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A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

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his kingdome The fourth reproofe Fourthly if it be a calling of such dignity it reprooueth those that run before they be sent and wait not a lawful calling from God that they discharge it afterward with peace of heart and comfort of Conscience We see manie young men make more hast then good speede in entring into the Ministery who for the most part want that iudgment staydnesse experience grauity moderation that is meet to be in men of that profession Hence it is that they are called by the name of Elders in the Scripture The Apostle thought it necessary to giue this charge to Timothy a young man though he were of rare hope and of excellent guifts u 2 Tim. 2 22. To fly the lusts of youth and to follow after righteousnesse Faith Loue and peace with all them that call on the Lord with a pure heart And in another place he saith x 1 Tim. 4 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be vnto them that beleeue an ensample in word in conuersation in Loue in Spirite in Faith in Purenesse If hee had this neede of instruction howe much more others The fift reproofe Fiftly it reproueth those that are so hand-fasted that they repine at their maintenance that labour among them How many places and Parishes are there that regard not how they be taught or whether they be taught or not so they may be well dealt withall in their Tithes that is if they might pay little or nothing to maintaine their Minister There is growne in many congregations this agreement and bargaine betweene the Pastor and the people if he will spare them in temporall things they regarde not how hee deale with them in spirituall things If they may pay little they are content hee shall preach little If they may enioy their Tithes at a low rate they are well pleased that he take his ease and teach them seldome But albeit he preach in season and out of season and do his dutie with all diligence yet they murmure and repine at his allowaunce and thinke euery thing too much that is bestowed that way The sixt reproofe Lastly it reproueth such as regard not the censures of the Church inflicted vpon euill doers The censures of the Church are made as a scar-Crow and esteemed of many as a mocke But if that power and authority were regarded in the Ministers hand that the word of God alloweth and appointeth wherby he is authorized to exercise spirituall iurisdiction in Church-matters not onely to preach but to punish not onely to teach but to correct not onely to instruct but to excommunicate then would the Office be magnified then would the Ministry be esteemed according to the institution of them Our Sauiour giuing order and direction to informe the Gouernors of the Church when scandals and offences arose among them addeth y Math. 18 18 Verily I say vnto you whatsoeaer ye binde on earth shall be bound in Heauen and whatsoeuer ye loose on earth shall be loosed in Heauen We see God promiseth to ratifie the sentence pronounced and denounced in his name The abridgement of this power is the contempt of the men and of their Ministry and the curbing cutting short of their authority doth open a gappe to all contumely and reproach of their persons and office If a Magistrate shoulde prescribe and ordaine that Law which is wholesome and profitable to the Common-wealth and haue no power at all to punish the Malefactors and misdoers that transgresse who is it that would regard the Commandement If a School-maister had authority onely to rule and to teach but were restrained to take vp the rod to correct and chastise the obstinat sluggard what Scholler would harken or giue eare to his teaching In like manner so long as the Minister is allowed only to speake the word or to threaten but stinted that he shall go no farther his Ministry will be little regarded as if a Maister should tell some of his Schollers of their shrewde trickes but were not licensed to punnish their euill doing God hath ioyned authority to the Pastors office put into his hand the discipline of the Church and the Ministers of God haue exercised executed the same according to his ordinance Hence it is that the Apostle reprouing an heinous offence amongst the Corinthians and shewing the vse of Ecclesiasticall correction saith z 2 Cor. 4 21 What will ye Shall I com vnto you with a rod or in loue and in the spirit of meekenesse Vse 2. Secondly seeing boldnesse to command vnder Christ belongeth to the office of the Minister it teacheth vs and putteth vs in minde of manie good duties as first to aske this guift of God and craue of him to indue vs with the zeale of his glory and other graces of his spirit that we may speake the word a Ephes 6 20. boldly as we ought to speake We see an example heereof in the Apostles when they heard the threatnings of the enemies of the Gospel b Acts 4 29. 5 28 29. They lift vp their voices to God with one accord and said O Lord thou art the God which hast made the heauen and the earth the sea and all things that are in them beholde their threatnings and graunt vnto thy seruants with all boldnesse to speak thy word So when the cheefe Priests said Did not we straightly commaund you that yee should not teach in his name And behold ye haue filled Ierusalem with yoar Doctrine and ye would bring this mans bloud vpon vs. Then Peter and the Apostles answerd We ought rather to obey God then mē Many men are endued with great gifts of learning and knowledge but they want the tongue of the Learned to minister a worde in season they want zeale and vtteraunce to deliuer the word of God to the people Let euery one therefore seeke to fit and furnish himselfe to this calling and in Christ Iesus be bold to do this dutie This the Prophet saith c Esay 58 1. Crie alowd spare not lift vp thy voice like a Trumpet and shew my people their transgression and the house of Iacob their sinnes This reproueth those that haue the worde in respect of persons who dare not do their duties and are afraid of mens faces They would be counted the Embassadors of God but they are affraide to do their Maisters message Let such learne of Iohn Baptist who shrunke not backe but was bold to tell Herod that it was not lawfull for him to take his Brothers Wife Wee must not bee Dastards and faint-hearted souldiers to fight the Lords battels but first be sure we haue a good warrant out of the word and then go boldly into the fielde and feare not to looke the enemy in the face True it is if wee haue not our Commission signed and sealed vnto vs wee haue iust cause to feare we speake in our owne names and not in the name
is in vaine for them to resist God and the power of his might Let them refraine from iniuring his Seruants and from going about to stop their mouthes let them remember what Gamaliell said n Acts 5 38. Now I say vnto you refraine your selues from these Men and let them alone for if this counsell or this worke be of men it will come to naught A notable lesson to bee learned of all malicious men and bloudy persecuters of the Gospell that would if it lay in them bury all remembrance of Christ and his Gospell they shall finde and feele the strength of him against whom they wrastle they shall see the folly of their owne waies and the madnesse of their owne workes and they shall in the end perceiue it to be as vnpossible and themselues as vnable to hinder the free passage of the Gospell as to bind the wind in their Fistes or to stop the Raine of Heauen from watering the earth Hence it is that the Prophet speaketh to like purpose to the Enemies of the Church o Esay 8 9. Gather together on heapes ô ye people and ye shall be broken in peeces and hearken all yee of farre Countries gird your selues and ye shall be broken in peeces gird your selues and ye shall shall bee broken in peeces Take counsell together yet it shall be brought to naught pronounce a decree yet it shall not stand for God is with vs. Vse 3. Thirdly seeing the Gospell cannot be stopped it it is the dutie of all of vs to pray for the free passage of it We haue a promise that God will spread abroade his sauing health and magnifie his great Name ouer all the Earth now it belongeth as a speciall duty to vs to pray vnto him to glorifie himselfe and to make his Name knowne among the Sonnes of Men. This charge doth the Apostle giue vnto the Thessalonians p 2 Thes 3 1 2 Furthermore Bretheren pray for vs that the word of the Lord may haue free passage and bee glorified euen as it is with you and that we may be deliuered from vnreasonable and euill Men for all men haue not Faith It is the duty of all the godly to pray for the enlarging of the Gospell whereby the Kingdome of God is also enlarged Let vs be mindfull daily of this duty desiring of the Lord this grace that the Gospell may be freely preached and cheerfully receiued q Math. 9 38. that he would send forth labourers into his Vineyard and maintaine them against rauening Wolues that seeke to deuour them that he would blesse their labours and remoue all stumbling blockes out of their way that hee would giue them courage and constancy in discharging their duty vtterly remoue al hirelings and false teachers out of his Vineyard It is God that must thrust forth Labourers into his Haruest It is he that fitteth them to the worke It is he that blesseth them in the worke Let vs not therefore be wanting to our selues but pray to the Lord of the Haruest to send out able worke-men to gather the Corne into his Garner The cause why we are not furnished with such Teachers and if we bee furnished yet the worke doth not prosper vnder their hands is because we doe not aske for a blessing from God from whom euery good guift proceedeth Vse 4. Lastly this serueth as a great comfort both to the Pastors and people For seeing the Gospell shall haue his course let the Ministers boldly go forward in the discharge of their dutie and teach the people committed to their charge Let vs not feare the faces of Men. The word which we preach is the word of God who is able to maintaine it and make it mighty in our mouthes to cast downe hils and holds that lift vp themselues against it He is able to danut and dash in peeces all those that set themselues against it The worke is the Lords the Worke-men are the Lordes the blessing and successe is the Lords and they that striue against it fight against the Lorde Let vs comfort our selues in these thinges against all the disgraces and reproaches of the World And concerning the Professors of this Gospell let this Minister comfort also vnto them that they builde not vpon the Sand or vppon a weake Foundation but their building standeth vpon a Rocke which shall neuer be remooued The Apostles comfort themselues and encourage one another r Acts 4 29. in the worke of the Ministery because they were assured that the word which they deliuered was no vaine word nor deceiueable Fable but the Gospell of Christ who chose them to the calling and sent them to the worke and strengthned them to stand and gaue them wisedome to conuince and confound all their Aduersaries Likewise Paule teacheth ſ Phil. 1 14. That