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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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be praised of God If it be such a comfort to be praised by a Magistrate before the Countrey what is it to bee praised of Christ before all the world at the greatest and last Assises If praises be good in this world where there is mutuall vaunting and they may bee blemished what is it to have praise in that day that shall last for ever unstained If it be such a comfort to be praised of a Magistrate for some one good deed what shall it be to be praised of Christ for all that ever was good in thoughts words or works Secondly it should teach men to seeke a good report and to doe all things that might have a good report Phil. 4.9 As a man may seeke riches so hee may seeke and desire a good name Prov. 22● But the praise of men is then unlawfull and unlawfully sought First when men doe things onely to be seene of men and have no better respects than applause Mat. 6. 1 Thess. 2.6 Secondly when a man praiseth himselfe with his owne mouth Prov. 27.2 Thirdly when it is challenged of others and men will not stay till God give them a good report Ioh. 8.49,50 Fourthly when men seeke praise onely for the shew of goodnesse and are not good in deed Fifthly when men seeke praise of men but seeke not the praise of God or the praise that comes from God onely which is tried in this that they will not doe duties that God onely cares for or that are disgraced in the world Rom. 2.28 Ioh. 5.44 and 12.42 43. Otherwise it is lawfull to seeke praise and there is an infallible signe to know whether praise be not ill for ●s and that is if praise make us more humble and more carefull of sound holinesse and doe refine us then praise is lawfull and a great blessing when it is like the refining pot it melts us and makes us better Prov. 27.21 Further if praise be so great a blessing then an evill name must needs be a great curse when it is for evill doing and if it be so evill to be dispraised of men what shall it be to be dispraised of God not for one but many sinnes not before a few but before all the world when it shall bee not to mend a ●●n as the Magistrates reproofe may be but to his eternall confusion Thus of the third Doctrine Doct. 4. It may hence be noted that the best men need praise and therefore God provides that they shall be praised even such as doe well need to be commended And this may appeare both by the comfort they take if they be commended Prov. 15.30 and by their earnest desires to cleere themselves if they be dispraised as we see in David Christ himselfe and the Apostles especially the Apostle Paul Use. And therfore the use should be to teach men to acknowledge the good things done by others and to give them praises especially if they bee godly and humble men it may doe them much good and greatly both comfort them and incourage them This made the Apostle Paul so rejoyce in the Philippines Phil. 3. ult It was no flattery It is flattery in some other men if they doe commend others for their owne ends or with selfe-praises or without daring to reprove their faults or to get praise to themselves or for any other corrupt end especially when our praises are to such as are publike instruments of good in Church or Common-wealth And it is a course of singular use to be held in private families if such as doe well might have praise as well as such as doe evill dispraise Use. 2. Secondly it may much condemne the corruption of heart which appeares in many men in this point in sinning against the just praises of others either by speaking evill of them and blemishing their good names which is to steale their riches from them or by withholding due praise which is to withhold the good from the owner thereof It should much affright such as are guilty of this fault that our Saviour Christ measures our love to God by our readinesse to praise for the works of God done by another Ioh. 5.41 42. It is a signe that men love not God when they love not goodnesse in others which sure they doe not if they commend it not Doct. 5. Well doing ought to be esteemed wheresoever it is found in a subject as well as a Prince in a servant as well as a Master in all estates and conditions of men For God doth so as may appeare Ephes. 6.7 8. and grace and goodnesse is alike precious wheresoever it is in the like degree which serves to rebuke that secret corruption in the natures of men that are apt to observe and praise good things in greater persons but withhold the incouragement is due to other men onely because they are poore and because they are worser Iam. 2.1 2 3. You may now by this doctrine try whether they be good themselves For it is a signe of goodnesse to observe and love goodnesse wheresoever he seeth it in a servant as well as in a friend and in a poore Christian as well as a rich Doct. 6. It may bee yet further observed that if men would bee praised they must doe well praise is onely due to well-doing Rom. 2.10 2 Tim. 2. 20 21. 1 Thess. 4.4 Rom. 13.5 And therefore it is a poore praise that men raise to themselves for other things all that same which is raised for any thing but well-doing is externall and vaine and therefore they are greatly deceived that rest in the report that is raised from their wit or beautie or birth or preferment or sumptuous buildings or the like Those may cause a great fame but onely well-doing can cause a good fame Secondly it shewes that hypocrites that have gotten reputation onely because they are thought to be good have but built in the sands For when in time it shall appeare that their owne works doe not praise them they shall finde that the praise of men will not last It is not saying well that works a durable good name but doing well It is but complementing at the best to professe and promise great care of practice and praising and yet be barren and unfruitfull Use. 3. Thirdly this shewes the great corruption of their nature that so unquietly seeke after praise and complaine how much they be neglected and yet their owne consciences know how idle and unprofitable they are and which is worse that they not onely doe not well but manifestly doe evill and sin daily in pride and envie in passion and wilfulnesse or other open transgressions This thirst after respect above others is a signe of a great strength of hypocrisie when they are more desirous to be thought good than indeed to be so and more carefull of the praise of men than of God Fourthly they sinne shamefully that praise the wicked and justifie him that God condemneth but Sal●mon hath set
this formality and outward shew and serving God for fashion how deeply is it seated in mens manners It is likely the most of you that heare this doctrine will say it is good and perhaps some one or two of you will be a little toucht with a kinde of consultation in your selves which way you might doe well but alas alas out and alas Oh that I could get words to gore your very Soules with smarting paine that this Doctrine might bee written in your very flesh for a thousand to one you will goe the most of you away and not redresse your wayes Religion shall not bee honoured by you more than before cursed be that worldly drosse or spirituall security that will thus rob and spoyle your soules and keepe Religion without her true glosse and bea●ty and shining glory I might here also note that submission to the ordinances of men is one part of a Christian mans well doing and a speciall ornament of the sincere profession of religion because it is the discharge of the duty enjoyned us by God and so is a part of the obedience due to God himselfe to keep their ordinances is to obey Gods commandement Secondly because such a conscionable submission to mans Lawes makes the religious works of Christians to be the more unrebukable in the eyes of wicked men and therefore they are to be warned of their rashnesse that say that conformity to mens lawes is evill doing when God sayes it is well doing they say it is a sinne God sayes it is a good worke It is neerer to the truth and safer to say that not conforming is a sin because it is a breach of Gods expresse commandement in the former verse and therefore also godly Christians whether Ministers or private persons that obey the lawes of men simply out of conscience of Gods Commandements and not for corrupt ends may comfort themselves that the good God doth like of what they doe because it is his will that so they should doe and he sayes they doe well though some good men are contrary-minded out of weaknesse censure them as evill doers Then it is implyed here that the conscionable conformity of godly Christians shall be rewarded in Heaven for all well-doing shall be rewarded in Heaven but submission to humane Ordinances is well-doing and therefore shall be rewarded in Heaven Paul is crowned in Heaven for his holding to the Jewish ceremonies to win the Jewes and further the liberty of his Ministery Thus of the matter required The end followes That you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men The word here rendred To put to silence is diversly accepted or the force of it is shewed by diverse tearmes in severall Scriptures Sometimes it is translated to still a thing that is tumultuous and raging and so the sea was silenced or made still Mark 4.39 Sometimes it is translated To make speechlesse or dumb so Mat. 22.12 Sometimes To confute so as they have not a word to answer so Mat. 22.34 Sometimes To muzzle or tye up the mouth so 1 Cor. 9.9 1 Tim. 5.18 and so it signifies properly and so well-doing is intended here as a meanes to muzzle the mouths of wicked men The word here rendred Foolish men signifies properly men without a minde or men that have not use of their understanding and so are either naturall fooles or mad men The Doctrines that may be gathered from hence are many For it may be evidently collected from hence Doct. 1. That wicked men doe usually in all places speake evill of godly men they are prone to it they doe it usually The holy Ghost here supposeth it to be done as the usuall course in all ages and conditions of the Christian Church and no marvell For it hath been in all ages past the condition of godly men to be evill spoken of and slandered God children were as signes and wonders Esay 8. And whosoever refraineth himselfe from evill maketh himselfe a prey Esay 59.15 The throats of wicked men are the ordinary burying places for the names of the Righteous Rom. 3. And this is the more to be heeded if we mark in Scriptures either persons reproaching or the persons reproached or the matter of the reproach or the manner For the persons reproaching we shall read sometimes that men are reproached by such as are of the same Religion with them Psal. 50.16 Esay 8.18 Cant. 1.6 Yea sometimes that godly men are reproached by such as are of their owne house and kindred as Isaak was by Ismael and Ioseph by his brethren the parents are against the children and the children are against the parents and a mans enemies are those of his owne house And for the persons reproached we shall finde them to be the most eminent and godly persons as Iob cap. 30.1 Moses Heb. 11.26 David Psal. 35.15 Ieremiah c. 18.18 the Apostles 1 Cor. 4.9 10 13. yea the Lord Jesus Christ himselfe Heb. 12.3 And for the matter objected wee shall finde the godly men have beene reproached with the most vile slanders that almost might be I may spare other testimonies now seeing Christ himselfe was charged with gluttony blasphemie sedition deceit diabolicall working and to have a divell in him and he supposeth it to be the case of Christians to be spoken against with all manner of evill-saying Mat. 5.12 And for the manner two things may be noted First that many times wicked men set themselves to study and invent without all colour of occasion mischievous things to reproach godly men withall thus they devised devices against Ieremiah Secondly that when they have evill reports afoot they pursue them and divulge them with all possible forwardnesse and malice thus the abjects tare Davids name and ceased not Psal. 35.15 and ill-minded men cease not till that good men may be every where evill spoken of Acts 28. The reason of this strange kinde of ill humour in wicked men is twofold First there is their naturall hatred of goodnesse it is not because of the sin of godly men but simply because they follow goodnesse There is a naturall antipathy betweene a good life and a bad man 1 Iob. 3.13.14.1 Pet. 4.5 Psal. 38.20 Secondly the other is because it is one of the rules of the divell To be an accuser of the brethren and good livers and the works of their father the divell they will doe Iob. 8.44 The use is diverse for Uses First it should informe men not to thinke it strange when they see such things come to passe for no other triall in this point of reproach befals godly men but what hath accompanied the condition of all godly men almost in all ages Secondly godly men should be the more stirred up to prepare apologies and in all places where they come to contend for the truth and strive together to preserve the reputation of one another Prov. 12.18 Thirdly godly men should arme themselves and prepare for reproaches and accordingly stirre up their
restlesnesse by the grievous distempers of the body or failing of their senses being for the time as Iob saith brought under the king of terrours Iob 18.14 What a wofull case Belshazzar was in you may reade Dan. 5.9 These terrours are the fansies the Gentiles so much dreamed of The fourth is desperation An evill Conscience in sinne many times brings them to hellish despaire of all mercy and pardon thus Cain rageth and blasphemeth like a frantick man And these effects of an evill Conscience are so mu●h the more great 1. Because the Conscience can lash a man without noise it can secretly inflict torments when no eyes shall pity him 2. Because there is no escape from Conscience a man can neither drive it away nor run from it it cleaves to the offender inseparably From a tyrant or ill master some men run away but from an ill Conscience there is no flying 3. Because Conscience it selfe is a thousand witnesses to prove the fault though never so secret and the offender is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemned of himselfe and goes up and downe with a heavie sentence upon him in his bosome though all the world should account him innocent 4. Because an evill Conscience is such a damnable disease and the griefe raised by Conscience is such and so lasting that the grieved dies before the griefe can be removed yea so violent is the confusion which despaire bringeth into the thoughts that out of the grievous mistaking and impatience many times the offender makes away himselfe as Saul Achitophel and Iudas did and many in our times doe 5. Because death it selfe doth not abate the torments of an evill Conscience but the living worme gnawes them even in hell for ever and with so much strength and power there that one said wittily Hell were not hell if it were not for the gnawing of this never-dying and never-ceasing worme 6. Because unto the making up of the compleat misery of the impenitent sinner the sentence of Conscience and the testimony of it shall be heard and admitted at the last day before the Tribunall of Christ. For though an evill conscience shall never disgrace for some effects as for that of working despaire of mercy yet for the maine body of the proceedings of Conscience it shall be not only allowed but justified by the voice of Christ to the eternall shame and confusion of the offender And though it be true that the worst of the effects before mentioned arise from a stirring Conscience yet is not the man safe that hath a still Conscience if it bee evill For first hee is in continuall danger of the awaking of that conscience of his that now is asleep What ease can that mans heart be at if he had all pleasures round about him if he were tied to a Beare or Lion or mad Dog though he were then asleep for hee may awake every moment and then where is hee The stilnesse of an ill conscience is but like the sleep of a frantick man Secondly there can be no true peace unto the man that lieth in sinne without repentance Isa. 57. There is no peace to the wicked saith my God Though hee bee friends with himselfe for a time yet God is not friends with him nor is sinne and Satan at peace with him though there be an uncertaine truce for a time Thirdly the danger of a still conscience is the greater for the terrours of a troubled conscience may prepare a man for Christ and compell a man to seeke helpe from Christ but in the case of a still conscience there are these two usuall miseries the one that men take a still conscience to be a good conscience and the other is that a man runnes onely blindefolded so long till death and hell may seaze upon him Thus of the effects of an evill conscience the meanes how conscience may be made good follow That an evill conscience may be made good two things must bee looked into first that wee get a right medicine to heale it secondly that we take a right course in application of the medicine First the medicine for the curing of an ill conscience is onely the bloud of Christ the disease of conscience is of so high a nature as all the medicines in the world are insufficient nothing but sprinkling it with bloud will serve the turne and it must be no other bloud than the bloud of the immaculate Lambe of God as the Apostle shews Heb. 9.14 The reason of this is because conscience will never be quiet till it see a way how Gods anger may be pacified and sinne abolished which cannot be done any way but by the bloud of Christ which was powred out as a sacrifice for sinne Now unto the right application of this medicine foure things are requisite First the light of knowledge Secondly the washing of regeneration Thirdly the assurance of faith Fourthly the warmth of love First knowledge a man must have both Legall and Evangelicall for they must know by the law what sinnes lie upon the conscience and trouble it and they must know by the Gospel what a propitiation is made by Christ for sinnes And for the second an evill conscience will never bee gotten off unlesse our hearts be sprinkled and washed from the filth and power of the sinnes which did lie upon the conscience Heb. 10.22 1 Tim. 1.5 Now unto such removing of such sinnes from the heart two things are requisite First that by particular confession wee doe as it were scratch off the filth of those sinnes that soule the heart and trouble the conscience Secondly and then that wee wash our hearts and daily rinse them with the teares of true repentance and humiliation before God for those sinnes Thirdly assurance of faith is necessary to the cure of an ill conscience because faith is the hand that layes on the medicine A man must apply the sufferings of Christ to himselfe and beleeve that Christ did satisfie for those sinnes that lie upon the conscience and must accordingly all to besprinkle the conscience with that bloud of Christ and then of an evill conscience it will presently become good but men must looke to one thing and that is that their faith be unfained For conscience will not be satisfied with the profession of faith they must beleeve indeed and with their hearts and with sound application of the promises of the Gospel concerning the bloud of Christ or else conscience will not be answered Heb. 10.22 1 Tim 1.5 Fourthly the heat of love must be added a man must so apply the bloud of Christ as that his owne bloud be heated in him affection with both towards God and Christ and Christians Christian love doth put as it were naturall heat into the conscience and makes it now receiving life by faith to bestirre it selfe in all the workes either of service to God or duty to men 1 Tim. 1.5 Heb. 9.24 knowledge bringing it light mortification making it cleane faith
