their building that haue led men from CHRIST crucified to vaine Traditions Philosophicall speculations Iewish obseruations and giuen his glory to Angels By the will of God That is by his approbation direction protection but especially by his singular vocation The Apostle then holds his calling from God and therefore beleeues Gods protection and blessing because God had called him to his function And as the Apostle so euery member of the Church holds his particular standing and function from God hee is ranked into his order by the speciall prouidence and calling of God And it is to great purpose that men should know it in their owne particular For first it inforceth diligence if God haue set thee in thy calling then it stands thee vpon to discharge the duties of thy calling with all heedfulnesse and painfulnesse Secondly it may teach men not to passe the bounds of their calling for seeing they are in their places by Gods will they must take heede of going beyond their limits eyther by vsing of vnlawfull wayes and courses or by intruding into other mens functions Thirdly it doth plainely appoint the particular calling to serue the generall Euery Christian hath two Callings the one is the externall designement of him to some outward seruice in the Church or Common-wealth and this is his particular calling the other is the singling of him out by speciall sanctification to glorifie God and seeke his owne saluation in the things of the Kingdome of Christ and this is a calling generall to him with all beleeuers Now it is manifest that Gods commandement is that men first seeke the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof and therefore hee neuer meant that men should so follow their outward businesse and imployments as to omit the meanes of knowledge and grace prayer reading hearing conference and such like Lastly the consideration of this that wee hold our particular callings from God should teach vs contentation in the willing vnder-going of the daily molestations or troubles and crosses that doe befall vs and to be content
that the testimony of one Apostle is better then a thousand others One Paul opposed to many false Teachers which should teach vs to conuerse much in the Doctrine of the Apostles and Prophets which are of like authoritie And the rather because the best of other men may erre nay haue erred and therefore a heape of humane testimonies should be of no value against one Scripture And as the people should try the Spirit by this witnesse so should Preachers make conscience of it to take more paines to informe the consciences of the people by the testimony of the Word then by humane authoritie of what sort soeuer Fourthly in that here is but one Paul that comes in to confirme the truth of the Gospell it shewes that many times the soundest Teachers are the fewest in number Here it is so in the best times of the Church so it was before there was but one Michaiah for foure hundred false Prophets so in Christs time there was a swarme of Pharisaicall proud vaine-glorious hypocriticall silken Doctors that loued the chiefe roome and sought preheminence teachers of libertie and strife defenders of traditions and their owne glory and greatnesse when Christ and his Disciples were by their enuy scorned as a few precise singular fellowes Fiftly in that the Apostle stileth himselfe by the name of Paul and not of Saul it may intimate that men truely regenerate hate the vaine name of their vnregeneracie it is a foule signe when men can glory in the titles and names of their lewdnesse and sinne past Lastly in that the Apostle tearmeth himselfe a Deacon for so the word translated Minister is in the originall it notes his great humilitie it was a happy time in the Church when the Apostles called themselues Deacons and then began the Church to decay in true glory when Deacons would needes be Apostles great titles haue euer beene dangerous in the Church Thus of the second Reason and the 23. Verse Verse 24. Now reioyce I in my sufferings for you and fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church THese words containe the Apostles second testimonie and it is taken from his sufferings for the Gospell and hee conceiueth that they haue great reason to perseuer in the loue of the truth since hee hath with ioy endured so many things for the confirmation of the doctrine he had taught In these words I note two things First the Apostles ioy in affliction secondly the Reasons which moued him vnto this reioycing His suffering in which hee doth reioyce he amplifies by the time now and the diuers sorts of crosses he endured which he expresseth indefinitely when he saith plurally my sufferings as also by the vse of them for you that is for confirmation of your Faith and encouragement The Motiues are foure first because they are the afflictions of Christ secondly because they are laid vpon him by the Decree of God his measure is set him and hee hath almost done his taske hee is ready to dye thirdly because they are but in his flesh fourthly because they were for the good of the Church Now reioyce I in my sufferings Doct. Gods Children haue much ioy euen in affliction they are cheerefull and with great encouragement they beare their Crosses and if any aske the reason why they are so glad in their affliction and trouble I answere Gods Seruants are the more cheerfull vnder crosses because they know first that the Prince of their Saluation was consecrate through affliction Secondly that their Sauiour did therefore suffer that he might succour them that suffer Thirdly that the sting is taken out of the Crosse and therefore it is not so painefull to them as it is to the wicked men Fourthly that the same afflictions are vpon their brethren that are in the world Fiftly that the way to life is such a kind of way a strait narrow troublesome way Sixtly that after all their troubles are a while borne in this world they shall haue rest with the blessed in heauen when the Lord Iesus shall be reuealed and better more enduring substance then any here they can want or loose Yea that their afflictions are to be accounted a part of that treasure that they would lay vp against the last day Seauenthly that God will in the meane time comfort them in all their tribulation Eightly that their manifold temptations serue for great vse as for their tryall of their precious Faith and refining of all Graces with the purging out of much drosse and corruption in their natures Ninthly that no afflictions can seperate them from the loue of God in Christ with many other reasons which I might instance in besides those mentioned in the end of this Verse If any yet aske how Gods Seruans haue attained to such Ioy since there are worlds of people that in their troubles could neuer be induced to conceiue of such contentment by any reason could be brought them I answere that there are diuers things in Gods Children which are not in wicked men which are great causes of and helpes to ioy in tribulation As first they will receiue the light and treasure vp holy knowledge which they finde singular vse of in their Troubles whereas an ignorant mind is vsually attended with a distempered hart Secondly they haue Faith in God and carry about in their hearts the warme and inflamed loue of Iesus Christ and are therefore able to trust in Gods prouidence in any distresse Thirdly Gods Children hold such a course as this when as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sufferings which are mala poenae euils of punishment doe fall vpon them they presently run and reuenge themselues vpon those inward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mala culpae euils of sinne euen their secret passions and affections and by crucifying them they worke their peace and tranquilitie within themselues for no man would be hurt by his afflictions without if he would mortifie his passions within Fourthly they are much in Prayer and keepe a good Conscience in an vpright innocent and sincere conuersation And lastly the word is a continuall Fountaine of ioy in all troubles which keepes them from discouragement or vnquietnesse Psal. 119. For you These words may be referred eyther to reioyce or to Sufferings It is true Gods seruants doe feele great ioy one for another And to thinke of the grace or prosperitie of other of Gods Seruants is many times a great comfort in trouble But I rather thinke the words are to be referred to Sufferings and then the sense may be for you that is for the doctrine which as the Apostle of the Gentiles I taught you Or for the confirmation of your Faith and encouragement to like patience And the rather because the offering of him vp for the sacrifice and seruice of their Faith was as the consecration of the
Matth. 15. The traditions in the Churches of the Gentiles may bee considered two waies 1. As they were in the times of the primitiue Church 2. As they were in the times after vnder Antichrist In the primitiue Church they had by degrees one after another a great number of traditions such as these To stand and pray euery Sabboth from Easter to Whitsontide The Signe of the Crosse to pray towards the East the annointing of the baptized with oyle the canonicall houres Lent and diuers kindes of fasts the mixing of water with wine the addition of diuers orders in the Church as Canons Exorcistes Ostiaries Holy-dayes to sing Halleluiah at Easter but not in Lent and such like Now if any aske what we are to thinke of those and the like traditions then in vse I answer 1. That the Church had power to appoint traditions in indifferent rites so that the rules of the Apostles for indifferent things were obserued as that they were not offensiue nor against order or decency or edification As to appoint the time and place of publike praier to set downe the forme of it to tell how often the Sacraments should bee administred c. 2. We must vnderstand that the word Traditions vsed by the Fathers did not alwaies signifie these and such like things deuised by men but sometimes they did meane thereby such things as were warranted by Scripture though not expressely As the baptizing of Infants the obseruation of the Sabboth c. 3. There were some Traditions in some Churches in the first hundred of yeere that were directly impious as the Inuocation of Saints and Images 4. Someother things were then vsed that were not euery way impious in their owne nature and yet not greatly iustifiable in their vse and such were diuers of the aforenamed obseruations 5. That diuers things at the first brought into the Church with good intents and to good purpose afterwards grew into abuse as for example In the Primitiue order of Mounks 6. The worser traditions were brought in by false teachers and too pertinaciously obserued by the people the Fathers bewailing it and sometimes complaining of it 7. The Fathers themselues in some things shewed leuity and vnconstancy of iudgement sometimes to please the people approouing things and againe sometimes standing vpon the sole perfection of the Scriptures Lastly it cannot well bee denied but that the libertie taken in the primitiue times to bring in traditions opened a doore to Antichrist Now concerning the traditions in Popery vnder Antichrist their doctrine is abhominable for they say that the word of God is either written or vnwritten and they say their vnwritten verities are necessary as well as Scripture yea that they are of equall authority with Scripture And those traditions they would thus exalt are for number many for nature childish vnprofitable impious and idolatrous But that we may be fully settled against their impious doctrine of traditions we may profitably record in our memories these Scriptures Deut. 12.32 Reu. 22.18 Matth. 15. 1. Pet. 1.18 Galat. 1.9 Isay 8.20 2. Tim. 3.16 Ier. 19.5 Col. 1.28 Luke 16.29 1. Cor. 1.5.6.7 Ob. But our Sauiour told his disciples I haue many things to say vnto you but yee cannot beare them now but the spirit when hee is come shall lead you into all truth Ergo it seems there are diuers truths of Christ which were not reuealed in Scripture but by the spirit vttered by tradition after Sol. This may be vnderstood of the gifts of the Apostles and of the effects therof and not of doctrine for of doctrine he had said in the chap. before all things that I haue heard of my father I haue made known vnto you 2. If it were vnderstood of doctrine yet he doth not promise to lead them into any new truths but into the old and those Christ had already opened which should be brought to their minde and they made more fully to vnderstand them For so he saith of the Comforter in the 14. chapter he shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoeuer I haue sayd vnto you 3. Be it he had not reuealed all as yet what did he therfore neuer reueale it why the very text is against it for hee said I haue yet many things to say vnto you therefore he did say them namely after his resurrection 4. Let it bee noted that he saith ye cannot beare them now the things he had to say they could not then beare why should we thinke that they could not then beare these graue traditions as the Annointing and Christening of bels and such like Lastly let them prooue it to vs that those toies are the things Christ promised to reueale and then they say somewhat Ob. But in the 20. of Iohn he saith there were many things which were not written which Iesus did Answ. He saith that the things which are written are to this end written that we might beleeue and beleeuing might haue eternall life so that what is needefull to faith and eternall life is written 2. Hee saith there were other things not written he saith other things not things differing from these other things in number not in substance or nature much lesse contrary things Ob. But the Thessalonians are charged to hold the traditions they had beene taught Sol. The Scriptures were not then all written 2. The Apostle vnderstands not traditions as the Papists doe For in the same place hee calleth the things written in Scripture Traditions as well as those were not yet written To conclude this discourse concerning traditions we must further vnderstand that the traditions in any Church though they be things indifferent in their owne nature become vnlawfull if they be such as be taxed in these eight rules 1 If they be contrary to the rules of the Apostles concerning such things ecclesiastically indifferent 2. If they bee vrged and vsed with superstition 3. Or as any parts of Gods worship 4. Or with opinion of merit 5. Or as necessary to saluation 6. Or if they bee equalled with the Law of God or the weighty things of the Law neglected and those more vrged 7. If they be light and childish Lastly if by their multitude they darken and obscure the glory of Christ in his ordinances Thus of the second thing The third thing from which hee doth dehort is the Rudiments of the world The Rudiments of the world By the Rudiments of the world hee meaneth the lawes of Moses especially concerning meats washings holidaies garments and such like ceremoniall obseruations Those lawes were called Rudiments or Elements as some thinke because the Iewes and false Apostles held them as needefull as the foure elements of the world or else because in their first Institution they did signifie the most choice and fundamentall principles of the Gospell that were necessary for all to know that would be
