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A03342 CVIII lectures vpon the fourth of Iohn Preached at Ashby-Delazouch in Leicester-shire. By that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ. Arthur Hildersam.; Lectures upon the fourth of John Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 13462; ESTC S119430 700,546 622

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condemnation If 〈◊〉 saith the Apostle 1. Pet. 4 11. let him speake as the oracles of God 〈◊〉 is vsually a slander Many will obiect against the Preacher thus I know he meant me yea he so●…spake as many in the Church knew hee meant me and what call you this but malice if he had loued me he would haue told me in priuate To these men I say 1. A Minister is not bound in reproouing sinne to beate the ayre but he may in his reproofes meane and intend to touch such as heare him yea it is his duty to bring his doctrine home as particularly as he can to the conscience of euery one that heares him like a good steward to giue vnto euery one his owne portion Luke 12. 42. 2. Admit he had spoken out of malice yet if he haue spoken nothing but vpon good warrant of Gods Word and thy heart be so disquieted by it surely thy case is fearefull Gods people haue euer beene wont to finde comfort in his Word euen in that part of it that hath most galled them by discouering to them their sinnes Let the righteous smite me saith Dauid Psal. 141. 5. it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprooue me it shall be as an excellent oyle And thy heart tells thee thou feelest no comfort in it but it vexeth thee so that were it not for such and such an alehouse where thou mayest finde company of thine owne minde that will take thy part in railing and scorning of the Preacher thou shouldst not know what to doe surely thy case is fearefull If thou hadst any grace in thy heart the Word of God would not be so bitter vnto thee Doe not my words saith the Lord Mic. 2. 7. doe good to him that walketh uprightly Doe they not doe him good at the heart do they not cheere and comfort him and because thou maist the better discerne of thine owne case in another mans person then in thine owne I will shew thee in a few examples what thy state is Cain was such a one as thou art for he because he could not be as well accepted as well thought on for his Religion as his brother was Gen. 4. 5. went away from Gods worship in a rage and hi●… countenance fell downe Ahab was such a one as thou art for he because Eliah and Micaiah dealt faithfully with him in their Ministry and effectually discouered to him his sins went neuer from their Ministry but with a discontented and vexed heart he counted them his enemies and hated them 1. King 21. ●…0 and 22. 8. The man that was possessed with a Legion of diuels was in thy case for he being in the Synagogue where Christ preached was tormented by his Ministry Luke 4. 33 34. Mar. 5. 79. Though Christ had not spoken to him in particular euer a word or once medled with him Finally the cursed Iewes that stoned blessed Stephen to death were in thy case for when they heard Stephen Acts 7. 54. They were cut to the heart and they gnashed vpon him with their teeth Lastly this serueth to discouer the sinne of such as are alwaies discontented with the length of the Sabbath and grudge that the Lord should haue one whole day in a weeke allowed vnto him That would haue the Sabbath day but foure houres long at the most euen no longer then the time is that is spent at Church vpon that day That say in their hearts as Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be done that wee may set forth wheat making the Ephah small and the Shekell great and with them Mal. 1. 3. Behold what a wearines is it What a tedious thing is it to keepe a Sabbath for a whole day whereas God hath expresly commanded Exod 20. 10. That on the seuenth 〈◊〉 should doe no manner of worke but keepe it holy vnto him 〈◊〉 giuen sixe dayes to doe all that we haue to doe in and euen on the Sabbath on his owne seuenth part of the weeke allowed vs to doe workes of present necessity And what is the true cause why the Sabbath seemes to vs so long a day aboue any other Surely because we take no delight in it nor in the workes and duties of it we doe not call the Sabbath a delight as we ought to doe Esay 58. 1●… The second Vse that this which we haue heard of the second property of 〈◊〉 zeale serueth vnto is to exhort all Gods seruants to striue against that vncheerefulnesse that they are so much subiect vnto and to labour to serue God with ioy and gladnesse of heart Say vnto thy soule as Dauid did Psal 42. 11. Why art thou so heauy O my soule and why art thou so disquieted within me Know thou that euen when thou hast most cause to be humbled and deiected in thy selfe through any affliction either outward or inward yet euen then thou art bound to striue against thy vncheerefulnesse when thou goest to doe any seruice vnto God euen in thy trembling thou shouldest reioyce Psal. 2. 11. Consider with thy selfe how great reason thou hast to doe so 1. No seruice pleaseth God so well as that which his people doe performe cheerefully and with ioy Deut. 28. 47 48. Because thou seruedst not the Lord thy God with ioyfulnesse and with gladnesse of heart for the abundance of all things therefore thou shalt serue thine enemies which the Lord shall send against thee 2. The Lord is not so strict and seuere as to reiect the seruice that with a good heart we doe vnto him for the infirmities and failings that he doth discerne in it but delights in it notwithstanding Let me heare thy voice for sweet is thy voice Cant. 2. 14. And this is a iust cause of encouragement to all that feare God not onely to doe seruice vnto him but to doe it cheerefully and with gladnesse of heart As for me saith Dauid Psal. 5. 7. I will come into thy house in the multitude of thy mercy and 130. 3. 4. If thou Lord shouldst marke iniquities O Lord who should stand But there is forgiuenesse with thee that thou maist be feared 3. Thou hast cause to doubt the soundnesse of thy heart if thou canst finde no sweetnesse nor comfort in Gods Word and worship for of the godly and vpright-hearted it is oft noted that the Word of God was sweeter to them then the hony or the hony combe Psalme 9. 10. That they reioyced because with an vpright heart they had offered willingly vnto the Lord 1. Chron. 29. 9. The righteous shall be glad in the Lord and shall trust in him and all the vpright in heart shall glory Psal. 64. 10. Lecture the eight and fiftieth Iuly 17. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXXII XXXIV FOlloweth the third Property of true zeale to be obserued in this example of our blessed Sauiour He that hath true zeale reioyceth in the zeale and forwardnesse of others For this was as we heard one cause that made our Sauiour to forget both hunger
duty that we must performe vnto others First for our selues We are to be exhorted that we would loue Church-meetings and delight more in them and be more thankfull to God for them than we haue hitherto been Labour for that affection that Dauid had Psal. 122. 1. I was glad when they said vnto me Let vs goe vnto the house of the Lord. Yea pray for the continuance of our solemne Assemblies both here and in other places of the Countrey This was also Dauids heart Psal. 122. 6. Pray for the peace of Ierusalem they shall prosper that loue thee And marke the Reasons Vers. 8 9. For my brethren and Companions sakes I will now say Peace be within thee Because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek thy good And therefore labour to walk worthy of this blessing and to profit by it For no enemy can put downe our meetings till God for our sinnes do put them downe Lam. 2. 6. He hath destroyed his Tabernacle as a garden he hath destroyed his Congregation Secondly concerning others there are two duties we are to be exhorted vnto 1. That euery one of you would call vpon his Neighbour and Friend and draw them to frequent the Church-assemblies When the Lord had prophesied Esay 2. 2. that vnder the dayes of the Gospell All nations should flow vnto the house of the Lord he addeth Vers. 3. that this should be the meane to draw so many to his house Many people shall go and say Come let vs go vp to the house of the Lord. 2. Masters of Families and Parents are to be exhorted that they would not think it sufficient to come to Church themselues but see that their children and seruants come also We should suffer none to attend vs in our owne house that will not attend and go with vs to Gods house Exod. 20. 10. Sonne Daughter Man Maid Stranger Iosh. 24. 15. I and my house will serue the Lord. Dauid speaketh of this as of one of the greatest comforts he had had vpon earth Psal. 42. 4. That he had gone with a multitude and led them into the house of God and Psal. 101. 7. There shall no deceitfull person dwell in mine house Sure he would much more haue said there shall no prophane contemner of Religion dwell in my house The second vse of the Doctrine is for reproofe And there be two sorts of men that are to be reproued by this Doctrine 1. Such as neglect the Church-assemblies in all the parts of Gods worship and se●…uice 2. Such as separate themselues from the Church-assemblies in some parts of Gods publike worship Of the first kind there are foure sorts 1. Such as separate from our Church-assemblies vpon pretence of the corruptions that are in them These are marked with a black coale by Iude vers 19. These be they who separate themselues sensuall hauing not the spirit But herein Christians must learne wisely to distinguish betweene such as are vniustly separated by others from the Church-assemblies and such as voluntarily separate themselues these deserue to be called Schismaticks and not the other Neither are they to be accounted Schismaticks as though they dare not be agents or practisers of any corruption that remaineth in the Church yet can beare and tolerate them as burdens without forsaking the Church for them To this first sort I will say no more but wish them well to weigh the examples of Gods seruants that haue been mentioned in this doctrine which frequented so diligently the publike worship of God vsed in Ierusalem when there were farre greater corruptions both in the Priests and people and worship it selfe than can be found in ours 2 Such as absent themselues from the Church-meetings out of respect they haue to their profit they must needs spend some Sabbaths in going to Faires they must go iournies on that day sometimes and make bargaines c. they cannot spare any time from the works of their calling to come to Lectures on the week day They cannot get their liuing they say by going to Church and when they do come to Church on the Sabbath they cannot bring their whole family with them they must leaue some behinde them to looke to their houses for feare of robbing These are like those Mal. 3. 14 that said It is i●… vaine to serue God and what profit is it that we haue kept his ordinances To these I say no more but this First if thou couldest come to the Church either on the Sabbath or week day with an vpright heart thou shouldest not need to feare that that would make thee poorer The Lord God would be a sunne and shield vnto thee no good thing would he with-hold from thee Psalme 84. 11. Secondly though thou may in sundry cases of necessity leaue some at home when thou commest to Church yet take heed thou pretend not necessity where none is For if thou dare leaue thy house empty when thou goest to a Faire or to haruest worke and canst trust God with keeping of it then and darest not do so on the Sabbath when thou commest to serue God be thou assured thy heart is naught and God will not hold thee innocent For God hath made a further promise to thee for keeping of thine house when thou leauest it vpon this occasion than at any other time Neither shall any man desire thy land when thou shalt goe to appeare before the Lord thy God thrice in a yeare Exod. 34. 24. 3 Such as though they haue nothing to do if their finger be sore or their head do butake will absent themselues I would haue such to remember the example of Hezechiah who in three dayes after he had been sick of a most painfull and mortall disease went into the Temple Esa. 38. 22. and the woman that on the Sabbath resorted to the Synagogue though she had had a spirit of infirmity eighteene yeares Luke 13. 10 11. And because the true cause of their absence is for that they find no comfort nor take any delight in our Church-exercises I would haue them to consider that there is no one more certaine signe of a dead heart void of all grace and sense of Gods loue than this not to be able to take any delight in his publike worship as may appeare by the contrary in these two places Psal. 84. 12. Dauid loued Gods Tabernacles so well because his heart and his flesh reioyced in the liuing God And 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. Such as haue tasted how sweet the Lord is will desire the sincere milke of the Word And know thou that as thou carest not for appearing in the Assemblies of the righteous in this life so hast thou cause to feare that thou shalt not stand in the Assembly of the righteous in the life to come Psal. 1. 5. when thou wilt esteeme better of them than now thou dost 4 Such as absent themselues vpon this pretence that they can serue God as well and spend their time
belieued and receiued in religion vpon the credit and authority of any man 1●…0 B. Baptisme It is both vnprofitable and hurtfull to the wicked 5. The whole congregation should continue together at the Administration of it 120. It should be administred in the publike assembly 12●… Blessing The ecclesiasticall Blessing pronounced by the Minister is not to be neglected ibid. What behauiour is fittest for the people to vse then 126. Body Care is to be had euen of our body and of the body of our neighbour 256 257. The sin of them that by disorder ouer throw their health 258. God requires bodily seruice of vs as well as spirituall 189. 190. Christ in the daies of his flesh shewed his miraculous power most in curing the bodies of men 445. Brownists See Church Their sinne is great in separating from our Churches 1●…7 C. Calling A man may be soundly religious and yet follow diligently his wordly Calling 238. Cautions for them that leaue the workes of their Calling to follow Sermons on the weeke daies 2●…0 Calling how far it may be neglected ibid. Calling to the Ministry Wherein the inward calling doth principally consist 261. Catechising It is a profitable and necessary duty of the Minister 205. Censures of the Church The neglect of them towards scandalous sinners is a great contempt done to Gods Worship 132 133. Ceremonies Difference in iudgement about Ceremonies should not alienate the affections of brethren 301. 303. 30●… Ceremoniall Law See Worship It was a carnall Worship 184 185. It was abrogated at Christs Passion 188. The Ceremonies were shadowes and we haue haue in our Worship the substance of that that was signified by them 186. 188. Popery exceeds iudaisme in Ceremonies and therein discouers much hypocrisie 197 198 Certainty in Religion The Elect and such as haue good hearts may attaine vnto it 140 212. 214. Meanes whereby we may attaine to it 140. Comfort for Gods people that complaine they want it 215. All men are bound to seeke for it 138. 141. They that haue historicall faith are certainely perswaded of whatsoeuer God hath reuealed in his Word 332. The faithfull are certaine that the Scripture is the Word of God and that it is God himselfe that speaketh to them in his Word 349. Certainty of saluation All the faithfull are not in the same measure certaine of their saluation 333. They that haue the greatest certainty are not without al doubts distrusts 333. 348. 349. Nor feele this certainty at all times 336. They that haue most assurance must yet liue in feare 334. Yet may the faithfull in this life be certaine of their saluation 334. 341. All are bound to seeke for this certainty 341. 342. The meanes wherby it may be obtained 343 The notes wherby true assurance may be discerned from that which is counterfeit 345 Comfort to the faithfull that complaine they want it 215 216. Cheerefulnesse Required in all the duties of Gods seruice 263 It is a sin in the faithfull to be vncheerefull ●…0 They haue iust cause to be cheerefull and to serue God willingly notwithstanding their infirmities 265 266. 461. Chambering See Dalliance Children They should seeke to requite their parents loue 391. Christ. He is the greatest gift that euer God gaue to man 11. How far He was abased for our sakes 12. Why he is called Christ and Messiah 200. 202. The benefit and merit of his death belongs not to all men 329. Yet is it necessary that the benefit men receiued by him should be expressed in most generall tearmes 330. Poore sinners should go boldly to him in all their distresses 450. We should not rest contented with any blessing till we haue Christ 14. Notes to know whether Christ be ours 15. He did constantly vse prayer and other parts of Gods worship and why 163 164. He is in the ministry of the Word to be offred vnto all in a most generall manner 330. Church Papists giue more credit to it then to the Word 150. 348. We may not separate from a true Church that enioyes the Word and professeth the Doctrine of saluation for the corruptions that are in it 165 166. 384 385. Yet may we not communicate with a true Church in any corruption 167. Euery man is bound to ioyne himselfe vnto and to be a member of the true Church 138 The profession of the true Doctrine of Christ is the only proper and certaine note of the true Church 167. How farre forth the testimony of the Church helpes to bring vs to faith 348 349. Church-Assemblies They are a meanes of our protection safety from all dangers 382. The most publike and solemne Church-Assemblies are greatly to be esteemed and frequented 129. 153. The sin of such as neglect them 128. The greatest are hound to carry themselues reuerently in them 117. Circumcision What it signified 180. Comfort To be found in Christ in all our distresses 450 No worldly thing can yeeld comfort to the distressed in minde 44 45. The Spirit of grace and regeneration is able to doe it abundantly and nothing else 46. They that feare God haue cause to be comfortable and vpon what grounds 90. Fine rules of comfort for such as are afflicted in minde 346 347. See Prayer Commonnesse of sin Sin is neuer the lesse dangerous to a man be-because it is generall 74. 384. How to carry our selues in euill times when foule sins grow common generall 428 429 It should trouble vs and cause vs to looke for some common calamity ibid. Company Haunting bad company argues a bad heart 87 What they should doe that liue in euill times and places 429. Common-Wealth The true causes why God spares our land though sin abound in it 429. Conference Cautions for them that conferre and moue questions of Religion 499 500. Confession The properties required to true confession 85. No man is bound to acknowledge all his sins to a priest 102. He that is truly penitent will be ready to acknowledge his sin euen vnto men when he is charged with it 103. It is profitable and necessary to confesse some sins euen vnto men dangerous to hide them 103 104. Conscience A good Conscience will breed vnspeakeable peace and ioy 437. 438. And assurance of a mans saluation 343. Constancie Constancie in obedience a good signe 481. Contentment Grace breeds Contentment 3. Controuersies Euery Christian is not bound to study controuersies nor to meddle with them 136. Yet some are 137. Conuersion No man by nature can doe any thing to helpe forward his owne conuersion 20. It is a miraculous worke of God 29. They that are truly religious will be carefull to w●…nne others to God 224. 235. Who are most charged and haue most opportunity to do good this way 236. Note of a true Conuert 239. True Conuerts shew great respect reuerence vnto their Ministers 215. Conuersion of man depends on Gods free grace 250. Foure things required in them that would win others to God 236. Priuate Christians
