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

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testimonie to euery one that requireth it but know the party to be worthy and one who shall not be found inferiour to the testimonie giuen of him not because he is a friend or kinsman or one whom thou wouldst preferre neither for forme or fashion but because herein thou shalt discharge a good dutie in faith to God and his people Reasons 1. Because the iudgement of men in the places of Masters Fellows of Colledges are much esteemed and relyed on 2. it is a matter of much moment to commend a man to be set ouer a people for which function the Apostle asketh who is sufficient 3. the setting to a rash hand here is as the rash laying on of hands which sinne the Apostle forbiddeth Timothy not onely in his owne person but euen the communication with it in the persons of other men 4. this rashnesse draweth not onely thy selfe into the sinne of false witnesse bearing and that against the Church but also it draweth others into the same as Patrons Prelates beeing the collaters and Instituters to benefices besides it is a confirming of the insufficient partie himselfe in his insufficiencie and a speciall patron of idlenesse seeing euery insufficient person by friends or fauour may procure an ordinary forme and be as farre commended as the diligent hand All these reasons besides the example of our Apostle should prouoke our care in this which is more then a matter of ordinarie fauour and to imitate the circumspection of the Apostle Iohn in the 12. of his third epistle Demetrius hath a good report of all men and of the truth it selfe yea and we our selues beare record and ye knowe that our record is true Doctr. 2. All are not naturall sonnes that are so accounted many that seeme to be begotten to the faith are no better then base borne begotten onely after the flesh as Ismael and still remaine a strange seede The Apostle had a cleare eye who perceiued many false challenges and vniust claimes to be made to the inheritance by a number who were neuer naturall sonnes but onely made a flourish as though they had beene the next heires and hence euerie where we are taught that all are not Israel who are of Israel and he is not a Iewe who is one without and though Ismael seeme a long time to haue the right of the first borne yet in the ende he is cast out of the house and prooueth disinherited Vse It standeth then all of vs in hand to looke to our legitimation least we loose the inheritance It is not outward shewes that will intitle vs he that will be the adopted sonne of God must be the naturall sonne of his ministers and such an one as standeth not in the ceremonie but feeleth in his heart the sinceritie of religion it is more to be the naturall sonne of the Church then to come to Church there to heare pray and receiue the Sacraments it is more then to giue good words to religious persons and exercises which are good cheape for a man may performe these outward seruices and get praise of men and yet want the praise of God these things then must be done but not insisted in if we would haue God to praise vs. Quest. But what may we doe to get approbation of God Ans. Because the Lord who loueth prayseth also truth in the inward parts we must beware of guile become Nathaniels men without guilfull spirits get our hearts circumcised that we may be Iewes within and not in the letter onely Examine then thy spirit into which the eie of flesh cannot pearce but that spirit which is all an eie doth discerne and enquireth whether thy heart be his Temple in which the Christian sacrifices of prayer and praise be daily kindled Whether thy soule be his Arke keeping the Tables and pot of Manna that is treasuring the word as a pearle and thy portion Whether that pretious Iewel of faith the cleanser and purifier of it be there Whether his feare that vigilant Centinel of thy soule cause it to depart from euery euill way Whether a good conscience like a Cynthius or monitor be euer watching thee and pulling thee by the eare in thy slidings he looketh how his spirit is entertained whether fruitfull in his graces quenched in his motions or grieued by thy sinnes he seeth how thy heart affecteth his Ministers whether thou with Timothie as a naturall sonne with thy father seruest in the Gospel These are things which must commend thee to God as beeing liuely sparkes of his owne image farre passing all shewes and semblances which are but as a painted fire not any whit warming the heart but leauing it frozen in the naturall dregges of sinne Grace mercie and peace from God the Father and the Lord Iesus Christ our Sauiour In these words is laid downe the forme of the Apostolicall salutation Which is a prayer containing two parts 1. the enumeration of the graces he wisheth for Titus and these are three Grace mercie peace 2. the persons of whom he craueth these who are the first causes of them and they be 1. God the Father 2. the Lord Iesus Christ further described by his proper office our Sauiour In the words 1. of the meaning 2. of the doctrine By grace is meant the free fauour of God accepting vs in his Christ and not any gifts of grace which are the fruits and effects of it I call 〈◊〉 a free fauour because else were it not grace if it were not freely giuen By mercie may be meant the former and that not idly added because the freedome of this grace might be more liuely expressed and confirmed and yet because mercie hath euer an eye to miserie I rather vnderstand hereby some fruits of that former grace of God in Christ such as are remission of sinnes iustification sanctification and life eternall by which we are freed from all miserie of sinne and punishment in pa●t here and in whole hereafter By peace is meant the effect of this mercie and that is peace with God through Christ who is our peace peace with the creatures and peace with our selues inward and outward so as in these three tearmes in this order depending one vpon another is requested whatsoeuer can make to the accomplishment of happinesse temporall or eternall From God our Father This title of Father is attributed vnto God either 1. essentially or 2. personally when essentially it is taken for the whole Trinitie as Deut. 32.6 Doe ye reward him O foolish people is he not your father In this sense God is a Father two wayes 1. generally of all nature and naturall things in that he frameth and gouerneth all his creatures yea men and angels Thus he is called the father of spirits Heb. 12.9 and thus is Adam called the sonne of God Luk. 2.38 and angels the sonnes of God Iob. 1. and of both may be spoken that of the Prophet haue we not all one Father Mal. 2.
stedfastnesse And this promise is described 1. from the stabilitie of it in that the author of it is God who cannot lie 2. from the antiquitie of it gathered from the circumstance of time before the world began both which considerations most effectually commend this promise of God and also confirme this our hope which leaneth vpon it Quest. What kind of promise is this he●● mentioned Ans. The word signifieth such a promise as is meerely free and most absolute as the learned haue obserued and is opposed vnto all legall promises which are not free but conditionall and made good to the keeper for the keeping of the law for the man that doth the law shall liue by the lawe but euangelicall promises whereof this is the principall are no such compacts or bargaines but free without all antecedent inducement and all condition of doing any thing on our parts As for the condition of faith which some may here alleadge the answer is we receiue nothing for our faith nor the worthines or worke of it but by it as a hand or meanes we receiue the free promise of eternall life Quest. But how could God promise before the world began that is from euerlasting seeing there was none then to promise vnto Answ. By an vsuall figure of speach the thing decreed is put for the decree it selfe and the true sense is this God promised that is decreed to promise before the world began and in due time hath made that promise manifest in the word preached as in the next words The like phrases we finde 2. Tim. 1.9 He hath called vs with an holy calling before the world was Eph. 1.4 we were choosen before the foundation of the world that is God decreed then to choose vs. Neither will this speach seeme strange to him that considereth 1. that with God all times are present none former or latter to him 2. that hereby the Scriptures would note the certaintie and assurance of such a maine promise of such vse and expectation Out of which words we note three lessons 1. That life eternall is ours by free promise 2. That God cannot lie and therefore the promise is infallible 3. The admirable care and loue of God to man tendring his eternall good before he or the world was Doctr. 1. That eternall life is by promise appeareth by that vsuall metonimie in the Scriptures whereby it carrieth the name of the promise it selfe although indeede it be the thing promised Heb. 6.12 be followers of them who through faith and patience attaine the promise that is life promised This truth was liuely typified both in the sonnes of Abraham as also liuely shadowed in that earthly Canaan The sonnes of Abraham were Isaac and Ismael two sonnes but one heire and he the sonne of promise by which title alone he held his prerogatiue whereas Ismael was the first borne Hence was it vsuall with the Apostles to oppose the sonnes according to the flesh to the sonnes of promise And as it was then so now is there a seede of promise euen all faithfull men and women who are raised out of faithfull promises faithfully apprehended called elsewhere not sonnes onely but heires of promise that is not onely such as to whom the promises belong but such as claime their inheritance onely by adoption and promise and not otherwise In like manner the earthly Canaan was called the land of promise not onely because it was long before promised to Abraham and his posteritie many of whom for many generations onely so enioyed it but also because those that were brought to the possession of that good land had it not for their owne worthinesse they were charged to beware of such thoughts for God gaue them this power by stablishing his couenant with them figuring vnto vs no other thing but that this blessed rest prepared for the people of God the truth of that shadow is held in no other tenure but by vertue of the promise neither here nor hereafter adde hereunto that whatsoeuer grace the Lord powreth into the hearts of the elect they all beeing not onely steppes and degrees but pawnes also and pledges of eternall life looke out vnto the promise faith apprehendeth it hope expecteth it loue thankfully entertaineth it yea and all the rest are quickned and strengthened by it Nay in this regard the holy spirit of God from whom these streames of grace doe flowe is called the spirit of promise not onely in that he was promised to beleeuers as Ioel. 2. I will powre out my spirit but also because he sealeth vp vnto their hearts the certentie of this maine promise touching their saluation Obiect But life eternall is called a debt Ans. It is so of his promise not of our desert Herodias craued Iohn Baptists head as her due but not because by dauncing she had deserued it but because of the Kings promise And that these promises are free may appeare in the first and maine giuen to Adam when he was farre from deseruing it in whom was nothing to mooue to the Lord but to the cleane contrarie Vse 1. Whosoeuer pretend any other title to the inheritance besides the promise of God are of the bondwoman and Ismaelites descending of Agar The Apostle sheweth how we receiue the promise of the spirit that is freedome from the law sinne death hell and damnation namely through faith here is no merit but faith taking ●old Which condemneth that arrogant doctrine of the Church of Rome who will haue life eternall repaied to the merit of workes for their condignitie which is all one with the renouncing of the promise of mercie and to flie for releefe vnto the iustice of God Whereas the whole new Testament draweth vs from that legal righteousnesse and suffereth vs not to behold our best workes but God the promiser and Christ the mediator and our birth which brings our inheritance and our selues in the gifts of righteousnesse and remission of sinnes onely receiuers and in the matter of our iustification before God meere patients and no agents at all Vse 2. The strength of our hope standeth not vpon merits but vpon this same promise which confuteth another Popish error that to hope without merit is presumption but Abraham had another prop for his hope it was not merit that made him hope aboue hope but because he knew who had spoken he doubted not the promise through vnbeleefe Obiect 1. Ioh. 3.19 If we loue indeed and in truth we know that we are of the truth And therefore hope of saluation is to be fetched from the workes of loue Ans. The scope of the Apostle is to teach that true faith cannot stand without a good conscience not that the perswasion of it either onely thence ariseth or thereupon only dependeth or cannot be without works but that then we haue more full perswasion of our coniunction with God and soundnes in faith when together with the inward
men into euill is because they can easilier giue credance vnto the persons of men then soundly iudge of the actions of them Hauing faithfull children After a mans owne person respect must be had of his priuate gouernment and cariage whom the Lord will haue called so neere him as to serue in holy things before him and because it is meete that such a one be a man of experience and gouernment the Apostle would haue him obserued in the priuate ordering of his family whence an aime may be taken how he is likely to behaue himselfe in publike that if his fitnes skil be tried in ruling the lesser and fewer he may the better be trusted with the greater For that this is the reason of all this diligent enquirie is plaine in 1. Tim. 3.5 For if he cannot gouerne his owne house how can he gouerne the house of God We know that he that is not able to guid a boate is not able to gouerne a great ship and he that being married cannot rule two or three of his own children so neare him much lesse can he gouerne a whole Church men and women who in comparison of the other are as strangers and few of them fully knowen vnto him Quest. But in ordering the familie the first care must be had of the wife why doth the Apostle vtterly omit that both in this place and that of Timothie and in both places only mention the gouernment of the children Ans. 1. That care is not excluded 2. The wife is not so absolutely put vnder gouernment as the children but are partly gouerners in the familie with the husband and beeing the wife of a Minister is presupposed to be of that grace and wisedome as that she is able to take vp her owne dutie without such enforcement and therefore the Apostle thinketh it sufficient to shew what a one the Ministers wife ought to be 1. Tim. 3.11 But 3. and especially because in the gouernment of his children there is a more liuely resemblance of such duties of gouernment which he is to dispense towards the Church And if we looke a little nearer the words we shall see that there is nothing enioyned the Minister as a Father of children which belongeth not vnto him as he is a spirituall father of the children of God For if we respect matter of instruction and doctrine he must haue faithfull children so in the Church by diligent teaching of the doctrine of faith must he bring men vnto the faith or if we looke at matter of manners he must do two things 1. displant vices and plant the contrarie vertues that they may not be accused of riotous or other vngodly courses which also he must publikely performe in the congregation by the word of exhortation and rebuke 2. correct and chastise the obstinate and rebellious that they be not disobedient and so as Minister he hath a rod of correction and the censures of the Church to inflict vpon the obstinate Now in the children of Ministers are required two things 1. for their institution that they be faithfull children 2. for their conuersation they must not be 1. riotous 2. disobedient By faithfull children are meant such as beeing instructed in the faith are at least in externall conuersation answerable to the profession of the faith they make Quest. But is it in the power of any Minister or man to haue faithfull children may not a good man and a Minister too haue most graceles children Ans. There is no man but he is to endeauour that his children may haue euen the grace of faith which is further laid out of his power then by getting himselfe within the couenant But there is no good man who hath it not in his power to instruct his children in the doctrine of faith and also for outward order to make them conformable and in some measure answerable to that prof●ssion so long as they abide vnder his roofe And if the Lord afterwards for some vnknowen and secret cause by leauing them shew he hath no delight in them such a father may herein comfort his conscience that to his power he hath vsed the best meanes for their good Doctr. 1. He that must reforme others abroad must first beginne at home For as true loue beginneth at home and then disperseth it selfe abroad so true religion reformeth at home first and conscionable reformation beginnes at a mans owne heart The tenour of the 101. Psalme sheweth that Dauid comming to his kingdome 1. reformeth his person 2. his Court and familie 3. his countrie The same course tooke Ioshua I and my house and Hester I and my maids And indeed sound reformation cannot correct in another what it selfe cherisheth neither can teach another and it selfe abide vntaught As if it be a zealous reformation proceeding from pure zeale it hateth disorder most of all in the owne bosome it lesse spares sinne in the owne heart then in the house and lesse in the house then abroad and the nearer this serpent approacheth the more is it feared and fled from Well knew the Apostle that he that cannot abide reformation in himselfe can neuer endure it in another and he that suffereth vanitie prophannes irreligion and disorder in his house he can neuer hate these in the house and Church of God and therfore maketh it a sufficient cause to debarre such a one from the Ministerie 2. How dangerous a thing it is for a man vnreformed in himselfe or family to take vpon him in publike the reformation of other we see in Moses himselfe Exod. 4.24 whom as he was going downe into Egypt to be the guide and deliuerer of the Church the Lord met in the way to haue slaine him and the reason was because his sonne Eliazer was not circumcised and so his owne house was vnreformed Whence we may gather how indignely the Lord taketh it that any man should come to gouerne his house that gouerneth not his owne If Moses himselfe be to plant circumcision among the people much more must all his owne males be circumsiced and this must be done or he shall die for it before euer he come where he must serue the Church of God Vse 1. Let euery man know the due season of this weightie dutie and that is when he hath done with himselfe For then he shall better see the mote in another he shall the better discerne the danger and discouer the shifts of sinne he shall more patiently and pitifully deale against it he shall more watchfully preuent it he shall more zealously purge it which not beeing first done many haue swet in redressing their wiues children seruants faults altogether fruitlesly because they neuer in earnest dealt against their owne Priuate men would faine see publike reformation of disorders and who can blame them but they must beginne by giuing religion a roome in their owne houses and hearts else shall they neuer see that they desire their eies may behold Who euer saw whole Churches
who thinke it Christianitie enough to be harmelesse ciuill or neighbourly men or if they can say with the Pharisie I am not thus and thus an oppresser an vsu●er nor as such and such precise and nice fellowes who are as much hated of them as euer were the Publicans of the Pharisies I pay my Church duties and giue euerie man his owne and this is the religion of the common Protestant But suppose thou wert thus guiltles as thou saist yet art thou not yet halfe a Christian for the Apostle Peter writing to beleeuers enioyneth them not onely to flie the corruptions that are in the world through lust but moreouer to ioyne vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and patience and godlines and brotherly kindnesse and loue and addeth two reasons 1. If these things be in you and abound c. teaching that without these positiue vertues all the knowledge of Iesus Christ and consequently his profession is idle and vnfruitfull 2. If any haue them not he is blind and cannot see a farre off and hath forgotten that he was purged that is such a one seeth but a little in heauenly things and little regardeth that couering and curing of sinne goe together nor that remission and purging of sinne goe with sanctification of life and studie of well doing and consequently can be no Christian which agreeth with Christs owne posession that if any abide in him he cannot choose but bring forth much fruit Againe it shall not be enquired in the last iudgement what thou art not nor iudgement passe according to that thou hast not but what art thou what hast thou hast thou receiued the spirit of Iesus Christ if thou hast not the spirit of Christ thou art none of his hast thou reciued the fruits of that spirit such as are loue ioy peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnesse faith meekenes temperance If any haue the spirit of Christ it is life in him vnto righteousnesse these shall shewe the faith of thy heart and that thou art a sound Christian and not in shewe as the most content themselues to be Now to come neerer the vertue it selfe the word signifieth one friendly to strangers and readie to lodge and entertaine them a dutie much commended in the Scriptures vnto all Christians as a sweete fruit of liberalitie but vnto the Minister especially as a father and president vnto the flocke In the precept consider foure points 1. The occasion of it 2. whether it bindeth euerie Minister and how farre 3. the reasons enforcing it 4. the vse First the ground of it was the distressed estate and condition of the Church which by reason of many tyrants and persecutors was driuen into many straights partly perceiued in present and partly foreseene by the propheticall spirit of the Apostle not onely in the tenne persecutions then imminent but also in the seuerall afflictions in the world in which they were to finde tribulation euen to the ende of it For as it is in this aspectible world which is subiect to so many changes and mutations because it standeth in the vicissitudes of yeares moneths daies nights so much more is it in the spirituall world of the Church which in the earth is acquainted with her winter as well as summer her nights as well as dayes somtimes the sunne of righteousnesse most comfortably shining and imparting his heate and light by his neere approach vnto her yea and sometimes there be two sunnes in this firmament for together with the sunne of the Church the sunne of the world affoardeth warme and comfortable dayes for the full beautie libertie and glorie of the Church But sometimes againe this sunne departeth in dispeasure and carrieth the sunne of the world with him then is a blacke winter of the Church nothing but stormes and tempests persecutions and trialls one in the necke of another and scarse one faire gleame betweene Now in such times the poore Church is driuen to trauell for rest and the innocent doue of Christ cannot finde in her owne land any rest for the sole of her foote well may she flie abroad to seeke her securitie In all which times euerie Christian is bound by this and such like precepts to giue her harbour and safe conduct till the dash and storme be ouer Besides suppose the Church in generall at her best estate yet the particular members of the Church are for most part poore and needie and euen then subiect to many troubles for keeping the faith and good consciences by meanes whereof they are often driuen from house and home and sometime are in banishment and exile sometime in prison and bonds all whom the Lord commendeth to the charitable and Christian deuotion of Christian men and bindeth them to the cheerefull receiuing and releeuing of them in such necessitie let them be strangers yet if they be of the houshold of faith they haue right to harbour and releefe and in the practise of this dutie the Apostle requireth that the Minister be the foreman Secondly It will be inquired whether euerie minister must be harborous and hospitable and if he must what shall become of them whose liuings are scarce able to harbour themselues and much more of the swarmes of our tenne-pound men and verie many scarse halfe that to maintaine their familie it seemeth that euerie Minister ought to be a rich man Ans. It is not for me to prescribe any thing in the Church constitutions concerning Impropriations and Nonresidencie the former whereof were they restored to the Church and the latter remooued out of the Church no doubt there were but that sufficient ministers might be sufficiently maintained furnished to hospitalitie through the land But this I say that the poorest Minister may not exempt himselfe from this dutie neither is altogether disabled from it a poore man may be mercifull and comfortable to the distressed some way or other as if with Peter and Iohn he haue not money nor gold nor meate to giue yet such as he hath he can giue he can giue counsell prayers and affoard his best affections such cups of cold water shall not be vnaccepted nor vnrewarded of him whose propertie is to accpet a man according to that he hath and not according to that he hath not where he seeth a readie minde Thus must that place 1. Tim. 5.10 be vnderstood such widowes as were to be receiued into the seruice of the Church were to be chosen of such as had beene hospitable and harberous Now in all likelihood many of them if not the most were verie poore and had no great matters to be liberall of therfore the Apostle seemeth in the next words to declare wherein this hospitalitie might be shewed euen by such as had knowne want namely if they had performed bodily labour vnto them washed the Saints feete bestowed their best affections and chearefull labour for their releefe and thus might these poore widowes
