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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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is that in all things necessary to saluation the Scriptures are so euident in one place or other as he that runneth may reade the seuerall points 3. Whereas they say that this obscuritie must be supplied by humane expositions and traditions I answer that the commentaries and expositions of good men are not to be neglected but yet so entertained as not simply arguing the obscuritie of Scripture but rather our infirmitie and weakenesse who cannot receiue a perfect doctrine perfectly Againe how were those purest Primitiue Churches directed that wanted all those councels decrees decretalls summes sentences glosses and determinations which the Romish Synagogue would bind vs vnto as rules of faith binding the conscience surely they dare not denie but that there was more light more grace more zeale and pietie before such trash of theirs which onely brought in corruption and heresie into the Church then euer was since or is euer like to be vnto the ende We will also conclude this point noting in one breath of Bellarmine three errors 1. that he attributeth that to the Scriptures which is to be ascribed to mans impotencie 2. that the obscuritie he speaketh of is in things necessarie to saluation 3. that supply must be made by humane expositions whereas the right opening of Scripture is by Scripture That he may be able to exhort with wholesome doctrine Now we come to the ende of the former dutie which is that he who is to be set apart to this waightie function may be fitted and furnished to all the parts of his calling which the Apostle reduceth to two heads according to the seuerall condition of the persons with whom he is to deale for all teaching is either the confirming and strengthning of sound doctrine tending to the conuerting and confirming of the tractable or else the infirming and weakening of false doctrine seruing to the confutation and conviction of such as are refractarie and gainsayers of the truth neither of which can any man possibly fruitfully performe without diligence and setlednesse in the Scriptures seeing that to these purposes he must hold fast the faithfull word For the meaning we must enquire 1. what is meant by exhortation wherin it differeth frō teaching And the difference chiefly stādeth in these 3. things 1. euerie exhortation is teaching but euerie teaching is not exhortation 2. to teach is more properly to propound out of Scriptures prooue by the Scriptures things to be beleeued or done to exhort is to incite prouoke the hearers to the beleeuing or doing of things so prooued by reasons and arguments 3. Teaching is a former worke for the enlightening of the vnderstanding and frameth the iudgement and exhorting is a secondarie work more properly pearcing the affections and so furthering the practise Secondly what is meant by doctrine that is nothing else but the word of God taught for that same which is here called wholesome doctrine is in c. 2.8 called the wholesome word and to shewe the identitie of them the Apostle ioyneth them together If any consent not to the wholesome words of our Lord Iesus Christ and the doctrine which is according to godlinesse he is puft vp 3. Why is this doctrine called wholesome to which I answer that that is wholesome doctrine which beeing well prepared afore hand maketh the soule sound and in good plight and liking for it is a borrowed speach from the food of the bodie to the meate of the soule which is the word of God here called wholesome doctrine of which epithite something is to be spoken but better occasion will be offered vs in c. 2.1 Doctr. 1. In that the word is called doctrine and no doctrine is without a teacher it behoueth euerie man to repaire to the teachers of it Now the teachers in the church are either the great doctor of the chaire who fully and sufficiently teacheth euerie beleeuer and whose teaching is absolutely necessarie to the conuersion of men or else his Ministers who as so many vshers are set to teach all the formes of the Church but so as vnder the Master farre wanting and short of his abilitie in themselues insufficient to bring men vnto the sight of their saluation and much lesse vnto their perfection not because they reade not the same lecture with the spirit but because they can onely teach the outward eare not the inward neither are they Gods to conuert although the word be able to saue soules as he is who in giuing the precept giueth also power to learne beleeue and practise it Vse Would any man be taught to saluation not hauing this knowledge naturally he must get him these teachers First he must goe thorough these vshers hands and then according to his proficiencie the spirit shall take him into his teaching But if a man will play the trewant and sit at home when Gods free-schoole is set open despising the teaching in the ministerie conceiuing that he may by his owne studie or reading attaine perfection he neuer climbeth into the highest forme he neuer hath the high things of God reuealed by the spirit who teacheth not now by newe reuelations or enthusiasmes but hath erected a ministerie of the spirit which euerie one must frequent that would be made wise to saluation Secondly as this doctrine implyeth teachers so doth it also learners and schollers Teaching vs that we must all of vs become learners of this word and doctrine for so long as there is doctrine and teaching on Gods part so long must there be an harkning and learning on ours and the rather both because that which is said of all knowledge that it is infinite is much more true of this for Gods commandements are exceeding large as also seeing in this schoole we are to become not onely more learned but better men It may not therefore be with vs who when we are at the best are but in part good as many who after they haue learned a while giue ouer as though they were both informed and reformed sufficiently but we must be still profiting and going forward and climbing as it were from on forme to an other so long as we liue still aiming at somewhat beyond for we may not conceiue of Gods schoole as it is in mens which are fitter for boyes and children then men of yeares a shame were it for an old man to goe to schoole but here whatsoeuer many an idiot say to the contrarie that now they are too olde to learne euerie man must waxe old in learning something daily seeing the best man may farre excell himselfe both in wisedome and goodnesse Thus Paul when he was an ancient scholler in Christs schoole pressed hard to things that were before him And Dauid with other saints of God prayed still to be taught of God euen when they were well taught as such as who the more they sawe the lesse they could acknowledge Vse In our learning of this doctrine we must examine our profiting
in your callings and seuerall conditions of life then look abroad into the field of my Church and there you shall not want wherein to employ your strength counsell exhortation mercie loue zeale diligence and all the graces yee haue Neither is it harder to set Christians on worke then to hold them vnto it The profits and pleasures of this life call them often from the speciall busines of Christianitie because they enquire not whether in such seuerall actions they seeke God or themselues What am I a beleeuer I should in euerie action glorifie God testifie my faith beautifie my profession edifie my brethren I ought to winne the ignorant bring on the weake or at least stoppe the mouth of the enemie who will be readie to say You may see what a slight excuse will serue any of them all to misse a sermon what a slight profit will make them forget themselues their father whom they professe and their Fathers house what a slender busines will interrupt and breake off for the time their family duties what a trifle will make them at oddes and suites with others yea themselues for they can be as contentious as any other Alas am not I a Christian a beleeuer am I not called to better things haue I not promised better should I make the deuill glad his instruments reioyce Gods spirit sad his children heauie should I occasion profane ones through my sides to wound all my profession should I open a Papists mouth or harden him against the truth should I cast backe weake ones by such fruites in me a professor should I cast off the care of my brethren and bring shame on all my fathers house Haue I faith or are these the fruits of it would it not rather be fed still in the ministerie would it not vpon all good occasions be working by loue can a beleeuer be so slacke so heauie so idle so secure so couetous so contentious so scandalous as I am oh I must looke better to the matter When I first entred into the wayes of God I said I promised I would looke to my waies I would not offend in my tongue in my hand in my eye in my life and conuersation and by Gods grace hereafter I will pay these vowes to the Lord in the sight of all his people Now for watching opportunities seeking occasions of doing good we feare them we flie them we avoid charitable motions and repute it our wisdome not to heare them selfe loue and selfe ease slaieth our profession deadeth our faith and burieth our loue to God and to men can working faith be so idle or beleeuing persons so workles or trees of Gods orchyard so fruitles shall greene leaues make vs good trees or good words good Christians Let vs pull out our hands out of our warme bosomes and fall to worke and leaue idle iangling It would bee more for the honour of God and his Gospell if professors would either doe more or say lesse practise something like or professe nothing at all Where is the communion of Saints become when doe professors meet together to edifie themselues by godly conference when enquire they one of an other where is a poore christian either sicke or in other distresse that we may gather him a little releefe were not such a fellowship as this likest vnto the purest Primitiue Church in the dayes of the Apostles themselues and were it not now fitter for beleeuers then liue so priuately minded as many as though we could not be religious vnles as of olde we cloister our selues like Monks liuing within our priuate wals feeding vp our selues storing vp for ours but forgetting Iosephs affliction And surely what is the cause we see not such a comfortable communion but because those that beleeue in God are so heauie vnto good workes the richer sort which should be as great wheeles to set forward the poorer either looke bigge vpon them or for other employments haue not so much leasure as they their own ploughs must forward whatsoeuer become of Gods and the poorer sort want both meanes and example Doctr. 3. In that the Apostle willeth Titus to affirme these things deliuered and addeth this as a reason because they are good and profitable we obserue that Ministers in their teaching must haue respect to these two things 1. That they deliuer true sound and good matter in it selfe 2. That it be profitable for the hearers First it must be true and sound else are they not of Gods sending for whom he sendeth he furnisheth with a word of truth as on the contrarie Satan is a lying spirit in the mouthes of seducers Now then is it true when it is deuided aright and then deuided aright when it is truly and properly grounded on the place whence it is raysed as also when it is truly and rightly applied Ayming 1. to please God and not men or the times 2. to beate downe sinne and not open a doore to libertie or licentiousnesse 3. to comfort and encourage such as walke vprightly and not make the hearts of those heauy to whom the Lord speaketh peace Let the doctrin be neuer so true if it be misaplied it ceaseth to be Gods who alwaies speaketh to the heart of his children Secondly it must be profitable as well as true For 1. euery thing in the Church must be done to edifie and consequently spoken also 2. All assemblies are appointed for the profit and for the better of the Church 1. Cor. 11.17 3. The commandement is to deliuer nothing but what may breed godly edifying 1. Tim. 1.4 and not to striue about words to no profit 1. Tim. 2.14 bounded with a threatning that the Lord will come against such Prophets as seeke out vaine things and such as bring no profit to his people Ier. 23.32 4. examples Paul professeth of himselfe that he kept nothing backe which was profitable Act. 20.20 Nay the Lord hims●lfe setteth himselfe a worthy example hereof to all teachers and preachers Isa. 48.17 I am the Lord thy God which ●eacheth thee to profit and leadeth thee the waie thou hast to goe Vse 1. It is not inough that a Minister be a great scholler but hee must be a true teacher too Many a learned man is a false Prophet wherof we haue pregnant example in the Church of Rome in whom we see the speach true that in Gods matters the greatest clearks are not euer the wisest men It is obserueable also in the Scribes Pharisies and Rabbies of the Iewes that depth of learning hath not alwaies the truth cheyned vnto it but that the Lord according to his accustomed manner working in and by weake things often reuealeth more sauing wisdome to some poore contemned humble soule then to all the great clearks who may otherwise professe that they haue the very key of knowledge which is not spoken that any should hence be emboldned to contemne so excellent an ornament as lea●ning is but only to shew that the Lord
shamefull thing it were to marrie a wife in hope to beget children by another mans helpe what an equall thing it is that he who doth not his dutie in his owne person but by a deputie should also goe to heauen by a deputie but not in his owne person as merily and wittily Iodocus a famous French preacher witnessed by Espenceus From all which I may conclude this reason with the words of a Papist that seeing neither nature is the principle or ground of nonresidencie for that is contented with a little nor yet grace which is contented with lesse therefore the corruption of the heart of man is the cheefe counseller and perswader vnto it Neither is his reason to be neglected for though a man saith he dare liue a nonresident yet would he not willingly die one And as for the matter of substitution whereon the whole frame of nonresidencie is set as on a foundation he saith he seeth not why one man might not haue as well an hundreth liuings as one by this plea for he might get substitutes inough neither doth he see any reason but women might also be capable of Church liuings by this plea as well as men for they also might performe the duties by substitutes But I remit the reader to the author as also to other of our later Diuines who haue largely and learnedly handled the same argument 5. We may adde hereunto the example of the Preists vnder the law who were fixed in their courses neere the Temple and had their chambers and roomes adioyned vnto the Temple that they might waite on their offices and be readie for their seruices and there is no reason why the Ministers of the Gospel should not now as diligently waite on their office as they vnder the law vnlesse we will say that the standing Ministerie of the new Testament is not so necessarie not so certaine as that walking Ministerie of the old Let Ministers therefore see that the occasions of leauing their flockes for a time be vrgent and weightie not pretences proceeding from couetousnesse nor ambition nor any other sinister respect neither let them dare to remooue themselues no not for a while but for some occasions which are more necessarie then the attending of the flocke for howsoeuer they may shroud themselues by the protection of humane laws yet in the court of conscience only such necessary and weighty occasions wil beare plea and giue a man leaue for a time to be absent 2. As it must not be a small matter that must draw a Minister from his charge so if such weightie occasions fall out as require the gifts of some men to be otherwise employed for the time for the greater good of the Church then in his priuate charge then we see what must be our rule If Titus be remooued an Artemas or Tychicus a faithfull and furnished man must be sent in his roome that while the whole bodie is cared for no particular member be lost or neglected Where also great and noble men may be put in minde what a grieuous sinne they bring vpon themselues when they call Ministers from their charges into their houses or vnto the seas or any such employment and in the meane time neglect to prouide sufficiently for their flockes and the sinne is the greater in that they might be ordinarily better serued by such as haue no charges and why should they not rather send to the Vniuersities then to the Churches if they did not chuse to wrong them both when as yet no necessitie vrgeth or forceth them hereunto Vers. 13. Bring Zenas the expounder of the lawe and Apollos on their iourney diligently that they lacke nothing In this verse is contained the second priuate busines which is enioyned Titus commanding him that he should set forward on their iourney both Zenas set out by his profession an expounder of the law and Apollos and this he should doe 1. by accompanying them in some part of their way and 2. by prouiding that they wanted no necessarie for their long iourney being to saile from Creta in Grecia For the persons of Zenas and Apollos they were Apostolike men of notable gifts for the Ministerie The former is here said to be by profession an expounder of the law that is of Mos●s lawe as is most likely rather then the ciuill lawe but howsoeuer he was not like our lawyers he ioyned himselfe with Apollos and was a poore man and had wanted but for the churches contribution For Apollos we reade of him Act. 18.24 that he was borne at Alexandria that he was an eloquent man mightie in the Scriptures and feruent in the spirit yea so powerfull in his doctrine as that of some he was accounted not inferiour to the cheife Apostles for as some said they were Pauls so some cleaued to Apollos as other some to Cephas and therefore both of them were worthy to be respected by Titus who therefore must performe vnto them this part of Christian curtesie to lead them forth on their way Doctr. Whence note that Christianitie hindreth not but commendeth and enioyneth ciuill curtesie and all kinde of humanitie For 1. whatsoeuer pertaineth to loue and good report that must beleeuers thinke on and doe Philip. 4. Secondly the wisedome which is from aboue is gentle peaceable full of mercie and good fruits Iames. 3.17 Thirdly those many commandements that Christians should salute and greete one an other and that with an holy kisse 1. Thes. 5.26 called by Peter the kisse of loue vsuall in those East countries by which outward testimonie they declared mutuall loue and kindnesse Fourthly outward curtesie is a necessarie vertue euen for the maintaining of the bond of Christian peace yea availeth much for the nourishing and encreasing the communion of Saints and societie with Gods people Fifthly how disgracefull a thing were it for the profession of Christ that such as professe faith in the Lord Iesus should shew themselues inhumane or hoggish who should be as lambes and little children for such are they who haue entred into the kingdome of Christ as the Prophet witnesseth Let this point therefore be well thought of that as faith and loue cannot be separate so must good conscience and good manners goe together Now for this speciall branch of curtesie to bring the seruants of God and the Church on in their iourney it is from an inferiour to a superiour a dutie of honour as we see in Barzillai 2. Sam. 19.36 who would go ouer Iordan with king Dauid set him so farre on his way to Ierusalem then returne back to Gilead And of the equall to the equall it is a dutie of kindnes and towards the teacher of both and as it seemeth was verie common among beleeuers in the Apostles times Thus we read how the Elders of the Church of Ephesus accompanied Paul to the ship Act. 20.38 so the disciples whom he found at Tyrus with their wiues and children accompanied
willingly not as Lords ouer Gods heritage but as examples to the flocke 2. Wouldest thou know what ambition Christ hath permitted vnto his Ministers it is euen this that he that would be chiefe of all should become seruant of all not as that man of sinne the sonne of perdition who while he calls himselfe the seruant of all the seruants of God exalteth himselfe not only aboue all his brethren but aboue all that is called God also but to be indeede the seruant of the least and weakest member of the Church furthering by all his endeauour the saluations of men If any then be of the spirit of Zebedeus his sons that desire to sit at the right and left hand of Christ in this his kingdome here is the most compendious way to rise to his thoughts let him painefully serue the Church as a good steward let him dispence the food to the family in due season thus he shall get next vnto Christ the most faithfull seruant of the Church becomes the greatest ruler in it According to the faith of Gods elect Here the Apostle expresseth the ende of his calling to Apostleship namely to this purpose to bring the elect of God vnto the faith or produce faith in the elect the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which aboue other expositions I receiue because the same Apostle leadeth vnto it 2. Tim. 1.1 Paul an Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the promise of life that is to declare the life promised in Christ. It is true in this inscription if in any other which Beza obserueth of all Pauls inscriptions that in some one word or other he vseth to cōprise the whole scope of the Epistle yea the whole summe of the Gospel but in this in many words yea many verses he enlargeth that which in others he breifely contracteth and therefore as he wisheth not to passe ouer the inscriptions too lightly as which containe matter sufficient ●o oppose against all seducers so may we not without great ouersight and hindrance of our owne edification passe ouer the diligent inquisition of such multiplicitie and excellencie of matter as is infolded in this and the two verses following which containe as we may well tearme it rather a large description of the Catholike faith of all Christians then a breife inscription of a priuate letter passing betweene two freinds These words which set open the gate to passe vs into such a fai●e feild containe three conclusions to be opened 1. That God hath some 〈◊〉 are elect chosen and others are not 2. That these elect haue a speciall faith distinct by themselues 3. That this peculiar faith is wrought in them by the Ministerie of the word For the first Men may be called the elect of God three waies ● In respect of some temporall function or Ministerie to which the Lord hath designed them Iob. 6.70 Haue not I chosen you twelue and one of you is a deuill 2. In regard of that actuall election and choise of some people and nations aboue other vnto the true meanes of life and saluation so to become the people of Gods election And thus although all Israel was not chosen to life eternall yet in regard of the meanes they were called an elect people And thus whosoeuer giue their names to Christ and are set into him by Baptisme may be called elect in this more general acceptation of the word 3. In respect of that eternall election of God which is according to grace whereby of his good pleasure he chooseth from all eternitie out of all sorts of men some to the certaine fruition and fellowship of life eternall and saluation by Christ. These elect of God are here meant the number of which is comparatiuely small for many are called but few chosen a little flocke and a few that haue found the narrow way These few I say are chosen 1. from all eternitie for no new thing can fall into the prescience and will of God 2. they are chosen of his good pleasure euen before they haue done good or euill 3. and they are chosen to the certeine fruition of life eternall as beeing immutably elected For although many of both the former sorts might fall away and manifest their reprobation as Iudas and such as the Apostle Iohn speaketh off They went out from vs but they were not of vs yet this is the priuiledge of this election that it is the firme purpose of God to saue and haue mercie Obiect It will be here alleadged that seeing there is not acceptation of persons with God Rom. 2.11 he cannot more accept one to saluation then another or if he do how shall it not be most vnequall that those who are equall should not be equally delt withall Ans. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated person signifieth not the substance of a man or the man himselfe but some outward circumstance belonging vnto him as his outward qualitie appearance or condition which beeing obiected to our eies may make a man lesse or more respected such as are honour wealth parentage learning authoritie which when they bring men into account then is the face or outward appearance of a man accepted And thus the Lord accepteth not nor reiecteth any man for any adherent qualitie which can commend him aboue another for he accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regardeth the rich more then the poore seeing they are both the worke of his hands but freely in his Christ chooseth such as are good in his sight the rest being reiected As for such as alleadge vnequall dealing in God towards such as are equally corrupted and lie all alike in the same masse there beeing no more matter of saluation in such as are chosen then those who are reiected all this paueth no way to a dependent election or reprobation which hangeth vpon some outward thing without the most absolute will of God much lesse maketh the straight waies of God vnequall For may not he doe with his owne as he will who art thou that darest dispute with God that presumest to prescribe laws to thy Maker that he should deale with one man thus or with another otherwise or who hath spoiled him of his soueraigntie ouer his creatures If thou canst not sound this depth of the riches of this wisedome and knowledge of God acknowledge then how vnsearcheable are his iudgements and how his wayes are past finding out Cauil not at what thou canst not conceiue but admire it Vse This first conclusion teacheth vs 1. To make sure our owne election and shew our selues vnto others to be of this small number namely by holy and vnblameable walking by daily flying the corruption that is in the world through lust by the daily washing and purging our selues from our old sinnes and by the studie of righteousnesse becomming vessels of honour prepared vnto euery good worke 2. It confirmeth
priests must notwithstanding publikely not onely read but expound it Which is committed vnto me according to the commandement of God our Sauiour Our Apostle insisteth still in the iustifying of his calling and sheweth how he came to be a dispenser of such great mysteries as these are of which he hath spoken it was not ambitiō which made him thrust himself in for a Pastor neither necessitie or want which vrged him to take vp this calling as many base wretches now a dayes make it as a citie of refuge for whilest he went with commission against Christians wee neuer read that he was glad to worke with his hands to minister to his necessities neither was it ease or honour which solicited him for euer after the vndertaking of it he was in disgrace in perills in paines and labours aboue all the rest of the Apostles neither was it a voluntarie motion taken vp of his owne head which mooued him vnto this function of preaching But first it was a businesse or charge committed vnto him of trust or wherewith he was betrusted Secondly he receiued it by commandement the nature of which commandement sheweth that he was so farre from vndertaking this office of his owne will that it was rather forced vpon him the word in the originall is properly a martiall word taken from the wars wherein the Captain hath a power to presse soldiers and to place them in the foreward rearewarde or wings at his pleasure from whome or from whence they may not start vnder paine of martiall law to which he seemeth to allude when he saith that he had fought a good fight And how Paul was extraordinarily pressed into this field euen against his heart and as we say the haire appeareth in that he must be beaten downe to the ground strucke starke blind eate and drinke nothing in three dayes that of an extraordinarie waster of the Church he might become an extraordinarie chosen vessell to publish the doctrine he had persecuted And thirdly he receiueth no more commandements from the high Priests to afflict the Saints but a commandement of a faire contrarie nature from the high Priest of our profession euen from God our Sauiour Which may be meant either of the sonne to whom the title of Iesus or Sauiour is properly ascribed in Scripture whence is notably prooued the diuinitie of Christ who as God meriteth mans saluation or else rather here of the Father the epithite beeing truely referred vnto both for the Father saueth by his Sonne and the Sonne by his flesh in reconciling vs vnto the father Againe the father is called a Sauiour as he is the God of life imparting to the elect through his Christ the life of grace and glorie which message of life the Apostle was to publish by vertue of this commission and commandement which is said to shewe this order to be receiued both from the Father our Sauiour and the Lord Iesus Christ 1. Tim. 1.1 If here it be asked whether Paul was called onely by the commandement of God The answer is yea onely for herein is the difference betweene the Apostles and ordinarie Ministers the proprietie of the former was to be called immediatly by Christ of the latter to be called of God but by men beeing generall to all ordinarie Consecrations that there is required a twofold presence 1. of God 2. of the Church as Iunius out of the Schoolmen learnedly obserueth but not so in extraordinarie callings to which the former sufficeth without the latter Out of these words naturally arise these three considerations 1. That the office of preaching is an office of trust 2. That whosoeuer vndertaketh must finde himselfe pressed by this calling and commandement of God 3. A direction from the Apostles example how and when ministers may and must insist in the commendation of this office Doctr. 1. That euerie minister called by God is one of Christs committes vnto whom he betrusteth now after his departure the care and ouersight of his spouse who is deerer vnto him then his owne life appeareth in that they are called stewards of this great house hauing receiued the keyes to open the kingdome of heauen and to distribute to the necessitie of their fellow seruants chosen vessells as Paul not to containe but to carrie the pearle and treasure of the kingdome feeders as Peter husbandmen to whom the vineyard is let out till his returne Of the doctrine much more afterward Vse 1. The honour of a Minister is faithfulnesse in the diligent and carefull discharging himselfe of that trust committed vnto him the principall part of which repose standeth in the faithfull dispensing of Christs legacies to his Church according to his owne testament which as it is his dutie enioyned 1. Cor. 4.2 so is it his crowne his ioy his glorie that by his faithfull paines he hath procured the welfare of his people and bringeth with it a great recompence of reward for if he that sheweth himselfe a good and faithfull seruant in little things shall be ruler ouer much what may he expect who is faithfull in the greatest Happie is that man that out of the vprightnesse of his heart can say with Paul that nothing no not his life is so deere vnto him as to fulfill his course with ioy and the ministration he hath receiued If any man aske how he shall come to this I answer he must take the course that Paul did 1. he must teach the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe v. 27. and 2. he must dispense it sincerely not handling it deceitfully nor making merchandise of it but 1. as of sinceritie as in the sight of God 2. in the declaration of the truth approouing himselfe to euery mans conscience here by he shall become a sweete sauour to God euen in them that perish whereas the false and foolish Prophet hath a cuppe of gall and wormewood tempered by the hand of the Lord Ier. 23. and the Prophet Ezekiel sheweth both the head and tayle of this vnhappie condition the first entertainement of him is a woe and his farwell a curse and therefore I say to euery one present whom it doth or may concerne as Paul to his Timothie O Timothie keepe that which is committed vnto thee and That worthie thing which is committed vnto thee keepe it yea I charge you all in the sight of God who quickeneth all things that you keepe this commandement Vse 2. The ministerie is no calling of ease but a matter of great charge nor contemptible as many contemptuous persons thinke it too base a calling for their children but honourable neere vnto God of great trust a calling committing vnto men great matters and worthie things which not onely the Angels themselues haue dispensed sundrie times but euen the Lord of the Angels Iesus Christ himselfe all the while be ministred vpon earth the honour of which calling is such as those who are employed in
yee euen compelled me Others doe it because their loue to the ordinance of God doth constraine them others considering how the world was drowned for despising Noah and his Ministerie and how God departed from his owne Cittie and house at Ierusalem because they despised his Prophets and mocked his messengers and fearing least the like befall our Church and land for the same sinne most profitably and iustly both by word and writing magnifie this function If men were like the Galatians who would haue plucked out their eies for Paul and receiued him like an angel yea and Christ himselfe if men would know them that labour in word and doctrine among them to haue them in singular loue for their workes sake then where we labour to magnifie we would and might endeauour to abase our selues and become weake to the weake and all things to all men but to free Gods ordinance from contempt we may and must challenge such titles as the Lord hath honoured vs withall who hath for our incouragement stiled vs by the stewards of his house disposers of his secrets disbursers of his treasures keepers of his keyes and seale secretaries embassadors angels v. 4. To Titus my naturall sonne according to the common faith Hauing spoken of the person saluting whose high calling hath hitherto detained vs Now are we come to the person saluted and so afterward are to proceede to the forme of the salutation it selfe both of them beeing contained in this 4. ver The person saluted to whom the Epistle was written is described 1. by his name Titus 2. by a title of relation My sonne according to the common faith 3. by the adiunct of his sinceritie my naturall sonne First for the name It sheweth him to be an heathen or Gentile born by nation a Grecian Gal. 2.3 of heathen parents and education for at this time he was vncircumcised and it is probable that he remained so vnto his death yet such a one as was without God in the world without Christ without hope is begotten by the Gospell not onely to be a beleeuer but to sinceritie in the faith and thus he becommeth a true Titus that is truely honourable yea so farre honoured as that he was a chiefe pillar and instrument in the Church and much employed in the Churches affaires by the Apostles themselues What an vndeuided companion of Pauls he was in his peregrinations and trauells appeareth Gal. 2.1 what great delight Paul had in him 2. Cor. 7.6 how he vsed him as a Legate vnto diuerse Churches and betrusted him with the gathering of the almes for the poore Christians in Iudea 2. Cor. 8.6.16 how he graceth him with the title of a companion and a fellow-helper in the Lords businesse v. 23. yea he vouchsafeth him the title of a brother 2. Cor. 2.13 nay more of that which is much nearer euen of a sonne in this place Doctr. Note hence the freedome and power of Gods calling to grace For what merit or dignitie what workes of preparation appeared in Titus beeing of heathen parents countrie and education whereby hee should be raised to such seruices so neere vnto God or what worthines was in Paul himselfe he was indeede an Hebrew of the Hebrewes circumcised the eight day of the tribe of Beniamin brought vp at Gamaliels feete and a great scholler but by all this he was armed to wast the Church and he acknowledged himselfe such a tyrant and persecutor of the Church of God as that he was vnworthy to be an Apostle and beeing one he was in that regard the least of them all 1. Cor. 15.9 and for the latter the power of Gods grace breaketh through the strongest opposition euen Gentilisme and Paganisme it selfe yea he whose honour it is to produce light out of darkenesse and quicken the dead doth often where sinne hath abounded make grace abound much more and of the greatest and notorious sinners raise vp such speciall instruments of his glorie as shall strippe and goe beyond a number that haue alwaies liued more ciuilly then they before their calling Vse 1. Hence is confuted all that Popish doctrine concerning workes of preparation and disposition before grace and of merit and supererrogation after Gods grace is free not mans will his mercie is mans merit 2. Consider thy owne basenesse and indignitie before thy conuersion to be humbled by it yet let not Satan goe beyond thee in it He will be alleadging against thy faith after this manner Would God shew mercie on thee who wert so desperately drowned in thy sinne or can thy calling be sound who so long a time didst fight against the truth here thou hast answer for thy selfe I was neuer worse though I was as ill as an heathen and Publican I was not worse then a blasphemer or a persecutor yet God had mercie for such and soundly called such and why not for me But he will obiect further Indeede if thou hadst liued a ciuill life and not haue beene so outragious and desperate in thy sinfull course there had beene more hope of thee as of one who wert not farre frō the kingdome of heauen but the case was not so with thee To which thou maist truely answer That there is no more disposition to grace in a meere ciuill man then in the most profane person although there be some more restraint of corruption in the one then in the other nay for most part there is lesse hope of such then of greater sinners for they are often hindred from seeing the truth of their estate by reason of their ciuill vertues and by comparing themselues with men notoriously wicked conclude with the Pharisie themselues to be in good case for they are not thus or as that man who is an open inordinate person whereas the other are more easily convinced in their owne consciences and are sooner brought to say with the Publican Lord be mercifull and so goe away more iustified yea and much more may be added hereunto namely that there is much more hope of great sinners then of many who haue not onely ciuilitie but a shew of religion and want the power and life of it of whom the speach of Christ is true that Publicans and harlots shall goe into life before them The seauen deuills in Marie Magdalen resisted not her conuersion so much as their conceit doth theirs who thinke that all deuils are cast out if Belzebub the prince of the deuils do not discouer himselfe greater hope there is of the cold Laodicean then of the luke-warme and experience and good reason from the Scriptures teacheth that such as haue beene before their conuersion either more outragious in their sinne or zealous against the truth when as once their change came haue prooued farre more eminent instruments of Gods glorie then such as before their change neuer so highly dishonoured him both because those affections which were so violent in sinne are turned in their vehemencie against sinne as also because the