day 3. It is his ordinance that the Word should be preached interpreted and applyed in our publike assemblies Eccl. 4. 17. When thou goest into the house of God be more ready to heare c. Acts 15. 21. Moses after he was read was preached in the Synagogue euery Sabboth day 4. It is his ordinance that the Lords Supper should be administred in the publike assemblies It was not onely the custome of the people of God in Corinth to receiue this Sacrament in the Church and place of their publike assemblies as is plaine by that which the Apostle writeth 1. Cor. 11. 22. but they are also charged and commanded by him so to doe verse 33. 34 Wherefore my brethren when yee come together to eat the Lords Supper he meanes as appeares plainely by that which went before tarry one for another And if any man hunger let him eate at home that yee come not together vnto condemnation 5. It is his ordinance that Baptisme should bee administred in the publike assemblies as Iohn did administer it in a solemne assembly so our Sauiour when he desired it sent not for Iohn to come to him to Nazaret to administer it but came though along iourney fourteene Dutch miles as Geographers thinke from Nazaret to Bethabara where Iohn vsed to baptize Matth. 3. 13. 6. It is Gods ordinance that in our publike assemblies Psalmes should be sung for as it is euident by their titles that they were penned for the vse of the whole Church in the most solemne worship of God so were they vsed accordingly not onely by Dauid 1. Chron. 16. 4. 7. and Iehosaphat 2. Chron. 20. 21. 22. and Iehu did 2. Chron. 33. 15. and Hezekiah 2. Chron. 29. 30. but by our blessed Sauiour himselfe also at the celebration of the Passeouer and of his holy Supper Matth. 26. 38. yea it is plaine by Psal. 81. 4. that there was a direct commandement and law of God that required them so to doe 7. It is his ordinance that the Minister should dismisse the congregation by pronouncing Gods blessing vpon them Num. 6. 23. Deut. 10. 8. and 21. 5. So that to refuse to come to any part of Gods publike worship or to goe away before all is done is a disgrace and contempt done to the ordinance of God The fourth generall rule is this we must when we are present ioyne with the congregation in all the parts of Gods worship and doe as the congregation doth I speake not of euery congregation but of a congregation of the faithfull of a congregation that is instructed and reformed according to the Word of God It makes much for the comelinesse and reuerence of Gods worship that all things in the Congregation be done in good order and without confusion 1. Cor. 14. 40. Paul being absent from them reioyced to thinke vpon the reuerend and goodly order that was in the assemblies of the Colossians Col. 2. 5. And it is a principall part of the good order that should be in the Congregation when they all come together and goe together pray together sing together and kneele together In a word when euery part of Gods worship is so performed by the Congregation as if the whole Congregation were but one man and on the other side it is a great confusion when while some are hearing others are praying some sing and some are silent Therefore it is said Nehem. 8. 1. All the people assembled themselues as one man and Acts 2. 46. They continued dayly in the Temple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with ioynt consent as if they had had all but one soule And it is not fit for any Christian either to come short of or goe beyond the Congregation in gestures of reuerence and deuotion in the publike worship of God The fift and last generall rule is this we must teach our seruants and children to shew reuerence to the Sanctuary and publike worship of God Men may not suffer their children and seruants to shew contempt vnto it I shewed you the last day that the keeping of the Sabboth and reuerence of the Sanctuary are twice coupled together Leuit. 19. 30. and 26. 2. Because no man can keepe the Sabbath well that doth not reuerence the Sanctuary And for the Sabbath you know God counts vs not obseruers of it vnlesse we see to it that our children and seruants obserue it also Exod. 20. 11. Let no man say If I my selfe reuerence Gods Sanctuary it is no matter though I keepe in my house such as despise it Abraham had beene neuer the better nor the more assured of Gods blessing for seruing God himselfe if he had not commanded his sonnes and his houshold after him to doe so too Gen. 18. 19. Dauid vowed vnto God that no deceitfull person that had a hollow heart towards Religion should dwell in his house Psal. 101. 7. Durst he then thinke you haue kept any that was an open despiser of Religion Neither let any say it is no matter for children what behauiour they vse in the Church though they prate or play or cry to the disturbance of the Congregation for I tell you God cannot endure profanenesse or contempt of Religion no not in children as is plaine by his fearefull iudgement vpon the children of Bethel for scorning of his Prophet 2. King 2. 23 24. Yea it stands vs all vpon to vse the vttermost authority we haue to maintaine the reuerence of Gods Sanctuary for the open contempt done by any may bring Gods curse on vs all Did not Achan the sonne of Zerah commit a trespasse in the accursed thing saith Phineas Iosh. 22. 20. and wrath fell on all the Congregation of Israel and that man perished not alone in his iniquity And certainely among other causes of the plague and other iudgements of God vpon the land this is not the least that Gods publike worship is performed amongst vs with so little reuerence and deuotion as it is for this cause saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 11. 30. many are weake and sickly among you and many sleepe Lecture the seuen and twentieth October 3. 1609. WE haue heard already out of the second generall point that is to be obserued in this verse viz. the question she mooues to our Sauiour that the worship of God is here called adoration and from thence we were taught That in all Gods worship not an inward deuotion onely of the soule but an outward reuerence of the body is required And the last day we began to deliuer the vse of the Doctrine touching the necessity of outward reuerence in the whole worship of God and heard first that it serued for Exhortation then for Reproofe The Exhortation was that we should all learne to carry our selues reuerently in all the parts of Gods worship And for our direction therein I told you there were rules giuen vs in the Word whereof some of them were generall and those were fiue which I deliuered to you the last day and some
In a sensible and visible manner he guided his people through the wildernesse in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night Exod. 13. 51. By a sensible and materiall fire that came downe from heauen he witnessed oft-times his approbation of the sacrifices that his seruants offered vnto him 1. Cor. 21. 26. In a sensible and visible manner his glory filled both the Tabernacle and the Temple 2. Chron. 7. 2. Now since the daies of Christ the Lord hath not beene wont to reueale himselfe to his Church in this corporall and sensible manner but as he is a spirit so in a spirituall manner only hath he reuealed himselfe to his Church It is therefore spoken of as a blessing peculiar to the dayes vnder the Gospel that vpon all sorts of his people he will powre his spirit in a far more plentifull manner then euer he had done before Ioel 2. 28 29. Hauing now finished the Doctrine that our Sauiour deliuereth in these two verses and both the Reasons that he bringeth for the confirmation of it it remaineth that we make our vse of it The first Vse of it is to condemne the religion of the Papists If we had no other reason against Popery this were sufficient to prooue it a false worship such as God alloweth not because it doth euery way match yea farre exceedeth the forme of worship that was vnder the Law euen in that point for which our Sauiour doth here condemne it The vestments their Priests vse in Gods seruice the Church-musicke and many other things are vsed in imitation of the Iewes But 1. In obseruation of daies and times in the number of their holy dayes 2. In the multitude of their significant ceremonies 3. In the pompe and worldly statelinesse of their Prelates and Clergie 4. In their superstitious ringing and set seruice and other ceremonies about buriall they doe farre exceed the Iewes If that forme of worship which God himselfe appointed vnder the Law must needs be abrogated as Christ hath here taught vs and no true worshipper might vse it any longer because it stood so much in externall and carnall rites in shadowes and significant ceremonies then certainely they that vse and delight in such a kind of worship that was but deuised by men must needs be deemed hypocrites and false worshippers of God See the iudgement that our Sauiour giueth of these kind of ceremonies and of them that are addicted to them The Iewes in his time had a ceremony that they would not eate meate before they had washed oft holding the tradition of the Elders Marke 7. 3. This might as lawfully haue beene vsed as any religious ceremony that was deuised by man for it was not vsed in Gods seruice and might haue seemed to be but a ciuill ceremony Yet our Sauiour discerning that it was inioyned by the Elders and was obserued by the Iewes as a significant ceremony a Doctrine to the conscience a meane to put it in mind of a spirituall duty Marke 7. 7. A thing wherein they put holinesse and which they accounted as a worthy seruice done vnto God he would not vse it himselfe Luke 11. 38. and taught his Disciples to refuse it and defendeth them for so doing Marke 7. 6. And this he did though he saw it would prouoke the Pharisees much and be likely to draw him and his Disciples to trouble Marke 7. 3. And three Reasons he giueth against them 1. He maketh it a certaine note of an hypocrite of a carnall man that hath no soundnesse of grace in him to be addicted to these ceremonies Marke 7. 6. In which respect also among others the ceremoniall Law is called a carnall commandement Heb. 7. 16. and the rudiments of the world Gal. 4. 3. 2. That it is a vaine worship Marke 7. 7. there is no profit nor sound edification that can come to the conscience by it The Apostle therefore calleth the ceremonies impotent and beggerly rudiments Gal. 4. 9. Obserue it well where they are vsed with most conscience and deuotion as in Popery they are they worke no knowledge or sanctification in men 3. That where they are vsed they will make the commandements of God of no authority Matth. 15. 6. They will destroy the power of true piety and godlinesse and euen eate out the heart of it And that was the cause why Sathan laboured not in any thing more busily in the Primitiue Church then to bring in againe the ceremoniall worship after God had abrogated it and the Apostle calleth them that were his instruments in this worke dogges that is enemies to all piety Phil. 3. 2. The second Vse of the Doctrine doth more neerely concerne our selues for it teacheth vs to take heed of hypocrisie in the seruice of God Striue to worship him in spirit and truth Luke 12. 1. Take heed to your selues saith our Sauiour of the leauen of the Pharisees which is hypocrisie The Lord doth exceedingly abhorre hypocrisie in his seruice The more seruice thou doest to God the more thou prouokest him if thou be an hypocrite Iob 36. 13. The hypocrites in heart heape vp wrath For the hypocrite is a false worshipper he maketh an Idol of God he thinketh he can deceiue God as he doth men Now there be three kinds and degrees of hypocrites that worship not God in spirit and truth and are therefore called here by Christ false worshippers of God 1. They that doe any seruice to God with their bodies onely without the vnderstanding and feeling and deuotion of the heart in euery seruice we doe to God he calleth still for the heart My son giue me thy heart saith he Pro. 23. 26. Paul had not pleased God in preaching if he had not in preaching serued God in his spirit Rom. 1. 9. Lydia had not pleased God in hearing the Word if her heart had not beene opened if she had not heard with feeling and affection of heart Act. 16. 14. No man can please God in praying vnto him vnlesse he pray with the feeling and affection of his spirit Psal. 86. 4. Reioyce the soule of thy seruant for vnto thee Lord do I life vp my soule nor in singing of Psalmes vnlesse he sing with grace in his heart vnto the Lord Ephes. 5. 19. Our prayers are compared vnto odours Reu. 5. 8. and vnto incense Psal. 141. 2. and the feruency of our affection is as the fire without which these odours and incense can neuer send vp any sweet sauour vnto God In which respect the Apostle biddeth vs be feruent in spirit as seruing the Lord Rom. 12. 11. as if no seruice could be acceptable vnto God without feruency of spirit Let euery one of vs therefore haue a principall care of that both in our prayers and in euery other part of the worship we doe vnto God Two good helpes are needfull to be vsed to this purpose 1. Watchfulnes Continue in prayer and watch in the same Col. 4. 2. for vnlesse we
