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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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an interrogation yet it is better to read it affirmatively otherwise they should have ceased to have beene offered Once purged from the guilt and punishment of sinne Should no more be pricked in conscience for their sins their consciences accusing them and drawing them before the tribunall of Gods justice for their sins If a medicine have once throughly cured a man it needs not againe be ministred to the man So if the ceremoniall Law with her sacrifices had healed the people of their sins those sacrifices might have ceased to bee offered but they were offered every yeare therefore they did not purge them from their sinnes The often iteration of those sacrifices shewed their inability to take away sin If the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Crosse have purged us from all sinne then Christ must be no more offered but the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Crosse hath purged us from all sinne which the Papists deny not Therefore Christ is no more to be offered as they say he is in the sacrifice of the Masse The Iesuites affirme that the Apostle here strikes at the legall sacrifices but not at the sacrifice of holy Church I but with one stroake hee woundeth them both The repetition of a sacrifice argues the weakenesse and debility of it for if it have once abolished sinne it needs not bee repeated againe CHRIST by his sacrifice on the Crosse hath taken away the sins of the world therefore Christ is not to be offered up any kinde of way neither bloudily nor unbloudily to expiate sin There is a conscience in every man that keepeth a register of all his sins It is scientia cum alia scientia There is a generall knowledge of the Law written in the hearts of us all and conscience is a particular application of it to our selves As for example the Law of God sayes Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge My conscience sayes to mee if I be guilty of that sinne thou art an Adulterer thou hast had thy Queanes in many corners therefore God will judge thee this is conscience which setteth our sins in order before us For the better unfolding of it we know that there be sundry kindes of consciences 1. There is an erring conscience a blind conscience as was in them that thought they did God good service when they killed the Children of God Such a conscience was in Paul before his conversion for the which hee was grieved afterwards when the eyes of their minde come but once to bee opened then their conscience will accuse them for it 2. There is a sleeping conscience A man knowes the will of God yet his conscience being a sleepe for a time he lyes snorting in the bed of sinne So did David in his sin of numbring the people but his conscience awoke at the length and his heart smote him for it A man may lye sleeping in covetousnesse drunkennesse adultery and God at the length awaken him out of that sleepe which is good for him 3. There is a seared conscience such as was in them 1 Tim. 4.2 when men are past feeling and hardned in their sins Custome becomes another nature They are so accustomed to drinking whoring oppressing and deceiving of their neighbours as that they thinke those to be no sins Their consciences never checke them for them These are in the ready way to Hell 4. There is an accusing conscience which is as a scolding queane in the house of a mans heart and will never suffer him to bee quiet day nor night They are like the raging Sea continually foaming In that case were they that went out of the Temple one by one being convicted of their owne consciences Such a conscience had Iudas when he cryed I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud This may prove a tragedy both in the end and in the beginning too as it did in him and it may end with a comedy in Gods Children It may lead some to hell and for others it may bee the way to heaven Mordeat nunc ut moriatur It is better for us that this Worme gnaw on us here to the vexation of our hearts for a while then gnaw on us eternally hereafter This accusing conscience more or lesse wee shall have in this world at one time or other they that fall into grosse sins and yet never feele a hell in their consciences in this life shall never finde an heaven in the life to come Therefore it was well said of one being demanded which was the way to heaven hell sayes he For if thou goest not by hell thou wilt never get to heaven 3. There is an excusing and cleering conscience When the bookes are cleered betweene GOD and us A debter is cleered when the booke of his Creditour is crossed so our consciences are quiet when our sins are out of Gods booke then we shall have no more conscience of sin This could not be effected by the sacrifices in the time of the Law neither can it bee obtained by any thing that we can doe in the time of the Gospell It is neither our comming to Church nor hearing of Sermons though these bee good things not our prayers fastings almes deeds receiving of Communions noe though wee should give our bodies to be burnt These are excellent duties yet these cannot acquit our consciences of sinne for when wee have done all we are unprofitable servants and we sinne in our best actions The only way to come to a quiet and excusing conscience is the application of Christ's merits to our selves being justified by faith we have peace with God If wee have laid hold on CHRIST by a lively faith wee may take up that song death where is thy sting c. Therefore let us repent and then entreat the Lord to assure our consciences that CHRIST hath dyed for all our sinnes and then wee shall have no more conscience of sins So we shall sing for joy when wee lye on our death beds and shall stand without trembling before God in the life to come VERSE 3. BVt the offerers of them have still conscience of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not onely of their present sins but of their sinnes past too All of them doe lye as a loade still on their consciences whereof the yeerely sacrifice by the High-Priest putteth them in minde Levit. 16.21 As they in the time of the Law had many sacrifices to put them in remembrance of sinne so wee in the time of the Gospell have many remembrancers of sinne Sundry Monitours to admonish us that we be sinners The Raine-bow may be a remembrance of sin to us that the world was once drowned for sinne and that it might be so still but for the goodnesse and mercy of God Baptisme daily ministred in the Church putteth us in minde of sinne for if we were not sinners we needed not to be baptized The Lords Supper puts us in minde of