vnion when Dauid and God consult together Iehoiadab and Ioash and when Iosiah standeth with Huldas the Prophetesse and for a man to oppose the ordinances of Christ with this humane ordinance is to set the bodie and soule together by the eares Not therefore the faithfull Ministers of Christ but such as stand with the beast and his ordinances and with the Antichrist of Rome are enemies vnto magistracie and weakeners of the power of Princes while they teach that all Ecclesiasticall persons are to be exempted from the ciuill power while they binde their hands in freeing their subiects from all obedience euen in ciuill commands and while they highly dishonour them in giuing the Pope a power ouer them to set them vp and depose them at his pleasure and that in thei● owne dominions where they are onely vnder God And here first may be noted that after the Apostle had taken great paines in the planting of this Church of Creta yet were many things wanting and defectiue still for Titus is left behind him to redresse things defectiue which must not be conceiued as that the Apostles either thorough ignorance forgetfulnes or carelesnesse omitted any thing but because they were cast into straights of time and could not euery where finish euery thing at least effectually and executionally but onely by way of direction Which is a ground of sundrie considerations First it noteth what was the speciall worke of an Euangelist namely that beeing the companions of the Apostles they were to bring on the work of the Lord to perfectiō both by establishing that foundation they had laid building on further by their direction where they left off The office was middle betweene the Apostle and the Pastor the calling was immediate from the Apostles as the Apostles was immediate frō Christ. Where by the name Euangelists are not meant those who in a straighter sense are so called as whose helpe the Lord vsed to write the historie of Christ and beginnings of Christian religion two of which were Apostles and other two their companions as Marke and Luke but those whom we call vice-apostles or pastors fore-runners who were in preaching the Gospel planting the ministerie and administration of holy things to be as hands and feete wholly at the Apostles appointment to call and recall whether and when they would such as Timothie Titus Marke Tychichus seruing now in one Church now in an other as the Apostles pleased to vse them whose office because their calling was from the Apostles and their worke seruing the founding and rearing of the first Christian Churches and that by the direction of the Apostles must needs also cease with the Apostles Secondly notwithstanding many defects and wants in this Church and those great ones and that in constitution for we see their cities were destitute of elders and Church gouernours yet was it neither neglected by Paul nor separated from by Titus as a cage of vncleane birds teaching vs not presently to condemne a number and societie of men much lesse of Churches for want of some lawes or gouernment for no Church is not wanting in some if they ioyne together in the profession of truth of doctrine and worship for so many of the Churches planted by the Apostles themselues might haue beene refused for wanting some officers for a time although they were after supplied How much better were it that the spirit of meekenes should lead into a patient expectation when God will further beautifie his Sion to make her become the praise of the world then that the spirit of pride should hurrie vs into a rash and peremptorie sentence against euen whole Churches Did not Paul when the Church of Galatia had reuolted from the Doctrine of free iustification by Christ yet call and account it a Church still Let them shew any of our errors of this nature Obiect But those Churches and this in Creta was in constituting but yours after a long time by publike lawes and common consent haue refused the lawes of Christ and that after you haue beene conuinced not to be the Church of Christ. Ans. But where is this sufficient conuiction If it be said in their bookes the truth is although they haue pointed vs to some wants yet none of them haue sufficiently concluded vs no Church at all and suppose our case were altogether as ill as they would make it who are they that they should giue vs a bill of diuorcement If a priuate man erre and offend must he not first be admonished and then censured and iudged but by whom by priuate men no but by the Church and shall not a whole Church or many Churches challenge the same forme of proceeding and therefore seeing this is not done by our neighbour reformed Churches which no doubt are the true Churches of God wee remaine and shall truely retaine the name of the Church and people of God and leaue them to the reforming of their error both in the matter of their plea as also in the manner of their proceeding Thirdly we learne hence that no Church is hastily brought to any perfection The Apostles themselues the master builders with much wisdome and labour and often in long time made not such proceedings but that had they not prouided labourers to follow them with a diligent hand all had beene lost Much a doe had they to lay the foundation and prepare matter for the building and yet this they did by conuerting men to the faith and baptizing them but after this to ioyne them into a publike profession of the faith and constitute visible faces of Churches among them required more helpe and labour and for most part was left to the Euangelists So as the building of Gods house is not vnlike to the finishing of other great buildings with what labour are stones digged out of the earth with what difficultie depart they from their naturall roughnes what sweate and strength is spent ere the Mason can smothe them as it is also with the timber and yet after all this they lie a long time here and there scattered a sunder and make no house till by the skill of some cunning builder they be aptly laid and fastened together in their frame So euery mans heart in the naturall roughnes of it is as hard as a stone his will and affections like the crabbed and knottie okes invincibly resisting all the paines of Gods masons and carpenters till the finger of God in the Ministerie come make plaine and smoothe way working in their conuersion And yet many conuerts although they belong to the Catholike Church make not a particular visible Church till they ioyne in some publike seruice and worship of God according to the lawes and orders appointed by himselfe 2. Besides this inward ineptitude and resistance neuer had any building except Babels towers which had Gods owne hand from heauen against them such outward opposites against it as this hath here is Satan and all
the gates of hell here is Sanballat and Tobiah Simon Magus and Amaziah here are false Christs false Apostles Heretikes Tyrants all standing against Christ and making warre against his bodie In all which regards if Salomon in the daies of peace without all opposition hauing an hundreth and three and fiftie thousand and sixe hundred workmen cannot vnder seauen yeares finish the materiall Temple how hardly thinke we must this spirituall house standing of liuing stones goe vp how slowly is it reared hauing more enemies and those no weake ones then Salomon had workmen euen as many as there be naturall men in the earth vnmortified lusts in men or deuils in hell all of them with all their power resisting the proceedings of the Church and Gospel Vse 1. This doctrine lets vs see what great things God hath done for such a people as among whom he hath planted h●s ordinances many strong holds and oppositions hath he brought down many enemies hath he subdued many engins of Satan and his instruments hath he broken before he could settle his glorie and cause it to dwell among his people For as it was at the first breaking out of this light to the world by Christs owne preaching neuer was the world on such a fire neuer was any age so fruitfull in tyrannie and heresie so hath it beene proportionally euer since in the seuerall parts of the world where this grace hath appeared Witnesse in these parts of Europe the stirres and tumults in all the countries against the light restored by Luther witnes also the fires and flames consuming the bodies of Gods seruants in our own countrie in and since the daies of King Henrie the 8. of worthy memorie that had it not bin the truth of God it could neuer haue come to this where we see it for which mercie all the land should be mooued to much thankfulnes Vse 2. Let euery man hence be mooued to helpe forward and lend a hand to the beautifying and perfecting of this spouse of Christ that as it were by many hands this difficult worke may become the lighter Among the Iewes euery man brought somewhat to the Tabernacle and so it was reared some more some lesse but euery man something so let the Magistrate bring his authoritie and countenance the Minister pure doctrine and holy life to the building of the Church the rich their riches to the honour of God the poore good affections and all heartie praiers that we may once see Sion in her perfect beautie Thus euen very meane men shall be honoured so highly as they shall become assistants to the Ruler of the whole earth as some so vnderstand the place of Iehoshuah and Zerubbabel Vse 3. A ground of moderation to beare so farre as good conscience and a mans calling wil permit the imperfections of any Church and in the wants of it carrie our selues as peaceably as may make to the honour of the God of peace and the manifestation of our selues the sonnes of peace as well knowing 1. that it is not to be expected of any Church militant vpon earth to be vnblemished which is a prerogatiue of Christs glorious bodie in heauen 2. by peace small things thriue and arise to their greatnes euen smoaking flaxe cherished groweth to a flame 3. that contention and division hindreth and ouerturneth those good things which haue gone forward but slowly when they went fastest Yet so as according to the extent of our callings we ayme and labour for the pure and perfect estate of the Church For it was a wicked speach condemned by the Prophet to say It is not yet time to build vp the house of the Lord therefore content our selues to dwell in seiled houses and sleepe in sound skins although the Lords house lie wast And hereupon that the Church afore time hath a long time beene wanting in many things tending to the perfection of it to ground a perpetuall imperfection is a peece of Satans sophistrie and argueth the want of that most dutifull affection of children toward such a mother pleading rather for her blackenes then beautie and not reioysing to see this spouse bedecked with all her ornaments The second point in this first dutie of Titus is gathered out of the word translated to redresse but properly signifieth a continuall and instant straightning of things which grow crooked in the Church Whence we learne that there is a continuall bending and inclining of good ordinances in the Church euen in their best estate After that sinne got once into Paradise and tooke the hold of our first parents innocent hearts not the best ordinances that euer the Lord instituted could so fence themselues as to keepe it from them how soone after had all flesh corrupted their waies how were his lawes ingrauen in the tables of mens hearts so forgotten as he must be forced to write them in tables of stone after that how was that law written by his owne fingers generally corrupted and violated as appeareth by Christs reformation of them how his own politie was violenced of Priest and people all the Prophets as with one voice and mouth complaine how al the ordinances of the new Testament were soone ouerturned and by degrees cleane shaken out of the Church by the rising and grouth of Antichrist who euen in the Apostles daies began to worke appeareth in the historie of the Church Hereunto adde the readines of the malicious man to sowe tares the vnwillingnes of the flesh to endure the Lords yoke the busines and curiositie of mans wit and fleshly wisedome which will be adding detracting or deprauing his institutions by a restles turkising of them the state of the Church militant now here now there exercised with continuall vicissitudes and changes as of day and night so of prosperitie and aduersitie according as God giues Kings ouer it either in mercie or wrath protectors or persecutors all these plainely prooue that which is not obscurely implyed that the best things in their best estate are on the bending hand and inclining vnto corruption Vse 1. This point letteth vs see our imperfection in this world and that all our perfection standeth in two things 1. in sight of imperfection 2. in strife vnto perfection For that the Church cannot be perfect is manifest in the continuall declinings of vs that are the members Which should make vs ashamed when we see our turnings backe daily reproouing vs. The Lord if his pleasure had beene such might haue as perfectly beautified and stablished his Church in earth as euer it shall be in heauen but he seeth it fitter for vs to be brought to an humble walking before him in sence of our infirmitie as also daily to repaire vnto him who is both the author and finisher of our faith that he would be pleased to laie as the first so the last stone of this his building that the whole praise of it may be his Vse 2. They may
duties according to the Lords direction else had the former labour beene lost in like sort in vaine had the publishing of the Gospel beene although by the Apostles thēselues had they not established such ordinances euerie where as serued for the strengthening and proceeding of it of which the setling of the ministerie and appointing Pastors ouer people is the principall Reas. 1. How necessarie was it for the whole administration of God among his people to haue a set place of abode that they might aske counsell at his mouth offer sacrifices Ilasticall and Eucharisticall put vp their prayers vnto him and receiue from him instruction and speciall direction and hence was it that the Lord sometimes setled himselfe at Siloh and sometimes his dwelling was in Sion and no lesse nay far more full comfort may we receiue in our assemblies and Bethels where the Lord as the sunne by his Ministers as by so many cleare lights not onely dispelleth darkenesse and errors in mind and manners but directeth vs in all our waies we haue to walk answereth vs in all our doubts in all our petitions raiseth vs in our falls supporteth vs in our weakenesse and prouoketh vs to cheerefulnesse in all the pathes that are good in his sight 2. Our weakenesse is such that notwithstanding all the benefit of standing ministeries we are euer recoyling and falling backeward more and more our bodies are not more prone to pine away for defect of daily foode then our soules if by the meanes of the heauenly Manna they be not daily repaired no eie seeth not the neede of daily directions to guide vs to daily duties and those which must be often done we must often be put in mind of 3. Experience sheweth that in such places where such ministeries be not setled we neede not seeke for adulterers swearers drunkards theeues and lyars such soyles are fruitfull of such imps that a man would thinke the old Sodomites were returned from hell yea the malitious man slacketh not to sowe these too thicke in such fields as good seede is cast into continually 4. The ordinance it selfe speaketh for it owne necessitie beeing the meanes wherby those who by it are brought to the faith are also preserued in it the milke whereby babes begotten grow to strong meate and are led from their infancie to their full age in Christ. For we may not alwaies be babes and weaklings but there is a perfection of Christianity which hereby we must be led vnto Heb. 6.1 not that any perfection of knowledge or holines can be attained of vs as Anabaptists foolishly dreame but partly in respect of that further degree which we ought euer to contend vnto for in the schoole of Christ we may waxe olde daily learning and the greatest scholler shall yet be farre from perfection and partly comparatiuely men of grace and knowledge may be called perfect and haue attained a further degree of perfection then such as are rude and ignorant subiect to be carried about with euery winde and are not yet gotten out of the elements of religion a man is said to be of perfect wisedome strength and other gifts of bodie and minde in comparison of a child or one not come to mans estate a Master of Arts may be called a perfect scholler in respect of a schooleboy and to this perfection of Christianitie are we led by meanes of this ordinance Vse To reprehend such as conceit themselues that when they haue gotten a smattring of knowledge they must needs haue faith also and afterward need no Ministerie nor sermons but marke where the life of God is it will make the soule craue the daily bread as the naturall life doth the bodie neither seeth that man any thing of God and the mysteries of his kingdome as he ought that presumeth of his knowledge so farre as that when he hath begunne to build and laid a foundation like the foole giueth ouer and neuer commeth to laie the roofe Perfection of true knowledge is the sight and sence of imperfection and religion in the heart espieth daily wants and decaies in the soule and repaireth to the ordinarie Ministeries for the daily repairing of them Which ordinances whosoeuer cōtemptuously forsake great schollers they may be but they were neuer good men Vse 2. Let vs reioyce that the Lord hath so liberally supplyed vs in this necessitie and testifie our thankefulnesse in diligence and subiection vnder the setled ministerie that our iudgements wills and affections may be setled in the truth for to the obseruer it will appeare that such for most part are wauering and variable who content themselues with a variable ministerie now hearing one now another now here now there without fixing themselues to some one As for such as vnder a setled ministerie come and goe at their pleasure now they heare one Sermon then another slipping in and out as they list to them I say litle is their conscience great is their sinne and manifest is their ficklenesse and inconstancie in their religion 3. Hence is a ground of petition that God would place Pastors in euerie congregation that his kingdome might come euerie where that euerie candlesticke might carie a burning and a shining light seeing we see here that it is Gods ordinance that so it should be And the greater the haruest is the more ought we to apply the Lord of it that he would thrust forth labourers into his haruest remoouing whatsoeuer impediments he seeth to hinder such a blessed and glorious worke As I appointed thee After that the Apostle had declared Titus his place and dutie he commeth to the second point namely his direction therein not giuing him leaue to adde any thing of his owne invention or alter any thing which Paul himselfe had done but bindeth his hands from doing or vndoing any thing in his whole administration but as Paul had commanded and appointed him the tenour of his commission reacheth no further Whence we may learne that Doctr. The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Euangelist but Apostolicall direction must goe before and guid him The Church is the house of God and must not be ruled by mans inventions but by the direction of the great housekeeper and seeing the father hath committed all the gouernement of it to his Sonne who hath purchased it with his blood the charge and burden of it now lieth vpon his shoulders and his prerogatiue it is to giue laws and orders and by his voice to rule the house of Iacob The whole Tabernacle to the verie pinnes must be framed according to the patterne and yet that was a mooueable in comparison of our most stable administration which shall continue to the ende of he world and the Lord in describing the parts thereof seuerally still remitteth them to the commandement to the patterne and forme shewed in the mount See Exod. 25.9.26.30 cap. 27.8 c. twise repeated in so
suppressed And as the charge must be iust so it must not be frailties or infirmities that hang vpon our nature commonly corrupted but grosse and open sinnes yea and enormious crimes in the sight of the sunne the iust challenge and proofe of which disable a man from this function by this Apostolicall Canon And howsoeuer he that is the cleanest and hath washed himselfe in snow water hath his owne clothes that will pollute him yet read we of diuerse in the Scriptures that haue attained to walke without reproofe as Iob Zacharie and Elizabeth and many euen priuate Christians at this day through Gods mercie liue without crime though not any saue the Sonne of God himselfe euer liued without sinne All which open to vs the meaning of the precept Doctr. How able soeuer a man be to teach yet if he be of corrupt conuersation and scandalous in life he is not fit to be chosen for a Minister Reasons 1. Our Apostle here in the first place and more largely insisteth vpon the life of him that is to be chosen and afterwards in fewer words requireth his fitnes for doctrine and so in his charge to Timothie that he should laie hands on no man rashly addeth that some mens sinnes goe before hand and some mens sinnes follow after iudgement as though he had said more largely Vse all the circumspection thou canst yet some hypocrites will creepe into the Ministerie some are inwardly profane and such close sinners thou canst not discerne till afterward they manifest themselues others are open sinners of which thou maiest iudge aright these latter thou art to hinder the former reclaime or seasonably remooue and so salue vp the sore againe for how requisite is it that such a sweete and sauorie doctrine should be matched with a sweet and sauorie Christian conuersation 2. That such an high calling is to be graced with an vnreprooueable life was typified in the law sundrie waies as after we shall more clearely see in the positiue vertues required especially in that prohibition that none of Aarons sonnes or seed that had any blemish in him might once presse to offer before the Lord neither come neere the vaile nor stand by the Altar 3. A scandalous and obnoxious person shall neuer do good in his calling For although the things of Christ as the Word Sacraments and Doctrine depend not vpon the person of the Minister but on the ordinance of Christ neither in themselues are the worse in bad mens hands no more then a true mans peece of gold in the hand of a theife yet by our weaknes in such a mans hand they are weaker to vs and although no man can answer or warrant the refusing of pure doctrine which is not to be had in respect of persons for the spotted life of the Minister who while he sitteth in Moses chaire be he Pharisie be he hypocrite must be heard yet can it not be but that the wickednes of Helies sonnes will make the people abhorre the offerings of the Lord which what a greiuous sinne it was before the Lord see 1. Sam. 2.17 Againe how can he benefit his people whose hands are bound whose mouth is shut and cannot vtter the truth without continuall galling and sentencing of himselfe and when euery scoffer shall be readie to say to him art thou become weake like one of vs and the word shall be still returned vpon himselfe how can it be expected that he should do good amongst them Christ preuented that scoffe Phisitian heale thy selfe and Paul sheweth the dutie of euery Minister namely to minister well and the fruit of it he getteth a good report and great libertie in the faith Wherein let a Minister be wanting if he were able to speake with the tongues of men and Angels yea if he had a fierie tongue sitting on his head he shall neuer be able to preuaile with ignorant persons who must be sensibly taught and that aswell by their eie as by their eare 4. It is a most dangerous condition to himselfe to be a good teacher of a bad life for such a one is in the snare of the deuill that is when he seeth his life still more and more exprobrated and himselfe more despised euery day then other for it is iust with God that with the wicked should be reproch then he beginnes to grow so bold and impudent as that he casts off all shame and care and as one desperate and hardened in sinne prostituteth himselfe remorselesly vnto all lewdnes and vngodly conuersation Vse 1. Hence may we see the reason why the Deuill so mightily laboureth to slander the most faithfull Ministers of Christ namely that by the contempt of their persons their doctrine also might be condemned And therefore he will play at small game ere he sit out If he cannot hinder the Ministerie he can disgrace it If he cannot discontinue it he can continue a deuill still that is both an aduersarie and an accuser of it for either Christs Disciples wash not or fast not or Christ himselfe is a good companion or Iohn Baptist is too austere and precise or some natural infirmitie as Elishaes bald pate shall be cast as a rub in the way to make the Doctrine lesse welcome And all this because long experience of many ages hath taught this old serpent that the most wretched miscreant euen Herod himselfe will heare gladly Iohn Baptist if he conceiue him as he is a good and godly man carying himselfe without reproofe and exception The selfe same is the ground why he setteth himselfe in all ages to shoue in and hold in the Ministerie such persons as like vnfauorie salt are too base for the dunghil euery way for the ouerthrow of this apostolicall direction vsing and vrging most impregnable arguments drawne from affinitie affection some base and seruill demerit letters and requests of great men or gifts which blind the eyes by which and many other meanes Satans Ministers for the Apostle calleth them no better keepe out the Ministers of God What mischiefe these stratagems of Satan haue wrought in the Church we may see and bewaile and prouoke thence our prayers that the Lord would so let his kingdome come euery where that such maine pillars of Satans kingdome may be shaken and broken especially in reformed Churches which professe and auow the lifting vp of the scepter of Iesus Christ. Vse 2. Note hence what conformitie is most vrged by Christ in all his Ministers namely the ●●iting to vncorrupt doctrine an vnblameable life by these two shall all men know who are the true Ministers sent of Christ this voice and these hands are infallible distinctions not onely of Ministers from other men but euen of Ministers among themselues and the maine and intolerable inconformitie of Ministers is the suiting of Iacobs voice with Esaus hands The Minister hath not done his dutie when he hath pointed to others the way to heauen and
or countries reformed on the suddaine No this is a worke which must first be performed by seuerall persons and so brought into families and so into townes and so into countries For otherwise let neuer so good lawes be enacted for common welths neuer so pure orders in any Church the labour is no lesse then lost But especially let the Minister looke to this that first himselfe then his house and then Gods house be reformed Vse 2. Here is a note to knowe a true professor by not to deeme him as he appeareth abroad but if thou wouldst haue the iust length of his foote follow him home from Church see how wisely he walketh in the midst of his house see whether his house be a Church how his children are ordered whether his seruants be like Cornelius his seruants and in a word whether he and his house at home serue the Lord. Doctr. 2. He that would haue the blessing of gratious children he must beginne at religion planting it in them as their tender yeares will beare training them in the institution and reformation of the Lord seasoning them with the words of pietie distilling and by little and little dropping into them seeds of holinesse and the feare of God and prouiding that they might if it were possible sucke in godlines with their mothers milke For this is the way to haue his house a little Church and house of God besides the approbation of his owne faithfulnes And that this is the dutie of parents we might be plentifull in Scriptures and reasons but briefly let euery father consider 1. that he is one cause of his childs euill he hath helped him into sinne and hath begotten him in his owne image the heathen could say that there are two maine causes in a lewd father of a lewd child 1. the euill nature and disposition of the parent 2. euill education now seeing the best of vs bring too much miserie vpon them by the former we had neede be meanes by the latter to drawe them out of it 2. This is a good ground of all other nurture and discipline teach them all the doctrine of manners all tongues together with all arts sciences yet let thē want this one discipline thou leauest them to the curse of God the ende of their liues is peruerted and in stead of beeing the staffe and ioy of thine age they shall perhaps become thy greatest scourges True it is which Salomon vttereth and which euerie parent in some measure shall say My sonne if thy heart be wise I shall reioyce whereas by the iust iudgement of God many lewde sonnes neuer come to knowe or performe dutie to parents because parents haue had small or no care to teach them dutie towards God 3. Marke how the Lord looketh vpon this dutie and accordingly blesseth or curseth fathers and children Abraham was to be a mightie nation c. and the Lord would not hide his secrets from him because he knewe he would teach his familie Gen. 18. On the contrarie Ely otherwise a good man how seuerely was he with his whole house corrected for neglect of this duty see the historie 1. Sam. 2.29 4. Euery Christian must extend his care euen to posteritie and be a meanes to leaue his children the true worshippers of God in the places where he hath liued or shall liue abroad in the world for as if we would haue the Church of God and his truth continue amongst vs we must then bring it into our houses so if we would haue it continue after vs when we are gone we must leaue it with our children that they may continue it in their houses also Quest. But wherein especially doth this dutie consist and how may we performe it Ans. It standeth in two things 1. in acquainting them with the grounds of truth necessarie to saluation and this must be done by priuate catechising 2. by bringing them to the publike assemblies so soone as they are able to sit either fruitfully or reuerently and in both these watch ouer their profiting Thus maist thou and oughtest to teach euen a child in the trade of his way Obiect But this is a vaine thing to trouble children alas what would you haue children to doe Answ. But although it may seeme to be fruitlesse while they are young yet will they remember it saith Salomon they are old teach thy child to speake well while he can but speake and when he will conceiue afterwards the sense and meaning of it 2. Thou shalt not loose thy labour for by this meanes thou shalt displace at least restraine naturall folly which is bound vp in their hearts if thou dost nothing else 3. Looke vpon the examples of godly parents Hannah brought Samuel to Heli his instructor so soone as he was weined 1. Sam. 1. Salomon was but a tender child when Dauid his father taught him and said let thy heart hold fast my words Eunica the mother of Timothie taught him the Scriptures of a child and what excellent fruits and testimonies appeared in these of their timely instruction Vse Let euerie parent resolue of the timely instruction of their children that as he hath begotten them in the flesh he may be a meanes to beget them in the faith also that as he is the father of their bodies he may also become after a sort the father of their soules also and let the mother be a nurse to the soule of her little ones as of their bodies and both fathers and mothers vse meanes that as their children waxe in bodily strength and stature so also they may growe to some strength and age in Christ Iesus But this dutie is not discouered in the fruits of it nay the practise of our youth without and on the Sabbath pointeth with the finger to that rule that is within doores throughout the weeke and if to profane the Sabbath sweare raile curse game contemne superiours be notes of faithfull children there is a number such but if these be things better beseeming the education of infidels it is a shame for professors of the Gospel to haue them so rife amongst them And what other is the next cause of the generall profanenes and dissolutenes of our age surely because men content themselues to send their children to Church and yet some scarse that and many that for a fashion that if they can meete with knowledge of God or religion there so it is but they banish it out of their houses And how infinitely doe we hereby disadvantage our selues The Papists confesse that all the ground we haue got of them is by catechizing and it is to be feared we shall loose our ground againe for want of it Iulian himselfe cannot deuise a readier meanes to banish Christian religion then by pulling downe schooles and places of education of children by chatechising And when lost the Church of Rome the soundnesse of religion but when they put downe chatechisme and set vp idols
Be thou great in the feruencie of thine anger in forgiuing a fact that is shew thy great indignation against that sinne the correction of which for the present thou forbearest saying that is threatning that if thou shalt deliuer him thou wilt further punish him afterwards And thus trayning them in obedience at home it will become thy glorie and their beautie abroad Whereas the cause that now they swagger and are masterlesse abroad is because they were neuer well mastered at home and the reason why now in mans estate perhaps vnder a faithfull ministrie they are so incorrigible is because in their youth they bare no yoke were not inured with corrections Fathers affoarded no helpe to the Ministers by their good education and therefore now good meanes cannot preuaile with them Verse 7. For a Bishop must be vnreprooueable as Gods steward not froward not angrie not giuen to wine no striker not giuen to filthy lucre The Apostle in the former verse hauing spoken of those positiue vertues required in the priuate life of euery Minister in the former part of this verse he enforceth them by reasons and in the latter part reckneth vp many vices from all which he must be free if he will be vnblameable The reasons are two the former of which is included in the change of the name a Bishop the latter propounded in a comparison He is Gods steward In both which regards his care must be doubled that he may walke vnblameable before his people For the former of these to vnderstand it the better we must conside● two things 1. the signification of the name 2. the force of the argument By the name Bishop he meaneth those whom before he called Elders and throughout the new Testament it is indifferently giuen to all teaching elders that is Pastors and Ministers and so is here to be taken A title well knowne in the Apostles daies in the tongue then commonly vsed to betoken a painfull office and a diligent labour borrowed from such as are set in the watchtowers o● 〈◊〉 o● campes to espie and by a loud voice or sound of a trumpet or otherwise by a bell or warning peece to discouer and signifie the approaching of the enemie for such were properly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bishops or watchmen and from hence the name was by the Heathen translated to signifie such gods as they conceiued the patrons of their countries or cities yea by the spirit of God in the Scriptures to signifie Magistrats so calling them to put them in minde of that care and charge which heauily lieth vpon them And yet more frequently and fitly it is attributed to the Pastors and teachers of the Church Not onely the great Pastor and Archbishop of our soules 1. Pet. 5.4 and the Apostles Act. 1.20 but to other pastors and teachers who in so many places as so many cities of God are set as on a hill to descrie and with the voice of Christ in the word as with so many siluer trumpets at their mouthes giue warning of those most cruell and fierce enemies and spirituall wickednesses which seeke the vtter subuersion of the Church the Citie of God And that thus the word must needs generally be taken in the new Testament appeareth Phil. 1.1 where the Apostle writeth to many Bishops in one citie Philipi and Act. 20.28 speaketh to many Bishops in one citie of Ephesus and here the Apostles argument and context can admit no other acception How this generall title came after to be restrained it is not so pertinent and profitable to discourse The learned may see it in Ierome vpon the place As for my selfe as before I promised in the title of Elders I mind not to trouble the peace of the Church about names and titles Doctr. This very name fastneth vpon euery Minister this maine dutie namly to keep watch in his charge ouer the soules of his people to discouer vnto them both Gods affection vnto them and their estate with God Thus the Prophets beeing the Bishops of the old Testament are called not only watchmen Ezech. 3.17 and Seers 1. Sam. 9.9 but Gods Trumpetters Isa. 58.1 and their successors in the new Testament are called not only eyes and light of the bodie Matth. 6.22 but also voices as Iohn Baptist was the voice of the 〈◊〉 Mark 1.3 Ioh. 1.23 And yet the word considered 〈◊〉 the composition of it betokeneth a more intent watchfulnes instantly considering the wants and necessities of the Church for the seasonable supplie of the same by feeding and by ruling which we read seldome separated in the Scriptures See Act. 20.28 Heb. 13.17 1. Tim. 5.17 1. Pet. 5.1 Thus must euery Minister whom the Lord hath made an ouerseer of his people watch their soules as those who must be counteable for them for if they die for want of food and be famished or else for want of ordering of admonition reprehension correction and censures according to Christs holy institution there blood shall be required at the Pastors hand for looke what charge Ahab had concerning Benhadad the same hath euery Minister concerning euery soule committed vnto him Keepe this man if he be lost and want namely by thy default thy life shall goe for his life See also Ezech. 3.18.19 Vse 1. Whence it will follow that looke how vnfit blind or dumb men are for a watchtower so vnfit are vnlearned and vnpreaching Ministers for their places How can he be called an eye that hath no eye how can he be called a voice that is dumb how vnfaithfull is the sleepie watchman who that he may haue ease careth not to betraie an whole citie How dangerous are they both for if the eye be dark how great is this darknes if the blind lead the blind both fall into the ditch By both of them vision faileth and by both of them people perish See for this purpose a notable allusion Isa. 56.9.10 where the Lord compareth his Church to a flocke of sheepe the Priests and Prophets to shepheards and shepheards dogges the enemies of the Church to wolues and wilde beasts and beeing offended with his people he calleth all the beasts of the feild and forrest to deuoure and rauin that is the Chaldeans Assyrians Antiochus and the Romans by all whom they were diuersly oppressed and the reason is added because the watchmen were all asleepe the doggs were sleepie and greedie dumb and barked not ease tooke vp some couetousnes others and therefore no remedie if those that should driue away enemies from the Lords folds cannot be at leisure to espie the danger but a fearefull spoile and destruction most needs befall such a people Which if it be so then let euery Minister stirre vp his watchfulnes and care and though the faithfull discharge of his dutie cannot but purchase him the malice of many y●● let him be con●ent to make exchange of such freinds and freindship with the fauour of God who as he hat●
