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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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Sin is called errour from the Law Isa 63.17 Jam. 5.20 Prov. 21.16 He that wanders out of the way of righteousnesse shall rejoyce among the dead Vse 1 Of refutation of the works of Popish supererogation which are held forth as better and more perfect then the Law for the Law never commands such things such are those monkish vows of perpetuall virginity and voluntary poverty if these be above the Law then they are transgressors of the Law Isa 1.12 13. Will a man be wiser then his maker holyer then the Law-giver Josh 1.7 8. To devise a worship better then God hath appointed is worse then to faile in breaking Gods Law This is meer impotency the other is arrogancy casting aspersion on Gods wisdome 2. They further hold some sins to be veniall in themselves some mortal If they be sins then they fall under the curse The wages of sin is death 3. That originall sin in the regenerate is no sin but David saith that he was conceived in sin and original sin in whomsoever it is found it is a transgression of the tenth Commandement 4. They say that mans Law doth binde the conscience and the transgression of mans law is sin We answer and grant when these laws are grounded on Gods Laws they binde not otherwise If the breaking of mens lawes is a sin then the keeping of them were a virtue but this is hypocrisie Isa 29. We must be subject for conscience sake 2 Against those that hold that infants are without original sin but the Scripture saith they are conceived in sin 3 To reprove the familists who hold that godly and regenerate men are in no wise subject to the Law but are freed from the condemning and commanding power of it But if they sin then certainly they are transgressors of the Law Vse 2. Of instruction 1. That all the sins and good things found in the whole Bible are to be ranked within the compasse of the ten Commandements 2. That all nations are under the Law 3. That the Law and Gospel mutually thus agree That the Law of Moses is included in the Gospel and yet the Law and Gospel are not confounded founded together The Gospel requires that in the way of thankfulnesse we should keep the Commandements of God Ezek. 36.27 3 This should discourage us from all sin and encourage us to labour to purge our selves from all sin All sin is the transgression of the Law of God Let not pleasures profits or credit allure us to sin against God Shall we for our own ends sin against God and so transgresse his holy good and righteous Law we must take heed how we meddle with that we have no Law for We must prove all our paths by the stony Tables of Gods Law Psal 119.105 Obedience is the fulfilling of the Law and hath great recompence of reward 1 JOHN 3.5 Christ was manifest to take away our sins and in him is no sin THese words containe in them the second and third reason why every hopeful Christian should purge himselfe as Christ is pure The second reason is taken from the end of Christs coming into the world and that was to take away our sins The third argument is taken from the pattern of Christs righteousnesse for in him is no sin From the second reason which is the ends of Christs coming into the world Doct. That the end of Christ coming into the world was to take away our sins By the manifestation of Christ we must understand the coming ●f Christ in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 He came for this end to take away our sins Joh. 1.29 Q. But what did Christ for us to take away our sins Answ He became our surety he willingly took upon him the burthen of our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 Isa 5.44 2. As Christ took the burthen upon him so God laid it upon him 3. Christ did take away our sins by imputation as in the old Law every man was to lay his hand on the head of the burnt-offering and to confesse their sins and so by that means their sins were taken away So now in this time of the Gospel we must lay hold on Christ by a true and lively faith challenging Christ to be our Saviour Lev. 16.21.22 2 Cor. 5. ult Thus Christ taketh away our sins by justifying us from the guilt and by sanctification he cleanseth us from the spot and staine of them Ezek. 36.25 1 Joh. 1.8 This he doth three wayes 1. By his death he overcame the principall enemies of our salvation as the Devil Heb. 2.14 and he hath overcome the world which was strong to carry us captive by flattery and fear Gal. 6.14 He hath crucified the body of sin and corruption in us Kom 6.6 2 By sending such ordinances into the Church as might cleanse us Ephes 5.36 Prov. 13.20 Isa 27.9 The fruit of afflictions is to purge away sin 3 He hath sent his holy Spirit into our hearts to change us A Spirit of faith purifying Act. 15.9 and of hope and love 1 Joh. 3.3 Gal. 3.14 We receive the Spirit of grace which makes Gods ordinance effectuall to eleanse us Vse 1. Of instruction to every one that is afflicted in conscience for sin and knowes not how to be eased and purged It is not fair buildings musick and merry company that will take away sin This course will make thee worse But this thou must doe consider to what end Chtist was manifested and sent into the world was it not to take away our sins But I finde not this wrought in me I find the world and lusts of my heart prevaile against me Christ takes away the burthen and debt of sin by undertaking to accept and bear them 1 Joh. 2.2 Mat. 11.28 The Father hath laid on Christ the iniquity of every weary and broken soul Now we must get to Christ and confesse all our iniquities and leave them upon him calling upon him for grace and mercy 2. To comfort those that depend upon Christ for mercy and have confessed their sins to him If he have taken away sin it is done effectually Heb. 10.1 to 10. 3 To teach every soul that believes that Christ came to take away our sins to renounce and abhorre all sin and to cleanse themselves from all filthinesse of slesh and spirit Let us not take Christs coming into the world in vain but give all diligence to purifie our selves as Christ is pure And in him is no fin This is the reason which is taken from the spotlesse innocency of Christ Doct. That Christ is spotlesse and pure from sin Luk. 23.22 41. Pilate and the Centurion acknowledged him to be so Heb. 4.15 Joh. 14.30 1 Pet. 2.21 22. 1.19 20. Reas 1. In regard of the purity of the divine nature If there had been sin in the humane nature of Christ it might have been said that God was a sinner 2. That he might fulfill all the legal types and sacrifices which were to be without blemish 3. From
could not have said as much Vse 2. Of reproofe to the Papists who lock up St. Johns writings from the people they may not be suffered to read them why if he write them for this end that they might not sin then they give the reins to sin that deny leave and liberty to read them Vse 3. To teach us the poysonful corruption of our natures that out of the purest soundest Doctrine gathers poyson Saint John fore-saw that from his Doctrine they would be ready to gather false conclusions So Rom. 5.20 when St. Paul had delivered the free Doctrine of Justification see what use they make of it he had taught that as sin abounded so did grace much more abound now he saw that they would be ready to gather false conclusions from this therefore he prevents it Chap. 6.1 shall we then sin that Grace may abound God forbid therefore it must make us out of love with our selves the commonest meats are most nourishing and good other rare meats commonly breed distempers but some stomach will corrupt any meat so the plainest points of Religion are the soundest and best but such is the corruption of our nature that it is ready to gather poyson out of them Vse 4. To teach us when we have made a good use of the Apostles writings viz. when they divert us from sin if you be restained and kept back from any sin by them you make good use of them St. John wrote this Epistle that they might not sin labour therefore by reading thereof to be made more cautelous against sin 1. If we can to doe no sin 2. If we doe to disallow it and hate it and so it will be as no sin to us We come now to the third point viz. the consolation If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father c. as if he had said how can it be that we should not sin he had taught the contrary and told them he wrote those things that they might not sin but yet for all that notwithstanding their best care and indeavour it could not be but they would sin but here is the comfort if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father c. he doth not say any man hath an Advocate with the Father but I and you and such as we are we have an Advocate with the Father now what is an Advocate sometimes it is applyed to the Holy Ghost somtimes to the Son to the Holy Ghost John 14.16 he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both because he is a Comforter and because he is an Advocate how not in pleading our case before the Father but by pleading in our hearts in giving us the Spirit of Grace and Supplication as the Apostle saith Rom. 8.26 as in Law he may be said to be our Advocate that draws our petitions for us the Holy Ghost doth not plead for us in heaven but he draws our petitions for us so that they are accepted in heaven Rom. 8.27 he doth speak good things from God to us and good things from us to God 1 Cor. 2.3 he tells us of our peace with God and our comfort and helps us to plead with God But properly it is the office of the Son to be Advocate an Advocate in Court is a more speciall pleader in the behalfe of another whose person and cause is there to be judged of and so Christ is our Advocate in speciall manner with the Father Doct. Every sinner hath Enemies that before the Father in heaven plead against him If any man sin c. there were no use of an Advocate to plead for us if we had none to accuse us and plead against us we no sooner sin but we have accusations put up in heaven against us and so our Advocate puts in for us what be these adversaries 1 Our own sins they plead against us and accuse us day and night some sins doe in a speciall manner plead against us and those are crying sins Gen. 4.10 the murther of Abel was a crying sin Gen. 18.20 the sins of Sodom cried and Ezek. 16.49 there are four things of Sodom mentioned which cryed to heaven for Vengeance Pride Idlenesse Intemperance Unmercifulnesse to the poor so sometimes detaining the labourers wages James 5.4 so also oppression Exod. 22.22.27 these are speciall crying sins because they will give God no rest till he hath revenged them in this World they will not stay till the last judgment but call for present judgment but all sins doe speake in the Lords ear and call for vengeance against us 2 Another Adversary that accuseth us is the righteous Law of God which we have broken that the word may not be in vain Joh. 5.45 3 The third Enemy is Satan that accuseth us night and day Rev. 12.10 so he did Job Chap. 1.9 10 11. he accused him of hypocrisie because he had no reall reason to accuse him therefore he surmiseth one 4 Our own conscience accuseth us and that is as a thousand witnesses Rom. 2.15 Vse 1 To take heed how we make bold with any sin you may put upon them a pretence of pleasure or profit or credit but there is no sin we commit but pleads against us yea and stirs up the Law and Satan and our own consciences to plead against us too 2 It teacheth us the miserable Estate of a poor sinner that goes on in sin and never takes any care to get Christ to be an Advocate for him he may hope that Christ pleads for him in Heaven but this is a vaine hope so long as he goes on in sin but he may be sure that sin and Satan and the Law and his conscience accuseth him and he having none to plead for him what a wofull case is he in 3 It may stir us up to get an Advocate that may plead for us against our accusers Doct. Every Child of God hath the Lord Jesus Christ in Heaven to plead his cause for him If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the Righteous he doth not say every man that sins hath an Advocate but we have an Advocate that is I and you and such as we are the children of God Rom. 8.34 he makes intercession for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 interpellat pro nobis he interrupts the accusation and strikes in for us Heb. 7.25 because he hath not only dyed for us and risen for us but he follows the buisinesse to the utmost till it be accomplished How doth he make intercession for us 1 He doth not fall down at his Fathers feet but he acts the part of an Advocate by his presence at the Throne of Grace so that his presence cuts off many accusations it being known he is our friend and stands for us they dare not be so bold Heb. 9 24. 2 He not only pleads for us by his presence but he intercedes for us by the merit of his blood and that pleads more powerfully for us than
