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A09383 A commentarie or exposition, vpon the fiue first chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians: penned by the godly, learned, and iudiciall diuine, Mr. W. Perkins. Now published for the benefit of the Church, and continued with a supplement vpon the sixt chapter, by Rafe Cudworth Bachelour of Diuinitie Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Cudworth, Ralph, 1617-1688. 1604 (1604) STC 19680; ESTC S114465 595,047 756

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are now constant but if triall shall come our frailtie shall appeare That our frailtie and weaknes may not be hurtfull to vs we must remember two rules One is not to haue a conceit of any thing in vs but to hold our faith and religion in feare as in the presence of God Rom. 11. 20. the second to take heede that there be not in vs an euill corrupt and dissembling heart For if our heart be naught our faith cannot be good Heb. 4. 12. 6 As Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed to him for righteousnes 7 Knowye therefore that they which are of faith are the children of Abraham The words Euen as Abraham c. haue reference to that which went before on this manner Ye Galatians receiued the spirit by my doctrine and my doctrine was the preaching of iustification of faith without workes which doctrine is like and sutable to the example of Abraham who beleeued God and it was imputed for iustice Here Paul sets downe the second argument whereby he prooues the truth of his doctrine And it is framed thus As Abraham was iustified so are the children of Abraham Abraham was iustified by iustice imputed and apprehended by faith vers 6. Therefore the children of Abraham are thus iustified This conclusion is the principall question it is not here expressed but in the roome thereof a declaration is made who are the true children of God namely they that are of Abraham in respect of faith That which is saide here of Abraham is a maine ground concerning the iustification of a sinner in the bookes of the old and new Testament therefore I will more carefully search the true interpretation of it Some expound the words thus Abraham beleeued God and the world reputed him for a good and vertuous man But if this be the right sense then Paul is deceiued who brings this text to prooue the iustification of Abraham not onely before men but also before God Now vertue and goodnes which is in estimation among men is not sufficient to acquit and iustifie vs before God The second exposition is of the Papists who by faith here vnderstand a generall faith whereby the articles of faith are beleeued And by imputation they vnderstand reputation wher by a thing is esteemed as it is indeede And they teach that faith is reputed for righteousnes because say they faith formed with charitie is indeede the iustice whereby a sinner is iustified before God But this Exposition hath his defects and errours For first of all Charitie is not the forme or life of faith but the fruit and effect of it 1. Tim. 1. 5. The ende of teaching is loue out of a pure heart good conscience and faith vnfained It is obiected that as the bodie is dead without the soule so is faith without workes Iam. 2. 26. and therefore that workes are the life of faith Ans. S. Iames by faith vnderstands a pretended faith or the Profession of faith as appeares by the words v. 14. though a man say he hath faith and v. 18. shew me thy faith Now of this profession of faith workes are the life Secondly this exposition makes faith or the act of beleeuing to be our whole and intire iustice before God whereas indeede if it be iustice it is but one part thereof And in the act of beleeuing loue cannot be included Thirdly faith ioyned with charitie is not the iustice whereby a sinner is iustified For our faith and loue are both imperfect and faith is imputed for righteousnes without workes Rom. 4. 6. and therefore without charitie For this is charitie to keepe the commandements of God Ioh. 15. 10. Paul saith that the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified is by or through faith Phil. 3. 9. and therefore our iustice and our faith are two distinct things The third exposition is also from the Papists that faith is reputed for righteousnes because it is reputed to be a sufficient meanes to prepare men to their iustification but this cannot be the sense of this place For this was spoken of Abraham after he was iustified and therefore needed no preparation to iustification Let vs now come to the true sense of the wordes In them I consider two things Abrahams faith in these words Abraham beleeued God and the fruit of his faith in these words and it was imputed to him for righteousnes Touching his faith I consider three things The first is the occasion which was on this manner After the conquest of the heathen kings Abraham was still in some feare in this regard the Lord comforts him Gen. 15. 1. I am thy buckler and thy exceeding great reward But to this Abraham replies I want issue and the Lord answers I will make thy seede as the starres of heauen Gen. 15. 5. Now then looke as God renewes and inlarges his promise to Abraham so Abraham renewes his faith and hereupon Moses and Paul say Abraham beleeued God God doth not now inlarge his promises to vs as to Abraham neuerthelesse the promises recorded in the bible are renewed to vs partly by preaching and partly by the vse of the sacraments and we accordingly are to renew our faith specially in the time of feare and danger The second thing is the obiect or matter of his faith and that is the multiplication of his posteritie It may be said how could Abraham be iustified by such a faith Ans. The promise of the multiplication of his seede was a dependant of a more principall promise I am thy God all-sufficient Gen. 17. 1. and I am thy exceeding great reward Gen. 15. 11. In this carnall seede Abraham specially respected by the eye of faith the blessed seede of the woman He therefore beleeued the promise of a seede as it was a pledge vnto him of a thing more principall namely the fauour of God and as it was a meanes to effect the incarnation of the sonne of God In his example we are taught how we are to respect and vse earthly things we are to respect them as pledges of Gods fauour and to vse them as meanes to further vs to Christ and to the attainment of our saluation The third point is the propertie of Abrahams faith which was a faith against hope For he beleeued the promise of a seede when his bodie was halfe dead and Sarai was barren In like sort we keeping true religion and good conscience must in all our temptations crosses miseries infirmities against reason sense and feeling beleeue the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting In the effect and fruit of Abrahams faith three things must be considered The first is what is meant by Imputation To impute properly is a speach borrowed from marchants and it signifies to recken or to keepe a reckening of expenses and receipts Thus Paul saith Philem. 18. If he haue done thee any wrong impute it to me that is set it on my reckening And this word is here applied to the Iudgement of God Because he
gift of illumination faith regeneration life sense and motion are the gifts of the spirit and so are ciuill vertues but the sending of the spirit is onely in respect of such gifts as are bestowed in the Church in the receiuing of which the spirit is acknowledged The place or mansion of the spirit is the heart that is the minde will and affection The heart is the very sinke of sinne yet that doth the spirit choose for his abode Hence we learne 1. That the beginning of our newe birth is in the heart when a newe light is put into the minde a newe and heauenly disposition into the will and affection 2. The most principall part of our change or renouation is in the heart where the spirit abides The end of all teaching is loue out of a pure heart good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. 3. The beginning and principall part of Gods worship is in the heart He that serues God in the righteonsnesse of his heart in peace and ioy in the Holy Ghost is accepted Rom. 14. 17. 4. In our hearts no wicked or carnall thought will desire or lust must raigne but onely Gods word and spirit For thy heart is the house where the spirit dwels and he must be Lord of his owne house 5. Aboue all things keepe watch and warde about thy heart and fill it with all good cogitations desires that it may be a fit place of intertainment for the spirit who is as it were an Embassadour sent from the great God vnto thee The last thing is the office of the spirit which is to make beleeuers Crie Abba Here I consider 4. things 1. The meanes whereby this Crie is caused 2. The nature of it 3. To whome it is directed 4. The manner of direction For the first in the effecting or causing of this Crie there are 4. workes of the spirit The first is Conuiction when a man in his iudgement and conscience is conuicted that the scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles are indeed the word of God To this purpose there are many arguments which nowe I omit This conuiction is a common worke of the spirit yet necessarie because much Atheisme lies lurking in our hearts which makes vs call into question euery part of the word of God The second worke is Subiection whereby a man conuicted that the scripture and euery part of it is the word of God subiects himselfe in his heart to the commandement of God which bids him turne to God and beleeue in Christ. And this second is a worke of the spirit of grace proper to the elect The third is the Certificate or testimonie of the spirit which is a diuine manner of reasoning framed in the mindes of them that beleeue and repent on this manner He that beleeues and repents is Gods child Thus saith the Gospel But I beleeue in Christ and repent at the least I subiect my will to the commandement which biddes me repent and beleeue I detest mine vnbeleefe and all my sinnes and desire the Lord to increase my faith Therefore I am the child of God This is the practicall syllogisme of the H. Ghost It is the testimonie of the spirit that we are the sonnes of God it is the earnest of the spirit and the seale whereby we are sealed to the day of our redemption and it containes the certentie ofspeciall faith The fourth thing that followes vpon this Testimonie is Peace of conscience Ioy and affiance in God And from this affiance comes the crying here mentioned whereby euery true beleeuer with open throat as it were cries vnto god the father This doctrine is of great worth it is the hinge vpon which the gate of heauen turnes and therefore to be remembred The vse By this we see a manifest errour in the Popish religion which teacheth that we can haue no other certenty of our saluation in this life but that which is probable or coniecturall that is a certentie ioyned with feare suspicion and some doubting Certentie in respect of God that promiseth feare doubting in respect of our owne indisposition But this doctrine is false For they which are Gods children receiue the spirit crying Abba and this crying argues affiance or confidence in God By faith we haue confidence in God and entrance with boldnesse Eph. 3. 11. and boldnesse is opposite to feare and excludes doubting in respect of our selues Againe by this doctrine we see it is ordinarie and possible for all that beleeue and repent to be certainly assured that they are the children of God For if they haue the spirit of God crying in them as all Gods childrē haue they cannot but perceiue this crie and withall they haue the testimonie of the spirit in them which is the ground of this crie Rom. 8. 16. And seeing this is so we must be admonished to vse all meanes that we may be assured that we are the children of God 2. Pet. 1. Giue all diligence to make your Election sure Paul bids rich men lay vp a good foundation against the time to come 1. Tim. 6. 18. And this foundation must be laide not in heauen but in the conscience God of his mercie hath made a couenant or bargaine with vs that beleeue and repent in this bargaine he hath promised to vs pardon of our sinnes and life euerlasting let vs then neuer be at rest till we haue receiued earnest from the hand of God and haue his promise sealed vnto vs by the spirit in our hearts You will say what shall I doe to be assured that I am Gods child Ans. Thou must examine thy selfe of two things The first is whether thou art conuicted in thy iudgement that the Scripture is indeede the word of God if thou art not yet conuicted then inquire and vse meanes that thou maist indeed be conuicted otherwise all is in vaine Secondly inquire whether thou dost indeed and in good earnest submit and subiect thy will to the cōmandement of God which bids thee beleeue in Christ and turne vnto God For if thou canst say that thou dost will to beleeue and will to repent if thou shew this will indeede in the vse of good meanes if thou condemne and detest thy vnbeleefe and all other thy sinnes thou hast receiued the earnest of the spirit and thou art indeede the child of God And this assurance shall be vnto thee of great vse For it will make thee reioyce in afflictions and it will worke patience experience hope Rom. 5. 5. It will make thee despise this world it will take away the feare of death and kindle in thy heart a desire to be with Christ. Touching the nature of this crie it stands in the desires and groanes of the heart directed vnto God And these desires may be distinguished from all carnall desires by three properties First of all they are in the hearts of them that are turned to God or at the least beginne to turne vnto him For God heareth
fruits of the spirit the hatred of our owne sinne the purpose of not sinning the feare of God and such like we must content our selues and waite for the fruition of further grace till the life to come Thirdly we must become waiters for the mercie of God and for life euerlasting Gen. 49. 18. Iud. v. ●1 For this cause we must doe as they doe which waite attend for some great benefit we must daily stand with our supplications knocking at the mercie gate to the death and we must daily prepare our selues against the day of death and it must be welcome vnto vs for then is the ende of all our waiting and attending The third point is by what are we to waite Paul saith We waite by faith Hence it followes that faith brings with it a speciall certentie of the mercie of God and of life euerlasting For men vse not to waite for the things whereof they are vncerten Waiting presupposeth certentie The Papists therefore that make speciall hope should also make speciall faith The last point is where is this waiting Paul saith in spirit Here obserue that all the exercises of Christian religion are to be in the spirit God must be worshipped in spirit Ioh. 4. 24. Rom. 1. 9. The heart must be rent and not the garment Io●l 2. The inward motions of the spirit are of themselues the worship of God whereas our words and deedes are not simply but so farforth as they are founded in the renewed motions of the heart Men in our daies thinke they doe God high seruice if they come to Church heare Gods word and say some few praiers Indeede these things are not to be condemned yet are they not sufficient vnlesse withall we bring vnto God a renewed spirit indued with faith hope ●oue In the 6. verse Paul propounds three conclusions The first is this that externall and bodely priuiledges are of no vse and moment in the kingdome of Christ. Paul saith 1. Tim. 4. 8. Bodily exercise profiteth little and that godlines is profitable for all things It was a great priuiledge to be familiarly acquainted with Christ and to haue eaten and drunke with him yet is it of no vse in the kingdome of Christ. For of such Christ saith Luk. 13. 26. Depart from me ye workers of iniquitie It was a great priuiledge to be allied to Christ in respect of blood yet in the kingdome of Christ it is of no vse and therefore Christ saith He that doth the will of my father is my brother sister and mother Mark 3. 33. To conceiue and beare Christ was a great honour to the virgin Marie yet was shee not by this meanes a member of the kingdome of Christ but by her faith in him And if shee had not borne him in her heart as well as shee bare him in her wombe shee had not bin saued To prophecie or preach and that in the name of Christ is a great dignitie and yet many hauing this prerogatiue shall be condemned Matth. 7. 22. It may be alleadged that some outward exercises as baptisme and the Lords supper are of great vse in the Church of Christ. I answer the outward baptisme is nothing without the inward Not the washing of the flesh but the stipulation of a good conscience saueth 1. Pet. 3. 18. Circumcision is profitable if thou keepe the law Rom. 2. 35. By this we are taught not to esteeme of mens religion by their riches and externall dignities For the fashion of the world is if a man haue riches and honour to commend him for a wise vertuous and godly man This is foolishly to haue faith in respect of persons Iam. 2. 1. Secondly by this we are taught to moderate our affections in respect of all outward things neither sorrowing too much for them nor ioying too much in them 1. Cor. 7. 30. The second conclusion Faith is of great vse and acceptation in the kingdome of Christ. By it first our persons and then our actions please God and without it nothing pleaseth God It is the first and the greatest honour we can doe to God to giue credence to his word and from this flowes all other obedience to all other commandements Hence we learne First that we must labour to conceiue faith a right in our hearts by the vse of the right meanes the word praier sacraments as also in and by the exercises of spirituall inuocation and repentance This beeing done we must rest vpon the bare word and testimonie of God without and against sense and feeling and quiet our hearts therein both in life and death Secondly faith in Christ must raigne and beare sway in our hearts and haue the command ouer reason will affection lust And by it whatsoeuer we doe or suffer specially the maine actions of our liues are to be ordered and disposed Lastly it is a thing to be bewailed that the common faith of our daies is but a Ceremoniall faith conceiued without the ordinarie meanes and seuered from the exercises of inuocation and repentance The third conclusion is that true faith workes by loue Hence the Papists gather that loue is the forme and life of faith not because it makes faith to be faith but because it makes it to be a true faith a good faith a liuely faith But this their doctrine is false and erronious For faith is the cause of loue and loue is the fruit of faith 1. Tim. 1. 5. Loue out of a pure heart good conscience and faith vnfained Now euery cause as it is a cause hath his force and efficacie in it selfe and receiues no force or efficacie from his effect Secondly true faith is liuely and effectuall in it selfe and hath a peculiar forme of his owne and that is a certen power to apprehend Christ in the promise For in faith there are two things knowledge and apprehension which some call application or speciall affiance which affiance because the Papists cut off they are constrained to make a supplie by loue Thirdly the operation of faith according to the doctrine of the Papist is to Prepare and dispose a sinner to his future iustification Now if this operation be from loue then loue is before iustification and that cannot be because as they teach iustification stands in loue Loue therfore is not the forme of faith They alleadge for themselues this very text in hand where it is said faith worketh by loue or as they translate it faith is acted and mooued by loue Ans. The meaning of the text is that faith is effectuall in it selfe and that it shewes and puts forth his efficacie by loue as by the fruit thereof And it cannot hence be gathered that faith is acted and mooued by loue as by a formall cause Againe they alleadge Iam. 2. 26. As the bodie is dead without the spirit so is faith without workes Ans. 1. The soule of man is not the forme of his bodie but of the whole man 2. Spirit may as well signifie breath or
to this end we must obserue 5. rules The first that the creatures of God must be sanctified by the word and praier 1 Tim. 4. the word must shew vs what we may doe and praier obtaines the doing of it The 2 rule we must be circumspect lest we sinne in the vse of the creatures In this respect Iob sends for his children after they had feasted together he sanctifies them Iob. 1. 5. The 3 rule we must vse the gifts of God with thankesgiuing Rom. 14. 6. Commonly in these daies there is no feasting or reioycing vnles all memorie of god be buried for that is said to breed melancholy The 4 rule We must suffer our selues to be limited and moderated in the vse of our libertie partly by the law of the magistrate partly by the law of charitie in the case of offēce I say in the vse because liberty it selfe is inwardly in the conscience and the vse of it is often in the outward action and therefore vnder the order of humane law The 5 rule Our liberty must be vsed for right ends as namely the glory of God 1. Cor. 10. 31. the preseruation of nature not the pampering of the flesh Rom. 13. 13. the good of our neighbour Rom. 12. 13. Make conscience to obserue this rule and the rather because the holie and spirituall vse of Christian libertie is a signe token that thou art in the kingdome of God a true member thereof as on the contrarie the abuse of Gods blessings shewes thee to be still in the kingdome of darknes When men fell things of great worth for a little value and then afterward giue themselues to rioting and spending we commonly say that they are theeues and no right owners of the goods which they solde The like may be said of them that abuse spirituall libertie that they are but vsurpers and no right owners of it Lastly it must be obserued that this rule hath 2. branches The first is that we must not minister to the flesh any occasion of sinning The second is that we must giue no occasion of sinning by meanes of Christian libertie The second maine rule followes Serue one an other by loue For the right cōceauing of it I will propound three questions The first is why is this rule propounded in this place Ans. It sets downe the end of all Apostolike doctrine as Paul sheweth 1. Tim. 1. 5. the end of the commandement is loue out of a pure heart good conscience faith vnfained Here men commonly vnderstand by the commandement the morall law That is indeed a truth but it is not the meaning of the place In the third verse Paul sets downe a commandement or denunciation to Timothie that he and the Pastors of Ephesus teach no other doctrine but the doctrine of the Apostles then in the 5 verse he propounds the summe and substance or end of the foresaid commandement in the 18 verse after a long antapodaton he inioynes Timothie to obserue it carefully So then the end of al sound doctrine is loue out of a pure heart and all our Preaching must tend to this The second question is what is the loue of our neighbour specified in this rule Ans. It is an affection renewed whereby we are mooued to wish well to our neighbour in the Lord. I say an affection to consute Lombard who saith that loue is not an habit in vs as other vertues are but the H. Ghost I saie it is an affection renued to consute the Papist who teacheth that we haue the true loue of God our neighbour by nature and that we want nothing but the second acte or the exercise of loue which they saie is from grace Further I adde that loue inclines vs to wish well to our neighbour for this is the formall and proper effect of loue and all this is done when we thinke well speake and doe well and that in respect not only of the bodie but also in respect of the soule of our neighbour Lastly I say that loue to our neighbour must be in the Lord. Because we are to loue him in respect that he is a creature of God and beares his image and not in respect of honour profit or pleasure which we receiue from him Loue for such ends is selfeloue The third question is what is the vse of loue Ans. It serues to make vs seruiceable to our neighbour Loue seekes not her owne things 1. Cor. 13. Christ was seruant to his enemies in bearing their sinnes vpon the crosse Paul that was free from all became a seruant to all to win some 1. Cor. 9. 19. To Christ we are to doe seruice and he hath put our neighbour in his stead so as that which is done to our neighbour shall be done to him our neighbour therefore must be serued of vs. And this is not against our libertie For we are free inwardly in conscience yet in the outward vse of our libertie we must be seruāts to mē The vse If we examine our liuer by this rule we shall find that there is very litle power of religion among men There are six sortes of men that liue in the breach of this rule The first are vsurers who lend for aduantage when they should lend freely to them that are in need these serue themselues and make a pray of all The second sort are ingrossers who gather in cōmodities to inrich themselues The third sort are idle per sons of what degree soeuer that spend their time in eating drinking sleeping gaming such are but vnprofitable burdens of the earth To this sort I referre beggars and vagabonds The fourth sort are Riotous persons that vse to goe from alehouse to alehouse from tauerne to tauerne and mispend that whereby they should maintaine their families and be seruiceable to their countrie The fift sort are Tradesmen who in their dealings vse lying dissembling fraud iniustice They seeke nothing but their priuate aduantage And this kind of men abounds in the world The last sort are drowsie and carnall Protestants who only seeke the things of this world and neuer so much as giue good example to seruants or children or any good counsell Beside all this it is the common fault of the world for men to serue themselues according to the common saying euery man for himselfe and God for vs all And the best men that are if they examine themselues shall find that they faile many waies and come short in the duties of loue to men with whome they liue This beeing so we are to acknowledge before God this maine offence of ours and to intreat for the pardon of it for Christes sake And euer hereafter to change our liues and to reforme them according to this rule And that is done on this manner Euery man hath or ought to haue 2 callings a general a particular The general is wherby we are called to be Christians In this calling we are to do good to all men by
not communicate any thing to him either in doctrine or counsell The vse This verse serues to expound other places in S. Iohn Where Christ promiseth to giue his spirit to his Disciples to teach them all things Ioh. 14. 26. and to led them into all truth Ioh. 16. 13. Now these promises directly and properly concerne the Apostles and they are here verified in Paul Who was so farre forth taught by God and lead into all truth that the cheife Apostles could not teach or communicate any thing to him For all this though Paul and the rest were led into all truth that they could not erre yet were they not led into all holinesse of life that they could not sinne Paul saith to will is present with me but he addes that he cannot doe the good he would Christ saith to all the Apostles He that is washed and is all cleane must still haue his feete washed Ioh. 13. 10. Wherefore they are to be rebuked that thinke there must be no want at all in them that are Preachers of the Gospel and hereupon take occasion to despise their Ministerie if they can spie any thing amisse in their doings Vpon the same ground they might reiect the Ministerie of the Apostles For though they could not erre in preaching and writing and though they had no neede to be taught of any man yet were they not free from sinne in their liues and the chiefe of them sundrie times fayled Againe here we learne that there is a good and lawfull kind of boasting and that is when a man is disgraced and his disgrace is the dishonour of God and the disgrace of the Gospel This makes Paul here to say that he learned nothing of the chiefe Apostles For if he had said otherwise he should haue bin reputed to be no more but an ordinarie disciple and the doctrine which he taught before this conference should haue bin called in question For this cause he stands vpon it that they did not communicate any thing vnto him Vpon the like occasion he professeth that he will boast 2. Cor. 11. 16. Here the saying of Salomon may be obiected Let an other mans mouth praise thee and not thine owne Prou. 27. 2. I answer it sufficeth for the truth of sundrie prouerbs if they be commonly ordinarily and vsually true though they be not generally true Thus ordinarily men are not to praise themselues yet in a speciall and extraordinarie case it may be otherwise And the manner which Paul vseth in commending of himselfe is to be obserued First he doth it in great modestie because in speaking of himselfe he concealeth that part of the sentence which should haue serued to expresse his praise Secondly in praising of himselfe he is not carried with enuie but his care is to maintaine the good name of the rest of the Apostles when he saith What they haue bin it is no matter to me Here then we see that the Atheists doe Paul wrong who challenge him for pride and presumption as though he could not brooke an equall and withall skorned to learne of any Againe by Pauls example we are to take notice of a common sinne Mens hearts are so possessed with selfe-loue and they are so addicted to their owne praise that it is griefe to them to heare any praised beside thēselues whereas loue binds vs as well to take care for the good name of others as of our owne When Paul saith What they were in times past it matters not to me we learne that we are to esteeme of men not as they haue bin but as they are Peter Iames and Iohn though they had bin fishermen yet are they honoured of Paul as Apostles Therefore when men haue repented we may not vpbraid thē with their liues past Neither may we take occasion to contemne them that be in authoritie because we haue knowne what they haue bin heretofore but euery man is to be esteemed according to his calling and according to the grace of God giuen him Like is Gods mercifull dealing toward vs. For he accepts men not as they haue bin but as they are when they repent Therefore if Sathan shall at any time obiect thy life past say vnto him thus Tell me not what I haue bin but tell me what I am and what I will be This sufficeth when we repent God accepteth the person of no man By person is meant not the substance of a man or the man himselfe but the outward qualitie or condition of man as countrey sexe birth condition of life riches pouertie nobilitie wisdome learning c. And God is saide not to accept the person because he doth call men bestow his gifts and giue iudgement according to his owne wise and iust pleasure and not according to the outward appearance and condition of the person Read Iob. 34. 19. It may be obiected that God deales not equally with them that are equall because all men are equall in Adam and of them he chooseth some to eternall life and refuseth others I answer he is said to accept persons that deales vnequally with men beeing bound to deale equally now God is not thus bound because he is a soueraigne and absolute Lord ouer all his creatures and may doe with his owne what he will Math. 20. 16. Secondly it may be obiected that God had respect to Abel and his sacrifice Gen. 4. 4. Ans. The condition of man is twofold outward inward Outward standes in worldly and ciuill respects Inward standes in a pure heart good conscience and faith vnfained For this onely was Abel respected Hebr. 11. 4. Though God accept not the outward person yet in euery nation he that feareth God is accepted of him Act. 10. 34. Thirdly it may be obiected that God iudgeth euery man according to his workes Ans. Though workes appeare outwardly yet the roote and ground of them is in the heart And the iudgement of God is according to them as they are fruits of the faith of the heart The vse All men are in this to be like vnto God their heauenly father not accepting persons in their dealings As Magistrates in the exequution of iustice Deut. 1. 17. Ministers in teaching and in the reproouing of sinne Mark 12. 14. and all beleeuers who are not to haue religion in acceptation of persons Iam. 12. 1. This acceptation is the ruine of societies And it is the common fault For vsually elections are made offices bestowed and iustice exequuted with partialitie and with blind respects to countrey kinred friendship money Secondly we are all taught to feare the iudgement of God and to prepare our selues with all diligence that we may be found worthie to stand before God in that great day For we must come naked before him and he will haue no respect to our birth our riches our learning Therefore it is good for vs now to put on Christ that in him we may be accepted For with him the father is well pleased Thirdly we may not set our
properties of loue reckned vp by S. Paul 1. Cor. 13. this is not the least that it suffereth all things v. 7. that is all such things as may be borne and suffered with good conscience for the good of our brother For looke as a louer doth suffer all things in regard of his loue in three respects First in vndergoing any labour that may be for her good as Hercules did for the loue of Omphale Secondly in bearing patiently all hard measure that is offered him for her sake as Iacob did for the loue of Rachel Thirdly in induring any thing that is imposed vpon him and putting vp what wrong soeuer is done vnto him by her as Sampson did for the loue of Dalilah So Christian charitie causeth vs to suffer all things First pro fratribus to indure any labour cost or trauell for their good Secondly propter fratres to beare all afflictions for their sakes as Paul saith he did for the Church 2. Tim. 2. 10. Thirdly à fratribus to beare wrongs and put vp iniuries at their hands as he did beeing shamefully entreated at Philippi stoned scourged c. This must be considered of vs all but specially of such as wil giue a man as good as he bringeth who are but a word and a blow a lie and a stab a word a writ such as cannot beare coales as they say nor brook any little wrōg nor endure any small frailtie in their brethren These men must remēber that in bearing coales that is in suffering and forbearing they heape vp coales of fire vpon their heads as Paul speaketh Rom. 12. 20. as also that God doth beare with them in greater matters euen when they wound him with their oathes Leuit. 24. 11. and giue him the lie thorough vnbeleefe 1. Ioh. 5. 10. as he bare the manners of the Israelites in the wildernes That Christ whose example we are to follow hath borne our infirmities Esa. 53. and doth ease them that trauell and are heauie laden Matth. 11. 28. and therefore we treading in his steppes must forbeare one another and forgiue one another if any man haue a quarrell against another euen as Christ forgaue vs. Coloss. 3. 13. Thus if when we see any sinne in our brother we reclaime him from it by reproofes exhortations admonitions we are Gods instruments to saue a soule from death and so doe couer a multitude of sinnes euen before God Iam. 5. 20. And if when we perceiue common frailties in our brethren we shal not stand too much vpō our right but shall yeeld vnto them in bearing forbearing and forgiuing we shall couer a multitude of sinnes before men 1. Pet. 4. 8. Thus much touching the rule Now I proceede to the reason whereby the Apostle vrgeth the practise of this precept in these words And so fulfill the law of Christ. The reason standeth thus That which is the fulfilling of the law of Christ must be practised of vs but the bearing of one anothers burdens is the fulfilling of the law of Christ therefore we ought to beare one anothers burdens For the clearing of this text sundrie things are to be considered I. It may be demanded what the Apostle vnderstandeth by the law of Christ Ans. Nothing els but the doctrine precept or commaedement of Christ enioyning the loue of our brethren Ioh. 13. 34 35. A new commandement giue I vnto you that ye loue one another as I haue loued you c. And it is all one as if he had saide Beare ye one anothers burdens and so fulfill the commandement of Christ who hath after a speciall manner commanded the loue of your brethren Now the Apostle rather vseth the word Law then Commandement because he would make a clearer antithesis betwixt the law of Christ and the law of Moses so vehemently vrged by the false Apostles as if he should haue said You Galatians are taught to obserue the Law of Moses circumcision daies and times moneths and yeares and so ye doe indeede Well if ye will needes be obseruing of Lawes here is a law for you to obserue beare with the frailties one of another and so you shal fulfill the most excellent law that euer was the law of Christ which is necessarie to be kept whereas the keeping of the Ceremoniall law is but in vaine II. Quest. Why doth Paul call the loue of our brethren the law of Christ rather then the law of nature or the law of God or the law of Moses seeing it was written in the minde of man in the creation was giuen by God himselfe in Mount Sinai was written by Moses the reliques whereof are yet remaining in the minde of man Ans. It is so called because it is a new commandement giuen by Christ himselfe after a speciall manner But it is hereupon further demanded why this commandement of louing our brethren should be called a new commandement To which some make answer that it is so called onely because it shewes a new manner of louing our brethren after the example of Christ as he hath loued vs. Now this manner of louing our brethren as Chrysostome expounds it is this that as Christ loued vs freely not mooued by any amiable thing in vs nor for any profit that should redound vnto himselfe thereby so we should freely loue one another not for any benefit receiued or expected But as Cyril of Alexand. vpon Iohn expounds it it stands in this that as Christ loued vs more then himselfe so we should loue our brethren more then our selues But this cannot be the meaning For S. Iohn in his 1. Epist. 2. and Epist. 2. repeating this new commandement saith onely this is a new commandement that ye loue one another and neuer addes as Christ loued vs the which he should haue done if these wordes as I haue loued you be an essentiall part of the new commandement which he enioyneth vs to obserue Besides our Sauiour himselfe saith a little after By this shall all men knowe that ye are my Disciples if ye loue one another not adding as I haue loued you therefore the new commandement is laid downe in these words Loue one another not respecting those that follow as a modification or limitation as I haue loued you Besides this exposition takes it for granted that the morall lawe Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe is a certaine rule by which we are to square our loue vz. that we must begin at our selues look how much we loue our selues so much we ought to loue our neighbor no more that therfore Christ shold giue a newe commandement of greater perfection then that in the lawe to wit that we loue one another as he loued vs that is more then our selues But this is a flat mistaking of the scripture for the commandement Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe is no exact rule whereby we are to trie and examine our loue as the Popish doctors and some others teach For then Paul and diuers of the Saints of God
the instant or present time for we are vncertaine whether we shall liue till to morrow or no. Iam. 4. 14. Therfore looke what we would doe at the houre of death if we were now at the last gaspe panting for breath or if we did see Christ comming in the cloudes to iudgement the very same thing we ought to do euery day with like zeale and feruencie of sp 〈…〉 t to praise and magnifie the mercie and goodnesse of God with like feare and trembling to worke out our owne saluation and to seeke re conciliation with like loue and sinceritie of affection to be beneficiall vnto our brethren c. VI. This doctrine meeteth with all miserable minded mē who hauing great meanes and opportunitie of doing good yet let slippe or rather cut off all occasions that might induce them thereto who in a brutish minde like to the sw●ne neuer doe good nor profit any till their dying day I speake not against the laudible custome of bequeathing goods to go●ly vses by a mans last will and testament but against those that doe little or no good all their life long till the houre of death Let these men consider that as the late repentance of malefactours a little before their death is commonly but a ceremoniall repentance so the funerall beneficence of those who giue little or nothing in all their life is vsually no free but a formall and extorted gift formall in doing as others do 〈…〉 torted in that it is giuen to stoppe the mouth of an accusing conscience The vitall beneficence is that which God accounteth of by so much to be preferred before the other but howe much it doeth more euidently declare a more liuely faith in the prouidence of God and a more vnfained loue of our brethren Againe they giue testimonie that they trust not in vncertaine riches but in the liuing God Lastly they haue the benefit of poore mens praiers to whome they are beneficiall which otherwise they should want VII The circumstance of time hath here the force of an argument for it inforceth the exhortatiō much that we should doe all the good we can and take the benefit of the opportunitie because time will not alway last the holy Ghost in sundry places of scripture from the consideration of the shortnesse of our time enforceth the duties of faith repentance newe obedience as 1. Cor. 7. v. 29 30 31. And this I say brethren because the time is short hereafter that both they that haue wiues be as though they had none and they that weepe as though they wept not and they that reioice as though they reioyced not Ebr. 3. v. 7 8. To day if ye will heare his voice harden not your hearts and v. 13. Exhort one another daily while it is called to day The godly in all ages haue practised this dutie Peter knowing that the time was at hand that he was to lay downe his tabernacle stirres vp himselfe to greater diligence in his calling and saith I will not be negligent to put you in remembrance of these things so long as I am in this tabernacle seeing I know the time is at hand that I must lay it down as our Lord Jesus Christ hath shewed me 2. Pet. 1. 12 13 14. The Church praieth thus to God Teach vs to number our daies that is so to consider the shortnesse vncertaintie and vanitie of our life that we may apply our hearts to wisedome Psal. 90. 12. But wicked mens practise is cleane contrarie for they take occasion vpon the shortnesse of their time to liue as they list to take their pleasures and to followe the lusts of their hearts therfore they say Let vs eate and drinke for to morrowe we shall die Esay 22. 13. Our life is short and tedious and our time is as a shaddowe that passeth away Come therefore and let vs enioy the pleasures that are present Wisd. 2. v. 1 5 6. And hence it is that some spend their time in eating and drinking and going gorgeously and faring delitiously euery day other in gaming carding dicing rioting revelling as the tearme is in swaggering wherin they followe their father the deuill who is therefore more full of wrath knowing that he hath but a short time Apoc. ●2 12. To these we may adde all such idle persons as followe no vocation or trade of life but day after day and yeare after yeare are still deuising new pastimes as they call them to trifle the time away These men hasten the iudgements of God and pull it vpon them before God inflict it It is a great iudgement of God for a man to be in that case that in the morning he shall say would God it were euening and in the euening would God it were morning Deut. 28. 67. In this case is euery idle loiterer who through idelenes is wearie of himselfe grieued the time passeth away so slowly and to these qui nihil agunt we may ioyne them qui male agunt and those also qui aliud agunt all which are condemned in this text against them Titus the heathen Emperour shall rise in iudgement and shall condemne them because he remembring on a time as he fate at supper that he had trifled away the day in doing nothing said Amici hodie diem perdidi Friends I haue lost this day II Ye see how large a letter I haue written vnto you with mine owne hand Here beginneth the Conclusion beeing the third generall part of this Epistle consisting of two parts an Insinuation in the II. verse a Recapitulation in the verses following He insinuateth himselfe into the minds of the Galatians by a twofold argument First from the largenes of his Epistle Ye see how large a letter I haue written secondly from the instrumentall cause in that he writ it with his owne hand where he giues authoritie to it and a kind of eminencie aboue his other letters And in both he commendeth his diligence loue and care which he had of them The word translated ye see is ambiguous and may be taken either as a commandement See how large a letter I haue written or as an assertion Ye see The like ambiguitie is in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philip. 2. 5. and may be read either thus amongst whom you doe shine or see that you shine as starres It is not materiall In whether acception it be taken seeing the sense is all one The first argument to mooue the Galatians to attention and acceptation of Pauls paines and good affection is taken from the largenes of his Epistle The word in the Originall translated large is strangely wrested by sundrie interpreters without cause Hilarie referring it to the loftines of sentences Hyperius to the profunditie and depth of matter Ierome to the greatnes of the character Chrysostome and Theophylact to the badnes of his hand as not beeing able to write well H●imo to the Hebrew character in which he wrote
