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A09434 A godlie and learned exposition upon the whole epistle of Iude, containing threescore and sixe sermons preached in Cambridge by that reverend and faithfull man of God, Master William Perkins, and now at the request of his executors, published by Thomas Taylor, preacher of Gods word ; whereunto is prefixed a large analysis, containing the summe and order of the whole booke, according to the authors owne method, to which are further added, foure briefe tables to direct the reader ... Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Taylor, Thomas. 1606 (1606) STC 19724.3; ESTC S100865 274,393 200

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childe of God or no for if he haue the spirit of God he is his and if he haue these holy motions and desires to pray and can send out these cries vnto God vnfainedly he hath the presence of the Spirit and he that hath not this spirit in these blessed fruites of it is none of his Thirdly these words are added to teach vs that when wee pray wee must doe it our hearts for where the spirit of God dwelleth thēce must prayer proceed but his abode is in the heart and therefore prayer that God many acknowledge it to proceed from the spirit must bee hartie and so of all other spirituall duties Colloss 3. singing with grace in your hearts Rom. 1. whom I serue in my spirit where the Apostle expresseth a reason why prayer should proceed from the heart because prayer is of the same nature with faith and the spirituall worship of God yea indeede is a part of it answerable vnto God himselfe who is a spirit but all these are seated in the heart and spirit and consequently prayer it selfe ought so to be neither is it the outward action or words which is simply the worship of God but so farre as they consent and proceed from the heart Which teacheth vs that whatsoeuer religious dutie wee are to turne our selues vnto wee are first of all therein to approoue ou● hearts vnto God Fourthly that there may bee a distinction made betweene the true beleeuer and the hypocrite and carnall man The hypocrite he prayeth outwardly for forme and fashion the naturall man in affliction prayeth of compulsion as a man that is racked and tormented without any loue of God at all both of them without any inward sense or rectified disposition of the heart but the beleeuer hee prayeth in the heart and in faith the spirit of God disposing his heart aright vnto prayer Quest. How doth the holy Ghost direct the heart Answ. By fiue waies or meanes first by illumination whereby hee reueileth God to man as also his owne estate both of them in part Secondly by conuersion whereby hee turneth the heart vnto God once made knowne Thirdly by direction whereby hee directeth the heart to deale as with God himselfe taking it from outward meanes Fourthly by feruent and constant desire● for things spirituall or temporall Fifthly by faith whereby we can rest on God for the accomplishment of the things wee haue heartily desired Quest. Whether may we not pray to the holy Ghost seeing here it is said praying in or by the holy Ghost Ans. We may not onely pray in or by him but vnto him for although wee haue no particular example hereof in the Scripture yet wee haue sufficient warrant for the three persons being vndiuided in nature must be also vndiuided in worship and one being worshipped all must be worshipped Secondly wee are baptized into the name of the holie Ghost as well as of the Father and Son and therefore hee is to be prayed vnto euen as they are Ob. But wee are not commanded to pray any where by the Father or Sonne as here by the holie Ghost which argueth that the holie Ghost is not the author of our prayers as they are Answ. The Apostle here would haue vs obserue an order in the working of the Trinitie for all the three persons are authors of our prayers the Father and Sonne make vs to pray but by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost maketh vs pray but more immediatly for he is the immediate author of our prayers which teacheth that when we pray it is not of our selues but from the spirit which stirreth and sendeth vp heauenly requests for vs herein then wee must renounce our selues magnifie the grace of God within vs and shew our selues thankfull by entertaining carefully such holie motions of this most holie Spirit of God Vers. 21. And keepe your selues in the loue of God looking for the mercie of our Lord Iesus Christ vnto eternall life THese word● containe the second rule of the Apostle tending to the preseruation of faith and true religion concerning loue and it is indeede of speciall vse and direction for the framing of our liues Christ calleth the loue of God and men the summe of the whole law Paul calleth it the end of the Commandements This caused Paul to keep faith good conscience 2. Cor. 5.14 The loue of Christ constraineth vs. Now for the better informing of our vnderstandings and our furtherance in obseruing this rule fiue things are to be considered first what is meant by the loue of God Ans. Wee are to vnderstand by the loue of God a diuine vertue in the hearts of the beleeuers whereby they loue God and Christ properly and simply for himselfe rest in him and cleaue vnto him as the most absolute good for by Gods loue in this place is not meant that loue wherby God loueth man but whereby man loueth God Quest. Why doth the Apostle here omit the loue of man Ans. Because the loue of man to man is included and to bee vnderstood in the other as a fruit necessarily flowing from it for first whē a man loueth his neighbour herein after a sort he loueth God for then is God loued not onely when our affection of loue is directed vnto himselfe but also when his ordinances his creatures image and other things partaining vnto him are loued Secondly the Apostle Paul calleth the loue of the neighbour the fulfilling of the law which cannot be vnlesse we include also therein the loue of God or rather it within Gods loue and ioyne them both together Now if the loue of man be the fulfilling of the law how much more is the loue of God which by the same reason must include the other Thirdly it is a true rule in Diuinitie that the first Commandement must bee included and practised in all the nine following as being the foundatiō of them all Now the maine dutie of the first Commandement is the loue of God which must goe with the practise of all the other so as al the duties of the other Cōmandements are included in the same The second point is whether this loue of God bee in man by nature or giuen by grace Ans. It is not from nature but a gift of grace following faith and iustification Ioh. 14.14 If yee loue me yee will keepe my commandements both which proceed from one beginning as no man then can by nature keepe the Commandements so no man can by nature loue God aright Rom. 8.5 The wisedome of the flesh that is mans best things his best thoughts and affections is enmitie to God therefore can there be no true loue of God in nature 1. Tim. 1.5 The end of the commandement is loue out of a pure heart and of a good conscience and faith vnfained Againe wee must first beleeue that wee are loued of God before wee can loue him 1. Epist. Ioh. 4. We loue him because he loued vs first It will bee obiected here
reformed resisteth plainly saying I will not haue this man to rue ouer me I desire none of his waies This loue then comes from grace 1. Ioh. 4.7 Loue commeth from God 1. Tim. 1.5 it hath his beginning from a pure heart true faith and good conscience Which must bee maintained against the Papists who say that nature affoordeth the inclination but grace the practise whereas indeed grace giueth both Thirdly consider the vse of loue It is the instrument and companion of true faith which worketh by loue Galath 5.6 The proper worke of faith is to lay hold on Christ this faith as a hand can of it selfe doe but when it commeth to the practise of morall duties it can no more worke without the grace of loue then a hand which can lay hold alone and of it selfe receiue and retaine can cut any thing without an instrument Whence it appeareth that faith in iustification is alone but in the life of man it worketh by loue and whereas it hath bin taught for many hundred yeeres that loue is the life of faith that is vn●rue for it only testifieth that faith hath life It is alleaged that as the bodie without the spirit is dead euen so faith without workes is dead therfore workes are the soule and giue life to faith But this consequence from this comparison is not good because the soule is not properly the soule of the bodie but of the man and so it proueth not that loue is the soule of faith Again the word Spirit there betokeneth the breath without which the body is dead and thus is the comparison to be returned that as breath maketh not a man liuing but sheweth him to be aliue so loue maketh not faith liuing but testifieth it so to be yea indeed is the fruite and effect of faith as breath is of life More particularly this grace of loue is two-fold first that whereby man loueth God secondly that whereby man loueth man In the former note two points first what it is namely a motion of the heart whereby it is affected to God causing it to be well pleased in God and his workes for himselfe as also to seeke fellowship with God so much as it can Secondly note the measure of this loue which in Scripture is double first that which the law requireth and that is the full measure of loue loue in the highest degree when man loueth God with all his soule with all his strength and all the powers of the whole man so as in man no loue can be aboue it vnto this all men are bound yet no man since the fall can attaine Secondly that which the Gospell describeth standing in an vnfained will and true endeuour to loue God with all the heart all the strength and all the powers which is a smaller measure than the former yea and a qualification and moderation of it yet to none but those that are in Christ. Wherby we come to the right vnderstanding of diuers places of scripture as 2. King 23.25 of Iosiah 2. Chron. 15.15 all Iudah sought the Lord with their whole hart These and such other places must be vnderstood as they are qualified by the Gospell in that they willed and endeuoured by all good meanes to seeke God yea this text also must be vnderstood of this second measure seeing the former being in the highest degree cannot be multiplied no not if men were glorified The second kinde of this loue is that whereby man loueth his neighbour which is a certaine diuine and spirituall motion causing the heart as the former both to be wel pleased in man for God that is because he is Gods image and his owne flesh as also to powre out it selfe and communicate goodnes to his neighbour in wishing speaking and hoping the best of him Wherein by the way obserue a plaine difference betweene faith and loue faith is a hand but to pull Christ to our selues loue is a hand also but opening it selfe and giuing foorth vnto others In this loue of the neighbour consider these three things first the order of it The order that hath been taught for many hundred yeeres is that first wee must loue our selues and then others from this ground Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe for the rule say they must goe before the thing ruled But this is not found seeing worthie then haue been commended in Scriptures for louing others as well yea and better than their owne selues so Dauid loued Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.17 Christ loued his enemies better than himselfe these began not with themselues yea indeed the right beginning of loue is in God and then as a man is a more principall instrument of Gods glorie hee must be for God preferred in our loue aboue our selues Thus euery man is bound to loue and preferre the life of his Prince aboue his owne see the perfect rule of direction herein Ioh. 13.34 Secondly note the manner of it set downe in that precept Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe that is as wee are cheerfull and free to practise the dutie of loue to our selues so must we doe it to others for this precept aimeth at the manner rather than the rule of our loue to man for that is as Christ hath loued vs. Thirdly the kindes of it it is two-fold first single when men loue others but are not repaid with loue againe yea when a man loues his enemie but is not loued again The second is mutuall loue that is when loue is requited with loue called in Scripture brotherly loue see Philip. 2.2 1. Cor. 1.10 when men are of one iudgement like minded speak● one thing and one soule is as it were in many bodies The second point is the multiplication of loue which the Apostle prayeth for vpon good ground because it ioyneth man to God and man to man and so becommeth as it is called the bond of perfection the bond of the Church Common-wealth of al societies 1. Cor. 13. Loue ed●fieth that is it helpeth to build the kingdome of God yea it constraineth men to all good duties in their particular callings Qu. But how shall this loue be multiplied Ans. By certaine meditations and practises The meditations are many first on Gods cōmandement Be seruants one to another in loue Gal. 5.13 Secondly of Gods image which al men should beare in loue 1. Ioh. 3.16 Thirdly of the fellowship of the faithfull hauing all one father one brother one saluation all linked by one spirit Ephes. 4.4 Fourthly of the loue of God Ioh. 13.35 which hereby we shall be assured of 1. Ioh. 3.14 The practises also are diuers first wee must labour to be assured of Gods loue to vs and encreased vpon vs Ephes. 5.2 Secondly the law of nature must teach vs to doe as we would be done vnto Thirdly our care must be more to loue than be loued for to loue is a vertue in our selues to be loued i● the vertue of another Fourthly pray daily for
of this Iude at his birth giue him such a name as might moue not only himselfe but his child after him to thankfulnes and confession of Gods goodnes So ought euery father in imposing his childrens names with Alpheus and euery mother with Leah make such choice of names as themselues and their children may bee put in minde yea and stirred vp to good duties euen so often as they shal heare or remember their own names The second point in this name is the variety of the names of Iude hee was called Thaddeus Mark 3.18 and Lebbeus Matth. 10.3 all which signifie the same thin gand all put in minde of the same dutie Here two Questions may bee asked First why was he called by so many names Some thinke he had all these names giuen him by the people and multitude as signifying all one thing others which is more probable that hee was thus called by the Apostles themselues rather then by his owne name that the horrible fact of Iudas in betraying his Maister should bee vtterly with his name forgotten A second question is whether may a man change his name or no If the change thereof be no preiuidce to any man much lesse hurtefull to the Church or common-welth nor offendeth the faithfull but wholy tendeth to the glory of God and good of men it may be altred and changed As Saul a great persecutor being called to be a publisher and Patron of the Gospell changed his name into Paul as also Salomon was at the first called by his Mother Iedidiah Peter at first called Simon Bariones Christ afterwards gaue him a new name and he accepted it Yet hence the too common practise of the world cannot bee warranted who for fraud and deceite doe alter their names which when it is not intended may warrantably bee done as in time of persecution in the raigne of King Edward the 6. Bucer changed his name and both called himselfe and suffered others to call him Aretius Felinus so did diuerse other worthie men in those dayes seeking no other then the glory of God and good of the Church in their owne saftie and that the Papists not knowing their names might reade their writinges without preiudice The second thing in the person writing is his office being called a seruant of Iesus Christ which is not so generallie to be vnderstood as ment of euery professor of Christ and beleeuer who is a seruant of the Lord Iesus but of a speciall seruice namely of Apostleship to which he was deputed Wherein consider two thinges First that he was called to bee an Apostle and seruant of Christ to plant the Church of the Gentiles Secondly that he did faithfully execute his function and performed his seruice First he pleades his calling for two causes first in regard of others and secondly in respect of himselfe First that his doctrine might with more attention and reuerence be receiued of others seeing he run not vnsent but was called and that to an Apostleship and therefore he spake not of himselfe but whollie and immediately directed by God Secondly for the confirming and comforting of himselfe that the Lord who had called him would stand by him both in protecting his person and prospering his worke in his hand Vse Seeing the Apostle Iude before he writeth laieth down his calling so ought all Ministers to make their calling the foundation of all their proceedings containing themselues within the compasse thereof euen as they are to teach the same dutie vnto all sortes of men that they tempt not the Lord by passing the bonds and limites of their calling Secondly in that Iude though he was of the same Tribe yea of neare allyance vnto Christ yet hee passeth by all these respectes which hee might haue stood vpon and contenteth himselfe with the title of a seruant of Christ We learne to make more account and esteeme it a greater priuiledge to be a seruant of Iesus Christ than to bee of the kindred of Kinges and allyed to the greatest Monarchs of the world Christ himselfe shewes vs what kindred should take vp our chiefe delight when hee turned himselfe from his Mother and Brethren and beholding his hearers said those were his mother sisters and brethren that heare the word of God and keepe it this alliance in the faith was neerer and dearer vnto him then that in the flesh If then thou standest vpon thy preferment striue to be the seruant of Christ which is more honorable then to be the sonne of a King to be a follower of Chist is more then to goe before the Rulers of the earth But if thou aske how shall I come to this preferment Himselfe answereth thee thou must giue vp thy selfe to heare his word and doe it that is learne to know and obey his will this is the maine dutie of a seruant endeuour to please the Lord in keeping faith and good conscience thou art in the way of preferment and art admitted a seruant of Christ. Thirdly If wee bee admitted the seruantes and followers of Christ wee must serue no other Maister but keepe our selues from being intangled either with the offences or affairs of the world as to be vassals thereto no man can serue two much lesse more Maisters of such contrarie commaundes Let none pretend to bee the seruant of Christ who by louing pleasure more thē God or seeking earth more then heauen disgrace such a profession The third thing in the person writing is the allyance Brother of Iames of which name there were two first Iames the son of Zebedeus whose death is mentioned in the 12. of the Actes by Herod the second was the son of Alpheus here mentioned First that he might distinguish himselfe from the other Iudas the traytour Secondly that he might winne further credit and attention to his doctrine seeing hee was no vnknowne person but one that came of the worthiest stock that was vpon the face of the earth and for this cause hee mentioneth his brother Iames who was better knowne as being the President of the Councell at Ierusalem and a choise pillar of the Church in his time Act. 15.13 not to credit himselfe but this Scripture which otherwise is in it selfe sufficiently powerful by the mention of him Now followes the second thing in the Salutation that is the person to whom Iude wrote in these words vnto those who are called and sanctified by God the father and preserued by Iesus Christ it is the militant Catholique Church which is liuelie described to be the number of beleeuers dispersed thorough the face of the whole world who are effectually called and sanctified and preserued vnto life euerlasting Out of which description note First who and what they bee that are members of this Church namely no wicked or profane persons but onely the elect such as are chosen vnto life euerlasting who after receiue their calling vnto holines and therein are assuredly preserued vnto life which priuiledges no wicked