either sin or the Law or Satan or our own consciences can plead against us Heb. 12.24 His blood speakes better things then the blood of Abel that cryed for condemnation this for absolution 3 He pleads for us in giving us leave to use his name for our helpe and his Spirit to plead for our selves he sends his Spirit to draw our petitions for us and helpe us in his name ro plead for our selves he is our chiefe Advocate he sends the Spirit Joh. 16.23 24. and he promises Zach. 12.10 so that though the Spirit be an Advocate yet he is sent by Christ Joh. 14.16 17. 4 He plays the Advocate in our behalf by expressing his good will towards us to his Father he declares his will to be that we may be cleared from all doubts and be where he is to behold his glory this he did upon earth Joh. 17.24 and this very same doth he expresse for us in Heaven and the reason of it is from Rom. 8.34 where his mediation is made a distinct worke from his death and resurrection and ascention and sitting at his Fathers right hand besides all these he makes requests for us in his own person pleading to God for us for good things as Moses did oft for the people Exod. 32.31 32. and as it was with Moses so it is said it should be with Christ Deut. 18.18 as Moses being a Mediatour put in a word of Peace for the people so doth Christ But doth he thus intercede for every sinner no he doth not say every man hath an Advocate but we have he did not intercede for all when he was upon the Earth I pray not for the World Joh. 17.9.20 for if Christ should have prayed for all men God would have heard him for all men and then his death had been effectuall for all men for he saith thou hearest me alwayes Joh. 11.42 Christ is not an Advocate for all but only for the Children of God Vse 1 Of direction to a Christian that doth sin what course to take for his peace and pardon to look up to Heaven for an Advocate that may stand to plead for him when sin and when Sathan and the Law and conscience plead against him many a poor soul hath his conscience pleading horror against him that he is proud and uncleane and Hypocritical c. why look up to Heaven now for an Advocate to plead for rhee first get into the estate of the children of God My little Children if we sin we have an Advocate it is not any man but we that are as little children lay down all pride and emulation and labour to frame our selves to holy obedience If we sin we have an Advocate c. therefore labour to become little children begotten to God by the Ministers of his Word 2 Cor. 8.5 give up your selves to God and to his Ministers to be taught of them according to his Will and if we be such we have an Advocate Vse 2. Of consolation to all whose consciences strike and gall them and they are disquieted with the bitternesse of their sins when sin accuseth and the Law accuseth and Sathan and conscience accuseth what should comfort a poor soule in this case why consider we have an Advocate with the Father so that though the Law and conscience tell us we have been disobedient yet Christ our Advocate hath fulfilled all obedience though we sin and our sins plead against us yet Christ pleads for us his blood cries for us and speaks better things than the blood of Abel and he sends his Spirit to helpe us to put up our petitions and he himselfe puts in for us and performs our prayers for us Rev. 8.3 by the Angel there is chiefly meant Christ he sweetens them takes all the corruption out of them so that they are a sweet smelling savour to God let us accuse our selves to the lowest acknowledgment of our own unworthinesse and then let us with comfort look up to our Advocate that pleads for us How shall I know that he prays and pleads for me 1 If you be little children to God give up your selves to him and to his Ministers to be obedient to his Ordinances 2 If he send his Spirit into your hearts and that helps you to draw your Petitions it is a sign that he himselfe is about the work by our sins we dampe his Spirit but if God renew his Spirit in us it is a sign that Christ hath our cause in hand 1 JOHN 2.2 And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole World IN these words we have Christ described by his function external 1. Advocate 2. Propitiation for our sin and secondly by his inward qualification righteous Jesus Christ the righteous We have done with his office of Advocation we come now to the second He is the propitiation for our sins and not ours only but the sins of the whole World Doct. Jesus Christ is the propitiation for the sins not only of beleeving Jewes but likewise of beleeving Christians all the World over He is the Reconciliation as some translations render it but that expresseth not the full meaning we must know therefore that Propitiation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includes Three things 1 That he should expiate our sins that is make satisfaction for our Sins a man may be a means of Reconciliation without satisfaction but he cannot be Propitiation without offering satisfaction for the wrong done now Christ did make satisfaction for our sins Heb. 2.17 and to make satisfaction he did offer a satisfactory sacrifice for our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 he bearing the sin and punishment due thereunto it is as much as if we had done it 2 To be a Propitiation it is required that he make peace and reconciliation for though a man sometimes recompence and satisfie a wrong yet the Party wronged will not be at peace with him and reconciled to him but Christ hath taken upon him to reconcile God to us so as that his wrath is turned from us and favour restored to us Col. 1.21 now this reconciling implies Three things 1 That sometimes we were friends with God 2 That we fell out with God 3 Being fallen out we are reconciled again and made at peace with him Now this is procured by Christ whereas we were once friends with God in Paradise and fell from him and his favour Christ hath come and made up that breach and reconciled us again Thirdly When Christ is said to be a Propitiation for our sins it implies that he hath procured the manifestation of Gods favour to us for suppose a Friend make satisfaction for another and reconcilement with another with whom he is fallen out yet if he know it not his heart is as loose as ever but Christ hath not only procured us Gods favour but he tells us his Father is reconciled with us and at peace with us Job 33.23 and 26. there is the effect
Spirit dwelling in you and that argues acquaintance with him Psal 19 11. in keeping of them there is great reward greater than any gold or silver a man may keep that and yet want a quiet Conscience but a man that keeps Gods Commandments shall not want peace of Conscience Psal 119.72 thousands of gold and silver will not keep a mans heart warm and comfortable but the keeping of Gods Commandments will and be it that you be about your calling no businesse of your calling will hinder your peace no Commandment of God hinders your Peace indeed if you go about things without warrant from a Commandment be it in the World in your callings if you look at your profit and pleasure c. and not at Gods Commandment to set you a work you lose your Peace and you will want your Peace in that dayes conversation but if you go about things in vertue of a Commandment never fear your calling will never hinder your Peace keep the Commandment and keep your Peace we hinder our Peace often because we go about businesses without an eye to the Commandment and so it is not acceptable to God he finds no savour of rest in it and therefore no wonder if we lose our Peace but if any work though never so mean be done in obedience to Gods Commandments we shall keep and maintain our Peace 1 JOHN 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him IT is St. Johns usual course to propound the Truth Affirmatively and Negatively Vers 3. Affirmatively Vers 4. Negatively Vers 5. he amplifies the keeping of Christs Commandment by a double benefit 1 In him that doth so is the Love of God perfect 2 Hereby we know that we are in him From whence Verse 6. he passes this conclusion of conforming our lives to the life of Christ Verse 4 He that saith he knows him c. To say is either in Heart in Word or in outward Carriage He that saith I know him he speaks not of an active understanding of him but of an affectionate hearty knowledge Knowledge is either speculative or operative infused or acquired Historical or Experimental all come to one but this Knowledge here meant is acquaintance so then he that saith he hath acquaintance with God and keeps not his Commandments that is as his Way his Treasure his Ornaments his Eye his Life 1 He is a Lyer that is he not only speaks false but he knows he speaks falsly for that is the difference between an untruth and a lye 2 There is no truth in him not one true grace not one true act of Repentance Faith c. Doct. Opinion or profession of the Knowledge of Christ without keeping of his Commandments is an undoubted signe that he is a lyar and the best Grace on him is counterfeit he hath no true Grace in him To say in the heart is opinion to say in the tongue or carriage is profession and if he do thus he is a lyar the truth is not in him Tit. 1.15 16. they professe they know God but in their works they deny him ssch a one is abominable disobedient and to every good work reprobate that is he goes about it untowardly is unskilful in it hath no sincerity and his work is rejected of God as reprobate counterfeit silver Q How is such a man a lyar and no truth in him A man may be a lyar sometimes and yet have some truth in him but this man hath no truth in him but 1 He speaks falsly 2 Against Conscience 3 No truth is in him A. 1 He speaks falsly which appeareth from the Efficacy of all true knowledge of Christ which brings forth obedience if a man knows Christ he loves him and affects him and obeyes him Mat. 7.22 23. all saving Knowledge stirs us up to obedience to God to righteousnesse to man if a man be a Son of Beliac such a man knows not God those that obey him not never knew him 1 Chron. 29.9 Know thou the God of thy Father and serve him they that never served God never knew him Joh. 14.21 if any man love me he will keep my Commandments and further no man knows God but he hath known the depth and danger of sin he hath known his enstrangement and absence from God if a man know not himself he knows not God 2 After that he hath known sin he comes to know Christ and his mediation such a man is sensible of his former misery and knows the excellencie of Christ he hath been so bitten with sin that he looks at it as the most hainous fight and the keeping of Gods Commandments he looks at it as the sweetest thing in the World 2 Cor. 6.14 Gods Commandments are not grievous to him such Knowledge springs from experience of our former misery therefore they that never come to this never knew Christ 2 Why is such a man a lyar that saith he knows God and keeps not his Commandments 1 From the conviction of the Testimony of that light which shines in his heart Joh. 16 9. there is a Spirit of conviction in all those that live in the Church for others do not contend that they know Christ but those that thus professe are convinced of their sins of their unbelief and disobedience and of the wickednesse of their hearts and lives Obj. Are there not many that live carnally and wickedly and yet are not convinced of their sins It is true there are such but then living in such a course they do not trespass against their Consciences they think they keep the Law and so think well of themselves and they are at peace and secure He that walks thus civilly and conformably yet such a mans Conscience is at uncertainty about his Estate he is convinced that he wants something but he cannot tell what it is till he be throughly convinced by Gods Spirit thus it was Mark 10.19 Matth. 19.18 19 20. the young man told Christ all these have I kept from my youth what lack I yet his Conscience guided him to feel that he wanted something though he had kept the Law in the outward letter yet he saw he wanted something and his Conscience was not at rest so that such a man as saith he knows Christ and keeps not his Commandments speaks against the conviction of his Conscience and therefore is a lyar I speak not of such Christians who want Peace because they do not keep Gods Commandments but of such who when they have Peace think they keep his Commandments 3 Why is there no truth of grace in such a man as saith thus Reas From the necessary conjunction of all graces with obedience no true grace of God but is either the cause of obedience it breeds it or else is a companion of obedience or else an effect of obedience it sprang from obedience Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 and love is the fullfilling of the Law Rom.