curing it and putting life into it by sprinkling it with the bloud of Christ and love infusing or rather inflaming it with the heat of life All these things are requisite though I stand not upon the precise order of the working of every one of these Thus how conscience may bee made good Now I might adde a direction or two how conscience may doe her worke aright that is a good conscience and not doe ill offices in the soule Two things I say are of great use for the guiding of a good conscience First that in all her proceedings she must follow the warrant of Gods word Secondly that she doe not mistake in judging of particular actions she must bee sufficiently informed about our Christian liberty for unlesse the conscience discerne that wee are freed from the malediction of the law and from the rigorous perfection of obedience and have restored unto us a free use of all things indifferent and the like shee may be over-busie and troublesome disquieting the heart and restraining the joyes should refresh and support a man Thus of the meanes how conscience may be made good the signes of a good conscience follow First by the opposition it makes against the remainders of sinne in the godly It maintaines a constant combating against the law of the members having at command the law of the minde It doth not only resist grosse evils but even the most secret corruptions in the heart of man This Paul discerned in himselfe Rom. 7. of doing God service Secondly by the manner of exacting of obedience for a good conscience First doth incline a man to doe good duties not by compulsion but a man shall find that he doth them by force of an internall principle in himself Secondly it cannot abide dead works a good conscience abhors all cold and carelesse or luke-warm or counterfeit serving of God it puts life into all good dutes it exacteth attendance upon God in doing them Heb. 9.14 Thirdly it more respecteth God than all the world or the man himselfe and therefore will compell a man to obey against profit and pleasure and liking of the world 2 Cor. 1.12 Fourthly it requires an universall obedience it would have all Gods commandements respected and therefore Paul saith I desired in all things to live honestly Heb. 13.18 The allowing of one sin shewes the depravation of the conscience if it bee a knowne sinne and still tolerated As one dead flie will spoyle a boxe of pretious oyntment I say one dead flie though many living flies may light upon a boxe of oyntment and do it no great hurt so a godly man may have many infirmities and yet his conscience be sound but if there be one corruption that lives and dies there that is such a corruption as is knowne and allowed and doth by custome continue there it will destroy the soundnesse of the best conscience of the world and doth usually argue a conscience that is not good Fiftly a good conscience doth require obedience alwaies thus Paul pleads I have served God till this day It doth not command for God by fits but constantly Acts 23.1 A third signe is that a good conscience is alwayes toward God it still desires to bee before God it seekes Gods presence it reckons that day to be lost and that it did not live as it were when it found not the Lord or had no fellowship or conversation with God A good conscience is like a good Angell it is alwayes looking into the face of God Acts 23.1 Thus of the signes The benefits of a good conscience are many and great for First it is the best companion a man hath all the daies of his life it is ever with him and speakes good unto him and comforts him A man that hath no company needs not to be alone for he may converse with much delight with his owne conscience and it is the surest friend a man can have for it will neither hurt him by flattery nor forsake him for any carnall respects and being an internall agent is out of the watch of all outward hinderances and is alwaies a messenger of good things to a man and fits him and fills him with peace that passeth all the understanding of all men that want a good conscience Secondly it gives a man assurance of the best treasures it makes a man certaine of his salvation for a good conscience will not be quiet till it know the love of God and the promises of grace in Christ and the assurance that conscience gives is a better assurance than any man can have for his lands or any estate on earth because it is so highly honoured that Gods owne Spirit doth not disdaine at any time to witnesse with it and to it Rom. 8.15 16. Thirdly by reason of that new acquaintance and affinity it hath with the holy Ghost it brings us into a familiar friendship with God as being an immediat Agent with the holy Ghost in all things that concerne us for Gods Spirit treates with the conscience and the conscience treates with the Soule Fourthly it is a continuall bulwarke against the divell and all his fiery darts whether he tempt us to sinne or to feare and doubting for so soone as the temptation is cast in a good-conscience by her reasoning presently throwes it out reserving principles both of precept and promise alwaies in a readinesse to that end so as by contrarious reasoning within us it both hinders us from yeelding to sin and supports us against all doubts and feares Prov. 28.1 Fiftly against all afflictions and disgraces and reproches of the world a good conscience still comforts a man and makes him rejoyce by the force of the testimony thereof 2 Cor. 1.14 So as it is most true that a good conscience is a continuall feast he never fares ill that hath a good conscience Psal. 7.8 Acts 24.16 Rom. 9.10 Sixtly and the greater is the comfort of a good conscience because it will comfort us and stand by us and for us when all other comforts faile It will never leave us in sicknesse or in death and so is better than a thousand friends or wives or children yea it will goe with us to the Judgement feat of Christ with this assurance that as a good conscience speakes to us now so will Christ speake to us at that day Rom. 2.16 Thus of the sorts or kindes of consciences The last point is about the bond of conscience what it is that can binde a mans conscience and the doubt ariseth from this and other Texts because here a servant is bound in conscience to submit himselfe to a froward master both to his command and to his punishments and other Scriptures speake of his obedience to superiours for conscience sake For answer hereunto we must know that God and his law have power simply and absolutely to binde conscience that is to urge it to require obedience of a man or to accuse
to be considered of 1. What need our spirits have to be sanctified 2. Wherein lyeth the sanctification of the spirit of man Our spirits have great need to be sanctified 1 By reason of the first sin they want originall righteousnesse and they are corrupt and infected with a generall leprosie 2. By reason of the steine and uncleanenesse all our actuall sins have added to the former corruption 3. By reason of the inhabitation of uncleane spirits our spirits have in them trenches cages forts and strong holds of Sathan 2 Cor. 10.4 and therefore had neede to bee cleansed after such soule spirits have been there 4. The naturall spirit of man frames nothing but evill and that continually this makes God so weary Gen. 6. In particular all the faculties of the spirit of man need sanctification 1. The minde is covered with a vaile wrapped in an ugly mantle of darknesse distracted with errour coupled with a thousand formes of evill thoughts 2. The memory performes no service to God it should be Gods Treasurer and Register but no body is in the office to keep record 3. The Will is grievously diseased and with sicknesse so distempered that it will not be ruled by any not by God not by men not by reason not by religion nor doth it agree with it selfe For man wills not alwayes the same thing 4. The affections out of the first poyson of naturall corruption have such monstrous births of evill that the spirit by them is set out of all order They are compared to beasts Esay 11. To fighting soldiers 1 Pet. 2.12 To tyrants making cruell lawes and leading into bondage Rom. 7. 5. The wretched Conscience then which there was once no diviner thing on earth is now in miserable case For either it is sick of a Lethargy and sleepes or if it waken it is like a mad Dog or Lion or a Iudge transported with rage It is ignorant without light it is soiled or ●tein●d with a thousand sinnes It is impure and exceeding base and without all properties of a divine Iudge For it is blinde and will be corrupted and will deferre the Affise c. Insteed of a throne of judgement it is thrust into a hole and horrible dungeon of darknesse where the Sunne of righteousnesse shineth not and there for the most part as if it were still night it lieth obscure and sleepeth And thus of the need we have of sanctification in our spirits The sanctification of the spirit lyeth in two things 1. In cleansing the spirit from sinne 2. In adorning the spirit with graces In the cleansing of the spirit consider both from what and how For the first if any aske what there is in our spirits needes cleansing away I answer That besides what hath been shewed many more particulars may be set out thus There are vile both impieties and unrighteousnesse in our spirits must be done away For impieties There is ignorance errour atheisticall thoughts pride hypocrisie inconstancy hardnesse of heart and division of heart conceitednesse vanity selfe-love hatred of goodnesse false feares carnall confidence forgetfulnesse doubts unsetlednesse unbeliefes of all sorts and love of the world For unrighteousnesse There are evill cares covetousnesse lusts of all sorts hatred malice desire of revenge anger fretting worldly gri●fe bitternesse discontentment vaine-glory emulation inordinate affection and evill concupiscence as good as men thinke their hearts and meanings are they may by this taste see how foule their spirits are Now for the second The spirit is cleansed from these sins by degrees and to that purpose the spirit of God worketh and useth 8. distinct new qualities which have not place in the soule but upon occasion of this service against sin And these are 1. Spirituall poverty or sense of sin and misery 2. Base estimation viz of the world with the pleasures profits and lusts of it Phil. ● 8 Esay 30.22 3. Hatred of sinne 4. Shame for sin Rom. 6.21 5. Godly sorow 6. Feare 7. Indignation 8. A purpose and inclination to forsake sin Thus of the cleansing of the spirit The adorning of the spirit followes The spirit of man in sanctification is adorned with holy graces and here I consider of the adorning 1. of the minde 2. of the heart 3. of the conscience The minde is adorned with three things which come new into it 1. The first is a heavenly light 2. The second is humblenesse of minde 3. The third is purity of imaginations 1. This light comes in by the illumination of the spirit setting in the minde a celestiall kinde of knowledge and this stands in two things For first this sanctification breakes open a way and sets at liberty the light of nature which was imprisoned and withheld in unrighteousnesse and then there is besides infused a new light from above and this light hath in it 1 1. A holy discerning of good and evill truth and falshood by which the minde in a measure discerneth a general course of avoiding the waies of death and the 〈◊〉 of hell 2. A holy inquiry by which the minde aspireth after God and truth and tryeth things that differ 3. Wisdome from above by which the minde is caried not only to a foresight and forecast for the things of the soule and a better life above the things of the body and this life but is furnished with certaine feedes of discretion for practise with observation of the circumstances of time place persons maner end occasions c. 4. A sacred frame of piety and patterne of godlinesse and truth and this patterne is so communicated to the understanding that it is indelible no dangers sin or death can ever utterly abolish it This frame of truth is perfected by degrees 5. There is planted in the minde Gods watch by the light whereof all the wayes of the heart and life are over-looked 2 2. The second grace planted in the minde is humblenesse of minde 1 Pet. 5.5 and this hath in it 1. A sense of the wants of the soule and life of man 2. A lowly kinde of forecast in all things to glorifie God and profit man accounting it no abasement to serve and please with all readinesse 3. A thankfull acknowledgement of the mercies of God infinitely above desert by which a man holds himselfe not worthy of the least of Gods mercies 4. A freedome in matters of opinion from selfe-conceit by which a man attaines to that not to be wise in himselfe or to rely upon his owne reason or judgement Thus a man is not high minded 5. An accounting of others of Gods servants better then our selves 6. A pronenesse to humiliation for sin and humility in cariage 3. The third thing brought into the minde is purity of imaginations holy thoughts by which the minde converseth as it were in heaven already and feedeth upon the fairest objects in heaven and earth Prov. 14.22 Phil. 3. 20. Colos. 3.1 Thus much of the
of mercy from God noted by the sprinkling of the mercy seate 7. times 2. The intercession of Christ noted by the incense heated by the burning coales of his owne ardent affection Ver. 12 13. 3. The perfection of Christs mediation in that no man is joyned with him nor must any man be present Ver. 17. 4. The extent of the benefits to all the Elect noted by the sprinkling of the blood upon the foure hornes of the Altar The Use of all may be briefly both for instruction and consolation For instruction 1. To the people who should be above all things carefull to seeke the comfort of the application of Gods favour in Jesus Christ oh wee must above all things by faith keep this sprinkling of blood as is said of thē Heb. 11.28 2. Ministers should hence take notice of the maine end of preaching which is to sprinkle blood upon the hearts of the people that they may both be setled in the knowledge and assurance of their right in Christ and the covenant of grace and likewise purged in their consciences from dead workes we doe little by preaching if we beget not reformation and assurance in the hearts of the people he preacheth not that sprinkles not 2. For Consolation Be not fearefull Christs blood will protect thee as safely as ever did the blood of the paschall lambe the children of Israel Be not doubtfull of the efficacy of it For if the blood of buls and goates c. could purifie in respect of legall cleansings how much more shall the blood of Christ who by the eternall spirit offered up himselfe to God purge thy conscience from dead workes and make attonement for all thy sins cleansing thee from all unrighteousnesse Heb. 9.13 14 15. 1 John 1.7 Be not discontent with thy condition thou hast what was merited and purchased with blood how little soever it seeme in thy eyes But especially be not unthankfull for such a singular way of mercy but with all gladnes of heart rejoyce above all things in Christ him crucified for thee Hitherto of the persons saluted the forme of the salutation follows Grace and peace be multiplied to you It was the maner in their salutations to wish to their friends that which they accounted a chiefe happinesse to them So doth the Apostle here wishing the multiplying of grace and peace Grace and peace Grace must be considered two wayes 1. First as it is in God and so it is his free love and gracious disposition to shew mercy in Christ. 2. Secondly as it is in man and so it notes either the gifts of their minde or their condition or estate in Christ and so the faithfull are said to be under grace and not under the Law Peace is both inward and outward Inward peace consists in the contentation and rest of the soule and so it is both the rest of the conscience from terrors and the rest of the heart from passion● and perturbations Outward peace is nothing else but prosperity or an estate free from unquietnesse and molestation and adorned with needfull blessings Grace and Peace are the two principall things to be sought and wished in this world when Christ comes to inrich the world hee comes with grace and truth Iohn 1. he cannot be miserable that hath th●se two nor happy that wants them altogether Which may be a singular comfort to a Christian in grace and peace is his portion and he may goe boldly to the throne of God in the intercession of Christ to beg either of these in his need Heb. 4. ult God may deny him other things but he will never deny him grace peace And therefore also Christians should joy in the grace of God wherein they stand Rom. 5.3 and be resolved in themselves that the grace of God is sufficient for them 2 Cor. 12.9 Especially they should praise and esteeme and glorifie the grace of God It is all God askes for as it were at our hands even to honour him by praising his grace and free love to us Ephes. 