dispēsation of the word Secondly whereas Paul saith not of men but of Christ I gather that euery lawefull calling is of God and not of men as authors thereof and that the Right to call belongs to God The father thrusts forth labourers into the vineyard the sonne giues Pastors and teachers the Holy Ghost makes ouerseers It may be alleadged that the Church hath authoritie to call and ordaine ministers I answer that the Churches authoritie is no more but a ministerie or seruice whereby it doeth testifie declare and approoue whome God hath called Thirdly whereas Paul thus proclaimes his calling Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ I gather that the callings of the Ministers of the Gospell must be manifest to their owne consciences and the consciences of their hearers And that for diuers weightie causes First they are imbassadours instruments and the mouth of God and for this cause they are to speake in the name of God and this they cannot doe vnlesse they knowe themselues to be called Secondly that the calling of the Ministerie may tend to edification there is required the assistance of Gods spirit in the teacher the protection of him and his ministerie the effectuall operation of the spirit in the hearts of the hearers And he that wants the assurance of his calling cannot pray to God in faith for these things neither can he apply the promises of God to himselfe Thirdly the knowledge of our callings breeds conscience of our duties diligence and the feare of god Lastly knowledge of our callings in the consciences of the hearers breeds a reuerence in their hearts and obedience to the ministerie of the word Vpon this some may demaund howe they may knowe that they are called of God to the ministerie of the word Answer they may knowe it if they finde three things in themselues the first is the testimonie of their consciences that they entred not for praise honour lucre but in the feare of god with a desire to glorifie him and to edifie the Church The second is a facultie to doe that to which they haue a desire and will In this facultie are two things knowledge of God and his waies and aptnesse to deliuer that which they knowe The third is the Ordination of the Church which approoues and giues testimonie of their will and abilitie He that hath these things is certainely called of God Nowe put the case a man wants the first of these three because he entred with euill conscience beeing carried with ambitious and couetous desires then I answer that his calling still in respect of the Churh is good and lawefull and when he repents of his bad conscience it is also accepted of God The fourth point to be obserued is that Paul makes three kinds of callings in the Church One is when men are called by men and not by God and thus are all false teachers called The second is when men are called of God by the ministerie of men thus are all ordinarie ministers of the word called The third is when men are called not by men but by Christ immediately And Paul here signifieth that he himselfe and the rest of the Apostles were called according to this third way And in this respect he puts a difference betweene the Apostles and all the Ministers of the newe Testament For in that they were called immediately they were also taught by immediate inspiration and also aided by the infallible assistance of Gods spirit And of all this they had promises Math. 10. 19. 20. Luc. 10. 16. Hence we may gather the certenty of our religion The essentiall note of the Church is faith faith stands in relation to the word of God and the word of God is no word vnto vs vnlesse we knowe it to be so and we knowe it to be so because it was written by the Apostles who in preaching and writing could not erre Secondly hence I gather that the doctrine of the Apostles it the immediate word of God because it was giuen by inspiration both for matter and words whereas the doctrine of the Church in sermons and the decrees of councels is both the word of God and the word of man The word of God as it agrees with the writings of the Apostles Prophets the word of man as it is defectiue and as it is propounded in tearmes deuised by man It may be obiected that Paul spake some things of himselfe and not from the Lord 1. Cor. 7. 12. Not the Lord but I. Answer the meaning is not the Lord by any expresse commaundement but I by collection and interpretation of Scripture and that by the assistance of Gods spirit v. 40. Seeing then the writings of the Apostles are the immediate and meere word of God they must be obeyed as if they had beene written without man by the finger of God Lastly seeing it is the propertie of an Apostle to be called immediatly by Iesus Christ hence it follows that the authority office and function of Apostles ceased with them and did not passe by succession to any other Therefore it is a falshood that the Pope of Rome succeedes Peter in Apostolicall authoritie and in the infallible assistance of the spirit when he is in his consistorie And where paul saith he was called by Iesus Christ and not by man that is meere man he giues a pregnant testimonie that Christ is both God and man And whereas Paul was called by Christ raised from the dead hence I gather the dignitie of the Apostle Paul aboue all other Apostles in that he was called after the resurrection of Christ when he was entred into his kingdome The Text. 2. And all the brethren that are with me to the Churches of Galatia The Exposition By brethren we are to vnderstand such as seperated themselues from the Pagans and receiued the faith of Christ 1. Cor. 5. 11. And here more specially such as taught and professed the faith that is both pastors and people whether of Antioche as some thinke or of Rome as others And Paul writes his Epistle as well in their names as in his owne and with their consent for two causes One was that he might not be thought to deliuer any priuate doctrine deuised of his owne head And this care he had alwaies and therefore taught nothing but that which was in the writings of Moses and the Prophets Act. 26. 22. And this was the care of Christ who saith My doctrine is not mine but his that sent me Joh. 7. 16. And at this daie this must be the care of the Ministers of the Gospell to deliuer nothing of their owne First therefore their doctrines must be founded in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and secondly that they may be sure of this they must haue the consent of the true Church specially of such as haue beene the Restorers of the gospell in this last age This rule Paul giues Timothie to continue in the things which he had learned of Paul and the rest
Gospel I answer he could doe no otherwise If a priuate man shall erre he must first be admonished and then the Church must be told of it If he heare not the Church then iudgement may be giuen that he is a Publican and not before much more then if the Church shall erre there must first be an examination of the errour and them sufficient conviction and after conuiction followes the censure vpon the Church and iudgement then may be giuen and not before And Paul had nowe onely begun in this Epistle to admonish the Church of Galatia Great therefore is the rashnes and want of moderation in many that haue beene of vs that condemne our Church for no Church without sufficient conuiction going before If they say that we haue beene admonished by bookes published I say againe there be grosser faults in some of those books then any of the faults that they reprooue in the Church of England and therefore the bookes are not fit to conuince specially a Church And though Paul call the Galatians Churches of God yet may we not hence gather that the Church of Rome is a church of God The name it may haue but it doeth in trueth openly obstinately oppugne the manifest principles of Christian religion If any demaunde what these Churches of Galatia are I answer that they were a people of Asia the lesse and though they were famous Churches in the daies of the Apostle yet now the countrie is vnder the dominion of the Turke This shewes what God might haue done to vs in England long agoe for the contempt of the Gospell This againe shewes what desolation will befall vs vnlesse we repent and bring forth better fruits of the Gospell 3. Grace be with you and peace from God the father from our Lord Iesus Christ. 4. Who gaue Here is laid downe the second part of the Preface which is the Salutation propounded in the forme of a praier Grace and peace c. Grace here mentioned is not any gift in man but grace is Gods and in God And it signifies his gratious fauour and good will whereby he is well pleased with his elect in and for Christ. Thus Paul distinguisheth the grace of God from the gift that is by grace Rom. 5. v. 15. and sets grace before the gift as the cause of it Here comes the errour of the Papists to be confuted which teacheth that the grace which makes vs gratefull to God is the infused gift of holinesse and charitie whereas indeed we are not first sanctified and then please god but first we please God by grace in Christ and then vpon this we are sanctified and indued with charitie Peace is a gift not in God but in vs and it hath three parts The first is peace of conscience which is a quietnesse and tranquilitie of minde arising of a sense and apprehension of reconciliation with God Rom. 5. v. 1. The second is peace with the creatures and it hath fiue branches The first is peace with angels for man is redeemed by Christ and by meanes of this redemption sinfull man is reconciled to good Angels Coloss. 1. 20. The second is peace with the godly who are all made of one heart and mind Isai. 11. 9. The third is peace with our selues and that is a conformitie of the will affections and inclinations of mans nature to the renewed minde The fourth is peace in respect of our enemies For the decree of God is Touch not mine annointed and doe my Prophets no harme Againe all things turne to the good of them that loue God The fift is peace with the beasts of the field God makes a couenant with them for his people Ose. 2. 18. The creatures desire waite for the deliuerance of Gods children Rom. 8. They that trust in God shall walke vpon the Lyon and the Bafiliske Psal. 91. The third part of peace is prosperitie and good successe whatsoeuer the righteous man doth it prospers And all things prospered in the house of Potipher when Ioseph was his steward because he feared God Gen. 39. 1 2. To proceed Paul sets downe the causes of grace and peace and they are two God the father and Iesus Christ. And here it must be remembred that the father and Christ as they are one God they are but one cause and yet in regard of the manner of working they are two distinct causes For the father giues grace from none but himselfe by the sonne and Christ procures grace and peace and he giues it vnto men from thefather Furthermore Christ is described by his propertie Our Lord and by his effects in the next verse The vse Whereas Paul beginnes his praier with grace we learne that Grace in God is the first cause and beginning of all good things in vs. Election is of grace Rom. 11. v. 5. Vocation to saluation is of Grace 2. Tim. 1. 9. Faith is of grace Phil. 1. 29. Iustification is freely by Grace Rom. 3. 24. Loue is by grace 1. Ioh. 4. 9. Euery good inclination is of grace Phil. 2. 13. Euery good worke is of grace Ezech. 36. 27. Eph. 2. 10. Life euerlasting is of grace Rom. 6. 23. To auoide any euill is the least good and euery good is of God It may be said that will in man is the cause and beginning of some good things Answer In the creating or imprinting of the first grace in the heart will is no cause at all but a subiect to receiue the grace giuen After the first grace is giuen will is an Agent in the receiuing of the second grace and in the doing of any good worke Yet this must be remembred that when will is an agent it is no more but an instrument of grace and grace in God is properly the first middle and last cause of grace in vs and of euery good acte Hence it followes that there be not any meritorious workes that serue to prepare men to their iustification and that the Cooperation of mans will with grace in the acte of conuersion whereby we are conuerted of God is but a fiction of the braine of man Lastly this doctrine is the foundation of humilitie for it teacheth vs to ascribe all to grace and nothing to our selues Secondly we learne that the cheife good things to be sought for are the fauour of God in Christ and the peace of a good conscience Consider the example of Dauid Psal. 4. v. 7. Psal. 73. v. 24 25. and of Paul who accounted all things dung for grace and peace in Christ. And the peace of good conscience is as a guard to keepe our hearts and minds in Christ. Phil. 4. 7. The fault of most men is They spend their daies and their strength in seeking riches honours pleasures and they thinke not on grace and peace After the manner of beasts they vse the blessings of god but they looke not at the cause namely the grace of God Our dutie Aboue all things to seeke
for grace and peace The reason true happinesse which all men desire consists in peace and is founded in grace they are said to be happie blessed that mourne suffer persecution for iustice sake Mat. 5. because in the middest of their sorrows miseries they haue the fauour of God the peace of good conscience Thirdly in that grace peace are ioyned we learn that peace without grace is no peace There is no peace to the wicked saith my god Isai. 57. last They which make a couenāt with hel death are soonest destroyed Isai. 28. 18. Laughter saith Salomon is madnes namely when it is seuered from grace and peace When men say peace peace then comes destruction 1. Thess. 5. The prosperitie of the men of this world ends in perdition read Ps. 73. Paul saith not simply that Grace and peace comes frō God but from God the father and from Iesus Christ that he may teach vs rightly to acknowledge and worship God For God is to be acknowledged and worshipped in the father in Christ in the holy spirit It was the fault of the Pagans and it is the fault of sundrie Christians to worship an absolute God without the father and without Christ. This fault must be amended for it turnes God to an Idol Againe when Paul saith that grace proceeds first from the father and secondly from Iesus Christ he sets downe the Order which God obserueth in the communication of grace peace The father is the fountaine of grace and giues it from none but from himselfe Christ againe is as it were a conduit or pipe to conuaie grace from the father to vs. Of his fulnesse we receiue grace for grace Ioh. 1. In him we are complete Col. 2. Election Iustification Saluation and all is done in and by Christ. 2. Tim. 1. 9. The vse I. Let them that trauell vnder the burden of a bad conscience and a bad life come to Christ by turning from their sinnes and by beleeuing in him and they shall obtaine grace finde rest to their soules II. In our miseries our hearts may not be troubled ouermuch but we must alwaies moderate our sorrowes For if we beleeue in Christ we shall alwaies haue grace and peace Read Ioh. 14. 27. III. We must moderate our cares for this life For if we trusting in Christ haue grace and peace we shall want nothing read Psal. 4. v. 6. 7. Iesus Christ that giues grace and peace is called Our Lord for two causes One is to teach vs to acknowledge Christ aright and that is as well to acknowledge him to be our Lord as wel as our Sauiour He is a Priest to procure life a prophet to teach the way of life a Lord to command them to walke in the way of life The fault of our times All men professe Christ yet many allowe of no Christ but of their owne deuising namely a Christ that must be a Sauiour to deliuer them from hell but not a Lord to commaund them that they cannot brooke The second cause why Christ is called our Lord is to signifie the persons to whome grace and peace belong and they are such as acknowledge Christ for their Lord and yeild subiection to him in heart and life They finde rest to their soules that take vp the yoke of Christ in newe obedience and the patient bearing of the Crosse Math. 11. v. 29. 4. Who gaue himselfe for our sinnes that he might deliuer vs out of this present euill world according to the will of God our father 5. To whome be glorie for euer and euer Amen In these words the second argument is propounded whereby Christ is described namely the effect of Christ which is that he gaue himselfe And he is said to giue himselfe for two causes First because he presented himselfe as a price and sacrifice for sinne to God the Father Math. 20. 28. Eph. 5. 2. 1. Tim. 2. 6. The second because he did publikely propound and set forth himselfe to the world as a sacrifice and price of redemption Rom. 3. 25. Ioh. 3. 14. and Act. 4. 12. In this giuing there are fiue things to be cōsidered The first the giuer Christ the second the thing giuen and that is Christ himselfe The third is the ende of his giuing for sinne that is that he might make satisfaction for our sinnes The fourth is another end of his giuing that he might deliuer vs out of this present euil world Here the present world signifies the corrupt estate of mē that liue according to the lusts of their own hearts 1. Ioh. 2. 16. And men are here said to be deliuered takē out of the world when they are seuered from the condition of sinnfull men by sanctification and newnes of life and by diuine protection whereby they are preserued from euill after they are sanctified Tit. 2. 14. and Ioh. 17. 15. And this deliuerance is not in this life in respect of place but in respect of qualitie The fifth thing is the cause that mooued Christ to giue himselfe and that is the will of God In the 5. verse there is set downe a corollarie or conclusion which containes the praise of God The vse followes Whereas Christ is the giuer of himselfe hence it followes that his death and sacrifice was voluntarie And this he shewed in two things When he was to be attached he fledde not but went to a garden in the mount as his custome was which was knowne to Iudas Ioh. 18. 2. And in the very separation of bodie and soule he cried with a loud and strong voice which argued that he was Lord of death died because his will was to die This must be remembred For otherwise his death had not beene a satisfaction for sinne In that Christ gaue himselfe to be a sacrifice we learne many things First that the worke of redemption exceedes the worke of creation For in the creation Christ gaue the creatures to man in the redemption he gaue himselfe and that as a sacrifice Secondly in that he gaue himselfe it appeares that he gaue neither angel nor meere man nor any thing out of himselfe and that all merits of life and satisfactions for sinne are to be reduced to the person of Christ and consequently that there be no humane satisfactions for sinne nor meritorious workes done by vs because they pertaine not to the person of Christ but to our persons and they were neuer offered of Christ vnto God as merits and satisfactions because he gaue nothing but himselfe and the things which appertained vnto his owne person Thirdly in that Christ giues himselfe we must take and receiue him with hungering hearts Nay he is to suffer violence of vs and the violent are to take him to themselues Lastly in that he giues himselfe to vs we againe must giue our bodies and soules vnto him in way of thankefulnes and dedicate all that we haue or can doe to the good of men The creatures at our tables
things Our first parents not content with their first estate must needes be as God Nadab and Abihu offer sacrifice to God but the fire must be of their owne appointment King Achas will offer sacrifice to God but the altar must be like the altar at Damascus False-teachers beside the doctrine of the Apostles had profound learning of their owne The Iewes beside the written law of Moses must haue their Cabala containing as they supposed more mysticall and excellent doctrine The Papists beside the written word set vnwritten Tradition which they make equall with the Scripture We that professe the Gospel are not altogether free from this fault We like that Christ should be preached but sermons are not in common reputation learned neither doe they greatly please the most vnlesse they be garnished with skill of arts tongues and varietie of reading this curiousnes and discontentment the Lord condemnes when he forbids plowing with the oxe and the asse and the wearing of garments of linsi-wolsie And it is the worst kind of discontment that is in things pertaining to saluation It is called by Paul the itching of the care and it is incident to them that follow their owne lusts The remedie of this sinne is to learne the first lesson that is to be lear ned of them that are to be good schollers in the schoole of Christ and that is to feele our pouertie and in what extreame neede we stand of the death and passion of Christ and withall to hunger thirst after Christ as the bread and water of life Read Isa. 44. 3. Ioh. 7. 37. Psal. 25. 11. the example of Dauid Psal. 143. 6. When the heart and conscience hath experimentally learned this lesson and not the braine and tongue alone then shall men beginne to sauour the things of God and discerne of things that differ and put a difference betwene grace and workes mans word and Gods word and for the working of our saluation esteeme of mans workes and mans word as offols that are cast to dogges Paul addes which is not another Gospel that is though it be an other gospel in the reputation of false teachers yet indeede it is not an other but is a subuersion of the Gospel of Christ. Hēce I gather that there is but one Gospel one in number and no more For there is but one way of saluation by Christ whereby all the Elect are saued from the beginning of the world to the ende Act. 15. 11. 1. Cor. 10. 3. It may be demanded how they of the old Testament could be partakers of the bodie blood of Christ which then was not Answer The bodie and blood of Christ though then it was not subsisting in the world yet was it then present to all beleeuers two waies first by diuine acceptation because God did accept the incarnation and passion of Christ to come as if it had beene accomplished Secondly it was present to them by meanes of their faith which is a subsistance of things that are not seene and consequently it makes them present to the beleeuing heart Againe hence it appeares to be a falshood that Euery man may be saued in his owne religion so be it he hold there is a God and that he is a rewarder of them that come vnto him For there is but one Gospel and if the former opinion were true then so many opinions so many gospels Paul saith that the world by her wisdome could not know God in his wisdome and for this cause he ordained the preaching of the word to saue men 1. Cor. 1. 21. And though he that comes to God must beleeue that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that come to him yet not euery one that beleeues generally that there is a God and that he is a rewarder of them that come to him comes to God for this the deuills beleeue The fourth point is concerning the Authors of this Reuolt and Paul chargeth them with two crimes The first is that they trouble the Galatians not onely because they make diuisions but because they trouble their consciences setled in the gospel of Christ. It may be alleadged that there be sundrie good things which trouble the conscience as the preaching of the law the censure of excommunication the authoritie of the magistrate in compelling Recusants to the congregation I answer these things indeede trouble the consciences of men but they are euill consciences and the ende of this trouble is that they may be reformed and made good But the crime wherewith the false-apostles are charged is that they trouble the consciences of the godly or the good consciences of men Here then is set downe a note whereby false and erroneous doctrines may be discerned namely that they serue onely to trouble and disquiet the good conscience And by this we see the Romane religion to be corrupt and vnsound for a great part of it tends this way Iustification by workes is a yoke that none could euer beare Act. 15. The vowe of single life is as a snare or as the noose in the halter to strangle the soule 1. Cor. 7. 34. So is the doctrine which teacheth that men after their conuersion must still remaine in suspence of their saluation and that pardon of sinne is necessarily annexed to confession in the eare to satisfaction for the temporall punishment of sinne in this life or in purgatory On the contrary the Gospell of Christ as here it appeares troubles not the good conscience but it brings peace and perfect ioy Iohn 15. 11. Rom. 15. 4. And the reason is plaine for it ministers a perfect remedy for euery sinne and comfort sufficient for euery distresse And this is a note whereby the gospell is discerned from all other doctrines whatsoeuer The second crime where with the false-apostles are charged is that they ouerthrow the gospell of Christ the reason of this charge must be considered They did not teach a doctrine flat contrary to the Gospell of Christ but they maintained it in word and put an addition to it of their owne out of the law namely instification and saluation by the workes thereof And by reason of this addition Paul giues the sentence that they peruer● and turne vpside downe the Gospell of Christ. Vpon this ground it appeares that the Popish religion is a flat subuersion of the Gospell of Christ because it ioynes iustification by workes with free iustification by Christ. The excuse that the works that iustify are workes of grace and not of nature will not serue the turne For if Christ by his grace make workes to iustifie then is he not onely a sauiour but also an instrument to make vs sauiours of our selues he beeing the first and principall sauiour and we subordinate sauiours vnto him But if Christ haue a partner in the worke of iustification and saluation he i● no perfect Christ. 8. But though we or an angell from heauen preach vnto you otherwise then
that which we haue preached vnto you let him be accursed 9 As we said before so say I now againe if any man preach vnto you otherwise then ye haue receiued let him be accursed An obiection might be made against the former conclusion thus But the most excellent among the Apostles Iames Peter Iohn by your leaue teach an other gospel then that which Paul had preached To this obiection he makes answer in this verse negatiuely that whosoeuer teacheth another Gospell is accursed whatsoeuer he be In this answer three things are to be considered a sinne the punishment thereof and a supposition seruing to amplifie the sinne The sinne is to preach in the cause of our iustification any other thing beside that or diuers to that which Paul taught the Galatians though it be not contrarie Thus much the very words import and the same wordes are againe vsed in the next verse And Paul bids Timothie auoid them that teach otherwise that is any diuers doctrine as necessarie to saluation beside that which he taught 1. Tim. 6. 3. And the reason of this sinne is because God hath giuen this commandement We may not depart from his word to the right hand or to the left neither may we adde thereto or take therfrom Iosu. 1. v. 7. 8. Deut. 4. 12. Before I gather any doctrine hence this ground is to be laid downe that Paul preached all the counsell of God Act. 20. 27. And that which he preached beeing necessarie to saluation he wrote or some other of the Apostles Ioh. 20. 31. This beeing graunted which is a certen trueth two maine conclusions followe One that the Scriptures alone by themselues without any other word are aboundantly sufficient to saluation whether we regard doctrines of faith or manners For he that deliuers any doctrine out of them and beside them as necessarie to be beleeued is accursed The second conclusion is that vnwritten Traditions if they be tendered to vs as a part of Gods word and as necessarie to saluation they are abominations because they are doctrines beside the Gospell that Paul preached And the Romane religion goes to the ground because it is founded on Tradition out of and beside the written word Learned Papists to helpe themselues make a double answer One is that they are accursed which preach otherwise then Paul preached and not they which preach otherwise then he writ But it is false which they say for that which he preached he writte Augustine hauing relation to the text in hand saith that he is accursed which preacheth any thing beside that which we haue receiued in the legall and Euangelicall scriptures Againe he saith that he must not teach any more or any other thing then that which is in the Apostle whose words he must expound The second answer is that to preach otherwise is to preach contrary Because as they say precepts and doctrines may be deliuered if they be diuerse and not contrary As the Gospell of Iohn and the Apocalyps were written after this epistle to the Galatians which are diuers to it though not contrarie the like they say of the canons of councells and that Paul Rom. 16. 18. put 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beside for contrarie I answer thus The proposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated beside or otherwise signifieth thus much properly and we are not to depart from the proper signification of the words vnlesse we be forced by the text And the place in the Romans in his proper and full sense must be turned thus Obserue the authors of effences besides the doctrine which ye haue learned And Pauls minde is that they should be obserued that teach any other diuers or distinct doctrine though it be not directly contrarie The Gospell of Iohn and the Apocalyps written afterward propound not any diuers doctrine pertaining to the saluation of the soule but one and the same in substance with that which Paul wrote The Canons of Councels are traditions touching order and comelinesse they prescribe not any thing as necessarie to iustification and saluation Againe the Embassadour that speakes any thing beside his commission is as well in fault as he that speakes the cōtrarie though not so much The second point is the punishment Let him be accursed Here are three things to be considered The first what is it to be accursed Ans. God hath giuen to the Church the power of building and it hath 4. degrees Admonition Suspencion from the Sacraments Excommunication Anathema And this last is a censure or iudgement of the Church whereby it pronounceth a man seuered from Christ and adiuged to eternall perdition Rom. 9. 5. 1. Cor. 16. 22. And he is here said to be accursed that stands subiect to this censure The second part is who are to be accursed Answer Hainous offendours and desperate persons of whose amendment there is no hope And therefore this iudg ment is seldome pronounced vpon any We finde but one example in the newe Testament Paul accursed Alexander the Copper-smith 2. Tim. 4. 14. And the Church afterward accursed Iulian the Emperour Other examples we finde not any The third point howe the Church should accurse any man and in what order Answer In this action there be foure iudgements The first is Gods which is giuen in heauen whereby he doeth accurse obstinate and notorious offendours The second iudgement pertaines to the Church vpon earth which pronounceth them accursed whome god accurseth It may be said howe comes the Church to knowe the iudgement of God whereby he accurseth Answer The word sets downe the condition of them that are accursed and experience and obseruation findes out the persons to whome these conditions are incident The third iudgement is giuen in heauen whereby God ratifies and approoues the iudgement of the Church according to that whatsoeuer ye binde on earth shall be bound in heauen The last iudgement pertaines to euery priuate person who holds him in execration whome God hath accursed and the Church hath pronounced so to be If he heare not the Church the Church pronounceth him to be as a Publican and heathen then saith Christ let him be a Publican to thee Thus must the text be vnderstood Hence we we are taught to be carefull in preseruing the puritie of the Gospell because the corrupters thereof are to be accursed as the damned spirits Hence againe it appeareth that the Church in accursing doth but exercise a Ministerie which is to publish and testifie who are accursed of God Lastly hence we learne that priuate persons must seldome vse cursing because God must first accurse and the Church publish the sentence of God before we may with good conscience vtter the same They therefore which in a rage accurse themselues others deale wickedly We are called ordinarily to blessing not to cursing The third point is the fupposition of things impossible on this manner Put the case that I Paul or any other of the Apostles should
deale with God and that they are to receiue the doctrine taught not as the word of man but as the very word of God as the Thessalonians did 1. Thess. 2. 13. The want of this consideration is the cause that some contemne the ministerie of the word and others are not touched and mooued in hearing Againe here is set downe the right manner of dispensing the word which must not be for the pleasing of men but of God Hence it appeares that Ministers of the Gospel must not be men-plea 〈…〉 nor applie and fashion their doctrine to the affections humours and dispositions of men but keepe a good conscience and doe their office The Lord tells Ieremie he must not turne to the people but the people must turne to him Ierem. 15. 19. Thus God shal be with them and they shal bring forth much fruit And the people must know it to be a good thing for them not to be pleased alwaies by their Ministers The ministerie of the word must be as a sacrificing knife to kill and mortifie the old Adam in vs that we may liue vnto God A sicke man must not alwaies haue his minde but he must often be crossed and restrained of his desire and so must we that are sicke in our soules in respect of our sinnes It is a fault therefore of men that desire to be pleased to haue matters smoothed ouer of their teachers This is Dauids balme which he wisheth may neuer be wanting to his head Psal. 141. 5. The ende of this verse sets downe a memorable sentence That if we seeke to please men we cannot be the seruants of God Hence I gather that our nature is full of rebellion and enmitie against God because they which please men cannot please God Againe here is set downe what is the hurt that comes by pride and ambition It keepes men that they cannot be the seruants of Christ. Ye beleeue not saith Christ because ye seeke glorie one of another Ioh. 5. 44. Ambition so fills the minde with vanitie and the heart with worldly desires that it cannot thinke or desire to please God Wherefore he that would be a faithfull Minister of the Gospel must denie the pride of his heart and be emptied of ambition and set himselfe wholly to seeke the glorie of God in his calling And generally he that would be a faithfull seruant of Christ must set God before him as a Iudge and consider that he hath to deale with God and he must turne his minde and senses from the world and all things therein to God and seeke aboue all things to approoue his thoughts desires affections and all his doings vnto him Lastly the profession of the seruant of God is here to be obserued in the example of Paul who saith Doe I now preach men and doe I yet please men as if he had said I haue done thus and thus I haue preached the Traditions of man heretofore and I haue pleased man in persequnting the Church of God but I doe not so still neither will I. And he that can say the like with good conscience I haue sinned thus and thus heretofore but now I doe not neither will I sinne as I haue done is indeede the seruant of God v. 11. Now I certifie you brethren that the Gospel which was preached by me was not after man The meaning is this that it may the better appeare that I haue iustly accursed them which teach any other Gospel and iustly reprooued you for receiuing it I giue you to vnderstand that the Gospel which I preached was not after man that is not deuised by man or preached of me by mans authoritie but it was from God and preached by the authoritie of God And this sense appeares by v. 10 and 12. In these words is laid downe the reason of the conclusion or the assumption of the principall argument which was on this manner If I be called to teach and that immediatly of God and my doctrine be true then ye ought not to haue reuolted from the Gospel which I preached but I was called to teach immediatly of God and my doctrine is true The first part of this assumption is here set downe and handled to the ende of the second chapter and the conclusion as we haue heard was set downe in the premises Hence two maine points of doctrine that are of great consequent may be gathered The first is this It is a thing most necessarie that men should be assured and certified that the doctrine of the Gospel and the Scripture is not of man but of God This is the first thing which Paul stands vpon in this Epistle It may be demanded how this assurance may be obtained I answer thus For the setling of our consciences that Scripture is the word of God there be two testimonies One is the Euidence of Gods spirit imprinted and expressed in the Scriptures and this is an excellencie of the word of God aboue all words and writings of men and Angels and containes 13. points The first is the puritie of the law of Moses whereas the lawes of men haue their imperfections The second i● that the Scripture setteth downe the true cause of all miserie namely sinne and the perfect remedie namely the death of Christ. The third is the Antiquitie of Scripture in that it fets downe an historie from the beginning of the world The 4. is prophecies of things in sundrie bookes of Scripture which none could possibly foretell but God The 5. is the confirmation of the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles by miracles that is works done aboue and contrarie to the strength of nature which none can doe but God The 6. is the consent of all the scripture with themselues whereas the writings of men are often at iarre with themselues The 7. is the confession of enemies as namely of heretickes who in oppugning of scriptures alleadge scriptures and thereby confesse the trueth thereof The 8. is an vnspeakable detestation that Sathan and all wicked men beare to the doctrine of scripture The 9. is the protection and preseruation of it from the beginning to this houre by a speciall prouidence of God The 10. is the constant confession of Martyrs that haue shedde their blood for the Gospell of Christ. The 11. is that fearefull punishments and iudgements haue befallen them that haue oppugned the word of God The 12. is holinesse of them that professe the Gospell The last is the effect and operation of the word for it is an instrument of God in the right vse whereof we receiue the testimonie of the spirit of our adoption and are conuerted vnto God And yet neuerthelesse the word which conuerteth is contrarie to the wicked nature of man The second testimonie is from the Prophets and Apostles who were Embassadours of God extraordinarily to represent his authoritie vnto his Church and the pen-men of the holy Ghost to set downe the true and proper word of God And the Apostles aboue
without repentance in the counsell of seperation and in the pleasure of God Thirdly by obseruing well this order we may attaine to the assurance of our election For if thou hast beene called and hast in trueth answered to the calling of God by obedience thou maist assure thy selfe of thy seperation from the womb to euerlasting life because this order is as it were a golden chaine in which all the linkes are inseperably vnited Lastly the consideration of this order serues to mortifie the pride arrogancie of our hearts in that it ascribes all to God and nothing to man in the cause of saluation Read Ezech. 16. 63. Againe by the consideration of these 3. causes we gather that God hath determined what he will doe with euery man and that he hath in his eternall counsell assigned euery man his office and condition of life For there is in God a pleasure whereby he may doe with euery man what he will And by his eternall counsell he seperates euery man from the very wombe to one calling or other and accordingly he calles them in time by giuing giftes and will to doe that for which they were appointed And this I vnderstand of all lawfull callings in the familie church or common wealth Thus Christ was called from the wombe and set apart to be a mediatour Isai. 47. 1. and Iohn 6. 27. Ieremie to be a prophet Ierem. 1. 5. Christ is said to giue Apostles Prophets Pastors teachers Eph. 4. 11. God sent Ioseph vnto Egipt to be the gouernour thereof and a releeuer of Iacobs familie Gen. 45. In this regard the Medes and Persians are said to be the sanctified ones of God Isai. 13. 3. and the men of his counsell Isa. 46. 11. The vse Hence we are all taught to walke in our callings with diligence and good conscience Because they are assigned vs of God Hence we are taught to yeeld obedience to our rulers teachers because they that are our rulers and teachers were seperated from the wombe to be so and that by God himselfe without the will of man Hence we may gather assurance of Gods protection and assistance in our callings for in that he hath appointed vs our callings he will also defend vs in them 2. Cor. 3. 46. Isay. 49. 2. Hence we may learne patience and contentation in all the miseries and troubles of our callings for in what calling soeuer thou art thou wast ordained to it by God from thy mothers wombe Thinke on this Hēce we learne thankfulnes to god because our calings giftes and the exequution of our callings is wholy of God and this Paul signifies when he saith that our seperation to our offices and callings was from our first conception Hence we learne to depend on Gods prouidence for the time to come For if he prouided our callings when we were not he will much more aide and blesse vs in them now while we haue a beeing Read Psalme 22. 8. 9. Poore parents that cannot leaue landes and liuings to their children after their decease let them comfort themselues in this that there children are from their mothers wombe seperated to some good office and condition of life by the wisdome of God and that a good office or calling is better then land and liuing Thirdly it appeares hence that the time of all euentes is determined in the counsell of God For God determines with himselfe the time in which he will call and conuert Paul By this we are taught in our praiers not to limit God to any time for the accōplishment of our requests for the disposition of time is his and that is to be left to his wisdome Againe in our afflictions and temptations we may not make hast for helpe and deliuerance before the time but waite the leasure of God who hath decreede the time of deliuerance He that beleeues makes no hast Isai. 28. 16. Habacuk must waite because the vision is for a time appointed Hab. 2. 1. Dauids eyes and strength failed in waiting on God Psal. 69. 3. Daniel waites on God 70. yeares and then praies for deliuerance out of captiuitie the time beeing expired This serues to discouer the wickednes of them that beeing in any kind of miserie cannot staie the leasure of God till he deliuer them by good meanes but they will haue present remedie though it be from the deuill and if helpe cannot be had when they desire they presently make away themselues The second point is the Forme of the calling or conuersion of Paul in these wordes to reuele his sonne in me that is to teach me the doctrine of the redemption of mankind by the sonne Iesus Christ. Here I consider to whome reuelation is made and how For the first reuelation of the sonne is made to cruell and persequuting Paul a desperate sinner Hence euery man can gather that God hath mercy for great and notorious offenders as for Paul and such like and the collection is good For God is much in sparing Isai. 55. 7. And yet here it must be remembred that all desperate offenders shall not finde mercie vnlesse they be great in their repentance as God is great in mercy For Gods mercy hath a double effect in vs one is remission of sinne by the imputaton of the merit of Christ the other the mortification of originall sinne by his efficacie And these two be inseperable as we see in Paul on whome God shewed great mercie whose repentance also was notable As the woman Iohn 7. had many sinnes forgiuen her so shee loued much v. 47. By this we see the great and common abuse of the mercy of God Men euery where presume vpon the greatnes of gods mercie and they make Christ a packe-horse lading him with their burdens and there is little or no amendment of life The manner that God vsed in reuealing the sonne to Paul stands in two things Preparation and Instruction Preparation is a worke of God whereby he humbled Paul subdued the pride and stubbernenesse of his heart and made him tractable and teachable This humiliation is outward or inward The outward was partly by lightening from heauen that cast him to the earth and made him blinde and partly by a voice reproouing him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me The inward humiliation was in a sight and horrour for his sinnes The sinnes that God reuealed to him are these the first was an height of wickednesse that in persecuting the Church he made warre euen against God himselfe Secondly God made manifest vnto him the meaning of the tenth commandement and that secret lust without consent of will was sinne Rom. 7. 7. And thus the lawe killed him that was aliue in his owne opinion when he was a Pharise The instruction whereby God taught the same to Paul hath two parts The first is the call of God whereby he inuites Paul to become a member of the sonne of God And this he did first by propounding vnto him the commandement of the