Spirit moves us Labour we to carry our selves not as idle hearers but as faithfull doers labour we to see our spots and deformities and strive to purge them labour we to practise new duties as they are renewed to us 1 JOHN 3.4 Whoso committeth sin transgresseth the Law IN the words and in the following to verse 7. he useth four motives to stir up to self-cleansing The 1. is from the danger of committing sin proved from the proper definition of sin Sin is the transgression of the Law 2. From the end of Christs coming and that was to take away sin 3. From the pattern of Christ who was without sin 4. From the practice of such as have any fellowship by union with Christ Whosoever abideth in Christ sinneth not Set out by the contrary He that committeth sin he hath neither seen Christ nor known him Doct. It is and ought to be a sufficient motive to every hopeful christian to abstain from sin because it is the transgression of the Law Numb 14.41 Why will ye goe up why will ye transgresse the Law The Rechabites were commended because they kept their fathers commandement And he hereby convinceth the Jewes of rebellion that the Sons of mortall men should make more conscience of obeying their dead fathers then his people of his Laws Dan. 9.11 Neh. 9.34 35. Rom. 2.22 23 24. Jam. 2.9 Reas 1 From the Law-giver he looks at every sin as an abrogation of his ordinances Deut. 27. ult He that walks in his Law confirmeth it sets his seal to it They who breake it would make it of no force This is one act of high rebellion against God 2 Sam. 12.7 8. 2 From the wrath and displeasure God pronounceth against every transgressor Jer. 7.19 44.4 3. God takes it as a dishonour to the power and efficacy of his word Jer. 5.22 23. God looks at it as a more boysterous and unruly passage in a man to break the bounds of his Law then for the Sea to breake its bounds 4. From the delight God takes in the keeping and keepers of his Law 1 Sam. 15.22 He more delights in obedience then in the cattle of an hundred hills Prov. 23.26 My Son give me thy heart That is more acceptable then all the Sacrifices Transgression is as rebellion and the sin of witchcraft Reas 2. Feom the Law it self 1 It 's holy just and good and therefore it is abominable to transgresse it For this is a sin against Holinessc Justice and Goodnesse 2. From the vigour and efficacy of this Law offering life to the obedient Psal 19.11 1 Tim. 4.8 Psal 119.16 death to the disobedient Gal. 3.10 Isa 59.1 2. 2 Chron. 16.11 Vse 1. To reprove such as are afraid to breake mens Laws for feare of penalty and are sensible of such dangers but are not afraid to violate and breake the holy and righteous Lawes of God This argues a most rebellious and revolting heart Such are not hopefull christians 2. To teach and exhort us to make conscience of all our wayes and to take heed to our paths lest we transgresse the Law and sin against God Prov. 28.9 If we turn away our ears from hearing Gods Law even our prayers are abominable The consideration of this should keep us from secret petty sins For though man seeth not yet God seeth and will punish 2 Sam. 12.11 12. If we think to get honour profit or pleasure by sin we deceive our selves Is it not as grievous a thing to have our soule wounded by our darling childe as our mortall enemy It is all one to be stabbed to the heart with a pen knife and with a sword Every sin wounds and rents our hearts Abstain we from all sin even the least sin is the transgression of the Law 3. This refutes such as think the Law is not given to the regenerate The Apostle here encourageth hopefull christians not to transgresse the Law Obj. But we are not under the Law but under grace Answ He means we are not under the covenant of works but of Grace Psal 119.105 Obj. As Christs passive obedience freeth from the curse so his active obedience freeth from the commanding power of the Law Answ 1. Christ hath done this and therefore those that are in Christ fear not death by their disobedience nor look for life by their obedience but we look at the Law as a rule of obedience that we may walke according to God and shew that we live by endeavouring to keep his commandements Take heed of Satans slights that would make the Gospel a Supersedeas to the Law in certain things pray not preach not but when the Spirit moveth Thus you shall set up a Spirit of delusion For sin is a transgression of the Law This is a perfect definition of sin transgression is the genus the Law the difference By Law in Scripture without addition is meant the Law of the ten commandements Jam. 4 11 12. 2.10 11. Obj. 1. What if a man sin against the Law of nature is not that a sin Answ Ir is in effect and substance the same Rom. 2.15 Though the Law of nature was more dimly and darkly known Moses law was but a new draught of the Law of nature in innocency Heathen Law-givers Philosophers and Poets have expressed the effect of all the commandements save the tenth Rom. 2 14.15 Obj. 2. Was it not a sin to transgresse the Ceremoniall and Judiciall Law Answ To the Jewes it was The ceremoniall Law was but an examplification of the second Commandement and the Judiciall Law doth but explain the second Table The Judiciall in regard of the equity is included in the morall Law the Ceremoniall stood in force till Christ dyed Obj. 3 Is it not a sin to transgresse the Gospel and is not unbeliefe a sin Joh. 16.9 Is not new obedience required in the Gospel Joh. 14.21 Ezek. 36.27 What say you to the commandements of the Gospel that we should walke as Christ walked Answ The commandements of the Gospel are all of them reduceable under the commandements of the Law God commanding perfect conformity and obedience to his whole will not only revealed but to be revealed If God command David to bring in musick into the Temple 2 Chron. 29.25 though Moses speake nothing of it yet this was expressed to heare and obey God in all things Deut. 18.18 God commanded to hearken to Christ Moses improperly and hiddenly delivered the substance of the Gospel partly in the ceremonial Law partly in the Sacrament of circumcision and the passover Christ was veyled under them Rom. 10.5.6 7 8. with Deut. 30.12 The word of faith spoken of by Moses Gal. 3.24 Transgression is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 want of Law and absence of it when a man speaks and doth without Law what we doe against it or beside the Law it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reas Taken from the end for which God gives the Law to be the means of perfection 2 Tim. 3.16 17.
