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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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what colour soever it comes with the appearance thereof and occasions leading thereunto 441 26. Means whereby to eschew evil 442 27. Whoso avoids not evil cannot do good 443 28. Christians must be doers of good 444 29. We must do all the good we can ibid. 30. We must do all the good we can at all times in all places in all companies to all persons in our general and particular calling though it be hard and difficult and in a good maner 445 31. Christians must seek after peace 447 32. Covetousness pride frowardness tale-bearers the enemies of peace to be avoided 450 Verse 12. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 451 2. Why eyes ears c. are attributed to God ibid. 3. Whom we are to understand by righteous and why so called and whom by them that do ill 452 4. The Lord careth for the righteous ibid. 5. God hears the prayers of his Saints readily 453 6. What prayers prevail with God 454 7. How the same may appear ibid. 8. Why the Lord at some times hears not grants not the prayers of his children 455 9. Gods wrath and the fruits thereof always bent against the wicked 457 10. Why the wicked are not always plagued here ibid. Verse 13. PAtience and innocency of life are the way to escape harms from men 458 Verse 14. 1. SOme are so bad that they wrong the innocent 460 2. Some hate the godly meerly for their goodness ibid. 3. Such as suffer wrongfully or for Religion and conscience sake are happy 461 4. We must tarry till God call us to suffer ibid. 5. Whether we may flee from persecution ibid. 6. A godly man is happy in what condition soever 463 7. Fear is an Enemy to constant suffering ibid. Verse 15. 1. VVHat it is to Sanctifie the Lord God 464 2. Faith the mother of constancy in sufferings 464 3. As we must believe Gods truth with our hearts so must we profess it with our tongues 465 4. We must believe with our hearts before we can confess with our mouthes 467 5. Our speeches must be accompanyed with meekness and fear ibid. Verse 16. 1 VVHat conscience is 468 2. The offices of conscience to bear witness 470 3. To give judgement before our actions 472 4. To give judgement after our actions 473 5. An erroneous conscience what it is and a doubtful 475 6. Whether a man sinneth that doth according to his conscience ibid. 7. Whether a man may do any thing against his conscience being erroneous ibid. 8. Whether it be lawful to do a thing with a doubtful conscience 476 9. The several kindes of conscience ibid. 10. The kindes of a still quiet conscience drowsie secure seared 476 477 11. Means whereby the conscience may be awakened 478 12. The stirring ill conscience excusing accusing 479 13. A good quiet conscience wherein it differs from a bad quiet conscience 481 14. What a good troubled conscience is ibid. 15. Signs declaring the goodness thereof 482 16. The great benefits of a good conscience 483 17. How it is kept ibid. 18. A godly conversation is to accompany the zealous profession of our faith 484 19. A godly man will stand by the truth 486 20. The wicked are apt to speak ill of Gods servants ibid. 21. A godly conversation stoppeth the ungodlies mouthes 487 Verse 17. 1. VVHy we ought willingly to suffer for righteousness 488 2. It is better to suffer for well then evil doing ibid. 3. No afflictions comes to us but by Gods will 489 4. How far God hath an hand therein ibid. Verse 18. 1. CHrists sufferings an encouragement for Christians to suffer 491 2. How Christ was just and how we ibid. 3. Christ suffered for our good ibid. 4. The godly sow in tears but shall reap in joy ibid. 5. Several particulars laid down about Christs sufferings 492 6. Profit arising from the meditation thereof ibid. 7. All Christs sufferings make up one perfect suffering 493 8. The quality of the person that suffered and for whom he suffered ibid. 9. Why our Savior suffered and to what end 494 10. That Christ must have dyed and so did 495 11. The benefits ensuing by Christs death ibid. 12. Christ rose again from the dead 496 13. Why he rose again the maner of his resurrection the place the time 497 14. Why the Jews Sabbath was changed ibid. 15. The benefits hereof and duties to be performed 498 Verse 19 20. 1. A Further comfort to them that suffer for righteousness sake 498 2. Reasons against the Papists exposition of these words 499 3. That there are no such places as Limbus patrum and puerorum 500 4. Reasons against Purgatory ibid. 5. Why purgatory was devised 501 6. That Christ went not down to hel to preach to the reprobates 502 7. Gods Spirit preacheth in faithful Ministers ibid. 8. God will finde a time to right things when they are disordered 503 9. The woful condition of the wicked ibid. 10. Disobedience the cause of Gods judgement on the old world 504 11. Whether all those which were drowned were damned 504 12. Two necessary considerations 505 13. Disobedience the fore-runner of destruction 506 14. The sins of our times like those of the old world ibid. 15. Gods patience towards the disobedient aggravates their sin ibid. 16. The names of the godly mentioned to their honor 507 17. The old world then most disobedient when they should have been furthest from disobedience 508 18. Christians must use the means whereby to be freed from hell and destruction ibid. 19. Faith and Repentance an ark for the soul ibid. 20. How useful examples and ocular sermons are 509 21. Wicked men fear not Gods judgements 510 22. Weak means are sufficient through Gods blessing for our preservation 511 23. Righteousness shall not want its reward ibid. 24. It s good to be near the godly ibid. 25. No man can be saved by the goodness of another ibid. 26. The wicked though they escape bodily danger shall meet with everlasting judgements ibid. 27. There are but a few which shall be saved ibid. 28. The speech of an Arian at his death 512 29. Men and women be more excellent then other creatures ibid. 30. Noah and the old world a right picture of the good and bad in our age 513 Verse 21. 1. THe godly throughout all ages are saved by the same means 514 2. The uses of Baptism 515 3. Who is to baptize and who to be baptized ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHat our Saviors ascension was that he did ascend why before whom and when 516 2. They that have charge over others must be careful to leave them in good plight ibid. 3. The place from which our Savior ascended with the benefits of his ascension 517 4. Three general Observations ibid. 5. The good Angels are subject to Christ who watch and guard us ibid. 6. The bad Angels are also subject to Christ 518 CHAP. IV. THe Contents thereof 519 Verse 1 2. 1. THe parts and meaning of
conscience A. By no means a particular faith must be had for all our actions we must forbear a thing till we be perswaded and such ought to be born with that seek resolution A scruplous Conscience is when a man is inclined to think a thing lawful and yet hath some scruples and doubts by reason of many difficulties that he hath heard of which he knoweth not how to answer or resolve Here our rule is to labor to suppress all difficulties that make us doubt but if it cannot be done then its lawful to follow conscience notwithstanding those doubts and scruples as Deut. 13. when the people were setled in a true way of serving God if one should come and teach them a contrary way confirming the same by a sign this must needs breed some scruples in the peoples mindes nevertheless conscience enclining to the truth of the former Doctrine they are bound to stand to it Thus of these three Questions For the fourth There are good and bad consciences Mans conscience was onely good in the Creation since the fall all mens consciences are corrupted and perverted whereof some are renewed and sanctified from Heaven and so become good though not perfectly because of the remnants of corruption Whosoever is not sanctified hath an ill conscience of one kinde or other An evil conscience is either a still and quiet evil conscience or stirring either by accusing or excusing wrongfully for the true property of a good conscience is to excuse altogether for well-doing Now when the conscience is either num and dead and lies still or otherwise accuseth for sin or excuseth wrongfully this is an ill conscience Of a still quiet ill conscience there be three kindes namely sleepy secure and seared The first a sleepy drowsie conscience that lives and lies in many sins and yet accuseth not by reason of ignorance in the Word of God as the common sort neglect many a duty and commit many a sin that conscience never checks them for because they be ignorant of Gods Law for which another that knows the Law of God is humbled with them are omnia bene they hope to be saved by their good meaning and crying God mercy at last they are not troubled at wandring thoughts worldly talk on the Lords day to go to bed without prayer and the like They are like one that comes into a sluttish house in a dark night and sees nothing amiss but when the Sun shines perceives the foul corners yea the very moats that flye in the Sun-beams Some such have come under a lightsom Ministery and have wondred and been ashamed of themselves and have been humbled and converted Thus was it with Paul before and after his conversion The second A secure conscience that is stirred onely at foul and staring sins hates murther and fighting but in rash and unadvised anger is not moved at all is somewhat troubled at swearing by wounds and blood but makes nothing of By my faith truth this bread fire Sun that shines and the like such have wide throats that can swallow all small things So there are that make conscience of oppression cruelty in justice but none of neglecting the Word Sacraments and Prayer or prophaning the Lords-day which be greater then the former though they do not so think and partly the commonness of them makes their conscience not accuse in them or that they be never awakened for their sins till some great cross do befal them or after some rowsing Sermon then their consciences work therefore they cannot abide such Preaching though it were happy for them if they might hear such still till they were wearied out of themselves The third A benumbd brawny and seared conscience benumbd as a member in the dead Palsie brawny as a laboring mans hand seared as with an hot iron which is worst of all when men go on and make conscience of nothing but do what they list and their hearts scarce smite them being as Nabal like blocks and stones daring do any thing and committing most horrible foul sins and yet not being troubled thereat This comes by the custom of sin and refusing the checks of their conscience and Gods giving them up to a reprobate minde and an hard heart to work wickedness and that with greediness great sins also lyen in without repentance do harden and benumb the conscience as a part of the body that is seared is past feeling They not onely doing against the light of Gods Word but even against the light of nature and their natural conscience God gives them over and so they go on in sin without sence of any thing The cause of these especially the two first is chiefly the want of a faithful Ministery for where this is though they be not converted yet they be convinced and sin not so quietly as others or if they live under such a faithful stirring Ministery and yet have drowsie and secure consciences it s because they come not to the Word or regard not what they hear or understand it not or sleep thereat But there are some more notorious which will not lightly abide a zealous or powerful Ministery but will get away from it else if they tarry through long contempt of the Word and hardening their hearts they grow past feeling having set down with themselves they will never be moved with whatsoever is said This is a great plague it takes from a man the onely means under God of his repentance he is as one under a grave stone that cannot rise These are lusty and merry they think their case happy they say Peace peace they thank God they were never troubled in conscience and marvel at them that be thinking them out of their wits or else that they have been some great offenders c. but they are troubled not because they be out of their wits but because they now begin to come into their right minde as it s said of the Prodigal They be troubled not because they be greater sinners then the others but because they see that the others see not which if they saw as it were happy for them if they did they would see cause enough to be wounded to the purpose But do they think their conscience will ever lie thus still No let them be assured God will set all in order before them and their benumb'd conscience will prove a raging conscience A Bankrupt makes a great shew at first afterward breaks and is arrested and imprisoned many make fair promises unto Delinquents that they will speak to the Judge for them c. but do indeed prove their chief adversaries such are the consciences of these men If it be once awakened and stirred it will roar as a Lyon and tear out their throats a sleepy conscience is like a starcht Ruff that stands up brave in fair weather but falls quite down in a storm The peace of such a conscience is naught it