not onely in many examples but in that originall sinne infecteth euery infants soule aswell of the beleeuing as vnbeleeuing parent But if sanctification be not from the parent whence is it From Christ who is made of God vnto vs sanctification 1. Cor. 1.30 1. Coloss. 22. In him are hid all the treasures of it of whose fulnes we receiue grace for grace 1. Ioh. 16. wherein two further points are to be knowne first what thing in Christ is the roote of our sanctification namely Christ his holines as he is man euen as Adams vnrighteousnes is the roote of our corruption Secondly that seeing he is the root of our sanctification it is necessarie there be a coniunction and vnion betweene him and vs before we can partake of his holines and it is the bond of faith which knits vs as members vnto him the head in which regard the Apostle saith he is made of God our sanctification 1. Cor. 1.30 that is the roote and author of it A third point is the measure of our sanctification which is but in part giuen vs in this life the most regenerate man being partly flesh and partly spirit appearing in this comparison Take a vessell full of water let a portion be taken out and an equall portion of hot water put in it become● luke-warme all of it partly hote and partly cold euen so euery man is a vessell of water filled with corruption to the brim if a part of his corruption be taken away and a proportionall part of holines put in stead of it the whole man becomes partly holy partly vnholy of which wee haue an example in Moses Num. 20.8.9 who in smiting the rock so as the water gushed out bewrayed the mixture of faith with vnbeleefe in the same action he takes the staffe therein he obeyed God but he strikes the Rocke twice being commanded only to speake to it and therein he disobeyed for which the Lord was angrie A fourth point is touching the parts of sanctification which may be diuided two waies first it is diuided into mortification and viuification Mortification is a part of sanctification whereby the power tyrannie and strength of originall sinne is weakned and also by little and little abolished which be cōsidered to be not in one part onely but throughout so as when one part of originall sinne decaieth so doth also the rest the ground of which is the vertue and efficacie of Christs death which if any aske what it is and what power it can haue since it is ended I answere it is that power of his Godhead whereby on the crosse hee sust●ined his Manhood and so made his death a satisfaction to the iustice of God for mans sinne It will be further asked how come we to be partakers of this vertue of Christs death and to feele the power of it in our hearts So soone as any man by faith begins to be vnited vnto Christ his death is applied vnto him so that by meanes of our coniunction with Christ we as truly partake of that power of his as he himselfe was on the crosse susteined by it then he feeles sin wounded in him and dying dailie to which hee cannot liue as before The second part of sanctification is viuification or quickning and it is when Christ dwels and raignes in our hearts by his spirit so as we can say we henceforth liue not but Christ in vs the foundation of which is the vertue of Christs resurrection which is nothing else but the power of his Godhead raising his Manhood and freeing him from the punishment and tyrannie of our sinnes this power is conueied from him vnto all his members who being mystically conioyned with him are thereby raised from the graue of their sinnes The second diuision is taken from the faculties of man which are seauen in number 1. The Minde 2. Memorie 3. Conscience 4. Will 5. Affections 6. Appetite 7. The life it selfe In all which this grace of God must appeare 1 The Minde is that part of man which frameth the reason this Paul calleth Ephes 4.5 the spirit of our minde which must be renewed the sanctification of which is called Reu. 3. the eye salue it is a grace cleering the darke minde and dimme vnderstanding containing in it these three things First sauing knowledge 1. Cor. 2.12 whereby we know the things giuen vs of God Some will say what be they Ans. This knowledge may be referred to two heads The first is the knowledge of God The second is the knowledge of our selues The former of these hath two branches first that knowledge of the true God which is life euerlasting Ioh. 17.3 Secondly to know the mercie of God in Christ to my selfe in particular Ephes. 3.18 This is to know the height length and depth of the loue of God to me in special as that God the Father is my father God the Sonne my Sauiour God the holy Ghost my Sanctifier this is the sauing knogledge of God The second head of this sauing knowledge is to know a mans selfe when hee sees the secret corruptions of his heart against the first and second Table to see and to feele this is a worke of grace and an argument of an heauenlie light enlightening the soule The second thing in the sanctification of the minde is after the knowledge of these to approoue the things of God that is to minde and meditate on things spirituall Rom. 8.5 to sauour the things of the spirit namely things pertaining to the kingdome of God Contrarie to the practise of them whose glory is their shame yea whose end is damnation Phil. 3.19 who minde earthly things The third thing is a setled purpose in the minde not to offend God in any thing but to endeuour the doing of his will and the pleasing of him in al things this is called the turning of the mind and is the substance of true repentance 2 The Memorie the sanctification of it is an aptnes by grace to keepe good things specially the doctrine of saluation by which Dauid was preserued from sinning Psal. 119.11 and Mary pondred things concerning Christ and laid them vp in her heart Luk. 2.15 3 The sanctification of the Conscience is an aptnes to testifie alwaies truly that a mans sinnes are pardoned and that hee preserueth in his heart a care to please God 2. Cor. 1.12 This testimonie was Pauls reioycing and Hezekias comfort on his death-bed was the testimonie of his conscience of his vpright walking before God yea this conscience is apt also to checke and curb vs when wee encline to euill so Dauid saith Psal. 16. his r●ines did correct him in the night season and to stirre vs vp to good as the voyce behind vs saying Here is the way walke in it Esay 30.21 4 The Will is sanctified when God giues grace truly to will good as to beleeue feare obey God when a man can say that though he
cries out that he was vile and abhorres himselfe After these examples we must euer keep our hearts as emptie vessels readie to receiue more mercie Thirdly note the measure of mercie asked he praies for continuance and increase of mercie to those who had alreadie the riches of mercie Whence we learne first that all the good we haue or can doe is of meere mercie not onely for the beginning and continuance but also for the increase thereof as grace is no grace vnlesse it be euery way grace so also of mercie Which takes away all conceit of merit seeing mercie filleth vp all the roome and leaues no place for merit Secondly that the Apostle here also cōfirmeth the former grounds of our perseuerance for by this prayer grace is to be added to the former graces yea multiplied so the Lord dealeth not giuing ouer when he hath giuen one grace for first he giues his seruant power to beleeue secondly he giues an execution of this power Neither there giues ouer but by a third grace giues continuance of that power yea and addes a fourth which is an execution of that continuance Thus he deales with all true beleeuers not onely in respect of faith but of obedience also Phil. 2.13 God worketh both the will and the deed Philip. 1.6 He that hath begun this good worke in you will performe i● vntill the day of Christ. So as this may well be called a multiplication of grace seeing euery beleeuer hath one grace more than Adam had he had power to obey so the renewed haue Secondly he had the act of obedience so they also haue Thirdly hee had power to perseuere which they likewise haue but hee had not the act of perseuerance which they hauing therein farre excell him The second thing desired in the prayer is peace namely the peace of God whereof he is the author and it is the vniti● and concord of man with God and with the creatures Touching this peace note three things the foundation of it which is Christ the second Adam euen as the first Adam was the author of discord and emnitie Ephes. 2.14 Secondly the manifestation of it this peace is offered in the preaching of the Gospel which therefore is called the glad tidings of peace Rom. 10.15 and the Ministers of it the Embassadors of peace 2. Cor. 5.20 Thirdly the kindes of this peace it is two-fold first betweene person and persons secondly betweene person and things The former hath sixe heads I. Peace betweene man and God the Father Sonne and holie Ghost properly called reconciliation whereby God in Christ is at one with man and man thorough Christ at one with God of which when man is once perswaded in his heart then comes this peace Rom. 5.1 from which springs another namelie tranquillitie of minde when the mind is quieted in all things that befall without grudging or impatience and that because it is the reuealed will of God Philip. 4.11 II. Peace with the good Angels Ephes. 1.10 for men being at peace with God the Angels are become seruants and ministring Spirits vnto them Hebr. 1.14 III. Peace with a mans self consisting in two things first when the conscience sanctified ceaseth to accuse and in assurance of Gods fauour beginneth to take his part to excuse and speake for him before God Secondly when the will affections and inclinations submit themselues to the enlightened minde of which if either be wanting man is at warre with himselfe and the peace of God ruleth not in his heart Coloss. 3.15 IV. Peace of true beleeuers among themselues who before they beleeued were as Lions and Cock●trise● Esai 11.6 but now in the kingdome of Christ haue put off that sauage nature and become peaceable as Act. 4.32 the number of beleeuers were all of one heart V. Peace of the faithfull with professed enemies namely when they endeuour to haue peace with al men Rom. 12.17.18 not requiting euill with euill VI. Concord of the enemies themselues with the true Church for often the Lord restraineth the malice and rage of his enemies and inclines them to peace Thus Iacob and Iosephs familie were preserued in Egypt and Daniel was brought in fauour with the chiefe Eunuch Dan. 1.9 The second branch of this peace is when al things creatures conspire and agree for the good of the godly This is called good successe promised Psal. 13. Whatsoeuer the righteous man doth it shall prosper Vse First in that mercie is first asked and then peace wee are by the order taught that peace and good successe are grounded on mercie so as men for the most part take a preposterous course who would haue good successe in health wealth peace honour learning c. in that they seeke it out of assurance of mercie in the pardon of sin whereas this ground must first bee laid as the foundation of al blessing and good successe Secondly we must endeuour that this peace grounded vpon mercie may haue place in our hearts that wee may haue boldnes in regard of God comfort in our consciences peace with our brethren quietnes and contentednes in all conditions of life c. This peace shall preserue our hearts in all things Philip. 4 7. This was Dauids securitie in the middest of his enemies and danger of death he would now lie downe in peace because the Lord did sustaine him Psal. 4. vers 8. This grace preserueth the heart vndanted in many afflictions euen as a souldier that takes the enemies Ensigne cares for no blowes or wounds so hee may carrie away the Ensigne so hee that preserues the peace of God in his heart makes light of afflictions seeing hee holdeth that which counteruaileth all of them The third grace desired in the prayer is loue which is a most excellent vertue preferred before faith and hope in some respects and made the end of the Comma●dement Loue is diuersly taken in the Scripture sometime it signifieth the loue of God to the creature and sometime the loue of man to God and man and so it is taken in this place being set after mercie and peace as a fruite of them In the handling of this vertue consider three points in generall before wee come to the speciall parts of it First what this loue is The loue of God and man is a certaine diuine and spirituall motion in the heart causing it to be well pleased in the thing loued and mouing it to affect communion therewith in these two consists the nature of true loue to God and man Secondly Whence hath loue his beginning A. Not from nature for the wisedome of the flesh is emnitie with God yea there is in euery mans nature a disposition to hate God and man when occasion is offered let the naturall man say neuer so often he loueth God herein he lieth and deceiueth himselfe for vrge him to frame and conforme himselfe vnto the word wherein he should testifie his loue here his wicked heart hating to be
receiue it First God giueth it vnto vs when he giueth vs Christ himselfe for it is giuen with him and it is made ours when God in mercie esteemeth iudgeth and accounteth it to be ours for it is ours by imputation which appeareth by these two reasons First as Christ is made out sinne so are we made his righteousnes 2. Cor. 5.21 but hee is made our sinne by imputation and therefore his iustice being inherēt in him is made ours by imputation Secondly as the first Adams disobedience is made ours so Christs the second Adams obedience is ours Rom. 5.17.18 but that is ours by imputation and therefore Christs obedience also Secondly to make this obedience ours we must receiue it and that can be onely by faith which is the hand of the soule receiuing into it the things that are giuen vs of God where note by the way that a sinner is not iustified by the dignitie of his faith but as it is an instrument whereby Christs obedience is applied vnto the soule III. Point What workes are excluded from iustification Ans. The workes of Morall and Ceremoniall law workes of nature and grace That euen workes of grace are excluded appeareth by these reasons First a sinner must so bee iustified that all cause of boasting may be cut off Rom. 3.27 But if a man were iustified by workes of grace he might boast still yea though hee acknowledge the workes to be of God see the Pharisies example Luk. 18. Secondly if a man were iustified by the workes of the law then our iustification should stand by the law but that it doth not Rom. 4.14 for then the promise were made voide yea the tenour of that whole Chapter prooueth that Abraham hauing store of good workes was yet iustified by faith without the works of the law the which thing also that obiection in chap. 6.1 witnesseth What then shall we continue in sinne drawne out of the fiue former chapters thus If a man may be iustified by faith without workes we may continue in sinne which obiection were no obiection if that had not been the intent of the Apostle to prooue iustification by faith onely without the workes of the law Thirdly Paul was not iustified by any workes 1. Cor. 4.3 I know nothing by my selfe yet am I not therby iustified where he noteth two things of himselfe first that hee had a good conscience within him secondly that he was not thereby iustified where hee debarreth all works of grace Fourthly we are saued by grace without workes these workes excluded are workes of grace for they are all such as God hath prepared to walke in Ephes. 2.8 Fiftly a man must first be iustified before he can doe a good worke and therfore works follow iustification and cannot cause it Yea and as all workes are excluded so al vertues also excepting faith are here reiected For as in a man that standeth to receiue a gift no part doth any thing to receiue it but the hand yet hauing receiued it all other parts testifie thankfulnes the tongue the feete and all the bodie euen so wee receiue the matter of our iustification by faith alone not by hope or loue but after the receiuing of Christ these with the other graces work and shew themselues The second point in this ground is the weight of it appearing herein that he that ouerthroweth it ouerturneth the faith Rom. 4.14 If they of the law be he●res of life faith is made voide and the promise of none effect And Galath 2.21 If we be iustified by workes Christ died in vaine Aduersaries hereof First the home-aduersarie is the common sort of ignorant people and all naturall men who with the young man say What shall I doe to be saued They say they will be saued by faith in Christ but when it commeth to the point they will be doing somewhat and stand much vpon their good meaning and righteous dealing Secondly the forreine enemie is the Popish doctrine Romish religion which teacheth that there be two iustifications First when a man of an euil man is made a good man this is by grace of the holy Ghost put into the heart the latter is whereby a man is made of good better which is by good workes But what Church soeuer holdeth this is fallen from grace This is a peremptorie sentence will some say and no generall Councell hath so determined Ans. The more is the pitie But Gods word hath peremptorily determined it Galat. 5.4 They are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace whosoeuer will be iustified by the law as the Romane Church at this day They say our doctrine maintaineth loosenes of life by excluding all workes from iustification Ans. Though we exclude the best works from iustification yet we debarre them not from Christian conuersation but therein require them as fruits of the spirit plentifully Ob. But it is absurd say they that one man may be iustified by the righteousnes of another Ans. Adams sinne is made ours and they marueile not at it what greater absurditie is it that the second Adams obedience answering to the first Adams sinne should bee ours in like manner The 16. ground is this Except a man be borne anew of water and of the hol●e Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ioh. 3.5 In which obserue first the meaning secondly the weight thirdly the aduersaries In the first consider two points first what it is to be borne againe secondly of what necessitie it is For the former wee must know that there must bee in him that is borne againe three things first a reall change from one estate to another Secondly there must be a roote from whence this change may arise Thirdly a new life First the chaunge is when a man of a meere naturall man is made a new man not in regard of his bodie or soule or powers of them all which a man retaineth the same after his regeneration but in regard of Gods image restored and renewed by Christ Ephes. 4.24 This is the restoring of that new qualitie of righteousnes and holines lost in Adam for so the Apostle describeth this new birth in the place alleaged This change is attributed to water and the holy Ghost wherein by water our Sauiour alludeth to some speeches of the old Testament as Ezech. 36.25 where the Prophet speaketh of the clensing of the Church by powring cleane water vpon it that is infusing new graces into the heart which take place of the old corruption And by the holy Ghost he sheweth that this clensing of vs is by the inward working of the holy Ghost Obiect But it will be said if a man bee a new man hee must haue a new soule Ans. This new qualitie of righteousnes and holines is as it were a new soule for in a regenerate man there is a bodie soule and besides the spirit which is the grace of sanctification opposed to flesh and