ashes of that ashes a certaine water was to be made which being sprinckled on them that were uncleane by the touching of a dead body c. it did sanctifie them and made them capable of the Tabernacle being purified by that water they might goe with the rest of the people into the place of Gods worship This Cow was a type of Christ. 1. As shee was Red So was hee dyed red in his owne bloud 2. As she was without spot or scab or any disease So Christ was without the spot of sin 3. As shee was never used to the yoke no more was Christ to the yoke and servitude of sin 4. As she dyed so Christ. Therefore if the water made of her ashes was precious much more the bloud of Christ sprinckled on our consciences In the proofe of this hee doth not insist because it was confessed by the Iewes So I thinke holy water may sanctifie touching the purity of the flesh If a man have dirt on his face when he is about to enter into the Church their holy water may take it away but it cannot helpe for any spirituall thing to scare away Devills or to put away veniall sins VERSE 14. THerefore he proceeds to the Apodosis Where 1. The sacrifice of Christ. 2. The end of it Not equally but much more Then the bloud of a beast The which he illustrateth by diverse circumstances 1. By the Person that offered this bloud he was Sacerdos victima 2. By the Party or power by the which he offered it Some by the eternall Spirit understand the Holy Ghost as by him he was conceived in the Virgins wombe by him lead into the wildernesse to bee tempted Mat. 4.1 So through his assistance he offered up himselfe but by the eternall Spirit is rather meant the eternall deity of our Saviour Christ 1 Pet. 3.18 19. As hee was man consisting of flesh and bloud So he was also God an eternall and incomprehensible spirit From this his infinite and unspeakeable deity the bloud of CHRIST received a power to make satisfaction for our sinnes Whereupon it is called the bloud of God Acts 20.28 The bloud of none that was a meere man could doe it if CHRIST 's bloud had not beene offered up by his eternall spirit it could not have purchased our redemption The bloud of Martyrs was offered up by the assistance of the HOLY GHOST yet it was not meritorious it was not that but the power of the deity that made Christ's bloud meritorious 3. By the thing offered not any brute Creature not a man an Angell but Himselfe 4. By the quality of the thing offered even in respect of his humanity and for that cause his bloud was more forcible 5. To whom to God As a full satisfaction for the sins of the world Then he comes to the efficacy of the bloud of Christ deduced out of the former the bloud of Goats and Bulls did purge the flesh and outward man this the conscience and inward man In some Greeke copies it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our consciences All stand in need of purging We have a double benefit by the bloud of Christ justification and sanctification from dead workes that is sins Now from these dead workes that lay as an heavy loade on our consciences the bloud of Christ purgeth us Sinnes are called dead workes 1. Because they come from dead men 1 Tim. 5. Verse 6. Eph. 2. Verse 1. 2. Because they engender death Rom. 6. ult The bloud of CHRIST purgeth our consciences from all sinnes so as our consciences cannot accuse and condemne us for sinne because it is washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Hebr. 10.2 Rom. 8.1 The second fruit issuing from the former is our sanctification that being thus justified wee may be sanctified in soule and body to serve the living God Luk. 1.74 He is stiled the living God 1. Because he lives of himselfe and that for ever 2. Because hee makes us by his spirit to live a spirituall life in this world 3. Because hee will raise us up from a corporall death at the latter day and cause us to live with him for ever in the world to come 1. Grievous is the sting of Conscience This chest worme gnaweth sore this made Iudas to cry out I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud This made Iosephs brethren to condemne themselves when no man laid any thing to their charge verily wee have sinned in that wee saw the anguish of his soule when hee besought us and wee would not heare This made those Iohn 8. that seemed holy men to the eye of the world to depart out of the Temple one by one being convicted of their owne consciences This was truly said to be mille testes Now how shall wee stoppe the mouth of these thousand witnesses We are all miserable sinners our consciences accuse us of innumerable sinnes but here is our comfort the bloud of Christ sprinkled on our consciences purgeth us from all sinne being justified by faith wee have peace with God Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God 's Elect it is CHRIST that hath dyed yea rather that is risen againe that with his owne bloud hath entred into the holy place and hath made an eternall expiation of our sinnes Let us all entreat the Lord to apply the force of this bloud to our consciences dayly more and more 2. There bee living workes a reverent using of the name of GOD a cheerefull and reverent hearing of his word temperance chastitie sobriety liberality c. these come from us when wee live by faith in the Sonne of GOD there bee also dead workes blasphemie swearing lying covetousnesse pride oppression envie hatred malice and these are to bee abhorred of us all 1. Dead things stincke If wee meete with a dead carkasse by the way wee hold our noses even so sinnes blasphemie prophanations pride envie hatred malice covetousnesse these stincke in the nostrills of God Almighty therefore let them be detested by us 2. Dead men are forgotten I am as a dead man out of minde So let not our mindes run on these dead workes on the profits of the world the pleasures of the flesh let these dead things bee no more remembred 3. That which is dead must be buryed give me a place to bury my dead out of my sight as Abraham said to the sons of Heth Gen. 23.4 Idolatry blasphemy all sins are dead things therefore let them be buryed 4. Dead things are abhorred of us We shun dead things by the way we will not come neere them so let these dead workes be abhorred of us Wee decline those things that bee deadly wee will drinke no poyson because it will kill us we will not goe where the plague is least wee dye All sins are deadly they will bring us to everlasting death therefore beware of them If wee meet with a dead body by the way wee decline it yet the savour that comes from it can but
shall we passe through it Christ himselfe will be our leader in it As hee is both the sacrifice and the Priest so he is the way and the guide the way Hee doth not say an High-Priest but simply a Priest because there is no other sacrificing Priest save CHRIST in the New Testament Not a small one but a great one great in person being God and man great in power for heaven and earth are his great in goodnesse and mercy that will have compassion on our weaknesse and if we happen to faint he will support us by the way For his superiority and preheminence over the house of God that is the Church 1 Tim. 3.15 Heb. 3.6 Moses was over the house of God yet as a servant Hebr. 3.5 Christ as the Lord and King the commander in the house he over a part of Gods house in Iudea Christ over the whole house dispersed over all the earth All Ministers in some sort are over the house of God Who is a faithfull servant that his Lord may make rule over his house that bee over you in the Lord 1 Thes. 5.12 So Moses was over the house Yet a great difference betweene them and Christ. A noble man is over his house and his steward is over his house Christ as the Lord and owner of the house wee as his stewards to give you your meat in due season A singular comfort to all that be of this house that such a one as Christ is over it Some houses have tyrannicall governours which scrape all to themselves and have no care of them in the house Christ is not such a one he