of iniquitie and therefore depart from me Holy This holinesse respecteth God himselfe his worship his holy things as the word sacraments prayer his sabbaths his sanctuarie in all which the Minister ought to be an example of holinesse and yet not onely in these but in his whole conuersation also The commandement is generall to all Gods people be ye holy for I am holy which requireth both the internall sanctification of the heart and the externall symbolls and profession of the same But more necessarie is it yet for the Minister to be cloathed with these robes of holinesse both that inward which standeth in getting and keeping faith and good conscience and that outward which consisteth in a religious and strict course of life And yet this must not be so taken as that holinesse is so essentiall to a minister as that he cannot be a Minister that wanteth it for Iudas may be a disciple and a deuill too but that it is a dangerous estate vnto himselfe and hurtfull to others for him to be destitute of it How necessarie it is for men to put off their shoes that is their vnsanctified lusts and affectons before they come to stand vpon such holy ground I will take a little paines out of the Scriptures to demonstrate and then make some vse of it To omit the extraordinarie ministerie and Ministers of the old Testament as the Prophets some of whom were sanctified in the wombe and others had their lippes touched with a coale from the altar to remooue their pollution the ordinarie Ministers in the sanctuarie and temple were 1. Leuites 2. Priests 3. the high Priest Many things were required in the setting apart to their service the lowest of these which were after a sort furthest remooued from God whose seat was in the Sanctuarie but many more to the sanctification of the higher and those that approached nearer or next of all As first the Leuites were inferiour to the Priests as whose office was to serue vnder them to helpe to carrie the tabernacle and vtensils of it to keepe watch for the safetie of it together with the holy vessels and instruments to helpe them in killing the beasts for sacrifice although they might not meddle in offering them vnto the Lord yea as inferiours to the superious they paid vnto the Priests the tenth of their tenths And yet what a number of rites and ceremonies did the Lord enioyne to be performed before these could be admitted to these inferiour seruices first in the tabernacle and after in the Temple As first they must be of one peculiar tribe peculiar by Gods owne election for the first borne of all Israel Numb 3.13 2. Whereas the congregation was not numbred but from 20. yeares old and aboue Num. 1.3 for till then they were not apt to goe to warre the Leuites must be numbred euerie male from a moneth old and aboue Num. 3.15 not because they were then fit for seruice but that they must then be brought before the Lord and set apart to his seruice euen from the beginning of their daies 3. They must not be presented before the Lord before the 33. day of their age for till then they were legally impure and vnsanctified Leu. 12.3 but after this time they must growe on to the thirteth yeare which was the first yeare of this seruice Numb 4.43 at which time they must be taken from among the children of Israel and set apart to the Lord Num. 8.6 And further in this separation there were two things more for 1. they must be purged and then consecrated Their purification was 1. by sprinkling purification water vpon them 2. by washing their clothes 3. by shauing the haire of their whole bodies 4. by preparing two bullocks the one for a burnt offring the other for a sinne offering for them see for these Num. 8.8 Their consecration stood likewise in foure things 1. After all this preparation in drawing them neerer to the Lord v. 9. 2. In the imposition of the Israelites hands vpon them freely giuing them from themselues to the Lord and his seruice vers 10. 3. In Aarons receiuing them of the people and shaking them before the Lord v. 11. as such as now being mancipated to his seruice were to goe and come at his becke as also such as who daily were to shake off that corruption which hindred thē in their callings 4. By laying their hands on the heads of the two bullocks prepared acknowledging the expiation of their owne sinnes and in way of thankefulnesse now wholly offring themselues vnto that seruice When all these rites were performed they were admitted to administer and not before Secondly the Priests the sonnes of Aaron whose office was to teach the people the doctrine receiued from God to pray for themselues and the people to blesse them and offer sacrifices for them had yet more state in their consecration for besides many of the former rites as imposition of hands their shaking before the Lord and the sacrifices common with the former 1. In the election of such a one more care was had no deformed man no man wanting or abounding with any member no blind or blemished person might come so neere vnto the Lord. 2. In his consecration he must not haue his garments washed as the other but must haue newe garments put vpon him Exod. 28.41 neither must he be sprinkled as the Leuites with holy water but with holy oyle and blood from the altar and thus must he be consecrated seuen dayes Exo. 29.30 3. In his office he may not lament for the dead of his people no not for the Prince but onely for those that are neerest of blood in his owne house Leuit. 21.3 he may not marrie a whore nor a woman diuorced or one polluted v. 7. the reason of all this is because he must be holy to the Lord. 4. In his failing and offending he must haue more clensing then many other men before he cā be admitted vnto his seruice for his sinne cannot be put away without a whole bullocke Leu. 4.2 and no more was required for the expiating of the sinne of the whole congregation v. 14. and the blood of the bullocke must be sprinkled seuen times before the Lord for the Priest as well as for the whole congregation implying that the Lord requireth as much sanctitie in one Priest as in all the people Thirdly as for the high Priest both in that he was a more eminent type of Christ as also came nearer the Lord then all the other euen into the holy of holies he must haue peculiar garments made by cunning men filled with the spirit of wisedome euen beautifull and glorious Exod. 28.3 in these he must be consecrated in these he must stand before the Lord in one part of which namely the frontlet which was put vpon his forehead must be written holinesse to the Lord that by the Lords appointment that might be most conspicuous Againe
to be soone remooued to another Gospell nor so fickle as children to be carried about with euery winde of doctrine but hold fast such a stable truth so full of direction in all the life and so full of comfort at the time of death for it is as a fast and faithfull freind tried in time of aduersitie standing closest to a man in his greatest necessitie Obiect There is no feare but we shall hold out whatsoeuer should betide we are grounded and setled Answ. But how many did in the fierie triall in Queene Maries time scarce one in Cambridge both the Vniversitie and Towne or if one poore Townsman held it out in the flames that was all Lastly both Teachers hearers must trie their doctrin by this touchstone if it abide this touch it is gold it is a pure and faithfull word if it be not according to this word there is no light in it Which is according to doctrine Here our Apostle both deliuereth another note and setteth another marke vpon the word as also vseth another argument why the Minister should hold and hold himselfe vnto the word of God deliuered in the Scriptures because it is not onely a faithfull word vnto which the faithfull may cleaue and rest as vpon a sure anchor but also such a word as beareth the bell for the ●itnesse of it to institute instruct and edifie the Church and members thereof as if he had said That word which is most fitted to edification and instruction is to be maintained and held fast that it may be held forth before Gods people but this is such a word and therefore Ministers must hold it fast Doctr. Whence we learne that the word of God is his owne ordinance fitted to instruct the elect in all necessarie truth and doctrine which is the very scope of our Apostle and will otherwise also appeare if we consider 1. The wisedome of God who hath in the bookes of Scripture comprised and deliuered a most perfect rule of doctrine concerning faith and manners to teach as both concerning God our selues and others whatsoeuer is necessarie or profitable to be knowne to saluation To the proofe of which serue all those places where we read that it is able to make a man wise vnto saluation to instruct him to all righteousnesse to furnish him to euery good worke to make him blessed by inchoation here in this life and consummation in the life to come for here through patience and comfort of the Scriptures we haue hope Rom. 15.4 and hereafter life eternall Ioh. 5.39 2. The mercie of God who hath written mysteries aboue the apprehension of the Angels themselues euen to the capacitie of the simplest in things of absolute necessitie whereas if he had but spoken the word it had beene more then he ought vs but he hath written it that we might ponder and meditate of it yea he hath translated it into euery mans language and so fitted it to edifie the more so as fiue words now are better then ten thousand if it were shut vp in it owne fountaine or any other strange tongue besides he hath brought it to vs by an easie price in one portable volume that we might conueniently exercise our selues in it day and night And that we might vnderstand those hard places which for our exercise we shall meete withall in reading and that we might be lead beyond the letter of the Scripture to shew the life of it in the keeping of faith and good conscience he hath appointed a Ministrie in the Church and in all ages hath raised vp men of God whome he hath furnished with the gifts of prophecie and enabled with sundrie gifts of the spirit to see and reueale the truth therein contained For euery manifestation of the spirit is giuen to profit withall and he gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets c. for the edifying of the Church and the gathering of the bodie of Christ. 3. The power of God who conuaieth such a power into this his ordinance as whereby it becōmeth so mightie in operation so able to cast downe strong holds and euery high thing exalted against God yea so strong at the weakest as that by it alone the kingdome of darknes and of the deuill is bartered and subdued and Iesus Christ the Prince of peace set vp in his throne within the hearts of men Vse Would any Minister edifie his people let him hold fast this word would he teach them Christ this word testifieth of him would he beget faith in them this word must doe it Rom. 10. would he destroie sinne in them as Dauid said of Goliahs sword there is none to that so there is no sword of the spirit but this would he raise the afflicted hence may he speake a seasonable and sauorie word to him that is weary in a word if a man will take the most compendious way to bring soules to heauen let him obserue this rule of holding him to this word which is ordained for doctrine But if a man either for idlenes or ease neglect the reading and study of the Scriptures or according to the vanitie of his heart lay by this booke and fall to the studie of Friars or Fathers and seeke to preach matters of more applause or to get a name of learning is in his profundities curiosities and such quainte deuises as he meeteth withall in mens writings this man leaueth the right way of edifying men in the waies of God and is in his conceit wiser then his maker who hath fitted this word for doctrine and no other 2. Hence note that it is Gods will that euery man should be expert in the Scripture seeing he hath so fitted it for the teaching of the simplest Which must force euery man to examine himselfe whether he hath found it such a fit word for doctrine for he whose heart cannot iustifie the word in this propertie is no child of wisedome Many haue heard this word a long time and yet vnderstand it not haue learned little or nothing are ignorant of Christ and what he hath done but in grosse and generall tearmes haue attained no lasting comfort from the same Where now lieth the fault the word is fit to ●each thee the Ministerie stablished and sanctified to the edifying of thee all the gifts of the ●eachers are giuen to profit thee Why then ha●t thou not profited Oh the sinne lyeth at thine own doore in that thy selfe hast refused or resisted instruction It is not the obscuritie of the Scripture but the darknes of thy blind mind that hath hindred thy profiting The word is as fit to teach thee as the choysest seed is to take and grow with encrease but thy soule is vnprepared thy heart is as the stonie or thorny or high way ground no seed can thriue in it all the labour of Gods husbandmen is lost vpon thee Thy sinne hath suffered the word to loose the vertue and power of it in raising
and progresse least we be such dunces as Paul speaketh of who were euer learning and yet neuer came to the knowledge of the truth And then we profit when we like good schollers haue passed our grounds and elements and as the Apostle speaketh when leauing the rudiments and principles of religion we are ledde forward vnto perfection and then are we ledde to further perfection when wee haue taken out the two maine lessons of a Christian man which Paul in euerie thing would be sure to keepe euen faith and good conscience by which two rules till a man be moulded and cast into this forme of doctrine he is but a novice Christian and a superficiall scholler in this schoole of Christ the former of which implyeth the knowledge of the doctrine and the latter the ordering of euerie particular action of life by it Now the examination of our selues by these notes will reprooue many of vs as non proficients who would be loth to be so deemed For 1. whereas for our time and meanes especially in this famous eie of the land our profiting might haue enabled vs to teach others many of our selues had need be taught in the principles of religion we cannot be gotten out of our A B C line of letters If a master should for diuers years together painfully striue with a boy and could neuer get him out of his letters what hope were there of his reading and much lesse of any skill in higher mysteries of learning It is the case of a number of vs. Many yeares haue the masters of the assemblies plainly deliuered doctrines fitted to the capacitie of simple men yea often repeated them and often beaten vpon them yet a number that goe for Christians are extreame ignorant in the principles of Christianitie And whereas the Apostle implieth that we may measure our owne ability by our fitnesse to teach others how fewe of vs be there that finde any competent abilitie to teach euen our pettyes in our families our seruants and children that cost and paines is ill spent when after seauen yeares schooling a boy is not able to teach an other his letters but many of vs that haue beene ●earers and learners in this schoole thrice seauen yeares and aboue and yet to omit our vnwillingnes are not able in any sort to catechize our families Further whereas he that is cunning in his profession he can speake of it to good purpose because he knoweth the mysteries of it many of vs cannot speake to any purpose but when any speach of religion is offred are as mute as fishes yea are greiued to be drawne to any speach of such things because our weakenesse is thereby discouered Finally were it so that we had proceeded but a little way in our profiting here it would be with vs as with schollers or prentises who beeing entred a yeare or two neede not alwaies the presence of their Master or Tutor for euerie action but can of themselues doe something especially in smaller matters and of lower conceit but many of vs can goe no further then our Masters are present with vs we are not come so farre as to take out a lesson now then by our selues we cannot meditate pray conferre to the increase of our knowledge and therefore we may conclude against our selues that we are but verie dullards in this doctrine And what is the reason of all this but that as negligent learners we forget as fast as we learne or as idle schollers we idle ou● our time otherwise and allot the least time to this studie Which requireth so much the more time paines care and diligence by how much things more excellent be more difficult besides that our helpes by nature are none at all to this as to all other knowledge and the benefit of it farre excelleth all other Let vs therefore stirre vp our selues and be stirred vp not to a smattering in this knowledge of God but to abound in it as Peter willeth vs. And seeing we are farre from our marke let vs aime at more fruitfulnesse in our age and walke from strength to strength from faith to faith that so growing vp in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ we may in due season be lifted vp vnto our glorie Doct. 3. In that the Apostle calleth that here wholsome doctrine which in the words before he called a faithfull word and fitted for doctrine Note that the men of God when they fell into speach of the word of God they spake not ●lightly of it away but were hardly drawne from it without leauing behind thē some notable elogie or other vpon it Rom. 1.16 the Gospel the power of God to saluation Ioh. 6.68 Peter saith not Master thou hast the word of God but thou hast the words of eternall life what a number of glorious things are ascribed vnto it see Heb. 4.12 mightie in operation sharpe c. Hence according to their seuerall occasions are al those excellēt epithits ascribed vnto it through the Scrip●ures some of the penmen looking at the author some at the matter some to the qualities some to the effects and accordingly invest it with titles well beseeming it And good reason had they so to doe for 1. They considered that the word of God is the principall part of Gods name which neuer could without great sinne be taken vp in vaine but is to be taken vp into the thought much more into the lippes with all reuerence and due regard 2. They sound the power of it so forcible and comfortable in themselues as that they could not chose but speake of it as they felt within the abundance of their owne hearts 3. They saw the worke of it so effectuall vpon others and that to such ends as not all the perfection of flesh and blood nor the strength or wit of men and angels could compasse as that they could not conceiue of it without admiration 4. They saw it was such a word as was to meete in the world with most harsh entertainement and hatefull opposition that Satan sinne and all wicked ones heretikes seducers Atheists and profane persons would resolutely resist it besides numbers that would account it foolishnesse and that would take offence at it not a fewe and therefore in great wisedome they were carefull that it should carrie some maiestie with it Vse Those that find such sweetnes in the word as the Saints of old cannot but with reuerent hearts conceiue and speake of it euer with signification of some eminent goodnes in it yea if they conceiue it in the author the word euen of euill will be confessed a good word as in Hezekiah and much more will the promises be sweete in the tast And if they acknowledge it in the most proper effects of it oh how will they thinke and speake of it as of a thing more necessarie then fire and water yea then the sunne in the firmament How will
heauen but a few meane men and those perhappes more nice then wise what becomes then of so many great and learned men wiser we hope then all they Thus while Paul speaketh the words of truth and sobernes he is counted a mad man Act. 26.15 Men are wiser then to bec●●e fooles that they may be wise it will not sinke with them that Christ can come out of Galily Ioh. 7.41 And thus by Gods iudgement vpon the infidelitie of men themselues can lay blocks inough in the way to stumble at the truth and desperatly breake the necks of their soules vpon that verie rock which was laid for the rising and saluation of the righteous 3. At how many hands doth the truth go away reproched yea hated and persecuted Gods graces are derided Gods children scoffed and mocked by those who are borne after the flesh Gal. 4.29 And why doth Caine hate and kill his brother because his deedes were good and his owne euill And why are Christians yea Christ himselfe mocked euen for this confidence in his God Psalm 22.8 But here euery man blesseth himselfe and God forbid that men that professe Christ or that we who are ordinarie hearers of his word should be iustly ranked in this number Yet euen of vs how few are there whom the truth hath set free from lusts and seruice of some sinne or other Many of vs indeed haue gone farre in the contemplation of this truth but our minds and soules are no more altered and changed then if we had read or heard some humane Histories affecting vs for the time but leauing vs where they found vs at first How few of vs are sanctified by this truth and daily proceed on to encrease in sanctification by meane of it which that it is the scope of it Christs petition teacheth Ioh. 17.17 Nay how many of our hearers detaine this truth in vnrighteousnesse that is while they heare learne and can remember much of it yet in their courses are as vaine and vngodly as euer before Which plainely argueth a forsaking of the truth vpon the plaine feild making such persons more liable to moe and more fearefull strokes of God who receiuing the truth into their eares vnderstandings and iudgements but turne away their affections from it yea turne from it in their practise in that they hate to be reformed by it And if we haue not in great part turned away from the truth where is our former courage and resolution for it may not the Lord iustly complaine of vs as he did once of his owne people they haue no courage for the truth Many of vs durst better haue beene seene in Christian exercises then now we dare we could better beare a rebuke for our profession then now we can we did more take to heart the dammage of the truth then now we do we did take more paines for it we could be at more cost for it we could be more zealous against the enemies of it then now we are or can be Alas our dasterdlines and timiditie that faint before daies of triall nay in daies not only of peace but of protection and encouragements in the truth what can we promise of our selues if we were called either to die with or denie Christ Oh therefore let vs call back our selues out of our ruines and ●●call our former daies 〈◊〉 with them our former workes as such as meane to partake in that honourable commendation of the Angel of the Church of Thyatira whose workes were more at the last then at the first Now that we may the better be preserued from beeing turned from the truth some rules are to be deliuered and practised 1. Entertaine it not for outward respects neither for the laws of the land nor the encouragement it hath c. as very many do but for the loue of it selfe for that we affect we easily turne not from it no nor are driuen from it and if we loue it for outward respects as those outward respects change so will our affections For example if we loue it for the prosperitie of it times of persecutions will make vs fall off with Demas If we hold it because we would hold our temporalties the losse of it will be light in comparison of losse of goods dignities countrie world libertie and life the least of these will the heart fasten vpon although with the losse of the truth and with it of saluation also 2. Practise so much of it as thou knowest and the more thou practisest the more thou knowest and the more thou knowest thus the more thou louest and the surer dost thou bind it vpon thy selfe and this is the surest hold Ioh. 7.17 when as in religion faith and good conscience are ioyned together for such as thy conscience is such shalt thou be found in religion without which heare euery houre a sermon read ouer the Bible as often as he did who gloried that he had read the text and glosse also fourteene times ouer all this knowledge will not lift thee vp to heauen 3. Call no ground of this diuine truth into question suspect not that which thou canst not reach but accuse thine owne weakenes and ignorance our first parents yeelding at the first onset of Satan to call into question the truth of God were turned away from all that image of God which stood in truth and holines 4. Beware of indifferencie in Gods matters many thinke it good wisedome and pollicie to be on the yeelding hand and as waxe fit to take all formes and the print of any religion but the truth is that such persons as are not rooted and stablished in the truth when windes and stormes arise or the euill day approach they shall not be able to stand but as they haue beene long tottering so their fall shall be great Vers. 15. Vnto the pure all things are pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing nothing is pure but euen their minds and consciences are defiled The connexion of these words with the former is not easie to be seene vnlesse we conceiue the words preceding in that proper sense which we haue giuen of them and then this verse will affoard a reason of the former For the Apostle hauing called these Cretians from attending to Iewish ●ables and commandements of men that is such fabulous doctrines as still would keep life in the ceremoniall differences of daies and meates persons and garments seeing now all that partition wall was broken downe he draweth a reason from that libertie which now is obtained for Christians vnto whom now nothing was common or vnclean but might be purely vsed of them who haue their hearts purifyed in obeying the truth And this reasons is enlarged by opposing the contrarie in a similitude of the like To the impure nothing is pure not onely outward things but their chiefe and eminent inward parts are defiled whether we consider the theoricall part that is the minde and vnderstanding so as they can