corruption of nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the soule of a soule renewed Secondly that a man may come to this estate there must be some root and beginning whence this change may arise and that is no other than Christ crucified the Redeemer and Mediatour of whose bodie beleeuers are members of his flesh and of his bones Ephes. 5.30 for looke as Eue was made of the side of Adam so is euery beleeuer of the blood of Christ and as euery man so farre as he is a sinfull man springeth from the first Adam so doth euery man so farre as he is renewed spring from the second Adam Christ Iesus Now that a man may spring out of Christ he must first being taken out of the wilde Oliue the old Adam Rom 6.5 be set and ingrafted into the second Adam as a new stocke and that by faith wrought in the heart by the spirit of God by which incision hee receiueth from Christ two things first in regard of his soule holines secondly in regard of bodie incorruption seeing that the whole man is vnited vnto Christ and so both soule and body receiue immortalitie and glorie Thirdly in this new birth there must be a new life by which if any liue not he is not borne again for the distinct knowledge of which life wee must distinguish of life life is vncreated and created vncreated life is the life of God yea God himselfe of which kind this is not Created life is either naturall or spirituall Naturall is that which we liue by naturall meanes as meate drinke sleepe physicke c. of which kind this new life is not but this is that spirituall life whereby a man in this life is ruled by the spirit of God according to the word and it standeth in two thinges First when the spirit dwelleth in the heart Secondly when the spirit ruleth the hart or more plainely this life hath two degrees First when a man beginneth to sauour affect and will spirituall things loueth them and chiefely affecteth them Rom. 8.5 when they haue some sauour and rellish vnto him Secondly when a man in all estates liueth by a iustifying faith and ordereth his life thereby The iust man saith Abacuke liueth by faith and this is as it is truly called life eternall the beginning and first degree of which euerie beleeuer hath possession of euen in this life The second point in this ground is the weight of it for which obserue the necessitie of the new birth in the former words where it is said that without it a man shall neuer see the kingdome of God much lesse enter into it No man is in Christ and so consequently out of state of saluation who is not a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 No outward prerogatiue can bring a man in request with God vnlesse hee be a new creature Gal. 6.15 It is a constant truth of Christ Ioh. 13.8 If I wash thee not thou hast no part in me The third point is The Aduersaries who are first euery man by nature the wisedome of whom herein is enmitie with God For euery one naturally is willing to yeeld vnto God some externall seruice and ceremoniall worship as in the Church to draw neere to God with their lippes but when they should come to their renewing and the mortifying of their lusts O then they storme and swell and cast off this yoke because they say it abridgeth them of their ease libertie and pleasure and they cannot bee their owne men for it Secondly the Romane religion which for many hundred yeres hath stood in ceremoniall and bodily actions rites gestures apparrell and most of all in outwarde penance borrowed partly of the Iewes and partly of the Heathens but all this doctrine of the new birth of mortifying hidden lusts and deniall of a mans selfe is dead and buried among them little hereof is spoken or written in the great volumes of their greatest Clerks But the doctrine which is from God is spirituall as God himselfe is and most concerneth the inner man Secondly they are great aduersaries hereof in teaching that man though captiue to sinne hath a power in his nature whereby if the holy Ghost free him he can of himselfe will and doe that which is good which if it were so then he is but in part new and so is no new man Secondly a regenerate man must be a new creature now creation is a framing of something out of nothing not of something into somthing Thirdly thus a man should be but halfe dead and so could not be borne againe but onely strengthened euen as a man in a swoune of whom wee cannot say properly he is reuiued because hee was not dead but recouered The 17. ground is out of Galath 5.1 Stand fast in the libertie wherewith Christ hath made you free For the meaning of which we must know that Christian libertie which wee are exhorted to maintaine standeth in a double freedome First from the Morall law secondly from the Ceremoniall From the Morall law two waies first from the curse of the law Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. Secondly from the rigour of it which requireth personall and perfect obedience this rigour is moderated by Christ whence followeth a freedome also from iustification by workes Rom. 5.1 Galath 5.4 The second freedome is from the Ceremoniall law which hauing an end put to it by Christ bindeth no man but our libertie is procured to vs in meates drinkes and all things indifferent with good conscience seeing to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1.25 Where we are commaunded to stand fast wee see the weight of it to be such as it may not be departed from nor forsaken for then we become debters againe to the whole law and so are fallen from Christ. Aduersaries hereof are first the Libertines as the Family of loue who being as they say deified are so carried by the holie Ghost that they cannot sinne no though they should commit fornication but no man is freed from obedience to the law by Christ although hee be from the curse and rigour of it Secondly all that take libertie to sinne because they say God in Christ is mercifull but Christ freed from sinne not vnto it Thirdly the Romane Church holding that the Pope hath power to make lawes binding conscience properly prescribing such things to be done the obseruing of which is the worship of God and meritorious as on the Popish fasting daies yea and Wednesdaies and Fridaies not to eate flesh euen this law bindeth the conscience of a Papist and such abstinence they say is a worke of merit and a worship of God But it will be said that Princes and Magistrates make such lawes of meates drinkes apparell and must be obeyed Ans. These lawes bind not conscience but the outward man Secondly they do not abrogate our libertie but moderate the ouer common vse for the common good but Popish
which being taken away there will be no difference left betweene the kingdome of God and the kingdome of the Diuell Which power of the keyes in opening and shutting heauen by the ministerie of the word seeing wee haue established by the lawes of the land we haue the state of a true Church and therefore no man can in good conscience separate from vs as no Church and people of God indeed if it had not the power to open heauen vnto men it were time to separate from it 3. The Aduersaries of this ground are first the ignorant people who popishly thinke that this power is onely giuen to Peter whose office now is to open and shut heauen But this power was giuen to all the Apostles as well as Peter and in them to al Ministers Churches and Congregations yea and it is not exercised in heauen but in earth Secondly all Atheists and Epicures that contemne and skorne the Word Sacraments and all holy things yea euen the power of the Church it selfe Thirdly all Papists and the Romish religion who abolish all binding and loosing in the publike Ministerie and haue brought al to a priuate shrift and absolution which in truth is nothing else but a racke and a gibbet to the conscience for first men must seeke for it at the hands of the Priest secondly they must confesse all their sinnes to the Priest thirdly they must make satisfaction to the iustice of God euen such as the Priest shall enioyne them But all this is directly contrary to the word for first Ministers must offer pardon of sin before it bee sought for Secondly in Christ pardon is offered freely wee neede no satisfaction of our owne Thirdly they impose a heauier yoke than euer Christ or his Apostles did vpon men when they enioyne them to an enumeration of all their sinnes before they can be pardoned the depth of which policie hath been sounded Secondly that Religion hath turned this power Ecclesiasticall to a Ciuill power whereby they take vpon them to excommunicate Kings Emperours not only out of the Church 〈◊〉 also out of their kingdomes and Empires whom they say they may set vp and depose at their pleasure as hauing power to wrest the Scepter out of the hands of whatsoeuer Monarch shall not stoope vnder their Popes authoritie These bee the maine enemies of this ground against whom we must for euer contend The 19. ground of faith is There is hath been and euer shall be a Church one of which is no saluation This is an Article of our faith and a maine ground of religion for if there be not euer a Church of God Christ is sometime no Redeemer no King because there should be no people redeemed nor subiects to the rule of his word and spirit Of which consider two things first what this Church is secondly who be the aduersaries of this ground For the first The Church is a companie of men chosen to saluation called vnited to Christ and admitted into euerlasting fellowship with him See Hebr. 12.23 and 1. Pet. 2.9 Compare these two places and this discription wil easily bee gathered The properties of this Church are these sixe which follow First being the Spouse of Christ she is one onely indeed although distinguished in regard of time as the Church of the old Testament and of the new Secondly of place as of England Scotland c. Thirdly of condition as the Militant and triumphant all these make but one bodie of Christ. Secondly it is inuisible not to bee seene but beleeued for election vocation redemption can onely be beleeued yet some parts of it are visible as in the right vse of the Word and Sacraments appeareth Thirdly to this assemblie and no other belong all the promises of this life and the life to come especially forgiuenes of sins and life euerlasting Fourthly it consisteth onely of liuing members quickened by the spirit of Christ not of any hypocrites or wicked persons Fiftly no member of it can be seuered or cut off frō Christ but abide in him and with him for euer Sixtly it is the ground pillar of truth that is the doctrine of true religion is alwaies safely kept and maintained in it Obiect The Churches in earth are true Churches and yet in these are many hypocrites and Apostata●s who fall from their profession And therefore all are not liuing members Answ. In visible Churches are two sortes of men lust men and hypocrites who although they bee within the Church yet the Church is not so called of them but in regard of them onely who are truly ioyned vnto Christ who are the better part although not the greater Euen as a heape of wheate and chaffe together is called an heape of wheate or a Corne heape of the better part Aduersaries hereof are Papists who frame not the Church by these true properties but by other deceitfull markes as succession multitude antiquitie and consent for when the Church first began there could be none of those at least not the three former and yet was there a true Church Secondly all these agree to Heretikes as among the Iewes what was more challenged than these and yet Christ saith they were blind leaders of the blinde But the true marke is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles truly taught and beleeued A note of Christs sheep is the hearing of his voice Ioh. 10.27 And Ye are in the Father and the Sonne if ye abide in the word which yee haue heard from the beginning 1. Ioh. 2.24 See Ephes. 2.20 The 20. ground is That there shall be a resurrection of the dead in the end of the world This was one of the sixe grounds of Catechisme in the daies of the Apostles Heb. 6.2 Hymeneus and Philetus destroyed the faith of certaine in teaching that the Resurrection was past alreadie Aduersaries hereof are the Familie of loue who hold that there is no Resurrection but only in this life The last ground of doctrine is There shall be a generall iudgement of all flesh It is one of the grounds Heb. 6.2 In which iudgement euery mans workes shall be tried and euery man accordingly shall receiue sentence of life or death eternall The aduersaries hereof are first the Atheist who denieth God himselfe and consequently his iudgement Secondly the drowsie Protestants who in iudgement denie not the last iudgement but yet plainly shew in their liues that they are not perswaded of it for then would they make more conscience of sin and of pleasing God in all thi●●● These are the maine grounds of beleefe vnto which all other may be reduced Now follow the grounds of obedience and practise The first ground of practise is Luke 13.3 Except ye repent ye shall perish In which two things are to bee obserued First the dutie required that is Repentance the necessitie of which appeareth in that without it men perish Secondly the aduersaries Concerning repentance two
things must be taught first what it is secondly what is the vse of it For the first Repentance as Paul describeth it is a conuersion whereby a sinner turneth himselfe vnto God and bringeth foorth fruites worthie amendement of life There be two kindes of conuersion of a sinner first that whereby God turneth man Secondly that whereby a man being turned by God turneth himselfe by grace the former is not repentance properly but the latter Iere. 31.18 Conuert thou me and I shall bee conuerted Surely after that I conuerted I repented Quest. In what part is this conuersion made Ans. It beginneth in the minde but it is of the whole man the minde laying off all purpose of sinning the conscience calling backe from sinne the will not seeking to fulfill the lusts of it but the whole man endeuouring to please God thorough his whole conuersation further repentance is attended with diuers fruites worthie newnes of life These are the duties of the Morall law performed in faith and truth without hypocrisie which because they proceede from the same beginning are approoued of God as repentance is The second point in this dutie is the vse of repentance and that is not to be ● cause of saluation but only a way wherin men must walke to life euerlasting We are slandered by the Popish church while they exclaime that our doctrine requireth nothing but faith to be saued by and so wee become enemies to all good workes But this is not our doctrine for we hold the workes of repentance to be the way of saluation Indeed when we speak of the instrument wherby we lay hold vpon Christ that we say is faith onely not hope loue or any workes but when wee speake of a way to life then faith is not alone but repentance is required hope the feare of God and e●●●y good worke So women are said to be saued thorough bearing of children 1. Tim. 2.15 namely as a way wherein they practise their faith and obedience Thus Abrahams faith and workes went together Iam. 2.22 Secondly The Aduersaries of this ground are first professors of Religion who content themselues with a fained repentance for most men being pricked and stung with the sense of their sinnes for a while will hold downe their heads like a bulrush breake off their companie come to Church pray heare the word and performe other duties but when the remorse is once past they returne to their former course of licentiousnes and this is thought a sufficient repentance whereas it is but ceremoniall and a fig leafe whereby men seeke to couer themselues for true repentance changeth the minde will affections conscience yea all the actions of life Secondly the Romish Church which for many hundred yeeres hath ouerturned this doctrine as first in generall aboue these 500. yeeres penance and publike confession of persons excommunicated hath bin by them taken and deemed to be repentance it selfe any other hath been scarse taught or knowne in these partes of the world Secondlie repentance is by them turned into a iudiciall proceeding and sentence of the court wherein the Minister must be iudge the sinner must come vnder confession the Minister must passe sentence and the other must make satisfaction accordingly which is an high abuse of this doctrine Thirdly they hold the workes of Contrition Confession and Satisfaction to merit yea and to conferre pardon of sinne and so abolish the merit and satisfaction of Christ. Secondly the world hath bin by that Church deceiued in diuers particulars concerning this doctrine as namely first it hath bin taught that repentance for the originall of it is partly from nature partly from grace partly from God partly from our selues which is a false foundation ioyning light with darkenesse it being wholy from grace Secondly remorse of conscience which the very diuels may haue is made a parte of repentance Saul himselfe nay Iudas wanted not this contrition which is no grace but a preparation vnto it Thirdly they make Auricular Confession whereby euery man is bound to confesse all and euery one of his sins with their circumstances in the Priests eare so necessarilie vnto repentance as without which he cannot haue pardon which is a very gibbet to the conscience Fourthly they turne their Canonicall satisfaction into satisfaction of Gods i●●stice for sinne wherein blasphemously they ouerthrow the most perfect satisfaction of the Sonne of God We are therfore to praise God who hath taken from our neckes this yoke of the Roman Church which neither wee not our fathers were able to beare The second ground of practise is concerning the exercise of repentance Luk. 9.23 If any man wil come after me let him deny himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me In which ground we will consider three thinges first the meaning secondly the moment thirdly the aduersaries against whom wee must contend For the meaning If any man wil follow me that is will bee my Disciple for Disciples vsed to follow their Maisters and teachers hee must learne three duties First Le● him denie himselfe Secondlie take vp his crosse Thirdlie follow mee To the deniall of our selues three things are required First we must for the magnifying of the grace of God ab●se our selues euen to nothing An example whereof wee haue in Paul 1. Cor. 3.7 I I haue planted Apollo hath watred but neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watreth but God that giueth increase If the planter bee nothing much lesse the planted We are not able as of our selues to think a good thought And againe All our sufficiencie is of God Secondly wee must renounce our owne reason and will and bring them vnder subiection to the will of God wee must not striue to haue willes of our owne but let Christs will be sufficient for vs his wisedome must be our reason Thirdly wee must esteeme all things as dung for Christ and preserue within vs a readines to leaue and forsake friends riches honours yea ou● libertie and life it selfe if need be for his sake and a good conscience The second dutie is To take vp our crosse daily vnto which two things are required first euery member of the Church must make reckoning of and looke for daily crosses priuate and particular in his calling and in his profession Secondly when the crosse commeth it must be taken vp cheerfully and borne with reioycing Matth. 5.12 Reioyce and be glad namely euen when men reuile and persecute you Rom. 5.3 Iustified persons are able to reioyce in tribulations according to the exhortation Iam. 1.2 Count it a● exceeding ioy An example of the Saints Hebr. 10.34 who suffred with ioy the spoyling of their goods The third dutie of a Disciple is after the two former to follow Christ. For when Christ saith And follow me it is as though he had said I goe before bearing my crosse let my Disciples follow me step by step in bearing of this crosse This containeth in it the maine