Moses speaking of Gods maruellous goodnesse to his Church expresseth it thus Deut. 4. 7. What nation is so great vnto whom the gods came so neare vnto them as the Lord our God is neare vnto vs in all things that we call vnto him for So Dauid setteth forth the plenteousnesse of Gods goodnesse and mercy by this Psal. 86. 5. Thou Lord art good and ready to forgiue and plenteous in mercy vnto all them that call vpon thee And Paul speaking of Gods bounty saith Rom. 10. 12. He that is Lord ouer all is rich vnto all that call vpon him The Reasons why none can looke for grace and mercy from God but those that aske for it why he will be sought vnto for it are three The first of them respecteth the Lord himselfe and his glory for God counteth himselfe greatly honoured when his people pray vnto him and depend vpon him as it is an honour to a man on earth to be much sought vnto and to haue men rely wholly vpon him This the faithfull knew well and haue by this consideration beene prouoked to this duty Therefore Dauid saith Psal. 63. 4. I will magnifie thee all my life and lift vp my hands in thy name when he lifted vp his hands vnto God he magnified him and Psal. 66. 17. I called vnto him with my mouth and he was exalted with my tongue He esteemed doubtlesse meanely enough of his owne prayers though he thus spake but he knew that God accounteth himselfe to be highly exalted and honoured by this when his seruants thus seeke vnto him In which respect also the Church voweth this to God as a duty whereby she knew God accounted himselfe to be much honoured Psal. 80. 18. Quicken vs and we will call vpon thy name The second respecteth the benefit we receiue by it for by praying our faith repentance loue and zeale is exercised and as the strength and vigour of our bodies is by exercise maintained and increased so is grace also increased by exercise Iude 20. But ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holy faith praying in the Holy Ghost By exercising our faith and repentance and loue in prayer we shall edifie our selues The third respects the nature of grace for he that once hath but the least measure of a true taste of it will esteeme it aboue all things in the world and therefore cannot chuse but earnestly desire more of it and he that doth not desire it contemneth it He that hath found the true treasure and ioyeth in it will sell all that he hath to purchase it Mat. 13. 44. 2. Euery blessing is the sweeter to the godly and certainer token of Gods loue if they can feele they haue obtained it by prayer Dauid giues this for the reason of his thankfulnesse and why Gods mercy in his deliuerance was so sweet vnto him why he would extoll the Lord for it Psal. 30. 2. because he obtained it by his prayer O Lord my God saith he I cryed vnto thee and thou hast healed me 3. Yea though they obtaine it not they can beare the want of it the better if they know they haue prayed for it Phil. 4. 6. 7. In euery thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiuing let your requests be made knowne vnto God and the peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding shall keepe your hearts and minds through Christ Iesus The Vse of this Doctrine is first to exhort euery man to foure duties 1. Labour for an vnfained desire of grace for till this thou canst neuer haue any assurance of thy saluation nor receiue any grace from God Luke 1. 53. He filleth the hungry with good things and the rich he sendeth empty away 2. Labour for the Spirit of prayer and supplication for without this thou canst receiue no good thing from God specially no grace Iames 4. 7. Ye haue not because ye aske not 3. In the best meanes cry and pray to God for grace else shall they not profit thee Thus did David though he enioyed excellent meanes of grace Psal. 25. 4. 5. Shew me thy wayes O Lord teach me thy paths lead me in thy truth and teach me and 119. 12. 33. Teach me thy statutes teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes 4. If thou euer hadst this desire this Spirit of supplication and feelest it decayed in thee oh stirre it vp againe and striue to recouer it and herein I may say to thee as the Apostle to them Heb. 10. 32. Call to remembrance the former dayes and as our Sauiour to the Angell of the Church of Ephesus Reu. 2. 5. Remember euen in this from whence thou art fallen and repent For as your desire of grace decayeth so doth your assurance and comfort decay Secondly this doctrine serueth to reproue the wicked and shew the fearefull estate of such as are void of all desire of saluation Psal. 119. 154. Saluation is farre from the wicked for they seeke not thy statutes Certainely thou art yet in thy sinnes in the state of a child of wrath If thou say well if God haue decreed to saue me I shall do well enough I answer thou presumptuous foole what hast thou to do with Gods secrets Deutr. 29. 29. while thou continuest with●…t all desire of grace thou hast cause to feare thou art a reprobate But we shall make the better vse of this Doctrine when we haue learned the doctrine that followeth We are therefore further to obserue that as Christ telleth her what she should haue done to obtaine this water of life she should haue asked so he telleth her also what he would haue done if she had asked he would haue giuen it her though she were a Samaritan and a most wicked woman also Whence we learne That all such as can vnfainedly desire and aske grace of God shall be sure to obtaine it See the expresse promises of God for this Mat. 〈◊〉 6. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be filled Mat. 7. 8. Euery one that asketh receiueth and he that seeketh findeth and to him that knocketh it shall be opened Rom. 10. 13. Whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued Reu. 22. 17. Let him that is a thirst come And whosoeuer will let him take the water of life freely The reasons of this are three 1. The infinite goodnesse of the Lord and the earnest desire he hath of the saluation and conuersion of men See this here in Christ he laboureth to worke this desire of the water of life in this wretched woman So Esay 65. 1. Behold me behold c. and so ver 2. I haue spread out my hands all the day vnto a disobedient people Can he then reiect them that vnfainedly desire his grace who is himselfe so earnest a suiter to vs that we would seeke and receiue it 2. The delight God taketh in and the readinesse that is in him to accept
secret sinnes vnto any Priest as the Papists teach without all warrant of Gods Word For 1. A man may obtaine comfort and assurance of the pardon of many sinnes onely by confessing them vnto God though he neuer acquaint any man with them for so Dauid professed he did Psal. 32. 5. I acknowledged my sinne vnto thee and mine iniquity haue I not hid I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord and thou forgauest c. 2. The party that is required by the Apostle Iames 5. 16. to acknowledge his secret sinnes vnto men is he onely that is afflicted in conscience and cannot by his secret confession of them vnto God finde comfort as is plaine by the context vers 13. 14. for he requires him first in euery kind of affection to seeke comfort from God by his owne prayer before he aduiseth him to send for the Elders of the Church 3. The Apostle doth not inioyne there that the party that is so afflicted should goe to the Priest onely but leaues him to his liberty to make choice of any other who for his wisedome and faithfulnesse experience and loue is fittest to yeeld him comfort in that case and therefore it is to be obserued that whereas he directs them to seeke for helpe against the sicknesse of the body from the Elders of the Church to whom God had giuen that extraordinary gift of healing verse 14 15. when he comes to giue them direction to seeke for helpe against the sicknesse and affliction of the mind he bids them not acknowledge their faults to the Elders of the Church but one to another verse 16. 4. This course of theirs is most opposite to Gods will for that which he would haue kept secret they will haue to be reuealed and those things that he would haue published they teach that secret confession will serue for and those sins that are discouered to the Priest vnder the seale of confession though they tend to the dammage of a whole state they teach may in no case be discouered But such sinnes as being either openly committed or any way brought to light by the hand of God men shall be able to reprooue vs for and charge vs with if God haue giuen vs hearts to repent of those sinnes we will bee willing to acknowledge them euen vnto men This we shall finde prooued by many examples in the Word of God 1. In a priuate man when God had discouered Achans sinne and Ioshuah charged him with it and requires him not onely to confesse it to God but to him Shew me and hide it not Iosh. 7. 1 19. He confesseth it not to God onely but to Ioshuah and the people of God that knew of his sinne and he doth it freely fully and particularly for hee confesseth more then they could charge him with Iosh. 7. 20. 21. So when Iohn had sharpely reprooued sinne and preached repentance to his hearers it is said Matth 3. 16. They came and were baptized of him confessing their sinnes The like we reade of the Ephesians Act. 19. 18. Many that beleeued came and confessed and shewed their workes 2. We haue the example of the Prophets and Ministers of God for this The Lord bids Samuel a child charge Eli with his sinnes and that in a very sharpe manner the old man yeelds presently It is the Lord saith he let him doe what seemeth him good 1. Sam. 3. 18. The Lord discouered the sinne of Ionah by a lot vnto the Marriners they charge him with it he confesseth it to them and tells them more then they could charge him with Ionah 1. 9. 10. he told them his country and his religion and how he had fled from the presence of the Lord. 3. We haue the example of great men and chiefe Magistrates for this The Prophet Nathan comes to Dauid and reprooues him for his sinne he presently confesseth it to him and that in so penitent a manner as the Prophet was faine to comfort him presently 2. Sam. 12 13. and not contenting himselfe to confesse it to him because his sinne was growne publike and scandalous he make the 51. Psalme publikely to be sung in the Temple and left to all posterity and in the very title of it confesseth his sinne and that hee could not repent of it till the Prophet Nathan had come to him The reasons why they that haue grace and are truely penitent are thus willing to acknowledge their sin euen to men are diuerse 1. It is a meanes to giue satisfaction to men whom by our sinnes we haue offended For no man is bound to thinke well of a sinner till he heare him professe his repentance in that place where our Sauiour presseth this duty of charity most he doth it vpon those tearmes if he turne againe to thee saying Irepent thou shalt forgiue him Luk 17. 4. And we are bound to giue satisfaction vnto men this way that haue beene offended by our sinne first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift Matth. 5. 24. And it is noted as a chiefe cause of Zedechias confusion that he did not humble himselfe before Ieremiah the Prophet 2. Chron. 36. 12. Who knew his sin and had charged him with it 2. It is a meanes to giue glory to God My son giue I pray thee glory to the Lord and make confession vnto him and tell me now what thou hast done hide it not from me saith Ioshuah to Achan Iosh. 7. 19. For as by our sins we haue dishonored the Lord so by professing our repentance we greatly glorifie him That is the reason why Gods seruants haue published such shamefull sinnes against themselues Moses reports of himselfe how hardly he was drawne to goe on Gods errand vnto Pharaoh and how oft he drew backe Exod. 3. 4. Ieremiah reports how that in impatiency seeing the opposition he found in his Ministry hee cursed the day of his birth Ier. 20. 14 c. Paul reports not onely before Agrippa and many profane men Acts 16. 11. How he had beene mad against Gods seruants and compelled them to blaspheme Christ but to the whole Church of God 1. Tim. 1. 13. 15. And why did they this they knew that this publike acknowledgement of their sins would gaine much glory to God and they cared not how much they disgraced themselues so they might honour God 3. It is a meanes to giue themselues assurance of Gods mercy Pro. 28. 14. He that confesseth and forsaketh his sinne shall finde mercy 1. In respect of the assurance of pardon That was the cause why Ioshuah though he knew Achans sinne and was resolued he should die for it yet is so earnest with him to confesse it because he would haue him die with comfort Iosh. 7. 19. My sonne giue I pray thee glory to the Lord God of Israel and make confession vnto him and tell me now what thou hast done hide it not from me 2. It is a meanes to finde mercy
to saluation 2. Timothy 3. 15. 3. We must vse in our doubts to conferre and mooue questions to such as are able to resolue vs the Priests lippes should keepe knowledge so the people should seeke the law at his mouth Malachy 2. 7. And Cornelius was directed to send for Peter and to seeke resolution in all his doubts from him Acts 10. 5. 32. 4. Because the Lord onely is the teacher that can resolue and perswade our hearts wee must giue our selues much to humble and faithfull prayer so did Dauid Psalme 119. 18. open thou mine eyes c. so did the Spouse of Christ when she found her selfe in danger to be seduced Cant. 1. 7. and Cornelius being in doubt and perplexity this day sought by fasting and prayer to receiue direction and resolution from God Acts 10. 30. 2. For reproofe 1. Of them that willingly remaine vnsetled in Religion vpon this pretence that by reason of the many differences in Religion they find in the world and the great shew of reason each side hath and the fowle faults that they discerne in men of all Religions they see great cause to doubt them all and small hope to attaine to any certainety and therefore they will serue God and not trouble themselues to enquire whether side hath the truth For the Elect and such as haue grace and good hearts shall be able to attaine to certaintie though there were neuer so great differences and occasions of doubting Of the Elect it is said Matth. 24. 24. That it is not possible for them to be deceiued and Iohn 10. 4 5. That Christs sheepe know his voice and will follow him and a stranger they will not follow because they know not his voice and of the godly and such as vse the meanes of grace and knowledge with a good heart it is said that the Light shall shine vpon their wayes Iob 22. 28. That God will instruct and teach them in the way that they should goe and guide them with his eye Psalme 32. 8. That the secret of the Lord is reuealed to them that feare him and his couenant to giue them vnderstanding Psalme 25. 14. That their eares shall heare a word behind them saying this is the way walke ye in it Esay 30. 21. That they shall know of that doctrine which is taught them whether it bee of God or whether their teacher speake of himselfe Iohn 7. 17. That they haue an vnction from the holy one and know all things Iohn 2. 20. Such shall vnderstand the Scripture and grow vnto certaintie For the testimonie of the Lord is sure and maketh wise the simple Psal. 19. 7. It is able to giue subtiltie to the simple and to the child knowledge and discretion Pro. 1. 4. So that all such as resolue that they will remaine neuters and seeke for no certaintie giue euidence against themselues that they belong not to Gods election nor haue any grace in them 2. Them that are ignorant and vtterly vnacquainted with matters of Religion that thinke and speake of these things carelesly or as of things that nothing concerne them Such are the most euen of those that haue best leisure and best wits and memories to them that may be applyed which is in Hosea 8. 12. I haue written to them the great things of my Law but they are counted as a strange thing But how well soeuer these persons iudge of themselues the Holy Ghost pronounceth them to be plaine Atheists and contemners of God as you shall see Iob 21. 14 15. they do in deed and heart say vnto God depart from vs that say we desire not the knowledge of thy waies yea such doe say in their hearts what is the Almighty that wee should serue him and what profit should we haue if we pray vnto him 3. Such as though they approoue of the truth wish well to them that professe it and professe it themselues yet doe they it vpon no other grounds then this that the state and place we liue in doe professe it or vpon this that such and such good men teach and hold it Whereas we should not receiue our Religion vpon any mans credit but labour to see the grounds of it with our owne eyes The people of God are not drawne to a resolution in Religion by company or compulsion but vpon their free choice They examine it Matth. 13. 44. Acts 17. 11. And see good reason and ground for it and thereupon aduisedly and voluntarily choose it Psalme 119. 30. I haue chosen the way of truth and thy iudgements haue I laid before me So as they are able to say Wee beleeue and know Iohn 6. 69. We should be able to giue a reason of that we hold in Religion 1. Pet. 3. 15. And it is noted for the propertie of the vnsound hearted hearer Mar. 4. 6. That h●…e receiueth with gladnesse immediately what he heares without euer examining it before The faith and Religion most men haue is rather suckt in with their mothers milke then receiued by the instruction of their teachers They hold it because it is commonly beleeued not because it is certainely true It is not chosen by them vpon their owne iudgement but taken in vpon common credit Lecture the one and thirtieth Nouember 7. 1609. THe last day we heard what the question was that troubled the mind of this Woman and wherein she did desire to be resolued by our Sauiour namely concerning the true Church and Religion of God which I told you was the second part of this Text followeth now the third and last part of it namely the reason that mooued her to doubt of this matter and to be perplexed in her mind about this question and that was this On the one side her Fathers had worshipped God in Mount Gerizim and that made her thinke that that was the best place to serue God in and on the other side Christ whom she knew to be a Prophet and all others that were of his Religion said that in Ierusalem was the place where men ought to worship and that made her doubt shee had serued God amisse all this while Where we haue to obserue that the Samaritans made the example and custome and authority of their forefathers the rule and warrant of their Religion and that was that that deceiued them And from thence we learne this Doctrine That it is not safe but dangerous in matters of Religion to ascribe too much to antiquity and to the example and custome of our forefathers But before I confirme this Doctrine least any should thinke we make no account of antiquitie or of the example and authority of our forefathers foure things shall be premised for the right vnderstanding of this doctrine concerning the account that is to be made in matters of Religion 1. Of antiquity 2. Of our forefathers 3. Of our naturall parents and ancestours 4. Of the customes of the places wherein we liue 1. There is an antiquity which is a