so good it is impured not beeing vsed or done in faith and good consci●nce A good or indifferent thing vsed or done is spoiled and corrupted in the manner of vsing or doing three waies 1. when it is vsed or done in way of superstition 2. of profanenesse 3. of scandall 1. Of superstition when any creature is offred vnto Idols or vsed or not vsed with opinion of holines merit or worship of God Thus the Heathen were accustomed before they eate or drunke to offer some part thereof to their gods which was another cause why Daniel craued that he might not be defiled with that meate as is well gathered out of cap. 5.4 and from such meate the Apostle wisheth all Christians to abstaine 1. Cor. 8.10 Hither are to be referred all Popish separations of daies and meats and their consecrations of water salt crosses palmes to driue away deuils all their vowes also pilgrimages orders single life wilfull pouertie watchings fastings whippings in all which they place opinion of holines and merit adde hereunto all superstitious rellikes and monuments which wheresoeuer are filthy and polluted 2. Of profanenesse when any creature or action is vsed or done out of that due manner measure or end which the Lord hath appointed vnto it as all vse of holy things by way of charming or enchantment especially good words and those out of Scriptures to spells and sorcerie the intemperate vse of indifferent things to surfetting drunkennesse pride and excesse in a word when any thing is done or vsed the carriage and end of which is not Gods glorie and mans good 3. Of scandall either to our selues or others Our selues when we vse any creature or performe any action with a doubtfull conscience that is whereof either the word hath not or we out of it haue no warrant in which ca●e tender consciences must be tendred rather then be racked by authoritie for be the things in themselues neuer so lawfull be they neuer so generally entertained in the iudgement and practise of others they are vtterly vnlawfull to me without such information Others if they be scandalized they are either within the Church or without and they both in things either 1. euill or 2. indifferent hauing on them a shewe of euill For necessarie things enioyned by the word there can bee no scandall giuen as preaching hearing praying these and such must bee done though all the world take offence at them Thus Paul preached Christ a stumbling blocke and scandall to Iewe and Gentile and Daniel prayeth to his God although the king and all the countrie raged against him This offence is Pharisaicall taken but not giuen Now for scandall giuen ● in things euill is when a man by word deede or doctrine disagreeable to the lawe of God becommeth a stumbling blocke and cause of offence 1. To the wicked whome they make worse in their euil more obdurate and further off from repentance 2. To the good whether stronger both grieuing them and bringing reproach vpon them or weaker who are not onely discouraged from their good beginnings but forced often to participate in that sinne whereof they haue a president in an other Wo to that man by whom such offences as these shall come In this kind was Peter an offence to Christ whom therefore he calleth Satan and commandeth him to come behinde him 2. In things indifferent scandall is giuen when vnseasonably and out of the rule of charitie they are vsed in which case the Apostle acknowledgeth things lawfull inexpedient and professeth that he will neuer eate flesh before he will offend his brother that is his weake brother he that is not taught not he that will not be taught he that is ignorant not malitious and is scandalized for that he knowes not the truth and not that he hateth it must be here respected with the offence of whome if the most indifferent things be vsed it is the violating of the lawe of charitie and a reiection of the faith of Christ. Now to remooue all this impuritie we must haue a proportionall puritie purchased by Iesus Christ. By whom 1. in regard of our persons being beleeuers we partake with all his righteousnesse and puritie and so are againe entitled to our first right in the creatures 2. In regard of the things themselues our libertie is procured from the bondage and heauie yoke both of the lawe morall and ceremoniall by whose appearance death and resurrection are obtained 1. ● deliuerance from all euill of sinne and punishment within and without vs. 2. restitution to all the good yea a further good then that was from which we fell 3. freedome from all ceremoniall pollution and libertie in all those creatures which by ceremonie was vncleane 3. In regard of our right vse he hath giuen vs precepts and commandements in things necessarie and rules of direction in things indifferent Now from this second point we may note sundrie worthie lessons which I will onely propound and not stand vpon them because I will hasten to the third and principall point of all 1. Seeing all things were pure in their creation we may herein as in a glasse behold the puritie of God in all his creatures admiring that goodnesse of his which bewraied it selfe euen in the meanest of them yea prouoking our selues to loue reuerence and feare before him the image of whose goodnesse shineth out not onely in angels and men but euen in the silly worme and flie yea in the liueles creatures themselues And further hence we may gather our owne dutie towards the creatures namely 1. reuerently meditate and speake of them 2. purely to vse them 3. mercifully to deale with them all which we shall the easier doe if we can spie out some part of Gods image in them 2. Consider our miserie and the wofull fruit of our sinne which hath debarred vs from all comfort in heauen and earth from God or any of his creatures sinne hath wrapped vs vnder condemnation hath set God and his creatures as hosts and armies against vs hath made nothing ours but hell and damnation so as if we meete with any euill from any of the creatures through the venome poison or noysomnes of the particular nature of it or by any other accident we are not so much to condemne the creature but our owne sinnes for they were either not so made or had not beene hurtfull at all to man but by his owne sinne the poison of which hath poisoned their natures so that by them mans sinne is either iustly punished or himselfe righteously exercised Now then seeing our owne sinne hath subiected the creatures of God otherwise so comfortable and sweete helpes vnto our liues vnto such vanitie we haue great cause to abhorre our sinnes for euer yea and our selues for them rather then drinke in iniquitie as the fish doth water The sweetest sinnes would carrie a bitter tang if we would but remember what sweete comfort of the creatures we haue forfeited
be subiect to the law of God Thus euery way the wickednes of man is great all the imaginations of the thoughts of his heart are only euill continually neither can be other seeing whatsoeuer riseth of flesh is no better then flesh Vse 1. Hence we see in part the corruption of our nature and in it the reproach of our first sinne and fruit of our first transgression whereby we might learne to be ashamed of our filthines which is thus seated and resteth not onely in the inferiour parts and powers of the soule or as Papists speak in the flesh and sensual part but euen in the reasonable most excellent part of the soule which is the minde and conscience This very cōsideration should be as a hammer to beat down proud thoughts which rise vpon the gazing of outward things and respects on which so many beare themselues who doubtles would quickly strike saile if they could turne their eie a little to see themselues by nature and naturall courses the children of wrath enemies of righteousnesse haters and hated of God Many a man blesseth himselfe in that he keepeth his bodie cleane from vnlawfull filthinesse his hands pure from open iniustice his words free from iniuring men and thus content themselues with a ciuill righteousnesse which is to glorie in the flesh But could they looke vnpartially into their soules they should finde a filthie sinke and puddle steaming out noysome and graceles parts into the whole behauiour all which thrust them vnder the regiment of death Yea euen the best of men regenerate finde this lawe of euill with them which ministreth smal ioy to some parts of their liues when they see the seedes of all sinne in themselues and these seedes to rise vp into the blade and care sometime before they attend to cut them downe or weede them vp and when they finde themselues as readie to yeeld an haruest of iniquitie as others if the good husbandman should not still be pruning and dressing them 2. As man could proceede from an habite of good to the priuation of it so can he not of himselfe go backe from this priuation to the habit seeing no freedome at all is left in any facultie of his soule to spirituall good Is the mind and conscience and all things impure to the vnbeleeuer and hath his will any more priuiledge then the other how erronious then is that doctrine of the Church of Rome and the schoolemen who teach that mans free will to good is not altogether lost but much weakened in spirituall motions that it can dispose and prepare it selfe to grace and that it coworketh with the grace of God in the verie first beginnings of grace Whereas the Scripture teacheth that man is so farre from his owne helpe in his recouerie that he resisteth it and fighteth against it till the Lord mightily subdue him as he did Paul on his way to Damascus The first degree or preparation to the cure is the knowledge of the disease but the naturall man will not be brought to acknowledge and confesse his estate Psal. 14.3 there is no man that vnderstandeth his way our Apostle hath elsewhere also ruled this case 2. Cor. 3.5 we are not sufficient of our selues to thinke a thought and therefore much lesse to will Philip. 2.13 It is God that worketh in vs both to will and to doe where we are not said to will actiuely but acted that is so farre as God maketh vs to will good Let our pouertie then be hence acknowledged Gods glorie magnified Christs merit amplified in which alone we recouer all our wants and are raised out of our graues of death 3. Hence we see the necessitie of regeneration in euerie part Eph. 4.22.23 be renewed in the spirit of your minds confesse then and crie out with the leper I am vncleane I am vncleane and seeing if Christ wash thee not thou hast no part in him pray with Peter wash me Lord not my feete onely but my hands and head yea my whole bodie and my whole soule my whole man The Apostle prayed that not onely the inferiour faculties of the Thessalonians as the affections and appetite which are the feete of the soule might be washed but vseth this forme The God of peace sanctifie you wholly 4. If the wicked man be thus vncleane then hate his companie the vile person is to be contemned come not neere him touch him and thou wilt be defiled he is filthie within and without and with the leper must be thrust out of the campe for feare of infection Doctr. 3. Before this naturall vncleanenes be purged euerie thing is vncleane vnto a man the vnbeleeuer tainteth euerie thing that he toucheth nothing within him nothing without him which is not polluted although not in his owne nature yet vnto him and in his vse Let a naturall man turne him to any action word or thought all of them not excepting the best are against God because they proceede from vncleane mindes and consciences 1. His actions spirituall euen his best seruices as praying hearing reading receiuing of Sacraments almes all these beeing the sacrifices of the wicked are abhomination vnto the Lord who first looketh to the person and then the gift who if he turne his eare from hearing the lawe euen his prayer is abhominable if he choose his owne wayes let him kill a bullocke for sacrifice it is all one as if slewe a man if he be a polluted person that toucheth any of these holy things shall they not be vncleane yes surely the most diuine ordinances are turned to him to sinne for the Lord first requireth pure parts and then pure actions Ezech. 36.26 2. His ciuill actions his honest dealing in the world his buying selling giuing lending his labour care yea all the duties of his calling are in and to him no better then sinnes 3. His naturall actions as eating drinking sleeping recreation physicke all are vncleane vnto him 4. All Gods creatures and humane ordinances as meate drinke cloath goods lands buildings mariage single estate in a word the whole way of the wicked is abhomination to the Lord Prou. 15.9 All these are witnesses of his sinne and filthinesse all of them are enlargers of his woe and damnation because he wanteth faith to lay hold on the Lord Iesus whereby the iust doe liue haue their heart purified and so are made Lords ouer the creatures Vse 1. Seeing no man can with good conscience goe about any thing while he is in his sinne and vncleannes let it mooue euerie man to beware especially that he approach not neere the courts of God nor compasse the altar without washing his hands in innocencie The Ministers may not take the word into profane mouthes and hands themselues hating reformation The brasen lauer must put them in minde of their dutie which was set betweene the tabernacle and the altar that the Priests might wash their hands and feete whensoeuer
it and the sunne rising it presently vanisheth away If they cleaue to the Church for a while they do not with full purpose of heart cleaue vnto the Lord. If they abstaine from euill it is more in regard of man then of God or their care is but to cut off the wash boughs of sin but they leaue the bole stumpe standing to stoppe the courses of more shamefull and grosse sinnes but not to damme vp the fountaine If they doe any good they are drawne to it not for the loue of God directly but for some wordly respect and the ende is rather feare fauour praise of men then the glorie of God as Ananias If they humble themselues before God it is for corne and oyle If they howle vpon the beds of their sorrowes it is for their sickenes and not for their sinne affecting deliuerance but not repentance If they worship yet wish they there were no God to worshippe as Herod pretended to worship Christ but intended to kill him If they thrust themselues into the companie of good men it is not to better themselues but to credit their actions they can desire them to pray for them as Pharaoh Simon Magus but cannot pray for themselues If they professe religion it is not for religions sake but some other thing accompanying it Ephraim is as an heifer that delighteth to thresh because treading out the corne the oxe must not be musled but eate at his pleasure but could not away with plowing the yoke was too heauie and the commoditie too light so some outward commoditie prouoketh the hypocrite to professe religion but he cannot abide to plowe vp his heart Iudas will carrie Christs bagge till he can gaine more by him Thus turne the hypocrite any way he will be found swan-like which of all foules hath the whitest feathers but the blackest flesh vnder them except wee shall fitlier compare them with Christ to the foxe who hath this qualitie that his skinne is better then his flesh a shewe he hath of godlines but wanteth the power he hath a name that he liueth but is indeede dead seeing the whole life of religion consisteth in inward renouation of heart and sanctimonie of life both which is wanting vnto him whose sinne lyeth vnder a cloake and liueth in his soule as in a closet from which the hypocrite will not be parted 3. The third note or character is in a further degree of the sinne in that they are said rebellious to Gods commandement and disobedient to the doctrine of God The word giueth vs to discouer two vices in these titular Christians 1. infidelitie 2. rebellion or in one word the want of the obedience of faith True it is they make a great shew of faith but the Apostle distinguisheth of faith one kind is fained another is vnfained the former may be ioyned with much knowledge much talke of pietie but neuer with a pure heart and good conscience as the latter Now this vnfained faith beeing the mother and mistresse of vnfained obedience and the onely roote whence this fruit can budde and blossome whosoeuer are destitute of the former cannot but be barren of the latter what are the fruits of vnbeleefe see Act. 17.5 2. Thess. 3.2 Heb. 3.12 And although hypocrites which taking on them the names of Christians make a great shew of holinesse in externall seruice in some ceremonies or wilworship that a man would meruaile that the Scripture should ascribe rebellion vnto them yet looking nearer vnto their seruice it will appeare no better For in all that obedience of theirs which they make such account of they depart from the word if not in whole yet in some part yea in such a part as maketh it rebellion which cannot properly be said of the imperfect obedience of Gods children whose best actions cannot abide the triall of the law for besides that the best of their obedience is wanting in that which the word requireth not beeing fruits of faith whereby only they become acceptable euen in doing that which God commandeth they become rebellious and that either by adding something of their owne as Iehu whose fact though commanded and much commended yet was such a rebellion as caused the Lord not many yeares after to visit all the blood of Iizreel vpon his house yea made the whole kingdome of Israel to cease Or else by detracting something from the word to which yet they seeme to giue absolute obedience as Saul who although he obeyed the word and made his boast of doing the commandement yet because he did not all the word is charged of rebellion 1. Sam. 15.13 This consideration meeteth with the excuses of such whited toomes who scorne to be called rebells because they heare the word and yeeld something vnto it they belong to God and will serue him so neere as he giueth them leaue but yet some lusts may not be left some sweet morsell shall be held vnder the tongue and they cannot endure such a continuall martyrdome as mortification is But those we see are not onely rebellious who stand out and openly belch out blasphemies against God and his word such as say we will not haue this man to rule ouer vs come let vs cast away his cords from vs the word of the Lord spoken by thee Ieremie we will not doe but those also who secretly in their course depart from the word with pretence of obedience such as take the word into their mouthes but hate to be reformed The fourth character of an hypocrite is yet in a further degree of the sinne and goeth neere the detection of him when after long custome in sinne and cracking his conscience checking him he becomes as a crazie pitcher which is vnfit to hold water so is he reprobate to euery good dutie now can he doe nothing but rush into sinne thick and threefold and dowse himselfe ouer head and eares in impietie And how can he be other for faith he neuer had any and if any zeale remaine it putteth him forward to sinne at least that which cannot please God his corrupt conscience hath so long accused him and borne him harmelesse in the outward ceremonie and formall worship that it is either brawnie and fencelesse and so workeles or if it set it selfe on worke it is still to make him more reprobate to good duties as wearie to heare the word ashamed to pray confounded and sometimes condemned in himselfe for his present waies and iustly for although he seemed sometimes to shine among the starres yet his present courses suite not with such practises as he had better neuer to haue bin acquainted with then euer to haue growen weary of Which alas we know to be the case not of a few who seeme to haue receiued the sentence which passed against the figge tree presenting Christ with leaues but not with fruite neuer more fruite growe on thee for how soone are they withered Nay more it is to be feared
and therefore necessarily supplieth it with moysture and heate of grace And the promise is that those that waite vpon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall lift vp their wings as the Eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not waxe fainte Secondly The comfort of old age dependeth hereupon the tedious and diseased daies of which whosoeuer would comfortably passe they must prouide themselues of this supplie For who is it that can say he hath pleasure in those daies when for the darknes and miserie of them the sunne and the moone and the starres seeme to fall from heauen vnto whom Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath not risen and vnto whose heart that bright morning starre hath not discouered his brightnes the least beame and glims of whose sauing grace farre surpasseth the sunne in his strength What comfort can be to him whose strong men that keepe the house that is whose armes tremble for weaknes and whose thighs bow themselues as too weake to beare the weight of the bodie vnlesse the Lords arme and right hand become his strength and as a staffe to leane vpon as he was to Dauid 2. Sam. 22.19 What ioy remaineth vnto him whose age hath worne away most of his senses that now hath his eyes dim as Isaaks that with Barzillai he cannot discerne between good and bad he hath no tast in that he eateth and drinketh he cannot heare any more the voice of singing men and women vnlesse he hath attained the eyes of faith to see God in Christ and so with Simeon he can behold his saluation vnlesse he find rellish and tast in the bread of life vnlesse he can heare the sweet note of Gods spirit consenting with his owne that he is Gods child together with that sweet harmony of a good conscience kept before God and men in all things which is heauenly musick vpon earth In a word what solace or reioysing can be to him who hath one foote in the graue that seeth death so neere him daily threatning him and no way to escape him vnlesse herein also the spirit sustaine his infirmitie by assuring him that Christ is his life who hath bereaued that serpent of his sting poyson and venome so as he shall doe him no more harme then helpe him towards his happines Thirdly why should not we thus prouide against that rainie day and furnish our selues against the euill of it seeing the heathen were by nature taught to prouide for themselues such props of their age as they thought would most bestead them both for their vtilitie and delight there is no man that finding his eyes decaying needeth to be vrged to prouide spectacles nor he whose loynes faile him to prepare him a staffe to leane vpon and much more should grace teach euery Christian that when with Dauid through age or otherwise he findeth his flesh fayling him and his heart also then to make the Lord his hope and his portion for euer Fourthly the recompence of this dutie is beyond all our thoughts seeing the blindnes of the bodie is made vp by the vision of the Lord Iesus and God the father appeased in him bodily weakenesse supplyed by spirituall strength corporal death abated yea exchanged with heauenly life all which not onely quell the feare of death approaching but euen whet the desire of it For if Simeon seeing Christ in his armes praieth for his peaceable departure If Moses seeing the land of Canaan from the toppe of mount Nebo could willingly submit himselfe to die If the three famous Patriarchs who neuer sawe the promises accomplished to their owne persons but a farre off promised to their posterities could willingly die in faith how much more shall they be able to wish their desolation who by the eye of the faith shall behold that heauenly Canaan and that celestiall Ierusalem of which the other were but darke shadowes Vse This doctrine cries shame vpon many old men that are as weake or weaker in soule then they be in bodie farre more blind more staggering euery way more sensles more dead they perceiue their faces and eyes looke drooping to the earth and yet their spirits neuer a whit more lifted vp vnto heauen they see the world forsaking them as not able to cherish them any longer and yet cannot they be drawne to forsake the world they cannot but behold the earth casting them off it and making a way fot the next age their posteritie and yet they cast care away and neuer prouide themselues of a continued citie The eie of their bodie seeth how they are growne into yeares and striken in age but the eye of their mindes see not the gray haires here and there vpon them no more then Eprhaims did Euerie man can see and say they are come euen to the period of their dayes and yet no man can say they are come to the beginnings of any true grace Thus although multitude of yeares should teach wisedome vnderstanding faith application yet may young Elihu truely obiect to the reproach not of a fewe that olde age is not alwaies wise Further vrging of this point although carried further in the deliuerie I purposely omit The Lord graunt all of vs whome it concerneth to learne thus much as is said In loue This second vertue beseeming the elder sort not onely as olde men but auncient Christians is brotherly loue which casteth eie vnto all the duties of the second table as faith principally to the duties of the former and most fitly ioined with faith as being the inseparable companion of it and such a marke as freeth it from imputation of deadnesse or vnsoundnesse Which vertue is inioyned euerie Christian olde or young both because it is the newe commandement of Christ as also a note of a Christian and true disciple of Christ Ioh. 13.35 and is besides the bond of vpright dealing in humane societie without which men were little better then wolues or wilde beasts But it is here rather commended to elder men who in this vertue as in the former and following graces must be more at the last then at the first and in whome this grace of loue must be proportionable vnto their faith for this may not be an infant if the former be of riper age but according to the proportion and growth of faith must loue abound And it must be obserued that our Apostle requireth not the vertue simply or in remisse degree or small measure but soundnesse in loue in such a degree and measure as that age seemeth of it selfe to call for Now if we would knowe wherein the soundnesse of loue consisteth it is then sound when it hath soundnesse 1. in the ground 2. order 3. seate 4. worke 5. durance of it First the true ground of all the loue of the creature is the loue of the Creator all the loue of man must issue from the loue of God and all duties of the second table must