many of the Brethren in the Lord were boldned through his bands to confesse and professe the truth of God We cannot fall except the word fall with vs nay except God fall with vs so long as wee stand fast in the Faith Wherefore howsoeuer others shrinke backe and make ship-wracke of a good conscience let vs hold out vnto the end and then wee shall be sure of eternall happinesse in the Heauens The occasion and argument of this Epistle Hitherto we haue handled the time when this Epistle was written and the place from whence it was written to wit when hee was in prison Now let vs consider the Argument thereof and the occasion whereof it was written The occasion of penning and writing this Epistle was double First generall for the instruction and direction of the whole Church in some necessary points of faith and obedience intreating most waightily and wisely of Iustice mercy mildnes meeknes moderation reconciliation Christian equity u Caluin vpon Philemon insomuch that he seems rather to respect the edification of the whole Church then to haue in hand the businesse of one poore and priuate man The speciall occasion was to intreat at Philemons hands to pardon his seruant that had offended him and to accept his subiection and submission vnto him This Phile. as it seemeth was a cittizen of Colosse x Hierom. in prolog Coloss Erasmus in hunc locum a citty scituate in Phrygia not far frō Laodicea whose seruant Onesimus committing either Theft in purloyning away his Maisters goods or some other great and grieuous crime as the manner of leud and euill Seruants is ran away from his M. as far as Rome being many hundred miles distant from Colosse where he supposed he should heare no more of him or if he did would not follow and pursue after him so far This Fugitiue and Runnagate Seruant false fingered and false hearted comming to Rome y Synop. Athana in hanc Epist was by the gratious prouidence of God brought where Paul the Apostle lay bound in prison and hearing him among others preaching the Gospel of Christ to Remission of sins to all
forgiuen and forgotten page 243 Doct. 4. Our loue to al the Saints especialy such as haue bin conuerted by vs ought to bee deare and feruent page 254 Doct. 5. The Gospell doeth not abolish or diminish ciuill ordinances distinct degrees among men pag 262 Verse 13. and 14. Doct 1. Euery Christian is bound to serue the common good of the church by what meanes soeuer GOD hath enabled him thereunto pag 272 Doct 2. All christian duties done to God or man must be done willingly and chearefully performed pa 282 Verse 15 and 16. Doct 1. All thinges euen sinne it selfe are ordred and turned by the prouidence of God to the good of the elect page 295 Doct 2. God oftentimes taketh from his seruants outward commodities to bestow vppon them greater page 305 Doct 3. The fals and sinnes of our brethren wherof they haue repented are not to be encreased and amplified with odious and extreame words but rather to be buried and forgotten page 311 Doct 4. The more grace apeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs. page 322 Doct 5. Although christian religion do not take away the degrees of persons yet it maketh vs al equall and brethren in Christ page 330 Doct 6. The more bandes and reasons are giuen vs to care for any the more wee are bound to care for him page 337. Verse 17. Doct 1. The consideration of our communion one with another ought to moue vs to regard one another and to do all good one to another pa 348 Doct 2. Among Christian friends all things are common page 350 Verse 18 and 19. Doct. 1. The communion of Saints doth not take away any mans right interest in his priuate possessions and things of this life page 365 Doct. 2. It is lawfull for one man to become surety for another and to engage himselfe and his credit pa 373 Doct 3. Couenants in Writing for debts bargaines and sales are honest and lawfull page 385 Doct 4. Such as haue gayned vs vnto God ought aboue all others to be most deare vnto vs. page 394 Verse 20 and 21. Doct 1. No man ought to be eager and extreame in exacting and requiring their debts dues and demandes from the poore and needy page 407 Doct 2. Whatsoeuer wee desire prouoke and perswade others to doe must be in the Lord. page 415 Doct. 3 Men ought greatly to reioyce at the good and benefit of their brethren in temporall eternal blessings which they see to befall them page 421 Doct 4. Men ought alwayes to hope well and to thinke the best of their brethren not to suspect the worst of them page 426 Doct 5. The faithfull being moued to christian duties haue yeilded more then hath bin required at their hands page 431 Verse 22. Doct 1. Hospitality that is the ioyfull and courteous entertainment of distressed strangers for the truths sake is to be vsed and practised of al the seruants of God page 440 Doct 2. The prayers of the faithfull are auayleable for themselues and others both to obtaine blessinges to them and to remoue iudgments from them page 447 Doct 3. The guifts of God bestowed vpon his Seruants come from his free grace not from our free will or deserts page 457 Verse 23 24. Doct 1. Courteous speeches and louing Salutations are beseeming the Seruants of God page 471 Doct 2. We must not vtterly cast off the weake but shew our compassion toward them page 478 Doct 3. Many that seeme forward in the profession do afterwardes fall backe page 484 Verse 25. Doct 1. Spirituall thinges are to bee prayed for and preferred before earthly things page 500 An Exposition of the Epistle of the Apostle Paul to Philemon The time whē this Epistle was written THIS Epistle is short in Words low in Argument and priuate in regard of the Matter yet the manner of handling is high and heauenly and the Doctrine generall and common to the whole Church It was written as appeareth to Philemon at what time the Apostle was growne olde in yeares was drawing neere his end and was clapt vp and kept in Prison at Rome from whence also he directed sundry Epistles to diuers Churches and particular persons From thence he wrote to the Galathians to the Ephesians to the Philippians to the Colossians and the latter Epistle to Timothy a 2 Tim. 4. which was penned not long before his death and dissolution For albeit he were held in durance and restrained of his liberty that he could not visit the Churches where the Gospell was planted nor lay a new Foundation where as yet it had not beene preached yet he was not idle or vnfruitfull but laboured to do good to the Church by writing when he could not come to bestow some spirituall Graces among them by teaching We see heere that Paul writeth out of Prison and slacketh not to instruct both generall Churches and particular persons From hence we learne that b Doct. 1. The course of the Gospell cannot be stopped the course of the Gospell cannot be stopped but keepeth on his way and passage in the World The truth of the Gospell will haue his free libertie it can be hindred by no Chaines it can be restrained by no Bandes and Boults it can be shut vp by no barres of Iron and Gates of Brasse but breaketh forth as the light of the Sunne out of a darke Cloud We see this euidently in the example of Paul c Act 26 22 28. albeit he were in bondes and Chaines yet he pleadeth his cause with such grauitie of speech with such power of the Spirit with such piercing of the matter with such efficacy of words and with such respect of the persons before whom we spake that he had almost gained perswaded Agrippa to Christianitie The like we see in another place d Act. 28 30 31. when he was brought Prisoner to Hierusalem confined to an House and deliuered to a Souldier to be kept he receiued all that came vnto him Preaching the Kingdome of God and teaching those thinges which concerne the Lord Iesus Christ with all boldnesse of speech without let This appeareth more euidently in none then in Christ himselfe who as at all times he sought all occasions and opportunity to doe good to the soules and bodies of men e Luke 23 43. so when he was vpon the Crosse he conuerted the Theefe and was ready to seeke and to saue him that was lost These consents of Scripture come directly to the former point and serue to teach vs that whatsoeuer the purposes and pretences of men be yet they shall neuer bee able to stoppe the streame of the word of God which floweth plentifully to the comforting and refreshing of the dry and barren hearts of sinfull men Reason 1. Let vs breefely consider the Reasons First the doctrine deliuered is of God not of Men from Heauen not from the Earth If man were the Authour of it it might
Hatches he sitteth quiet and holdeth the Sterne he doth not indeede as they doe but he doth farre greater and better things The Church and Common-wealth are not vnfitly compared to a mans body which consist of many partes all needefull and necessary yet all haue not the same vses and functions If the members of a mans r Halicar Roman antiquit lib. 6. Plutar. in vita Coriolani Liui. decad 1. lib. 2. body should rise and rebell against the belly if the feet should plead that they onely beare vp the waight of the whole body if the handes should affirme that they labour painefully earne their liuing and bring many other commodities if the shoulders should say that they beare all burthens or the head that it seeth and heareth the mouth that it speaketh and then if all ioyntly should turne themselues to the belly and accuse it to be without profit to remaine in the midst of the body without doing anything and sustaine no labour to the maintenance of the rest of the partes were not this a foolish conceit of reasoning and would not this tend to the ruine of the whole body In the body politicke if the people that dig and delue should complaine and conspire against the Prince and Nobles who labour by care rule by authority foresee by wisedome and manage by gouernment because they worke not with their hands would not this draw with it the destruction of the Common-wealth So is it in the Church and in the offices of the Church As the people labour by working so doe the Ministers in studying and preaching All haue not one office all haue not one vse Therefore the Apostle saith Å¿ 1 Cor. 12 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21. The body is not one member but many if the foote should say Because I am not the hand I am not of the body is it therefore not of the body And if the eare should say because I am not the eye I am not of the body is it therefore not of the body If the whole body were an eye where were the hearing And if the whole were hearing where were the smelling But now hath God disposed the members euery one of them in the body at his owne pleasure for if they were all one member where were the body But now are there many members yet but one body and the eye cannot say vnto the hand I haue no need of thee nor the head againe to the feete I haue no neede of you Whereby we see that the body consisteth of many members all haue their necessary vse for the preseruation of the whole and yet all haue not one and the same function So then they despise the Ministers of the Gospell and so account the Ministery of the word needlesse and vnprofitable