request to God only in the alone mediation of Christ. The second maine poin● of Religion out of this ground is this That religious worship is due to God alone for wee may not giue apparance of religious worship to creatures Cornelius is reprooued for giuing to Peter excesse euen of ciuill worship Acts 10.25 for he knew Peter to bee a man and not God and so seemed to mingle a kinde of religious worship with ciuill This is a maine ground also which whosoeuer denieth he holdeth no● the head Christ Col. 2.18.19 The Aduersaries of this ground also are the professed Papists who worship Saint● and Angels not onely by kneeling before them but praying also vnto them which cannot be denied to bee a religious worship seeing it attributeth vnto them to heare the prayers of all men 〈◊〉 all times in all places ye● and to know the hearts of men vpon earth Secondly they maintaine religious worship of Images they goe on pilgrimage vnto them offer Incense creepe vnto them and kneele before them Yea they worship the Crucifixe with the same worshippe whereby they would adore Christ if hee were liuing vpon earth as also the reliques of Saints Out of all which wee see what to thinke of that Church which onely hath the name of a Church she holdeth not the head Christ seeing for so many hundred yeeres she hath displaied her fornication in worshipping Saints Angels Images and the Virgin Mary so as her Bill of diuorcement is iustly giuen her 2. Thess. 2.10 Reuel 13.8 from whom we must separate if we would not partake with her in her plagues The sixth ground of practise is Esai 8.13 Sanctifie the Lord of hostes which words contain the substance of the third Commaundement in which consider first the meaning secondly the weight thirdly the Aduersaries For the meaning A thing is said to bee sanctified two waies either when it is made holy or when it is acknowledged to bee holie Now this latter must bee heere vnderstood for Gods name cannot be made holie which is holinesse it selfe and the first cause of all holinesse but it is sanctified of vs when wee acknowledge it holie and this our sanctification of God either respecteth God himselfe or the gifts of God Our sanctification of God himselfe the thing intended in this ground is done two waies first when in our mind we acknowledge and praise him in his attributes of wisedome mercie louing kindnes power prouidence and such like 1. Pet. 3.15 Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts that is acknowledge him in his wisedome power and other his attributes Look as good subiects speaking of and mentioning their Prince will put off their hats in reuerent opinion of him so we religiously should thinke and speake of these Iob fearing only and but suspecting that his sonnes in their feastings had dishonoured this name of God sanctified them When Hez●k●●h heard the blasphemies of Rabshak●h against God be humbled himself rent his cloathes and put on sackcloath 2. King 19.1 Yea wicked Ahab hauing heard though falsely that Nab●●● had blasphemed God he rent his cloathes and proclaimed a fast which sheweth whatsoeuer his fact was the vse and manner of holy men in his time when Gods name was dishonoured and blasphemed Secondly wee sanctifie God himselfe when wee with reuerence acknowledge his titles as God Lord Iehoua Father Christ Iesus Holy Ghost and not without religious and obedient affection speaking or thinking of them Our sanctification of Gods gifts which are many as the Word preached Prayer Sacraments Meate Drinke and all things seruing for the good of bodie or soule is not by giuing or adding any holines vnto them which in themselues are all holie but when we acknowledge them holie by preparing our selues to a holie vse of them and vse them accordingly with good conscience for euery creature of God hath a double vse first a lawfull vse when God permits a general vse of his creatures thus all may vse meate drinke apparell c. Secondly a holy vse when a creature in his lawfull vse is vsed in a holy manner for this includeth the former though that may be without this For example all the Iewes kept the Passeouer lawfully but onely those celebrated it holily who prepared themselues according to the commandement which holy vse is obtained by the word and prayer 1. Tim. 4. The word directeth vs to vse these gifts of God in obedience and prayer obtaineth grace to vse them according to the worde vnto which holy vse of Gods creatures we are to be mooued by these reasons first we must distinguish our selues from the bruite beasts the swine in the forrest ●●teth vp the maste but looketh not vp to heauen no not to the tree whence it falleth Secondly because we haue lost our title to all the creatures in Adam which onely is in this vse restored Thirdly because they are the gifts of God we must thus acknowledge them to be his and in him learne to vse them Fourthly that vice may auoide the common abuse of them whereby hee is prouoked to displeasure The second point is the weight of this ground which may appeare in the con●●●rie seeing the blasphemer doth what hee can to ouerthrow the Godhead it selfe whence euery such one is called by such a name as signifieth a 〈◊〉 of God or one that thrusteth God thorough and therefore the sanctification of God is a ground of moment Secondly the first petition of the Lords Prayer is sanctified be thy name wherein wee are taught to preferre and pray for the hallowing of Gods name before our own saluation Thirdly the scope of the third Commandemēt is the same which whosoeuer obserueth not reuerseth both the former And lastly the Lord is so iealous of his glorie that he will bee sanctified of all them that come neere him else hee will sanctifie himselfe in their confusion Leuit. 10.3 Thirdly The Aduersaries of this ground are first though by Gods mercie the religion of the Church of England is no aduersary vnto it yet the liues of the most fight against it for although when we mention earthly Princes wee can vse all reuerence yet Gods name is most fearfully abused and tossed in wicked mens mouthes by oathes and cursed speakings besides that many abuse the same to Charmes and Spels in their sorceries and men thinke all is well because herein they vse good words but the truth is the better the words be the greater is the sinne yea it is noted to be a signe of a low and base spirit not to sweare and blaspheme vpon any occasion many souldiers thinke they cannot be couragious enough vnlesse they pierce God rent Christ by detestable oathes such as would cause wicked Ahab himselfe to rend his cloathes at the hearing Secondly the great aduersarie is the Papist and that diuers waies first in that they teach that the very doing of some worke is a sanctification of God as the outward worke of
that they are said to go immediatly before his face Psal. 89.14 and so necessarie among men that without them no societie can be preserued The aduersaries hereof are first the liues of most men who seeke their own things and not to maintaine the liues goods name chastitie of others yea too many preferre their priuate gaine before the common good of men in Church and Common-wealth Secondly the maine aduersarie is the Romane Religion which defendeth the greatest iniustice that can be by establishing a Monarchy among themselues not onely controlling the soueraigne authoritie of Princes in their owne kingdomes but also exempting their subiects from their alleageance at their pleasure Of which vsurped power deba●●e them once and that counterfeit Religion will fall with it because it is onely vnderpropped by it Secondly that Religion ouerthroweth iustice in chastitie for first it giueth power to the Pope to dispense with mariages within degrees of nature it licenseth the brother by that dispensation to marrie his brothers wife and so is a patrone of horrible incest Secondly it defendeth the toleration of Stewes Thirdly by solemne decree it forbiddeth mariages to sundrie orders of men which Paul calleth a doctrine of diuels 1. Timoth 4. Yea they binde certaine men and women from mariage and yet call it a Sacrament Fourthly the last Councell of Trent affirmeth that all mariages not solemnized by a Masse-priest and in the faith of the Romish Church are of none effect Thirdly that Religion teacheth that to steale a small thing is a veniall sinne whereas the thought of stealing deserueth the curse of the law Secondly it defendeth begging yea and placeth holines in it whereas the word teacheth that there should be no begger in Israel Fourthly it teacheth that a sporting lie or a beneficial lie are venial sins flat against the ninth Commandement Lastly against the tenth Commandement it teacheth iniustice namely that hurtfull motions intended against our neighbour if there bee no consent of will are no sinne Whence wee may see what to thinke of that Religion yea Christ himselfe sheweth Mat. 5.19 Whosoeuer breaketh the least of these Commandements and teach men so to doe he is the least in the kingdome of heauen that is he hath no part therein But the Romane Church breaketh them yea and teacheth men to doe so and therefore it is not of God and the peremptorie teachers thereof haue no part without repentance in the kingdome of heauen The tenth ground is 1. Cor. 7.20 Let euery man abide in that calling in which hee was called First the meaning The scope of the words sheweth that among the Corinths some who were sla●es and seruants but cōuerted to the faith their masters still remaining Infidels thought that now they were free from their Masters and might relinquish their seruice and hence tooke occasion to liue as they listed against which conceit of licentiousnesse the Apostle Paul opposeth himselfe and wisheth that this be reformed and that those who being called to the faith vnder vnbeleeuers abide in that same calling wherein they were called In which verse two things are contained First that euery man that would liue religiously must haue a double calling first the generall calling of a Christian secondly some particular vocation and calling wherein to conuerse Secondly that euery man must abide in his particular calling which that a man may doe first he must be contented and well pleased with his calling Secondly hee must walke diligently in the duties thereof for these reasons first the commandement of God Genes 3.19 In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate thy bread which words though they be a threatning yet they include a commaundement bounded with a promise of blessing Psalm 128.2 The man that feareth God shall eate the labours of his own hands and blessed shall he be Exod. 20. Sixe daies shalt thou labour enforced by Gods owne example for in sixe daies the Lord made heauen and earth Quest. May we not vse recreation in the sixe daies Ans. Yea so it be moderate and help to make vs fitter for our callings for labour it selfe being commaunded euery thing also which vpholdeth it is commanded Such commandements are vsuall in the New Testament also Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steale no more but rather let him labour with his hands the thing that good is So 2. Thess. 3.12 men are commanded to eate their owne bread Secondly Examples in the Scripture God enioyned Adam in the state of innocencie this double calling first to serue him secondly to dresse the garden The second Adam Christ himselfe while he led a priuate life till his baptisme which was the space of thirtie yeeres liued in his father Iosephs calling The Angels themselues are ministring spirits for the good of the godly and ascend and descend vpon the sonne of man and liue not out of their calling Thirdly it is the ordinance of God that men should be his instruments for the commō good of the societies wherein they liue euen as euery member in the bodie endeuoureth it selfe not onely for it owne good bu● for the benefit of the whole So should euery member of the bodie politique This ground is of great weight for the maintaining of the three maine societies for neither familie Church nor Common-wealth can stand without distinction of particular callings and labour in the same for which cause the Apostle would not haue him to eate that will not labour 2. Thes. 3.3 The aduersaries hereof are first many amongst vs as those who spend their liues in gaming and they who spend their wealth in bezeling and drinking and they also who being strong to labor spend their time in begging all which are vile courses of life and enemies to all good societies Secondly the Roman religion first in maintaining a Monkish life whereby a man cutteth himselfe off from all societie and liues in prayer and fasting but wee are taught not onely to practise duties of the first table but of the second also and without the speciall calling the generall is nothing Secondly In maintaining loosenes of life and idlenes for God hauing appointed 52. Sabbaths in the yeere wherein men are to lay aside their ordinarie callings and no moe they haue added as may appeare in their callender fiftie two moe which they call holy daies and so spend more than a quarter of a yeere in rest and idlenes whereby they become aduersaries of this ground The eleuenth ground is 1. Tim. 1.19 Keepe faith and good conscience The meaning By faith we must vnderstand the wholesome doctrine and religion deliuered in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles further this faith must not goe alone but must haue his companion which is a good conscience the propertie of which is to excuse and iustifie a man in al callings before God and man and it is knowne by a two-fold testimonie first of the life past secondly of the life present and to come The testimony
of the life past is that a man hath repented him of all his sinnes past and is turned vnto God The testimonie of the life present and to come is first that a man hath a purpose neuer to offend God but endeuours to please him in all things Secondly that when hee hath slipped and sinned against Go● it was not wittingly and willingly but of humane infirmitie Thirdly that a man hath his generall testimony which is required to a good conscience Psal. 119.6 I shall not be confounded when I haue respect to all thy Commandements Iam. 2.5 He that breaketh one Commandement i● guiltie of all that is hee that wittingly and willingly against the knowledge of his conscience breake one of the Commandements of God will if occasion be offered willingly and of knowledge break them all so as a good conscience must testifie on a mans side concerning all sinnes and all obedience Examples whereof we haue in Hez●kiah Esai 38.3 Remember Lord how I haue walked before thee with a perfect heart And in Paul 1. Cor. 4.4 I know nothing by my selfe The weight of the ground appeareth in the wordes following where the Apostle saith that while some put away good conscience they haue made shipwracke concerning the faith where he compareth our conscience to a ship our religion and faith to our treasures laid in it Now as a hole in the ship loseth the treasures by sinking the ship so cracke the conscience and the treasures of religion suffer shipwracke whence it is that Timothie is willed to keepe the mysterie of faith i● pure conscience 1. Tim. 3.9 The aduersarie of this ground is the Romish Religion who ouerthroweth true testimonie of conscience which is euer ioyned with true humiliation and repentance for sinnes past in teaching that many sinnes are in themselues veniall or no sinnes as those lusts against the last Commaundement which killed Paul himselfe and in extenuating mans corruption and extolling nature wherby they say a man may worke his saluation being holpen by the holy ghost whereas indeede no true peace of conscience is to bee found till nature bee wholy debased grace take the whole place Secondly they teach that a man cannot bee certaine of his saluation in this life but may coniecture and hope well which is the very racke and torment of the conscience Thirdly while they teach that a man must merit his saluation by his workes they torture the conscience and leaue it destitute of this testimonie for how can the conscience quiet it selfe when it knowes not how many workes will serue the turne nor when it hath sufficiently satisfied the iustice of God and this is to bee marked that the chiefest of that religion whatsoeuer they hold in their life time yet when they lie on their death-bed they flie from their owne merits to the merit of Christ. Notable is that speech of Stephen Gardiner at his death to conuince it who hauing been a great persecutor and being much perplexed on his death-bed by a friend of his visiting him was put in minde of that iustification which is by the meere mercy of God in Christ to whom hee answered You may tell me and those who are in my case of this doctrine but open not this gap to the people So as they are glad to entertain our doctrine for the true peace of their conscience which in their owne doctrine they can neuer finde Thus haue wee shewed in part that faith is a most pretious treasure beset with many enemies against whom wee must alwaies contend which wee shall yet more clearely see in beholding the vse of this treasure which is two-fold first to r●ueil● from God vnto man all things needfull vnto saluation concerning doctrine or manners wherein it excelleth all man● learning for first all the lawes and learning of men reueile the Morall law only in part and mingle it with superstitions and ceremonies but they reueale no part of the Gospell onely this doctrine of faith reuealeth in the full perfection both the Law and Gospell Secondly the lawes and learning of men know nothing much lesse reueale of m●ns miserie neither the cause nor the remedie thereof but this doctrine of faith knoweth and reueileth both namely the first cause to bee the sinne of our first parents and the proper and perfect remedie to be the death of Christ. Thirdly mens lawes and learning speake at large of temporall happinesse but know nothing of eternall but this doctrine not onely knoweth the true happines of men but teacheth and describeth the readie way thereunto The second vse of this doctrine of faith is that it is a most perfect instrument of the holy Ghost for the working of all graces in the hearts of men I meane not the letters and syllables but the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles taught and beleeued Paul calleth it the power of God to saluation and Christ himselfe saith that his word is spirit and life that is the instrument of the Spirit whereby life eternall is procured for which two notable vses it is a most pretious treasure Whence we learne first to be swift to heare this doctrine taught in the publike Ministerie as Iames counselleth chap. 1.19 because in it God openeth his treasure to dispence the same vnto vs. Secondly it being a pretious treasure wee must hide the same in the coffers of our hearts Psal. 119.11 I haue hid thy word in my heart It must be an ingrafted word in them Iam. 1.21 And this dutie we practise first when wee haue care to know it secondly to remember it thirdly when wee set the affections of our hearts vpon it as men do vpon their treasures Thirdly if it be the treasure of the Church then it bringeth to the possessors of it wealth honour and pleasure as other treasures doe For as the house of Obed-edom was blessed for the Arke so is that heart which holdeth true wisedome within it see Prou. 3.13.14 c. We in this land haue good experience of this truth who by Gods blessing haue aboue fourtie yeeres enioyed wealth peace honour and aboue all Gods protection and whence haue these flowed but from the true faith and religion set downe in the Prophets and Apostles maintained and defended amongst vs which if we would haue continued we must also continue to hold and affect this truth as a treasure vnto the end The second point or head of the Exhortation is that the Saints are the keepers of this treasure of faith to whom it was 〈◊〉 giuen Whence we may learne first that it is an infallible note of the true Church of God to keep maintaine and defend the wholesome doctrine of Religion deliuered by the Prophets and Apostles It was noted to bee the chiefe prerogatiue of the Iewes that to them the Oracles of God were committed Roman 3. Hence 1. Tim. 3.15 the Church is called the ground and piller of truth because in her publike Ministery she maintaineth and preserueth