of pardon before all worlds the promise of pardon in the beginning of the worde The seed of the woman c. The procurement of pardon vpon the crosse and the donation or the giuing of the pardon This donation is an action of God whereby he giues and communicates Christ vnto vs and applies to our consciences the remission of our sinnes In this donation there is required a hand to giue and a hand to receiue The hand of God whereby he giues is the word preached and the sacraments the hand to receiue is our faith The giuing of pardon is necessarie for though sinnes be pardoned in the decree of God by his promise in the word and by procurement vpon the crosse yet pardon is no pardon to vs till it be giuen vnto vs by God Furthermore this giuing is not altogether at one instant but it beginnes in the conuersion of a sinner and is often iterated in the vse of the word and sacraments to the death Paul wils the Corinthians reconciled to God still to be reconciled 2. Cor. 5. 21. And we are taught euery day to pray to God to giue vs the pardon of our sinnes This giuing is twofold conditionall and absolute Conditionall when God giues the pardon of sinne vpon condition Thus in baptisme and in the first conuersion of a sinner all sinnes without exception are pardoned yea future sinnes yet not simply whether a man repent or no but vpon condition of future repentance The absolute donation is when a man repents or renewes his repentance for then the pardon of sinne is simply and fully without condition applied and reuealed to the conscience When Dauid confessed his sin Nathan in the name of the Lord saith Thy sinne is forgiuen thee 2. Sam. 12. Now then to come to the point the child of God hath pardon of his fall in respect of the decree to pardon in respect of the generall promise of pardon in respect of the procurement of pardon in respect of the conditionall donation of pardon which is made in baptisme and he may be said to want pardon in that the pardon of his offence is not fully and absolutely giuen him till he recouer himselfe and renewe his repentance If it be here demaunded what the childe of God askes when he praies for pardon day by day I answer he praies for two things First that God would continue to shew his fauour and to impute the merits of Christ vnto him wheras he for his part by his offence deserues to be depriued of all fauour Secondly he asks the giuing of the pardon that is that God would certifie his conscience thereof The vse Seeing the intent of the Deuill and wicked men is to destroy the saith as it appeares in this place and in the first temptation wherewith Satan assaulted Christ Math. 4. we must haue a speciall care of our faith And first we must looke that our faith be a true faith least we be dece●ued as the foolish virgins Secondly we must keepe and locke vp our faith in some safe and sure place namely in the store house or treasurie of a good conscience 1. Tim. 1. 19. Thirdly our care must be to increase in faith that our hearts may be rooted and grounded in the loue of God And for this cause we are to make continuall experiences and obseruations of the loue of God toward vs and to laie them all together and to build a ioyfull conclusion therevpon The third answer of Paul is And they glorified God for mee that is the churches of Iudea when they heard of my calling conuersion they considered therein the power the goodnes and the mercie of God and with ioy they gaue him thankes for it In this practise of the church we learne that our dutie is to sanctifie glorifie the name of God in euery worke of his And this sanctification hath 2. partes The first is the consideration of the diuine vertues that shew themselues in euery worke of God as his wisdome power iustice mercie prouidence presence c. The second is praise and thanks giuing to God for the same And this practise must be inlarged to all his workes without exception to his iudgements as well as to his workes of mercie Therefore we are commaunded in persequution to sanctifie God in our hearts 1. Pet. 3. 17. And Moses because he failed in the doing of this duty was barred the land of Canaan Num. 20. 12. In England god hath wrought his wonderous workes among vs. He hath giuen vs peace and protection against our enemies with the Gospell for the space of 40. yeares and more And our dutie is to glorifie God in these workes of his but alas we doe it not For the Gospell of saluation is little regarded of the most and little obedience is yeelded to it This neglect of ours in glorifying praising of God is a great sinne and it standes vs in hand to repent of it betime least God take away his word from vs and leaue vs to strange illusions to beleeue lies Again here we see what is the right maner of honouring of the Saints and that is to glorifie God in them and for them As for religious worship of adoration and inuocation it is proper to God and the Saints desire it not Reuel 22. 9. CHAP. II. 1 Then 14. yeares after I went vp againe to Ierusalem with Barnabas and tooke with me Titus also 2 And I went by reuelation and communicated with thē of the Gospel which I preach amōg the Gentiles but priuately with them that were the chiefe least by any meanes I should runne or had runne in vaine IN this chapter Paul proceedes to iustifie and defend his immediate extraordinarie calling And this whole chapter seemes to depend on the last wordes of the former chapter against which the Aduersaries of Paul might happily obiect on this manner Though the Churches of Iudea glorifie God for thee yet will not the Apostles doe it because thou teachest otherwise then they teach To this obiection Paul makes a double answer in this chapter The effect and summe of the first is this I went vp to Ierusalem I conferred with the Apostles there I had their consent and approbation And the answer containes three parts The first of Pauls iourney to Ierusalem in the first verse the second of his conference with the Apostles in the 2. verse the third of the approbation which they gaue him from the 3. v. to the eleuenth In his iourney I consider foure things The first is the Manner of his iourneying in these wordes I went vp or ascended to Ierusalem And this he speakes because Ierusalem was placed and seated vpon a mountaine and compassed with moūtaines Psal. 125. or againe in respect of the dignitie and excellencie of the place as we in England are said to goe vp to London from all the parts of the land because it is the cheife citie The second thing to be considered in the iourney
hearts vpon the outward things of this world because God doth not respect vs for them But we are earnestly to seeke after the things that make vs accepted with God as true faith righteousnes and good conscience Rom. 14. 17. Againe superiours must be admonished to deale moderately with their inferiours Coloss. 2. 11. Againe inferiours are to comfort themselues if they be oppressed in that God the iudge of all accepts no persons Lastly here we learne that when we shall haue immediate fellowship with God in heauen all outward respect of persons shall cease God himselfe and the lamb Christ Iesus shall be all in all to the Elect. In the ende of the verse Paul addes for they communicated nothing to me but to the contrarie Rom. 1. 12. may be obiected Where Paul desires to come to Rome that he might be comforted by their mutuall faith both his and theirs Answ. Though the Apostles did communicate nothing to Paul in respect of doctrine or iudgement yet might they or the meanest beleeuers conferre something vnto him in respect of comfort or the confirmation of his faith and thus much he signifieth to the Romanes Here is a good item for them that come to no sermons because they can learne nothing Put the case they were as learned as the Apostles yet might they profit in hearing in respect of comfort of faith and good affection 7 But on the contrarie when they saw that the Gospel ouer the vncircumcision was committed vnto me as the Gospel ouer the circumcision was to Peter 8 For he that was mightie by Peter in the Apostleship ouer the circumcision was also mightie by me toward the Gentiles 9 And when Iames and Cephas and Iohn knew the grace of God that was giuen to me which are accounted pillars they gaue to me and to Barnabas the right hād of fellowship that we should preach to the Gentiles they vnto the Circumcision The wordes of more difficultie are thus to be explaned Contrariwise that is they did communicate nothing to me in way of correction but on the contrarie they gaue me the hand of fellowship Againe the words Circumcision and vncircumcision signifie the nation of the Iewes and the Gentiles the one circūcised the other vncircūcised And whē Paul saith that the grace of God was giuen to him he meanes specially the gift of an Apostle Rom. 1. 5. Lastly to giue the right hand of fellowshippe to Paul is to esteeme and acknowledge him for their collegue or fellowe Apostle by giuing the right hand in token thereof The contents of the words are these Here Paul sets downe the third signe of his approbation namely that the cheife Apostles acknowledged him for their fellow Apostle v. 9. Secondly he sets down the manner how the cheefe Apostles acknowledged this fellowship and that was by making a couenant with Paul that he should preach to the Gentiles and Peter to the Iewes Thirdly he sets down the impulsiue cause that mooued the Apostles to receiue Paul to their fellowship and that was the decree of God whereby he ordained that Paul should be the cheife Apostle to the Gentiles and Peter the cheife Apostle among the Iewes v. 7. Lastly he sets down the signes whereby the Apostles knew that Paul was ordained the Apostle of the Gentiles and they are two the grace of god giuen him and the power of his Ministerie among the Gentiles v. 8 9. Furthermore the things here contained are in a syllogisme disposed thus When the Apostles saw that I was ordained the cheife Apostle of the Gentiles and Peter of the Iewes they acknowledged me for their fellow Apostle and made a couenant with me that I should preach to the Gentiles and Peter to the Jewes But when I was with them at Ierusalem they saw that I was ordained the cheife Apostle of the Gentiles and Peter of the Iewes This minor is omitted yet the proofe thereof is set down thus For they saw the efficacie of my ministerie among the Gentiles and the grace of God that was with me Therefore they acknowledged me for their fellow Apostle c. The vse This text makes notably against the primacie of Peter First therefore let vs obserue the Ordinance of God here plainely expressed that Paul should be the cheife Apostle of the Gentiles and Peter the cheife Apostle of the Iewes And this may else where be gathered For the commission of the twelue Apostles ran thus that they must first preach to Ierusalem and Iudea then to Samaria and in the last place to the vttermost part of the earth Act. 1. 8. And Pauls commission was that he should first preach to the Gentiles and in the second place to the people of Israel Act. 9. 16. It may be obiected that the commission of all the Apostles was to goe into all the world and to preach to all men without exception Mar. 16. 15. Answer This power and libertie Christ gaue to all the Apostles and he did not take it away afterward neuerthelesse he ordered it by a second decree that Paul should specially haue care of the Gentiles and Peter of the Iewes And this the Lord did in great wisdome that confusion and discord might be auoided and a regard had of all prouinces through the world Hence it followes that the primacie of Peter ouer Iewes Gentiles is a supposed thing For the ordinance of God is that Peter shall be cheife ouer the Iewes and not ouer the Gentiles which were almost all the world beside And thus the supremacie of the Pope goes to the ground for if he hold of Peter and succeede him in authoritie and office as he pretends he must challenge a superioritie ouer the Iewes and he hath nothing to doe with vs. For Paul was cheife ouer the Gentiles and not Peter Secondly this Ordinance of God giues vs to vnderstand that the place Math. 16. 18. Thou art Peter and vpon this rocke will I build my Church c. and I wil giue thee the keies of the kingdome of heauen doth not containe a promise made to Peter of a primacie ouer all the Apostles and ouer the Catholike church If Christ had meant any such thing in these words he would not haue assigned the Iewes to Peter and all the nations of the world beside to Paul Thus we see how this text for many hūdred yeares hath beene abused and is still at this day Thirdly it is false which the Papists teach that the place in S. Iohn Feede my lambes and feede my sheepe giues a primacie to Peter ouer the whole world For by the ordinance of God this feeding of lambes and sheep is limited to the nation of the Iewes Lastly whereas Eusebius saith in his Chronicle that Peter was Bishop of Rome and sate there 25. years it hath no likelihood of truth for then Peter liued in the breach of an expresse commandement of God for a long time because the Iewes were his speciall charge Againe it is to be obserued in this
text that Iames Peter Iohn are made equall all being pillars and Iames is first named and that not without cause For not Peter but Iames was the President of the councell of Ierusalem because he spake the last and concluded all Act. 15. 13. Therefore the first naming of Peter in other places of scripture is no sufficient proofe of his supremacie Thirdly Peter here is said to make a couenant with Paul that he shall be the Apostle of the Gentiles and Peter of the Iewes But if Peter had bin head of the Church for 14 yeares togither and had but known the primacie which the Papists giue to him he would not haue consented to this order It is alleadged that Paul was the cheife Apostle ouer the Gentiles in respect of paines and labour and not in respect of iurisdiction I answer this distinction hath no ground in the word of God Againe Paul was an Apostle and vsed his Apostolicall authoritie ouer the Gentiles and there is no Ecclesiasticall person that is or can be aboue an Apostle For he was simply to be beleeued in preaching and writing and had extraordinarie power giuen him by God to punish them that rebelled Againe Paul here saith that the Gospel was committed to him and Peter that is that they were put in trust with it Hence we learne 3. things The first that the Gospel is not ours but gods and that men are but the keepers of it For this we are to praise God The second is that the ministers of the word are to keep and maintaine the truth of it with all faithfulnesse and good conscience and further to apply it to the best vse and to the greatest good of men For this charge lies vpon them that are put in trust The third is that the Gospel is a speciall treasure For this we in England are to giue vnto God all thankfulnes specially by bringing forth the fruits of the Gospel In this dutie the most of vs come short and therfore we may iustly feare least God take from vs the gospel of life and giue it to a nation that will bring forth the fruit of it Moreouer in that Paul saith that God was mightie by him and Peter to the Iewes and Gentiles we are to consider the efficacie of the Ministerie Of it three cautions are to be obserued The first that grace or power to regenerate is not included in the word preached as vertue to heale in a medicine Paul saith He that planteth and he that watereth is not any thing 1. Cor. 3. 7. To regenerate is the proper worke of God not agreeing to angels no not to the flesh of Christ exalted aboue men and angels For the vertue to renew or regenerate is not in it as in a subiect but in the godhead of the sonne The second caution is that grace is not inseparably annexed and tyed to the word preached for to some it is the sauour of death to death The third is that the preaching of the word is an externall instrument of faith and regeneration and the proper effect of it is to declare or signifie And it is an instrument because when the ministers of the word doe by it signifie and declare what is to be done and what is the will of God the spirit of God inwardly inlightens the minde and inclines the heart to beleeue and obey Hence we learne that it is a magicall fiction to suppose that fiue words For this is my bodie should transubstantiate the bread into the bodie of Christ. Secondly we learne that the Sacraments doe not conferre grace ex opere operato by the worke done For the word and Sacraments are both of one nature Sacraments beeing a visible word Now the word the preaching of it doth not conferre grace but onely declare what God will conferre Thirdly by this it appeares that charmes or spels haue not force in them to cure diseases and to worke wonders but by satanicall operation For the best word of all euen the word preached hath it not Lastly we are here to be put in mind that we loose no time in hearing of the word for it is a meanes whereby we are clensed and renewed Euery branch that bringeth forth fruit God purgeth it by his word and other meanes that it may bring forth more fruite Ioh. 15. It is a thing to be obserued that the Apostles at Ierusalem acknowledged Paul to be an Apostle because he had the gift of an Apostle and because his ministerie was powerfull amōg the Gentiles Therefore they which haue the gift of teaching by whome also God is powerfull in the conuersion of sinners are Ministers certenly called of God Let them thinke on this that vtterly condemne the ministerie of the Church of England For many teachers among vs can shew both the gift of teaching and the power or efficacy of their ministery It is worth the marking also that the Apostles are called Pillars Here we see what is the charge of the ministers of the word namely to sustaine and to vphold the Church by doctrine praier counsel good life Elizeus is called of Ioas The charrets and horsemen of Israel 2. King 13. 4. And the Church of God vpon earth is called the Pillar and ground of trueth in respect of the Ministerie of the word 1. Tim. 3. 15. Againe in that all ministers in their places according to the measure of gifts receiued are pillars they are admonished hereby to be constant in the truth against all enemies whatsoeuer It is the praise of Iohn the Baptist that he was not as a reed shaken of the winde Math. 11. 7. All beleeuers are to stand fast in temptation against their spirituall enemies Eph. 6. 13. and this they shall the better doe if they be directed by the good example of their teachers Thirdly in that Ministers are pillars we are taught to cleaue vnto them and their ministerie at all times in life and death For we are liuing stones in the temple of God Christ is our foundation and they be pillars to hold vs vp and therefore not to be forsaken Deut. 12. 19. Furthermore Paul at this time was not accounted a pillar for he saith thus Iames Cephas Iohn are accounted pillars as who should say I am accounted none Thus Paul goes through good report and euill report and is content to be contemned Lastly the example of concord among the Apostles is to be obserued in that they giue the right hands of fellowship one to an other 10 Warning onely that we should remember the poore which thing also I was diligent to doe In these words Paul sets downe the fourth and last signe of his approbation at Ierusalem on this manner At my departing the Apostles warned me to remember the poore and of no other thing did they giue me warning therefore there was a full and perfect consent betweene vs. In the wordes two things are set downe the Apostolicall warning and the practise of it by Paul The warning
stand before me Ierem. 15. 19. God reueales his secrets to the Prophets his seruants Amos 3. 7. Lastly fearefull iudgements of God belong to Ministers of wicked liues Destruction befalls the sonnes of Eli and their families because they by leud example made the people of God to sinne 1. Sam. 2. 24. The like befell the sonnes of Aaron for their presumption Againe all superiours are warned to goe before their inferiours by good example When Moses went into Egypt to be the guide of the Israelites the Lord would haue destroied him by reason of the bad example in his owne familie namely the vncircumcision of his child Dauid for his euill exāple whereby he caused the enemies of God to blaspheme is punished and that after his repentance that men might see in him an example of Gods iudgement against sinne 2. Sam. 12. 14. Here againe we see that the consent of many together is not a note of truth Peter Barnabas and the Iewes all together are deceiued and Paul alone hath the truth Panormitane saith that a laie-man bringing Scripture is to be preferred before a whole Councell Paphnutius alone had the truth and the whole Councell of Nice inclined to errour 14 But when I saw that they went not with a right foote to the truth of the Gospel I said to Peter before all men If thou beeing a Iew liuest as the Gentiles and not like the Iewes why constrainest thou the Gentiles to doe like the Iewes In these words Paul sets downe the reproofe of Peter and the whole manner of it In it many points are to be considered The first is the time of this reproofe and that was so soone as Paul saw the offence of Peter Here we learne that we must resist and cut off the first beginnings of temptation of sinne and of superstition because we are prone to cuill and therefore if it once set footing in vs it will take place The second point is the foundation of the reproofe in these wordes when I saw and that is a certen knowledge of Peters offence Here we are to take notice of the common fault and that is that we vse to censure and condemne men specially publike persons vpon suspitions and coniectures and heare-say Whereas we should not open our mouthes to reprooue till we haue certen knowledge of the fault Moreouer publike persons as Magistrates and Ministers haue their priuiledge that an accusation is not to be receiued against them without there be a proofe by two or three witnesses 1. Tim. 5. 20. The third point is the fault reprooued which is here expressed by an other name not to walke with a right foote to the truth of the Gospel that is not to conuerse with men and to carrie himselfe so as he may be sutable to the sinceritie of the Gospel both in word and deede Here is a notable dutie set downe for all men To walke with an euen foote according to the truth of the Gospel and this is done when in word and deede and euery way we ascribe all the good we haue or can doe to grace to mercie and to Christ when againe in word and deede and euery way we giue all thanks to God for grace and mercie by Christ. Here two sorts of men are to be condemned as haulters in respect of the truth of the Gospel The first are Papists who ioyne Christ and workes in the cause of our iustification and saluation The second are carnall Protestants and all other sorts of men that professe the name of Christ and withall challenge to themselues a libertie to liue as they list For they walke contrarie to the Gospel disioyning iustification and sanctification faith and good life remission of sinne and mortification This is the rife and common sinne of our daies We are light in the Lord but we walke not as children of light We are content to come to the marriage of the kings sonne but we come not with the marriage garment It is to be feared this very sinne will banish the Gospel and bring all the iudgements of God vpon vs. Let vs therefore repent of our vneuen and haulting liues and preuent the Lords anger by walking worthie the Gospel of Christ. It will besaid how must we performe this dutie Ans. Two rules must be remembred The first is that we must haue and carrie in vs a right heart For the want of this was Simon Magus condemned Act. 8. 21. A right heart is an humble and an honest heart The humble heart is when in the estimation of our owne hearts we abase our selues vnder all creatures vpon earth and that for our offences when againe in the affection of our hearts we exalt the death and blood of Christ aboue all riches aboue all honours aboue all pleasures aboue all ioyes and aboue all that heart can thinke or tongue can speake The honest heart is when we carrie and cherish in our hearts the setled purpose of not sinning so as if we sinne at any time we may in the testimonie of a good conscience say that we sinned against our purpose The second rule is that we must make straight steppes to our feete Hebr. 12. 13. And that is done when we endeauour to obey God according to all his commandements Psal. 119. 6. and also according to all the powers of the inward man that is not onely in action but also in will affection and thought Let vs also applie our hearts to the doing of this least if we come to the marriage of the kings sonne without the garment of a right heart and life we heare the sentence Binde them hand and foote and cast them into vtter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth The fourth point is the place of reproofe before all men for they that sinne openly to the offence of many are openly to be reprooued 1. Tim. 5. 20. The fifth point is concerning the reasons which Paul vseth for the restraining of the sinne of Peter The first is set downe in the 16. verse If thou beeing a Iew c. Here the meaning of some words are to be opened To Iudaise or to liue as a Iew is to obserue and that necessarily a difference of meates and times according to the ceremoniall law of Moses To Gentilize or to liue as a Gentile is to vse meats and drinks and times freely without difference Peter is said to compell the Gentiles to Iudaise not by teaching of any doctrine for the Apostles neuer erred in teaching and deliuering any thing to the church of God this is a principle therefore he constrained them by the authoritie of his example whereby he caused them to thinke that the obseruation of the Ceremoniall law was necessarie The first reason then is framed thus If thou beeing a Iew vsest to liue as the Gentiles thou maist not by thy example compell the Gentiles to Iudaize in the necessarie obseruation of ceremonies but thou beeing a Iew vsest to liue as the Gentiles
couenant they are children of God and originall sinne which is in them is couered from their first beginning and not imputed to them The vse There was no absolute necessitie of circumcision For they which died before the eight day were borne holy and consequently in the couenant and therefore might be saued And thus Baptisme was not of absolute necessitie for the children of beleeuers are borne holy and Christian and therefore dying in the want of baptisme may for all that be saued The seale of the couenant is not of like necessitie with the couenant it selfe Secondly here we learne that it is not the act of baptisme to conferre the first grace but onely to confirme and seale it vnto vs. Adoption and life beginnes not in baptisme but before If the roote be holy the branches springing thenee are holy We are borne Christians if our parents beleeue and not made so in baptisme Lastly if we be borne holy it is our shame that we haue made no more proceeding in holines then we haue done the most remaine ignorant and vnreformed and they of the better sort either stand at a stay or goe backward The second point is concerning Iustification in the 16. v. of which sundrie things are there propounded And first I will beginne with the name The word Iustifie is borrowed from courts of iudgement and signifies a indiciall act Otherwhiles it is put for the action of the iudge and then it signifies to absolue or to pronounce innocent Thus Paul saith Act. 13. 39. That we are instified from all things from which we could not be iustified by the law of Moses that is absolued or cleered Againe he opposeth iustification to accusation and condemnation Rom. 8. 33. Now the contrarie to condemnation is absolution Sometimes againe the word iustifie signifies the act of the partie iudged or of the witnesses and then it imports as much as to giue testimonie or to declare and approoue Thus Iames saith Abraham was iustified by workes chap. 2. v. 22. that is declared and approoued to be a iust man by workes In the former signification is the word vsed where the holy Ghost deliuereth the doctrine of iustification as in this place The vse Here we see how to distinguish betweene Iustification regeneration and renouation Regeneration is vsually in scripture the change of the inward man whereby we are borne anew Renouation is the change both of the inward and outward man that is both of heart and life Iustification is neither but a certaine action in God applied vnto vs or a certaine respect or relation whereby we are acquit of our sinnes and accepted to life euerlasting Secondly we must here note that the Teachers of the Church of Rome mistake the word Iustification For by it they vnderstand nothing els but a physicall transmutation of the qualitie and disposition of our hearts from euill to good And by this mistaking they haue made a mixture or rather confusion of law and Gospel Thirdly here we see what is to be the disposition of the partie iustified for by the consequent we may learne the antecedent A man therfore that would be iustified must come before the iudgement seat of God and there must he plead guiltie and be his owne aduersa●ie condemning himselfe and beeing pressed with the terrours of the law he must flie and make his appeale to the throne of grace for pardon in Christ and then he shall be acquit or iustified from all sinner Thus much doth the word 〈…〉 stifie import Thus came the Publican before God Luk. 18 when he said Lord be mercifull to me a sinner and departed iustified Thus in the sift petition we are taught to come euery day into the presence of God and to acknowledge our debts and to vse the plea of mercie saying Forgiue vs our debts The second thing to be considered is the subiect of iustification or the person to be iustified and that is man generally signifying that a Man is iustified The holy Ghost speaketh thus generally for two causes The first is because all men without exception haue need of iustification euen they which are regenerate Rom. 3. 23. And in this place Paul saith that he and Peter and the rest haue beleeued in Christ that they might be iustified by faith Here we are to take notice of the miserable condition of prophane and secure Epicures who neuer so much as dreame of any iustification The second reason is because God communicates the benefit of iustification generally to all sorts of men and this he doth in the Ministerie of the word in which he beseecheth men to be reconciled to God 2. Corinth 5. v. 21. This must be an inducement vnto vs to come vnto Christ humbling and iudging our selues that we may be iustified God himselfe from heauen vseth reasons vnto vs daily to mooue vs to the practise of this dutie What meane these gratious and continuall preseruations of Prince and people Church and land By them we see it is the good pleasure of God to giue vs a time to seeke his kingdome and righteousnes wherefore let vs not neglect the day of visitation but take the time while it serues that we may turne vnto God and be accepted of him and escape the woe pronounced vpon Corazin and Bethsaida The third thing to be considered concernes things excluded from iustification as false causes namely the works of the Law Here it may be demanded what works are meant I answer first not onely workes of the Ceremoniall but also of the morall law For all men know that ceremoniall actions are of no vse vnlesse they be ioyned with morall duties of loue and mercie And if Paul meant onely Ceremoniall workes he needed not to haue made so long a discourse against iustification by workes for he might haue ended the whole matter in a word or twaine by shewing that the ceremoniall law was abrogated by Christ. Secondly I answer that not onely workes done before faith are excluded but also workes that follow faith and are done in the estate of grace For Paul here reasons thus If no flesh be iustified by workes then not we beleeuers but no flesh at all is iustified therefore not we beleeuers Dauid Psal. 143. reasoneth on the same manner No flesh shall be iustified in thy fight therefore I cannot though otherwise I be thy seruant in keeping thy commandements When Abraham was the father of all the faithfull and was come to the highest degree of faith and abounded in good workes yet was he not then iustified by workes Rom. 4. 1 2. Paul kept a good conscience before God and men Act. 23. and yet was he not iustified therby 1. Cor. 4. 4. And he saith that we are not saued by the workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in Eph. 2. 9 10. And the workes that God hath ordained for vs to walke in are the best workes of all euen workes of grace Againe he saith that we are not saued
one is of some Protestants lesse dangerous yet an vntruth namely that we are iustified onely by the Passion of Christ. But if this were so we should be iustified without fulfilling the law for as I haue said we owe to God a double debt one by creation namely the fulfilling of the law in all things from our first beginning the second since the Fall of Adam namely a satisfaction for the breach of the law Now the Passion of Christ is a paiment of the second debt but not of the first whereas both must be answered For Cursed is he that doth not continue in all things written in the law to doe them The passion of Christ procureth deliuerance from hell but alone by it selfe considered it doth not purchase a right to eternall life Obiect I. Christ fulfilled the law for himselfe therefore his passion alone serues for our iustification Ans. Christ as man fulfilled the law for himselfe that he might be in both natures an holy high Priest and so continue Neuertheles as Mediatour God and man he became subiect to the law in this regard he did not fulfill the law for himselfe neither was he boūd so to doe Obiect II. That which Christ did we are not bound to doe but Christ say some fulfilled the law for vs therefore we are not bound to fulfill the law Ans. That which Christ did we are not bound to doe for the same ende and in the same manner Now he fulfilled the law in way of redemption and satisfaction for vs and so doe not we fulfill the law but onely in way of thankfulnes for our redemption Obiect III. The law doth exact both obedience and the penaltie also Ans. In the estate of innocencie the law threatned the penaltie and it onely exacted obedience Since the fall it exacteth both obedience and the punishment The threatning of the law exacts the punishment the precepts exact obediēce Obiect IU Hebr. 10. 19. By the blood of Christ we haue entrance into the Holy place Ans. By the blood of Christ we are to vnderstand the Passion and the passion may not be seuered from actiue and voluntarie obedience For Christ in suffering obaied and in obeying suffered And as Chrysostome saith the Passion is a kind of action Christ in the oblation of himselfe did not onely offer to God his passion but also praiers which are no passions Heb. 5. 7. The second errour is of the Papists who teach that the thing by which and for which a sinner is formally iustified is remission of sinnes with inherent justice infused by the holy Ghost But this cannot be For inherent iustice and iustification are made distinct gifts of God Paul saith Christ is made vnto vs of God wisdome iustice sanctification 1. Cor. 1. 3. Againe But ye are washed ye are iustified and sanctified 1. Cor. 6. 11. Secondly the iustice whereby a sinner is iustified is reuealed without the law Rom. 3. 21. Now inherent iustice or the habit of charitie is reuealed by the law and the obedience of Christ is the onely iustice reuealed without the law For it is a iustice imputed that the law neuer knew and in this obedience Christ performed the law and more too For he died for his enemies and so loued his neighbour more then himselfe Thirdly God is not onely a iustifier but also iust in iustifying Rom. 3. 26. because he iustifieth none but such as bring vnto a him a true and perfect iustice either in themselues or in their Mediatour Prou 17. 15. Now this inward and inherent iustice is not such For it is imperfect because it is increased as they teach by a second iustification and it is in this life mixed with the corruption of the flesh Fourthly the righteousnes of a good conscience is an excellent grace and gift of God but by it we are not iustified 1. Cor. 4. 4. Lastly a close errour is to be noted in this Popish doctrine of iustification For in Popish learning Remission of sinnes is not onely an abolishing of the guilt and the punishment but also of the corruption of sinne so as the partie pardoned and iustified hath nothing in him that as they say God may iustly hate And yet Paul iustified and regenerate saith otherwise of himselfe that sinne dwelleth in him and that the law of sinne rebells in him against the law of his minde and leads him captiue to sinne Rom. 7. The vse of the doctrine First in that we are iustified by an obedience out of our selues we are taught vtterly to denie our selues and to goe out of our selues as hauing nothing in vs whereby we may be saued Here is the foundation of the abnegation of our selues Secondly the obedience of Christ must be vnto vs the foundation of our obedience for he performed all righteousnes for vs that we might be seruants not of sinne but seruants of righteousnes in all duties of obedience And in his obedience we must not onely respect the merit thereof but also his holy example in loue mercie meekenes patience c. and after it are we to fashion our liues Thirdly the obedience of Christ must be the foundation of our comfort In all daungers and temptations we that beleeue are to oppose the obedience of Christ against the fierce wrath of God against hell death and condemnation Certen beasts when they are pursued flie the next way to their dennes where they hold themselues euen to death Christ in respect of his obedience is our hiding place Rom. 3. 26. he is set forth unto the world as a Propitiatorie For as the Propitiatorie couered the Arke and the decasogue so he couereth our sinnes and he hides our bodies soules from the furious indignation and vengeance of God Let vs therefore by our faith flie to this our hiding place in the storme and tempest of Gods wrath and let vs there liue and die Fourthly this Obedience is the foundation of our happines For true happines is to be eased of our sinnes Psal. 32. 1. and this ease we haue from Christ Math. 11. 28. Lastly the consideration of this obedience is the foundation of our thankfulnes to God For if we beleeue that Christ suffered and fulfilled the law for vs we are worse then beasts if we doe not euery way shew our selues thankfull for this mercie The fifth point to be considered is the meanes of iustification namely the Faith of Christ. Of which I consider 3. things The first what faith is The Papists define iustifying faith to be a gift of God whereby we beleeue the articles of faith to be true and the whole word of God But thit faith the deuills hanc Here they alleadge that Abraham was the father of all the faithfull and that his faith was nothing els but a perswasion that he was able to giue him a child in his old age Ans. First the obiect of Abrahams faith was double one lesse-principall that he should haue ishew in his old age the second more
terrifieth and condemneth vs and therby it occasioneth or vrgeth vs to flie vnto Christ who is the cause that we die vnto the law As the needle goes before and drawes in the third which sowes the cloth so the law goes before and makes a way that grace may follow after and take place in the heart Thus must this place be vnderstood and all other places that speake of the law in this manner as Rom. 7. 8. c. The third point is touching the ende of our death to the law and that is that we may liue to God It may be demanded what life this is whereby we liue to God Ans. There is a naturall and a spirituall life Naturall life is that which we receiue from Adam by generation and it is the function of naturall faculties in liuing moouing vse of senses and reason Spirituall life is that which we receiue from Christ by regeneration and it is the action motion or operation of the spirit in vs. This life is called by Paul the life of God Eph. 4. 18. And this is the life which he speakes of in this place And it is described by many things First by the ende and vse of it For it serues to make vs to liue to God that is to the honour and glorie of God And we liue to God by liuing wisely godly iustly Tit. 3. 12. Wisely in respect of our selues godly in respect of God iustly in respect of men That we may liue wisely we must obserue two rules The first we must labour with all diligence and with all speede that we may be worthie to stand before the sonne of man at his comming And therefore we must labour to be in Christ hauing true faith and good conscience Eph. 5. 15. Luk. 21. 36. Consider also the example of Paul Act. 24. 16. It is true wisdome to be wise for our soules and for euerlasting happines and it was the follie of the foolish virgins that they did not surnish themselues with the oyle of grace in time conuenient The second rule we must in this world come as neere heauen and the happines of life euerlasting as may be Psal. 3. 14. And for this cause we must ioyne our selues to the assemblies where the word is preached praier made and sacraments administred for there is the gate of heauen Consider the practise of Moses Heb. 11. 25 26. and of Dauid Psal. 84. 10. Againe beeing absent from heauen both in bodie and soule yet we must haue our conuersation there by the cogitation of our mindes and by the affections of our hearts Phil. 3. 21. That we may liue godlily seuen rules must be remembred The first we must bring our selues into the presence of the inuisible God yea we must set our thoughts wills affections and all we doe in his sight and presence and we must euermore remēber whatsoeuer we doe that we haue to deale with God himselfe In this regard Enoch is said to walke with God Gen. 5. 24. Abraham and Isaac before God Gen. 17. 1. and 48. 15. and Dauid Psal. 116. 9. and 139. all and Cornelius Act. 10. 33. and Paul 2. Cor. 7. 17. The second we must take knowledge of the will of God in all things whether it be reuealed in the word or by any euent It is not enough to know Gods will but when time and place serues we must acknowledge it Rom. 12. 2. Col. 1. 10. The third we must bring our selues in subiection to the knowne will of God and captiuate all our senses vnto it and suffer God to set vp his kingdome in vs. Rom. 12. 1. The fourth when we haue offended God we must instantly humble our selues before his maiestie confessing our offences and making instant deprecation for mercie Thus did Ezra chap. 9. and Daniel chap. 9. and Dauid Psal. 32. 3. The fifth in all our miseries and aduersities we must be silent in our hearts by quieting our wills in the good will of God Psal. 4. 4. Examine your selues and be still Psal. 37. 7. be silent to Iehoua Consider the example of Aaron Leuit. 10. 3. of Dauid Psal. 39. 9. of the Iewes Act. 11. 18. The sixth in all things we doe or suffer we must depend on the goodnes prouidence and mercie of God for the successe of our labours and for ease or deliuerance out of miserie This is to liue by faith and as Peter saith 1. Pet. 3. 17. to sanctifie God in our hearts The last in all things we must giue praise and thankes to God and that for our miseries and afflictions Iob 1. 22. for in them God mingles his iustice with mercie whereas he might vtterly condemne vs. That we may liue iustly in respect of men two rules must be obserued The first we must make God in Christ our treasure and our portion and his fauour and blessing our riches Then shall not the vile sinnes of auarice and ambition beare sway in vs and then shall we learne with Paul to be content in any estate Phil. 4. 11. because howsoeuer the world go we haue our portion and treasure The second we must loue God in louing of man and serue him in doing seruice to men by the offices and duties of our callings They which labour in their callings for this end to get riches honours and to set vp themselues in this world prophane their callings and practise iniustice For not selfe loue but loue to God in duties of loue to men must beare sway in all our actions Thus we see what it is to liue to God Now we are all to be exhorted to order our liues in this manner For first of all we are Gods and therefore we must glorifie God both in our bodies and soules 2. Cor. 6. 20. Secondly the end of our iustification and redemption is that we may liue to God And it is great wickednes to peruert the order of God by liuing to our selues and the iusts of our hearts Thirdly there be three degrees of life one is in this life a spirituall and a renewed life the second in death when the bodie goes to the earth and the soule to heauen the third in the last iudgement when bodie and soule reunited enter into the presence of God Therefore that we may be saued we must liue vnto God in this life for we can neuer come to the second degree of life but by the first And we must not imagine that we can steppe immediatly out of a leud and wicked life into euerlasting happines in heauen Lastly the grace of God in the ministerie of the Gospel hath appeared and long taught vs and called vpon vs to liue vnto God Therefore vnlesse we be ashamed and confounded for our sinnes and beginne with all speede to liue vnto God it will be worse with vs then with Sodom and Gomorrha and many other nations 20 I am crucified with Christ Thus I liue yet not I any more but Christ liues in me And in that I now liue in the