comes not after humiliation nor proceeds from apprehension of Gods love but from a false imagination having no true reformation of life accompanying it Now that the consciences of such may be awakened here whilest there is help though usually most shun the same they must 1. Labor to be acquainted with Gods Law wherein they shall as well see the smallest as the greatest sins Therein they shall perceive their own error as who thought that they did love God above all and their neighbors as themselves that they did ever serve God and put their whole trust in him that it was lawful for them to swear so it were true that it was lawful to go to wizards that on the Lords day they might walk about their fields and do their other businesses and yet serve God as well as they that went to Church that they might do with their own what they list c. 2. Labor to know and believe that the least sin is damnation yet do most bless themselves in their evil courses and are not a whit moved by all the threatnings of Gods Word that thereupon they may be humbled and terrified and flie out of themselves to God for mercy which is the onely way to come to good To this end let them make use of the most stirring sermons meditate of Gods judgements go to such as are afflicted or lie on their death beds consider that there be thousands in Hell which have not committed the tithe of their sins and that if they themselves should dye suddenly this night their condition were miserable If any shall say My conscience hath been quiet all this while I do not mean to call my estate into question let such know that many go snorting to Hell and that a troubled conscience is better then a drowsie secure conscience for that may come to good the other is out of all possibility of mercy Indeed to stay in terror of conscience is fearful yet not worse then to have a benumb'd conscience there 's hope of them that be troubled of the others but a little Physitians prescribe their Patients sometimes to go to sea to be sea sick and that to purge away some ill humors for the health of the body no less needful is it to be soul sick for the welfare of our souls yet is it a common speech of most at the visitation of the sick Oh I pray do not trouble him he is in a very good minde c. but the Prodigals condition though he had ragged cloaths and a rent heart was better then his elder brothers and the Publican justified not the Pharisee Thus of the quiet ill conscience The stirring ill conscience is either when it stirs by excusing or by accusing Excusing upon the doing of some evil whereof John 16. 2. or the omission of some duty as the hearing of the Word Prayer and the li●e Thus was it with Saul when he was questioned by Samuel for not obeying Gods Commandment thus hath it been with some Papists when they have practiced Treason against their Prince and Countrey A good conscience doth excuse indeed but rightly not amiss in all things not in some onely for the maner as well as the thing it self Accusing and that 1. When it should not as an Idolator is troubled in conscience for leaving undone some piece of idolatrous service 2. For trifles and not for matters of weight as the Pharisees made great conscience of going to meat with unwashen hands but not of murthering Christ as Papists make great conscience of eating flesh on a fasting day who yet make no conscience of Whoredom Swearing so Civil persons would be much troubled if they should be but accused for wronging their neighbors who yet are no whit moved for prophaning the Lords day not coming to the Sacrament neglect of Prayer and the like 3. When it is forcible and violent causing horror and fear gastliness terror in the dark or at the sight of any of Gods Judgements trembling at the ratling of a leaf yea and desperation it self This though it be not good of it self yet turns to the good of the godly God brings them this way onely he leaves them not here but by the voyce of the Gospel doth relieve their mindes and perswades them to seek mercy upholding them with the hope thereof Some have checks of conscience but so as they can bear them out some again so as they cannot endure them Who so finde their consciences accusing them for their sins and know no pardon but their consciences still tell them of their sins and that their course is bad let such know that they have evil consciences which being let alone will accuse them worse If their consciences accuse them God is greater and knows more Therefore let them seek to pacifie God and their consciences too To this end consider That God hath provided in his infinite mercy an all-sufficient remedy in the death and bloodshed of Jesus Christ then which there is no other way to satisfie Gods displeasure nor to stanch the terrors of conscience let such bewail and lament their state to Almighty God confessing their sins and judging themselves as the Prodigal for the same thereupon craving of him with strong cryes and humble prayers the pardon and forgiveness thereof To such as thus come in the truth of their hearts God hath made many gracious promises Thus suing to him he will in his own good time send down a comfortable answer This is the onely course to come to good to still conscience with forgetting our sins and mirth is but to deceive our selves to wear it out by head and shoulders it s but as the putting away of the tooth-ake with cold water which will still it for a little but after it reboundeth more violently this is the way to get peace After this will our consciences begin to be quiet and thereupon excuse and comfort Then will Faith purifie the heart and work an hatred of all sin with a continual care to please God in all things Then shall we be quite altered and changed from that we were I cannot but wonder at a number of men whose consciences witness against them who yet seek not to pacifie them by assurance of pardon but adde more daily unto their sins whose consciences bear witness That they have no care to please God but their way and works be naught assuredly their consciences will one day cry louder O lay up no new matter of accusation all the profit and pleasure that comes of it will be dear bought It s as to drink pleasing poyson it goes down pleasantly but afterward wounds the bowels If a man had never so much wealth yet if he have an ill conscience what shall it profit him It were as if a man had a costly banket rich apparel and attendance c. and one with a sword drawn were standing ready by
him to kill him This is a Bailiff to arrest a Jailer to keep safe a witness to accuse a Judge to condemn an Executioner to torment c. It s of all foes the worst they accuse to men this to God one may go from them sometimes but not from this It s an evil help in adversity which like Jobs friends troubles us more then all the rest It will be a woful companion at the hour of death and day of Judgement It s like a woful contentious wife when a man hath had trouble enough abroad coming home he findes more there O their life is no life that live with a worm gnawing within Thus what joy will there be of health wealth or whatsoever else yea as we are to take heed of this so also are we of a benumbd conscience the end of both being bad the one no less dangerous then the other Thus of a bad conscience A good conscience is an excusing and comforting conscience that speaks on ones side and that for well doing Thus have the Angels in Heaven a perfect excusing conscience So had Adam in his innocency and we shall one day have in heaven Now our conscience is but so in part as all our other faculties Some corruption remains therein even in the best and therefore doth sometimes accuse or excuse when it should not but for the most part it excuseth and witnesseth comfortably on our sides this is either a good quiet or a good troubled and trembling conscience A good quiet conscience hath these two parts an heart witnessing to us 1. The pardon of our sins past in the blood of Jesus Christ for as Jonah's casting into the Sea stilled the same So believing in Christ stills the most troubled conscience if we be justified through him who shall condemn and 2. Our unfained uprightness and care to please God in all things detesting all evil and bearing true love to his Word and Saints of the former read these Scriptures Job 19. 25. Romans 8. 16. Psalm 4. 6. and 32. 1. Gal. 2. 20. Cant. 2. 16. Of the latter these Psalm 26. 2. and Isaiah 38. 3. Acts 23. 1. 2 Cor. 1. 12. Heb. 13. 18. They that believe most assuredly the pardon of their sins and walk most stedfastly with God they have the good quiet conscience at least so far as is here to be attained This is a wonderful Jewel a continual feast This causeth joy This causeth boldness to come to the Word boldness before God boldness also towards men let men say what they will we care not if our consciences witness truly on our sides yea boldness against the Devil who will lay much to our charge sifting us to the full O thou art a damned Creature will he say No Satan yes an horrible sinner and who hast deserved Hell fire I grant Satan but Christ Jesus hath paid my debt and delivered me If thou shalt scape Hell yet thou shalt never get to Heaven will he say for none come there but such as keep the Law O Christ hath kept it for me But he hath dyed but for a few whereof thou art none yes I am He dyed for none but such as truly believed in him so dost not thou Yes I do believe and do lay hold on his gracious promises But Christ dyes for none to whom he gives not power to become new Creatures so art not thou Hereunto will a good conscience answer boldly and so put Satan to flight This differs from a bad quiet conscience that comes from ignorance of their danger as a blinde man standing before a Canon this out of knowledge of Gods Word This is quiet upon examination that because never examined This is quiet upon good grounds that upon nothing but upon bear conceits This hath joy adjoyned therewith which that hath not That leaves one in deadness this quickens the heart to every good duty This holds at all times that driven away by the terror of the Ministery of the Word or by afflictions especially it fails at death and Judgement day A good troubled and trembling conscience is when one is perswaded of Gods love and the pardon of sin through Christ but cannot hold it firm and fast and this not in the beginning of their conversion onely but after they hold it with a wavering hand so doubtful and full of fears because of their unworthiness and the greatness of the mercy so that ever anon they are to seek and ready to faint And for the other their heart witnesseth the true hatred of all sin and care to please God in all things but herein they think they do nothing as they should and that they can do no good and even when they have done duties very carefully yet are they still troubled as if they did all for fear of pain and Hell and not for the love of God or out of self-love in hope of Heaven and to save their souls And because they finde some corruptions and rebellions they think that these spoil all their duties and that they themselves are vile wretches yea though they hate them deadly yet this doth not satisfie them they hate them not so much as they should Again they are so timerous and fearful whether they may eat this or that or thus much wear such good apparel do this or that go this way or that all which notwithstanding are lawful for them but they are so afraid to offend God that they often accuse themselves c. This is a good conscience though not so setled as were to be desired and as the other is This may appear by these Notes Such would not part with the comfort they have for the world nor be utterly out of hope and are glad when they can believe best They resolve to trust in God and serve him though he would kill them They are humble and both much and servent in Prayer They hang upon the Ministery of the Word hunger after the Sacrament long for the Sabbath delight in the Saints There 's no Physitian more welcome to a sick body then a godly Minister to them in time of trouble They walk usually more strictly then they that have more comfort and are more zealous and more afraid to sin and more grieve at sin in others So that this is a good conscience no less then the former Both go to Heaven the one in sharpness the other in sweetness run the way of Gods Commandments They be like to two Travellers through a Wilderness or in a dark night one of good courage afraid of nothing the other of a fearful nature afraid of every thing both which get well through So do these the one hath experience of Gods goodness in not being troubled and tempted the other of his power in being upheld that he is not swallowed up and overcome of fear and grief O that there were many such consciences And yet it cannot be denyed but