God nor expect the same hand in healing them which hath smitten them He that beleeueth maketh not haste saith the Prophet which if it be true then this hastines to be disburdened of the hand of God is a token of distrustfulnes of God and want of faith Nay this practise argueth not only want of a true faith but a presence of a false and Satanicall faith for if there bee no faith in the Charme it will not worke Thirdly wee beleeue not the Lord to be the Lord of bodie and soule as one hauing soueraigne Lordship and power to saue and destroy for let any ciuill man be pressed by temptation vnto sin he will bee easily brought to make no bones of very dangerous sinnes what other is the reason hereof but that hee esteemeth not the Lord to be his Lord and accounteth of his commandements but as dreames not serious or giuen in earnest whereas if Gods Lordship were rightly acknowledged sinne would not be so ripe and rife as it is Fourthly wee beleeue not the mercie of God in the pardon of our sinne as we ought for howsoeuer in our peace wee thinke our faith strong enough for any encounter yet let a temptatiō assaile vs then we begin to doubt whether we be the children of God or no and are full of impatiencie Example hereof we haue euen in Iob himself who before his triall thought himselfe safe in his nest but when Gods hand was heauy vpon him then he brake foorth in speeches full of impatiencie as that God was his enemie and did write bitter things against him wherein he bewraied his want of faith and his crooked and cankered incredulitie and the same weakenes may the dearest strongest of Gods childrē one time or other espie in themselues Fiftly wee know not as we should the agonie and passion of Christ he suffered the first death and the paines of the second death for our sinnes they were the speares that pearced his heart but we carrie vp our heads and can take delight in them as though there were no danger in them whereas the remembrance of them should make our hearts to bleede and faith in the heart should cause vs die to sinne seeing those who are Christs are crucified with him but because men wil not depart from their sins which are not killed but liue and are strong in them and no man saith what haue I done it is a plaine euidence that the life of faith is not to be found in the liues of most men Sixthly wee beleeue not that wee did rise with Christ and ascended with him into heauen because in this our long peace our thoughts are set vpon the world and we mind earthly things still whereas if we were risen with Christ we would seeke the things that be aboue Coloss 3.1 Seuenthly we doe not beleeue as we ought the last iudgement because wee are not smitten with feare and reuerence in speaking and meditating of it Paul speaking of it calleth it the terrors of the Lord 2. Cor. 5.11 and this made him so forward in al good duties yea this same consideration of the last iudgemēt made him endeuour to keepe a good conscience before God and all men but men make no conscience of their waies Eightly wee beleeue not aright our owne death and resurrection in the last day for men commonly deferre their repentance and amendement of life till the last day of their daies and then they crie and call on the bed of their sorrowes which argues a counterfeit faith for if a man did beleeue his death it would driue him to the daily amendement of his life By these notes we may easily discerne this secret sinne of vnbeleefe within our selues Secondly when wee haue thus found out this sinne wee must bewaile it an● mourne for our vnbeleefe as being the mother of all our sinnes confesse it before God and craue increase of faith as the man in the Gospell Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeleefe and with the Disciples Lord increase our faith Thirdly we must set before our eyes and acquaint our selues with the promises of the pardon of sinne and life euerlasting by Christ as also all other dependant promises whereof some concerne our prosperous successe in our waies and Gods protection in our labours and callings and others concerne afflictions promising happie issue and deliuerance therefrom with strength in temptation to the which all promises may be referred which we must alwaies haue in our eye that our faith may ground it selfe vpon them Fourthly we must truly relie and rest our selues in these promises settle and content our hearts in them that looke as the earth hangeth without proppe or pillar in the middest of the world onely by the word of God so must our hearts be staied in the same word and promise of God yea if wee should see nothing but destruction before our eies our faith must then be our subsistence and when our vnbeleefe would vnloosen our hold and make vs giue backe let our faith in these promises make resistance as Dauid Psal. 42.5 My soule why art thou so disquieted within me trust still in God especially seeing wee haue promises which assure vs in our troubles either of their mitigation or remouall after all these followeth the subiection of faith when the heart and life are conformed to the obedience of all the Commandements of God And thus we purging our harts of vnbeleefe shall escape such fearefull iudgements as this first example hath put vs in minde of Vers. 6. The Angels also which kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation hee hath reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknes vnto the iudgement of the great day THese words comprehend the second example whereby the first part of the former reason is confirmed namely that whosoeuer giue themselues libertie to sinne shall be destroyed here prooued by this example of the Angels themselues In which consider three points first the persons that sinned The Angels Secondly the sinne or fall of the Angels which kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation Thirdly their punishment he hath reserued in euerlasting chaines In the persons sinning wee haue sundrie considerations as first that it pleaseth the spirit of God to chuse this example of the Angels to prooue his purpose and that most fitly because they are the excellencie of all creatures for so the Scriptures euery where speake of them as when the highest praise that belongeth to inferiour creatures is attributed vnto them in Scripture the speech is drawne from the glorie of Angels Gen. 3 3. Iacob commending the fauourable countenance of Esa● being reconciled vnto him saith he saw his face as the face of an Angell So Manna is called Angels foode that is a most excellent foode that if those excellent creatures should neede foode they could wish no better 1. Cor. 13.1 Though I should speake with the tongue of men and Angels Signifying that if Angels had tongues they
God this being the same will that Adam had in the state of innocencie Obiect Good trees cannot bring foorth euill fruite therefore the Angels being good could not sinne of themselues Answ. A good tree remaining good bringeth foorth good fruite but being changeable may bring forth euill So much of the cause of the fall of Angels The second thing in their fall is the parts of it which here are two first They kept not their first beginning Secondly They left their owne habitation First they fell from their first estate which words are expounded Ioh. 8.44 they stood not in the truth By this truth is meant the image of God in righteousnes and true holines Eph. 4.24 and this image is truly called truth because it neuer deceiueth men as vnrighteousnes doth which maketh a glorious shew of pleasure or profit but indeede it deceiueth men who finde nothing lesse therein Secondly because herein is no hypocrisie it maketh no shew or appearance of other than indeed it is as the manner of falsehood is The sense then is that the Angels voluntarily departed from their originall condition and stood not in that image of God wherein they were created The second part of this one sinne is that they left their habitation which a man might esteeme but a small matter but yet the sinne is not small for God in the beginning appointed most excellent places for his seuerall creatures wherein they were to performe their seruice and homage vnto God as Heauen was the proper place assigned to Angels to man Paradise in his innocencie as after his fall the families of the Patriarches before and in Christs time the Temple since that time the societies and congregations of the faithfull are these places appointed for man to set 〈◊〉 the speciall praises of the Creator in Now the Angels leauing their place incurred two grieuous sinne● first they left the presence of God secondly their office and calling in which they ought for euer to haue been employed in the glorifying of God Ob. But doe not the Diuel● keepe in the ayre Ans. Some of them doe by Gods permission but not as in their proper place or first habitation for that was in the comfortable presence of God in heauen The third point in this sinne is the measure of it They left that is wholly and to●ally their condition they quite forsooke God his image heauen it selfe and that office which therein they were assigned vnto Obiect Here it may bee obiected If the Angels in their innocencie and excellencie f●ll wholy and vtterly from God much more 〈◊〉 sinfull man although beleeuers wholy fall from God and vtterly cut themselues by 〈◊〉 from Christ. Ans. But hereunto I answere that there is not the same reason of the grace of creation as i● of the grace of regeneration for that commeth farre short of this by the former the creature hath a power either to stand or fall to abide with God or depart from him and this power is in it selfe but by this latter grace of regeneration such feare of God is put into the hearts of the regenerate that they shall not depart from God Iere. 32.40 and this power of not falling is in them indeed but not from themselues neither is it strange that there should bee such difference betweene the state of nature and that which is aboue nature Againe as the grace of creation and regeneration is different so there is a difference of the will created and regenerate Created will hath a freedome to will that which is good so hath the will regenerate also Secondly created will hath a power to will to perseuere in that which is good so also hath the will regenerate The created will hath not the will it selfe neither the act of perseuerance wherein it differeth from the will regenerate which hath both these Heere the Schoolemen deceiued themselues and others in that they taught that in the conuersion of a sinner the will hath a freedome to receiue grace or not to receiue it so placing it in the will of man and putting it in his own hand and power to beleeue or not beleeue But the truth is that in the first conuersion of a sinner the will rebelleth and 〈◊〉 For none commeth to the Sonne vnlesse the Father draw him it is not the will it selfe but the conuersion of it that frame●● i● 〈◊〉 willingnes making it of vnwilling willing to ●●tertaine that which i● truly good I● is vntrue that the will of man is now as the will of Angels was before their fall hauing a power to fall or not fall Vse First in th●● the Angels were condemned for forsaking their first beginning we must bewaile this 〈◊〉 sin in our selues for we also had the same first beginning with them the same image of God 〈…〉 vpon 〈◊〉 which wee haue willingly departed 〈…〉 that remaineth for vs to doe which belongeth not 〈◊〉 them to vs● all meanes to obtaine ou● first beginnings againe that this image may be restored vnto vs and renued vpon vs vnto which three things are required first that our spirituall vnderstanding be cleered and enlightened secondly that a good heart and conscience bee gotten and preserued thirdly a subiection in our whole conuersation vnto all the lawes and commandements of God Secondly though we haue the same beginning by creation which is lost by our fall yet wee haue another beginning by a new birth and regeneration which they want we haue been borne baptized and brought vp many yeeres in the true faith and profession of Christ now our dutie is to bee more wise than before to be warie lest wee fall from this beginning as wee haue done from the former but cleaue to our faith and stand to our vow made in our Baptisme for otherwise our estate becommeth as remedilesse as the condition of the Angels themselues who are shut vp in the chaines of condemnation for euer Thirdly we see how farre the Scriptures may bee said to bee sufficient to cleere all doubtes and determine all controuersies seeing here it onely propoundeth a generall sinne of Angels and nameth no particular as Peter also saith they sinned and Iohn that they stood not in the truth Thus contenting it selfe with generall tearmes without particularizing the proper sinne deseruing this iudgement and determineth not that great question controuerted among Diuines of whome some say it was a 〈◊〉 in thought other● that it was actuall others that it was enuie some Pride c. which maketh the Papists saye that the Scriptures are not sufficient to determine all hard questions But we must not imagine the Scriptures to be such a iudge 〈◊〉 decideth all doubts which the curiositie of mans braine may cast within it selfe whereof there are 〈◊〉 among the ancient Schoolemen such as this i● by scripture indeterminable nay of purpose the holy Ghost ●u●teth 〈◊〉 all cause of such curiositie by silence in such ●nnecessarie matters that 〈…〉 the rather 〈◊〉 to ●●re
awaken vs and secondly the notes to know when wee are wakened For the former consider first the infinite iustice and wrath of God against the least sin which made the Apostle say It is a fearfull thing to fall into the hands of God Secondly the greatnes of our sinnes and the number which is like the sand vpon the sea shore Thirdly the vncertaintie of the day houre of our death which as it leaueth vs so shall the last iudgement finde vs. Fourthly our vow in Baptisme wherein we promise to forsake the Diuell and all our owne lusts Fifthly Christs passion and his bloodie sweate not for his owne but our sinnes which made him crie My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Sixthly that the night is past and it is n●w day the sunne is vp euen the sunne of Righteousnes is risen vpon vs and therefore we are to be raised out of our sleepe and walke as children of the light Rom. 13.12.13 Secondly if a man would know whether he begin to be awakened let him obserue whether his heart haue begun to moue in spirituall actions or no. For that bodie is wakened out of bodily sleepe which can moue it selfe in bodily actions Quest. When doth the heart begin thus to mooue it selfe and how shall I know it Answ. When thou beginnest to turne thy eyes inwardly into thy selfe and canst finde and espie the priuie corruptions which lurke within thee Secondly when thou art inwardly and heartily displeased with thy selfe and grieued for thy sins Thirdly when thou canst humbly and heartily sue to God for pardon and canst hunger and thirst after Christ and his merits aboue all earthly things Fourthly when thou beginnest to endeuour to doe the will of God and please him in all things then assure thy selfe thou art wakened out of thy sleepe of sinne and not before Thirdly if dreaming be the fountain of all sinne we must learne the contrary vertue namely that being once awakened wee striue to watch and be sober 1. Thess. 5.6 For the practise of which dutie these rules are to be marked first wee must daily and diligently obserue our selues our hearts and sinnes and seeing what sinnes wee are most prone vnto there must wee double our care and watchfulnes for otherwise where we are weakest Satan soonest maketh a breach for there he makes his greatest assaults Secondly we must daily looke for an euill day so as wee forecast euery day to endure the worst that it can bring foorth against vs and our profession out of which forecast in vaine shal any man purpose to keepe faith and a good conscience Wee may not crie peace peace for then commonly sudden desolation commeth vpon vs. Thirdly wee must esteeme of euerie day as our last day that so wee may be 〈…〉 did of which wee haue spoken in the seuenth verse and therefore passe this sinne ouer without further handling Onely let this one thing bee here remembred that seeing it is a sinne of Sodome to defile the bodie with the sinnes of the seuenth Commandement our dutie is to reserue within vs that speciall care whereby our bodies may bee preserued in holines and honour 2. Thess. 4.3.4 This is the will of God The bodie must be giuen vp as an holy sacrifice to God else it shall not be acceptable Rom. 12.1 Wouldest thou haue thy bodie rise vp vnto glorie and fellowship with God and Christ at the last day then let thy ●are bee to lay it downe in the grant in honour by preseruing i● a pure member of Christ for without holinesse no man shall euer see God that is haue fellowship with him being a most holy and cha●● spirit yea the contrarie things ought not to be named in the Church of God Eph. 5.5 The second sinne followeth in these words 〈◊〉 despise gouernment and speake 〈…〉 In which words 〈…〉 〈◊〉 refuse and put away yea and so 〈◊〉 as they can put downe all Lordship gouernment ciuill power and dominion Secondly in their practise 〈…〉 First in their iudge●●●● they put downe gouernment by ●eaching for otherwise they could not and maintaining that after men were conuerted to the faith being now become Christians and beleeuers they were no longer to be vnder Magistracie or authoritie but their neckes were to be eased from that yoke and this errour was dangerously sowne by the malitious m●n in the Primitiue Church and called some trouble and labour vpon the Apostles themselues in their 〈◊〉 as appeareth 1. Cor. 7.11 where the Apostle answereth this case which seruants themselues were hold to call in question being conuerted Art thou called a seruant care not for it So Titus 3.1 Put them in remembrance that they be subiect to principalities and powers So as it 〈◊〉 a lesson not well learned in those first ages of the Gospell This was the iudgement and opinion of the false Teachers which euen the word despise implieth presupposeth Now whereas some might say that they must needs will they ●ill they be vnder authority for Rulers and Princes would and did keepe them vnder The Apostle addeth and speake euill c. that is although they cannot shake off gouernment so easily as they would yet they can easily manifest their malice against it in reuiling them that are in authoritie First then we are to speake of their doctrine and then of their practise In the former consider three things first what is this rule or gouernment which they despise secondly vpon what ground refuse they to be vnder authoritie thirdly vpon what ground doth Iude condemne them for this refusall First to know what this authoritie is we must distinguish all gouernment into diuine and humane The Apostle Peter acknowledgeth this distinction 1. Pet. 2.13 Submit your selues to euery humane ordinance Diuine gouernment is the absolute power of God whereby he maketh lawes to binde the conscience and that vnder paine of life and death eternall This is the power of all the Trinitie but the administration of it is giuen to the Sonne This power is not here meant for had they denied this they could not haue carried a face or shew of Christians The other which here is vnderstood is humane or ciuill rule and dominion whereby man is set ouer man which may be thus described Ciuill gouernment is a state of superioritie consisting in the power of commanding and in the power of the sword for the common good of mankinde That it is a state of superioritie appeareth Rom. 13.1 Let euery soule be subiect to the higher power Further I say it consisteth in a double power first of commanding that is of making edict● and lawes of calling and conuenting Secondly of the Sword and that in foure things first in arresting secondly imprisoning thirdly putting to death fourthly making warre in way of protection or otherwise This second power namely of the Sword is added first to put a difference betweene the authoritie of the Magistracie and Ministrie which difference standeth in