of sinne And by this power Christ is said to liue in them that beleeue The third is the Resurrection of the dead bodie to euerlasting glorie in the day of iudgement Rom. 8. 11. Thus then the meaning of the words is euident that Christ as a roote or head liues in them that are vnited to him and that by the operation of his spirit causing them to die vnto their sinnes and to liue vnto God And againe it must be remembred that Paul speakes this not priuately of himselfe but generally in the name of all beleeuers For he saith 2. Cor. 13. 5. Know ye not that Christ is in you except ye be reprobates The vse Hence it followes that they which are true beleeuers cannot make a practise of sinne and againe that they sinne not with the full consent or swinge of their wills Because Christ liues in them and restraines the will in part When they sinne therefore they sinne not of malice but of ignorance or infirmitie Secondly the true beleeuer cannot wholly fall away from grace because the life of Christ cannot be abolished As Christ died but once and for euer after liues to God so they that are in Christ die once to sinne and liue eternally to God Rom. 6. 10. The vertue and power of God that was shewed in raising Christ to life is likewise shewed in quickning them that doe beleeue Eph. 1. 19. He therfore that is made aliue to God dies no more but remaines aliue as Christ doth Thirdly they which are true beleeuers are a free and voluntarie people obeying God as if there were no law to compell them For they haue Christ to liue in them Read Psal. 110. 2. The spirit of life that is in Christ is also in them and that is their law Rom. 8. 2. It is the propertie of the child of God to obey God as it is the nature and qualitie of the fire to burne when matter is put to it It may here be demanded how we may know that Christ liues in vs Ans. By the spirit of God 1. Ioh. 3. 24. And the spirit is knowne by the motions and operations thereof The first whereof is a Purpose to obey God according to all his commandements that concerne vs with an inclination of our hearts to the said commandements Paul saith he was sold vnder sinne and yet withall he addes that he delighted in the law of God according to the inward man Rom. 7. 23. He that loues God and keepes his commaundements hath the father and the sonne dwelling in him Ioh. 14. 23. Let this be obserued Pharaoh when Gods hand was vpon him confessed he was a sinner and his people and requested Moses and Aaron to let the people goe But after God had withdrawne his hand he returned to his old course The like doe sicke men they make promise to amend their liues and they request their friends to pray for them but when they are recouered they forget all their faire promises The reason is this There is conscience in them and by it they know themselues to be miserable sinners but they want this purpose to obey God and the inclination to his laws and therefore indeede they hate not their sinnes but rather the commandement of God The second operation and signe of the spirit is a mind and disposition like to the mind and disposition of Christ which is to doe the will of God to seeke his glorie and to applie himselfe to the good of men in all duties of loue The third and last to omit many is to loue Christ for himselfe and to loue them that loue Christ and that because they loue Christ. This is a true signe that we haue passed from death to life 1. Ioh. 3. 14. It may here be said how can Christ be said to liue in vs considering we are laden with afflictions and miseries Where Christ liues there is no miserie Ans. In the middest of all miseries the life of Christ doth most appeare Where naturall life decaies there spirituall life takes place 2. Cor. 4. 10. I beare in my bodie the mortification of our Lord Iesus that the life of Iesus may be made manifest in me Gods power is made manifest in weaknes 2. Cor. 12. Againe it may be said if Christ liued in vs we should not feele so many corruptions as we doe Ans. The life of Christ is conueyed vnto vs by little and little God hauing wounded and slaine vs first bindes vs vp then he revives vs and the third day he raiseth vs vp Hos. 6. 1. Againe nature feeles not nature nor corruption feeles corruption but grace therefore it is the life of Christ in vs that makes vs feele the masse and bodie of corruption Furthermore here we are to take notice of the common sinne of our daies Men will not suffer Christ to liue in them and to rule ouer them It is reputed a small matter but it is a grieuous offence The Gentiles say Let vs breake their bands and cast their cords from vs. Psal. 2. 2. And it is was the sinne of the Iewes to say We will not haue this man to raigne ouer vs Luc. 19. 14. And therefore Christ saith bring them hither and slay them before me Lastly here we learne our dutie and that is so to liue that we may be able to say with good conscience that Christ liues in vs we must seeke his kingdome aboue all things and take his yoke on vs. It will be said what must we doe that Christ may liue in vs Ans. We must vse the meanes appointed meditation of the word prayer sacraments and withall we must spiritually eate the flesh of Christ and drinke his blood Ioh. 6. 57. And that we may eate him we must haue a stomacke in our soules like the stomacke of our bodies and we must hunger and thirst after Christ and therefore we must feele our owne sinnes and our spirituall pouertie and haue an earnest lust and appetite after Christ as after meat and drinke When Sisera was pursued by the armie of the Israelites he cried to Iael and said Giue me drinke I die for thirst Iudg. 4. 19. euen so we beeing pursued by the sentence of the law by the terrours of hell death and condemnation must flie to the throne of grace and crie out saying Giue me of the tree of life giue me of the water of life I perish for thirst Then shall our wretched soules be quickned and reuiued to euerlasting life Math. 5. 6. Rev. 21. 6. In the fourth place here is set downe the Meanes of spirituall life in these words And in that I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me And that the doctrine may the better appeare I will stand a while to shew the meaning of them By flesh is ment the mortall bodie or the fraile condition of this temporall life Heb. 5. 7. and 1. Pet. 4. 2. And
but included The second is that here the Spirit signifies the spirit of adoption Eph. 1. 13. Rom. 8. 16. The third is that to receiue the spirit is not barely to receiue the gifts of the spirit as we are said to haue the sunne in the house when we receiue the beames of the bodie of the sunne beeing in heauen but in this receiuing there are two things One is that the spirit is present in vs the other that the same spirit testifieth his presence by his speciall opera tion and gifts of grace Paul saith Eph. 4. 30. Greeue not the spirit Which is not meant of gifts but of the very person of the spirit And it must be remembred that the effects and gifts of the spirit presuppose the presence of the spirit By workes of the Law we are to vnderstand the doctrine of iustification by the workes of the law By the hearing of faith is meant the doctrine of the Gospel hearing beeing put for the thing heard namely preaching and faith for the doctrine of iustification by faith in Christ crucified For faith signifies not onely the gift whereby we beleeue but also that which is beleeued In the third verse spirit signifies the operation of the spirit whereby the inward man is renewed and made like to God or againe the Exercises of the inward man and flesh signifies outward things or actions that properly pertaine to the outward man as circumcision and such like Thus 2. Cor. 5. 17. flesh and the new creature are opposed And Paul saith Rom. 9. 29. He is a Iew that is a lew within in the spirit hauing the circumcision of the heart To begunne in the spirit is to beginne in godlines and religion inwardly in the exercises of the renewed heart The Resolution In these words is contained the first argu ment whereby Paul prooues the truth of his doctrine It is framed thus If ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine my doctrine is true and ye foolish that adde vnto it iustification by the workes of the law but ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine therefore it is true and ye deale foolishly that haue added to it iustification by workes The maior or first proposition is not expressed but the proofe thereof in the third verse thus it is a point of extreame follie when ye haue begun in the spirit to end in the flesh therfore it is folly in you hauing receiued the spirit by my doctrine to adde any thing vnto it of your owne The vse When Paul saith Let me learne one thing of you he notes the fault of the Galatians and of sundrie others who when they haue attained to a certaine measure of knowledge in Gods word are presently puffed vp with pride and often thinke themselues wiser then their teachers This was the fault of the Corinthians 1. Cor. 8. 10. and of sundrie in our daies who separate wholly from all our congregations presuming to know that which they neuer learned of their teachers That this ouerweening pride may not take place we must ioyne the knowledge of our selues with the knowledge of Gods word and mixe our knowledge with loue For loue edesies and bare knowledge swells the heart Againe here when it is said Receiued ye the spirit that is ye did not receiue the spirit by the workes of the law but by the hearing of faith Here I say we see the difference betweene the law and the Gospel The law doth not minister the spirit vnto vs for it onely shewes our disease and giues vs no remedie The Gospel ministreth the spirit For it shewes what we are to doe and withall the spirit is giuen to make vs doe that which we are inioyned in the Gospel Here also we learne that the preaching of the Gospel is necessarie for all men because it is the Instrument of God to conferre the spirit Whole Peter was yet speaking the spirit of God fell vpon the Gentiles Act. 10. 44. Paul saith his ministerie is the ministerie of the spirit 2. Cor. 4. 5. sauing the ministers and others 1. Tim. 4. 16. And the most learned haue neede of this ordinance of God For suppose they haue knowledge sufficient yet haue they neede of the spirit of God to guide and gouerne them Further let it be obserued what is the scope of all our hearing and teaching namely that we may receiue the spirit of God without which spirit we can doe nothing Moreouer Paul here sets downe an infallible argument whereby we may be assured that the Scripture is the word of God For the scriptures in their right vse which is in reading hearing meditation haue the diuine and supernaturall operation of the spirit ioyned with them to comfort in all distresses and in the very pang of death and to conuert the heart of man making him in respect of righteousnes and holines like vnto God This priuiledge haue the Scriptures Isa. 59. 21. and no word els Lastly let vs here obserue the certen marke of true religion and that is that the preaching thereof conferres the spirit of adoption This doth not the pretended catholike Religion of the Papists it doth not conferre vnto men the spirit to assure them that they are the children of God because it teacheth that we are to be in suspence of our saluation Againe by teaching humane satisfactions merits it ministreth the spirit of pride and presumption as also the spirit of crueltie not of meekenes for they of that religion commonly delight in blood and there haue bin no warres or seditions or rebellions in Europe for many ages but they of the Romish religion haue bin at one ende of them When Paul saith v. 3. Beganne ye in the spirit c. he teacheth a diuine instruction that true godlines and Religion stands in the spirit that is the grace of the heart or in the exercises of the inner man whether we respect the beginning the middle or the accomplishment thereof The kings daughter is all glorious within Psal. 45. 13. True worshippers worship God in the spirit Ioh. 4. 25. Rom. 1. 12. He is a Iew that is a Iew not without but within in the spirit in the circumcision of the heart Rom. 2. 29. Gods seruice and kingdome stands in iustice peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. He that is in Christ must not know him in any carnall respects but be a new creature 2. Cor. 5. 17. Gal. 6. 17. Baptisme is not the washing of the spots of the flesh but the promise that a good conscience makes to God By this doctrine we see the fault of the world which for the most part placeth religion in ceremoniall performance of some outward duties The Iewe vsed to come to God with sacrifices and to draw neere to him with his lippe his heart beeing farre from God The Papist hath turned the Apostolike and Catholike religion into a masse of ceremonies borrowed partly from the Iewes and partly from the Gentiles And
know God onely in part therefore we loue in part and consequently we doe not fulfill the law Againe the Scripture puts all men euen the regenerate vnder the name of sinners to the very death Isa. 64. 4. All our righteousnes is as a defiled cloth Prou. 20. 9. Who can say my heart is cleane Iob cannot answer God for one of a thousand Iob. 9. The righteous man shall pray for the pardon of his sinnes in a time when he may be heard Psal. 32. 6. If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues 1. Ioh. 1. 9. The Papists say that all these places are meant of veniall sinnes Ans. There are no veniall sinnes which in their owne nature are not against the law of God but only beside it The stipend of euery sinne is death Rom. 6. 23. If we were perfectly sanctified and consequently fulfillers of the law in this life then Christ should not be a Sauiour but an Instrument of God to make vs our owne Sauiours And to say this is blasphemie Lastly that which man could doe by creation so much the law requires at our hand but man by creation could loue God with all the powers of his soule and with all the strength of all the powers which now since the fall no man can doe It remaines then for an infallible conclusion that it is impossible for any man in the time of this life to fulfill the law The vse This point serues notably to condemne the follie of the world The Israelites say at Mount Sinai that they will doe all things which the Lord shall command them Exod. 19. 8. The young Prince said that he had kept all the commandements from his youth Mark 10. 20. Our common people say that they can loue God with all their hearts and their neighbours as thēselues Secondly this doctrine serues to confute sundrie Errours of the Papists who blasphemously teach that a man after justification may fulfill the law in this life that a man may for a time be without all sinne that works of the regenerate are perfect and may be opposed to the iudgement of God that men may supererrogate and doe more then the law requires The groūd of all these conclusions is this They say there is a double degree of fulfilling the law The first is in this life and that is to loue God truly aboue all creatures and to loue our neighbour as our selues in truth The second is to loue God with all the powers of the soule and with all the strength of all the powers and this measure of fulfilling the law is reserued to the life to come I will briefly consider the reasons and the ground of this blasphemous doctrine Obiect I. God promifeth the Israelites that he will circumcise their hearts that they may loue him with all their hearts with all their soules and with all their strength Deut. 30. 6. And thus Iosua turned to God with all his heart with all his soule and with all his strength according to all the law of Moses 2. king 23. 25. Ans. The phrase with all thy heart is taken in a double signification Sometime it is opposed to a double heart and then it signifies a true and vpright heart without guile or dissimulation Thus they of Zebulon are saide not to fight with a double heart 1. Chron. 12. 33. but with a perfect heart v. 38. Where marke the opposition of an whole or perfect heart to a double heart In this sense are the places before named to be vnderstood Neuerthelesse the whole heart soule and strength in the summe of the morall law signifies all powers of the soule and all the strength of all the powers Thus doth Paul Rom. 7. expound the law when he faith the law is spirituall and by the prohibition of lust giues the meaning of the whole law For concupiscence or lust comprehends the first thoughts or motions Obiect II. Noah is saide to be iust and perfect Gen. 6. and God commands Abraham to walke before him and to be perfect Gen. 17. 1. Paul saith Let as many as be perfect be thus minded Phil. 3. 15. Answ. There is a double perfection perfection of parts and perfection of degrees Perfection of parts is when a man hath in him after he is regenerate the beginnings of all vertnes and the seedes of all graces by which he endeauours to obey God in all his lawes and commandements Perfection of degrees is when the law is fulfilled both in matter and manner according to the rigour of the law Now the former places speake onely of the perfection of parts and that is such a perfection in which we are to acknowledge our imperfection and it is no more but a true and generall indeauour to obey God Isa. 38. 1. Obiect III. Sundrie holy men are saide to fulfill the law Dauid turned from nothing that God commanded him all the daies of his life saue in the matter of Vriah 1. king 15. 5. Zacharie and Elizabeth walked in all the commandements of God and that without reproofe before God Luk. 1. 6. Ans. There are two kinds of fulfilling the law one Legall the other Euangelicall Legall is when men doe all things required in the law and that by themselues and in themselues Thus none euer fulfilled the law but Christ and Adam before his fall The Euangelicall manner of fulfilling the law is to beleeue in Christ who fulfilled the law for vs and withall to indeauour in the whole man to obey God in all his precepts And this indeauour ioyned with the Purpose of not sinning is called the righteousnes of Good conscience and though it be not really a fulfilling of the law yet it is accepted of God as a fulfilling of the law in all thē that are in Christ. For God accepts the indeanour to obey for perfect obedience Thus Dauid Zacharie Elizabeth and others are said to fulfill the law Obiect IIII. We pray that we may fulfill the law when we say Let thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Ans. We pray not that we may fulfill the law in this but that we may striue as much as may be to attaine to the fulfilling of the law That is the scope of the petition We desire not to be equall to the Angels and Saints but onely to imitate them more and more and to be like to them Obiect V. Rom. 7. 18. To will is present with me therefore say they in will the law may be kept though the flesh relent Ans. When Paul saith that to will was present he doth not signifie that he could perfectly will that which is good For his will beeing partly renewed and partly vnrenewed the good which he willed he partly nilled and the euill which he nilled he partly willed Obiect UI. Christ tooke out flesh that the righteousnes of the law might be fulfilled in vs. Rom. 8. 4. Ans. The righteousnes of the law is fulfilled in vs not because we doe all things required
a double iustification one before God the other before mē Iustification before God is when God reputes a man iust that onely for the merit and obedience of Christ. Iustification before men is when such as professe faith in Christ are reputed iust of men By this distinction Paul who saith that a man is iustified by faith without workes Rom. 3. 28. and Iames who saith that Abraham was iustified by faith and workes Iam. 2. 24. are reconciled for Paul speakes of iustification before God as he himselfe expressely testifieth Rom. 4. 2. and S. Iames speakes of iustification before men which is not onely by the profession of faith but also by workes In the same sort there is a double Election One speciall whereby God knowes who are his The other is more generall whereby we repute all men to be Elect that professe faith in Christ leauing secret iudgements to God Thus Paul writes to the Ephesians Philippians c. as Elect. And the Ministers of the word are to speake to their congregations as to the Elect people of God In the same manner there is a double sanctification one before God in truth Eph. 4. 28. the other before men in the iudgement of charitie Thus men are said to tread vnder foote the blood of Christ wherewith they were sanctified Hebr. 10. 29. Thus all that are of right to be baptised are holy and regenerate not in the iudgement of certentie which is Gods but in the iudgement of charitie which is mans secrets alwaies reserued to God Againe when Paul saith in the sight of God he giues vs to vnderstand that there is an vniuersall iudgement of God before whome we must all appeare and be iudged And when Paul saith in the time present that God iustifieth though not by workes he signifies that this iudgement is alreadie begunne vpon vs euen in this life This must teach vs to walke in godly and holy conuersation in the feare of God and to watch and pray that we may be found worthie to stand before God Malefactours when they are going to iudgement and when they see the Iudge set lay aside skorning and bethinke themselues what to say or doe Now we are these malefactours and we know that God hath alreadie begunne to giue iudgement of vs and therefore we must prepare our selues to make a good reckoning In the testimonie of the Prophet our dutie is set downe and that is that we must in this world liue by faith That we may liue by faith we must doe two things One is to choose the true God for our God the second is in our hearts to cleaue vnto him and that according to his word First therefore we must cleaue fast to his commandements by entring into the way of his precepts and by walking in them For this cause we must haue alwaies about vs the eye of knowledge to direct our steps in the wayes of God that we euer keepe our selues in our callings that is the dutie we owe to God and man Secondly while we stand in the waies of God we shall be assailed with many Temptations on the right hand and on the left therefore we must further cleaue to the promises of God beleeuing his presence protection and assistance in all temptations and daungers And this our faith must be as it were a hand to stay vs. Here two caueats must be remembred One that we must not prescribe vnto God the manner of his assistance but leaue it with other circumstances of time and place to God The second is when all earthly things faile vs we must rest vpon the bare word of God and beleeue the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting This is to liue by faith And this dutie must be practised when we are in the field to fight for our countrey when we lie on our death beddes and when we are in any danger Marke further Paul saith the iust man liues by faith he therefore that is iustified continues to be iustified by his faith and therfore the second iustification that is said to be by our works is a meere fiction And in that none liues by faith but he that is a iust man we see that true faith is alwaies ioyned with the Purpose of not sinning or with the iustice of good conscience and where they are seuered there is no more but a meere pretence of faith When Paul saith the Law is not of faith he sets downe the maine difference betweene the Law and the Gospel The law promiseth life to him that performs perfect obedience that for his works The Gospel promiseth life to him that doth nothing in the cause of his saluation but only beleeues in Christ and it promiseth saluation to him that beleeueth yet not for his faith or for any worke els but for the merit of Christ. The law thē requires doing to saluation and the Gospel beleeuing and nothing els Obiect I. The Gospel requires repentance and the practise of it Ans. Indeede the law doth not teach true repentance neither is it any cause of it but onely an occasion The Gospel onely prescribes repentance and the practise thereof yet onely as it is a fruit of our faith and as it is the way to saluation in which we are to walke and no otherwise Obiect II. The law requires and commands faith Ans. The law requires faith in God which is to put our affiance in him But the Gospel requires faith in Christ the Mediatour Godman and this faith the law neuer knew Obiect III. In the Gospel there are promises of life vpon condition of our obedience Rom. 8. 13. Jf by the spirit ye mortifie the deedes of the flesh ye shall liue 1. Ioh. 1. 9. If we confesse our sinnes God is faithfull to forgiue them Ans. The promises of the Gospel are not made to the worke but to the worker and to the worker not for his work but for Christs sake according to his worke As for example promise of life is made not to the worke of mortification but to him that mortifieth his flesh and that not for his mortification but because he is in Christ and his mortification is the token or euidence thereof And therefore it must be remembred that all promises of the Gospel that mention works include in them Reconciliation with God in Christ. Obiect IV. Faith is a vertue and to beleeue is a worke therefore one worke is commanded in the Gospel and is also necessarie to saluation Ans. The Gospel considers not faith as a vertue or worke but as an instrument or hand to apprehend Christ. For faith doth not cause effect or procure our iustification and saluation but as the beggers hand it receiues them beeing wholly wrought and giuen of God This distinction of the law and the Gospel must be obserued carefully For by it we see that the Church of Rome hath erroniously confounded the law and the Gospel for this many hundred yeares The law of Moses say they
scripture namely the Scripture before named the written law in the bookes of the old Testament And further by the law we must vnderstand God in the law Rom. 11. 32. God hath concluded all vnder vnbeleefe Concluded The law is compared to a Iudge or sergeant sinne to a prison And the law is said to conclude or inclose men vnder sinne because it doth to the full accuse and conuince vs of sin so as our mouthes are stopped and we haue no way to escape All All men that came of Adam by generation with all that comes from them their thoughts desires wordes and deedes The promise The thing promised which is Remission of sinne and life euerlasting By the faith of Christ That is the faith whereof Christ is both the author and matter This is added to signifie vnto vs who are true beleeuers namely they which are beleeuers by the faith of Christ. Against this text of Paul blind reason mooueth many questions as namely why God created man and then suffered him to fall why God did not restraine the fall of Adam to his person but suffers it to inlarge it selfe to all mankind so as all be shut vp vnder sinne why the promise is not giuen to all but onely to beleeuers But there are two speciall grounds vpon which we are to stay our minds The first is that God hath an absolute soueraigntie and lordship ouer all his creatures We may not therefore dispute the case with God Rom. 9. 20. He may doe with his owne what he will Math. 20. 15. The second is that the waies and iudgements of God are a gulfe into which the more we search the more we plunge our selues because they are vnsearchable Rom. 11. 33. Marke the phrase of Paul the Scripture concludes all vnder smne if it conclude or shut vp then it determines what is sinne what not And if this be so then it may also determine what is true and what is false and so be truly tearmed a Iudge of controuersies in religion If it shut vp sinners vnder their sinne then also it shuts them that erre vnder their errour for errours be sinnes and fruits of the flesh It is said blasphemously that if the Scripture be a Iudge it is but a dumme Iudge and I say againe that offenders may plead for themselues on this sort that the law is but a dumme Iudge when it condemnes them and shuts them vnder sinne but they shall finde it hath a loud voice in their consciences when they read it seriously and examine themselues by it euen so the Scripture speakes sufficiently for the determination of truth and falshood in matters of saluation when it is searched with care and humilitie When Paul saith We are all shut vp vnder sinne he puts vs in minde of our most miserable condition that we are captiues of sinne and Satan inclosed in our sinnes as in a prison like imprisoned malefactours that waite daily for the comming of the Iudge and stand in continuall feare of execution And seeing our condition is such we must labour to see and feele by experience this our spirituall bondage that we may say with Paul We are sold vnder sinne and that we know there is no goodnes dwelling in our flesh Rom. 7. 14. 18. This is one of the first lessons that we must take out in the schoole of Christ. Againe if we seriously bethinke our selues that we are captiues of sinne and worthie of death it will make vs with contentation of minde to beare the miseries of this life sicknes pouertie reproch banishment c. considering they come farre short of that we haue deserued who are no better then slaues of sinne and Satan Whereas Paul saith that all men with all that proceeds from them is shut vnder sinne he teacheth that all actions of men vnregenerate are sinnes The wisdome of the flesh that is the wisest cogitations counsells inclinations of the flesh are enmitie vnto God Rom. 8. 5. To the vncleane all things are vncleane Tit. 1. 15. An euill tree cannot bring forth good fruit Mat. 7. It may be obiected that naturall men may doe the workes of the morall law as to giue almes and such like Rom. 2. 14. Ans. Sinnes be of two sorts One is when any thing is done slat against the commandement of God The second is when the act or worke is done which the law prescribes yet not in the same manner which the law prescribes in faith in obedience to the glorie of God In this second regard morall works performed by naturall men are sinnes indeede Hence it followes that Libertie of will in the doing of that which is truly good is lost by the fall of Adam and that man cannot by the strength of naturall will helped by grace applie himselfe to the calling of God Whereas Paul saith that the promise is giuen to beleeuers it is manifest that the promise is not vniuersall in respect of all mākind but only indefinite and vniuersall in respect of beleeuers Wherfore their doctrine is not sound that teach the Redemption wrought by Christ to be as generall as the sinne of Adam Indeede if we regard the value and sufficiencie of the death of Christ it is so but if we respect the Communication and donation of this benefit it is not For though all be shut vnder sinne yet the promise is onely giuen to them that beleeue It is obiected that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe 2. Cor. 5. 19. Ans. The text in hand shewes that by the world we are to vnderstād all beleeuers through the whole world And whereas Paul saith God shut vp all vnder vnbeleefe that he might haue mercie vpon all Rom. 11. 32. his meaning is here set downe that he shut both Iewes and Gentiles vnder vnbeleefe that he might haue mercie vpon all that beleeue both of Iewes and Gentiles Marke further the ende of the law is conuiction and the ende of our conuiction is that the promise of mercie may be giuen to them that beleeue Here is notable comfort with incouragement to all good duties Doth the law as it were in the name of God arrest thee doth it accuse and conuince thee of manifold sinnes doth it arraigne thee at the barre of Gods iudgement and fill thy soule with terrour dost thou by the testimonies of the law and thine owne conscience see and feele thy selfe to be a most miserable and wretched sinner well It may be thou thinkest that all this is a preparation to thy damnatiō but it is not For it is cōtrariwise a preparation to thy saluation For the law with a loud voice in thy heart proclaimes thee a sinner and threatens thee with perdition but the end of all this is that Iesus Christ may become a Sauiour vnto thee so be it thou wilt come vnto him and beleeue in him For he saues no sheepe but the lost sheepe and he calls not iust men but sinners to repentance Let vs therefore with all our
if he fall into any offence of frailtie yet doth he not make a practise of sinne as the wicked and vngodly doe It may be saide the Galatians and all the Galatians are the children of God but what is that to vs Ans. They among vs that professe true saith in Christ with care to keepe good conscience are likewise to hold themselues to be children of God He beleeues not the Gospel that doth not beleeue his owne adoption For in the Gospel there is a promise of all the blessings of God to them that beleeue and there is also a commandement to applie the said promise to our selues and consequently to applie the gift of adoption to our selues When we are bidden to say Our father we are bidden to beleeue our selues to be children of God and so to come vnto him Therefore with Paul I say that all we that truly beleeue in Christ and haue care to lead a good life all I say are indeede the children of God The vse Comforts arising by this benefit are many First if thou be Gods child surely he will prouide all things necessarie for thy soule and bodie Math. 6. 26. Our care must be to doe the office and dutie that belongs vnto vs when this is done our care is ended As for the good successe of our labours we must cast our care on God who will prouide that no good thing be wanting vnto vs. Psal. 34. 10. They that drowne themselues in worldly cares liue like fatherlesse children Secondly in that we are children we haue libertie to come into the presence of God and to pray vnto him Eph. 3. 12. Thirdly nothing shall hurt them that are the children of God The plague shall not come neere their tabernacle they shall walke vpon the lyon and the aspe and tread them vnder foote Psal. 91. 13. All things shall turne to their good Rom. 8. 28. And the rather because the Angels of God pitch their tents about them Lastly God will beare with the infirmities and frailties of them that are his children if there be in them a care to please him with a Purpose of not sinning Malach. 3. 7. If a child be sicke the father or mother doe not cast it out of dores much lesse will God The duties First if ye be Gods children then walke worthie your profession and calling Be not vassalls of sinne and Satan carrie your selues as kings sonnes bearing sway ouer the lusts of your owne hearts the temptations of the deuill and the leud customes and fashions of this world When Dauid kept his fathers sheepe he behaued himselfe like a shepheard but when he was called from the sheepefold and chosen to be king he carried himselfe accordingly So must we doe that of children of the deuill are made the children of God And if we liue according to the lusts of our flesh as the men of this world doe whatsoeuer we professe we are in truth the children of the deuill Ioh. 8. 44. 1. Ioh. 3. Secondly we must vse euery day to bring our selues into the presence of God and we must doe all things as in his sight and presence presenting our selues vnto him as instruments of his glorie in doing of his will This is the honour that the child of God owes vnto him Mal. 1. 6. Thirdly our care must be according to the measure of grace to resemble Christ in all good vertues and holy conuersation For he is our eldest brother the first borne of many brethren and therefore we should be like vnto him 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. Fourthly we must haue a desire and loue to the word of God that we may grow by it in knowledge grace and good life For this is the milke and foode whereby God feedes his childrē 1. Pet. 2. 2. Such persōs thē amōg vs that haue no loue or liking of the word but spend their daies in ignorāce securitie shew themselues to be no children of God The child in the armes of the mother or nurce that neuer desires the brest is certenly a dead child Lastly we must put this in our accounts that we must haue many afflictions if we be Gods children for he corrects all his children And when we are vnder the rodde of correction we must refigne our selues to the will and good pleasure of God This is childlike obedience and this must be done in silence and with all quietnes then God is best pleased The internall meanes of Adoption is Faith in Christ. And for the better conceiuing of it three questions are to be propounded The first what a kind of faith is this Ans. A particular or speciall faith and it hath three acts or effects The first is to beleeue Christ to be Jesus that is a Sauiour the second is to beleeue that Christ is my or thy Sauiour the third is to put the confidence of heart in him When Thomas felt the wounds of Christ he said My Lord and my God and thereupon Christ said Because thou hast seene thou beleeuest Ioh. 20. 29. Here marke that to beleeue Christ to be my Christ is faith Against this speciall faith the Papists obiect three arguments The first is this Euery speciall faith must haue a speciall word of God for his ground but there is no speciall word that thy sinnes or my sinnes are forgiuen by Christ therefore there is no speciall faith Ans. We haue that which in force and value is equiualent to a speciall word namely a generall promise with a commandement to applie the said promise to our selues Secondly I answer that the word and promise of God generally propounded in Scripture is made particular in the publike Ministerie in which when the word is preached to any people God reueales two things vnto them one that his will is to saue them by Christ the other that his will is that men should beleeue in Christ. And the word thus applied in the publike Ministerie in the name of God is as much as if an Angel should particularly speake vnto vs from heauen The second Argument Speciall faith say they is absurd because by it a sinner must beleeue the pardon of his sinnes before he hath it in as much as faith is the meanes to obtaine pardon Ans. The giuing and the receiuing of pardon and faith are both at one moment of time for when God giues the pardon of sinne at the same instant he causeth men to receiue the same pardon by faith For order of nature faith goes before the receiuing of the pardon because faith is giuen to them that are to be ingrafted into Christ and pardon to them that are in Christ for time it doth not and therfore this second argument is absurd The third Argument The full certentie and perswasion of Gods mercie in Christ followes good conscience and good workes and therefore faith followes after Iustification Ans. There be two degrees of faith A weake faith and a strong faith A weake faith is that against which doubting much preuailes in
baptisme that are retained in the Papacie pertaine not to the Papacie but to another hidden Church which by these and other meanes is gathered out of the middest of Romish Babylon And therefore baptisme is rather a signe of this then of the Romish Church Againe we must be warned to take heede that we deceiue not our selues thinking it a sufficient matter that we haue bin baptised For except Christ inwardly wash vs by his spirit we haue no part in him Ioh. 13. 8. Circumcision saith Paul auaileth not vnles thou be a doer of the law Ro. 2. 25. Baptisme indeed saueth 1. Pet. 3. 21. but that is not the baptisme of water but the stipulation of a good conscience by the resurrection of Christ. The outward baptisme without the inward is not the marke of Gods child but the marke of the foole that makes a vow and afterward breakes it Eccles. 5. 3. Moreouer baptisme is not onely a signe of our adoption but also a seale thereof and a meanes to conuaie it vnto vs and for the better vnderstanding of this point and for a further clearing of the 27. verse I will speake of the whole nature of baptisme That which is to be deliuered I reduce to eight heads I. the name of baptisme and the phrases II. the matter III. the forme IV. the ende V. the efficacie of baptisme VI. the necessitie thereof VII the circumstances VIII the vse Touching the name Baptisme is taken sixe waies First it signifies the superstitious washings of the Pharisies who boūd themselues to the baptismes or washings of cuppes and potts Mar. 7. 4. Second 〈…〉 it signifies the washings appointed by God in the Ceremoniall law Hebr. 9. 10. Thirdly it signifies that washing by water which serues to seale the couenant of the new Testament Math. 28. 19. Fourthly it signifies by a metaphor any grieuous crosse or calamitie Thus the passion of Christ is called his baptisme Luk. 12. 50. Fiftly it signifies the bestowing of extraordinarie gifts of the holy Ghost and that by imposition of hands of the Apostles Act. 1. 5. and 11. 16. Lastly it signifies the whole Ecclesiasticall Ministerie Thus Apollos is saide to teach the way of the Lord knowing nothing but the baptisme that is the doctrine of Iohn Act. 18. 25. In the third sense is baptisme taken in this place when Paul saith Ye are all baptised into Christ. The phrases vsed in Scripture of baptisme are strange in reason and therefore they are to be explaned Here it is said Ye that are baptised into Christ put on Christ. The reason of this speach is threefold The first is this the washing of the bodie with water is an outward signe to represent to our eies and minde the inward washing and our vnion or coniunction with Christ therefore they that are baptised are said to put on Christ. The second reason is because the washing by water seales vnto vs our inward ingrafting into Christ for as certenly as the bodie is washed with water so certenly are they that beleeue ingrafted into Christ. The third reason of the speach is because baptisme is after a sort an instrument whereby our insition into Christ and fellowship with him is effected For in the right and lawfull vse of baptisme God according to his owne promise ingrafts them into Christ that beleeue and the inward washing is conferred with the outward washing For these causes they that are washed with water in baptisme are said to put on Christ. In the same manner must other phrases be vnderstood as when it is said that baptisme saueth 1. Pet. 3. 21. that men must be baptised for the remission of sinnes Act. 22. 6. that we are buried by baptisme into the death of Christ. Rom. 6. 3. The second point concernes the Matter of baptisme Here I consider three things the signe the thing signified the Analogie of both The signe is partly the element of water Act. 8. 36. and partly the Rite by diuine institution appertaining to the element which is the sacramentall vse of it in washing of the bodie and these two water and externall washing of the bodie are the full and complete signe of baptis 〈…〉 e. Here a question may be made Whether washing of the bodie in baptisme must be by dipping or by sprinkling Ans. In hot countries and in the baptisme of men of yeares dipping was vsed and that by the Apostl 〈…〉 and to this Paul alludes Rom. 6. 3. and dipping doth more fully represent our spirituall washing then sprinkling Neuerthelesse in cold coūtries and in the baptisme of infants new borne sprinkling is to be vsed and not dipping in respect of their health and life For the Rule is Necessitie and charitie dispense with the Ceremoniall law Vpon this ground Dauid did eate the shewbread circumcision was not alwaies the eight day as appeares by the Israe lites in the wildernes and for the same cause in these countries dipping may be omitted though otherwise a sacramentall rite And it must be remembred that baptising signifies not onely that washing which is by diuing of the bodie but also that which is by sprinkling The thing signified or the substance of baptisme is Christ himselfe our Mediatour as he gaue himselfe to wash cleanse vs. Thus Paul saith that he cleanse●th his Church by the washing of water Eph. 5. 6. The Analogie or proportion of both is on this manner Water resembles Christ crucified with all his merits S. Iohn saith The blood of Christ cleanseth vs from all our sinnes 1. Ioh. 1. 7. that is the merit and efficacie of Christ crucified freeth vs from our sinnes and from the guilt and punishment thereof Externall washing of the bodie resembles inward washing by the spirit which stands in iustification and sanctification 1. Cor. 6. 11. Tit. 3. 5. The dipping of the bodie signifies mortification or fellowship with Christ in his death the staying vnder the water signifies the buriall of sinne and the comming out of the water the resurrection from sinne to newnes of life Rom. 6. 3 4. The third point concernes the Forme of baptisme Math. 28. 19. Goe teach all nations baptizing them into the Name of the Father c. I explaine the words thus Marke first it is faide Teach them that is make them my disciples by calling them to beleeue and to repent Here we are to consider the Order which god obserues in making with man the couenant in baptisme First of all he calls men by his word and commands thē to beleeue and repent when they beginne to beleeue and repent then in the second place God makes his promise of mercie and forgiuenes and thirdly he seales his promise by baptisme This diuine Order Christ signifieth when he saith make them disciples and 〈…〉 as alwaies obserued of God Before he made any couenant with Abraham and before he sealed it by Circumcision he saith to him Walke before me and be vpright Gen. 17. 1. and of his seede he saith they must-first doe
the couenant of Grace and therefore we must acknowledge the father to be our father the Son to be our Redeemer the holy Ghost to be our comforter and seeke to grow in the knowledge and experience of this It may be demanded whether baptisme may not be administred in the name of Christ alone or in the name of God without mention of the persons in the Godhead Ans. No. For the true forme of baptisme is here prescribed If it be said that Peter biddes them of Ierusalem repent and be baptized into the name of Christ. Act. 2. 38. I answer that Peters intent in that place is to set downe not the forme of baptisme but the ende and scope thereof which is that we may attaine to true fellowship with Christ. The fourth point is concerning the endes of baptisme which are foure The first is that baptisme serues to be a pledge vnto vs in respect of our weaknes of all the graces and mercies of God and specially of our vnion with Christ of remission of sinnes and of mortification Secondly it serues to be a signe of Christian profession before the world and therefore it is called the stipulation or interrogation of a good conscience 1. Pet. 3. 21. Thirdly it serues to be a meanes of our first entrance or admission into the visible Church Lastly it is a meanes of vnitie Read Eph. 4. 5. 1. Cor. 12. 13. The fifth point concernes the Efficacie of baptisme Of which there be foure necessarie questions The first is whether the Efficacie of baptisme extend it selfe to all sinnes and to the whole life of man For answer I will set downe what we teach and what the Papists We teach that the vse of baptisme inlargeth it selfe to the whole life of man and that it takes away all sinnes past present and to come one caution remembred that the partie baptised stand to the order of baptisme which is to turne vnto God and to beleeue in Christ and so to continue by a continuall renouation of faith and repentance as occasion shall be offered Reasons may be these First the scripture speakes of them that had long before bin baptised and that in the time present baptisme saueth 1. Pet. 3. 21. and ye are buried by baptisme into the death of Christ. Rom. 6. 4. And in the future tense it is saide he that beleeueth and is baptised shall be saued And Paul saith that the Church is cleansed with the washing of water that it may be presented glorious and without spot vnto God Eph. 5. 26. And all this shewes that baptisme hath the same efficacie after which it had before the administration thereof Secondly the couenant of grace is euerlasting Isa. 54. 10. Hos. 2. 19. and the couenant is the foundation or substance of baptisme therefore baptisme is not to be tied to any time but it must haue his force so long as the couenant is of force And this appeares by the example of the Galatians who are now fallen away to an other gospel after their baptisme and yet are instructed and directed by their baptisme Lastly it hath bin the doctrine of the ancient Church that all sinnes are done away by baptisme euen sinnes to come The doctrine of the Papists is that baptisme takes away all sinnes that goe before the administration thereof and that sinnes after baptisme are not taken away by baptisme but by the Sacrament of pennance But the doctrine is erronious as may appeare by the arguments which they vse Argum. first Circumcision had no vse after the administration thereof for the abolishing of sinne Therefore neither hath baptisme Ans. Circumcision had And this appeares because the Prophets put the Iewes in minde of their circumcision when they fell away from God bidding them to circumcise the foreskin of their hearts Ier. 4. 4. Arg. 2. The Apostles vsed to call them that sinned after baptisme to confession of sinne and to repentance or pennance Act. 8. 21. 1. Ioh. 1. 9. Ans. This makes for vs for in so doing they bring men to their baptisme and to the order set downe there which is that the partie baptised must first of all turne to God and beleeue in Christ and there is no new order set downe afterward but onely a renewing of this first baptismall order both in the Ministerie of the word and in the supper of the Lord. And whereas they make a distinction of pennance the vertue and pennance the sacrament placing the vertue before and after baptisme and the sacrament onely after for this they haue no word of God Arg. 3. If a man be inlightned that is baptised and then fall againe he cannot be renewed by repentance which is in baptisme Hebr. 6. 6. Ans. The text speakes not of them that fall after baptisme but of them that fall away by an vniuersall Apostasie denying Christ. For it is said v. 7. that they crucifie Christ againe that is crucifie Christ crucified and so make a mocke of him and tread vnder foote the blood of Christ. Hebr. 10. 29. Againe the text speakes not particularly of repentance in baptisme but of all repentance whatsoeuer yea of repentance after baptisme For there is no place for repentance where Christ is renounced Arg. 4. Pennance as Hierome saith is a second table after a shipwracke Ans. Repentance indeede is a second table or bord whereby a sinner fallen from his baptisme returnes againe to it and so comes to the hauen of euerlasting happines Thus then we see that baptisme is the true sacrament of repentance for repentance pertaines to the inward baptisme The vse If baptisme serue for the whole life of man then if thou be in any miserie or distresse haue recourse to thy baptisme and there shalt thou finde thy comfort namely that God is thy God if thou truly turne and beleeue in him Secondly remember euery day the obligation of homage wherewith thou hast bound thy selfe to God specially in thy temptations remember it and see thou stand to it and make it good The second question is whether baptisme abolish Originall sinne or no The answer of the Papist is that it doth so as in the partie baptised there remaineth nothing that God may iustly hate and therefore he saith that Originall sinne after baptisme ceaseth to be sinne properly We teach and are to hold that the perfect and intire baptisme in which the outward and inward baptisme are ioyned together abolisheth the punishment of sinne and the guilt that is the obligation to punishment and the fault yet not simply but in two respects first in respect of imputation because God doth not impute Originall sinne to them that are in Christ secondly in respect of dominion because Originall sinne raigneth not in them that are regenerate Neuerthelesse after baptisme it remaines in thē that are baptised and is still and that properly sinne Paul saith Rom. 7. 20. If I doe that I would not it is no more I that doe it but sinne that dwelleth in