2. 37 and 16. 29. Simile The stirring ill conscience Excusing Accusing Use. 1 Iohn 3. 20. See Psal. 32. 5. Prov. 28. 13. Isa. 1. 18. Ezek. 33. 16. Mat. 11. 29. Simile A good quiet conscience Heb. 9. 14. Ionah 1. 15. See Act. 16. 30. 2 Cor. 1. 12. Ioh. 30. 20 21. 1 Iohn 3. 21. Acts 23. 1. Wherein it differs from a bad quiet conscience A good troubled conscience Signs declaring the goodness thereof Simile 1 Sam. 24. 5. Use 1. The great benefits of a good conscience See Pro. 14. 10 Heb. 13. 18. Acts 7. 56. How it is kept Use 2. Use 3. A godly conversation is to accompany the zealous profession of our Faith See Iosh. 1. 8. Mat. 5. 16. Iohn 13. 17. Iam. 1. 22. Reasons Luke 12. 47. Isa 41. 8. 1 Sam. 13. 14. Isa. 1. and 58. Ezek. 14. 33 Acts 15. 9 Iames 2. 18. Gen. 13. 7. Iob 31. 35. 2 Sam. 12. 14. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. A godly man will stand by the truth The wicked are apt to speak ill of Gods servants Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Isa. 5. 20. Prov. 17. 15. Iude verse 14. Heb. 12. 4. A godly conversation stoppeth the ungodlies mouthes See Acts 16. Use 1. Use 2. 1 Iohn 3. 12. Gal. 4. 29. Why we ought willingly to suffer for righteousness It s better to suffer for well then evil doing Reasons Mat. 5. 10 11. Acts 5 41. Phil. 1. 29. Luke 23. 41. Use 1. Use 2. No affliction comes to us but by Gods will Acts 2. 23. and 4. 28. Mat. 10. 17 18. Acts 21. 11. How far God hath an hand therein Mat. 16. 23. Iames 1. 12. Rev. 2. 10. Use 1. Mat. 10. 31. Simile Use 2. Acts 21. 15. Use 3. Use 4. Christs sufferings an encouragement for Christians to suffer Iohn 13. 16. Acts 3. 14. How Christ was just how we Use. Another help in our sufferings Christ suffered for our good Use. The godly sow in tears but shall reap in joy 1 Tim. 4. 8. Use 1. Iames 4. 4. 2 Cor. 10. 18. Use 2. Particulars here laid down about Christs sufferings Profit arising from the meditation hereof 2 Tim. 1. 12. Iohn 3. 16. Eph. 2. 4. 1 Pet. 1. 3. Use. All Christs sufferings make up one perfect suffering Heb. 9. 26. Use 1. Use 2. The quality of the person that suffered Heb. 7. 26. For whom Christ suffered Use 1. Matth. 11. 29. Isa. 1. 17. Use 2. Why our Savisuffered To what end he suffered Use 1. Use 2. Isa. 2. 2. Iohn 1. 40 45. Iohn 1. 14. 1 Tim. 3. 16. That Christ must have dyed and so did Isa. 53. 9. Dan. 9. 26. Rom. 4. 25. The benefits ensuing by Christs death 1 Iohn 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. See Rom. 3. 25. Col. 1. 21. 1 Iohn 4. 10. Hosea 2. 18. Psal. 91. 13. 1 Iohn 3. Use. Christ rose again from the dead 1 Cor. 15. 5. Why he rose again Acts 2. 24. Rev. 1. 28. The maner of his Resurrection The place from which he rose When he rose Psal. 16. 10. Why the Iewish Sabbath was changed The benefits hereof 1 Cor. 15. 17. Use. The duties to be performed Eph. 5. 14. Heb. 11 35. Col. 3. 1. A further comfort to them that suffer for Righteousness sake The meaning of the words How the Papists understand them Reasons against the same That there are no such places as Limbus patrum and puerorum Iohn 8. 5 6. 1 Cor. 10. 3. Eccles. 12. 7. Isa. 57. 2. The Popish opinion about Purgatory Reasons against it Luke 2. 29. Phil. 1. 21. 2 Tim. 4. 8. 2 Cor. 5. 1. Iohn 17. 24. Luke 23. 43. Rev. 14. 13. Why Purgatory was devised Iohn 3. 18. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Eccles 11. 3. That Christ went not down to Hell to preach to the Reprobates Gods Spirit preacheth in faithful Ministers 2 Pet. 1. 21. Luke 10. 16. Use 1. 1 Cor. 2. 4. Use 2. See 1 Cor. 14. 25. Use 3. God will finde a time to right things when they are disordered Use. The woful condition of the wicked Matth. 25. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. 2 Cor. 5. 11. Disobedience the cause of Gods judgements on the old world Whether all those which were drowned were damned Use 1. See Act 12. 23 Ibid. 20. Dan. 4. 5. Simile Use 2. Psal. 5. 4 5. Leut. 26. 14. Deut. 28. 15. Two necessary considerations Disobedience is the forerunner of destruction Use. Iohn 3. 36. 1 Iohn 3. 8. The sins of our times like those of the old world Gods Patience towards the disobedient aggravates their sin Use 1. See Psal. 50. and 55. Isa. 57. 11. Heb. 2. 13. The names of the godly mentioned to their honor 1 King 15. 34. See Prov. 10. The old world then most disobedient when they should have been by Noahs making of the Ark feared therefrom Christians must use the means whereby to be freed from Hell and destruction Faith and Repentance an Ark for the soul. Use 1. Gen. 19. 14. 1 Kings 6. 7. Use 2. How useful Examples and occular sermons are See Luk. 17. 32 1 Cor. 10. Ezek. 12. 3● Iam. 5. 10 11. Use. Dan. 5. 22. Wicked men fear not Gods judgements Prov. 14. 16. and 22. 3. and 28. 14. See Mr. Dod on Psal. 14. Weak means are sufficient through Gods blessing for our preservation Righteousness shall not want its reward 1 Tim. 4. 8. Use. It s good to be near the godly No man can be saved by the goodness of another Ezek. 18. 20. The wicked however they escape bodily dangers shall meet with everlasting judgements There are but a few which shall be saved The speech of an Arrian at his death Matth. 7. 21. Use. Gen. 46. 27. Rom. 13. 1. Men and women be more excellent then other creatures Use 1. Use 2. Noah and the old world a right picture of the good bad in our age The godly throughout all ages are saved by the same means 1 Cor. 10. 3. Baptism what it is c. The uses of Baptism Use. Rom. 6. 4. Who is to Baptize and who to be Baptized See Rom. 4. 25. and 8. 34. What our Saviors ascension was That he did ascend Luke 24. 51. Acts 1. 9. Iohn 6. 14. 19. 20. 17. Why he did ascend Before whom he did ascend The time when he did ascend They that have charge over others must be careful to leave them in good plight The place from which our Savior ascended Acts 7. 56. The benefits of his ascension Eph. 4. 8. Iohn 14. 2. Three observations in general Isa. 49. 23. The good Angels are subject to Christ. Use 1. Use 2. They watch and guard us Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. The bad Angels are subject to Christ. Col. 2. 15. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. The contents of the Chapter The parts and meaning of these two Verses Doctr. The passion of Christ is an especial means to stir us up unto mortification Tit. 3. 7. 2 Cor. 5. 15. Use. Rom. 8. 7. 1 Pet. 2.
their hearts and lives and are more cunning in points of Church Government then in points of Sanctification yet we doubt not but some true servants of God have been misled and their tender consciences have stumbled whom God hath enlightened and brought from among them and who have had more peace in a day in coming to the Word from them and joyning with the Church again then they had before in a whole year 10. Some say There be so many Religions in the world that they cannot tell which to take There be Jews Turks Anabaptists Familists Papists Protestants Lutherans Calvinists Brownists c. every of which say they have the truth and what should such plain men as I do for my part I think it the wisest course to meddle with none of them all but follow my own business till they all agree which is the Truth not troubling my self at all with any thing they say I may come to Church because of the Law but I will never greatly regard what is said or spoken there A. A bad excuse is better then none at all but this will not serve mens turn Though there be many that say They have the Truth yet there is but one Truth and this is to be found out of such as are not willing to be ignorant as these Objectors commonly be Its no marvel that there hath been ever and will be that envious one that soweth Tares where the good husbandman soweth Wheat There have ever been Hereticks and false Teachers in the Church that they which are approved may be known but by the light of the Word which is able to shew men the Truth the servants of God willing to learn the same have found it out Zachary Elizabeth Mary Nathaniel and thousands of others found it out though the Jews at that time were rent into many Sects Scribes Pharisees Sadduces Essenes c. They did the will of God and were Christ sheep therefore heard his voyce and were instructed in the Truth And it is extream madness in any to neglect the finding out of the Truth because there is some difficulty seeing without the knowledge hereof they perish eternally The more falshood there is the more it stands them in hand to search for the Truth or else they shall perish in their ignorance as others do in their error We must buy the Truth we must strive both to finde it and maintain it The Truth must be had else we dye In worldly things men be wiser As if one dwell some distance from the Market and in the way to it he must go over a great Common where lie a great number of by-paths some to one place some to another will he for this stay at home and want necessaries and say I will never go lest mistaking my way I lose my Market No but he will rather get one that knows the way to conduct him therein whereto he will take good heed that he may not mistake at any other time Or will he neglect to buy necessary provision because there be so many deceitful people in the world and so starve at home No but he will say There be false wares and deceitful men but I le learn skill to know the one from the other to discern the good from the bad so that some difficulty taketh not away mens care but rather whetteth and increaseth it This worldly wisdom will condemn mens folly and madness in heavenly things We must therefore get skill in Gods Word whereby to try Doctrine and that by earnest prayer unto God there be plain places of Scripture that will confute the errors that shall be broached by them we must be judge These things I speak because I would have all get over these logs if they have hitherto stumbled and if we have got over we may be able by good Arguments to help over others our weak brethren that are willing to learn that they may be able to confute any caviller or answer any that shall kick at these things And I pray and beseech you look to it let there be none here so ill minded toward himself that having stuck at any of these he be willing and still content so to do concealing the same neither desiring to be rid out of the fetters thereof This is dangerous indeed especially take heed that there be not such an ill minde and vile disposition in any as not to be content alone to cast off Religion upon these occasions and pretences but labor to lay them in the way of others to draw them from God O fearful thing Cannot you your selves be content to cast off God but will you labor to bring others also to destruction O these enemies to God and his kingdom what will be their end and where shall they appear For if they that win souls shall shine as the stars what shall they do that destroy souls As the ten Spies that went with Caleb and Joshua bringing up an ill name and slander upon the Land of Canaan whereby they discouraged their Brethren from going toward it were shut out and perished so they that bring up an ill name upon the zealous Profession of Gods true Religion and discourage their Neighbors from it will assured perish in endless confusion Against the Preachers of the Word Offences also are taken as 1. Some say There is a deal of preaching indeed and crying out against sin and calling men to this and that strictness of life and that it is such an hard matter to be saved but you must give us leave to regard none of this that is said for we see none worse then the Ministers themselves they must say somewhat when they be in the place but they are as proud and covetous and as bad as any other and were there any such matter as they teach would they dare to go clean contrary A. It cannot be denied but that some in the Ministery both of them that do not and of them that preach that yet live so grosly and dissolutely contrary to their teaching that they give a grievous offence to those that wait for such things yea and make many ignorant with Elies sons loath the sacrifice of the Lord and think that Religion is no such matter as we tell them of because they observe the contrary in their Teachers But what though they do thus yet notwithstanding is the Word of God holy and good Is Physick nought because the Physician is a bad man or the meat because the Cook is a swearing hasty fellow There is no calling wherein there are not some bad But there be many Ministers that make conscience to live according to that they teach and as well to be examples to the Flock in holy conversation as to preach which is but one part of a Ministers duty and who setting humane frailties aside may bid their adversaries write a book against them For common frailties who can say his heart is clean even between