committed his flocke vnto him ●o let him resolue and say to the Lord as Iacob to Laban I will feede and keepe thy sheep In like manner let euery congregation to whom the Lord hath giuen a pastor according to his owne heart testifie their thankfulnes herein in beeing contented to haue their waies looked into and spoken of as well conceiuing the miserable estate of sheepe without shepheards not saying to the Seer see not least that plague befall thē pronounced against the men of Anath●th praying also that the kingdome of God may come euery where and his lightsome countenance shine on them that want such meanes seeing their estate is such as hath great need of watchmen Secondly from the force of the argument namely that he that is to be a Bishop ouer others must of necessitie watch ouer himselfe and his owne in priuate note a generall rule to be obserued in all elections and furnishing of any place and office namely that due respect must be had what gifts the office requireth and those must be principally regarded in that person that is to be placed in it as for example if the place require the tongue of the learned seeke out for learned men if wisedome seeke out wise men if grauitie sobrietie conscience and diligence seeke out for graue sober conscionable and diligent men and thus the Lord dealeth whensoeuer he placeth any man If he haue a curious sanctuarie to build he seeketh out some B●zaleel some Aholiab or other filled with excellent spirits of wisedome and vnderstanding and knowledge to worke in curious works of gold siluer c. If he set Salomon to build a glorious temple to himselfe he directeth him to send to Hieram for a cunning man a wise man and of vnderstanding If he be to bring his people out of Egypt he furnisheth a Moses and an Aaron If to take the land by fighting he fitteth some valiant captaine as Ioshua if to bring them out of captiuities he raiseth some Darius or Zerubbabel or Nehemiah euen suiting persons vnto places yea the Sonne of God beeing to gather his Church among the nations and to plant his owne ordinances to bring men out of their nusled idolatry and Gentilisme to serue the true God if he had not aforehand considered the difficultie of the work and accordingly furnished such as he dismissed for this purpose how had it like euer to haue beene effected Vse The cause of all corruptions in elections and designements to offices and places lyeth here that men looke not to the qualitie of the place first but beginning where God ends first at the man either because he is a proper man for parts and gifts of bodie and minde or by such and such commended or furnished to performe such expectations and contracts or an auntient or a kinsman c. this marres all and often setteth fooles on horsebacke when wise men walke on foote by them Let everie man whom it concerneth learne wisedome of God and his spirit here which first inquireth into the place and so in passing their suffrages in elections thus reason oh this is a difficult matter where haue we a fit man for it if to choose a Magistrate this requires one able to execute the Lords iudgements where haue we a man of courage fearing God and hating couetousnesse If a fellowe of a colledge this requireth learning iudgement and one able at least to bring vp youth in knowledge and godlinesse where shall we finde such an one but if a minister oh this requires one able to build vp the bodie of Christ and who is sufficient for this thing The reasons hereof are 1. the externall election of the Church ought to follow the internall of the spirit see 1. Sam. 10.24 2. it euer argueth corruption to preferre priuate respects before the publike good 3. the ends of euerie calling are 1. and principall Gods glorie 2. neerer and inferiour 1. the helping of the communion of Saints 2. building of the Church which he who is likely most to preferre is principally to be preferred As Gods steward Here are likewise to be considered two things 1. the signification of the word 2. the force of the argument First the word implyeth thus much that God is a great housholder Matth. 21.33 that his house is his Church where he as a great personage keepeth his residence more stately and honourable then the court or standing house of any earthly king in the world in that herein he pleaseth to manifest his presence by his spirit working in the word and ministerie and as it is with other great houses so the spirit of God speaketh of this as committed not to one but many stewards who take the charge of it to order and gouerne it according to the minde of the Master and vnto his greatest honour and aduantage And these stewards are the ministers so called 1. because as the steward in an house is to dispence all necessaries vnto the whole familie according to the allowance and liking of his Lord euen so the Minister receiueth from God power to administer according to the necessities of the Church all the things of God as word Sacraments prayer admonition c. 2. As the steward receiueth the keies of the house to open and shut to lock and vnlock to admit or exclude out of the house for so is it said of Eliacim Isa. 22.22 euen so euery Minister receiueth the keies of the kingdome of heauen to open and shut heauen to bind and loose to remit and retaine sinnes as Matth. 16.19 3. As the steward sitteth not in his owne as an owner or freeholder but is to be counteable and to giue vp his bills monethly or quarterly when the master shall call for them so euery Minister is to be counteable of his talents receiued and of his expenses and how he hath dispensed his masters goods Heb. 13.17 They watch for your soules as they which must giue accounts Doct. From which similitude we may learne that it is the dutie of euery Minister to see that he haue both the calling and also the properties beseeming him who is the steward of God And for his calling he must be Gods steward the Lord must set him in this place of seruice so neere him or else he is but a theife and intruder of whom it cannot be said that the Lord hath made him ruler ouer his house The properties of Gods steward are principally two 1. Wisedome 2. Faithfulnes So we finde them in the place alleadged who is a wise and faithfull seruant whom the Lord may make ruler ouer his house And first of the faithfulnes of this steward as the cheife Doctor of his Church hath gone before in example who was first appointed and then faithfull vnto him that appointed him Heb. 3.2 so is it required of euery Minister of Christ and disposer of the secrets of God that he be found faithfull Now this
fire from heauen know not of what spirit they are of 3. The Minister is to watch ouer mens manners more then others now if espying as he shall contempt and rebellion in some malice deceit dissembling in others and vnkindnes and vnthankefulnes in euerie corner what a life should he lead if he should be alwaies readie to draw if he should not beare with some faults and take none at the worst yea if he should not resemble God himself whose roome he standeth in who striketh not for euery escape but is slow to wrath and grieued for the euill Let none here alleadge Christs whipping the buyers and sellers out of the Temple for he was not onely a Minister but the Lord of his Temple Nor the Apostolicall rodde wherewith Peter strucke Ananias dead and Paul Elimas blind which was a gift extraordinarie and temporarie We must walke by this ordinarie canon which prohibiteth a Minister to be a striker Vse 1. What an happie change of things should our eies see if this one charge of the Apostle were duely obserued how might brethren liue together in vnitie although they retained some difference in iudgement in things circumstantiall and of lesser moment then such as are too hot might be wisely cooled without chafing and storming such as are weake might be by softnes and gentlenesse suported by the stronger such as haue strayed might by the spirit of meekenesse be reduced into the fold and such as are loath to step awrie should be incouraged in their godly care And surely this is the meanes vsed by Christ and his Apostles in the building vp of his kingdome and maintaining of his causes who while they had power to command did rather choose to beseech men and not onely practised in their owne persons but prescribed to all those who were to succeed them in their labours and to continue the ministry vnto the end Wheras contrariwise what is it that hath vpholden Antichrist so long and quickned and preserued life in bad causes but violence crueltie and rage against the seruants of God The strongest arguments in Poperie were euer fire and fagot and if they could not take away the reasons alleadged by the word this they could doe euen take away their liues by the sword of the Magistrate 2. Here are reprehended many Prophets and the sonnes of the Prophets who perhaps in the schoole of the Prophets are no better then swashbucklers fitter to receiue pay in the field then pension from the Churches patrimonie resolute Lamechs who readily reuenge an iniurie seuentie times seuen fold whose glorie is to quarrell and stand out at swords point with any man that which is Gods glorie they deem cowardise namely to passe by an offence How doe these consider that they are either dedicated vnto or dismissed with the tidings of peace that they are to serue vnder the Prince of peace euen the head of our profession who in his owne person bare all iniuries rebukes and buffettings of sinners and commanded his disciples to turne the other cheeke to the smiter not that it is not lawfull for them to stand vpon their lawfull defence but to be so farre from offering or returning iniurie as that they must rather suffer twaine then revenge one 3. The same dutie belongeth to euerie Christian for the Apostle speaketh not a word in all these ministeriall directions especially in the manner and carriage of the life of the Minister but it concerneth euery man in his place and may be his glasse of whatsoeuer condition he be And who seeth it not vnlawfull for any of Gods people to liue in wrath and enmitie or as we say like dogs and cats but as the children of one father members of one bodie maintainers of one faith and expectors of one glorie The subiects of Christs kingdome are no longer cockatrises basilisks Lyons but lambes and as sucking children harmeles and innocent so saith the Apostle the wisedome which is from aboue is gentle peaceable c. Which meeteth with a number of men marked as Caine was with the deuils brand who was a manslayer from the beginning who are men of a word and a writ nay a word and a blow if not a stabbe caring no more in their furie to spill a man then to kill a dogge such a blacke image of the deuill is stampt vpon them as they are professed enemies to the image of God and care not in how many they can extinguish it But such bloodie men whose valour and sport it is to fight it out and quarrell are for most part hit home in earnest and as they are the enemies of the commō societies of men are by God suddenly rooted out of their societie and seldome go to their graues in peace for the Lord scattereth the people that delight in warre and the cruel and bloodie man liueth not out halfe his dayes He that sheddeth mans blood by man commonly his blood is shed Abner slayeth Asahel Ioab slayeth Abner and Salomon slaieth Ioab Not giuen to filthie lucre This vice of couetousnesse is the fifth and last reckoned by the Apostle of which he would haue the Minister free The word noteth such a one as beeing greedily set on gaine and outward profits bendeth the greatest part of his studie that way or else one that will take any course vse any meanes lawfull or vnlawfull refuse no occasion but out of euerie thing neuer so base and meane can carue his owne commoditie no matter what winde it is that bloweth in his profit But to shew that all is not gained which is thus gotten the Apostle cals it filthie gaine or lucre 1. because this immoderate and vnnaturall affection maketh a man most base and sordid in getting seruill in keeping and illiberall in expending 2. because by getting or keeping this gaine some filthie sinne or other will cleaue to the fingers as in Achab and Iudas couetousnesse and murther were coupled in Achan and Gehezi couetousnes and lying were combined In the Priests and Prophets of Ieremies time couetousnesse and all manner of iniustice from the greatest to the least euerie one is giuen to couetousnesse from the Priest to the Prophet they deale all falsely and no marueile if the roote of all euill be so fruitful in all iniquitie Doct. 1. The Minister of all men must be free from such a base sinne as this is the man of God must flie earthly mindednesse as a sinne most dishonouring his high calling and disabling him from the dutie● of it Reas. 1. This vitious affection distracteth him and infoldeth him in many impertinent businesses stealing away his heart and causeth the proper duties of his calling to lie neglected Most fitly did the Apostle compare the worke of the Ministerie to a warfare and inferreth this same reason against this vice in the person of a Minister that as he which goeth a warfare doth not implicate and entangle himselfe with the affaires of this life but hauing receiued
who thinke it Christianitie enough to be harmelesse ciuill or neighbourly men or if they can say with the Pharisie I am not thus and thus an oppresser an vsu●er nor as such and such precise and nice fellowes who are as much hated of them as euer were the Publicans of the Pharisies I pay my Church duties and giue euerie man his owne and this is the religion of the common Protestant But suppose thou wert thus guiltles as thou saist yet art thou not yet halfe a Christian for the Apostle Peter writing to beleeuers enioyneth them not onely to flie the corruptions that are in the world through lust but moreouer to ioyne vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and patience and godlines and brotherly kindnesse and loue and addeth two reasons 1. If these things be in you and abound c. teaching that without these positiue vertues all the knowledge of Iesus Christ and consequently his profession is idle and vnfruitfull 2. If any haue them not he is blind and cannot see a farre off and hath forgotten that he was purged that is such a one seeth but a little in heauenly things and little regardeth that couering and curing of sinne goe together nor that remission and purging of sinne goe with sanctification of life and studie of well doing and consequently can be no Christian which agreeth with Christs owne posession that if any abide in him he cannot choose but bring forth much fruit Againe it shall not be enquired in the last iudgement what thou art not nor iudgement passe according to that thou hast not but what art thou what hast thou hast thou receiued the spirit of Iesus Christ if thou hast not the spirit of Christ thou art none of his hast thou reciued the fruits of that spirit such as are loue ioy peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnesse faith meekenes temperance If any haue the spirit of Christ it is life in him vnto righteousnesse these shall shewe the faith of thy heart and that thou art a sound Christian and not in shewe as the most content themselues to be Now to come neerer the vertue it selfe the word signifieth one friendly to strangers and readie to lodge and entertaine them a dutie much commended in the Scriptures vnto all Christians as a sweete fruit of liberalitie but vnto the Minister especially as a father and president vnto the flocke In the precept consider foure points 1. The occasion of it 2. whether it bindeth euerie Minister and how farre 3. the reasons enforcing it 4. the vse First the ground of it was the distressed estate and condition of the Church which by reason of many tyrants and persecutors was driuen into many straights partly perceiued in present and partly foreseene by the propheticall spirit of the Apostle not onely in the tenne persecutions then imminent but also in the seuerall afflictions in the world in which they were to finde tribulation euen to the ende of it For as it is in this aspectible world which is subiect to so many changes and mutations because it standeth in the vicissitudes of yeares moneths daies nights so much more is it in the spirituall world of the Church which in the earth is acquainted with her winter as well as summer her nights as well as dayes somtimes the sunne of righteousnesse most comfortably shining and imparting his heate and light by his neere approach vnto her yea and sometimes there be two sunnes in this firmament for together with the sunne of the Church the sunne of the world affoardeth warme and comfortable dayes for the full beautie libertie and glorie of the Church But sometimes againe this sunne departeth in dispeasure and carrieth the sunne of the world with him then is a blacke winter of the Church nothing but stormes and tempests persecutions and trialls one in the necke of another and scarse one faire gleame betweene Now in such times the poore Church is driuen to trauell for rest and the innocent doue of Christ cannot finde in her owne land any rest for the sole of her foote well may she flie abroad to seeke her securitie In all which times euerie Christian is bound by this and such like precepts to giue her harbour and safe conduct till the dash and storme be ouer Besides suppose the Church in generall at her best estate yet the particular members of the Church are for most part poore and needie and euen then subiect to many troubles for keeping the faith and good consciences by meanes whereof they are often driuen from house and home and sometime are in banishment and exile sometime in prison and bonds all whom the Lord commendeth to the charitable and Christian deuotion of Christian men and bindeth them to the cheerefull receiuing and releeuing of them in such necessitie let them be strangers yet if they be of the houshold of faith they haue right to harbour and releefe and in the practise of this dutie the Apostle requireth that the Minister be the foreman Secondly It will be inquired whether euerie minister must be harborous and hospitable and if he must what shall become of them whose liuings are scarce able to harbour themselues and much more of the swarmes of our tenne-pound men and verie many scarse halfe that to maintaine their familie it seemeth that euerie Minister ought to be a rich man Ans. It is not for me to prescribe any thing in the Church constitutions concerning Impropriations and Nonresidencie the former whereof were they restored to the Church and the latter remooued out of the Church no doubt there were but that sufficient ministers might be sufficiently maintained furnished to hospitalitie through the land But this I say that the poorest Minister may not exempt himselfe from this dutie neither is altogether disabled from it a poore man may be mercifull and comfortable to the distressed some way or other as if with Peter and Iohn he haue not money nor gold nor meate to giue yet such as he hath he can giue he can giue counsell prayers and affoard his best affections such cups of cold water shall not be vnaccepted nor vnrewarded of him whose propertie is to accpet a man according to that he hath and not according to that he hath not where he seeth a readie minde Thus must that place 1. Tim. 5.10 be vnderstood such widowes as were to be receiued into the seruice of the Church were to be chosen of such as had beene hospitable and harberous Now in all likelihood many of them if not the most were verie poore and had no great matters to be liberall of therfore the Apostle seemeth in the next words to declare wherein this hospitalitie might be shewed euen by such as had knowne want namely if they had performed bodily labour vnto them washed the Saints feete bestowed their best affections and chearefull labour for their releefe and thus might these poore widowes
1. To mooue such as are separated to the ministerie vnto the diligent reading of the Scriptures to redeeme that time which they haue or may otherwise spend in reading filthie lewde and wanton bookes superstitious pamphlets Machiauells blasphemies or Popish errors and heresies vnlesse it be 1. with sound and setled iudgement able to discerne right from wrong truth from falshood and 2. with this end either more to detest them in themselues or fore warne others of them and thus the wise marriner neede not leaue the sea if he can avoide the rockes But let a Timothie or Titus hold him to this booke he shall hence haue supply of wisedome to saue himselfe and others or what wouldst thou wish besides wisdome for thy calling wouldst thou be fitted to exhortation deceiue not thy selfe philosophie cannot fit thee onely the word of God worketh in all the parts and powers of the soule minde will and euerie affection by Philosophy thou maist enforme the vnderstanding although but darkely in the things of God but did that euer reform● or alter any mans heart reade then this booke teach this and thou shalt ransacke the affections yea and consciences of the hearers Or else wouldst thou haue a dexteritie and facultie in the quicke resoluing of doubts studie this truth be readie in it and thou shalt finde truth manifesting both it selfe and the contrarie And seeing this is the onely euerlasting veritie it will much more make the mightie to ouerthrowe whatsoeuer is contrarie vnto it Finally wouldst thou haue eloquence added to all these former abilliments without which they could not be but obscure then studie this truth of God and thou shalt feele it framing thine heart and so ministring speech yea thou shalt speake out of the fulnesse and abundance of thy heart graciously nay it will be with thee in thy measure as it was with the Apostles thou canst not choose but speake the things thou seest and knowest 2. To confute the Popish teachers who contrarily 1. teach that the Scripture beeing so hard and obscure as they say it is may be wres●ed abused by heretikes at their pleasure and that no man can be fitted vnto these duties especially the latter of conuiction of error fully by the euidence of Scripture it selfe except he borrowe some helpe and force elswhere namely from the expositions and voice of their Church And 2. in deciding their controversies of religion according to the former position they ●lie from the word vnto Bishops Fathers Councels Decrees and Popes But to the first we answer that although we are not to neglect much lesse despise the light and direction of godly mens expositions and iudgements nor such truthes as are receiued by the true Churches of God yet without them by considering the nature of the things themselues the conference of places the knowledge of tongues the suitable correspondence of the parts of the context we may come to attaine the true meaning of the place controuerted by that be able to convince withstand all gainsayers And to the latter their practise is contrarie vnto Christs and his Apostles as we haue shewed As also the practise of the auncient Churches since as may appeare by that memorable course of Constantine the Emperour who commanded the Fathers met together in the Nicene Councel about 362. yeares after Christ to referre the great controversie then in hand against the Arrians to the decision and determination of the Scriptures Which godly course Augustine backeth who liued not past 40. yeares after when he affirmeth that it was an auncient order of disputing to haue present the books of holy Scripture and to stand to the triall thereof If this was an auncient order of disputing in Augustines dayes surely the contrarie Popish practise is but a nouel●ie and we iustly presse them to antiquitie Vers. 10. For there are many disobedient and vaine talkers and deceiuers of minds cheifly they of the circumcision 11. Whose mouthes must be stopped which subvert whole houses teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake The coniunction for sheweth that the words following containe a reason of the matter preceding namely why the Minister should be a man so qualified with able parts both to maintaine the truth and confute the falshood The reason is drawne from the description 1. of teachers in these two verses and 2. of hearers in the 12. The teachers are described by three arguments 1. from their indefinite number there are many not two or three who are easily set downe but many 2. By their adiuncts which are two 1. They are disobedient or refractarie such as will not submit themselues to the true doctrine and discipline of the Church 2. they are vaine talkers that is such as beeing giuen to ostentation and vanitie contemne the studie and deliuerie of sound and profitable doctrine and search out words and matters of wit and applause both of them of more sweetnesse vnto the flesh then soundnes vnto the soule and spirit 3. By their most dangerous effects and these also are two 1. Their deceiuing of minds for which vngodly practise he especially brandeth them of the circumcision that is either by metonimie the Iewes themselues circumcised or else Gentiles Iudaizing embracing Iewish opinions mixing the Law and Gospel Moses and Christ circumcision and baptisme together making indeed an hotchpotch of religion by confounding things that can neuer stand together The 2. effect of them is their subuersion of whole houses that is they poyson and infect whole houses yea and where the grounds and foundation of religion hath beene laid they ouerturne and ouerthrowe all This last effect is declared by two arguments 1. from the instrumentall cause of it and that is by their false doctrine teaching things which they ought not 2. from the finall cause of it that is couetousnesse for filthy lucres sake Now these teachers beeing so many so dangerous and hurtfull their mouthes must needes be stopped Which is a common conclusion set betweene the two verses as hauing reference vnto them both as a common remedie against all the mischeife which any way may be let in by them and therefore those that are to be admitted into the Ministerie must be of abillitie to stop their mouthes For there are many disobedient Doctr. 1. In that the first thing taxed in these false teachers by the Apostle is disobedience we learne that disobedience commonly is the ground of false doctrine For 1. it is iust with God to giue vp those to errors and delusion that receiue not the truth in the loue of it for wheresoeuer it is receiued in loue obedience cannot but be yeelded vnto it 2. The nature of sinne is euer to be excusing it selfe and is loath to be crossed although neuer so iustly but studyeth how to defend it selfe as long as it can euen by wresting the Scriptures and by taking vp one error for the maintenance of another 3. The tenour
of the blessed seede in whom all nations should be blessed Elizabeths speach sheweth the accomplishment thereof Blessed art thou among all women because the fruite of thy wombe is blessed which words she vttered beeing filled with the holy Ghost ver 41. or in generall looke to the whole old covenant of the old Testament it is after a sort ceased and a new established in stead of it see Heb. 8.8 In that he saith a new testament he hath abrogated the olde 2. Diuine vse was to signifie the inward circumcision of the heart wrought by Christ and therefore called the circumcision of Christ whereby he inwardly cutteth off the corruption of the heart iustifieth vs regenerateth vs setteth vs into himselfe communicateth all his merits and benefits of them vnto vs to all which purposes he once appeared in the flesh and now in his owne bodily absence sendeth out his spirit This Paul calleth circumcision made without hands Now how iust is it that when the circumcision without hands appeareth that the other made with hands should cease 3. Divine vse was to represent baptisme which was to come in place of it in the new Testament Coloss. 2.12 yee are circumcised in that yee are buried with him through baptisme Now then when baptisme which is Christian circumcision is once instituted necessarily must Iewish circumcision which was a type of it cease From which three ends we may answer that maine allegation for the continuance of circumcision in that it is called an eternall and euerlasting couenant But 1. the couenant is said to be euerlasting not simply but conditionally namely so long as the couenant of it lasted for gnolam signifieth not alwaies a time without all ende but such a time as after a long durance may admit determination and expiration 2. In respect of the thing signified that is grace in Christ it may be said to haue euerlastingnes 3. In regard of the perpetuall supplie thereof by baptisme which is to last as long as time but not in the ceremonie or shaddowe of it as the false Apostles taught much lesse with confidence in it as a meritorious cause of iustification All this hath hitherto let vs see the error and sinne of these seducers Now the danger will be descried if we consider that of Paul If yee be circumcised Christ will profit you nothing for what were this other then to denie the true Messiah and his appearing in fulnesse of time what were it but to reare vp againe the partition wall which is destroied what else then to renounce the new couenant of grace and establish againe the olde one of workes which was to giue place to the new so as truely saith the Apostle by establishing circumcision a man becommeth a debter to the whole law which cannot but be ioyned with the fall of all religion faith hope baptisme and consequently the losse of saluation it selfe Doctr. The plainnes of the Apostle in deciphering the seducers so manifestly as they might be knowne teacheth that where there is a common danger towards the Church by meanes of false teachers we are not to spare their credit but to laie them open as not onely their errors but their persons may be knowne and taken heed of in which regard Paul nameth these deceiuers And hereof are sundrie other forcible reasons 1. Because the saluation of the Church and members of it is more to be respected then all Satans synagogue 2. It is necessarie that such should be knowne for feare of infection for false teachers may do more mischeife in poysoning the flocke then a number of priuate men can doe 3. The Apostles tooke great libertie herein as Paul nameth Alexander the Coppersmith and wisheth Timothie to beware of him and Iohn in his third Epistle nameth Diotrephes for his ambition and promiseth to decipher him more plainely and so paint him out in his colours as that the Church might abhorre him But yet this text affordeth vs some conditions of such plaine reproofe which necessarily must be obserued to the right performance of the same As 1. the error must be certainely knowne as this was 2. It must not be euery small error but such a one as 1. greatly impaireth Gods glorie 2. greatly impeacheth mans saluation as we haue prooued this to doe For otherwise if their errors were either lesse dangerous in themselues or more dangerous to themselues alone although herein they must be made voide of excuse their wickednesse shewed them and their prepared damnation preached vnto them if they did not hurt others with themselues the true Pastors might with lesse danger dissemble their errors and let them rot away in their filthinesse but in the foresaid cases there must be no bearing of them 3. In the reproofe Christian loue must bewray it selfe as the minde and intention of the Apostle here no doubt was not to gall or vex these deceiuers nor to wrecke himselfe vpon them but carrie in his eye the care of the Church and the profit of Gods people Euery good action must be done well in a good manner and in a good intent and here especially the manner must discouer the intent and that is when such a spirit of meekenesse putteth forth it selfe that euen the parties openly reprooued may see their good sought in hauing their sinne discountenanced and their persons rather discouered then disgraced Vse 1. This doctrine noteth the simplicitie of some who thinke it very vncharitable so to note open offenders in open reproofs as men may carrie them leuell to the offenders or impute it to want of discretion or to some malitious intent of the discrediting of men whereas besides that no such thing is intended the propertie of charitie is more carefull to preuent the common hurt of the Church then to saue the credit of some few men of corrupt mindes 2. Whereas some idle and foolish heads haue set themselues on work to paint out some worthier men then themselues in their colours and to picture out some sort of men better then themselues men of sounder iudgement conspiring in all the maine points of true religion and of innocent and inoffensiue liues with the black coales of enuious and slanderous invectiues striuing to besmeare them these haue no colour of warrant for such a rouing and distempered practise For 1. they haue no calling God neuer setteth any man on worke to defame his seruants 2. Are such errors as are imputed to them knowne and conuinced or litigious and controuerted or are they such as ouerturne religion and saluation seeing they consent in the whole truth and substance of religion 3. Doe not all eyes which looke on such pictures see the intentions of the picturers to haue beene gall bitternes vexation and wrecking of mens persons so farre from the spirit of meeknesse that the spirit of malice hath suggested them with words as sharpe as swords and as Iob speaketh of the crocodile flames of fire goe out
of their mouthes and sparkles of fire leape out the smoke they send out is like a seething pot or caldron 4. As the spirit of truth is a peaceable and meeke spirit so neuer shall a man finde a bitter spirit conscionably vtter pure truths neither indeed will truth Gods darling dwell with such And what lowder lie then to charge Gods children with damnable heresies Let all antiquitie be searched and we shall finde three things which must concurre to make an heretike 1. The broching of something contrarie to the Articles of faith 2. A departing from the Church vpon it with profession of drawing Disciples 3. After solemne admonition a stiffnesse in such error and faction None of which if they can be found in such as to whome all are imputed Let euery man iudge whether such boldnesse in any man deserue not more open reprehension and censure whereby such might learne at length to spare the credit of such who are so farre beyond the reach of their enuie as that they iustly pittie their weaknesse and solly and not with them attempt any more the discouering of their fathers nakednesse which were a good way to couer their owne Vse 3. Let none looke to be spared in the Ministerie if they will be incorrigible no not great ones If any people might looke to be spared surely they of the circumcision might beeing a people of such prerogatiues But 1. Paul preferres the Churches good aboue their credit 2. As God hath no respect of persons no more hath his word 3. When great ones are more seuerely taxed inferiours will feare the more Doctr. 2. Note further who are to be reputed the chiefe plagues of the Church and the archseducers of the world euen they of the circumcision that is such as ioyne the lawe with the Gospel and works with faith in the act of iustification for they ●each such doctrine as abolisheth from Christ and maketh him profit nothing and that in such manner as men can hardly shift or auoide them for they slily glide into the extraordinarie commendation of that the Scripture also commendeth and attributeth too much vnto that which the Scripture ascribeth somewhat vnto As for example Circumcision in the prime of it was an ordinance to seale the righteousnesse of faith and for a time was worthily in such reputation as that death is iustly threatned against the neglect of it be it in Moses himselfe These seducers taking hence occasion goe one step further and will haue it a meritorious cause of saluation and consequently will not haue it dated when the Lord hath expired it but albeit the bodie hath appeared the shadowe must remaine The Popish teachers at this day are the iust heires of these seducers as appeareth in these particulars the Iewish teachers would professe and teach Christ but not alone for he must be ioyned with Moses and all the former rites and all these with Christs merits must be iumbled to iustification Euen so Popish seducers sit with Antichrist in the Church of God and professe Christ but together with Christ they must merit something themselues and so make themselues debters to the whole law And further they make the works of grace almes prayer fasting contrition yea their owne rites and traditions obserued meritorious causes of saluation for they promise life eternall to masses indulgences auricular confession vowes pilgrimages c. and so tread in the verie steppes of these seducers 2. Againe as the Iewish teachers dealt with circumcision so doe the Papists with our Sacraments which because by diuine institution they are signes and seales of Gods mercie and faithfull couenant they turne them into physicall not conduits but causes not containing onely but conferring grace euen by the worke wrought 3. Further as the Iewish teachers lead their disciples to stand vpon outward shewes and prerogatiues as that they were sonnes of Abraham had receiued the law circumcision in their flesh and were distinguished into diuerse famous sects as Scribes Pharisies Sadduces Essees c. The verie same things in effect doe Popish teachers force men to stand vpon as false antiquitie fained succession dissembled chastitie hypocriticall orders as of Francis Dominicke Benedict and an hundred more according to whose rules whosoeuer walke mercie and peace they pronounce vpon him such cannot faile of life euerlasting but as for beleefe in the Sonne of God seeking life by that means it is the least of their labour Thus doe they with those seducers publish lies and dreames of their owne hearts that Gods people may forget his name that is the grace and mercy of God in Iesus Christ. Vse 1. This point letteth vs see how pernicious and dangerous the Popish doctrine is which whosoeuer holdeth and maintaineth is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Paul is not more confident in any thing then this that the ioyning of any thing with Christ as the matter of our righteousnesse is the cutting off of a man from Christ Gal. 5.3 Behold I Paul say and testifie that if yee be circumcised that is with opinion of righteousnes by it or confidence in it for else at this time the worke of circumcision hurt him not that kept himselfe from confidence of righteousnesse by it Christ profiteth you nothing so we testifie truely against the Papists that so many of them as will be iustified by the works of the lawe are fallen from Christ. Now because their doctrine teacheth this and he is not an absolute Papist that beleeueth it not we truely conclude that it is a doctrine leading from Christ and the absolute Papist hath no part in Christ. Obiect Doth not Iames make a cooperation of faith and works Ans. Yea but not in the act of our iustification nor in the matter or worke of our saluation but onely in the declaration of the sinceritie of our faith and truth of our conuersion which by fruits of righteousnesse we shew to be voide of hypocrisie so as let faith and works ioyntly concurre in the approbation of our iustification but in case of making vs righteous before God away with the works of the law if thou meanest to haue part in Christ these will neuer stand together here let Moses die and be buried and let no man euer knowe where he was laid to raise him againe This point shall be clearer when we come to those words of our Apostle Wee are not saued by the works of righteousnesse which we had done In the meane time dare Paul affirme of the lawe of Moses Gods owne lawe that he that holds vnto it to be iustified by it is fallen from Christ what would he haue said of their desperate and irrecouerable fall who looke for iustification out of their owne traditions vowes inventions the drosse and chaffe of their owne deuises of all which the Lord will say who required these things at your hands Let vs beware of dogges the propertie of whom is to returne to their vomit
so of such Christians as turne Iews againe beware of the concision and betake vs to the circumcision which worshippeth God in the spirit and haue no confidence in the flesh no confidence in the lawe Get Christ close him by faith in the heart he is the Lord and accomplisher of the lawe vnto righteousnesse and thus hast thou enclosed thy righteousnes as a ring encloseth a Iewel Say with that Martyr onely Christ onely Christ. 2. Seeing Popish doctrine hath not saluation but carrieth men from Christ it ought not to be tolerated where it can be abolished for the scepters of Christian Princes must hold vp the scepter of Christ the Prince of peace and as it is no good religion in Princes to set vp a religion that would abolish Christ so neither is it good policie in regard both of their treacherous positions and practises For as they teach that hereticall for so they call Protestant Kings may be depriued of life much more other royalties and temporalties so is their practise proportionable in deposing kings and Emperours practizing hellish treasons and iustifying the murdering of Princes And therefore howsoeuer we should seek to pull the poore seduced ones of them out of the fire yet if they be incurable themselues haue taught vs how we should deale with them or rather neither make nor meddle with them by the tenour of the oath taken of the old leaguers in France the forme of which was this Si ad haereticorum partes de flexero si amicitiam si foedus si matrimonium cum eis faxo si opem fidemve do si ave si vale dixero illa die fulmine ferito God make vs as wisely resolute to preserue the puritie of the truth amongst vs as they are cautelously circumspect to barre it out from themselues then should they goe farre inough and stay long enough before we should entreat their returne Whose mouthes must be stopped The phrase is metaphoricall and betokeneth such an euident conuiction of errors by weight of reason and euidence of the Scripture as wherby the aduersarie of the truth is struck dumb and hath no more to say then if he had his mouth shut vp Quest. But how should we shut their mouthes for such commonly rage against the truth and ioyne mallice to error and so prostitute themselues in impudencie as that they will euer haue some shew of words at least to pretend against the truth Ans. This precept is first and properly directed to the Minister of God who by all his endeauour must take away all the defence of such errors and then confirme the contrarie truth by such sure grounds and arguments as that all men may see they haue no sound reason much lesse Scripture at least interpreted by Scripture for their defence And thus when the Church shall heare what such persons can say for themselues it will appeare to be but vaine babling and multiplying of words flowing not seldome from such as are euen damned of themselues in their owne conscience And this practise is agreeable to that of Christ himselfe who sometimes by the Scriptures Matth. 22.34 sometimes by reason Luk. 20.25.26 Giue to Caesar sometimes by a like interrogation and question Luk. 20.7 The Baptisme of Iohn sometimes by posing and parling Matth. 22.46 so set vp and silenced the Pharisies Sadduces Herodians and others as none could either answer him or durst aske him any more questions But when men are thus confuted by argument ouerthrowne with the sword of the spirit and confounded by the power of truth and yet still proceed to trouble the peace of the Church and the faith of the Saints then may the Church and must proceed by censure and admonition to enioyne them silence the which if yet they will not heare they ought by the Church to be driuen from the societie of the faithfull if they prooue gangrenes they must be cut off Doctr. The dutie of euery faithfull Minister is when occasion is offered timely to oppose himselfe against seducers and stop the mouths of false teachers wherein also the Church ought to backe and strengthen him For 1. the example of Christ must be our president who most boldly and freely vindicated the law from the corrupt glosses and expositions of the Pharisies and that in his first sermon 2. In regard of the particular members of the Church that they may be preserued in soundnesse from starting away and forsaking of the truth Hence did our Sauiour Christ not seldome vtter holy things before dogges and swine that is the Scribes and Pharisies and malicious Iewes because of those that stood by that they might be confirmed against their corruptions And this is made one ende of the precept the madnesse of the false Apostles must be made manifest that they may preuaile no longer 3. In regard of the false teachers themselues fooles saith Salomon must be answered least they be wise in their owne conceit neither shall the labour be wholly lost vpon them for it shall be a meanes either to conuert them and bring them to the knowledge of the truth or else so to conuince them as they shall be made excuseles And further the Church must strengthen euery Ministers hands in this contending for the faith and so manifest her selfe to be the ground and pillar of truth which is committed to her trust and safekeeping against all gaynesayers Vse 1. This ministeriall dutie requireth a great measure of knowledge and a man furnished with gifts of varietie of reading and soundnesse of iudgement euen a man who hath a storehouse in his brest First he must be well read and skilfull in the Scriptures that by them in the first place he may be able to shut the mouth of the aduersarie partly by the expresse texts of Scripture partly by harmonical parallel and sutable places as by the mouth of many witnesses partly by the analogie of faith arising out of the whole bodie of the Scripture partly by the proprietie of the speach in the fountaine and partly by the apt knitting of the context that there may be full concent with it selfe the antecedents and consequents yea more he must be furnished with varietie of reading euen in the workes and writings of men that he may be able in good sort not onely to apprehend the state of the questions and originall of controuersies but also that he may refute his aduersarie partly by the concent of the Church in all ages and partly by the helpe of things that are granted and confessed on both sides and partly by the contradictions which the patrons of errors cannot but vnawares flip into for it is true of a lyar or a patron of lies that he had need of a good memorie Secondly to all this knowledge is required a sound iudgement that he may be able to inferre good and necessarie consequents vpon the graunting of the truth he standeth for and on the contrarie the absurdities and