in the throne of a mans heart Conscience is our companion God much more Psal 139. Reas 2. God is our witnesse therefore when we speak soberly we call God to witnesse He is a Judge Heb. 10.3 an Executioner and therefore if Conscience sees cause to condemn us God much more if Conscience see cause to acquit us God much more Psal 139.2 3. Vse 1. A signe of our present estate and what God will doe concerning us if we live and die thus What saith thy Conscience if thy heart assure thee thou lovest thy Brother 2 Cor. 1.12 That thou savourest not sin that thete is no good duty but thou wouldst doe thou hast been humbled for thy sins Conscience hath been an Executioner and yet hath come with pardon sealed to thee with the broad seal of Heaven If thou seest one spark of sincerity in thee God sees more Obj. May not a mans conscience be deceived Rom. 3.17 Luke 18.9 to 14 May not a man say I have no guilty conscience Answ Conscience sometimes bears false witnesse Tit. 1.15 16. If a man have a defiled conscience it will deal falsly A mans conscience through ignorance and partiality doth bring a false verdict As it is many times with a Jury ignorance of law and false evidence makes them bring a false verdict but then send them back again and shew them better evidence and the law c. So Conscience doth oft-times bring a false verdict but its thorough ignorance of the Law of God or partiality Doth thy conscience speak bitter things Consider what the grounds are If such as doe argue thee dead in trespasses and sins then know that God doth call thee from heaven to repentance If it tell thee thou art an hypocrite consider what grounds it hath Conscience may be muzled by ignorance and partiality the Devill puts false glasses before our eyes 2. A ground of serious humiliation to every mans heart whose conscience upon due examination doth accuse him 3. To teach every Christian which hath found that he hath passed from death to life to be afraid to commit any sin And comfort thy soul if Conscience do acquit thee then will God much more 4. Labour we always to be doing some good for we have a companion that hears and sees all and a register that notes every good word or work The Apostle in stead of telling us If our hearts condemn us God will condemn us much more He gives a reason of it describing God 1 From his greatnesse 2 Knowledge Doct. God is better acquainted with our hearts and wayes then our selves Psal 19.12 He means sins not onely secret and hidden from others but from our selves Psal 139.12 Thou Lord knowest my thoughts afar off they are ever before thee 2 Kings 8.11 12 13. Reas 1. From Gods omnisciency his all-sufficient knowledge Heb. 4.13 They are anatomized before him as if every vein and sinew were laid open he divides between the marrow and the bone John 21.12 Rom. 15.11 Job 26.6 Though hell and destruction be both covered yet before the Lord they be both open Whether Hell be in the waters or on the earth they cover not from God Hell and destruction are before the Lord how much more the hearts of the children of men 2. From the creation God made our hearts gave us power to affect think purpose He knoweth what is in us Job 38.36 If God give understanding to the heart he knows much more what is in the heart Psal 33.13 God hath fashioned our hearts therefore he knows them Psal 99 10. 3. From the providence of God We have our motion in God A Mill moves from the Miller because he hath caused it so to doe but the motion of the Mill is not in the Miller it can move without him We move in God as a supportant conservant cause as a Mill moved by the breath of the winde so we by the breath of the Lord as there is not a turning in the Mill but from the winde so not a turning of our hearts without him Our hearts are in the hands of the Lord Prov. 21.1 4. From the unsearchable depth of the deceitfulnesse of mans heart Jer. 17.9 10. Prov. 3.17 Our hearts make us believe we are rich and have need of nothing when indeed we are wretched and miserable poor blinde and naked Prov. 30.2 3. Sometimes that we are more foolish than any man and have not the understanding of a man while we walk in a sinfull way they make us believe we are in Gods favour Luke 18.9 When we are in a good estate and God would have us walk chearfully in him our hearts will cast a thousand discouragements upon us we cannot pray or profit by the Word of God or doe any good duty our hearts will few pillows under our elbowes that so we may sleep quietly but when we go to try our hearts by the Word of God then they will fall out with us indeed 2 Sam. 15. the beginning Vse 1. Take heed of all secret sins Not onely such as may be hid from men but of such roots of sin as are hid from thy selfe yet cannot be hid from God Take heed of such sins as are so subtle that thou knowest not whether they be sins or no sins which our own soules know not of If a man would be kept from presumptuous sins he must cleanse the inward and hidden frame of his heart Q. How shall we cleanse our hearts A. 1. Pray to God with David Psal 19. to cleanse us from such sins which we know not We have confessed such sins as we know by our selves and those which the world knows by us but we must make a new reckoning for such sins as we know not 2. Not to trust our own hearts but the Word of God Psal 119.9 The Word of God saith there are such sins in every age therefore we must pray to God to help us against them 3. Keep our hearts with all diligence observe every winding and turning and take heed of occasions that provoke our hearts any way to sin Prov. 4.23 2. This shews the impossibility of their good estates that look to be justified by habits and works It is the happinesse of Gods servants in that they look not to be justified by the perfection of their hearts 3. Ground of tryall If we finde that our hearts doe not condemn us let us trust our hearts no farther then we prove them by the rule of Gods Word If God hath helped you to look up to Christ for the pardon of your sins and you now sit loose from sin it is an argument that your sins are pardoned because we could not else hate sin Psal 119.6 But on the contrary if we finde our hearts condemning us our hearts are full of selfe-love Parents are full of partiality as that they can scarce see any evill in their children If they see cause of death in them much more God the righteous Judge If they see cause of
and yet said Come let us kill him and in the mean time they said he was a Conjurer and cast out devills through Belzebub the Prince of devills when as they knew he was the Son of God and did it by his own power therefore Christ tells them their sins should never be forgiven them But if they shall go further and affect the society of Christians delight to doe them good offices and take the like from them if such after fall off and maliciously oppose those wayes they more plainly manifest themselves to have sinned this sin and therefore pray not for them Vse 3. Shews us the desperate condition of all such as commit this sin and therefore to blesse our selves from it they are cut off from all means of salvation a man may neither admonish nor reprove them nor shew them any courtesie or doe any good to them for if I might I ought to pray for them for no office of love ought to be dispensed without prayer and therefore take heed of all sins against conscience of all presumptuous sins and sins of boldnesse for they lead to this great transgression Psal 19.13 And that you may be kept from presumptuous sins take heed of secret sins Vse 4. Of direction If we be Children to Parents or Wives to Husbands or Subjects to Kings and they sin against the holy Ghost yet they may do civill service and offices towards them as those that lived under Julian the Apostate he committed this sin therefore the Christians prayed against him but he had many Christians in his Army that doubted whether they might serve him or acknowledge him as their Emperor or depose him it was concluded they might serve him but yet they prayed that God would take a course against him as David said his day shall come on or he shall descend into the battle and perish which shews that if a Prince shall sin this sin his Subjects ought not to depose him but to doe him offices of service The like may be said of Children to Parents and Wives to Husbands if there be any tye of nature a may doe them civill offices which confutes that desperate doctrine of the Romish Church that whosoever denyes the Pope to be the Supreme head of the Church he is to be excommmunicated and then no man is bound in allegiance to him but that whosoever shall slay such an hereticall Prince shall merit salvation Vse 5. Learn hence to discern the nature of peremptory prohibitions When St. John would peremptorily forbid praying for such he saith I doe not say he shall pray for it Neither do you say he shall pray against it might some say St. John makes account this is a strong prohibition I doe not say that is you have no warrant from me I give you no commission such is the manner of Scripture prohibitions Isa 1.12 Who hath required this at your hands So Jer. 7.31 I commanded them not neither came it into my heart implying that it is a most peremptory prohibition if Gods Word give us no warrant of direction for if there be nothing for it there is enough against it for this is our direction that we are to doe onely what God commands in his Word to that we must add nothing nor take away any thing THE END THE TABLE The First Figure notes the Chapter the second Figure notes the Verse A Abiding in Christ is joyned with avoyding of sin 3. 6. Christ an Advocate for Gods Children yea a righteous Advocate 2. 1. Anabaptisme examined 2. 19. Why Christ was not an Angel 1. 1. Primary Antiquity a certain note of Divine verity 2. 24. True Antiquity fetches its Originall from the beginning 2. 7. The Antiquity of the Doctrin of imitating Christ 2.7 Ministeriall Application must be made to severall sorts and ages 2. 13. Antichrist foretold 2. 18. In Johns dayes there were many Antichrists nor can the last times be long without such Antichrists Ib. In petty Antichrists the praediction of the great Antichrist is in some measure fulfilled Ib. Antichrist denyes Jesus to be the Christ 2. 22. and how Ib. Antichristian Teachers deny the Father and the Son Ib. Every Antichristian doctrine is a lye 2. 21. Apostates are in the Church 2. 19. were never Members of the Church Ib. Apostacy is a note of a Seducer and of an Antichristian spirit 2. 19. It s the punishment of Hypocrisie Ib. B Beginning what it signifies 1. 1. Believers may be assured their prayers are heard 5.19 Blood of Christ how it cleanses 1. 7. For Christ came by Blood 5. 6. Boldnesse with God and peace of Conscience goe together 4. 3. Boldnesse mortifies fear and shame 4. 17. Perfect love assures of Boldnesse at the day of judgment Ib. The sight of our Brother is a stronger inducement to love him then any hater of his Brother can have to love God 4. 20. He that hates his Brother will find lesse cause to love God then his Brother Ib. C Cards and Dice unlawfull 2. 16. Certainty is a property of the Apostles Doctrine 1. 3. The Chiefest creatures may be wicked 2. 13. Gods Children must be as little Children 2. 12. It s comfortable to know we are Gods Children 5. 1. God hath his Children among all Ages of men 2. 13. Little Children may know that God is their Father Ib. note this against the Anabaptists How little Children must be trained up Ib. Christs active and Passive obedience must not be seperated in cleansing 1. 7. Christ pure from sin 3. 5. this should be an effectuall means to purge us Ib. Christ came to dissolve the work of the Devill 3. 8. Christs death the manifestation of Gods love 3. 16. Christians must be ready to dye for their Brethren Ib. True Church-members never depart from the Church 2. 19. Communion of Saints what it is 1. 3. The same Command that requires love to God requires love to our Brethren 4. 21. Confession to God not simply to the Minister the way to pardon 1. 9. Confession that Christ is the Son of God a sure note of Gods dwelling in us and our dwelling in him 4. 15. The office of Conscience 3. 20. according to the testimony of Conscience will God judge us Ib. A fearfull Conscience is voyd of true hearted Love 4. 18. Conversion why called a New-birth being but an alteration 2. 29. Converters are spirituall Fathers 2. 1. The Covenant of grace how without condition 2. 19. D As Darknesse-passing is the Estate of Gods Children in this life 2. 8. Difference between a sin unto death and deadly sins 5. 16. False Teachers must be looked at as Deceivers 2. 26. Sometimes they may be reproved and confuted but not named Ib. The desire and indeavour to deceive is deceit Ib. He that denyes the Son hath neither the Father nor the Son and contra 2. 23. The Devill sins continually 3. 8. of him sinners are Ib. Difference between the Children of God and the Children of the Devill 3.