1.6 Woe unto wicked men that neglect the grace of God what shall it profit them to gaine the world which yet they doe not and want grace and peace but especially why doe they not let Christians alone with their portion why doe they trouble them in their peace and despight them for their grace can they not follow their pleasures lusts profits honors c. and let Christians live quietly by thē who desire but liberty to enjoy grace with peace There is something also to be noted from the order of placing grace must bee had before peace there can bee no peace to the wicked and hee is undoubtedly wicked that hath not the grace of God Be multiplied Grace and Peace is multiplyed 1. First when the number of gracious persons is increased This is to be sought and prayed for 2. When the kindes of grace and peace are all had For there is the manifold grace of God 3. Thirdly when the measures and degrees are augmented The Husbandman would faine have his seed increase and the tradesman his trade so would the ambitious man his honors and preferments c. Even so should the Christian be ambitious and covetous in his desires that his grace and peace might increase Quest. What should we doe that grace and peace might be multiplied Answ. 1. Be sure it be true grace else it will never increase 2. Thou must increase in ●eeknesse and humility For God will give more grace to the humble Iam. 4.8 and the meeke shall have abundance of peace Psal. 37.6.11 3. If thou wouldest have thy grace and peace increase thou must be constant much in the use of all the ordinances of God which are the meanes of grace and peace As thou measurest to God in the meanes so will God measure to thee in the successe thou must be much in hearing For grace is in the lips of Christ Psal. 45.3 and much peace shall be to them that love Gods lawes Psal. 119. and thou must goe often unto God by prayer who gives grace and glory and will withhold no good thing Psal. 84.12 2 Thess. 1.11 12. Runne by faith to Christ who is the Prince of peace Esay 9.6 and stirre up the grace of God that is in thee For thou hast not received the spirit of feare but of power 2 Tim. 1.7 4. Thou must not perplex thy heart with the cares of this life but in all things goe to God by prayer and cast all thy care upon him so shalt thou have peace that passeth all understanding to keep thy heart and minde Phil. 4. 6 7. Thou must make much of the beginnings of desires joy liking and care of the meanes of godlinesse and not let them goe out so as thou shouldest fails of the grace of God or receive those graces in vaine 6. Thou must be resolved upon it to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live righteously and religiously
so matchlesse and perfect a rule and canon of holinesse written in the word of God to direct us 3. Having our natures by regeneration in part healed and freedome of will in part restored so as no● if wee be not holy it is because wee will not be holy 4. Having such mighty helps as are 1. The assistance and supply of the spirit of grace within us 2. Prayer with a promise of granting whatsoever we aske 3. Guides and spirituall Pastors to oversee and direct us 4. A cloud of witnesses even the examples of the godly of all sorts 5. Such acceptation with God if we be willing and love to be his servants Act. 10.36 But of this in the next point 4. Here is implyed how infinitely kinde God is in accepting our holy endevours if we desire to be holy in all our conversation he will account it to be holy as he is holy and yet alas it comes ten thousand degrees short of the holinesse of God yea far short of what it should be yea which is more of what it might be in us 5. The image of God is in conversation as well as nature we resemble God not onely in the renovation of our nature but in the renewed actions also so then we beare Gods image 1. In nature 2. In action or obedience Of this later here 6. A Christian should be especially carefull of his outward conversation even to shew forth the light of good works and holy carriage before men Wee should be exceeding carefull to expresse holinesse in conversing one with another There are many motives 1. We are Gods witnesses 2 Tim. 2.2 2. T is a good profession 2 Tim. 2.2 3. There are many witnesses to observe us 2 Tim. 2.2 4. Carnall men are crooked and perverse Phil. 2.16 5. A holy conversation will silence foolish men 1 Pet. 2.15 6. It will bring much glory to our heavenly Father Mat. 5. 7. It proves our justification and foretels our salvation 8. To walk upright is to walk safely Prov. 9. T is as it were to live in heaven Phil. 3.20 10. It will support us in wrongs adversity Act. 23.1.2 Cor. 1.12 11. It will shew our knowledge is not idle 2 Pet. 1.8 12. It furthers our reckoning and provides us acceptation in the day of death and judgement 2 Pet. 3.11 Rev. 14.13 7. If we would be holy as God is holy we must be holy in all conversation that is we must shew respect to all the commandements of God wee must shew a care of religion as well as vertue of godlinesse as well as honesty of mercy as well as just dealing to enemies as well as friends at home as well as abroad toward inferiors as well as superiors in prosperity as well as adversity in all companies as well as one c. Mark it in the tryall of our selves by this doctrine we may know infallibly whether wee be called or beare the image of God or no for if there be any one sinne that we will not forsake or any one commandment we are not desirous to obey it will prove all is n●ught in us Heb. 13.18 8. Lastly we must here further observe that if we would have comfort that we beare the image of Gods holinesse we must be carefull of the manner of our conversation as well as the matter For though these words ● all manner may note the extent unto the matter of all holinesse yet there is no evident reason why a great part of the meaning of the holy Ghost should not be restrained to the manner as the word sounds Now there are divers things in the manner of our conversation to be observed for the resembling of Gods holinesse 1. The first is godly purenesse we must in our conversation shew respect of God and godlinesse and keep our selves from the impurities of the times and watch against sin in all our waies 2 Cor. 1.12 2. The second is simplicity or holy harmlesnesse as it is opposed to fraud and fleshly wisdome and shews it selfe in a plaine and evident desire to doe what God requires though it be never so much scorned in the world 2 Cor. 11.3 1.12 3. The third is precisenesse or circumspection making conscience of lesser sins as well as greater and avoiding the appearances and occasions of evils as well as the evils themselves Eph. 5.15 4. Conversation in heaven which is so to use the world as to let our hearts still run upon God and his Kingdome directing all our actions some way to further that end Phil. 3.20 5. Meeknesse of wisdome which is shewed by lowlinesse and not being wise in our selves but doing good in a continued sense of our own vilenesse and unworthinesse to doe any service to God or man Iam. 3.13 This is called a conversation with feare 1 Pet. 3.2 ver 16. 6. Constancy Phil. 1.27 7. The affections of godlinesse or well-doing or zeale Tit. 2.14 Verse 16. Because it is written be ye holy as I am holy THE first argument no inforce the exhortation ver 13. is taken from the image of God in us and this reason is propounded in the first words of ver 14. and expounded in the two former verses and this and that two waies 1. By a description of the image of God in us ver 14 15.2 By the proofe in this verse In this proofe two things are to be observed 1. Whence the proofe is taken As it is written 2. What is alledged viz. Be ye holy as I am holy The meaning is that we stand bound to shew regard of our conformity to God in holinesse for this was long since required in the written word of God that wee should be holy as God is holy And first then concerning the Scripture from whence the proofes of doctrine are fetched Here I consider 1. Of the use of the Scriptures in generall for proofe of doctrine 2. Of the Scripture of the Old ●estament from whence this proofe is fetched For the first Proofes of doctrine are of three sorts 1. From men as they are men 2. From the senses 3. From God The first is not infallible the second is infallible in some respects the third is infallible simply for ever The testimonies of men work onely opinion as being but Arguments contengent and probable The testimonies of the senses and of God work knowledg or bring arguments necessary Hence it is that the Prophets and Christ and the Apostles in their teaching amongst the people almost never use any testimonies of men in matters of religion and when they doe it is chiefly for confutation of adversaries by their owne writers Now for the senses they are internall or externall Internall and so there is a double testimony 1. from the law of nature 2. from the conscience The externall are seeing hearing tasting c. and the argument from them is from experience The testimony of the senses is in●allible in some respects viz. as they are rightly
thoughts and be yeelded to and delighted in and that constantly they seeke the pleasure of contemplative wickednesse and doe not resist it by praying against it even vaine thoughts may dead the affections and poison them Psal. 119.113 Fourthly sometimes it is neglect of mortification the s●ule will gather aboundance of humors as well as the body and therefore Christians should not goe too long especially if they ●eele a kind of fulnes to grow upon them but take a purge that is seriously and secretly set time apart to humble themselves before God purging out their most secretest corruptions with all hearty confession before God Fiftly sometimes it is want of practice or want of an orderly disposing of their waies in godlinesse If they rest onely in hearing their affections cannot last long sincere and besides the most Christians burden their own harts for very want of order and that they goe not distinctly about the works of godlinesse but rake together a great heape of doctrine which they know not what to doe withall Psal. 50. ult Sixtly sometimes againe it is occasioned by inordinate feeding when Christians begin to affect novelties and seeke to themselves a heape of teachers they scape not long without fulnesse and the fits of l●athing 2. Tim. 4.3 Seaventhly sometimes very idlenesse is the hindrance The want of a particular calling to imploy themselves in the sixe dayes breeds a generall kinde of wearinesse and satiety which extends the heart of it not only to the times of private dutyes in the working dayes but to the very Sabbath also They cannot worke at Gods worke with any great delight that had no more minde to their owne worke Eighthly sometimes it is neglect of preparation and praier before we come to the word Ninthly sometimes it is a violent kinde of ignorance and unbeliefe when a Christian knowes not this right to the word and will not be perswaded of the fatherly love and presence of God in his ordinance If Preachers must say I have beleeved therefore I will speake so must Hearers say I have beleeved therefore I will heare They should know that they are welcome to Christ and may eate and drinke Cant. 5.1 And that their heritage lieth in the word Psal. 119. Tenthly sometimes it is a very disease in the body as melancholy or some other which doth so oppresse the heart that it doth not take delight in any thing But of this more in the next Use. Lastly any of the sinnes mentioned in the former verse will hinder affection Malice Hypocrisie or Envy or any of the rest Vse 3. The third use may be for instruction to teach us to strive for affection to the word and to provide to order our selves so as we be not wanting in the direction of the Apostle and so two sorts are to be taught that is such as want appetite and such as have it that they may keepe it aright Quest. What must such doe as finde either want of appetite or decay of it Ans. Such as would get sound affections to the word must doe sixe things First they must refrain their feete from every evill way It is impossible to get sound affections without sound reformation of life Psalm 119. Secondly they must pray for it they must beseech the Lord to quicken them Psal. 119.37 and to inlarge their hearts verse 32. especially to give them understanding verse 34. and to open their eyes to see the wonderfull things of his law verse 18. Thirdly they must chuse an effectuall Ministery to live under it such as is executed with power and demonstration to the conscience 2. Cor. 4.2 Fourthly they must remember the Lords day and that they doe when they empty their heads and hearts of all cares of life which might choak the word diligently doing their owne works on the sixe daies and finishing them that they may be free for the Lords work on the Lords day The cares of life choake the word Matthew 13. Fiftly they must converse much if it be possible with affectionate Christians For as yron sharpneth yron so doth the exemplary affection of the tender-hearted whet on the dull spirits of others Sixtly they must purge often they must be frequent in the duties of humiliation by solemne fasting and prayer and sound confession striving when they feele fulnesse to grow upon them to disturden their hearts and to quicken their spirits more forcibly to the love of Gods name and word Quest. But what must such doe as have gotten some affections to the word that they neither lose them not be unprofitable in them Ans. They must looke to diverse things First they must hate vaine thoughts take heed of those secret vanities of imagination and that delightfull contemplation of evill in the minde Psalm 119. 113. Secondly they must trie all things and keepe that which is good they must heare with judgement and make speciall account of such parcels of doctrine as doe most fit their particular needes labouring by all meanes that such truths run not out 1. Thess. 5.21 Thirdly they must take heed of itching eares For where mens desires are still carried after new men they are in great danger of fulnesse or of declining and which is worse of being carried about with diverse doctrines and at length to be a prey to deceitfull mockers Fourthly they must preserve by all meanes the feare and trembling at Gods presence and humiliation of minde For so long as we can dread the presence of God in his ordinances we are in no danger of losing our love to the word Psalm 119.120 Lastly in Esay 55.1 2 3. wee may note diverse things that God requires in such as have the same thirst 1. They must come to meanes 2. They must buy and bargaine with God by prayer and vowes 3. They must eat that is they must apply it to themselves 4. They must be instructed against merit in themselves and bring faith to beleeve success though they deserve it not they must buy without mony 5. They must hearken diligently 6. They must eate that which is good that is they must apply effectually that doctrine they feele to have life in it 7. Their soules must delight in fatnesse that is they must be specially thankfull and cheerefull when God doth enlive his promises and sweeten his words to their tastes 8. They must after all this incline their ear and come to God they must make conscience to strive against dulnesse and distractions and seeke God in his word still or else their affections may decay and then if they doe this they shall live and enjoy the sure mercie● of David by a perpetuall covenant Quest. But what shall such godly persons as are afflicted with melancholy doe in this case of affections Ans. They must attend these things First they must be perswaded to see the disease in the body which extends the oppression of it to the very affections Secondly they must remember times that are past