inconueniences which necessarily follow his aduersaries false positions Now alas how farre are readers and dumb men from this one part of the dutie of a Minister how dangerous are they in their places seducers may come and doe with open mouthes into their parrishes they cannot stop their mouthes nay in truth they are as the keyes to open them and vnlocke them Well were it or much better with our Church if Theophylactus his rule were obserued that he who in some competencie could not doe these things should neither be admitted nor permitted in the Ministerie Vse 2. Hence we further see that it is rather to be wished then hoped that all Ministers should be of one minde and accord in the truth and at peace among themselues For seeing it is the constant condition of the Church to haue many daubars with vntempered morter many vaine talkars deceiuers of mindes enemies to the crosse of Christ and the libertie of it what must now in this case all the world sit still and be at rest must Christs Ministers be silent and the Pastors haue neuer a voice to driue awaie wolues from the Lords foldes must hurtfull doctrine be winked at and suffered still to creepe in to the destruction of many No no there must now be opposition and strong dissention among the Ministers themselues Ieremie must set himselfe as well against Preists as Princes and people The Ministerie of the Apostles did spend much of it selfe against the false Apostles that serued not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies Christs owne Ministerie though the Prince and author of all our peace bent it selfe most against the cheife teachers of that age who sought glorie and praise of men and thus must his faithfull Ministers tread in his holy steps If Paul had not strongly opposed himselfe against many learned teachers Act. 15.2 where had the saluation of the Church of that age laid Let men learne therefore to be wise hearted and get knowledge whereby they may rather iudge of doctrines then take offence at the diuersitie of iudgements and practises of Ministers But if any one be sunke downe so deepe that he voweth to beleeue none of them all neither will follow any religion till they be all agreed among themselues to him I will say that this rocke was laid to breake the necke of his soule vpon and a fearefull signe it is that Christ himselfe is to him a stone to stumble at For came not Christ to make debate in the earth came he not to send fire desiring nothing more then that it should be kindled came not he with his fanne in his hand to diuide betweene the chaffe and the wheate the which shall neuer be wholly seuered till the haruest And meanest thou to be a looker on till the wheate and chaffe become one or hast thou well ridde thy selfe by beeing till then iust of Gallio his religion who cared nothing for these things I assure thee who wilt looke on whilest other contend for the faith thou shalt be a looker on too whilest other goe into heauen and haue lesse to doe in that businesse then thou desirest because thou desiredst it not when thou mightest yea when thou wast gratiously invited and desired to enter Which subuert whole houses In these words is contained the second dangerous effect of these false teachers declared by two arguments 1. by the instrumentall cause namely false doctrine for they teach things which they ought not 2. by the ende of it for filthie lucres sake The danger appeareth in three things 1. in that they subuert that is quite ouerturne the saluation of men 2. they subuert houses in the plurall number 3. whole houses The first of these sheweth that these deceiuers not onely shake men in the foundation of religion but vtterly ouerthrowe them and doe as a man who not onely beates downe a windowe or a bay or the side of an house but diggeth vp the foundation or as one who not only loppeth a tree or heweth it down by the ground but diggeth it vp by the roots and quite supplanteth it so doe these deceiuers quite destroy the faith of men and turne it vpside downe that is not onely lead men away from the simplicitie of the Gospel but wholly and altogether from euerie part of the sauing truth Thus is the word vsed among the heathen whereby they expresse such a raging of the sea as casteth vp and causeth to floate that filth and mire which lay at the bottome Quest. But how did they ouerturne mens faith and saluation Ans. By teaching iustification by circumcision that is the works and rites of the lawe But will some say could this beeing but one point subuert all I answer that fundamentall truthes are such and so linked and knit together as breake one and many fall yea some are such as being denied all of them fall to the ground A man that pulleth downe an arch of the Church endangereth the whole but yet the Church may stand but he cannot digge vp the lowest stones of the foundation but all commeth to ruine Of these the Apostle mentioneth two like the two pillars which Sampson pulling downe the whole house fell the one that of the resurrection which beeing denied all preaching and all faith is in vaine the other is this of seeking righteousnes elsewhere then in Christ who is Iehovah our righteousnesse for this makes grace no more grace and Christ to haue died in vaine Whence by the way note the dangerous estate of such as liue and die essentiall members of the Church of Rome who by their doctrine of merit and iustification by works are subuerted and plucked vp by the rootes and turned of their saluation Quest. But if this be so whether may a man be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point of religion or in such a one as by consequent raseth the foundation Ans. The things which all Christians are bound to beleeue may be reduced to two heads The former are such principles as make the rule of faith so neerely touching the matter of saluation as that a man cannot be saued vnlesse he knowe and beleeue them for all will confesse that he that must be ordinarily saued must in some measure knowe the causes the matter the obiect the manner the end and meanes of it If God I say ordinarily saue him he must knowe the platforme of Christian religion As for example 1. God in vnitie of dietie and trinitie of person for vnlesse he knowe God in Iesus Christ there is no life euerlasting 2. himselfe in the guiltines and vnder the curse of sinne seeing Christ came to call none but sinners to repentance and hunger after the meanes of deliuerance for the waters of the well of life are giuen onely to such as thirst after them 3. The meanes as that without shedding of blood there is no remission of sinne and consequenly that the Sonne of God must take the nature of
deliuered from that for then the light would discouer them so as the simplest could scarce lie open vnto them and therefore they must first insinuate themselues and then by addition and sowing of their owne both depraue and denie the truth 2. The verie nature of error beeing the child of darkenes is to flie the light and as the adulterer watcheth for the twilight so doth he that adulterateth the truth Vse 1. Not needing to applie this doctrine against the Iesuites who like so many swarmes of frogges and locusts are sent out of the bottomles pit and creepe euery where into houses especially ignorant corners to beguile the simple Let it teach vs this wisedome to know whom we admit into our houses Many dangerous men there are of corrupt mindes who dare not nor will speake again●● a doctrine deliuered to a mans face nor before such as can iustifie it but behinde a preachers backe can traduce it and before the weake and simple offer impeachment vnto it of these there are not a few who whether they be Popishly or profanely addicted must be wisely discouered and remitted for their entertainment to such as themselues 2. We must in our priuate houses cleaue to truthes publikely deliuered and beware least any deceiuer defeate vs of such a treasure The Lord might free his Church in an instant of all seducers but he suffereth such hurtfull men 1. to trie the faith of his and their loue to the truth whether they will abide with him in temptation 2. to rouse vs out of securitie that the more gins and snares are laid for vs we might be the more circumspect for thus the Lord left the Cananites in the Land vndestroied to exercise his people for which with other endes he seeth it meete that these tares should growe together with the wheate vntill the haruest 3. As these wicked ones are suttle to corrupt the truth and disperse their errors namely by infecting and subuerting houses so should we on the contrarie learne to be wise in our generations and know hence that the way of fortifying and spreading the truth and banish error is by instructing and enforming our houses And surely truth will neuer flourish in the Church and in publike till it be more heartily and with better welcome entertained in families We wish good lawes and by Gods blessing many there are for the Church but were there none to our hands euery Christian should be a law to himselfe and all that is within his gates Let vs make good orders and obserue them in our families and thus our houses shall become Churches And by whetting the truth vpon our children and seruants they shall be able to teach their families after vs and so we shall propagate the grounds of true religion euen to after ages The third point of the danger is that they subuert whole houses not one or two persons in the houses but whole houses Where note the infection of error which is therefore compared to a gangrene or running tetter which let it take any one part and destitute it of heate and vitall spirits it proceedeth on vnto all and no way is there to cure the person but by cutting off the member Our Sauiour Christ calleth the doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisies leaven for the spreading of it So also if the error be in manners let Peter dissemble a little and a number will fall with him yea and Barnabas also will be drawne into the dissimulation Vse 1. Teaching Masters of families to become more wary of themselues for on them dependeth the good estate of the whole family if they be ouerreached the whole family is seduced if the deuill hold in his power the Master of a familie he knoweth little good will be done in that house except the Lord preserue some Ioseph in Potiphars house or some Saints in Neros court to iudge and condemne the rest both here at the great day 2. They must be watchfull ouer their families to keepe Popish and prophane persons out of doores least they corrupt the rest We know little what mischeife a little leauen doth but the deuill knoweth well inough and therefore he seeketh to thrust into euery societie and familie some wretch or other not to hinder good things only but to spread euill and mischeife that if he can Christs owne companie shall not be without a Iudas W●ll knoweth he that one swearer one drunkard one contemner of God and his word will doe more mischeife in an house then many religious persons can doe good Let heads of families not take their seruants hand ouer head not caring what their seruants are or are not so they will be droyles and drudges but for their owne sake for their children sake and for the more prosperous successe of all their businesse make such choise of their seruants as they may truely say with Ioshuah I and my house will serue the Lord and with Ester I my maids will fast 3. When Satan or his Ministers goe about priuily to bring vs out of tast with the word or the preachers and professours of it be wise to espie his malice betimes and timely preuent him for otherwise he will speedily subuert thee and thy house for he doth his mischeife by degrees and if thou yeeldest thy selfe but a little to harken to his whistle God in iustice may yeeld thee wholly and thy house to delusion Thus haue we seene the dangerous effects of these false teachers which beeing so great must encrease the true Ministers 1. diligence Act. 20.28 2. faithfulnesse against them Gal. 2.11.14 Now we come to the declaration of this latter effect by the instrumentall cause false doctrine and the finall which is couetousnes or filthy lucre Teaching things which thy ought not that is either impious doctrines which derogate from the glorie of God extenuate the merit of Christ or else loose and licentious doctrine rather giuing patronage to corrupt manners then any way improouing them And all these they teach for filthy lucres sake Doctr. Where the heart is set vpon gaine it will haue falsehood to feed it True it is in all sorts of men and callings which is here said of false teachers filthy lucre and falsehood are inseperable companions The Prophet Micha telleth vs that the Preists that teach for hire and the Prophets that prophecie for mony while they bite with their teeth that is while they haue to bite and feed vpon all is peace to the feeders but if a man put not into their mouthes that is satisfie not their appetite and desire they prepare warre against him as if he were an enemy to God and man The like affirmeth Ezekiel of the false Prophets who polluted the Lord among his people for handfulls of barly and peeces of bread would sew pillowes vnder euery armehole by which type they signified ease and prosperitie to the people and made vailes for euery head
is euerie where a reproach but here besides that it marreth such a necessarie dutie and hardeneth the person vniustly reprooued against a iust reproofe for time to come it carrieth many blots with it For 1. it argueth him to be a busie bodie who especially if a priuate person pryeth into other mens actions that he may catch matter of reprehension whereas it is not the part of a prudent Christian to seeke out the sores of others but wisely to heale those which beeing in his way and calling he meeteth withall 2. It argueth want of loue to receiue hastily reports against such as we professe freindship vnto with whom a rent is made where none was nor needed to be iustly taking themselues iniured when they see themselues discredited in our hearts causlesly or else their names not sufficiently tendred of vs. 3. It argueth want of wisedom and great indiscretion rashly to reprooue that wherof either the partie knoweth himselfe innocent or else is done secretly now that is secret to vs which albiet it be knowne to others yet is not sufficiently knowne to vs the note of a foole saith Salomon is to beleeue euery thing and of a slanderer to discouer secrets Prov. 10.19 Quest. But what if I heare a report of my neighbour and I haue a vehement suspition and some presumptions that it is true may I not vpon those reprooue Ans. In this case obserue two rules The former in Deut. 13.14 Thou shalt rather seeke and make search and inquire diligently and if it be true and the thing certaine then thou maist safely reprooue 2. If thou canst not be certaine then reprooue not but vpon supposition thou canst not here say directly as Nathan to Dauid thou art the man For such a plaine reproofe implieth the certaine knowledge of a sinne which we must not suffer vpon our brother Leuit. 19.17 Sharpely It will heare be demanded what is this sharpe reproofe here mentioned Ans. To know it the better we may consider it either in the person of euery Pastor or that which is in the seuerall Churches The former belonging to euery Pastor standeth 1. in the enlargement of sinne knowne to be committed that it may appeare vnmasked and in it owne face that thus it may appeare more ougly and odious both to the vnderstanding and iudgement of the sinner 2. In following it with the curse of the law denouncing out of the word those plagues of God which shall surely ouertake such a partie if he faile of vnfained and seasonable repentance that thus there may follow a renting of the heart a breaking vp of the fallow ground and seeing one measure of sorrow fitteth not all sinnes such a measure of sorrow in the soule of the sinner as the degree of the sinne deserueth The latter kind of sharpe reproofe is that whereby the Church seeketh to recall offenders Neither is this that of the ciuill sword but is spirituall and respecteth the soule alone and standeth in three things 1. Admonition with denuntiation of iudgements 2. In suspension from the Lords table 3. In excommunication whereby the obstinate offender is giuen vp to Satan for the humbling of the flesh and sauing of the spirit as by a desperate remedie The error will not be great to vnderstand either of these in the precept but if either more then other I encline rather to the former namely that Titus is here directed how to carie himselfe toward these vaine people through the course of his doctrine rather then in exercising the censures of the Church whereunto both the words before and the verse following seemeth to encline Doct. According to the nature of sinnes and sinners we must set an edge vpon our reproofes and sharpen them for all sinnes are not of one size nor all sinners of one straine but some sinnes are more enormious then other and some sinners are more obstinate then other Some sinnes are of ignorance some of malice some secret some open some sinners are as waxe to worke on some are stonie and stifnecked some haue here and there their freckles and frailties on them others are spotted all ouer like the leopards or like the Ethiopian they neuer change their hew no washing doth them good Now we must wisely put a differnce betweene both Compassion must be shewed vpon some and others whom loue cannot allure feare must force some must be saued by loue and some be pulled out of the fire some sores need but a gentle lenitiue some a sharper drawer some require but the pricke of a needle to open them others a more painefull lancing and cutting and some a cutting off Obiect 2. Tim. 4.2 Reprooue with all long suffering how can that stand with this precept of sharpe reproofe Ans. Some which commit these two places together would reconcile them againe by considering the persons to whom the Apostle writ them the one Timothy who they say was seuere austere and therefore is exhorted to patience and meeknes the other Titus who was gentle and meek of nature and therefore spurred vnto sharpnes and seueritie But the context applieth it selfe fitlier to their answer who draw the difference from the people ouer whome they were set The Cretians were hard and re●ractarie full of bad qualities as here we see the Ephesians among whom Timothy was sent were of some better temper and disposition and therefore were more mildly to be delt withall Besides more mildnes was to be vsed with such as yet had not beleeued then those who hauing professed the faith in word and yet departed from it againe as the Galatians and these Cretians with whome Paul was so sharp and this difference also some of the auncient put between these two peoples of Ephesus and Candy But howsoeuer the places are easily accorded for euen to the worst much patience and lenitie must be vsed till it be dispised and till it be cleare that no meeknes will serue to winne men but then it is high time that seueritie should terrifie those who by lenitie would not be allured according to the example of God himselfe Rom. 2.4 Vse 1. As all Christian duties so this much more ought to be ordered by Christian wisedom and therfore Ministers especially must labour for the gift of discerning to iudge aright of persons and sinnes Of persons which are of Hagars seede and which are free borne of Sarah which men need the rodde and which the spirit of meekenesse Of sinnes which be greater for which the wounds may be the deeper which be larger for which the sorrow may be enlarged and in a word which are hard knots which need hard wedges 2. With wisedome and loue euery Minister must ioyne zeale and conscience yea in some case vehemencie seueritie in their reproofes dealing as the Lord himselfe doth often in setting the sinnes of men in order before them If he be to deale with Heli●s sonnes the sonnes of Belial it will not serue the turne
to say What is it that I heare my sonnes doe so no more for this is rather a saluing and too hastie a skinning ouer of a rotten sore the fester of which quickly breaketh out againe with more rage and danger but here he must put on the zeale of God yea a iust and holy anger gounded vpon the loue of God and godlines wherein he hath Iohn Baptist Matth. 3.5 and the Sonne of God himselfe going before him Math. 23. It is thought great wisdome in men so to carie their doctrine as no man is offended at it whereas howsoeuer all meeknes and patience in our owne matters is a Christian and commendable vertue yet zeale in the matters of God may not be wanting and were all men Saints or sinners but penitent we might by tendernes and compassion raise them but some are in the fire and must be pluckt out many are fooles to whose backs stripes belong many are festred in their sinnes and must haue corrasiues and fretting waters to make them smart at the quicke in which cases if any of our patients cha●e and storme and grow neuer so impatient it will be no wisedome in such as haue the ordering of them to let him haue his owne will in his desire to be let alone but still make incision search further the depth of the wound and send in taints to the bottom for such louing wounds must go before applying of salues to sound healing 3. Let all godly hearers learne to make manifest their patience and obedience by suffering themselues to be launched and pricked euen to their hearts by those whom God hath sent as his surgions to cure mens soules otherwise by sinne wounded to death as knowing that the hurt of the daughter of Gods people is not healed with sweete words but as the bitterest pill is fittest to purge and worketh kindlier then the sweetest potion and as the thunder and lightning more purifie the ayre then the calmest sunnshine euen so gall and wormewood is the portion which the Lord hath tempered for many to take off the pleasant tast of their sweet sinnes As for vs we take no pleasure in your smart or iudgement but that without it you cannot be cured You cannot but confesse that when sores are ripe and raging the next way to cure is launcing suffer vs then a while and trie whether we are not as readie with the good Samaritan to powre oyle as wine into your wounds so it make to your soundnes But all will not come vnto the supper by entreatie some must be compelled and if we bring a true word and handle it truely it cannot but deuide betweene the marrow and the bone yea betweene the soule and the spirits and the ioynts c. Heb. 4.12 And can all this be done and a man feele no smart nay surely if our Ministrie worke no smart it worketh no cure That they may be sound in the faith Doctr. The sharpest rebukes in the Church ought to ayme at this end the recouerie of diseased Christians to soundnes in religion both in iudgement and practise Which appeareth in that the greatest ordinarie censure in the Church is not mortall but medicinable For as a surgeon cuts off armes and legges that the bodie and heart may be saued so in this bodie parts and members are cut off that themselues may be saued as well as the whole bodie Paul excommunicateth the incestuous person that his spirit might be saued Himineus and Philetus were cast out to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme Those whom Iude wisheth to be pulled out of the fire by violence must be saued thereby If any obiect against this that in 1. Cor. 16.21 If any man loue not the Lord Iesus let him be had in execration to the death and therefore edification and saluation is not the ende of this censure I answer It is one thing for the Church to excommunicate another to curse and execrate the one is an ordinarie censure the other verie extraordinarie and rare the one against those who may be freinds of the Church the other only against desperate enemies and open and obstinate Apostates euen such as Iulian whom the Church iudgeth to haue sinned the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore execrateth and accurseth So as that place nothing impeacheth the truth of the doctrine Vse 1. Much more ought Ministers in their sharpest rebukes aime at the conuersion of men what a sharpe reproofe was that of Peter to Simon Magus Act. 8.21.25 Thy mony perish with thee and thou art euen in the gall of bitternesse and yet he addeth repent therefore and pray vnto the Lord c. So is it the part of all Peters successors to whom the care of the Lords flock is committed so to reprooue not as those who would shame mens persons but disgrace their sinnes neither as insulting ouer mens euills nor delighting in their falls nor despayring of their rising but as imitating good Surgions who whilest they seare or cut or cut off still shew compassion and gently entreate the patient euer perswading him that this rough course will make to his health and soundnes 2. While Ministers thus dispense Christian seueritie in their reproofes and denunciation of iudgements the bearers must not mistake them as many doe and much lesse say vnto them as Corah and his company to Moses and Aaron yea take too much vpon you or as the Egyptian to Moses who made thee a iudge who gaue you the keyes of heauen to open and shut it vpon whom you please when did God make you of his counsell to foretell my damnation c. conceiuing that in our menacies and threatning we quite cut them off from all hope of mercie and that we take vpon vs to shut the doore of grace vpon them and to shorten the arme of the Lord that he cannot saue them Whereas the truth is while we thunder out damnation against the sinner which verie many desperately rush into while they auoid the mention of it in our mouthes it is not that we despaire of your saluation or would haue you so to doe nor we doe not admonish you to shame you but you must if you will be saued by the word we preach conceiue with vs that we desire your soundnes of faith and therefore we deale with you as with sickemen who commonly will take nothing to doe them good but what is forced vpon them which if you doe not we are not in your hearts the Surgeons of your soules but rather your executioners 3. This reprehendeth those whose rebukes tend altogether to discourage godly courses in their people and bring them from soundnes in the faith making heauie the hearts of them to whom the Lord speaketh peace 2. Those that malitiously thunder their bolte of excommunication against those that professe Christ sincerely Thus did the Iewes excommunicate whosoeuer durst confesse Christ as that blind man Ioh. 9.34 so the
for it is euill to him that eateth with offence and Paul would neuer eate meate before he would offend Hence followeth it that we may not offend either priuate or publike persons Of priuate men some are of weake consciences and these must be borne vp and yeelded vnto for good rather then destroied by our libertie the Apostle became all things to all such persons and Christ himselfe would not quench a smoaking flaxe Some other are obstinate stiffe yea and malitious from whom we must challenge our Christian libertie If men be carping Pharisies or wilfull Papists the counsell is Let them alone nay more so pretious must our libertie so dearely purchased be vnto vs as we may not neglect it or dissemble it before such as are taught and should be stronger although they be brethren for this was Peters case for which he was iustly reprehended who withdrawing himselfe from the Gentiles to pleasure the Iewes gaue them who had beene taught the contrarie occasion to conceiue of the Gentiles as vncleane still This whole truth is confirmed by Pauls practise who would and did permit Timothie to be circumcised in regard of infirme and weake beleeuers among the Iewes Act. 16.3 but would not suffer Titus so to be Gal. 2.3 partly because he would not offend the godly and partly because he would challenge Christian libertie against those obstinate and malitious aduersaries who had almost ouerturned all the labours of the Apostle in that Church of Galatia by vrging circumcision as a thing of absolute necessitie vnto saluation Here is ministred a direct answer to that question whether recusant Papists are to be compelled to Church because it is an offence vnto them Wherto I answer 1. that this is not a case of indifferencie but necessarie that they come into the pure worship of God and therefore it must be effected either by entreatie or compulsion 2. Were it indifferent yet were they not to be festered in their error because they refuse instruction and are not weake but wilfull 3. Neither are they thus compelled to beleeue but to vse the right meanes of faith 4. Good Iosias made a couenant with the Lord and caused all his people to stand vnto it 2. Chro. 34.32 Now as we may not offend our priuate brethren so much lesse the publike Magistrate who hath power giuen him of God to limit and restraine our ouercommon vse of these things by wholesome lawes concerning things indifferent which lawes we are bound in conscience to obey for then their indifferencie ceaseth not in regard of themselues but of that law restraining them And here sundrie questions may be further demanded As 1. Whether a man may with a safe conscience eate flesh at times prohibited by the Magistrate Answ. In this one instance direction is giuen euen in all the other things of this kinde as concerning daies garments c. therefore I say that to eate or doe any other thing against a law is one thing and to doe otherwise then the law commands in these things is another the former commonly 1. hindreth the end of the law 2. contemneth the authoritie of the law maker 3. hath no iust cause in it selfe 4. careth not for the offence of others this is alwaies a sinne against God and a breach of the fifth commandement but otherwise the former cautions duly obserued I see not how it is a sinne in conscience to eate besides the law Quest. But can any Magistrate make a law to binde the conscience Answ. No but yet we must obey their wholesome lawes for conscience sake which conscience is bound not by the law of the Magistrate but by Gods law which bindeth to obedience of the Magistrates lawes in all lawfull and honest things so Paul Rom. 13.5 subiecteth not the conscience to the lawes of men but to Gods ordinance inforcing obedience to such humane lawes as ●ight not with his owne Quest. 3. But how stand we to the libertie wherein Christ hath set vs free if we suffer the Magistrate to curb vs of it Answ. Wel inough seeing the Magistrate medleth not with the libertie in conscience purchased by Christ for then we might not yeeld a whit but stand on our right but reseruing that as whole and entire as he found it he onely restraineth the ouercommon vse of that libertie for example The lawes which prohibit this or that meate beeing ciuill and made in respect of ciuill and politike order for the common good of men are externall and the obseruation of them is a ciuill obedience and in it selfe properly no worship of God vnto which the outward man is bound directly ●nd not the inward but by accident Which if we will plainely and in a word vnderstand we must consider in euery indifferent thing two things 1. a libertie to vse them 2. the vse of that libertie which two differ as much as meat set vpon the table and the eating of it The libertie is in the conscience the vse is an outward thing the former no Magistrates law medleth with nor can restraine but in the latter his law is a binder And thus we shut the doore against all Popish ecclesiasticall lawes and canons concerning fasts feasts daies garments and infinite other traditions which they vrge as things necessarie to saluation directly binding the conscience yea as meritorious and leading to a state of perfection whereas indeed they directly fight against Christian libertie yea many of them against the morall law it selfe Let them plead as they doe that to the greater authoritie more subiection is due and therefore they must be much more obeyed in their ecclesiasticall constitutions then the Magistrate in his ciuill I answer when they haue prooued their charter out of the word whereby they may make lawes which must be obeyed for conscience sake as the ciuill Magistrate may we will subscribe vnto them In the meane time we haue learned that seeing the Church hath power only to ordaine constitutions for orders sake no man is further bound to them but only so farre as he may auoid scandall of others or further the publique good intended by that constitution But what if the Magistrate giue life to ecclesiasticall constitutions of the Church whether then doe they become such lawes as bind the conscience Answ. The Magistrate giueth no greater power to the Church to make lawes then Christ hath giuen if he make his pleasure knowne that he by his power will see order kept it is the part of euery good subiect and Christian to obey him cheerefully Secondly To vse out libertie in loue we must not onely not cast back our brethren but edifie them and bring them forward in godlinesse 1. Cor. 6.12 all things must profit 1. Cor. 10.23 all things are lawfull but all things edifie not And the generall rule of all indifferent things is Let all things be done to edification and Rom. 15.1 2. Let euerie man please his neighbour to edification euen as Christ
expresse no such thing in their life and conuersation they haue only drawn a faire gloue ouer a foule hand For looke a little nearer them and consider their persons so polluted they are as that they are abhominable such as are worthy that both God and good men should turne away from as from things noysome to their sences for so is the nature of the word vsed also Luk. 16.15 And looke yet further into their liues in stead of sanctimonie you shall meet with rebellion in stead of subiection vnto God you shall discouer disobedience and whereas if they were the sonnes of Abraham as they professe they would doe the workes of Abraham They are reprobate to euery good worke which word is sometimes taken passiuely as 1. Cor. 9.27 I beate downe my bodie least I should be reprobate Heb. 6.8 The ground that beareth thornes and briars is reprobate and neere vnto a curse and so indeed are these refuse and reiected fellowes as souldiers cassierd or as base persons and banquerupts are passed by and not called into office so these are reiected of God and good men Yet it better fitteth the place to accept the phrase actiuely and then the sence is this that they are so farre from the practise of pietie that as men of corrupt minds are said to be reprobate concerning the faith so those corrupt minded men are reprobate concerning good workes and actions which are the fruits of faith that is so giuen vp to sinne and with the Gentiles Rom. 1. to a reprobate minde that they seeme to haue lost all difference and distinction of good and euill and can turne their hand to nothing which is not euill Which disposition of theirs seemeth to be well expounded Ier. 4.22 They are wise to doe euill but to doe well they haue no knowledge In the verse three points are to be marked and handled 1. That there will alwaies be Hypocrites in the Church 1. The Characters or notes of them which in the verse are fowre 3. Their miserable estate and condition in the word abhominable vnto which we will adde the vse For the first That there euer will be in the Church together with sound members many hypocrites appeareth With Abel will be a Cain of two men borne in the world one is an hypocrite with Isaac an Ismael if Abraham himselfe beget two sonnes one is an hypocrite with Iacob an Esau making shew of purchasing the blessing as well as he with the wheat the tares must grow to the haruest the branne abideth with the meale till the boulting the same net couereth good and bad fishes and much filth is drawne along with the fish Iudas lurketh in Christs owne family The purest primitiue Churches planted by the Apostles could not long continue a pure virgin as all the Apostles foresaw and forewarned neither can it be but in the peace of the Church as in a sweet and rainie season many weeds come vp and make a great shew among the good hearbs so many thrust themselues into the profession bringing with them the cares and loue of the world whom the first sonne of persecution causeth to wither and appeare to be themselues And although the Lord could easily at once purge his floore of them yet in great wisedome he suffereth them 1. in regard of his own glorie that his holinesse might appeare in the daily discouering of them and purging his Church for he cannot abide that hypocrites should long goe in the tale and account of his children but one time or other one way or other will be sanctified in all them that come neere him at which time his glorie also shineth out vnto others in their iust iudgement 2. In regard of the wicked that they should the more stumble at the truth by reason of some hypocrites among professors 3. In regard of the godly that they should partly be exercised by this meanes partly driuen to examine what truth is in them 4. In respect of the truth it selfe which getteth some testimony hence as Christ on the crosse by the very title of his enemies affirming that he was the King of the Iewes Vse 1. Let euerie man trie himselfe and the soundnes of his heart he is not a Iewe that is one without and therefore euerie man had neede lay a good ground of his faith and religion he beginneth wel that beginneth in the truth The outward profession may ioyne thee to the Church indeede which verie thing deceiueth many who conceiue that because we haue changed the mattins into preaching and the masse into the Lords table therefore they cannot but be of the Church but the time will come which shall separate those whom now the bare profession ioyneth when two shall be in a house two in the field yea two in a bed whereof the one shall be taken and the other refused one taken like Ruth going on to Iudah another like Orpah going backe to Moab when the fan shall separate wheate from chaff● the one to the garner the other to the burning when the sheepheard shall diuide the sheepe from the goats which now grase together liue together feede together are folded together the one to the right hand the other to his left Let not thy profession deceiue thee for many hypocrites are in the bosome of the Church 2. Let no man be offended if in trialls many by falling away be discouered to be hypocrites who haue long made a shewe of godlinesse for in this great house there must be vessells of dishonour as well as of honour Let no man entertaine any dislike either of the doctrine or the Church because some men turne from it for beeing the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles if Apostles themselues yea or angels should come and teach a contrarie or a diuerse doctrine from it we must deeme them accursed for God is faithfull and no vnfaithfulnesse of man can make him otherwise And for the Church that is the fame euen a number of beleeuers sanctified and sealed to eternall life of which number they neuer were They went out from vs but they were not of vs for had they beene of vs they would haue continued with vs 1. Ioh. 2.19 For what bonds haue they broken but some outward and visible bonds such as are externall profession of doctrine externall conformitie vnto it outward worship communion in the administration of the Sacraments whereby they were tyed onely to the members of the Church all which are easily broken and dissolued but not any internall or invisible bond such as is the bond of eternall election or the bond of the spirit of Christ whereby they should haue bin first knit vnto the head which is of absolute necessitie to be truely vnited to the Church for these knots once tyed could neuer be dissolued Neither let any child of God hence too much torment himselfe with feare least he should not perseuere in the grace receiued but if any