me doth it Here marke Paul calls concupiscence in himselfe after regeneration sinne and that properly because he saith it is the same that maketh men to sinne And Col. 3. 5. he saith Mortifie your earthly members and among the rest he nameth euill concupiscence And to the Ephesians 4. 22. Be ye renewed in the spirit of your mindes Therefore after baptisme some portions remaine still of the old man or of originall sinne S. Iohn saith 1. Ioh. 1. 8. If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues Answer is made that this is spoken of veniall or small sinnes but how can they be small sinnes that are to be washed away with the blood of Christ as he saith v. 7. And if these words be spoken of infants as they are then must Concupiscence be a sinne in them for they haue no actuall sinnes Lastly Christ saith Ioh. 13. 10. He that is all washed must haue his feete that is his carnall affections washed Here obserue two things One that defilements of sinne remaine in them that are washed The second that they are after the first washing to be done away by Christ and not by the acts of our pennance The grounds of Popish doctrine in this point are two The first is this They make three degrees of Concupiscence The first is the pronesse in the flesh to rebell against the law of the minde or the pro●esse to euill The second stands in the first motions to sinne which goe before consent of will The third stands in acts of lust ioyned with consent of will This third they say is forbidden in the moral law which forbids and condemnes voluntarie concupiscence and the two first are not Because as they speake concupiscence it selfe with the first motions are not in mans power and therefore they are rather to be tearmed defects or infirmities then sinnes and that men are no more to be blamed for them then for the diseases of their bodies Ans. The doctrine is false for it is an euident truth that Concupiscence with the first motions thereof to euill is condemned in the Morall law It is a Principle in expounding the law where any actuall sinne is forbidden there all causes occasions furtherances thereof are likewise forbidden Therefore considering actuall concupiscence ioyned with consent is forbidden in the law Originall concupiscence with the first motions thereof beeing causes of the former are likewise forbidden And Paul saith he had not knowne Lust to be sinne vnlesse the law had said Thou shalt not lust Rom. 7. 7. Now he was a Doctor of the law and knew that lust with consent was a sinne for thus much the light of nature teacheth therfore the law speakes of an higher degree of lust namely of lust going before consent The second ground is this When sinne is remitted it doth not make men guiltie but ceaseth to be a fault Originall sinne therefore ceaseth to be sinne after baptisme Ans. Though actuall guilt be taken away yet potentiall guilt remaineth namely an aptnes in Originall sinne to make men guiltie and though it be not the fault of this or that person yet it is a fault in nature or as it is considered in it selfe The vse If Originall sinne remaine after baptisme to the death then we must humble our selues and vse to the very death the plea of mercie and pardon denying our selues and resting on Christ. Againe if persons baptised be sinners to the death it may be demaunded what difference there is betweene the godly and vngodly Ans. In them that are regenerate there is a sorrow for their inward corruptions and for their sinnes past with a detestation of them and withall there is a Purpose in them to sinne no more and with this purpose there is ioyned an endeauour to please God in all his commandements so as if they doe sinne they can say with good conscience that they sinned against their purpose and resolution This cannot the vngodly man doe The third point is how baptisme conferres grace Ans. It conferres grace because it is a meanes to giue and exhibit to the beleeuing minde Christ with his benefits and this it doth by his signification For it serues as a particular and infallible certificate to assure the partie baptised of the forgiuenes of his sinnes and of his eternall saluation And whereas the Minister in the name of God applies the promise of mercie to him that is baptised it is indeede as much as if God should haue made a particular promise to him In this regard baptisme may well be said to conferre grace as the Kings letters are said to saue the life of the malefactour when they doe but signifie to him and others that the kings pleasure is to shew fauour Againe baptisme may be saide to conferre grace because the outward washing of the bodie is a token or Pledge of the grace of God and by this pledge faith is confirmed which is an instrument to apprehend or receiue the grace of God And this confirmation is made by a kind of reasoning in the minde on this manner He that vseth the signe aright shall receiue the thing signified I saith the partie baptised beeing of yeares vse the signe aright in faith and repentance therefore I shall receiue the thing signified remission of sinnes and life euerlasting A king saith to his subiect He that brings the head of such a traytour shall haue a thousand poundes Well the head of the foresaid traytour is cut off and he that hath the head may say Here is a thousand pounds or this will bring me a thousand pounds because it is vnto him as a pledge vpon the kings word of the reward of a thousand pounds And so is the washing in baptisme an infallible pledge to him that beleeues of the pardon of his sinnes Thus doe the sacraments conferre grace and no otherwise One reason for many may be this The word of God confirs grace for it is the power of God to saluation to them that beleeue and this it doth by signifying the will of God by the eare to the mind now euery sacrament is the word of God made visible to the eye the sacrament therefore confirs grace by vertue of his signification and by reason it is a pledge by the appointment of God of his mercie and goodnes It may be said a sacrament is not only a signe and a seale but also an instrument to conuay the grace of God to vs. Answer It is not an instrument hauing the grace of God tyed vnto it or shut vp in it but an instrument to which grace is present by assistance in the right vse thereof because in with the right vse of the sacrament God conferres grace and thus is it an instrument and no otherwise that is a morall and not a physicall instrument The doctrine of the Papist is that the sacrament conferres grace by the worke done that is that the outward action of the Minister conferres grace by his owne force when
the sacrament is administred And that it may conferre grace some say that the saide action hath vertue in it for this purpose which passeth away when the action is ended others say it hath no vertue in it but that Gods vsing of the action eleuates it and makes it able to conferre grace But this doctrine is a fiction of the braine of man Iohn the Baptist Math. 3. 11. makes two baptizers himselfe and Christ and he distinguisheth their actions his owne action is to wash with water and the action of Christ is to wash with the holy Ghost This distinction he would not haue made if he by the washing of water had conferred the holy Ghost Paul saith Christ sanctifieth his Church by the washing of water through the word Eph. 5. 26. Baptisme therefore doth not conferre grace because the bodie is washed with water but because when it is washed the word of promise is beleeued and receiued The Apostles are called fellow-workers with God 1. Cor. 3. 9. and yet in the worke of regeneration and in giuing of life they are not any thing v. 7. Peter saith directly that the washing away of the filth of the flesh doth not saue but the stipulation that a good conscience makes to God 1. Pet. 3. 21. The worke of creation is from God immediatly and onely now regeneration is a worke of creation and therefore it is of God immediatly and not immediatly from the sacrament and mediatly from God The flesh of Christ is eleuated and exalted aboue the condition of all creatures neuertheles vertue to giue life is not in the flesh of Christ but in the godhead much lesse then shall the sacraments haue vertue in them to conferre grace Faith is said to iustifie yet not by his owne vertue for it doth not cause our iustification but serue as a meanes to apprehend it when it is caused by God how then shall the sacraments cause iustification Lastly if the outward washing of the bodie be eleuated aboue his naturall condition in the administration of baptisme then so oft as the outward element is vsed in any sacrament there is a miracle wrought and Ministers of sacraments are workers of miracles which may not be said Againe their doctrine is erronious in that they teach that the outward act in the Sacrament performed by the Minister cōfers grace where there is no gift of faith to receiue that which is conferred contrarie to that saying Ioh. 1. 12. As many as receiued him he gaue this power to be the sonnes of God Indeed they say there must be faith and repentance to dispose the partie but this disposition serues onely to take away impediments and not to inable vs to receiue that which God giueth The vse We must not thinke it sufficient that we come to the Church heare Gods word and pray contenting our selues in the worke done For thus shall we deceiue our selues but in doing these acts of religion we must in our hearts turne vnto God and by faith imbrace his promises otherwise the best actions we doe shall be vnprofitable vnto vs. Heb. 4. 2. Againe if the vsing of the element in the sacrament doe not conferregrace then be assured that charmes and spells be the words neuer so good haue no vertue in them to doe vs good but by diabolicall operation The last question is whether baptisme imprint a Character or marke in the soule which is neuer blotted out Ans. In scripture there is a twofold marke of distinction one visible the other inuisible Of the first kind was the blood of the paschall lambe in the first passeouer for by it the first borne of the Israelites were marked when the first borne of the Egyptians were slaine Of this kind is baptisme for by it Christian people are distinguished from Iewes Turkes and infidels The inuisible marke is twofold The first is the eternall Election of God 2. Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God stands sure and hath this seale The Lord knowes who are his By vertue of this Christ saith I know my sheepe Ioh. 10. And by this the Elect of all nations are marked Apoc. 7. and 9. The second is the gift of regeneration which is nothing els but the imprinting of the image of God in the soules of men and by this beleeuers are said to be sealed Eph. 1. 13. 2. Cor. 1. 22. And baptisme is a meanes to see this marke in vs because it is the lauer of regeneration The Papists haue deuised another worke which they call the Indeleble character and they make it to be a distinct thing from regeneration and they say it is imprinted in the soules of all men good and bad and remaines in them when they are condemned What this marke should be they cannot tell some make it a quality some a relation but indeed there is no scripture for it the truth is it is a meere fiction of the braine of man The sixt point to be handled concernes the Necessitie of baptisme Here we must put difference betweene the Couenant of grace and baptisme which is the confimation or seale of the couenant To make couenant with God and to be in the said couenant is absolutely necessarie to saluation for vnles God be our God and we the seruants of God we cannot be saued Baptisme it selfe is necessarie in part first in respect of the commendement of God who hath inioyned vs to vse it secondly in respect of our weakenes who haue neede of all helps that may confirme our faith Yet baptisme is not simply necessarie to saluation for the want of baptisme when it canbe had doth not condemne but the contempt of it when it may be had and the contempt is pardonable if men repent afterward for the children of beleeuing parents are borne holy 1. Cor. 7. 14. and theirs is the kingdome of God and therefore if they die before baptisme they are saued The theese vpon the crosse and many holy martyrs haue died without baptisme and are in the kingdome of heauen It is obiected that the male child which is not circumcised must by God commandement be cut off from the people of God Gen. 17. 14. and therefore he that is not baptised must also be cut off Ans. The text is spoken and meant not of infants but of men of yeares who beeing till then vncircumcised despise the ordinance of God and refuse to be circumcised And this appeares by the reason following for he hath made my couenant void now infants doe not this but their parents or men of yeares Secondly the speach of Christ is obiected Ioh. 3. 5. Except a man be borne of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ans. Christ alludes to the washings of the old testament Ezech. 36. 25. and withall giues an exposition of them on this manner Thou art a Pharisie and louest much washing but if thou wouldest enter into the kingdome of heauen thou must be washed with cleane water that is
is incommunicable but only in respect of operation But the very flesh or manhood of Christ is really giuen to the beleeuing heart Ioh. 6. 54 56. By it we receiue eternall life from the godhead and by it God is ioyned to man and man to God The second is that Christ giues his merit and satisfaction to them that beleeue And this satisfaction imputed is the couer wherby our sinnes are couered Psal. 32. 1. and the white robes dipped in the blood of Christ. Reu. 7. 14. Thirdly Christ giues the efficacie of his spirit to make vs conformable to himselfe in holines and newnes of life and thus he makes vs put off the old man and put on the new man created after God in righteousnes and holines Eph. 4. 24. The fourth is that the word preached and the sacraments are as it were the hand of God whereby he exhibits and giues Christ vnto vs with all his benefits Of our receiuing of Christ giuen by God two things must be obserued one is that we must there receiue Christ where God offers and giues him that is in the word and sacraments The second is that faith is our hand wherby we receiue Christ and this receiuing is done by a supernaturall act of the minde whereby we beleeue Christ with his benefits to be ours Ioh. 1. 12. Thus we see how we are one with Christ and Christ with vs. Communion with Christ is when we haue possesse and inioy Christ and his benefits and that is partly in this life and fully in the life to come Of this communion speakes Salomon at large in the Song of songs and Dauid Psal. 45. The vse In that we are to put on Christ we are put in mind to consider our fearefull nakednes What is that Ans. There is a nakednes of creation and a nakednes following the fall The nakednes of creation is when the bodie without all couering is in health full of glorie and maiestie in respect of other creatures Nakednes arising of the fall of man is either inward or outward Inward is the want of the image of God the want of innocencie of good conscience of the fauour of God and affiance in him For these are as it were the couerings of the foule Outward nakednes is when the bodie beeing vncouered is full of deformitie and shame Now that inward nakednes of heart is noted as a speciall euill Gen. 3. 7. Exod. 32. 25. Prou. 29. 18. Reu. 3. 17. we must labour to see and feele this nakednes in our selues For by it we are desormed and odious in the eye of God Secondly we are here put in minde to haue a speciall care of the trimming and garnishing of our soule And for this cause we must put on the Lord Iesus Rom. 13. 14. And that is done two waies First by vncouering our nakednes before God and by praying him to couer it To vncouer our shame is the way to couer it Psal. 32. 1 2 3. The second way is to subiect our selues to the word and spirit of God and to be conformable to Christ both in his life and death It stands vs in hand thus to put on Christ. For the king of heauen hath long inuited vs to the marriage of his Sonne we haue yeilded our selues to be his guests and there is a time when the king will take a suruay of all his guests whether they haue the wedding garment which is Christ himselfe and they which are not clad with this robe shall be cast into vtter darknes We are as naked infants exposed to death Ezech. 16. 7. the merit and obedience of Christ is as swadling clothes and swadling bands If we would then liue we must lappe and infold our selues in them The rather I speake this because in these daies men and women are intoxicated with a spirituall drunkennes or rather madnesse whereby they are alwaies tempering and trifling about their bodies and let their soules lie naked It may be said we haue all put on Christ in baptisme I answer we haue had in England peace and prosperitie this 43. yeares and we haue liued all this while as it were in the warme sun-shine and therfore many of vs no doubt haue worne this garment very loosely Thirdly there is a great temptation arising vpon the consideration of our owne indignitie For when our sinnes come to our remembrance they driue vs from the presence of God and make vs that we dare not pray Now the remedie is this We must come clothed with Christ into the presence of God we may not come in our owne names but we must come in his name and present the merit of Christ vnto the father euen as if we were one and the same person with him Thus shall we be accepted Fourthly it may be demanded what we must doe for our selues in the time of plague famine sword We must put on Christ then shall we walke in safetie in all dangers This garment serues not onely for a couering of our shame but also for protection Isa. 4. 6. And if we be taken away in any common iudgement beeing clothed with Christ there is no more hurt done to vs then to him and he carrieth vs in his brest as if we were part of his bowells Lastly though we be clothed with Christ in baptisme yet we must further desire to be clothed vpon 2. Cor. 5. 4. In this life we are clad with the iustice of Christ 1. Cor. 1. ●0 this is one garment In the life to come we shall be clad with immortalitie This is the second garment to be vpon the former V. 28. There is neither Iewe nor Grecian c. These words as I haue said containe an answer to an obiection which is this If all beleeuers among the Gentiles be children of God and all put one Christ then there is no difference betweene Iewe and Gentile and the prerogatiue of the Iewe is nothing Paul answers thus there be sundrie differences of men in respect of nation condition sexe yet in respect of Christ all are one Moreouer I haue shewed that these words containe the groūd of the Adoption of the Galatians which is an vnion with Christ whereby all beleeuers are made one with him There remaine other things to be added By occasion of this text two questions are mooued the answer whereof serues much to cleare the meaning of Paul The first is whether Magistracie and gouernment be necessarie in the societies of Christians Ans. Yea Kings and Queens shall be nourcing fathers and nourcing mothers to the Church of God saith the prophet Isai 49. 23. Paul bids vs praie for Kings and all in authoritie that we may line in peace and godlines 1. Tim. 2. 1. The fift commandement Honour thy father c. requires subiection to authoritie and this commandement is eternall Obiect I. All beleeuers are one in Christ therefore there is no subiection among them Ans. Beleeuers are vnder a twofold estate or regiment the first is the Regiment
it pertaines to the conscience The vse indeede of our libertie is in outward things as meate drinke apparell c. but the libertie it selfe is in the conscience And thus it differs from ciuill libertie which stands in the moouing of the bodie in the choise of bodily actions and in the free vse of our goods Christian libertie hath two parts a Deliuerance from miserie and Freedome in good things Deliuerance hath foure parts The first is a Deliuerance from the curse of the law for the breach thereof Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. And this comes to passe because there is a translation made of the curse from our persons to the person of Christ. Gal. 3. 13. The second deliuerance is from the obligation of the law whereby it binds vs to bring perfect righteousnes in our owne persons for the attainment of euerlasting life according to the tenour thereof Doe this and liue And this deliuerance is procured because there is a translation made of the fulfilling of the law from our persons to the person of our Sauiour Christ. From these two deliuerances ariseth the Pacification of the conscience partly for our Iustification and partly for our conuersation Touching iustification A sinner in his humiliation and conuersion hath by this doctrine a Libertie without respect to his owne workes or to his owne fulfilling of the law to rest on the meere mercie of God for the forgiuenes of his sinnes and the saluation of his soule and to appeale from the throne of diuine iustice to the throne of grace and to oppose the merit of Christ against the wrath and iudgement of God And this hath bin alwaies the helpe of the godly in their distresse Read 2. Chron. 33. 12. Ezra 9. Dan. 9. Psal. 32. 31. 130. 143. Consider the example of the Publican and the Prodigall sonne who condemne themselues and make their appeale to the court of mercie and grace Here some man may say how shall I know that I am freed from the rigour of the law and from the curse thereof Ans. Thou must first set thy selfe at the barre of Gods iudgement and there must thou arraigne accuse and condemne thy selfe this done thou must vse thy libertie and make thine appeale to Gods mercie and grace for pardon by asking seeking knocking and thus at length shalt thou be resolued touching thy deliuerance Moreouer touching conuersation our consciences are setled thus In that we are freed from the Rigour of the law God in mercie accepts the will and indeauour to beleeue repent and obay for faith repentance and obedience He spares them that feare him as a father spares his child when he indeauours to doe that which he can Mal. 3. 17. The law requires perfect obedience at our hands yet God of his mercie lookes more at the will to obay then the perfection of obedience This must be a stay to our mindes when we see more corruption then grace in our selues and our obedience tainted with many spots of disobedience The third Deliuerance is from the obseruation of the Ceremoniall law of Moses Col. 2. 16. And hence ariseth an other deliuerance from the bondage of humane Traditions as Paul saith If yee be dead with Christ from the Elements of the world why are ye burdened with traditions Col. 2. 20. The fourth Deliuerance is from vnder the tyrannie and dominion of sinne Rom. 6. 14. Let not sinne haue dominion ouer you For ye are not vnder the law but vnder grace In the first tonuersion of a sinner Originall sinne receiues his deadly wound and the dominion thereof is diminished according to the measure of grace receiued The second part of Christian libertie is a Freedome in good things and it is fourefold The first is a freedome in the voluntarie seruice of God Luk. 1. 74. We are deliuered from our enemies that we may serue God in righteousnes and holines before him all the daies of our liues without feare Paul saith that the law is not giuen to the righteous man 1. Tim. 1. 9. because he is a law to himselfe and freely does good duties as if there were no law to bind him The cause of this freedome is the Gift and donation of the free spirit of God Therefore Dauid praies Stablish me with thy free spirit Psal. 5. 1. And Paul saith Where the spirit is there is libertie 2. Cor. 3. 17. And The spirit of life which is in Christ is a Law to vs and frees vs from the power of sinne and death Rom. 8. 2. It may be obiected that this freedome in the voluntarie seruice of God is bondage For Christ saith Matth. 11. 29. Take my yoke vpon you And we are as straightly bound to the obedience of the law of God as Adam was by creation nay more straightly by reason of our redemption by Christ. Ans. The more we are bound to obedience the freer we are because the seruice of God is not bondage but perfect libertie The second freedome is in the free vse of all the creatures of God Tit. 1. 15. To the pure all things are pure Rom. 14. 14. And the reason is because the dominion ouer the creatures lost by Adam is restored by Christ. 1. Cor. 3. 22. And hence it is that Paul calls the forbidding of marriage and of meates with obligation of conscience a doctrine of deuills 1. Tim. 4. 1. The third freedome is a Libertie to come vnto God the father in the name of Christ and in praier to be heard Rom. 5. 2. Eph. 3. 12. Whereas according to our naturall condition our sinnes are a wall of partition betweene vs and God and cause vs to flie from the presence of God and though we crie vnto God and fill heauen and earth with our cries so long as we are in our sinnes we are not heard of him The fourth freedome is a Libertie to enter into heauen in the day of our death Christ by his blood hauing made a way Heb. 10. 19. Thus we see what Christian libertie is The vse followes The Anabaptists gather hence that among Christians there must be Magistrates they must haue power to make lawes beside the lawes of God but this power they haue not because Christians haue a free vse of all the creatures of God by Christian libertie Ans. We must distinguish betweene the libertie it selfe and the vse of it And the Magistrates authoritie deales not with the libertie which is in the conscience but with the vse of it and he doth neither diminish nor abolish the vse of any of the creatures but restraines the abuse and moderates the ouer common vse for the common good Thus Magistracie and Christian libertie may stand together and the rather because libertie is in conscience and the Magistrates authoritie pertaines to the bodie Here is further comfort for all the godly for euen by Christian libertie their consciences are exempted from the power of all creatures men and Angels 1. Cor. 7.
in respect of iustification as Paul shewes at large in this Epistle and yet the Popish doctrine is that we are to be iustified by the workes of the law Againe Christian libertie frees our consciences from the Traditions of men Col. 2. 20. and yet the Popish religion bindes vs in conscience to the Traditions of men nay it is nothing els but an heape of traditions Here two things are to be considered the manner of standing and the time The manner is signified in the very words For to stand fast is to hold and maintaine our libertie with courage and constancie whatsoeuer comes of it as the soldier keepes his standing though it cost him his life We are readie to defend the libertie of our countrie euen with the hazard of our liues much more then are we to defend Christian libertie with the losse of all that we inioy sinne must be resisted euen vnto blood Hebr. 12. 4. If men be fearefull they must pray to God for the spirit of boldnes and courage and if God vouchsafe not this gift when opportunitie is offered they may withdraw themselues and by flying preserue their libertie The time of standing is the euill day that is the day of triall Eph. 6. 13. And then to stand fast is a matter of great difficultie And for this cause we are before hand to prepare our selues by obseruing these rules following First we must labour that religion be not onely in mind and memorie but also be rooted in the affection of our hearts so as we loue it reioyce in it and esteeme it aboue all things Secondly we must not onely be hearers of the word of God but also doers of it in the exercises of faith repentance new obedience Thirdly we must ioyne with our religion the soundnes of good conscience for if conscience faile we cannot be sound in our religion Lastly we must pray to God with all manner of praier and supplication for all things needefull Eph. 6. 18. 2 Behold I Paul say vnto you that if ye be circumcised Christ shal profit you nothing These words are a reason of the former conclusion thus If ye be circumcised and goe backe from your Christian profession Christ shall profit you nothing therefore stand fast In the words I consider a sentence and the proofe of it The sentence If ye be circumcised c. the proofe J Paul say vnto you For the better vnderstanding of the sentence Circumcision must here be considered according to the circumstance of time three waies Before Christ it was a sacrament and a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4. 11. after the death of Christ till the destruction of the temple it was a dead ceremonie yet sometime vsed as a thing indifferent After the destruction of the Temple when the Church of the new Testament was planted among the Gentiles it was a deadly ceremonie and ceased to be indifferent and in this last respect Paul saith If ye be circumcised c. Againe circumcision must be considered according to the opinion which the false Apostles had of it now they put their confidence in it and made it a meritorious cause of their saluation and ioyned it with Christ. The words therefore carrie this sense If ye will be circumcised with this opinion that circumcision shall be vnto you a meritorious cause of your saluation Christ shall profit you nothing The vse Hence it followes that the doctrine of iustification by works is an errour ouerturning the foundation of religion which whosoeuer obstinately maintaineth cannot be saued It will be said this is true of ceremoniall works but not of morall works Ans. Yea euen of morall For that which Paul saith here of circumcision he speakes generally of the whole law vers 4. Ye are abolished from Christ whosoeuer are iustified by the law And circumcision must be considered as an obligation to the obedience of the whole law Againe it may be said this is true of the works of nature but not of works of grace Ans. Yea euen of workes of grace for the Galatians were regenerate and therfore looked not to be iustified saued by the workes of nature but by workes of grace Secondly hence we gather that to adde any thing to the passion as a meritorious cause of our iustification and saluation is to make Christ vnprofitable For he must be a perfect Sauiour or no Sauiour he admits neither partner nor deputie in the worke of our redemption And the grace of God admits no mixture or composition with any thing that is of vs. Grace is no grace vnlesse it be freely giuen euery way Therefore the Popish religiō is a damnable religion because with the merit satisfactiō of Christ it ioyns humane merits satisfactions in the case of our iustification It may be alleadged that the Popish religion maintaines all the articles concerning Christ as we doe Ans. It doth so in word but withall it addes to the foresaid articles the doctrine of humane merits and satisfactions which make voide the death of Christ. Againe Papists alleadge that it is the glorie of Christ that he merits for vs and withall makes vs to merit for our selues as it is the glorie of an Emperour to make other kings vnder him Ans. It is not the glorie of the Emperour to make kings as partners with him in his kingdome And workes set vp as meritorious causes of saluation dishonour Christ for they make him vnprofitable as Paul here teacheth Popish religion therefore is in no wise in any place to be tollerated where it may be abolished but it is to be wished that it were banished forth of towne and countrey and students are to be warned with great circumspection to read Popish writers For no good can be looked for of that religion that makes Christ vnprofitable Lastly we are here taught to content our selues with Christ alone and with his works merits and satisfactions For in him we are complete Col. 2. 10. The confirmation of the sentence followeth I Paul say it therfore it is so This kind of reasoning may not seeme strange for the Apostles in writing and preaching had the diuine and infallible assistance of the spirit so as they could not erre This must be held as a Principle in religion and beeing denied there is no certentie of the Bible 3 For I testifie againe to euery man that is circumcised that he is bound to keepe the whole law 4 Ye are abolished from Christ whosoeuer are iustified by the law ye are fallen from grace The meaning Paul saith I testifie againe because he hath spoken thus much in effect before Gal. 3. 10. That is circumcised who is of opinion of the false Apostles that will be circumcised and looke for iustification thereby Bound to the whole law that is to the whole ceremoniall law to the iudiciall law and to the whole morall law And further bound in respect of iustification and life to doe all things in the law For he that
the price of eternall life Phil. 3. 13. Luk. 9. 62. Here comes a common fault to be considered we in respect of profession goe forward yet we looke backe in our course and minde earthly things Lastly we must not be mooued with the speaches of men which are giuen of vs either to or fro They are lookers on and must haue their speaches and our care must be not to heede them but to looke to our course The second dutie of Christian people is that they must not onely be runners but they must runne well And that is done by beleeuing and by obaying the true religion or as Paul saith by hauing faith and good conscience 1. Tim. 1. 18. These are as it were the two feete by which we runne to life euerlasting Vnder faith we are to comprehend the true acknowledgement of God affiance in him and inuocation c. Vnder good conscience is comprised the purpose of not sinning and the care to obay God in all his commandements To applie this to our selues runners we are but alas few of vs are good runners We haue one good foote and that is our faith or religion which is sound and good but we halt on the other foote our care to keepe conscience is not sutable to our religion And three things cause a lamenes or feeblenes in this foote the lust of the eye that is couetousnes the lust of the flesh and pride of life The third dutie is that we must runne the race from the beginning to the ende and finish our course so as we may apprehend life euerlasting 1. Tim. 6. 11. 2. Tim. 4. 7. 1. Cor. 9. 24. And for this cause we must cherish in our hearts a loue and feruent desire of eternall life and by this meanes we shall be drawne on through all miseries and ouerpasse them to the ende Secondly we must hold and maintaine a constant and daily purpose of not sinning And where we are the weakest there must our resolution be the strongest And thus shall we be constant to the death 8 It is not the perswasion of him that calleth you The meaning This opinion of iustification by the workes of the law is not from God who hath called you from bondage to libertie The scope Paul here meetes with a conceit of the Galatians which was this Why dost thou so often and so sharpely reprooue vs for we hould nothing against conscience but are perswaded of the thing which we say To this Paul answers here this perswasion is not of God because it is against the calling of God for he calles you to libertie and this your opinion drawes you into bondage Here we see the cause of mens declining from God and his worde and that is this Men denie credence to Gods word listen to plausible perswasions and so fall awaie Thus Eue fell in the estate of innocencie by listning to the false perswasions of the deuill The Papists ●usle themselues in their superstitions by a presumption that the Church cannot erre and that god wil not leaue his church destitute of the assistāce of his spirit Our common people boulster themselues in their blind waies by a presumption that God is all of mercy and that if they doe their true intent serue God say their praiers deale iustly and doe as they would be done vnto they shall certenly be saued Tradesmen often vse many practises of fraud and iniustice and that vpon a perswasion that they haue a charge and family which must be maintained If men now a daies will not blaspheme drinke and riot as others doe they shall be charged with precisenes and that comes vpon a perswasion that it sufficeth to auoid the outward and notorious crimes which are mentioned and condemned in the law Thus the whole world is misled by blind perswasions Secondly hence we learne to close vp our eyes as it were and absolutely to follow the calling of god to subiect all the powers of our soules vnto it Thus did Abraham when he was called to go he knew not whether and Paul without vsing consultation went and preached in Arabia at the calling of Christ. Thirdly Paul here sets downe a note to discerne of false doctrines and opinions in religion If they be sutable to the calling of God they are good if they be against the calling of God they are naught This is Pauls rule God calles vs to libertie therefore the doctrine of iustification by the workes of the law is naught for it drawes vs into bondage In like ●ort God calles vs to free iustification and therefore the doctrine of humane satisfactions and of the merit of workes is naught Againe God calls vs to an vtter deniall of our selues and therefore the Popish doctrine of preparation and of freedome of will in the conuersion of a sinner is naught Lastly it is to be obserued that Paul saith in the time present of him that calleth you for hence it appeares that God continues to call the Galatians euen after their fall in which they fell away to an other Gospel and as much as in them lay abolished themselues from Christ. This shews Gods patience and that there is a possibilitie of mercie after great and grieuous falls It may be saide how long doth God continue to call men vnto him Ans. So long as he vouchsafeth them the benefit of the publike Ministerie Thus then more then fourtie yeares hath God called vs in England And for this cause it is our part to pray to God for hearing eares to be pearced in our hearts and we must answer the calling of God Psal. 27. 8. at the least in the desires and groanes of our hearts And lastly we must in life and conuersation be sutable to the calling of God 9 A little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe The sense As a little leauen leaueneth and fauoreth the whole lumpe of dow euen so one errour or point of corrupt doctrine corrupteth the whole bodie of Christian religion because all the points of religion are linked and compounded together so as if one be corrupt the rest cannot remaine ●ound and incorrupt The scope The obiection of the Galatians is Put case that we erre in ioyning Circumcision and Christ yet there is no cause why thou shouldest ●o sharpely reprooue vs for it is no great errour to ioyne workes and Christ in the cause of our Iustification Paul answers to this obiection by a prouerbe saying that a little leauen of false doctrine corrupts the whole bodie of religion and one errour though it seeme to be of small moment at the first may at length bring with it the corruption and deprauation of many other points The vse In the example of the Galatians we see what is the common fashion of men namely to extenuate their faults and to make small matters of great offences The Phari●ies taught that sundrie of Gods commandements were small and little commandements Matth. 5. 19. To them that make no conscience of sinne great
that is another cause of dissention 1. Corint 3. 3. The second point concernes the qualitie of these dissentiōs When Paul saith if ye bite and deuoure c. he signifies that they were fierce and violent And such commonly are dissentions for religion as appeares by the persecution in Queene Maries daies the heate whereof nothing could slake but mans blood Againe he signifies in these very wordes that they were bru●ish and beastlike more beseeming wolues lions dogges then men This must teach vs to detest railing cursing euill speaking fighting vnles it be in the case of necessarie defence for by these actions we degenerate to the condition of beastes and repell from vs the worke of grace for Christ of lions wolfes beares hath made vs his sheepe and lambes Isai. 11. The third point is touching the effect of contention that is the ruine desolation of the Church The diuision of the members among themselues is the dissolutiō of the whole bodie Differences in points of religion breed doubting doubting hinders faith and inuocation and the free course of the Gospell and where these be hindred the Church goes to decay And by reason of the dissentions that be in these last daies many liue as Atheistes and will be of no religion By this we are to be admonished to studie and to vse all meanes to maintaine Christian peace and concord Eph. 4. 3. To this end we must remember one generall rule Rom. 12. 18. haue peace with all men And withall we must obserue the cautions which Paul addes one is if it may be with good conscience for there are some with whome there is no peace vnles we sooth them in their vices or denie our religion either in whole or in part The second is If it lie in you for sometime men are accused and must of necessitie defend themselues These two cautions obserued peace must be had with all men It may thē be demanded why do not the Protestans make a Pacification with the Papists Ans. we are content so to do in respect of ciuill societie but not in respect of religion We haue a commandement to the contrarie Reuel 18. 4. come out of Babylon my people and touch no vnclean thing where a pacification is made both the partes must yeeld somewhat but we may not yeeld in any point of our religion to the Papists In an Instrument of musick the stringes out of tune are set vp or set downe to the rest and the strings that are in tune are not stirred Euen so the Papists are to turne to vs we are not to turne to them our religion beeing the doctrine of the prophets Apostles Peace is three-fould Church peace Ciuill peace Houshould peace All these are to be maintained Touching Church peace I giue 3 rules The first is that for the ending of differences in religion there must be conferences in a free or christian councell the spirits of the prophets is subiect to the prophet 1. Cor. 14. ●2 when there arose differences in the Churches of Iudea the Apostles and elders came together to inquire of the matter Act. 15. 6. And this is a thing much to be desired in these daies specially in these Westerne partes of the world It may be demanded why did not the Protestants ioyne with the Papists at the councell of Trent Ans. from the first session it was more then 6 yeares before any safe conduct was giuen to the Protestants and at their appearing in the councell exception was taken against their letters and they dismissed And when they appeared the second time vpon new safe conduct the councell was the next day reiorned for 2 yeares And when safe conduct was giuen the 3 time the Protestant princes refused to send their diuines because they had bin twice mocked Moreouer the councell was not a free councell because the Pope himselfe was both partie and iudge The second rule There must be a christian toleration one of an other Eph. 4. 2. here that we mistake not I propound 2 questions One is in what must there be a toleration Ans. A toleration presupposeth an errour or defect in our brother An errour is either in iudgement or manners An error in iudgment is either in the foundation of religion or beside the foundation in lighter matters if the errour be in the foundation there is no toleration of it If it be in some lesser matter a toleration is to be vsed according to the rule of the Apostle if ye be otherwise minded God will reueile it Phil. 3. 15. when others see not that which we see we must not presētly cōdemne them but tolerat their ignorance till God reueile his truth vnto them Againe errors in manners be of 2 sortes some without offence as hastines frowardnes vaine gloriousnes c. these we must tolerate Pro. 19. 11. and others with open offence and such admit no toleration 1. Cor. 5. 11. The second question is to what ende must we tolerate the infirmities and ignorances of our brethren Ans. Toleration must tend to the good and edification of men Rom. 15. 2. We must not so tolerate as that we approoue of the least vice or betray the least part of Gods truth It may here be demanded whether there may not be a toleration for Poperie Ans. No. The toleration of two religions in one kingdome is the ouerthrow of peace Againe Poperie is a religion both hereticall and schismaticall It may be said that faith and conscience is free I answer though faith in the heart and conscience in it selfe be free in respect of mans authoritie yet is not the publishing of faith and the profession of conscience free in like sort but it stands subiect to the power of the Magistrate The third rule Euery man in his place specially teachers must set themselues to build the Church Iud. v. 20. Eph. 4. 12. Indeede the truth is to be defended but marke how The truth must be confessed when time and occasion serues without opposition this done all contentions laid aside we must set our selues to build the Church And the rather Ministers of Gods word in England must remember this because while we are striuing among our selues in sundrie points of difference the Papist our common enemie gets ground Touching ciuill peace it must be remembred that the peace and good estate of Ierusalem stood in this that it was made the seate of Gods sanctuarie and the throne of iustice Psal. 122. When the Arke was in the house of Obed-Edom all things prospered with him Now in the new Testament the preaching of the Gospel inuocation of Gods name with the vse of the Sacraments come in the roome of the Sanctuarie Ciuill peace then is maintained when men yeeld subiection to the Gospel of Christ which brings peace to all that receiue it Touching houshold peace I giue two rules One is that gouernours of families must vrge and compell all vnder them to admit at the least outwardly the practise of