13.10 1 Tim. 1.5 and so hope 1 Joh. 3.3 patience is joyned with obedience and meeknesse springs from obedience and from the spiritual experience of a mans weaknesse and experience of Christs power in him springs humility so that all graces either spring from obedience or serve to it or accompany it so that even these very graces that are more in the understanding and speculation they either spring from obedience or help to obedience the Knowledge of a Christian is not unfruitful 2 Pet. 1.8 which shews that a Christians Knowledge brings forth fruits of obedience no gift a Christian hath but he considers what good he may do with it and if he see it not serviceable he regards it not so that if every grace do breed or nurse or accompany obedience then whosoever professes he knows God and doth not keep his Commandments there is no truth in such a man no true grace Vse 1 For tryal of the truth of our profession would you know the truth of your Grace of your Repentance of your Faith of your Humility You shall know it by your fruitfullnesse what use do you make of your Graces would you know whether your Repentance bee sound or your Love c. sound would you know this Why consider do they make you obedient and carefull to keep Gods Commandments as your Way your Treasure your Ornaments your Eye your Life if any grace bee fruitfull make you conscionable in the keeping of Gods Commandments that is a witnesse of the truth of that Grace a painted Tree bee it never so fair yet it bears no fruit but a living Tree brings forth fruit you have cause to suspect your Grace if it make you not fruitfull and carefull to please God if Grace make you obedient it is sincere but if a man hath never so many Gifts and Graces if they lead him not to obedience truly they are but counterfeit and there is no true Grace in him Isa 47.10 if they caused them to rebell there is no truth in them if any Grace leave you more corrupt or lesse fruitfull there is no truth in you Vse 2 It exhorts us to a conscionable diligent keeping of Gods Commandments hereby we shall keep our profession true our Consciences void of offence and shall have an evidence that we know Christ if a man say he knows God and yet keep not his Commandments his profession is not true but he that both saith so and doth so his profession is sincere 2 It will keep your Consciences in Peace when your Conscience checks you not but bears you witnesse that you desire to do Gods will in truth this brings great Peace 3 It keeps your Grace sound the more fruitfull and the more obedient the more doth Grace increase a Christian that lets his Grace lye at rest it grows rusty and hee may doubt of the truth of his Grace if any mettal lye up and rust we may suspect whether it be right or no but if it be kept with continual use we suspect it not take a Christian that doth not exercise himself in Grace he grows so rusty that he suspects the truth of his Grace but put thy grace to employment let it be in continual use and thou shalt easily see it is good metal and currant the employment of Graces proves the truth of them therefore as we desire to keep our profession true or our conscience clean or our graces sound keep in a daily course of obedience always be doing good and that from Gods Commandment Vse 3 Of Consolation to all such as take a good course and labour to keep Gods Commandments who may sometimes suspect all their grace is counterfeit and there is no sincerity in them why if there be no sincerity in you you do not keep Gods Commandments as your way but you cannot say but you would gladly finde your hearts keeping them as your way and you endeavour it and it is the grief of your souls when you go out of the way do you keep them as your treasure and ornament and apple of your eye and life Why then there is truth of grace in you truth of sincerity though not of Perfection you must not look to keep them without sin but if you desire to keep them as the most precious thing as your treasure your ornament your life the apple of your eye though a man may sometimes have a moat fall into his eye but in this case do not say your Graces are counterfeit for if they were counterfeit you would not keep Gods Commandments Psalm 36.1 Wickednesse saith to the wicked there is no fear of God before his eyes how doth that appear to David vers 4. he sets himself in no good way he is in a bad way and goes on therein and such a one it is plain he hath no fear of God before his eyes by their fruits he knows them if you set your selves in no good way your profession cannot be true but if the way you take be good and if not thou dost not take it up why if it be thus your profession is true and your grace sound it is a question whether Solomon fell finally or his graces were true or no you may know his repentance was true because he found his lust to women as bitter as death Eccles 7.6 7. well then if an Adulterous or Idolatrous Wife were as bitter as death to him then it is an evident sign if he looked at his transgression as death he looked at the Commandment as life and therefore his repentance was sincere so then if a man finde his sin as as bitter as death it is a sign his repentance is true But yet we must here distinguish between the horror of sin and sin it self the horror of sin may be as bitter to us as death but not the sin it self as Judas the horror of sin was so bitter to him that for it he hanged himself but had Judas been troubled with the sin of his conscience as he was with the horror of his conscience he would not have gone about to help one sin by another had he hated sin for it self he would have hated Murther as sin So would you know whether it be horror of sin or sin that troubles you If it be horror you will seek to drive it away by sin as some do by merry company and merry Books this is a plain signe that sin troubles them not for then they would not seek to help one sin by another but if a man look at the breach of the Law as the losse of his way it troubles him as much as the losing of his Treasure it is as a moat in his eye he had as lieve part with his life if it bee thus with thee thou mayest have comfort thy profession is true thy conscience clear thy profession sound and sincere 1 JOHN 2.5 6. But he that keepeth his Word in him is the love of God perfect indeed c. THe words
God was fore-warned of Antichrists aforehand Q. When or by whom were they fore-warned A. Our Saviour forewarns them of Antichrists and false Teachers Matth. 24.24 25. unto which words Saint John seems to have reference so also the Apostles were careful in fore-warning them 2 Thes 2. from the third Verse to the tenth 1 Tim. 2.3 4. 2 Pet. 2.2 3. which was expresly spoken of Rome Rev. 18.13 so we see by the mouth of two or three witnesses this truth was confirmed Reas 1. To prevent the mis-conceit that the people had that the Day of the Lord was near at hand and thereupon began to think it was no time to settle to their Callings but to give themselves to vigilancy and prayer 2 Thes 2.1 2 3. to prevent this conceit he tells them expresly Antichrist must first come 2 That they might be the better fore-armed against such false Teachers for there should be damnable Herisies 2 Pet. 2.2 and not as points of curiosity only but contra dogmata fidei therefore that they might prepare themselves against such heresies Christ and his Apostles were carefull to fore-warn them Mat. 24.24 25. 2 Pet. 3.17 18. unlesse you be well established in the truth they will carry you away into errour 3 That they might quicken the Pastors of the Church to lay sound foundations that they might establish them in sound Doctrine Acts 20.28 29 30. Vse 1. Shews the great faithfulnesse of the great Shepheard of our Souls Christ Jesus in fore-telling himselfe of Wolves coming and stirring up his Apostles to doe the like Vse 2. It may teach both christian Ministers and people to practise such duties for which end he writes these things one main end is to establish them in sound Doctrine that so whatsoever false Teachers say yet christians may not be seduced for if they gave warning so long before much more now we know this to be come to passe therefore let not Women or little Children excuse themselves for God looks that you should be so grounded in the truth that no Seducers may carry you away Doct. 3 In the days when St. John wrote this Epistle many Antichrists were then come into the World 1 Joh. 4.1 2 3. This is the first place that mentions Antichrist expresly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies first opposition as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 secondly substitution as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro consul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thirdly it signifies equality 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now Antichristos includes all as one that is opposite to Christ so he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 secondly he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is substitute or vicar of Christ hence the beast that came out of the Sea had the horn of a Lamb as if he had the power of Christ thirdly he is Antichrist that is one that carries himself as equal to Christ therefore he dispenseth with those laws which no mortal may dispence withall as incestuous marriage and he binds the consciences of men Jam. 4.20 now it is proper to the law of Christ to sit in the conscience therefore he may well be called Antichrist but yet of these he is properly called Antichrist in the former sense that is one that opposeth himself against God and Christ and all Emperors and Kings Bellarmine excuses the Pope from coming to the Nicene Council saying indignum est caput membra sequi Secondly lest he should sit beneath the Emperor which hee thought unmeet therefore he may well be said to exalt himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thes 2.4 above every Cesar and yet here is the misery that he carries himself as a Vicar of Christ yet can oppose himself against Christ Q. But how were many Antichrists then come A. In ecclesiastical Histories we shall find that St. John lived about an hundred years after Christ and was born about the same time with Christ now about the year 26 after Christ Histories report there was Simon Magus who seemed to be the great power of God and to be he that gave the Law in Mount Sinai 2 He gave out that it was he that was crucified under Tiberius Cesar here was an Antichristian spirit and I was saith he that Holy Ghost that descended on the Apostles so that he denyed both the Father and the Son after him sprang up Menander that affirmed that it was he that died for the World and that all that believed on him should be saved In those times Ebion taught that Christ was but a meer man and held circumcision necessary and in his time lived Cerinthus who retained all the Judicall Law and denyed Christ to be God Act. 15.1 and he is held to be one of those that held the World to be made by Angells and he was the root of the error of the Chiliasts all these lived in Johns time Vse 1 It shews us the marvelous enmity of that wicked one that as soon as ever Christ had sowed good seed that evil one sowed tares this was the subtilty of that old Serpent to sow errors before the truth could take firm rooting Vse 2. Hence we see the impudency of Heresie especially when