be performed in the first neither ought any creature to be loued so farre as it is an enemie and hatefull to God the creator Psal. 139. I hate the wicked that is so farre as wicked namly their practises not their persons Secondly it must be sound in the order which will appeare in two rules 1. it must be in the greatest measure where is most grace and shew it selfe most friendly and louing to them that loue and are the friends of God It must doe good vnto all but especially the houshold of faith The Apostle commending the loue of the Ephesians which for the soundnes of it he sawe was praise worthie he hence approoueth it that it was towards all Saints and hence the Apostle Iohn gathereth a note that we are translated from death to life if we loue the brethren And herein we haue God himselfe going before vs in example who respected the poore widowe of Sarepta aboue all Israel Now we shall descend fitly to this dutie by these staires 1. by louing God simply for himselfe 2. Christ as man the beloued of God the head of his Church 3. the Church it selfe the bodie of Christ receiuing of his fulnes grace for grace and 4. the particular members must rise vp higher in our affections as the Lord hath highlier honoured them with grace and more expressely renewed his image vpon them The second rule for the right order of sound loue is that it must beginne at home but may not there determine the rule of the loue of our neighbour Christ hath made the loue of our selues and as we are to prouide for our owne good first and that according to the wisedome which the word teacheth first seeking the kingdome the pearle the treasure for our soules and then these outward things for our outward man euen so are we to deriue this loue in this manner vnto the soules and bodies of others according as they are nearer vs or further off in the degrees of grace and nature And here respect must be had 1. to those of our own house as to whom we are tyed either by the bond of marriage who beeing one with vs haue right to the same affection wherewith we loue our selues or of neere blood as parents children or of dutie as seruants he that careth not for these is worse then an infidel and hath denied the faith 2. He that careth for none but these is little better for if loue bee sound within it will be working outwardly As 1. to such as are tyed by any bond of blood or alliance euen without the family 2. to such as are in a perpetuall contract of friendship with vs as was betweene Dauid and Ionathan 2. Sam. 18.1 and Christ had one who aboue the rest was called the disciple whom Iesus loued 3. it must proceed on to strangers as men and as those that may be heires of the same grace of life with vs yea to the poore as well as to the rich Iam. 2.8 9. nay more to our enemies Matth. 5.44 Loue your enemies these are the degrees of sound loue Thirdly this loue must be sound in the seate of it and that must be the heart Rom. 12.9 Let loue be without dissimulation it must not be hypocritall from the teeth outward or fawning but loue must come from a pure heart 1. Ioh. 3.18 Let vs not loue in word and tongue but in deede and truth Fourthly it must be sound in the worke or action of it 1. in preuenting the euill of the brethren not suffering men to sinne 2. in procuring their good The Apostle would haue experience of the naturalnesse of the loue of the Corinths in their bountie and liberalitie towards the Saints in want For if any haue this worlds good and shutteth his compassion from his brothers neede how dwelleth the loue of God in him Fiftly it must be sound in the durance and lasting of it Prou. 17.17 A friend loueth at all times and here trie the soundnesse by these notes 1. If in a milde and iust reprehension it breaketh not off 2. If it hold in aduersitie a brother is made for aduersitie see Act. 11.29 3. If it hold then when iniurie is offered and occasions of breaking off by vnkindnesse or hard measure 1. Cor. 13.5 Loue is not prouoked to anger but suffereth all things In these two latter it resembleth Gods loue which is both constant and closest to a man in the day of his trouble neither taketh it the forfeit of our daily prouocations Vse By all this triall both olde and young may see how farre they are from soundnesse in this grace contenting themselues euen with a shadowe of it for the most of mens loue is grounded either vpon receite or hope of benefit or vpon flesh and fleshly respects and is not begunne in nor for God nor knit by the spirit of God the least part of it is set vpon the Saints that are vpon earth excelling in vertue it generally determineth it selfe in selfe louing and selfe seeking not seeking the things of others as well as their owne or not seeking and louing the soules of men as well as their bodies or respecting persons and not embracing the poore as well as the rich or not blessing their enemies as well as their friends the most loue of men is a lip-loue a semblance a counterfeit and fruitlesse loue diuorsed from inward heartie affection or else a vanishing and flitting loue flinching in aduersitie when most neede is and readie vpon the least occasion to be ouercome with euill and changed into bitter hatred this crazie loue euerie where argueth a riuen and crackt faith such counterfeit loue is the daughter of counterfeit faith and vnsoundnes of loue is a sure token of vnsoundnes of faith and halting in religion In patience This third ornament of Christian old age is fitly by the spirit of God added to the two former as the preseruatiue of both most requisite vnto all Christians For seeing this vertue is nothing else but a willing and constant suffering of hard and painefull things for Christianitie and honesties sake and further that affliction followeth the faithfull who studie to testifie their loue of God in the loue of man euen as the shadow followeth the bodie necessarily must he that would hold out in Christianitie get this grace to beare off such calamities as follow vpon the keeping of faith and good conscience 2. No man can haue either of the former that wanteth this for these three vertues are like the three graces which goe hand in hand the former leading the latter and this last laying hold on both the former so as if any man would trie the soundnes of the former he cannot better do it then by the sequele of the latter the soundnes of faith discouereth it selfe in the soundnes of loue and the soundnes of loue in a sound patience for as sound faith is louing so sound loue
vnwillingly or which I had rather not doe and if it be a sinne which I do it is the Princes sinne and not mine nay whatsoeuer action of thine wanteth faith is thy sinne besides although all thy externall condition is in the power of the Magistrate yet internall things as the keeping of faith and obedience and good conscience are not in his power but placed by God in the will and consent of the beleeuer to keepe or to loose Secondly but if the Princes commandement call vs to suffer any vniust thing as if he should laie tyrannicall burdens vpon bodie goods and outward estate these we must acknowledge subiected vnto him by God and therefore the ordinarie defence is prayer and patience by which the passion of vniust vexation will become iust and comfortable vnlesse for the time of the brunt of persecution we can conuey our selues from the furie according to that of Christ if they persecute you in one citie flie to another and Act. 8.1 the Saints were scattered by the persecution for by this meanes of preseruing our selues we preserue also the Church which otherwise would be destroied in vs but els we must meekly beare all vniust vexations and in such times take heed of medling with the seditious These two former grounds will become clearer by the explaning of some instances which we meet with in the Scripture and therefore it will be worth our labour breifly to inquire into some few of them And first whether Mordecay did with good conscience deny subiection yea reuerence to Haman seeing hereby he not only made light of a great man sent by the King but also of the Kings commandement who commanded Haman thus to be honoured as the reprehension of the Kings seruants noted in the text prooueth why transgressest thou the Kings commandement Answ. Mordecay was bound in conscience to obey neither of them in any thing contrarie to the word of God as this required honour was 1. Because it was more then ciuill for such the Persian Kings required as was at least mixed with that which was due to God else it is lawfull inough to fall downe on ones face before Princes 2. If it had beene but ciuill honour yet it had not beene due from Mordecay to Haman because Haman was descended from a nation which God had cursed and willed his people to hate and abhorre and neuer to seeke their peace all their daies but especially they were charged neuer to forget the inhumanitie of the Amalekites but vtterly to destroie them because they were the first that came out to warre against them after their comming out of Egypt If the honour had beene but ciuill and Mordecay of any other people then the Iewes to whom that commandement was directed and Haman of any other offspring then an Agagite that is of the offspring of the Kings of the Amalekites who were all of Agag surnamed Agags as it were the Pharaohs of Egypt and Caesars of Rome he would not haue denied this honour or if he had he had sinned The second instance is in Naboth of whom it may be enquired whether he could iustly denie Ahab his vinyard seeing the Kings hath power to take feilds and vinyards and giue them to his seruants 1. Sam. 8.14 and in outward things we must obey although to our detriment and losse Answ. Naboth iustly refused because God had forbid him so to do In Leuit. 25. the law is expresse that no Israelite might sell his feild but vpon condition of redeeming it and returning vnto it in the Iubely but Ahab did not so require it but either to purchase it out because it lay so fit for him or else to exchange it Now that this was the iust ground of his deniall appeareth in his answer God forbid that I should giue the inheritance of my Fathers vnto thee he knew well that if coppie-holders and tenants vnto men may not set let or alienate without their landlords consent much lesse might he against the expresse will and couenant of his Lord. Againe if it had bin only a losse and dammage vnto himselfe alone he would doubtles haue yeelded but no euill of sin must be chosen at all The third instance whether the people might warrantably resist Saul when he would haue put Ionathan to death seeing Saul had sworne his death and the Lord seemed by lot to designe him thereto Answ. This was a meane wherby it pleased the Lord to deliuer Ionathan at that time The deliuering of an innocent was good the question is of the meanes To which I adde that if it were by meanes of intercession and due respect and reuerence to the Kings person and place as the text seemeth to implie by their pleading for Ionathan the meanes also were good but if it were by mutinie or opposition or sedition yet this manner of the fact shall be condemned but not the fact it selfe As for the lot the Lord indeed noted thereby Ionathans fact but thereby conuicted him not of a fault for Ionathan heard not when his father charged the people with the othe the whole falt therefore rested in Sauls inconsiderate and rash othe The fourth instance is in Ioab both in not obeying one commandement of Dauid and in obeying another First whether he did well in slaying Absolon hauing such an expresse charge to spare him yea to vse him kindly Answ. Absolon iustly deserued death by the law Deut. 21.18 and iustly fell in his sinne but Ioab sinned in slaying him for although he was the generall of the warre and had power yet he forgate that he was a subiect and that in this one point his power was limited by him that gaue him his whole command Meete it was that Absolon should be punished but by Dauids consent and though Ioab thought it in policie the safest way to put him out of the way yet his father conceiued how fearefull his death would be if he should be cut off in his sinne and no doubt purposed otherwise by banishment or imprisonment to haue repressed him if he could no way haue reclaimed him But Ioab had no power ouer his life wilfully to slaie him when Dauid had excepted it and put case it was a falt to spare him it was Dauids and not his Quest. But whether did he well to obey Dauid in numbring the people beeing a thing which Moses and Ioshuah did without sinne and wherein the King was so peremptorie Ans. He sinfully obeyed Dauid euen as he did also in betraying Vri●h vpon Dauids letter he was a courtyer that conceiued himselfe to be at euery command although against his conscience as this was he knew that God had forbidden to number the poople without a speciall commandement or necessarie cause or without paying the halfe shekel appointed for euery ones redemption at euery time of numbring his speach in 1. Chro. 21.3 sheweth that it was not only against the law of God but the light of his owne
the truth of God against the aduersaries of it and where Salomon brandeth him with a note of follie that maketh no question but beleeueth euery thing he sheweth that there is a wise inquisition into necessarie truths tending to edification But the Apostle expresseth what questions he disaloweth in a Diuine foolish questions that is vnnecessarie idle of no moment of no good vse to edification neither in faith nor loue in conscience nor manners Where me thinks Paul by the spirit of prophesie foresawe forewarned and forearmed the Church of that great malice of the deuill which in after ages preuailed to the ouerthrowe of all puritie of religion and piety it selfe and that was by turning men from the comfortable practise and proper vse of Scripture to seeke out an art of diuinitie appropriat to some few and so suddenly came to turne all the sound knowledge of the Scriptures into a skeptike and questionarie diuinitie whereby the deuill kept good wits from the knowledge and studie of tongues and the necessarie fundamentall points of Christian religion and set them on worke in the speculation of strange friuolous and curious questions wherein they were not one more against another then all of them against God and his truth and the building of his Church And this is the quod libe●a●ie schoole diuinitie then which nothing is more highly magnified of many at this day who had rather tast leekes then Manna and although our Apostle graunteth that it may haue a shewe of learning and wisedome falsly so called yet as here it is called foolish so elsewhere he confidently tearmeth it both foolish and vnlearned because it is occupied in such questions as haue neither wisedome nor learning in them while they make a shew of both Such are their questions concerning their heauenly Hierarchies and orders of Angels concerning the degrees of the Saints in heauen so definitiuely and magistrally determining as though they had newly dropped out of the clouds Paul durst neuer vtter such things who was wrapped into the third heauen Others of them as though at the request of the rich man they had been sent from hell are as confident of things done in purgatorie Others are at redde warre whether things notionall or ●eall be better some sweate in disputing whether the world could be better made others to be resolued whether the Pope be more mercifull then Christ because Christ deliuereth none out of purgatorie as the Pope doth But about their Sacrament and consecrated hoast their tumults are such and so ridiculous as a iudicious Diuine would be loath to foule his mouth or his hearers eares with them These are the toyles of the angelicall seraphicall magistrall and subtile Doctors Scotus Hales Holcoth Durand and such monsters of Diuines which how much true learning they containe the darkenes of their ages in which they liued and since sufficiently manifesteth Gods righteous iudgement was vpon them and the whole world since for their sakes and that sentence verified vpon them while they thought themselues wise they became starke fooles Let students looke how they spend time in them for the truth is that if a man be deuoted to them he shall be euer learning and yet neuer come to the knowledge of the truth nay it may be feared of some who were towardly set in the truth that comming into this schoole too timely are now growne crooked and out of loue with the truth and are indeed turned into the things they read The second thing which Titus must resist are genealogies which also must be rightly taken because there alwaies was and yet is an excellent vse of them in Scripture Before Christ they were so necessarie as the Iewes were commanded to keepe publike and priuate records of their tribes and families yea and if there were any that could not tell or finde his genealogie he was not to be admitted or if inconsiderately he were was to be deposed from publike office Numb 1.18 Nehem. 7.62 and to this purpose some holy writers of Scripture haue set downe for the vse of the Church to the ende whole bookes of genealogies but especially that the Iewes might be able to bring their descent from the Patriarks as we reade of Paul who no doubt could bring his line downe from Beniamin Philip. 3.5 The vse of these genealogies was manifold I will note two First to manifest the truth of God in the Scriptures 1. In the accomplishment of many speciall prophesies to particular persons For example God promised to Abraham that he should be a mightie man that this truth might be fully known must be set downe the whole descent and posteriritie and Princes that came of him although neuer so wicked from Ismael himselfe Rebecca also had a promise of two mightie peoples in her wombe and that the elder should serue the younger how should this be knowne to be accomplished but by the genealogie of them both for which purpose euen the dukes that came of Esau were all recorded The like of Iacobs prophesie concerning Ephraim and Manasseh for otherwise the wicked should haue no name nor register in the booke of God it is not for their owne sakes whose memories should rot but for the honour of God and his seruants they are there rolled to shewe that the godly were not only inwardly but euen outwardly blessed according to promise with such a fruitfull race and posteritie 2. It is a great light to the truth of Scripture when it setteth downe the persons by whom and the times in which euery worthy thing was done what also and by whome the Church suffered how all nations were euer enemies to religion but one little point or corner of the world how God had euer a Church in the world euen in the corruptedst times a litle remnant of Israel that worshipped him in spirit and truth which things are cleared by genealogie The second and principall vse of genealogie is to manifest the true Messiah vnto the world As 1. to shewe that because God would be appeased in the same nature that had sinned therefore he was true man and not in shew and that his humanitie incarnation and natiuitie should not be obscure his naturall descent is by the Euangelists brought downe from Abraham yea from Adam shewing vs thereby what is the proper end of all genealogie in the Scriptures 2. The nobilitie of his birth and worthines of his parentage and that he was the right heire to the Iewish kingdome 3. The truth of the prophesies concerning him that he was the sonne of Abraham and of Dauid and that the scepter departed not from Iudah till his appearing 4. The blessing wherewith that family out of which he came was advanced and distinct from al the tribes of the earth 5. His humilitie who came of all sorts of men and women publike and priuate poore and rich good and bad that he might be a fit Sauiour of all sorts of men not disdaining to place in
but to the checks of their owne conscience they had neuer runne on so farre into such an incurable condition Vse 3. This consideration also teacheth vs to looke that in euerie thing we keepe good consciences before God and all men the vse of which will be manifold 1. To keepe vs from errors and heresies and containe vs in the profession of the true faith for let good conscience be put a way there must needes followe a shipwracke of faith as is to be seen in all heretikes Hence are we counselled to make pure conscience as the coffer to keepe faith in 1. Tim. 3.9 keepe faith in pure conscience neither indeede will it be kept without For by the iust iudgement of God punishing sinne with sinne it comes to passe that corruption of iudgement and practise of doctrine and manners goe hand in hand and for most part vndiuorsed 2. In doing any action lawfull in it self a good conscience only maketh it good to the doer for to doe euen the will of God against my conscience is sinne to me be the same in it selfe neuer so materially good 3. In suffering or enduring any thing for well doing as not the paine but the cause maketh a martyr so not the cause so much as the conscience of the sufferer worketh out his boldnesse and peace in the middest of the combat and giueth him securitie in his conflict whereas a bad conscience will betray the best cause 4. In inioying any condition of this present life a good conscience is a sweete companion euen a drie morsel with peace of heart is better then an house full of sacrifices with strife and warre within In outward afflictions there is inward reioycing for let the heart be pacified in God it can reioyce in tribulation The disciples can go away reioycing from the Councel that they were counted worthie to be beaten and suffer rebuke for Christ Act. 5.41 The Martyrs can kisse the stake embrace the fire sing in the midst of the flames 5. Yea it doth not onely through the whole life minister ioy and comfort euen in the remembrance of death as 2. Tim. 4.7.8 but it followeth a man after death when all things else forsake him and as a most faithfull friend it goeth with him before Gods iudgement seat and pleadeth for him at the barre of Iesus Christ yea testifieth with him and cleareth and quite acquitteth him from the iudgment of the great day All which beeing so what paines and labour can be thought too much in the getting and keeping of such a iewel which bringeth in so rich a recompence for so little labour and how worthily doth he forfeit all these sweet fruits of it who will be at no costs nor paines for it Vers. 12. When I shall sende Artemas vnto thee or Tychicus be diligent to come vnto mee to Nicopolis for I haue determined there to winter Our Apostle hauing finished all such common precepts as respected the whole Church in Creta he now passeth to some priuate businesse which more specially respected the person of Titus and commended to his practise and it standeth of two branches the former touching Titus his comming to Paul in this 12. vers the latter touching the louing intertainement which he should shewe towards Zenas and Apollos in the next verse Concerning Titus his iourney to Paul he is directed both for the time when I shall send Artemas vnto thee or Tychicus as also for the place where to Nicopolis with a reason rendred why he must come thither because Paul had a determination there to winter First Titus is enioyned to come to Paul who as he had power to place or displace him at his pleasure so he wanted not sufficient reason at this time to call him vnto him 1. that he might visit Paul whose affection longed to see him and to be refreshed by him 2. that he might further instruct him in the doctrine of faith and the discipline of the Church 3. that he might elswhere send him to preach and confirme some other Church planted by the Apostle 2. As for the place Nicopolis whether Titus must come we reade of three cities called by this name but this was in Thracia neer Macedonia and the reason added is not needlesly affixed to the Apostles iniunction but to encourage Titus vnto so long a iourney for els he might conceiue with himselfe that the Apostles calling beeing to goe from place to place to plant Churches he might happily misse of him there and so loose his iourney therefore Paul telleth him that if God let his purpose stand he shall be sure to finde him there seeing he had determined there to winter And from both the precept and reason it is plaine that Paul was not now at Nicopolis nor writ this Epistle there nor sent it thence howsoeuer the subscription of the Epistle boldly but heedelesly affirmeth it for then he would haue said be diligent to come to me hither and I haue determined here to winter and not come to Nicopolis for I haue determined there to winter the mistaking of this adverb in the text was the cause of the erroneous subscription added by the scribe who copied out the Epistle the like whereof in sundrie other Epistles is confessed both by Protestants and the Papists themselues 3. But when must Titus come not before Artemas or Tychicus were sent from Paul to supply his place in Creta Of Artemas we reade not so much as of Tychicus who accompanied Paul into Asia Act. 20.4 and by whome the Apostle sent his Epistles to the Ephesians 6.21 and to the Colossians 4.8 in both which he is called a beloued brother a faithfull Minister and fellowe seruant in the Lord and euerie where verie respectiuely spoken of But yet seeing he is here mentioned before Tychicus and set apart for the worke and seruice of the Church by the Apostle himselfe it is certaine he was a faithfull and sufficient man for else would not the Apostle haue committed a matter of such trust and charge vnto him Doctr. Out of this prouident care of the Apostle for the Church we learne that it is verie dangerous and hurtfull to the Church to be left destitute of their Ministers and teachers although for a verie small time Paul had an earnest desire to see Titus and as is likely some other speciall worke more commodious for the Church to employ him in elswhere and yet he must not come til an Artemas or Tychicus come in his roome to take charge of his people he saith not come thou to me and I will shortly send Artemas or Tychicus but come not till I send them Well knewe the Apostle 1. the weakenesse of faith without continuall support and that if there be not watering as well as planting whatsoeuer is best begunne will easily decay and beeing once decayed is hardly recouered 2. the subtiltie of Satan together with his malice who vncessantly seeketh reentry who if he