haue receiued the white stone and the newe name in it let him knowe that the foundation of God remaineth sure let him for his part set his seale vnto it by departing from iniquitie and he that thus daily purgeth himselfe shall bee a vessell prepared vnto honour 2. Tim. 2.19 3. We may not looke to liue here belowe amongst angels but if we willingly will not be deceiued we must make account of tares for such an heauen wherein dwelleth nothing but righteousnes cannot be looked for vpon earth And therefore the Anabaptists following the Donatists while they will abide no tares in their fields and floares themselues remaine no wheate no Church for these two must abide together vntill the haruest so as in the meane time where the one is not neither is or can be the other But we must looke vp and breath after that day of separation when the Lord Iesus shall make good that promise vnto vs Cant. 4.8 Thou shalt come with me my spouse from Lebanon and looke from the toppe of Amanah from the top of Shenar and Hermon from the dennes of Lyons and from the mountaine● of Leopards where three promises are wrapped vp in one 1. of deliuerie out of the world Lebanon a part of it beeing put for the whole 2. of victorie for the Church shall be exalted as on the toppes of the highest hils and shall disdainefully and tryumphantly looke downe vpon her enemies who shall be put vnder her feete 3. of safetie from wicked lyonish cruel and bloodthirstie men and from leopards and hypocrites which haue as many contrary guises as the leopard hath spots The second point are the characters of an hypocrite The first of the fowre is in these words They professe they knowe God The hypocrite is a great professor of religion and hence commeth to be answerable to his name in seeming to be and sustaining the person that he is not as a clowne or knaue on a stage plaieth the part of a noble or king but is well knowne to be the next remooue from a rogue so these fellowes whom the Apostle noteth haue often in their mouthes the name of God and of Christ the title of the Chuch and pretend great knowledge of God and cunning in the Scriptures and other Ecclesiasticall writings yea further make a great shewe of faith and pietie and if bare profession would lead to heauen these could not be the least or last there And to make this a little more plaine an hypocrite can carrie himselfe so leuell and euen in his course as no man shall be able outwardly to accuse him or impute any thing vnto him no more then the disciples could accuse Iudas when euerie man said Master is it I but none of them said master is it Iudas Obserue him in his religion you shall heare him crying vnto God and saying my God I knowe thee challenging God for his God and thrusting himselfe vnder him as one of his people and holy ones many shall crie Lord Lord saith Christ and shall professe the knowledge of him to whom he shall professe that he neuer knewe them for his You shall see him outrunning all that is required at his hands he will bring many oblations not of sheepe and small beasts but many oxen and not in one place as God requireth but in many yea in so many as the altars shall exceede the number of the cities you shall see him cleaue to the Church heare pray nay heare gladly as Herod pray boldly as the Pharisie and receiue often the seede with ioy and yet be bad ground Looke to his outward carriage he will not faile in the practise of iust dealing he will abstaine from most sinnes as other men he will cling to good mens companie be pragmaticall and busie in performing many sightly duties he will be readie to plucke out his eyes for good Ministers as the Galatians for Paul and yet afterward fall quite from his doctrine You would verily thinke him to be a sheepe of Christ and so himselfe may happily take himselfe to be the child of God and in all this ledde by the motions of the good spirit of God whereas not a fewe vncleane spirits breath in him Ob. Alas will some here say what am I better then such a man as you speake of what am I other then an hypocrite if this man may be one I see my selfe come behind such as these and so haue lost a great deale of paines of hopes Ans. As Christ said to the young man vaunting of keeping all the lawes of God from his youth one thing is yet wanting so it is to this man which if thou hast thou as farre exceedest him as light doth darkenes though thou wantest a great deale of his appearance What this is the next note sheweth The second note is in these words But indeede they denie him that is all the religion of an hypocrite is onely an outward profession separated from the inward sinceritie of the heart All that we haue spoken of him is but a liueles forme of godlinesse in which the power of it is denied 2. Tim. 3.5 Men may be said to denie a thing three wayes 1. with the tongue 2. with the heart thus the Atheist denieth God Psal. 24.1 3. with the life or actions which is here properlie meant For aske the tongues and words of these men concerning their courses all wil appeare to be fish whole but aske their liues and you shall heare their workes which are farre more euident witnesses with or against a man then his words speake otherwise Or grant they doe many glorious workes to the eie yet euen herein after a sort God is denied in that they are lame and indeede carkases of good actions without any soule to quicken thē all is externall and in such workes they may be verie busie but spiritually they performe nothing Thus Christ chargeth the Scribes and Pharisies with hypocrisie in that they outwardly appeared righteous but inwardly were like the graues full of putrifaction and rottennes And if narrowly we examine the most glorious appearances of this kind of men we shall out of the Sriptures more euidently see the light of this truth which teach vs that there is a generation that draw neere God with their lippes but their hearts are farre remooued from him so as though he be neere their mouthes he is farre from their raines they can come with sheepe and oxen to seeke the Lord Hos. 5.6 but not with faith and repentance in their hearts and therefore shall they finde him If God delighted in outward sacrifices they would giue him many a one but that sacrifice of an humble and contrite spirit which is his delight they detaine from him Hence is all their righteousnesse compared to a morning dewe which maketh shewe as if it would water and moisten the heart of the earth but it onely standeth a little vpon the face or crust of
powerfull more tender ouer his seruants reuenge their abuse both in a better seruice employed and in higher degree disgraced 2. Let euery one lay these notes to his owne heart and especially beware that his workes giue not the lie to his words and profession for which purpose let euery of vs be carefull to approoue our sinceritie to God our profession to men and both of them to our selues by yoking answerable practise to our profession not disioining the things which the Lord would haue coupled nor admitting discord and iarre in things whereof the one should be as the true exposition of the other Let vs then looke a little nearer the matter and see by the cleare sunshine of the word whether they onely be hypocrits who are only so reputed or whether our selues haue not the beames which were worth the casting out and not to range into all particulars let euery man search his owne heart in this one point whether whilest he professeth to know God he denie him not in his workes To helpe vs forward in this triall we must conceiue that improperly the Scripture applieth this name not to such as by infirmitie flip into it for the best actions of the best smell of it as Mr. Bradford confesseth of himselfe but to counterfeit and sembling professors who with Ieroboams wife professe themselues to be other then they are imitating and resembling stage players to whom properly the name belongeth To follow then the resemblance a litle 1. Doe we not see base fellowes plaie and act the Kings part and take on them as though they were so indeed for an howre or two and yet are glad to hang themselues vpon the sleeue of some noble or meaner man for protection euen so a number of Christians by profession in the sight of all men as vpon a stage seeme to be Kings ouer their lusts and commanders ouer their sinnefull affections whereas indeed they are but vessells and seruants to some one sinne or other Secondly as on the stage beggarly and meane fellowes beare themselues as nobles or rich states or act Midas or Craesus part whereas they are scarce able to paie for the roome they plaie in till they haue gathered it euen so many professors seeme to be rich in graces encreased with goods and stand need of nothing and yet indeed like the Angel of the Church of Laodicia are wretched miserable poore blind and naked Thirdly as on the stage cowardly fellowes take vp armes as though they were captaines of great valour and seeme to fight one with another and yet doe but dally euen so many professors seeme to be captaines and fight with much rusling against sin and vngodly courses yet indeed they are but in iest sinne need not feare to receiue a deaths wound from them it is safe inough in the house of a friend Fourthly as on the stage very varlots and shifters plaie the parts and sustaine for the time the persons and names of honest men euen so many professors seeme to be honest yea religious men but are indeed voluptuous giuen vp to the vncleane lusts of their hearts haunters of tauarnes or whorehouses and though they ioyne in publike to good exercises yet cold inough is their loue vnto them oh how tedious is one howre spent in Gods seruice in comparison of a whole day yea and put the night to it consumed in any one sinneful pastime or pleasure and though they seeme freindly to the freinds of religion entertaining them as Ioab did Amasa saluting them as brethren to their face yet their hearts are not with them but are deuising with one floute or other behind their backs to dismisse them and for the enemies of religion whom they would seeme to hate they are most freindly vnto them their hearts their hands their persons goe with them if they call them to be agents or abetters in any vngodly practises as wicked Ahab did good Iehoshaphat their answer is readie I am as thou art my people as thy people my horses as thy horses I and mine are yours to command in any such seruices of sinne But to leaue the resemblance and come to a more speciall application of this examination 1. There is neuer a one who professeth not that the eyes of God are pure beholding all things trying the hearts and raines we all professe that his waies are iust that he cannot abide to behold iniquitie neither can doe otherwise then punish sinne wheresoeuer he findeth it and yet in our practise we renounce all this profession for we can sinne in the darke as if the darknes and the day were not both alike vnto him if we can auoid mans eye we are cock-sure Nay we liue profanely in his sight and against his iustice we flatter our selues with promises of peace 2. We professe that God is our Father and therein acknowledge not onely his general prouidence ouer all things disposing nourishing and preseruing all liuing creatures but his particular prouidence towards our selues But yet indeed we denie him so to be for euery man spendeth out himselfe in shifting and shuffling for himselfe as if he had no father in heauen to care for him which is the practise of a meere worldling Others depend not on him for their maintenance but leane on the broken reed of their owne labour wit cunning diligence many moe vpon vnlawfull and indirect means of gaine by extortion vsurie deceite false waights and measures Others when the least iniurie is offered them murmur for the present and laie vp for time to come reuenge and mallice as though there were no God to order their matters or to commit vengeance vnto Thus God is professed a father but where is his honour Others will haue God their Father but cannot abide his children others professe they feare him as a Father but come to their deeds they feare man much more then God for let a man threaten especially hauing power they quake and crouch but let God threaten they bristle as if they would bid him battell 3. We professe that God is faithfull true of his word and his word the truth it selfe and yet hardly are we brought to beleeue God on his word or further then we see him his promises stay not our hearts but when we haue him in our hands his threatnings terrifie vs not but when we haue them in our eyes the Pastor may pipe but people follow no dance let such call backe what they haue said as hauing said too much except they would beleeue more 4. We professe in word that God is onely wise that his word is our wisedome and the onely rule of all his worship and our waies yet how many stand vpon old customes examples of men naturall reason humane lawes and those of restraint or tolleration in matters directly against the word and many haue better waies of their owne then any we can teach them And as we professe these things of God so we professe as much
of Gods deliuerance 2. Sam. 16.12 It may be the Lord will looke on mine affliction and doe me good this day not making doubt for neither did Dauid in generall but constantly cleauing to the promise call vpon me in the day of trouble and I will deliuer thee Prayer for deliuerance must be ioyned with this expectation of our deliuerance not prescribing time nor meanes nor manner much lesse vsing vnlawfull meanes but reserue vnto the Lord the glory of his wisedome in ordering the whole matter and circumstances of our deliuerance The fifth fruit is a totall resignation of a mans selfe to the will of God and a voluntarie subiection vnto his good pleasure who knoweth out of his wisedome what is the best and out of his loue maketh euery present estate worke to the best to his children example hereof we haue in Dauid 2. Sam. 15.26 Behold here am I let him doe as seemeth good in his eyes yea euen if he should say I haue no delight in thee The third point wherein the soundnes of patience consisteth is in the found durance and lasting of it And indeed not euery patience and tollerance of euill is here meant but such as implieth a delaie and continuance vnder some weight or burthen nay the very word importeth so much signifying as well perseuerance as patience neither is this sound patience a suffering only but a long suffering nor a patience but a long patience such as the husbandman waiteth withall vnto the haruest such as the Prophets endured all hard measure by such as our selues must possesse our soules by and euery possession is of continuance such as maketh not hast yea such as must waite vntill the comming of the Lord. Iames in the place alleadged exhorteth to be patient till the comming of the Lord which is not meant of his last comming to iudgement but of his particular executions beforehand for the deliuerie of his chosen the reuenge of their wrongs vpon their enemies Vse All these notes let vs see the crazines of this grace in vs. It is no patience when men beare out crosses by stoutnes and stomacke neither by a nature not so subiect to impatience for here is not silence vnto God disposing the crosse vnto them So when men can buckle well enough with and swimme out of one kind of crosse which pincheth them not so much but sinke in some other when they must choose their rods and t●ialls or else they are heartles and dead in the neast here is a crannie in their patience which will sinke their soules Some againe beare out their crosses because they are yoked and coupled to them like two spaniels which must goe together because they cannot goe asunder but without all willingnes or chearefulnes but this is farre from Christian patience and is as we say patience perforce And lastly when we cannot entertaine afflictions thankefully as finding some goodnes and sweetnes in them when deliuerance is not expected from God as by such who haue title in his promise when we desire to be at our owne hands and will not stay his leisure but hastily like infidels runne vnto indirect meanes and sometime to Sathan himselfe in sorcerers witches when we are so tugged with afflictions as we hold not out but are readie to giue vp all here is all vnsound here men may not onely suspect but conclude from vnsound patience vnsoundnes of loue of faith and consequently the want of the truth in all their profession of religion Vers. 3. The elder women likewise that they be in such behauiour as becommeth holynesse not false accusers not giuen to much wine but teachers of holy things Our Apostle hauing taught how and what doctrine should be applyed to old men he proceedeth now to make olde women matchable vnto them and therefore he beginneth with the word likewise which sheweth that the same vertues as formerly haue beene mentioned are to be vrged vpon old age of both sexes and who can denie sobrietie wisdome grauitie soundnesse in faith loue and patience to be as necessarie for auncient women as men whether we consider the same inconueniences of the same olde age lying vpon them or the impotencie of their sexe in vndergoing them which yet maketh the want of these vertues farre more miserable then in the other And then he addeth some further duties fitted to their estate which he doth 1. by prescribing such vertues as are seemely for their yeares and 2. by prohibiting such vices as in all ages are wicked but in theirs most vnseemely and scandalous The duties are two 1. an holy behauiour in themselues in the first words of the verse 2. a drawing on of others vnto holinesse and honestie in the latter part of the verse and forward The vices prohibited are two 1. of slaundring or false accusing 2. of intemperate desire or drinking of wine or strong drinkes both which are contained in the middle of the verse But we will speake of the words as they lie in the verse But before we come vnto them we may learne this lesson Doctr. In that wholesome doctrine must be taught and applyed vnto women as well as men note that no woman cannot without danger of damnation despise or neglect the ministerie of the word they beeing as straightly bound vnto the meanes of saluation and the Apostle taketh double paines to teach them their duties Reas. 1. As saluation is one to all so is there but one way to all for as women must haue their names written in the booke of life as well as men that is in the booke of Gods election to life so must they be also added vnto the Church as well as men seeing none are saued who are not added vnto the Church Now this addition to the Church standeth not onely in an outward profession of the Gospel by which they are added to the visible Church for the foolish virgins made a great shewe for a time but in vnfained conuersion and sanctification whereby they are added vnto the invisible Church True it is that women must be ioyned vnto the people of God and therefore must participate 1. in the word which must be preached to euerie creature Paul preached to a company of women among whom Lydia was conuerted 2. in the Sacraments and be both admitted into the Church by baptisme as Cornelius the Iaylor and all their housholds as also strengthned in the Church by the Lords Supper in which they must remember the Lords death vntill he come But all this is not inough yea nothing at all vnlesse they be first knit vnto God himselfe the bond of which coniunction is faith wrought in the heart by meanes of the word and working in heart and life by loue to God and men If then women must beleeue to saluation aswell as men the Iaylor and all his houshold beleeued in God nay if women must continue in faith to which saluation is tyed and not
the plagues of God which enter into the house of the vniust person yea often whippeth him with his owne rodde bringing often vpon such as haue beene vnfaithfull seruants by meanes of vnfaithfull seruants pouertie and want or worse things that their sinne might returne vpon them with much more bitternesse 4. That a good meanes to learne rightly to vse our owne portion of goods is by the carefulll vse of other mens comming into our hands For he that wretchedly rioteth and squandreth his masters goods for most part is giuen ouer by Gods iudgement to bee a waster of his owne And here taketh place that speach of Christ If you be vnfaithfull in an other mans goods who shall giue you that which is your owne teaching that he that is vnfaithfull to an other seldome is faithful in his owne affaires That they may adorne the doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things First for the meaning The doctrine of the Gospel is called the doctrine of Christ. 1. Because he is the argument and subiect of it whence some of the Euangelists beginne their writing thus The beginning of the Gospel of Iesus Christ and the Apostle Paul beginneth his writing with his setting apart to preach the Gospel of God concerning his Sonne for Christ Iesus deliuered to death for sinne and raised again for iustification is the whole matter Whence Paul calleth it the word of the crosse not onely because the crosse followed it but also in that it is the doctrine of Christ crucified 2. Because he is the first and chiefe messenger and publisher of it who in Paradise promised that the seede of the woman should breake the serpents head and none but the sonne who came from the bosome of the father could reueale and shewe the fauourable face of his father vnto vs who also in fulnesse of time to shewe himselfe the cheife doctor of his Church came in his own person and went about preaching and teaching this doctrine of the kingdome 3. Whosoeuer haue beene the teachers and publishers of this doctrine from the beginning either by word or writing not excepting Prophets and Apostles themselues or shall be vnto the ende they all do it by commandement from him yea himselfe preacheth in them and in vs. Thus the Apostle saith Eph. 2.17 that Christ came and preached peace to them that were farre off that is to the Gentiles in the persons of his Apostles for otherwise in his owne person as he was not sent so he preached not but to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel And therefore although Paul sometimes call it his Gospel and speaking of other Apostles also our Gospel yet must it be meant onely in regard that they were the publishers but not the authors of it for that is Christ himselfe 4. As it proceedeth from him so it tendeth wholly vnto him and leadeth beleeuers to see and partake both of his grace and glorie shining in the same Secondly Christ is called God our Sauiour 1. To prooue his owne dietie not onely in expresse tearmes beeing called God but also by the epithite agreeing onely to a diuine nature our Sauiour 2. To imply our owne miserie whose infinite wretchednesse onely God could remooue and whose infinite good none but God could restore 3. And especially in regard of this doctrine 1. to confirme the diuinitie of the same it beeing a doctrine of God and a doctrine of saluation proceeding from our Sauiour 2. To enforce the dutie towards it namely that seeing the author of it is God the matter diuine the effect saluation meet it is that such a sauing doctrine a doctrine of such tidings should be beautified and adorned Thirdly this doctrine is adorned when it is made bewtifull and louely vnto men and this by two things in the professors of it 1. By an honest and vnblameable conuersation for carnall men commonly esteem of the Doctrine by the life and the profession by the practise of the professor Hence the Apostle would haue Christians so compose all their actions as whosoeuer should see their good workes might be mooued to glorifie God And this appeareth more clearely in the contrarie for when the worke answereth not to the word it causeth the name of God to be blasphemed among vnbeleeuers and to glorie in the law yet breaking the law is a great dishonour to God 2. By Gods blessing which is promised and is attending such walking whereby euen strangers to the Church are forced to beginne to like of the profession for Gods blessing vpon his people is not onely profitable to themselues but turneth to the saluation of many others We read of many of the Heathen people that when they saw the great aduancement of Hester and Mordecay they became Iewes And when the Egyptians saw the great workes that God did for his people among them it is said that many of them ioyned themselues to the Israelites So we read in the Ecclesiasticall storie that when Licinius was ouercome by Constantine and the persecutions ceased which had almost for 300. yeares together wasted the Church how innumerable of them who before had worshipped their idols were contented to be receiued into the Church On the contrarie the Gospel is dishonoured when the Lord is forced to iudge and correct the abuse of his name in the professors of it Ezech. 36.20 When they that is the Israelites entred among the Heathen they polluted my name when they said of them these are the people of the Lord and are gone out of his Land Fourthly Seruants adorne the Gospel when professing it they by performing all faithfull seruice to their masters in and for God seeke and obtaine the blessing of God in the condition of life wherein he hath placed them whereas the casting off of the yoake in beleeuing seruants would make men conceiue that God whose name they professe were the author of confusion and not of order and that the Gospol were an enemie to ciuill and humane right For what is more right and equall then for masters to enioy their seruants as they do the other parts of their goods and bet●er might a man misse a great part of his goods then the person and labour of his seruant Doctr. The meanest Christian in his place may and ought to bring glorie vnto the Gospel These seruants were sould and bought like beasts in smithfeild yet must such poore creatures by their faithfulnesse diligence and conscience decke and bewtifie the Gospel which euen by their liues receiueth either honour or discredit In the Tabernacles building euery man must bring lesse or more The Lord esteemeth not of men by the places they hold but by their carriage in them A poore wise child or seruant here is better then an old foolish King In a word no man is called to the truth but on condition to shew forth the vertues of him that hath called him Vse 1. Let seruants who
vs nearer himselfe and draweth him nearer vnto vs according to that gracious promise that in sixe troubles he will be with vs and in seauen he will not forsake vs. What meane then the enemies of this grace of God the Papists to seeke for any part of their iustification and saluation in merits and works whereas if we consider the beginning of all our good which they call the first iustification the Lord is found of vs who sought him not his skirts couered vs when our father was an Amorite our mother an Hittite and we in our blood And for the encrease of our good which is that second iustification which they dreame of and is indeede nothing else but the increase of our sanctification he beginneth and perfecteth he is the author and finisher of our faith by which we stand and hold on vnto saluation 1. Cor. 1.8 who shall confirme you to the ende that yee may be blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus Christ. Vse 2. If this be a doctrine bringing saluation then must we embrace it as we would saluation it selfe there is no man but would lay hold on saluation yet no man almost claspeth hold on the Gospel to make it his portion many a one can make it his talke and his pretence but scarse any maketh it his portion by yeelding himselfe to be cast into the mould of it Now for the right entertaining of it two things are required 1. To acknowledge that this word of saluation is by God sent vnto vs as the speciall token of his loue This Paul vrgeth on the Iewes his hearers Act. 13.26 men and brethren to you is the word of saluation sent this the Iewes knewe well enough but Paul would haue them acknowledge the benefit which a verie fewe at this day doe 2. To be thankefull for such a mercie not onely by accounting their feete beautifull that are the bringers of such tidings but by holding forth this word of saluation as we are commanded Phil. 2.16 And this is done 1. by beleeuing it in the heart to iustification 2. by professing it with the mouth to saluation 3. by teaching and propagating it to others by holy speach and example ●nd thus onely it becomes vnto vs as it is in it selfe a sweete sauour of life vnto life And this dutie is rather to be thought vpon because this doctrine although it be in it owne nature a word bringing saluation yet may it by accident through our default become though not a cause an occasion of destruction and a sauour of death vnto death and what a wofull thing were it so to sinne against the Gospell as it should become working according to the nature of the subiect a killing letter vnto vs how fearefull a sinne were it to turne this grace into wantonnes or to neglect and yet much more despise so great saluation seeing this is to sinne against the neerest and immediate word of saluation and if those escaped not vengeance who despised the word spoken by angels much lesse shall such as despise the word vttered by the Sonne himselfe Many men when they see the lawe broken especially those precepts wherein humane societie is more disturbed as by theft murther adulterie periurie c. oh these sinnes cannot be brooked for the foulenesse and detestablenesse of them but yet the same men liue in a greater sinne then any o● all these and see it not namely the neglect or contempt of saluation offered in the Gospel which is more dishonourable vnto God and much more preiudiciall to his owne soule Let the Iewes be our glasse herein in whom the Lord suffered many contempts of his lawe and yet neuer vtterly cast them off but no sooner almost had they refused this corner stone but he scattered them into all windes and would haue no more to doe with them vnto this day Let other famous Churches of Corinth Ephesus Galatia Colossus Thessalonica the seauen flourishing Churches in lesser Asia to whom Iohn writ his Epistles in the reuelation teach vs that neuer did any Church wilfully refuse this grace but ere long God gaue them ouer into the hands of Christs greatest enemies and so of persons it will be true that whosoeuer loue not blessing the curse of God shall befall them and runne into their bowels like water To all men These words may be expounded 1. without exception and then it must be conceiued by way of publication or manifestation of this grace which in the generall promises of the Gospel is published and offered to all excepting none whosoeuer beleeueth shall be saued 2. with restraint when this grace bringeth saluation by way of exhibition not offring only but conferring the same And the restraints are two 1. it bringeth saluation to all men namely that are elected and saued for whosoeuer are saued must passe by this doore and come to the knowledge of the truth neither can this be thought strange of him who considereth that the Scriptures acknowledge such a generalitie yea a world of the elect onely God was in Christ reconciling the world vnto himselfe that is the beleeuers who onely are reconciled and Christ is the lambe that takes away the sinnes of the world that is of his elect see also Ioh. 14.31 2. It bringeth saluation to all men that is all kinds and conditions of men not to euerie particular or singular of the kinds but to all the sorts and kinds of men to seruants as well as masters to Gentile as well as Iew to poore as rich Thus is it said that God would haue all men saued that is of all sorts of men some so Christ healed all diseases that is all kinds of diseases and the Pharisies tithed all hearbs that is all kinds for they tooke not euerie particular hearb for tithe but tooke the tenths of euerie kinde and not the tenth of euery hearb And hence we note a third difference betweene the Law and Gospel That doctrine of the law brought not saluation no not by way of manifestation to all men no nor yet to all sorts and conditions of men that was a more restrictiue doctrine to the Iewes only and in that couenant was alwaies a difference held and a wall of partition was set vp between Iew and Gentile and betweene people and people Before the flood were the sonnes of God and the sonnes of men After the flood before the law there was the promised seed and the seed of the flesh the sonnes of the freewoman and of the bond woman after the law before Christ was held the distinction of Iew and Gentile with the former God made his couenant them he tooke into his teaching and passed by the other to these pertained the adoption the glorie the couenant the giuing of the law the seruice of God the oracles the promises these had his Temple his Prophets ordinarie and extraordinarie This difference Dauid implied Psal. 147. Hee sheweth his word vnto Iacob his statutes and
iudgements vnto Israel he dealt not so with euery nation neither haue they knowne his waies But now in this last age of the world this couenant of grace and life at least for propounding is made common to all people now euery man is inuited vnto repentance the partition wall is broken downe the vaile is rent and the mysterie which was kept secret from the beginning of the world is published to all nations Rom. 16.26 Vse 1. This place thus rightly interpreted yeeldeth no patronage to that deuise of Vniuersall election which they draw from the vniuersall vocation of men to the knowledge of the Gospel But many are called not euery particular man and the greatest part of the world haue alwaies bin out of the couenant besides of them that are called few come so as all to whom this grace is published participate not in it Vse 2. Note the extent of this couenant farre aboue the other whence it is fitly called by Iude the common saluation as in regard of the ends and meanes of it so also in respect of the subiects called vnto it so in the former Chapter vers 4. it is called the common faith not onely in regard of the kind and obiect of it but also of the subiects persons of all kinds beeing called thereunto which consideration should stirre vp our reioysing in that the barren and desolate hath more children then the married wife that the place of the tents of the Church is so enlarged and the courtaines of her habitation spread out as we are exhorted Isa. 54.1 Vse 3. Note that the kingdome of Christ admitteth no distinction of men it is not of this world which accepteth of men for their place countrie calling but all countries and callings are alike vnto God in euery nation and calling he that feareth him is accepted of him he neither accepteth the person of the Prince nor of the poore for they both are the worke of his hands he calleth the Gentile the seruant the poore and these receiue the Gospel Where againe we who are Gentiles and were Lo Ammi and Lo Ruhania may reioyce that we are receiued to pitie and that the wing of Gods mercie is stretched ouer vs who iustifieth the circumcision of faith and the vncircumcision through faith Hence may the poore beleeuer be he a thrall a seruant and base in the world raise his heart to comfort that euen he whom men despise is called and that effectually to see the grace and saluation of God euen he who is perhaps a seruant to some meane man is a free citizen in Gods kingdom euen he that hath neuer a foote in earth is become a purchaser in heauen Here is no complaint that the prodigall sonne is entertained and the seruiceable sonne neglected The Enunch need not say I am a drie tree nor the sonne of the stranger the Lord hath surely separated me from his people but whosoeuer cleaueth vnto the Lord to loue the Lord and serue him them he will giue a name better then of sonnes and daughters euen an euerlasting name that shall not be put out Vse 4. This meeteth also with a wofull delusion among many Protestants to whom when we call for conscionable walking in a Christian course What say they did not Christ die for all men and is not heauen as open for mee as for others would not God haue all men to be saued is he not mercifull will he condemne for such and such things which what is it else but from the abundance of grace to make their sinnes superabound and thus they plainly shew that they were neuer yet effectually called and that although they haue bin called to the supper yet haue they refused to come Hath appeared The Gospel is compared to a great light shining out brightly and gloriously 1. a light in that 1. it dispelleth a manifold darknesse which before occupied the minds of men 2. in regard of direction 3. comfort which it bringeth to the beleeuing soule And 2. a great light wherein is a fourth difference from the old Testament in which all things were more darke and obscure through the vaile of figures and ceremonies so as their light was but like the obscure light of the sunne before the rising not that the substance and scope of their doctrine was not the same with ours but that in the manner of deliuerie it was farre lesse lightsome But now the light is risen vp in glorious sort shining not as before almost to none but Iewes but to the Gentiles also so as according to the Prophets foreshadowing hereof the sunne is not only risen and in our midheauen but the light of it is seauen fold bigger then it was before And the reasons are sundrie 1. Many were the types and predictions of the old Testament which must be knowne to be accomplished in the new which for this cause must as farre excel the other in light and brightnesse as the bodie the shadow or the thing it selfe the figure and picture of it truely to this saith one that the exposition must be more cleare then the text 2. The promises made to the Church of the new Testament were many moe and farre more ample then to the old as that from the least to the greatest all should know the Lord that the mountaine of the Lord should be lifted vp vpon the toppe of the mountaines that all the earth should be filled with the knowledge of God as the waters couer the sea the which if they be fulfilled then this great light hath appeared 3. The generalitie of the doctrine confirmeth the same For all nations were to be called to the embracing of it Gentiles Arabians Barbarians and the rest euen of the most barbarous Heathens much light therefore and perspicuitie was to be required in such a doctrine as should acquaint all nations not only with it selfe but all that doctrine also which was formerly deliuered in all ages to the Church of God and this latter most full and clearely explaned in the former This light in this regard is growne like that cloud from an handbreadth to couer the whole heauens and is indeed that water running vnder the threshold of the sanctuarie which is risen from the ankles to a riuer yea a sea couering the earth 4. The exhibiting of Christ in fulnesse of time who came from his fathers bosome to reueale things there secretly reserued from the beginning of the world and the plentifull powring out of the spirit long before promised and 50. daies after Christs ascension accomplished to the Church of the new Testament doth certainely seale vp this same truth besides those expresse places of Scripture which might be alleadged to this purpose In 2. Cor. 3. Paul affirmeth that the ministration of the spirit is farre more glorious then that of the law which he calleth the ministration of death of which he affirmeth that yet it was so glorious that it made