certaine and infallible note of the true Religion The old way is called the good way Ier. 6. 16. The true Religion is the most antient Religion So the Prophets that seduced Gods people to Idolatry are said to haue caused them to stumble in their way from the antient wayes Ier. 18. 15. So the Idolatry of the Iewes is disgraced by this note that it was new Deut. 32. 17. They serued new gods newly come vp And the true Church of God is called The antient people Esay 44. 7. No people of any Religion in the world may compare in antiquity with the true Church ofGod But that is onely truely ancient in matters of Religion which was from the beginning It is not the continuance of a thousand or two thousand yeares that can make any thing in Religion truely antient but it must be from the beginning or it is not truely antient The Gospell is called an eternall Gospell Apoc. 14. 6. And so Iohn commends his Doctrine 1. Iohn 1. 1. to be that which was from the beginning So our Sauiour giues this rule to try a truth in Religion by Matth. 19. 8. From the beginning it was not so And the Apostle 1. Cor. 11. 23. grounds his Doctrine of the Sacrament and the direction he giues to the Church about it vpon the first institution of it That is truely antient in matters of Religion that can fetch his originall from him that is called the antient of daies Dan. 7. 9. That is from God himselfe and his Word That that is deriued but from men is of no antiquity in this case So the Lord in that place I cited euen now Deut. 32. 17. calls the idolatry of the Israelites the worshipping of new gods newly come vp though they had continued in the world many hundred yeares For Abrahams ancestours were Idolaters Iosh. 24. 2. because it was but the deuice of man and had not warrant from his Word That which is grounded vpon the authority of the Prophets and Apostles which wrote by diuine inspiration that and that onely hath true antiquitie for it which made Iohn say 1. Ioh. 2. 7. The old commandement is the Word So that whatsoeuer Doctrine is taught and confirmed by the authority of the Word though it may seeme new to men because they neuer heard of it before yet it is not new in it selfe neither can they that teach or receiue it be iustly called Nouellists or new-fangled men It was no innouation or new-fanglednesse in Nehemiah to celebrate the feast of the Tabernacles Nehemiah 8. 17. Though it had beene out of vse from the daies of Ioshua vnto that time because it had the warrant and authority of the Word of God And whatsoeuer Doctrine is taught or custome receiued in the Church without the warrant and authority of the Word though it could be prooued to haue beene taught and receiued one thousand sixe hundred yeares agoe by such and such famous men and antient Churches yet it is a noueltie and hath no true antiquity to commend it vnto vs. 2. As we haue this to say for antiquitie so say we also of our forefathers that there are certaine Fathers whose example ought to be of great authority with vs in matters of Religion Remember the dayes of old saith the Lord Deut. 32. 7. Consider the yeares of so many generations aske thy father and he will shew thee thine elders and they will tell thee And Iob 8. 8. Inquire of the former age and prepare thy selfe to search of their Fathers And it is oft noted as Deut. 32. 17. Ier. 44. 3. and 194. to aggrauate the sinne of the Iewes that they serued new gods newly come vp gods whom their fathers knew not So that if we should walke in a new way that our elders and forefathers had not walked in we had iust cause to feare we are not in the right way Our Sauiour directing his Church how to finde the right way bids her obserue the steps of the old flocke Cant. 1. 8. and Ierem. 18. 15. He calls the false way a way that was not trodden But these Fathers that should be of such authority with vs in matters of Religion are they onely that haue followed the direction of the word Amon is blamed for forsaking the God of his fathers 2. Kings 21. 22. Yet walked he in the way of his owne father and of most of his ancestors Yea it is expressely said that he did euill in the sight of the Lord as his father Manasses did verse 20. How is it then said that hee forsooke the God of his fathers The reason is rendered in the same place verse 22. because he walked not in the way of the Lord. Those are the fathers we are to haue respect vnto in the matters of Religion that walke in the way of the Lord and none but they So that as our Sauiour saith Matth. 12. 50. Whosoeuer shall doe my fathers will which is in heauen he is my brother and sister and mother So may we truely say that all the godly that in former ages haue walked in the way of the Lord they were our fathers And though that we did know none of our owne ancestors that professed the Religion that we doe Yet so long as we professe no other Religion then the Patriarches Prophets and Apostles did and many other holy men that haue liued since the Apostles times we cannot iustly be said to haue forsaken the God of our fathers or to be of any other Religion then our forefathers were of 3. In some cases there is great respect also to be had to the example euen of our naturall parents It should be a great bond for a Christian to keepe him in the loue of the truth when his owne parents and ancestors haue beene louers and professors of the true Religion This is noted to the praise of Azaria and Iotham 2. King 15. 3. and 34. They did vprightly in the sight of the Lord according to all that their fathers did That is the reason why Paul puts Timothie in minde of the piety that was both in his mother and grandmother 2. Tim. 1. 5. And a double condemnation shall doubtlesse fall vpon such as haue had religious parents if themselues become either Papists or prophane men This is noted to the shame of the Israelites Iudg. 2. 17. That they turned quickly out of the way wherein their fathers walked obeying the commandements of God but they did not so And Iehoram the King of Iudah receiued a writing from Eliah the Prophet threatning extreame vengeance against him because he had not walked in the wayes of Iehosaphat and Asa hauing so good a father and so good a grandfather that he yet became himselfe so vngratious a man 2. Chron. 21. 12. 14. 4. Some authority and religious respect is also sometimes to be giuen euen to the customes and fashions of the places where we liue Paul alleadgeth the custome of the Churches to stoppe the mouth of contentious
iust time appointed by God Iohn 19. 14. the day of his Passion was but the day of the preparation to the Passeouer Thus we haue seene how corrupt the state of the Church was And yet marke how our Sauiour made no separation from it but communicated with it in the worship of God 1. When he was an infant he was circumcised and by that Sacrament incorporated into that Church Luke 2. 21. 2. When his mother was purified he was brought to the Temple and presented to the Lord and an oblation was giuen for him as for other children Luke 2. 22. 3. He was content to be an hearer of such teachers as taught in that Church Luke 2. 46. 4. He was euery Sabbath wont to ioyne in publike prayer with the Congregation that was at Nazaret Luke 4. 16. 5. He receiued the Sacrament of Baptisme in a Congregation of that people Luke 3. 21. When all the people was baptized he was baptized also 6. He communicated in the Passeouer with the people and the Priests Iohn 2. 13. 7. He allowed his Disciples to heare those teachers Matth. 23. 12. Yea he commanded the Leper whom he cleansed to goe and shew himselfe to the Priest and offer his gift in the Temple Matth. 8. 4. The Reasons why all men are bound to count such assemblies the true Churches as enioy the Word and Doctrine of saluation and may not separate from them for their corruptions are these 1. So long as God continueth his Word and the Doctrine of saluation to a people so long it is euident God dwells among them and hath not forsaken them I will set my Tabernacle among you by which he meaneth his solemne worship whereof this is a principall part Leuit. 26. 11 12. and my soule shall not abhorre you And I will walke among you and I will bee your God and yee shall bee my people In Iuda God is knowne his name is great in Israel Psal. 76. 12. In Salem also is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place in Sion And till God hath forsaken a Church no man may forsake it For shall we be holier and hate corruption more then the Lord It is no sufficient warrant for any to separate from a Church because it is guilty of such sinnes and corruptions as deserue God should forsake it and for which God in his Word hath threatned that he will forsake it till it may appeare vnto vs God hath indeed forsaken it and put in execution that which he hath iustly threatned against it no man may forsake it Though adultery either in the man or the wife giue iust cause of separation and that the bond of wedlocke should be broken so as the innocent party may iustly forsake the offender yet till a bill of diuorcement haue passed betweene them they remaine still man and wife notwithstanding that sinne the woman whom her husband had wronged in this kind is called his wife Mal. 2. 15. Esau had iustly deserued to loose the prerogatiue of his birthright and superiority he had ouer his brother when he had despised it and fold it Gen. 25. 34. and Saul to be depriued of his Kingdome yea God by his decree and oracle had said of Esau and Iacob The elder shall serue the younger Gen. 25. 23. And of Saul and Dauid that he had reiected the one and appointed the other to raigne in his stead 1. Sam. 13. 14. and 15. 23. 26. 28 And yet till the Lord saw it good to put this his decree and oracle in execution and actually to depose the one from his birthright and the other from his Kingdome Iacob acknowledgeth Esau his Lord and superior Gen. 32. 4 5. and so did Dauid Saul 1. Sam. 24. 7. 9. So though a Church for the many corruptions that are in it be vnworthy the name of Christs Church and be also such as the Lord hath threatned to make no Church yet till the Lord hath put this his threat in execution and taken away his tabernacle and worship from it it is still to be acknowledged and reuerenced as the Church of Christ. 2. Because no separation may bee made from those assemblies where men may be assured to finde and attaine to saluation Lord to whom shall we go thou hast the words of eternall life saith Peter vnto our Sauiour accounting this a sufficient reason why they might not leaue him Iohn 6. 68. But men may be sure to finde and attaine to saluation in such assemblies where the Ministry of the Word and the Doctrine of saluation is continued For the Word and Gospell of Christ is called saluation here and Heb. 2. 3. Because it is the ordinary meanes ordained of God to bring men to saluation Rom. 1. 16. 1. Cor. 1. 21. Yea it is at one time or other effectuall in all Gods Elect that doe enioy it Iam. 1. 21. calls it the engrafted Word which is able to saue your soules To teach vs what to iudge of our Church and of the Brownists that separate themselues from it 1. We may not deny but that there is iust cause of feare that God may take away his Tabernacle from amongst vs and remoue our Candlesticke Euen the generall decay of our first loue may cause vs to to feare it Apoc. 2. 5. And the great neglect of the Church censures vpon scandalous offenders in respect of that the Apostle saith know yee not that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lump 1. Cor. 5. 6. But specially the generall increase of all filthy and abhominable sins in the land Thy Campe shall be holy that he see no vncleane thing in thee and turne away from thee Deut. 32. 14. seest thou not saith the Lord Ezek. 8. 6. the great abominations that the house of Israel committeth here that I should goe farre off from my Sanctuary 2. Though we acknowledge our Church to be a true Church yet may wee not communicate with it in any corruptions that shall be detected or approued to be in it Herein we haue our Sauiours example to guide vs. Though he esteemed the Church of the Iewes to be a true Church and ioyned with it in Gods worship yet would he not communicate with it in the least corruption He would not vse so much as their superstitious purifications Marke 7. 6 7. When they put off the Passeouer a day longer then God had appointed he would not ioyne with them in that Matth. 26. 17. 3. We should mourne for and shew our dislike to those things that are euill in our Church so did the faithfull before the captiuity Ezek. 9. 4. So did Christ Luk. 19. 41. But we may not separate our selues nor deny it to be a true Church for the reasons aboue alleadged 2. To conuince the Papists of errour in their doctrine touching the notes of the true Church None of their notes are proper and infallible for the profession and preaching of the true Doctrine in all fundamentall points is the onely proper
and certaine note of the true Church as we see here in the argument Christ vseth to prooue the Church and worship of the Iewes to be the true worship and Church of God For saluation is of the Iewes This was the chiefe priuiledge the chiefe badge and cognisance of the old Church that the Oracles of God were committed to them they enioyed the true Doctrine of saluation Psal. 147. 19 20. Rom. 3. 2. And thus doth the Apostle describe the true Church vnder the Gospell he calls it the houshold of God built vpon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Iesus Christ himselfe being the chiefe Corner-stone Ephes. 2. 19 20. He calls it also the pillar and ground of truth 1. Tim. 3. 25. Lecture the sixe and thirtieth December 26. 1609. THe two first parts of this Verse we haue already finished and are now to proceed to the third and last viz. The Reason whereby Christ iustifieth the worship which the Iewes did vnto God in these words Saluation is of the Iewes wherein two things are to be obserued 1. What hee meanes here by Saluation 2. How this Saluation that he speaketh of is said to be of the Iewes By Saluation in this place is meant the Word of God and the Ministry thereof as may appeare by these three Reasons 1. The Saluation here spoken of is that whereby the Iewes knew how to worship God aright else there had beene no consequence in this Reason wee worship that wee know For saluation is of the Iewes q. d. Because wee haue Saluation Now the onely meanes whereby the Iewes knew how to worship God aright was the Word 2. This Saluation here spoken of was the chiefe prerogatiue whereby the Lord did preferre the Iew before the Samaritan and all other nations and so is it mentioned here And the chiefe prerogatiue of the Iewes was the Word Psal. 147. 19. Hee sheweth his Word to Iacob his statutes and his iudgements to Israel verse 20. He hath not done so with any other nation neither haue they knowne his iudgements And Rom. 3. 2. The chiefe preferment of the Iewe was this because to them were committed the Oracles of God 3. The saluation here spoken of is that that was to be deriued from the Iewes to Gods people of all nations And what was that The Law shall goe from Zion and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem Esay 2. 3. And the reason why it is so called is for that it worketh the saluation of men Which teacheth vs That the Word of God and the Ministry thereof is the saluation of men See for proofe of this what titles are giuen to it by the Holy Ghost 1. It is called the Word of grace Acts 20. 32. 2. It is called the Word of life Phil. 2. 16. Iohn 6. 68. 3. It is called the grace of God Titus 2. 11. 4. The Kingdome of God Matth. 21. 43. The Kingdome of God shall be taken away from you and giuen to a nation c. 5. Saluation it selfe and euerlasting life here and Heb. 2. 3. Act. 28. 28. Iohn 12. 50. I know that his commandement that is his Word which he hath commanded me to teach is euerlasting life These are vnproper and strange speeches to be spoken of the Word yet are they farre more effectuall to set out the dignity and excellencie of the Word then if the Lord should haue said onely in plaine termes that it is the meanes and worker of our saluation Before I come to shew the Reasons why it is so called I will answer three questions and doubts that may arise in your minds which may hinder you from vnderstanding aright and conceiuing the meaning of this Doctrine 1. Can none be saued that want the Word To this I answer It cannot be denied but some haue attained to saluation that neuer enioyed the Word Neither must we imagine that God either could not nor neuer did saue any without the Word or that all they are to be iudged to be in the state of damnation that either in times past or at this day liue and die in those places where the light of the Word did neuer shine For God is able to doe whatsoeuer it pleaseth him Psal. 115. 2. He hath appointed meanes not to tie himselfe but vs onely vnto them and as the inuisible Church the company of Gods Elect is a Catholique Church in all ages and in all places so in such times and places as he hath denied the Word vnto he hath beene wont to saue his Elect without the Word While his people were in the wildernesse where they could not haue the ordinary meanes of tillage God did feed them extraordinarily and gaue them bread from heauen Iohn 6. 31. So Rahab had faith euen while she dwelt in Iericho Heb. 11. 31. And the Wise men of the East before they came to Iudaea Matth. 2. 2. 2. Shall all be saued that haue the Word that reade it that heare it that professe it To this I answer That it is certaine all are not saued that enioy the Word For in all ages there haue beene many that haue liued vnder most faithfull and profitable Ministers and haue heard them also ordinarily and yet haue not beene saued such an one was Iudas Iohn 6. 70. Yea the most part of them that haue enioyed the Word haue missed of saluation In so much as in all ages the best of Gods seruants haue had cause to complaine as Esay 53. 1. Who will belieue our report And to whom is the arme of God reuealed Yea it may well be that those that haue enioyed the Word most abundantly may be farre worse men for all kind of wickednesse then such as neuer heard the Word in their liues So it is said of Ierusalem that it exceeded Sodome in all kind of abominations Ezek. 16. 48. The Word vseth not to saue any vnlesse it be by preaching opened and applied Acts 8. 31. 1. Cor. 1. 21. For it saues none but such as can vnderstand belieue and obey it It saueth none but Gods Elect. Onely those that God hath ordained vnto life shall profit by it shall finde it effectuall to their saluation Acts 13. 48. The rest cannot profit by it Many are called but few are chosen Matth. 22. 14. The rest shall be made worse by it The Word of God is like vnto the water of iealousie mentioned Numb 5. 27. 28. When it is receiued into an honest and good heart it doth it good and makes it fruitfull when into a corrupt heart it rotts it and makes it worse 3. Is the saluation of any to be ascribed to the Word it selfe or any vertue that is in it To this I answer That 1. The saluation euen of those that are saued by the Word is not to be ascribed to the Word it selfe or any vertue that is in it as if it were to be accounted the author and worker of any mans saluation 1. The glory of this