hath a loving and fatherly care of all in the house Some householders would provide for their house and cannot they want ability Christ Iesus that is over this house is both able and willing to provide all things necessary for us Therfore let us be of good comfort we shall not want the thing that is good The Church is God's house All England is the Kings dominion White-Hall is his Chappell so all the world is Gods empire but the Church is his house therefore let us behave our selves wisely and religiously in the house of God Will any make the Kings house and Ale-house to quaffe and swill in A brothel-house to commit adultery in and shall we that be in the Church the house of God be drunkards adulterers wicked and lascivious livers As wee bee in Gods house so let us demeane our selves accordingly VERSE 22. HAving such a wise loving and mighty Priest let us come unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 namely to God by him by the invocation of his name asking boldly all things necessary for this life and the life to come as also let us draw neere to him by an holy life and blamelesse conversation They that make an outward profession and deny him in their lives are farre from him the others are neere and walke with God as Enoch Some interpret it Let us draw neere to that heavenly Sanctuary which is opened to us whereunto we draw neere with a true heart But especially this is to be understood of prayer This drawing neere is not so much with the feete of our bodies as with the feete of our soules The way whereunto is chalked out to us and wherein our High-Priest directeth us for it must have relation to all that went before Now we draw neere to heaven by prayer and an holy life A true heart voyd of hypocrisie and dissimulation for God heareth not hypocrites though they make never so goodly a shew and have never so glorious words 2. An assured faith which purifieth our hearts Act. 15.9 there must be no doubting in faith Iac 1.6 Though thou beest as tall a man as Saul yet thou art not the neerer to heaven but if thou sendest many prayers to heaven and hast thy conversation in heaven then thou drawest neere to heaven Being sprinckled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to our hearts from an evill conscience There was a sprinckling water in the time of the Law made of the ashes of the red Cow wherewith the people were sprinckled Num. 19.9 their bodies were sprinckled with that but our soules must be sprinckled with the bloud of Christ. From an accusing conscience that our sins are washed away in the bloud of Christ. We should have no more conscience of sin Heb. 10.2 our consciences should no longer pricke us for sin because being justified by faith we have peace with God and there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus This afterwards breedeth sanctification 1 Pet. 1.2 There be many false-hearted wretches in the world such as Iudas was that kissed Christ and betrayed him at the same time there bee many that pretend love to religion and yet have none in them such were those Ezek. 14.1 Such were the Pharisees whited tombes and painted Sepulchers such were the Sadduces that came with a notable glosse to our Saviour Christ and there is a number of Hypocrites at this day that maske under the Vizard of Religion He that made the heart knowes the heart and will one day discover them to their shame Therefore if we draw neere to God let it be with a true heart least hee say to us as to them this people draweth neere to mee with their lippes but their hearts are farre from me If wee be falsehearted men though we carry never so glorious a shew God cannot abide us but if we be true-hearted men though there be many weakenesses and infirmities in us he will accept us in Christ Iesus Behold a true Israelite said Christ of Nathaneel There bee true Israelites and false false cloathes glasses clockes c. Faith is like the Moone sometimes at the full sometimes in the wane But seeing Christ hath merited our salvation God hath promised for Christ's sake to bestow a kingdome on us therefore let us not doubt of it That is to doubt of the sufficiency of Christ's merit and of the Word of God How shall wee come to this full assurance If our hearts bee sprinkled from an evill conscience by the bloud of Christ. By nature have we all bad consciences accusing us for sinne In many things we sinne all All those sinnes lye as an heavy loade on our consciences and make us to cry out ô my sinnes they will not suffer mee to bee quiet day nor night but being sprinckled in our hearts with the bloud of CHRIST we shall no more be vexed with the sting of an evill conscience because Christ hath dyed for all our sins Happy are they that be thus sprinckled Our hearts being sprinckled from an evill conscience our bodies must be washed with pure water It is not enough to have a good soule to God-wards though that is the chiefe but our bodies also must be washed with the pure water of the HOLY GHOST Our eyes must be washed from unchast lookes our eares from rash receiving of reports one against another our
England is mine and shall any goe about to wring them out of his hands The King of Kings sayes vengeance is mine and wilt thou wrest Gods sword out of his hand Take heede how thou doest it lest thou beest found a fighter against God Say not such a one hath angred mee I will be even with him ô saucy Merchant wilt thou intrude thy selfe into Gods office The second branch of the testimony The greatest part of Interpreters are of opinion that the Apostle alleadgeth this to his purpose indirectly by the way of consequent If God will bee avenged on the enemies of his people much more on the enemies of his Sonne They thinke that to judge his people is to judge the enemies of his people for his peoples sake But this is alleadged directly and to judge is put for to punish The Lord shall judge his owne people even so many of them as revolt from him the living God to dumb and dead idols That is the scope of the whole Chapter as yee may see from Verse 15 to this place and Saint Paul citeth Verse 21. Rom. 10. to prove the rejection of the Iewes Though they be his owne people whom he hath honoured with the Word and Sacraments that have given up their names to him and taken upon them the profession of his holy truth yet if they fall from him he will severely punish them Therefore those men that have beene enlightned with the Spirit of grace that have had CHRIST IESUS revealed to them and yet contumeliously despise that spirit count the bloud of the Testament a prophane thing and tread the Sonne of God under their feete undoubtedly they shall drinke deepely of the cup of Gods vengeance for vengeance is Gods and he will powre it in full measure on them It cannot bee denyed but that God is exceeding mercifull his mercy reacheth to the clouds is higher than the heavens his mercy is over all his workes There is not halfe a Psalme of Iustice but an whole Psalme of his Mercy The foote of that song is this for his mercy endureth for ever yea he is the Father of mercies of a great number of mercies yet for all that hee is just too As mercy is his so vengeance is his he is a Iudge as well as a Father As he is wonderfull kind and beneficiall to his people when they serve him so he will judge his people when they depart from him David said concerning