saluation in this present world God in his wisedome hath combined to euerie ende his meanes in all his ordinarie courses as to naturall life bread sleepe Physicke so to the spirituall the word Sacraments prayer sobrietie righteousnesse pietie and therefore the argument will be sound in the contrarie thus If God haue appointed me to die the death of the righteous he hath ordained me to the meanes namely to liue the life of the righteous if to glorie then to grace if to the full reuelation of glorie hereafter then to the first fruits of it here in grace if to the great citie of the great king hereafter then to the suburbs here there is no iumping to heauen no more then a man can leape from one citie to an other vpon earth Naturall reason teacheth that there is no skipping from one extreame to an other without a meane and much more doth diuine wisedome tell vs that no man can climbe from earth to heauen without Christs the ladder and faith with the fruits of hope loue obedience c. which are as it were the staues of the same 3. Note hence what is the proper ende of euerie mans life in this present world namely that in the way of a sober righteous and religious life he may attaine euerlasting happinesse hereafter there is no other time to get heauen but here vpon earth after death commeth nothing but iudgement no other purgatorie is to be expected then that in this life by the blood of Christ whatsoeuer Poets and Papists fable to the contrarie nor is there any other sactifaction but by faith here to lay hold vpon Christ onely oblation Alas how doe many peruert the ende of their liues some to get wealth honour and great estates others to sit downe to eate and drinke and rise vp to play others to trade in some one or other speciall sinne and lust but let vs that will be wise to saluation seeing it is called to day and our acceptable time and day of saluation is come vpon vs beware of hardening our hearts let vs not dare to striue against the holy Ghost in the ministerie for contemners of grace in this present world shall neuer partake of the glorie of the iust hereafter this is the gate of heauen and the iust enter into it or else this ministerie bindeth ouer to death from which it is impossible euer to bee loosed Vers. 13. Looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the glorie of the mightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ. In this verse is set downe the second effect of this grace which hath appeared namely when it hath reuealed and published the good things which are reserued for vs hereafter and put them in our hands by faith and hope to lift vp the heart to the patient and vigilant waiting for and expectance of them And in the second place teacheth when the full reuelation of these things shall be namely in the second which is the glorious appearing of Christ who is described 1. from his maiestie and power that mightie God and 2. from his mercie and loue as he is our Mediator our Sauiour Iesus Christ. Wherein our Apostle includeth a verie strong argument to enforce all the former duties of which we haue spoken in the verse going before as also an effectuall meanes to containe beleeuers in those dutyes as though the Apostle had in more full and plaine forme of speach thus said I haue told of great things brought to light by the Gospel the which if you would haue part in you must take the way which I haue directed you into leauing the by-paths of vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and walking in the path of sobrietie righteousnesse and pietie for those that wait for the wedding must prepare that they be not found without the wedding garment and if at any time any discouragements or wearines 〈◊〉 you in this Christian course you cannot better sustain the one or establish your selues against the other thē by casting vp an eie in to the things within the vaile the expectatiō of which will be able to hold your hearts in your vprightnesse and cause you to forget that which is behind and striue to that which is before and presse hard to the marke and the price of the high calling of God In the verse we will first giue the meaning of the words and then raise the points of instruction First by hope is meant the thing hoped by an vsuall forme of speach that is both Christ himselfe principally as the words next following expound as also with him life saluation freedome from sinne and miserie perfection of glorie and immortalitie the branches of this exposition are prooued by two places of Scripture the former 1. Tim. 1.1 where Iesus Christ is called our hope the latter Eph. 1.18 that yee may knowe what the hope is of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance is in the Saints Blessed hope 1. because Christ our hope is for euer blessed in himselfe and bestower of all blessing to his Church 2. the fruition of our hope putteth vs in possession of absolute blessedn●sse for it shall both put an ende to all the hinderances of the blessednes of the godly and conferre perfect blessednesse in greatest measure and endlesse continuance seeing it bringeth vs to the perfect knowledge and sight of God who is blessednesse it selfe to the sight and fellowship of his blessed Sonne to the societie of the blessed angels and Saints and restoreth vs to the integritie of our owne nature with immortalitie that there may be no ende of our blessednesse 3. all our present blessednesse dependeth vpon the happie accomplishment of it for were we without this hope we were of all men most miserable And appearing of the glorie By a metominie of the adiunct for the glorious appearing a forme of speach verie vsuall among the Hebrues not that Christ is not now euery way glorious in himselfe but in that he shall then manifest his glorie for then his glorie shall breake out as the sunne when he shall sit in the throne of his maiestie And here we must note how the Apostle opposeth this second comming of Christ vnto his former that was the appearing of grace this of glorie that was i● humilitie for he came meekely riding on the colt of an asse but this shall be in power when he shall ride vpon the wings of the windes and make the clouds his charriot that was to teach righteousnesse but this to remnuerate it that to be like a seruant to be iudged and condemned for sinne this to declare himselfe the Sonne to whom all iudgement is committed by the Father Now indeed his maiestie and greatnes is troden downe and contemned and the glory of the world exalteth it selfe aboue his but then shall all vanishing glorie melt before him when he shall appeare in such brightnesse as shall obscure the brightnesse of the sunne yea make it fall
that which all the Prophets and Moses said should come to passe that Christ should suffer and be the first that should rise from the dead For what other thing could any of the Prophets write concerning Christ but either touching his humilitie or his glorie and how could himselfe haue beene raised but after or we but by his abasement Let not therefore both thine eyes be fixed as the Iewes are vpon the basenesse of his first comming but let one behold as a Christian the glorie of this second appearing which shall abundantly counteruaile the humilitie of the former Vse 2. The glorie of this second appearing is a terror to all the vngodly who haue despised his humilitie and his still voice in the Ministerie of the Gospel For whosoeuer now in this his appearance of grace will not tremble at his word to frame their soules to the obedience of it shall at this second appearance of glorie tremble to dust at his greatnesse and not be able to abide the brightnesse of his glorie Those that are now ashamed of him and that contempt and dishonour that followeth his profession shall then be ashamed of themselues when the Sonne of God shall be ashamed of them And as for such as daily pearce him with the speares and nayles of their sinnes they shall be sure to see him thus glorious whom they haue pearced when themselues shal be pearced with shame and sorrow to their endles confusion Vse 3. To comfort the faithfull seeing there is a time when they also shall appeare in glorie they must be content first to suffer with Christ before they can raigne with him and weare the crowne of thornes before this crowne of glorie the Lord dealing herein with them as a father with his children who though they be borne to neuer so great places and estates yet in their minoritie subiecteth them to such discipline as befitteth their yeares before he bestow their portion vpon them God hath his children now in the world the world knoweth them not nor seeth their glorie nay they themselues cannot in any clearenesse behold their owne glorie for no eye can see the full glorie of the Saints till the fulnes of Christs glorie appeare but when this time commeth the least of them shall be knowne to be Kings sonnes so as the Deuil himselfe and his wicked instruments who can now accuse them and say there goes an Hypocrite there goes a Precisian a Puritane a dissembler and are offended at the low base estate of the Saints here shall change their note and be compelled to say there goes a child of God there goes the Kings sonne there gos an heyre of the kingdom and shall gnaw their tongues for greif to see them exalted in glory shine in the brightnesse of Gods image and themselues vtterly and eternally excluded from God and his kingdome Let vs not then iudge our selues or others according to the flesh nor walke by sight but by faith no● altogether looking on our selues or others as we now are but as we shall be for although indeed we are now the sonnes of God yet it appeareth not what we shall be so long as our life is hid with Christ yea let vs lift vp our eyes to that glorie of our head that shall be reuealed and distributed to vs his members and our hearts in the earnest requests of faith alwaies praying Lord let thy kingdome come cause these shadowes to flie away and that day to breake wherein thy glorie which now is obscured may be manifest and shine out in the first place as is meete and then the glorie of thy seruants whose bewtie shall be made perfect in thy glorie and bewtie Doctr. 4. The Apostle doth not mention Christ without magnifying him in his titles both of power and mercie teaching ●s by his example neuer to speake of God or Christ but in a iust and weightie matter and occasion and for the manner with feare and reuerence and to such ends as we ought and are warranted by the word Now for our direction we haue the Scriptures insisting in magnifying God and Christ and the blessed Spirit in their titles and attributes especially for these three ends First to shew what a one God is in himselfe as here to shew what a person Christ is namely full of glorie might and mercie our Apostle is much and large in his stile and attributes To this purpose the Prophet Isay in one place giueth him fiue titles His name shall be called Wonderfull Counsellor the mightie God the euerlasting Father the Prince of peace Secondly not onely for the glorie of God but for the benefit of the Church 1. That hereby they might acknowledge him to be the true God so the Prophet Ieremie opposing the true God against all idols and false gods speaketh most highly of him There is none like vnto thee O Lord thou art great and thy name is great in power and in the next verse he calleth him King of nations and challengeth all dominion to belong vnto him And our Apostle when he would bring the Athenians to the acknowledgement of the onely Lord ascribeth many and great things vnto him as that he made the world and all things else that he is Lord of heauen and earth that he giueth to all life breath and all things that he made of one blood all mankind that he assigneth their times and the bounds of their habitation that in him we liue mooue and haue our beeing vers 28. 2. That after this acknowledgement we might prouoke our selues to answerable duties for example In consideration of his mercie to breake out into his due prayses Psal. 3.3 Thou Lord art my buckler my glorie and the lifter vp of mine head Isa. 12.2 Behold God is my saluation I will trust and will not feare for the Lord is my strength and song he is also become my saluation In regard of his omnipotence to studie for vprightnesse Gen. 17.1 I am God all sufficient walke before mee and be vpright In meditation of his omnipresence to be euery where reuerent because of his eye Act. 10.33 We are all here present before God c. In respect of his truth to relie our selues vpon it 1. Chro. 17.27 Thou hast blessed and it shall be blessed Exod. 3.14 Moses must tell the children of Israel that I Am hath sent mee that is who giueth beeing to all things and especially to this couenant of your deliuerance out of Egypt now at the end of 400. yeares Thirdly another end of Gods titles in Scripture is that we should not onely glorifie God and edifie our selues but also stirre vp others to the praise and worship of the true God who hath thus made himselfe knowne vnto vs Psal. 95.3.6 Come let vs worship c. for the Lord is a great God namely in beeing knowledge mercie and power Psal. 40.9 I haue declared thy righteousnesse in the great congregation I haue not hid it
blood of Christ by often meditating and applying vnto himselfe his death and merits which are the onely purging ●ire and fullers sope without which although he take much sope and nitre yet can he not be purged this is the onely fountaine opened to the house of Dauid for sinne and vncleannesse this is the onely lauer of the Church 2. He laboureth in the encrease and strengthning of his faith which as an hand apprehending the former purifieth the heart 3. He diligently and reuerently frequenteth the word and Sacraments as the outward meanes appointed by God for the effecting and encreasing of sanctification 4. When he heareth Christ say If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee he reuerently falleth downe at his feete in feruent prayer Lord not my feete only but my hands and my head wash mee throughly euen from toppe to toe Thus he knowes he can onely become cleane and by these same meanes he seeth he can only be kept cleane he dare not neglect these meanes as the foule monsters of the world that had rather be wallowing in the dung of the earth and bathing themselues in their dirtie and sinnefull sports and delights then frequent the places where these pure waters streame in most pleasant abundance but their cards dice bowles boules vnprofitable companie idle solitarines which as so many draynes carie with them all vncleannes the which they powre on the heads of wicked men with full buckets chaine them with chaines of darknes that they cannot so much as desire these cleane waters which the spirit powreth on those which thirst after them The second point is the motiues to become purged and to labour in sanctification 1. Because hereby wee resemble the Lord himselfe by which reason we are often in the Scripture mooued to the study of holines Leu. 19.2 and hence we become deare vnto God when he spieth his owne image vpon vs for euen naturall fathers loue their children best who are likest vnto them 2. Hereby we are not only conformable to his image but to his will for this is the will of God that euery man know to possesse his vessell in holinesse and in honour 1. Thess. 4.3 3. Hereby we distinguish our selues from the profane Esaus of the world whereas by nature we are as foule as they 4. We attaine to the end of our redemption and haue an argument that Christs death is effectuall to vs because we see the power of the deuil and sinne destroied in vs. 5. All legall purifications are resolued into nothing but euangelicall sanctimonie which may not be neglected vnlesse we will come behind those who were directed by shadows types whereas we haue the truth substance 6. Without puritie of heart and life no man shall see God Blessed and holy are they that haue part in the first resurrection the second death shall not hurt such for only those that are slaine by the first death are hurt by the second and the second resurrection only profiteth those that haue part in the first Without shall be dogges and whatsoeuer is filthy and vncleane and know we not that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6.9 What meane men then to feare least they should be too pure and too holy and to reproach others as beeing so What a fearefull delusion is it for men to flatter themselues as most doe that there need no such strictnes or precisenes but to come to Church and receiue Sacraments according to law and do as other men do and sometimes as their leysure suffers to read or pray alone and heare a sermon extraordinarie But alas what will it profit a man to be a sundaies Saint and a work-daies Deuil Or what great good can good moods do are we not exhorted to the following of holines to cleanse our selues from all filthines of soule and bodie to an heauenly conuersation to haue no fellowship nor touch any vncleane thing On the other side are we not vrged to continuall prayer In all things to be thankfull to meditate day and night in the law of the Lord to make the word our marke to aime at and in all things with full purpose of heart to cleaue fast vnto the Lord And now dare any flesh except and say but if I shall doe thus it is more then need and I should become too precise and too pure and so are they that do so we serue a God of pure eyes that will not be thus dallied withall To be a peculiar people vnto himselfe In these words is set down one end why Christ vnderwent such paines not only to iustifie but also to sanctifie his Church namely that it might become impropriate vnto himselfe and applied vnto his owne best purposes For as vncleane vessels can neuer be vsed vnto any good purpose vntill they be washed and sweetned no more can sinnefull men euer become vessells of honour reserued vnto the Lords owne vse before they be washed by the blood of Christ and those pure waters of the spirit before mentioned The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifieth something on which a man for some excellencie in it setteth his affection more then other and therefore layeth it vp and reserueth for some speciall vse and purpose and will not at any hand part with it as if a man should laie vp some bright and bewtifull peeces of gold which he will not suffer to see the sunne as we say or be brought out scarce in extreame necessitie Thus although all the earth be the Lords who beeing the God of nature and grace hath all power and libertie to conferre where he pleaseth grace aboue nature yet his good pleasure was to choose Israel to be his cheefe treasure aboue all people and an holy nation that vnto them he might shew his wisedome and glorie and his loue and mercie vpon them But that was but a type the thing it selfe is specially apparant in the Church of the new Testament euen the true Church of God in all ages since vnto which all those titles iustly belong which Peter giueth to the beleeuing dispersed Iewes A royall pr●●sthood a chosen generation an holy nation and a peculiar people Now the Church may be said to be a peculiar people by the Church vnderstanding the true and essentiall members of the Church 1. Because beleeuers are the most precious of men euen the most noble persons of the earth descended of the blood of Christ in which regard they are the dearest of men and nearer vnto God because more noble then the rest Thus Salomon describeth the Church as though it were a stately court where are none but of the blood royall Kings Queenes Lords and Ladies and hence are beleeuers called sonnes of God brethren of Christ and heyers vnto the crowne of heauen Secondly In regard of God they are a peculiar people distinct from others by his grace of election by which they are chosen
be glorified by vs hath he called vs out of the world which lieth in wickednes vnto holinesse and so fitteth vs to euery good word and worke oh what a thing were it for vs to walke in such waies as are distastfull and dishonourable to God and no whit distinguish vs from the profane and vngodly of the Lord needed the Lord haue bin at halfe the cost and labour with vs for such fruits as these or is this that returne which he expecteth of all his paines Vse Would any know whether he be a good tree of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord set into Christ and liuing and thriuing in him let him looke to his fruits which be they neuer so good cannot make a tree good but can declare it so to be Examine then thy selfe whether thou art a new creature whether old things be passed away and all is become new whether thou findest the effect of the blood of Christ purging thy conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God whether thou walkest in the light as he is in the light hence it will appeare that this blood is still distilling vpon thy soule to cleanse thee from all sinne there is no more conspicuous note or euidence that a man hath escaped condemnation and is in the state of grace then that which is giuen by the Apostle as a touchstone Rom. 8.1 Which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit But what haue they to do with Christ who hate the light in whom sinne ruleth to destruction who walke in the waies of the world and in the lusts of their owne hearts and eyes who are led by the spirit that beareth rule in the sonnes of disobedience who in stead of shewing out the vertues of God beare vpon them the brand and expresse image of their father the Deuil some in mallice and enuie against God and good men as he was a manslayer from the beginning some in vncleannes and filthines as he is called an vncleane spirit others in rayling swearing and cursing who haue their tongues set on fire from hell others in vnrighteous words and deeds as he is a lyar from the beginning some in tempting and seducing others to their owne lure enticing to companionship drinking gaming c. as he compasseth the earth to doe mischeefe of all these we may say as Christ to the Iewes Ye are the children of your father the Deuil for his workes yee doe And others also in whose liues such open vnrighteousnes breaketh not out yet because they cannot shew the fruits of righteousnes we may cōclude against them that they were neuer washed by Christ. The adopted sonnes of God imitate the naturall Sonne who when the Iewes said Tell vs art thou that Christ that we may doubt no longer he presently sendeth them to his workes If I doe not the workes of my Father beleeue mee not so art thou a Christian and the child of God as thou professest and beleeuest I say if thou dost not the workes of God thou art not to be beleeued Now the workes of God are 1. to beleeue in his Sonne 2. to endeauour to keep all his commandements 3. to practise the duties of repentance and invocation and that daily 4. to call others especially those that belong vnto thee vnto the knowledge and seruice of the true God that thou with thy house maist serue the Lord 5. to make thy calling and euery dutie to man branches of obedience vnto God These would make thee diligent in the Ministrie for faith must be maintained neither canst thou obey all vnlesse thou knowest all the third would cause thee to watch against sinne in thy self the fourth to banish it from thy family the last would make thee beneficiall to all men hurtfull to none and by all shalt thou adorne thy holy profession These works of thy father cheerefully and constantly performe and we will beleeue that thou art the child of God Thirdly note that the thing that God requireth in a professor is zeale forwardnes and earnestnes in well doing and that his whole course should be a studious prosecuting of good workes The same word is vsed in 1. Cor. 14.1 Couet spirituall gifts but the word is be zealous after or zealously addicted vnto them and cap. 12.31 Be zealous after the best gifts the same teacheth the same Apostle Gal. 4.17 It is a good thing euer to be zealous in a good thing and is a vertue euery where called for in the scriptures yea such a one as without which good things cannot be done well or in good manner Now because euery forwardnes and earnestnesse euen in good things is not commendable zeale for Peter euen in Christs defence may hastily draw his sword and rashly lay about him therefore to the right ordering of it there must alwaies goe with it these three things First the light of knowledge that it may both beginne and end with the word Paul reprooueth the Iewes who had zeale and that for the law of God because it was not according vnto knowledge yea he condemneth that hote zeale wherewith himselfe was enraged in the time of his ignorance because it had turned almost to the wasting of the whole Church To this head are to be referred those blind deuotions of the Papists at this day who are much in zeale whereby they are in continuall tumults as the Ephesians for their Diana but ignorance must be the mother of these deuotions Secondly it must be guided by good discretion it must be wise as well as warme in greater matters greater and lesser in lesser A wise man will not powre out all his indignation against euery trifling displeasure nor set his whole strength to that which he can wipe away with a finger There must alwaies be a fire of zeale kept burning in the soule as the fire on the Altar neuer went out but it must be a iust zeale proportioned according to the occasion euen as we keepe the fire on our hearths all day long but enlarge or lesson it according to the occasions of the house If some great good be in thine eye tending to the great glorie of God and great good of his Church stirre vp and adde to thy zeale till it become a great flame but in smaller and minutiall matters to carrie an vnbounded and vnbridled zeale were to call for a sword to kill a flie or an hatchet to breake an egge and yet zeale must euer fence the heart from affecting committing or communicating the least euill in the world Thirdly it must carrie with it sincere affection abandoning all by-respects besides the glorie of God desire of mens good and conscience of the good dutie it selfe In doing any good thing the close corners of the heart must be well searched seeing much deceit and guile lurketh in them and if with the Papist we doe any thing neuer so good for the matter and neuer so zealously for the manner to merit at the
Kings and especially for good men as the shepheard for the sheep and not principally for the wolues Besides the supposition is nought for though they be iust yet they are so but in part and therefore sometimes they follow their priuate affections and do wrong and need the law to vrge them to do right For the third although beleeuers be vnder the protection of God who suffreth not an hayre to fall from their heads without his prouidence yet may we not strip his prouidence from the meanes which serue it of which this is a speciall one And for the fourth true it is that loue couereth all things but by couering must be meant 1. A fauourable construction of all things which in right reason may be well con●●ered for a man may not put out his eyes and affection may not so ouermaster sence as to call manifest darknes by the name of light 2. A passing by smaller infirmities and priuate offences as one that would not take knowledge of them 3. Such a couering as may cure also for loue is wise and herein most louing when in taking notice of an iniurie it turneth it selfe to the discipline of the partie sometimes by louing admonition in all lenitie and sometimes by mercifull seueritie in sharper reprehension yea and if that take no place in proceeding further to discouer the sores to skilfull surgions according to the quality of the offence to the bench either of the church or commonwealth and this is no impreachment vnto loue as we see in God himselfe who chasteneth vnto amendment whom he loueth Againe Christians may not returne euill for euill but rather beare two blowes then giue one and suffer a double iniurie then offer one but yet this hindreth not but that a Christ●an may lawfully defend himselfe although he may not offend and hurt another for we may not thinke our selues so straitly bound to the letter as the right sence of such precepts for euen Christ himselfe hauing a blow on one cheeke turned not the other but was readier and would haue done it before he would haue returned the wrong as he might Lastly Christians may not reuenge But reuenge is twofold either lawfull or vnlawfull This latter is priuate reuenge done by a mans selfe or by the help of the Magistrate when a man seeketh to right his wrong with the hatred and wreckling himselfe vpon the person or any other sinister end and this must be farre from a Christian. But there is a publike reuenge put in the hands of the Magistrate who is the Minister of God to take vengeance on the euill doers and this may be prosecuted in a good manner and for a good end without hatred of the partie offending yea and executed according to the constant orders laws of the countrie agreeable to Gods word and this execution is nothing else but the manifestation of Gods vengeance and righteous sentence Vse 2. This doctrine further meeteth with all those common slanders raised by Satan and his instruments against Christ and his kingdom and ordinances by which the deuill hath most powerfully preuailed against the Church in all ages namely by perswading ciuill gouernours that Christs kingdome is the greatest enemie to their states and kingdomes and such an enchocher as will at length vnlesse it be warily preuented pull downe their greatnesse This imputation hath the father of lyes euer laid before the eyes of great ones to alienate the minds of Princes and people from the same for the euidence of which how hath hee made it goe for currant that whereas all errors are easily tolerated and countenanced onely true religion and the professors of it haue been the causes of all stirres and tumults as though the doctrine and teachers of the Gospel of peace carried nothing else but fire and swords where they goe By what other meanes did Haman incense king Ahashuerosh against the Iewes but by telling him of a dispersed people dwelling apart from others hauing lawes which yet were Gods owne different from all other people and they would not obey the kings laws and therefore it was not for the kings profit to let them liue By what other meanes did the Chaldean courtyers incense Nebuchadnezzar against the three companions of Daniel but by imitating their contempt of him and his edict These men haue not regarded thy commandement nor will serue thy gods nor worship thy image which thou hast set vp By what other means did Rehum and Shimshai and their companions hinder the building of the temple then by writing vnto Artashast that if the Iewes had once fortified themselues within walls they would be rebellious as of old and would pay neither toll tribute nor custome and that they wrote thus much because they would not see the kings dishonour In the new Testament how haue Christians standing out for the lawes of Christ against Antichrist beene alwaies charged that they were the onely subuerters of the place where they liued and the direct contradictors of the decrees of the Caesars vnder whom they liued How often was Paul accused by the Stoicks in Athens by Demetrius by Tertullus that he was a pestilent fellowe a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes thorough the world and a sect-master And it is no meruell if the members and ministers of Christ be thus dealt with in the world seeing the head himselfe was not onely accused and condemned but executed for that he was an enemie to Caesar and a moouer of sedition Our eyes haue seene and read and our eares haue heard how Popish spirits haue euer beene readie to charge the Protestants in seuerall countryes to haue attempted to wrest the sword out of the Princes hand Harding chargeth Luther to haue animated Thomas Munzer the rebels preacher in Thuringia wheras Luther plainly calleth him the preacher of Sathan so the Rhemists call M. Calvin one of the principall rebels of his time and affirme the Protestants consistories the shoppes of rebellion This hath euer beene the cunning of Sathan to preuent the accusation of others in the things wherein himselfe is most guiltie for those that knowe Popish doctrine can easily discouer it to be none of Christs nor his Apostles because it wresteth all Princes authoritie out of their hands and mooueth their subiects to rebellion and such as knowe the state of Rome and Rhemes knowe where the shoppes stand in which all conspiracies and rebellions haue beene and are daily forged and then where would they lay them but vpon Protestants who hence shewe themselues taught by Christ because if Satan himselfe should come to accuse yet could he not say truely that euer any such thing was found in their hands Did not Charles the ninth of Fraunce giue out that the most bloodie massacre that euer the sunne sawe was done for the conspiracie of the Protestants against him and the kingdome whereas it was onely a Popish and perfidious plot long before laid against the liues
were ashame that such Popish notes should be recorded 2. The darke deliuerie of this doctrine hath bred vp another no lesse Popish that seeing grace is so tied to the Sacrament therefore the infant baptized is washed from all originall sinne and that by the concomi●ant grace of the Sacrament euery infant is so pure as there is nothing in it which God can hate A doctrine fearefully derogatorie from the blood of Christ and contrarie to the Scriptures which teach that originall sinne is taken away to those that are set into Christ by baptisme 1. in regard of the forme the guilt 2. the fruit the punishment 3. the raigne and dominion of it 4. in that the remainders and relliks of it are in daily consumption but in regard of the matter of it of the act of it of the molestation of it it is present in the most sanctified nature the earth beareth The Apostle saith of such there is no condemnation to them but he saith not there is no damnable thing in them 3. From the misconceit of this doctrine and the extolling the outward worke of baptisme the which imposters and deceiuers of mindes haue still delighted to dwell in hath sprung vp that dangerous error of baptizing by women as also the priuate nimbling vp of the matter in corners by some Priest or minister Whereas for the person we know that the Minister in his ministerial actions sustaineth the person of Christ which a woman cannot doe Againe those that are called to baptize are called also to preach for the Sacrament without the word is a dumb ceremonie and as a seale to a blanke And Paul who would not permit a woman to teach ministerially would much lesse suffer her to baptize If any woman haue beene accessarie to this grieuous sinne let her seriously and seasonably humble her selfe for it in that without yea and against the commandement of God shee hath polluted such a sacred ordinance If any man should set the Kings broad seale to any instrument but the Lord-keeper his fact were no lesse then high treason and shall we think there is lesse danger in counterfaiting the great seales of Gods couenant As for the due place of baptisme it is the publike assemblie as beeing a part of publike worship annexed vnto preaching Matth. 28. Circumcision in the law was nothing so excellent as this the successor of it yet might it not be administred in priuate houses but the partie must be brought before the Lord and much more here where after a more glorious manner the partie is to be receiued not into his fathers family but the family of God the visible Church And is it not a farre greater indignitie for the Sacraments to be brought into priuate houses then for ciuill iudgement the nature of which is to be open and publike in the gates As for the pretended case of necessitie there is no such as vrgeth is to transgresse the commandement and to make priuate places publike Why should we not rather with the auncient who euen in most ignorant times could conceiue that in defect of baptisme with water if it could not conueniently as without the debasing of Gods ordinance be had a sufficiently supply might be made by the other two either of the holy Ghost or of martyrdome and that God in case of necessitie accepteth the will for the deede which also some of the auncient applyed to this purpose and that not the want but contempt of baptisme is damnable Fourthly from the doubtfull deliuerie of this doctrine ariseth an other error and opinion of falling from grace for marke the man that staggereth in the former he will be nibling and fumbling at all these as far as he dare for if euery child receiue grace as a thing tied vnto baptisme what becommeth of that grace when children growing in yeares growe also extreamely flagitious and wicked necessarily it must be lost and vanished which is both against the Scriptures and the doctrine of our Church For if the child be borne of God in baptisme he sinneth not because the seede of God is in him and if the infant be come vnto Christ in baptisme he neuer casteth him off Ioh. 6.37 he shall neuer hunger ver 35. he shall not be lost 39. he shall liue for euer 50. If the infant be once of the Church it remaineth in the Church and can neuer be a limbe of Satans synagogue Lastly as all error is fruitfull so hence also is grounded that fancie of Popish penance which they make a Sacrament to restore such by as are fallen from the grace of their baptisme and a second table to saue such as by vertue of their first couenant cannot be restored as though the couenant of God were not eternall and vnchangeable or as if God married vs not to himselfe for euer or as if the force of baptisme lasted not beyond the action and administration of it Vse 2. To teach parents 1. to be present to present their children with ioy vnto holy baptisme What a comfort is it for a father to see his child washed with the blood of Iesus Christ cleansed from sinne set in to the visible Church yea into the bodie of Christ in the right vse of this Sacrament wherein a parent ought more to reioyce then if he could make it the heire of the world 2. diligently vpon the occasion of their childrens baptisme to examine themselues whether they be in couenāt with God or no that so their children may be entred into the same couenant yea and seeing their often faylings with God to enter now a newe league and renew their couenant with him by renewing their faith by making vp againe through true repentance their former breaches yea by solemne prayer and invocation to vrge the Lord to call to minde his couenant made to the iust and their seede and make it good vnto himselfe and his child now to be entred into the Church But what a generall fault of Parents is it to content themselues in bringing their children that the outward worke may be performed vpon them spending no small time in circumstances of solemnitie as costly banquets and feasting which in moderation I condemne not but take little or no time in preparing themselues and their children to the receiuing of the inward grace of baptisme which great error is worthy reformation in the most in the best Vse 3. To the congregation that seeing this is such a solemne ordinance as wherein the Lord signifieth sealeth and exhibiteth sauing grace to euery worthie receiuer that therefore euerie on in the congregation continue together vntill the ende of the Sacrament and not runne out as the manner of most is For 1. it is an ordinance not belonging only to the infants parents and sureties who are often left in a manner alone with the Minister but to all the congregation seeing Baptisme is a receiuing of a member into the congregation and in this
tyeth not himselfe and truth vnto it Obiect But we haue no teachers who teach not the truth Answ. We are to blesse God that the truth of religion is so happily taught and protected as it is and Satan wanteth of his will that it is so and yet can we thinke that his mallice now towards the end is so abated or that the state of the Church is now aboue all times so priuiledged as that he hath not his instruments still labouring to corrupt and depraue the truth broaching so farre as they dare their priuate opinions for which the truth is little beholding vnto them The Prophet Ieremie speaketh of Prophets who prophecied lyes in the name of the Lord and saith they prophecied false vision and diuination and vanitie and the deceitfulnesse of their owne hearts why what was that in that they said Yee shall not see the sword and famine shall not come but I will giue you assured peace in this place If we shall heare such sweet inchanting voyces all is well with vs we haue the most flourishing and most reformed Church that euer was since the Apostles dayes and we may take a nappe and rest in our peace and prosperitie what way can we be mooued surely these words may seeme the visions of mens owne hearts the rather in that the Lord by his owne hand from heauen proclaiming the contrarie by durable plagues and lasting iudgements of plagues famines vnseasonablenesse of weather by yeares together and for the troubles and oppositions in the Church when or where were they stronger since the Gospel first entred If we shall here voyces whispering oh men are too precise too pure too forward and what need so much teaching so much running trotting to sermons and disgracing such as frequent the meanes of saluation more carefully with the tearmes of sermon-gadders and sermon-mungers and such Is the truth which desireth nothing more then the light beholding to such visions of mens owne hearts or can we here acknowledge the stile of the spirit and word of truth If we shall meete with doctrines giuing libertie to profane gaming and pastimes on the Lords sabboath and then hauing gotten in a finger go on to make it an indifferent thing to keepe or not to keepe but only the times of Church required by law and further make it questionable whether we ought to keepe this present Sabboath or devise some other is not this as great a blow to the truth as she can receiue more then she looketh for in the house of her freinds which let it preuaile we shall see a poore staruen pietie among men in very few daies If we meet with other defences iustifying and approouing euery thing and any thing to be spoken in the pulpit besides the pure word of God which is profitable to teach improoue correct and instruct in all righteousnesse that a man may moyle himselfe and hearers in pudles I speake comparatiuely in regard of the pure word of God when in the meane time the sweet streames which run from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie are neglected how is the truth here honoured when the Scriptures the fountaine of it are so vnequally matched If it shall be affirmed that whosoeuer shall in name professe themselues to be Christians the Sacraments are not to be denied them although they be openly wicked because all men are subiect to sinne If men shall make a tush and a light or no falt to sweare by faith or trothe c. because it is but a custome of the tongue surely we may say if these be the voyces of Prophets they are of such as Christ speaketh of which deceiue many which make iniquitie abound and the loue to the truth grow key cold Vse 2. To people to pray to the Lord 1. To giue pastors according to his owne heart not such as may seeke out vaine and foolish things the froth of wit and learning but such things as may feed their soules with wisedome and vnderstanding 2. For the spirit of discerning to trie the spirits by which are of God for the guise of false teachers is priuily to bring in damnable doctrines and craftely to creepe into mens affections and men more easily run after them because they speake something pleasing to corrupt nature sometimes in the matter sometimes in the manner and therefore such as would not be deceiued by them must be prouoked to more warinesse 3. For the spirit of subiection that they may receiue the truth as truth for else it will be iust with God to giue them ouer to be seduced with false teachers and to beleeue lyes For those that despise his counsell shall eate of the fruit of their owne way and be filled with their owne devises those that regard not to know God shall by God be deliuered vp to a reprobate sence and those that will not beleeue one Micah but hate him shall fall into the hands of foure hundreth false Prophets to fall by them 4. Commend the cause of the truth vnto the Lords protection entreating him that it may be continued euen to this our Church and Land the which surely by the great contempt and abuse of the light and the bringers of it we haue iustly forfeyted and deserue to be plagued with all kind of illusions as Poperie profanesse Brownisme Atheisme the which fearefull iudgements haue made out great head alreadie and are forerunners of greater euills and beginnings of more bitter sorrowes without timely repentance And to what other ground can we ascribe all these euills but vnto the iust iudgement of God for our hatred and abuse of the light the candlesticks of it Vers. 9. But stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the lawe for they are vnprofitable and vaine Although Titus hath beene in the former verse commanded to teach and beat home such true and profitable points of doctrine as we haue heard yet must he know that he hath receiued but halfe his errand and is but halfe way in his dutie wherein if he would be compleat he must further circumspectly watch against and represse all vaine and fruitles teaching especially those kinds here mentioned either suffering them not to breake out at all or if they doe to nippe and blast them quickly and betimes if he can he must stoppe them in the head if he cannot do that he must stay them in the streame The verse standeth on two parts 1. a precept to stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the law 2. a reason of it for they are vnprofitable and vaine For the meaning of the words we must knowe that our Apostle condemneth not the moouing of euerie question in handling the word for there are many necessarie ones in diuinitie which for our instruction and edification we may enquire and dispute thus we reade that Paul disputed often and thus we are trained and furnished in the diuinitie schoole to defend
the truth of God against the aduersaries of it and where Salomon brandeth him with a note of follie that maketh no question but beleeueth euery thing he sheweth that there is a wise inquisition into necessarie truths tending to edification But the Apostle expresseth what questions he disaloweth in a Diuine foolish questions that is vnnecessarie idle of no moment of no good vse to edification neither in faith nor loue in conscience nor manners Where me thinks Paul by the spirit of prophesie foresawe forewarned and forearmed the Church of that great malice of the deuill which in after ages preuailed to the ouerthrowe of all puritie of religion and piety it selfe and that was by turning men from the comfortable practise and proper vse of Scripture to seeke out an art of diuinitie appropriat to some few and so suddenly came to turne all the sound knowledge of the Scriptures into a skeptike and questionarie diuinitie whereby the deuill kept good wits from the knowledge and studie of tongues and the necessarie fundamentall points of Christian religion and set them on worke in the speculation of strange friuolous and curious questions wherein they were not one more against another then all of them against God and his truth and the building of his Church And this is the quod libe●a●ie schoole diuinitie then which nothing is more highly magnified of many at this day who had rather tast leekes then Manna and although our Apostle graunteth that it may haue a shewe of learning and wisedome falsly so called yet as here it is called foolish so elsewhere he confidently tearmeth it both foolish and vnlearned because it is occupied in such questions as haue neither wisedome nor learning in them while they make a shew of both Such are their questions concerning their heauenly Hierarchies and orders of Angels concerning the degrees of the Saints in heauen so definitiuely and magistrally determining as though they had newly dropped out of the clouds Paul durst neuer vtter such things who was wrapped into the third heauen Others of them as though at the request of the rich man they had been sent from hell are as confident of things done in purgatorie Others are at redde warre whether things notionall or ●eall be better some sweate in disputing whether the world could be better made others to be resolued whether the Pope be more mercifull then Christ because Christ deliuereth none out of purgatorie as the Pope doth But about their Sacrament and consecrated hoast their tumults are such and so ridiculous as a iudicious Diuine would be loath to foule his mouth or his hearers eares with them These are the toyles of the angelicall seraphicall magistrall and subtile Doctors Scotus Hales Holcoth Durand and such monsters of Diuines which how much true learning they containe the darkenes of their ages in which they liued and since sufficiently manifesteth Gods righteous iudgement was vpon them and the whole world since for their sakes and that sentence verified vpon them while they thought themselues wise they became starke fooles Let students looke how they spend time in them for the truth is that if a man be deuoted to them he shall be euer learning and yet neuer come to the knowledge of the truth nay it may be feared of some who were towardly set in the truth that comming into this schoole too timely are now growne crooked and out of loue with the truth and are indeed turned into the things they read The second thing which Titus must resist are genealogies which also must be rightly taken because there alwaies was and yet is an excellent vse of them in Scripture Before Christ they were so necessarie as the Iewes were commanded to keepe publike and priuate records of their tribes and families yea and if there were any that could not tell or finde his genealogie he was not to be admitted or if inconsiderately he were was to be deposed from publike office Numb 1.18 Nehem. 7.62 and to this purpose some holy writers of Scripture haue set downe for the vse of the Church to the ende whole bookes of genealogies but especially that the Iewes might be able to bring their descent from the Patriarks as we reade of Paul who no doubt could bring his line downe from Beniamin Philip. 3.5 The vse of these genealogies was manifold I will note two First to manifest the truth of God in the Scriptures 1. In the accomplishment of many speciall prophesies to particular persons For example God promised to Abraham that he should be a mightie man that this truth might be fully known must be set downe the whole descent and posteriritie and Princes that came of him although neuer so wicked from Ismael himselfe Rebecca also had a promise of two mightie peoples in her wombe and that the elder should serue the younger how should this be knowne to be accomplished but by the genealogie of them both for which purpose euen the dukes that came of Esau were all recorded The like of Iacobs prophesie concerning Ephraim and Manasseh for otherwise the wicked should haue no name nor register in the booke of God it is not for their owne sakes whose memories should rot but for the honour of God and his seruants they are there rolled to shewe that the godly were not only inwardly but euen outwardly blessed according to promise with such a fruitfull race and posteritie 2. It is a great light to the truth of Scripture when it setteth downe the persons by whom and the times in which euery worthy thing was done what also and by whome the Church suffered how all nations were euer enemies to religion but one little point or corner of the world how God had euer a Church in the world euen in the corruptedst times a litle remnant of Israel that worshipped him in spirit and truth which things are cleared by genealogie The second and principall vse of genealogie is to manifest the true Messiah vnto the world As 1. to shewe that because God would be appeased in the same nature that had sinned therefore he was true man and not in shew and that his humanitie incarnation and natiuitie should not be obscure his naturall descent is by the Euangelists brought downe from Abraham yea from Adam shewing vs thereby what is the proper end of all genealogie in the Scriptures 2. The nobilitie of his birth and worthines of his parentage and that he was the right heire to the Iewish kingdome 3. The truth of the prophesies concerning him that he was the sonne of Abraham and of Dauid and that the scepter departed not from Iudah till his appearing 4. The blessing wherewith that family out of which he came was advanced and distinct from al the tribes of the earth 5. His humilitie who came of all sorts of men and women publike and priuate poore and rich good and bad that he might be a fit Sauiour of all sorts of men not disdaining to place in
his genealogie Phares the incestuous sonne of Iudah and Bathsheba that was the wife of Vriah And in these vses these genealogies may be still with sobrietie read taught and heard Quest. What is it then the Apostle condemneth Answ. Not any such as serue to the edification of the faith of the Church whereof this of Christ a publicke person and Sauiour of the world is the cheife of all neither the keeping of the descent so farre as serueth to the preseruation of right iustice and ciuill peace In which respect Kings and Nobles yea and other inferiour persons may enquire into that right which their ancestors haue made their due and must so hold their genealogie as they may hold their right against all claimes But here is condemned all that recounting of kinred and petegree in all sorts of men which proceedeth from a vaine minde and tendeth to worldly pompe and vaine-glorie For this was the sinne of the Iewish teachers that whereas now by Christs appearance all distinction of families was in religious respect abrogated and now was no such need of genealogie as before vnlesse it were before Infidells and such as were not perswaded of the right descent of Christ yet they out of their pride would be much and often in extolling of their tribes and kinred and so not only for these accessories let goe the substance of religion but as if they would build vp that politie again which now was abolished to the great hurt of their hearers would much busie themselues in such fruitles discourses These genealogies must Titus withstand By brawling and contentions about the law are meant those hote contentions which yet many Iewes and Iudaizing teachers did trouble the puritie of religion withall striuing still to bring backe againe the obseruation of Iewish ceremonies such as was circumcision differences of meats and daies and garments as though Christ were not yet come wherewith the Church in that tender age was much molested But now our Apostle pointeth to another end of the law namely to institute the life contain in obedience and lead vnto Christ but not to shadow Christ to come as before who by his comming hath put an end to all such ceremonies Of all these endlesse questions idle genealogies and brabling contentions the Apostle giueth this censure that although they may seeme to haue a puffing kind of knowledge and be stood for as for fire and water as if the whole substance of religion were placed in them yet are they vnprofitable and vaine farre from instruction and edification of men in true godlines yea indeed great hindrances thereto as taking vp time and labour and wits of men which should better be imploied which as we said is a forceable reason to auoid and represse them Hitherto the meaning Doctr. 1. The Deuil is readie in the purest Churches to corrupt the puritie of doctrine by stirring needles endles questions either in substance of doctrine or in ceremonies wherein men will be as hote as if all religion were placed in them And thus shall the peace of the Church be troubled the free passage of the Gospel hindred the godly teachers greeued and all for things vnnecessarie and idle things sometimes so farre from profiting the Church as that they much hinder it and obscure the doctrine of true religion All this appeareth plainely in this our example The malicious man is euer sowing tares in Gods feild and if he cannot extinguish all the light of Christian doctrine if he cannot pull downe as he would the substance of truth he will doe what he can he will make dissention in smaller matters whereby many shall be offended many cast backe that were comming on and many other kept back who might come on in time So when the Disciples of Christ and Iohn consented in the substance of doctrine yet could he make them quarrell in washings and fastings and such ceremonies Paul and Barnabas consented in substance of doctrine yet for a verie trifle and indifferent thing the companie or leauing behind of Marke were so exasperated and deuided that they did seperate one from the other And if he be so forceable in good men that he taketh the aduantage of flesh in them much more doth he effectually worke in vnconscionable men who are all flesh and all corruption Easie were it in all ages to discouer this eminent note of Satans mallice in false teachers namely that they were euer more earnest in vrging and constraining of men in their owne deuises then to the duties of the morall law Christ charged the Pharisies that they placed more religion in washing potts cuppes and beddes then in keeping Gods commandements These Iewish teachers Act. 15.29 are branded that they troubled the Church with words and combred mens minds euen in the Apostles daies with things dead and vnnecessarie with circumcision and ceremonie And is not Gods iudgement come vpon the Papists at this day to the vttermost who haue called backe all these Iewish ceremonies againe and so long contended for them that they haue lost the substance of pure religion and the truth hath betaken her to her wings Their schoole diuinitie is turned away from Christs bodie to his garments their maine disputes are taken vp about workes of preparation free-will merit of workes workes super errogatorie purgatorie differences of garments meats dayes vowes pilgrimages which are such things as Christ wrapped vp together and left in his graue when himselfe rose againe And their doctrinall diuinitie to the people as we read it in the postills but schoole distinctions and legends fables or of latter times bitternes against the first restorers of religion who oppose their former false doctrines And for their heat in vrging these things aboue all the commandements of God none is so blind but may see that they more seuerely punish him that fasteth not their lent then such as are manslayers more him that keepeth not one of their Saints dayes then him that keepeth neuer a Sabboath thorough the yeare that they make it a greater sinne for some sorts of men to marie a wife then to liue in secret filthinesse all their liues long Thus the deuil hauing gotten in his head easily thrusteth in all his bodie and if he get a Church or people at this aduantage that he can comber mens mindes with needlesse things and stirre vp brabbling contentions about vnprofitable and vaine deuises of men he is in great hope and probabilitie ere long to put out that light which he hath al●eadie so farre darkned Vse Let vs acknowledge the worke of Satan when we see men who are all of one sound iudgement in the substance of religion and so should be brethren to be at such hote strife and opposition for matter of ceremonie and for things in comparison vaine and vnprofitable 2. Let vs not count it a strange or new thing to be too much offended at it 3. Let vs pray the Lord who can rebuke Satan to dissolue such
as if he be a leader a seducer or wilfull in his error as also of the degree of his offence and error as if it be a direct ouerthrowe of the foundation or an high blasphemie or such as may turne to the ouerthrowe of pure religion established or the disturbance of publike peace or otherwise according to the nature of the fact may and ought to proceede to a proportionall degree of punishment whether by mulcts or imprisonment or banishment yea in the extremitie of euill to the extreame remedie euen of death it selfe for there is no remedie but if a soare prooue a gangreene it must be cut off True it is that the charitie of the Church must aime at the cutting off of errors rather then mens persons but if the nature of the error so require euen the last punishment by death as it is in the hand of the Magistrate so will it be most iust and proportionall That it is in the power of the Magistrate to cut off incurable and invincible heretiks is cleare 1. by precept Deut. 13.5 of slaying the false Prophet and Deut. 17.5 of stoning the idolater 2. by example of Moses Exod. 32.35 slaying 3000. of the Leuites for the idolatrie of the calfe of Helias 1. Kin. 18.40 who slewe 400. of Baals Priests when there was no Magistrate to do it so of Iosias 2. King 23.6 of Iehu 2. King 10.25 yea wicked Nebuchadnezzar made a decree that whosoeuer blasphemed Daniels God should die the death The same might easily be prooued out of Imperiall constitutions and iudgements of Fathers and Councels Now that this is the fittest punishment for some heretikes we may gather by the instance of Arrius whom Constantine the great banished indeed but how much better had it beene for the world if he had taken such a monster from the face of the earth how much better had that sparkle beene with himselfe extinct before it had come to set the whole world on fire and if he that reuileth his Prince deserueth death as a traitor how much more he that blasphemeth the name of God or any part of his truth Obiect But Christ biddeth vs beware of false Prophets but not to slay them yea wisheth to suffer both to growe together till the haruest And Paul neuer giueth other commandement concerning them then to avoid them and withdrawe our selues from them And Musculus expounding the place in 1. Cor. 5. concerning the incestuous person hath these words he commaundeth not to kill him but to remooue him from among them Answ. 1. Some such places are such precepts as are di●ected vnto the Churches whose weapons are spirituall and hath no such power of life and death ouer the bodie or outward man 2. Some other institute and informe the Pastors of the Churches how to carrie themselues towards such offenders as this in hand and the like to Timothie but intend not to speake any thing of the Magistrates dutie So Bullinger affirmeth that here Paul enformeth Titus and not Sergius Paulus how to carrie himselfe towards an incurable and desperate heretike 3. These precepts were deliuered when there was no Christian Magistrate to performe the dutie and therefore the Chuches were more carefully vrged vnto theirs 4. They must all be vnderstood with respect 1. of the qualitie of the persons and offences which must be distinguished 2. of the Church as whether such tares can be plucked vp without apparant hurt of the Church for else they must be let stand and so must that place be meant least ye also plucke vp the good wheat and this is agreeable also to the doctrine of the auncient who aduised rather to tollerate some lesser euill then that a greater good should be hindered or a greater euill occasioned Vse 1. Seeing excommunication is such a grieuous censure it is not to be inflicted rashly or for trif●les but delibe●ately in matters of waight and much moment yea heauily and not without inward griefe that the Church is vrged to such seueritie For 1. if it be a greiuous thing to be disfraunchized and cast out of a wel ordered common wealth how much more to be cast out of the church the commonwealth of Israel Which made some of minde that this censure is not to be vsed but in such cases as wherein the Iewish lawe condemned to the death the which strictnes in that it may seeme to confound the Iewish Iudiciall lawe with Euangelicall discipline howsoeuer I will not maintaine yet surely as Musculus well noteth I thinke it ought not to be vsed but in such cases as more expressely shut out of the kingdome of heauen and such as the Apostle mentioneth 1. Cor. 6. because it is a declaration of that which is by God done in heauen who for a non apparance or not paiment of a trifling fee thrusteth not out of heauen Secondly it must be vsed as a last and desperate remedy euen as the Surgeon trieth all gentle meanes before launcing seating or cutting off Thirdly it must be done with griefe and sorrowe of the whole Church euen as a member in the bodie cannot be cut off without extreame paine to the whole This is a fitter affection then anger couetousnesse or any other such sordid and base selfe seeking in dispensing the iudgements of the Lord. Fourthly It must be done verie sparingly in wisedome and moderation whereof we haue a notable patterne in the Church of Geneva wherein such was the power of the word and wisedome of the Pastors in restoring offenders by the spirit of meekenesse that in the space of whole tenne yeares as M. Beza himselfe confesseth onely two persons were stricken with this censure Now of the fearefull abuse of this censure whereby it is daily turned into an idle scarecrow sold and bought at a vile price I neede not speake any thing seeing the thing it selfe speaketh so loud would God it were as well reformed as it is by a number of the godly learned discouered Vse 2. If heretikes must be avoided then it followeth that Protestants ought to avoid all communion and mixture with hereticall Churches persons namely with that hereticall Apostaticall Church of Rome and the members of it To prooue it an hereticall Synagogue I shall not neede to spend time after those two famous lights our learned D. Whitakers and Reynolds the former of whome hath prooued that the present Church of Rome is no particular Church but hereticall and ouerturning the foundation and grounds of faith as by eighteene seuerall points he instanceth and concludeth that whosoeuer would be saued must necessarily forsake her as an antichristian and Satanicall synagogue The other in his fifth Thesis of his learned booke defendeth that the Romane Church is neither Catholike nor a sound member of the Catholike Church in explaining the tearmes whereof he saith that the newe Romane Church is tainted with a gangrene of most pestilent heresies which euerie
way spreadeth further and further and subverteth the faith of verie many and concludeth that no otherwise then the contagion of the most mortall diseases as the plague or leprosie or such like euen so the infection of Poperie is as diligently to be shunned of all the faithfull This truth out of the mouthes of such two worthy witnesses we may the better beleeue not onely for the strength of arguments they haue vsed as yet vngainesaied by any aduersarie but also in that we haue some of her owne children confessing her the mother of all heresies I will not light a candle to the sunne in the former point but briefly shewe wherein especially they are to be avoided and that for more perspicuitie in two questions Quest. The former whether Popish religion may be tollerated in a countrie professing the truth of Christian doctrine as ours by Gods blessing doth I answer No if by any lawfull meanes it may be banished For beeing an heresie which 1. disannulleth the death of Christ. 2. abolisheth the humane nature of Christ. 3. destroyeth the substance of the Sacraments 4. taketh away the solace of the elect of God 5. the honour of the sonne of God sitting at his Fathers right hand 6. almost all religion all these beeing the expresse words of D. Reynolds and prooued in that thesis it followeth that it may not be suffered in a countrie which can abolish and cast it out For 1. Euery worship must be sutable to him that is worshipped If he be diuine so must it if he be ciuill it must also be ciuill if he be simple pure without mixture so must that worship which is or can be acceptable vnto him 2. We know out of the word that Samaritane worship when men will feare God but worship him according to the rites of the countrie 2. King 17. vlt. was euer hatefull to God who will not haue his feild of the Church sowne with diuerse seeds nor plowed with an oxe and an asse The Iewes meddle not with the Samaritans but must hate the workes of the Nicolaitans And indeed to halt between two to be neither Gods nor Baals is to be of no religion at all and the Church of Laodicea sheweth that the Lord can neuer digest two contraries neuer so well mixed or wisely tempered in matter of religion 3. The approbation and blessing of God on those Kings gouernments and Churches who went through-stitch in pulling downe all the high places as Dauid Salomon Hezekiah But memorable was the worthy act of Iosia who made a couenant before the Lord and called all the inhabitants of Ierusalem the Preists Levites and all the people from the smallest to the greatest and caused them all to stand to it See 2. Chro. 34.31 ad sin But whereas others otherwise good Kings are reprooued and blemished because either they left the high places standing and proceeded not to a through reformation as As● ● Kin. 15.14 Or if they did fully reforme their countrie yet that they did not so zealously hate Idolatrie but that they would enter into league and affinitie with Idolaters as Iehoshaphat Asas sonne Who lifted vp his heart vnto the waies of the Lord and took away the high mountains and groaues out of Iudah But yet Iehu is sent to reprooue him for his societie with wicked Ahab saying Wouldst thou helpe the wicked and loue them that hate the Lord A worthy commendation was it of the Angel of the Church of Ephesus that he could not beare them which were euill Rev. 2.2 4. Consider the danger and hurt in tolerating heresie in these particulars 1. It is a breach of Gods commandement Deut. 29.18 There shall not be among you man woman nor family nor tribe which shall turne his heart from the Lord to goe serue the gods of these nations There shall not be among you any roote that bringeth forth gall and wormwood 2. This mixture layeth open to Gods revenging hand and is called by no lesse title then Rebellion Iosh. 22.17 3. There is most apparant danger of infection for heresie is called in the Scripture leauen and a gangreene and here also consider the weaknesse of flesh which is as readie to be plucked away with euery error of the wicked as the most drie tinder is to receiue the sparkle of fire cast into it Hence also are Idolaters called stumbling blockes snares thornes whippes and destruction See Iosh. 23.13 4. This mixture in religion threatneth ruine vnto Church and Commonwealth it hindreth or corrupteth publicke iustice by partiallitie or too rough and exasperate proceeding it causeth distraction of affections and prepareth to tumults and massacres as the experience of many ages hath taught A kingdome or Church deuided against it selfe cannot stand Which Ieroboam well conceiuing that he might bring the people to vnitie in religion set vp two calues one in Dan and the other in Bethel How both Iewes and Gentiles wickedly resisted Christ and his Apostles vpon this same ground that two diuerse religions were vnsafe in one countrie and long could not continue but the one would eate vp the other the historie of the Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles euidently shew From whom we may frame a good argument that if they were so vigilant to keepe out whatsoeuer might disturbe their errour how much more carefully should the truth be preserued in the puritie of it of all such as haue any care of the continuance of it nay more shall the mention of a toleration of our religion in Rome or Spaine be capitall and should we by connivence at their knowne Idolatrie giue them as good as a tolleration and so strengthen their hopes for an alteration These reasons if I should now in particular applie vnto the Romish Church for the further euidence of them I know better where to beginne then to make an end and should dwell too long on the question which I purposed rather to point at then fully to handle as more largely out of the Scriptures Fathers and councells I easily might But from them all as they lie in one word may be concluded that the toleration of Poperie in a reformed country where it may be cast out is vtterly vnlawfull The second Question is whether Protestants may marrie with Papists Answ. For the right resoluing of this question two things must be considered 1. Whether the person that now professeth Poperie will yeeld to be wonne to the embracing of true religion which if he do then caseth such a one to be a Papist and may be maried withall ●hus Isaac married Rebecca the daughter of Bethuel and Iacob the daughters of Laban who was an Idolater as appeareth Gen. 31.53 On the same condition Boaz married Ruth a Moabitisse woman but who was first conuerted to the Iewish religion And thus the Lord himselfe yeelded vnto the mariages with Heathnish women taken in warre but heauily after a sort and by indulgence but on no hand vnlesse they
deeds denie him but this is not that which is in our question which is of diuersitie in religion and not of infidelitie or hypocrisie where the same religion is professed the former is a barre of marriage but not the latter Obiect But then you will say that such marriages made ought to be dissolued● I answer 1. that marriage is an externall thing and properly hindereth not faith and saluation of it selfe and 2. that it is not against christianitie to keepe contracts made with Turks and heathen 3. Besides in the Apostles dayes the faithfull beeing married to an infidell he was not to put her away 1. Cor. 7.12 if she would abide with him But as M. Zanchius after he had learnedly discussed this question and propounded reasons out of the Scriptures Fathers Councels and ciuill lawe that such mariages ought to be disanulled yet doubtfully leaueth it to the iudgement of the Church so will not I be too bold in defining this great question Vers. 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe Hauing in the former verse shewed both the persons to be proceeded against called heretikes and the manner of proceeding against them namely after once or twice admonition to auoid them Now in this verse our Apostle discendeth to giue some reasons of this seueritie which are two in number First he is such a one as is subuerted or turned off the foundation Secondly he wittingly and willingly spurneth against the knowne truth sparkling and shining in his conscience and therefore is remedilesse and desperatly incurable For the former By beeing peruerted or turned off the foundation is not to be meant any falling off from the foundation of Gods election which abideth so sure as that not any one of Gods elect shall euer fall away as Hymencus and Philetus did but a falling off from some fundamentall points of Christian religion held and maintained by the Church whereof this partie yet seemeth a member As for example The maine foundation aymed at in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles is to teach that Iesus Christ God and man is the alone and perfect Sauiour of his Church and whosoeuer teacheth or holdeth any doctrine tending to ouerthrowe either of his natures or anie of his offices he is truely said to be turned off that foundation Againe the maine grounds of all our religion for matter either of faith or manners are the commandements of the law and promises of the Gospel and whosoeuer either directly or by direct consequent ouerthroweth any of the commandements of God or articles of our faith he is truly said to be turned off the foundation Now this cannot euery error in religion doe For to keepe our Apostles allegorie comparing the profession of religion to the building of a great house some errors are lesser and as it were besides the foundation such as may be thought as the breaking downe of some window some greater as the breaking downe of some side of the house and yet the house standeth although much defaced But some are such as ouerturne the whole house and rase the verie foundations of all such as is the doctrine of iustification by workes which point alone putteth men quite out of their estate in Christ and shutteth them out of the kingdome of heauen Gal. 5.2.4 Whence might be obserued how needfull a thing it is for euery one to be well grounded in points of Catechisme which is a thing most dangerously neglected by the most and beeing so grounded to looke well to themselues least they be turned off from them and so depart from the holy commandements for thus the end of such would be far worse then the beginning But we will come to the latter degree of this sinne Hee sinneth beeing damned of himselfe that is he wilfully sinneth or addeth sinne to sinne not only by maintaining an errour but 1. against the light of the word shining in his conscience 2. against the wholesome admonition of his faithfull pastor yea and of the whole Church the voice of which he will not heare 3. euen against besides other convictions that of his owne conscience whereby he is resolued to take part with the wickednesse of his heart and persist an heretike in his heresie This man if he had no other iudge is iudged and condemned of himselfe and sheweth that he is damned of himselfe Obiect But there is no man so monstrous and gracelesse that will persist in error against the light of his conscience Answ. Yes and this commeth partly by the naturall impuritie of conscience which can excuse not only intentions vnwarrantable but euen sinnes committed against the law As in the young man Mar. 10.20 who boasted that he though he had liued in the breach of all had kept all the commandements from his youth and 2. partly by the increase of that corruption through a sencelesse numbednesse and vnfeelingnes which springeth from a custome of sinne and 3. especially by the iust iudgement of God who striketh them with a reprobate sence by withdrawing euen the very light of nature from those who would faine put it out or deteine it in vnrighteousnesse and by deliuering them vp to strong delusions that they might beleeue lies who would not embrace the truth in the loue of it Now he that is such a wilfull offender and knowne so to be must be auoided But it is hard will some say to know any man thus to sinne Answ. Because we speake not now of the iudgement of certaintie which is proper to God whereby he alone can iudge of the finall estate of a man but only of the iudgement of humane wisedome which is giuen to the Church who iudgeth only for the present by the present fruits it is not so hard to doe for such a man hath beene brought to conference to the tryall of the Scriptures to the analogie of faith and to the admonition of the Church by which his reasons haue bin refelled his iudgement informed his conscience conuinced himselfe forewarned of his danger but he obstinately hath refused all these good meanes and persisteth in his error Where note 1. What patience the Lord vseth in his iust proceedings euen against the worst men whom he will not haue condemned nor cast out of the Church vpon suspicions or surmises no nor presently after an open sinne is committed but their must be a time between wherein the Church must rightly informe her selfe that she may know the nature and degree of the sinne before she turne her to any censure or sentence Yea and further the sinne beeing apparant she must not reiect any till all good meanes of reclaiming haue beene in vaine vsed Which may teach vs that to heape or hasten excommunications ipso facto or as it is often before the partie can come to the knowledge or suspition of any such proceeding is to swarue from the rules of the word and those weightie
the first condition of any good worke that the worker must be a beleeuer in Christ. For 1. make the tree good and then the fruit will be good he must be a man that hath learned by the doctrine of the Gospel to doe a good worke as the words of the verse imply 2. the heart the fountaine of all actions is naturally corrupt with originall sin and the members are weapons of vnrighteousnesse and therefore before the heart be purified by faith the best actions passing through our vnderstandings wills affections and parts can no more auoid tainture and pollution then can the sweetest water running through a muddie channell or the purest liquor standing in a fustie vessell 3. He that being an vnbeleeuer hath not the sonne neither hath the spirit of the Sonne and consequently cannot send forth any fruites of the spirit the Sonne hath not set him free but he is bound hand and foote and not able to mooue in any one action of spirituall life 4. Hee that cannot pray by the spirit cannot bring forth any worke truely good nothing can be done without prayer the Lord must giue strength the will and the deed he must teach vs to worke set vs in and hold vs on in working he must giue it successe and blessing and make it fruitfull to our selues and others and without the prayer of faith nothing of this is obtained 5. Without faith it is impossible to please God for to euery good worke are required many actions of faith For 1. generall faith must make and warrant it good in the matter and know it to be commanded or allowed in the word for that is a good work which God will haue done and good intentions if they roue without a word make nothing good 2. Speciall faith must know the action to be good in the worker renewed in part and accepted in Christ who couereth the spots and imperfections of the worke for the Lord first respecteth the person and then the worke first Abel and then his sacrifice 3. Faith looketh that the worke be good in the endes of it a bad end spoileth the best action Now the right ends of a good worke are 1. Gods glorie for as all riuers goe out of the sea and returne againe into the sea so all good actions as they come from God so they tend vnto him againe be they the least and lowest euen eating drinking or what soeuer else all must be done to the glorie of God 2. The good of our brethren and edification of men for this end Christians must make their light to shine abroad before men and the whole law is fulfilled in this one word Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe 3. The exercise of our owne graces by doing our owne duties to God and man not selfe-pleasing profiting praise feare shame or such other sinister ends as sway with the vnregenerate but as is the end of the commandement so must it be of our obedience which is loue out of a pure heart and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 4. Faith will prouide that good actions be compassed by good meanes we may not doe euill that good may come of it It was Rebecca her sinne to draw the promised blessing vpon Iacob by deceit and Lots infirmitie to seeke deliuerance from the Sodomites by prostituting his daughters And though sometimes bad meanes succeed and the Lord by an ouerruling power bring light out of darkenesse yet is there alwaies iust matter of mourning and humiliation 5. Faith will haue respect to good circumstances as times places persons c. the fayling wherein often blemisheth most bewtifull actions and cause them to miscarie and prooue vnsuccesfull In a word faith in the heart is most carefull to doe good things well and because it knoweth that when it hath done the best it can yet all that seruice is vnprofitable it claspeth fast hold vpon the righteousnesse of Christ and will be found in that righteousnesse which is by faith in him Phil. 3. And therefore as for all other so for this good worke of beneficence and loue to the Saints the Apostle wisheth Titus to goe to beleeuers with whom he might be bold as who had receiued a spirit of effectuall faith working in obedience to God and loue to Gods people and could not suffer them to be either idle or vnfruitfull in the worke of the Lord. Well knew the Apostle that to haue sent him elsewhere on this errand it had bin but the losse of both their labors here he knew he should speed or no where So as we may conclude this point with that speach of Augustine where faith is not no good worke can be The third point in the precept is that these good works must be shewed forth for necessarie vses why Christians should shewe forth good workes I haue formerly shewed in handling the 8. verse of this Chapter and therefore will come to declare what are the necessare vses in generall of such good workes as are here called for And here we must know that the Romish Church hath not more boldly then blasphemously pretended many necessarie vses of good workes which the Scriptures neuer intending to set them vp in the place of Christ are far from acknowledging a tast whereof I haue giuen in a fewe positions which are stiffely defended by the pillars of that Church As 1. That good workes prepare a man to his iustification whereas the former point shewed that a man must be a iustified person before he can doe a good worke 2. That they doe iustifie the person of the worker before God notwithstanding the Apostle saith that by the workes of the Lawe no flesh can be iustified 3. That they make men more iust by a second iustification which distinction of the first and second iustification is a dreame of their owne not grounded in the Scriptures nor once heard of in the Church at the least fourteene hundred yeares after Christ and his Apostles 4. That they satisfie Gods iustice for temporall punishment 5. That they merit heauen yea a greater degree of glorie in heauen 6. That they purge away sinnes 7. That they apply Christs merit to purge them 8. That they merit at Gods hand for ones selfe and others 9. That they free from purgatorie paines 10. That a man may raise his trust in God from them All which with many other blasphemous tenures of this kind directly thrust Christ from his throne and make him but halfe a Sauiour at the most and consequently no Sauiour at all It would draw this point further then would well fit a commentarie to dispute here these positions with them and therefore intending our busines in hand and taking the mention of such hereticall blasphemies in this auditorie to be no small refutation we come to those necessarie vses which are warranted by expresse Scripture yea and thence commended vnto vs both in regard of 1. God 2. our neighbour 3. our selues