opposition is set on fire of Hell that such monstrous opinions should be broached in St. Johns time that envied against them and wrote against them and therefore we must not wonder if Heresies sine pudore broach themselves in the Church for even in St. Johns time a s●n of thunder that shook them down mightily yet even against him were these Darts shot it must therefore stir up Christians to ground themselves in the whole Counsel of God do you think if such Heretiques did not blush before St. John they will blush before us Hence wee see the truth of God is of more power than the spirit of Error for though there were so many heads of Error yet they all fell down before the Doctrine of St. John so that this writing remained when all they were lost magna est veritas prevalebit therefore such is the power of truth that it dispells all Errors 3 It confutes boasting of Antiquity every ancient thing is not true for then these false Heresies had been true but yet there is Antiquity which springs from the first institution and that is prevalent there is a secondary antiquity that is Tares that are presently sowen after the good Seed yet though they were sowen the very same day yet secondary antiquity will not justifie their Doctrin but that which comes from the institution by God Doct. In the coming of these many Antichrists that which was told aforehand of the coming of Antichrist is in some measure fulfilled For otherwise St. Johns discourse would be somewhat impertinent to what end doth he say Ye have heard that Antichrist shall come and that Antichrists are come already And again he doth argue from the last times to Antichrist and from Antichrist to the last times reciprocally which reason were not of strength unlesse it were
gives them such unfeigned humiliation and broken-heartednesse and such castisements that they recover themselves that all the World may see neither doth the church allow it nor God but as they were patterns of sin so they shall be patterns of Repentance 2 Sam. 12 11 if David doe fall into scandalous sins God will follow him with such chastisements that God will manifest he is no approver of such courses and David himself shall proclaim that he repents unfeignedly so that he was not so carefull before to cover it as he is now to divulge it and declare that it was the cause of bitter anguish to him so that neither God nor the church nor themselves approve of their sin but are against it Vse 3. It may teach Gods servants to make an holy use of other mens falls Dost thou see Professors fall into loose wicked courses and give no testimony of their repentance why God hereby would manifest that thou art sincere and upright God hereby prevents thy mis-leading by their evill counsell or practise blesse God that hereby he purifies his Ordinances and wipes away the soyle of his church he wipes their face by casting out such and especially make this use Be not high minded but fear fear that God that is able to cast men from one sin into another Isa 6.2 3. Why did the Angel there sing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Holy Holy Holy c. why because he was to send the Prophet on a Message to harden the wicked and make their hearts fat Vse 4. To exhort all in a speciall manner to take heed of Hypocrisie if we take up a course of Religion and good duties at home and abroad we think that God will be mercifull to us but let us see that what we doe we doe in spirit and in truth Heb. 12.13 Lev. 10.3 God will certainly discover us scarce ever any lived that dyed in Hypocrisie but he was uncased before his death there is nothing so secret but it shall be revealed Hypocrisie must be manifest to all men though there were good hopes of them yet God washes off the spots of his church and not only at the last day but in this World therefore let it not suffice you to live in the church for you may be as ill Humours and so annoy the church of God and it will be well that you be cast out or at the best though you be ornaments and supporters to the church yet you are but as glasse eyes and wooden leggs why God may stay long for the good of his church but certainly he will lay you open to some corrupt Doctrine or way that you shall be manifest 2 Tim. 3.9 why vers fifth he tells you what they were They had a form of godlinesse c implying it is a mad course to be an Hypocrite for by his outward profession he gets the ill will of wicked men and for want of sincerity he gets the ill will of God There are sundry signs of this Hypocrisie 1 If thou findest in thy self an hatred of admonition Mat. 14.4 Herod was impatient of admonition therefore he put John in prison and thereby manifested his hypocrisie 2 If thou beest given to praise wicked men and accompany with them Prov. 13.20 Prov. 28.4 that is a fore-runner of forsaking of the Law 3 When a man makes no conscience of his tongue but lets his tongue run at random to passion oc rayling or slandering Jam. 1.26 4. If you see any man living in any known sin and delighting in it it is such a link as the Devil will chain him fast by 5 When a man shall make use of Religon to any other end than for Gods glory if you make Religion a stalking-horse to your own ends certainly you will fall off Joh. 6.26.60.66 those that followed Christ for the Loaves not one of them continued with him 2 King 10.29 Acts 8.17 to 23. When Simon Magus would make use of Spiritual gifts to get money he was in the gall of bitternesse and bond of iniquity his heart was not right therefore as you desire to have fellowship with God be sincere and upright 1 JOHN 2.20 But ye have an Vnction from the holy one and know all things THe Apostle having instructed little Children that Antichrist would come and described him vers 18 19. in this verse and the next he propounds some means to help them 1 An Unction within themselves whereby they know all their seducements and snares vers 20 21. 2 The second means is from the corrupt and false doctrin of these Teachers who is Antichrist but he that denies the Son whose doctrin perverted that unction which they had received vers 22 23. In the first means observe 1 A benefit received an Unction 2 The Author from Christ 3 The vertue of it whereby you know all things you know the truth and that no lye is of the truth To begin with the first the benefit Ye have an Vnction Doct. There is not the least of the Children of God but they are partakers of an Oyntment of Christ you little Children have it Vers 27. There were three sorts of Functions in the Old Testament into which they were instituted by Oyntment Kings Priests and Prophets Kings 1 Sam. 13.10 11. so Priests Exod. 29.7 so Prophets 1 King 19.16 now Christ being ordained to be King Priest and Prophet therefore he is called the Anoynted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 12.15 Luke 1.32 33. Heb. 6.20 Heb. 7.24 Acts 3.22 23. all other Unctions were but types of him therefore he is said to be annoynted with the oyl of gladnesse above his fellows Psal 45.7 he was not only gladded himselfe but all the ends of the earth were made glad by him therefore he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now because he was not a type but the person typified he was not anyonted with material oyl but with the Spirit of God which is the true Unction Acts 10.38 Luke 4.18 Dan. 9.24 hence called Messiah in Hebrew the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek from this Oyntment of Christ we are annoynted by the same Unction as Psal 133. so that spirit which was poured on his head descended to his lowest members 2 Corinth 1.21 22. yea to the skirts of his garments so then we are annoynted by the Spirit Now fitly are we laid to be annoynted by the Spirit as it were by Oyl in a Four fold respect 1 As Oyl hath been used for healing Wounds Luke 10.34 so when the Spirits of men are wounded by the sence of sin God poures in such an Oyl of his Spirit that he heals and binds them up 2 Oyl hath a suppleing softning and lithni●g power so Gods Spirit makes us nimble and agile to every good work in the East Countries they used to annoynt Wrestlers and Runners to make them more nimble and quick such use is the Spirit of to make us quick and ready to run the wayes of Gods Commandements Ezek. 36.27
of any certain knowledge and thus Antichrist denies his Prophetical Office For the Priestly Office of Christ which consists first in offering sacrifice secondly in intercession for the application of his sacrifice Now the Church of Rome evacuates his Priestly office first in his sacrifice 1 By adding other sacrifices and so they make his not to be sufficient and they add two Sacrifices first the Sacrifice of merits and they say they merit first by works done as building of Churches Monasteries c. which they say satisfie for mens sins and secondly they merit by suffering as Pilgrimages and Purgatory and so by indulgences and Pardons 2 They evacuate the Sacrifice of Christ by evacuating the Redemption of Christ 1 By making it not plentifull whereas the Redemption of Christ is a plenteous redemption both for body and soule they say he redeems us from eternall pains but not from temporall from Purgatory 2 By making it not gracious for they say the grace of Redemption is applyed to us not invincibly but according to the will of the Creature 3 By applying it not by faith but works 4 They say a man cannot know his Redemption by Christ surely and certainly but probably 5 This grace they dispence not spiritually but elementally by imposing it on Sacraments so that without Sacrament no grace and some grace is given ex opere operato 3 They evacuate his Sacrifice by making it not eternal so that this grace is not certainly eternall but he that hath been washed in Christs blood may finally fall away and become a reprobate 4 In making it not necessary in respect of some as the Virgin Mary 2 They say it is not necessary in respect of temporal punishments 2 They evacuate his Priestly Office by discouraging people from coming to God in the name of Christ but to approach to God by the mediation of the Virgin Mary and some Saints they would have us direct our prayers to some Saint and so deny the sole mediation of Christ 3 For his Kingly Office they deny it partly by denying his Head-ship they deny his absolute Soveraignty they will not make the election to be of Free Grace 2 By setting up another Head in the Church the Pope which God never appointed as he that sets up another King without his consent doth as good as deny the other King so here is as much dishonour to Christ in setting up a new Head as in cutting off the true Head to set up one that may rule all Nations have the deciding of all Causes c. 3 They deny his Kingly Office in his great work of Conversion by makeing it not to depend on the Soveraignty or prerogative of his Kingly Office but on the liberty of our wills 4 They deny his Kingly Office by defacing his Kingdome which is his Body his Church they deface his Church his Body and transforme it not into a christian state but Antichristian and so make it no Church of Christ and so deny his Kingly Office They deface the Church of Christ whether Militant or Triumphant The Church Militant whether you look at it as a Catholick Body for that 1 They teach that the most erroneus notorious livers are truly Members of the Church but we see Christs Kingdom consists of spiritual people