because they work not with their hands and not labour with bodily labour are as madde and monstrous as they that would haue all the body to be an hand no mouth no head no foot For albeit the Teachers of the Church be not the hands of the body to handle the Carpenters Axe or the Shepheards Crooke or the Husbandmans Plough or the saw of the Sawyer yet he is as the eye of the body to giue light to them that sit in darkenesse and in the shaddow of death as the mouth of the bodie to speake to God and to poure out supplications before him for the people yea he is also as the belly for as the belly which receiueth all meats that nourish mans body doth send them backe againe with aduantage to the nourishment of the whole body so the Minister receiuing maintenance from the Church doth feed them againe and nourisheth them with the bread of life to the saluation of their soules He receiueth temporall things but he soweth vnto them spirituall things The Apostle saith t 1 Cor. 9 7. Who goeth a warfare any time at his owne cost Who planteth a Vineyard and eateth not the fruite thereof Or who feedeth a Flocke and eateth not of the Milke of the flocke The Souldier liueth by the receiuing of his wages the Husbandman by the fruits of his labours the Shepheard by the encrease of his flock and therefore it must not seem strange vnto vs that the Lords Souldiers should enioy their pay and that his Workemen should haue their hire Vse 3. Lastly seeing the celling of the Pastour set ouer the people is painefull it offereth good considerations and profitable Meditations both to the Pastors and to the people Touching the Ministers it serueth as a good admonition to such as purpose and intend to enter into this great calling of the Ministerie that they doe it wisely and warily that they runne not before they bee sent that they enter at the Doore and climbe not in at the Windowe that they considet what prouision and store of new and old they haue to goe through the worke Such as meane to builde u Luk. 14 28 31. doe first make great prouision and preparation The Kings of the Nations and Princes of the Earth with great aduise and consultation doe proclaime warres The Ministery is a going to Warfare it is a building of Gods House and therefore it is to bee enterprized not rashly but aduisedly not meanely stored but plentifully furnished with all manner of prouision fit for the Lordes worke Againe beeing the Souldiers of Christ and the leaders of his people they must seeke to please a Gal. 1 10. not men but their Captaine that hath chosen and called them they must take heede they doe not intangle and snare themselues in worldly matters and so hinder their worke in hand whereby they are made vnfit to serue God and his Church The order and discipline of the Warres is such that so soone as the Souldier hath enrolled and giuen his name to his Captaine he leaueth his house and other affaires which might with-draw his minde and mindeth nothing but the battell So ought we to bee wholie loosed and throughlie freed from the impediments and incumbrances of this Worlde that Christ may haue our seruice in this warfare This is that vse which the Apostle maketh of this Doctrine 2. Tim. 2. Thou therefore suffer affliction as a good Souldier of Iesus Christ b 2 Tim. 2 3 4. No Man that warreth entangleth himselfe with the affaires of this life because he would please him that hath chosen him to be a Souldier Touching the people they must know that when God sendeth such Labourers among them they must bee esteemed and accounted as the greatest defence and preseruation of a Citty and Kingdome This is confessed by Ioash the King of Israell when Elisha fell sicke of his sicknesse whereof he died c 2 Kin. 13 14. O my Father my Father the Charet of Israell and the Horsemen of the same The prayer of Moses d Exod. 17. preuailed more then the Sword of Ioshua and all the furniture of war against the Amalekites The Apostle writing
the Minister if they do him no harme if they offer him no wrong if they abstaine from iniurie toward him It was farre otherwise with the Galathians who loued Paule so dearly and entirely that they accounted nothing to bee too precious for him q Gal. 4 14 15 The triall of me which was in my flesh ye despised not neither abhorred but ye receiued me as an Angell of God yea as Christ Iesus what was then your felicity For I beare you record that if it had beene possible ye would haue plucked out your owne eyes and haue giuen them vnto me But in these daies wherein we liue it were well or not much amisse for the faithfull Ministers of the Gospell if such as should support them would not subuert them if such as should help them would not hinder them if such as should raise them vp were not ready to cast them downe and if such as should refresh them were not rather giuen to reuile them and disgrace them Heere then is condemned all hard and bitter dealing toward them whereby their calling which is an honourable office is made an irksome burthen vnto them to bear against such as taunt and scorne them that iest and mocke at the worke of their ministry which is the wisedome of God and the power of God against those that delight to vex the seruants of God to mingle their bread with grauell their drinke with gall and their life with reproach This made the Prophets and Apostles cry out continually to see themselues abused their Ministery contemned the word of God himselfe refused all Religion prophaned When Eliah saw that the children of Israell had forsaken the Couenant of God cast downe his Altars and slaine his Prophets he desired God to kill him r 1 King 19 4 It is now enough O Lord take my soule for I am no better then my fathers The prophet Å¿ Esay 65 2. 53 1. 49 4. Esay saith I haue spred out my hands all the day to a rebellious people which walked in away that was not good euen after their owne imaginations Lord who hath beleeued our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord reuealed I haue laboured in vaine I haue spent my strength in vaine and for nothing but my iudgement is with the Lord and my worke with my God The Lord sayth to Ezekiell t Ezek. 33 31 32. The Children of thy people talke of thee by the walles and in the doores of houses they sit before thee and heare thy words but they will not doo them for vvith their mouths they make iests and thou art vnto them as a iesting song of one that hath a pleasant voice and can sing well for they heare thy words but they do them not and when this commeth to passe for loe it will come then shall they know that a prophet hath beene among them So when Paule came to Athens u Acts 17 18. and saw the City full of Idols he preached vnto them the knowledge of God and the resurrection of the dead but they said What will this babler say And others worse then those that scorne and scoffe at the word of life which they should heare with feare and reuerence are falne into this horrible depth of sinne that thorough malice to the word it selfe do come vnto them to heare them not to learne but to trap and intangle them not to edifie themselues but to misreport and accuse them not to receiue profit but to finde occasion to persecute them as the Iewes did with Christ and his Apostles who came not to heare them but to tempt them not to beleeue them but to belye them Many such Iewes and Iudasses wee meete withall in our dayes who are so farre from reioycing the hearts of their Ministers that they may doo the worke of their calling wil ingly not grudgingly cheerefully not heauily u Heb. 13 17. with ioy not with greefel that they thinke it a great duty done vnto them if they doo not disgrace them or molest them It is a great sinne not to helpe them not to countenance them not to stand with them in good causes but to suffer euery base companion and beastly liuer to insult vpon them as their footstool but it is more greeuous to scorne them and deride them to make them their Table-talke and their Tauern-talke to declaime against them from the Tribunall of their Ale-bench but it is most fearefull of all to come to them to catch them and intrap them to hunt after words and Syllables and to wrest them against the minde and meaning of the speaker Let vs beware of these sinnes let vs not be in the number of such as are set downe in the seat of scorners and false accusers If they shall not escape that do no good if they shall not be excused that do not reioyce them surely they shall bee guilty of a sorer and seuerer punnishment that malice them that mocke them that misinforme others of them and euery way misvse them and contemne them Vse 4. Lastly seeing we are all bound to reioyce in the proceeding of the faithfull it followeth from hence necessarily that wee are not to enuie and repine at the growth of the Church or of any member of the Church This is a great fault and folly in many when they see any parts of the Church flourish and behold greater encrease in others then in themselues by and by they grudge and repine at it and haue their owne eye euil because the Lords eie is good These are like to those Labourers that were hyred into the Vine-yard who when they saw such as were hyred about the eleauenth houre to receiue their penny and to be made equall with them who had borne the brunt and burthen of the day x 1 Mat. 28 20 11. and had endured the heat and sweate of the worke they enuied at the Seruants and murmured against the Mayster of the house We must enuy no mans good wee must repine at no mans Saluation The calling and conuersion of the Gentiles y Acts 11 3. 15 1. was such a stumbling-blocke in the way and n Mote nay a Beame in the eyes of the Iewes that they had rather renounce the Gospell and depart from Christ then to receyue them into a fellowshippe of the same Faith and make them partakers of the Kingdome of Heauen So did the Scribes and Pharisees z Math. 9 11. Luke 7 39. take it greeuously that the grace of God and Remission of sinnes and the Mysteries of Saluation should be preached and published to Publicans and Sinners There is no guift or benefit bestowed vpon any but it is giuen for the good and comfort of the whole Church so that wee should reioyce therein not repine thereat forasmuch as we haue our portion and profite in it Neuerthelesse what is more common and vsuall then to make the blessinges of God vppon others a great