godly Ministers lade them with reproaches Pag. 419 Euery Christians care must be to stoppe the mouthes of the wicked Pag. 421 Seruants ought to be subiect to their masters 423 Theft of seruants neuer so coloured is condemned Pag. 429 Seruants are bound to shewe all good faithfulnesse Pag. 431 The meanest Christian may and must bring glorie to the Gospel Pag. 433 The Gospel is the doctrine of Gods grace Pag. 437 The doctrine of the Gospel is a sauing doctrine Pag. 440 The Gospel is a bright shining light Pag. 446 The Gospel is a schoolemaster as well as the Lawe Pag. 453 The doctrine of grace truely receiued teacheth to denie all vngodlinesse Pag. 458 A Christian must denie all lusts whatsoeuer may seeme to plead for them Pag. 463 The doctrine of grace teacheth both to eschewe euill and doe good Pag. 465 The Gospel looketh for some answearable return for the saluation it bringeth Pag. 467 The doctrine of the Gospel teacheth sobrietie of life wherein it standeth and rules of practise Pag. 468 The Gospel calleth for iust and righteous dealing at professors hands Pag. 471 The Gospel inioyneth a godly life the proper work of piety rules of practise Pag. 473 Godlinesse must be exercised in this present world Pag. 478 The Gospel receiued in truth lifteth vp the heart to wait for Christ his second appearing Pag. 482 The expectation of Christ his second comming is a notable meanes to prouoke to Christian duties Pag. 491 Christ his glorie shal shine out in ful brightnesse at his second appearing Pag. 494 Wee ought neuer to speake of God but in a weighie matter and reuerent manner Pag. 496 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church but not for euery particular man Pag. 505 Before Christ redeemed vs we were miserable slaues vnder sinne and death Pag. 511 The Sonne of God hauing once set vs free great is our freedome Pag. 514 Redemption and sanctification are inseperable companions Pag. 517 The members of the Church are Gods peculiar people Pag. 523 The worker must be good before any worke can be so Pag. 527 Iustified persons must needes bring forth good workes Pag. 527 The thing that God requireth in euery professour is zeale in weldoing Pag. 529 All proofes and reproofes must be fetched from the Scriptures Pag. 534 The word of God must be so handled as that the authoritie of it be preserued Pag. 535 To despise Gods Ministers is a grieuous sin Pag. 537 The doctrine of subiection to Magistracie must be often enforced and why Pag. 539 The scope of the Ministerie is to put men and keepe them in remembrance of Christian duties Pag. 540 The memorie ought to be taken vp with godly instructions learned in the Ministrie Pag. 541 Christianitie consumeth not Magistracie but confirmeth it Pag. 544 Euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers Pag. 548 Euery Christian must make account that euery Christian dutie belongeth vnto him Pag. 559 Euery man ought to preserue in himselfe a readinesse to euery good worke Pag. 563 The word condemneth as well vnbridled speaches as disordered actions Pag. 566 Euill speaking is a most hatefull sinne in Christians Pag. 568 A Christian may not be a common barrater Pag. 574 Christian equitie is a beautifull grace in Christians Pag. 579 Christian meekenes beseemeth euery Christian Pag. 584 The consideration of our common condition is a notable ground of meekenes Pag. 588 Whosoeuer is called vnto the faith hath experience of a change in himselfe Pag. 591 The whole course of an vnconuerted man is an vnwise walking Pag. 596 A marke of a man out of Christ is to resist and reason against the word Pag. 599 Before men bee brought to Christ their whole life is but a wandring from God Pag. 601 The spirit that is in man lusteth after envie Pag. 617 Then are wee saued when wee are sanctified Pag. 627 Before the Lord put forth his loue in Christ it could not bee reached of man nor angel Pag. 632 Workes of righteousnesse are excluded from iustifying vs before God Pag. 635 The Lord in baptisme not onely offereth or signifieth but truely exhibiteth grace Pag. 639 All the inward grace of baptisme is from the Holy Ghost Pag. 650 God in sauing men reneweth them to his owne image Pag. 655 The graces of the spirit are plentifully powred out vpon vs in the new Testament as not of a full mercie Pag. 660 Christ our Lord the onely fountaine of all our welfare Pag. 664 The righteousnesse of a sinner before God is not any qualitie in the beleeuer Pag. 669 The honour of the Saints is that they are heires of life eternall Pag. 674 All truthes must bee deliuered but some more stood vpon and vrged then other Pag. 680 A good worke cannot come but from a good man Pag. 684 Professors of the Gospel must be the first and forwardest in euerie good work Pag. 686 Doctrine must bee true and truely dealt withall Pag. 689 Sathan seeketh to corrupt the purest Churches by bringing in needelesse questions Pag. 696 There haue beene alwaies are and shall be heretikes in the Church of God Pag. 703 Euen heretikes and enemies of the Church must bee louingly dealt with by the Church Pag. 706 It is dangerous for the Churches to be left destitute of their teachers though for a short time Pag. 726 The Lord maketh good vse of the most wicked consciences Pag. 723 Christianitie enioyneth all kind of ciuill curtesie Pag. 731 Such as are in the Lords work must be carfully prouided for that they lacke nothing Pag. 732 Christianitie is no barren or fruit lesse prof●ssion Pag. 739 Religion is the strongest binder of man to man Pag. 748 OTHER PROFITABLE NOTES which besides illustration of Doctrines lie either in the explication of the sence or in application of the vses RVles to be obserued in changing of mens names in number three 4 Cases in which a man may forbeare to set his name to his writings 3. 5 Reasons to stirre vp ministers to diligence 5. 7 Reasons to stirre them vp to faithfulnesse 4. 7 Comforts for ministers in their seruice 4. 8 Priviledges of the Apostle aboue the ordinarie Pastor 3. 9 Men may be called elect of God 3. waies 11 Difference of sauing faith from all other 3. 14 Truth of faith discerned by 4. notes 15 Gospel called Truth for three reasons 18 Notes shewing the heart drawn vpward towards heauen 3. 26 Infallible properties of Christian hope 8. 28 Reasons why we must freely loue our brethren 4. 41 The doctrine of the Gospel called the common faith for 5. reasons 58 Duties to spirituall fathers 5. 61 Differences of the Apostolicall faith from the Romish Apostaticall 4. 63 Letters testimoniall not rashly to be giuen for foure reasons 65 The first person called father for 3 reasons 68 Christ called Lord for 4 causes 68 Men are called Sauiours 3. waies 69 The wickeds peace crazy in 3. respects 73 The power of the Magistrate and Minister doe differ in
of the Magistrate Difference of these two in 3. things The minister onely may execute ministerial office and power He saith not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Comites Apostolorum Ex ijs quae in Ecclesia Christiana requiruntur vt partibus suis omnibus constet solam doctrinam videri nobis absolute sine vlla exceptione necessariam Beza de Praesb excom No Church can suddenly be brought to perfection why 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. C●r 2.17 A great worke hath God done for that people among whome he hath setled his ordinances Euery man set hand to this worke to helpe it forward Zach. 4.14 Beare with meeknes some wants whi●h thou canst nor helpe Hagg. 1.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods best ordinances in their best estate are continually bending Our perfection here is a sense strife against imperfections Aug. de temp serm 49. No Church on earth so well ordered as that it neede not further reformation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost hom 2. Hieron in hunc locum 1. Pet. 5.1 Est diligentia digna pijs propter concordiam loqui cum Ecclesia recte sentiente Chem. de vtilit loc theolog 1. Pet. 2. Rev. 15. Patres non nunquam abusione quadam nomen sacerdotis tribuunt ministris Euang. sij Whitak contr Dur. pa●agr 48. Nec hoc loco permisisse se ●it Tito vt libera quasi regia potestate ministros Ecclesiis praesiciat sed vt salvo iure potestate eligendi sive praesentandi quae est penes Ecclesias collegia sacerdotū moderator ipse accedat ordinator Magalianus Iesuit ad Tit. cap. 1. sect 5. annot 2. Antequam diaboli instinctu studia in religione fierent cōmuni Praesbyterorum consilio gubernabantur Hier. in locum Omni actu ad me perlato placuit Praesbyterium contrahi vt firmato consilio quid circa personam eorū obseruari deberet omnium cōsensu statueretur Cypr. lib. 3. epist 11 ad Cor. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 subaudi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No religion can thriue or continue if the min●sterie be vnsetled and discontinued Reasons Eph. 4.11 Euery man stādeth in as much need of daily bread for his soule as for his bodie Blesse God for thy owne liberall supplie Pray that others in want hereof may be supplied The ordering of the Church is not left free no not to an Euangelist No traditions or impositions vnder Apostolicall authoritie warrantable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nunc bene viuitur si sine crimine sine peccato autem si quis viuere se existimat non id agit vt peccatum non habebat sed vt veniam non accipiat Aug. Quis e●i● innocen●●t accusasse sufficiat Iulian. Sine querela non sine peccato August contr Coelestin A man of scandalous life is vnfit to be a Minister Reasons 1. Tim. 5.22.24 Leuit. 21.17 Isa. 14.10 Luk. 4.23 1. Tim. 3.13 Ministri est verba vertere in opera Hierom. ad Paulinum 1. Tim. 3.7 The deuill hath reason therfore both to depraue the best and thrust in the worst into the ministerie 2. Cor. 11.15 The most commendable conformitie is to ioyne to vncorrupt doctrine ●n vnblameable life 1. Pet. 5.3 1. Tim. 4.12 Gal. 2.13 Rules to keepe a man vnreprooueable Act. 14.15 ● Tim 3. ● Deut. 25.5 1. Cor. 7.39 Matth. 19.11 12. Mariage of Ministers lawfull 1. Tim. 4 1.2 Dan. 11. Reasons why the Papists resist this doctrine Three maine obiectiōs briefly answered Exod. 12 11. 1. Sam. 21.4 They forget that they make mariage a Sacrament Rom. 8.8 Of all the workes in the flesh reckoned in Gal. 5.9 marriage is none Adeo honorabile est coniugium vt cum eo possit quis eti● ad sanctam fidē asc●ndere Chrysostom in locum Nec ratione nec authorita●e probatur quod absolute loquēdo sacerdos peccet contrahendo matrimonium nec ordo in quantū ordo nec ordo●in quantum sacerest impeditivus matrimonij Card. Caiet in epist. Tit. 1. tract 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ierem. 16. Ecclesia tanquā ADAMVS prima origine integertima fui● quo longius pergit plus sordis contrahit Brightm in Apocal. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sacerdotium non dirimēre contractum matrimonij c. Caietan in loco supra citato Euery man that hath nature 〈◊〉 him hath right in this law of nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Till the time of Pope Hildebrand Euseb hist. eccl lib. 5. cap. 24. Rev. 8. Iohannes a Casa Bishop of Beneventum wrote an Italian Poem in cōmendation of Sodomie Zeged Mutius did the like whose booke is approoued by the bull of Pope Iulius 3. Pope Sixtus 4. built a Stewes at Rome for the same vnnaturall lust Contra Origin haeres 29. de quibus August Isti sunt nefanda facientes sua corpora corruptioni tradentes Polygamie is alwaies was vnlawfull aemulae Gen. 30.1 Obiections answered The first comming in of Polygamie seemes plainly to ouerturne the contrarie opinion of Aquinas whose words are these Fieri potnit dispen●a●io à Deo per inspirationem internam Supplem 3. part qu. ●● art 2. 1. Sam. 1.6 1. king 11.1 Psal. 89.50 Videndum quid debeas quid possis see Matth. 22. Principalis prudentiae est omne malum initio opp●imere Concil Chalc. act 3. Consuetudo peccandi tollit fensum peccati Hos● 3.11 Heb. 12.15 Lex divina curat de minimis Impudens oratio est dicere sic factum est non enim si quid contra leges factum est id imitari licet Demost. contr Aristog Iacob married two sisters also at once and by as good reason so may we Non numeranda suffragia sed appendenda August in Psal. 39. Right reformation of others beginneth at a mans selfe Begin not with others till thou hast done with thy selfe Psal. 101.2 Whosoeuer would haue gratious children must begin at religion Reasons Prov. 23 1● It standeth in two things Prov. 22.6 Prov. 4.4 Preface of the Catech. of the Councill of Trent Euseb. hist. eccl lib. 10. cap. 32. Gen. 34.30 Deut. 22.19 Lev. 21.9 Ier. 35. 1. Sam. ● 29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Riot an hatefull sinne Reasons Deut. 21.20 A note of irreligion in parents to suffer it in their children Especially in a Ministers child staineth the labours of his father To be bewailed that so fearfull a sin should be so generall The godly must moderate their affections to containe themselues within the golden meane Luk. 8.14 1. Pet. 1.13 Rules to helpe forward in this dutie Iob 1.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Disobedience of children to parents condemned Rom. 1.30 2. Tim. ● 2 Coloss. 3.1 Eph. 6.1 Wherein obedience to parents must be shewed Reasons enforcing the dutie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 2.51 Philip 2.8 The cause of lewdnes in sons is often the indulgence of parents 1.
of their owne displeasure and sometimes out of their sonnes misdemeanours doe disinherit their heires but the Lord cannot growe into such displeasure with his children as ●ue● to cast them out whome in his Christ he hath once admitted into his house If his sonnes sinne against him he will visit their sinnes and scourge them with the rodds of men but his mercie and truth will he neuer take from them Now of the tenure by which we hold life eternall namely of hope I haue spoken twise before in this Epistle at large chap. 1.2 2.13 to which the reader may looke backe onely in a word note that it is a mark of a man set into this new condition to hope and wait for the blessed inheritance in heauen 2. Cor. 5.2 We sigh desiring to be clothed with our house from heauen 2. Tim. 4.8 the description of the godly to be those that loue the appearing of Christ. And if all creatures groane with vs for the time of their deliuerance how ought we much more for whom such things are prepared Hence it followeth 1. that it will not stand with a conuerted heart to linger after the things of this life or to make his heauen vpon earth or to haue equall affection to earth as heauen 2. nor to neglect the meanes whereby this hope is confirmed whether outward offring as the Gospel ministerie word Sacraments or inward receiuing as faith vnfained working in obedience Ver. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou shouldst affirme that they which haue beleeued in God might be carefull to shew forth good workes The first words of this verse beeing as it were a finger pointing to some excellent matter some take to be a preface making way and winning attention to the sequel of the verse others thinke it to be an epiphonema or graue shutting vp of that matter which immediately goeth before as giuing consent and acclamation vnto the most weightie and necessarie doctrine of free iustification by the grace of God in Christ which doctrine because the Apostle by the spirit of prophesie did foresee would be most strongly opposed he purposely by a vehement asseueration strengtheneth as also the doctrine of Christian hope which although it be not of things seene yet is it of things so faithfull and firme in respect of the promise as the Christian soule may without wauering and doubting relie and leane it selfe vpon the faithfull accomplishment of it But I take it the words may not vnfitly be referred to the whole doctrine propounded both before and after there beeing the same scope of both for what new thing is the Apostle to teach which he had not taught and vrged before and what particular is expressed in the verse which formerly hath not beene deliuered to young and old men and women servants and other all which estates after their conuersion vnto the faith are in speciall called to readines in euerie good worke vers 1. and to what other ende are those large descriptions of our twofold estate but to strike on the same string that howsoeuer we could not in the former attaine to any fruitfull conuersation yet now in the latter it were a shame not to adorne our profession and calling and what other end learned we of the appearing of grace but that vngodlines and wordly lusts beeing denied we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world So as I say the Apostle setteth a seale vnto his whole doctrine that it is true and faithfull most vndoubted and certaine in it selfe and most worthie of all our credit and faith seeing nothing can be truelyer spoken nothing more profitably beleeued nothing more comfortably practised then the truth here deliuered vnto vs. Quest. But are not other doctrines true and faithfull yea as true as this and is not all Scripture of diuine inspiration Answ. Yes neither doth our Apostle oppose the truths of Scripture as though one were more or lesse true then another but in more necessarie or more questionable truths he setteth here and there a marke or pointng hand both to vrge the authoritie and necessitie of the one and also to force men more easily to yeeld vnto the truth of the other Example hereof we haue 1. Tim. 1.15 in such a fundamentall point as is saluation onely by Christ to be opposed by so many hundreth heretikes it is no maruell if we see some starre set by it or a light held ouer it that none may passe by it vntill they haue diligently waighed and fully resolued vpon the truth of it In like manner beeing to entreat of the difficult labour care and work of the ministerie from which women as not beeing capable of it are interdicted and of the excellencie of the function which no man might either rashly take vpon him or negligently execute beeing lawfully called and beeing further to set downe a certaine rule vnto which all the lawefull callings in the Church are to be conformed In such a waightie matter as is the preseruation of the Church and pietie he prefixeth a worthie preface 1. Tim. 3.1 This is a true saying if any man desire the office of a Bishop he desireth a worthie worke But where the Apostle doth all these things as in this place he could with lesse reason depart from his ordinarie manner Doctr. The Ministers of God must teach euerie truth reueale the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe but some truths must be dwelt vpon and more auouched then others and namely such as are either more necessarie or more contradicted This is the wisedome of the spirit of God himselfe who by his penmen distinguisheth of truthes and hath neither prefixed Behold in the beginning of euerie sentence nor affixed his Selah in euerie ones ende but onely in truths more observable and remarkeable then the rest Which point may receiue a generall confirmation from this obseruation that the penmen of Scripture beeing to write the historie of things past because they were of facts more vndeniable as things running into the sences of men they stand not so much vpon ratifications and asseuerations yea a number of historicall books there are the authors of which are not known to the church But when they come to write prophesies of things to come and things in reason more improbable then the authors name his kinred his calling with other circumstances of time place and persons seruing to confirme and conuince the truth of prophesies are registred And if these truthes were either more necessarily then ordinarie concerning the Church or more liable to opposition and exception then was much more caution and confirmation vsed To avoide multitude of examples whereby this point might be strengthened I will onely insist in that prophesie which more neerely concerneth vs that liue now in the newe Testament namely of the Reuelation The which booke because it describeth the state of the Church from the time of Iohn the last of the
Apostles vntill Christs comming againe and especially the proceedings pride and fall of Babylon the great whore with all the kingdomes of Antichrist the holy Ghost could not but foresee what labours and trauailes Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impaire the credit and authoritie of this aboue all other books wherein he preuailed so farre as euen some true Churches called the truth and authoritie of it into question and therefore it is worth the marking with what a number of confirmations this booke aboue all other in the Scriptures is backed First the author of it is set in the forefront or face of it The Reuelation of Iesus Christ who professeth himselfe to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first and the last the beginning and ending which is which was and which is to come euen the Almightie so in the seuerall Epistles to the Churches in seuerall stiles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. that holdeth the seauen starres in his right hand 2. he that is first and last which was dead and is aliue 3. which hath the sharpe two edged sword 4. which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feete like fine brasse 5. which hath the seauen spirits of God and the seuen starres 6. he who is holy and true who hath the key of Dauid who openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth 7. he who is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly the instrument or penman his seruant Iohn the Euangelist the Apostle the Diuine who for the further and more full authority of it repeateth his name at least fowre times saying I Iohn Thirdly to omit many in the last chapter are fiue testimonies heaped together that if it were possible no man might be found so obstinately wicked as euer to doubt of it but that he that shold stād against the truth of it might euen gainsay the shining of the sunne it selfe 1. of the Angel 2. of God himselfe the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. of Iesus Christ Behold I come shortly c. 4. of Iohn I Iohn heard and saw all these things 5. the protestation of Iesus Christ vers 18. I protest if any man shal adde or diminish from these things of this booke God shall adde all the plagues of it against him and take away his part out of the booke of life Now had this booke neuer to haue bin oppugned there had not needed such strong and frequent confirmations neither would the holy Ghost haue bin so earnest in a needles matter The like we might teach out of particular examples How earnest is the Apostle in the poynt we haue in hand beeing the very foundation of Christianity not here only but elswhere in his writings when he saw that men would ioyne the law and gospel circumcision and baptisme Gal. 5.2 Behold I Paul say vnto you if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing and vers 3. I testifie againe vnto you and 4. ye are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace he could not satisfie himselfe in his vehemencie against such a doctrine as this was Nay the sonne of God himselfe hath left vs his owne example in this point of wisdome who was wont in his teaching vnto diuerse more necessarie truths to prefix his Amen Amen I say vnto you which is in sence all one with this of our Apostle if we consider the speach though in the speaker and manner of speaking was wonderful difference himselfe beeing the author and Amen it selfe euen the faithfull and true witnesse and all other so farre only true as they testified from him And so he often shutteth vp his speach with he that hath eares to heare let him heare and then let him that heareth or readeth consider such sayings carrie salt with them and for such the Lord planted the eare more especially Vse 1. To teach Ministers in matters of weight to deale so soundly as the conscience of the hearer may be as firmely stablished in the truth taught and perswaded as if an angel from heauen should come and teach an other doctrine he may be held accursed so as the verie hearts of the hearers may say this is a faithfull doctrine and saying for thus as the Gospel is the word of truth so shall it be held in much certenty by the professors of it And it is a fault blame worthie in many Ministers who when they are occasioned by the place in hand to speake of some controuerted or most necessarie truth either for idlenes because they will not so much trouble themselues or for vnfaithfullnesse avoide by declining and shunning such truths the displeasure of the times which godly Ministers must swallowe that the truth opposed may be setled in the hearts of men not to speake of such as are infamously guiltie of some vices vnrepented of and vnreformed which maketh them balke and betray necessarie truths which in that regard they dare not mention 2. It is a great fault of hearers and worthie amendement who cannot well indure to heare of points in controversie especially betweene the Papists and our selues whereas their vnderstandings and iudgements are so farre from beeing stablished in the certaine truth of such things as euery winde or blast of the skulking Iesuite or Papist is able to vnsettle them in great matters and turne them off their grounds Now if it bee the teachers part to insist especially in such needefull points as are most opposed and hardlyest yeelded vnto it must needes be the hearers to provoke themselues to the right discerning of such differences for neither doe the contentions of the teachers so much concerne themselues as their hearers neither ende they in themselues but in the hearer See we not how if neuer so grosse or slender a point of carnall libertie be contended about it will carrie the applause almost of all men with i● Is it meete then that any Saint of God be a looker on and not rather according to the commandement that euerie one should contend for the faith once giuen and can they contend vnlesse they be taught how and here instructed with weapons This admonition is the more needfull in these dayes so full of danger by the seduction of Papists separators libertines which swarme euerie where the daily encrease of all which is not more incredible then lamentable 3. We learne hence how to conceiue of the point and doctrine in hand seeing the wisedome of Gods spirit vseth to speake to the worth of the thing and by such prefaces and markes of speciall worthinesse pointeth to some weightie and needfull point vsing here another stile then if he should speake of mint and cummin and some smaller points of religion We meet not in euery precept with an oyes or warnword but where we do we must conceiue such not the motes but the beames of our religion
bid him not God speede and 2. King 3.14 Elisha telleth Iehoram an idolatrous king that had it not beene for the good king Iehosaphat he would not haue looked vpon him nor seene him And yet this hindreth nothing but that we must salute our owne priuate enemies though we may not the open enemies of God 3. If any haue sinned the sinne vnto death we may not pray for them therfore not salute them 1. Ioh. 5.16 This is the former kind of salutatiō but not that which the Apostle speaketh of in the text but the latter which is a more inward and entire affection betweene such as are of the houshold of faith who are straitlye● knit together then by the bonds of humanitie and ciuill conuersation for besides these they are tyed by the bond of the spirit of faith of a most holy profession and are brethren not in the flesh but in the faith yea heires of the selfe same inheritance in glorie These are said to loue one another in the faith If they therefore be to be kindly saluted which hate vs much more they which loue vs and if they which loue vs in the flesh much more they which loue vs in the faith and that with a most heartie and large affection Hence note 1. that religion bindeth man to man in the straitest bond for 1. the spirit is the tye● of it and hence is it called the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace and indeede it must be a wonderfull bond that can reconcile such deadly enemies as men are before they come into the kingdome of Christ Isa. 11.6 2. Gods image wheresoeuer it is is exceeding beautifull and a great binder especially where renewed and repaired which beeing once espied let the outward condition be what it can be a religious heart seeth sufficient matter of loue and will knit the soule vnto the soule of such a one 3. It addeth strength and firmenesse to all other bonds of nature affinitie desert c. and maketh them more naturall What a true friend was Ionathan to Dauid because he saw that God was with him his soule claue vnto him though the kingdome was to be rent from him for it yet could he not rent his heart from Dauid If Ioseph had not had more then nature he could not but haue reuenged such infinite wrongs vpon his brethren whereas the grace of his heart made him say It was not you my brethren but God sent me before you Consider also of the example beyond all imitation of our Lord Iesus Christ who gaue himselfe to the death for vs when we were yet his enemies 4. This loue must needes be most lasting for beeing loue in the truth for the truthes sake it shall continue so long as the truth doth but the truth abideth with vs and shall abide with vs for euer· and this is the cause that whereas the loue of nature dieth with it and the loue of wicked men dieth with their persons this loue liueth in death yea when goeth to heauen with a man and getteth strength and perfection then faith ceaseth and hope vanisheth away Vse 1. Whence we are taught most familiarly to embrace them that loue vs in the faith and to make most account of their loue Many loue in the face many in the flesh many in nature onely the loue of Christians is a fruit of faith a worke of the spirit and ●herefore a surer bond then they all Well knew the Apostle that none was in comparison worth hauing but this he calleth for no other he careth for no other he mentioneth no other 2. Such as set into any societie with others if he would haue it comfortable vnto him let him strengthen all other naturall or ciuill bonds by this bond of religion let him labour to begin his loue in the faith or if he haue begunne elsewhere alreadie let him reforme the same hereby if he looke for any sound comfort in his estate for this is the cause that men often haue so little returne of loue from their wiues so little obedience from their children so little dutie from their seruants so slender respect from their equalls because they begin their loue and duties at a wrong ende and haue for other respects affected those with whome they liue but the least if at all for grace and religion which of all is the soundest most profitable and most comfortable Quest. But how may I knowe whether I loue an other in the faith o● no Answ. By these notes 1. If thou loue him because he is a member of Christ for this loue must be a fruit of faith and knitteth him that hath it to the members as faith doth to the head 2. If thou loue his soule first and will not suffer sinne vpon it 3. If thou spyest and dost reuerence the image of God in him and louest him that is begotten because of him that begat and preferrest the grace of his heart aboue all other outward parts and respects 4. If thou aboue all other things wish him yea if it be in thy power helpe him to a further part in the better part which shall neuer be taken from him 5. If the more thou seest grace to growe in him the more entire thy loue groweth towards him 3. This point sheweth their fearefull condition that make religion the verie cause of their hatred and malice against the godly an apparant marke of the deuill is stamped vpon them who for this cause compasseth the earth that if it were possible he might chase the image of God from off the face of it Secondly in that the Apostle saluteth such as loued them in the faith we may note what a mighty power the Gospel carrieth with it where the Lord will haue it effectuall These Cretians had beene a vile people and of most bruitish behauiour as we haue at large heard in the first Chapter but now there were amongst them such as loued Paul and such as claue vnto him in the faith the Gospel had tamed and subdued them had turned them out of their sauage and cruell natures had made them tractable and docible and of euill beasts had reduced them to Christian affection and conversation but of this we haue spoken before Grace be with you all Amen This is Pauls ordinarie farwell written with his own hand in all his Epistles whereas the Epistles themselues were written out by some of his Scribes And it is added 1. as the marke of his owne Epistle that he might preuent counterfeit writings for well knew he how neerely it concerned the Church to cleaue vnto those writings which were indited by the holy Ghost inspiring the Prophets and and Apostles and not to haue any other bastard writings obtruded vpon her in which practise the deuill was restlesse euen in those times 2. As a testimonie of singular affection and good will which can be by no better meanes expressed then by frequent and earnest prayers and
indeed his bowells were not straitned toward Titus and the Church committed vnto him seeing he wisheth the verie fountaine of grace to be opened vnto them for this word as we shewed in the beginning signifieth both the free loue and fauour of God towards vs in Christ as also all other spirituall blessings flowing from that fountaine such as are remission of sinnes reconciliation with God iustification sanctification life eternall and all the meanes tending thereunto 3. That beeing an Apostolicall prayer it might also be a meanes of obtaining and conuaying vpon them the grace requested and although he had made the same request for them before yet it is no vaine repetition for partly he prayeth for the encrease and further feeling of this grace for them and partly teacheth vs thereby that it is the only blessing to be prayed for the cheife if not only grace which our selues are to labour for and which we must by all meanes endeauour that others may haue their portion in with vs. 4. To shew that all our greeting must beginne and end in grace and that our formes of salutation should fauour of grace and not be profane gracelesse or formall as the most are 5. Beeing a Minister of grace he beginneth and endeth with it and teacheth Ministers that their first and last action of the day and of their Ministeriall dutie should be the commending of their people vnto the grace of God in their praiers and besides if ordinarie letters much more other more weightie actions of men must be vndertaken and performed with praier and praise Secondly in that he saith Grace be with you he sheweth that howsoeuer this Epistle was inscribed to Titus alone yet was it intended to be of common vse to the whole Church and therefore we haue not vnfitly applied the most of the doctrines to the vse not of Ministers only but of all sorts of men so farre as they concerned them Last of all in that he saith grace be with you all he meaneth all the elect and only they for only they are effectuall partakers of this sauing grace called often elsewhere the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the treasurie and fountaine of it The wicked are indeede endued with excellent gifts of Gods spirit but they want this grace of God in Christ which is the only foundation of our election to the grace of life of our effectuall vocation to the grace of God wherein we stand and of that assured hope of that heauenly inheritance which he hath purchased of his grace By this grace we are happily reconciled vnto God and adopted to be heyres of grace hereby also we haue receiued the word of grace which is made fruitfull to the planting and watering of all other sauing graces in vs and so to the furthering and finishing of the whole worke of our saluation in glorie This grace be euer with vs and all them that loue the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ to their immortalitie Amen So shall it be And so be it To God the Father of lights and to Iesus Christ that eternall word together with that annoynting euen the blessed spirit the only one true and wise God who hath happily led vs through these labours be all praise and glorie in all the Churches for euermore Amen A SHORT VIEWE OF SVCH Doctrines as are enlarged with their reasons and vses A Man may sometimes lawfully change his name Pag. 4. Such names are to be giuen to children as may put them in minde of some good dutie Pag. 4 The name of a seruant of God is full of honour Pag. 6 The chiefe offices in the Church are for the service of it Pag. 10 God hath some who are elect and other are not Pag. 11 The elect haue a faith by themselues Pag. 13 The faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought by the ministerie of the word Pag. 16 The doctrine of the Gospell is truth it selfe Pag. 18 The knowledge of the truth is the ground of faith Pag. 19 The truth intertained in truth frameth the heart vnto godlinesse Pag. 21 The ende of the ministerie is to drawe vp mens mindes from earth to heauen Pag. 24 True faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene attended with many other graces especially with hope Pag. 27 Life eternall is the beleeuers by free promise Pag. 30 God is truth itselfe and cannot lie Pag. 33 The free loue of God appeareth in that whatsoeuer he doth for his elect in time the same he decreeth before all time Pag. 39 The doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times Pag. 43 The Lord effecteth all his purposes and promises in due season Pag. 44 Saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Pag. 48 The office of preaching is an office of trust Pag. 52 Whosoeuer entreth into the ministerie must finde himselfe pressed by the calling and commandement of God Pag. 53 Ministers may be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the disposition and necessitie of their people require Pag. 55 Gods calling to grace is free and powerfull Pag. 56 Ministers ought to be spirituall fathers in begetting children to God Pag. 58 Faith is one and the same in all Gods elect Pag. 62 Euerie man must be carefull 1. whome 2. to what 3. how farre he commendeth an other Pag. 65 All are not naturall sonnes that are so accounted 66 The free and euerlasting grace of God is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall Pag. 69 True peace is the fruit of Gods grace and mercie Pag. 71 Whosoeuer is called to labour in the Church must by all his care further the worke of the Lord. Pag. 75 He that would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through his calling must euer haue the ende of it in his eie Pag. 76 Churches must not be condemned as no Churches for want of some lawes or gouerment if they ioyne in the profession of the truth Pag. 80 No Church is hastely brought to perfection Pag. 81 There is continuall bending of good ordinances euen in the best estate of the Church Pag. 83 Such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie there is where a Church is planted that without it religion cannot possibly thriue or continue Pag. 86 The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Evangelist but Apostolicall direction must guide him Pag. 89 How able soeuer a man is to teach if he be of a scandalous life he is vnfit to be chosen a Minister Pag. 92 Marriage of Ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God Pag. 97 Polygamie was euer blameworthy euen in the best Pag. 103 He that would reforme others abroad must begin at home Pag. 110 To haue the blessing of gracious children thou must beginne at religion Pag. 111 The carriage of a mans children is a great credit or disgrace to his profession especially of the Minister Pag. 113 Riot is an hatefull vice to be