the government of his house and kingdome I will sing of Mercy and Iudgement Wee sing of Mercy but we let Iudgement goe like bad Musitions wee leave out one part of the song wee harpe much on the string of Mercy but we never meddle with the string of Iustice. Though wee sweare be drunken commit adultery steale secretly from our neighbours though we make small reckoning of his word raile on it and the Preachers too yet God is mercifull ready to forgive our sins I but remember likewise that vengeance is his and he will judge even his owne people especially if with an high hand they sinne against him hee will wound the hairie scalpe of them that goe on in their sins The Scripture records examples of Gods vengeance as well as of Gods Mercie He threw the Angels out of heaven when they sinned hee drowned the whole world for sinne he rained fire and brimstone on Sodome he made Iesabel a filthy adulteresse though a Queene to be cast out of a window and eaten up with dogs If we know the truth and make no conscience to live according to the truth if we cause his Gospell to be blasphemed by our wicked lives especially if wee choake the truth revealed to us set our selves against it and maliciously despise the spirit of grace whereby wee were in some measure sanctified then the vengeance of GOD will light heavy on us Therefore let us thinke as well on Gods Iustice as on his Mercy VERSE 31. OVt of this divine testimony the Apostle inferreth a fruitfull conclusion shewing what use we are to make of this doctrine it must cause us to feare God Almighty An horrible thing to fall suddenly when we little thinke of it and deepely too into the wine presse of Gods wrath so much the word doth import Into what into the hands of the living GOD. Why God hath no hands therefore we need not feare falling into them True indeed God hath no part or member of a body as we have for he is a spirit yet for our capacitie it is adscribed to him By the hands of God in this place is meant the wrath power and anger of God Almighty As a master sayes to his servant take heede how you come into my hands againe so it is a fearefull thing to fall into Gods hands What is this God A living God that lives for ever not a dead and dumbe Idoll therefore there is no escaping out of his hands if we fall into them For the better explication of it know that GOD hath two hands The one is Manus protegens into thy hands I commend my spirit It is a comfortable thing to fall into these hands The other is manus puniens and that is double the one as he is Pater castigans so David chose to fall into the hands of God the other as he is Iudex vindicans and so it is a fearefull thing to fall into his hands The wrath of a King sayes Salomon is as the roaring of a Lion what is the wrath of the King of Kings An earthly King may be appeased with rewards and requests but his wrath if he be once angry as a Iudge cannot be appeased Some by violence may snatch thee out of a Kings hand which is stronger than he none can deliver thee out of Gods hands if thou beest his prisoner once looke for no Gaole delivery Thou mayest run out of a Kings kingdome but there is no running from GOD whither shall I flye from thy presence in any corner of the earth hee will finde thee out yea though thou haddest wings to mount up into the heavens he can fetch thee downe An earthly King lives but for a time at the length hee dyes but GOD lives for ever Therefore it is a fearefull thing to fall into his hands Yet men little consider this they imagine it is nothing to fall into Gods hands A servant had rather fall into Gods hands by making a lye then into the hands of his master by speaking a truth A number of desperate persons had rather fall into Gods hands by swearing and forswearing then into the hands of an earthly judge We make no account of Gods hands tush God sees it not or if he regard it he is a kinde God it makes no matter for falling into his hands yet it is a fearefull thing for though he beare long with thee in wonderfull patience and long suffering yet he will make thee beare in the end Therefore let us not wittingly and willingly
a carnall delight these cannot so well looke for Gods protection If thou goest upon Gods calling behold he will support thee in thy going Every word in this calling might be as a dagger to the heart of Abraham Out of thy Country kindred c. yet Abraham did not draw the necke out of the collar he obeyed God This obedience is illustrated by the place from whence he went from his owne Country and by the place to the which he went He went tam animo quàm corpore But at this time when hee was called hee had no inheritance in it 2. As a blind man that cannot tell where he goes God told him he would shew it him but as yet he had not shewed him when GOD called him hee knew neither the name of the place nor the Scituation of it This was a mervailous exercise of his faith 1. A mans native country is sweet and pleasant to all nescio qua natale solum dulcedine cunctos ducit immemores non sinit esse sui Vlysses was very desirous to see the smoake of his country Shall I leave my Country that hath beene as a mother to bring mee into the world and to nourish mee in it A man in conscience by the Law of nature is bound to his owne country 2. Here I am among my kinsfolke and acquaintance there I shall bee among strangers as an Owle among birds to bee wondred at 3. Here I have plenty of all things I know not what I shall finde there A bird in the hand is better then two in the bush 4. This Country I know that I know not God hath not revealed to mee so much as the name of it and shall I goe to it nay soft a while it is good tarrying in mine owne rest 5. Here I may goe up and downe quietly In my travelling I shall meet with many dangers Therefore it is good sleeping in an whole skinne Shall I obey this vision I will not doe it Abraham admits of none of these consultations but obeys God calling him I am sure my God is able to keepe me in what corner of the world soever I am for all the world is his and I am sure hee will keep me for he loves me as the apple of his own eye Therfore come on it what will I will obey Gods calling O admirable faith without faith he could never have done it Let us leave all if God calls us to it It is not simply unlawfull to travell GOD commands no unlawfull thing He commanded Abraham to travell It is not necessary a man should bee like a Snayle alwayes carrying his house on his backe that becomes a woman rather than a man There is a time when a man may leave his owne Country and travell into strange Countries yet great circumspection is to be had in it 1. A man must be called to it wee must doe nothing without a calling Not as if every one should expect such a calling as Abraham had by Gods immediate voice We have our callings but mediate If a man be employed in an Ambassadge to a forrein Prince he hath a calling to leave his Country for a time If a man cannot live in his owne Country and can more conveniently maintaine himselfe and his charge in another he may goe to it so as he make not shipwracke of Religion If a man abound in wealth and be desirous of tongues arts and sciences in another Country he hath a calling to it Et sic in reliquis 2. Wee must take heede that our families in the meane season be not neglected he that careth not for them of his house is worse