as they would bee for vsually if in discretion men prooue before they trust they are taxed of pride and haughtinesse yet considering the vile hypocrisie that is in many it is better to be so censured without cause then to be beguiled by men that make their religion but a cloake to their owne ends The third rule is that while they stand and fall not into open sinne thou maiest not traduce them but conceale thy dislikes till God lay them open vnlesse greater danger might ensue by the concealment for the Lord may make him sound and giue him repentance Paul doth not dispraise Demas here as he doth not commend him Thirdly we may in this man note the propertie of many hypocrites they will not be discountenanced they are vsually impudent this man thrusts himselfe into the Apostles company and will be commended to the Churches he will haue a place though it be the last place Verse 15. Salute the brethren which are in Laodicea and Nymphas and the Church which is in his house Hitherto of Salutations signified now the Salutations required follow and these are particular verse 15.16.17 generall v. 18. The particulars concerne either Laodiceans v. 15.16 or the Colossean preacher verse 17. who is not onely saluted but exhorted or rebuked by intimation In the salutation of the Laodiceans obserue two things first the persons who are to be saluted v. 15. 2ly a speciall direction for the open reading of two epistles v. 16. The persons are the brethren in generall and Nymphas in speciall and the houshold of Nymphas Salute the brethren which are at Laodicea 1 Christian curtesie ought to haue in it a holy remembrance of absent friends 2 It is not vanitie or weaknesse but may stand with singular gifts and graces of minde to bee industrious and large hearted in the many remembrances of all sorts of Christians 3 It is profitable that men of great gifts and place should preserue their memory with others though it be but in these lighter complements of salutation for many times it may inflame much affection to godlinesse in such to whom they send their salutations 4 God hath his choice amongst men for here hee takes notice of the brethren in Laodicea onely God doth not driue in whole townes of men into the field of his grace at once for as it was then in turning men from gentilisme so it is now in turning men from profanenesse the Gospell doth not worke vpon all promiscuously And Nymphas This Nymphas was not a woman as Ambrose and Dionisius and Catharinus and the glosse would haue it for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the end of the verse his house not hir house This Nymphas it seemes was some eminent Christian whom Paul would specially honour before the congregation and so it shewes that a speciall respect should be had of such as did excell in gifts amongst such as professe the sinceritie of the gospell And the Church that is in his ●oms● By the Church hee meanes those in the houshold that feare God whether they were women or children or seruants Now here first I consider of these persons and then of the title the Apostle giues them in calling them a Church In that the Apostle thus with honour remembers the houshold of Nymphas it shewes his singular vprightnesse in that he can respect grace in whomsoeuer hee finde it hee loues a good seruant as well as a good Master and can commend good order in an houshold as well as in a congregation This should teach vs not to haue the grace of Christ in respect of persons and hereby also we may try our loue to Gods children by examining our selues whether we can loue such as can neither profit or pleasure vs nor grace vs in the world And this may be a great incouragement to the yoong and meaner sort in that they may perceiue from hence that if they get true grace they shall be respected both of God and good men Now in that the Apostle calls this houshold a Church we may note that a religious and well ordred familie is as it were a little Church Here in one familie is prescribed what all families should be this familie is called a church because his people were godly and the word of God was read there and prayers made to God and Psalmes sung and the yonger sort were catechized and instructed Now doe we learne from hence that our houses are Churches then these things will follow 1 That Gods worship and pietie must be set vp in them how can they be churches of God if God be not serued in them 2 All must be done there in order and quietnesse and silence for so it is or should be in the Church 3 Euill persons that are incorrigible must not dwell there but must be cast out Psal. 101. 4 The Husband or Master of the familie must dwell there as a man of knowledge and wiues children and seruants must obey as the Church doth Christ. Againe are our families Churches why then religious families are in a happy case for then God himselfe will dwell there So as a stranger comming to such places may say as Iacob did of Bethel surely God is in this place Lastly should our families be Churches Oh then woe vnto the world of profane housholds should a Church be without sacrifice and can their families escape Gods wrath seeing there is neither prayer nor pietie in them but in stead of Gods seruice there is cursing and swearing and lying and chiding and filching and whoring and rayling and fighting and what not The most families are very cages of vncleane spirits where not God or good men but very deuills dwell they are very styes of vncleanesse and vnholinesse Thus of the 15 verse Verse 16. And when this Epistle is read amongst you cause it to be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans and that you likewise read the Epistle from Laodicea These words conteine a direction for reading 1 of this epistle and that both priuately and publikely 2 of an epistle from Laodicea In the generall we may obserue that the Scripture may be read it is mens dutie to doe it t is a flat precept search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 and this may euidently reprooue the profane neglect of the most herein in this great light many are so drowned in carelesnesse that they haue not yet so much as a Bible in their houses and others thought for their credit sake they haue gotten them Bibles yet they read them not This Epistle In that this Epistle may not be neglected but must be read it shewes that whatsoeuer is reuealed to the Church to be a part of the word of God it must be read so soone as this Epistle is written it must be read of all Christians which shewes that euery part of Gods word is to be read Now for the persons that must read the Scriptures it is here set downe indefinitely of you meaning
applause they set out at first with such a strife to seeme eloquent and learned that they quickly spend their store and then rather then they will be obserued to want they will giue ouer preaching 3 Sometimes God himselfe for the wickednesse of their liues casts a barrennesse vpon their hearts and blasteth their gifts In this exhortation foure things may be noted 1 Who he is that is exhorted say to Archippus 2 The matter charged vpon him see to thy Ministry 3 The reason by which it is vrged thou hast receiued it of the Lord. 4 An explication of the matter charged by the extent of it to fulfill Say to Archippus Here I obserue 7 things 1 The Sinner must be told of his sinne Leuit. 19.17 2 Such as offend publikely must be told of it publikely 3 Ministers as well as others may be rebuked though some Clergie men are so sore and so proud that they may not be touched and many times it is a iust iudgment of God that no man should rebuke them that their sores might not be medicined but like vnsauorie s●lt they should be cast out of God No mans learning or greatnesse of place can so protect them but that they may be told of their faults it is too commonly knowne they can sinne aswell as others why then should they not be rebuked as well as others Doth Archippus need to be told the Lord be mercifull to the land and Church There be many Archippasses in the Church of England had need to be wakened with a loud trumpet of rebuke and to be told of their faults euen of their ignorance silence sloth pride couetousnesse simonie dissolutenesse ambition contempt of their brethren and soule murther of many kinds 4 The people may put their teachers in minde of their faults as they ought to incourage them in well doing so may they admonish them for what is euill Therefore Ministers should striue so to liue and so to teach as their people should not haue cause to finde fault 5 Ministers must bee told of their faults by their people with great reuerence and heedfulnesse and wisdome according to that direction Rebuke not an Elder but exhort him as a Father here they must say to Archippus not directly reprooue him 6 They must say it to him not say it of him Ministers ought not to be traduced behind their backs 7 He doth not threaten him if he doe not which implies hee hoped their exhortation would speed certainly t is a great praise to profit by admonition Take heed to thy Ministry This take heed hath in it three things 1 Consideration a weying and meditation of the greatnesse of the function of the dignitie of it and the dutie also with the accounts he must make to God and his high calling and the great price of soules c. 2 It notes diuers of the worthy qualities of a Minister as care attendance watchfulnesse aptnesse to teach and diuide the word aright discretion to giue euery one his portion diligence gentlenesse in not marring the doctrine with passion patience to indure the worke and labour of his ministry c. 3 It notes caution and so Ministers must take heed both of what is within them and what is without them they must take heed of their owne diuinations they must take heed of sloth and idlenesse they must take heed of the obiections of their owne flesh and the tentations of the Diuell without them they must take heed of the new errors that will daily rise they must take heed of the sinnes of the people with all the methods of Sathan in deuising committing or defending of sinne they must take heede of mens fancies and for persons they must take heed of hypocrites and open aduersaries domesticall vipers and forraine foes false brethren and profest Idolaters The Vse may be for great reproofe of our sleeping watchmen and blinde guides that take no heed to their ministeries Oh the woes that will fall vpon them who can recount the miseries that the bloud of soules will bring vpon them Which thou hast receiued in the Lord A Minister is said to receiue his ministrie in the Lord in diuers respects First Because it is Gods free grace that he is chosen to be a Minister Rom. 5.1 Secondly because he is inwardly called and qualified by God Thirdly because he receiued his outward authoritie though from men yet by the direction and warrant of Gods word Fourthly because he receiues it for the Lord that is to Gods glory and the furtherance of his kingdome ouer the misticall body of Christ. The Vse is threefold First the people should therefore learne to seeke their ministers of God Secondly Ministers should hence learne neither to bee proud nor idle not proud for they receiued their ministerie of God it was his gift not their deserts not idle for they are to doe Gods worke Thirdly Ministers may hence gather their owne safety notwithstanding the oppositions of the world that God that called them will perfect them To fulfill it Ministers are said to fulfill their ministeries two waies 1 By constancie holding out in it to the end to fulfill it is to go on and not looke backe when they are at plow 2 By faithfull performance of it with a due respect of all the charge they haue receiued of God thus to fulfill it is to shew the people all the counsell of God it is to rebuke all sorts of sinnes and sinners it is faithfully to do euery kinde of worke that belongs to their ministerie whether publike or priuate Vers. 18 The salutation by the hand of me Paul remember my bondes grace be with you Amen There are 3 things in this Verse a signe a request a vowe or wish The salutation by the hand of me Paul To write with his owne hand hee calls the token in euery Epistle 2. Thess. 3.17 Here two things may be noted 1 The great care that anciently hath beene to prouide that none but the true writings of the Apostles should be receiued of the Church it should cause vs so much the more gladly to receiue and read these Apostolicall writings 2 It implies that euen in the times of the Apostles Sathan raised vp wicked men who endeauoured to counterfeit bookes and writings and to father them vpon the Apostles themselues or other eminent and worthy men this continued successiuely as a most diuellish practice in diuers ages after Remember my bondes The obseruations are 1 Gods children haue beene in bondes 2 It is profitable to remember the troubles and afflictions of Gods children and to meditate of them for 1 it may serue to confirme vs when wee finde like hatred from the world 2 It is an alarum to preparation and the harnessing of our selues against the fight of affliction when one part of the host of God is smitten should not the rest prepare for the fight 3 It will soften our hearts to mercy both spirituall and corporall And 4 It may learne vs
Faith 3. Precepts of life 4. the Epilogue or Conclusion The Proaeme is exprest in th● first eleuen Verses of the first Chapter The Doctrine of Faith is exprest in the rest of the Verses of the first Chapter and the whole second Chapter The Precepts of life are set downe in the third Chapter and in the beginning of the fourth And the Epilogue is in the rest of the verses of the fourth Chapter The Proaeme containes two things First the Salutation vers 1 2. and secondly a Preface affectionately framed to winne attention and respect wherein he assures them of his singular constancie in remembring them to God both in Thanks-giuing for their worthy Graces and the meanes thereof v. 3.4 5 6 7 8. and in earnest Prayer for their increase and comfortable perseuerance in knowledge and the eminencie of sinceritie in holy life vers 9.10 11. The Doctrine of Faith he expresseth two wayes first by Proposition secondly by Exhortation In the Proposition of Doctrine hee doth with singular force of words and weight of matter set out both the worke of our Redemption v. 12.13.14 and the person of our Redeemer and that first in his relation to God verse 15. then in relation of the World verse 15.16.17 and thirdly in relation to the Church both the whole in generall verse 18.19.20 and the Church of the Colossians in particular vers 21.22 And thus of the Proposition Now his Exhortation followes from the 23. of Chap. 1. to the end of Chap. 2. and therein hee both perswades and disswades hee perswades by many strong and mouing Reasons to an holy endeauour to continue and perseuere with all Christian firmnesse of resolution both in the Faith and Hope was already begotten in them by the Gospell and this is contained in the seauen last Verses of the first Chapter and the seauen first Verses of the second Chapter Hee disswades them from receiuing the corrupt Doctrine of the false Apostles whether it were drawne from Philosophicall Speculations or from the Traditions of men or from the Ceremoniall Law of Moses and hee proceedes in this order first hee layes downe the matter of his Dehortation Chap. 2. vers 8. then secondly hee confirmes it by diuers Reasons from vers 9. to 16. and lastly he concludes and that seuerally as against Mosaicall Rites vers 16.17 against Philosophy vers 18.19 and against Traditions vers 20. and so to the end of that Chapter Thus of the second part Thirdly in giuing Precepts of life the Apostle holds this order first hee giues generall Rules that concerne all as they are Christians then hee giues speciall Rules as they are men of this or that estate of life The generall Rules are contayned in the first seauenteene Verses of the third Chapter and the speciall Rules from the eighteenth Verse of the third Chapter to the second Verse of the fourth The generall Rules hee reduceth into three heads viz. first the Meditation of heauenly things vers 1.2.3.4 secondly the mortification of vices and iniuries vers 5. to the 12. thirdly the exercise of holy Graces a number of which hee reckoneth both in the kindes meanes and ends of them from vers 12. to 18. The particular Rules concerne principally houshould gouernment for hee sets downe the dutie of Wiues vers 18. of Husbands ver 19. of Children vers 20. of Parents v. 21. of Seruants vers 22.23.24.25 and of Maisters Chap. 4. vers 1. The Epilogue or Conclusion contaynes in it both matter of generall Exhortation as also matters of Salutation The generall Exhortation concernes Prayer vers 2.3.4 wise Conuersation vers 5. and godly Communication vers 6. Now after the Apostle hath disburdened himselfe of those generall cares then hee taketh liberty to refresh himselfe and them by remembring certaine that were deare both to him and them And first he makes enterance by a narration of his care to know their estate and to informe them of his To which purpose he sendeth and prayseth Tichicus and Onesimus vers 7.8.9 The Salutations then