1. 20. And this is then much more true of the clearer light he giueth men by his Word Ioh. 15. 22. If I had not come and spoken to them then they should not haue had sin but now haue they no cloke for their sin Let euery man say thus to his own heart it is the Lords doing that thou art borne in these dayes of light that thy lot is fallen into such a place where thou hast good meanes of knowledge that thou hast attained to knowledge aboue many others if thou profit not hereby and be not wonne vnto God certainely God hath determined to glorifie himselfe in thy condemnation more then in a thousand others that he hath not done so much for The second Reason is in respect of the Elect that God may vse this knowledge they haue as a preparatiue and helpe to their conuersion in the day of their visitation True it is that the naturall man hath nothing in him whereby he is able to prepare himselfe to his conuersion Yea he is ready to become the worse as we haue heard for this knowledge he hath of the truth But if he be the Lords Elect one whom he hath determined to call this shall be his aduantage and he shall haue cause to praise God for it that he hath liued in Gods Church and among Gods people where he hath heard somewhat of Religion and seene some profession of it that he hath had some knowledge in the grounds and principles of the truth yea if he haue but liued vnder an ignorant Ministry where he hath heard the Word read onely though that cannot conuert him nor any are to rest in it yet that small light he may get by it shall be an aduantage to him So was it with this poore Woman The knowledge she had gotten by hearing Moses read and by liuing so neare the Iewes now the time of her visitation was come prooued an aduantage to her So that which the Iewes heard of Iohn concerning Christ though for the present they regarded it not but rather were offended at it in the day of their visitation prooued an aduantage to them Iohn did no miracle but all things that Iohn spake of this man were true and many belieued on him there Iohn 10. 41 42. So the Apostle saith that the elect Gentiles that had liued among the faithfull to heare them and see their good examples though they hated them for the present yet in the day of their visitation they should praise God and account this a great benefit 1. Pet. 2. 12. The Vse of this Doctrine is first for conuincing of them that mislike wee should deny the Church of Rome to be a true Church of Christ or teach that they that die in the faith thereof cannot be saued or inueigh with any bitternesse against Papists because say they they hold many truthes By this reason both the Samaritans of old and the Iewes and the Turkes now may bee held to be true Churches and in the state of saluation 2. To teach euery one of vs to seeke for knowledge which is the foundation of all other graces without it can no man ordinarily be saued God will haue all men to bee saued and to come to the knowledge of the truth 1. Tim. 2. 4. Though many misse of saluation that haue some knowledge yet there is much more hope of the worst man that hath knowledge of the truth then of the ciuillest man that is void of knowledge Of all the sorts of ground where the seed was cast that by the high way side was the worst Matth. 13. 9. Let Ministers therfore principally labour to ground their people by Catechising in the Principles of Religion because him in whom thou mayest discerne a competencie of knowledge in the fundamentall Principles of Religion thou mayest with comfort admit to the Sacrament if his life be not scandalously wicked though thou cannot otherwise discerne any fruit of the Spirit in him because that man hath in him as I may say the matter and seed of regeneration And this should incourage parents to traine vp their children in the instruction and information of the Lord for though 1 many so trained proue vngratious 2 little ones haue little sense of that they learne yet if they belong to God this will one day prooue an aduantage to them 3. To teach professours not to glory in that they haue some knowledge but to labour for that which is proper to the Elect. Three differences may bee obserued betwixt a Samaritans knowledge and a true Christians 1. She receiued Moses some parts of the truth but reiected the Prophets we desire to know the whole truth so farre forth as God shall giue vs meanes we refuse not to know any truth that God hath reuealed nor winke with our eyes nor content our selues with fragments but seeke to be informed in the whole body of Religion in the whole forme of Doctrine Rom 6. 17. Yea we seeke to grow and increase daily in knowledge 2. Pet. 3. 18. grow in grace and in the knowledge of the Lord. 2. She though she knew somewhat which she learned of Moses yet that that concerned specially her owne direction and practise she knew not Moses had plainely enough condemned all Idolatry Take yee therefore good heed to your selues for yee saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire least yee corrupt your selues and make you a grauen image the similitude of any figure Deut. 4. 15 16. which yet the Samaritans vsed We desire chiefly the knowledge of those points that are most necessary and profitable and most concerne our selues as all Iohn Baptists good hearers did as appeares by the direction craued of him Luke 3. 10. 12. 14. 3. Her knowledge had no power in her heart for shee liued in grosse whoredome notwithstanding it and therefore was no true knowledge of God of the sonnes of Ely it is said that because they were sons of Belial lewd men that they knew not the Lord 1. Sam. 2. 12. our knowledge reformeth and ruleth vs and that onely deserues the name of true knowledge the feare of the Lord that is wisedome and to depart from euill is vnderstanding Iohn 28. 28. Lecture the foure and fortieth March 6. 1609. IOHN IIII. XXV THe last day we heard that this Woman hearing our Sauiour speake of an alteration that should shortly be made in the manner of Gods worship was thereby put in mind of the Messias comming Concerning which she professeth two things 1. That she knew well he was comming his comming could not be far off 2. That when he should come he would tell them all things In the former we obserued the last day what knowledge of the truth there may be in an vnregenerate and wicked man It remaineth now that we proceed to that which she speaketh touching the office of Christ When hee is come saith she he will
tell vs all things She professeth that she knew Christ when he came would teach the Church farre more excellently fully and perfectly then Moses and the Prophets had done By all things she meaneth only all those things that concerne the worship of God and the saluation of man as if she should say when he commeth he will tell vs all these things all such things as we speake of So is the word taken also in that speech of Christ Ioh. 14. 26. The Holy Ghost whom the Father shall send in my name he shall teach you all things So that which Paul saith Act 20. 27. Of declaring to them all the counsell of God he interpreteth thus verse 20. I haue kept backe nothing that was profitable to you For many other things before Christs comming were more particularly and fully reuealed to the Church then they haue beene since You shall find more spoken in Leuit. 26. and Deut. 28. of the temporall rewards of goodnesse and of the temporall punishments of sinne then in all the New Testament In things and matters concerning this life the Prophets told more and gaue more particular and cleere direction then Christ hath done When Saul seeketh for his Fathers asses that were lost he commeth to Samuel and hee telleth him of them When Iehosaphat would know whether he should haue successe when he went with Ahab in battle against Ramoth Gilead he asketh counsell of the Lord and sendeth for the Prophets 1. Kings 22. 5. 7. When Dauid feared that Saul would come to besiedge Keilah and that the men of Keilah would deliuer him into his hands he asked counsell of God and receiued a direct and cleere answer 1. Sam. 23. 11. 12. When any was sicke and they desired to know whether he should dye or escape they were wont to send to the Prophet and he would tell them 1. Reg. 14. 1 2. Elisha could tell the King of Israel the words that his enemy the King of Aram spake in his Priuie Chamber 2. Reg. 6. 12. Now Christ telleth vs no such things The Lord vnder the Gospell doth not giue vs so cleere direction in these outward things But in heauenly and spirituall things that concerne Gods worship and our saluation Christ hath told vs more then Moses and the Prophets we haue a more cleere and perfect direction now then they had vnder the Law In which respect the light they had then is compared to the light of a candle that shineth in a darke place and that which we haue now vnto the day light 2. Pet. 1. 19. Of these spirituall and heauenly things this woman speaketh here 2. For the second point Though these be not the words of the Euangelist that wrote by diuine inspiration but the words of a weake sinnefull woman reported by the Euangelist yet may we ground a Doctrine vpon them whereupon our consciences may safely rest For 1. Our Sauiour by his answer approoues and confirmes her speech 2. This is a truth she learned from the Word of God she knew Moses had said thus of Christ Deut. 18. 15. 18 19. The Lord thy God will raise vp vnto thee a Prophet like vnto mee from among you euen of thy brethren vnto him yee shall hearken Whereby shee well vnderstood he should be a greater Prophet then Moses Then the Doctrine that we are to learne here is this That Christ since his comming hath fully and perfectly reuealed all things concerning the saluation of his Church This honour God reserued vnto his Son that he should teach his Church more fully then the Prophets did How or where hath Christ taught vs more then Moses and the Prophets seeing he taught but three yeares and a halfe or thereabouts and that but in Iury onely he did but begin to teach as it is said Acts 1. 1. Heb. 1. 3. Surely by the Doctrines and writings of the Apostles He by word of mouth and by his spirit taught the Apostles all things and by their Doctrine and writings hath perfectly instructed his Church that shall be to the end of the world This is plaine Iohn 15. 15. All things that I haue heard of my Father haue I made knowne vnto you and 17. 8. I haue giuen vnto them the word which thou gauest me After his Resurrection he conuersed with them by the space of forty dayes and instructed them in the things that pertaine to the kingdome of God Acts 1. 3. And after his Ascension he did yet more fully instruct them and by their doctrine and writings the whole Church This is that that he saith Ioh. 14. 25 26. Christ did not teach his Church all things by word of mouth when he liued vpon earth but by the Ministry and writings of the holy Apostles These things haue I spoken vnto you being present with you but the Holy Ghost which the Father will send hee will teach you all things and 16. 12. 13. I haue many things to speake vnto you but you cannot beare them now but when he is come that is the spirit of truth hee will lead you into all truth So that in the time of the Apostles he did fully instruct his Church and perfectly reueale the whole will of his Father so as nothing might after be added vnto it How can Christ or his Apostles be said to haue taught more then was taught before seeing that the Scriptures which the Church enioyed before did containe a perfect direction for Gods people both in faith and manners and neither Christ nor his Apostles taught any more then was contained in the Scriptures as is euident by that we reade Luk. 24. 27. 44 45. Acts 26. 22. Three things there are wherein the Scriptures as they are now perfected and consummate by the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles doe excell the Scriptures of the Old Testament 1. Though the Scriptures did before the Apostles time giue cleere direction to the people of God in those things that concerned their saluation As Dauid could say the enterance of thy words giueth light it giueth vnderstanding vnto the simple Psal. 119. 130. yet they doe it now much more plainely and cleerely then they did before that was but a light that shineth in a darke place as the light of the Moone or of the Starres or of a candle this as the day-light 2. Pet. 1. 19. yea the things contained in the Old Testament are made more plaine to vs then they were to the Prophets themselues of which saluation the Prophets haue enquired and searched diligently who prophesyed of the grace that should come vnto you Vnto whom it was reuealed that not vnto themselues but vnto vs they did minister the things which are now reported vnto you 1. Pet. 1. 10. 12. 2. They were perfect before the Apostles times and gaue sufficient direction in all things to the Church that then liued the law of the Lord is perfect saith Dauid Psal. 19. 7. yea so perfect it was euen in Moses time that it was
the Passeouer Exodus 13. 8. how much more now 3. The third Vse is for exhortation and incouragement to learne of Christ Matth. 11. 29. this will bring much rest to our soules which we must now doe by the written word and ministry thereof God hath committed to vs the word of reconciliation and we are in Christs stead as the Apostle teacheth 2. Cor. 5. 19. 20. And seeing his office is to teach vs all things let vs seeke in all things in euery place as well at home as at the Church in euery condition of life in prosperity aduersity as we are Masters Seruants Landlords c in euery thing that we goe about as buying selling apparell recreations c to receiue direction from him In euery thing inquire what saith Christ concerning this What would he haue me doe That which Paul saith of marriages and meates may be said likewise of apparell recreations all the commodities and gaines of this life they are good to vs when they are sanctified by the Word and prayer 1. Tim. 4. 4 5. Many will heare Christ willingly in some things but in many things they will doe as they list whereas Acts 3. 22 23. Wee should heare him in all things that bee shall say vnto vs and euery soule that will not heare this Prophet shall bee destroyed from among the people THE FIVE AND FORTIETH LECTVRE ON MARCH XIII MDCIX IOH. IIII. XXVI Iesus saith vnto her I that speake vnto thee am He. WE heard the last day what a confession this Woman of Samaria made of the Messiah 1. She knew he would come 2. She knew his comming was then at hand 3. She knew that when he should come he should teach his Church all things that concerned Gods true worship and the saluation of man In these words that I haue now read and the verse following two things are set downe 1. How Christ made himselfe knowne vnto her to be the Messiah which she spake of verse 26. 2. How this conference betweene them was broken of by the comming of the Disciples verse 27. In the first we are to obserue that it is somewhat strange that he thus plainely reuealeth himselfe vnto this Woman here and to inquire what may be the reason of it that so we may receiue a doctrine and instruction from it 1. We shall not finde that in any Sermon he made to the Iewes hee did euer manifest himselfe so plainely to be the Messiah as he doth here to this Woman of Samaria and yet we know he was not sent to the Samaritans but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel Matth. 15. 24. We reade Iohn 10. 24. That the Iewes came about him as he was walking in Salomons Porch and compassed him round that he might not get from them and expostulated with him in this manner how long doest thou hold vs in suspense If thou bee the Christ tell vs plainely yet would he not in plaine tearmes tell them that hee was he yea when Iohn the Baptist sent two choise Disciples to him to know whether he were he that should come or they should waite for another he makes them not a plaine and direct answer but bids them shew Iohn what workes of his they had seene done Luke 7. 19. 22. yea he straitly chargeth his Disciples Matth. 16. 20. That they should tell no man that hee was Iesus the Christ and yet behold he plainely makes himselfe knowne to this poore Woman 2. The Reason why he vouchsafeth this rare fauour to this poore Woman is for that he saw her heart was now prepared to receiue the truth hee told her not so much at the first till he saw her heart was prepared to receiue it he saw her heart was now truely humbled in sense of her sin he saw she esteemed reuerently of his person he saw she was very desirous of sauing knowledge he discerned in her a longing desire for the Messias comming because she knew when he came he would teach his Church all things and therefore now he thus plainely reueales himselfe vnto her In this manner did Christ also deale with the poore man that was borne blinde when he had heard what zeale and grace he had shewed in answering of the Pharisees and enduring of their excommunication he sought him out and finding him made himselfe more plainely knowne vnto him then he did vnto any other almost Ioh. 9. 3●… 37. To the Iewes in Iohn●…0 ●…0 ●…4 he did not make himselfe so plainely knowne because he saw they sought it out of an euill purpose And he charged his Disciples not to make him knowne because he saw the people were not yet prepared to receiue this truth This then is the Doctrine that we are to learne here That the Lord will cleerely reueale himselfe to all such as with an humble and honest heart doe desire to know him When God hath thus prepared the heart of any and made it 1. Humble in sense of his owne ignorance and sinne 2. Vnfainedly desirous of sauing knowledge 3. Desirous of it with an honest heart and purpose to obey the truth he neuer vseth to leaue it there but is wont further to reueale his sauing truth vnto that soule See how this is confirmed in all these three particulars For the first Psal. 25. 9. They that be meeke shall he guide in iudgement and teach the humble his way The man that seeth his ignorance and corruption is poore in spirit and mournes for nothing so much as for it you see God hath promised he will teach him his way For the second the blessed Virgin saith in her Song that this hath euer beene Gods manner Luke 1. 53. To fill the hungry with good things and to send the ri●…h away empty to such as vnfainedly and earnestly desire to know Christ he will vndoubtedly reueale himselfe For the third Psal 25. 12. What man is he that feares the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall chuse And verse 14. The secret of the Lord is reuealed to them that feare him and his Couenant to giue them vnderstanding Iohn 14. 21. He that loueth me shall bee loued of my Father and I will loue him and shew mine owne selfe vnto him And Psal. 50. 23. To him that disposeth his way aright will I shew the saluation of God Such as with an honest heart desire to be taught of God because they feare to offend him because they loue him and desire to please and serue him such he will teach the way they should chuse he will reueale his secrets to them euen the secret of all secrets his decree touching their eternall election The Reasons of this are three 1. The good pleasure of God The free and infinite loue the Lord beareth to them that are his This Reason our Sauiour giueth Mat. 11. 26. euen so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight 2. The vnchangeablenesse of this loue of God and care he hath to perfect