represse the good motions of the spirit In this respect Paul saith when I would do good euill is present and the law of the flesh rebelles against the law of the mind Rom. 7. 21. 23. Hereupon the flesh is fitly resembled by the disease called Ephialtes or the mare in which men in their slumber thinke they feele a thing as heauie as a mountaine lying on their brests which they can no waie remoue The second action of the flesh is to bring forth and to fill the mind with wicked cogitations and rebellious inclinations In this respect concupiscence is said to tempt intice and draw away the mind of man Iam. 1. 14. Againe the lust of the spirit hath two other actions The first is to curbe and restraine the flesh Thus Saint Iohn saith that the seed of grace keepes the regenerate that they can not sinne 1. Ioh. 3. 9. The second action of the spirit is to ingender good motions cogitations and inclinations agreeable to the will of God Thus Dauid saith that his raines did teach him in the night season Psal. 16. And the prophet Isai saith thine eare shall heare a voice saying here is the way walke in it when thou ●urnest to the right hand or to the left c. 30. v. 21. And this voice no doubt is not only the voice of such as be teachers but also the inward voice of the spirit of God in vs. And thus by the concurrence of these contrarie actions in one and the same man is this combat made The third point is concerning the cause of this combat in these wordes and these are contrarie one to another The contrarietie of the flesh and the spirit makes the combat And the contrarietie is very great for the spirit is the gift of righteousnes and the flesh standes in a double opposition to it for it is first of all the want of righteousnes and secondly a prones to all vnrighteousnes that is to say not a single but a double priuation or want of the grace or gift of God Hence I gather that man hath no freedome of will in good duties before his conuersion because he is then wholly flesh and wants the spirit of God and the flesh is flat contrarie to the spirit and one contrarie hath no power at all to bring forth the effect of his contrarie And hence it followes that there are no such workes wherby a man may prepare himselfe to his owne iustification for though the mind be inlightned with a general faith yet man before he be iustified is nothing but flesh and flesh beeing in nature opposite to the spirit can make no preparation for the spirit no more then darknes can make preparation for the entrance of light The fourth point is concerning the persons in whome this combate is to be found And they are beleeuers not vnbeleeuers or wicked men such as the Galatians were to whome this combate is said to belong It may be alleaged that naturall men haue a combate in them For they can say I see and approoue that which is good but I doe that which is naught Ans. This combate is betweene the naturall conscience and rebellious affection and it is incident to all men that haue in them any conscience or light of reason But the combate of the flesh and the spirit is of an other kinde for in it the mind is carried against it selfe the will against it selfe and the affections against themselues by reason they are partly spirituall and partly carnall Secondly not all beleeuers haue this combate in them but only such as be of yeares for infants though they haue the seede of grace in them yet do they want the act or exercise thereof and therefore they feele not this combate because it standes in action Thirdly this combate is in the godly for the time of this life only because in death the flesh is abolished and consequently the combate it selfe The fift point is in what things doth this combate shew it selfe Ans. In all the actions of men regenerate which Paul signifies when he saith ye cannot do the things which ye would For example in praier sometime we feele feruent desires and sometime againe deadnes of spirit sometimes faith sometimes doubting This combate is in all the actions of the Godly specially in good actions Thus much Paul teacheth whē he saith I find by the law of God that when I would do good euil is present Rom. 7. 21. And I do not the good which I would but the euill which I would not that do I. v. 19. And that we mistake not it must be remembred that Paul speakes all this of himselfe as beeing regenerate that he speakes it not of this or that action but of the course of his life in which he willed and indeauoured to do that which was good and acceptable to God And that appeares by the very wordes when he saith to will is present with me And I would do good but I do it not Marke further while Paul wills and indeauours to do that which is good if he faile and do amisse he may well say It is not I that do it but the flesh that dwelles in me And vngodly men for the couering of their wickednes if they say as they do that it is their flesh that sinneth and not they the abuse the holy doctrine and example of Paul The last point concernes the effect of the Combate which is to hinder the Godly that they cannot do that which they would and that three waies First it makes them that they cannot sinne that is liue in practise of any one sinne 1. Iohn 3. 9. Secondly if at any time they fall it s●aies and keepes them that they sinne not with full consent of will For they say when they sinne the euill which I hate that do I. Thirdly though in the ordinarie course of their liues they do that which is good yet by reason of this combate they faile in the dooing of it Rom. 7. 18. to wil is present with me but I find no means to fulfil or accomplish that which is good Euen as a sick-man that is in recouerie for his affection thinkes he is able to walke a mile or twaine and yet by reason of faintnes and weakenes is scarce able to walke once or twise about his chamber So the regenerate man for affection inclines to the best things and yet by reason of the flesh failes in the dooing of them Thus much of the combate the vse followes Hence I gather that concupiscence or lust after baptisme in the regenerate is a sinne For the lust of the spirit is the thing that God requireth and approoueth now the lust of the flesh is directly contrarie to it as a defect or priuation thereof and therefore the lust of the flesh is properly a sinne whether consent of will goe with it or no. Againe hence it followes that workes of the regenerate are mixed workes that is good workes indeed yet not perfectly
good but partly euill for such as the cause is such is the effect now the minde and will of man are the cause of his workes and the mind is partly carnall and partly spirituall so also is the will and therefore the workes that proceede from them are partly spirituall in part carnall Vpon this ground it followes that all the workes of regenerate men are sinfull and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnation Obiect Sinne is the transgression of the law good workes are no transgression of the law therefore good workes are no sinnes I answer to the minor The transgression of the law is twofold One which is directly against the law both for matter and manner the second is when that is done which the law requires but not in that manner it should be done And thus good workes become sinfull The dutie which the law requires is done but it is not done perfectly as it ough to be done by reason of the flesh Secondly it is alleaged that good workes are from the spirit of God and that nothing proceeding from the spirit of God is sinne Ans. Things proceeding from the spirit of God alone or from the spirit immediatly are no sinnes now good workes proceed not only from the spirit but also from the mind and will of man as instruments of the spirit And when an effect proceedes from sundrie causes that are subordinate it takes vnto it the nature of the second cause hereupon workes are ●●rtly spirituall and partly carnall as the minde and will of the doer is Thirdly it is alleged that good works please God and that things pleasing God are no sinnes Ans. They please God because the doer is in Christ and so pleaseth God Againe they please not God before or without pardon for they are accepted because God approoues his owne worke in vs pardons the defect thereof Lastly some obiect on this manner No sinnes are to be done good workes are sinnes there-therefore not to be done Ans. They are not simply sinnes but onely by accident For as God commands them they are good and as godly men doe them they are good in part Now the reason holds onely thus That which is sinne so farre forth as it is a sinne or if it be simplie a sinne is not to be done Now then vpon this doctrine it followes that there is no iustification by workes nor no fulfilling of the law for the time of this life Thirdly hence it follows that the grace of God for the time of this life is mixed with his contrarie the corruption of the flesh This mixture the godly feele in themselues to the great griefe of their hearts When they would beleeue their mindes are oppressed with vnbeleefe They see more ignorance in themselues then light of knowledge There are a number amongst vs that say they know as much as all the world can teach them that they doe perfectly beleeue in Christ and euer did that they loue God with all their hearts and did neuer so much as doubt of the mercie of God But these men are voide of the grace of God they are like emptie barrells that make a great sound they neuer knew what is meant by the combate of the flesh and spirit Fourthly we are here to be admonished in all duties of religion to vse industrie and paines by willing striuing and indeuouring to the vttermost to doe that which we ought to doe We must vse asking seeking knocking Matth. 7. 7. we must with Paul vse wrastling in our praiers to God Rom. 15. 30. They that would haue knowledge in the booke of God must doe more then heare a Sermon they must striue against their ignorance and blindnes and laboriously exercise their senses in the discerning of good and euill They that would beleeue must striue against their naturall vnbeleefe and indeauour to beleeue Blessed saith Salomon Prou. 28. is the man that feareth himselfe or inures himselfe to feare Paul saith of himselfe that he laboured and tooke paines to keepe a good conscience Act. 24. 16. Lastly by reason of this combate we are put in minde to vse sobrietie and watchfulnesse ouer our owne corruptions with much and instant praier least we fall into temptation Matth. 26. 41. We should practise these more then we doe for beside the enemies without we haue an enemie within that seekes our perdition 18 And if ye be led by the spirit ye are not vnder the law In the 13. verse Paul propounds a maine rule of good life Giue no occasion to the flesh and for the better keeping of this he giues a second rule v. 16. Walke in the spirit Of this second rule he giues two reasons The first is taken from the contrarietie of the flesh and the spirit v. 17. The second is in these words they that walke according to the spirit are freed from the curse of the law In these words Paul sets downe three things The first is the office of the spirit which is first of all to regenerate and renew all the powers of the soule and secondly to guide and conduct them that are regenerate Psal. 143. 10. In this guidance or conduction there are foure actions of the spirit The first is Preseruation whereby the holy Ghost maintaines the gift of regeneration in them that are regenerate The second is Cooperation whereby the will of God as the first cause workes together with the regenerate will of man as the second cause And without this Cooperation mans will brings forth no good action no more then the tree which is apt to bring forth fruit yeeldes fruit indeede till it haue the presence and cooperation of the Sunne and that in the season of the yeare The third is direction whereby the spirit of God ordereth and establisheth the minde will and affections in good duties 2. Thess. 3. 5. The last is Excitation whereby the spirit stirres and still mooues the will and minde after they are regenerate because for the time of this life the grace of God is hindred and oppressed by the flesh Hereupon after regeneration there must still be new inclining Psal. 119. 36. new drawing Cant. 1. 3. new working of the will and the deede Phil. 2. 13. Hence it follows that beside the antecedent and first grace there is necessarie a subsequent or second grace For we doe not that good which we can doe vnles God by a second grace make vs doe it as he made vs able to doe it by the first grace The second thing is the Office of all true beleeuers and that is to resigne thēselues in subiection to the worke of Gods spirit Now Gods spirit workes in and by the word of God And hereupon this Subiection hath two parts The first is to make triall inquirie and examination what is the good will of God in euery thing Rom. 12. 2. Thus did Dauid Psal. 119. 94. I am thine saue me for I seeke thy commandements The second part is to denie our selues
sought in a good manner The right manner of seeking the praise of men is this A man must in this life passe through three iudgements the iudgement of God of his owne conscience and of his neighbour and the order of going through them is in the first place he must seeke for the iudgement and approbation of God in the next his owne and in the last his neighbours Nowe the vaine-glorious man takes another course first and principally ayming at the glorie and good liking of man hauing small or no regard of the two other II. Excuse There is a good boasting which Dauid vsed and that we may lawfully vse Psal. 7. 8. Ans. Boasting is either lawfull or vnlawfull Lawfull boasting is in the Lord when beeing vrged and compelled we confesse the good things that are in vs to Gods glorie Of this read at large 2. Cor. 11. Vnlawfull is when men ascribe the gifts that they haue of God vnto themselues or hauing gifts do arrogate more vnto themselues then indeed they haue or in a word doe so esteeme of their gifts as if they had not receiued them from God And this is a damnable boasting III. Excuse Gods blessings we may seeke for and what are glorie and honour but the blessings and gifts of God Ans. There are two degrees of honour The first is the honour that euery man hath in his place and calling For euery calling ordained by God hath a glory annexed vnto it which beeing the gift of God it may be both sought for and enioyed The other degree is that which is aboue a mans place and calling and that ought not to be sought for Euery person must content himselfe with the honour which is sorted vnto his calling Neuerthelesse if God giue greater honour he may accept it but where God giues it not there it must not be desired It remaineth therefore that vaine-glorie is a branch of pride wherein men principally referre all there studies counsels indeauours and gifts to the honouring and aduancing of themselues The next point to be considered is why he admonisheth the Galatians of vaine-glorie Answ. The Galatians were men of vnderstanding and knowledge and were adorned with many excellent gifts Now they that haue receiued good gifts of god many times are most vaine-glorious 2. Cor. 12. 7. Math. 6. 5. And whereas all other vices feed vpon that which is euill this vice of vaine-glorie feeds vpon good things For a man sometimes will be proud euen because he is not proud A third point to be considered is where vaine-glorie is to be found Ans. It is no rare matter for it is a common vice and spreads it selfe farre and wide Some there are which neuer lift vp heart nor hand unto God at home and yet the same persons in the publike assemblies wil make as though they praied with great deuotion And what is the reason hereof but this that they are carried with a spirit of pride and arrogancie seeking the commendation of men that behold them rather then to approoue their hearts and consciences vnto God Of another sort are those that haue beene old and ancient hearers of the word who notwithstanding doe little or not at all profit either in knowledge or in good life and the cause is not in the Gospel or in the dispensers of it but in themselues because they receiue not the Gospel for it selfe but for the praise and commēdation of men and for the credit account they are in by reason of Christian profession The last thing is the remedie of pride and vaine-glorie which is the rather to be thought vpon because it is a great impediment of Christian loue This remedie consists partly in meditation and partly in practise Remedies in meditation are these 1. God resisteth all proud persons and giues grace to the humble 1. Pet. 5. 5. the reason is because the vain-glorious man seeking himselfe and not god robbes God of his honour Thus the proud Pharisie exalting himselfe aboue the poore Publican went away lesse iustified that is not approoued of God as the Publican was 2. It is the worke of the deuill to puffe vp the mind with selfe-liking and conceit that thereby he may worke mans perdition Gen. 3. 5. But God worketh contrarily for he therefore abaseth men that he might in his good time the more exalt them 3. There is no religion in that heart that is wholly bent to seeke the praise of men Ioh. 5. 44. And the man that desires to be talked of and admired by others doeth thereby in effect giue notice vnto all the world that his heart is not sound in the sight of God Remedies consisting in practise are first an indeauour to acknowledge the great Maiestie of God and withall our own basenesse and vilenesse before him 2. We ought to ascribe all good things we haue or can doe to God alone and nothing to our selues For in all that befall vs God is the principall agent our selues are but tooles and instruments in his hand by right therefore the commendation belonges vnto him and not to vs. 3. In all actions and duties of religion first we must indeauour to approue our selues to God and the next place is to be giuen to man not contrariwise 4. when we are reviled we must rest content whē we are praised to our faces or otherwise we must take heed For then Satan standes at our right hand to puffe vs vp and consequently to ouerthrowe vs. It is a a true saying that Temptations on the right hand are far more dangerous then those on the left In the fift place Pauls reason to disswarde from this sinne is taken from two euill fruits of it Contention and Enuie prouoking one another envying one another Men that are ambitious if they be crossed in their courses grow contentious if they prosper in the world then are they enuyed by others Read for this purpose the historie of Samuel and Saul 1. Sam. 15. Seeing then vaine-glorie hath so badde fruites issuing from it it must teach vs to abhorre and detest it with all our hearts and on the contrarie to seeke by all meanes possible to preserue and maintaine loue in the whole course of our liues FINIS THE SVPPLEMENT OR CONTINVATION OF the Commentarie vpon the sixt Chapter ALMA MATER CANTA BRIGIA HINC LVCEM ET POCVLA SACRA Printed by IOHN LEGAT Printer to the Vniuersitie of CAMBRIDGE 1604. TO THE RIGHT WORshipfull Sir BASSINGBVRNE GAVDY Knight RIght Worsh. hauing beene licensed some yeare agoe according to the auncient laudable custome of the Uniuersitie to interpret S. Pauls Epistles and then earnestly intreated by M. Perkins his Executor and others his friends which had some interest in me to supplie that which was defectiue in his Commentarie vpon the Galatians ouercome at the last by their importunitie I vndertooke the busines making triall of my simple facultie in this short Chapter which I haue here according to my poore talent finished Yet not daring to publish
when I would doe good that euill is present with me Rom 7. 21. In my minde I serue the lawe of God in my bodie the lawe of sinne v. 25. And the Prophet saith that all our righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloath Isay 64. 4. Therefore euery good worke is stained with sinne Thus much shall suffice to shewe that it is impossible for any man in the time of this life to fulfill the lawe The reasons alleadged to the contrary are sufficiently answered before Pag. 188. c. To which place I referre the reader It may further be said if we cannot perfectly fulfill the law why doth Paul command vs to beare one anothers burdens and so to fulfill the law of Christ Answ. The lawe is said to be fulfilled three waies First by personall obedience and thus Christ onely fulfilled it Secondly by imputed obedience thus the regenerate fulfill it in Christ he beeing their righteousnes 1. Cor. 1. 30. and they complete in him Coloss. 2. 10. Thirdly by inchoate obedience thus Zacharie Elizabeth are said to haue walked in all the commandements of the Lord without reproofe Luk. 1. 6. And thus all the faithfull fulfill the lawe in labouring to obey God in all his commandements according to the measure of grace receiued and thus we are said to fulfill the lawe in this place God accepting the will for the deed We are further to consider that fulfilling of the lawe is sometime opposed to the transgression of the law as Iam. 2. 10. in which sense no man euer did or can fulfill it except Christ God and man who for this cause is said to be the end of the lawe for righteousnesse to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 10. 4. Sometime it is opposed to hypocrisie and dissimulation as 1. Ioh. 2. 4 5. and thus all the Saints fulfill it in that they indeauour to mortifie their corruptions and in all things to approoue their hearts and liues to God in keeping faith a good conscience In which sense Paul here biddeth vs to fulfill the lawe of Christ in performing duties of loue and bearing one anothers burdens It will be said if the lawe can no otherwise be fulfilled then by inchoate obedience to what ende serueth it Answ. It hath a threefold vse euen since the fall First it serues to restraine the outward man by keeping men in order through feare of punishment of which vse Paul speeketh when he saith that the lawe is not giuen to a righteous man but to the lawlesse and disobedient c. 1. Tim. 1. 9. Secondly to arrouse the drousie conscience and this it doeth many waies 1. By reuealing sinne for by the lawe commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3. 20. 2. By reuealing the wrath and anger of God for sinne for the lawe causeth wrath Rom. 4. 15. 3. By conuicting the conscience of sinne When the commandement came sinne reuiued Rom. 7. 9. 4. By arraigning and condemning vs for sin for the lawe is the minister of death 2. Cor. 3. 7. and so putting vs out of all heart in our selues it causeth vs to flie to the throne of grace and so is our schoolemaster to bring vs to Christ. Gal. 3. 24. Thirdly it serues as a rule of good life Dauid saith that the word of God specially the law is a lanterne to his feete and a light to his paths Psal. 119. 105. So that though a regenerate man be not vnder the lawe in regard of iustification or accusation or coaction or condemnation yet he is vnder it in regard of direction and instruction for it shewes what is good what is euill what we ought to doe what to leaue vndone Lastly whereas Paul saith Beare ye one anothers burdens and so fulfill the lawe of Christ the word S O hath great Emphasis for it implies the manner how the Galatians and all men are to fulfill the lawe not by obseruing circumcision daies or times moneths or yeares as the false Apostles taught but by bearing forbearing and tollerating the infirmities of their brethren It may not vnfitly be applyed to the religious orders of Franciscans Dominicans Carthusians c. Let them not thinke that they keepe the lawe by abstaining from flesh by whipping themselues by single life counterfeit fasts voluntary pouertie regular obedience c. But let them comfort the afflicted releiue the distressed beare with the weake support one another in loue and S O they shall fulfill the law of Christ. v. 3. For if any man seeme to himselfe that he is somewhat when he is nothing he deceiueth himselfe in his imagination In this verse the Apostle remooues an impediment which hindereth most from performing the former dutie of bearing other mens burdens and that is a vaine conceit and imagination they haue of their owne excellencie farre aboue their brethren in thinking themselues too good to doe any dutie or service vnto them to be their packehorses to beare their burdens This vaine imagination and swelling conceipt which puffeth vp the most the Apostle laboureth to purge in this place when he saith He that seemeth to himselfe c. where by the way we may obserue the method of the Apostle first to giue rules of direction after to remooue impediments which may hinder our obedience 2. We see here the force of the word which searcheth the secrets of the heart Ebr. 4. 12. in that it casteth downe the imaginations and euery high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God and bringeth into captiuitie euery thought to the obedience of Christ 2. Cor. 10. 4. In the words we may obserue these foure things 1. That men are nothing of themselues 2. That thought they be nothing yet they seeme to themselues to be somewhat and that of themselues 3. That in so doing they deceiue themselues 4. The remedies against the ouerweening of our selues For the first it may be demanded howe it can be truely said that men are of themselues meere nothing Is he nothing that is created after the image of God in holinesse and righteousnes Are Princes and Potentates nothing that are called Gods in scripture Are they nothing that Prophecie and worke miracles Answ. Paul speaketh not of the gifts of God bestowed vpon men but of the men themselues and of them not as they were in the state of innocencie before the fall but as they are nowe in the state of corruption Apostasie or in the state of grace as they are considered of in and by themselues Thus euen spirituall men are nothing of themselues for of them especially the Apostle speaketh as it may appeare out of the first verse For first all are by nature the children of wrath and firebrands of hell 2. the gifts of God bestowed vpon vs whether of nature or of grace are not ours but Gods the giuer of them Therefore no man may arrogate more vnto himselfe then another in regard of them seeing all of vs are but stewards and the things we haue are but
be content to be deluded by flatterers and clawebackes which please them in their itching humours so they willingly suffer thēselues to be deceiued euē by themselues to the ende that they may appeare to others to be that which in trueth they are not that so they may aduauce and magnifie themselues in the accounpt of the world For as Alexander the great beeing in India caused his souldiers to make and leaue behind them bittes and horse shoes of an extraordinarie greatnesse hudge speares massie shields big helmets long swords and other furniture for horse and man fitting rather Hippocentaurs or Giants then men of ordinarie stature and all to the ende it might be said in future time that Alexander was a mightie Monarch indeed So many there be who setting the faire side outward make goodly glorious shewes in the eies of men and so would haue other to thinke of them accordingly farre aboue their desert that posteritie might iudge them to be that which indeed they are not and so with Alexander in deceiuing others they wittingly deceiue themselues Which spirituall guile of deceiuing our selues in matters touching our saluation is most dangerous when men delude themselues in perswading themselues falsely that they know sufficient that God is to be loued aboue all our neighbour as our selues which is as much as all the preachers in the earth can say that they beleeue when in stead of faith there is nothing but damnable pride and presumption that they repent when it is nothing but deceitfull counterfeiting and hypocrisie Besides the danger consider the indignitie of it men can abide nothing lesse then to be deceiued and circumvented by others and yet behold they are deluders and deceiuers of themselues and that which doth more aggrauate the indignitie of it in such things as ought to be best knowne and most familiar vnto them wherein it is a shame they should be deceiued vz. in the knowledge of themselues and that which is yet more in a matter of greatest moment in the saluation of their soules What maruaile therefore is it that men should be deceiued by the seducer of all seducers the deuill who are so easily deceiued of themselues or rather willing to deceiue themselues Further obserue that proud conceited persons such as haue an ouerweening of themselues and their gifts and of all men thinke fowle scorne to be deceiued euen they are easiliest deceiued yea and that of themselues for so the Apostle saith He that thinketh that he is somewhat c. deceiueth himselfe in his imagination Againe marke hence that no men be their gifts neuer so rare their callings neuer so high their places neuer so great are to good to beare other mens burdens for they that thinke themselues to be somewhat some great men that is too good to put vnder their shoulders to beare the frailties and infirmities of their brethren doe nothing herein but deceiue themselues Princes and Potentates of the earth are prophecied by Esay chap. 49. vers 23. to be nourcing fathers and nourcing mothers vnto the Church not onely by nourishing and defending it as the nource her child but also by bearing with the frailties and wants which are therein Lastly consider that this selfe-conceitednesse and ouerweening of a mans selfe is the very bane and poyson of loue for it maketh proude men thinke themselues too good to become packe-horses or drudges to beare other mens burdens to become seruiceable vnto them in any dutie of loue or to tollerate their frailties or to yeelde of their right or to suffer iniuries at their hands or to put vp any little indignitie without stomacke and discontent because they imagine themselues euery way better then their brethren and therefore ought to be tollerated but not so bound to tollerate and beare with others So that where selfe-loue is there is no true brotherly loue It was well said of the Poet Non benè conveniunt c. maiestas amor It may may be said may not he that is priuie to his owne vertues in conscience of his owne worth iudge himselfe to be somewhat that is to be that which indeed he is or to haue a greater measure of knowledge grace and other gifts then they that haue lesse Answ. He may For humilitie is not sottish the master in humilitie cannot thinke his scholler more learned then himselfe except he shall thinke against his conscience For that saying Let euery man thinke better of another then of himselfe must be restrained onely to equalls and not extended to superiours in regard of their inferiours Secondly I answer that the Apostle in that place speaketh not of the giftes and graces bestowed vpon men but of the persons themselues and of them not so much as they are in the account of men as in the account of God For he saith not Let euery man thinke another more learned wise discreete sober then himselfe for so he may thinke against his conscience but Let euery man thinke another that is any other that is his brother in the Lord better then himselfe to wit before God And this euery man may doe with good conscience for albeit another shall outwardly seeme more ignorant negligent backward in matters of religion then himself yet for any thing he knoweth he may be higher in the fauour of God then he And therefore though a man erre in thinking of another better then of himselfe yet he shall not doe any thing against his conscience Thus the Publican accounted the proud Pharisie better then himselfe For he held him as iust himselfe not worthie to looke vp to heauen yet herein he sinned not nay he is commended for it though he erred in his iudgement of the Pharisie And so if the Pharisie had reputed the Publican better then himselfe that is higher in Gods fauour then himselfe he had not sinned nor done against his conscience For though he might iudge himselfe more iust then the Publican in regard of his life past yet for his present estate before God he could not Though Dauid knew in the particular quarrell betwixt Saul and him that Saul was vniust and he innocent yet if he should haue thought better of Saul in generall then of himselfe he should but haue done his dutie The fourth and last point containeth the remedies of this euill which are the rather to be considered because it is a great sinne one of those seuen which the Lord doth most of all detest Prou. 6. 17. a dangerous sinne hauing a heauie woe attending vpon it Woe to them that are prudent in their owne eyes Isa. 5. 21. a sinne almost incurable Seest thou a man that is wise in his owne eyes there is more hope of a feele then of him Prou. 26. 12. therefore the remedies are more carefully to be known and applied The remedies are specially fiue The first is to looke our selues in the glasse of the Law which will shew what we are without flatterie or partialitie by it
workes and to approoue them How we are to prooue our workes by taking triall and examination of them I haue already shewed in the former verse But we are further to approoue them to God according to Pauls commandement study to shew thy selfe approoued vnto God 2. Tim. 2. 15. and his practise in coueting alway to be acceptable vnto him 2. Cor. 5. 9. This approouing of our works is a soueraigne remedie against ouerweening of our selues for he that alwaise stands vpon his tryall and Gods approbation cannot be puffed vp with self loue of himselfe or selfe-liking of his own works but rather humbled with the consideratiō of Gods absolute iustice and his owne imperfections and so stirred vp with greater diligence to worke out his saluation with feare and trembling Nowe we shall approoue our workes vnto God if we obserue these three things First that all our actions specially in the worship and seruice of God be grounded vpon the will word of God not vpon wil-worship or humane inuentiōs otherwise it will be said Who required these things at your hands Secondly that we performe all our actions sincerely and vprightly as in the presence of God with an honest heart and a good conscience as Abimelech protesteth of himselfe Gen. 20. 5. and Hezekiah Isay 38. 3. and Paul Act. 23 1. Thirdly that they alway tend to a good end as the glorie of God Whether ye eate or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe doe all to the glorie of God 1. Cor. 10 30. and the good of our brethren Let all things be done to edification 1. Cor. 14 26. It may here be demaunded whether we may not approoue our selues and our actions to men To which I answer that we may ought For although we may not be men-pleasers that is such as frame and temper our actions and our speeches so as they may alway be pleasing to the corrupt humours and wicked affections of men for then we were not the seruants of God Gal. 1. 10. Yet we are to please them in that which is good to edification Rom. 15. 2. 1. Cor. 10. 33. And Christ cōmandeth that our light should so shine before men that they may see our good works And Paul biddeth vs to procure honest things in the sight of all men And whatsoeuer things are true and honest and iust and pure whatsoeuer appertaine to loue and are of good report we must thinke on them and practise them Phil. 4. 8. Yet we must seeke for the approbation of men with these cautions First we must so seeke for the approbation of men as that we do not seeke it nor rest in it alone but withall seek to be approoued of God For he that praiseth himselfe and so consequently he that is praised of others is not approoued but he whōe the Lord praiseth 2. Cor. 10. 18. How can ye beleeue saith our Sauiour Christ which receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour that commeth of God alone Ioh. 5. 44. Secondly we must seeke for the approbation of God in the first place and in the second place to be approoued of men as Christ did for he grew in fauour first with God and after with men Luk. 2. 52. and the Elders who by faith obtained a good report Hebr. 11. 2. read Rom. 14. 18. Thirdly we must neuer looke for the approbation of the multitude or acclamation of the most for that cannot be done without ambition and vaine glorie in seeking popular applause Woe be to you when all men speake well of you Luk. 6. 26. Thus Christ saith He sought not praise of mē For those that are addicted to popular applause and are ouer curious of their credit immoderately seeking to get and keepe a good name with all sorts of men while they seeke for fame they loose a good name in seeking fame from the wicked which is but a shadow and loosing a good name in the opinion of the godly which is the substance Fourthly we must so farre seeke for the approbation of the wicked that we minister no not the least occasion of offence vnto them 1. Cor. 10. 32. Giue no offence neither to the Iew nor to the Gentile but to conuict their consciences and to stoppe their mouths by our godly vnblameable conuersatiō which may be a preparatiue for them against the day of their visitation 1. Pet. 2. 12. Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of the visitation Fiftly in doing our duties we must not respect the iudgement of the world neither fearing the faces nor the censures of men This was Pauls practise 1. Cor. 4. 3. I passe very little to be iudged of you or of mans iudgement we must goe through good report and euill report 2. Cor. 6. 8. Lastly we must seeke to be approoued of men not so much in regard of our selues as that by this meanes Gods glorie may be more and more aduanced for our light must so shine before men that they may see our good workes and glorifie our father which is in heauen Matth. 5. 16. If we obserue these sixe cautions we may with good conscience seeke to get a good name which will be vnto vs as a pretious oyntment refreshing vs with the comfort of a godly life Prou. 22. 1. Eccles. 7. 3. Thus much of the Remedie The reason followeth And then shall he haue whereof to reioyce in himselfe and not in another The wordes translated to reioyce signifie to glorie which is more then to reioyce There is a double ground of glorying one out of a mans selfe another in himselfe Out of himselfe in God alone Let not the wise man glorie in his wisdome nor the strong man in his strength nor the rich man in his riches But let him that glorieth glorie in this that he vnderstandeth and knoweth me Ier. 9. 23 24. 1. Cor. 1. 31. In himselfe in the comfortable testimonie of a good conscience Our glorying is this the testimonie of our conscience that in simplicitie and godly purenes we haue had our conuersation in the world 2. Cor. 1. 12. The one is glorying before God the other before men The one of iustification the other of holy conuersation for time past and constant resolution for time to come The one in the testimonie of our conscience 2. Cor. 1. 12. the other in the testimonie of Gods spirit witnessing to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. 16. The first is not meant in this place but onely the second For no flesh can glorie in his presence 1. Cor. 1. 29. It will be said This glorying in a mans selfe is vaine glorie and a branch of pride Ans. It differs from vaine glorie first in the foundation for vaine glorie hath for his ground our owne vertues and gifts considered as comming from our selues
and not from God whereas this true glorying is grounded vpon them as they are fruits of regeneration proceeding from our iustification by Christ and reconciliation with God Secondly in the ende Vaine glorie tendeth to the aduancing of our selues in an opinion of our proper iustice and desert This true glorying aimeth at the glorie of God alone Obiect Paul reprooues those that consider their owne gifts onely neuer comparing themselues with others 2. Cor. 10. 12. They vnderstand not that they measure themselues with themselues and compare themselues with themselues Therefore it seemes that a man by comparing himselfe with others may haue whereof to reioyce Ans. He reprooues the false Apostles in that place for glorying in the gifts which they had and the number of Proselytes which they had wonne neuer comparing themselues with himselfe or any other Apostle which was the cause they were so puffed vp with pride For to compare our selues with those that are eminently aboue vs is a notable meanes to abate pride as I haue alreadie shewed Whereas the measuring of our selues by our selues with our inferiours is the onely way to encrease it And this is it which the Apostle reprooues in this place Further we may reioyce or glorie in the testimonie of a good conscience if we obserue these rules I. In our best desires endeauours actions we must labour to feele our owne defects that we doe not the good we should nor in that manner we ought II. We must labour to haue euen our best workes our almes praiers c. couered with the righteousnes of Christ for it is the sweete odour of his sacrifice that doth perfume all our actions that they may be acceptable to God beeing offered with the praiers of the Saints vpon the golden altar Reuel 8. 3. III. We must acknowledge all the good things we haue the will and the worke the purpose and the power to proceed from God alone Philip. 2. 13. Iam. 1. 17. IIII. We must reioyce in them not as causes but as fruits of iustification so that if the question be whether we be iustified by them or not we must renounce them tread them vnder our feete and account them as dongue as Paul did Philip. 3. 8. Hence we learne sundrie things I. That if we would haue a light heart and passe our time merrily with comfort content we must looke to approoue our hearts to God in all our actions II. It contutes the opinion of the multitude who iudge those that make conscience of sinne and lead a more strict life then the common sort endeauouring with Paul to haue alwaies a cleare conscience toward God and toward men of all others to lead a most melancholike sadde and vncomfortable life For the truth is this is the onely true ioy all other ioy is but counterfeit in comparison it is radicall proceeding from the heart the other but superficiall from the teeth outward it comforts a man in the midst of afflictions whereas a man may haue the other and yet in the midst of mirth his heart will be sorrowfull this is permanent and during the other transitorie and fading It is like the ioy in haruest Psal. 4. 7. and which they haue that diuide a spoyle Esa. 9. 3. therefore Salomon saith it is a continuall feast Prou. 15. 15. and Peter calls it ioy vnspeakable and glorious 1. Pet. 1. 8. III. This shewes that there is much false ioy in the world consisting wholly in honours profits pleasures none of which haue their ground in a mans selfe and therefore beeing out of a mans selfe they are not true and durable but false and vanishing ioyes Now those which haue no comfort but out of themselues are of foure sorts First such as reioyce and glorie in the opinion that the world hath of them and not in the testimonie of their owne conscience Secondly such as reioyce not in their reconciliation with God but in their blamelesse conuersation in that they haue not beene open offenders or men of scandalous life Luk. 18. 11. Thirdly such as reioyce in the vertues of their ancestors as the Iewes bragged they were the seede of Abraham Ioh. 8. 33. which vaine glorying of other mens vertues Iohn Baptist reprooueth when he saith Thinke not to say with your selues we haue Abraham for our father c. Mat. 3. 9. Fourthly such as reioyce thinke themselues in a good case because they see others worse then themselues this is right the Pharisies ioy O God I thanke thee I am not thus and thus or like this Publican Luk. 18. 11. This is it which the Apostle directly aimeth at in this place when men thinke thēselues iust because others are more wretched then themselues and pure because others are more defiled Whereas other mens hainous sinnes shall not iustifie vs and our lesser sinnes saue onely as Ierusalem iustified her sisters Sodome and Samaria Ezek. 16. 51. But so a man may be iustified and yet condēned 5 For euery one shall beare his owne burden Here Paul laies downe a second reason of his assertion in the former verse why euery man ought to prooue his owne worke rather then to be curious in searching into the liues and skanning the actions of other men because euery man shall beare his own burde which is all one with that Gal. 5. 10. to beare a mans owne iudgement and that Rom. 14. 12. to giue an account to God for himselfe It is a prouerbiall speech the meaning wherof is expressed by the like Ier. 31. 30. Euery man that eateth the sower grape his teeth shall be set one edge And by that which is common amongst vs Euery vessel shall stand vpon it owne bot to●e that is euery man shall beare the punishment of his owne sinne For as the Indian is not therefore white because the Morian is more blacke or as the sand blind is not therefore sharpe sighted because some other is stone blinde So no man is therefore acquit of his sinnes because others are greater sinners or exempt from punishment because others shall vndergoe a deeper conde●●nation Therefore confidering that euery man must beare the guilt and punishment of his owne sin he ought more narrowly to looke to himselfe then to others and to be a more seuere censurer of himselfe then of another For the better vnderstanding of the words sundrie questions are to be discussed First it may be demaunded howe euery man should beare his own burden seeing we are commanded to beare one anothers burdens Ans. There are two sorts of burdens The first is of giuing an account to God thus euery man shall beare his owne burden for euery man must giue an account for himselfe vnto God Rom. 14. 12. The second is of bearing one anothers infirmities of which Paul speakes vers 2. In this sense a man is not to beare his owne burden but euery man his brothers For the Apostle to crosse the opinion of those which thought a man was polluted with