follow and they are of two sorts for some are signified to them some are required in them Of the first sort he signifies the Salutations of sixe men three of them Iewes and three Gentiles vers 10.11.12.13.14 The Salutations required concerne eyther the Laodiceans vers 15.16 or one of the Colossaean Preachers who is not onely saluted but exhorted vers 17. And then followes the Apostles generall Salutations to all in the last Verse THE PLAINE Logicall Analasis of the first Chapter THis CHAPTER stands of three parts a Proaeme a Proposition of Doctrine an Exhortation to constancy and perseuerance The Proaeme is continued from vers 1. to 12. the Proposition from vers 12. to the 23. the Exhortation from ver 23. to the end The Proaeme is intended to winne attention and affection and stands of two parts the Salutation and the Preface The Salutation is contayned in the two first Verses and the Preface in the third Verse and those that follow to the twelfth In the Salutation three things are to be obserued first the Persons saluting secondly the Persons saluted thirdly the Salutation it selfe The Persons saluting are two the Author of the Epistle and an Euangelist famous in the Churches who is named as one that did approue the Doctrine of the Epistle and commend it to the vse of the Churches The Author is described first by his Name Paul secondly by his Office an Apostle which is amplyfied by the principall efficient IESVS CHRIST and by the impulsiue cause the Will of God The Euangelist is described first by his Name Timotheus secondly by his adiunct Estate a Brother Thus of the Persons saluting The Persons saluted are discribed first by the place of their abode and so they are the Citizens and Inhabitants of Colosse secondly by their spirituall estate which is set out in foure things 1. They are Saints 2. They are faithfull 3. They are Brethren 4. They are in CHRIST The Salutation expresseth what hee accounteth to be the chiefe good on earth and that is Grace and Peace which are amplified by the Causes or Fountaines of them from God our Father and from our Lord IESVS CHRIST Thus of the Salutation In the Preface the Apostle demonstrateth his loue to them by two things which hee constantly did for them hee prayed for them and hee gaue thankes for them and this hee both propounds generally vers 3. and expounds particularly in the Verses following In the generall propounding three things are euidently exprest first what hee did for them hee gaue thankes hee prayed secondly to whom euen to God the Father of our Lord Iesus thirdly how long alwayes that is constantly from day to day Now in the Verses that follow he expounds and opens this first his Thankesgiuing vers 4.5.6.7.8 secondly his Prayer vers 9.10.11 In the Thankesgiuing hee shewes for what hee gaue thankes which hee referres to two heads 1. their Graces 2. secondly the Meanes by
whole body for from him flowes Peace and Reconciliation vers 20. concerning which Reconciliation there are eight things to be noted 1. the mouing cause which is to be supplyed out of the former Verse as the Coniunction and importeth viz. it pleased the Father 2. the Instrument by him viz. CHRIST the head 3. the Benefit it selfe viz. to reconcile 4. the subiect Persons in generall all things 5. the End to himselfe 6. the Effect making peace 7. the Meanes through the bloud of his Crosse 8. the Distribution of the Persons who in those words things in earth and things in heauen Thus of his relation to the whole Church In the description of his relation to the Church of the Colossians he vrgeth them with two things first their misery without CHRIST 2. the remedy of their misery by CHRIST Their Misery stands in two things first they are Strangers secondly they are Ene●ies and both are amplified 1. by the subiect wherein viz. not outwardly onely but in their mindes 2. by the Cause viz. wicked workes vers 22. In setting downe their Remedie hee notes 1. the Meanes 2. the End of the meanes is the death of the body of Christs flesh The end is that hee might present them holy and vnblameable and without fault in Gods sight vers 22. Thus of his relation to the Church of the Colossians and thus also of the second part of this Chapter viz. the Proposition of Doctrine The Exhortation followes where is to be considered first the Exhortation it selfe and then the Reasons The Exhortation is to perseuerance both in Faith and Hope In the Exhortation to perseuerance in faith there is worthy to be noted first the manner of propounding it which is with an If secondly the duty required Continue thirdly the manner of the dutie grounded and stablished fourthly the obiect Grace in Faith In the Exhortation to perseuerance in Hope two things are to be obserued first he sets downe the euill to be auoyded viz. vnsetlednesse or reuolting in the words Be not moued away secondly hee quickens them by remembring the cause and fountaine of their hope viz. The hearing of the Gospell preached Thus of the Exhortation the Reasons follow There are seauen Reasons to inforce this Exhortation to perseuerance The first is taken from the Consent of Gods Elect Which are through the world who haue in the preaching of the Gospell receiued Faith and Hope as their common portion The second Reason is taken from the testimony of PAVL himselfe and that is two-fold the first is the testimonie of his Ministerie This is it hee preacheth and therefore it should be it they should keepe fast the second is the testimony of his Sufferings hee hath endured much for the Doctrine of Faith and Hope and therefore they should continue in it and to stirre them the more concerning his sufferings hee sheweth that hee suffered with great Ioy which hee confirmeth by expressing the reasons of his ioy first because they were the afflictions of Christ secondly because hee had his part allotted him by the decree of God and it was his ioy that hee had almost finished what was left for him to suffer there was but a little remaining thirdly because they were but in his flesh fourthly because they were for them and the good of the Church Verse 24. The third Reason is taken from the testimony of God who inioyned vnto PAVL and other Ministers this dispensation of the Doctrine of Faith and Hope with a charge that they should see his Word fulfilled herein Verse 25. The fourth Reason is taken from the excellencie of the Gospell which is set out first by the nature of it it is a mysterie secondly by the antiquitie of it it was and was hid since the world beganne from Ages and Generations thirdly by the time of the reuelation of it now in the new world fourthly by the persons to whom it is reuealed viz. onely the Saints all which should moue to care and constancy in keeping of it Verse 26. The fift Reason is taken from the excellency of the Subiect of the Gospell which is no lesse nor worse then Christ reuealed by the preaching of the Gospell In this reuelation of Christ in the Gospell consider first who reueales him God secondly the cause of his reuelation the will of God hee would thirdly the manner viz. in a rich and glorious mystery fourthly the persons to whom viz. the miserable Gentiles fiftly the effects or fruits of it which are first the inhabitation of Christ secondly the hope of glory Verse 27. The sixt Reason is taken from the end which is the presenting of them perfect in Iesus Christ which is amplified by the meanes to bring to this end which is preaching and that is amplified first by the parts of it which are teaching and admonishing and secondly by the manner in all Wisedome Verse 28. The seauenth Reason is taken from the holy strife of the Apostle to bring men to this which is amplified by the great successe which the LORD had giuen Verse vlt. A METAPHRASE vpon the first Chapter of the Epistle to the COLOSSIANS PAVL the Messenger or Embassadour-generall for all the Churches of the Gentiles by Commission from the promised MESSIAH now come in the Flesh the Lord annoynted seperated hereunto not for his owne worthinesse or by any priuate motion of his owne or by commandement of any man but by the expresse will of God according to his euerlasting counsell as also Timotheus a reuerend Brother an Euangelist of Christ with full and free testimonie approueth this Epistle written To the Citizens and Inhabitants of the Citie of Colosse that are seperate from the world and sanctified with true Grace and faithfully walke in that holy Calling in brotherly communion one with another and indissoluable vnion with CHRIST your Sauiour Grace be with you and Peace euen the free fauour of GOD with all internall eternall and needfull externall blessings from him that both will and can euen God our Father through the merits of the Lord our annoynted Sauiour We giue thankes vnto God euen that God that by an eternall and vnexpressable generation is the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ remembring you earnestly and constantly in our daily Prayers being exceedingly fired and inflamed since wee heard by continuall and true report of your precious Faith by which you haue with firmenesse and stedfastnesse of assurance laid hold vpon IESVS CHRIST for life and righteousnesse and the rather because wee likewise heard of your holy affection to such as haue seperated themselues from the prophanenesse of the world to the seruice of God especially considering that you haue not the glorious Faith of Christ in respect of persons but loue all the Saints as well as any And as a People not destitute of any sauing Grace we reioyce to heare of that liuely hope by which you haue laid hold on the Promise of eternall glory which
with our kinde of life seeing we are thus set and placed by Gods will Thus farre of the Apostle The Euangelist is described first by his name TIMOTHY secondly by his adiunct estate a Brother Three things briefely may be obserued here first that consent in doctrine is a great meanes and effectuall to perswade both to incorruption in Faith and integritie in liuing This made Paul to ioyne Tymothy with him and the consideration of this as it should teach all faithfull Ministers to make themselues glorious by a brotherly harmonie in matters of opinion so it doth giue occasion to bewaile that great sinne of wilfull opposition and crosse-teaching which doth in many places too much abound a course that is taken vp by some of purpose to hinder the growth of knowledge and sincerity some of these instruments of the Diuell hauing for the most part no life or hart eyther in studie or preaching but when enuy and malice and a desire to be contrary doth instigate and pricke them forward These are like them of whom the Apostle complayned that were contrary to all men and forbid vs to preach to the Chruches that they might be saued and fulfill the measure of their sins alwayes God they please not and the wrath of God is come on them to the vttermost Secondly here wee may learne that spirituall aliance is the best aliance for it is a greater honour to Timothy to be a brother then to be an Euangelist for hee might haue beene an Euangelist and yet haue gone to Hell when hee had done as Iudas an Apostle did And this cannot but be exceeding comfortable seeing there is not the meanest childe of God but he may attaine to that which was Timothies greatest title Thirdly the Apostle doth intimate by the taking in of Timothies assent that the most glorious doctrine of God doth need the witnesse of men such a vanitie and secret sinfulnesse doth lodge in mens hearts Which should teach Ministers with all good conscience and heedfulnesse to weigh well and consider throughly of their doctrine before they deliuer it because there is a weaknesse too commonly found in the very deare children of God namely to receiue doctrine vpon the trust and credit of the Messenger without searching the scriptures as they ought to doe Thus farre of the persons saluting the persons saluted are described both by the place of their habitation at Colosse and by their spirituall estate in which hee describes them by foure things they are Saints they are faithfull they are Brethren and they are in Christ. Before I come to the particular handling of each of these I consider foure things in the generall First here wee see the power of the Gospell But a little before if Colosse had beene searched with lights as Ierusalem was there would not haue beene found one Saint nor one faithfull man or woman in the whole Citie and now behold by the preaching of the Word here are many Saints and faithfull Brethren to be found in her Secondly wee see here who be the true members of the Church The Apostle acknowledgeth none but such as are Saints faithfull and in Christ. Thirdly wee see here that a Church may remaine a true Church notwithstanding grosse corruptions remaine in it vnreformed as here these titles are giuen to a Church much poysoned with humane traditions and vile corruptions in worship Lastly it is to be obserued that the Apostle ioynes all these together to note that one cannot be without the other one cannot be a Saint vnlesse hee be faithfull and in Christ and so of the rest The last clause cuts off the Iewes apparantly from being Saints or true beleeuers seeing they receiue not Christ and the first clause cuts off the carnall Protestant so as hee cannot be a beleeuer or in Christ seeing hee cares no more for sanctitie and the two middle-most cut off the Papists and all Heretikes and Schismatickes seeing they haue with insolent pride made a rent and Apostasie from the true Apostolicall Churches by aduancing themselues with their Man of sinne aboue their brethren nay aboue all that is called God Thus farre in generall the first thing particularly giuen them is that they are Saints Saints This Word is diuersely accepted in Scripture Sometimes it is giuen to the Angels and so they are called Saints Deut. 33.2 Iob 15.15 Secondly men are said to be holy by a certaine Legall or Ceremoniall sanctitie Leuit. 11.44 And in this sence the superstitious are holy This is the holinesse and sanctitie of Papists and Popish persons which place all their holinesse in the obseruation of Rites and Traditions and superstitious Customes Thirdly all that stand members of the Church by the rule of Charitie or in respect of outward visibilitie and profession are called Saints and so all that couenant with God by offering Sacrifice are called Saints Lastly and properly it is a tearme giuen to men effectually called the children of God truely conuerted are called Saints not because they are perfectly holy without all sinne but in foure respects First in respect of Seperation because they are elected and gathered out of the world and ioyned vnto Gods people and dedicated to holy seruices and vses and thus the word is often taken Secondly in respect of vocation and therefore the Apostle 1 Cor. 1.2 When he had said they were sanctified he said by way of explication they were Saints by calling Thirdly in respect of regeneration because they are now new creatures And lastly in respect of iustification or imputation because the holinesse and sanctitie of Christ is imputed to them The sence being thus giuen the doctrine is plaine that men may be Saints in this life there are Saints in Earth as well as in Heauen This is apparant also in other Scriptures as Psalme 16.3 To the Saints that are in earth And Psal. 37.28 Hee forsaketh not his Saints And Psal. 132.9.16 Let thy Saints reioyce So in the Epistle to the Ephesians ch 2.20 Citizens with the Saints c. chap. 3.8 Paul calleth himselfe the least of all Saints c. chap. 4.12 For the gathering together of the Saints with many other places The vse of this serues first to confute the grosse folly of the Papists that acknowledge no Saints till three things come to them first they must be Canonized by the Pope secondly they must be dead first thirdly it must be an hundred yeeres after their death This last prouiso was well added lest their treasons and most vile practises should be remembred Secondly this serues for the seuere reproofe of numbers in our owne Church that liue as if there were no sanctitie to be looked after till they come to heauen Thirdly the Scripture is not without singular comfort to the poore despised Saints I will take them in order as they lye Deut.