in our repentance Luk. 4.44 Act. 6.20 Every tree must not only beare fruit but his own fruit proper to his kind as the proper fruit of rich men is mercy and if they had never so many praises otherwise that they were courteous wise just chaste c. yet if they be not mercifull their workes are not good workes Ninthly his workes must bee full before God It was an objection against the Church of Sardis that her workes were not perfect or full before God therefore she is threatned if she repent not to feele the heavie hand of God Rev. ● 1 2. No● as I conceive a mans workes are not full when he is not carefull of every good worke which he knowes concernes him as for instance if a man pray and yet be not carefull of hearing the Word his prayers are abomination to God because his workes are not full There be some duties which he makes no conscience to obey in though he know they be required hee that turneth away his eares from hearing the Law his prayers are abominable Pro. 28.9 If a man would be never so carefull about Gods service and yet make no conscience of the works of mercy required of him his sacrifice is not accepted Hos. 6.6 7 c. Thus the long prayers of the Pharisees will not be regarded if they devoure widowes houses Mat. 23. and so on the other side if a man were never so mercifull a man if he were not also a religious man in the things of Gods service his workes would not abide triall before God they were not good because they were not full And for this reason the workes of civill honest men are not good such were Pauls workes Phil. 3.6 which hee accounts but drosse and dung in comparison vers 8. of such as these Thus of the rules of good workes the kinds follow The vulgar commonly when they heare of good workes thinke of nothing but almes and hospitality or other courses of shewing mercy Now though it be true that workes of mercy be good workes yet they are but one sort of good workes whereas the Christian is bound to be ready to every good work 1 Tim. 3.17 and therefore it will bee profitable to informe our selves of the many wayes by which we may do good workes for thereby such Christians as are not able to give almes may see a way how to enrich themselves in well-doing other wayes These then are the sorts of good workes First to beleeve is a good work yea it is instead of many good workes yea in some sense it is to us instead of the works of the whole Law as it is a means to lay hold on all the good works that ever Christ Jesus did To put on the ●ord Jesus is a good worke in a high degree and so every act of faith in all the passages of a mans life is a good worke for this is the worke of God to beleeve as our Saviour shewes when hee gives that for answer for such as asked what they must doe to doe the workes of God Ioh. 6.28 Rom. 13.12 13 14. This is clearly acknowledged in these other Scriptures 1 Thes. 1.3 2 Thes 1.11 Secondly all workes of piety are good workes all workes of worship that is such workes by which a man doth service to God are all in the number of good workes and so to pray to fast to heare the Word to receive the Sacraments c. are good workes for godlinesse hath the promises of this life and of the life to come and therefore it is profitable to all things 1 Tim. 4.8 And these workes must needs be accounted good workes for they are deare works the blood of Christ was poured out that wee might be cleansed from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9.14 Thirdly all workes of repentance all that a Christian doth about his humiliation or reformation are evangelically good workes as if he confesse his sinnes and do execution upon his sinnes if hee make satisfaction for his trespasses to men if he reforme himselfe or his houshold or his charge these and the like are all good workes 2 Chron. 19.3 Fourthly to suffer for a good cause is reckoned in the number of good workes as to forsake father or mother house or land wife or children liberty or life for Christs sake and the Gospels it is in the number of those good things that shall have a good reward Mat. 19.29 Ier. 31.16 Ruth 2.11 12. Fifthly workes of mens particular callings whether in the Common-wealth or Church or family or any vocation or trade of life so workes of Justice are good workes and to obey Magistrates is called well-doing vers 14. of this chapter so to preach the Gospel is a good worke 1 Tim. ● 1 So in the family for parents to bring up their children well is a good worke 1 Tim. 5.10 yea the labours of servants in the family are such workes as shall have reward of God as well as workes of piety Esa. 6. Col. 3. Sixthly workes of mercy are good workes whether it bee spirituall mercy to instruct admoni●h or reprove or comfort Psal. 140. or whether it be outward mercy in giving lending visiting defending the poore or the like All confesse these to be good workes Act. 9.16 But that almes may be a good worke these three rules must be observed First that it be given of goods well gotten else no good workes Secondly that he that gives it have a good eye to distribute where there is need for to keepe a good house and to entertain russians and drunkards and gamesters is not a good work nor hospetality because here is not a good eye Thirdly almes mu●t be given to a good end not for the praise of men or to merit thereby Mat. 6. Thus of the kinds of good workes The questions follow Quest. 1. How can any workes done by any man in this life be accounted good seeing there is none that liveth and sinneth not yea all our workes even the workes of the most righteous are as a menstruous cloth Esa. 64.6 For ans●er hereunto I say It is true that if God looke upon the best workes of the most godly in this life and examine them by the rigour of his covenan● which he called His covenant of workes then no flesh living can have comfort of his workes but all will appeare lothsome as a menstruous gar●ent But the workes of the beleeving Christians are otherwaies to bee considered of for First they are tried by the covenant of grace by the benefit of which covenant he is delivered from the rigorous perfection of the Law his uprightnes is accepted instead of perfection he is now no more under the Law but by Gods grace and acceptation his workes are taken as if they had been perfect Secondly he hath the benefit of Christs intercession who presenteth his workes before God covering the evill of them and tendring them to God who accepts
The words are Nimrod was a mighty hunter before the Lord. Now these word● have beene interpreted either properly thus He was a hunter of beasts before the Lord that is which beasts hee would sacrifice before the Lord or meta●horically that hee was the first that set up Monarchies of the thraldome appointing Lawes and a forme of Government and this hee did by instinct from God for the protection of the Church and Common-wealth against the injuries of those that dwelt neere them Secondly say that hee is in these words condemned as a hunter that is a tyrant as the word is taken Lament 3.5 Ierem. 16.16 Ezech. 32.30 c. and that it is added Before the Lord to note that he did oppresse men by manifest violence openly shaking off all feare even of God himselfe yet it followes not that his power was not of God the manner of getting it was evill but the power was good Thirdly it will not follow that Magistracy is evill or not of God because it had an ill beginning if it were granted that it did begin in Nimrod For so the translation of Ioseph into Aegypt and the Kingdome of Saul and Ieroboam c. should be evill and not of God for they had ill beginnings But lastly I answer that Nimrod was not the first beginner of authority or power or government though hee were of that kinde of Governours for there was a hunter both Ecclesiasticall and Civill before yea and there were Cities in the world before therefore there must needs bee government and Governours Cain built a City yea and God himselfe ordained Magistracy after the floud when he said By man shall his bloud be shed Genes 9.6 In short Nimrod was the author of the Babylonicall tyrannicall Monarchy not the authour of the Magistracy or civill authority over others Object Many Kingdomes and Officers are gotten by evill meanes Solut. So many men get goods by usury or robbery yet the things are of God Object But we see that Magistrates are chiefe and set up by men Solut. So the fruits of the earth are gotten in by the labour and care of men are they not therefore of God Ministers are chosen of men is not their calling therefore of God Second causes doe not exclude the first To conclude the Magistracy is the ordinance of men subjectively as it is enjoyed or borne by men and objectively as it is imployed amongst men and in respect of the end as it is for the good of men But the true word Creation or Ordinance shewes it is Gods worke or institution or appointment Secondly it is to be noted that we are bound to submit our selves to the ordinances that is to the office or calling or authority hee doth not mention the persons so much as the calling because oftentimes there is found in the persons vices and some causes of not obeying but in such againe wee must not consider the person but the ordinance or calling it selfe Thirdly we must submit our selves to their ordinances that is to all sorts of Magistrates Now all Magistrates may be distinguished either in respect of 1 Iurisdiction 2 or Religion 3 or Objects 4 or Affaires 5 or Office 6 or Adjuncts 7 or Dignitie First in respect of Iurisdiction some are superiour that they have none above them but God as Emperor King Dictator Senate c. or inferiour which is appointed by the superiour as are all inferiour Governours and Officers Secondly in respect of Religion some are beleevers as David some infidels and so are either such as persecute Religion as Herod Iulian or tolerate it as Trajane Thirdly in respect of Objects some are Togati Governours some are Armati Marshall men Fourthly in respect of Businesse some are Councellours some Senatours some Judges c. Fifthly in respect of Office some are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law-givers some are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law-keepers as Justices and the like Sixthly in respect of Adjuncts some are lawfull and just and good Magistrates who come by their power by lawfull election or succession and doe exercise it well others are are unlawfull or bad Magistrates as having in respect of the manner attained their places by unlawfull meanes or doe exercise their authoritie with cruelty or partiality or the like Seventhly in respect of Dignitie some have dignity and not authority as such as enjoy the titles of Dukes Earles Lords Knights Esquires or Gentlemen some have dignity and authority also as such of any of the former kinde or the like as are likewise called to any office of rule and gove●nment or service Now wee must bee subject not alone to the King or Superiour but to governours under them as the Text shewes We must be subject to Prince that are Infidels as well as to Christian Princes for such were the Magistrates for the most part when the Apostles writ So we must be subject to unworthy or vicious or tyrannous Princes as well as to godly and vertuous and loving Princes which the word here translated Ordinance imports for it signifies creation And so Magistracie is a creation in divers respects First because God was the author of it as he was of the world Secondly because Magistrates are raised beyond expectation Thirdly because many times God as a righteous Judge suffers many m●n to get into high places of honour and authority that have no worthinesse or fitnesse or stuffe in them more than hee would have to rule or furnish it selfe even to such Magistrates also must we submit Onely for the last distinction there is a difference for such as excell onely for titles of dignitie and have not authoritie wee must reverence and shew as civill respect unto them as belongs to their places but we are not bound to submit our selves to them by way of obedience for that is due only to such as have authoritie as well as dignitie Thus of subjection to Magistrates subjection to the lawes of Magistrates followes Concerning the lawes and ordinances of Magistrates two things may hence be gathered First that we must subject our selves to such lawes and ordinances as men that are in authority doe make wee are bound to this subjection even to mens lawes that we are bound the very words of the Text prove howsoever or in what respect wee are bound is to bee distinctly considered For mans lawes doe not binde as God's lawes doe for God's lawes doe binde not onely the outward man but the inward man also even the very consciences more distinctly and particularly The lawes of men binde onely the outward man properly for God reserveth the conscience of man onely to his owne command Now whereas the Apostle saith Rom. 13.5 Wee must obey Magistrates not onely for feare but for conscience it is thus to bee understood First that men are not onely driven to obedience of Magistrates for feare of punishment but even by their owne conscience ever testifying that they ought to obey them Secondly
the Inhabitants that the common priviledges might be maintained that courses for raising of riches and trades might be held Each man did looke to his owne wealth but the King was to looke to the Common-wealth And thus much of the Originall of Kings Their excellencie above other men followes Secondly it must needs appeare that Kings are of all men most excellent in respect of their outward condition and calling 1. Because God himselfe was a King and is delighted to ranke himselfe among men of that degree 2. Because their creation is from God they are a speciall sort of men raised in a peculiar manner to their places by God who pleads it as his glory that Kings raigne by him Prov. 8. Rom. 13. 3. Because God hath communicated to Kings the image of his owne Majestie and printed in the natures of men a naturall forme of Kings as the Vice-gerents to God himselfe 4. Because a divine sentence is in the mouth of the King as Salomon faith their judgement is God's judgement and God would have the people to beleeve that what they say in judgement God himselfe saith it 5. Because they have a power above all other men of which when I come to treat of the word Superiour 6. Because they take accounts of all other men but give accounts onely to God 7. Because they have the treasure of honour they give all the honour which is possessed by any of their subjects and so doe they all offices of honour and government in their Dominions 8. Because they are the Basis or the foundation or stay of all their subjects who are maintained in Religion Justice and Peace by their meanes And thus of their excellencie Thirdly it is to be noted that the word is set downe indefinitely and so it shewes that this honour belongeth to all Kings in the substance of it whether he be a King of one City or many whether he be a Jew or Gentile a Christian or Pagan Hereticall or Orthodoxall Caesar or Herod young or old vertuous or vitious Use. Fourthly the use should bee therefore from hence to inforce upon our hearts an increase of care and conscience in acknowledging the honour and right of Kings and in loyall and sincere observance and obedience to their Lawes It should not seeme grievous to men to bee held under the yoke of obedience and to bee subject to others that are but men as well as themselves There are many things may encourage the hearts of subjects without grievance to beare the superiority of Princes and not to be discontented for First Kings have nothing but what they have received Secondly if Kings doe wrong they must give account to God for all the wrongs that they have done Thirdly God hath charged Princes to bee carefull of their subjects hee hath given them lawes though they bee Kings Fourthly Princes subjects are first bound to God and therefore they are not tied to Princes in any thing contrary to Gods Word Fifthly though the outward man be subjected to the power of Princes yet their consciences are free in spirit they are subject onely to the God of spirits Sixthly the hearts of Kings are in the hands of the Lord and he turneth them as he pleaseth Prov. 21. Seventhly though God hath set up Kings yet he hath not put downe himselfe but he ruleth in all these things he is King of heaven Dan. 4.34 and he is King of all the earth Psal. 47.8 He is a King immortall 1 Tim. 1.12 Eighthly whereas thousands of subjects cannot attaine to the sight of the King nor obtaine any particular suit from him nor can the King provide for them in particular yet may they goe to God and Jesus Christ who is King of righteousnesse and peace they may get great suits in heaven and shall bee provided for in all needfull things Psal. 23.1 and 5.3 and 48.15 and 74.12 and 80.2 Esay 49.10 Mat. 2.6 Revel 7.17 Lastly though they be subjects now in respect of earthly Princes yet in respect of God they are anointed to be Kings themselves and shall receive a Kingdome better than all the kingdomes of the earth The Princes of this world are but mortall Kings but every godly man is a King immortall hee partakes the title of God himselfe God is a King immortall by nature and he is a King immortall by adoption and grace and besides the poorest subject that is a true Christian entertaineth the King of glory every day Psal. 24 7 9. As superiour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word signifieth one that hath above the havings of other men and so the King hath more than all his subjects not onely in matter of maintenance but also in matter of authoritie and supremacie this his having in supremacie is here meant That the King is supreme is so manifest by this text as it needs no proofe Princes are called therefore in the Old Testament Heads of the Tribes or of the people to signifie that they were not onely higher in place but had soveraigne and supreme authoritie over all the people This supremacie of Kings gives them authoritie in all causes both ecclesia●ticall and civill and over all persons Church-men as well as Lay-men as hath beene proved at large before in the former parts of this verse The use is therefore to coufute the damnable pleadings of the Popes of Rome and their adherents that claime to have the right of supremacie above the Kings and Princes of the world There are divers manifest arguments to overthrow the supremacie of the Pope First this expresse text that acknowledgeth the Kings to be superiour this was the Doctrine in the Apostles times Secondly● it is more to bee noted that Peter himselfe who by the opinion of the Papists had the height of place in the Church that even Peter I say is so far from claiming this to himselfe that hee directs Christians to acknowledge supremacie onely as the right of Kings yea and flatly forbids dominion in the Clergie 1 Pet. 5.5 Thirdly our Saviour Christ at large beats downe this primacie or supremacie in his Apostles and all Church-men shewing that they had not authoritie as the Kings of the earth had it must not bee so with them and much lesse had they authoritie over the Kings of the earth Matth. 20.25 Luke 22.25 Fourthly every soule must bee subject to the higher powers If every soule then Church-men if they have soules must be subject and therefore may not rule Rom. 13.1 Fifthly Christ and the Apostles never claimed any such supremacie but shewed the contrary by their doctrine and practice Sixthly it is made the expresse marke of that man of sinne that hee lifts up himselfe above all that is called God that is above Magistrates 2 Thess. 2. This hath beene the constant Doctrine of the ancient Fathers Origen Homil. 7. in Isai. faith Hee that is called to a Bishoprick is not called to principality but to the service of the Church Tertullian lib. ad