those that are least esteemed and are of lowest condition were bought with as great and high a price as others and were redeemed not with corruptible things as Siluer and Gold but with the deare and precious bloode of Christ Rich and poore high and lowe great and small had all one price paide for their ransome This is the reason x Math 18 10 11. vrged by Christ See that ye despise not one of these little ones for I say vnto you that in Heauen their Angels alwaies behold the face of my Father which is in heauen for the sonne of man is come to saue that which was lost If then the least be redeemed by his death and saued by faith in him as well as the greatest it followeth that al should bee regarded none contemned all loued none despised Hence it is also that the Apostle chargeth those that are strong to receiue vnto them y Rom. 14 1 3 15. the weaker sort and not to despise them whom God hath receiued and for whom Christ hath dyed Reason 2. Secondly there is no respect of persons with God He doth not esteeme men for accidentall things as for pouertie or riches for honor or dishonour The poore the fatherlesse the widdow the stranger the seruant are as deare to him and as greatly respected of him as those that are set in high places are honoured with great callings When we speake of a person in our talke and communication me meane some man or some woman but the Scripture meaneth a more speciall thing to wit the outward quality or condition of man which may purchase him grace or disgrace fauour or disfauor When God wil cal vs to his truth and bestow his graces vppon vs it is done according to his holy wil and good pleasure he is not moued to it by the outward appearance and condition of the person he respecteth not Country or sex or birth or riches or pouertie or Nobility or wisedome or learning or friends This is it which the Apostle teacheth z Gal. 3 27 28 Al ye that are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ there is neither Iew nor Grecian there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female for ye are all one in Christ Iesus And to the same purpose Peter speaketh a Acts 10 34 35. Of a truth I perceiue that God is no accepter of persons but in euerie Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted vvith him Seeing then God accepteth the person of no man he wold haue no man reiected for the meannesse of his person Reason 3. Thirdly they shal receiue with others the same recompence of reward the same kingdome of heauen the same measure of glory The differences that now are in this life shal cease As there is now the same precious faith so then there shall be the same precious felicity The poorest members of Christ haue the same spirituall graces that are necessary to saluation and therefore shal be partakers of the same inheritance This the Apostle Iames setteth downe chap. 2. b Iames 2 5. Harken my beloued Brethren hath not GOD chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith and heires of the kingdome which he promised to them that loue him He hath not prepared and prouided one place of glorie for those that are Rich and another place for those that are poore he hath not left one inheritance for the Noble and another for the vnnoble but as they haue one Faith to apprehend Christ so they shall haue one glorie to be like vnto Christ The Lord Iesus himselfe testifieth this c Iohn 14 2 In my Fathers house are many mansion places if it were not so I would haue tolde you I go to prepare a place for you If then wee consider these points that the lowest in the Church and the most vnworthy to be of the Church are bought with one the same price that God accepteth and respecteth no mans person and that they shall receiue with others an eternall waight of glory and immortalitie we may conclude this as a necessary truth that we ought not to bee ashamed of any though of the lowest sort and poorest estate and meanest condition to whom God hath imparted and vouchsafed this mercie to beleeue in Christ and to be a member of his bodie and to be in the number of true beleeuers Vse 1 The Doctrine being made euident the Vses will be as apparent First seeing we are bound to loue the lowest in the Church that belong to Christ we learne that our affections must bee carried most earnestly and in the greatest measure to those that haue the greatest measure of heauenly graces not regarding Riches or Kindred or outward respects before the other It is a sound and sanctified loue that is wrought in vs toward those that are faithfull The Apostle in this place was so farre from beeing ashamed of Onesimus conuerted to Christ and gayned to the Gospell though he were a Seruant and had beene a Theefe and a Runnagate that he glorieth in his Faith reioyceth in his Conuersion accounteth him as his Sonne and respecteth him as his owne bowelles This affection no lesse then fatherly toward him hee expresseth afterward d Verse 16 17 Receiue him not nowe as a Seruant but aboue a seruant euen as a Brother beloued specially to me how much more then vnto thee both in the Flesh and in the Lord If therfore thou count our things common receiue him as my self He saw in this man being a Proselite newly conuerted to the Faith such fruits of sanctification as seales of his conuersion that he loued him most dearely and sought by all meanes to procure fauour for him with his Maister Whatsoeuer the former life of men hath beene when once they make Conscience of their waies beginning to leade an holy life and to blot out the infamy reproach of their conuersation led in the time of their ignorance it is our duty to begin to loue them as entirely as our Brethren in Christ and as children with vs of the same Father The practise heereof we see in Christ our Sauiour and haue this instruction giuen vs from his owne mouth Mathew 12. when it was tolde him as hee was preaching his word to the multitude that came to heare him that his Mother and Bretheren stoode without desiring to speake with him hee answered e Math 12 48 Who is my Mother and who are my Brethren And he stretched foorth his hand toward his Disciples and said Beholde my Mother and my Brethren for whosoeuer shall do my Fathers will which is in heauen the same is my Brother and Sister and Mother To this purpose the Prophet Dauid speaketh f Psal 16 1. All my delight is in the Saints that are vpon the earth The Godly must be most dear vnto vs and we are bound to be kind to them as to our Kin.
they teach so they be not idle They are Ministers of the Church of England and therefore may preach in any part of the Land and are blamelesse Therefore there is no vnlawfull non-residency For God hath ordained saith the Å¿ 1 Cor. 9 14 Apostle That they which Preach the Gospell may liue of the Gospell Answere I answer they are not onely Ministers of England but of such a particular Congregation and haue their maintenance of such a particular Church and therefore are bound to imploy their labour in that particular place He that hath not a particular charge and Church to care for will care indeede for no Church as he ought to care For if that which is t Arist polit lib. 2. cared for of all is cared for of none then he that hath but a generall care of one place no more then of another commonly neglecteth all When God sent Ionah the Prophet to Niniue u Ion. 1 2 3. he sinned in going to Tarshish If he had preached neuer so duely and diligently in that Citty when God called him to another he had not discharged the duty of a good Prophet Besides whereas they say they are Ministers of England therefore sufficeth to preach in any corner or quarter of the Land they may as well say they are Ministers of Europe and consequently may preach in any part of Europe and be discharged in conscience of any farther duty to be required of them Nay some are so shamelesse as they dare openly auouch that they are as much bound to the Church of Ierusalem if they might haue accesse thereunto as to that people that called them and doe maintaine them Verily this argueth little learning and lesse conscience For this were to change a Pastor into an Apostle a limited office into an vnlimited and as great a wonder as to bring all the world into the circuit and compasse of a little Towne And we see it is directlie against the order of the Scripture which calleth them Ministers of such and such a particular Church x Acts 20 17. Phil. 1 1. Reue. 2 3. as of Ephesus of Pergamus of Sardi and the rest So when generall teaching y Math. 28 20 is Apostolicall particular is z 1 Pet. 5. 2. Heb. 13 17. Pastorall which is limited to a certaine place Againe it is a thing in it selfe vnreasonable and to the people iniurious that they shoulde receiue their Wages in one place and performe their seruice in another place that one should giue them their hire and another haue the profit of their paines Would not a man thinke he had wrong done him if he hyring a seruant another shoulde take the labour of his hands Or should that seruant be excused who hauing wages paid him by his Maister should apply himselfe in another mans work Or when a man hireth a shepheard to looke to his sheepe will hee not complaine if they be neglected and another mans sheepe fed and attended Or can such a shepheard thinke his duty discharged albeit he be neuer so diligent and watching in looking to the sheepe of another A Shepheard hath a particular Flocke to attend which hee must watch a Seruant must dispatch his worke that hath hired him Thus it ought to be with euery faithfull Minister he hath his speciall ground to Till his proper house to build his Flocke to feede his Citty to watch his Army to lead and may not wander out of the boundes and borders limited vnto him Obiection 7 Others alledge in excuse of this absence that many of them giue necessary attendance vpon their Lords and their Families and being their Houshold Chaplaines and so doing seruice to great persons are forced to bee absent from their Cures Answere I answere this sauoureth of couetousnesse or of ambition or rather of both They haue couetous hearts and aspiring mindes If they haue peculiar charges of their owne Who compelled them to be other mens Chaplaines Or if they be to attend vpon their Lords who compelled them to take the charge of Soules It was an vsuall thing among the godlie Kinges of Iudah to haue their Prophets at their elbowes to teach them to stirre them vp to good thinges and to keepe them from falling into sinne The Prophet Dauid had Gad the Seer belonging vnto him a 1 Sam. 22 5 2 Sam. 24 11 who was with him in his banishment and was as his Counsellour he was retained both in prosperity and aduersity with him And it is a commendable thing not only in Princes but in men of State and high place when they entertaine such for a loue of the truth to instruct them and their families in the knowledge of godlinesse when they esteeme them as the Ministers of God and giue them not single but that double honour which Gods word alloweth them and when they can be content to heare the Law at their mouthes and submit themselues to the obedience of that which is spoken vnto them in the Name of the Lord. Yea such as are so entertained may highly aduance Gods glory and doe great good with such great men and in such great Families if they regard to doe good seruice to God rather then to themselues if they doe not flatter to please men but deale carefully and conscionably in their places But such as are of high calling may haue attendance and sufficient seruice done vnto them by others that are without Cures and haue no charge of soules committed vnto them and as they are willing to entertaine them so they are able to maintaine them that they shall not liue of the Churches which they doe not instruct Obiection 8. Lastly they pretend that they teach commonly by themselues but continually by their substitutes They come often among their people and teach them by Curates which they haue set in their places and therefore they sinne not by Non-residency Answere I aunswer this often teaching is not sufficient where continuall watchfulnesse is required The Lord neuer said vnto him Teach often but preach the word in season and out of season He is accursed that doth the worke of the Lord negligently Iere. 48 10. Diligence is required where danger is feared The flockes that are in danger of the Wolfe b Gen. 31 40 Luke 2 8. Esay 62. 6. are watched day and night The Enemy is alwayes at hand and watcheth his aduantage by the absence of the Pastour If they could couenant and agree with the aduersary neuer to assault their charges but at cettaine times and seasons of the yeare and bargaine with him not to meddle in their absence they had some good pretence for their negligence and might bee ready to meete him when he commeth to tempt and seduce their people Againe they cannot bee discharged by a Deputy where they are to performe personall duty neyther are they freed from blame by other mens guifts where they are to practise their owne guifts These are