they are but ill humours 2 They give false notes of the Church antiquity universality prosperity which may agree to some Heathenish places 3 They make the Church infallible and this they confine to the church of Rome so that if Rome fall the church of Christ falls 2 For the parts of the church either in a council 1 They say a council is uncapable of errour 2 Subject to the Pope 3 That they may make Laws to binde the consciences of men Or else in the several parts 1 For the Head the Pope they set two heads on the Body and so make it a Monster For the middle Members the Priests 1 They say they may not marry and so are unclean 2 Exempt them from the power of civil Magistrates and so are an inordinate generation 2 Their regular Priests as Monks and Fryers they are all of them abominable not planted by God and professe poverty and chastity which exposeth them to uncleannesse For the lowest Members the Lay-men whether Magistrates or private men 1 For Magistrates they make them not heads no not in their own Kingdoms but subject to the Pope and he desposeth them 2 For the people he can dispence with their Oath of Allegiance 3 From both they with-hold the Scripture in the known Tongue and the cup. For the Church Militant in Purgatory they make a Church God never acknowledged For the Church triumphant they make the Saints as so many Idols in praying to them visiting their Relicks making them partakers in Christs mediation such a Kingdome as this Christ would loath and any true christian derest So that we see though they doe not deny his Man-hood nor his God-head yet they deny him to be the Christ that is the anoynted for they wash off all his Unction Vse 1. It may discover to us the depth and the danger of Popery the Doctors of their Church say it is impossible any should be saved out of their Church but you must know you cannot give up your selves to an Antichristian Doctrin but you turn an enemy to Christ you take away his Offices make him no Christ no Saviour therefore let none say Popery and the true Religion may be reconciled they may as well combine Light and Darknesse as Christ and Antichrist Vse 2. It may be an use of thankfulnesse to God that hath delivered us from this darknesse and brought us to know the truth as it is in Jesus the true King Priest and Prophet of his Church therefore let us sanctifie God in our hearts let us walk as men that are redeemed and taught of him learn we to rest on him for pardon for teaching for direction and guidance Doct. 3. Antichristian teachers deny the Father and the Son Before he had said they deny the Christ but he goes further and saith They deny the Father and the Son because he that denies the Son denies the Father the reason is because of that neer relation that is betwixt them vers 23. and so contrariwise the truth of this appears in Saint Johns time for some made themselves the Christ and some God the Father as Simon Magus and Menander made themselves the Christ and so took away the Father-hood and the Son-ship some againe taught that the Father came down and took flesh and was buried and so often descended into cloven Tongues so that they denied the several Persons But that great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Antichrist of Rome he denies the Father and the Son 1 He denies the Son if you speake of the God-head of Christ 1 They say we are in an errour to say Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but from God from the Father and they will not
consolation to all such as lose any thing by keeping the Apostles Doctrin whether they lose goods or friends or life or liberty here is a comfort that over-ballances all discomforts Two things chiefly discourage a Christian he may either loose fellowship with the Church and be excommunicate or else he may lose his naturall life here is comfort against both these what though you be excommunicated from society with the Church you shall yet notwithstanding keep fellowship with the Father and the Son Joh. 9.34 the blind man gave such a strong Testimony to Christ that the Pharisees cast him out that is excommunicated him well when Christ heard that he was cast out he found him out and so though this poor man was cast out of the Church by a clavis errans wrong excommunication yet he had fellowship with Christ what if a Christian be cast out why here his comfort a man is no sooner shut out from Fellowship with the Church but he is sent to Christ this poor man Christ came and instructed him though he were cut short from instruction in the publick ordinances yet Christ instructed him and he never spake more powerfully and effectually so that he gave him Faith to beleeve and Grace to worship him so that though a man in a good cause should be cast out from the society of the Church yet he shall find more near communion with Christ 2 A man by professing Christ may be delivered up to the powers and so may lose his life why this is the promise even eternall life he may lose a temporary life but he shall gain an eternall life Doct. Primary Antiquity is a certain note of divine and Apostolique verity Prime Antiquity because he saith here it was from the beginning and he appeals to the Doctrin that was delivered from the beginning of his time that is from the first promulgation of the Gospel If that which you have heard from the beginning abide in you c. So that Prime Antiquity that which the Apostles first taught is a note of the truth Jerm 6.16 enquire for the old way that is the good way Jerm 18.15 he complains that they strayed from the ancient wayes and were run into by-wayes and he complains of it as if thereby they had forgot God therefore when St. John would describe the Gospel he calls it an everlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 and contrarily when God would confute the people for leaving him he convinces them of novelty Deut. 13.7 they followed other new Gods But why is Prime Antiquity the note of divine and Apostolique verity 1 Because Antiquity is the image of God and every truth is an image of God whilst Satan stood in the truth he had the image of God when a Doctrin reacheth the truth it comes to the image of the ancient of dayes it is the same truth now that was from the beginning of the world 2 From the speciall care God takes to plant and water the Church with pure Doctrin Satan is up early to do mischiefe but God is up before him to do good as soon as God made a World he made a Church and gave them truth though Satan was a Lyar from the beginning yet God taught him truth before he was a Lyar the good seed is first sown and then comes the envious man and sows tares 3 From the nature of all errors they are abberrations from the way of truth What are errors but deviations from the first way therefore there was some way of truth before when our Saviour would tax the error about divorce he saith from the beginning it was not so Vse 1 May serve to be a signe of tryall between the Popish and Protestant Religions they boast much of Antiquity that they can fetch it from the Apostles times why but yet if they fetch it from the prime Antiquity from the times of the Apostles we will not yield it them for John himselfe would not fetch his Antiquity from the latter part of his dayes but from the first promulgation of the Gospel Matth. 5. our Saviour saith it hath been said of old and yet was not truth that is prime Antiquity that comes from the ancient of dayes from the first Institution vetustas consuetudinis est vetustas erroris Ignatius said my Antiquity is Christ Error may come as soon as the truth is sown but yet it hath not prime Antiquity for Satan was a Lyar from the bginning and yet that will not serve to prove that a lye is the truth it is a false Antiquity that comes not from the ancient of dayes for our Religion if we cannot fetch it from the Apostles first Doctrin and from the Prophets and Apostles of old we will renounce it but when we can bring for all our Doctrin the seal of the Prophets and Apostles we have a sure note of the truth we preach no truth but what Christ and his Apostles taught our Antiquity stands not on Monuments or writings though all records were burnt our faith depends not on them but on the prime Institution Vse 2 It confutes the Common cavill against Professors they accuse them of new fanglednesse they say none of your Fathers or Ancestors walkt in this way why it is the way of Christ and his Apostles sin is a new way a new strange thing 1 JOHN 2.25 And this is the Promise he hath promised us even eternall life THis eternall life is said to be promised Doct. Eternall life is given by promise Gal. 3.18 Heirs of eternall life are called Heirs of Promise Heb. 6.17 because they are Heirs of that Promise was made to Abraham Rom. 4.13 14. Reas 1 From the grant of eternall life to Christ and through him to us Gal. 3.16 that therefore eternall life might be by Christ it is needful it should be by promise 2 Cor. 1.20 Reas 2. That it might procure those two great benefits first Honour to God secondly peace to his Children had we pleaded it by the Law we had pleaded it of debt but God provided that what grace should come should be free and therefore by Promise 2 From hence follows peace of Conscience had we been under the Law every failing would make us doubt and therefore that our hearts might be setled he hath given it us of Promise Rom. 6 16. Vse 1 A strong refutation of Popish merits by the works of the Law and that in their own persons why then it is not of grace nor promise that is the true reason why they deny certainty of Salvation because they hold it from the works of the Law therefore there is no peace of conscience in their Relion if it be of the works of the Law then not of grace if not of grace then not of promise if not of Promise then not of Christ for if they be bound to obey the whole Law they are in doubt to break it if they keep it yet they know not whether they shall persevere to the end and so