a note upon those persons that they are naught themselves For hee saith that they that breake the Law praise the wicked Prov. 28.4 and 24.25 Psal. 10.3 Fifthly they are yet worse that glory in their shame that seeke praise for the excesse of wickednesse committed by them either against God or men as they doe that would be commended for their cost bestowed on Idols or for their worshipping of Saints or Angels or for their revenges and wrongs done to men or for their mightinesse to hold out in drinking wine or for their filthy acts of any kinde or for their excesses in strange apparell or for the raising of themselves by unlawfull meanes or for their deliciousnesse in their fare or the like As those glory in their shame so their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 Lastly this doctrine should beget in men a great desire to live profitably and to doe good and in a speciall maner to apply themselves to such works as are most praise-worthy Quest. Here then ariseth a question What things in particular do most advantage a mans just praises Answ. The answer is that there are divers things will make a man to bee much praised as First to honour God he hath promised to honour those that honour him Prov. 8.17 Now to honour God is to seeke his Kingdome first and to confesse his name before men though it be in evill times Secondly humility and a lowly carriage with meeknesse For the humble shall be exalted and the proud brought low Luk. 1.14 20. Thirdly mercie to the poore This made the Macedonians famous in the Churches especially to shew it liberally and readily 2 Cor. 8. Fourthly diligence and exact carefulnesse to discharge the labours of our particular calling with all faithfulnesse this made the good woman famous mentioned Prov. 31.27 28 29 30 31. especially if wisdome and providence be joyned with diligence Fifthly to live in peace and study to be quiet and meddle with our owne businesse and to be a peace-maker wins a great deale of praise 1 Thess. 4.11 Matth. 5.9 Sixthly to be exactly just in mens dealings and true in his words and contracts this will make men abound with blessings The word is praises as it is in other places translated Prov. 28.20 Seventhly to bee courtous is to bee amiable so as it bee done without affectation and not directed for thy owne ends and not done with dissimulation Eighthly to doe good to our enemies to bee not onely ready to forgive but to pray for them and forbeare to wrong when it might be executed and to shew all willingnesse to overcome their evill with goodnesse Rom. 12. 20 21. Ninthly a care in all things strictly to submit our selves to the just Lawes of men avoiding transgression for conscience sake as the coherence in this place shewes And thus of the sixth Doctrine Doct. 7. It may yet further bee observed from hence that God doth require Magistrates in a speciall manner to looke unto it that they doe all they can to praise and incourage godly men and such as doe good in the countries where they live Rom. 13.5 This is the end of their calling Iob 29.25 This will prove heavie one day for those profane Magistrates that in the places of their abode disgrace none more than such as are godly and countenance none more than such as are most dissolute and lewd of life The judgements of the Lord will be terrible against these unrighteous men Lastly the Antithesis is here to be noted For when hee saith that such as doe well should bee praised hee doth not say that such as doe evill should be dispraised and this may be considered of either in the case of private persons or in the case of Magistrates For private persons they are bound to the good behaviour in respect of the evill of others many wayes First till their evils are knowne not to mistrust or condemne others Secondly when their evils are knowne if they be secret they must not bee revealed if they be open and the persons be good men they must doe what they can to cover them and if they bee evill men they must not speake of their dispraises without a great respect of glorifying God by it and besides they must not venture so far to judge of the finall estate of any man for any evils till the end come In the case of superiours it is true they may use dispraise but it must be as a medicine which must bee applied with many cautions and the ingredients must be Gods word and not their owne Verse 15. For so is the will of God that with well-doing you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men IN these words is contained the second argument taken from the will of God God is specially desirous that Christians should doe all the good they can and in particular should be carefull to obey the Magistrates because by that meanes they may confute such ill-minded men as are apt to speake evill of religion so that the words containe a choyce rule prescribed unto Christians to be carefully observed In which rule consider First the authority of it So is the will of God! Secondly the matter of it well-doing Thirdly the end which is the silencing of wicked men For. This word For seemes to give a reason not of what went next before in the former verse but of the exhortation to Christians as they are subjects shewing the happy effect of well-doing in generall and in particular of their submission to Magistrates and how orderly and profitably their life should be as they are good subjects and serviceable to the Common-wealth For so is the will of God The will of God is diversly accepted in Scriptures for though God's will indeed bee but one yet for our infirmities sake it is considered of with distinction and so it is either personall or essentiall There is a will of God that is personall restrained to some of the persons so the Father wils the obedience and death of the Sonne and Christ obeyes that will of his Father Ioh. 6.38 39 40. Mat. 26.39 42. But it is the essentiall will of God here meant the former is the will of God ad intra and this the will of God ad extra as they say in schooles The essentiall will of God is taken sometimes for the facultie of willing sometimes for the act of willing sometimes for the thing willed and sometimes for the signe by which that will is declared as his Word is his will So here by his essentiall will God wils both good and evill Good is the object of God's will properly and of it selfe Evill is the object of the will of God but onely under some respect of good Evill is either of punishment or of sinne Evill of punishment God wils and is the Author of Psal. 115.3 as the just Judge of the world and punishment of it selfe is a good thing as it is a worke of justice Evill of
he sheweth the manner how they must be subject viz. With all feare Servants must subject themselves to their masters in all feare which being put downe indefinitely must be understood both in respect of God and in respect of their Masters Servants must shew their feare of God in their places divers wayes First by avoiding such sinnes as are contrary to the will and commandement of God in their generall life such as are swearing lying slandering hatred of the godly drunkennesse whoredome and the like Psal. 101.3 4 5. Secondly by carefulnesse to doe good service as well as their masters not only by spending the Sabbath in the duties of Religion but in redeeming the time in the week-dayes as may be without hindrance of their worke or offence to their masters to imploy themselves in prayer reading conference c. and the reason is because as servants must doe their masters worke as they are servants so they stand bound in the common obligation to doe Gods service as they are men and no man but is subject to the Law of God who hath given all his commandements to servants as well as to masters Thirdly by doing their masters worke out of conscience respecting the will and commandements of God and therefore serving their masters with all faithfulnesse as if the service were to be done to God himselfe or to Jesus Christ Ephes. 6.5 Col. 3.23 Fourthly by praying for their masters and for the good successe of their labours for their masters commodity thus Abrahams servant is commended for his practice of the feare of God and left for an example to all servants to doe likewise Gen. 24. Fiftly by doing their masters worke without eye-service being as carefull and as diligent when their masters are absent as when they are present as remembring that the Lord sees them though their masters do not Col. 3.22 The feare then towards their masters they may shew divers waies First by avoiding what may displease their masters such as is answering againe Tit. 2.10 contention with their fellowes and all unquietnes Phil. 2.4 fullennesse Prov. 29.19 and all unfaithfulnesse shewed either by pu●loining in the least things Tit. 2.10 or carelesnesse in disappointing the trust committed to them as also masterfulnesse pride and haughtie behaviour when they will not abide it to be told or directed or doing what they list not what they be appointed Secondly by reverent behaviour to bee shewed by lowlinesse of countenance by giving titles of honour and respect Iohn 13.13 by standing before them when they sit Luk. 17. by avoiding rude behaviour or sawcy familiarity as accounting them in heart worthy of all honour 1 Tim. 6.1 One point of which reverence is that servants should not presume to deliver their opinions easily in their masters presence unlesse it be required or may be gathered by argument from the lesse Iob 32.6 7. Thirdly by their secrecy in all the affaires of their masters especially they should take heed of discovering their masters infirmities to others abroad out of the family Fourthly by avoiding inquisitivenesse to meddle only with their owne businesse the servant knoweth not what his master doth Ioh. 15.15 Fiftly by doing their worke with all faithfulnesse and diligence in absence as well as presence that when the master comes hee may finde them so doing Mat. 24. Thus of the manner of the duty the persons to whom they must thus submit themselves follow and so they must be subject with all fear not only to the good but also to the froward To the good and gentle For the sense we must enquire who are good masters and who gentle Good masters are discerned by divers signes First they seeke not only painefull and skilfull but religious servants Psal. 101.1 6 7. Secondly they not only licence but teach their servants to keepe Gods Sabbaths and to worship him Commandement 4. Gen. 18.19 Thirdly they will not command their servants to doe any thing that is sinfull or to lye as snares or defraud others for their profit Fourthly that receive their servants especially such as are religious as their brethren Fiftly that are overseers as well of the manners of their servants as of their labours being as carefull that their servants be no worse to themselves than to their masters Sixtly that use their servants well not only praising them for well doing but alwaies rewarding their service with liberall wages and when they part from them not suffering them to goe from them empty without portion c. Masters shew their gentlenesse also divers waies as First when they use their authority moderately or are not haughtie or violent towards their servants Secondly when they passe by their infirmities and take not notice of all the ill they say or doe Eccles. 7.22 Thirdly when their servants offend they chide them with good words and not revile them But also to the froward Froward masters are such as are bitter to their servants hard to please that are apt to finde fault that use their servants hardly in words or deeds but chiefly such as are cholerick and passionate and peevish in their carriage towards their servants So that foure Doctrines may be noted from these words and from the coherence Doct. 1. First that God takes notice of the faults of Superiours as well as he requires duties of inferiours he sees frowardnesse in masters as well as disobedience in servants and the reason is both because God is no respecter of persons and also because he gives his law to all men And therefore superiours must make conscience of their duties for though in all things they are not to give accounts to their inferiours yet they must give accounts of all they doe to God Col. 3.24 Doct. 2. That God sees and dislikes such faults as the lawes of man take not notice of If a master should kill his hired servant mens lawes would take hold of him but if he be never so froward with him he may escape mens lawes But though the lawes of men punish not frowardnesse yet God will So we see in the exposition of Christ given unto divers commandements Mat. 5. man failed in killing adultery purity c. not once thinking of anger lust filthy speaking reviling c. yet God forbids even these things also which serves to reprove the folly of such as justifie themselves for very just men because they offend not the lawes of men but never consider that God can finde a world of faults in them that mens lawes cannot because God sees the heart and by his lawes requires obedience of the inward man and condemnes all swerving from the right temper of heart and carriage And therefore we should all looke to our waies to approve our selves not only to men but to God and so to confesse the imperfections of mens lawes as to admire the perfection of Gods Word Doct. 3. That frowardnesse is a vice to be avoided of all sorts of men It is not only uncomely in
murderer is in a fearefull case but thou art a murderer therefore thou art in a fearefull case Now that that reason which concludes thus in him is his conscience is most apparent For the minde gives only the first part of the Syllogisme which is that a murderer is in a fearfull case or that the minde sees either by the naturall principles planted in it or by the Scriptures The other branch the conscience takes out of the memory that is that thou hast committed murder Now the concluding of both and applying them to the murderer is the proper work of conscience conscience is that within us that so concluds upon our actions Now for the definition of conscience omitting the diversity of frames given by divers men I expresse that which I take to be the cleerer and fullest to shew us what it is Conscience is a divine faculty in the soule of all reasonable creatures applying the principles or propositions of their minde in their particular actions either with them or against them I say it is a faculty to note that it is more then the act or the habite of the minde judging or determining For acts and habits may be lost but conscience cannot Besides the Scriptures shew that conscience doth act as it excuseth or accuseth and therefore must be a faculty it selfe and not the act of a faculty I say a faculty in the soule because I dare not assigne it or confine it to any part of the soule as they doe that make it a part of the understanding for the understanding hath no parts properly and to make it a part Analogically is not to be borne in a definition as Logicians know I say moreover it is in all reasonable creatures to note that beasts that have only a sensitive soule have no conscience And whereas God also is no creature therefore he hath no conscience For God being holinesse it selfe needs no faculties to governe himselfe by nor any conscience to witnesse or prompt him And I say it is in all that none might imagine that some men have a conscience and some have none For every man hath a conscience either good or bad Secondly the proper worke of conscience is imported in the other words of the definition viz. applying the principles of the minde For the understanding whereof we must know that there are certain notions or frames of truth planted in the minds of all men being infused by God as a naturall law in their minds shewing what is good or evill and those principles are increased in the mindes of such as have the benefit of the Scripture more or lesse according to the degree of their knowledge Now that which conscience doth is this it repaires to these formes of truth or light in the minde and takes such of them as concerne the businesse in hand and with the force of them either comforts or affrights men according as the occasion is Note that I say it is a divine faculty I wanted a fit terme to expresse my meaning for that I would ●●ter I say that it is a wonderfull speciall faculty in us it is a most celestiall gift Conscience is so of God and in man that it is a kinde of middle thing betweene God and man lesse then God and yet above man So then Conscience concludes about a mans owne actions for if conscience trouble it selfe about other mens actions it is either the weaknesse or the errour of conscience and I adde particular actions because conscience never imployes it selfe properly about generals and lastly I adde for the successe or end it is either with a man or against him to note that conscience is such an Arbiter between God and us that sometimes it speakes for God against us and sometimes for us to God But that we may be more distinctly informed about conscience I therfore come to the second point which is to consider what conscience can doe or how it is imployed in us and conscience is imployed both for God and for man which worke I will consider first apart and then joyntly For God then Conscience works diversly and hath many offices under God and for God for it is Gods speciall spy set in the heart of man to watch him and his intelligencer and notary to set downe what man hath done it is Gods hand-writing the Law of God written in our hearts or rather worketh by the helpe of that body of the Law written by the finger of God upon the tables of mens hearts it is a co-witnesse with God Rom. 9.1 It is also Gods Lievtenant and a great commander placed within us that severely requires homage and service to bee done to God and especially diverts man from ill directing him in the carefull manner of serving of God for God will not accept any service that conscience doth not order 2 Tim. 1.3 It is a taster for God in point of doctrine of Religion for all doctrines must bee brought to the conscience to bee tried whether they bee of God or no 2 Cor. 4.2 And finally it makes a man endure grief and suffer wrong for God and his glory as this Text imports For man conscience is many waies imployed as first it is imployed in viewing and surveying the things of man especially the hidden things of man and here the power of conscience is wonderfull For other creatures may see the things without them but have no power to see the things within them only man he hath a knowledge reflexed The eye of a man too can see other things but without a glasse it cannot see it selfe But now conscience can discerne it selfe and the whole actions of man and so it differs from science or the knowledge of the minde for to know other things is science but to know our selves is conscience The soule then by conscience knowes it self it views the thoughts memory affections of the soule and can tell what wee thinke desire love feare hate c. Secondly in matters of Religion conscience is specially imployed for instance both in the Word and the Sacraments For the Wo●d the mystery of faith even all the grounds of Religion they are laid up and are in the keeping of conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 And in Baptisme where as God makes a covenant with us and likewise requires a restipulation or promise on our part conscience is herein imployed and without conscience God will do nothing in the businesse It was the forme in the Primitive times that the party which was to be baptised was to be examined before God whether he did beleeve t●e question was Credis Doest thou beleeve And he was to answere Credo I doe beleeve Now this answer God would not take unlesse the conscience would say that hee did beleeve as hee said this is the answer A good conscience is mentioned 1 Pet. 3.21 Againe a good conscience serves in all the offices of our life or affairs even in all things to be a