base and filthy pleasures why dotest thou vpon vncertaine and sinfull profits why doth thy heart degenerate to regard and so aspire after worldly preferment Remember whence thou art descended and with whom alyed and walke as becomes the coheyre of Christ. Secondly are they Brethren to the Apostles and other great Gouernours of the Church it should then teach Ministers Magistrates and Masters of Families so to rule as to remember that they rule their Brethren neyther to neglect their good for why should thy Brother perish nor with proud insolencie or tyrannie eyther in correction or seuere carriage to Lord it ouer them Thirdly are they Brethren to the Saints abroad and are they of the same familie with them then it should teach them to pray for them and to lay the distresses of other Saints and Churches to their hearts for though they be remoued in place and carnall knowledge yet are they neare in the mysticall vnion if it be considered that the same Mother bare them and the same Father begat them Lastly are they Brethren to the Saints at home then they should learne to conuerse brotherly to liue and loue together as becommeth Saints and Brethren Oh that it could sincke into mens mindes or that this were written in mens hearts then could there be nothing more glorious and comfortable in this earth then this communion of Saints especially in the fellowship of the Gospell In Christ. Men are said to be in CHRIST three wayes first as the Plant in the Stocke Iohn 15. secondly as the Member in the Body 1 Cor. 12.12 thirdly as the Wife is one with the Husband Ephes. 5.25 Dost thou aske then how thou maist get into Christ. Ans. Obserue three things First before thou canst be ingrafted into Christ thou must be cut off the olde tree eyther a new man or no man eyther lose the World or neuer finde Christ eyther disarme thy selfe of all vaine confidence loue delight and support from the world and worldly men or the arme of the Lord will neuer beare thee vp and nourish thee Secondly a true Member is not but by generation in nature nor canst thou be a true member of Christ but by regeneration great oddes betweene a wodden legge though neuer so exquisitely made and a true legge all members in Creation be begotten and in Grace begotten againe Thirdly as they are not Man and Wife where there is no sure making by Contract or Marriage going before so neyther can any be in Christ vnlesse hee be receiued vnto the Couenant of Grace and as it is a mad thing in Nature for any woman to say Such a man is my Husband for hee is a kinde man and did cast his eye vpon mee or did me a pleasure at such a time c. So it is as great spirituall madnesse for any Soule to pleade interest in Christ when they can alleadge no more but his generall loue to man or that hee offered Grace to vs in the Word and Sacraments or that wee together with the Gospell receiued outward blessings or such like when men can shew no contract no mutuall entercourse betweene CHRIST and the SOVLE no manner of euidence for their hopes no witnesses from the Word Spirit or Children of God for their spirituall Marriage Againe would a man know whether hee be in Christ these Comparisons likewise resolue his doubt by a three-fold Answere first hee is in Christ if he blossome grow and beare fruit euen such fruit as is to eternall life If a man be abundant in the workes of the Lord and grow in such graces as are communicated onely to the faithfull hee is certainely a true Plant in this Stocke for by growing and fruit is the Plant that is ingrafted knowne from the sprigge that is lopped off and lyeth by and is withered A life barren and voyd of the workes of Pietie and Mercy is a manifest signe that the person is not in Christ. Secondly if there be in our soules the sense and feeling and motion of spirituall life then are wee members for in a wodden legge is there no sense nor naturall motion When men haue as much sense and feeling sauour and delight in the things of the Spirit as the Word Prayer fellowship in the Gospell with the exercise of holy Graces in the duties of Gods worship or things otherwise belonging to the Kingdome of Christ as the carnall man hath in the profits pleasures and fleshly things of this world These certainely are men after the Spirit and by the Spirit mystically vnited to Christ the head and on the other side a more plaine and palpable signe cannot be giuen to proue demonstrat●uely that a man is not in Christ then when a man findes no taste hath no feeling can take no delight in spirituall Meanes Graces or Persons and yet is easily affected with the least profits and delights of the world Thirdly it will appeare by the holy communion betweene Christ and the faithfull Soule by his co-habitation and spirituall entercourse when Christ meetes a Christian with holy Comforts with heauenly refreshings with sacred answeres with spirituall direction and other sacred signes of the presence of Christ in the vse of the meanes sporting himselfe with the Christian Soule this entercourse I say this secret and chamber-meeting these inward and heartie feelings wrought by the Word and Sacraments by Prayer and Fasting by Reading and Conference are certaine and sure signes and seales to proue a marriage going before And thus farre of the foure titles giuen to the Children of God and also of the second thing viz. the persons saluted Now followeth the Salutation it selfe Grace and Peace be vnto you from God the Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ. IT hath beene an auncient custome both in the Iewish Christian and Pagan world to beginne Letters and Epistles with Salutations and in these they were wont to wish to their Friends that which was accounted the chiefest good Hence the Heathen as they were opinionated about the chiefe good they did differently wish good things to their friends in their salutations Some wished health some wished welfare or safetie some to doe well some ioy and a merry life as they were eyther S●oickes or Epicures But the Apostle finding that true felicitie was in none of these doth religiously wish that which in the Kingdome of Christ was in greatest request viz. Grace and Peace Grace This word is diuersly taken For kindnesse 2 Sam. 16.17 for abilitie to affect or perswade Psal. 45.2 for the happinesse that is had from Christ in this world and so it is opposed to glorie Psal. 84.11 for the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 1.4 Tit. 2.12 for approbation from God Prou. 12.2 finally it is taken for the spirituall libertie that wee haue from Christ and so it is opposed to the Law Rom. 6.14 lastly it is taken for the loue and fauour of God receiuing the Sinner into couenant
Secondly That the true tryall of all Doctrine is by inquiring whether it be agreeable to that Doctrine wherein the world was ouercome to GOD. Though an Angell from Heauen should preach otherwise yet his Doctrine were to be detested as accursed And therefore wee may iustly complaine of the Papists and all popish men that chaine men downe to a necessitie of looking vpon the hundreds of yeeres neere vnto vs and will not beare it that men should seeke ground for their Conscience by ouer looking all the hundreds of yeeres since Christ and minding onely conformitie to the Doctrine that first founded the Churches of the Gentiles all Doctrines since then though in the purest times are to be receiued no further then they agree with the Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles Thirdly that men are bound to seeke the word wheresoeuer it may be heard for if this had not beene so how could all the World receiue the light of the Gospell and further wee may see that the want of Teachers was no warrant to commit the Churches to the care of such as could not teach a necessitie lieth in the people to seeke the word where it may be had And therfore those Church-gouernours sinne grieuously that in this light create so many insufficient men and set them ouer the flocks of CHRIST For if want of able men had beene a reason the Apostles should haue seene into this necessitie to ease the labour and care of the Churches but it is a more grieuous sinne to admit ordaine and place them and yet see many worthy and able men wholy want places Fourthly wee might here note the vanitie of their argument that would proue vniuersall grace because Christ died for all men for in this place here is not onely the world but all the world and yet here can not in any reasonable sence be ment all the singular men and women in the world for there were many thousands of particular persons to whom the Gospell came not and therefore by all the world as here so in that question may be vnderstood all the Elect world or if the world vniuersally then it is true in respect of offer or not excepting out of any of any Nation or by all the world is ment men of all sorts and conditions in the world Fiftly Wee might here note the incredible power and swiftnesse of the Gospell that could ouercome and that in so short a time and the rather if that we consider that the Magistrates generally drew the sword against it and there were not wanting Ministers to oppugne it euen false teachers of all sorts and besides the people had beene so long time settled in their false Religion and lastly if wee looke vpon the meanenesse or the fewnesse of those that were Gods Embassadours to the Gentiles Thus of the fift part of the description The last thing by which the word of GOD is described is the efficacie of it and here the Apostle sheweth first what it doth It bringeth fruit and It encreaseth for so it is added in some Copies secondly vpon whom as euen in you thirdly when it began to be so viz. from the day that you heard c. fourthly what made it worke so viz. the hearing and true knowledge of the grace of God And is fruitfull Concerning fruitfulnesse required as an effect of the word I consider foure things First the Reasons to moue vs to fruitfulnesse Secondly the sort of Fruits we should beare Thirdly the meanes to make vs fruitfull Lastly the Vses For the first there are many things might moue vs to make conscience of glorifying God in our places by bearing the fruit of the Gospell euen expressing the power of it in our liues First it is a speciall glory to GOD and to our Adoption and calling Secondly it is a testimonie that we are in deed Christs Disciples Thirdly the practising of those things which are within the compasse of Gods promises such as are all the fruits of righteousnesse is the very ground-worke of true prosperitie Fourthly To this end did God by election before time and speciall vocation in the Gospell choose vs and call and single vs out of the world Fiftly It procures vnto vs an vnstained and in offensiue glory euen vntill the day of Christ Sixtly If a man indeauour to bring forth fruit and to walke as becomes the Gospell he is sure to speede when he hath any suite to God Seauenthly against such there is no law Eyghtly it shall be to vs according to our fruit Ninthly The fruits of righteousnesse are better treasures for a Christian then all riches Tenthly If we be not fruitfull we shall be cut off from CHRIST and vtterly for euer remaine frustrate of all his merits and vertue Now for the second the fruits that wee should beare are such as these The forsaking of our particular beloued raigning sinnes this is all fruit The exercise of the true loue and feare of God in a conscionable both worship of God and practise of Life the fruits of zeale for Gods glory humilitie patience and the exercise of the duties of Mortification as Prayer Sorrow Fasting and the rest Fidelitie in the diligent discharge of the duties required of vs in our Families and Calling Sobrietie in the vse of Gods Creatures Contentation Iust-dealing and to be rightly ordered in matters of Report Finally workes of Mercie and all duties of Loue. Thirdly that wee may be more fruitfull first we must labour for greater tendernesse in our hearts and plow our ground deepe with long furrowes of Mortification the seed will not grow if it fall vpon the trampled and smooth heart of man the stones must be taken from the rootes secondly we must learne to make God our trust and Gods promise our treasure else in many parts of Christian fruitfulnesse worldlinesse will teach vs to deny to obey thirdly we may not neglect to send forth the leaues of profession for as these leaues are of medicinable vse so they are good inducements to force a necessitie of more fruit if no profession there will be little fruit Fourthly wee should labour to be abundant in storing vp of sauing knowledge for the wisedome that is from aboue is full of good fruit Fiftly wee should seeke the prayers of Gods Ministers for vs and subiect our selues to be directed by their care and paines though the vngratefull world contemnes Gods Messengers and Vine dressers yet the truth is that if many times they did not rise vp in the gap woe would be vnto men for their barrainnes Sixtly we should make vse of our crosses and learne humilitie and acknowledgement of our sins by them breaking our hearts in Gods sight and beseeching him for the compassions of a Father to be shewed to vs that so wee might after much exercise vnder our crosses bring forth the quiet fruit
Lastly nothing but the will of God bindes conscience the Apostle of purpose layeth the foundation in the Preface concerning the knowledge of and resting vpon Gods will that so he might the more easily beat downe their Traditions and Philosophicall Speculations of which he meant to intreate in the next Chapter Now if this Doctrine be true as it is most true then Apocryphe Scripture Councels Fathers and Princes Lawes doe not binde further then they are agreeable to Gods will and therefore much lesse Popes Decrees Traditions and humane Inuentions Thus of the Obiect of Knowledge In the next place it is described by the Parts of it in the next words In all Wisedome and spirituall Vnderstanding Where the Apostle shewes that sauing Knowledge hath two parts viz. Vnderstanding and Wisedome Concerning the difference betweene the two originall words in this place rendered Wisedome and Vnderstanding there is a great stirre amongst Interpreters Some say that the one proceedeth out of the principles of the Law of Nature and the other out of the principles of Faith Some take the one to be a knowledge concerning the end the other of things that are for the end Some thinke by Vnderstanding is meant apprehension and by Wisedome is meant Iudgement or dijudication Some thinke that Synesis rendered Vnderstanding receiueth the will of God in the whole and that Sophia Wisedome conceiueth it in the parts and with weighing of all circumstances by the first they consider what is lawfull and by the second what is expedient Some say that the one of them conceiueth the obiect of felicitie the other the meanes by which men attaine it Some thinke they differ thus that the one vnderstands of God absolutely by Scripture as he is and the other considers of God by collation or comparison with the creatures by experience as hee is tasted to be good but the plainest and soundest difference is this that Vnderstanding is contemplatiue knowledge but Wisedome is actiue knowledge the one giues rules for practise the other for Iudgement and contemplation But before I consider of them apart I obserue two generall Doctrines First that sauing Knowledge and Wisedome is not naturall but from aboue and had onely by CHRIST here it followes Faith and Loue it is wrought by the power of the Gospell it is prayed for and lastly it is plainely said to be spirituall See more Iames 3.17 1 Cor. 2.14 2 Cor. 1.30 Tit. 3.3 and it may serue for many vses First it should inforce vs to labour to become spirituall men as wee would desire to haue any thing to doe with the knowledge of Gods will for if wee be not more then naturall men it is certaine wee know not the things of God Be sure therefore thou be no naturall man Quest. How may a naturall man be knowne Ans. Hee is a naturall man First that hath in him onely the spirit of the world 1 Cor. 2.12 Secondly that knowes not that wisedome of God that is in a mysterie that is his Reconciliation and Saluation by Christ 1 Cor. 2.7.10.14 Thirdly that loues not God Vers. 9. as they doe not that loue not the word people and way of God Fourthly that knowes not the things giuen of God by the Spirit Vers. 12. Fiftly that accounts spirituall things fooli●h things and religious courses foolish courses Vers. 14. Sixtly that hates sinceritie and walkes after his owne lusts Iud. 19.18 And it is worthy to be noted that the Apostle when he fore-tels of these wicked loose persons and prophane men liuing in the Church he saith they make Sects and it is most sure that not onely Heretikes and false-Teachers that draw men out of the bosome of the Church to diuide them from our Assemblies but euen wicked men that wallow in sinne make Sects and Schisme and diuision in the Church though they otherwise come to the Word and Sacraments as the people of God doe for the Word is seldome effectuall in the working of it in any place but wee may finde the Diuell stirring vp carnall and naturall men that striue by all meanes to pursue such as desire to feare God lading them with reproaches and blowing abroad slanders and