shamefull thing it were to marrie a wife in hope to beget children by another mans helpe what an equall thing it is that he who doth not his dutie in his owne person but by a deputie should also goe to heauen by a deputie but not in his owne person as merily and wittily Iodocus a famous French preacher witnessed by Espenceus From all which I may conclude this reason with the words of a Papist that seeing neither nature is the principle or ground of nonresidencie for that is contented with a little nor yet grace which is contented with lesse therefore the corruption of the heart of man is the cheefe counseller and perswader vnto it Neither is his reason to be neglected for though a man saith he dare liue a nonresident yet would he not willingly die one And as for the matter of substitution whereon the whole frame of nonresidencie is set as on a foundation he saith he seeth not why one man might not haue as well an hundreth liuings as one by this plea for he might get substitutes inough neither doth he see any reason but women might also be capable of Church liuings by this plea as well as men for they also might performe the duties by substitutes But I remit the reader to the author as also to other of our later Diuines who haue largely and learnedly handled the same argument 5. We may adde hereunto the example of the Preists vnder the law who were fixed in their courses neere the Temple and had their chambers and roomes adioyned vnto the Temple that they might waite on their offices and be readie for their seruices and there is no reason why the Ministers of the Gospel should not now as diligently waite on their office as they vnder the law vnlesse we will say that the standing Ministerie of the new Testament is not so necessarie not so certaine as that walking Ministerie of the old Let Ministers therefore see that the occasions of leauing their flockes for a time be vrgent and weightie not pretences proceeding from couetousnesse nor ambition nor any other sinister respect neither let them dare to remooue themselues no not for a while but for some occasions which are more necessarie then the attending of the flocke for howsoeuer they may shroud themselues by the protection of humane laws yet in the court of conscience only such necessary and weighty occasions wil beare plea and giue a man leaue for a time to be absent 2. As it must not be a small matter that must draw a Minister from his charge so if such weightie occasions fall out as require the gifts of some men to be otherwise employed for the time for the greater good of the Church then in his priuate charge then we see what must be our rule If Titus be remooued an Artemas or Tychicus a faithfull and furnished man must be sent in his roome that while the whole bodie is cared for no particular member be lost or neglected Where also great and noble men may be put in minde what a grieuous sinne they bring vpon themselues when they call Ministers from their charges into their houses or vnto the seas or any such employment and in the meane time neglect to prouide sufficiently for their flockes and the sinne is the greater in that they might be ordinarily better serued by such as haue no charges and why should they not rather send to the Vniuersities then to the Churches if they did not chuse to wrong them both when as yet no necessitie vrgeth or forceth them hereunto Vers. 13. Bring Zenas the expounder of the lawe and Apollos on their iourney diligently that they lacke nothing In this verse is contained the second priuate busines which is enioyned Titus commanding him that he should set forward on their iourney both Zenas set out by his profession an expounder of the law and Apollos and this he should doe 1. by accompanying them in some part of their way and 2. by prouiding that they wanted no necessarie for their long iourney being to saile from Creta in Grecia For the persons of Zenas and Apollos they were Apostolike men of notable gifts for the Ministerie The former is here said to be by profession an expounder of the law that is of Mos●s lawe as is most likely rather then the ciuill lawe but howsoeuer he was not like our lawyers he ioyned himselfe with Apollos and was a poore man and had wanted but for the churches contribution For Apollos we reade of him Act. 18.24 that he was borne at Alexandria that he was an eloquent man mightie in the Scriptures and feruent in the spirit yea so powerfull in his doctrine as that of some he was accounted not inferiour to the cheife Apostles for as some said they were Pauls so some cleaued to Apollos as other some to Cephas and therefore both of them were worthy to be respected by Titus who therefore must performe vnto them this part of Christian curtesie to lead them forth on their way Doctr. Whence note that Christianitie hindreth not but commendeth and enioyneth ciuill curtesie and all kinde of humanitie For 1. whatsoeuer pertaineth to loue and good report that must beleeuers thinke on and doe Philip. 4. Secondly the wisedome which is from aboue is gentle peaceable full of mercie and good fruits Iames. 3.17 Thirdly those many commandements that Christians should salute and greete one an other and that with an holy kisse 1. Thes. 5.26 called by Peter the kisse of loue vsuall in those East countries by which outward testimonie they declared mutuall loue and kindnesse Fourthly outward curtesie is a necessarie vertue euen for the maintaining of the bond of Christian peace yea availeth much for the nourishing and encreasing the communion of Saints and societie with Gods people Fifthly how disgracefull a thing were it for the profession of Christ that such as professe faith in the Lord Iesus should shew themselues inhumane or hoggish who should be as lambes and little children for such are they who haue entred into the kingdome of Christ as the Prophet witnesseth Let this point therefore be well thought of that as faith and loue cannot be separate so must good conscience and good manners goe together Now for this speciall branch of curtesie to bring the seruants of God and the Church on in their iourney it is from an inferiour to a superiour a dutie of honour as we see in Barzillai 2. Sam. 19.36 who would go ouer Iordan with king Dauid set him so farre on his way to Ierusalem then returne back to Gilead And of the equall to the equall it is a dutie of kindnes and towards the teacher of both and as it seemeth was verie common among beleeuers in the Apostles times Thus we read how the Elders of the Church of Ephesus accompanied Paul to the ship Act. 20.38 so the disciples whom he found at Tyrus with their wiues and children accompanied
2. This apostolicall faith is not a faith of two or three but a common faith which euery beleeuer hath but the apostaticall Popish faith falsely called Catholike is not so for it is the faith of the teachers of the Church onely which their hearers may safely rest in although they haue no speciall faith of their owne neither indeed know what their Church or teachers doe beleeue but who seeth not that this grosse faith in the lumpe cannot be either sauing or Catholike sauing can it not be for the sauing faith of the elect goeth with the knowledge of the truth v. 3. neither can it be Catholike or the common faith no more then that can be a common commoditie which is ingrossed into some few mens hands and neuer seeth the open market or rather which is a monopolie for to beleeue say they as the Pope beleeueth although they know not what he beleeueth is sufficient 3. This apostolicall common faith purifyeth the heart cleanseth the conscience from dead workes and worketh by loue but the apostaticall Romish faith is a pragmatical fancie working by rage furie violence and blood filling their hearts and hands with detestable resolutions and attempts fouling their consciences with most impure and impious workes of the flesh and such as the issues of death follow as often experience hath beene their mistrisse 4. This common faith is most ancient it is the old and the good way but so is not theirs let them terme it the old religion as long as they will it is a strange doctrine a new devised faith not sauouring of apostolicall antiquitie as will appeare plainly to him that compareth that which they now professe with that which was professed when Paul writ the Epistle to the Romans Hence will it follow that their faith not beeing the common faith I say not that they must amend their faith but change it if they will be saued by it it is not all the patching and daubing and refining of their points will helpe them nor all the baulme in Gilead can so supple their positions that we may ioyne with them vntill they beginne againe and laie the same foundation with vs which is to seeke to enter into life by the doore and not as theeues seeke to creepe in at the window till this be done the ioyning with them will be the departing from the common faith till this be done we may not giue them the right hand of fellowship Let them first shake hands with Christ which is our heartie praier to the Lord for them we wil gladly and heartily reach thē ours Vse 3. If the faith be but one we must all then studie to keepe the vnitie of faith in the bond of loue which is the Apostles collection on the same ground Ephes. 4.3.4 we ought so to compose our affections as we may go out with one heart and one minde in the profession of this one common faith which maketh communion betweene the highest and lowest rich and poore Master and seruant Preacher and people for in Iesus Christ all are one Iew and Gentile bond and free Paul was Titus his father in the faith but yet this common faith made him his fellow brother 2. Cor. 8.23 so he calleth himselfe the father of the Corinthians and yet them his brethren as Onesimus a poore seruant by vertue of this common faith became the sonne of Paul and yet his faithfull and beloued brother so as howsoeuer in earthly relation we haue our difference and inequalitie yet in regard of this common faith beleeuers may say as they in the Prophet wee haue all one father and one mother yea one meate and cloath one education and one inheritance The Ministers must therefore so acknowledge himselfe a father as that he is a sonne too so a teacher as that he be a diligent hearer and entertainer of the doctrine also The Master must not forget he hath a master in heauen and that his seruant in regard of the common faith is or may be his fellow seruant and if he be a religious seruant he must be counted more then a seruant euen an Onesimus a brother in the Lord. The Magistrate must so rule as a subiect vnder Christ and not altogether stand on authoritie but cast an eye vpon the common faith The husband must not altogether stand on his headshippe but like a man of knowledge dwell with his wife as one who is with him a ioynt heire of the life of grace so in other relations Which consideration were it obserued it would cut off much discomfort in families cities societies Church and common wealth it would keepe men from offering occasions of vnbrotherly strife and contention as we see in Abraham and Lot it would cause them to forgiue and forget old iniuries as Ioseph Gen. 50.17 if they would conceiue that they are all brethren in the faith The third point in the words is to consider of the adiunct of sinceritie by which Titus is commended my naturall sonne that is not illegitimate or base borne but my rightfull true and as we say lawfully begotten sonne one that both resembleth my selfe and is a right follower of me The same word is vsed 2. Cor. 8.8 where the Apostle perswadeth the Corinths to the chearefull releefe of the poore brethren in Iudea by this reason that he might trie the naturalnes of their loue Which commendation was of good vse 1. for Titus his encouragement whom so great an Apostle so esteemed 2. that the Cretians might with more respect and reuerence receiue him thus highly commended 3. to distinguish Titus from some other of his sonnes who a while fathered themselues vpon him but after falling from the faith prooued but bastards and counterfeit as Hymenaeus Philetus Alexander Titus was not such a one not Timothy see 1. Tim. 1.2 Doctr. 1. In that the Apostle powreth not out his commendation of Titus neither this but vpon good ground obserue how warie euery man should be both whome and to what ende and how farre they commend another and yet this more especially if their iudgment be required or esteemed Thus Paul commendeth Titus 1. one well knowne to be worthy and not out of partiallitie 2. for a good end the benefit of the Church that his person and doctrine might be more louingly embraced and that this was his ende appeareth 2. Cor. 8.23 If any enquire of Titus he is my helper and fellow or of our brethren they are messengers of the Churches wherefore shew towards them the proofe of your loue 3. he commendeth him sparingly and is not lauish beyond the truth Neither is he generall in such elogyes for scarce any else but Timothie receiued such a testimonie from him Vse In this Seedplot of the ministerie whence young Titusses are to be commended vnto the vse of the Church it standeth those in hand who are to dismisse them with letters testimoniall not hand ouer head to giue a rash
counsell is he that is able to receiue this let him receiue it But the true meaning is that the minister ought to be content with one wife at once and not defile himselfe by polygamie and this precept was not without ground for among both Iewes and Gentiles the custome of polygamie had so farre preuailed that it was become as naturall to marrie many wiues at once now the Apostle perceiuing that custome had taken away the sense of the sinne and placing Titus to redresse things amisse he beginneth at this great enormitie and prohibiteth him to choose such into office in the Church as had giuen such note of an inordinate life Quest. But was it lawfull for other men to haue more wiues then one at once seeing the precept is giuen onely to ministers Ans. No and yet the minister here onely inhibited directly as whom he dealeth with but the people herein also so farre as his example was propounded to their imitation in the obseruation of the whole law of God For here we may fitly obserue these 2. rules for our directions 1. That all the vertues which are required of common Christians must be much more in the minister as euerie thing in the sanctuarie was double to that which was common as the cubit the shekel of the sanctuarie 2. That all the morall vertues required and expressed in the life of the Minister must be imitated of common Christians who must follow him so farre as he followes Christ and in his generall dutie see their owne both of them hauing but one way to heauen So much of the meaning The doctrines are two 1. The mariage of ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God 2. Polygamie was euer a thing blame-worthie euen in the best Doct. 1. Seeing that we are cast into the last times wherein the spirits of error shall be more rise then euer and 2. that many shall depart and giue heede vnto them and 3. that it is enioyned euerie faithfull teacher to arme his people against them it is no lesse then our dutie to warrant out of this place the mariage of Ministers against all the impious decrees of Papists who that they should not want that note of Antichrist fore prophecied namely the contempt of women vnder a semblance of sanctitie and chastitie as Hierome expoundeth it and least their doctrine should not otherwise appeare to be as it is a doctrine of deuills 1. Tim. 4.1.3 haue prohibited mariage to all orders of their Clergie and admit none into their orders without a vowe of perpetuall single life from which if they euer after depart they depriue them of all dignities cut them off as apostates from the faith and adiudge them if they iustifie that opinion euen to death it selfe Quest. But why should they depriue themselues of their libertie and the comfort of that estate it seemeth to be meere conscience that should lead them to vndergoe such a burden Ans. I hope to make it appeare that it is nothing lesse then conscience enformed by the word by the answer of their chiefe allegations In the meane time among sundrie other obserue three maine beames which beare vp the this Popish roofe 1. grosse hypocrisie causing them to make a shew of greater holinesse and chastitie then all others in which regard we may as well yeeld them the title of Puritans as they challenge the thing it selfe 2. presumptuous pride for by th●ir doctrine hereby they seeke for a further perfection then that which the Law requireth of them 3. the maine of all is humane policie for hereby they keepe their wealth together which 1. maketh them able to maint●ine their royall estate 2. it maketh the world to admire them such is their ●ompe and glorie 3. by their great promotions and dignities they a●●●re and ally vnto them the greatest nobles of the earth by whom they strengthen their estate so as neuer could mans wit deuise a surer way to keepe their wealth which euery eie may see to be the proppe of their greatnesse and which by the marryage of all their orders might quickly be dissipated and dispersed 2. by this policie they haue their vassals and instruments whom they must dispatch with death and deadly things about them into all countreys more free and prompt to the vndertaking and accomplishment of any misc●iefe These I take to be their strongest foundations of their tottering building as for other which they vent out to the world they are but shewes and pre●ences and sandie grounds of foolish builders as now we are to manifest Ob. First out of the old Testament they alledge diuerse things as Leu. 11. Be ye holy for I am holy and ye that carie the holy vessels of the Lord be holy and the Priests and Leuites in ministring their turnes before the Lord must abstaine from their wiues and Abimelech would not giue Dauids young men hallowed bread vnlesse they had abstained from women and they that eate the Passeouer had their loynes girt which is the seate of lust Therefore none in orders may marrie Ans. 1. In such allegations they are long and tedious but of which I may truely say as the Stoiks of diseases if they be long they are light And to beginne with their last symbolicall argument we will lightly passe it as worthy of something else rather then an answer both because symbolicall diuinitie wil beare no argument but also in that they haue not prooued nor can that all they that eate the Passeouer were Priests neither regard they that they were presently to depart out of Egypt and therefore needed to trusse vp their long and loose garments As for that of Abimelech 1. Dauids seruants were souldiers not Priests and therefore is it impertinent 2. they were such as had wiues how can we conclude from them that other men ought to haue none 3. it was a question which the Lord would haue Abimelech aske Dauid and that by oracle as appeareth v. 11. concerning some legall defilement which euen by touching some wo●en might debarre them from touching the holy bread 4. let them ● so conclude that no Israelites might marrie because at the giuing of the law they must abstaine 3. dayes from their wiues In the three former allegations they are not vnlike an inexpert musitian who harpeth altogether vpon some one iarring string and so marres all the musicke for all of them are laid vpon this vnsound and vngodly position which they take for graunted that marriage is an vncleane and vnholy thing for this is the tenour of all their conclusions be holy therfore abstaine from marriage Which heresie of Montanus and the Manichee● Pope Syricius and his successors haue fought manfully to maintaine 〈◊〉 of that place of the Apostle Those that are in the flesh cannot please God as though they had neuer read that God was the institutor of it and not as a remedie but when there was no maladie in the