the offence against God nor the quality of the fault not the best way to bring them to amendment but following the rage and fury of their own hearts God will call them to an account for the same He forbiddeth cruelty against beasts much more against those that are made according to his own image They were or are the children of others though now your servants to whom being fatherless you had need be the more merciful and may not your children also be servants Do you to other mens children as you would others should deal with yours are they not also your own flesh and it may be as dearly bought with the blood of Christ as your selves Though you are to keep a good strait hand over your servants yet must it be with moderation 2. If servants be bound thus to carry themselves towards bad Masters how much more then to the good and gentle to such as are careful of their good every way to such as give them good counsel instruct them bring them to good duties give them that 's fit for them teach them their trade and govern them with moderation What shall we say then to the servants of our times that have such Masters and Dames and yet be unfaithful lazy and negligent Where shall these appear assuredly it s no small favor to be under such Governors the times we live in are grown to a strange pass In times past about twenty or thirty years ago when the light alas was dim what diligent and painful servants were there who would tarry at least seven or ten years in an house whereas now they are so unruly that no house can hold them long they finde fault for the most part when there 's no cause Formerly servants were careful to please their Governors and glad if they could and would accept of their endeavors and be pleased with them but now Masters and Dames are fain to please their servants if they can do any thing they be so teachy and masterly as they may not be spoken to belike the course of things must be turned the order of nature perverted Masters must be as servants to please and servants as Masters to do what they list Hath God honored the servants of these times with the Gospel denyed to former ages and do they thus requite God and profit by it will it not be to their further condemnation The monstrous pride of youths is the cause of all this disorder the peace and plenty that God hath given us hath so lift them up as they have forgotten the ancient simplicity and plainnefs that was heretofore and have their mindes so high set as their study is to prank up themselves brave and get gay clothes to keep company and have their swing this they minde and not their business If they thus continue they shall never be worth a servant themselves or else shall be plagued with such as themselves were nay who knows whether for their pride and unconscionableness they may not come to rags and a bit of bread 3. Now what is here required of servants towards bad Masters must also be performed by us to those we have any way to deal withal Thus Subjects are to do the duties of Subjects towards their Princes though they should be Tyrants or deal hardly with them Thus though we live by neighbors that be untoward and contentious we must live quietly Thus must husbands wives live together We must not be overcome of evil but overcome evil with goodness God hath no where bid us do to others as they do to us that 's the leaven of the Scribes and Pharisees but to love our enemies and to do good to them that hate us c. yet must not this hearten any to be bad but every man must make his Neighbors yoke as easie as he can not laying too much upon him They must not say as some husbands to their wives they must do their duties to us whatsoever we be What! are you so cunning indeed know you so well other folks duties and your own no better you should know your own duties best How great then is their sin that cannot live with good Neighbors How great that wives that having a kinde and careful husband is ever fretting complaining and vexing him How great that husbands that having a loving dutiful careful wife doth not use her kindely but hoggishly yea it may be loveth others better He that cannot live with bad ones and do his duty is scarce a good Christian but he that cannot do his duty to good ones is not so good as an Heathen and a Publican Verse 19. For this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience toward God endure grief suffering wrongfully NOw follow the Reasons to perswade to patient suffering of the hard dealing of unconscionable Masters and needful it was to use a great many Reasons to perswade to such a duty being so hard to nature which accordingly he doth If you do so and do as you ought you please God and its acceptable to him as the word is translated in the following verse for being referred to God we can do nothing thank-worthy to God when we have done all we are unprofitable servants but we may do that which by Jesus Christ may be acceptable to him This is the first Reason Whence may be noted That To enforce the performance of any duty how difficult soever this is enough that its pleasing to God that 's to be lookt at of us in all our life and actions Hereby the Apostle exhorts Children to perform their duties to their Parents as all to do good and to distribute What Tenant would not be glad to do that which will please his Landlord or a Subject that which will please his Prince And should not we readily do such things as will please God yea if it should be to the laying down of our lives Is not he the Soveraign Lord of the whole world that made us and all things Hath not he as he is most holy pure and good in himself been admirably merciful to us Is not his will a right will Is he not pleased with that which is good Doth any thing displease him but sin Should we not do that which is pleasing to him though difficult Should we not fly from that which displeaseth him though we might get thousands by it If we please him hath he not a Kingdom for us If we displease him is he not a consuming fire Oh! this may make us hang down our heads that we are no more careful to please such a great and good God Alas if a thing have any difficulty we pass it off though the doing thereof would please God never so well Oh! why do we not pray oftner and with better affection why hear we not the Word more diligently why are we not more heavenly minded more patient more liberal would not God be pleased herewith and is there
Apostles Paul and John joyn both together Great is the force hereof as both being within us and so more able either to comfort or terrifie us then any other thing as the wind that gets within the earth shakes it most terribly and likewise so inseparable that a man cannot get from it 1. This sheweth plainly that there is a God who hath set Conscience on work thus to admonish warn comfort accuse terrifie c. Having done evil why should a mans Conscience accuse or terrifie him but that God hath ordained it should so do and accordingly it doth cite him before God and judge him before hand for not man or Angel can take the accusation of Conscience it bears record in the sight of God Why have the most unbridled despisers of God when any token of Gods wrath hath appeared run into holes and cellars under the ground yea and such wicked monsters after some foul offence though so secretly done as that they needed not to have been afraid of men yet been so much vexed and disquieted but that their Consciences informed them of God against whom they did sin and that his wisdom and knowledge did far surpass that of men or Angels as knowing not onely what is done and spoken in the world but what is in every mans heart 2. This confuteth those which affirm That we cannot be assured of our Salvation and why because we cannot know whether we believe or not c. But as we may know a Tree by the fruits so may we our Faith God gives us not grace that we should not know whether we have it or not wherefore serves Conscience but to witness what is in us Thus what Conscience is For the second The Offices of Conscience they are to bear witness and to give judgement First I say To bear witness and that 1. Of our thoughts whether they have been proud distrustful unclean wandering at the hearing of the Word or in Prayer worldly on the Lords day c. for the understanding hath two faculties one whereby it conceives or thinks this or that the other whereby it doubles upon it self and knows that it did think it The minde thinks a thought the Conscience goes beyond the minde and knows what the minde thinks so that if a man would hide his thoughts from God his Conscience can bear witness of them Thus it discovers the very bent and sway of our hearts 2. Of our will and affections whether the same be set on good or that which is evil 3. Of our speeches whether they be agreeable to Gods Word or not 4. Of our actions though never so secret Thus Davids Conscience told him that he had sinned in numbring the people but that he had not conspired against Saul howsoever he was by him persecuted so Jobs Conscience witnessed against him that he had spoken somewhat impatiently but for him that he had not eat his morsels alone c. 1. This setteth out the great mercy of God to man God hath not here left us alone but besides his Word and Ministers every man hath a keeper still going along with him who is to pry into our actions and to bear witness of them all and when we have done amiss to tell us secretly thereof that so we may ask pardon and amend and may not complain that we had none to tell us of our faults c. and that is our conscience Hereby such as belong unto God are stirred up to have recourse unto God for mercy and thereupon are pardoned after their conversion they are also hereby kept from many evils and through the checks of Conscience we are driven to repentance Happy are they that have tender Consciences and turn not the deaf ear thereto Doth our conscience tell us of any thing amiss if we do thereupon amend we make good use thereof but if we do not whereas it now speaks softly between it and us in our ear it will roar out one day when it will be heard whether we will or not namely Both at the hour of our death and on the day of Judgement Most men count their conscience a common Barretor one that troubles them as Ahab said Elias did Israel therefore is it just with God to give them benumb'd consciences that they go snorting to Hell 2. It setteth out the Equity and Justice of God that condemns no man till he hath given him both a law to guide him and a conscience to admonish him yea to accuse and condemn him When God judgeth every mans conscience shall justifie God for so doing when God shall awake the conscience then it will speak true give a righteous verdict and condemn the civilest for want of Faith in Christ and not performance of the duties of the first Table 3. It teacheth us to beware we sin not whether in thought word or deed either out of hope that none shall know it or that we shall scape for lack of witnesses or that we may alledge that we knew not that so and so to do were sins Thus we should but deceive our selves for there be witnesses enough thine own conscience is as a thousand and God as ten thousand Le ts do no other thing but that whereof we would hear again for conscience will bear witness do not we bless our selves for our sins done in secret as if none saw them or could witness any thing against us The bird in the breast knows and God knows hang down thine head then and ask mercy of God and confess thy self to him if not even thine own conscience may break it out in this world as Judas's in accusing himself whereas he was not taxed by others and many have confessed Murther Adultery Theft c. some with repentance others in hellish horror Do not any thing in hope of secrecy unless you can keep God and your consciences from being present neither be we careful for eye-witnesses of our well doing in the performance of duties It s enough if our conscience tells us we have done well yea if we be taxed for Hypocrites or otherwise be slandered its sufficient that God and our own conscience can bear witness of our sincerity and uprightness it s more then if every one should speak well of us excepting our own conscience Thus was Job thus Hezekiah comforted 2. To give judgement and that whether things be good or bad whether they be well done or ill done and this judgement is given either before our actions or after them before Conscience gives judgement thus it tells us what is good and what bad and not so barely but with some furtherance This is good therefore do it This is ill therefore do it not so Pilate knowing Christ to be innocent his conscience moved him to seek to loose him so Reuben when his brethren would have killed Joseph apprehending that to be ill and that from
it alone and think to wear it out in time O no conscience will still cry louder What if one should make the Bayliff drunk and so get away the debt is never the more paid he will come again though the evil Spirit in Saul went away by the Minstrels playing yet it returned to him again the like may be said of conscience I wonder at the horrible madness of some people though their consciences do already accuse them and condemn them for many things yet are so far from seeking to disburthen them that they daily adde more and more thereto How justly may these fear lest the terror of conscience come so fiercely on them as even to weary them out of their lives But howsoever they sleep now there will be a time when they will awaken and cry to the purpose 4. Let us take heed that from henceforth we do not burthen our consciences they will be Witnesses Accusers Judges Tormentors If this be against us what shall be for us and if this condemn us who who shall clear us If we have eaten too much or some unwholsom thing and it lye on our stomack we cannot be at rest till we be emptied thereof and accordingly thenceforth are more careful to abstain from the like so should we do in respect of sin yea in our places as Magistrates Ministers Husbands Parents Masters c. we must discharge our duties and for the same have the testimony of our conscience and enjoy the peace thereof then which what 's more to be desired which not gain pleasures honor c. can procure Because thy conscience doth not now accuse thee thou dost haply conceive that al 's wel but assuredly hereafter it wil though it may be twenty years hence and that when thou shalt be least able to undergo it as in sickness c. 5. This cleareth Gods justice he will nor needs not bring other witnesses or occasions against us then our consciences they will testifie with us or against us on that day Before I leave this Point consider we that the Word of God is that which tells us what is to be done and what left undone and that this bindes the conscience to obedience when any thing is done agreeable to the Word the conscience saith it s well and excuseth when any thing is done contrary to the Word the conscience saith its ill and condemneth As for them that have not the Word their consciences judge by the light and Law of nature which was left man after the fall for there remain some general notions in mans heart both of the first and second Table as appears