wilfully both disgracing them and shunning their presence and when they haue done call them Sectaries and other Hereticall names them I say that excepting their care and conscience to walke vprightly with God and vnrebukeable amongst men liue in peace by them but though men are deceiued God will not be mocked these are the men that God meanes to indite for making of Sects in the Church as well as Heretikes Secondly seeing true Wisedome is from aboue it should worke in vs a dislike both of hellish wisedome and earthly wisedome by hellish wisedome I meane such wisedome as was in the Priests when they killed Christ or that that was in Pharaoh who counts it to deale wisely to oppresse Gods people It is diuellish wisedome to be cunning or artificiall in hiding the practise of sinne it is diuellish wisedome to haue skill in defending sinne It is diuellish wisedome that is vsed in the refining of sinne as for example drinking of healths began to grow to that detested head and was accompanied with that filthy villany and abhomination in respect of the excesse of it that certainely the Diuell should neuer haue gotten the most men in a short time to haue had any thing to doe with such a damned beastlinesse now the Diuell not willing to loose his homage and sacrifice inspires some men to bring in a libert●e to drinke in lesse glasses and with allowance of choyse of drinkes or Wines and now the sinne is refined it goes currant Earthly wisedome is of two kindes for eyther it is a skill to get goods or else it his humane learning and policie both allowable in themselues but neither to be much liked or trusted to for as for the skill to get riches What would it profit a man to winne the whole world and loose his owne soule and the prayse of humane wit learning policie c. is much curbed by certaine terrible places of Scripture The conceit of this wisdome makes the Crosse of Christ of none effect and a man may haue a great measure of it and be famous and yet be without God without Christ and without the couenants of promise and without hope in the world for not many noble not many wise hath God chosen Yea God many times hides the mysteries of the Kingdome of Grace from these great Wise-men and sets himselfe of purpose to stayne their pride to destroy their wisedome and to infatuate their counsels Where is the Scribe learned in the Scripture where is the Disputer of this world skilfull in humane learning and policie Hath not God to vexe the very hearts of these men tyed conuersion of soules ordinarily to the foolishnesse of preaching Doct. 2. It is not enough to get Pietie vnlesse wee
Colossians were in without Christ Secondly the remedie in Christ. Their miserie is both propounded and expounded It is propounded to stand in two things viz. Alienation and enmitie It is expounded in two things viz. that they were thus miserable first in their Mindes secondly in their Workes the remedy followes in the next Verse Before I come to consider of their misery there are certaine words of Coherence to be weighed viz. And you hath hee now also reconciled where obserue first the word of Connexion And secondly the benefit repeated reconciled Thirdly the person whom you Fourthly the time when hath now Fiftly the person who Hee From the generall consideration of the matter contained in this Verse and the next with the Coherence sixe things may be obserued First that CHRIST is a true head to euery particular Church Secondly that then is any people happy and not before when the Gospell gathers their soules to God Thirdly they cannot be miserable that cease to be strangers and enemies to God whatsoeuer their outward estate be Fourthly Doctrine must be applyed for the humiliation of Gods Seruants so to Dauid for the conuincing of the wicked so to Ahab for the tryall and detection of the temporary Faith so to Herod for the hardening of the reprobates and their reiection and cutting downe by the Sword of Gods seruants and for the speciall consolations and directions of Gods Seruants And therefore Ministers should employ themselues in application and to that end should study for power of matter as well as forme of words and turne themselues into all formes requesting beseeching reprouing c. with all diligence and sinceritie The People also must know that their profiting lyes in application and to this end they should attend meditate repeate pray striue against Securitie and Obiections keeping aliue the sparkes that are kindled in their soules When a man can conscionably apply the Word it shewes hee truely hates sinne and is a true hearer Fiftly men may know particularly they are reconciled which both checkes Securitie in not labouring for this knowledge and confutes Papists and drowsie Protestants that say it is presumption to thinke so Sixtly Experience giues sure testimony to the Doctrine of the Gospell then wee know profitably when wee know the doctrine in our owne case as the Colossians here their Reconciliation Wee neede not wonder then if wee see that the most powerfull parts of practicall Diuinitie haue little or no testimonie or if it be it is darke and seldome from the most men yea from many Church-men The cause is they neuer had experience themselues And we should learne to esteeme their iudgement most that doe draw Religion most into practise for God will shew the humble his way And you In the gathering of Soules God workes beyond desert and many times beyond probabilities If wee respect the men they were Gentiles hardened by hundreds of yeeres in custome of sinnes if wee respect the meanes it is Epaphras none of the greatest of the Apostles Which should teach vs to liue by Faith and vse Gods ordinance with confidence As in the businesse of conuersion so in matter of preseruation knowing that God is not tyed to desert or meanes Also Doct. The Church and Kingdome of Christ is in this world still in progresse Christ hath not done when hee hath conquered Rome spiritually that had conquered the world before corporally but here is a fresh increase and a new You also And thus it will be still till the end of the world and therefore wee should euery one doe what wee can to helpe forward the Kingdome of God and the adding of such soules as yet belong to the vocation of Christ. And this wee may doe both by furthering the Gospell preached and by seeking a holy seede getting within the Couenant our selues and by education labouring to mend that which by propagation wee haue marred Yea the consideration hereof should much encourage vs in the combate against Sinne and the World for in the warre Souldiers vse to gather spirit and valour vpon the tidings of new supplies Now. Men are not reconciled till redemption be applyed Christ dyed before but they were not reconciled till now It is not safe for men to rest in the Historicall beliefe of Christs death eyther learne to dye to sinne to crucifie thy flesh and to take vp thy Crosse daily or else forbeare to mention CHRIST for it is in vaine thou hast no part as yet in Christ. Hath Though Sanctification while wee tarry in this world be vnperfect yet Reconciliation is past so soone as a man is turned to GOD. Gods rich fauour may stand with the many wants and infirmities of man but then we must remember it is free and gracious for if we be perfectly reconciled and yet not perfectly sanctified then it must needes follow wee are not reconciled from our owne workes Hee That is Christ which being againe mentioned shewes 1. that hee is God seeing Reconciliation is here giuen to him which was before ascribed to the Father 2. It proues that in the one essence of God are more Persons then one 3. It proues that Christ dyed willingly hee is not onely the meanes but the vndertaker of our Reconciliation hee is not onely the Sacrifice but the Priest also Reconciled The repetition or application of this word and worke to the Colossians shewes that there is one constant way that God holds vnalterably with all his people No sort of men can be happy vntill they be reconciled if men will not minde their peace and sue out their pardon in Christ their hope will fayle them there is no other way to be saued Thus of the words of Coherence There remaines both their misery in this Verse and the remedy of it in the next Verse Strangers and Enemies c. In generall wee may first obserue that it is profitable for men to know and meditate of their naturall misery though men be neuer so vnwilling to it yea though they be already deliuered from it For the consideration hereof shewes men the neede of a Sauiour and as a Schoole-master traynes them vp to Christ it mollifies the stony hearts of men it breedes watchfulnesse ouer our nature when wee know it is so poysoned and corrupted it makes vs compassionate ouer others in their distresse or infirmities it sets an high price vpon spirituall things and makes vs account Gods fauour our greatest ioy it makes vs cleaue to God in a perpetuall Couenant To omit many other commodities that arise hereof it reproues the seldome teaching and learning of the doctrine of mans naturall miseries Strangers Vnregenerate men are strangers in fiue respects 1. in respect of Heauen not onely pilgrimes here but without promise of a better life so continuing 2. In respect of God without God in the world 3. In respect of Gods people not fellow-Citizens but Forrainers 4. In respect of the speciall prouidence of God Strangers to
first fruits to God vpon which followed a greater blessing vpon the whole Church The consideration hereof should teach Gods people not to faint at the troubles of their Teachers since they are for them though to carnall reason it seemes contrary yea the Apostle Ephes. 3.13 saith it is their glory Which also shewes the vaine paines that wicked men take when they persecute faithfull Teachers for though they thinke thereby to plague the people that so greatly relie vpon them yet indeede God turnes all so for the best that those sufferings are for them and not against them And if wicked men were thus perswaded they would spare such wicked labour and if the godly could beleeue this it would make them vnmoueable in trouble for what shall make against them if this kind of troubles make for them And fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ. Some of the late Papists gather from these words that CHRIST did not suffer all that was needfull for mans deliuerance from sinne but left a deale to be suffered by his members especially men of principall note and hence grew their Supererogation Satisfactory paines and Indulgences But that this cannot be the meaning of this place is cleare first because that doctrine is contrary to other Scriptures as Esay 53.4.5.6.8.10.11.12 Iohn 19.30 Heb. 10.1 to 15. Heb. 9. 14.25.26 2 Cor. 5.14 1 Iohn 2.1 Psal. 49 7. Secondly themselues being Iudges this sense brings in a grosse absurditie for if the words be vnderstood of the suffering Christ left to his people to endure for satisfaction for sinne then it will follow that Paul suffered all was wanting and so there should remaine none for any other to suffer for he saith he suffered the rest of the sufferings of Christ. Thirdly Caluin and Fulk say that none of the Fathers did here thus vnderstand the words and it is plaine that S. Augustine is flat against this sense when hee saith Though Brethren dye for Brethren yet no bloud of Martyres is shed for remission of sinnes this Christ onely hath done And Leo a Pope could say The iust receiue not giue Crownes And out of the fortitude of the faithfull arise examples of Patience not gifts of Righteousnesse Fourthly the next Verse cleareth this for hee did thus suffer according to the dispensation giuen him of God Now hee was giuen to edifie not to redeeme the Church Fiftly their Schoole-Diuines are against them the Glosse hath it thus Pro vobis i. Confirmandis in doctrina Euangelij Aquinas doubts not to say that to affirme that the Passions of the Saints are added to make vp or fulfill the Passion of Christ is hereticall Caietan referres the words quae desunt vnto in carne mea The plaine meaning is that the Apostle did endure that measure of affliction that GOD in his counsell had appointed him to endure for the Name and Gospell of CHRIST and the good of the Church in the confirmation and encouraging of mens mindes in the truth of the Gospell Of Christ. His sufferings may be said to be the sufferings of Christ eyther as Christ is taken for the whole mysticall body which is not strange in Scripture for by Christ in 1 Cor. 12. hee meaneth the body of Christ or as hee is the head of the Church and so the afflictions of Gods seruants may be said to be his sufferings eyther because they be such as hee should suffer himselfe if hee were on earth or because they were laid vpon him by Christ for the Churches good or because they were for Christ and his doctrine or because they deserue nothing but all the praise is Christs or because of the sympathie of Christ with the Christian who accounts them as if they were his sufferings And in this latter sense I thinke chiefely these words are to be taken for it is certaine Christ doth so feele the miseries of his people that hee accounts them in that respect to be his owne miseries as these places shew Heb. 4.15 Rom. 8.17 Mat. 25.42 c. Phil. 3.10 1 Pet. 4.13 2 Cor. 1.4 Acts. 9.4 Hence grew that witty diuision of Christs sufferings into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so as the first should be vnderstood of the sufferings he endured in his owne person and the latter of the sufferings he felt in his members The consideration of this that Christ accounteth the afflictions of his members to be his owne may serue for diuers vses For first it shewes that they be in a wofull case that haue ought to doe against Christ Ministers or any of his Seruants They would easily graunt it that the Iewes were brought into great distresse by the wrongs they did to Christ himselfe then must it also follow that they cannot scape scot-free that despise reuile traduce or any way abuse the Messengers or Seruants of Christ since hee accounts it as done to himselfe Secondly this may be a wonderfull motiue to stirre vs vp to be industrious in well-doing and in helping and relieuing the poore Members of Christ since we are sure to haue thankes and reward from Christ himselfe as if wee had done it to him Lastly in all our sufferings wee should striue that wee might be assured that our sufferings are his sufferings And that it might be so wee must be sure of two things 1. that wee be found in him for vnlesse wee be the members of Christ we cannot haue the benefit of this Sympathie 2. that we suffer not for ill doing Rest of his sufferings Doct. So long as Christ shall haue a member on earth there will rest something for him to suffer in his members and therefore wee should learne not to promise our selues rest and ease while we are in this world To fulfill The word signifieth eyther to doe it in stead of another as if the Souldier fight in his Captaines roome or to doe it in his owne course or turne according to the appointment of his Gouernour and in such proportion as is required and thus I thinke it is taken here It is certaine that all the Afflictions of the members of Christ come from Gods decree and the continuance and measure of them is appointed of God And therefore it should encourage euery Christian the more chearefully in his course and when his turne comes to take vp his crosse and follow Christ and neuer stand much vpon the malice of men or the rage of Diuels but to looke principally to God with this assurance that God will deliuer them when his measure is full In my flesh Doct. First God doth afflict the flesh of his Seruants hee spareth not the best of his Seruants herein Vse is to teach vs therefore not to pamper our flesh but to be resolued to suffer it willingly to be vsed like the flesh of Christ and the Saints But especially we should take heede of taking care for the flesh or seruing to the flesh It