10. which on the other daies they are not 3. It is not to be denyed but some Christians may and ought to spend more time in the exercises of Religion then other some Such as are of wealth and ability to liue of themselues are more bound to frequent the publike exercises on the weeke day then poorer men Such as by their callings haue more leisure and freedome from worldly employment then such as haue more necessary and important businesse Of rich men it may be said There is a price put into their hands to get wisedome Pro. 17. 16. That maketh the Apostle speake as he doth of the priuiledge that the single person hath aboue the marryed the vnmarried man careth for the things that belong to the Lord how hee may please the Lord The vnmarried woman careth for the things of the Lord that shee may bee holy both in body and in spirit 1. Cor. 7. 32 34. and the widow also shee that is a widow indeed and desolate trusteth in God and continueth in supplications and prayers night and day 1. Tim. 5. 5. Whereas verse 14. Other women haue other imployments Such a widdow was Anna Luke 2. 37. she departed not from the Temple but serued God with fasting and prayer night and day Lecture the one and fiftieth Aprill 24. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXVIII XXIX IT followeth that we come now to shew what is to be said for the defence and encouragement of those men that not contenting themselues to serue God vpon the Sabbath do vpon the weeke daies leaue their worldly businesse and spend much time in Gods worship And that I will deliuer for the better helpe of your memory and mine owne in fiue principall and chiefe points 1. Euery Christian is bound to serue God not vpon the Sabbath onely but to spend some part of euery day in Gods worship This was signified in the Law 1. When God commanded there should be a morning and euening sacrifice offered euery day Exod. 29. 39. And the King is commanded notwithstanding all his weighty imployments to reade some part of Gods Word euery day Deut. 17. 19. and that we should pray euery day it is euident by the fourth petition of the Lords pray Therefore we reade that Gods seruants did set themselues certaine times for prayer euery day and obserued them precisely Psalme 55. 17. Dan. 6. 16. and yet both these were men that had much businesse Reasons for this are these 1. Though the Sabbath in a speciall sort be called the Lords day yet is euery day his too Psal. 74. 16. Therefore as the Apostle prooues we must glorifie and serue God with our bodies as well as our soules because they are both his 1. Cor. 6. 20. so may we prooue that God is to be serued euery day as well as on the Sabbath day because euery day is his 2. If we do not by this meanes euery day stirre vp quicken and nourish Gods grace in our selues The deceitfulnesse of sinne and Sathan and worldly occasions will by little and little harden vs and steale away our hearts from God security will creepe vpon vs before we be aware Heb. 3. ●…3 And the more dealings a man hath in the world the greater cause he hath to feare this That is the reason that is giuen why the Lord will haue the King to read euery day Deut. 17. 20. That his heart bee not lasted vp and that he turne not from the commandement 3. The little time spent in Gods seruice euery day will bring Gods blessing vpon the whole day and vpon the businesse and occasions of that day As the first fruits that Gods people gaue to him brought his blessing vpon all the rest Deut. 26. 10 11. It is that that giueth vs a sanctified vse of the day and of all the comforts of it of our owne labours and of the labours of our seruants 1. Tim. 4. 5. So that when a man shall remember how many houres in euery day he hath spent in sleeping eating drinking and sporting and how few houres yea minutes of the day he hath bestowed on the Lord and on his owne soule he shall haue cause to complaine as Iob 7. 6. My dayes are swifter then a Weauers shuttle and are spent without hope 2. It is lawfull to haue publike assemblies to keepe Lectures and Exercises not on the Sabbaths onely but on other daies also and for Gods people to frequent them This is euident in the practise and example of the Primitiue Church and of our Sauiour himselfe It is spoken to the praise of Gods people in the Primitiue Church that they continued daily with one accord in the Temple Acts 2. 46. And Luke 19. 47 Christ taught daily in the Temple and had a great audience verse 48. All the people hanged on him and 21. 37 38. In the day time he taught in the Temple and at night hee went out to the mount of Oliues and in the morning all the people came to heare him in the Temple Mar. 8. 13. We read that a very great multitude had followed him and continued with him three daies and some of them came from farre so that besides those three daies they spent some good time in comming to him and going backe If it had not beene lawfull to keepe Lectures and exercises vpon weeke dayes doubtlesse he would not so vsually and often haue preached on those dayes and if it had not beene lawfull for Gods people of all sorts to frequent them surely he would not haue suffered them to doe it he would haue reprooued them for it So that he that shall reprooue or deride or blame Gods people for this out of doubt he hath not the spirit of Christ in him 3. Though no man be so expresly and particularly commanded to goe to Sermons on the weeke day as on the Sabbath yet all that are able to doe it whose necessities will permit them are as well bound to goe to Sermons on the weeke day as on the Sabbath God requires more seruice of euery man then he hath expressely and particularly commanded Besides the sacrifices that God had expresly commanded there were free offerings vnder the Law which men of their owne voluntary will did bring vnto God Leuit. 1. 3. and 7. 16. None were expresly commanded to goe vp to Ierusalem at the three feasts but onely the males Exod. 34. 23. nor among the males any that were vnder 20. yeares of age for such onely were wont to be numbred Exod. 30. 4 and yet we finde that Elkanah was wont to take with him all his family his wiues his sonnes and daughters euery yeare to those feasts 1. Sam. 1. 4. 21. So did the blessed Virgin euery yeere keepe the Passeouer at Ierusalem with her husband And our Sauiour himselfe when he was but twelue yeares old was wont to goe with them Luke 2. 41 42. If any shall obiect and say that God alloweth no will-worship but hath straightly charged vs in his worship
now truth of grace in her not onely affirmes that Christ had told her all that euer shee did but also alledgeth this as an argument to prooue him to be the Messiah the Sonne of God We learne this Doctrine That the Lord is priuy to all the wayes of men and can tell vs all that euer we did But this Doctrine and the Vses of it we haue alread handled in the fourteenth Lecture and therefore I will passe by it here Lecture the foure and fiftieth Iune 19. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXX FOlloweth now the successe God gaue to the zealous endeauours that this Woman vsed to draw her neighbours vnto Christ which is set downe in this verse In which we are to obserue that which we may wonder at if we obserue it well 1. That vpon her speech they went out of the City and came to Christ and 2. They were a great many that did so as may appeare verse 39. 41. 3. They beleeued vpon her report that he was the Messiah verse 39. Now from hence we haue this instruction to learne That the conuersion of a man to Christ dependeth neither on the worthinesse of the party that is conuerted nor on the excellency of the meanes whereby he is conuerted but onely vpon the free grace and pleasure of Almighty God This is that the Apostle teacheth Iam. 1. 18. Of his owne will begat hee vs with the word of truth Rom. 9. 18. He hath mercy on whom he will haue mercy and whom he will he hardeneth But the truth of this Doctrine shall more cleerely appeare to you in these points 1. He giues the meanes of grace to some and denyeth them to other euery whit as worthy as they hee forbad Paul to preach in Asia or Bithynia and called him to preach in Macedonia Acts 16. 6 7 10. Our Sauiour did that at Capernaum which he refused to doe at Nazaret his owne country as Elias was sent to a widow in Sarepta and not to any of the widdowes that were in Israel and Elizeus clensed Naaman the Syrian where as there were many lepers in Israel that were not clensed by him England hath had the preaching of the Gospell these fiftie yeares together Spaine nor Italy neuer had it since the daies of the Primitiue Church nay Ireland for the most part though it be vnder the same gouernment neuer had it nay euen in England many Townes haue had it without intermission these 50. yeares together many neuer had it yet And what may be imagined to be the cause of this Surely this hath come to passe neither by chance nor by the will of man but it hath beene the Lords doing alone He that said Amos 4. 7. I haue with-holden the raine from you and I caused it to raine vpon one City and caused it not to raine vpon another City it is he onely that hath caused the Word to be preached in some places and caused it not to be preached in other some And what hath mooued him to do this Surely no worthinesse he saw in these Countries townes or persons to whom he granted his Gospel aboue the rest to whom he hath denied it but his good pleasure onely as the Apostle teacheth 2. Tim. 1. 9. Hee hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our owne wrokes but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen to vs in Christ Iesus before the world was Secondly among those to whom he giues the meanes we shall finde to some they are blessed Others euery whit as worthy and more likely to receiue good by them are neuer the better for them 1. Some few in those places that enioy the meanes feele Gods power in them to their conuersion Ier. 3. 14. One of City and two of a Tribe and the greatest part by farre is neuer the better for them Matth. 22. 14. Many are called but few are chosen 2. Some simple rude people are wont to finde such a blessing on the meanes as that they attaine to great measure of knowledge and grace by them whereas others of better nature capacity and education enioying the very same meanes can feele no sweetnesse or power in them I giue thee thankes O Father Lord of heauen and earth saith our Sauiour Matthew 11. 25. that thou hast hidden these things from the wise and prudent and reuealed them vnto habes 3. Some that haue beene notoriously and infamously wicked we see are oft conuerted by the meanes and made new men Others become most vile and wicked men by them that were very ciuill and morall men before By the same Ministry whereby the Publicans and Harlots were conuerted the Scribes and Pharisees were made outragiously wicked Matth. 21. 31 32. And from whence commeth this that the meanes of saluation do good on some and no good on other Surely not from the worthinesse of the persons that are conuerted or from the excellencie of the meanes but onely from the good pleasure of Almighty God according as we haue seene Euen so O Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Matth. 11. 26. He hath mercy on whom he will haue mercy and whom he will he hardneth Rom. 9. 18. 3. Though he doe vse to worke by meanes yet the meanes he is wont to worke by are so weake and simple that they are more likely to hinder his worke then to further it at all In his most miraculous workes he hath beene wont to vse meanes but they were such as all the world might see had in themselues no force at all to effect that which he wrought by them See this Iosh. 6. 3. 〈◊〉 They must 1. Goe round about the City for sixe daies together once a day and seuen times the seuenth day 2. The last time they had gone round about it the Priests must blow the trumpets of Rams-hornes seuen times 3. When these trumpets had beene blowne the seuenth time all the people must giue a shout and then the walls fell downe flat Doe you not thinke the men of Iericho scorned them all this while and thought them out of their wits The like we shall see in a miraculous cure done vpon Naaman the Leper he must go wash himselfe in ●…ordan seuen times and then he should bee cleane 2. Reg. 5. 10. And vpon a man that was borne blind Christ made clay with his spittle and a●…nointed the eyes of the blinde man with the clay Iohn 9. 6. And so doth he in the great worke of mans conuersion vse meanes yea he hath set downe and appointed in his Word what meanes he will vse and without which he neuer vseth to worke But what are these meanes Surely 〈◊〉 Corinthians 1. 21. The foolishnesse of preaching that is 1. Preaching which the most men and wisest men in the world all that perish esteeme contemptibly of and account meere foolishnesse 1. Cor. 1. 18. 23. 2. The preaching of such men as haue no shew with them in the world no outward meanes to draw
keepes his stomake for it He knew and so did not they what a multitude of the Samaritans were comming towards him 3 The question which the Disciples had among themselues about this answer their Master had made vnto them verse 33. They wondred how he in that place should come by meate Yet out of the reuerence they beare to his person they durst not aske him but only inquired among themselues how that might be 4. The manifestation that Christ himselfe maketh of his owne meaning in that answer he had giuen vnto them verse 34. The meate he spake of was 1. To do the will of him that sent him that is to instruct and saue soules 2. To finish his worke It is my meat saith Christ to finish it to exercise my selfe in it still euen to the end of my daies And this he calls his meat 1. Because of the appetite and desire he had to it as men haue to their meate he desired nothing so earnestly 2. Because it refreshed him maruailously no food no dainties were so sweet vnto him The first thing then that in these verses offreth it selfe to our consideration is this that the Disciples out of the loue and respect they had vnto our Sauiour doe mooue and intreat him to eate somewhat and that he blameth them not for this From whence we haue this to learne That though a Christians chiefe care should be for his own soule and the soules of other men yet the bodies of men may not be neglected but must be nourished and cared for also especially theirs whose health and strength may be of most seruice and vse to God and his Church 1. For the care of our selues this way see a plaine direction giuen vs by the Apostle Ephes. 5. 29. No man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it And 2. For the care we should haue of others it is to be obserued that when our Sauiour had restored the daughter of Iairus to life he commanded that something should be giuen her to eate Mar. 5. 43. and that all those workes of mercy vnto which the Lord will shew such respect at the day of iudgement Matth. 25. 42 4●… are such as had beene shewed vpon the bodies of Gods seruants And lastly for the speciall care should be had of the bodily health and strength of such as whose seruice may be of speciall vse to God and his Church We haue a notable example in the care of the Apostle had of Timothy for Timothy being a young man and vnmarried for the suppressing of the lusts of youth and the better obtaining of the gift of continency did altogether forbeare the drinking of wine and vsed to drinke water onely and thereby weakened his stomake and brought vpon himselfe many other infirmities Paul therefore forbids him 1. Tim. 5. 23. to drinke water any longer and chargeth him to drinke wine The Reasons of the Doctrine are foure 1. The commandement of God that forbids vs to kill and take away the life either of our selues or others Exod. 20. 13. commandeth vs to vse all good meanes for the preseruing of life both in our selues and others Our bodies and liues are not our owne to doe with what we list but the Lord is the God of our life Psal. 42. 8. and our bodies are his and not our owne as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 6. 