himselfe by insensible wounds and true it is that wine kills more then the sword As for the plagues wherewith the Lord pursueth this sinne after this life they are vnvtterable only let the sinner of this suit know that it banisheth him from the suite of the Saints and excludeth him out of heauen 1. Cor. 6.10 Let Ministers and people therefore consider well what a number of sinnes and plagues that man thrusteth himselfe into that is giuen to wine and strong drinke and sitteth downe with drunkards and yet how hath this sinne as a deluge ouerflowne the land yea and that height of it seeketh not corners whereby one man sporteth himselfe in making another drunke oh woe vnto that man that maketh himselfe merrie in another mans sinne which should be as a dagger at his heart and woe worth that deuillish reioysing which triumpheth in putting out Gods image and bringeth a man to the condition of a bruite beast whereas our reioysing should be in remoouing blocks from before the blind rather then in laying them Alas that these should be the fruits of the Gospel will not such things force our God to remooue the hedge of his vineyard and breake downe the wall nay is not the hedge troden down already seeing such so vile sinns vnheard of among the heathen like so many wilde beasts depopulate and wast this Garden of Eden planted by the Lords owne fingers that vnlesse the Lord of hosts returne and visit this vine and returne vs vnto him by repentance we that haue bin enuied for our happines shall come of all nations to be pitied when the long patience of our God shall be expired with a soddaine ruine and a wofull downefall And yet further we who liue in the Goshen of our Countrie if darknes couered the face of all the land we should be light the sunne is vpon vs we are in the sunne let vs walke as in the noone-day those that are drunke are drunke in the night let vs be ashamed of such works of darknes that we may be answerable vnto our light should Gilead be a citie polluted with such a bloodie sinne especially let the schoole and the sonnes of the Prophets as to whom it is more especially directed meditate of this precept that a Bishop must not be giuen to wine No striker This fourth vice seemeth fitly to be set after the former as beeing an vsuall attendant of them The right meaning of which that we may better conceiue we must know that we may not so vnderstand the precept as that at no time a minister may lawfully strik another for there be times and cases when it may be not only lawfull but necessarie For 1. it detracteth nothing from his priuate economicall right whereby he may and ought moderately as occasion is offered exercise his power of correcting his seruants and children 2. It derogateth nothing from his common right in case he be set vpon and cannot call for the Magistrats helpe in which case by a iust and common law he is armed and warranted to become a Magistrate to himselfe and may not onely strike but euen kill with the sword also so be his heart be free from that desire and his intendment be not to kill but rather weaken the enemie and to defend himselfe rather then hurt the other in which case Christ allowed the Disciples whom he could haue miraculously preserued the vse of swords Luk. 22.36.38 except we will allegorically vnderstand those places as Beza doth and Peter had a sword readie to draw and smite at Christs apprehension 3. Some Ministers may be present in a iust and lawfull warre to teach souldiers to fight the Lords battels after the Lords minde to pray for prosperous successe to comfort and animate the camp Thus Moses praied in the campe and we read of Ambrose in the campe of Theodosius and of Zuinglius who died in the field in which case it is not doubted but that a Minister may strike and kill also the enemies of God The meaning then is that a Minister may not be a man of a martiall heart and spirit such a one as in his priuate matters will stand out with euery man at the slaues end in contending or a man of a word and a blow an hackster or cutter but one of a patient spirit meeke long-suffering following peace with all men yea propounding himselfe a patterne of peaceable disposition to the flocke Reasons 1. Because the weapons of our warrefare are not carnall but spirituall The Apostle denieth not but that the calling of a Minister is a fight and warrefare 2. Tim. 2.3 but they fight not against flesh and blood but spirituall wickednesses and the weapons are suitable to the warre and to the enemies not such as wound the flesh but which subdue Satan and sinne and wound the consciences of men and cast downe high cogitations which fortifie themselues in strong holdes and exalt themselues against God as of pride rebellion false conceits and opinions namely the sword of the spirit put into their hands which in the constant and conscionable preaching of it beeing wisely welded is sufficient and powerfull against all enmities besieging the soule Besides they haue prayers teares faith zeale loue if Ministers will strike they may with these and ought and the effect will be proportionable that is not to bring mens bodies into subiection vnto themselues but their soules and consciences vnto the obedience of Christ. This castle is not wonne by fists or clublaw neither with the strokes of the tongue by bitter and feirce rayling speaches nay the seruant must not thus striue but be gentle towards all men apt to teach suffering the euill men patiently 2. Tim. 2.24 2. The Minister is the Surgeon of mens soules who must heale wounds but not make them except for cures sake And as a good Phisitian who beateth not his patient no not when through distemper perhappes he may fall vpon him but considereth his case and goeth on in his course of cure so must the Minister after the example of Christ beeing smitten not smite againe beeing reuiled not reuile againe being in passion not threaten For if such had beene fit meanes to build his kingdome how easily could Christ haue beene auenged of his enemies nay which is more if Peter shall in the loue and zeale of his Master and that in the defence of his life draw a sword Christ will bid him put it vp againe into his place for he is now out of his owne element and newly stepped out of his calling not without indignation threatning him that if he dares to take the sword when God hath not put in into his hands he shall perish with it Yea and least any man for his cause sustaine bodily harme he will heale Malcus his eare who surely deserued nothing lesse Whence easily we see that those fierie men who with those two Disciples would for euery iniurie cal for
into admiration to see the gifts giuen them knowing them to be vnlearned Act. 4.13 or else they were most fearce and bloodie enemies as Paul whom the Hebrewes could not beleeue that he was become a Preacher of that truth he had persecuted vntill the Lord gaue further testimonie of him Act. 9.26 3. The matter of this word is an euerlasting truth the Law an eternall rule of righteousnesse as ancient as God himselfe the Gospel an euerlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 containing promises of eternall truth which shall haue their stabillitie after heauen and earth shall be no more besides such assured articles of faith concerning God in the three persons and the Church of God that if an Angel from heauen should come and teach another doctrine he must be accursed Moreouer such diuine prophecies and predictions together with the exact accomplishments although some hundreths yea thousands of yeares passed betweene as by this one part sufficient euidence may be gathered of the faithfulnesse and steadfastnes of the whole 4. The forme of it which is the conformitie of it with God himselfe maketh it appeare that if God be faithfull this his word must needs also be so in that it resembleth him in his omnipotencie for this power and arme of God neuer returneth in vaine but doth all the worke of it In his wisedome giuing most perfect and sure directions resoluing all doubtfull cases and making wise vnto saluation In his puritie and perfection beeing an vndefiled and perfect law In his omniscience it searcheth the heart discouereth the thoughts deuideth betweene the marrowe and bone Heb. 4.12 In his iudgement acquitting beleeuers to whom it is a sweete sauour of life to life condemning Infidels both here and much more at the last day Ioh. 13.48 In his truth and veritie as here and Coloss. 1.5 it is called the word of truth 5. The ends shew the certaintie and faithfulnes of it it beeing the onely meanes of regeneration 1. Pet. 1.21 of begetting faith Rom. 10. and consequently both of freeing men from hell and damnation and of assuring them of that freedome the onely word that can supplie sound and firme consolation yea setled and assured comfort vnto distressed consciences none of which ends could it euer attaine if it selfe were vnsound and vncertaine Now as it carrieth with it all these grounds so are there without it a nūber more wherby we may confirme the same truth as 1. It is the foundatiō of the church Eph. 2.20 against which if hell gates could euer preuaile the Church were vtterly sunke 2. Hereunto hath the Lord tyed his Church as to an infallible direction to the law and to the testimonie without which there is nothing but errour and wandring ye erre not knowing the Scriptures 3. This truth hath beene aboue all other oppugned by Satan Antichrist heretikes tyrants yet neuer a whit of it was euer diminished Salomons bookes may be lost but not these of the true Salomon Iesus Christ. That the Scriptures were burnt in the Temple and that Ezra composed a newe Scripture is to be reiected as a Iewish fable Ezra might put together parcells of Scripture scattered and compose them into bookes But where were Ezechiel Daniel Zacharie Hagge or what were they doing to suffer all the Scriptures to be lost in their times or where was the watchfull eie of God could it winke or nodde or not see or not preuent the perishing of his word vtterly from the Church 4. This word hath beene so certenly sealed in the hearts of the elect of all ages that where it once was harboured in truth it could neuer be shaken out by any kind of most exquisite torture and torment All which confirme the doctrine propounded most plentifully Obiect But some bookes of the canonicall Scriptures are perished Answ. Many indeede are reckoned but they were either not canonicall or the substance of them is still contained in the canonicall Obiect But if God himselfe had written the whole Scripture as he did the law and had deliuered it to men as he did the tables to Moses then had there beene no doubt of the certaintie of it but it was written by men Ans. Yet is it as certaine as if God had immediately writ it with his owne finger for holy men spake and writ as they were mooued by the holy Ghost not as men but Gods instruments guided by extraordinarie immediate and infallible assistance of the spirit Obiect In 1. Cor. 7.12 Paul saith I speake not the Lord. Ans. The plaine sense in one word is I giue counsell in this case of mariage by collection out of the word of which the word hath not deliuered any expresse lawe and no more can be gathered of it Vse This doctrine is of speciall vse both vnto teachers and hearers vnto teachers it affoardeth a twofold instruction 1. if it be so faithfull a word to hold it fast 2. to hold themselues fast vnto it For the former the teacher must looke that he lay such hold on it as he neuer suffer it to be wrested from him no danger no fauour no power no subtiltie may force him to vnfasten his hold much lesse goe backe and recoile from it or play fast and loose with it or so carrie it as one that would swim betweene two waters but carie it and hold it out as faithfully and constantly as becommeth such a faithfull word Ieremie on this ground that he had a sure word after he had beene smitten and stocked he went not into corners nor behinde the wall to speake the will of him that sent him but as one that had laid faster hold on it in tearmes of defiance and personall application to the stoutest and proudest of them he vttereth with much boldnesse and plainnesse what he had in commission The like we read of Amos against Amaziah The like of the Apostles thorough the Acts and their Epistles and all vpon this ground that the Lord sent them with a faithfull word And if reasons will perswade to this dutie we haue not a fewe For 1. what sound comfort can any Minister finde in life or in death but in beeing found faithfull where was Pauls reioycing towards his death but that he had fought a good fight and had kept the faith 2. This faithfull word was not easily purchased vnto vs but by the blood of many a faithfull man both of Pastors and people shed in our owne and other countries and should the preachers of it esteeme lightly of so precious and so dear a purchase 3. If the Pastor depart or be driuē frō the faithfull word how can his people hold it he is guiltie of all their Apostacie from the faith Let the Pastor receiue such a blowe the sheepe cannot but be smitten 4. Looke on the danger and Gods righteous iudgement on such teachers as esteeme of mens words and writings aboue that is meet in the meane time not embracing this word in the loue of their
is that in all things necessary to saluation the Scriptures are so euident in one place or other as he that runneth may reade the seuerall points 3. Whereas they say that this obscuritie must be supplied by humane expositions and traditions I answer that the commentaries and expositions of good men are not to be neglected but yet so entertained as not simply arguing the obscuritie of Scripture but rather our infirmitie and weakenesse who cannot receiue a perfect doctrine perfectly Againe how were those purest Primitiue Churches directed that wanted all those councels decrees decretalls summes sentences glosses and determinations which the Romish Synagogue would bind vs vnto as rules of faith binding the conscience surely they dare not denie but that there was more light more grace more zeale and pietie before such trash of theirs which onely brought in corruption and heresie into the Church then euer was since or is euer like to be vnto the ende We will also conclude this point noting in one breath of Bellarmine three errors 1. that he attributeth that to the Scriptures which is to be ascribed to mans impotencie 2. that the obscuritie he speaketh of is in things necessarie to saluation 3. that supply must be made by humane expositions whereas the right opening of Scripture is by Scripture That he may be able to exhort with wholesome doctrine Now we come to the ende of the former dutie which is that he who is to be set apart to this waightie function may be fitted and furnished to all the parts of his calling which the Apostle reduceth to two heads according to the seuerall condition of the persons with whom he is to deale for all teaching is either the confirming and strengthning of sound doctrine tending to the conuerting and confirming of the tractable or else the infirming and weakening of false doctrine seruing to the confutation and conviction of such as are refractarie and gainsayers of the truth neither of which can any man possibly fruitfully performe without diligence and setlednesse in the Scriptures seeing that to these purposes he must hold fast the faithfull word For the meaning we must enquire 1. what is meant by exhortation wherin it differeth frō teaching And the difference chiefly stādeth in these 3. things 1. euerie exhortation is teaching but euerie teaching is not exhortation 2. to teach is more properly to propound out of Scriptures prooue by the Scriptures things to be beleeued or done to exhort is to incite prouoke the hearers to the beleeuing or doing of things so prooued by reasons and arguments 3. Teaching is a former worke for the enlightening of the vnderstanding and frameth the iudgement and exhorting is a secondarie work more properly pearcing the affections and so furthering the practise Secondly what is meant by doctrine that is nothing else but the word of God taught for that same which is here called wholesome doctrine is in c. 2.8 called the wholesome word and to shewe the identitie of them the Apostle ioyneth them together If any consent not to the wholesome words of our Lord Iesus Christ and the doctrine which is according to godlinesse he is puft vp 3. Why is this doctrine called wholesome to which I answer that that is wholesome doctrine which beeing well prepared afore hand maketh the soule sound and in good plight and liking for it is a borrowed speach from the food of the bodie to the meate of the soule which is the word of God here called wholesome doctrine of which epithite something is to be spoken but better occasion will be offered vs in c. 2.1 Doctr. 1. In that the word is called doctrine and no doctrine is without a teacher it behoueth euerie man to repaire to the teachers of it Now the teachers in the church are either the great doctor of the chaire who fully and sufficiently teacheth euerie beleeuer and whose teaching is absolutely necessarie to the conuersion of men or else his Ministers who as so many vshers are set to teach all the formes of the Church but so as vnder the Master farre wanting and short of his abilitie in themselues insufficient to bring men vnto the sight of their saluation and much lesse vnto their perfection not because they reade not the same lecture with the spirit but because they can onely teach the outward eare not the inward neither are they Gods to conuert although the word be able to saue soules as he is who in giuing the precept giueth also power to learne beleeue and practise it Vse Would any man be taught to saluation not hauing this knowledge naturally he must get him these teachers First he must goe thorough these vshers hands and then according to his proficiencie the spirit shall take him into his teaching But if a man will play the trewant and sit at home when Gods free-schoole is set open despising the teaching in the ministerie conceiuing that he may by his owne studie or reading attaine perfection he neuer climbeth into the highest forme he neuer hath the high things of God reuealed by the spirit who teacheth not now by newe reuelations or enthusiasmes but hath erected a ministerie of the spirit which euerie one must frequent that would be made wise to saluation Secondly as this doctrine implyeth teachers so doth it also learners and schollers Teaching vs that we must all of vs become learners of this word and doctrine for so long as there is doctrine and teaching on Gods part so long must there be an harkning and learning on ours and the rather both because that which is said of all knowledge that it is infinite is much more true of this for Gods commandements are exceeding large as also seeing in this schoole we are to become not onely more learned but better men It may not therefore be with vs who when we are at the best are but in part good as many who after they haue learned a while giue ouer as though they were both informed and reformed sufficiently but we must be still profiting and going forward and climbing as it were from on forme to an other so long as we liue still aiming at somewhat beyond for we may not conceiue of Gods schoole as it is in mens which are fitter for boyes and children then men of yeares a shame were it for an old man to goe to schoole but here whatsoeuer many an idiot say to the contrarie that now they are too olde to learne euerie man must waxe old in learning something daily seeing the best man may farre excell himselfe both in wisedome and goodnesse Thus Paul when he was an ancient scholler in Christs schoole pressed hard to things that were before him And Dauid with other saints of God prayed still to be taught of God euen when they were well taught as such as who the more they sawe the lesse they could acknowledge Vse In our learning of this doctrine we must examine our profiting
Papists and others deale with such as stand with Iesus Christ and especially that great Antichrist the Pope to testifie his malice and rage against Christ and his truth striketh with the sentence of excommunication both Kings and people whosoeuer receiue not his marke in their hands and foreheads But our comfort is that Christ is not in such counsells no more then he was in that counsell of the Iewes when the blind man was cast out neither the spirit of Christ presenteth himselfe whatsoeuer they bragge and babble of his infallible assistance And againe such as are cast out of and by such counsells if they stand with Christ and for him he presently taketh them vp and meeteth with them as he did with the blind man ver 35. 3. Such also as wickedly profane this high and great censure pronouncing this fearefull sentence either for trifles seeing the Apostles neuer vsed it but against Apostates incestuous persons blasphemers and great offenders or else for malice pollicie mony or any other end then to bring men to soundnes in the faith Doctr. 2. Both Pastor and people must haue care and conscience that they may become found in the faith both in iudgement which is here aimed at especially as also in practise of which the precept is giuen 1. Tim. 5.7 These things command that they may be blamelesse Neither of them must thinke it inough that in the spirituall life of grace they keepe life and soule together except this life be accompained with health and soundnes for as in our bodily life we thinke it not inough that we liue but we prize our health and soundnes aboue all earthly things skin for skin and all that a man hath will he giue for his life and yet of an vnhealthfull languishing and painfull life men are so wearie as with Iob they would seeke for death as for treasures so much more carefully ought we to preuent and remooue such spirituall diseases and infirmities of our soules which hold vs vnder that we cannot become the louely plants in the Lords house euen fresh and well liking And that we may be better acquainted with the doctrine and our dutie it will not be vnprofitable to note the difference betweene a spirituall disease and a spirituall infirmitie An infirmitie is a rellike of sinne subdued in the beleeuer but still bewraying it selfe like the grudging of a vanquished ague whereby the child of God is prone to the practise of sinne and is made heauie and backward in performing spirituall duties A disease is the ordinarie preuailing of some sinne or sinnes against grace I say not euery preuailing of sinne is a disease for infirmities may sometimes preuaile not only within the soule but also without the bodie as Noahs drunkennes Lots incest c. but that which is vsually preuailing for some time and more frequent maketh a sicknes and disease in the as in the bodie not euery distemper or qualme or headeach is a disease but some distempered humor which hath beene longer on gathering more tedious in affecting and more dangerous in threating the very life of the patient Now both these may be in a regenerate person neither of them in the wicked the former because regeneration is indeed the roote and possibilitie of all graces but not the act of them the latter because in the wicked is no grace at all against which sinne striueth and grudgeth none against which sinne can frequently preuaile for all is corruption all is rottennes and raigning sinne as it is not in the weakest of the regenerate Vse Let euery Christian labour for soundnesse against both these the which beeing so necessarie as whereon the comfort of all Christian life dependeth I will shortly describe 1. some meanes whereby the carefull Christian may both come by and keepe this soundnes and 2. some reasons which shall serue as spurrs in the flanke to prouoke to the more carefull vse of those meanes The meanes which I will propound are three 1. To be carefull to get and keepe a good heart see that the heart be sound that is vpright and sincere for while a man is not heart-sicke all other infirmities and diseases are not vnto death Secondly when the heart is well watch it to keepe it well carefully auoiding whatsoeuer would hinder or hurt the soundnes of it and especially 1. False doctrine which as poison speedily destroyeth the soule whether it be Popish leauen or libertine doctrines of some Protestants 2. Wicked manners which if they be in smaller things are like those slippes and slidings whereby men breake their armes or legges or if in greater sinnes are like those downe falls which threaten the breaking of the necke of the soule and a totall falling from soundnes in religion both these must be shunned because the least sinne breaketh or disioyneth something and so hindreth Christian soundnes Thirdly be carefull to know vse the best meanes of spirituall health and here those which are of daily vse are especially two 1. To keepe a good diet be constant in the word Sacraments prayer keepe thy houres of publike and priuate exercises before the Lord feede vpon the purest foode euen vpon wholesome doctrine not rising out of earth but deliuered from heauen 2. By spirituall physicke or surgerie daily beate downe thy bodie mortifie thy corruptions subdue thy lusts and swelling affections by applying the corrasiues of the lawe and curse of it against the sinnes of thy soule and then bind thy selfe vp with the lenitiues of the Gospell and if thy owne skill faile thee suffer thy selfe if at any time thou be bruised or out of ioynt although it be painfull for the time by Gods skilfull Surgeons to be handled and set in ioynt and so restored to soundnes againe Now the reasons or motiues to the carefull vse of these meanes are fiue 1. drawne from euerie mans necessitie which is not so little as it is little felt and perceiued The poore woman in the Gospel tyred for 12. yeares together with her issue of blood spent all she had on Physitians to cure her of her griefe and the reason was because she felt the paine and tediousnes of it but we who cannot weare out one weeke nor one day in bodily griefe without many complaints can carrie many bloodie issues of sinne in our soules euen from our cradles to our graues and complaine of no griefe no paine and so neuer seeke for cure nay because we deeme our selues sound men we refuse cure when it is offered We reade in the Gospell of a number of people who followed and flocked after Christ for the cure of their bodily maladies and griefes and the casting of deuills out of their bodies but of verie fewe who complained of their spirituall diseases and issues or of the blindnes and deafnes and lamenes of their soules or cryed to haue their sinnes the works of the deuill cast out of their soules And yet is there no necessitie hereof