will be said howe can a man reape that which he soweth seeing that Christ affirmeth it to be a true saying that one soweth and another reapeth Ioh. 4. 37. Ans. In that one soweth and another reapeth it is not to bee imputed to nature but to the speciall prouidence of god the words are to be vnderstood of the prophets who were the seedsmen in sowing the seedes of the Gospel of the Apostles who were the reapers whose plaine and powerfull preaching of the Gospel did as farre exceede that of the prophets as the haruest doth the seed time Thus the time vnder the Law is resembled to childhood and infancie that vnder the Gospell to mans estate Gal. 4. 1. c. Againe it may be said the husbandman soweth not the body that shall be 1. Cor. 15. 37. Therefore he reapeth not that which he sowed Ans. He reapeth not the same indiuiduall but yet the same specificall bodie It may further be doubted of the trueth of that which is signified by this prouerbiall sentence namely whether euery man shal receiue according to his workes for so euery man should be condemned To which I answer that it is not vniuersally true for if the righteous commit iniquitie all his righteousnesse shall be no more remembred and if a wicked man turne from his sinne none of his sinnes that he hath committed shall be mentioned vnto him Ezeck 33. 13 16. It must therefore be restrained thus He that doeth wickedly and perseuereth therein to the ende He that doeth well and continueth in well doing shall receiue according to his workes the seedes of his former sinnes shall not growe vp to the haruest of condemnation For it is the priuiledge yea the happinesse of a righteous man so to haue his finnes couered with the robes of Christ his righteousnesse as that they shall neuer be vncouered to his shame Psal. 32. Esay 43. 25. Againe it may hence be prooued in that sanctification in death is perfected originall corruption beeing vtterly abolished and therefore though the booke of a regenerate mans conscience be opened at the day of iudgement yet nothing shall be found in it but his good workes which follow him till the resurrection Apoc. 14. 13. Besides this in the last sentence pronounced by our Sauiour Christ Math. 25. only their good workes are mentioned Come ye blessed of my father inherit the kingdome prepared for you for I was hungrie and ye fedde me c. their sinnes and imperfections not so much as once named but concealed and passed ouer II. Obiect It may be said that neither the good nor the bad doe reape that which they haue sowne the godly for the seeds of good works reape nothing but affliction the wicked for the cursed seeds of a damnable life comfort and contentation To which I answer that it is not true if we restraine it to the tearme of this life for so all men reape not as they haue sowne But it is vndoubtedly true of the life to come for the iustice of God requires that all should be rewarded according to their workes Rom. 2. Hence therefore we may gather that seeing men must reape as they sow and yet doe not reape nor receiue their reward in this life that there is another life after this in which God will giue to euery one as his workes shall be and therfore there shall be a iudgement And because the bodie was partaker with the soule either in doing good or euill it is iust likewise it should be partaker either of miserie or felicitie and therefore there shall be a resurrection III. Obiect The whore of Babylon must be rewarded double Apoc. 18. 6. In the cuppe that shee hath filled to you fill her the donble And the Saints pray thus to God Render to our neighbours seuenfold into their bosome Psal. 79. 12. Therefore it seemeth that some men shall not be iudged according to their works because they are punished aboue their deserts Ans Shee is rewarded double yet not aboue but according to her deserts giue her double according to her workes v. 6. the meaning is not that shee should be punished twise as much as shee had deserued for it is the law of God that the malefactour should be beaten with a certaine number of stripes not aboue but according to his trespasse Deut. 29. 2. but that shee should be tormented twise as much as shee had tormented others Againe these phrases and formes of speech of rewarding double or seuen fold signifie that God will pay wicked men whome to the full a definite number beeing put for an indefinite as Gen. 4. 15. Doubtlesse whosoeuer slaieth Cain shall be punished seuen fold The meaning is not that the murtherer of Cain should be punished seuen fold more then he was punished for killing his brother Abel for it should not haue beene so great a sinne for a man to haue killed him as it was for him to kill his brother but that he should be most seuerely and grieuously punished IIII. Obiect Infants haue no works whereby they may be iudged seeing they doe neither good nor euill as the Scripture speaketh of Iacob and Esau Rom. 9. 11. therefore all shall not be iudged according to workes Ans. These phrases of Scripture As a man sowes so shall be reape euery one shall receiue according to his workes c. are not to be extended to all but must be restrained to such as haue works knowledge to discerne betwixt good and euill which infants haue not For besides that they are destitute of workes they also want the vse of reason and therefore they shall not be iudged by the booke of conscience but by the booke of life For to say as Hugo de S. Vict. doth vpon the Rom. quaest 59. that they shall be condemned for the sinnes which their parents committed in their conception and natiuitie as though they themselues had actually committed them is contrarie to that Ezek. 18. 20. the sonne shall not beare the iniquitie of the father U. Obiect But how shall they be pronounced iust who beeing come to yeares of discretion yet haue no good works as Lazarus and the theefe vpon the crosse who liuing leudly all his life long was converted at the last gaspe Ans. That Lazarus had no good works whereby he might be declared iust it cannot be prooued the contrarie rather may be gathered out of Scripture and that the good theefe had no good works it is flit against the text Luk. 23. 40 41. where he maketh a notable confession of Christ and rebuketh his fellow labouring to bring him to the faith which was a memorable fact of Christian charitie Secondly though it were graunted that they had no good works in action yet they were full of good workes in affection and by these they were to be iudged God accepting in his children the will for the deede Lazarus by reason of his extreame pouertie and the theefe by reason of the shortnes of time which
mercenarie hireling to looke for reward I answer it is the propertie of a hireling to looke onely or principally for his hire either not minding the glorie and honour of God or lesse respecting it then his owne priuate aduantage so that when the hope of his gaine is gone he leaueth his charge and flieth away like the Popish Monks who were right hirelings indeede for they minded nothing but their owne commoditie according to the old saying No penie no Pater noster But to looke to the recompence of reward in the second place after the glorie of God the performāce of our dutie and discharge of a good conscience is no propertie of a hireling seeing God hath promised to giue to them which by continuance in well doing seeke glorie and honour and immortalitie eternall life Rom. 2. 7. By this that hath beene said we may see the impudencie of the Rhemists who in their marginall notes vpon Luk. 14. 1. Ebr. 11. 26. and Apoc. 3. 5. doe notably slander vs and our doctrine in auerring that we teach that no man ought to doe good in respect of reward the like may be said of Cardinall Bellarmine Bintfeldius and others For this is our constant doctrine that we may and ought to stirre vp our dulnes to all chearefulnes in the discharge of our dutie by setting before our eyes the reward which is promised Yet so as that we ought not onely nor principally to respect the reward for the zeale of Gods glorie the care and conscience we haue to discharge our dutie ought rather to mooue vs to be plentifull in good workes in lue of thankfulnes vnto God for the riches of his mercie then the greatnes of the reward seeing we ought to do our dutie though there were no heauen no hell no reward no punishment no Deuill to torment no conscience to accuse the very loue of God ought to constraine vs. 2. Cor. 5. 14. And here we must with thankfulnes acknowledge the endles loue and mercie of God towards vs seeing that when he might exact strict obedience without any promise of recompence for our labour nay when he might shiuer vs in pieces with his yron scepter yet as Abashuerosh did to Queene Esther he holdeth out his golden scepter vnto vs in the preaching of the word that we might lay hold of it and by it apprehend eternall life Yea it pleaseth him to winne vs by gifts to incite vs by rewards to allure vs by promises in giuing his word that if we giue we may looke to receiue though not for our merits yet through his mercy if we bestowe transitorie goods we shal receiue a durable substance If a cuppe of cold water Gods kingdome Matth 10. 12. The second generall point is the circumstance of time when we shall reape to wit in due time This due time may be vnderstood in part of this life for godlines hath the promise of this life as well as of the life to come and the works of mercie haue beene euen in this life recompenced to the full The widow of Zanepta for entertaining the Prophet Eliah was miraculously sustained in the dearth the meale in her barrell did not wast and the oyle in her cruise did not diminish 1. King 17. 16. And so the Shunamite for the like kindnes shewed to the Prophet Elizeus beeing barren obtained a sonne and when he was dead shee obtained him to life againe 2. King 4. as the widow of Sarepta did hers at the praier of Eliah 1. King 17. 23. Foras God doth alwaies giue to his children in this life the first 〈◊〉 of his spirit so he doth often giue them the first fruits of their labours as a tast of their future felicitie and an earnest of that happines which after they shall fully enioy Our Sauiour Christ saith he will reward them an hundred fold in this life Matth. 19. But this due time is properly meant of the life to come which hath two degrees the first is at the day of death when the soule entreth into happines the second at the day of iudgement when both soule and bodie beeing reunited shall be put in full possession of eternall glorie and felicitie for then they shall be rewarded according to their workes not so much as a cuppe of cold water which they haue giuen to releeue the Saints of God but shall be recompenced to the full Matth. 10. 42. Use. Seeing God hath set downe a set and certen time when we are to reape it is our dutie with patience to expect it as the husbandman doth who hauing sowed his field doth not looke for a croppe the next day or weeke or moneth but patiently expecteth the haruest that he may receiue the pretious seede of the earth For he is too vnreasonable who hauing sowed in September looketh for a croppe in October he must waite for the moneth of August till the haruest and in the meane time indurestorme and tempest winde and weather snow and raine haile and frost So we must sow our seede and sow plentifully still expecting the fruite of our labour with patience till the great haruest come the great day of retribution in which God will seperate the wheat from the chaffe gathering the one into his garners and burning vp the other with vnquenchable fire Matth. 3. 12. Let vs consider the example of God who doth patiently expect and as I may say waites our leisure when we will turne vnto him that he might haue mercie vpon vs. Esa. 30. 8. he waiteth at the doore of our hearts and standeth knocking to be let in Apoc. 3. 20. nay he calleth vnto vs standing without Open vnto me my sister my loue my doue my vndefiled for my head is ful of dew and my lockes with the droppes of the night Cant. 5. 2. Wee vnto thee Ierusalem will thou neuer be made cleane when will it once be Ier. 13. 27. More particularly Gods wayting and expecting is set downe in Scripture by sundrie degrees First he waiteth all the day long Esa. 65. 2. I haue stretched out my hand all the day long to a disobedient and gainsaying people Secondly fourtie daies together Yet fourtie daies and Niniue shall be destroied Ion. 3. 4. Thirdly all the yeare long as the husbandman doth I looked for grapes and loe wild grapes Esa. 5. 4. Fourthly he expecteth our amendement many yeares together Luk. 13. 7. Behold these three yeares haue I come and sought fruit on this fig-tree and find none Fifthly the Lord suffered the manners of the Israelites fourtie yeares in the wildernes Psal. 95. 10. Act. 13. 18. Sixtly the long sufferance of God as Peter saith 1. Epist 3. 20. did patiently expect the conuersion of the old world all the while the Arke was in preparing for the space of an hundred and twentie yeares Seuenthly he expected the Canaanits and Amorits for the space of foure hundred yeares yea he suffered all Gentiles to wander in their owne waies and in the
times and moneths and years I am afraid of you least I haue spent on you labour in vaine Ans. There is a twofold obseruing of time good and euill lawfull and vnlawfull Vnlawfull and superstitious is either Iewish or Heathenish the Iewish and superstitious obseruation of times is when religion is placed in the keeping of them in an opinion that they bind the conscience to the strict obseruing of them as their Iubilies feasts of the Passeouer of weekes of Tabernacles Calends new moones c. Heathenish when times are obserued in respect of good or badde successe as when men make two vnluckie daies in euery moneth in regard of health when they count leape-yeare ominous as Valentinian did who beeing newly created Emperour would not come forth and shew himselfe the bissext of Februarie Not to marrie in the moneth of May. To obserue Planetarie houres and Climactericall yeares the Horoscope or time of a mans birth and the position of the heauens at that time Both these kinds are forbidden Paul was afraid of the Galatiās first because they obserued daies and moneths yeares that is Iewish ceremonies beggerly rudimēts Secondly because they obserued times or seasons that is heathenish superstitions mentioned before And assuredly besides the vnlawfulnes of this practise it is also vaine euen in the iudgement of the heathens thēselues Alexander the great commanded the Macedonian souldiers which had not beene accustomed to fight in Iune because it had beene ominous vnto them that they should call it Iuly and so got the victorie ouer Darius Lucullus beeing to fight with Tigranes vpon an vnlucky day in which Cepio was ouercome of the Cimbrians I will said he make it fortunate to the Romanes and got the victorie And who knoweth not that the selfe same day hath beene fortunate or luckie to some as they vse to speake vnfortunate and vnluckie to others The same day was Crassus slaine by the Parthians and Pachor king of Parthia taken by Ventidius The same day was vnto Pompey the day of his birth and the day of his death The same day was to Fredericke the second his coronation day and his funerall day The lawfull obseruing of time is two-fold Humane Diuine Humane is threefold Naturall Ciuill Ecclesiasticall Naturall is the obseruing of the motion of the sunne the moone and the starres whose reuolutions make times and seasons daies moneths yeares the obseruing of the foure quarters or seasons of the yeare spring summer autumme winter The Ecclipses of sunne and moone the full moone the wane the change The time of cutting of timber of planting sowing c. in obseruing whereof a great part of Astronomy Philosophie and husbandrie is imployed Ciuill is when times are obserued in regard of pollicie or of the good of the common wealth as faire-times market-times tearme-times c. the spring as fit time for Kings to goe forth to warre 2. Sam. 4. 11. The keeping of Lent fasting daies Ember weekes are all in a ciuill respect for the breed of cattell the maintenance of nauigation and the plentie of all things Ecclesiasticall when set times are obserued in the Church for order sake without superstition or opinion of worship as among the Iewes the feast of Purim Esth. 9. 26. the feast of the Dedication Ioh. 10. 22. Amongst Christians festiuall daies as the feast of the Natiuitie of circumcision of the resurrection ascension of Christ these and such like solemnities appointed for our thankesgiuing and humiliation are not vnlawfull if they be enioyned by lawfull authoritie and kept in good manner Diuine is when vpon the consideration of the shortnesse and vncertainetie of our liues we prepare our selues against God shall call vs and so number our daies that we apply our hearts to wisedome Psal. 90. Or obseruing the day of Gods mercifull visitation we take the opportunitie and vse the meanes that is offered for our conuersion and saluation Or obseruing the time of Gods visitation in iudgement and indignation we hide our selues vnder the couert of his wings Prou. 22. 3. IV. Hence we learne that there is no possibilitie of doing good or beeing beneficiall vnto others after this life for Paul biddeth vs doe good while we haue time thereby insinuating that after death all possibilitie of doing good is cleane cut off The time allotted to doe good beeing included within the limits of this life The dead that die in the Lord rest from their labours Reuel 14. 13. Therefore no good workes are performed after this life Paul beeing aged and readie to die the tearme of his life beeing almost expired saith I haue finished my course 2. Tim. 4. 7. which could not be truely said if he were to performe any good workes after his death 2. Cor. 5. 10. We must giue account for all things we haue done in the body that is in this life Where it is to be obserued that the Apostle speaking of all the workes whereof we are to giue account doth confine them within the compasse of this life therefore no workes can be done after this life be ended Let vs heare the testimonie of the auntient Cyprian to Demetr Quando istine excessum est nullus locus poenitentia est nullus satisfactionis effectus Ierome Dum in praesenti saculo sumus siue orationibus sine concilijs invicem posse nos coadinvari cùm autem ante Christi tribunal venerimus non Iob non Daniel nec Noe rogare posse pro quoquam sed vnumquemque portare onus suum And againe In hac vita licet nobis quod volumus seminare quum transierit operandi tempus auferetur c. Hence I gather two things First that the doctrine of Purgatorie is a meere fable because there is no time after this life be ended left to doe good either to our selues or others and therefore not to worke righteousnesse to repent or to satisfie the iustice of God which the Popish sort say is done in purgatorie But what should I stand to batter the paper walles of Purgatory with the canon of the scripture which were long agoe burnt to ashes by the fire of the word Secondly seeing all opportunitie nay all possibility of doing good is confined in the compasse of this life euery man must followe the counsell of the wiseman Salomon All that thy hand shall finde to doe doe it with all thy power for there is neither worke nor inuention nor knowledge nor wisedome in the graue whither thou goest Eccles. 9. 10. Dauid saith in the graue no man will or can praise God And this is the cause wherefore Paul doth so instantly vrge all men to take the present opportunitie Beholde now is the acceptable time behold nowe is the day of saluation 2. Cor. 6. 2. V. Hence we are taught to account euery day euen this present day as the day of death or the day of iudgement for we must doe all the good we can while we haue time now our time is
tabulae and therefore is to haue care that true religion be professed and the contemners thereof punished An example hereof we haue in good King Iosiah who caused all that were found in Ierusalem and Beniamin that is all his subiects to stand to the couenant which he made with the Lord nay which is more he compelled all that were found in Ierusalem to serue the Lord their God 2. Chron. 24. 32 33. among which multitude many there were no doubt which did like better of Idolatrie then of Gods worship as the word compelled doth import The King that made that great supper commanded his seruants to cōpell the guests to come in vnto him Luk. 14. 23. whence Augustine gathereth that it is the Magistrates dutie to compell recusants schismatikes heretikes and such like to the hearing and professing of the word But here three things are commonly obiected against this doctrine Obiect I. To compell men to embrace true religion is to make them goe against their conscience which the Magistrate ought not to doe as some Papists haue asfirmed that they would not for tenne thousand worlds compell a Iew to sweare that there were a blessed Trinitie because he should be damned for swearing against his conscience although the thing were neuer so true Ans. I. If it were so hainous a sinne to compell any to embrace true religion because it is against their conscience why doe Popish Prelates and Magistrates compell Protestants and that by exquisite torments to reconcile themselues to the Church of Rome to sweare obedience to the Pope to acknowledge Trāsubstantiation and to heare Masse which they know are directly against their conscience II. If they will not compell men to doe any thing though neuer so good or godly because it is against their conscience why should they not be as scrupulous in restraining them from doing that which is vnlawfull because they are perswaded in conscience they ought to doe it For if they compell men to omit that which they beleeue to be good because they know it to be euill as their owne practise prooueth in that they will not suffer Protestants to pray publikely in a knowne tongue nor receiue the Sacrament in both kinds c. why doe they not compell them also to doe that which they know to be good though they thinke it to be euill III. The Magistrate is to compell men to embrace true religion or to punish them for their obstinacie in not harkening to the word because he is to vse the meanes to reclaime them and to winne them to a loue and liking of the truth Now so long as they are vrged to heare the word there is hope they may be wonne againe and experience shewes as Augustine testifieth of the Donatists that they which did professe religion at the first meerely by compulsion may afterwards by the mercie of God professe it onely for deuo●ion And what though some come not to learne but to carpe and cauill yet God may cast the nette of his mercie so farre ouer them that contrarie to their purpose they may be caught IIII. If the Magistrate who may compell them and so reclaime them doe suffer them to continue in their errours or heresies without controlment he is guiltie of their sinne but by compelling them he hath discharged his dutie for albeit they beeing compelled doe dissemble and play the hypocrites doe lie and forsweare themselues that is not the Magistrates sinne who intendeth nothing but their conuersion and saluation it is their owne proper and personall sinne Obiect II. Men ought to be perswaded to embrace religion and induced to beleeue but not compelled for the will can not be compelled Ans. True it is the will cannot be compelled and as true is it likewise that the Magistrate doth not compell any to beleeue for when a man doth beleeue and from his heart embrace true religion he doth it willingly notwithstanding meanes are to be vsed to make them willing that are vnwilling and the meanes is to compell them to come to our assemblies to heare the word and to learne the grounds of true religion for it is Gods commandement men should prooue the spirits 1. Ioh. 4. 1. that so they may know the truth and cleaue vnto it Augustine saith fitly and finely to this purpose Quod autem vobis videtur invites ad veritatem non esse cogend●● erratis nescientes Scripturas neque virtutem Dei qui eos volentes facit dum coguntur inviti Secondly when Papists receiue the Sacrament sweare allegeance to their Prince present themselues in our congregations who knowes that they doe these things against their conscience nay rather we ought in charitie to thinke that they are perswaded in conscience they may doe them when by oath and protestation they confesse so much But be it they did all in hypocrisie shall the execution of godly lawes therefore cease because hypocrites will not obey but in dissimulation Obiect III. The Magistrate by compelling Recusants to the outward profession of religion maketh them to play the hypocrites to counterfai● and dissemble Ans. The Magistrate in executing the lawes hath no such intent but onely that they might heare the word beleeue it and be saued Againe Protestant recusants in other countries are not allowed by Papists to alleadge their conscience for their refusall but are compelled either to conforme themselues or to vndergoe cruell torments no more may such pretence of conscience excuse the Papists or other heretikes but that they should receiue the same measure which they mete to others II. Quest. How can it be truly said that the false Apostles compelled men to receiue circumcision seeing Titus was not compelled to be circumcised Gal. 2. 3. Ans. That place maketh nothing against the text in hand the meaning is that Paul for his part was readie to haue circumcised Titus as he did Timothie Act. 16. 3. rather then offend the weake brethren But when it came to this point that they would needes vrge circumcision as a thing necessarie to saluation Paul refused to do it for all the false brethren that crept in v. 4. that is notwithstanding they laboured by all meanes to bring it in vse againe Neither did the Apostles vrge it or require it as a thing necessarie to saluation III. It may be demaunded whether that circumcision beeing so vehemently vrged by the false Apostles might not haue beene vsed Answ. It might not For albeit it be in it selfe a thing indifferent and so it skilleth not whether a man be circumcized or not as Paul saith Circumcision is nothing and vncircumcision is nothing yet beeing vrged as a matter o● absolute necessitie as without which men could not be saued Act. 15. 1. it ought not to be vsed The like may be said of all indifferent things if they be made essentiall p●rts of Gods worship or necessarie to saluation as the vse of meates and drinkes obseruing of times and seasons wearing this or that habit or
to suffer persecution for the profession of it nor lay downe their liues in the maintenance thereof Matth. 13. 21. As soone as tribulation or persecution commeth by and by they are offended Whereas we ought to haue the same minde that Paul had who knowing that bonds and imprisonment aboad him yet passed not for them neither was his life deare vnto him Act. 20. 23. and was not onely readie to be bound but to die also for the name of the Lord Iesus Act. 21. 13. The reasons which should make vs willing to take vp our crosse and follow Christ are these First it is a great mercy and fauour of God that we are accounted worthy to suffer any thing for his sake Act. 5. 41. The Apostles departed from the counsell reioycing that they were accounted worthy to suffer rebuke for his name Secondly it is a meanes by the mercifull promise of God to procure and obtaine the blessings of this life Mar. 10. 30. Thirdly it hath blessednes annexed to it with a promise of assistance and helpe of Gods spirit 1. Pet. 4. 11. If ye berailed on for the name of Christ blessed are ye for the spirit of glorie and of God resteth vpon you which on their part is euill spoken of but on your part is glorified Lastly the ende of the crosse is glorie vnspeakable If we suffer with him we shall also be glorified with him Rom. 8. 17. Further whereas Saint Paul linketh together persecution and the preaching of the crosse we may see that the profession of the Gospel and persecution doe either goe hand in hand or doe follow one another inseperably for as many as will liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecution 2. Tim. 3. 12. Moses is said to haue chosen rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a season Heb. 11. 25. Where we see that affliction is the lette and portion of the godly The reason hereof is two-fold The malice of the Deuil who is alway nibbling at the heele Gen. 3. 15. And the hatred of the malignant Church the deuils seede euer maligning the Church and people of God The deuill maketh warre with the remnant of the womans seede which keepe the commandement of God and haue the testimonie of Iesus Apoc. 12. 17. The malignant Church persecuteth the Church of God as we may see in their types namely in Caine hating and persecuting Abel Ismael Isaac Esau Iacob Which they did onely because they saw their owne workes to be euill and theirs to be good 1. Ioh. 3. 12. And if it be demaunded why those that preach the word plainely and powerfully to the consciences of men in euidence of the spirit are so extreamely hated and maligned Ans. It is for no other thing but euen for the workes sake for which they ought to be reuerenced 1. Thess. 5. 13. and because they prophecie not good vnto them but euill 1. King 22. 8. that is preach not pleasing things by sowing pillowes vnder their elbowes and lulling them asleepe in the bedde of securitie but denounce the iudgements of God against them and so disquiet and trouble their guiltie consciences And what I beseech you is the reason why those that make conscience of sinne are so maligned of the wicked world and branded with the blacke names of Puritans and Precisians but this which our Sauiour Christ giueth Ioh. 15. 19. Because they are not of the world therefore the world hateth them Now all this commeth to passe by reason of that enmitie which God hath put betwixt the woman and the serpent his seede and her seede Gen. 3. 15. This teacheth vs first that we should suspect our selues that our hearts are not found nor our practise sincere when all men speake well of vs for true profession is alwaies accompanied with persecution Woe be to you when all men speake well of you Luk. 6. 26. Secondly that we must not be discouraged in our profession though there be neuer so many that make opposition or so mightie that raise persecution against vs. Though they tell vs as they did Paul Act. 28. 22. Concerning this sect we know that euery where it is spoken against or take vs vp with Nicodemus Ioh. 7. 52. Art thou also of Galile search and looke for out of Galile ariseth no Prophet In these blasts and stormes of temptatiōs we ought to make that saying of Christ our anker hold Blessed is he that is not offended in me Mat. 11. 6. Lastly that we thinke it not strange when we finde affliction or meete with persecution 1. Pet. 4. 12 13. 13 For they which are circumcised keepe not the Law but desire to haue you circumcised that they might glorie in your flesh Here the Apostle preuenteth and obiection which might be made against his former conclusion v. 12. For it might be said Paul did them wrong in standering them to vrge circumcision onely because they would auoid persecution when as they did it as zealous obseruers of the Law To this he answereth negatiuely that whatsoeuer they did pretend they intended no such thing And he prooueth his former assertion by two arguments and withall describeth the false Apostles by two other properties His first reason may be framed thus If they did vrge circumcision as beeing zealous of the Law and hauing conscience of the obseruing thereof they would keepe it themselues as well as compell others to the keeping of it But they keepe it not themselues Therefore they vrge it not in conscience to haue it obeied but for some sinister ende The second reason is this They that propound no other end to themselues in vrging of circumcision but vaunting and boasting in the flesh they seeke not the obseruation of the Law But these seducers vrge circumcision and other ceremonies that they might glorie in the flesh Therefore they seeke not the obseruation of the law So that here we haue two other properties of false teachers The first is to compell men to the obseruing of that which they will not obserue themselues For thus these seducers vrged the ceremoniall law Resembling herein the Scribes and Pharisies who bound heauie burdens and grieuous to be borne and laid them on mens shoulders whereas they themselues would not mooue them with one of their fingers Matth. 23. 4. The Popes and Prelates of the Romish Church are notorious in this kind in vrging men to make conscience of that which they themselues will not keepe to practise that which they will not performe and to beleeue that which they count false and fabulous For first they strictly require regular obedience to be performed of their nouices and others to their generals or gouernours specially to the Vicar of Christ and See of Rome whereas they will not be subiect to the higher powers as they ought Rom. 13. 1. nor obedient to gouernours as it is required 1. Pet. 2. 13 14. Nay their practise is notorious in these foure particulars
boasteth not but onely of his Apostolicall calling and his faithfull discharge thereof to the end he may stoppe the mouthes of the false Apostles Thus to confesse the good things we haue to the glorie of God beeing vrged thereunto is lawfull boasting nay it is sometime necessarie making much for the maintenance of the Gospell as Pauls boasting made much for the good of the Church of Corinth Againe there is a twofold lawfull boasting one before God another before men Rom. 4. 2. Of the former the Apostle speakes in this verse of the latter in the 2. Cor. 12. He gloried not in the testimony of a good conscience before god but onely before men Before God he glorified in nothing but in the sauing knowledge of Christ and him crucified And whereas it may besaide that this his boasting in regard of the false Apostles as also his glorying in the testimonie of his conscience 2. Cor. 1. 12. and in his infirmities 2. Cor. 11. 30. were not in the crosse of Christ. I answer they were for his glorying ouer the false Apostles in teaching freely was in the good and prosperous successe of the Gospel which is the doctrine of the crosse and his glorying in the testimonie of his conscience in that it was washed by the blood of the crosse as Paul speakes Coloss. 1. 20. In his afflictions in that they were the afflictions of Christ and he by them made conformable to him But it will be said that he gloried in his reuelations in his paines and trauell in preaching the Gospel and in the multitude of Churches which he had planted Ans. First he did it beeing vrged thereunto secondly he did it to defend his calling and the credit of the Gospel and therefore this boasting was not vnlawfull nay it was necessarie and in the Lord. For when we are compelled we may confesse the good things we haue if we doe it sparingly and for the edification of others that they may be bettered by our example and that they seeing our good workes may glorifie God our heauenly father Matth. 5. 16. Here we see what glorying is Vnlawfull namely when men ascribe vnto themselues either that which they haue not or more then they haue or as proceeding from themselues their wisdome strength industrie in sacrificing to their owne netts and burning incense to their owne yearne Habac. 1. 16. or in boasting of them without necessarie cause either for their owne vaine glorie as Nebuchodonosor did Dan. 4. or not for Gods glorie as Herod did Act. 12. And if this glorying be so greata sinne surely boasting in wickednes as Doeg did Psal. 52. 1. must needes be most damnable as when the greatest swearers and swaggerers count themselues the best companions the greatest Idolaters and superstitious persons most religious the greatest oppressours surfeters drunkards fighters most valiane and couragious c. Now this may be done three waies either ignorātly as whē Paul gloried in his cruel persecuting of the Saints before his cōuersion Act. 26. 11. or presumptuously when men glorie in wickednes notwithstanding they be perswaded in conscience that it is euill and then it is the sinne of Sodom Isa. 3. 9. or malitiously to despite God and then it is the sinne against the holy Ghost The second point to be considered in the words is the thing wherein he will glorie called here the Crosse of Christ Sane in the Crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ. The words in the originall translated saue are exceptiue as if he should say I will glorie in nothing except in the crosse of Christ and exclusiue onely in the crosse of Christ and in nothing els Albeit they are sometime aduersatiue as Gal. 2. 16. and Apoc. 21. 27. There shall enter into it no vncleane thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but they that are written c. where the words are not exclusiue for then it would follow that some which worke abomination should enter into heauen but aduersatiue as Matth. 12. 4. and Luk. 4. 20. which may serue by the way to cleare the text Ioh. 17. 12. Those thou gauest me haue I kept and none of them is lost but the child of perdition that is but the child of perdition is lost For the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I take it are not so well translated by the exceptiue coniunction nisi as by the aduersatiue sed seeing here is no exceptiō made of Iudas as though he had beene giuen to Christ afterward had fallen away which exposition must needes be made if the words be read nisi filius perditionis Further by the Crosse of Christ the Apostle vnderstandeth synecdochically the all sufficient expiatorie and satisfactorie sacrifice of Christ vpon the crosse with the whole work of our redemption in the sauing knowledge where of he professeth he will glorie and boast For Christ is made vnto vs wisdome righteousnes that as it is written He that glorieth should glorie in the Lord euen to make boast of him all the day long as the Psalmist speaketh And the reason why Paul professeth that he will glorie onely in the Crosse of Christ is because Christ crucified is the treasurie and storehouse of the Church seeing that in him are hid not onely the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Coloss. 2. 3. but of bountie and grace Ioh. 1. 16. and of all spirituall blessings Eph. 1. 3. For first by Christ crucified we haue reconciliation with God remission of sinns acceptation to eternall life Secondly we haue the peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding peace with God with Angels with men with our selues with the creatures Thirdly we recouer the right and title which we had in the creation to all the creatures and blessings of God 1. Cor. 3. 22. Fourthly all afflictions and iudgements cease to be curses and punishments and become either trialls or corrections Lastly death it selfe is no death but a sleepe for all that die in the Lord are said to sleepe and to rest vpon their beddes Isa. 57. 2. Indeede if we looke vpon death through the glasse of the Law it is the very downefall to eternall destruction but if we consider it as it is changed by the death of Christ it is but a passage from this trans●torie life to eternall life Christ by his death hath taken away sinne the sting of death so that though it seaze vpon vs yet hauing lost it sting it cannot hurt vs. So that in a word in Christ crucified are all things that a man can glorie of If we would glorie in knowledge and wisdome He is the wisdome of the father seeing that all treasures of wisdome and knowledge are hid in him and therefore Paul desired to know nothing among the Corinthians but brist and him crucified 1. Cor. 2. 2. for this knowledge is eternall life Ioh 17. 3. If in the loue and fauour of great men by him we are highly aduanced into the loue fauour of god Eph. 1. 6. If in
And withall he laies downe two conclusions The first is that in Christ Iesus that is in the kingdome of grace neither circumcision nor vncircumcision are any thing that is are neither acceptable to God nor auaileable to saluation Vnder these two synecdochically comprehending all outward priuiledges and prerogatiues dignities and regalities or whatsoeuer can be named vnder circumcision comprising the preheminence of the Iewe and the profit of circumcision which was much euery way Rom. 3. 1. seeing that to them appertained the adoption and the glory and the couenants and the giuing of the Lawe and the seruice of God and the promises Rom. 9. 4. Vnder circumcision containing the Gentiles with all their wealth wisdome strength lawes pollicie and whatsoeuer is of high account and glorious in the eies of the world All which he exclude and accounts as nothing in respect of regeneration For that which is highly accounted of among men is abomination in the sight of God Luk. 16. 15. Therefore wisedome wealth nobility strength are nothing 1. Cor. 1. 26. Outward callings as to be King or Kaesar Prophet or Apostle Outward actions of fasting almes praier Nay kindred and alliance as to be mother or brother of Christ is nothing for if the blessed virgine had not borne Christ in her heart as she did in her wombe she should neuer haue beene saued Luk. 11. 27 28. if his kinsmen had not beene his brethren by spirituall adoption as well as by naturall propagation they should haue had no inheritance in the kingdome of God Mark 3. 33 35. Nay the outward element of baptisme without the inward grace is of no force for it is not the washing away of the filth of the flesh that is acceptable to God but the stipulation of a good conscience which maketh requests vnto God 1. Pet. 3. 21. and if the communicant at the Lords table doe not eate panem Dominū as well as panem Domini as Augustine speaketh that is if he doe not receiue Christ spiritually by the hand of his faith as he doth corporally receiue the element by his bodely hand he receiueth vnworthily and so eateth and drinketh his owne iudgement 1. Cor. 11. 39. Now the reason why these outward things are nothing availeable is because the things that are accounted of with God are spirituall and eternall not tempōrall and carnall as these are which as they shall vtterly cease in the kingdome of glory Matth. 22. 30. for then Christ will put downe all rule authoritie and power 1. Cor 15. 24. so are they not of any moment or account in the kingdome of grace as Paul teacheth 2. Cor. 5. 16. Gal. 3. 28. Coloss. 3. 11. It may be said these priuiledges and outward things as Prince and people Master and feruant bond and free c. haue place in the kingdome of grace seeing Christianity doth not abolish nature nor ciuill pollicy To which I answer that man must be considered two waies in respectof the outward or inward man Consider him as he is a member in ciuill society as of the family church or common-wealth there are sundry differences of persons as bond free magistrate subiect poore rich c. in which sense the Apost exhortation taketh place wiues submit your selues to your husband● Coloss. 3. 18. children obey your parents v. 20. seruants be obedient to your masters v. 22. But if man be considered in respect of his spirituall estate as he is a member of the inuisible or catholique church vnder spirituall gouernement consisting in righteousnes peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. there is no distinction of calling condition or sexe for we are all on in Christ. Gal. 3. 28. or Christ is all and in all things Coloss. 3. 11. in that though we be many yet are we but one body in Christ. Rom. 12. 5. seeing we are quickned with one spirit Eph. 4. 4. The Popish opinion therefore which teacheth that there be some outward callings and actions which commend vs to God as to lead a single life to fast to vow voluntary pouerty to performe regular obedience to professe monkery to be buried in a friers cowle or to abstaine from these and these meates is here condemned when Paul saith that outward priuiledges will not serue the turne and that meate commendeth vs not to God 1. Cor. 8. 8. Againe neither this nor the like places Gal. 3. 28. Col. 3. 11. do any thing fauour the Anabaptisticall fancy of bringing in an anarchie that is an ataxy into Christian society by taking away christian magistrates and distinction betwixt masster and seruant for by the same reyson we may consound the sexe of man and woman for Paul saith there is neither male nor femalle but we are all on in Christ the meaning thereof is this that although in respect of our inward or spirituall estate before God there be no such difference yet that hindreth not but there may be in respect of our outward estate Further we learne from hence that no man is to thinke highly of himselfe in regard of outward priuiledges as birth honour welth fauour nor to glory in them Ier. 9. 23. rich men must not be high minded 1. Tim. 6. 17. Nay the King may not lift vp his mind aboue his brethren Deut. 17. 20. Pauls example is notable who accounted all the priuiledges which he had before his conuersion whilst he was a Iew as that he was a citizen of Rome a Pharise a great Rabbin instructed by Gamaliel of the tribe of Beniamin circum cised the 8. day c. and after his conuersion beeing a christian as that he was an Apostle taken vp into the 3. heauen c. to be as nothing or worse then nothing euen as losse or dunge in respect of beeing a new creature in Christ that is in respect of iustification and sanctification And therefore we may not set our minds to much vpon outward things as riches honours pleasures seeing they are not ●●●ylable to saluation Besids this teacheth all those that are but in meane and base estate to be content for outward priuiledges auaile nothing outward wants and miseries hinder nothing If a man be rich he is nothing the ne●rer and if he be poore he is not a whitt the further off it is the pouerty of the spirit which makes a man rich in grace for though the poore man be the rich mans flaue yet he is the sonne of God and sellow heyre with Christ and though the rich man be the poore mans master yet he is the seruant of Christ as Paul saith he that is called beeing a seruant is Gods free man and he that is called beeing free is Christ seruant 1. Cor. 7. 22. Lastly this crosseth the opinion of the multitude who think that if a man be increased in riches graced with fauour aduanced with honour that he is a godly wise religious man and that religion which he professeth is the truth This is nothing