19. 20. and therefore the wrong we doe to our bodies redoundeth vnto him 2. All the creatures of God that serue for the preseruation and health and comfort of our bodies are giuen vs by God to that end that we might vse and enioy them and giue him praise I brought you into a plentifull country saith the Lord Ier. 2. 7. to eate the fruit thereof and the goodnesse thereof And the Apostle 1. Tim. 6. 17. He giues vs richly all things to enioy and 1. Tim. 4. 3. God hath created meates to be receiued with thanksgiuing of them which beleeue and know the truth And therefore the neglecting to vse them for the comfort of the body must needs argue vnthankefulnesse vnto God and a light esteeme of his goodnesse and bounty 3. The bodies of Gods seruants are the members of Christ 1. Cor. 6. 15. and the Temples of the Holy Ghost 1. Cor. 6. 19. and in that respect they must not be neglected but there is an honour due vnto them 4. And lastly the body is the seruant of the soule and the instrument whereby it worketh and therefore the neglect of it will greatly disable the soule and hinder the functions and actions of it and besides make it subiect to many passions and fancies that otherwise it might be free from Therefore when our Sauiour speaketh how the Lord fitted him to the worke of mediation and redemption saith Heb. 10. 5. A body hast thou prepared me thou hast giuen me a body fit for that worke and seruice The Vse of this Doctrine is 1. For reproofe of such as in their health vpon pretence of Religion and mortification neglect and macerate their bodies and deny them such helpes and comforts as are necessary for them I grant that it is sometimes profitable and necessary to abridge our selues of the comforts of this life 1. For the taming and mortifying of the flesh and bringing of the body in subiection to the soule I keepe vnder my body and bring it into subiection 1. Cor. 9. 17. 2. For the profession of our repentance and humiliation before God Ezra did eate no bread nor drinke water for he mourned because of the transgression of them that had beene carryed away Ezra 10. 6. 3. For our helpe in extraordinary prayer Let them not feede nor drink water but let man and beast be couered with sackcloth and cry mightily vnto God Ion. 3. 7 8. In which three respects God inioyned his people to keepe a day of solemne abstinence once euery yeere though they had no other extraordinary occasion to mooue them to it Leuit. 23. 29. But euen at such times the Lord requireth vs to keepe that measure as that we neglect not the health of our bodies nor make them vnseruiceable vnto vs I will haue mercy and not sacrifice saith the Lord Matth. 12. 7. And the rather because we are easily drawne to hypocrisie this way and euen to put holinesse in will-worship and humility and neglecting of the body as the Apostle noteth Colos. 2. 23. 2. For reproofe of such as in their sicknesse refuse or neglect the benefit of Physicke True it is 1. That it is the Lord onely who both sendeth sicknesse vpon others and with-holdeth those diseases from vs and our families that fall vpon others and who healeth vs when we are sicke whether we haue taken Physicke or no if we recouer our health it is the Lord that healeth vs he is the God of our life Psal. 42. 8. and of our health also he is the strength of our life Psal. 27. 1. yea it cannot be
the worke of the Ministry must be like vnto the housholder which hath a treasury of good prouision in himselfe and bringeth forth of it things both old and new Matth. 13. 52. This I thought needfull to stand vpon because I finde that those Ministers of all others are most vehement and bitter in complaining of their people for going from them who are either vtterly vnable to teach profitably and take vpon them to flye before they haue wings or such as are idle men and make no conscience to stirre vp that gift that God hath bestowed vpon them 3. The last direction I haue to giue to such Pastours is this That if they see cause to iudge that such as leaue them sometimes doe it without contempt of their Ministry in a dutifull manner seeking nothing in it but their profit and growth in grace and that they doe indeede profit by another more than they did by themselues that they are much bettered in knowledge zealous loue to the Word reformation of life conscience of all their waies since they went to heare such a man then take heed thou repine not at it but reioyce heartily that this worke is wrought in them though not by thy selfe Remember the doctrine that thou hast now heard Yea say they were such as left thee with some contempt yet if they profit more by another than by thee thou shouldest be willing to take knowledge of the good things that are euen in thine enemy and to reioyce in them also The Corinthians began to despise Pauls Ministry and to entertaine false Apostles that sought to disgrace him and yet doth he take knowledge of the good things were in them and praiseth God for them also 1 Cor. 1. 4 5. The like example he giueth vs also he reioyceth that Christ was preached euen by them who though they had good gifts and did both for matter and method teach profitably yet had naughty hearts and preached out of enuy and desire to add affliction vnto his bonds Phil. 1. 15 16 18. Lecture the fiftieth ninth Iune 24. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXXII XXXIV FOlloweth the fourth Property of true zeale to bee obserued in this example of our blessed Sauiour Though he had spent much time already in instructing the Woman yet as if he had done nothing hitherto he earnestly desires to do more Yea he professeth it was his meate to finish and perfect his fathers worke He that hath true zeale will not rest in any thing he hath already done but will still endeauour to goe forward and to be better than he hath beene and to finish his worke well Two branches there are you see of this property 1. He that hath any true zeale in him is carefull to grow and goe forward there is no one more essentiall property of true zeale than this desire to grow See a plaine example of this in Paul he had attained to a great measure and done much seruice to God yet heare what he saith Phil. 3. 13 14. I count not my selfe that I haue attained to perfection but one thing I doe as if he should say This is all my perfection I forget that that is behinde and endeauour my selfe to that which is before and follow hard toward the marke There is no certainer a signe that a man hath sauing grace in him than this when he earnestly desireth and endeauoureth to haue more grace They that haue had most store of grace haue euer beene most couetous and greedy to get more as none are so desirous of riches as they that haue most wealth nor any so desirous of knowledge as the best learned It is made a title of the seruants of God to hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Matth. 5. 〈◊〉 See an experiment of this in Dauid how he hungred after the sauing knowledge of Gods will Open thou mine eyes saith he that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Teach me thy statutes make mee to vnderstand the way of thy precepts Psalme 119. 18. 26 27. 2. His chiefe care is to finish his worke well This wee may see in Paul Acts 20. 24. I passe not at all I care not what I endure so I may fulfill my course with ioy And it is noted by the Holy Ghost of the best of Gods seruants that they neuer shewed such zeale and faithfulnesse in the worke of the Lord as when they were neare their end when they saw they were not to continue long Iacob Moses Ioshua Dauid Peter shewed more care of the Church and zeale of Gods glory toward their end than euer they did before Yea our Sauiour was neuer so zealous and painefull in instructing and praying for his Disciples as he was a little before his death See what he saith of this Ioh. 9. 4. I must worke the workes of him that sent me while it is day the night commeth when no man can worke And see what he did also how he doubled his diligence in preaching and praying for his Church immediately before his Passion In the day time euery day he was teaching in the Temple and at night he went out and abode in the Mount of Oliues And all the people came early in the morning to him in the Temple to heare him Luke 21. 37 38. To reprooue such as stand at a stay and thinke they haue done enough It is a certaine signe of a man that is but luke-warme in Religion when he thinketh he hath grace enough when he hath no desire nor vseth any endeauour to get more grace Thus is the luke-warme Laodicean described Apoc. 3. 16 17. he said he was rich and encreased with goods and had neede of nothing It is not possible but he that hath any soundnesse of grace in him must needs haue in him a desire to grow As in the naturall body euery member groweth till it come to full stature so is it in the mysticall body of Christ Col. 2. 19. All the body furnished and knit together by ioynts and bands increaseth with the increasing of God Iohn 15. 2. Euery branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may beare more fruit Therefore though the Thessalonians were grown so farre that the Apostle praiseth God for their effectuall faith and diligent loue and patient hope 1. Thess. 1. 3. and saith of them that their faith grew exceedingly and their loue one toward another abounded 2. Thess. 1. 3. yet he earnestly exhorteth and beseecheth them that they would increase more and more 1. Thess. 4. 1. 10. 2. For conuincing of their errour that seeke to iustifie many corruptions both in manners and religion by this Argument In such and such a mans dayes such things were vsed and I hope he was a learned man and a good man and why may they not then be vsed now To these men I answer First that it hath beene an old tricke of hypocrites to pretend great reuerence and respect to the seruants of God that are dead when their credit might
yet this comparison holdeth betweene the Prophets and all the Ministers of the Gospell they were sowers and we are reapers This is plaine by another speech of Christ Matth. 11. 11. for there hauing preferred Iohn Baptist before all the Prophets and that in this respect among others because he gained more to God by his Ministrie than any of them had done as appeareth Verse 12. From the time of Iohn Baptist hitherto the Kingdome of heauen suffereth violence he addeth in the latter end of that 11. verse Notwithstanding he that is least in the Kingdome of heauen that is in the new estate of the Church is not in respect of his person and gifts but of his Ministry greater than Iohn Baptist. Hitherto belong those prophesies that in the dayes of the Gospell the Church should so increase Esay 54. 2 3. Enlarge thy tents for thou shalt encre ase on the right hand and on the left and that knowledge should then abound Esay 11. 9. and sanctification also after those daies the daies of the Gospell he meaneth saith the Lord I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Ier. 31. 33. Nay the Lord neuer sendeth any faithfull Minister to a people but he vseth to make his Ministry fruitfull vnto some the sower neuer goeth forth to sowe but he meets with foure sorts of ground whereof the one is good as our Sauiour teacheth vs in that Parable Matth. 13. 3 8. Yea this is made a note of an able Minister of the New Testament 2. Cor. 3. 6. he is a Minister not of the letter onely but of the spirit The Reasons of this Doctrine are three 1. All things that concerne our saluation are more clearely taught and more fully in the Ministry of the Gospell than they were vnder the Law This is plaine Colos. 1. 26. where the Apostle calleth the Gospell a mystery which had beene hidden since the world began and from all ages but now is made manifest to all his Saints 2. The mercy of God and his free grace is more fully made knowne and offered vnto men in the Ministrie of the Gospell than it was vnder the Law This reason the Apostie giueth the grace of God that bringeth saluation hath appeared vnto all men Tit. 2. 11. 3. The Spirit of God which onely maketh the Word of God effectuall in the heart of man is much more plentifully bestowed since the time of Christs Ascension than euer it was before This is plaine Iohn 7. 39. The Holy Ghost was not yet giuen because Iesus was not yet glorified This Doctrine serueth for the Vse and profit both of vs that are Gods Ministers and for all you that are Gods people First we that are Ministers are to be exhorted by this Doctrine that we labour to be fruitfull and profitable in our Ministry Seeke not wealth or ease or credit but fruit Labour to finde that thy Ministry hath done good that it hath beene effectuall to the conuersion of some This made Paul so earnestly desirous to see the Romanes that he might haue some fruit among them also as he had among the other Gentiles Rom. 1. 13. Foure Reasons may be giuen to mooue vs to this care 1. God hath placed vs in this calling and giuen vs the gifts we haue to this end euen for the perfecting of the Saints and for the edifying of the body of Christ Ephes. 4. 8. 12. the manifestation of the spirit is giuen to euery man to profit withall 1. Cor. 12. 7. 2. Euery man should count it his misery to be vnprofitable it is noted for a great part of the misery of our estate by nature that we are altogether vnprofitable Rom. 3. 12. how much more a Minister Matthew 21. 30. cast yee the vnprofitable seruant into vtter darkenesse there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth 3. Nothing will yeeld vs that comfort in life or death as this not all the wealth we haue gathered nor the credit and applause we haue had 1. Thess. 2. 19. they whom he had won to God were his hope and ioy and crowne of reioycing 4. This is the chiefe thing that will assure vs that God hath indeed called vs to be Ministers of his Gospell and approueth of our Ministry when we are fruitfull when the porter the Holy Ghost appeareth vnto vs and giueth entrance to our Ministry into the hearts of the people Iohn 10. 3. as we know he did to Pauls Ministry into the heart of Lydia Act. 16. 14. We haue heard all the Ministers of the New Testament are reapers The seruants to whom God committed his talents if they were good and faithfull seruants gained somewhat to their Master Matth. 25. 23. Thus Paul approoueth himselfe to be an able Minister of the Gospell the Corinthians that were conuerted by his Ministry were his letters of commendation written in his heart yeilding him much inward comfort and assurance of his calling and also knowne and read of all men such an euidence of his calling as was apparant vnto all men 2. Cor. 3. 2. this he calls the very seale of his Apostleship 1. Cor. 9 2 Now seeing this is so necessary I will giue some few rules out of Gods Word which if we follow we shall be sure to reape fruit of our labours 1. We must be diligent and painefull both in study and in preaching giue attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine neglect not the gift that is in thee but both by diligence in study and in preaching labour to stirre it vp and increase it saith the Apostle vnto Timothy 1. Tim. 4. 13 14. 2. When we teach we must labour to teach that not wherein our selues may shew most learning or eloquence but which may be most profitable and of vse to them we teach speake thou the things which become sound wholesome doctrine Tit. 2. 1. and the things that he would haue Titus to affirme constantly and to insist vpon in his Ministry are the things that are good and profitable vnto men Tit. 3. 8. 3. Striue to teach in that manner as may most profit thy hearers Marke 4. 33. Christ preached so as they were able to heare This was Pauls minde though he excelled all the flaunting preachers at Corinth in the tongues yet he professed that in the Church he had rather speake fiue words to the capacity and edification of others then ten thousand words in an vnknowne tongue 1. Cor. 14. 18 19. Hitherto belongeth that exhortation preach the Word reprooue rebuke exhort that is apply thy doctrine alwaies to the present estate and condition of thy hearers 2. Tim. 4. 2. 4. Take heed to thy life that thou do nothing to hinder the fruit of thy labours take heed vnto thy selfe and vnto the doctrine 1. Tim. 4. 16. And 1. Cor. 9. 15. it were better for me to die then that any man should make my glorying void that is rather then that any man should be able to obiect ought