than an infidell A man under pretext of travelling may not runne away from his Wife and Children 3. Wee must have no sinister respect in it Dinahs gadding abroad lost her her Virginity We must not make travelling a cloake to cover theft murder adultery and other grosse and notorious vices God can finde us out in all places for whither shall we flye from his presence 4. We must not imagine our travelling to be meritorious as pilgrimages were in former times they should merit heaven by going to the holy land by visiting the Sepulcher at Hierusalem c. whereas when wee have gone all the world over wee are unprofitable servants 5. Let us take heed in travelling that wee travell not away faith and good conscience wheresoever we become let us keepe our selves undefiled of the superstitions and corruptions that be in other countries Let us keepe our religion safe and sound that the least cracke be not found in it Wee make a faire travelling if wee travell in the Devils cloakes A great sort of young Gentlemen rashly and unadvisedly by travelling are like the Scribes and Pharises they compassed Sea and land to make a proselyte and when they had made him they made him threefold more the child of the Devill so they by their travelling make themselves threefold more the Children of the Devill greater swearers and blasphemers fornicators and adulterers then they were before They went out Protestants and come home Papists they went out religious and returne Atheists Travelling is a dangerous thing Let us not take it on us unlesse wee bee some way or other called to it as Abraham was He went not alone he carryed his old father his nephew Lot and it is like sundry others whose names particularly are not expressed No doubt for the world he was exceeding well in Chaldea it is very like hee had a convenient house to dwell in sweete Gardens and pleasant Orchards droves of Cattell and flockes of Sheepe great store of pastures and arable grounds about his house faire household stuffe c. Would it not grieve a man to part with all these and to goe he knew not whither yet Abraham leaves all at GODS appointment so must we all doe We must tread in the steps of our father Abraham We in England God be thanked are well seated by report of travellers it is one of the fattest ylands on the earth here wee live quietly under the reigne of a religious King wee have all things fit and convenient about us yet if God should call us out of our owne Country let us be content to forsake all as Abraham did We are tenants at will ad voluntatem domini all that wee have is at Gods disposition and let him dispose of us where it pleaseth him If we leave all at Gods appointment wee are no loosers by it we shall have an hundred fold even in this world and in the world to come life everlasting Abraham was a great gainer by his going out of his Country God made him a great man afterwards he was able with his owne household servants to wage battell with five Kings and conquered them God blessed him with abundance of Gold and Silver Sheep Camels Oxen c. Hesters banishment was an occasion of a kingdome to her and some have lived better in exile then in
offered to them if they would have transgressed Gods Commandement Which is illustrated by the end Some interpret it the better Resurrection not that worser of the reprobate that shall rise againe but to everlasting woe but that better resurrection of the godly to eternall glory Others A better that is a more glorious resurrection as martyrs not that common one of all the faithfull 1 Cor. 15.41 Yet by the opposition this is the meaning of it If they would have denied God and broken his Commandements they might have had a kinde of resurrection from the sentence of death pronounced against them and have lived longer in the world yet they refused that for a far better resurrection in the world to come when they shall rise againe with comfort and enter into GOD's Kingdome a better resurrection than they that were raised up by Elias and Elisha they rose to a temporall life So we by faith shall receive our Fathers and mothers brethren and sisters our sons and daughters alive againe by faith we shall receive our owne bodies againe after the wormes have eaten our flesh with the same eyes in substance that we now have shall we see GOD meet CHRIST IESUS in the ayre and be translated into the kingdome of glory Vnspeakable is the force of faith the LORD strengthen the faith of us all If Eleazar would but have dissembled that he had eaten Swines flesh he might have beene delivered If the three children would have fallen downe and worshiped Nebuchadnezzars golden Image they might have beene delivered if Daniel would have praied to King Darius he might have beene delivered from the Lions Master favour thy selfe said S. Peter to Christ when he went to Ierusalem to be crucified and many Syrens sang this sweet song to the Martyrs O favour your selves doe not wilfully cast away your selves have a care of your selves your wives and children Who would not bee intised with this Musick yet it could not prevaile with them And why That they might receive a better resurrection If for the preservation of this short life which is but a span long they had revolted from Christ and his truth they should have had a miserable resurrection they should have risen with a sting of conscience with a worme continually gnawing on them they choose rather to suffer death that they might rise with a cheerefull and joyfull conscience to eternall life All shall rise againe good and bad Cain shall rise with the same hand wherewith he slew his brother Iesabel with the same body that was eaten up by the Dogs Rabsekeh with the same tongue wherewith he railed on the God of Israel Iudas with the same lips wherewith he trayterously betrayed our Saviour Christ Turne-coats like Ecebolius shall rise but they shall rise with horror of conscience The godly that have stuck to Christ that have fought valiantly under his banner to the very death they shall rise with comfortable consciences meet Christ joyfully in the aire bee translated into the kingdome of glory and remaine with him forever Therefore let us all have an eye to this resurrection VERSE 36. THE lesser belong to the Name or to the body Some did incutere pudorem some dolorem some horrorem Were tryed by mockings as Elisha 2 Reg. 2.23 Ieremiah Cap. 20.7 Psal. 38.13 c. They received the triall of mockings and scourgings Yet it is not like they used wyre whips as some now in other parts doe By bonds and imprisonments As Micajah and Ieremiah The drunkards made songs of David Ieremiah Iob. Our Saviour was mocked on the crosse The Scribes the Pharisees the Elders and all the common people mocked him The Martyrs were mocked in the Primitive Church This is a tryall we have daily even in the peace and light of the Gospell There be Atheists Drunkards Adulterers Prophane persons that daily mock the children of God This is an horrible sin 1 Saint Paul cals it persecution Gal. 4.29 and all mockers are persecutors Seest thou a jesting fellow that is alwayes scoffing at good men Thou mayest well say there goes a persecutor 2 The seat of the scornefull is the highest step of sin Psal. 1.1 3 God is a speciall avenger of it he made Beares come out of a Wood and devoure two and forty litle children that mocked Elisha Then let those men looke