by the Laws which the Heathens have made about the worship of their Gods and against perjury murther theft adultery c. These I say are judged by this It s true that mens Laws an Oath a Vow do binde the conscience but it s by vertue from the Word now if the minde be enlightened with the true knowledge of the Word of God then will the conscience give right judgement but if it be ignorant of the Word then it may make the conscience erronious or scruplous and doubtful An erronious conscience is when it accuseth where it should excuse or excuse when it should accuse which comes from an erronious judgement which judgeth good to be evil and evil to be good hence the conscience of some men excuse them in doing things that be flatly bad and accuse them for doing good things Thus a Papist thinks he doth well to go to Mass and that he should do very wickedly to come to Church with us A doubtful conscience is when a man is not perswaded of the lawfulness of a thing or the unlawfulness of it but is as a man that holds a Wolf by the ●ars he knows not whether he should let him go or hold him still whoso thus doth any thing sinneth both this and the former proceed from the want of the knowledge of Gods Word We must therefore labor to be well instructed in the Scriptures ignorant persons must needs fill their lives with swarms of offences and sins for they not knowing many things to be sins which be swallow them and never accuse themselves for them as we say the blinde cats many a flye and do many things which they have no faith of the lawfulness of but do them for custom example of others and the like and so sin in them people think if they be free from murther whoredom theft c. they be in a good case but being ignorant their lives abound with sins O therefore let the Word be a light unto our feet and a lanthorn unto our paths Thus of the offices of conscience For the third Three questions here offering themselves require resolution Q. 1. Whether doth a man sin that doth according to his conscience As a Papist thinks he serves God highly well in going to Mass one in the Primitive Church thought Fornication a thing indifferent and so committed it A man thinks he may lawfully travel homeward on the Lords-day being in a journey A. He doth ill that doth any of these or the like for his erring conscience cannot make that good which God hath before pronounced to be evil by forbidding it in his Word our conscience is not our rule but Gods Word Thus every one should be saved by his own devotion and it were lawful to go to a cunning man to sell as dear as we can to deceive them that deceive us to use the Creed and Ten Commandments as a Prayer c. which who can justifie Q. 2. Whether it be lawful for a man to do a thing against his conscience I mean though his conscience be erronious and deceived As if a Papist be perswaded that its a sin to come to Church with us and yet for fear comes an Anabaptist holds it unlawful to take an oath before a Magistrate and yet through fear he doth A. They do ill not simply for doing these things as being good and such as God requires but for doing them with an ill conscience against their conscience so that if they do not these things being required they sin if they do them they sin what then They must labor to be informed and perswaded of the lawfulness of them and then do them So that though as in the former question our perswasion of the lawfulness of a thing being indeed unlawful makes it not good so the doing of a good thing against ones conscience makes it unlawful If a man think himself bound in conscience to pray three times in a day he ought so to do though God hath left it indifferent An erronious conscience must be followed till it be better informed but how vile is it to commit an evil against the checks and light of conscience and yet what 's more frequent Q. 3. Whether is it lawful to do a thing with a doubtful
denounced against Chor azin and Bethsaida may well fit us it shall be easier for them then for us Do we so requite the Lord bring we forth nothing but sowre Grapes Assuredly were it not for an handful for some small remnant yet left amongst us we might have lookt to have been ere this as Sodom and Gomorrah our wine being as theirs for our sin is as theirs Most are like that ground which beareth thorns and bryars whose end is to be burned the means they have will but encrease their sin and damnation 2. This rebuketh many whose fruit is nothing meet for him by whom they be dressed we live not as if we were in the noon-day but in the twy-light our conversation is not such as becometh the Gospel 3. For such as have received special favor from God and made their Covenant with him of true obedience they must walk far otherwise then the men of the world They must not be covetous as they that know no better inheritance then the world they must not be proud as they that know no better garments then these rags and clouts being altogether ignorant of Christs righteousness So we must not talk of worldly matters on the Lords-day as heretofore we must not spend our time in gaming sport or too much merryment or idleness as before If we be guided by the Spirit of God which the world knoweth not let us shew it by our fruits and so much as we hope to differ from them in our latter end so let us differ now To have wrought the will of the Gentiles This is not meant of every particular person of the Jews that were written to in this Epistle that they thus walked as the Gentiles and it may be some of the Gentiles were restrained and lived soberly but this he understands of the body of them both But how came they to live after the lusts of the Gentiles They lived amongst them and so became as bad as they Whence note That Bad company is very dangerous Solomon forbids it and so doth St. Paul David also clears himself of it he could not away therewith See Prov. 1. 10. and 23. 20. and 24. 1. 2 Cor. 6. 17. Psal. 26. 4. and 119. 63 115. In the Law its forbidden to touch a thing unclean as a dead corps This did morally signifie meddling with sin and sinners Using bad company we can neither keep a good course nor a good conscience we shall quickly learn their evils we being apt schollars hereto and our nature like tinder and gunpowder readily set on fire None can walk in the Sun but shall be tanned nor touch pitch but he shall be defiled nor be in a Mill but he shall be dusted nor dwell with a Collier but he shall be smutted so cannot any frequent the company of wicked men but he shall be harmed hereby yea how can any converse with such and not be accessary to their sins at least through their untimely silence not reproving or admonishing them for the same and so consequently partaker of their plagues O then as we would avoid the company of those that have the plague lest we be infected thereby so le ts shun the company of those which are tainted with foul sins lest destruction come upon us The Lord calls upon us to come out and depart from such Jehoshaphat escaped narrowly with his life for being with Ahab and questionless not a few have smarted for being familiar with the wicked When we walked in laciviousness lusts Hereby is meant all sorts of uncleanness and the provocations thereto as fidling dancing mixt sports of men and women filthy talking ribald jesting unclean songs lewd ballads whorish apparel idleness c. These are so common that it s even a death to people to be held from them we can scarce see a yong man or woman in whom some one or other flag of wantonness hangeth not out Are not these works of darkness shall such inherit the Kingdom of Heaven O that the disorder of such were pulled down and that they would in time repent of their wantonness and lusts which will else cost them full dear one day and was never so sweet but it will prove as bitter Excess of wine Another lust of the Gentiles which we are to avoid the immoderate use or rather abuse of wine and strong drink Wine is the good creature of God made for good use and God hath given us liberty to use the same and that both ordinarily according to our ability so as it may be for the health of our bodies and strengthning the same the better to serve God in his worship and our callings and in time of weakness of body or minde and extraordinarily as in times of great and solemn rejoycing so of thanksgiving to God for deliverances and mercies and at marriages or such meetings of friends wherein not onely what 's for necessity is allowed but also what 's for delight and so a more liberal use thereof then at other times yet even then moderation and christian sobriety must be retained we must no further make use of wine but as thereby we may be fit to praise God or otherwise to do good But the excessive use of it to drunkenness is abominable and often prohibited Besides it s not onely odious to God and so all good men but it s even vile in the eyes of the Heathen insomuch that they have made many severe Laws against the same and uttered many excellent sayings against it It puts God as it were ou● of place and makes one's belly his God for that he serves more then God cares for it seeks to please it more then God nay to satisfie it he cares not to dishonor God It s also a wicked abuse of Gods benefits and a means to dishonor him which ought to allure us to love and serve him it makes a man also unfit for Gods service we be unfit at the best but when the head and heart are oppressed with drink we are then as blocks and beasts unfit for any good work in Church or Common-wealth unfit to govern or be governed unfit to follow our Callings yea unable to cover our own nakedness as it was with Noah Hence it is that Magistrates and Ministers whose callings are of greatest use and necessity do flatly forbid it it makes a man also fit for all evil as to swagger swear curse rail mock to talk filthily to scoff at Religion and the Servants of God to commit whoredom as Lot to quarrel fight stab kill daily experience shewing most frays proceeding from the pot to thrust their wives out of doors beat their Children play the mad men fill all places with filthy vomiting c. It s reported that one being tempted to whoredom murther and drunkenness and thinking that he must needs yield to one of them for that adultery
Gods Sheep husbanding Gods Heritage carefully that it may yield fruit in abundance to the owner the Lord we must not use them as we list but as we will answer for every sheep They be dear to God and he will have account of every sheep in our fold we should be thankful to God that hath trusted us with such a jewel as a part of his Heritage and therefore be faithful to him and them 2. If People be Gods Heritage and every Congregation as a particular Farm they must look they yield fruit that God may take delight therein and may say It s the fruitfullest Farm that I have within a great way I have more obedience yielded to my Word my Sabbaths better kept my Sacraments better resorted to Families better instructed and governed in that Town then in many others more love mercy zeal c. As an Husbandman that hath a rich piece of ground and which bears a great crop he will delight to be much in it looking on it walking about it looking that no damage come to it c. but if it prove barren he cares not for coming at it So where theirs a fruitful piece of ground to the Lord he wil delight in it boast of it bless it fence it and continue his favor to it and to their posterity after them they paying the rent of the Gospel and fruit which is the obedience thereof and outward mercies as he seeth best c. But in Towns where there is no fruit no obedince yielded no Prayer no regard of Sabbaths or Sacraments but on the contrary Prophaness Swearing Sabbath-breaking Contention Whoredom Drunkenness c. God will take no pleasure in such a Farm but if it hath had a good Husbandman will take him away and put it over into the hands of some hireling or base person good enough for such a place But being ensamples to the flock Now of the duty exhorted unto which is the third and last the two former are not enough to those this must be added Though it may be said Better Preach well and live naughtily then live jollily well and preach not or altogether without edification yet indeed both ought to go together Ministers must not onely teach well but also do the same be paterns unto their people go before them in practice they must not be like Statues in a high-way like Noahs builders which framed the Ark but were not saved therein or like the Scribes and Pharisees which laid heavy burthens on others which they themselves would not touch This was signified under the Law none that were to minister before the Lord were to be deformed Our Savior both taught and did Ministers must be as shining Lights they must be unrebukeable as people must joyn doing with hearing so must Ministers doing with Preaching Reasons 1. Hereby it shall appear that they mean in good earnest and require nothing of others but that whereunto they themselves are willing to yield 2. Hereby Atheists will be put to silence whose usual speech is after this maner Tush if there were any such matter to be feared as they talk of would not they live otherwise but there 's no such thing they must say something in place to scare the people and keep them in awe The common sort of ignorant and careless people profit not by preaching as long as the Preachers life is contrary to his Doctrine as who go more by seeing then by hearing If a man should speak as an Angel and not live thereafter such is their