all Ministers yet of all able and faithfull Ministers we are There hath beene long and is at this day great difference of iudgement amongst Gods seruants in our Church some hold that there is a forme of Church gouernement set downe in the Word which was practised in the Apostles times and which all Churches are bound vnto vnto the end of the world other of Gods seruants are of another minde Some hold the ceremonies to be vnlawfull others hold them to be lawfull and fit And this difference in iudgement hath wrought great alienation of heart and affection among Gods seruants but this ought not to be so 1. We should reuerence and esteeme one another so many as we see to be able and painefull and godly men we are to reuerence and esteeme of notwithstanding these differences in iudgement we ought not to despise or condemne one another for these things Rom. 14. 3. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not and let not him which eateth not condemne him which eateth The odious termes of Puritans or Formalists of Schismatickes or Time-seruers ought not to be heard amongst brethren 2. We should auoide all bitternesse of contention about these things Though we differ in ●…udgement in these things yet should we endeauour that the people may discerne no difference nor disagreement in Doctrine amongst vs. True it is we may and ought to seeke resolution for our consciences out of Gods Word euen in these things seeme they neuer so small Rom. 14. 〈◊〉 Let euery man bee fully perswaded in his minde And when we haue receiued good resolution in these things we ought to hold that fast so farre forth as God hath reuealed his will vnto vs the Minister especially it is required that he hold fast the faithfull Word Tit. 1. 9. But if we dissent one from another in these things it must be without bitternesse in a brotherly manner Ephes. 4. ●…5 Follow the truth in loue saith the Apostle It is not to be held want of zeale or alteration in iudgement but true wisedome in a Minister to shunne in his Ministry and Doctrine so farre as in him lyeth these points that brethren differ in and to spend his time in such points wherein we all agree and which are more profitable for the people to know Acts●…0 ●…0 20. In the building of Salomons Temple it is said that there was no noise of hammer or axe or any toole of Iron heard in the house while it was building 1. King 6. 7. It were to be wished that in our Ministrie whereby Gods spirituall Temples are to be built there might be no noise heard of any iarres or contentions that are among our selues but that we all would doe as Dauid did though his brethren the Iewes had prouoked him much yet could he not be stirred to fight against them but vsed all his skill and force against the Philistines 1. Sam. 27. 7 12. So should we all ioyne our forces against the common aduersary It is promised as a blessed fruit of the Gospell which euery godly man prayeth for and desireth to see Esay 11. 13 14. That Ephraim and Iudah may cease to enuie and vexe one another but that they may ioyne together against the common aduersary 3. Howsoeuer we cannot agree in iudgement yet should we loue one another and be glad to imbrace one anothers acquaintance and to reioyce one in anothers gifts and faithfulnesse and successe in his labours neuerthelesse for the difference that is in iudgement amongst vs about these things Wee haue a worthy example for these things in the Primitiue Church Acts 4. 32. The multitude of them that belieued were of one heart and one soule and therefore it is said of them Acts 2. 46. that they were not strange one to another but maintained a sweet society together and reioyced one in another They did eate their meate together with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart The Reasons that may moue vs to this agreement are these First the great aduantage that all sorts of wicked men Papists Atheists and ignorant persons take at our contentions and disagreements When the Holy Ghost would intimate one cause why Abraham was so loath to fall out with Lot so desirous to compound the differences that were betweene their heard-men he saith Gen. 13. 7. And the Canaanites and the Perizzites dwelt at that time in the land Doubtlesse we haue in our land many Canaanites and Perizzites at this day that doe take great offence at this and make it their chiefe occasion to alienate their hearts from the truth of God and from the reuerence of our calling Matth. 18. 7. Woe bee to the world because of of offences it must needes bee that offences shall come it is iust with God and necessary such wretches should haue somewhat laid in their way to stumble at but Woe bee to that man by whom the offence commeth woe be to vs if we become occasions of such offence vnto them Secondly such as we differ from in iudgement may be Gods deare children and faithfull seruants though they erre and cannot see the truth in these matters as we thinke we do True it is that God hath made this promise to all the faithfull Ier. 32. 38 39. They shall be my people and I will bee their God and I will giue them one heart and one way that they may feare me for euer But this is meant that in fundamentall points they shall all agree True it is also that it is a thing greatly to be wisht and sought after that all Gods seruants might be of one iudgement in all points It is worthy to be obserued how oft the Apostle beats vpon this point 1. Cor. 1. 10. Bee yee knit together in one minde and in one iudgement and 2. Cor. 13. 11. Finally brethren bee perfect bee of good comfort bee of one minde liue in peace and the God of loue and peace shall bee with you Phil. 3. 2. fulfill my ioy that yee may be like minded hauing the same loue being of one accord and of one iudgement The Apostle knew well that the neerer we agree in iudgement the faster will our affections be knit one vnto another But though this be to be desired and endeauoured after yet can it neuer be attained in this life that all Gods faithfull seruants should agree in all points Perfect vnity is not to be looked for in the Church of God till the number of all the elect be fulfilled till the Church be come to her perfection Ephes. 4. 13. Paul speaking of the vnitie of faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God this vnity the perfect vnitie tels vs when it is to be looked for Euen when wee shall all meete together vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ. It is great rashnesse and ignorance in any to doubt of the soundnesse of euery mans heart that doth not receiue and imbrace euery
went his way Secondly the meanes whereby this faith that was begun in him was confirmed and increased in Verse 51 52. and part of 53. Thirdly the confirmation and stablishment which he receiued in his faith by these means and the fruit whereby he declared it in the latter end of the 53 Verse Now for the first it is said that the man belieued the word that Iesus had spoken vnto him and to declare that he did so indeed he gaue ouer importuning him any more and went his way It may seeme somewhat strange if we mark it well to see so great and sudden a change wrought in this great man Euen now he was of that mind that he would not belieue vnlesse he might see signes and wonders now he belieues Christs bare word though he did see nothing at all done Before he thought Christ could do his sonne no good vnlesse he would go downe to him to see him and pray ouer him or touch him and vse some solemne ceremony about him now he belieueth his sonne is recouered though Christ did none of all these but onely spake the word And if we enquire into the causes of it we shall find them to be principally two the first in the Lord the other in himselfe First the Lords gracious pleasure was the cause of this who worketh mans conuersion when and by what means it pleaseth him Ioh. 3. 8. The wind bloweth where it listeth and who had appointed this to be the time of this Noblemans conuersion and this word of Christ to be the means whereby it should be wrought This should make vs carefull to be constant hearers of the Word For first some point of great importance may be taught in one Sermon which haply we shall not heare againe in an hundred Secondly though at all times Gods Elect may profit by their hearing yet hath God his times and moments determined with himselfe wherein he will work with his Word more mightily than at other times And who can tell which is the Sermon that God hath appointed to do him most good by We should therfore frequent Sermons as good husbands do their faires and markets and prouident Merchants the times of the Royall Exchange that no opportunity of a good bargaine may escape them Secondly his heart was well prepared to receiue good by Christ both by that hand of God that was vpon him in the sicknesse of his sonne and also by that reuerend and good opinion he had conceiued of Christ by that that he had heard or seene of him before he esteemed him to be a great Prophet one that was able and willing to do him good And this reuerend opinion he had conceiued of him made him willing as great as he was to come himselfe to him so great a way Now by these meanes his heart was much better prepared and made fit to giue credit vnto that that Christ should say vnto him than otherwise it would haue been From this first point then we haue this Doctrine to learne That It is a matter of great vse and necessity for our profiting by the Word to come to it with a heart that is rightly prepared The man that brings to the Word a prepared heart shall receiue more good by once hearing of it than another shall do at many times True it is that many a man hath receiued some good by the Word felt himself much moued by it that yet hath come to it without a due preparation as not only Agrippa that was almost caught Act. 26. 28. but euen Foelix also Pauls ministry wrought mightily vpon his heart it made him to quake and tremble Act. 24. 26. and Herod though doubtles his heart was neuer well prepared when he came to heare Iohn yet can it not be denied but he receiued much good by hearing him he heard him gladly and reformed his life in many things by hearing of him Mar. 6. 20. Yea many haue felt a diuine power in the Ministry of the Word as haue come to it with very bad hearts such were those officers that were sent to apprehend our Sauiour Iohn 7. 46. Yea sometimes God hath so farre forth glorified his power in this his owne ordinance as he hath wrought thereby euen the effectuall conuersion of some that haue come to it without all good preparation of heart as the Athenians which heard Paul Act. 17. first with what hearts they came to heare him it is plaine Ver. 18. Some said what will this babler say and the best of them heard him onely out of a desire to heare newes Vers. 21. and yet see how God wrought by that Sermon in the hearts of sundry of them Vers. 34. Howbeit certaine men claue to Paul and belieued among whom also was Denis Areopagita and a woman named Damaris and other with them And vpon these experiments it were much to be wished that all men euen the wickedest would be brought to heare yea though they came but by occasion or as intending some other thing yea though they came euen with an euill intent to carp or to mock yet I would they would come Possibly they might be caught though they came euen with such hearts Yea it were to be wished that such as can by no other meanes be drawne to heare might euen be compelled and forced to it by Authority Iosiah is commended for this 2 Chro. 34. 33. That he compelled all that were found in Israel to serue the Lord and if you looke into Ieremy and others that prophecied in Iosiahs time you shall find there was many a notorious lewd man in Israel in those dayes And if there be any part of Gods seruice that men may and ought to be compelled vnto certainly it is rather this than any other therefore euen the excommunicate persons by the ancient Canons of the Church were allowed to come to the Sermon It is therefore a great errour in any to imagine that it is to no purpose to vrge such and such to come to Church because they think they are either so sottish or so lewd that they can receiue no good by comming and therefore it matters not whether they come or no. But though all this be so as you haue heard yet first this is a singular helpe and furtherance to our profiting by the Word to come to it with a prepared heart secondly and where God meanes his Word shall prosper to worke sauing grace there he prepares the hearts of men to receiue it thirdly neither doth it ordinarily preuaile to worke true faith and sound conuersion but in a prepared heart The former examples are very rare Marke this therefore in the course God hath beene wont to keepe in the conuersion of men either by his miracles and strange works or by his corrections or by the terrours of the Law he hath been wont to fit the hearts of his elect to receiue the Gospell Acts 5. 14. The number of them that belieued in the Lord both of men
and by himselfe Luke 5. ●…6 He kept himselfe apart in the wildernesse and prayed he vsed this kind of praying in the morning Ma●…e 1. 35. In the morning very early before day he arose and went out into a solitary place and there prayed He vsed it also in the euening Matth. 14 ●…3 Hee went vp into a mountaine alone hauing no house of his own●… he was wont to goe abroad into the most solitary place to pray and when the Euening was come hee was there alone Yea this was his custome Luke 22. 39. Hee went as he was wont to the Mount of Oliues 5. He was wont to performe this worship of God with gestures and signes of as much reuerence humility and submission as we shall read any of Gods seruants haue beene wont to doe Luke 2●… 41. He knecled downe and prayed Matth 26. 39. He fell on his face and prayed The Reason why he was thus diligent in worshipping God wa●… not so much for his owne sake as for vs. For he had no need to pray for hee had all creatures in heauen and earth at command and by his word was able to doe what pleased him Matth. 8. 8 9. Speake the word onely and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be healed For I am a man also in authority c. Why then did he thus vse to worship God surely for our sake onely and not for himselfe but in respect of vs. Three Reasons there were for it 1. That he might purchase to vs eternall life it was necessary he should perfectly keepe the law for thus runs the Couenant Matth. 19. 17. If thou wilt enter into life keepe th●… commandements yea perfectly Gal 〈◊〉 1●… This we were not able to doe therefore he Gal. 4 4 5. Was made vnder the Law that he might redeeme them that are vnder the Law that we might receiue th●… adoption of sonnes Therefore it became him to fulfill all righteousnesse Matth. 7 5. And this is a chiefe part of that righteousnesse God requireth of vs in his law that we worship him Mat. 22. 38. This is the first and the great comm●…ndement 2. That he might giue vs an example for that which he speaketh of one of his actions may be said of all that he did in obedience to the morall Law Iohn 13. 15. I haue giuen you an example that you should doe as I haue done 3. That he might obtaine for vs the Spirit of God whereby we may be made able to doe the like For as the disobedience of Adam deserued that all his posterity should loose the Image of God and become like vnto him Rom. 5. 22. By one man sinne entered into the world so the actiue obedience of Christ hath deserued that God should renew his Image in all the faithfull and giue them his quickning spirit Rom. 8. 2. the Law of the spirit of life in Christ Iesus hath made me free from the law of sinne and of death The Vse of this Doctrine is to stirre euery one of vs vp to a greater conscience and diligence in all the duties of Gods worship specially in prayer For if the Sonne of God that had not such need to doe it in respect of himselfe yet vsed it so constantly and vsed it onely because the Law requires it of vs and that he might make himselfe an example to vs and that he might obtaine grace for vs to doe it what excuse can we that are bound vnto it by Gods Law and stand in such need of it haue for our ordinary neglect of publike prayer of prayer with our family of secret and priuate prayer 2 The second thing we are to obserue here is this that our Sauiour in commending the worship and Religion of the Iewes makes himselfe one of their number acknowledgeth himselfe a member of their Church professeth that himselfe did worship God as they did from whence this Doctrine ariseth for our instruction That those assemblies that enioy the Word and Doctrine of saluation though they haue many corruptions remaining in them are to be acknowledged the true Churches of God and such as none of the faithfull may make separation from We shall need no further proofe of this Doctrine then the example of our Sauiour himselfe If we consider on the one side how corrupt the State of the Iewes Church was in his time and on the other side how farre forth our Sauiour did communicate with them in the seruice of God 1. For the first what the state of that Church was in his time we may know if we consider 1. What the Priests and teachers were themselues that had the ordering of Gods worship 2. What the people were with whom he was to ioyne in Gods worship 3. What the worship it selfe was wherein he was to communicate 1. The Priests and teachers 1. Were ignorant and vnlearned Matth. 23. 16. 2. They were wicked and vngodly Matth. 23. 3. 3. They had a corrupt and vnlawfull enterance into their calling yea euen the high Priest himselfe For whereas by Gods ordinance he was to hold that office during his life this office was bought and sold and made annuall Iohn 11. 49. Caiphas was high Priest for that yeare 2. And what were the people Surely the most of them in all places where he conuersed were notoriously and obstinately wicked In Nazaret where he had liued most see what they were Luke 4. 28 29. All that were in the Synagogue when they heard this Doctrine were filled with wrath and rose vp and thrust him out of the Citie and lead him to the edge of an hill to cast him downe headlong But were they better in other places No he vpbraided all the Cities where most of his great workes were done Woe bee to thee Corazin woe be to thee Bethsaida Matth. 11. 20 21. And were the people of Ierusalem any better you shall perceiue that by that affection they shewed at the Passion of our Sauiour When Pilate a Gentile had made such an offer to them Luke 23. 18. All the multitude cryed at once not him but Barrabas and Matth. 27. 25. When Pilate had washed his hands and protested for Christ innocency then answered all the people and said desperately his blood b●… on vs and our children 3. The worship it selfe that was vsed in that Church had many corruptions in it 1. They vsed many superstitious ceremonies the obseruation whereof they vrged more strictly then the commandements and ordinances of God Mar. 7. 9. 2. The Temple was prophaned and made a den of theeues Matth. 2●… 12 13. 3. The discipline and censures of the Church were shamefully abused Iohn 〈◊〉 22. The Iewes had decreed that if any did confesse that Iesus was the Christ he should bee excommunicated ipsofacto 4. The Doctrine was corrupt in many points as you shall finde Matth. 5. 2●… 48. 5. Some corruption also was crept into the administration of the Sacraments For they kept it a day after our Sauiour who obserued the