great vnthankfulnesse deny corporall benefits so that it cannot be expressed how well he hath deserued of that person whom he hath won by the word to God c Col. 1 13. And deliuered him by his Ministry from the power of darkenesse and translated into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne Thirdly we may obserue in the Apostles correcting of his former grant that as he is commended that doth his duty that is required of him freely and willingly so he is worthy to be praised and commended that doth not goe about to wring and wrest a benefit against a mans will though it be due debt and a bounden duty but laboureth by all meanes that it may be voluntary and not vpon necessity for hereby it commeth to passe oftentimes that he not onely getteth a benefit but winneth his heart and good will that giueth it and many times it falleth out that the minde of the giuer is more to be respected then the guift it selfe as we see in the poore Widdow mentioned in the Gospell d Luk. 21 2 3. who casting into the treasury two mites is said to haue giuen of her penury more then all the rich men that bestomed of their superfluity Thus much of the generall obseruations Now let vs come to the particular Doctrines I would haue retained him with me that for thee he might haue ministred vnto me in the bonds of the Gospell The Apostle in these wordes doth claime both Philemon and Onesimus to owe vnto him being in bondes their seruice and comfortable administration Indeede he senderh his Seruant backe to him yet he seemeth closely and secretly to insinuate that hee would take it thankfully at his handes and receiue it as a guift most welcome vnto him if Philemon would returne him to him againe and that he should deserue more praise if of his owne accord and liberality he would haue sent back his Seruant now restored vnto him of whose helpe and Ministery he had so great neede The Seruants of Christ that suffer for his Name are to be succoured by what duties soeuer we can For seeing the banishing of our persons the whippings of our bodies the spoiling of our goods the impairing of our good Name and many other reproaches and afflictions doe accompany the preaching and profession of the Gospell whosoeuer shrinketh back from suffering them and refuseth to be partaker of them when God calleth him to beare witnesse vnto the truth he renounceth the Gospell forsaketh his Brethren and separateth himselfe from Christ The defence of the Gospell is common to all and euery man must be an helper to the truth Therefore the man that suffereth persecution for Gods cause and the Gospels is not to be accounted as a priuate person but as one that dischargeth a publike duty of the whole Church and therefore the care of him generally lieth vpon the shoulders of all those that professe the faith Doctrine 1. Euery Christian is bound to serue the common good of the Church by what meanes soeuer God hath inabled him From hence we learne that help succour and seruice is a due debt from all that truely are religious to them that suffer for the Gospell and for righteousnes sake We see how Paul requireth it of Philemon and Onesimus that they should in his bondes Minister vnto him and helpe him in his distresse The vertue heere required is that fruit of loue by which a man becommeth a Seruant to euery one for their good within the compasse of his calling So then euery Christian is bound to serue the common good of the Church and of them that haue need therein by his guiftes by his goods by his wisedome by his authority and by what other meanes soeuer God hath inabled him This is commaunded by by the Apostle Gal. 6. While e Gal. 6 10. we haue time let vs do good vnto all men but specially to thē that are of the houshold of faith So the same Apostle setteth out loue by his effect f 1 Cor. 13 5. Loue seeketh not her owne things but the good of others it suffereth all things it endureth all things The Church of the Hebrewes is commended for the notable fruits of their loue shewed vnto the Saints that thereby they might be encouraged to go forward and to hold out vnto the end g Hebr. 6 10. For God is not vnrighteous that he should forget your worke and labour of loue which ye shewed toward his Name in that ye haue ministred vnto the Saints and yet Minister This we read to haue beene the practise of the Primitiue Church in time of extreame misery and the hard weapon of necessity pressing sore vpon them h Actes 4 33 34 35. Great grace was vpon them all neither was there any among them that lacked for as many as were Possessers of Landes or Houses sold them and brought the price of the things that were sold and laid it down at the Apostles feet and it was distributed vnto euery Man according as he had neede The examples of the godly are worthy to be considered who haue shined in the world by this vertue as by a light in dark places Obadiah ministred to the Prophets in the time of Famine and in the daies of persecution i 1 King 18. Neh. 1. and 5. He did not onely hide them from the rage of the enemy but supplyed their necessitie Nehemiah imploied himselfe for the good of Ierusalem by his authority power wealth and credit that he had with the King This was in Paul as he testifieth of himselfe k 1 Cor. 9 19 Though I be free from all men yet haue I made my selfe Seruant vnto all Men that I may win the moe So that he was ready to offer vp himselfe vpon the Alter of their Faith Likewise he requireth of the Widdowe 's imployed in the Church-seruice to attend vpon the sick that they should be of this good report As l 1 Tim. 5 10. to haue lodged Strangers to haue washed the Saints feet to haue Ministred to them that are in necessity So the Church of Thyatira is commended by Christ for the performance of this duty m Reu. 2 19. I know thy workes and thy loue and seruice and faith and thy patience and thy workes and that they are moe at the last then at the first This is so generall a duty that the Apostle Paule expresseth it among the common fruits of Faith Rom. 12. Be affectioned to loue one another with n Ro. 12 10 11 brotherly loue in giuing honour goe one before another Not slothfull to doe seruice feruent in Spirit seruing the Lord. No man is exempted from this duty be hee neuer so high is is no disparagement but a great aduancement euen of the honour and glory of Princes as the Prophet teacheth o Esay 49 23. Kings shall be thy nursing Fathers and Queenes shall be thy Nurses they shal worship thee with their faces toward the
therefore seeke to blaunch the foulenesse and filthinesse of it to which they are so continuallie accustomed But howsoeuer these men account of sinne and whatsoeuer they call it they shall find that the lessening of it is the way to encrease it and the diminishing of it is the meanes to make it greater If we would haue our sinnes and offences not to come into account we must forsake them and repent of them Thirdlie it reprooueth such as disclose and reueale a Penitents confession When our Brethren in the anguish of their Soules and in a feeling of the horror of sinne haue sought peace and comfort at our handes and haue discouered their offences that trouble them to vs as the sicke man doth his disease to the Physition that hee may bee healed it is our dutie to comfort them not to disgrace them to conceale them not to reueale them to hide them not to publish them and blaze them abroad to their disgrace and discredit True it is when euill is opened vnto vs e Alexand. Hal. part 4. Quest 28. membr 2. art 2. Siluest in Confess 3. nume 2. not past or present but to be done afterward as if a man confesse his determination and resolution to commit Murthers we are not tied to couer and conceale it but are bound to manifest and make it knowne This sheweth the wonderfull abuse of the Church of Rome committed in holie thinges and thinges supposed by them to be holie The Sacrament of the Lordes Supper is most horribly prophaned of them which being instituted in remembrance of the death of Christ to assure vs of our spirituall communion in him and of our spirituall nourishment from him is often receiued of them to combine them together in wickednesse and to take securitie thereby one of another not to reueale the Treasons and Conspiracies that are plotted among them Thus it is in the supposed Sacrament of Pennance when they would reueale the hidden mischeefe and poysons of their hearts to the Priestes and Iesuits their Confessors they will seeme to doe it by way of confession that so it might be as it were locked vp and sealed with this Seale as a secret neuer to bee disclosed and discouered Thus is confession become nothing else but a couer of Treason and Rebellion But when our Brethren being afflicted in Conscience and wounded with the Darts of Satan and the poyson of sinne shall accuse themselues and confesse some haynous sinne committed that lyeth heauy vpon them and can find no comfort in concealing of it but greater horror thereby are brought to the gates of Hell and like to be swallowed vp in despaire when they shall I say confesse to the glorie of God and the shaming of themselues the wickednesse of their hearts and handes we are not to vtter it to others to their disgrace but by all meanes we can to couer it in secret and silence For as we f Iam. 5 15. are to acknowledge our faults one to another and to pray one for another so we are in loue to conceale the falles one of another and not to open them in choller and mallice to their reproach Lastly this reproueth our remisnesse and wretchlesnesse in dealing with recusant Papists the members of the Pope and Popish Church who because we would not offend them we speake of them honourably and giue them the Name of Catholikes and honour them with the Title of the Church whereas wee should giue them their right and call them by their propper Names of Idolaters and enemies of the Grace of God and disturbers of the State We haue many among vs that are ready to ioyne with them and to giue them the right hand of fellowship who can bee content to mingle together God and Baall Christ and Beliall light and darkenesse the Temple of God and an Idoll But as we beleeue the High-priest of Rome to be the very Anti-christ described in the Scripture so we also hold that the Church of Rome is a false and Bastard-Church and no true Church of Christ Iesus who not onely haue shaken but razed downe the very foundations of Religion maintaining the worshipping of Images and the merrits of workes by making a mocke of Christes merits and satisfaction by deuising other Mediators and by presuming to offer him vp an vnbloody Sacrifice to God the Father Let vs not therefore halt betweene g 1 Kin. 18 21 two opinions nor go about to reconcile those thinges which can neuer hold or hang together The false Apostles would ioyne the Law and the Gospell together the workes of the Law and the grace of Faith in the matter of Iustification which can neuer be the one destroying and pulling down the other because h Rom. 11 6. if it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke So we haue those that dreame of an vnion between Christ and Antichrist but if the Lord be God follow him if Baall be he then goe after him No man can serue both these Maisters so contrary one from the other so that whosoeuer cleaueth to the one forsaketh the other Verse 16. Not now as a Seruant but aboue a Seruant euen as a Brother c. Heere is a singular commendation of Onesimus expressed by many steps and degrees the one ascending and climbing aboue the other He was not onely as a Seruant but aboue a Seruant not onely as a Brother but a beloued Brother not onely deare to Paule but much more to Philemon himselfe This is so much the more worthy praise and commendation nay of wonder and admiration as the disposition of Seruants in those times was lewd and licentious who albeit they had good and godly Maisters yet they were light-fingered and light-footed and vpon euery occasion they were apt to run away from them i Gen. 16 6. as appeareth in Hagar that liued in the house of Abraham when Sarah began to deale roughly with her immediatlie she fled from her Seeing therefore it was so rare a thing among those kinde of men to finde any well minded and disposed the Apostle maketh the more account of him and would haue his Maister to make account of him As if he should reason thus Him who in Christ Iesus is become thy Brother thou oughtest carefully to tender and dearely to loue But Onesimus is now by his vnfained conuersion become thy Brother Therefore receiue him Heere we see the Apostle reasoneth for Onesimus to haue him receiued and respected aboue an ordinary Seruant because hee was truely conuerted and had in him a good measure of Grace and was become a true and sound Christian Doctrine 4. The more grace appeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs. We learne from hence that the more Grace appeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs whether
confesse it they haue great names and high Titles of honour giuen vnto them Å¿ Psal 82 6. I haue said ye are Gods and ye are all Children of the most high But ye shall die as a man and yee Princes shall fall like others If then there be so little difference in the life and lesse difference of the death of rich and poor of Maister and Seruant of Magistrate Subiect we shal find a greater equality and parity betweene them in holy and heauenly things We allow them to be as the elder brethren but they must know and consider that other are as the yonger bretheren of the house and haue the same priuiledges giuen vnto them For if the Lord Iesus be not ashamed to call vs all brethren shal they be ashamed to confesse one another to be equall in the matters of our redemption and saluation Shall the rich man disdaine the poore or the Prince his people or the Maister the seruant or the Free-man him that is bond seeing the Lord of life that is equall with his Father in might and Maiesty vouchsafeth to repute vs al in the place of Brethren Hence it is that he saith in the Gospell speaking of lodging the stranger in our houses of cloathing the naked with our Garments of feeding the hungry with our meats of visiting the prisoners with reliefe of refreshing the sicke with our comfort t Math. 25 40. Verily I say vnto you inasmuch as ye haue done it vnto one of the least of these my Brethren yee haue done it vnto mee Who are more disgraced and contemned in the worlde then such as are Strangers or Prisoners or naked in necessity Yet these poore contemptible ones are deare in his sight tender as the Apple of his eye and acknowledged of him to be his Bretheren Wee are not worthy therefore to bee esteemed of Christ if we regard not such as are in greatest price and cheefest account with him So then we must take heede that wee neuer despise and deride and disdain those that are called the Brethren of Christ nor refuse to imbrace them as our owne Brethren This is that vse which the Apostle vrgeth in setting downe the duties of Maisters u Ephes 6 9. Ye Maisters do the same thinges vnto them putting away threatning and know that euen your Maister also is in heauen neither is there respest of persons with him Where we see how hee moueth all Maisters to cast off all pride and high conceite of themselues and to Loue their faithfull seruants as their faithfull Bretheren It is not farre from this purpose which Iob speaketh touching his practise and behauiour toward his Seruants x Iob. 31 13 14 15. If I did contemne the iudgement of my seruant and of my Mayde when they did contend with me What then shall I do when God standeth vp And when he shall visit me What shall I answere He that hath made me in the womb hath he not made him Hath not he alone fashioned vs in the womb Where the holy man commendeth mildnesse in all Gouernors and reprooueth the exercise of cruelty toward their seruants Hee gaue them free libertie to declare and debate the matter with him to alledge what reasonable excuse soeuer they had considering with himselfe that we haue one common Creator and maker and are partakers of the same Nature and concluding thereuppon that albeit such as are bound to serue vs bee of low degree and despised in the world yet they neuerthelesse are our brethren So then such as are aduanced vnto high places and set in authority ouer others are not to trample them vnder their feete to despise and set them at naught to account them as vile persons in their eies but to vse them with mildnesse and to behaue themselues in al lowlines to rule their houses with al gentlenesse We must remember that wee haue a Maister in heauen so that albeit he hath exalted vs on high yet God standeth aboue all and is the Maister both of the Maister of the seruant O that this were well waighed and wisely considered and thoroughly learned of all Superiors that sit at the sterne and guide the ship The higher and greater our places are the lower and lesser ought our hearts to be If we be made Magistrates and Maisters and Rulers to gouern others let vs confesse they be Brethren with vs. This yeeldeth a profitable meditation to all Christian Gouernors when we behold any of our Inferiors thogh they were our bondmen in any trouble or distresse to thinke earnestly vpon these things If God haue made mee neuer so high when I see the people pinched with dearth and famine that they are ready to perish and famish in the streats for want of Bread I must knowe they are not Dogges though many make no better nor farther reckoning of them alas alas they are my Brethren When the Pestilence walketh in the darkenesse and the plague destroyeth at noone day that God striketh downe with his fearfull hand that thousands fall at our side and ten thousands at our right hand for he oftentimes maketh hauocke and bringeth desolation into many houses and families I must thinke it is no Murraine of Cattle they are my bretheren When I behold the oppression of the poore and the grinding of the faces of the needy that they are eaten vp as bread and sold as old shooes for nothing I must haue this feeling of their affliction they are not as Horsses or Asses ouer-laden with their burthen whom yet if it were so y Exo. 23 4 5. we were bound to pity raise vp though belonging to our enemy they are my poore and dear brethren whom God hath created whom Christ hath redeemed whom the holy spirit hath sanctified whom the word hath regenerated whom the church hath nourished whom the Angelles haue guarded and who together with me in the last day shall be glorified At that day shal God be all in al when Christ Iesus shall abolish all power and authority among men when Princes must resigne their kingdomes and cast downe their crownes at his feete then there shall be no more Prince and Subiects Pastor and people Mayster and Seruant Father and Sonne Husband and Wife These degrees indure but for a season which must haue end when Christ shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead If God haue made me a Maister and committed Seruants to my charge they must not be respected as my Swine or Oxen they are my Brethren and therefore I must looke vnto them in time of their sickenesse vse all good meanes for their deliuerance The Centurion in the gospell is commended that when his seruant fell sick was in danger of death he came to Christ z Math. 8 6. for help and succour If a man haue a Bullocke and beast that is diseased he will aske counsel seeke remedy much more ought we to deale mercifully with our seruants which God
our selues too deepely for other mens debtes our mindes bee distracted with pensiue thoughtes our hearts bee pierced with bitter Sorrowes and our bodyes be ●…st into loathsome prisons as it hath fallen out to very many before our eye● If Riotous liuers and prodigall persons that wast their wealth in vanit●… and spend their goods vnthriftily doe request and require vs to giue ou● words or to be bound in bands for them we are not bound to doe it by ●he Law of God nay we are bound not to doe it by the Lawe of God w● b 1 Tim. 5 8. are bound to prouide for our owne families or else wee haue denyed t●e Faith and are worse then Infidelles that are in the world and out of the ●hurch The Apostle in giuing of Almes and extending of our liberalitie ●owardes the poore Saints Would not c 2 Cor. 8 13. haue one ouer-burdened and another ●ased One oppressed and another released One pressed downe another to high ●ifted vppe The same proportion is to bee holden and obserued in this case Indeede d 1 Cor. 13. Loue seeketh not her owne but is bountifull Neuerthelesse it is no fruite of Loue required to bee in vs that one should bee greeued and another eased that one should bee hindered and another helped Vse 3. Lastly seeing it is not vnlawfull or forbidden to binde a mans selfe by band or otherwise to another it ought to teach all Creditors and Lenders not to be rough and rigorous ouer a surety No cruelty toward any is lawfull If it be a Malefactor that hath committed an heynous crime and deserueth the punishment of death he is not to bee proceeded against with a desire of priuate reuenge and a satisfying of our cruell minde and a thirsting after blood If it be a Debter that is fallen into decay hee is to bee dealt withall in Mercie and Commisseration not with Rigour and Seueritie If then wee are to deale so with a Debter much more with a surety When we see a man that hath