weakness they would not regard him yea in the better sort it doth greatly abate the edge of all they hear yet doth not the power of the Word and efficacy of the Sacraments depend on the lives of the Ministers but whether they be good or bad sitting in Moses Chair they are to be followed and obeyed in those things which they teach truly 3. Hereby they shall procure themselves a good degree and great liberty and boldness in their Ministery whereas otherwise it 's not possible but that their ill consciences must stop their mouthes How can they rebuke sin zealously they themselves being addicted unto those very sins which they would reprove If they do will it not be replyed Physitian heal thy self 4. Ministers have such a Calling as that whil'st others are busied about worldly things most part of their time theirs lies in the study of the Scriptures and about holy and Spiritual things whereby they may daily be further and further built up 5. It s the way to do most good when the one is seconded by the other holy Preaching with an holy life else there 's a very ill harmony when upon both good is not done people are left without excuse 6. The Devil labors to stain Ministers lives as knowing that hereby their Doctrine becometh for the most part ineffectual Therefore he labors by all means to bring in ill livers into the Ministery neither cares he what their gifts be so their lives be stained or else he labors with those that be in to pervert them one way or other by loosness riot c. or get them to be covetous c. If he cannot prevail in those then in some lesser things as in their apparel the government of their Families and the like If he cannot do thus much yet will he rather play at some small game then sit out he will then raise up false reports of godly Ministers which he knows will be listened unto and do some hurt 1. For Ministers 1. They must live among their people else how can they give them good example and so win them 2. They must look exceeding warily to their lives yea to their Wives and Childrens behavior we must watch over our own hearts bridle and beat down our corruptions avoid all appearance of evil all the least occasion of evil for a mote in us will be counted a beam and do more hurt then a beam in another yea we must not onely beware in things evil but even abridge our selves in lawful things of something we might do and that for the peoples weakness as of our lawful recreation or refreshing so that we wrong not our selves too much herein and in the matter of the maintenance seeking our own or providing something for Wife and Posterity which we might and ought to do yet we must forbear somewhat for the peoples weakness who are ready to think a man covetous if he hath any thing more then from hand to mouth or looks to save any thing as they do for theirs And yet people must here again be admonished that they stand not too much upon their Ministers life but look to his Ministery and labor to profit by it the Word of God is holy and ought to be of power with us whatsoever the life of the Minister be But alas how many Ministers be as bad as the worst in the Parish as
such liberty as will not stand with Christianity or a good conscience These cause that the Church of God cannot conceive so well nor give so full a testimony of them as were to be desired but are forced to speak doubtfully Oh let us so walk that by sincerity and constancy in godly courses we my get a large and full testimony in the conscience of those we live withal It 's a Crown and Garland to us whiles we live and a confirmation to us that we deceive not our selves It 's an honor when we die as the contrary even to be accounted vile a fearful punishment yea it 's a comfort and crown to our Wives Children Friends and a provocation to them to follow our steps whom they hear so well spoken of According to the foreknowledge of God God in his foreknowledge and eternal decree hath as ye heard appointed some to Salvation Q. Why did God before all worlds thus decree of men Ans. Of his own will which is the first and highest cause It 's not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his will He hath power over us as the Potter over the clay As he did not therefore chuse some because he foresaw they would receive grace so neither is foreseen infidelity the cause why God refuseth any but because he would for though he neither hateth nor casteth away any but for their sin yet this was not the cause of the Lords decree but his own will which is that which maketh any thing just and good Our will indeed being so corrupt must not be a reason of our actions but in God his is whose will maketh a thing good and not because a thing is good therefore he willeth it Beyond this will of his we must not enquire but in humility lay our hand upon our mouth and admire the depth of his wisdom and be content to stay for further knowledge of these things in the world to come In the mean time sit we down quietly believing what God hath revealed in his Word It followeth 1. That if any can prove his election he must stand and admire at the unsearchableness of Gods free mercy that he should think upon him a poor worm before the beginning of the world and one that should be of the common stock of Adam a sinfull wretch think of him I say to choose him to life passing by so many Oh how should this ravish our hearts and inflame us with love 2. That if any be rejected they must not complain of cruelty in God for that they are rejected Is the clay to say to the Potter why hast thou made me thus Beside thou art not condemned but for the just deserts and sins which thou hast committed against God all that can be said is this He gives not his grace to them as he doth to his elect whereof who shall complain God is bound to none Unto the Sanctification of the Spirit The end why we were elected is 1. In respect of God his glory 2. In respect of our selves our Salvation which we come unto by Santificaction which is the end of our Redemption All that were elected in time he brings into the world we come in enemies to God children of wrath polluted but he lets us have the word whereby he effectually calleth us to faith and repentance and so purgeth and washeth us by his word outwardly and his spirit inwardly whereby our nature is cleansed from the love of all sin and made pure in Gods fight and we enabled to dye to sin and live righteously Hereby may every one examine and prove whether he be elect or no viz. Not by climbing to the top at first and flying unto the unsearchable counsels of God the way to dazle and confound us but by the lowest step our Sanctification Here 's also comfort to them that can prove their Sanctification in truth though imperfectly There 's no condemnation to them an infallible mark of their election which may the more soundly comfort them because it is unchangeable as God is so that all the Devils in Hell shall never be able to prevail against their Salvation which is a Bulwark and Castle against all temptations Once the childe of God and ever so onely labor to walk worthy of this love and grow in sanctification that we may have the more plentiful and strong argument of our election past and glory to come Here 's also terror to those that walk after the flesh and the lusts thereof that lie yet in their sins they need not make a question about their election they may know that as yet they have no mark of it such rather carry a mark of reprobation about them Break off your sins therefore and turn to God who would not leave any sin that would hinder assurance of Salvation and who would not do any duty that might assure him thereof Let this be a strong and sharp spur to move us to Repentance and be not desperately careless saying If I be elected I shall be saved let me do as I will and if I be rejected let me do never so well I shall be damned These are flat lies use thou in humility the ways and means to attain faith and sanctification that thou mayst be assured of thine election else if thou wilt desperately justle against God see who will go by the worst Yea not only the prophane bear a brand of reprobation but even those that have some shew of holiness such as like H●rod hear gladly and amend many things or such as like the Pharisees make clean the outside of the platter the inside being full of filthiness such as have a shew of godliness yet by some sins deny the power of it or such holiness as stands in Ceremony the substance being neglected These kindes of holiness are no marks of Election therefore do not we content our selves with these but labor for true inward and sincere sanctification which is in the heart in one thing as in another in trouble as well as in prosperity Unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ The meritorious cause of our salvation is Christs obedience and sufferings and his obedience was chiefly in the offering up of himself for though the Father had Elected us to salvation and made us happy in Adam yet we wrought our own overthrow by sin and so deserved the curse of God here and for ever The only way then to deliver us from this and to save us was by the Lord Jesus God and man who suffered all the wrath that was due to us for our sins and so discharged us To appease this wrath there was in our selves no power no means else in the world would serve even the
all that are not as they should be whereas they should by a wise meek and moderate defence and kinde perswasions win credit to the truth which they defend and so do good they on the contrary cause them to speak evil and to think that it s but a preposterous hate and pride of heart in them so to speak and so do hurt Some sober Christians do much good and win on many that at first were opposite when they hear the wait of their reasons rather then the bigness of their words and seeing they do it in the fear of God and for conscience sake Some are not so milde as others but of an hotter nature this must in any wise be tempered with wisdom yet are not we to part from any part of the truth but to stick as close thereto as we may Verse 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil of you as of evil doers they may be ashamed that falsly accuse your good conversation in Christ. TO our constancy in the confession of our faith we must have a good conscience not so onely as it may be known to our selves but we must so walk that others even our adversaries may perceive the same that thereupon changing their mindes and being ashamed that they have spoken so evil of us they may cease to blame such as walk in so good a conversation as becometh the Servants of Christ Before I come to handle the points particularly laid down herein I will shew 1. What conscience is 2. The offices thereof 3. Resolve some questions about it and 4. Treat of the kindes thereof For the 1. Conscience is a faculty or power placed by God in the soul of a man which determineth of his thoughts desires words and deeds either with him or against him in the sight of God I say It s a faculty or power not a bare act for many actions are ascribed thereto as to accuse excuse comfort terrifie c. Placed by God for God being the creator of the soul he must accordingly be the creator of all the faculties of it In the soul called also the heart and the Spirit of a man Herein there be diverse faculties as the understanding whereby we conceive what is true and what is false what is good and what is evil the will whereby we will or nill choose or refuse any thing whereto are joyned the affections joy grief love hope fear c. and the memory whereby we hold fast things conceived or else call to minde and remember things past So also is conscience another faculty thereof whereby the soul reflects upon it self whereby I know that I do know such a thing that I think this or that that I affect or desire love or hate this or that for its one thing to know a thing think a thing remember a thing c. and another to know that I know it think it remember it Now in which part of the soul it hath its place as whether in the understanding or will or in every part of the soul I will not stand it s enough for us to know that there is such a faculty in mans soul. True it is it not only gives witness of all the faculties tels what I think desire affect c. but it useth and worketh upon all the faculties as the understanding for by it it directs and according to it it doth accuse so as if the judgement be well informed the conscience will give right witness if ignorant or ill informed then it gives wrong testimony So the memory accusing or excusing for things past so it worketh upon the will by provoking it to choose or refuse this or that so it worketh upon the affections raising up in us comfort and joy upon well doing fear and grief upon ill-doing Now though it have to do with all yet it may have its proper place in the understanding and minde according to the judgement of most Divines Of a man for no Creature on earth hath Conscience but man True the Angels are not without it the good having a good comfortable excusing joyful Conscience the evil a woful ill accusing and tormenting Conscience which is so much the worse for that they know so much and be so maliciously bent against it so that even when they be not in the place of torment but have leave to range the world yet they carry Hell with them even a tormenting Conscience whereof their trembling according to Saint James is an evident testimony But no other Creature hath it for having no Reason they have no Conscience therefore we