we respect the manner of preaching 3. if we respect the suffering that followes preaching 4. if we respect the efficacie of preaching For the first Paul may be said to fulfill the word in that he doth preach as he was by his commission appointed he was charged by God to preach and in obedience to Gods word or will hee did preach it It is not enough for Ministers to receiue commission to preach but they must fulfill it and therefore woe to those Loyterers and Non-residents that care more to fill their barnes then to fulfill their ministration For the second Ministers are said to fulfill the word when they execute their Commission in a due manner and this they doe first when they preach with all diligence secondly when they hold out to the end not taking paines for a Sermon or two or a yeere or two till they can get preferment but with all constancie perseuering in the labour and worke of their Ministry till their course be ended and the fight finished thirdly when they reueale all the counsell of God that is needfull for their hearers thus Paul fulfilled the word Acts 20.18 Thirdly Ministers fulfill the Word by afflictions for thereby they confirme the hearts of their hearers as also thereby is fulfilled vpon them that which is in Scripture so oft fore-told should befall the faithfull dispensers of the word Quest. Can all Ministers shew their bonds for the Gospell Ans. Nay some can shew the liuings they haue lewdly gotten their ease their dignities their resisting of the word faithfully taught by others the disgraces they haue cast vpon their Brethren but alas their paynes or sufferings may easily be reckoned But woe vnto them for for all the euill they haue done they haue brought euill vpon their owne soules the Lord Iesus shall consume them with the breath of his comming Lastly in respect of the efficacie of the word it is fulfilled by them for many great things threatned or promised in the word were to be accomplished by them some extraordinary some ordinary The extraordinary were bound to certaine times such as were heretofore the calling of the Gentiles and the induration or obstinacie of the Iewes and such as are now in doing or to be done as the reclayming of the world by the euerlasting Gospell the downefall of Antichrist and the gathering of the Iewes These things haue beene promised in the word and haue are and shall be wonderfully fulfilled by the ministry of preachers The Ordinary are fulfilled in the Church at all times and thus the Word is fulfilled in the elect and in the reprobate In the elect Ministers fulfill the Word 1. In conuerting those by the word which were fore-ordained of God 2. In conueying Christ to their soules so as the word is not a bare history of the merit and grace of Christ but is fulfilled in the application of Christ Rom. 8.4 3. By diuiding the word amongst them as the food of their soules to preserue them 4. The application of the Promises which are effectually in the Minister fulfilled in the hearts of the hearers Lastly in causing the Elect to fulfill the word both in obeying the Word and in perseuering in the doctrine to the end In the Reprobate they fulfill the word 1. In hardening them 2 Cor. 2.15 2. By making them inexcusable by illumination 3. In occasioning many sinnes through their owne wilfull corruption Rom. 7.8 4. In slaying them or by sentence cutting them off Esay 11.3 Mat. 16.16 2 Cor. 10.6 The Vse of all this is 1. To shew the necessitie of continuall preaching seeing by it the word must be fulfilled many are still to be conuerted and all to be com●orted directed strengthened reproued c. 2. To iustifie the continuall trauaile of faithfull Ministers that will neuer giue ouer to exhort reproue conuince c. They are enioyned to see the word of God fulfilled and therefore no wonder though they will not let men rest in their sinne and securitie 3. To teach vs in all temptations or afflictions to run to the word preached for thereby God will certainly performe all needfull consolation or direction or humiliation 4. To informe Ministers that they must adde indefatigable paines since so much is to be fulfilled by them 5. To admonish stubborne sinners to take heed of prouoking God for if the word may not be fulfilled in their saluation it shall be fulfilled in their induration Verse 26. Which is the Mystery hid since the world began and from all ages but now is made manifest to his Saints THese words are the fourth generall Reason taken from the excellency of the Gospell which is here described in foure things 1. By the nature of it a Mistery 2. By the antiquitie of it since the world began or from ages and generations 3. By the time of the full reuelation of it viz. Now in the new world by Christ 4. By the persons to whom it is reuealed viz. the Saints The Mistery The Gospell is a great Mysterie a hidden Mysterie hidden in God because it was a secret in the purpose and grace of the Father before the world beganne Hidden in Christ because he was that store-house in which the Father laid vp all his treasures that concerne mans life and immortalitie and because he was the meritorious cause of all our happines Hidden in the Word because the Scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles are the sacred fountaines of knowledge and originals from the bowels of which flow the comforts of the Gospell to the Church Hidden also in the darke shadows of the Ceremoniall Law Hidden from Adam himselfe in Paradise so long as hee acknowledged his happines by the Couenant of works Hidden from the Gentiles many hundred yeares while they serued dumbe Idols and had not the Sunne of righteousnesse shining among them Hidden from the Iewes in part and comparatiuely because in a manner all the Iewes were ignorant of the manner of Christs Kingdome and of the calling of the Gentiles and such like comparatiuely in respect of vs they had the light of a Candle but wee haue the light of the Sunne and therefore Iohn is said to be least in the Kingdome of God Hidden from the naturall man still who cannot perceiue the spirituall things of God no though otherwise hee abound with wit and learning Hidden also from the very faithfull comparatiuely in respect of what they shall know in the kingdome of glory and in respect of the differences of degrees among themselues now Quest. But why is the doctrine of mans happinesse so obscure to many euen in the Church in these dayes Ans. Man is by nature couered with the vaile of originall blindnesse and besides hee is bewitched with the deceitfulnesse of his actuall sinnes the God of this world with his wiles and subtilties his deepenesse and his methodes blindeth many thousands to their destruction that he
is that wonderfully commends whatsoeuer it is in There is a kinde of seed of order sowen in the creatures This order in man is their eutaxie or well disposing of themselues The Apostle might commend their order generally both in relation to the common-wealth and to the Church and in their families as also in their particular conuersation That there might be order in Common-wealths God hath set man in au●thoritie for by him Kings raigne and haue their power and hath communi●cated a part of the honour of his owne diuine lawes to their ciuill lawes viz. That they should binde mens consciences so farre as they are not disagreeing from his word Besides hee hath recorded threatnings against the disobedient and acknowledgeth Magistrates to beare his image to be as it were Gods by representation and hee guides them by his spirit for the time many times qualifying them with gifts and guiding their mouthes in iudgement for a ●●uine sentence in the mouth of a King yea hee himselfe drew a plat-forme of rules for Common-weales to giue them a taste of gouernment Now that men may attaine to this Eutaxie and good order in Common-weales they must reade the law of God and let that be a generall guide to them and they must propound sanctitie as well as felicitie as the end of their gouernment and in calling to office they must be carefull not to set the feet where the head should be but to chuse men that feare God and hate couetousnesse and are men of courage The feare of God and courage is wonderfully wanting in all sorts of Magistrates And as for courage in respect of the people what are they the better if they haue a good man that will doe no good then if they had euill men that would doe no euill Yet in truth Magistrates whether good or euill men doe much euill by suffering euill to be vnpunished But to returne to the point Magistrates that would preserue order must giue good example themselues and mend the disorders of their own housholds and bring such a sympathie and loue of the people as they should both preserue their authoritie and yet remember that they rule their brethren And in their gouernment they cannot obserue order vnlesse they punish vice as well as command or prouide for vertue and wealth Besides they must take away the persons or places that are occasions of disorder and they must charge and remunerate as well as punish Finally the people out of the obligation of conscience must striue to liue in order with reuerence and feare yeelding ready obedience and furtherance to those that are placed in authoritie ouer them There is order also in the Church and thus there is order in doctrine for milke must be propounded before strong meat or with sufficient reference to the parties to be taught There is order also to be obserued in the time places and manner of celebration of Gods worship There is order also to be respected in the vse of things ecclesiastically indifferent There is order in the subordination of persons in the ministerie some to rule some to teach some to exhort some to distribute There is order also to be obserued in the discipline of the Church proceeding by degrees with offenders so long as they are cureable Neither may our families be without order order I say not only in the duties that concerne the maintenance of the familie but also in the exercises that concerne religion and the seruice of God in the familie In families there must be a care also of reformation especially that openly profane persons only for temporall aduantage be not retained or admitted there In the familie also there must be a daily exercise of patience humilitie knowledge and all other Christian graces that concerne mutual edification What should I say There is a mutuall relation in all the members of the familie one to another and the discharge of their seuerall duties one to another is charged with a daily care of order But I thinke the Apostle commends the order of holy life vnto which euery Christian is bound It is certaine we can neuer soundly proceed in godlinesse without a care of a settled frame and order of liuing Wee may not liue at a venture in religion T is not enough to doe good now or then by flashes There is an order in holy conuersation We must walke by rule There is an holy disposing of our waies required It is required of vs that we should ponder the pathes of our feet We must order our affaires with discretion This is called the way of prudence or vnderstanding There is a guiding of our feet vnto the waies of peace T is a wonderfull curse to be left to our securitie to walke in darke and vncertaine waies and contrariwise the vision of the saluation of God is promised to such as dispose of their waies aright And to be carefull o● an orderly course of life is to keepe our soules and peace shall be vnto such But alas men haue corrupted their waies and their vnderstandings are darkened and they are strangers from the life of God neither will men cease from their rebellious waies The ciuillest men walke after the way of their owne hearts yea the most men hate those that are right in their waies and are like Dan that would bite the heeles of such as endeuour to walke in sinceritie Some hypocrites there are that will know the way of the Lord and aske of him the ordinance of iustice as if they would be carefull to please God but alas they were neuer washed from their old sinnes and they quickly returne with the dogge to their vomit and corrupt their waies being of purpose set on by the deuill to make a clamorous profession that so their fall might more dishonour the glorie of an exact and circumspect conuersation Alas what should I say There is wonderfull want of order in the very liues of Gods children Scarce the tithe of professors of sinceritie of the Gospell that haue gathered a catalogue of holy duties and obserued out of the word that frame and order of settled holy conuersation There are 10. helpes of order in holy life 1. knowledge 2. vprightnesse that is an vnfained resolution to shew respect to all Gods Commandements 3. constant diligence 4. watchfulnesse 5. contemplation or meditation 6. praier 7. reading the word daily 8. frequent hearing of the Gospell preached in the power of it 9. a tender conscience 10. societie and fellowship with gracious Christians in the Gospell There are many impediments of an orderly conuersation 1. Men are not reconciled to God and so not being in Christ they receiue not influence of grace from Christ to enable them to walke in an holy course 2. In others t is negligent mortification the staine of former sinnes being not washed away there remaines in them an ill disposition to sinne 3. Many are
wade into them only a word or two of it This losse is incureable two wayes sometimes in the crosse or iudgement it brought vpon the offender sometimes in the vnstedfastnesse it selfe for sometimes though the Lord restore inward ioy and assurance yet hee will not remooue the outward signe of his wrath sometimes hee drawes backe the outward affliction but doth not restore the inward comfort or not in so great a measure so as some of Gods children may die without the sense of the ioy of Gods saluation till they come to heauen yea they may die in great terror and despaire yet the Lord may be reconciled and they may truely repent though these terrors or iudgements bee not released because God many times will thereby purge the publike scandall and cleere his owne iustice Besides such spectacles doe giue warning to a carelesse world to let them know that God hath treasures of wrath for sinne if they repent not Thus of the doctrine of stedfastnesse of faith and vnstedfastnesse also now briefely for some vses of it It may serue for great reproofe of the great neglect of seeking this stedfastnesse of faith We may complaine aswell of the common Protestant as of the Papists heerein for they are alike aduersaries to the assurance of faith let such as are touched with feare of God and desire to beleeue trauell more and more for attainement heereof and to this end cleaue to the sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and labour in the practise and exercise of all holy and Christian graces And for particular consideration of the troubles and losses of Gods children we may note 1. That it is a wonderfull fearfull thing to fall into Gods hands and that the promises of God yeeld no protection to a willing offender woe vnto prophane beasts if sinne make God angry towards his owne children and make them also vile before men then where shall those beasts that wallow in sinne appeare if they bee iustly abased that fall once into one sinne what shall be the confusion of face and heart in those men when all the sinnes they euer committed shall be reuealed before Gods Angels and men at the last day 2. They that stand haue great reason to take heede lest they fall from their stedfastnesse and bee carried away with the errour of the wicked 3. We should be wonderfull thankefull if God hath kept vs from falling it is his singular grace to keepe the scot of his Saints VERS 6.7 As yee haue therefore receiued Christ Iesus the Lord so walke yee in him 7. Rooted and built vp in him and stablished in the faith as yee haue beene taught abounding therein with thankesgiuing In these two verses the Apostle concludes the exhortation begunne in the 23. verse of the former chapter for whereas after all these reasons and the answer of sundry obiections they might finally haue sayd tell vs then at once what it is you would haue vs to doe the Apostle answers summarily that concerning holy life hee would haue them walke as they haue receiued the Lord Iesus Christ and concerning faith hee would haue them to bee rooted and soundly edified and established in the faith especially to abound in thankfulnesse to God for their happy estate in Christ Iesus The 6. verse containes a precept concerning holy life viz. to walke on in Christ and a rule by which that precept is to be squared and determined viz as they haue receiued Christ Iesus the Lord. As yee haue receiued Christ Iesus the Lord c. These words may bee diuersly vrged vpon them according to the diuers sences may be conceiued of them For 1. To walke as we haue receiued Christ may beare this sence namely to frame our obedience according to the measure of the knowledge of Christ we haue receiued it shall be to vs according to what we haue to whom God hath giuen much of them he requireth much and iudgement certainely abideth for him that hath receiued the knowledge of his masters will and doth it not if our practice bee according to the knowledge wee haue this may bee our comfort God will accept of vs and otherwise they are but in a miserable case that are barren and vnfruitefull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Such a sence as this may be gathered viz. So liue with care of a godly life as ye neglect not to preserue the doctrine concerning Christ ye haue receiued Certainely it ought to bee the care of euery godly minde to doe his best to preserue the purity of the doctrine hee receiued together with Iesus Christ great is the generall neglect of many sorts of people heerein 3. Or thus Let the doctrine you haue receiued from Christ Iesus bee your onely rule both for life and manners So liue and walke as you haue receiued The Apostle commandeth to separate from euery brother that walketh inordinately and not after the traditions which they had receiued of the Apostle By tradition he meaneth the holy word of God deliuered by liuely voice vnto the Churches while yet it was not written euen the same which now is written The elect Lady and her children are commended for walking in the truth as they had receiued commandement of the Father Yea so must wee sticke vnto the word receiued as if any man teach otherwise he should be accounted accursed For the Apostles receiued it not of men but by the reuelation of Iesus Christ And as they haue receiued of the Lord so haue they deliuered vnto vs Therefore wee must conclude with the Apostle These things which wee haue learned and receiued and heard out of the holy word those things we must doe 4. The sence may bee thus as yee were affected when yee first receiued Christ so walke on and continue at first men receiue Christ with singlenesse of heart with great estimation of the truth with wonderfull ioy with feruent loue to Gods children with a longing desire after spirituall things with endeauour to beare fruit and without the mixtures of mens traditions and inuentions Now then they are exhorted to take heed that they lose not what they haue wrought but preserue those holy affections and desires still striuing against the witchcrafts of Sathan and the world that they be not beguiled from the simplicity that is in Christ Iesus The doctrines hence to be noted are 1. That Christians doe receiue Christ and that not onely publikely into their countries and Churches which yet is a great priuiledge for Christ bringeth with him many blessings and staies many iudgements brings a publike light to men that sit in darknesse and shadow of death and raiseth immortality as it were to light and life againe but priuately and particularly into their hearts and soules This is the happiest receiuing of Christ. Oh the glory of a Christian in receiuing Christ for he that receiueth Christ into his hart receiueth excellent illumination vnspeakable ioy