beene well aduised in it and circumspect to preuent daungers and foresee damages so farre as the eye of mans vnderstanding and iudgment can reach we ought not to take aduantage of his error but to shew him what fauour possibly we can If thou seest him fallen into thy hands deale with al mercifulnesse toward him and consider not so much what thou mayst do by Law as what thou oughtest to do in loue neyther thinke what rigour of Iustice will permit but what the right of equity will allow thee to do It is a true saying e Terent. in Heautont act 4. scen 5. that the Heathen saw into Extreamity of Law is oftentimes the greatest iniury and want of Charity that can bee Hence it is that Salomon exhorteth sureties to deale wisely to ridde themselues out of daunger and to vse all lawfull meanes to free themselues from trouble and not delay to promote and procure their owne good Prou. 6 3. My Sonne if thou be surety for thy Neighbour do this now and deliuer thy selfe seeing thou art come into the hand of thy neighbor go and humble thy selfe and sollicit thy friends He would neuer giue this deuise and direction what hee should do that as ensnared and entrapped by suretyship vnlesse the Creditor were to be drawne to shew pitty Now in these words g Three rules to be obserued of them that haue bin entangled by rash suretiship he giueth a three-fold counsell what to doe and how to behaue our selues when we are entangled with rash suretiship First wee must not sit still or neglect the opportunity to deliuer our selues from danger we must submit our selues to him to whom we are bounde and into whose power thou art fallen and at whose mercie thou standest craue pardon and patience at his hands request him earnestly to bee friendly and fauourable toward thee in releeuing or releasing thee and letting of thee alone Say vnto him and say it in trueth of thy heart and with full purpose of performing Doubt not of your debt be content for a while and God willing I will discharge all at the last Secondly we are willed and warned to go to our friend or to him whom wee tooke for our friend when wee became surety for him and to vrge him instantly to pay his owne Debt and discharge thee of the danger without delay tell him it is for his cause that thou endurest this trouble and bearest this burthen and that for dooing good to him thou sufferest and sustainest this losse will him to consid●… of thy kindnesse that haddest not the power to deny the engaging of thy ●elfe to helpe him in his necessity Thirdly we are admonished and aduised to go to our friends that lou● vs and desire our good and are greatly greeued for our affliction entreat●…g them to pitty our case pardon our negligence and helpe vs out of these b●iars in which wee are entangled hoping neuer to come into the like inco●…berances againe These are the wayes that we are to take and the pathe● that we are to walke in In the practise of them being sanctified to our vse we may looke for a blessing from God and hope to finde comfort in our owne hearts But if thou thinke to escape the handes of thy Creditors by hyding or absenting of thy selfe from him or standing out against him or holding sute with him and answearing him at the Law thou art deceyued Thou shalt better prouide for thine owne peace and security by submitting thy selfe to the party to whom thou art bound by intreating the person for whom thou art bound and by soliciting thy friends to consider thy case and their owne in thee All this doth Salomon not onely counsell vs to do but to do it speedily and to take little rest vntill wee be deliuered from this daunger saying h Prou. 6 4 5 Giue no sleepe to thine eyes nor slumber to thine eye lids deliuer thy selfe as a Roe from the hand of the Hunter as a Bird from the hande of the Fowler Heereunto accordeth and agreeth the saying of Christ our Sauiour i Luke 12 58 While thou goest with thine aduersarie to the Ruler as thou art in the way giue dilligence in the way that thou mayest bee deliuered from him least hee draw thee to the Iudge and the Iudge deliuer thee to the Iaylour and the Iaylour cast thee into prison I tell thee thou shalt not depart thence till thou hast payde the vtmost Mite There is nothing to bee gotten by opposing of our selues against such as may hurt vs and by keeping out of their sight with a purpose to defraude them and to defend our selues It is most true which Salomon speaketh in another place k Prou. 22 7. The Rich ruleth the poore and the borrower is Seruaunt to the Man that lendeth Whereby hee meaneth that commonly it falleth out among men that the rich ouer-rule the poore and that the Debters are
disease which we desire to haue remoued that driueth vs to the Phisitian And we haue no promise to obtaine earthly thinges except we seeke them as we ought to seeke them and follow the right manner that God hath left vnto vs to find them Many seeke after them and pray for them but they do not obtaine because they aske amisse It is our duty not onely to pray for lawfull thinges but also in a lawfull manner A man may do a good thing after an euill manner it is in our actions so it may be in our prayers An indirect and vnsanctified order may marre and corrupt a good and godly prayer To conclude therefore let vs know that this grace and fauour of God so often remembred in Paules Epistles and so often craued and prayed for to be bestowed vpon the Saints is onely able to giue satisfaction and contentment vnto the soule to stay and rest vpon and therefore we ought aboue all other thinges to labour earnestly to feele it in our hearts Indeed it seemeth nothing and base in his eyes that hath it not but when a man once knoweth the worth and value of it and tasteth the sweet comforts of it within him he is ready to sell all that he hath to enioy it and retaine it he is content to renounce and forsake all Dignity and Honour all Glory and Praise all Health and Beauty all Friends and Fauour all Wealth and Treasure all Ioy and Delight all Mirth and Melody yea Brethren and Sisters and Lands and Wife and Children and all thinges that may be deare vnto him rather then depart from this Iewell of grace farre in price aboue all the Iewels of this World It is with vs in respect of spirituall thinges as it fareth with the buyer while he is in buying his commodity before he is possessed of it according to the discription of Salomon Prou. 20. i Prou 20 14. It is naught it is naught saith the buyer but when he is gone apart he boasteth He diminisheth the goodnesse of it he saith it is to much it is not worth the money you aske for it but when he hath purchased and possesseth it he praiseth his penniworths and iudgeth it better then his money So is it with all Heauenly graces so long as we are destitute of them we thinke them not worth our labour and trauel seeking and enioying we esteem euery houre too much that is spent in following the meanes appointed to obtaine them and albeit God call vnto vs k Esay 55 1 2. to come to buy and eate to come I say and buy Wine and Milke without Siluer without mony yet we haue no eares to heare nor leisure to attend nor harts to consider of his calling But when once we haue found thē and know the iust price and value of them we would not loose them for all the World nor for a thousand worldes if they were offered vnto vs nay we are willing to sell all we haue to haue them continue and abide with vs according to the counsell of the same Salomon Prou. 23 23. l Prou 23 23. Buy the truth but sell it not likewise wisedome and instruction and vnderstanding Let vs therefore grow in loue with this grace of God that we may haue our hearts established with it Let vs do that now which wee would do at the last gaspe and breath Then we are ready to renounce the World and to preferre one drop of grace and faith before a Kingdome Let vs now begin to learne wisedome let vs prostrate our selues before the Throne of grace let vs neuer giue rest to our soules vntill we find it and let vs sue vnto him that is the Author and Fountaine of all grace to wit Christ Iesus to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be all glory and praise for euer Amen FINIS A Table of the principall Contents of this Booke A ABraham receiued Angels page 281. Hee and Lot reconciled 252 253 Absence of the Pastour hurtfull 196 Absence of the people from the Pastor 202. reasons against it 203 Abuse of the Ministers 397 Abuse of Gods prouidence 299 Accepting of personnes 189. not with God 331 Acount of our faith must be giuen 91 92 Action differs from euill in it 307 Admonition 207 Adoration of Saints 146 Adulterer penitent is no adulterer 318 Affect such as haue most grace 186 Affection betweene Pastor and people 189 Afflicted are not greatest sinners 13 Afflictions serue for confirmation of others 12. common to godly and vngodly 19. they are profitable 207 Agreement betweene Paul and Iames in matter of Iustification 191 192 All things not to be done of al. 11 Almes houses 156 Almes must be chearefull 285 Amen 494 Anabaptists 265 367 387 Apphia Philemons wife 8 Appeare all must before God 337 Apostataes 486 Application 76 Archippus 8 Assurance of faith no Doctrine of presumption 180 Assemblies of the Church 84. they are beasts that reiect them 85 Assurances lawfull 385 Aske no vnlawfull thing of others 418 Atheists 209 Attention required 219. three benefits of it ibid. Authoritie giuen to the Ministers 163. they must not abuse it 170 Authoritie absolute no man hath 419 B Backbiters 427. the sorts of them 427 428 Back-sliders 132 150 491. they proue worse then others 486 Bands where the greatest are should be most loue 337. the more bandes are broken the greater sinne 341 Good Beginninges helpe not without proceeding 132 Bellarmines doctrine of Princes 267 Benefit of others is to bee sought 135. Benefits that come by instruction 40 Benefit bestowed vpon Saints shall not be lost 280 Better too forward then backward 75 Birth-day 424 Blessed that suffer for the truth 14. not all that heare 242 Blessed that liue in Gods fauour 57 Blessings are to be craued from GOD in Christ 61. ascribe them not our selus 63 Blemishes of body no sinnes 315. to be patiently borne 316 Blind zeale See zeale Blind deuotion 288 Blind not to be discouraged 311 Blindnesse of minde a sinne 310 311 wherein it differs from blindnesse of body Ibid. Blood of the Martirs 13 Body must bow to God 94 Bondage of the wicked 115 Bond-Seruants whether they may fly Epist Dedicat. Brother who is 256 Borrowers often Theeues 412 Bretheren faithfull are 33● They are bound to loue each other 342 Brownists 177 C Calling giuen of God 336. Euery minister hath two callings 268 Canker of the Common-wealth 381 Canonized Saints 120 Cause makes a Martyr 19 Care two-fold 504. It must be had of euery member 189 Censurers of the Church 168 Chaplaines 200 Chance 299 Charity 315 256 Christ reiecteth none how base soeuer 5 Christ and the faithfull one body 16. he accounts our sufferings his 16. He is the Obiect of our Faith 106. Our saluation is wholly wrought by him Ibid He is true God 107 Christ is harboured in his members 145 446. he is the annointed of the father 463. Why he is called Lord. 493.