say in our speech of a bad and unconscionable man he hath no more Conscience then a Dog or as much Conscience as an Horse whereby we mean none at all for these Creatures have none Man then hath a Conscience yea every man yet as the use of Reason may be lost by folly phrensie c. so the use of Conscience in such So by notorious wickedness a man may lose the use of his Conscience for a time whereupon we say of such a one he hath no Conscience yes every man hath a Conscience though as the use of Reason is taken from one deeply drunk so custom of sinning hath taken away use of Conscience so that it doth not admonish him before he do ill nor check and accuse him after or hath such an erronious judgement thinking good evil and evil good that he hath also an erronious Conscience But this benummed or beguiled Conscience will be awakened at one time or other in life or death or at the day of Judgement for no mans Conscience dyes but lives and shall meet him at the last day and though his sins be now as words written with the juyce of Lemmons nothing to be seen yet when their Conscience comes to the fire of Gods Judgements then every little dash idle words vain thoughts c. will be perceived Though men choak and smother Conscience though they strangle it or so drown it in their cups yet it will and doth abide still what made Joseph's Brethren troubled in Egypt but Conscience which told them of the sin committed by them twenty years before So Conscience told Pharaoh that he and his people were wicked which determined of his thoughts desires words and deeds or more briefly beareth witness either with us or against us in the sight of God It meddles not with other folks actions for that is science or knowledge but with our own and that is Conscience Conscience that is knowledge with another that is either another knowledge when I knowing any thing do know that I know it and so know my self and what is in me or another person that knows with me what I know and that as well as I or rather far better namely God who made the Conscience and will judge it and is privy to all that is in it for so is no other neither man nor Angel and accordingly the
his conscience he disswaded them therefrom so Davids conscience told him that he should do ill to kill Saul and thereupon would not give ear to those that perswaded him hereto Thus being tempted to Lye Deceive Swear Prophane the Lords day c. the conscience tells us that its evil so to do Again being called upon to any good duty the conscience tells us its good and provokes us to do it Why then Conscience is a Puritan if it do thus is not this corrupted as well as the other faculties O yes therefore it gives judgement very weakly and imperfectly in all but especially in the unregenerate and especially in the most ignorant and most wicked yet it retains some part of her office and power and will be doing as its enlightened and therefore it will give this judgement in foul and gross things in the worst of all as when they go to commit Murther Adultery c. or tell them on the other side they should go to Church c. but in the regenerate it doth much good work it s as a guide to conduct us in our way and whereby we shun all by paths It s a bridle to keep us from sin and a spur to goodness it s joyned in Commission with the Spirit of God they are obeyed or rejected together 1. Our duty then in token of our thankfulness is That we listen to the voyce of Conscience and be ruled by it we must take advice thereof ere we do any thing If we will not be ruled thereby but do contrary thereto it will one day exclaim against us when God shall judge us for our disobedience Why did not I give thee a Conscience to tell thee of these things will God say Yes Lord shall Conscience answer I told him it was naught and yet he would do it I told him such and such a thing was his duty and urged him to it and yet he would not give ear but put off the time from one day to another he would not repent have prayers in his family c. such shall then be stricken speechless Most are so eagerly carried after their passions and unruly affections as that they do not hear the voyce of their conscience the noise of those drowns the voyce of this 2. Even natural men have a light of conscience urging them to good and restraining them from evil None so evil but they have in them some light by which conscience is set on work to advise or counsel to the doing or avoiding this or that good or evil it s therefore no note or sign of grace in any because their conscience doth thus and thus This is in meer natural men from the light and knowledge that conscience hath of things good or evil yea oftentimes so forcible are those stirrings of conscience in them as that it keeps and restrains them from many sins which they are inclined to and would otherwise commit and puts them upon many good things which it urgeth them to which of themselves they have neither will nor power to do not from the love they have of the good or hatred of the evil but beca●se they would please Conscience which will not suffer them to be at quiet till it be obeyed this they may do and yet in the mean time may be onely in the state of Nature for though here they obey Conscience yet they do it not for Conscience sake Their obedience ariseth not from the purity and holiness of the Law of God but from fear of men from discredit or shame from hope of reward desire of ease or the like If there were no other cause to move them to enter upon good duties or to restrain them from doing evil but the Law of God they would not yield that obedience to Conscience which now they do And thus conscience gives judgement before things be done For its judgement after our Actions It then gives sentence This was well done This was ill done and not so onely but with an Absolution or Condemnation This was well done therefore you are innocent in it and deserve neither guilt nor punishment This was ill done therefore you are guilty and have deserved Gods wrath hereby Samuels Conscience spake for him Whose Ox have I taken c. Pharaohs against him I have sinned c. Thus is Conscience as a Judge acquitting or condemning us yea a little God as it were in the midst of man giving sentence beforehand as it shall be at the Tribunal seat of God on the last day If it acquits us then it worketh Peace Joy Comfort Boldness if it condemn us especially forcibly O then it causeth shame as in Adam when he fled and hid himself in the thicket after he had offended so also fear yea in the midst of all jollities as in Belshazzar and at small things as the shaking of a leaf so also sorrow which the world judgeth to be melancholy whereas it is far otherwise and yet both may and do often meet together yea desperation as in Cain and Judas and an universal distraction of body and minde the accusation of conscience are wounds to the heart Davids heart smote him A wounded Spirit who can bear They are as the gnawing of a Worm that never dyeth but lyeth continually gnawing at ones heart 1. If our consciences do excuse and acquit us bearing witness of the truth and integrity of our hearts of our hatred of evil our delight in Gods word and endeavor to please him above all things c. then may we rejoyce and be of good comfort the same being an infallible mark of our Salvation and may be bold in believing the same against Satan and all his discomforts There 's a great fault in many Christians though as the Apostle saith They know nothing by themselves but that their hearts bear witness with them of their care and faithfulness in all things yet are never the more comforted but are still cast down through Satans suggestions and lyes and their own unbelief If thine own conscience well informed according to Gods Word acquit thee why shouldst thou not be of good comfort you may be humbled for your failings yea deeply for your strong corruptiōs yet for the main be of comfort if in any particular we have done well we may be comforted 2. Let us always keep our selves in well-doing that we may hear our consciences speak comfortably so may we keep a continual feast 3. If we have any thing lying on our consciences for which they boyl within us and accuse and pronounce judgements against us let us not make a slight matter of it but seek to God for mercy and to be discharged of it that so we may still conscience which then may be done not before Stop not the mouth of conscience as many do by mirth and toys this is but to delude thy self and delay time others let
a convenient portion of Gods outward favors so did both Jacob and Agur. True we have no warrant to pray for abundance that were a sign of a proud and earthly heart but if God send it we must crave much grace therewith lest we surfeit thereof and it make us like a Camel over-burthened that we cannot go So we may crave Peace in a Land in Towns in Families between particular persons so health a dutiful fruitful Wife religious and obedient Children c. These things are promised of God neither will he withhold any good thing from them that love him and therefore we may pray for them But because they be good but in a mean degree we must desire grace first more and more earnestly these things onely conditionally we must seek his favor forgiveness of our sins faith grace absolutely without taking nay for the outward we must submit our wills to his will and desire them onely so far as may stand with his glory and our best good for God seeth that though these blessings be goodly things over the contrary yet we abuse them and are the worse for them and therefore God is fain to take them away and send the contrary as see what an abundance of iniquity this our long peace and plenty hath bred so that though we may not pray as Elias did for a punishment on the Land yet surely we might rather be glad if God would scourge the Land one way or other to the amendment thereof then that it should thus go on to be destroyed and for our selves how do we abuse our prosperity if it do but continue some small time we must therefore pray for that which may stand with our best good and for grace to use it well we shall enjoy it the longer we must be content for our selves rather to have an healthful soul in a sick body then in an healthful body a surfeited soul with sin and security so a meaner Estate with some losses but with Spiritual gains in grace is better then abundance with a worldly and secure heart so for our Children we may desire that they may prosper in this world and have a competency and live to do good but must desire most that they may be gracious and rather so in a poor estate then to swagger it out or be worldings in great wealth It s found true from experience that such as be earnest and much in desiring these outward things they seldom or never crave Gods favor or seek grace for their souls If we be shortened in these things look we cause it not by our sin If we have we must repent and amend If we have not then may we think that the Lord knoweth this state to be best for us and thereupon to be content therewith That are in Christ Jesus Here 's the true fountain of all Peace namely to be in Christ Hence all Peace comes to us and without this there is nor can be no true Peace By nature we are the Children of wrath are at enmity with God are Rebels and Traytors and guilty of eternal condemnation so that there must be a peace made between God and us else we perish This is onely done by Jesus Christ who is our Peace-maker who by his All-sufficient Sacrifice of himself hath made an atonement when our sins is taken away in his death and his righteousness imputed unto us by faith then is God at peace with us and become our merciful Father when we be assured hereof by Gods Spirit and able to prove it by good Testimonies then have we peace in our own consciences even such as passeth understanding yea joy and that unspeakable and glorious Then being at peace with God all Creatures be reconciled to us the Angels to become our friends and attendants the Devils not to have their wills of us men to respect and regard us c. and thus have we right to all outward peace and prosperity for Christ hath purchased as Heaven so Earth for us and it s promised to the believers and they have right thereto though with exception of the cross when God seeth it best Thus we see how peace flows from Christ no peace in conscience till God be at peace with us no Creature at peace with us till God be reconciled yea without this peace we have no right to any outward peace so that a bad man can have no peace Obj. But the common sort of men prophane worldlings and civil ones will say We are none of those you think very well of for we are none of your precise fellows yet we have peace with God we doubt not nor see we any other cause and if he loved us not he would not do for us as he doth and for my conscience I thank God I am at peace therewith I was never troubled in my life and for outward prosperity I thrive I thank God well nay these precise fellows are most without peace for they are not in Gods favor its like for no body cares for them but hates them besides they be troubled in minde and sad and some of them are at their wits ends and for outward peace they be ever sickly a number of them and one cross or other is upon them so that I think you are quite wide Answ. How foolishly do these reason They are loved of God because of their outward prosperity This is but Esaus but Ishmaels Portion yea and Judas bare the bag The Lord maketh his sun to shine and the rain to fall even on the bad He casteth such bones to dogs and for their peace of conscience it s no peace but benumbedness and an hard heart for want of sight of their deadly danger which yet is never the less and will one day break out in most fearful maner they peace that were never humbled for their sins It s woful peace they peace that live in their sins what to do have they therewith had Zimri peace that slew his master For outward peace health welfare c. it s often the portion even of Atheists and contemners of God but what is it whilest they have no peace with God have it in wrath with a wo and secret curse There 's no soundness in this peace it cannot comfort the heart it s but flashing vanity if any contrary blow come they are dead in the nest as Belshazzar Besides how uncertain is it subject to be lost every moment The wrath of God is still ready to seize on them as on the Philistines sporting at Sampson Pharaoh Herod c. They pass away as a dream their rejoycing is as the crackling of Thorns How soon is their Candle put out They stand in a slippery place how suddenly are they gone leaving nothing but a stink behinde Their end will be eternal howling with Dives And are not the godly in Gods favor because men favor them not They are the more and for their trouble