hereticall seducers vnder this title seeing they tread the s●me steps of the old Puritane heretikes the memorie of whom let it be accursed for euer No no the beleeuer is ●aught daily to pray Lord forgiue vs our debts with the Publican Lord haue mercie on mee a sinner he accounteth his owne righteousnesse as a stained clout well knowing that if he should challenge righteousnesse from himselfe that his owne cloathes would defile him yea let them take much snow and nitre yet of themselue● can they neuer be cleane but that Christ becommeth as purging fire and fullers sope vnto them Now if any yet thinke it vnreasonable to ascribe both puritie and impuritie to the same soule the answer is the Scripture hath taught vs how to conceiue it 1. Ioh. 1.7.8 The blood of Iesus Christ purgeth from all sinne yet if any say he hath no sinne he deceiueth himselfe It is indeede Gods grace and fauour to account the beleeuers his doue and vndefiled and in regard of that perfect robe of righteousnesse he couereth them withall to adde that there is no spot in them but it is grace in them to acknowledge and vtter of themselues that which Christ did of his disciples ye are all cleane but you had neede haue your feete washed seeing that this purging is not wrought all at once in vs but by degrees and that in this life there remaineth alwaies some impuritie to be purged Vse 1. Let none dare to scoffe at the godly vnder this title or any other which the Lord vouchsafeth them hearest thou the Lord accounting his Church as pure as the sunne and perfect and vndefiled in their way calling them his holy ones and saints and thinkest thou this a sufficient ground to scoffe at them or doest thou shewe thy selfe one of this number or rather is it not the part of an Ismaelite and a cursed wretch to scoffe at the sonnes of blessing for the blessings sake nay rather seeing the Lord thus honoureth his seruants and testifieth his loue in passing by all their imperfections as though there were none let such as haue taken occasion to scoffe at Christians from that which is their onely approbation before God euen ioyne themselues to the people of God that as the liberties of Gods people in Persia made many of their enemies become Iewes so those that haue been enemies and readie to offer them violence seeing the fauour of God towards them may be mooued to become friendly vnto them 2. If the deuill doe raise any scoffing Micholl to scorne our sinceritie while we solace our selues before the Lord and if the sonnes of men will not cease to turne our glorie into shame Let not those that feare God be daunted nor giue ground much lesse flie backe for any tearmes of contempt but account this their priuiledge before God a badge of Christs profession and their honour before all the world and thus encourage themselues to striue on to further puritie both of heart and life 1. Of heart because the inside must first be made cleane and 2. of life for when the soule is purified it must worke in the life in obeying the truth through the spirit Thus the Christian man beeing like a cleare chrystall glasse with a light in the midst which must needes appeare through euery part of it hauing within him the light of grace holdeth it forth although in the midst of a froward and wicked generation The reasons to mooue vs hereunto are sundrie 1. In regard of Gods account and estimation of such as shall choose such cleane paths to walke in as we haue heard what neede a man care if all men condemne him so God iustifie and approoue of him and his wayes 2. Hereby onely a man becommeth capable of Gods graces who powreth not his gratious liquors into any fustie or filthie vessell but if any man purge himselfe he shall be a vessell vnto honour sanctified and meete for the Lord and prepared vnto euery good worke 3. All the promises of God are made only to such Dauid breaketh out into a resolued conclusion Psal. 73.1 Surely God is good to Israel to the pure of heart Let his trialls be what they will let his person be neuer so meane let his name be neuer so reproched the Lord respecteth him that is of an holy conuersation there is no difference between Iew and Gentile rich and poore with God so the heart be purified Such are only fit to approach God in prayer who can lift vp pure hands and so offer that cleane offering prophecied of to be lifted vp in euery place God heareth not sinners saith the blind man And the exhortation is let vs drawe neare God with true hearts in assurance of faith sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Heb. 10.22 Nay more the studie of puritie hath the promise of blessednesse of the blessed vision of God for who shall ascend into the mountaine of the Lord and who shall stand in his holy place Euen he that hath innocent hands and a pure heart Seeing then that without it no man shall see God and that all vncleane persons shall be kept without the gates of the Citie let this consideration added to the expectation of such pr●●ises mooue vs to cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God 2. Cor. 7.1 4. This course is a note of a true beleeuer who as in other things so herein is made conformable vnto Christ in purging himselfe as he is pure the scope of the place is to shew this to be a marke of our adoption when knowing our selues subiect to sinne yet we desire and endeauour by all good meanes to cleanse our selues daily propounding herein before vs Christ as a patterne of imitation 5. Lastly let vs be prouoked to a greater care of holines seeing the Lord hath not beene niggardly in affoarding vs meanes aboue many by the which we might be clensed He hath giuen vs his word plentifully wherby faith might be wrought vs to the purifying of our hearts He hath sent out his Sonne whose blood through the eternall spirit offred without spot by himselfe vnto God purgeth our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God he hath giuen vs of his spirit to renew vs by whose blessed dewes we might be besprinkled as with pure water so as we might be iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God He hath sent out his chastisements and afflictions in such greeuous manner as our Fathers neuer saw the like by which as by rubbing and beating and wringing many might be purified and made white He hath sought to purge his floore by sundrie fannes of afflictions by plague and pestilence famine and dearth violent and vnseasonable winds and weathers and by the angrie distemper of
be as carefull to maintaine them for otherwise we loose most pretious things purchased with the pretious blood of the Sonne of God the commandement is to stand fast in the libertie in which Christ hath set vs free we must suffer no cauiller to infringe our charter nor bind vs where Christ hath loosed vs. If the Lord haue pronounced all things that is indifferent pure free to the pure beleeuer let a Popish spirit come boast of his vowe of voluntarie pouertie of single life of abstinence from flesh c. we haue learned otherwise from this Scripture that not onely all estates bondage or libertie riches or pouertie marriage or single life are alike vnto God but also that all creatures are sanctified to the sanctified receiuer and consequently that all their vowes besides that they are out of the power of him that voweth doe nothing else but reuoke and abolish Christian libertie And lastly we are to testifie our thankefulnes for such liberties purchased especially by abhorring the wickednesse of Poperie which bringeth vpon men a more detestable bondage then that of Egypt 1. by binding them to seeke for righteousnes and iustification before God by the workes of the lawe 2. by impos●●● a masse of traditionarie precepts and commandements of men 〈◊〉 by 1. they steale away this dearely purchased libertie 2. hold the Church vnder rudiments now after that faith is come 3. robbe Christ of his honour by lessening his benefits and darkening his grace 4. set themselues in the roome of Christ in making lawes to bind the conscience vpon paine of damnation although God is the Lord of it Thus much of the former branch of this 15. verse But vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their mindes and consciences are defiled This opposition sheweth the truth of the exposition of the former words for as by the pure were meant the regenerate and beleeuers so by the impure person the Apostle affirmeth that he meaneth the vnregenerate and vnbeleeuer who wanting faith whereby he might partake with Christ and all his benefits whose righteousnesse and innocencie is the onely lauer of the Church by which also he might haue his heart within him purified in part and his outward conuersation cleansed from dead workes wherein he walketh he is no better then a leper in Gods eyes ouerspread with naturall corruption and outwardly spotted and speckled like the leopard and in regard of the whole man like a blackeamoore who cannot change his hewe for such an impuritie is here asctibed to the vnbeleeuer as not onely outwardly runneth vpon him but such a one as hath taken and corrupted both the inferiour and the most supreame and excellent faculties of his soule euen his minde and his conscience By the minde is meant the whole vnderstanding part of the soule which beeing the eie of the soule carrieth with it reason iudgement and election The pollution of which is to be taken vp with darkenes and blindnes 1. Cor. 2.14 to be filled with vanitie Eph. 4.17 with fleshlinesse Colos. 2.18 in so much as all the naturall wisedome of man is fleshlie and deuillish By conscience is meant that facultie of the soule which by applying particular things iudged of and done doth determine them either with or against them which depending vpon the former must necessarily be ledde into the errors of it no otherwise then one blind man is ledde by an other into a ditch The pollution of it is when it is either idle or ill occupied the former when it is sleepie sensles or feared doing nothing at all neither accusing nor excusing the latter when it doth both these but neither of them as it ought but accuseth where it should excuse and excuse where it ought to accuse Now both these being thus polluted let the vnbeleeuer turne himselfe to any thing in generall without himselfe as all things in generall fall vnder the vnderstanding or turne him to any particular thought word action concerning himselfe which onely the conscience hath to doe with in all these he is polluted so as nothing to him can be pure So as we must here conceiue of an absolute impuritie ascribed to the vnbeleeuer which is the onely difference in the opposition for whereas puritie was in the former branch attributed to the beleeuer in some respect onely for 1. the best are encombred with originall sinne 2. but in part and not fully regenerate 3. ouertaken not seldome with actuall transgression which may and doth make them still crie out with Dauid Lord create a cleane heart within me This impuritie is absolutely and without any restraint ascribed to vnbeleeuers and vnconuerted men And in this branch also the Apostle bendeth himselfe against the error of the Iewish teachers who were verie strict and curious least they should be outwardly by this or that meate day garment or otherwise be defiled for he would haue them conceiue that he spake of no such thing neither were these the subiects wherein their impuritie did so much consist but in such a thing as stucke nearer them then any outward thing yea then their verie skinnes euen in vnbeleefe and consequently in such a power of sinne in their hearts as made all things though in their nature and institution neuer so good yet vnto them and in their vse no otherwise vncleane then a fustie vessell corrupteth the sweetest wines that can be powred into it And therefore would he haue these ceremonie-masters to turne their eyes into themselues and looke into their inside and then they shall see themselues bootelesly to employ al their paines in keeping themselues from outward pollution so long as they carrie that within them which defileth euery thing they meddle withall Whence wee learne sundrie instructions Doct. 1. We haue here a good argument of the diuinitie of Scripture in that it can and doth as God himselfe enter vpon and iudge the thoughts of men and of men themselues not as men from things without but from things within euen according to their cleannes or vncleanes before God From this argument the Apostle prooueth the same thing Hebr. 4.12 the word of God is liuely and mightie in operation and deuideth and cutteth a sunder the soule and spirit that is it worketh not only vpon the inferiour faculties which are lesse pure but vpon the purest and most supreame part of the soule called the spirit and the minde and by Paul the spirit of the minde for nothing is so secret in the soule but it lyeth vnder the stroke of the word which pearceth as farre as the eye of the author of it to whom all things are naked and open vers 13. No Anotomist can by cutting vp one part of the bodie after another so manifestly discouer to the eye the seuerall parts of man as doth the word and the spirit therein discouer and reprooue the most inward thoughts such a light carrieth with it as chaseth away the darknesse
vnto them to be instituted in all discipline and instruction whence the whole information of youth and that generall education which they receiue from Masters or Tutors is by the best humane writer vpon that argument expressed by this same word Secondly he taketh occasion hence to enter into more particular description of such vertues as should cause the faces of the younger women to shine and these be seauen in number 1. Loue of their husbands 2. Loue of their children 3. Temperance 4. Chastitie 5. Home keeping 6. Goodnesse 7. Subiection or obedience vnto their husbands Thirdly he enforceth the necessary practise of all these duties by a disparate argument namely the reproach and blasphemy which otherwise in defect of them will redound vnto the word of God of which three points we are to speake in order Out of the first of which we learne Doctr. What must be the fruit of the elder womens carriage and speach namely the making of the younger wise in the generall wisedome of godlines and honestie Euery practise and euery speach of theirs ought to be either a precept or example of wholsome instruction Prov. 31.6 The vertuous woman openeth her mouth in wisedome the fruit of her lips yeeldeth instruction and her life is a shining lampe which doctrine as it is cleare both here and elsewhere in the Scriptures so is it of exceeding profitable vse 1. To older women to teach them warines in all their words and behauiours and looke to their carriage both abroad and at home as well within their owne houses as the house of God whose eyes are euery where beholding the good and the badde euen in the denne with Daniel and the dungeon with Ioseph that they may walke wisely euen in the midst of their houses so setting themselues coppies of religious conuersation to those ouer whom they are set fasting praying reading instructing in priuate in which priuate duties they shall meete perhappes with much more comfort although publike duties be more powerfull that in all common actions also of life they may bring them to this touch whether they will instruct others in wisedome or no. By which triall if vnpartiall not a few shall find their behauiours and speaches fitted to traine the younger sort to prattle and plaie the busie bodies to scoffe to quip raile heartburne their betters to instruct them to become as bold in behauiour as souldiers to court it like curtezans and at the best to fill their heads with old fables and follies which corrupt minds and breed to more vngodlines whereas they ought in these yeares to account all that time of their life lost wherein the younger sort gathereth not some vertue or good from them And although this lesson especially be directed to elder women yet is it profitably to be extended vnto all Christians of what sex or age soeuer euery of whom ought to sanctifie their speaches and actions by the word and by prayer if euer they would attaine this high point of Christianitie of becomming shining lights and promoters of the glorie and kingdome of God aswell in others as in themselues not speaking or performing any thing vnwarrantably rashly or carelesly or without this aime and end set as a white before their eye namely the edifying of themselues and others 1. Cor. 10.31 2. Whereas it is commonly but inconsideratly thought to be only a ministeriall dutie to make men and women wise vnto saluation we see hence the contrarie that it belongeth not only to other men but euen to women also but with this difference and reseruation that the Mininistry and Ministers are appointed the ordinarie principall and publike meanes of begetting and preseruing men and women vnto God but this more priuate and common instruction is appointed for the encrease and strengthning in that grace giuen Againe the Minister like a good Master builder is to laie the foundation and the rest of the people are like labourers bring filling to the worke and house of God and may not depart from his precepts and directions and therefore Iude exhorteth the Saints to edifie one another in their most holy faith Let not women therefore be ashamed thus to labour with the Ministers in the Gospel no more then those holy women which laboured with Paul nay rather because it is a good note that their names are written in the booke of life let them be incouraged vnto this holy precedencie and testification of Christianitie in euery word action and behauiour neither let them make daintie fearing that in these corrupted daies none will be hastie to follow their right ordered steppes for seeing this is the ordinance of God appointed to this end and vse it shall prosper to the same purpose in such as whom the Lord hath any delight in to build them vp further when they shall heare the gracious speaches of their lippes and see the grace of their liues and as for others let them at their perill neglect their owne duties yet shall it not be without vse in them also as not without comfort to their owne soules in the day of the Lord. That they loue their husbands Now our Apostle teacheth younger women how they should carie themselues in their familes and propoundeth many marriage vertues which ought to discouer themselues in all women called vnto that estate and in younger women are speciall ornaments whose loue modestie chastitie humilitie and subiection should be as the vailes of their heads and as the chaine and garland of their necks The first of these is loue challenging rightly the first place because it is the leader of all the rest and the cheifest of them easily drawing the other after This loue must be set vpon two obiects 1. their husbands 2. their children for this is such an affection as is to be set vpon their owne proprieties and not any besides Obiect But this may seeme a needelesse precept for is it not naturall for women to loue their husbands and children or can a woman ●ate her owne flesh can the members but loue the head or can any monster of women so farre loose naturall instinct as to forget the fruit of her wombe Salomon commanding the child to be diuided knew out of his wisedome that nature could not but worke and bewray it selfe in one of the parties Answ. Many by Gods iust iudgement and their owne corruption are become without naturall affection whome this precept taketh hold vpon 2. The best nature of all if it be not extinguished as in the former yet is greatly corrupted and can produce nothing pleasing to God and therefore hath the Lord bound women to this affection of loue by a surer and straighter bond then that of corrupted nature hauing by his owne commandement laid it vpon them as a calling to walke in that the performance of it might be an obedience of faith and not a worke of naturall instinct a dutie of conscience as well as of affection 3. Though
an honest and peaceable man he cannot preach indeede but he liues as well and doth as much good as if he preached we would not change him for the best preacher of them all But where is this harmonie of doctrine and life in such a one know we not that the best liues of the best men are but seruants and attendants to their doctrine and like the miracles of Christ which serued to prepare confirme prouoke and condemne but conuerted not the beholders this is the worke of the Gospel in the ministerie of it which is the power of God to the saluation of euerie beleeuer Was it euer heard that a dumbe Minister by his life conuerted a soule to God and what is his life but a liuing out of a lawfull calling an iniurious robbing men of their goods which he before God hath no right vnto and a cruell murthering of their soules for want of knowledge And if the question were made to me whether good doctrine or good life might better be spared in a minister I should answer readily that to preach well and liue ill were farre better and more eligible then to liue honestly and not to preach seeing the former bringeth ruine vpon himselfe alone this latter both vpon himselfe and his people Secondly as there must be good doctrine so there must be good life too for a Minister may not thinke he hath done enough when he hath taught others if himselfe yet remaine vntaught like some statue which pointeth the way to passengers but it selfe standeth a stocke still and mooues not but he must first be a good man and then teach others so to be In the old Testament the Priest must first be cleansed himselfe and then cleanse others first wash himselfe and then sprinkle others first sanctifie himselfe and then others so in the new we must first become lights our selues and then enlighten others first approach neere God our selues and then bring others before him for this is the propertie of a good sheepheard to goe before his sheepe that they may followe him But all this while we may not thinke that the authoritie of the word standeth vpon the good or bad life of men which hath a better bottome of his owne to stand vpon but yet it is a further seale of the truth of it vpon the simple and that sundrie wayes which I will not stand vpon These two make a sweete harmonie especially within a mans owne conscience when he can appeale vnto his fellow-ministers as Paul to Timothie and say you haue fully knowne my doctrine my manner of liliuing c. and vnto the consciences of Gods people calling them to witnesse both of his painfull preaching 1. Thess. 2.9 as also of his holy and vnblameable behauiour vers 10. yea euen vnto Gods tribunall with much comfort at the ende of his dayes as Paul did Act. 20.19.20.26 Which two as they must conspire so the minister is to be an example in both 1. Tim. 4.12 be an example in word conuersation c. The Apostles were as lights vpon hills as starres in the heauens Pastors are called to be patternes to their flockes the great Pastor of the sheepe our Lord Iesus set himselfe a coppie vnto all Christians both in holy doctrine and in blessed example of life Great is the force of godly example especially in the Pastor both to the beleeuer to prouoke him and to the vnbeleeuer either to bring him to a liking of the religion of God or to condemne him who hath both seen heard yet hath not beleeued euen as Noah condemned the old world by making of the Arke which are the reasons why the Lord hath euer scattered some of his children here and there a saint or two euen in Neroes house a Lot in Sodome and as a lilly riseth vp sometimes among thornes so doe the sonnes of God in the midst of a froward generation that they might shine as purer lights in the darkenes of the world round about them Vse 1. These are true notes to discerne a true Minister by pure doctrine and holy life If you consult with a Papist he will decypher you one of his Priests by his mitre crosyer staffe copes and other garments by his oyntings shauings c. which indeede are markes of the beast but not a word of life and doctrine whence we know them to be theeues not entring in by the doore but by the window to robbe and steale 2. This requireth the presence and residence of the minister with his flocke for if hee be ordinarily absent how can he be an example vnto them Thirdly it proclaimeth woe vpon them who by contrarie practise to their preaching giue occasion of stumbling to the people as Elies sonnes did better it were that such had neuer beene borne then so to strengthen the hands of sinners besides that by his owne mouth he shall be iudged Fourthly it stirreth vp the men of God to care of their liues to which we in this calling might be mooued by sundrie other strong reasons 1. We stand before God and therefore we must put off our shooes wash and cleanse our selues Ier. 15.19 If thou turne thou shalt stand before mee 2. We shall be better enabled to our duties both because God teacheth his secrets to his seruants the Prophets as also the doctrine shal be more acceptable and lesse excepted against Herod heard Iohn because he was a good man 3. We else pull the sinnes of many vpon vs and harden a number in the same sinnes the wicked Iewes could alleadge the Priests examples for their Idolatrie Ier. 44.17 and Ioh. 7.48 Doe any of the Rulers and Pharisies beleeue in him 4. He that diuorceth godly life from pure doctrine shall be the least that is haue no place in the kingdome of heauen Fifthly it teacheth all hearers to take benefite by the examples of their teachers who labour faithfully in the Gospel among them for must we studie to shew our selues examples in vaine Philip. 3.17 Brethren be followers of me and 4.9 The things which yee haue heard and seene in me those things doe Heb. 13.7 Remember them that haue the ouersight of you whose faith follow considering what hath beene the end of their conuersation The examples of the godly are called a cloud of witnesses to put vs in minde that as the Israelites were mooued as the cloud mooued so should it be with vs cast our eyes vpon the cloud of the faithful pastors especially to follow thē so far as they follow Christ which who so refuse to doe they haue three feareful witnesses against them the word of God their owne consciences the Ministers liues And here we must be put in mind to go one step beyond ordinarie for many cast their eyes vpon the examples of their Ministers to spie if they can obtaine some libertie to the flesh through their frailtie but if they cannot the most thinke it sufficient that they can commend