Chyrographe a bill of debt and it accuseth by ordinances that is it taketh conclusions from the law of God to arrest or condemne the sinner But most vsuallie it is referred to the ceremoniall law by some of them men did enter into bond as by circumcision so saith the Apostle he that is circumcised is bound to keepe the whole law Gal. 5.5 By others of them men made bills of debt circumcision confesseth corruption of nature by propagation The washings were open confessions of the foulenesse of our liues in the sacrifices men subscribed to their owne death and damnation for they confessed they had deserued to die in steed of the beast The words may be true of all but most principally of the ceremoniall law In generall he here intreateth of deliuer●nce from the ceremonies of Moses then two things may in particular be noted 1. What the ceremonies were in themselues 2. The manner or meanes how the Church was discharged of them For the 1. if we require what they were They were 1. for honor ordinances of God 2. for vse hand-writings 3. for effect they were against vs or contrary to vs. Ordinances Some read for ordinances some read by ordinances some with ordinances and some of ordinances They that read for ordinances say the hand-writing was for ordinances that is either in fauor of the decrees that were against vs or for the better assureing of the keeping of the ordinances it was by ordinances viz. euangelicall for they say the decrees of Christ did euacuate the lawes of Moses They that read with ordinances say that the hand-writing was the debt of death which Christ tooke away with the ordinance that is the externall rites and rudiments of Moses But I thinke the sense is cleere as it is here rendred of ordinances And so the point to be obserued is that the ceremonies imposed vpon the Iewes were Gods ordinances which may shew vs that God did take vpon him the right to binde the conscience of men by ceremonies 2. Seeing Christians are freed from them by God himselfe therefore the Apostle would haue them stand to their libertie 3. This should exalt the praise of the morrall law if they were bound to obserue the very ceremonies because they were Gods ordinances then much more should wee bee carefull to keepe the morrall Hand-writings This word notes their vse because men are by nature wonderfull slow to acknowledge their misery therefore the Lord in all ages did driue men vnder their hands as it were openly to make profession of their owne sin-guiltinesse and fall that so Gods iustice might be clered Therefore were the sacrifices required presently after the fall and baptisme now is of like nature to shew vs our naturall vncleannesse that need to be washed Against vs In effect they were against vs. The ceremonies were against vs that is against the Iewes 4. waies 1. As they were bills of debt 2. As they told the longing wife that her husband was long after to come 3. As they proclaimed God infinitely hating sinne so as he must haue attonement in bloud and that daily 4. As they were transgressed in respect of the right manner of obseruing them Now though these ceremonies belong not to vs Christians yet we are in the same debt by nature that they were though wee haue not that way of expressing our debt Quest. But how could that which God commanded them to do be against them Answ. Many waies 1. When they failed in the matter as when they offered strange fire or sacrificed their sonnes 2. When they did anger God by omissions or delaies as when Moses tri●led out the circumcision of his sonne 3. When they did it for wrong ends as when the whore would sacrifice to colour her whoredomes Pro. 5. or when men did thinke thereby to make amends for their sinnes Ier. 7. or when they vsed them for the hurt of Gods children as Balaam vsed his sacrifice 4. When they mingle their owne inuentions with Gods ordinances and their feare towards God was taught by the precepts of men 5. When they did vse them as a burthen and it was a wearinesse to them Lastly when they that vsed them were wicked men and did vse them without knowledge or faith or repentance for their sinnes or the care of the due manner as many places of scripture shew And thus may the very law of God be against vs still aswell as against them The vse of all this cheifly may be to shew the miserie of euery impenitent sinner his sinnes are vpon record there is the hand-writing against him let him looke vpon sacrificing Iewes and there he may behold man daily in effect saying thus Thus must it be done to the man that repenteth not of his sins the obligation lies forfeited and the Lord may call vpon him for his debt of 10000. talents when he hath not a farthing to pay and then he will be cast into prison Againe when he saith vs he shewes that this is the estate of all men by nature there was a hand-writing against the very Apostle himselfe and such as were in the visible Church therefore he saith against vs. Thus of what the ceremonies were in themselues Now of the discharge from them there two things may be noted 1. The manner Christ put them out tooke them away fastned them 2. The meanes viz. the Crosse. The summe is that Christ Iesus by his sufferings on the Crosse paid our debt and freed vs from the hand-writing that was against vs the anger of God conceiued against vs for the forfeiture was thereon by the bloud of Christ appeased and forgiuenesse of sinnes and debts therein merited And by the bloud of Iesus the faithfull ouercome the deuill that had power to destroy by reason of the forfeiture and because none of the former agreements would serue by reason of mans weaknes therefore God makes a new couenant and seales it by the bloud of Christ vpon the Crosse and if we would be assured of our release in particular First for the forfeiture in Paradice we receiue an atonement in the bloud of Christ And he that from the curse in Paradice had power ouer death was now by Christ destroyed And for the law of Moses we are by Christ deliuered both from the rigor of it and from the curse of it his owne sacrifice being the propitiatorie to still the cry of the Law and to hide it from the eyes of Gods iustice h and as for the writing of the conscience the bloud of Christ cleanseth it from dead workes and quieteth it in the declaration of forgiuenes and it maketh intercession for sinne after calling to keep it quiet and as for the ceremoniall hand-writings they were both fulfilled and abolished in the sacrifice of Christ on the crosse hee himselfe saying It was finished And the more to assure vs of our safetie from these forfeitures he vseth those diuers phrases of putting
word praier and holy liuing this chariot is followed with the applause of Angells and the approbation of the Saints the place is in the new Ierusalem on earth in the temple of their God The chariot is drawne with white steeds sincere teachers it is prouoked and driuen on by the spirit of God and the effect of all is a heart inspired with heauenly ioies and refreshings 3. As it begun in Christ and is continued in the life of a Christian so this triumph shall be perfitted in death and consummate in the resurrection to the eternall dissolution and confusion of all wicked men and diuels Now for vse of this what lust cause is thereto take vp bitter lamentations for the wonderfull frowardnesse of the natures of the most men who had rather be miserable and serue the diuell still then be made glorious by conquest in repentance for their sinnes they had rather be his prisoners then such princes rather slaues to Sathan then sonnes to God rather dragged into captiuitie with the diuell then carried in the chariot of triumph with the Saints 2. If such honors be done to Christians and such ioyes had in a Christian estate Oh then let it be the praier of euery godly man daily to God as Psal. 106.4 Remember me O Lord with the fauour of thy people visit me with thy saluation c. Lastly how should it excite in vs a desire to walk worthy of such a victory yea how should it inspire vs with spirituall magnanimitie to resist Sathan and with a holy scorne to disdaine his filthie tentations and in all estates to demeane our selues so as might become men that know and beleeue that Christ hath spoiled principallities and powers for vs c. 4. For the meanes of this victorie it is added in these words In himselfe So it is read in the greeke and in the most interpreters and his in himselfe either it notes his misticall body or else it notes Christ himselfe alone and in this latter sense it is continually taken and so we may here learne that it is the Lord Iesus Christ alone euen himselfe alone that hath wrought this victory for vs there was none other able to stand in the feild against the aduersary there is no name else vnder heauen by which wee can be saued and therefore we should giue all the glory to Christ alone and not to any man or Angels for they neuer fought for vs nor were they able to ●and in this battle of our redemption VERS 16. Let no man therefore condemne you in meat or drinke or in respect of an holy day or of the new Moone or of the Sabbath daies 17. Which are but a shaddow of things to come but the body is in Christ. Hitherto of the seuen reasons of the dehortation The conclusion followes in these words and the rest to the end of the chapter and it hath three branches For 1. he concludes against Iudaisme in these words 2. Against philosophie vers 18.19 3. Against traditions vers 20. to the end In these words is contained both the conclusion it selfe vers 16. and the reason vers 17. and the drift is to shew that the ceremonies of Moses are abolished and therefore they should not receiue them or hold themselues bound vnto them This was foretold Dan. 9.17 it was signified by the renting of the vaile and these ceremonies were solemnly and publickelie laid downe in the first councell which was held by the Apostles at Ierusalem Act. 15. And they were then so laide downe that the Apostle after giues order to the Church that those ceremonie● should neuer be vsed nor any other deuises but such as might be to edification order and decencie and were without offence The ceremonies named in the text are the difference of meates and drinkes and the obseruation of times concerning which he writes more sharpely Gal. 3.1.3 4.10 5.9 6.12 In the law there were three sorts of meates that legallie were required 1. The meate offrings 2. The shewe bread 3. The cleane beasts The meate offring was a type of Christ our nourishment The shewe bread was a type of the Church in her mysticall vnion And the cleane beasts knowne by chewing the end and diuiding the hoofe were types of the Christians both meditation and discretion in the meanes of his holy conuersation And for the confirmation of this place the Apostle elsewhere shewes euidently that the difference of meates is taken away 1. Tim. 4.1.2.3.4 The difference of times in the law is here said to be threefold of daies of monthes of Sabbaths In respect of an holy day The originall and most translations word for word haue it thus in part of an holy day but in diuers senses some say in part of an holy day First in partition of a festiuall day from a not festiuall day aswell in daies as in monthes or Sabbathes Some say in part for they could not obserue all ceremonies being absent from Ierusalem Therefore the Apostle would haue them to receiue none at all seeing they could not receiue them all Some say in part of an holy day that is in that part of them which concernes daies c. but it is more plainly as it is here rendred Or of the new moone They did obserue the Calends or first daies of euery month Or of Sabbath daies There were diuers sorts of Sabbathes of daies of yeares or seuens of yeares The Sabbathes of daies were either morrall viz. the seuenth day which God did chuse or ceremoniall the ceremoniall Sabbathes were either more solemne such as were the three great feasts passeouer pentecost and tabernacles or lesse solemne such as were the feasts of blowing the trumpets and the feast of expiation The Sabbath of yeares was euery seuenth yeare The Sabbath of seuens of yeares was the Iubile which returned euery fiftie yeares We see here then that the Apostle shewes that we are deliuered from the bondage of the obseruation as before of meates so now of Sabbathes Obiect But is the Sabbath day that was morrall abrogated Sol. No the Apostle speakes here of the ceremoniall law not of the morrall and of ceremoniall Sabbathes not of the morrall Sabbath the word is in the plurall number The manner of propounding the conclusion is to be obserued Let no man condemne you These words may bee referred either to Gods children or to false teachers in the first sense it is thus let none condemne you that is doe not shew such loue to these ceremonies hereafter that thereby you incu●re iustly the blame and censure of Gods children And if they bee referred to false teachers then it is thus let no man whatsoeuer perswade you that you are condemned or iudged of God for omitting the obseruation of the ceremonies care not for their censures neuer trouble your consciences about it Which are shaddowes of things to come Here the Apostle with full saile driues into the hauen by shutting vp with this
appertaine to filling of the flesh In these words is conteined the third branch of the conclusion and it is inforced against traditions here I obserue both the manner of propounding and the matter For the first it is to be obserued that whereas he condemned the former by way of aduise he condemnes these by bitter and tart expostulation why are ye burthened with traditions as if he should say were there not a singular proannesse of nature to corruption could they be so blinded as to suffer false Teachers to impose traditions vpon them In the matter consider first what he condemnes viz. traditions explicated in the kindes v. 21. 2. The reasons why hee condemnes them and these are 6. First ye are dead with Christ and therefore yee ought not to bee subiect to traditions of the force of this reason afterwards 2. You are dead from the rudiments of the world that is from the ceremoniall lawes of Moses which yet were are rudiments or waies of instructing the world in the principles of the Kingdome of God and therfore much more should you now giue ouer traditions 3. They are burthens and the greater by how much the lesse sence you haue of them 4. The matter of them is light and vaine and idle v. 21. 5. They are all corruptible and perish with the vsing 6. They are after the counts and doctrines of men ver 22. Ob. But there seemeth to be a depth in these traditions Sol. v. 23. He confesseth that they haue a shew of wisdome and that in three things 1. In voluntary religion 2. In humblenesse of minde 3. In not sparing the body which hee censures two wayes 1. It is but a shew or flourish no true substance either of worship or sanctity 2. It with-hoolds the honour due to the body Now that the whole may be better vnderstood we must distinctly consider what he meaneth by tradition which will appeare if it be considered negatiuely with comparison with the two former 1. They are not things required by Scripture any way For all such were condemned vnder the first kinde viz. ceremonies which though now abrogated were once required 2. They are not such rites besides Scripture as are practized with opinion of worship for they are condemned vnder the second kinde viz. philosophy So then the traditions heere condemned are such rites customes or obseruations as men binde their consciences to to obserue or practize in the ciuill life of man Besides the instances in the text such are the obseruation of euill dayes or houres to be borne in or to marry in or to set out on a iourney in the rules obserued about infants vnbaptized as that they must not be washed or they must lie in a sieue or such like about weomen that lye in Such is the not marrying with kindred at the font as they call it such are the obseruation of signes of ill lucke or of death gathered from the crying of birdes or the running of beasts such is praying at the lighting vp of candles and the burning of candles ouer the dead corps or the naming of children with names that agree to men and women to make them liue the longer such is not burying in the north side of the Church and the like silly trash with which simple people abound more then is ordinarily obserued Thus of the generall Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ In these words diuers things may be obserued 1. Heere we see the necessity of our vnion with Christ the Apostle will not a done with it he remembreth it still 2. When he saith if yee be dead it implies that men may make a faire shew and professe long and liue in true visible Churches and yet it is a question whether they be in Christor no If ye be dead with Christ. 