thereof Vnder what colour soever it comes Dan. 3. 16. and 6. 10. Acts 4. 19. and 5. 29. Exod. 23. 2. Mat. 4. 8. Mat. 16. 26. With the appearance thereof and Occasions leading thereunto Use 1. Deut. 32. 6. Dan. 4. 27. Means whereby to eschew evil Iob 31. 1. Psal. 39. 1. Use 2. Use 3. Simil. Use 4. Whoso avoids not evil cannot do good Use. Acts 26. 28. Acts 10. 38. Heb. 13. 16. Isa. 1. 17. Rom. 2. 10. Doctr. Christians must be doers of good Iohn 5. 29. Reasons Isa. 38. 3. Mat. 7. 21. Iohn 5. 29. Rom. 2. 10. Psal. 119. 6. Luke 1. 6. 2 King 23. 25. We must do all the good we can At all times In all places In all companies To all persons 1 Thess. 5. 15. In our general calling In our particular calling Though it be hard and difficult Luke 5. 18. Dan. 6. 10. Iosh. 24. 15. Eccles. 9. 10. Gal. 6. 10. Rom. 2. 7. And in a good maner Isa. 1. 11. and 58. 2. Iosh. 24. 14. 1 Chron. 28. 9 1 Pet. 5. 2. 2 Cor. 8. 12. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Mat. 7. 17. Mark 11. 21. Luke 19. 22. Use 4. Psal. 119. 20. See Isa. 1. 11. Use 5. 3 Iohn ver 11. Use 6. Christians must seek after peace See Acts 4. 32. 1 Cor. 1. 10. 2 Cor 13. 11. Gal. 5. 22. Eph. 4. 3. 1 Thess. 5. 13. Iames 3. 17. How we must seek peace Gen. 13. 8. Gen. 21. 32. 2 Chron. 18. 1. and 19. 1. See Rom. 12. Heb. 12. 14. Mat. 10. 34. Ier. 15. 10. Reasons Mat. 5. 9. 1 Tim 2. 8. Psal. 133. 3. Prov. 17. 1. and 15. 17. Prov. 21. 9. See Ier. Lam. Concordia parvae res crescunt discordia magna dilabuntur Mat. 12. 25. Use 1. Psal. 120. 7. 1 Cor. 3. 3. Iam. 3. 15. Rom. 2. 8. Use 2. See Prov. 1. 10 c. Use 3. Use 4. The enemies of peace to be avoided Pride Covetousness Frowardness Prov 16. 28. Talebearers Mat. 5. 9. Use 1. 1 Iohn 2. 1. The prevention of an Objection See Deut. 11. 12 Psal. 25. 16. 27. 9. Why Eyes Ears Face c. are attributed to God Use 1. Use 2. Whom we are to understand by Righteous and why they are so called 2 Cor. 51. 21. Simil. Use. Whom we are to understand by them that do ill The Lord careth for the Righteous Deut. 11. 12. Psal. 33. 12. 146. 8. Psal. 103. 13. Mat. 6 9. Isa. 49. 15. Iudges 5. 20. Iosh 10. 13. Psal. 33. 18 19 and 121. 8. Mat. 16. 30. Zech. 2. 8. Obj. Sol. Iudg. 6. 13. See Psal. 32. 6. Isa. 45. 2. Obj. Sol. Psal. 37. 19. Use 1. Psal. 23. 27. 1 King 6. 16. Use 2. God hears the prayers of his Saints readily Psal. 145. 18. Isaiah 65. 24. Psal. 141. 2. 50. 15. and 69. 31. Iam. 5. 16. Ier. 7. 16. Ezek. 14. 14. Matth. 7. 11. Isa. 38. 14. 1 Sam. 1. 13. Ionah 1. 2. What prayers prevail with God Psal. 73. 25. How it may appear that God hears their prayers readily Rom. 8. 26. Hos. 14. 3. Prov. 50. 15. Matth. 7. 7. Psal. 22. 1. Why the Lord hears not nor grants not sometimes the prayers of his children Matth. 15. 23. Simil. 2 Cor. 12. 9. Simile Use 1. Use 2 Use 3. Dan. 2. 20. Simil. Use 4. Pro. 15. 8 29. Psal. 14 4. Isa. 29. 13. Iohn 9. 31. Hos. 7. 14. See Prov. 1. 24. Gods wrath and the fruits thereof are always bent against the wicked 1 Cor. 10. 6. Reasons See Psal. 9. 8 16. Rom. 13. 3. Why the wiced are not always plagued here 2 Thess. 1. 8 9. Use 1. Use 2. Patience and innocency of life are the way to escape harms from men Prov. 15. 1. Iudg. 8. 1 2 3. 1 Sam. 24. 18. and 26. 21. 1 Sam. 19. 4 5. and 14. 45. 1 Sam. 24. 18. and 26. 21. Use 1. Use 2. Some are so bad that they wrong the innocent Prov. 22. 22. and 23. 10. Use. Some hate the godly meerly for their goodness Gal. 4. 29. Numb 23. 8. See Rev. 17. 6. Psal. 16. 3. 1 Iohn 3. 14. Psal. 15. 4. Use. Matth. 18. 6. Such as suffer wrongfully or for Religion and Conscience sake are happy Use. Matth. 5. 10. 1 Pet. 4. 14. Reasons Iohn 15. 19. Phil. 3. 10. Acts 5. 41. Phil. 1. 29. Matth. 5. 10. Luke 12. 32. Iames 1. 12. Heb. 11. 26. We must tarry till God call us to suffer Acts 21. 13. Whether we may flee from persecution Use. Mark 8. 38. Mark 10. 30. Matth. 5. 10. Acts 5. 41. and 16. Heb. 10. 34. 2. Sam. 6. 22. Heb. 12. 4. A godly man is happy in what condition soever See Psal. 1. 1. 32. 1. 112 1. 126. 1. Ionah 1. 6. Use 1. Use 2. Fear is an enemy to constant suffering Matth. 10. 28. Luke 12. 4. Rev. 2. 10. Use. Rev. 21. 8. What it is to sanctifie the Lord God Iohn 3. 33. Rom. 4. 20. Faith the mother of constancy in sufferings Rev. 2. 2. 1 Iohn 5. 4. Luke 8. 24. Use. As we must believe Gods Truth with our hearts so must we profess it with our tongues Rom. 10. 9. Rev. 2. 13. Reasons Acts 26. 18. Use 1. Iohn 5. 39. 1 Sam. 13. 19. Numb 11. 29. Col. 3. 16. Use 2. Iohn 3. 19. Hos. 4. 6. Matth. 12. 30. Mark 8. 38. Use 3. Luke 12. 8. We must believe with our hearts before we can confess with our mouthes Our speeches must be accompanied with meekness and fear Use. What Conscience is Iames 2. 19. Rom 2. 15. Acts 24. 16. 1 Iohn 3. 20. Use 1. Use 2. Iames 2. 1 Iohn 2. 3. 1 Cor. 2. 12. The Offices of Conscience To bear witness Ier. 17. 10. 1 Cor. 2. 11. Rom. 9. 3. 1 Sam. 24. 10. and 24. 15. Psal. 7. 4 5. Iob 42. 3. 31. 5 7 c. Use 1. Use 2. Psal. 51. 4. Use 3. See Acts 23. 1. 2 Cor. 1. 12. Heb. 13. 18. Isa. 38. 3. To give judgement before our actions See Isa. 30. 21. Psal. 16. 7. Obj. Sol. Use 1. Use 2. After our actions 1 Sam. 12. 3. Exod. 9. 27. Prov. 28. 1. 2 Cor. 1. 12 1 Iohn 3. 21. Isa. 57. 20. Acts 2. 37. Prov. 18. 4. Mark 9. 48. Use 1. 1 Cor. 4. 4. Use 2. Use 3. Simile Use 4. Simile Use 5. Rom. 2. 15. An erronious conscience what it is See Iohn 16. 2. Gen. 30. 18. A doubtful conscience what it is Rom. 14. Use. Psal. 119. 105. Whether a man doth sin that doth according to his conscience See Acts 26. 9. Whether a man do any thing against his conscience being erronious Rom. 14. 1 Cor. 8. 7. Whether it be lawful to do a thing with a doubtful conscience The several kindes of conscience Tit. 1. 15. The kindes of a still quiet conscience Drowsie Simile Secure Seared Eph. 4. 18. Luke 15. 17. Simile See Ioh. 3. 20 21. Means whereby the conscience may be awakened See Deu. 29. 19 See Acts
have some extraordinary motion of the Spirit of God to the contrary as it 's written of some of the Martyrs or finde themselves as yet not strong enough to endure their rage Those I say may slie to be reserved as a seed to propagate the Church afterward Throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bythynia The places whereunto they fled for habor were Regions and Countreys in Asia the less where there were then famous Churches Note hence 1. The large extent of the Church of God in the time of the New Testament that whereas before it was kept within the pale of Judea in the New since our Saviours ascension it 's dispersed over all Nations far and wide from the Sun-rising to its going down that it might be fulfilled which God spake to Abraham that in his seed all the Nations of the world should be blessed But what 's become of those Churches of Asia now They are all lamentable to be spoken under the tyranny of the Enemy of God and Christ Jesus the Turk They are now no Churches but Synagogues of Satan cages of unclean birds so are also the Churches to whom Saint John wrote in his Revelation Be we not therefore high minded but fear for if God hath not spared the natural branches take heed lest he also spare not us yea considering our luke-warmness unthankfulness contempt of the Word and such other our crying sins we have cause to fear the like judgement 2. The singular diligence and care of this holy Apostle over the charge committed to him Not onely did he preach to them being present with them but wrote also being absent being in persecution and scattered throughout strange Countreys he encourageth them unto constancy and that they should not faint under their troubles of such helps there is great need in such cases and at such times He was careful not onely to gain them to God and the Faith but to hold them fast that as they were begotten so they might be nourished up in the faith as they were converted so he was careful to confirm them this being no less necessary then that For Non minor est virtus quam quarere parta tueri having offended but again put in trust with the sheep he is now careful of his Commission which is set down for the example of all Ministers even as we love Christ so will we must we feed his sheep and lambs We must labor by all diligence and faithfulness to convert and build up yea in times of sickness or any affliction when Satan waits to tempt them and they be weak we are to come and strengthen them we are to shoar them up that they reel not to comfort them that they despair not But how do they perform this duty that never come at their charges seldom or never preach put it off to another though never so unfit how also they that either preach not or but unprofitably which come not to a poor or mean mans house upon any occasion How shall they be able to answer the great Shepherd of the sheep when they shall be called to an account See Heb. 13. 17. Elect c. Here he describes them by their inward estate to God-ward I will not here handle the common place of Election I have done it at large and I reserve such things to Catechizing onely now of such things as are necessarily occasioned by the text whereof this may be one That God hath chosen out some men to salvation as he did of the Angels which are called the Elect Angels Before the world he Ordained and decreed some persons to obtain salvation even the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory See to this purpose Acts 13. 48. Eph. 1. 4. 1 Thess. 5. 9. This must needs be so for whatsoever falls out in the world universally or particularly God in his eternal and unchangeable decree Ordained the same And if wise men do not especially great things whereof they have not before deliberated much lels doth God Let us hold fast this truth inviolable according to the Scriptures casting away all carnal conceits of cruelty or the like in the Lord and with the Apostle Paul what we cannot understand learn we to adore and admire Q. But how could the Apostle know they were Elect may one know the Election of another A. For our own we may as we shall hear by an by for others we may also though not with the same knowledge and judgement of certainty because the heart of man is known to none but to God only and a man may go far who yet may fall away but with the judgement of charity which hath degrees according to the fruits we see in them if they only profess Religion and be in the Church we may hope but it is but weak hope where we see no fruits where we see some good likelihoods of religion some good beginnings we may more strongly be perswaded for to such a man may say If these things be in you in truth you are the very Elect of God Now when we see the fruits of faith sanctification and godliness in men and that they shew it not by fits but constantly not in some things but in all not in prosperity onely but in adversity too in persecution and under the Cross we may the more yea very boldly judge of them as the Elect of God and so doth out Apostle here as appears by the next words Unto Sanctification of the Spirit He saw good signs of Sanctification in them and that they suffered persecution for Religions sake therefore he so hoped of them he so stiles them We should not onely labor to have sound testimonies to our selves of our Election and Salvation but so live as we may get a good and full testimony thereof in the conscience and minde of the Church and Brethren with whom we live For a good name in the Church is a precious thing and much to be desired The voice of the Church is the voice of God We are so to live that whatsoever befalls us as to die suddenly or strangely or to have great and extraordinary afflictions while we live our lives notwithstanding may have spoken so well for us as we may have good report while we live and when we be dead So have many poor godly ones in Scripture and in our times when great and mighty ones that have been wicked their names be rotten and so not at all or else stinking and so as a dunghil or puddle which the more it is stirred the more it stinketh They therefore that live vilely in their lusts bring an ill name upon themselves who can judge they are Elect or shall be saved yea many be desperate they care not what men say as bad a sign as can be such also as walk hollowly and by halfs in some things well and in some other taking