witnesse if we doe that which conscience thinks well to comfort us and if we doe that which conscience thinks ill to discourage us Rom. 2.15 and 9.1 Yea conscience is the guide of our lives We are here pilgrims and strangers farre from our home and in journey continually now God hath set consciences in us to be our guides that in all things we are to doe we may be directed and incouraged by conscience taking the direction and warrant of conscience as a speciall ground of our actions so as to doe cont●ary to what conscience bids us is a sin for it doth not only witnesse about what is past but it directs us about what is to come as now to be done But the principall worke of conscience whether we respect God or man is to keepe court in the heart of man There is in man Forum Conscientia a Court of Conscience a secret Tribunall is set up in the heart of man and therein fits conscience and arraigneth accuseth bringeth witnes sentenceth and doth execution Now concerning the judgement of conscience keeping an Assise in the heart of man two things are to bee considered first the law by which conscience judgeth secondly the manner of the proceeding in judgement For the first Conscience judgeth of the actions of men by vertue of certaine principles as I said before which it findeth in the understanding gathered either from the law of nature or from experience of Gods providence or from the Scriptures Now the manner how it proceeds in judgement is in forme of reasoning as I said before for in the minde the conscience findes as it were a booke of law written which is in the keeping of the faculty they call it in schooles Synt●resis from hence the conscience takes the ground of reasoning and from the memory it takes evidence of the fact or state of the man that is arraigned and then by it selfe it judiciously concludes and passeth sentence and so it proceeds whether it condemne or absolve In the judgement of condemnation it proceeds thus First it cites or calls for the soule to be tried then it accuseth in this forme out of the body of the law kept in the minde it takes the conclusion it meanes to workes upon and then useth the memory to testifie of the fact as for instance Every murderer is an offender thou art a murderer therefore thou art proved to be an offender Then comes the sentence in the same order Hee that commits murder without repentance shall be damned thou committest murder without repentance and therefore art a damned creature So likewise it proceeds in absolving For evidence it proceeds thus He that hath such and such marks as godly sorrow the love or feare of God c. he is a childe of God but thou hast these marks therefore thou art a childe of God and then it goeth to sentence He that is the childe of God shall bee saved but thou art proved to be the childe of God therefore thou shalt be saved Nor doth it rest in the sentence but immediatly doth it selfe begin the execution for laying hold upon the guilty person it presently buffets him and terrifies him and pricks him at the very heart and gnawes him many times with unspeakable torments and tortures And so contrariwise in the sentence of absolution it proceeds with comfort settleth and quieteth the heart of the absolved and many times makes it able with joy to stand undaunted against all the powers of hell and the world of which more afterwards when I come to intreat of the sorts of conscience Observe by the way the difference between the court of conscience within us and mens courts of Justice without us For in mens courts they proceed secundum allegatae probata according to allegation and proofes but God hath appointed another judgement in the heart of man there God judgeth not according to allegation and proofes but according to conscience and hath associated to every man a notary of his owne and a witnesse of his owne which he produceth out of his very bosome so as man shall bee made to confesse what he hath done though all the world excuse him and shall have comfortable testimony in himselfe though all the world beside accuse him The glory of the power of conscience appeares by the third point and that is the prerogatives and properties of conscience in a man for 1. It keeps court in the heart of a man without limitation of time it will call a man to answere and heare judgement at any time it is not limited to any terms nor can the sentence be delaied it hath power to examine testifie and give sentence at any time of the yeere at pleasure nor will it admit any appeal to any creature 2. It is subject properly only to God no earthly Prince can command the conscience of a man as will more appeare afterwards 3. It keeps continuall residence in the heart of man it is alwaies with him at home and abroad it observeth and watcheth him in all places in the Church at his table in his bed day and night it never leaves him 4. God hath subjected man to the obedience of conscience if it command erroneously if it be in things indifferent as in the case of meats and daies in the Apostles time if the conscience doubted or forbade the use of them which yet in themselves might be used the man was bound to follow his conscience though the conscience erred and so sinned in doubting or forbidding Rom. 14.14.23 5. Yea so much honour doth God give unto the conscience that he suffers his owne most holy Spirit to bring in evidence in the court of conscience for so we read that the Spirit of Adoption doth beare witnesse before our spirits that is before the conscience that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.15 6. It is a great prerogative that God hath granted immortality unto conscience Conscience never dies no not when we die Every mans conscience shall bee found no lier at the day of Judgement in so great request with Christ as that dreadfull Judgement shall be guided according to the evidence and verdict of conscience Rom. 2.15 16. For the fourth point Conscience is not all of a sort in all men some have good consciences and some have ill consciences and both these kindes of consciences must be considered of Conscience considered as good comes to be so either by creation or by renovation By creation Adam had his conscience good but by the first sinne conscience became evill in him and all his posterity so as all men naturally have evill consciences and no men have their consciences good but as they are renewed The difference between a good conscience by creation and renovation is this that by creation conscience was perfectly good from the first moment it was infused till the fall and did discover it self by excusing and comforting alwaies for Adams conscience till his fall could accuse
him of nothing But by renovation conscience is good for the time of this life but imperfectly and increaseth in good men by degrees and so because man is renewed but in part it is a part of the goodnesse of the conscience to accuse for sinne especially if it be presumptuous after calling as well as to excuse from faults while the man keeps his uprightnesse That a good conscience should only excuse is true in this world onely of conscience as it was good by creation Now concerning the goodnesse or badnesse of conscience these seven things are to be considered of First that all mens consciences by nature are evill Secondly the difference of evill in mens consciences Thirdly the signes of an evill conscience Fourthly the hurt of an evill conscience Fiftly the meanes how evill consciences may be made good Sixtly the signes of a good conscience Seventhly the great happinesse of the man that hath a good conscience For the first that all mens consciences are by nature evill is manifest because all have sinned in Adam and lost their originall righteousnesse in all the faculties of the soule and so every man in his naturall condition is in every point uncleane and to the impure all things are impure even their consciences are polluted saith the Apostle Tit. 1.15 For the second evill is not in the same degree in all mens consciences but after a different manner in divers men for First in most men wee see that conscience is so feeble and works so little that it seemes to be but a small sparke or like a bubble which riseth now and then and presently vanisheth Now the reason why conscience stirs so little in the most men is not to be taken from the nature of conscience for that can worke all workes mentioned before but from divers things in man For first Adams sinne as it deprived all mens consciences of originall righteousnesse which was the life of the conscience so it brought such a depravation and evill disease upon the conscience that it was never healed nor cured in the naturall man to this day but the weaknesse arising from the infection holds him downe still Secondly the generall ignorance and darknesse which is in the world is one great cause why conscience lieth so miserably weake and neglected For it cannot worke for want of light For in the mind it findes only a few naturall principles or some generall truths of religion which are altogether insufficient to direct in the particular occasions of mens lives Thirdly besides the law of nature is corrupted in man and so those principles are very muddy and uncertaine and the generals of Religion are poysoned with secret objections gathered from the controversies of so many false religions Fourthly further it is manifest that the cares and pleasures of life oppresse conscience in many and in them conscience stirs not not because it cannot stir but because there is no leasure to heare what it saith men are so violently carried to the pleasures and busines of this world As a man that runs in a race many times runs with such violence that he cannot heare what is said unto him by some that he passeth by though it were counsell that might direct him in the right way of the race so is it with men that haste to be rich conscience often cals to them to take heed of going out of the way by deceit or lying or oppression or the like but they pursue riches so violently that they cannot heare the voice of conscience And so is it with the voluptuous person and with the most men that live in any habituall gainfull sinne Fiftly yea this weaknes comes upon the conscience of some by custome of sinnes that are not sinnes of gaine or pleasure as the sinnes of negligence sloathfulnesse passion or the like in which men are wilfully confirmed and will not regard the checks of their owne conscience Finally one great reason why the most of us feele so little of conscience is the evill hearing of the Word of God for the Word of God powerfully preached would awake the conscience but that most men set themselves to neglect it by a willing wilfull entertainment of distractions and in voluntary forgetting of what they have heard and so hood-winking themselves it is no wonder they cannot see Secondly some mens conscience is starke dead it stirs not at all The conscience is compared to a part of the body that is not only without sense and rotten but is feared with an hot iron and this is the case only of some notorious either Hereticks or malefactors that have lived a long time wilfully in some monstrous wickednesse either knowne or secret 1 Tim. 4.2 This seared conscience is either joyned with a greedinesse to commit speciall wickednesse or with a reprobate minde that is so horrible stupid that it judgeth evill to be good or at the best not dangerously hurtfull Ephes. 4.18 Rom. 1.28 Thirdly in some men the evill of conscience lyeth in this that it is over busie and sinnes too much and so in two sorts of men first the superstitious or secondly the desperate The superstitious person is many times disquieted by his conscience in doing well or when he doth that which is not unlawfull as the Popish Priest is troubled for comming to our Churches or the Christian that is carried with preposterous zeale is troubled for obeying the Magistrate in using his liberty in things indifferent in the desperate the evill of Conscience is the horrible tormenting of them beyond the bounds of the offence of Conscience and that in two things First in that it presents the wrath of God to them without the hope of mercy in Christ as did the Conscience of Cain Secondly in that it drives them to doe that against themselves which is desperately wicked as to make away themselves as the desperate Conscience of Iudas and Achitophel did Fourthly in some men there was a temporary goodnesse in the Conscience of which they made shipwracke and so utterly lost the goodnesse they had for a time And thus many hypocrites doe that for a time get the forme of Religion even into their Consciences but afterward falling into the immoderate love of the world or the lust of some particular sinne fall cleane away from Religion and so lose the goodnesse which they had 1 Tim. 1.19 Thus of the differences of evill in the Consciences of divers men the signes of an evill Conscience follow But before I give the signes wee must take notice of a distinction and that is that the Conscience may have evill in it and not be an evill Conscience Conscience in this life in men regenerate is renewed and restored but in part and so may erre sometimes and in some cases and yet be no evill Conscience As for instance in certaine weake Christians in the Primitive Church who yet were godly men the Apostle shewes Rom. 14. that some Christians for Conscience sake did
refuse certaine meates and dayes the Conscience erred in judging those meates and dayes to bee unlawfull to be observed and used and yet hee calls them that were so led by an erring Conscience hee calls them I say brethren But when we speake of an evill Conscience we meane Conscience unregenerate As a man may have sinne in him and yet be a good man so may Conscience have blindnesse in it and yet bee a good Conscience The signes of an unregenerate Conscience may be gathered from the differences of evill Consciences The signes then of an unregenerate still Conscience are these First when it is quiet in the committing and after the committing of knowne sinne whether open or secret For open sins as for drunkennesse swearing lying profanation of the Sabbath and the like the Conscience cannot be good when these or the like open wickednesses are committed and so when it is quiet notwithstanding secret whoredome or filthinesse of any kinde or continuall wickednesse in the thoughts or desires that Conscience that can abide a soule heart is a wicked Conscience Secondly when it excuseth for doing notorious evils and so they have evill Consciences that could trouble and persecute even to the death godly men and yet thinke they did God good service Iohn 16.2 The signes of an unregenerate stirring Conscience are these First when the Conscience serves onely to tell ill newes when it serves to tell a man onely of his losse by Adam or the Law but never comforteth him by bringing●in any evidence of Gods favour in Christ. That Conscience that terrifies without Christ that is without mixing any of the comforts of the Gospell in Christ is an evill Conscience the speciall property of a good Conscience is to excuse and comfort and therefore that Conscience that doth onely accuse is an evill Conscience Secondly when the Conscience flees from the presence of God as did Adams Conscience after the Fall and this the Conscience discovers when it dares not stand before the discovery of the Law of God not dares abide a powerfull Minister that speakes to the Conscience of the hearers and ransacks them Thirdly when the Conscience languisheth about questions that tend not to edification and raiseth the strength of zeale and all the power of it about things that are lesse necessary either unto faith or practice And this was the case of the Pharisees Conscience that spent all their zeale about lesse matters and neglected the waightier things of the Law And this is the case of all such Christians that are zealous with a fiery zeale about circumstances or the estates and businesses of others and neglect the maine things of substance that concerne their owne sanctification assurance or salvation Fourthly when the Conscience is for men and not for God when the motive that raiseth and incourageth it is the praise of men and not the praise of God This also was the case of the Consciences of the Pharisees for the Conscience in them was busie and did require good duties but the respect was still the praise of men whereas a good Conscience is for God above all Fiftly when it will accuse onely for grosse evils and those knowne to others and not for lesse and