to themselves that mock the Prophets of GOD the Lord will meet with them one way or other 4 Mocks touch the good name A thiefe is a lesser sinner than a mocker A good name is above gold Prov. 22.1 Therefore let us all take heed of this vice which is frequent among us The Apostle would not have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is when as men presuming on their wit think to turn a thing whither they will he would not have this to be named among us much lesse to bee practised by us Elias scoffed at Baals Priests in an holy zeale being directed to it by the Spirit of God Such Ironies proceed from an extraordinary motion of Gods spirit but let us beware how we scoffe at Gods workes how we make our selves merry with his Word how we mock his Ministers and other his servants It is a vice too rife among us Some had rather lose their friend than their jest nay some had rather lose the friendship of God than their jest It is a great sin to grieve any of Gods children wilt thou grieve him sayes S. Paul for whom Christ died he had rather eat no flesh so long as he lived than he would offend his brother and let not us jest so long as we live if we cannot doe it without the offence of our brethren Mockings are tryals woe to the tryers but blessed are they that with meeknesse and patience endure these tryals And scourgings which must needs be painfull to the body By bonds and prisonments which are uncomfortable to all Though a Bird want nothing in a Cage have bread and water enough yet she had rather an hundred times be abroad Liberty is sweet bondage soure though it bee accompanied with some delights and pleasures But I warrant you their imprisonment was hard enough they were fed with the bread of affliction and the water of affliction as Micaiah was and some as the Story saith in Queene Maries dayes were faine to drinke their owne water instead of drinke they had a miserable imprisonment which they notwithstanding endured cheerefully for the Lord's sake VERSE 37. THey were stoned as Zecharias the son of Iehojadah 2 Chro. 24.21 S. Stephen and S. Paul were stoned They were hewne asunder as Ierome reporteth by the common consent of the Iewes Isaiah was Origen sayes he was sawne in peeces with a woodden saw at the commandement of Manasseh because he affirmed he saw the Lord of Hosts Tempted This is left out altogether by Chrysostome and Theophylact Some read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were burnt as some were under Antiochus That might be entertained with some applause
The Hebrewes have no fit name for it in all the old Testament the word conscience is not to be found Yet the old translation hath foisted it into the Text Gen. 43.22 Non est in nostra conscientia quis posuerit eam in marsupijs nostris as also Prov. 12.18 It is in the booke of Wisedome and Ecclesiastic but they were written in Greeke But the Hebr. put leb the heart for it Davids heart smote him that is his conscience Give not thine eare to every word that men speak of thee for thy heart knoweth that thou also hast cursed others that is thy conscience In Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latin conscientia a joynt knowledge or a knowledge with an other either cum alio that is with the high and eternall God for none besides God and a mans owne selfe hath an immediate knowledge of himselfe or rather scientia cum alia scientia there is a knowledge whereby we know that we know and that is conscience but the nature thereof shall better be manifested by a definition I might propound sundry to you Damascen defines it thus it is lex nostri intellectus Origen est correptor paedagogus animae Saint Bernard est inseparabilis gloria vel confusio uniuscujusque The Schoolemen say it is applicatio Scientiae ad factum seu faciendum The best of the new wryters est practicus Syllogismus hominem excusans aut accusans In my poore judgement it may bee thus defined conscience is a function of the understanding whereby wee apply the generall knowledge that is in us to our particular thoughts words and actions 1 It is not a part of the will but of the understanding not of that which wee call theoricall but of that which is termed practicall Therefore it is in worke and action As a dead man is no man but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So a dead conscience is no conscience but nomine tenus A seared conscience that is past feeling and doth nothing Whereupon the Schoolemen contend that it is neither habitus nor potentia but actus His whole worke is to apply the generall knowledge engraven in us by the pen of nature to our particular thoughts words and actions There be generales notitiae or maximes written in our hearts as it is an horrible thing to commit murther a beastly thing to commit adultery a fowle vice to lie and dissemble to have an heart and an heart whereas God hath given thee but one heart This the law written in our hearts teacheth us Now comes conscience and doth her duty Thou hast committed murder thou art an adulterer a lyar a dissembler therefore thou art abhominable in the sight of God The knowledge that is in us gives us the major Conscience infers the minor and the conclusion necessarily followes of it selfe This is conscience in generall whereby it is easie to see what a good conscience is One defines a good conscience thus Quae habet in corde puritatem in ore veritatem in actione rectitudinem and it is not amisse yet it expresseth not the power of a good conscience A good conscience is a comfortable applying of the knowledge that is in us to the joy of our hearts whereupon ariseth boldnesse and confidence so that a man thinkes himselfe as it were in heaven I will give you an example of it in a minister Knowledge gives Saint Paul the major every minister of CHRIST that hath walked faithfully in his calling shall have a crowne of righteousnesse a good conscience in Saint Paul makes the minor and brings in the conclusion I have fought a good fight kept the faith therfore for mee is reserved a crowne of righteousness This is a good conscience which ought in some measure to be in us all That wee may the better be assured that we have a good conscience as Saint Paul had let us examine our consciences in these things First for our entrance into the ministery then for the execution of our ministery being entred First let us examine our conscience about our entrance into this high and magnificent calling wherein two especiall points are to be observed namely the gifts passive and active 1 Let us call our selves to accompt what passive gifts we have received from GOD Almighty A Bishop sayes Nazianz. is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a vaine and empty name he must be well furnished in some measure with gifts fit for the office A Scribe sayes CHRIST that is taught to the Kingdome of Heaven must be as a rich householder that is able 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to tumble out of his treasury 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such are all Ministers of GODS sending Ezra was a perfect scribe in the law of God So Artashastes doth entitle him in the beginning of his letter To Ezra the perfect Scribe of the law of the Gods of heaven Apollos was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and mighty in the Scriptures Saint Paul boasted of himselfe