of their waies and callings and to leade them into crooked paths as he would haue had Christ to haue leapt frō off the top of the pinacle although he had an ordinarie way to go downe and haue made stones bread but the good Angels on the other side are giuen vs to keep vs in all our waies Psal. 91. and so vnder the protection of the Almightie The second strife namely about societies concerneth either first families secondly Churches or thirdly Common wealths all which the Diuell striueth to ouerturne as the good Angels to preserue and maintaine them First the Diuels endeuour is vtterly to ouerthrow all families of Christian men especially he robbed Iob of all his substance slew his seruants and children but the good Angels guard and defend them Iacob had the Angels of God defending him and his familie from the furie of Esau Gen. 31.1 Psal. 91.10 when the plague and pestilence preuaileth against the vngodly the good Angels keepe it off from comming neere the tabernacles of the righteous Secondly in Churches and congregations the wicked Angels striue to corrupt the word Sacraments and all the Ministerie or to make it fruitlesse euery way to their power hindring the good successe thereof The Diuell offereth himselfe to bee a lying spirit in the mouth of all Ahabs Prophets Zach. 3.1 He standeth at Iehoshuah his right hand to withstand him in his office He seweth tares in the field where the good seede of the word is sowne Mat. 13. Hence are those false doctrines of forbidding meates and marriages called the doctrine of diuels 1. Tim. 4.1 He hindred Paul once or twice from his iourney to the Thessal to confirme them 1. Thess. 2.18 He raiseth persecution against the Church for hee is said to cast some of the Church at Smir●a into prison Reu. 2.10 The good Angels on the contrarie fight against them for the good of the Church the furtherance of the Gospell and preseruation of the true worship of God The Law was giuen by their ministrie Galat. 3. The tidings of saluation and the doctrine of the Gospell was first preached by Angels Luk. 2.9 The Angell brought Philip to instruct the Eunuch Act. 8.26 as also to baptise him vers 38. deliuered Peter out of prison Act. 12.11 Thirdly the wicked Angels seeke to supplant Common-wealths and kingdomes Satan moued Dauid to number the people by which sinne he wasted 70000. of his people The good Angels fight in their defence The Angell told Daniel that hee fought against the Prince of the kingdom of Persia for the Iewes Dan. 10.13 The Angell smote of Zenacheribs armie in one night an hundred fourescore and fiue thousand who were enemies to the Church 2. King 19. Ob. How can the Diuell thus furiously fight against persons and societies seeing he was neuer seene neither can this fight be perceiued of vs Ans. As he is a spirit so his fight is spirituall not easily discerned by the eye of flesh for we fight not against flesh and blood but against principalities and spirituall wickednesses Againe he fighteth not onely in his owne person 〈◊〉 by his instruments and complices whom hee daily raiseth vp against the persons of men and all humane societies and this fight we may in part perceiue Vse First note hence the dignitie of euery beleeuer who haue the Angels yea and as here the Archangels to put themselues in garrison for their defence for from Christ it is Secondly we are with all thankfulnes to acknowledge Gods prouidence and protectiō especially in this land whose peace and prosperitie hath bin so long established vnto our persons and societies our families Church and Common-wealth wheras if Satā had might to his malice no● one of these should stand a moment Thirdly in all dangers our comfort must hence bee raised that though Satans crueltie bee neuer so great yet we haue the guard and defence of the good Angels to keep vs in al our waies and these are too many and too strong for him and all the power hee can raise against vs. Thus was Elis●●●s seruant comforted There be more with vs than against vs the good Angels are more powerfull for our good than the wicked are to harme and hurt vs. Fourthly ●●nce learne to make conscience of euery sinne in thought word and deed for admitting and commi●ing any sin wee trecherously turne against those that fight for our defence and do what we can to grieue and driue them away from vs and so put our selues in the power of Satan to bee led at his pleasure into sinne as also into the dangers of it The second point in this cause of contention is the occasion of it namely it was about Moses his bodie Michael would not suffer the Diuell to reueile where Moses bodie was laid so to sow the seedes of Idolatrie whereby Gods true worship might be ouerturned for hee cared not for the bodie of Moses but to bring in Idolatrie by meanes of it Hence note that the wicked Angels fight not so much against the bodies of m● as against their soules nor contend so much to ouerthrow them in their outward es●ate or to depriue them of their goods 〈◊〉 drink c. as in their inward to ●●est from them their spirituall things namely Gods true worship and the things and meanes which 〈◊〉 to the maintaining and 〈…〉 We haue to fight 〈…〉 in high places Ephes. 6. ●2 But 〈◊〉 may as well 〈…〉 in spirituall things for therein bend they their principall forces The 〈◊〉 of the diuell is to blinde the mindes of Infidels that the light of the glorious Gospell of Christ should not shine vnto them 2. Cor. 4.4 This same Serpent that be guiled Eue thorough his subtiltie seeketh how to corrupt mens minde● from that simplicitie which is in Christ 2. Cor. 11.3 Vse First we must keepe that which is committed vnto vs. 1. Tim. 6.20 The treasure which God hath put into our hands is his true worship sound doctrine right vse of Sacraments al which seeing Satan most desireth to breake off or corrupt wee ought accordingly to striue how wee may preserue them to our selues and haue them continued in their puritie to our posteritie Secondly in that Satan seeketh to depriue the soule of spiritual things we must 〈◊〉 our graces and become more vigilant in maintaining and adding also vnto our knowledge faith loue hope and other our graces seeing Satan will si●t v● to make vs ●●chaffe we must watch and pray that our faith faile not Thirdly marke who is the author of Idolatrie namely the diuell himselfe and of that especiall part of it which then he could not effect but hath now obtained in that Idolatrous Church of Rome namely in worshipping of Images stocks and stones relikes of Saints and of the woodden Crosse yea armes legges hands feet and fingers of Martyrs whence is al this but from the diuell himselfe who for the same purpose would haue reueiled where Moses bodie was buried
by God Yea so farre haue they gone on in this delusion that they are become spectacles of follie to the whole world for if Iohn Baptist had had so many heads as the Papists brag of he had been a monster of men besides though the Crosse wheron Christ was crucified was no greater than as ordinarie man might beare yet so many seuerall peeces thereof they pretend themselues to haue in seuerall places as would load a shippe Ob. They say they had all those ●●likes by reuelation 〈…〉 Ans. These 〈…〉 are but 〈…〉 illusion● to maintaine Idolatrie besides that 〈◊〉 the word being 〈…〉 perfect 〈◊〉 in all matters to bee beleeued or done vnwritten reuelations are no proofes of doctrine but are lu●●ly to be suspected The third thing in the verse is the manner of his speech in which obserue three things first what speech the Archangell would not vse He would not speake euill Secondly what speech he vsed The Lord rebuke th●● Thirdly the reason or cause of both because he durst not speake euill First of this cause as being first in nature which is s●●d to bee feare Now to know what kinde of feare it was consider that the 〈◊〉 is a three-fold feare first from entire nature secondly from the corruption of nature thirdly from grace The first is a naturall propertie whereby the creature seek● to preserue it selfe and to shunne danger which feare is not 〈◊〉 in it selfe for it was in Christ when he said his soule was heauie euen vnto the death and if 〈…〉 possible let this cup passe from me but this is not here meant The second feare proceeding from corruption of nature in men and Angels is that seruile feare when the creature feareth nothing but due and deserued punishment the conscience being guiltie vnto it selfe and accusing for sinne and the heart destitute of faith and loue of God which if it were present would cast out this slauish feare which is no other than the feare euen of the Diuels themselues who beleeue and tremble Iam. 2.19 but neither was this the feare of the Angell The third feare is from grace and it is a gift of the spirit of God who therefore is called the spirit of feare working in men and Angels a care to please and a feare of displeasing God in all things this is the feare here meant which was in the Angell In which consider three things further first the beginning of it which is faith euen in the Angels themselues whereby they beleeue the power iustice soueraigntie and Lordship of God ouer them and that they must be subiect and obedient thereunto but in man it is a faith apprehending the mercie and fauour of God reconciled by Christ this feare in Angels and men therefore is the fruite of their faith Secon●●y the propertie of 〈…〉 is to make the subiect of it to feare the offence of God 〈…〉 euill of the world to 〈…〉 properly 〈◊〉 of all because by it God is displeased and in the next 〈…〉 of iudgement consequently but 〈…〉 the first place Psal. 119.12 〈…〉 trembleth for feare of thee and I 〈…〉 stand of thy iudgements This was the religious feare of Dauid first a fearing of Gods offence and then a standing in awe of his iudgements thirdly the vse of it which is to make man and Angel make conscience of sin Exod. 〈…〉 the Midwiues spare the Hebrew 〈◊〉 it will not suffer the Angell hereto reuile the Diuell The feare of God saith Salomon causeth to 〈◊〉 euery 〈◊〉 way yea it frameth to obedience and i● 〈◊〉 because it keepeth the heart from defiling it selfe Our dutie hence is to pray that the Lord would put into our heart● this religious feare which they containe vs in awe of his Maiestie and so keepe vs from offences wherein wee may resemble this Angell as also to be a welspring of life vnto vs not onely 〈◊〉 escape the snares of death but to quicken and prouoke vs in the w●●es of life euerlasting Secondly wee must auoide the sinne which the Angell was 〈◊〉 of namely the boldnes of sinning especially in these daies wherein then aduenture and rush vpon sinne without feare or shame The second point herein is what speech the Archangell would not vse that is cursed speaking or railing iudgement Which to know what it is obserue the differences of iudgement which is two-fold either publique or priuate Publique iudgement i● when a man is called by God to iudge the creature and this is two-fold first of the Magistrate secondly of the Minister The Magistrate is called by God to seeke out the misdemeanours of men and according to the offence is to pronounce a righteous sentence 〈◊〉 to the taking away if the cause 〈◊〉 of the temporall life it selfe The Minister is also in the name of God to pronounce the curse of the law vpon vnrepentant sinners and the promise of the Gospell vnto the penit●nt Secondly priuate iudgement is when the creature passeth iudgement against ●●other without calling from God but vpon priuate grudge anger stomacke and reuenge this is here called railing iudgement and it is practised three waies first in speaking falsehoods and vntruths against others Secondly in speaking truths but with intent of slandering and detracting from the good name of others Thirdly in misconstruing mens sayings and doings to the worst part when they may be taken in the better this railing speech the Angell durst not vse Hence we learne to make conscience of this sinne of slandering reproching and reuiling others from which the Archangell abstained dealing euen with the Diuell himselfe but many of vs who can vtter the prouerbe That it is a shame to belie the Diuell are contented yea and readie to belie and detract from the children of God our brethren by this railing iudgement Some will say what may we neuer vse this kind of iudgement Ans. Neuer no not against the Diuell but if wee would take vp iudgement against any creature let it bee against our owne selues for our sinnes here we may passe sentence freely and so escape the iudgement of God as for others wee are to iudge by the iudgement of loue which hopeth speaketh thinketh and suspecteth the best and couereth the worst euen a multitude of sinnes The third point is the speech which the Archangell vsed in these words The Lord rebuke thee Which words are a forme of prayer in which he commendeth and remitteth reuenge vnto God desiring that the Lord to whom iudgement belongeth would restraine correct and repay the Diuell for his malice Here it may bee asked what shall we doe when wee are wronged Ans. Learne of the Angell not to requite and repay euill for euill neither in action speech or affection but leaue all reuenge vnto the Lord. Zachariah being stoned to death vniustly desired no reuenge but said The Lord see and require it Christ himselfe being accused before Pilate answered nothing and when he died he prayed for those who crucified him
Matth. 17. Againe when a man will needs reuenge himselfe of a wrong done against him hee takes vpon him the person of the accuser witnesse Iudge and executioner which is against all iustice and equitie besides that the Lord challengeth this as his own prerogatiue Vengeance is mine and I will repay Ob. But did not Elias pray for fire from heauen in way of reuenge whereby he destroyed his enemies Ans. He did but by instinct from God which is as much as a commandement Ob. But Christ when he was smitten said If I haue well said why smitest thou me Ans. We must put a difference betweene lawfull defence of our selues in our good cause and the offence of our aduersaries Farre was Christ herein from reuenge and so must we Ob. But this is hard and impossible vnto flesh and blood Ans. Yea but we professe our selues to bee children of our Father in heauen and therefore we are to haue more than flesh and blood in vs euen that grace of God which carrieth beleeuers further in Christs schoole than flesh and blood can leade them Vse Schollers and learned men that are to defend Gods cause and the truth of religion yea euen against very heretikes must abstaine from reuiling speeches if wee be reuiled by the pe● of the aduersarie we must commit the iniurie to God Secondly people that goe to law with others for most part herein offend that they doe it in way of reuenge and to wrecke their malice vpon their aduersarie whereas the right vse of sui●e in law is only to defend a mans right all reuenge laid aside Thirdly hence men of valour are taught not to take a challenge into the field it is an honour not to accept of it seeing reuenge is to bee left vnto God let the wrong bee neuer so great Fourthly when men be at oddes and difference it is not lawfull to chide braule contend crie and lift vp the voyce in threatnings seeing all these are degrees and kindes of reuenge which wee must leaue vnto God Qu. What must a man doe that is to incounter with the Diuel either by temptation possession or otherwise Ans. Hee must follow the practise of the Archangel euen flie to God by prayer and intreate him to rebuke him The like practise must be taken vp by those who are to deale with heretikes who seeke the ouerthrow of religion The Lord must be intreated to restraine the malice of the Diuell that he may not in himselfe or instruments preuaile to corrupt or represse much lesse suppresse or supplant the truth Vers. 10. But these speake euill of those things which they know not and whatsoeuer things they know naturally as beasts which are without reason in those things they corrupt themselues IN the former part of this verse is laid downe a third argument which amplifieth the sinne of these deceiuers thus framed For a man to giue sentence and condemne that which hee knoweth not is a point of great iniustice and rashnes But these men condemning Magistracie condemne a thing they know not and therefore are iustly accused of rashnes and iniustice The like s●●ne of these seducers hath been too vsuall in all ages In the daies of the Apostles themselues the Gentiles accounted the doctrine of the Gospell but foolishnes the Iewes an offence and yet neither of them knew what it was The same rashnes is at this day to bee descried in the Church of Rome who haue denounced the sentence of excommunication against our Churches and condemne the Protestants for heretikes when the most of them neuer knew our doctrine nor neuer heard what wee could say for our selues yea most iniuriously they mistake vs in sundry maine points of doctrine as when wee teach that workes doe not iustifie a man before God they crie out and say we condemne all good workes The same fault is exceeding rise amongst vs in these daies for let a man make conscience of his waies and endeuour to please God he is presently branded with names of reproch by those whose tongues are nimble to speake euill of things they neuer knew who are to know that a man cannot be too precise in keeping the commaundements of God and that themselues haue made a promise in Baptisme to walke in no other waies and ought to renew the same so often as they come to the Lords table And whatsoeuer things they know naturally In the rest of this verse is set downe the third sinne of these deceiuers which is the sinne of intemperance standing in the immoderate vse of meate and drinke apparell c. Touching this sinne two things are propounded first the proper cause of it that is naturall knowledge in these words Whatsoeuer they know naturally Secondly the sinne it selfe or the propertie of it In those things they corrupt themselues The cause is because they are guided with a naturall knowledge like the bruite beasts which are without reason There be three kindes of knowledge incident vnto the creature first naturall knowledge arising from the instinct of nature common to man and beast and consisting in the senses of sight taste touching c. by the benefit whereof the beast it selfe can discerne what is food fit for it selfe and what is not what is profitable and what is hurtfull and vnprofitable for it vnto which is ioyned a naturall appetite by the benefit of which the creature can chuse or refuse his food and meate in season The second is reasonable knowledge proper to man and is nothing els but the light of vnderstanding whereby he reacheth farre higher and discerneth meate drinke apparell and rest to be Gods good gifts and knoweth the ciuill vse of them with the which is ioyned election of will whereby hee can chuse or refuse the ciuill or vnciuil honest or dishonest vse of them This knowledge is in all men for euen the Gentiles themselues doe by nature the things contained in the law Rom. 2.14 that is ciuilly and outwardly thus many of the Heathen haue excelled in ciuill carriage and practise of iustice temperance and other ciuill vertues The third is spirituall knowledge not proceeding either from naturall instinct or reason it selfe but from the enlightening of the spirit of God and it hath sundrie fruits First it enableth men to know these things in their right causes as that these giftes of meates drinks such like proceed from God not as he is the God of nature only but as by grace in Christ he is our God yea our Father so they become pledges of his speciall mercie seeing they are now restored againe to the beleeuer hauing been formerly lost in Adams fall Secondly this knowledge causeth men to know them in the due measure of their goodnes and excellencie rightly discerning them from spirituall blessings so as the heart shall not be set vpon them in the first place but vpon the other as of farre higher esteeme yea they shall bee counted as dung in regard of these Thirdly it instructeth