secret sins to be repented of Sixtly when it will accuse onely in the time of adversity as in the case of Iosephs brethren Thus of the signes of an evill Conscience The misery that the men have that have an evill Conscience followes and they are miserable whether they have a waking or a sleeping Conscience The misery that comes from a waking Conscience is evill and may be two wayes discerned first by the tearmes by which it is called and resembled in Scripture secondly by the effects which it worketh really upon a man For the first An evill Conscience that is awake is in Scripture compared to a sting or pricke wounding the heart of a man It is likened also to a dog or a bloud-hound that lieth at the doore and having fresh sent howleth and barketh after the malefactor Gen. 4. It is likened as some thinke by David Psal. 51.4 to an evill contentious wife that is ever before a man chiding and brauling and as a moth secretly eats the garment so doth an evill Conscience eat up the heart of a man when others little see it Prov 25. It is like a dart strangely shot into a mans body Psalme 38. and it is compared to the boyling of the tumultuous sea Esay 57. and it is called a worme that dieth not but lieth gnawing and eating upon the heart of a man Esay 66. Marke 9. So that a man that hath an evill Conscience is like a man that is stung by a serpent or followed by a bloud-hound or vexed by a continuall-contrarious wife or that is hourely shot through with darts or that hath a living worme ever gnawing at his heart But that this may be more distinctly understood wee must take notice of foure effects of an evill Conscience usually The first is shame He that hath an evill Conscience is betrayed by his own blushing many times when his offence is secret yea a man feeles an inward shame in his owne heart disgracing and abusing him though he make no outward shew of it For though sometimes an innocent person upon the fulnesse of an aspersion may conceive shame as David did Psal. 44.15 yet it is usually the effect of an ill Conscience The second is paine and anguish of heart arising from the gnawing and stings of Conscience mentioned before which so continually burdens the heart that it takes away all contentment in any thing and keepes the heart in an habituall disconsolation and though the disease of melancholy may breed a sadnesse like unto it yet is there manifest difference betwixt this affliction of spirit and melancholy for the melancholick person usually can assigne no certaine reason of that sadnesse whereas Conscience when it stings a ●●gnes the cause of it to be such and such things which bring no● only the shame of men but the wrath of God Besides melancholick sadnesse may be eased by physicke but this sorrow is not cured by any meanes but such as are spirituall The third is a strange kind of feare breaking the heart of a man and so subduing his courage that he is not able to sustaine himselfe against the impressions of vaine causes of feare A trembling heart is the effect of an ill conscience Deut. 28.65 Thus wicked men are said in Scripture to feare when no man pursueth them Pro. 28.1 and to be so faint-hearted as the sound of a shaken leafe shall make them fly as it were from a sword Levit. 26.36 and as it is in Iob The sound of feare is alwayes in his eares yea the terrours of conscience sometime so enrage upon the offender that no torments are like unto their terrours which sometimes are so great that they are hardly able to sustaine themselves but discover their horrible
if he obey not or to excuse if he obey As for the authority of masters or other superiours it cannot reach to the conscience properly for they have no power to command or punish conscience but that which ties conscience to submit unto them is the commandement of God in his Word in this and such like places And therefore hence wee may learne the difference between the power of mens lawes and the power of Gods Word which difference will further appeare distinctly in many things First men may make many lawes either ecclesiasticall or civill which bind not at all yea which we are bound not to keep as if they command a thing contrary to the Word of God and in that case it is better to obey God than men and conscience is first bound to God Acts 5. Dan. 3. Now all Gods laws binde Secondly if such as are next above us in authority command us any things contrary to the lawes of the supreme Magistrate to whom they and we are bound we are not tied to obey Thirdly mens lawes can only binde us to outward working or suffering they cannot make lawes or inflict punishment upon the hearts or mindes of men whereas Gods lawes enjoyne obedience upon the inward man as well as the outward and eternall punishment as well as temporary Fourthly the best lawes of men where they binde most binde not by any immediate power of their owne but by feare of Gods Word that enjoynes us to obey their lawfull authority Fiftly mens lawes ever binde with limitation that is with respect of the end of the law and the person of the law-maker and the offence of others and hereupon Divines say if mens laws be omitted so as the end of the laws bee not hindred that is that the Common-wealth be not damnified or other particular ends crossed or offence be not given as much as in us lieth or the law-giver be not despised or contemned the conscience may not accuse a man of sinne Sixtly some lawes of men are meerly penall note that I say meerly penall that is they are made about matters of lesse importance and not uttered precisely in commanding tearmes or so uttered that the Common-wealth is accounted by the law-giver to be sufficiently provided for if the penalty be inflicted Now he that is ready to pay the fine or the penalty and doth not transgresse but in some case of necessary respect he is not to be charged with sinne before God And thus of conscience and of the laying downe of the first reason The avouching of it followes in verse 20. Verse 20. For what glory is it if when you be buffeted for your faults you shall take it patiently But if when you doe well and suffer for it you take it patiently this is acceptable with God WHere the Apostle makes it good that the best praise is to suffer wrongfully First by affirming that it is no true glory for a man to suffer for his faults and endure it Secondly by shewing that to suffer patiently for well doing is a thing very acceptable to God That it is no true glory for a man to suffer for his faults that he endure it patiently he expresseth in these words What glory is it if when yee be buffeted for your faults you take it patiently Out of which words divers doctrines may be briefly noted Doct. 1. First that men of all sorts doe naturally affect glory 〈…〉 or reputation and are guided by it in their actions or sufferings even the meanest sort of men set before themselves something which they glory in and according to which they order themselves as here servants even of the worst sort too yea such as are faulty and so disliked and corrected yet will not be without something to glory in and that is as is here supposed to bee their patience in abiding blowes And this ariseth in man partly out of corruption of nature and pride that seekes to cover their faults with some thing they account to bee of praise and partly out of the force of some remainder of goodnesse in their natures that are not destitute of all desire of vertuous actions Which may serve for Use to all men in their carriage one towards another to avoide as much as may be the dishonouring and disgracing one of another for no person is so meane but he finds himselfe stung by disgrace And it may teach superiours to use praise and glory as a meanes to provoke and excite inferiours to obedience and care as being a motive that will work universally upon all natures Doct. 2. Usually men account that to be glory which is not vain-glory is taken for true glory by most men thus men mistake that place Their glory In Idols and Pictures Hos. 10.5 In Epicurisme and shamefull lusts Phil. 3.19 In the increase of meanes and power to sinne Hos. 4.6 7. In the gifts and power of other men 1 Cor. 3.21 In Russian-like pride or vain and strange apparell 1 Cor. 11.14.1 Pet. 3.5 1 Tim. 2.9 10. In mischief and malicious practices against the godly Psal. 52.1 94.4 In fraudulent bargaines Pro. 20.23 In a mans owne gifts of nature as wit strength memory c. Ier. 9.23 In the common graces of Religion as knowledge zeale c. Rom. 2.27 1 Cor. 4.7 In the praise sought and given by himself Ioh. 7.10 and 8.54 2 Cor. 10.18 In the merit of his owne workes Rom. 4.2 In the praise of men more then of God In strife contention and provocation of others Iames 3.14 Gal. 5.26 Phil. 2.3 In the falls of other men that are divided from them in judgement 1 Cor. 5.6 In earthly things as houses riches beauty honour pleasures c. 1 Pet. 1. 24. Isa. 48.16 So here some men account it their glory to suffer patiently though they be guilty and have deserved all they suffer And therefore we should be warned and directed in studying that which is true glory And if any aske what were indeed glorious I answer that spirituall riches are the best glory and therefore our soules are called our glory by an excellency Psal. 3.4 The best glory is within Psal. 45.14 And in particular it is true glory To be righteous and mercifull Prov. 21.21 To be humble and feare God Prov. 22.4 To know God Ier. 9.23 To live so sincerely as we may have the testimony of a good conscience 2 Cor. 1.12 To be exalted of God to the priviledges hope of his children Iam. 1.9 To have interest in the crosse of Christ Gal. 6.14 To be abased and truly humbled for our sins Iames 1.9 To abound in labours and sufferings for the Gospel 2 Cor. 11. and 22.12 To defer anger and passe by a trespasse Prov. 19.11 To suffer without fainting for Religion Ephes. 3.13 So here to doe well and suffer for it and endure it patiently this is a glory with God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sinning Doct. 3. The words may be rendred thus What
or contempt of others or hath the appearance of such evill in the judgement of others Esay 3. 1 Thes. 5. 8. When it becommeth not good workes or hindereth them 1 Tim. 2.9 as when men restraine mercie to the poore or oppresse their Tenants or defraud other men onely to mainetaine themselves or theirs in outward pompe and gallantnesse of apparell This is the horrible sin of the Gentry in many places of this kingdome 9. When it is condemned and reproved by godly Ministers that are both wise and learned for their testimony ought to be received 2 Thess. 1.10 and it is a vile sinne to vexe them and grieve them by our obstinacie yea though they were not able to make so full demonstration yet when they reprove such things out of a spirituall jealousie and feare they corrupt their hearers they ought to be heard Heb. 13.18 1 Cor. 11.2.3 10. When the time that might be profitably spent is consumed by the tedious curiositie of dressing Ephes. 5.16 as it is with those that have not time for God● worship in private or cannot come time enough to the Church or neglect their calling by being so long in dressing 11. When it dishonours the body of a man Col. 2. ult as when it is slovenly or sluttish or is taken up of meere singularitie and affectation of the praise of mortification and tends to restraine Christian libertie in others For no pretence may uncomely apparell be used for 1 Tim. 2.9 it is required that the apparell of women be comely for so the originall word signifies But especially uncomely apparell is then most vile when it is worne with a purpose to deceive as the Prophet complained of such as weare a ro●gh garment to deceive 12. The puritie of a Christian life should avoide all dressings or fashions which had their originall from infamous persons such as are the fashions of Whores or debauched creatures and such a beginning it is said commonly Yellow starch had What fellowship betweene light and darknesse righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse Christ and Belial If we would have God to love us we must separate and come out from amongst them and touch no uncleane thing 13. When such apparell is worne as is contrary to the wholesome lawes of men for we are bound to submit our selves to every ordinance of man for Gods sake 1 Pet. 2.13 14. Lastly when the partie that useth such apparell or dressing is condemned in himselfe and hath his owne conscience accusing or disliking it or is no● fully assured that he doth not sin Whatsoever is not of Faith in those things is sin Rom. 14. Verse 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart c. HItherto of that adorning they should not be curious or costly in Now in this verse he shewes in the affirmative what apparell or dressing they s●ould be carefull of and that is the adorning of their soules and the apparelling of the inward man In the words three things may be noted 1. What must be apparelled viz. the hidden man of the heart 2. With what it must be adorned which he shewes both in generall and in particular in generall it must be with incorruptible things in particular it must be with a meeke and quiet spirit 3. The reason viz. because such apparell is very rich in Gods account The fir●● thing then is what must be apparelled viz. the man of the heart The man of the heart This is a kind of speaking not used in any place of Scriptu●e but this onely this Apostle onely useth this kinde of expressing himselfe Now concerning the man of the heart I would consider of sixe things 1. What he is 2. Whence he is or his originall 3. In what he excels the outward man 4. What condition he is in by nature 5. H●w he may be mended or made better 6. How we may know when the man of the heart is right ●or the first by the man of the heart hee meanes the same the Apostle Paul●oth ●oth by the inward man 2 Cor. 4.16 and the inward man is the soule or he●rt of man Thus ●e speakes of a Jew that is outward and a Jew that is in●ar● Rom. 2.28 29. Now the heart is and may well be called the man for divers reasons 1. In respect of definition For the definition of a man agrees to the heart of man though there were no body for God was the God of Abraham and Abraham was and was a living man many hundred yeeres after his body was in the grave Mat. 22. And hence it is that unto the soule or heart of man in Scriptures is attributed all things that the outward man can doe as life Psal. 22.27 language Eccles. 9.1 Psal. 14.1 36.1 praying to God Psal. 37.4 receiving messages from God as when the Prophet is bidden to speake to the heart of Jerusalem Esay 40. serving of God c. 2. In respect of dominion The heart is the man because it disposeth the way of man Pro. 16.9 and ruleth the outward man for out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh And therefore Solomon saith that from the heart comes life Pro. 4.23 3. In respect of acceptation The heart is that which God especially respects in man it is the heart he lookes upon 1 Sam. 17.7 He tries the heart and as Solomon saith He weighes the hearts of the children of men Pro. 21.2 and he will be served with our hearts Iosh. 24.14 and in all holy duties it is with us in Gods account according as he seeth the heart 1 Kings 8.39 so he requires the heart in repenting 1 Sam. 7.3 in praying 2 Tim. 2.22 Hos. 7.14 in hearing the Word Luke 8. and so in every good duty Thus of the first point For the second The man of the heart hath his originall from God himselfe He is the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.8 and it was his especiall glory to forme and fashion the heart in man as divers Scriptures shew Zech. 12.1 Psal. 33.15 and is therefore called the God of the heart Psal. 37. For the third The man of the heart excells the outward man exceedingly and that both in substance and in priviledges As for substance in the outward man we agree with beasts but in the inward man we agree with Angels in as much as the man of the heart consists of a spirituall and immateriall essence as well as the Angels And as in substance so in properties there is great difference for first the man of the heart is hidden it can be and doe all his worke and yet be invisible God himselfe hath variety of conversation with the man of the heart that no creature else knowes Secondly he is free and subject only to the God of his heart properly No man can come at or governe or command the heart of man Thirdly he is properly the seat of Gods image Wee are not properly like God in our bodies because God hath no body but in