after an heavenly manner I thanke my GOD I speake with tongues more then they all But a number there bee that thanke GOD they speake but with one tongue namely their mother tongue Indeed the man of GOD ought chiefely to bee seene in GODS booke and though he have never so great skill in Logicke Rhetorique Philosophy History c. he must dissimulare eloquij venustatem when he speaks to the people as Saint Ierom. sayes yet for all that he must not bee a rudesby a meere stranger in them Moses that man of GOD was brought up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all no art excepted and this Saint Stephen records to his singular commendation Saint Paul was not to seeke in Aratus Epimenides and others Meletus Bishop of Alexandria whom alluding to his name they called mel Atticae hee was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all acts as Euseb. testifies of him Didymus used rhetorique poetry philosophy Philo Iudaeus was an excellent divine in his age for his learning in these externall arts he was called an other Plato Origen was wonderfull in them in so much as Porphyrie his enemy was compelled to admire him for it The Papists at this day many of them give them their due are very learned men Oh that GOD would turne the edge of learning the right way And shall the Ministers of our Church bee unlearned wilt thou leape into Moses Chaire or rather into Christs Chaire and hast no gifts in any comparable measure to teach the people out of it The King in the Gospell sayd to the man that came to the marriage without the wedding garment Friend how camest thou hither So will hee say to all saucy and insufficient Ministers Friend how came you hither who made you the dressers of my vineyard that have no skill to dresse it who made you dividers of my word that mangle it and cannot cut aright who made you builders of my house that know not how to square a stone or frame a piece
thee at the houre of death When CHRIST had exhorted His Disciples to watching and prayer because the day of Iudgement was uncertaine in the conclusion of His speech He turnes Him to the people and sayes and the things I say to you I say to all watch Even so in the shutting up of this exhortation that which I have sayd unto my brethren in the Ministery I say to you all bee all assured that yee have a good conscience in all things Let the Magistrate be assured that he hath a good conscience that he hath winked at no sinne for favour nor punished any for wrath malice and displeasure but as the Iudgement is Gods so he hath executed it with all good conscience Let the father keepe a good conscience in a religious education of his Children not suffer them to run at randome as Heli did but bring them up in the feare and nurture of the Lord. Let the Master keepe a good conscience in the usage of his servants knowing that hee also hath a Master in heaven Let them that have the oversight of the Clergy committed to them keep a good conscience in that office looking alwayes to the maine point the feeding of the flocke of CHRIST Let them use the Ministers as Christs Ambassadours reverently at least in regard of that heavenly person Christ Iesus whose person they susteyne Let the Proctors Advocates all officers in the court be assured they have a good conscience in all things Let them not pill and pole but bee content with honest gaines for their paines let them not make worke for the inriching of the Court when there neede none Francis Spira an Italian who himselfe once had beene an advocate in such Courts complaineth of it and his Conscience made an out-cry against him for it when hee dyed in desperation Let all Christians in their places bee assured they have a good conscience in all things But the world the love of mony makes all to make shipwracke of a good conscience The Divell offered Christ all the Kingdomes of the world to worship him but if he offer us but a groate or six pence we are ready to worship him Money makes all in Church and Common wealths to smother the checke of conscience to nip them in the head and not to regard them but though we can put conscience to silence in this life hee will open his mouth against us in the life to come When we dye as a father observeth we must leave all books behinde us Saint August workes Saint Basils workes the booke of the Court yea and the Bible the Booke of bookes but the booke of our consciences we must carry with us and that when it is opened shall either accuse us or excuse us at that day therefore let us looke well to this booke heere let us examine it as the Father willeth us let us conferre it with the booke of life let us put out all the blots that bee in it that it may speake for us not against us at the dreadfull day of judgement VERSE 19. HIS suite is in this verse renewed Abundans cautela nonnocet Restored set at liberty being now in bonds at Roome Which shall be for your good Sooner If it be Gods will out of hand not in respect of Gods purpose but in regard of outward impediments Saint Paul at this time was in Prison at Roome as the subscription of the Epistle doth intimate His imprisonment was an hinderance to the Gospell therefore he earnestly requests their prayers for his restitution to his former liberty Saint Peter was in prison and irons betweene foure quaternions of Souldiers earnest prayer was made by the Church for him God sent His Angell and brought him forth Pray earnestly for mee and I trust I shall bee delivered by your prayers Let us pray for the Preachers that the Word of God may run and be glorified in all places VERSE 20. IN the former part of the Chapter he commended to them many excellent duties of brotherly love hospitality constancy in the truth obedience to spirituall Governours now because Saint Paul may plant Apollos water but it must bee GOD that gives the encrease hee prayeth to GOD for them to worke all these graces in them In this prayer 1. The person to whom he prayeth 2 The matter of it verse 21. The person is described by a Title and an effect his Title is this dator amator pacis 2 Cor. 13.11 1 Cor. 14.33 Peace is an union of the hearts of men men will never bee at peace if they be not of one heart and one minde as they were in the Primitive Church Now God alone rules in the hearts of men therefore he onely can make peace There is a double peace the one betweene GOD and us Romans 5.1 Luke 2.14.29 GOD is the giver of that the other is a peace betweene our selves 1 Thes. 5.13 wherewith God is greatly delighted They be both herbes that growe in his Garden He is the God of them both We must be at peace one with an other 1 We have a peaceable Prince Isai. 9.6 therefore let us that be his Subjects and Souldiers bee peaceable 2 There is no one string in all the Scripture harped so much on as this 3 Without this wee cannot see GOD. Hebrewes 12.14 Blessed are the peace makers for they shall bee called the Children of GOD. 4 Rom. 12.18 It is to be embraced with all much more with them that professe the same Gospell with us Owe nothing to any man save love Let us looke to discharge this debt unto all 5 The Divell according to his name is a maker of debate Satan signifies an enemy The enemy came and sowed tares He is that enemy that sowes the tares of dissention in the world The Divell dwels in contention as the Salamander in the fire Contentious persons are like the Divell who sowes the seed of contention betweene man and man they that be of a wrangling disposition that are never well but when they have their hand in contention are like Ishmael whose hand was against every man and every mans against him They are not of God but of the Divell we have a peaceable GOD let us bee like Him My peace I leave with you sayes CHRIST If we be right Christians we will be at peace one with an other 6 Peace is a credit to the Gospell as contention is a discredite Gen. 34.21 So must we be peaceable Pursue peace and follow after it Yet some run away from peace Let them bee sent for to make peace they will not come they will professe so much a fearefull thing We have one Father one Mother one Elder Brother believe in one Saviour hope for one Kingdome therefore let us be at peace let no jarres be among us In the building of the Temple the noise of an hammer or toole was not heard and let there be no knocking with the hammer of contention among Christians which are Gods