in speach and gesture before his master and behind his backe but especially in the free obedience of all his lawfull yea and vnequall commandements so as they be not vnlawfull Coloss. 3.22 seruants obey your masters in all things that is in all lawfull and bodily things And the same Apostle mentioneth both in the Ephesians and Colossians bodily masters to shew that so farre as the soule is not hurt nor the conscience wounded the rule of the seruants obedience is not his owne but his masters will be it irkesome difficult wearisome Luk. 17.7 the wearie and toyled seruant may not come out of the field to ease and refresh himselfe at his pleasure but waite still vpon the hand of his master and sit downe and eate at his masters appointment and not before as that parable teacheth 3. In patient induring without resistance rebukes and corrections although bitter yea and vniust 1. Pet. 2.18.19 seruants be subiect to your masters not onely the good and courteous but to the froward and bitter for it is praiseworthy in conscience towards God to suffer greefe wrongfully When Agar was roughly dealt withall by Sarah she runne away and would not endure her but the Lord by his Angel controlleth this course and giueth her better counsell returne home to thy mistres and humble thy selfe vnder her hand or suffer thy selfe to be afflicted by her Quest. But may not a seruant auoid the rigour and extremitie of the vniust anger of his master Ans. It may be lawfull without despising of the masters authoritie to giue way for the present vnto his furie and if conueniently it may be to withdraw himselfe ●ill the rage be past and the storme blowne ouer as Dauid conueied himselfe from Saul and the Egyptian that directed Dauid to the Amalekites made him to sweare by God that he would not deliuer him to his master from whom he had fled neither did Dauid sinne in taking that oath because of that law Deut. 23.15 If a seruant had fled from his masters rage especially if an Heathen who cared but a little for their seruants liues he must not forthwith be deliuered to his master but humanitie must be exercised towards him they must adde no affliction vnto him but kindly intreate him till mediation may be made and his Master appeased with him Hence we note that religion and the doctrine of the Gospel freeth no man from any dutie but rather fasteneth it vpon him the Apostle saith not that seruants beeing now brought to the faith are no longer to be commanded by their masters but by Christ but writeth to them not as free but as seruants still and inforceth their subiection euen to vnbeleeuing masters and elsewhere writing vnto masters he forbiddeth them not to exercise rule and dominion ouer their seruants but only teacheth them after what manner to weld their authoritie And indeed this is a point which occasioned much trouble in the Apostles daies both vnto masters and seruants for they hearing of a libertie purchased by Christ to beleeuers in him they presently begunne to cast vp all and would not serue any longer especially vnbeleeuing masters but would be at their owne hands against which conceit the Apostles Paul Peter Iohn much laboured still recalling seruants to their former subiection and obedience Let not now any obiect that this seruile condition is against the law of nature is a fruite of sinne is against the law of Christ who hath purchased such libertie as now in him all are one is against the Apostles rule be not any longer the seruants of men which things surely the seruants of those times and some since haue taken hold of For 1. euery subiection is not against the law of pure nature who can denie but that in innocencie there was a politike subiection of the wife to the husband the children to the parents and this was no fruit of sinne although the tediousnesse and painefulnes of it came in by the fall 2. Christ hath purchased a libertie for soule and bodie but we must be content with the first fruits of it here in this world and those are the spirituall libertie we haue from Satan sinne and condemnation which shall bring on that perfect freedome we expect in heauen when we shall not only be freed from the power of sinne as here but euen from all molestation of it and not only set free from the euil of seruitude as here we are by Christ bu● euen from it selfe 3. In Christ all are one indeed but in regard 1. of the spirituall and inward man 2. of the meanes of leading men to happinesse but in respect of the outward man they abide master and seruants still Prince and people still bond and free still noble and ignoble still Paul hauing conuerted Onesimus a runnagate seruant kept him not with him at Rome because he was called nor freed him from the seruice of his master but sent him to Philemon againe who although he must in regard of the faith account him a brother yet his outward condition was to be a seruant still 4. We must be no longer the seruants of men namely in respect of the inner man and the conscience which in seruants is as free from men as in Masters no master can command that for it is onely to be commanded by God but the Apostle speaketh not of bodily seruice to men neither is there any word which belongeth to the doctrine of faith that is a maintainer of any licentious libertie nay religion teacheth them that as Christ hath set them free so also that they shall not vse that libertie as a cloake of maliciousnesse and licentiousnesse but carrie themselues the rather as becommeth the seruants of God and the freemen of Iesus Christ. Vse 1. If this be so let Masters haue a care if they would haue seruants subiect vnto them to choose such as are religious and frame to religion such as they haue chosen that knowing what it is to be subiect to their master in heauen conscience may compell them to be subiect vnto their earthly masters also Wouldest thou haue thy seruant to please thee in all things worke him to please God in all things Wouldest thou finde him faithfull vnto thee see then that he be a Ioseph who will not sinne and be vnfaithfull to the Lord. Wouldst thou haue him a profitable seruant to thee see he be an Onesimus and then howsoeuer in times past he was neuer so vnprofitable yet now will he become profitable to thee and others Many masters feele the iust smart of vndutifull vnfaithfull vnprofitable servants to the ruine often of themselues and their familyes because they haue no care of their choise nor to frame them to godlinesse and prof●ciencie in grace whome they haue chosen 2. This meeteth with the sinne of many seruants who lift vp their hearts aboue the estate of subiection and in their hearts despise the person or place of their gouernours and
God nor Baal they can well away with either religion but care greatly for neither 3. And a third sort goe so iust betweene a ciuill and religious life that euen while they professe religion it is verie hard to say whether nature or religion giueth the stroake to their actions but zeale to the truth haue they none vnto which lukwarme Laodiceans being neither hote nor cold that coūsell of the holy Ghost is fit Be zealous and amend for else the Lord will spue them out of his mouth 4. Some are zealous but either without knowledge or beyond the right vnderstanding of the word affection leading it and not iudgement at least rightly enformed and this tendeth but to their owne and the hurt of the Church 5. Some are zealous in and for wickednesse Zealous persecutors as Paul before his conuersion on such fellowes as were those fortie that tooke an oath that they would not eate nor drinke till they had slaine Paul Zealous railers against God against his word his ministers and seruants against the strict obseruation of the Sabbath against the most conscionable duties of watching against sinne or of working of righteousnesse vnto which they are sworne enemies themselues and in others account it mere follie and madnesse all their zeale is against zeale But let vs whome God hath taken into his schoole to teach vs better things be careful to raise this grace out of the ashes of it and consider 1. how zealous the Papists be in their owne inventions and for the traditions of their fathers and shal not we for the truth 2. the more resistance it hath the greater is the glorie to hold it out 3. how that cold Christians haue but cold comfort from God in themselues and from their best workes because they come short of this precept which requireth that euerie C●ristian be zealous of good workes Vers. 15. These things speake and exhort and rebuke with all authoritie See that no man despise thee The Apostle here repeateth the precept which he gaue to Titus in the beginning of this chapter contracting and reducing the speciall offices of a faithfull minister to three heads 1. doctrine These things speake 2. exhortation and exhort 3. reproofe and rebuke Secondly he prescribeth the manner how he shall performe all these with all authoritie Thirdly because Titus was young and want of yeares might seeme to denie him that authoritie which was meete for an Euangelist he backeth him herein in the last words let no man despise thee Which words although they may be conceiued as a charge to his hearers yet I take it rather to be a precept to himselfe that he should not suffer any to contemne him Quest. But how could Titus or how can any other Minister hinder men from despising them seeing the world is euerie where so full of mockers Answ. There will indeede alwaies be mockers of the best Ministers and despisers of their persons yet must the Minister so carrie his doctrine with power and authoritie and his life with grauitie and integritie as he giue no cause of iust contempt of himselfe nay rather that hereby he get himselfe reuerence that not the best onely but euen those which are not the verie worst who with religion and conscience haue put off all forehead and humanitie may beginne to feare and stand in awe of him which course seemeth to be closely commended to Titus So was Timothie commanded to free his youth from contempt 1. Tim. 4.12 Let no man despise thy youth but how shall hee effect this the next words shewe vs But become vnto them which beleeue an example in word in conuersation in loue in spirit in faith in purenesse Hauing spoken before of teaching exhortation and reproofe in their seuerall places we will onely note in this former part what it is that the minister is tyed vnto in his teaching exhortation and reproofes and in the performance of euerie part of his ministeriall office namely vnto the word These things saith our Apostle for this purpose hath the Lord in great wisedome furnished the Scriptures to make the man of God able both to teach instruct and improoue so as he neede goe no further to seeke for profitable things Which teacheth such as will stand in Gods counsell to fetch from hence all their doctrines all their proofes all their exhortations and all their reproofes for so shall they be iust so shall they be powerfull to worke a worke of edification and so shall they be vnresistable in the consciences of men These things if men would tie themselues vnto they should encrease men with the encreasings of God in spirituall wisedome watchfulnesse and the feare of God Then should we not meet with so many pretors for sinne and libertie to the flesh straining their wittes to legitimate bastardly broods of opinions which the Scripture neuer acknowledged hers Nor so many who in their reproofes glad the hearts of the impenitent and make heauie the hearts of those to whom the Lord hath spoken peace who strike at the best things and men and so as soone as euer they haue deliuered a truth in thesi least they should leaue it while it is true misapply it in the hypothesis girding at godlinesse as too much scrupulositie and precisenesse accounting conscience an hypocrite and the feare of God dissembling before men Hence are discouered as sinnefull all reproofes of sinne by iesting enterluding and stage representations in which fooles make a mocke of sinne and open a publike schoole of all lewdnesse and iniquitie and if any deuill or sinne be cast out there it is by Belzebub the Prince of the deuils Further all reproofes by satyrizing and by slanderous libells and secret calumniations all which commonly wrecke themselues rather vpon the persons then sinnes of men are here reprooued which although they be indeede sharpe and biting meanes yet hath the Lord appointed fitter and sharper arrowes to smite his enemies withall euen sound and sufficient conuictions out of the word which is able to wound and daunt kings themselues and prescribed them also to be publikely drawne and shot in such graue reuerent and seemely sort as is befitting 1. both the persons and calling of the reproouer 2. the things themselues which are weightie and serious as also 3. the presence of God and his congregation whose matters are debated and whose sentence against sinne is in denouncing and executing Small wisedome therefore it is for men in these cases of the saluation and damnation of men to suffer their wits to play vpon sinne so lightly and iestingly as becommeth rather some vaine spectacle or professed iester then either the errand of the Lord or a messenger from the Lord of hosts The second point is the manner of deliuering doctrine exhortation and reproofe with all authoritie Doctr. The word of God must be deliuered in such manner as the maiestie and authoritie of it be still reserued vnto it 1. Pet. 4.11 If any man
such doctrine as Ministers may not teach Nature desireth to change pasture often and the eare so farre as vncircumcised is Athenian itching after nouelties children would be in newe lessons before the old be halfe learned so Christians cannot away to dwell in that pure doctrine which would lead them in true godlinesse whereby often by the iudgement of God they forfeit their faithfull Pastors and in Gods wrath haue hirelings set ouer them that feede them with wind they desire fine words and profound matter and are wearie of plaine doctrines and they haue a pickt language and vaine speculations they aske and haue But no sooner is Manna loathed but quailes are rained but with vengeance it is flesh but a meat that rotteth in the mouth euen betweene the teeth Vse 3. In priuate conferences man with man auoid these vaine questions that all our priuate cōmunication may tend to edification fathers must teach their children with Abraham in Gods wayes children must depend vpon their fathers and aske them of such things see Psal. 44.1 Mothers must teach their young children the Scriptures as Eunicha did Timothie Masters of familyes should make their families petty schooles and nurseries of diuinitie we reade how Apollos a great man proceeded a doctor in Aquilaes house our priuate houses should be Churches or Chappels therefore such idle and vaine questions should find neither time nor place in these our priuate Churches Vers. 10. Reiect him that is an heretike after once or twise admonition 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe The fittest dependance of these words with the former I conceiue to be this Paul hauing exhorted Titus both to teach the truth according to godlinesse as also to resist all such foolish and vaine doctrine as might do hurt in the Church of God Titus might obiect This indeede is my dutie wherein I entend to exercise my selfe with diligence but when I haue laboured and done all I can many there are who will not yeeld to the truth nor submit themselues to this ordinance of God how am I to carrie my selfe toward such Ans. The Apostle carefull to preuent all such things as he foresaw might be hurtfull to the Church giueth direction in these two verses how to proceede in this businesse also The former giuing direction and laying downe the dutie and the latter enforcing the same by moment of reason In the former are three things to be considered 1. the persons against whom Titus is to deale here called heretikes 2. The direction how he is to behaue himselfe towards them reiect them 3. The orderly manner of proceeding after once or twise admonition The latter verse containeth the reason of this seueritie because such persons are incurable and incorrigible which is prooued by two arguments 1. such a one is subuerted that is turned or cast off the foundation 2. he sinneth against his owne conscience beeing damned of his owne selfe that is he wittingly and willingly spurneth against that truth of which his conscience is by the former admonition convinced For the first who is an Heretike Answ. He that professing Christ yet inuenteth or maintaineth any errour against the foundation of religion and that with obstinacie For the opening of which description three things are to be noted First that an heretike must professe Christ. For Iewes Turkes or Pagans cannot properly be Heretikes although they fight against Christ and all religion in all the foundations of it These are more properly called Heathens Infidells and Atheists without God in the world But the person whom Titus hath here to deale withall is one within the Church and cast off from a foundation vpon which he seemed to stand Secondly he must maintaine an error in doctrine for if men erre in practise they are rather hypocrites and profane wretches and this error must be fundamentall that is ouerturning some ground or article of our faith for it will not make a man an heretike not to beleeue the fables of Saint Francis although Pope Benedict 4. so determine Nay if a man should hold something wherein the Scriptures are his aduersarie as that an oath is not to be taken and warre is not to be made by Christians such a one were in a grosse error but not presently sunke into heresie But if any man shall maintaine iustification by works a daily sacrifice for satisfaction for sinne or any other righteousnesse or worke to stand before God in besides Christ the defence of this will easily prooue heresie And hereby the Popish doctrine is clearely prooued hereticall Thirdly this error must be willfully and obstinatly mainteined for he must reiect admonition and striue after conuiction and this properly maketh an heretike For euery one that holdeth an hereticall opinion is not an heretike a man may by simplicitie leuitie or rashnes or gentlenes of nature be drawne into such an opinion but if admonished of his error he contend not but is readie to yeeld vp himselfe to the perswasion of truth he is no heretike For these three things make vp an heretike 1. error 2. conuiction 3. obstinacie or weddednes to his opinion Hence first note by the way what an heauie thing we charge him with whom we brand with the title of an heretike for we charge him to be one who resteth not in the wholsome word but maintaineth such an error as hath turned him off his foundation one that contemneth the iudgement of the Church despiseth wholsome admonitions continueth in his damnable opinion against the light of his minde against the check and accusation of his conscience and beeing condemned of himselfe heapeth vp sinne vpon sinne All which censure if we shall hastily passe we shall hardly auoid rash iudgement for if euery error in diuinitie presently made an heretike the Apostles themselues had beene no other then heretiks who at first were so erronious and ignorant in many things of the greatest moment in religion What a false witnesse then hath that Apostate Church of Rome passed against ours and all the reformed Churches whose teachers in all their sermons and writings stile vs by no other name then heretikes whereas they cannot shew wherein they haue conuinced vs to haue departed from the Catholike and Apostolike faith and much lesse that we haue with pertinacie and against our owne consciences maintained any falsehood Indeed if our rule be their Canon law which iudgeth him an heretike who speaketh against the Romish Church or obeyeth not whatsoeuer the Pope decreeth we cannot auoid that name Or if we should teach as they doe and that after conuiction that the Saints in heauen are mediators by their merit and prayer that prayer is to be made to Saints and dead men that we can be iustified by the merit of our workes by fasting prayer pilgrimage or any such obseruance that concupisence is no sinne in the regenerate that a man can perfectly fulfill the law that Saint Dominike
deeds denie him but this is not that which is in our question which is of diuersitie in religion and not of infidelitie or hypocrisie where the same religion is professed the former is a barre of marriage but not the latter Obiect But then you will say that such marriages made ought to be dissolued● I answer 1. that marriage is an externall thing and properly hindereth not faith and saluation of it selfe and 2. that it is not against christianitie to keepe contracts made with Turks and heathen 3. Besides in the Apostles dayes the faithfull beeing married to an infidell he was not to put her away 1. Cor. 7.12 if she would abide with him But as M. Zanchius after he had learnedly discussed this question and propounded reasons out of the Scriptures Fathers Councels and ciuill lawe that such mariages ought to be disanulled yet doubtfully leaueth it to the iudgement of the Church so will not I be too bold in defining this great question Vers. 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe Hauing in the former verse shewed both the persons to be proceeded against called heretikes and the manner of proceeding against them namely after once or twice admonition to auoid them Now in this verse our Apostle discendeth to giue some reasons of this seueritie which are two in number First he is such a one as is subuerted or turned off the foundation Secondly he wittingly and willingly spurneth against the knowne truth sparkling and shining in his conscience and therefore is remedilesse and desperatly incurable For the former By beeing peruerted or turned off the foundation is not to be meant any falling off from the foundation of Gods election which abideth so sure as that not any one of Gods elect shall euer fall away as Hymencus and Philetus did but a falling off from some fundamentall points of Christian religion held and maintained by the Church whereof this partie yet seemeth a member As for example The maine foundation aymed at in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles is to teach that Iesus Christ God and man is the alone and perfect Sauiour of his Church and whosoeuer teacheth or holdeth any doctrine tending to ouerthrowe either of his natures or anie of his offices he is truely said to be turned off that foundation Againe the maine grounds of all our religion for matter either of faith or manners are the commandements of the law and promises of the Gospel and whosoeuer either directly or by direct consequent ouerthroweth any of the commandements of God or articles of our faith he is truly said to be turned off the foundation Now this cannot euery error in religion doe For to keepe our Apostles allegorie comparing the profession of religion to the building of a great house some errors are lesser and as it were besides the foundation such as may be thought as the breaking downe of some window some greater as the breaking downe of some side of the house and yet the house standeth although much defaced But some are such as ouerturne the whole house and rase the verie foundations of all such as is the doctrine of iustification by workes which point alone putteth men quite out of their estate in Christ and shutteth them out of the kingdome of heauen Gal. 5.2.4 Whence might be obserued how needfull a thing it is for euery one to be well grounded in points of Catechisme which is a thing most dangerously neglected by the most and beeing so grounded to looke well to themselues least they be turned off from them and so depart from the holy commandements for thus the end of such would be far worse then the beginning But we will come to the latter degree of this sinne Hee sinneth beeing damned of himselfe that is he wilfully sinneth or addeth sinne to sinne not only by maintaining an errour but 1. against the light of the word shining in his conscience 2. against the wholesome admonition of his faithfull pastor yea and of the whole Church the voice of which he will not heare 3. euen against besides other convictions that of his owne conscience whereby he is resolued to take part with the wickednesse of his heart and persist an heretike in his heresie This man if he had no other iudge is iudged and condemned of himselfe and sheweth that he is damned of himselfe Obiect But there is no man so monstrous and gracelesse that will persist in error against the light of his conscience Answ. Yes and this commeth partly by the naturall impuritie of conscience which can excuse not only intentions vnwarrantable but euen sinnes committed against the law As in the young man Mar. 10.20 who boasted that he though he had liued in the breach of all had kept all the commandements from his youth and 2. partly by the increase of that corruption through a sencelesse numbednesse and vnfeelingnes which springeth from a custome of sinne and 3. especially by the iust iudgement of God who striketh them with a reprobate sence by withdrawing euen the very light of nature from those who would faine put it out or deteine it in vnrighteousnesse and by deliuering them vp to strong delusions that they might beleeue lies who would not embrace the truth in the loue of it Now he that is such a wilfull offender and knowne so to be must be auoided But it is hard will some say to know any man thus to sinne Answ. Because we speake not now of the iudgement of certaintie which is proper to God whereby he alone can iudge of the finall estate of a man but only of the iudgement of humane wisedome which is giuen to the Church who iudgeth only for the present by the present fruits it is not so hard to doe for such a man hath beene brought to conference to the tryall of the Scriptures to the analogie of faith and to the admonition of the Church by which his reasons haue bin refelled his iudgement informed his conscience conuinced himselfe forewarned of his danger but he obstinately hath refused all these good meanes and persisteth in his error Where note 1. What patience the Lord vseth in his iust proceedings euen against the worst men whom he will not haue condemned nor cast out of the Church vpon suspicions or surmises no nor presently after an open sinne is committed but their must be a time between wherein the Church must rightly informe her selfe that she may know the nature and degree of the sinne before she turne her to any censure or sentence Yea and further the sinne beeing apparant she must not reiect any till all good meanes of reclaiming haue beene in vaine vsed Which may teach vs that to heape or hasten excommunications ipso facto or as it is often before the partie can come to the knowledge or suspition of any such proceeding is to swarue from the rules of the word and those weightie