to use such evill courses as they doe for by the doctrine and reasons before it appeares plainely that they doe both holily and happily by committing all to God Psal. 14.4 7. 22.9 Thus of the second doctrine Doct. 3. It is a speciall praise in women to trust in God and the more praise because it is so rare in women who use to relie upon either their parents or their husbands to provide for them and seldome looke up to God And besides it produceth excellent effects for it makes them subject to their husbands and that with all quietnesse and meeknesse and feare to displease their husbands as is implied here And besides women that trust in God will be a great help and comfort to their husbands in their crosses they will encourage them to relie upon God in whom they put their trust which very help is worth great riches The Use should be therefore to perswade wives to be the more carefull of their faith and trust in God and to looke to it that it be a true faith and a right trust in God for such wives as are a vexation to their husbands by their carelesnesse and frowardnesse and unquietnesse and such as are so farre from comforting their husbands in distresse that they rather add affliction to their afflictions by censuring them and crossing them they may justly fear that their trust in God is not right Yea it maybe observed that some wives that professe religion and are unquiet and live frowardly and stubbornly towards their husbands they are unquiet in their consciences too and when crosses come upon them call their faith into question and cannot be established in their trust in God And it is just with God it should be so that such women as dare live in knowne transgressions against their husbands should not know their portion in the consolation of God God will not be loved when their husbands are not loved Thus of the fourth point The fift point is the effect and that is They adorned themselves Adorned themselves In all ages the comelinesse and ornameut of a wife as a wife was to obey her husband with meeknesse and feare and those were the comeliest and best apparelled women in the sight of God their husbands and good men that were most quiet and easie to be governed and willingest to please their husbands And so on the contrary a wife were a very unhandsome woman and not fit to please any wise man that were of a froward and unquiet disposition either through anger or crying or the like yea though she had otherwise never so great an estate or never so excellent gifts of nature of mind or bodie yea if she could be imagined to have true holinesse and grace yet she were but a loathsome creature And this doctrine as it should move all wives so especially such as have not other things to commend them but want either portion or beautie or skill or have but weake gifts in religion these should be the more carefull to recompence their husbands and strive to please them in this way of adorning themselves The matter of the example is subjection to their husbands and of that I have entreated in the exhorration it selfe The speciall argument is taken from the particular example of Sarah ver 6. Where we are to observe 1. What she did viz. she obeyed Abraham calling him Lord. 2. What fruit will follow to Christian wives if they follow her example viz. they shall become her daughters 3. Upon what condition they shall obtaine that honour viz. if they doe well and be not affraid of any amazement Sarah ● The names here mentioned are Sarah and Abraham and both their names are kept in the Christian Church not as they were at first but as they were changed of God out of his love and respect to their faith and obedience The woman was first called Saras which signified My Lady or My Mistris but after was changed into Sarah to signifie that she should be a Mistris to many or a Mistris indefinitely meaning that shee should have a great posteritie as the mans name was changed into Abraham and signified a father of many nations From the giving of the names wee may gather 1. Such as glorifie God by beleeving and keeping his covenant and patient bearing of adversitie shall be blessed of God and in particular shall have this blessing of a happy posteritie A godly life brings God to us and our families and an ungodly life drives him away 2. That God is no accepter of persons but godly wives shall have their part in the blessing of godly husbands This Christian wives may looke for if they be as Sarah holy women and such as obey their husbands and are a comfort and helpe to them in all the travels of their lives and no way hinder godlinesse in them Obeyed Abraham Divers things may be noted hence 1. That obedience is the chiefe thing required in the subjection of wives shewing how Sarah was subject he saith she obeyed him The maine thing required of wives is to be ruled by their husbands Those wives transgresse that are not carefull to see that done which their husbands require and with reason require and those that crosse their husbands and vexe them by opposing or censuring especially those that will not be quiet unlesse they may doe what they list and rule their husbands 2. That as much is due to everie husband as was due from Sarah to Abraham else this argument of the Apostle had not beene good They might have said that Abraham was a great man and holy and wise and loving c. but the Apostle requires that what women would doe for the substance of obedience if they had Abraham to their husband that must they doe to him that is now their husband And the reason is cleare because Gods commandement in the morall Law prescribes the same honour to be given to all husbands and in the New Testament obedience is required of all wives to all husbands And this was the more observable in Sarah because in obeying Abraham shee was faine to leave her owne countrey and be exposed to a world of paines and danger and wants 3. That the discharge of domesticall duties is a good worke and shall be had in everlasting remembrance Though all good wives have not the honour to be written in Gods booke of Scripture and praised therein yet they have the honour to be written in Gods booke of Remembrance which shall be opened at the last day and so contrariwise Calling him Lord. That shee did so call him the Apostle found written Gen. 18.12 Hence we may observe 1. That godly wives ought to acknowledge their husbands to have power over them as if they had beene servants bought with their money not that their subjection is no better than the subjection of servants but that the husbands have as well power over them as they have over their servants Sarah doth
and disagreements and faults in the carriage or judgements of Christians in their living together The earnestnesse of the Apostle in heaping up these directions imports that he discerned many things amisse which was not only true of the Churches of Corinth and Galatia and Thessaloni●a but even of the Church of Philippi which St. Paul most commends And the like we may find in the estate of the seven Churches of Asia if we mark what is said to them by S. Iohn in his Revelation Yea there was not perfect agreement at all times amongst the Pillars of the first Christian Churches Paul and Barnabas were at variance Acts●5 ●5 ●9 and Paul and Peter did openly disagree Gal. 2. The reason is because in this life we know but in part and are sanctified but in part 1 Cor. 13. The Use should be first to teach us not to be offended or scandalized at the differences of opinion that breake out in all the Churches of Christ every where in our times Wee must pray the God of peace to give us peace and know that it hath alwaies beene so and therefore it should not hinder us from embracing the known truth Secondly this should the more enflame our desires after heaven and make us the more willing to die because there will never be perfect holinesse and agreement till we come to heaven then we shall be holy as God is holy and know as we are known and charity will be perfect for ever And besides this should teach us with the more patience to instruct and waite for the amendment of such as are contrary minded and not strive over violently or passionately with them 2 Tim. 2.25 Lastly if Christians can agree no better and have such defects then wee should never wonder overmuch at the monstrous abominations in opinion or life that are found amongst the wicked of the world and in false Churches A second doctrine I observe from hence is That we ought to be rightly ord●red in our minds as well as any other part of our soules or lives Yea the minde is to be looked to in the first place Hence it is that in our regeneration our mindes are especially renewed Rom. 12.2 and God requires to be served with our minds Mat. 22.37 Yea as God is an eternall mind so the service of the mind is most proper for God And besides our mindes give lawes to our lives and therefore if the mind be not good the life must needs be evill The happinesse of the whole man depends upon the mind and therefore the Apostle reckons the impuritie of the mind and conscience to be the worst impurity can befall a man Tit. 1.15 and the same Apostle makes it a signe of a man whose end is damnation to have his mind taken up and wholly bent to earthly things Phil. 3.19 This point may serve first to shew the wofull estate of such persons as have ill and unsound minds And the mind is unsound when it is corrupt or putrefied with ill opinions concerning either faith or manners 2 Tim. 3.8 1 Cor. 11.3 and when it is blinded with ignorance 2 Cor. 4.3 4. for without knowledge the mind cannot be good Pro. 19.2 and it is a divellish mischiefe to have darknesse in our mindes as that place in the Corinthians shewes The minde is also unsound and in wof●ll ●aking when it is taken up with vile thoughts and contemplative wickednesse Rom. 1.21 Eph. 4.17 and when men have double mindes Iames 4.7 or wavering mindes Iames 1.7 And therefore one of the highest curses God inflicts upon men with whom he is angry is to plague them in their mindes either with a reprobate mind Rom. 1.28 or with a desperate minde Secondly this Doctrine shewes what harmfull creatures deceivers of mindes are they doe more mischiefe than such as deceive men in their estates or poison mens bodies Tit. 1.10 Thirdly this should teach all carefull Christians to gird up the loynes of their mindes 1 Pet. 1.13 and to labour to get a sound minde 2 Tim. 1.7 and in particular to get the unitie of minde which the Apostle here requires And so I come to the third point The third Doctrine then which I observe out of these words is That all true Christians are bound in a speciall maner to strive to be all of one mind which in this place is meant of unity and agreement in judgement and matter of beliefe in the points of Religion This is urged in divers Scriptures as 1 Cor. 1.10 2 Cor. 13.11 Phil. 2.2 Rom 15.5 and this was the great glorie of the first Christian Church that all the multitude were of one heart and one soule Acts 4.32 There are many reasons to perswade us hereunto 1. From the nature of this agreement It is as it were one of the bonds of the mysticall union for though it be not the principall one for that is the Spirit of Christ yet it is a speciall one it is like the veines and sinewes which tye the bodie together to breake this unitie is to cut asunder the very veines and sinewes of the mysticall bodie of Christ 1 Cor. 1.10 2 From the equitie and comelinesse of it We have but one Father one Baptisme one Spirit one Hope and therefore should have but one Faith Eph. 4.3 4 5. 3 From the good effects of this unitie for first it will make us the fitter to prayse God and doe him service with the greater encouragement and comfort as we may see Rom. 15.5 Secondly it will make us ever eat our meat with more gladnesse and singlenesse and quietnesse of heart Act. 2.46 Thirdly it will winne us the more favour and honour amongst the people as wee reade in the example of those first Christians Act. 2.47 yea in the end of that verse wee may gather that it is a great advantage for the conversion of others when they see us agree so well together and further it will bee a singular joy to our Teachers to see us agree and be all of one minde and to serve God with one shoulder as the Prophet speaketh Zeph. 3.9 so Phil. 2.2 Yea it will bee a signe to us that wee are true Christians and have found true comfort in Christ and in brotherly love and that we have fellowship by the Spirit in the bodie of Christ and that we have right bowels and mercie unto others Phil. 2.1 2. 4 From the ill effects of dissenting Two of them may be gathered from the coherence in this place for first it is implyed That if Christians agree not in opinions they will hardly practise the foure other vertues here named towards the persons with whom they dissent they will not love them as brethren heartily nor bee so pitifull to them in distresse nor so mercifull to helpe them if they be in need nor so courteous and kinde to them Secondly if this first rule be transgressed it is very probable they will bring trouble upon themselves and that either
by Christ 154 Excellent uses of the manifold descriptions of Christ 248 249 As he is a Lord how he excels other Lords 249 How said to be both a stone and a living stone 249 250. c. Christ is precious many wayes 254 How we may get an esteeme of Christ above all things 281 How we may manifest this esteeme ibid. How Christ is an honour to us 292 Christ many waies refused 298 In what respects Christ bare our sinne 531 Christian. A Christians life is a joyfull life 54 What they must doe to preserve that joy in their hearts 55 How farre he may rejoyce in earthly things 56 Priviledges of weake Christians 229 Encouragement for weak Christians 237 Christians have divers sacrifices 266 Only Christians come of the best generation 317 They are royall many wayes 318 The priesthood of a Christian is a singular priviledge 320 321 It should put us in minde of divers duties 321 Christians are holy many wayes 322 How Christians are said to be all of one Nation 325 Why called a peculiar people 326 327 A sound Christian shewes himselfe so by his conversation 388 For what reasons Christians should be much affected with the consideration of their Calling 689 The necessity of knowing our calling 690 How it may be knowne 691 Divers sorts of Christians ibid. Carnall Christians know not their Calling ibid. c. The reasons of it 692 Good Christians have a blessed estate above all men 693 True Christians inherit nothing but blessing 693. and that many wayes 694 Church Eleven prerogatives of the Christian Church 79 80 The Church like Mount Sion in many respects 276 277 The uses hereof ibid. The excellencie of the word above all other assemblies of the world besides 277 Cleane Cleanenesse Eight things to be done for the getting of a clean heart 175 Come We Come to Christ many mayes 256 Eight wayes to come to Christ 257 Encouragements thereto ibid. c. Compassion It was shewed by Christ five wayes 332 In man how 679 Motives to it ibid. What bowels of Compassion doth import 683 Confound Beleevers shall never be Confounded 284 The diverse acceptation of the word Confound ibid. How Confounded may be taken in a good sense 285 Meanes by which God keepes the Beleever from being confounded ibid. In what he shall not be confounded ibid. How farre he may be confounded 286 Conditions of such as will not be confounded 287 What sorts of men shall suffer shame and Confusion ibid. Conscience It ought to be adorned with nine things 18 Kindes of Conscience 503 Reasons why men ought to be instructed about Conscience 499 What Conscience is ibid. It s proper worke 500 How Conscience is imployed in us ibid. The law by which Consc. judgeth the maner of proceeding in judgment 502 Prerogatives of Conscience ibid. c. Divers kinds of Conscience 503 Differences of evills in mens Consciences 504 Signes of an evill Conscience that is still and stirred 505 Hurts of an ill Conscience with foure effects ●hereof 506 Aggravations of the miserie of an ill Conscience 507 What must be done to make an ill Conscience good 508 Two things for guiding the Conscience 509 Signes of a good Conscience ibid. Benefits of it 510 How farre Conscience may be bound 510 511 Conversation Our conversation said to be vaine in sixe respects 140 The sins which make it so ibid. There is vanitie in the Conversation of the Saints themselves ibid. Five degrees of our redemption from a vaine conversation 141 Seven signes of it ibid. Speciall rules for the right ordering of a holy Conversation 323 Meanes to ●ttain● it 324 Differences betweene a holy Conversation and a civill ibid. A sound Christian shewes himselfe so by his Conversation 388 Vide Honest. Sixe things which make an honest Conversation 389 An honest Conversation is the way either to convert or convince the Gentiles 392 By what meanes we may win wicked men in our Conversations 594 595 Reasons why a Christians Conversation should be coupled with feare 598 599 Conversion Nine signes to know whether we be effectually converted 585 Rules for it 586 Courtesie It containeth seven things 685 Creation The wonderfulnesse of our Creation shewed many waies 151 152 The use of it ibid. D DAy Many sorts of Dayes n●ted in Scrip●●●● 416 How the Day and season of grace may be knowne 417 Darknesse The acceptation of the word Darknesse 338 c. Degrees of it 339 Nine aggravations of the Darknesse that is in wicked men 340 The use of it ibid. c. Foure signs of spirituall Darknesse 341 There is some Darknesse even in the children of Light ibid. There are seven differences between the Darknesse of the godly and the darknesse of the ungodly 341 342 Death Vide Die 198 534 Deceit Vide Guile The miserie of Deceitfull persons 206 207 Of Deceitfull Servants 207 The iniquitie of our times herein 208 Signes of a man without Deceit 209 Despaire How many wayes wicked men may Despaire 307 Preservatives from Despaire 308 309 Speciall differences between the Despaire of the godly and wicked 309 310 Desire The necessitie utilitie and nature of this affection of Desire largely handled 221 The true Desire of the word hath foure distinct things in it first Estimation of it secondly Longing for it thirdly Content in it fourthly Constancie in the renewing of it 221 222 How we may discerne our affections to it 222 Signes both externall and internall of our Desire to the word 222 223 c. Impediments 223 Meanes of getting true Desire to the word 225 Rules for preserving these Desires 226 Motives thereto 227 How farre wicked men may desire the word 230 Die Vide Death Men Die many waies 534 The many inconveniences by forgetting to Die 198 How to prove willing to Die ibid. Disobedience How unbeleevers are guilty of Disobedience and their Disobedience aggravated 293 Drunkard Drunkennesse Reasons against it well applied 106 E EArth Earthly In what the vanity of Earthly things appeares 700 No reason to be in love with them ib. c. What daies are Evill in respect of wicked men 703 Wherein godly mens daies are Evill ibid. Great difference of the evill daies of good and evill men ibid. How farre Christians may rejoyce in Earthly things 56 Elect. The Elect have eight priviledges above all men in the world 7 8 Three sorts of Elect 150 Election A fourefold Election 7 How they may be knowne ibid. 315 Good use of the point 8 There are many things in our Election which may ravish us 314 Rules to live so as becommeth the assurance of Election 316 Envie It is a hatefull sin 214 Signes of a man free from Envie 215 Evill-doers Who are pointed out for such 446 Evill-speaking Vide Backe-biting Report the aggravation of it 213 Reasons against it 216 The effects of it foule 217 The use to be made of it with Rules against it 218 What to doe to avoid it 219 In what cases odious 395 Helpes to