God in plentifull and liberall manner vpon such occasions as this but iustifieth not intemperance or excesse in the vse of them 3. Ob. It is an ancient rule that in some olde and lingering diseases it is good to be drunke therefore it is lawfull vpon some occasion to be drunke Ans. This cannot be done in good conscience being an vnlawfull meanes to cure any disease though old and vsed 4. Ob. But some say they can drinke and neuer be drunke they can beare more away than two or three Ans. W●e vnto them that are strong to drinke wine and strong drinke there is a curse of God against them who vse needlesse drinking though they neuer surfet nor be drunke Q● For what ends may we vse the creatures and in what manner Ans. The lawful end of their vse is two-fold first for necessitie to preserue life and health secondly for our lawful and honest delight Psal. 104.14 God giueth bread to strengthen the heart and oyle also to make his countenance glad Christ suffered a woman to powre a boxe of pretious oyntment vpon his head himself was at a feast in Galeley and forbad not the liberal vse of wine Secondly for the manner and measure we must knowe that one man cannot herein be a rule to another one mans stomack and health craueth more another lesse But euery man must obserue this rule of sobrietie that he haue alwaies an eye to spirituall exercises as praier hearing of the word meditation as also to the workes and duties of his speciall calling and so much as fitteth a man vnto these is his measure and when a man by the creatures maketh himselfe heauie and vnfit for these he hath exceeded his measure Vers. 11. W●e vnto them for they haue followed the way of Caine and are cast away by the deceit of Balams wages and perish in the gainsaying of Core IN the former words of the verse W●e vnto them is laid downe the conclusion of the principall argument of the Epistle namely that these seducers shall be destroyed hauing taken vnto themselues libertie of sinning which he hath alreadie prooued by a particular enumeration of the sinnes vnto which they were addicted and further amplifieth that second part of the reason by the reckoning vp of diuers other sinnes both in this verse and in the rest vnto the twentith First of the conclusion W●e vnto them Here first it may bee demaunded why or how the Apostle dare pronounce such a peremptorie sentence against them and that of euerlasting condemnation seeing the Archangell durst not passe iudgement no not against the Diuell himselfe Ans. There be two grounds of this practise first God giueth to all Prophets Apostles and Ministers the power of the keyes whereby they retaine and binde vp some mens sinnes to destruction as also to remit and loose the sins of some others in both which they pronounce iudgement generally Secondly God gaue yet a further power vnto Prophets and Apostles which is denied now to ordinarie Ministers whereby reuealing vnto them his speciall iudgements against particular persons hee made them his instruments to pronounce these his iudgements against men euen in particular Thus Dauid Psal. 109. cursed particular persons Paul curseth Alexander the Coppersmith 2. Tim. 4. and Gal. 5.12 Would to God they were euen cut off that trouble you and by the same spirit of reuelation the Apostle discerned this woe most certainly to befall these seducers Vse Hence the Papists conclude that Prophets and Apostles and cōsequently the Popes may make laws to binde the conscience because they haue power ouer it it being lawfull for them to curse bodie and soule Answ. A creature may bee cursed two waies first by imposing a curse and inflicting it vpon the bodie soule or conscience this is the peculiar curse of God resting in his power alone and is not committed to Prophets Apostles or Ministers for it argueth such a power ouer the soule as may saue or destroy it Secondly by foretelling and pronouncing a curse to come which God will inflict and this is that which belongeth to Prophets Apostles and Ministers but this argueth no power at al ouer the conscience Secondly some hence may conceiue that they haue warrant to curse other creatures man or beast seeing the Apostle vseth it Ans. This practise of the Apostle hauing an extraordinary spirit of reuelation is no rule for any man no not for the Minister ordinarily called Our rule left vs by Christ is to blesse and not curse Mat. 5.44 Rom. 12.14 which must be vnderstood of particular persons for otherwise the Minister hath authoritie to accurse impenitent sinners in generall but not this or that particular person no not in Gods cause for he knowes not what shall be the future estate of this or that man in particular much lesse may priuate men in priuate causes vse cursings or imprecations against others which condemneth their wicked practise who in their anger and impatience breake out into cursing of their childrē seruants friends yea or enemies our contrary duty must be to blesse as we are called vnto blessing Thirdly marke the Apostles disposition they were themselues most meek in dealing with men who called others vnto meeknes their own patient minds were knowne vnto all men in all the matters of men but when Gods glorie was called into question and the saluation of men likely to be hindred they lay aside their meekenes and put on seueritie and roughnes their zeale in Gods matters would not admit such lenitie and patience as towards men in mens matters they were willing to exercise They had an Apostolicall r●d which in such cases they vsed against offenders Moses the meekest man vpon the earth when he saw the Israelites worship the golden Calfe was so incensed with wrath that hee brake the Tables which were in his hands and tooke his sword and together with the Leuites slew three thousand of them the same day Exod. 32.27 Christ himselfe though hee would not breake a brused reede yet dealing with the Scribes and Pharisies who had corrupted the whole lawe laded them with woes and curses Matth. 23. Paul who otherwise was all things to all men yet when Gods glory was impared by Elymas his withstanding of him he strook him blinde and cursed Alexander out of a rightly ordered and holie zeale all which examples teach vs the like religious affection that when Gods honor is in hazard our zeale should be inflamed when mans saluation is likely to be hindred our meeknes must be for the time set aside that the zeale of Gods house may euen consume vs Psalm 69.9 as it did Christ himselfe when he saw his Fathers house dishonoured and of a house of prayer made a denne of theeues vnto whom we are daily to be conformed They haue followed the way of Caine. In these words the Apostle returneth to the former part of the reason whereby he hath alreadie by three forenamed sinnes proued that these seducers are
place is Core mentioned Secondly Dathan and Abiram were in their Tents and so were the men of Core also when the earth opened and swallowed them vers 17. But Corah and the two hundred and fiftie men were at the doore of the Tabernacle with their Censors fire and incense and were deuoured with fire from heauen vers 19. Ob. Num. 26.10 The earth opened her mouth and swallowed them that is Dathan and Abiram with Core Ans. The learned expound that place not of Cores person but his substance retinue Marke here the iust iudgement of God Corah had abused himselfe being a Leuite his office and those sacrifices which he offered by fire and the Lord destroied him by fire The same was the dealing of God with Nadab and Abihu Leuit. 10.2 Looke in what things men sin and dishonour God by those for the most part the Lord reuengeth himselfe vpon them so men glorie in abusing the creatures of God as meats wine and strong drink the Lord in the meane time secretly turneth the same to their owne destruction that those which are his good gifts and ordained for the preseruation of nature being by● men abused through Gods iust iudgement are turned to the choking and ouerturning of nature Secondly hence learne the wise counsell of Salomon Prou. 24.22 Feere God honour the King and meddle not with the seditions or with them that make alterations For although it be lawfull for a subiect being called to shew his minde what he thinketh meete for the Church or Common-wealth yet for a priuate man to attempt vpon his owne head to alter any thing standing by Gods and the Princes law is no better than sedition and is a branch of Corah his sinne Thirdly although Corah Dathan and Abiram are destroyed for this sinne yet Cores children are not destroyed but spared Numb 26.11 God in iustice remembring his mercie his care for the Ministerie was such as could not suffer the Leuites race to bee rooted out but preserued for the vse of the Tabernacle Let Gods care teach vs our dutie in this behalf namely to applie our best endeuours for the maintaining and preseruing the Schooles of learning for the vse and seruice of the Church Commendable hath been the care of many Kings and Princes in this behalf whom wee should imitate in preseruing these seed-plots of the Ministerie for herein they imitate the great King euen God himselfe Vers. 12. These are spots in your feasts of loue when they feast with you without all feare feeding themselues IN these words the Apostle setteth downe the seuenth sin of these seducers to know the meaning whereof the better consider foure things first what is meant by feasts of loue and charitie Ans. In the Primitiue Church it was a custome and manner to haue a feast before the Lords Supper made by the Communicants vnto which some brought hony some bread some wine some milke and euery one according to their abilitie contributing somthing thereunto These were here meant and called Loue-feasts because they were herein to testifie their mutuall loue among themselues as also to the poore who hereby were relieued and to the Ministerie it selfe which was by these feasts partly sustained Secondly what is meant where these seducers are called spots in these feasts or rocks for the word signifieth either and more properly the latter they are rocks because as rocks are perceiued a farre off by the seafaring men euen so the infection of these wicked men spreads it selfe very farre and againe as rockes are dangerous and troublesome to them so are these as rockes and stumbling blockes to the weake hindring them from the profitable progresse in godlines they are also rightly called spots because as a spot defaceth the countenance so their presence is an eye sore a disgrace vnto these Loue-feasts The third thing is the cause why they are thus called that is because in these Loue-feasts they feede themselues for laying aside all care of the poore of the Ministrie for whose sake this contribution was made they pampered and fed themselues riotously wasting the goods of the Church The fourth is the cause of this their riot without feare that is because they haue cast off the feare of God and man In these words therefore the Apostle chargeth these false teachers not only with intemperance in generall but also with a special kind of riot in mispending and wasting the contribution pertaining to the poores maintenance and the sustaining of the Ministerie Vse That which is spoken of these mē may be applied to these last times wherein diuers men riotously abuse the goods specially prouided for the maintenance of the Ministerie and poore as first the Romish Clergie those Locusts that come foorth of the mouth of the beast idle bellies and slow backes the most of which want learning and are vnable to teach the people yet feede themselues without feare so as their eyes are swollen with fatnes wealth they want not hauing craftily conueied vnto themselues the third part of the reuenewes of Europe but with it do nothing but pamper themselues Secondly such Patrones are here included as feede themselues with Church-liuings appointed for the relieuing of the poore and maintenance of the Ministerie in such sort as Gods people cannot bee faithfully and sufficiently taught they can bee content to depart from some ten pounds a yere to some vnable man so as they may of the rest feede themselues without feare or else as some doe serue their lusts in mispending the Churches reuenewes vpon Hawkes Hounds and other improfitable rauenous creatures Thirdly such Students whether Fellowes or Schollers of or in Colledges as mispend their time in idlenes gaming or other improfitable exercises come also within the compasse of the Apostles reprehension as feeders of themselues with that salarie or liuing which was giuē for the maintenance of the Ministerie Here a question may be demaunded namely whether those whom wee call lay men hauing Church lands liuings impropriate vnto them may bee said with these seducers to feede themselues without feare or whether can any man impropriate any Church goods or liuings without sacriledge Ans. The answer hereof is two-fold first though no good member of the Church can in good conscience seeke the harme and preiudice of the same yet the plaine truth is that the Church goods and lands may bee sometimes vpon some occasions alienated the groūd of which answere is this rule namely that the gouernours of the Church are to content themselues with things necessarie For when the people had brought sufficient for the building of the tabernacle Moses biddeth them bring no more seeing saith he there is enough so as when the Church hath too much and excesse as the Romish Church these Churches of Europe gotten by Masses Purgatorie Dirge● Sacrament of Penance c. there may be admitted alienation and impropriation of Church goods and l●nds but so as two conditions must be
the flames and motions of lusts springing from the former fountaine This lust I call first an inordinate motion to distinguish it first from a holy lusting in the regenerate Dauid lusted after and desired the commandements of God yea aboue gold and siluer and there is a lust of the spirit against the flesh as wel as of the flesh against the spirit Secondly from a naturall lusting which is an appetite after meate drinke c. which in it selfe is no sinne Lazarus desired without sinne the crummes vnder Diues his table These lusts then are not to be condemned but only lusts inordinate Secondly I say euery euill motion because lust in the Scripture comprehendeth all thoughts and motions against Gods law so is the Commandement to bee vnderstood Thou shalt not lust Eph. 2.3 Among whom also we had our conuersation in times past in the lusts of the flesh in fulfilling the will of the flesh and of the minde Where the Apostle inlargeth it vnto all motions inclinations passions and perturbations of the heart minde will or affections so farre as they are not directed by the law of God This text must be vnderstood of actuall lust of which there be two degrees for sometime it is sudden and sometimes voluntarie the former is the first motion of the minde conceiued but without consent The latter is the motion conceiued but with consent purpose and deliberation which may be made plaine in this similitude The eye is sometimes cast vpon an obiect on a sudden without any purpose or intention of the minde but sometimes purposely and steadily vpon the same and as in the twinkling of the eye it is often shut without thought or purpose but sometimes againe of purpose and deliberation to preuent some hurt so is it in the minde the heart is a furnace of lust the flames whereof arise sometimes vpon the sudden and sometimes vpon leisure and deliberation both these degrees must here bee vnderstood Concerning which lusts there be three things further here to be considered First the qualitie and nature of these lusts in that they are said to bee vngodly lusts such as their root is such are these branches and therefore are in their nature properly sins yea principall and master sinnes yea and sinning sinnes causing men to goe on in sinne Qu. If they be sinnes what Commandement of the ten condemneth them Ans. Sudden lust before consent of will is condemned in the tenth but voluntarie with consent is condemned in all the nine former If this distinction bee not held we cannot make tenne Commandements For in all the Commandements lust is forbidden necessarie then it is that lust should be thus distinguished and also referred as wee haue said Quest. Some may aske In what Commandement is original sinne condemned Ans. Some say it is forbidden in the whole law which is not vntrue but yet it seemeth to be directly condemned in the first and last Commandements for these two concerne properly the heart of man the first respecting the hart directly so farre as it concerneth God the last so farre as it concerneth man whether himselfe or others Vse This teacheth vs to detest the Popish error which teacheth vs that inordinate lusts be no sinnes if consent of will be not added but that is false for if they bee conceiued in the minde they are the sinnes of the minde condemned in the tenth commandement Ob. But they say there can be no sinne properly produced without consent of will Ans. In ciuill matters the reason is good that none can be accessarie vnto sinne vnlesse consent of will be added but in diuine matters and in the Court of Conscience it is farre otherwise Secondly in the lusts note the propertie of them in these words Which walke after their propertie is to raigne in men and to cause men to giue attendance vpon them yea and to walke after them Where they are not resisted and repressed they make that man a vassall and slaue vnto them Rom. 6. Let not sinne raigne in your mortall bodie to obey the lusts of it Where the Apostle insinuateth so much that they force and compell men to the obedience of thē the whole order and course of which regiment is liuely described Iam. 1.14.15 by fiue degrees first lust tempteth and that two waies first by withdrawing the heart from God secondly by intising and intangling the minde with some delight of sinne Secondly lust conceiueth when it causeth the will to consent and resolue vpon the wickednes thought vpon Thirdly it bringeth foorth when it forceth a man to put in execution the things consented vnto and resolued vpon Fourthly it perfecteth the birth of sinne vrging a man to adde sinne vnto sinne vntill he come to a custome which is a ripenes and perfection in sinning Fiftly it bringeth forth death that is euerlasting vengeance and destruction in all which hee alludeth vnto the beginnings proceedings and end of a man who after he is past his full strength decaieth againe and dieth by these degrees the lusts of the heart rise vnto this raigne and regiment in the heart of euery wicked and naturall man where grace ouercommeth not nature Thirdly obserue the number of these lusts After vngodly lusts Where he speaketh in the plurall number as of many for originall concupiscence is the seede of all sinne in euery man and looke how many sinnes there be in the world so many lusts are there in the hearts of men so as seeing there is no number of the euils in the world euen so are the lusts of the heart innumerable Therefore truly may wee conclude that vngodly men haue their hearts filled with vngodly lusts The second point in the words is that these vngodly men shall walke after their lusts which is then done when men first suffer their hearts to be withdrawne from God by euill lusts and motions secondly giue assent thereunto thirdly practise them fourthly keepe a course and trade in sinning which is the perfection of it Thus a man denieth the true God and excludeth him out of his heart and setteth vp the diuell yea his owne lusts for his God vnto which hee becommeth a slaue so as this is no small sinne Doct. Hence note a difference betweene the regenerate and the reprobate for if the childe of God be enticed and drawne away from God he grieueth for it and giueth not readie consent vnto the temptation Secondly if through frailtie he bee ouercarried to giue consent yet it is not full consent but he doth it against his will and purpose for his purpose is not to sinne Thirdly if he put lusts in execution he lieth not in them he will not walke after them but recouereth himselfe because he is incorporated into Christ he hath the roote of grace which shall not vtterly die in him the seede abideth in him which at last shall sproute vp to repentance and amendement of life and hereby may a man know whether he be the childe of