able to encounter with the enemie Isaac waxed mighty in a strange country encreased and was exceeding great he had flockes of sheepe heards of cattle and a great houshold even so much as the Philistines had envie at him Iacob with a staffe passed over Iordane but returned with great substance God gave to Salomon that which hee asked not riches and honours so as among Kings there was none like him in all his dayes hee had 1400 charrets and 12000 horsemen hee gave silver in Ierusalem as stones and Ceders as wild figtrees Iob had 7000 sheepe 3000 Camels 500 yoke of Oxen 500 she Asses insomuch as he was the greatest man in all the East-Country Hester of a poore banished maide fatherlesse and motherlesse became a Queene Daniel was made the third man in the Kingdome hee plucked Ioseph out of prison and made him ruler of Egypt hee tooke David from the sheepe-coates and sent the Scepter of Israel into his hand All that the just man takes in hand shall prosper here S. Iohn wisheth that Gajus may prosper so we are if it stand with Gods good liking to wish to all our friends for then they have greatest opportunity to honour God and to doe good to others Indeede prosperity sometimes proves hurtfull Ease slayeth the foolish and the prosperity of fooles destroyeth them It is sayd a thousand shall fall at thy side and ten thousand at thy right hand that is as Saint Bernard interprets it a thousand fall in adversitie which is as the left had but ten thousand in prosperitie which is the right hand and as Galen observed plures occidit gula quam gladius surfetting and drunkennesse hath killed more than the sword In adversitie wee are humble in prosperitie wee are proud in adversitie we pray in prosperitie we play in adversitie we seeke God in prosperitie we forget God All the while that David was in persecution and in wars hee was a chaste man when hee came to take his ease and to walke idly on the roofe of his palace then he was caught in the snare of adultery Solomon was drowned in the Ocean of his prosperity Solus in divitiis fuit solus egregie corruit None swimme in such a Sea of riches and honour as he did and none suncke more egregiously than he did they stand upon slippery places and they slippe ere they be aware therefore wee had neede be suters to God especially to keepe us in prosperitie Yet if it hurt the fault is not in it nor in God that sent it but in our selves that abuse it as if a friend should give a man a brave and excellent sword and he should kill himselfe As for his estate he wisheth that he might prosper so for his body he wisheth that he may be in health which in it selfe is an invaluable jewell Sed carendo magis quam fruendo we know not how to prize it but when we want it 1. When a man is sicke he can doe nothing so well as in his health we cannot pray so well paine draweth us away we cannot reade we cannot goe to Church we cannot follow the workes of our calling so conveniently we cannot visite our friends as the Virgin Mary did Elizabeth 2. Sinne puls sicknesse upon us because all have sinned all are sicke at one time or other in some measure or other Behold hee whom thou lovest is sicke S. Augustine malleus haereticorum the hammer of heretiques was so bruised with the hammer of sicknesse that he could neither walke stand nor sit But God in mercy hath provided remedies for it learned and expert Physitians the vertue of sundrie hearbes and simples to restore us to health againe 3. A sicke man is a prisoner confined to his bed or house a man that hath his health is at liberty to goe where hee will yet in the Lord. 4. What is wealth without health Nec domus aut fundus non aeris acervus auri Aegroto domini deducunt corpore febres though thou hadst the riches of Croesus yet they could not rid thee of an Ague so displeasing is sickenesse so pleasing is health therefore if it bee the will of God let us wish it to our selves and to our friends too This is illustated a pari from the like in his soule thy soule prospereth well that growes up in the graces of the spirit so prosper thou in thy estate and in health of body here is a lively description of a happie man in this life a good outward estate mens sana in corpore sano a sound minde in a sound body The soule is the principall animus cuiusque est quisque the soule is the man the soule is the workman the body the toole wherewith he worketh the soule is a spirit the body a lumpe of flesh the body is from the earth the soule from heaven the body we have by mediate generation of our parents the soule by immediate infusion from God they are the fathers of our bodies but he is the Father of spirits the body is mortall and dyeth the soule immortall and liveth for ever the body when we be dead lyeth by the wals as a thing of no reckoning is put into the grave among wormes the soule is taken up by the Angels and carried into Abrahams bosome yet generally we are all for the body nothing for the soule that shall be well clothed that shall fare daintily lie softly We have no care to clothe our soules with the fine linnen of the Saints which is Christs righteousnesse to feede it with the bread of life that came from heaven to lay it one the soft bed of a sweet and excusing conscience If the body be sicke there is sending for the Physitian the soule may be sicke of the dropsie of covetousnesse of the swelling tumor of pride of the consumption of envie no seeking to the heavenly Physitian for the curing of it The body saith Chrysost. is not wholly to be neglected that thou maist have a good wagon for thy soule a good governor for thy ship a good souldier to fight for thee but thy soule is farre more to be respected Otherwise thou art like a man that sets forth his maide bravely and suffers his wife to goe basely What discretion is it to give all to the body nothing to the soule What pitty is it ancilliam reficere ac dominam interficere To fat the body and to kill the soule This is no charity but iniquity no mercie but cruelty no discretion but confusion above all let us care that our soules may prosper as did Gajus his soule VERSE 3. WE have had the entrance Now to the matter of the Epistle Where 1 there is the substance of it 2. The conclusion of it The substance hath two branches a Commendation an Admonition v. 9. He commends him for two vertues that glistered in him the one is Sincerity v.