The vse of it 496 Christians who they be 496. The true Christian hath faith and loue 100. He must haue more then Faith 103. He is onely a free man 114. Wherein it standeth 115. bound to serue the Church 272 Christians are not enemies to States and Common-wealthes 263. They are the onely friends of Princes 269 A good Christian a good Subiect 267 Chistian pollicy 265 Cherish good things 481 Cheerefulnesse See Willingnesse Children should not hear an euil word 45 Children of God neuer voide of the fruits of faith 122 Children deformed destroyed by the Heathen 157 Children must obey parents 343 Church meetings to be frequented 30 Church and Commonwealth compared to man 36 Church of Rome teacheth that faith may be without charity 104. It is a Tyrant 177 Our Church hath many Saints 120 Church is Christs schoole 128. it shal neuer perish 487 Church accused of sedition 264 Church of Rome no true Church 322 Ciuill honest men 97 503 Circumcision 392 Comparison betweene Idolatry olde and new 63 64 Compassion 114. it is to bee shewed to the ignorant 177 Company of euill persons 94. 123 150. of the godly to be delighted in 439 Communion ought to be among al saints 113. It standeth in two things 114. We must delight in it 123. it takes not away priuate possessions 365 A Communion among the vngodly 124 Communion is with Christ and among our selues 149 Communion one with another what it teacheth 348 357 Communion with Christ wherein it consisteth 349 All things Common among friends See friends Comfort to all that employ their guifts 140 141. Comfort to the Ministers 167 278. and to the people 279 Comfort in losses 307. not to be vexed through impaciency 310 The Colliers Faith 77 78 Confession of faith necessary 86. it hath promise of reward 87. It is a fruite of faith ibid. it is required of all 89 Confession is as our faith 91 Confession of penitents not to be reueiled See Penitents confession Cōfirmation in the truth necessary 131 Coniunction among the faithfull in 3. things 123 Contemners of Gods ordinances 130. and of the weake Brother 479 Conscience of our companie 350 Contentation 370. Rules seruing to worke it ibid. Conuerted must seek to conuert others 69 Course of the Gospell cannot bee stopped 1 Conuersion of a man alters him quite 227 Contempt of prayer 454 Couetousnesse 354 372 409 504. the sorts of it ibid. it is the root of all euil ibid. Couenants in writing See Obligations Cruelty toward Transgressors 174 Cursed speaking 475 Creditors not to be rigorous 383 410 Curteous speeches become the Saints 471. against them that pinch curtesie who shall beginne them 474. against such as perform them only outwardly ibid. D Daungerous to contemne preaching of the word 214. Day-laborer 410 Despise not any how vile soeuer 5 Deuils faith what it is 78 107. many com behind them 79 108. they haue no hope of mercy ibid. they knowe they are reserued to wrath ibid. they teach the reprobate a lesson which thēselus could neuer learne 80. they do Gods will by constraint 288. what are their baits 489. they corrupt Gods worship 499 Deuil signifieth a false accuser 144 Degrees of faith 81 Defence of the godly wee must vndertake 94 Desire the best gifts 149 464 Description of the iniquitie of our times 150 151 178 Deputies cannot discharge vs. 200 Departers out of the Church 220 Delight must be in Gods seruice 287 Death of the godly sudden ofttimes 308 Dead faith 258 259 Deare they must be to vs that haue gained vs to the faith 394 Deformed haue comfort 311 Delight not in the vngodly 318 Debts to be paid 389. such as do not are theeues ibid. they are not to be eagerly exacted from the poore 407. they are of two sorts 246 Degrees in submitting our selues to the word 401 Despaire not of any mans saluation 430 three Meditations about it 431 Deserts See Merits Demas 484 Disgrace it is not to be cast in prison for the Gospels sake 12 Difference betweene the godly and vngodly 24. between Pastors and hyrelings 72. between Gods loue of the elect and of the reprobat 86. between beleeuing God and in God 107. between Heathnish and christian religion 156. between that which penitent persons haue bin and are 318. between sinner sinner 480 between the godly and hipocrites 486 Dislike of our selues is the first steppe to grace 52 Discretion required in the minister 175 Diuision of parishes hath footing in the word 198 Diligent teaching required 200 No Disgrace to do seruice to the Saints 276 Disorder in the world ouerturns not gods prouidence 298. God ordereth it 299 Doubts must bee remoued by the minister 362 Doubtfull things must bee taken in the best part 429 Duties are better done by help of others then alone 21 Duties to be performed willingly 285 Duties of godlines chiefly to bee regarded 503. E Earthly things must be set after heauenly 500 Education of children in godlines 43 Elect shal in Gods good time be called 7 Elect called Saints and why 86 Enuy not the proceeding of others 75. 153. who are most giuen to it Ib. reason why we should not enuie others 76 Enuie what it is 133. most hurtful to him that hath it ibid. Enemies to a good name 98. Enimies of the Church prosper not 278 280 Enimies to the Ministers are enimies to God 398 Encrease in good things is required 226 324 483. seeing we are in the way to the kingdome 127 Entising to euill 152 153 Enquire out such as want 161 Enquire which way to do good 281 423 Entrance of sin into the world 302 Epistle to Philemon when written 466 Epicures 299 Equality in christ among beleeuers 331 Esteem of penitent persons as they are 314. Euil cannot bee defended by Gods prouidence 300 Execution for treason not religiō 19 20 Exhorting one another required 39 152 260. Examine our selues whether sanctified 122 Examples corrupt not to be folowd 189 Exacting our own not alwaies warrantable 412. F Faith is the hand of the soul 53. it stands in particular application 66 76 80. no comfort without this 77. particular faith required of euerie one 77 Faith of the Church of Rome what it is 77. it is grounded vpon ignorance 78 No faith where no knowledge 78 Faith hath sundry degrees 8● 110. it must not be kept to our selues 92 Faith and Loue commend a man to god 95. they perfect a Christian ibid. they are marks of election ibid. they go together 99. they are as the tree and fruit ibid being seuerd they lose their names natures 100. he is no true Christian that separates them 100 Faith is prooued and tryed by our loue and loue by our Faith 101. How it dooth iustifie 103. It is not built on men 487 What true faith is 106 Faith in the Saints Popish Doctrin 208 Faith is wrought by the preaching of the word ●09 It is ioyned with repentance Ibid. It teacheth to depend vpon God