3. Note heere the praise of a mortified life for when he saith if yee be dead in Christ it imports that to be so is an excellent condition to be truly mortified with Christ is a rare happinesse to die with Christ is better then to liue with the world 4. Penitent sinners haue life and death ioyes and sorrowes c. common with Christ. 5. In speciall they haue death common with Christ. They die with Christ 1. Because Christs death was theirs when Christ died they died because his death was for their sakes for their benefit 2. Because when their bodies die they die in vnion with Christ. 3. Because the vertue of Christs death is deriued to their souls whence flowes death to the law that is a release from the rigour and curse of it 2. Death to sinne that is a power to mortifie sin conueiued in the ordinances of Christ and applied by the spirit of Christ. 3. The presence of Christ in all the duties of mortification though they be done neuer so secretly yet Christ is with them The vse may be both for triall and comfort For triall art thou not dead with Christ in respect of the mortification of thy corruptions then art thou not in Christ. For comfort to the mortified thou art in Christ and hee will neuer leaue thee nor forsake thee till hee hath raised thy body and cured thy soule Thus of the wordes in themselues they are also to bee considered as they are heere vsed against traditions and so they are two wayes Christ is dead and in his death ye are freed from all bondage of soule to any thing but the will of God and therefore t' is a dishonour to Christs death and the freedome purchased in it to make our selues seruants to traditions 2. You are dead with Christ that is you are mortified persons and these things are too light for any graue and penitent persons to take vp his thoughts or cares about them fleshly persons are onely capable of this trash mortified persons without teaching suspect them Thus of the first reason From the rudiments of the world The second reason stands thus if by the death of Christ ye be freed from the ceremonies of Moses which were then rudiments or as it were the first grounds of instruction then much more are you freed from traditions which are but beggerly obseruations that no body can tell whence they came or what good they doe This should bee of force to preuaile with vs against the multitudes of idle traditions that raigne amongst the people Why as though ye liued in the world are ye burthened c Quest. Doe not the faithfull liue in the world that he saith with such a salt interrogation as though ye liued in the world Answ. They liue in the world corporally yet not in the world in respect of their profession of spirituall and celestiall life So Christs kingdome was not of this world 2. In respect of subiection to all the frame of rites and obseruations of the world they liue not as men that are tyed and vowed to the seruice of the world in whatsoeuer obseruations it shall propound Burthened Traditions are a
broken or disabled by religion they must not only loue Onesimus as a Christian but also as one of them for he was a Citizen of Colosse there is loue should be in men as they are fellow Citizens and of the same trade or profession or the like Thus of the narration Vers. 10. Aristarchus my prison-fellow saluteth you and Marcus Barnabas sisters sonne touching whom ye receiued commandements If hee come vnto you receiue him 11. And Iesus which is called Iustus which are of the circumcision These only are my worke-fellowes vnto the kingdome of God which haue beene vnto my consolation The salutations follow and they are either signified or required signified verse 10. to 15. required verse 15. to the end The salutations signified are from six men three of them Iewes Aristarchus Marcus and Iesus verse 10.11 and three Gentiles Epaphras Lucas Demas verse 12.13.14 Aristarchus is the first concerning whom heere is set downe with his name both his estate a prison-fellow and his salutation This Aristarchus was a Iew of Macedonia conuerted by Paul who out of the deerenesse of his respect would neuer leaue him but accompanied him in his aduersities for hee was taken with him in the tumult at Ephesus and heere he is his prison fellow in Rome Crosses abide all that will liue godly if hee will haue grace with Paul he may perhaps lie in prison with him too But heere wee see that aduersitie doth not less ●n that affection that is sound either to God or to Gods people they that cannot endure the smiting of the tongue would little endure the iron fetters Marcus is the second This is he about whom the contention was betweene Paul and Barnabas Act. 13. because hee had forsaken them and the labour of preaching with them Now hee is commended by his alliance to Barnabas Certainly the kindred of worthy men are to be regarded euen for their sakes much more their posterities It is a great fault that when men haue spent themselues in the labour and seruice of the Church their posteritie should be neglected and exposed to want and miserie And is it a credit to be Barnabas●●sters ●●sters sonne What is it then to be the childe of God by regeneration Concerning whom you haue receiued commandement Some thinke that Marcus brought to them the decrees of the Counsell at Ierusalem and these reade it of whom ye receiued c. Some say the meaning heereof is not reuealed and therefore they will not inquire Some thinke that vpon his forsaking of the Apostle the Churches had notice not to receiue him if hee came vnto them and that he had written to them himselfe Some thinke the latter word whom receiue are an explication and so they shew what was commanded viz. to receiue him Now for the obseruations we may note First that scandalous persons are not to be receiued Secondly that the greatnesse of the offences of men are not to be measured by carnall reason but by the consideration of the person manner place time c. A lesser offence aggrauated by circumstance● may giue cause of priuate separation from voluntarie companie Thirdly that an ingenuous nature is much affected with the distaste of discreet Christian● Fourthly that repenting sinners are to be receiued if vnto Gods mercy then much more vnto our houses and companies It is an ill qualitie to be hard to ●e reconciled In generall t is our dutie and Gods commandement that wee should receiue one another Thus ministers must receiue their people when they are with them to speake to them of the Kingdome of God and the people must receiue their ministers also and the people must receiue one another euen the meanest Christians as well as the greatest the little ones that beleeue in Christ all the disciples of Christ are to be receiued Now because this point of receiuing one another is exceeding needfull and there may be much mistaking about it I thinke good therefore to giue out of seuerall Scriptures rules how we are to carrie our selues in this businesse of receiuing one another 1 That we entertaine with all heedfulnesse so Act. 9. in Pauls case and Act 18.27 in Apollos case This condemnes the carnall hospitalitie in the world which promiscuously admits any of any profession where the basest and vilest sort of people are soonest chosen for the table and companie yea many of the better sort are to be blamed such as are ouer credulous many times to their owne singular disgrace and hurt of the Church 2 That when we are assured of the faithfulnesse of any wee receiue them with all Christian respect freely and liberally Rom. 15.17 bearing with their infirmities Rom. 15.1 yea if need be pardoning their offences Phil. 12.17 3 That in societie with weake Christians wee take heed of intangling them with questions and controuersies Rom. 14.1 as the manner of some i● 4 That great respect be had of our callings 5 That the imploiment be chiefly about holy things Receiue them in the fellowship of the Gospell not for recreation or idle discourse either labour to strengthen them Act. 18.26 or to be furthered in obedience by them 2. Cor. 7.15 6 That great respect be had of frugalitie Luk. 10.8 Thus of verse 10. Vers. 11. And Iesus which is called Iustus which are of the circumcision c. The third person that doth salute is described by his proper name Iesus and his surname Iustus Quest. May the name of Iesus be giuen to any man Answ. Before it was appropriated to the sonne of God it was both lawfull and vsuall to giue it to men as appeares by Iosonas name which is the same and the sonne of Syrake But now it is not expedient any way and therefore the Iesuites may change their names like Iebusites as they are The name Iustus was not giuen him by the Iewes but by the Romans as the varying of the language sheweth and in all probabilitie giuen in praise of his faithfulnesse and true dealing with all men Quest. What may we doe to winne the reputation of iust persons Answ. 1. Be peaceable and make peace and doe all things without murmuring or reasonings Mat. 5.8 Phil. 2.15 2 Be watchfull vnto chastitie and the honestie of the seuenth commandement 1. Pet. 2.11.12 3 Let your conuersation be without feare 1. Pet. 3.2 4 Be not vaine in apparrell 1. Pet. 3.3 5 Get a meeke and quiet spirit 1. Pet. 4.3.4 6 In yeelding Apologie be constant and vnmoueable with all cheerefulnesse willing to giue answere with all meeknesse and reuerence and good conscience 1. Pet. 3.15.16 7 Shew all vprightnesse in thy calling and this vprightnesse hath 3. things 1 Diligence 2 All true and faithfull dealing in words and promises 3 A conuersation without couetousnesse Finally to liue inoffensiuely is a strong inducement euen to the worst men many times to draw from them a good testimonie euen of Gods children Thus of their
zeale that spends it selfe in rayling and fiery reproches railers seldome stand long 11 Or an ignorant bold zeale such as was in the Iewes Or lastly a selfe conceited zeale when men trust too much to themselues and their owne iudgements True zeale hath in it 6 things 1 The affections of worship and spirituall compassion it will not rest in the bare worke done either of pietie to God or spirituall mercy to men it cannot bee cold or lukewarme in praying hearing preaching admonishing c. 2 An ardent loue to such as feare God shewed by desire mourning and seruencie of minde towards them 3 An vtter hatred of the wickednesse and profanenesse of the world with a willingnesse to shew and maintaine according to a mans calling a spirituall oposition against it 4 An affectionate desire after Gods house and the puritie of it thus the zeale of Gods house should eate vs vp 5 A great wrestling within a man against the corruptions of his owne nature expressed by indignation sorrow confession strong cries to God and reuenge vpon the flesh 6 The couetting of all spirituall things as the best things in the world Lastly obserue that he saith much zeale or great zeale which sheweth that men ought to thriue in zeale aswell as in other graces howsoeuer the world iudge of it only let men looke to themselues according to the former rules that they deceiue not themselues nor the world For you and for them of Laodicea and Hierapolis I will not trouble the Reader with the topographie of these townes it is out of question they were neere bordering cities Only obserue here 3 things 1 That the care of faithfull teachers and their desire to do good extends to other Churches also hence they are compared fitly to starres that giue light not only to the orbe in which they are but to places further of and this good Ministers may do by praier example of faithfulnesse and diligence or by counsell or writing or confirmation of doctrine by preaching as there is occasion And this shewes the worth of painfull and sincere Teachers they are a great benefit to the whole countrie where they liue and therefore they should be protected and incouraged by all them that would be accounted louers of their countrie 2 That Ministers owe a speciall loue and care to the neighbour Churches for as neerenesse of habitation increaseth the strength of ciuill bonds so should it much more in spirituall 3 That the care of other Churches should not cause men to neglect the stocke that depends vpon them it is not sufficient that men preach somewhere God calls for an account of their stewardship in their owne charge they must tend their owne heards he were a strange Husbandman that would plow his neighbours field and let his owne lie vntilled it is vile corruption to be intent when we labour for others and remisse when we labour for our owne people Luke the beloued Phisition There is some adoe amongst Interpreters who this Luke should be but I incline to them that thinke it was Luke the Euangelist but whosoeuer it was three things may be heere obserued 1 That the Church of God hath alwaies consisted of men of diuers callings so as no lawfull calling is excluded nor yet any only taken 2 That Phisicke hath beene of ancient honor and vse in the Church wee see it here in the Apostles time and it was long before also for there were Phisitions in Iosephs time 4 Sorts of men may be reproued concerning Phisicke or Phisitions 1 Such as totallie neglect them though they haue neede to vse them yet our Sauiour Christ saith the sicke neede a Phisition o 2 Such as are wayward and will not be cured that is such as through impatiencie will not be ordered by this meanes in the manner they should be 3 Such as put their whole trust in Phisicke as Asa did neglecting to seeke vnto God for helpe yea it is to be noted in Asa that his disease being but ordinarie yet to neglect the Lord in it was a great sinne for though God hath allowed Phisicke as an helpe yet it was neuer his meaning to robbe himselfe of his owne glory 4 Such as will out of pride and nicenesse be tampering with their bodies in phisicke when there is no need contrarie to that of our Sauiour Christ the whole neede not the Phisitian Now in as much as many times it is manifest phisicke doth no good to the diseased we are to vnderstand three things first that this may be the fault of carelesse and ignorant Phisitians 2 That as we grow monsters in the world by sinning ouerpassing the deedes of the wicked so the Lord sometimes by bringing in strong and new diseases doth ouerpasse the skill of the Phisitians 3 God for sinnes or triall may restraine the blessing vpon the meanes which else would be auaileable The third thing I note is that the holy Ghost giues this praise to a godly Phisitian importing that a Phisitian should be a man sound in religion and zealous for the truth and knowne and beloued in the Church for as it is certaine godly and religious Phisitians may do much good in the dangers of their patients so miserable experience shewes that popish and superstitious Phisitians do exceeding much hurt by working vpon those opportunities to seduce and peruert men And Demas This is that Demas that afterward forsooke Paul and imbraced this present world from the consideration of whose estate wee may obserue three things 1 That the vices of men by the profession of the truth may be restrained when they are not cured This mans loue of the world was in him when he was at the best but it was curbed and held downe and so it is with many hypocrites and therefore men should be warned and looke to themselues that they be not deceiued by taking the restraint of the outward practice of some euill for the true mortification of them It is many times a great hand of God vpon vnsound hearted men that at their best they are seene into and not greatly esteemed it seemes it was so with this man for if we marke it the Apostle not only reckons him in the last place but he names him also without any manner of praise as if he would import that hee durst not commend him to the Churches We should here learne what to doe towards such from the example of the Apostle Now if any would know more fully what is to bee done and how they should carry themselues towards such as they iustly doubt and feare not to be right though they make profession there are three rules to be obserued 1 Pitty them pray for them and admonish them 2 Commit not thy selfe vnto them but bee well aduised before thou converse inwardly with them It is true that the practise of this rule is strangely censured when those kinde of people perceiue themselues not to be regarded so much