ripe age in Christ which is not till death Now for the further cleering of this point two questions are to be resolued 1. Quest. Seeing it is a sinne for a man to seuer himselfe from the Church of God where and what Church is that to which a man may for euer ioyne himselfe with a good conscience Ans. That people which heare beleeue and obey the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles are the true people and Church of God vnto which a man may safely ioyne himselfe Diuers notes there be but the infallible notes of the true Church are knowledge faith and obedience vnto that doctrine these were the notes of the Primitiue Church next after Christ Act. 2.42 First they continued in the Apostles doctrine Secondly in fellowship wherein the duties of loue are comprehended Thirdly in breaking of bread that is the administration of Sacraments for the celebration of the Supper is put for both Fourthly in prayer that is inuocation of God with thankesgiuing In that Commission of the Apostles giuen for the gathering together of the Church of God they are enioyned first to teach all Nations that is to make them Disciples namely by the doctrine Propheticall and Apostolicall Secondly to baptise them that is to bring and admit them into the house of God Thirdly to teach them to performe all things which they were commanded In which Commission two of these notes are expressed Ephes. 2.19 The Church is founded vpon the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Ioh. 8.31 If ye abide in my word ye are truly my Disciples Ioh. 10.27 My sheepe heare my voyce and followe mee Psal. 147.19 He sheweth his lawes to Iacob and his statutes to Israel he dealeth not so with euery nation Hence we note that wee may not ioyne our selues with the Iewes or Turkes who renounce the words of the Prophets and Apostles neither yet with the Papists for though in word and speech they holde this word yet in deede and in the sense they corrupt it euen in the foundation The second question But what if there be errors in the Church or things amisse may wee not then separate our selues Ans. Things that may be amisse in the Church must be distinguished for some faults concerne the matter of religion some the manner the former respecteth doctrine principally the latter the manners of men First for things amisse in the manners of men wee may not separate but with Lot haue our righteous hearts vexed and grieued with the wicked conuersation of those among whom wee liue The Scribes and Pharisies sitting in Moses chaire teaching Moses his doctrine must bee heard howsoeuer the corruptions of their manners be such as they may not bee imitated Matth. 23.1 Yet here obserue further that although we may not separate our selues from such corrupt persons in the publike assemblies yet in priuate conuersation wee may abstaine from them 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is called a brother be a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a railer or a drunkard or an extortioner with such a one eat● not that is eate not priuately Secondly if the Church erre in matter of religion then must we consider whether the error be in a more weightie and substantiall point or in matter of lesse importance If it be in smaller points the foundation being kept wee may not separate our selues 1. Cor. 3.15 If any mans worke burne he shall lose but himselfe shall be safe yet as if it were by fire Now if the error of the Church bee in substance of doctrine or in the foundation then we must consider whether it erre of humane frailtie or of obstinacie if of frailtie we may not separate The Church of Galatia was through frailtie quickly turned to another Gospell and erred in the foundation holding iustification by workes yet Paul writeth vnto it as vnto a Church of God So likewise the Church of Corinth erred grieuously and ouerthrew the Article of the Resurrection and yet Paul behaued himselfe accordingly vnto it But if the Church erre in the substance of religion obstinately then with good conscience separation may be made 1. Tim. 4.5 If any man teach otherwise and consent not to the wholesome doctrine from such separate thy selfe An example hereof we haue in Act. 19.9 when Paul had preached in the Synagogue of the Iewes and could not preuaile with them but they began to blaspheme and speake euill of the waies of God then he withdrew himselfe and separated from them 1. Chro. 11.14.16 when Ieroboam had set vp the two Calues to be worshipped many of the best disposed Iewes departed from him and came to Rehoboam and ioyned themselues with Iudah and Ierusalem in the true worship of the God of their Fathers Whence wee see that no man may with good conscience separate himselfe from the Church of England seeing it teacheth beleeueth and obeyeth the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Further consider the manner of the separation of these wicked men there be three sorts of separation First by apostasie when a man falleth wholy from his religion from the Church and from common grace Heb. 6.4 It is impossible that they which were once enlightened if they fall away c. Secondly by heresie when men erre in the substance of doctrine and religion and that of obstinacie Thirdly by Schisme and that is when men hold the same faith and foundation and yet disagree and separate in regard of order and ceremonie These seducers separated themselues by heresies their heresies were these first that men being in Christ might liue as they list and so they were Libertines Secondly that among the people of God there ought to be no ciuil Magistracie and so they became also Anabaptists Here obserue that euen in the Apostles time and daies were many heretikes among whom was Hymeneus and Philetus 2. Tim. 2.17 and many wolues entred euen in their daies which spared not the flocke Which may serue to stablish our mindes against the Papists who obiect that our religion is the foundation of al heresies as at the rising of which many heresies were reuiued in so much as they call all our religion heresie and the professors of it heretikes by which reason they might as strongly prooue that the doctrine of the Apostles themselues was heresie and that the Primitiue Church in the Apostles time was hereticall and no Church for in the first hundred yeeres after Christ the Church swarmed with heresies sowen by Sathans instruments to the choaking of that holy doctrine which was sowne by the Apostles and their successors in the fielde of the Church nay rather we conclude our religion to be Apostolicall because the same heresies which arose vp in the Apostles times against their doctrine now reuiued againe vpon the reuiuing of our religion The second sinne of these seducers in this verse is that they are fleshly or natural men For so it is explained in the last words not hauing the spirit wherin consider
holines is incomprehensible and infinite yea the fountaine of all other holines Created holines is a certaine gift of God which by some proportion resembleth this vncreated holines of God the subiect whereof are Angels man and Gods ordinances especially the written word so as this holines of faith is this deriued holines and not the former Secondly how is the doctrine of religion most holy Ans. First in it selfe being without all fault and error and hauing sundrie excellencies being full of diuine wisedome and truth and the onely instrument whereby Gods infinite wisedome and goodnes is made knowne vnto vs. Secondly in regard of the effect and operation which is to make the creature but especially man holy Ioh. 17.17 Sanctifie them in thy truth thy word is truth It sanctifieth men instrumentally in that it maketh them resemble God in many graces by this Dauid became wiser than his Teachers Psal. 129. and so resembled God in wisedome Iam. 3.17 This wisedome which is frō aboue of which the word is the instrument is pure peaceable easie to be intreated full of mercie and good fruites without iudging and without hypocrisie Thus wee see how it maketh men resemble God in all these yea and in all other vertues Thirdly it is most holy because it sanctifieth all inferiour creatures to the vse of man so as hee may vse them with good conscience 1. Tim. 4.4 Euery creature of God is good sanctified by the word and prayer Where by the way may be noted the superstition of the Romish Church which halloweth Bread Salt Water Palmes c. for the curing of diseases casting out of diuels working wonders which practise of theirs is nothing but the defiling and prophaning of the creatures by superstitious prayer seeming to hallow them yet without any word or warrant either of promise or commandement which is the principall instrument of sanctifying the creatures vnto their lawfull ends and vses Hence learne first that the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles is from God because it is full of wisedome without any follie full of truth voide of all falsehood as also most holy both in it selfe and in operation and effect and in the author as proceeding from him who is the fountaine of all holines it is not of men neither needeth the euidence of men by this propertie only if it had no more it carrieth with it and containeth within it sufficient euidence against the gates of hell that it is from God and holy as himselfe is Secondly the word being most holy it must dwel in our hearts plentifully and our care must be that it may be written in the tables thereof that it may bee an ingrafted word bearing rule ouer our wils and affections yea ouer our whole liues for where it ruleth it sanctifieth the whole man Thirdly the doctrine of true faith sanctifieth vs but as it is receiued beleeued and applied by faith and no otherwise when it taketh place in vs then it sanctifieth vs it is not the rehearsing of the articles of it nor the knowledge of it nor carrying about with vs the words of it that can worke grace but the hiding of it and mingling it with faith in the heart from which we gather that it is a foule error of the Papists to teach that the Sacraments conferre grace by the worke wrought and that as the penne writeth by the hand of the writer and that of it selfe the hand mouing it so the Sacraments of themselues sanctifie being administred by the Minister but this is erroneous for the Word and the Sacraments are both of one nature the Sacraments being none other but the word made visible but the word read or vttered sanctifieth not by the worke done but by being beleeued and applied by faith therefore no more doe the Sacraments by being administred but by apprehending Christ in them grace must be conferred by the spirit of grace and not by the vertue of any action in the Sacraments The last point in this first rule is the meanes whereby beleeuers are to build vp themselues in their most holy faith and that is prayer praying in the holie Ghost Wherein euery member of the Church is put in minde of a principall dutie namely that whensoeuer wee feare or foresee a falling and defection frō the faith by reason either of weakenes within or persecution without thē time it is to repaire vnto God by the prayer of faith crauing at his hands strength and power not onely to bee preserued from reuolt but also to bee confirmed in the faith and doctrine wherein we stand The Apostle hauing exhorted the Ephesians to stand fast and be strong in the Lord and hauing prescribed some meanes tending to that purpose in the 18. verse hee concludeth the principall of the rest to bee prayer praying alwaies with all prayer and supplication in the spirit and that it is so appeareth by two reasons first by prayer faith is exercised yea and increased according to the increase whereof the other graces of zeale hope patiēce and constancie are likewise confirmed and animated Secondly faithfull prayer hath a faithfull promise made vnto it Ask● and ye shall haue seeke and yee shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you these promises we must lay ●old vpon and applie vnto our selues for the stirring vp of continuall prayer and strengthening of grace especiallie in time of temptatiō and in sense of frailtie and then God will be good in hearing and helping as his promise is Now in this meanes obserue the manner of making prayer in these words In the holy Ghost which are added for foure causes first to giue vs to vnderstand that although a man be regenerate yet he cannot pray as he ought vnlesse hee be still mooued helped and stirred by the holy Ghost God giueth sundrie graces in the conuersion of a sinner first a preuenting grace which yet is not at all effectuall vnlesse it be seconded and helped with a supplie of a second grace for that is true euen of the regenerate without me yee can doe nothing Ioh. 15. God giueth first the will and then the deede Phil. 2.13 yea and the continuance of the doing of that which is truly good Hee that hath begun the good worke will performe or finish it chap. 1.6 Here let grace be euery way grace lest it be no grace at all let God who is all in all haue all the glorie of all as for the doctrine of mans merit and humane satisfaction which robbeth God to enrich man it here falleth to the ground The second is because prayer is a singular and especiall worke of the holy Ghost in vs who stirreth vp in vs these grones and sighes which we cannot expresse Rom. 8. and maketh vs crie Abba Father Zach. 12.10 this spirit of grace and compassion is promised to bee powred out vpon the house of Dauid and inhabitants of Ierusalem and from hence a man may examine and finde whether he be the
for mercie Thirdly wee learne hence to waite by our hope in Christ for life euerlasting euen to the death that must be the white which must euer be in our eye at which wee must continually direct our aime We haue many examples of holy men who haue gone before vs in this dutie Iacob when hee was making his will inserteth and as it were interlaceth this speech O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation Gen. 49.18 Moses had his eye euer vpon the recompence of reward Heb. 11.26 Iob would trust in the Lord yea although he should kill him Iob. 13.15 Dauid was much and often in this expectation of the Lords mercie Psal. 40.1 In waiting I haue waited on the Lord that is I haue instantly waited and mine eyes haue failed me whilest I haue waited for my God Psal. 63.3 and Psal. 16.9 My flesh shall rest in hope his hope was that his flesh should rise againe vnto life euerlasting Obiect But how cā we nourish this hope will some man say seeing we are so tossed perplexed with so many miseries and grieuances in this life Ans. Paul meeteth with this obiection Rom. 1.3 We reioyce in tribulation Qu. How can we doe so Ans. When wee subiect our selues vnto God in afflictions he sheddeth abroad his loue in our hearts and this breedeth patience which bringeth foorth experience and experience hope which maketh not ashamed being the helmet of saluation and our anchor which staieth our ship in the troublesome sea of this life Fourthly if wee must by our hope waite on Christ then in all our requests and petitions vnto God we must abide the Lords leisure not limiting him or prescribing the time vnto him of hearing for herein our hope must exercise it selfe Further from the obiect of this waiting which is the mercie of God we may learne diuers points first that there is no such merit of worke as the Papists dreame of for then might we waite for iustice and of due lay claime to life eternall But here we haue another lesson read vs namely that the Saints of God iustified sanctified and so continuing for to such Iude wrote as verse 1. must waite for the mercie of God vnto life eternall Yea let a man keepe all Gods Commandements hee shall merit nothing he doth but his dutie In the second Commandement the Lord saith he shewes mercie on thousands but who are they euen to them that loue me and keepe my Commandements If Adam had stood in innocencie he could not haue merited any better estate than hee was in how much lesse can wee since the fall nay Christ as hee was man alone could not merit nor did not but in regard of the personal vnion But the Papist will here say that life eternal is promised vpon condition and if wee can keepe the Commandements wee may merit I answere if wee keepe the condition of our selues wee may merit indeed but this is impossible for euen our keeping of the condition were of mercie and mercie and merit will neuer meete and stand together Secondly if we waite for mercie in Christ then must wee altogether despaire in regard of our selues of euer attaining life euerlasting for hope sendeth a man out of himselfe and causeth him wholy to relie himselfe vpon Christ. Thirdly if we must waite for the accomplishment of mercie which tendeth to life euerlasting then much more must wee in our dangers or troubles waite for Gods mercie in our deliuerance If wee must waite for the greater wee may for the lesse Hab. 2.3 At last the vision shall speake and not lie though it tarrie waite And Isai. 28.16 He that beleeueth maketh not haste This meeteth with mans corruptiō who in present trouble will haue present help or else he wil fetch it from hell it selfe from Satan and Sorcerers but such neuer learned to waite on Gods mercie for saluation for then could they waite his leisure in lesser matters for health and ease and with more comfort make farre lesse haste Secondly from the second effect or fruite of hope namely that it deceiueth not nor disappointeth him that hopeth note first a difference betweene humane or carnall and religious or Christian hope The former often deceiueth men at least when death commeth all such hopes perish but the second neuer deceiueth a man in time of need no not in death it selfe Secondly hence a man may and must beleeue his owne perseuerance in grace for where this hope is such a man cannot fall wholie from Christ for then his hope should disappoint him neither from his owne saluation because this hope laies hold on the mercie of God vnto eternall life and herein can neuer frustrate his expectation or make him ashamed Thirdly if our hope bring vs to the fulnes of happines and to the accomplishment of mercie hereafter then it bringeth vs to the beginnings of this happines euen in this life for the beginning of life eternall is in this life and standeth in the conuersion of sinners vnto God and in amendement of life and whosoeuer hath true hope hee is thereby stirred vp vnto daily repentance and reformation of life 1. Ioh. 3.3 He that hath this hope purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure Now there is none of vs but wee say wee hope for life eternall and looke to bee saued by the mercie of God in Christ it standeth vs thē in hand to trie the truth of this hope within our selues and manifest the truth of it vnto others and both these by this note namely that we finde it to purge our hearts and liues and that it conforme vs vnto Christ for if we hope to be like him after this life we must labour to resemble him euen in this life by being in some measure pure holy innocent meeke louing c. euen as hee was for otherwise if our liues be not in some reformation of our selues and conformitie to our head sutable to the profession of our hope it is but pretence of hope and will make men in the end ashamed Vers. 22.23 And haue compassion of some in putting difference and others saue with feare pulling them out of the fire and hate euen that garment which is spotted by the flesh THese words containe the two last rules tending to the preseruation of the faith both of them teaching how we may and are to recouer and restore those who are fallen or declining from faith or good conscience For the better vnderstanding whereof consider in the words two things first the way to begin this recouerie which is in the end of vers 22. By putting difference Secondly the manner how they are to be recouered expressed in both the rules the former concerneth Christian meeknes Haue compassion on some the latter concerneth Christian seueritie and other saue with feare Concerning the former the way of this recouery is to put a difference that is by Christian wisedome to distinguish betweene offenders For our direction wherein wee must know that