flesh and had their senses restored so when the spirit of God like the fauonian winde bloweth vpon vs it reuiueth vs againe giuing vs a new life new senses a new heart new wills and affections for all old things passe away and all things become new 2. Cor. 5. 17. For it openeth the eyes of our vnderstanding making vs discerne of things that differ Eph 1. 18. Philip. 1. 10. it boareth a new eare of obedience in vs Psal. 40. 6. and giueth vs a new tast not to sauour the things of the flesh but of the spirit Rom. 8. 5. Further this serues to detect the naturall Poperie of the multitude and of our owne hearts when we perswade our selues though falsely that though we goe on in our sinnes yet that we can repent when we list When as the Prophet saith O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe and Paul saith that it is as great a worke to create a new heart as to create a new world for regeneration is a new creation 2. Cor. 5. 17. Augustine saith well He that will grant pardon to him that repents will not alway giue repentance to him that sinnes Againe in the sense that Paul calleth the image of God a new creature or the new man and corruption the old man we graunt that our religion is new and Popish religion is old For as the new men is the restored image of God in which Adam was first created though afterwards defaced by his owne inuentions Eccles. 7. 31. So our religion is the restored or reformed doctrine first taught by the Apostles which afterward was corrupted by mens deuices Albeit in Tertullians sense ours is the old religion and theirs the new as the image of God is the old man and corruption the new Vse If we be not changed in our liues but remyane old Adams still euen the same men we were before in minding willing affecting earthly things and fashioning our selues to the guise of the world we are no new creatures though we promise and protest neuer so much we are but hypoc●●tes deceauing others and our selues also For where this new creature is there is a change in all the faculties and powers of soule and body the mind is not set vpon the world but mindeth heauenly things the will affections and conuersation of the whole man is in heauen Philip. 3. 20. For the spirit of regeneration is like the leauen which a woman tooke and bid in 3. pecks of meale till all was leauened for after the same manner by a secret operation it altereth the mind will affections If any be in Christ saith the Apostle he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become newe If therefore we be new creatures why lead we not a new life if we be changed in affection why are we not changed in conuersation But by this we may perceiue that all which are christians in profession are not christians in conuersation all that are washed with the outward Element of water are not washed with the inward baptisme the lauer of regeneratiō as first those that are as good fellowes that is as badde as euer they were before and make no consciēce of sinne Secondly such as are no more but ciuill honest men like those honest women which raysed persecution against Paul and Barnabas and expelled them out of their coasts Act. 13. 50. Thirdly worldly wise men which sauour of nothing but the world Lastly such as haue some loue and liking of the word and are in some sort outwardly conformable thereunto hauing some legall sorrow for sinne arising from legall terrors but haue no thorowe change nor renouation Lastly we may not maruell if the world hate maligne those that are new-creatures seeing they neither mind nor affect the same things For there can be no true loue where there is contrarietie of iudgements wills affections which hath beene is and wil be betwixt those that are borne of the flesh and those that are borne of God Gen. 3. 15. v. 16. And as many as walke according to this rule peace shall be vpon them and mercy and vpon the Israel of God Here Paul commends this glorying in the crosse of Christ and studie of pietie in becomming a new creature as the onely rule of faith and manners which all teachers and heare●s were to obserue and follow Enforcing the keeping and obseruing of this double dutie by the fruit and benefit that comes thereby specified here by peace and mercy In the words two things are generally to be considered First the duty of walking in these words As many as walke according to this rule Secondly the reason of motiue to the practize thereof in these Peace shall be vpon them and mercy which is amplified by the generalitie thereof that is shall light vpon as many as walke according thereto and vpon the Israel of God The dutie is that we walke according to this canon or rule the word translated walke signifieth not simply to walke but to walke warily and circumspectly as it is expounded Eph. 5. 15. or to walke by rule in order and measure without treading aside but making straight steps to our feete Hebr. 12. 13. Pauls rule which we must walke by is faith in Christ called here glorying in the crosse of Christ repentance towards God called regeneration or the new creature which is rightly called a ●●le of faith and manners of things to be beleeued and practised because by it all doctrines and actions are to be examined nay the Scripture is therefore called Canonicall because it se●tes downe an exposition of this rule there beeing nothing from the first chap. in Gen. to the last words in the Apoeal which aimeth not at one of these two either repentance towars God or faith in Christ Here all ministers are taught what rule to follow in preaching the word or building the church of God namely faith repentance the doctrine of the crosse and conuersion or the new creature And all ●earers according to what rule to order their liues and actions For this metaphor of walking and that by a rule or line shewes that we are trauellers or pilgrimmes that this world is a strange countrey that we are to goe to another that the world is an endles labyrinth in which we shall for euer lose our selues except we be guided by this rule And here we see that there is a certen rule for the regulating of all things apertaning to faith and manners though we cannot apply it nor vse it as we should The fault is in vs not in the rule Whereas Paul saith as many as walke according to this rule he shews that Christians haue but on onely rule which they are to follow and according to which they must frame their liues for the Apostle exhortes vs that we all proceede by on rule Phil. 3. 16. Therefore the Papists doe notoriously offend not only in
15. Obiections against Baptisme of Infants Answered 261 Children of Turkes and Iewes are not to be baptised 261. 30 Children of professed Papists may be Baptised two cautions obserued 261. 32 Children of wicked christians and of parents Excommunicate may be Baptised 262. 15 Baptisme is to be administred but once 262. 26 Of the place of Baptisme 263. 1 The vse of Baptisme 263. 9 Papists abuse baptisme 377. 12 We must be bearers and how 490. 32. Beare one with another 491. 492 Beleeuers must be Bearers and sufferers 168. 169 Foure kindes of Beleeuers in the visible church 319. 6 Why beleeuers are called childrē of promise see promise Funerall beneficence 603. 21 Vitall beneficence 603. 25 Blessing came by the curse 203. 20 There is a good and lawfull kind of boasting 89. 12 Boasting is either lawfull or vnlawfull 455. 11 whether Bondage may stand with Christian religion A treatise of spirituall Bondage 364. 39. Our spirituall bondage stands in 3. things 365. 1 Of the nature signe and vse of it 365. What is ment by Brethren 5. 38 61. 25. The name Brethren of force to perswade vs to vse gentlenes 466. 29 Brethren taken foure waies in Scripture 469. 39 Burdens of two sorts what they be 520. 24. To beare one anothers burden what 520. Bearing of our owne burden what it is 520. 35 Vses vpon this that euery man must beare his owne burden 528. 6 Sinne a burden to wicked Angels man god and the creatures 528. 11. What kind of burden sinne is 528. 27. The Iewes sporting at the threatnings of the Lord calling them the burden of the Lord. 529. 10 Mens Burdens are of two sorts 489. 3. Foure sorts of those burdens that may be borne of others as well as of our selues 489. 9 The two first sorts borne three waies Jbid. 20 The two latter how to be borne Ibid. Sundrie obiections against Bearing only our owne Burdens propounded and answered 520. 35 to 528. Infants beare the burden of Adams sinne and why 521. 15 True beleeuers freed by Chirst frō a threefould burden 527. 26 How Christ and we are said to beare the Burden of our sinnes 527. 39 C Pauls Calling was not by the church of Antioch 2. 23 It differs from the calling of other Apostles 2. 23 A good calling necessarie for a minister 3. 1 The Anabaptists arguments that a man may preach without a calling answered 3. 7 Euery lawfull calling is of God 3. 22. Foure reasons why ministers calings must be manifest to their consciences and to their auditors 3. 31 Three notes to knowe whether a man be called to the ministerie 4. 10. Three kinds of calling in the Church 4. 25. Two sortes of calling 34. 1 Three kindes of extraordinarie callings 34. 4 Three rules to be obserued for the triall of an extraordinarie calling 34. 22. God in his eternall counsell assignes to euery man a calling 48. 1 The child of God in his conuersion hath not power to resist the inward calling of God 306. 35 Who calles who are called what is the calling of God 398. Men answer the calling of god three waies 399. 1 Gods calling is either operatiue or significatiue 399. 7 Euery man ought to haue two callings 404. 28 Carnal vide natural Roman Catholykes like vnto the ould False prophetes for outward shewes 612. 2 Their outward shewes stand in foure particulars ibid. 3 Ceremonies are of two sortes 231. 13. Ceremonies considered three waies 309. 39 Charming a kind of wichcraft 429. 37. How we may discerne of charmes 403. 10 Two degrees of Gods children 336. 4. VVhy beleuers called children of promise vide promise Who are the children of Abraham vide Abraham A Child of God is two waies 536. 26. A Child by grace is three waies 36. 28. The excellencie of this benefit to be the Child of God 236. 39 The duties of Gods children 238. 2. 238. 24. A Treatise of the authoritie that parents haue in disposing their children 274. 28 Children must be subiect to their tutors and gouernours 276. 25 What a man must doe to be assured he is Gods child 277. 14 What the vnion with Christ is vid. Vnion Is what respect they are said to be one with Christ 265. 1 How all beleeuers are made one with Christ 265. 3 Of the donation of Christ. 265. 36 Of our receiuing of Christ. 266. 15 What communion with Christ is 266. 23 How the Lord Iesus is put on 267. 4. Of the apprehension of Christ. vid. Apprehension Why Christ called Sonne vid. Son Whether the Sonne be God vide Sonne Christ tooke not to himselfe the office of a Mediatour 281. 16 A treatise of Christs incarnation why how farre forth and how he was made flesh 282. 4 Of the vniting of the flesh to the godhead of the Sonne 284. 12 Of Christs subiection to the law 285. 35. Of Christs obedience in fulfilling the law 286. 18 Of the application of Christ. vide Application Christ crucified the storehouse and treasurie of the Church which is shewed in fiue points 630. 25. 28 Why Paul gloried rather in the crosse of Christ then in his resurrection 631. 23 The Papists wicked glorying in the crosse 632. 1 Christ is called our Lord in fiue respects 652. 25 Christ was made a curse for vs. vide Curse How Christ suffered the wrath of God 200. 1 Christ must be really learned before he be taught 53. 9 When Christs obedience beganne and ended 119. 14 How Christ could obey being God and satisfie for vs beeing man 120. 4. In what order Christ giues himselfe vnto vs 146. 8 Christ is God 5. 25 Christ which giues grace and peace why called our Lord 12. 38 How Christ is said to giue himselfe 13. 26. Two endes why Christ gaue himselfe 14. 38 Christs death and sacrifice was voluntarie 14. 10 Euery man must applie the gift and sacrifice of Christ vnto himselfe and how it may be done 15. 22 How they of the old testament were partakers of the bodie and blood of Christ 21. 35 Christ is the great Prophet and doctour of the church 36. 39 Christs office stands in three things 37. 2. Christ teacheth those that are to be teachers two waies 37. 37 What a Christian is 449. 21 A Christian is Christs fiue waies ibid 22. The vses of one beeing Christs ibid. 31. The office of a Christiā man 451. 5 The Church of Rome no church of God 9. 24 How the Church can be wasted why the Lord suffers it to be so 43. 24 30. Authoritie of the church no principle 433. 39 Vnity is not an infallible inseparable marke of the church 407. 18 Three certen marks of the catholike church 335. 1. 1 Why the Christian church is called barren and desolate 357. 1. 14 The estate of the church is either inward or outward 357. 18 The vse that ought to be made that the church hath Christ for her husband 358. 9 The catholike Church on earth is said to be in heauen for two
first cause of all good things in vs. 11. 7 Grace and peace are the cheife good things to be sought for 11. 30 Gods order in the communication of grace peace 12. 21 Grace and works cannot stand together in iustificatio● 20. 18 Wherein standes the efficacy of preuenting grace 52. 10 Whether it can be resisted 52. 30 How efficacie of grace and libertie of will stand together 52. 37 Grace in Scripture signifieth two things 153. 10 Preuenting grace is two fould 308. 24. The works of grace in God Imprint their Image in the hearts of them that belong to God 308. 32 Falling from grace though but in part is dangerous 339. 23 The hatred of Gods grace in man is the beginning of all persecution 362. 21. What is our Guide now in the new Testament the lawe beeing abrogated 234. 22 Men are said to be vnder grace two waies 318. 28 One little grace of God brings many other with it 391. 11 Beside the antecedent and first grace there is necessarie a subsequent or second grace 421. 34 Grace mentioned in the Scripture twofold 651. 33 Gratia gratum faciens and gratia gratis data ibid. 34 Gratia gratum faciens naturall or supernaturall ibid. 40. 652. 1 Why the fauour and loue of God is called the Grace of Christ 652. 15. The soule the proper subiect of Grace 652. 32 H Hatred whether a sinne or not 435. 4. What it is 435. 27 What a right heart is 111. ●7 What a humble and honest heart is 111. 18. Mans heart peruerse to Gods ordinance 618. 12 What Heresie is 432. 12. 18 Difference betweene heresie and schisme 432. 36 Difference betweene heresie and a simple error 433. 9 Three things in heresie ibid. 10 Three rules to preserue our selues from heresies 433. 20 There are two degrees of honour 455. 22. I Idolatrie committed two waies 304. 16. That Idolatrie may be rooted out of the mind what is to be done 305. 37. What Idolatrie is 427. 22 An Idol and Idolatrie taken two waies 427. 22 the Romish religion teacheth Idolatrie foure waies 428. 9 their Arguments answered ibid. 24 Iealousie twofold 329. 16 Good Iealousie stands in 3 things 331. 26. 332. 6. What the name of Iew signifieth opposed to Gentiles 270. 13 Of the distinction of Iewes Gentiles the cause of it 114. 3 Wherein it stands 114. 16 How long it endured ibid. 31 The nation of the Iewes shall be called and conuerted before the ende of the world but when or how God knowes 182. 2 Ierusalem a type of the catholike church in sixe respects 350. 21 Whether Ignorance be a sinne in those that want the word of God 303. 25. the Image of God standes in two things 335. 13 Whether Images be necessarie in the congregation of the people of God 161. 10 Immoderate vse of Gods gifts is 3 waies 400. 27 Imposition of hands by the church of Antioch vpon Paul no calling but a confirmation of his calling 2. 13. Imputation what 175. 18 Imputation twofold 175. 25. Things indifferent not to be vsed as oft as we liste and how we will 80. 22. Two things restraine the vse of thē indifferent 80. 29 A thing indifferent when it is made necessarie to saluation is not to be vsed 8115. Infantes how they are to be tearmed innocents and how not 525. 39 Infantes haue no good workes 553 8. Infantes to be iudged not by the booke of Conscience but by the booke of life 553. 10 Inscriptions no part of Scripture 658. What the Intercession of Christ is 298. 7. Certain Interpretation of Scripture where to be found 352. 33 Ioy is twofould 444. 17 Ioy of grace in this life standes in three things and hath a double fruit 444. 18. 23 Paul made fiue Iourneyes to Ierusalem 74. 2 We are to haue some warrant for our Iournies where three sortes of mē are to be blamed 75. 15. 20 Israel twofould 646. 1 Israell of God what ibid. 4 Israel of God why mentioned ibid. 6. Iudisme what it is 41. 12 What it is to Iudaise 112. 3 Iudge the best of others three obiectiōs mooued answered 392 10. In giuing Iudgment of Churches three rules to be marked 8. 15 Three things are subiect to Iudgement 156. 3 Iudgement is twofould 159. 25 The dutie of ministers often to forewarne the people and the dutie of the people often to meditate of Gods iudgements 441. 10. 15. Iugling a kind of witchcraft 429. 35. What the word iustice signifies 116. 8. The subiect of iustification 117. 10 False causes of iustification ibid. 35 What is that thing in Christ by and for which we are Iustified 118. 32. We are not Iustified onely by the passion of Christ. 121. 10 The meanes of iustification 123. 30. Faith alone Iustifieth 129. 17 Iustice twofould of the person and of the act 176. 18 The danger of the doctrine of Iustification by workes 397. 29 Iustification is twofould of the person of the faith of the person 385. 5 Arguments against Iustification by works 375. 3 Faith and loue no ioynt causes in Iustification 384. 10 384. 10. Whosoeuer obstinately maintaineth the doctrine of iustification by workes cannot be saued 373. 30 Obiections remooued ibid. The kindes of iustification 131. 8 The practise of them that are iustified 131. 36 But one Iustification 177. 1 Papists in the day of death renounce Iustification by workes 183. 34 There is a Iustification before God and a Iustification before men 193. 3. We are Iustified not only by the death but also by the obedience of Christ. 286. 18 No Iustification by workes 419. 9. 420. 6. The twofould popish Iustification confuted 348. 12 K Kingdome of God what 42. 25 Gods kingdome what it signifieth 441. 22. Knowledge of the true God stands in two points 248. 20 Knowledge of god is 2. fould 303. 5 Knowledge whereby men know God is either litterall or spirituall 306. 4. The properties of spirituall are th●●e 306. 18. The Knowledge whereby God Knowes men standes in 2. things 308. 10. and it hath two properties 309. 24 L The distinction of Latria and Dulia friuolous 313. 6 We are free from the Law in foure respects 136. 10 The maine difference betweene the Law and the Gospell 194. 36. 214. 17. Why the lawe is vrged though we cannot keepe it 196. 16 The difference of the promises of the Law and the Gospell 210. 17 Impossible for any man in the time of this life to fulfill the Law 186. 35. Obections remooued c. ibid. 11 There are two kindes of fulfilling the Law 189. 11 The Lawe is not greuous three waies vide commandements The difference of the promises of the Law and the Gospell 210. 17 How the Law reuealed sinne before Christ and after 216. 14. The vse of Gods Lawes 227. 23 The Lawe is a Schoolemaster to Christ in two respects 229. 10 When the Lawe of Moses was abrogated 230. 19 How farr forth the Lawe is abrogated 230. 38 What is the Morall Ceremoniall
of canonicall Scripture 655. 20 Reasons why we must prouide for the poore 100. 35 The Gospell must be preached though all men be offended 396. 15. Preaching containes foure ministeriall actions 54. 17 Effectuall and powerfull preaching of the word stands in two things 160. 39. Preaching must be plaine 160. 11 Necessarie for all men 165. 20 The word must be dispenced in the infirmitie of mans flesh for diuers causes 323. 7 The benefits of preaching 326. 27 Prayer to Saints and Angels is carnall prayer 299. 29 Pray onely to God ibid. 300. 14 The right manner of seeking the praise of men 455. 1 Primacie is 2 of order of power 60. 18. Authoritie of the Church no principle 433. 39. Externall and bodily priueledges are of no moment in the kingdome of Christ. 382. 1 Gods promises lie as voide till the particular time of their accomplishment 204. 20 The promise made to Abraham is a couenant or testament and how 211. 30. Christ is the foundation of all the promises of god partly by merit partly by efficacie 313. 2 Why beleeuers are called children of promise 360. 8 Prouerbiall sentences are not at all times true in euery particular 550. 36. Gods prouidence vseth euill things well 348. 22 Subiectiō to punishment hath three parts 365. 13 There are seuerall degrees of punishments in hell 555. 556 R The workes of redemption exceed the works of creation 14. 19 Of the redemption of man from vnder the law 288. 19. c. Christ the onely redeemer 311. 9 Three markes of regeneration 241. 40. The gift of regeneration is neuer vtterlie extinguished 262. 29 What true regeneration is 377. 35 The workes of the regenerate are mixed with sinne and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnation obiections remooued 419. 9. 15. Of the reioycing of the Church vide Church Two groundes of reioycing vide glorying Reioyce signifying to glorie 517. 11 Obiection against reioicing in ones selfe vide glorying VVhat rules are to be obserued in the reioycing in the testimonie of a good conscience vide glorying False reioycing wherein it confisteth 519. 13 Reioycers are of foure sorts 519. 16 To reioyce in a mans selfe what 517. 18. The cheife principle in religion what 433. 24 Whether it be lawfull to compell men to imbrace religion 614. 5. The Magistrate may compell obstinate recusants to professe true religion ibid. 8. Obiections to the contrarie answered ibid. 25 Pauls manner in reproouing 18. 8 Libertie in reproouing with three caueats 103. 13 Why we vse not in preaching personall reproofes as Iohn Baptist did 393. 16 The manner of reproofe vide Restore He that is iniuried is fitter to reprooue him that offered the iniurie then any other 474. 39 Reproofes must not be deferred 460. 22. No wonder that sinners be loth to be reprooued 460. 37 A treatise of Christian reproofe 469. 31. Who are to be reprooued ib. 35 Reproofe belongs not to those that are out of the visible Church 470. The greatest Princes are subiect to reproofe 471. 15 Onely open skorners and persecuters of the word are not to be reprooued 472. 10 Men are to be reprooued for any sinne knowne ibid. 10 And for wrongs offered vs. 474. 20 Obiection against reproofes answered 47● 12 Who are reprooued 477. 1. 37. In fiue cases we are not bound to reprooue others offending 478. 13. In what manner are men to be reprooued set downe in ten rules 579. 37. The bitternesse of reproofe is to be allaied foure waies 483. 17 A man may reproue another foure waies 484. 8 In fitting our reproofe to the offence committed we must put a difference betwixt sinne finne 484. 28. In three cases we are not priuatly to reprooue but publikely to detect offenders 487. 15 The Pastour ought to be resident with his Hocke for two causes 337. 10. Restitution vide Satisfaction As oftē as our brother falls we must restore him 461. 5 Who are to be restored ibid. 17 Spirituall men are more for to restore those that are fallen then any other 463. 3 The manner how we must restore 464. 28. Reuelation is of two sortes 36. 11. Extraordinarie reuelation is foure waies 36. 15 The reuelation which Paul had is extraordinarie 36. 22 Reuolt what and the kindes thereof 18. 29 Remedies against reuenge 445. 8 Reward is double of honour and of debt 569. 37 Reward presupposeth not alwaies debt 571. 14 God giueth rewardes foure waies 571. 29. The phrases of speech of rewarding double or seuen fold what they signifie in the Scripture 552. 31. Pauls rule what it is 641. 33 The Papists rules Lesbian rules 642. 20. Monkish rules vaine and wicked 642. 28. We must be runners in the race of God 386. 19 We must runne well and to the end 387. 7. 22. S Of the institution of the Sabbath 315. 9 20. Sacraments conferre not grace by the worke wrought 254. 21 whether there be now in the church of God any sacrifice or oblation of Christ 161. 29 Whether the Saints may fall away totally and finally 586. 20 There is but one way of saluation 22. 5. Preuision of faith and good workes no cause of saluation 47. 20 The saluation of beleeuers is most sure 47. 27 The manner and way of our saluation 229. 21 The sanctification of the name of God hath two parts 72. 10 There is a double sanctification 193. 21. Satisfaction must be made for wrongs done 98. 39 Who must satisfie 99. 21 To whome 99. 28 What 99. 38 When 100. 9 In what order and manner 100. 15. Schisme and heresie differ vide Heresie The Papists schismatikes and not we 437. 21 For the auoiding of schisme and sedition two rules ibid. 29 Slanders vse to be raised vpon euery light and vniust occasion 395. 18. Scripture is both the glosse and the text 352. 36. 434. 3 Scripture hath sundrie senses according to the Papists 345. 35 When the Scriptures speakes figuratiuely and when properly 346. 30. The Scriptures by themselues are sufficient to saluation 24. 24 The Scriptures are as certen as if they had beene written by God 27. 5. The authoritie of the Scripture dependes not vpon the testimonie of the Church 27. 20 It is necessarie that men should be assured that the Scriptures are of God 31. 30 The testimonies whereby this assurance may be obtained 31. 35 In Scriptures there is diuine and infallible authoritie 353. 15. The meanes to decide controuersies 356. 29 Bookes of Scripture in the new testament haue a threefold difference 608. 9 Bookes of Scripture why called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as also Kethubim by the Iewes 659. 25 The Scriptures why called Canonicall 641. 38 Seditions what 435. 15 The separation of Paul from the wombe what it is 46. 35 To make a faire shewe in the flesh signifieth foure things 610. 33 Simulation what and the sorts 105. 36. Sinne where it takes place giues a man no rest till it hath brought him to a height of wickednes 43. 39. What a sinne of
that there is a great want of the grace of God among ●s Therefore take heede of it 30 But what saith the Scripture put out the bond-woman and her sonne for the sonne of the bondwoman shal not be heire with the sonne of the freewoman The second answer to the former obiection is in these wordes that they which hate the children of promise shall at length be cast out of the house of God Obiect I. These wordes cast out the bondwoman are the words of Sara to Abraham therefore they are not the words of scripture Ans. The words were vttered by Sara but they were afterward approoued by God Gen. 21. 12. and thus they are the voice of scripture Obiect II. Sara is commended for her subiection to Abraham 1. Pet. 3. 6. yet here shee speakes imperiously Cast out the bondwoman Ans. Shee speakes this not as a priuate woman but as the voice and mouth of God and that no doubt by instinct from God And therefore the words shee vttereth are to be esteemed as the commandement of God This her case is extraordinarie and not to be followed Thevse I. All carnall hypo●●ites mockers of the grace of God shall be cast forth of Gods familie though for a time they beare a sway therein This is the sentence of God Let vs therefore repent of our mocking and hereafter become louers of the grace of God as Christ was Mark 10. 21. II. Consolation the persecution of the people of God shall not be perpetuall For the persecuting bondwoman and her sonne must be cast out The rodde of the wicked shall no● rest vpon the Lot of the righteous Psal. 125. 3. This is our comfort III. All iustitiarie people and persons that looke to be saued and iust●fied before God by the law and the workes of the law either in whole or in part are cast out of the church of God and haue no part in the kingdome of heauen The casting out of Agar and Ismael is a figure of the reiection of all such Behold here the voice of God casting downe from heauen the greatest part of the earth the Turke the Iew the obstinate Papist with the stepmother the Romish church 31 Then brethren we are not children of the seruant but of the freewoman The conclusion of the whole argument following directly from the 27. verse If we be children of the promise then are we children of the freewoman and not of the bondwoman consequently we are iustified and saued without the works of the law by the meere grace of God causing vs by faith to rest on the promise of God whose substance and foundation is Christ. CHAP. V. 1 Stand fast therefore in the libertie wherewith Christ hath made vs free and be not intangled againe with the yoke of bondage THese words are repetition of the principall Conclusion of the whole Epistle Which was on this manner I Paul am called to teach and my doctrine is true therefore ye did euill to depart from it and your dutie was to haue stood vnto it Further they are collected and inferred vpon the conclusion of the last argument vsed in the last chapter thus Ye are children of the freewoman and therefore ye are free and therefore ye should hold fast your libertie In the words two maine points of doctrine are propounded The first is that by nature we are all intangled with the yoke of bondage For the better conceiuing of this I will handle three points the nature of this bondage the signe of it and the vse Touching the nature of it Our spirituall bondage stands in three things The first is bondage vnder sinne which Paul teacheth when he saith I am carnall sold vnder sinne Rom. 7. 14. Here remember that by sinne is meant Originall sinne which hath two parts Guiltines in the first offence of Adam which is imputed to all mankind and the disposition of all the powers of the soule to all manner of euill whatsoeuer And this rebellious disposition is like a leprosie infecting the whole man and it raignes like a tyrant ouer the soule of man by tempting intising and drawing him from one actuall sinne to another so as he can doe nothing but sinne Iam. 1. 14. The second thing is obligation or subiection to all punis●●ment both temporall and eternall And it hath three parts The first is Bondage vnder Satan who keepes vnrepentant sinners in his snare according to his owne will 2. Tim. 2. 26. he rules in their hearts like a God 2. Cor. 4. 4. and hath power to blinde them and to harden their hearts till he haue brought them to eternall death Heb. 2. 14. The second is bondage vnder an euill conscience which sits in the hearts of offendours as an accuser and a terrible iudge and lies like a wild beast at a mans dore readie euer and anon to plucke out his throat Gen. 4. 7. The third is bondage vnder the wrath of God and the feare of eternall death Heb. 2. 15. The third part of this bondage is the obligation to the ceremoniall law It pertaines not to all mankind but onely concernes the Iewes to whome it was a yoke of bondage Act. 15. The signe of this bondage whereby it may be discerned is to keepe a course or practise in sinning Ioh. 8. 34. He that commits sinne is a seruant of sinne or againe a life led according to the custome and fashion of this world in the lust of the flesh or the lust of the eye which is couetousnes or in the pride of life Eph. 2. 2. 1. Ioh. 2. 16. The vse We must learne to see feele acknowledge and bewaile this bondage in our selues Deliuerance belongs onely to such captiues as know themselues to be captiues Luk. 4. 18. and labour vnder this bondage Matth. 11. 28. Thus did Paul when he saith I am sold vnder sinne and O miserable man who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death To feele this bondage is a steppe out of it and not to feele it is to be plunged into it Secondly we must pray earnestly for deliuerance The dumme creatures sigh and trauell till they be deliuered from their bondage much more then must we doe it Rom. 8. 22. Thirdly we must learne to detest whatsoeuer is of our selues because it wholly tends to bondage Lastly we must be content with any affliction that God laies on vs though it be lingring sicknes pouertie imprisonment banishment For God might worthely lay on vs all shame and confusion because we are by nature slaues of sinne and Satan The second maine doctrine is that by grace there is a libertie pertaining to the people of God Here I consider foure things 1. what this libertie is 2. the author of it 3. the persons to whome it belongs 4. our dutie touching this libertie For the first Christian libertie is called the Good or commoditie of Christians Rom. 14. 16. It is a spirituall Right or condition lost by Adam and restored by Christ. I say spirituall because
and to conforme our mindes consciences wills affections in all things to the foresaid will of God Rom. 12. 2. Let all such as desire to be spirituall remember and make conscience to practise this The third is the Priuiledge of beleeuers in the last wordes Ye are not vnder the law Vnderstand this in respect of the curse and condemnation of the law for otherwise we are all vnder the law as it is the rule of Good life The priuiledge then is that God doth not impute the defects of obedience to such as truly beleeue and repent but he accepts their imperfect obedience as perfect and absolute This serues to comfort them that greeue because they feele the want of Sanctification in themselues For if they can and doe will that which is good and indeauour themselues in the course of their liues according to their will let them not feare ouermuch when their obedience is defectiue because they are not vnder the rigour of the law and therefore God accepts the will and indeauour to obay for obedience And the consideration of Gods mercifull acceptation must stirre vs vp to an earnest care and conscience of all good duties 19 Moreouer the workes of the flesh are manifest which are adulterie fornication vncleannes wantonnes 20 Idolatrie witchcraft hatred debate emulations wrath contentions seditions heresies 21 Enuie murthers drunkennes gluttonie and such like whereof I tel you before as I also haue told you before that they which do such things shal not inherit the kingdom of God Paul before deliuered his rule in generall tearmes Giue no occasion to the flesh and fulfill not the lusts of the flesh Now he proceedes further in way of declaration to make a Catalogue or rehearsall of the particular workes of the flesh which were in vse and knowne to the Galatians And this he doth for waightie cause For we are full of blindnes and see not our corruption and we are full of hypocrisie and therefore readie to esteeme our selues spirituall when we are carnall And therefore this Catalogue serues fitly as a table or glasse to discouer the corruption of mans heart by the fruits thereof After Pauls example euery man shall doe well to make a Catalogue of the sinnes of his whole life By this meanes shall we better know our selues and take a manifest view of our sinnefull condition In this Catalogue I consider three things the condition of the workes of the flesh the kinds of them and the punishment thereof The condition is that the workes of the flesh are said to be manifest not onely to God but euen to men that haue the light of reason and naturall conscience Hence it followes that there is matter sufficient for the condemnation of them that neuer knew the Gospel For though the flesh it selfe be secret and hidden yet the workes of the flesh are manifest to the naturall man And this must further admonish vs neuer to hide or excuse our sinns but freely to confesse thē before God and before men also when neede requires Whether we confesse them or no they are manifest and the ingenuous confessing or vncouering of them is the way to couer them Psal. 32. 1. 4. Touching the kinds or sorts of the workes of the flesh they are in number se●uenteene and I may reduce them to foure heads The first sort are against chastitie the second against religion the third against charitie the last against temperance The workes of the flesh against chastitie are foure and they are placed in the first ranke for iust cause for by them men are brought to reprobate mindes Rom. 1. 28. and to be without sense or feeling Eph. 4. 19. and the bodie which should be the temple of the holy Ghost is made a stable and a stie for the deuill Adulterie it is the incontinencie of persons married or of persons vvhereof one at the least is married or betrothed I say betrothed because one and the same punishment is designed to married and betrothed persons and therefore the sinne is like in both If adulterie which is the breach of wedlocke be a worke of the flesh then damnable is the decretall of Pope Syricius that marriage it selfe was the pollution of the flesh It may be obiected that young widdowes by marrying haue damnation and breake the faith of baptisme 1. Tim. 5. 12. Ans. They are not saide to breake the faith of baptisme because they marrie but because they waxe wanton against Christ and so marrie that is cast off the reines of obedience by committing fornication and then for to couer their offence they marrie This I take to be the right sense of that place Adulterie is named in the first place and that for speciall cause For as it is a common so is it also a great sinne For it is the breach of the couenant of marriage made in the presence of God and vnto God and therefore it is called the couenant of God Prou. 2. 17. It is the punishment of idolatrie Rom. 1. 24. It is a sinne greater then theft Prou. 6. 30. 32. The committers of this sinne cut off themselues from humane societie and become men of death women of death according to Gods law And it will neuer be well with humane societie till adulterers be made fellons their liues taken from them and their goods confiscate Lastly this sinne brings the ruine of the families of adulterous persons and it sets a fire in them that burnes to destruction Fornication it is the incontinencie of single persons Marke how it is made a manifest worke of the flesh Hence it follows that fornication is no light matter or a thing indifferent as some haue taught It may be obiected that it is numbered among things indifferent Act. 15. 29. for with strangled and blood is ioyned fornication Ans. The Gentiles indeede esteemed it as a thing indifferent and hereupon it may be it is ioyned with things indifferent But the iudgement of the Church was otherwise and this opinion of the Gentiles is confuted by Paul 1. Cor. 6. Againe it may be obiected that the Lord commanded the Prophet Ose to take vnto him an harlot Ose 1. 2. Ans. It was done in type or figure and then the wordes of the Lord carrie this sense Take vnto thee a wife of fornications that is prophecie and publish that thou art like one that takes a wife of fornication Againe if the thing were done indeede yet did not the Prophet take an harlot to liue in fornication with her but at Gods commandement to liue with her according to Gods ordinance namely in marriage Againe hence I gather that there is no warrant for the Toleration of fornication For it is a foule and manifest worke of the flesh Magistrates may not doe euill that good may come thereof Rom. 3. 8. Whosoeuer doth euill must feare because the Magistrate beares the sword to punish Rom. 13. 4. And the commandement of God was that there must be no whore in Israel Deut. 23.
12. v. 13. Distributing vnto the necessities of the Saints The two latter sorts beeing principally meant in this place are not to be borne by dissembling of them or yeelding to them much lesse by bolstering men vp in them or by partaking with thē For albeit the adulterer and vncleane person would gladly make Christ a baud the theife would make him his receiuer and many there are who would be content to shift off their sinnes in whole or in part and lay them vpon the shoulders of others yet in Gods cause and quarrell in matters of faith we are not to yeeld a haire breadth Moses told Pharao that ●he would not leaue so much as a hoofe behind him Exod. 10. 26. And Paul would not giue place to Peter and them that were with him no not for a moment that the truth of the Gospel might continue with them Gal. 2. 〈◊〉 They must therefore be borne by disburdening thē of thē by gentle mild admonitiō or if they cannot be redressed by bearing tollerating of them in passing by them as though we did not perceiue them for as Salomon saith It is the glorie of a man to passe by infirmitie or lastly by praying for them For if we shall breake the bond of brotherly loue and Christian societie by reason of these or such like infirmities which we see to be in our brethren we walke not in loue in that we beare not their burdens as the Apostle commandeth in this place and Eph. 4. 2. Support one another through loue And surely this is a most necessarie precept of great vse and consequence in the life of man for except we beare and tolerate the frailties of men in passing by them in such sort as I haue said it is impossible we should lead a quiet or comfortable life in any societie We must seeke for a new world or leauing the fellowship of men betake our selues to some solitarie desert as sundrie Eremites and Anchorites haue done because they could not by reason of their froward and wayward natures digest the manifold inconueniences which they saw to be amongst men in publike societies This dutie therefore of bearing one anothers burdens albeit it be difficult yet it must be practised specially of those that are strong men in Christ for as in architecture all stones are not fit to be laid in euery place of the building but some below as the fundamentall and chiefe corner stones to beare vp the waight and burden of the building others aboue in the wall that so the whole building may be firme and compact in it selfe So in the Church which is the house of God where all beleeuers are liuely stones built vpon Christ Iesus the chiefe corner stone bearing vp the whole burden euen all the infirmities of the Church those that are strōg must support the infirmities of the weake that so the whole building beeing compact and knit together may growe vp to a holy temple in the Lord. For otherwise the whole frame of the building must needs be dissolued and come to ruine It is a common prouerbe among the Italians that Hard with heard neuer makes a good wall By which is signified that as stones cobbled vp one vpon another without morter to combine them make but a tottering wall that may easily be shaken but if there be mor●er betwixt them yeelding to the hardnes of the stones it makes the whole like a solide continued bodie strong and stable able to endure the shocke of the ramme or the shot of the cannon So that societie where all are as stiffe as stones which will not yeeld a haire one vnto another one beeing as fast as froward as hastie as another cannot be firme and durable But where men are of a soft a yeelding and relenting nature giuing place to the stiffenes of others and yeelding to thetempest for a time that societie is compact in it selfe and so cannot but continue because one doth beare the infirmities of another Dost thou therefore see thy brother to be ouertaken with some sinne or to be ouer curious very froward too self-conceited abounding in his owne sense exceeding hastie c. beare this his infirmitie now and so he perhaps may beare with thee in the like case another time or beare thou with his curiousnes he will beare with thy dulnes beare with his ficklenes he will beare with thy frowardnes beare with his hastines he will beare with thy selfe-conceitdenes For it is to be obserued that the Apostle saith not that those onely which are strong should beare the frailties of the weake but that both strong and weake should beare one anothers burdens it beeing a mutuall and reciprocall dutie imposed vpon all because there is none so strong but one time or other he may slippe and fall and so may stand in neede to be supported euen of the weake the palsie man beeing sicke had his burden to wit his bed borne but beeing restored could helpe to beare another mans burden so if thou beare another mans burden that is weake when he is strong he will be readie to beare thine if neede require God commands that if we find our neighbours beast lying vnder his burden we must lift him vp how much more ought we to helpe our brethren lying vnder the burden of sinne Therefore the strong are to support the weake and the weake must vpon occasion support the strong as in the arch of a building one stone doth beare mutually though not equally the burden of the rest or as harts swimming ouer a great water doe ease one another in laying their heads one vpon the backe of another the foremost that hath none to support him changing his place and resting his head vp on the hindermost Thus in a familie the husband must beare with the nicenes and frowardnes of his wife the wife with the fastnes or hastines of her husband Those Magistrates and Ministers which are too cold and backward in good things must beare with the ouer great heat and forwardnes of their fellowmagistrates or fellow-ministers and those must beare with them againe seeing both aime at the same ende the edification of the Church and the good of the Commonwealth Thus in Gods prouidence Luther and Melancthon were happily ioyned together and did beare with one another Luther with his softnes Melancthon with his hastines he with his boldnes he with his timorousnes Melancthon did well temper the heat and zeale of Luther with his mildnes beeing as oyle to his vineger and Luther on the other side did warme his coldnes beeing as a fire to his frosennes Thus the Apostle commandeth that we should beare with the infirmities of those that are weake and not sufficiently catechized in the doctrine of our spirituall libertie purchased vnto vs by Christ and not to please our selues too much but rather to please our neighbour in that which is good to edification Rom. 15. v. 1 2. For amongst other