no peace it is as impossible for a man to attain Salvation by Works as to be his own Saviour Vse 2 Hence learn the way of attaining peace of Conscience and assurance of Salvation why claim it by promise and it is sure to thee what makes thee doubt of thy Salvation why thou seest this Corruption and that Rebellion and thou seest the want of this and that Grace and therefore thou art in doubt why thou shouldest claim Salvation by promise thou wouldest have thy Works more perfect why that which makes us doubt is a secret cleaving to the Works of the Law but we must not so much look at what we do as what we beleeve what we work as what Christ hath wrought for us therefore take heed of sticking to any Works of the Law and as you desire to maintaine peace of Conscience and to dye peaceably claim Salvation by promise there is no more required of you than to lay hold on Christ he doth not look for perfection of faith but truth of faith be thy faith never so weak if true it gives thee Christ and he gives thee the Promise and that gives thee eternall life Q. But how shall I know whether I have this faith A. If God hath given thee an heart ot distrust self as gifts and parts of Nature and Education and to be humbled and look after Christ if thou prizest Christ and desirest him above all blessings this is true faith if thy faith hath emptyed thee of thy selfe to go out to Christ as thy Portion as the most sweet and comfortable thing I say thou hast that faith that conveys Christ to thee and Christ the Promise and the Promise eternal life say not therefore as some do I thank God I never doubted of Salvation neither have I cause I have alwayes lived honestly c. if thou fetchest thy perswasion from the Works of the Law then not from Jesus Christ nor the Promise therefore do as Paul touching the Law saith he I was unblameable and yet I count all these as dross and dung to win Christ Phil. 3. therefore distrust all these go out out of your selves and lay hold on Christ Vse 3 May teach us to magnifie the grace of God that hath thus devised a way for our Salvation he hath therefore given it us of grace that it might be sure 1 JOHN 2.26 These things have I written unto you concerning them that deceieve you TO help young Children to beware of Antichrist the Apostle had given them some instructions and some means now in this Verse to the end he rehearseth the two special means he had prescribed 1 Was his Writings vers 26. 2 Their Unction vers 27. therefore vers 28. he exhorts them to abide in Christ First In vers 26. we have set out 1 Saint Johns writing to these Babes and the Argument of it 2 A descripition of false Teachers Seducers 3 A description of their Act and Work 1 Their Sin is a seduction and deceiving of men 2 The vigour of it 3 He passeth them by calling them Seducers without naming their persons Doct. There is good use to be made of the Scripture against false Teachers even of those that want not the unction of the Spirit These things I have written unto you you that have received the Spirituall Unction otherwise Saint Johns writing had been in vain and their reading if there had not been use of them 2 Cor. 11.13 he informes the Corinthians of false Teachers Gal. 5.12 Phil. 3.2 Col. 2.8 all these shew that the Spirit thought it meet to instruct even Christiaas against false Teachers Obj. If this annoynting teach all things what need the Scripture be written is it not to give light to the Sun A. No there is a double use of the Scriptures 1 For the confirmation of the witnesse of our own Conscience a Christian mans heart witnesseth against false Doctrin but when the Holy Ghost not only witnesseth in our hearts but in his Word too In the mouth of two or three Witnesses every truth is established 2 Cor. 13.1 2 There is use of them to help our own spirits what though my spirit rise up against such false Teachers yet I might be deceived therefore that I might discern the truth of my own spirit I must try it by the Word a good man may know what spirit he is of Luke 9. 55. in some things therefore that we may discern the truth of our own spirits we must try them by the Word the Word and the Spirit of God in Conscience are like to Tallies they answer one another in every line Vse 1 May teach us to discover the corruption of their spirits who say after they have once received the spirit of regeneration which is indeed but common illumination they need not the Scriptures therefore they neglect reading of them as Enthusiasts and Annabaptists that will neither read nor pray but when the Spirit moves them and to this purpose they abuse a notable place 2 Pet. 1.16 they say we do well to attend to the Scripture till the day dawn and the day-star arise in our hearts but afterwards there is no further use thereof but untill is not alwayes a word of restraint but ye do well to do it before and to do it after as when it is said Michol had no Childe till the day of her death it implies not that then she had any but that she never had any so that it is a vain collection to reason after this manner 1 Tim. 4. Give diligence to reading and exhortation till I come would he have him leave off when he came No but he would rather have him alwayes continue so doing so that place rather exhorts them to attend to the Scripture after the day dawn in their hearts rather than restrains from it 2 The Scripture there opposeth not the Law and the Gospel but he would have them now attend especially to the Gospel 3 This word untill is not limitted to the attending to the Prophets but to the words day dawn meaning their hearts are a dark place until the day dawn and the day-star arise in their hearts therefore such men as these are not of Saints Johns spirit who exhorts those to whom he wrote to attend to his Writings as an help against false Teachers Vse 2. It may exhort us in these seducing days to be diligent and frequent in reading the Scriptures because they are written to help us against Seducers if a Friend should write to us beware of such Cheaters we would give heed to what he wrote and observe his Counsells why we have letters sent from farre even from heaven to warn us of Seducers and our friend sets down their Notes and Marks and means to avoyd them therefore let us be perusing them and observe what they direct us to Doct. 2 The Children of God are to look at false Teachers as Deceivers 2 Joh. 7. 2 Cor. 11.13 Rom. 16.17 18. Q. What is meant
with this You say an hopefull Christian abstains from all sin how comes it then to passe that so many teach otherwise To this St. John answers Let no man deceive you Here is 1. A loving compellation Little children which comprehends babes young men and old men 2. The exhortation a warning against deceivers 3. Two doctrins clean contrary unto them 1. He that doth righteousnesse it righteous as God is 2. He that commits sin is of the Devill Which he proves 1. From the practice of the Devill 2. From the contrary end of Christs coming 3. From the conrary practice of those that are born of God Doct. It is the duty of all sorts of good people to take heed they be not deceived in judging who be righteous men The question was who were righteous The false Teachers said A man may be righteous and yet live in sin Be not deceived saith St. John Phil. 3.2 We must as much beware of conterfeit righteousnesse as of dogs they are not so apt to bite men as these to do the Church hurt Reas 1. From the easinesse of being deceived by the pretences of righteous men in all ages Gal. 2 4. Under the mask of righteous men may walk men unrighteous 2. From the necessity that lies upon our selves to have communion and fellowship with them Psal 16.3 Gal. 6.10 doing good offices to them 1 John 4. Yea we are commanded to walk in their steps Phil. 3.17 3. From the danger of walking with unrighteous men Prov. 17.15 4.14 15. This we may easily do unlesse we know them Vse 1. To reprove such as think all they live amongst are righteous wherefore was this exhortation how should a man be deceived if all were righteous Numb 16.2 3. 2. To teach us all to pray to God that we may grow up in a spirit of discerning There is an inflinct in the servants of God whereby they are able to relish the spirits one of another A dog will sent out his way with more dexterity then all men can reason it out A man can open the whole Law but when he comes to discerning he knowes not who is righteous and who not 2. Grow we righteous our selves and to a great measure so shall we the better discern of others A woman that hath conceived she will the more easily discern of another So when thou feelest the work of righteousnesse in thine owne heart how shalt thou comfort thy self that thou ar● righteous because thou lovest Gods children How shall I know who is righteous A righteous man is known by his righteous wayes St. John speaks not here what makes a man righteous but what declares him to be righteous The Jesuites grant this 7.18 19.21 If a tree bring forth grapes it is a vine if figs a fig-tree What is it to do righteousnesse The contrary to what it is to commit sin He doth righteousnesse That walks in Gods commandements when his judgement and heart is for it 2. When Gods laws are his rule of righteousnesse 3. Whose end is righteousnesse Hallowed be thy name 4. When we doe unrighteousnesse it is a burthen and grief and we recover our selves Obj. But righeteousnesse doth not consist in the bulke of the work but in the heart and an hypocrite may have as fair an outside as a true righteous man Answ True But God hath given a spirit of discerning to a Christian that he shall discern the main sway of a mans heart 1. If thy affections worke as well as the outward man Psal 51.6 his griefs cares desires see with what affection they come off 1 Chr. 29.9.17 He saw such joy when they came to offer as if they would have offered more if they had had it 2. See whether they they come off with some facility forced things are not naturall John 4.34 3. Consider the evennesse and constancy of a mans way Violent things will not last unlesse there be a continuall supply sent Hos 6.4 If when we have done good workes we kisse our hands and sacrifice to our owne nets this is unrighteousnesse Obj. In times of religion Gods ends and ours may be levell how then shall we know a righteous man Answ Observe when those ends part which will be at one time or other When two men walk together a dog follows them you know not whose it is but let them part then the dog will follow his Master So it is here Vse 3. To avoid the Doctrin of the Papists of justification by works He saith not that good works make a man good but we may know a man is righteous by his righteousnesse lest they should run away with this that the habit of righteousnesse make us righteous We answer imperfect righteousnesse cannot make us perfecly righteous Isa 64.6 1 Cor. 13.8 to 12. This which you say will neither hold in covenant of works nor covenant of grace In the covenant of works not the habits of grace but works of righteousnesse do justifie And in the covenant of grace we are justified by faith without the works of the Law Now a signe of tryall of our owne righteousnesse and others is when in ordinary course we give God and man his due when we go about good duties in Gods name and for his glory Obj. It may be I do it for the stopping of conscience and that I may be well thought of Answ So may you do and yet be sincere I may please men and my own conscience What if you please men will you not still stick to God If you do good duties freely constantly and humbly though you do them to satisfie your conscience to please men yet are you righteous So may you judge of other men It is not enough to do good duties but to see with what affection they do them if they cleave to God though for their own ends they are righteous 1 JOHN 3.8 He that committeth sin is of the Devill for the Devill sinneth from the beginning for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destpoy the works of the Devill AGainst the wicked principles of false Teachers the Apostle arms them wi●h these two principles of Christian religion 1. Who doth righteosnesse is righteous 2. Who doth commit sin is of the Devill He that makes sin his work makes himself the childe of the Devill So in the Originall Q. What is it to commit to work sin Answ Jam. 3.2 In many things we sin all Yet a man is said to sin whose ordinary course is not sin but a righteous and good way 1. When a man makes his course a trade of sin 2. He allows himself in sin justifies and excuseth himself doth not hate his sin nor himself for it In proper sense a man is said to commit sin 1. When he imagineth deviseth plotteth sin as a Poet his fictions 2. Acts it 1. By travelling in birth as a woman with child 2. By bringing it forth in due time Psal 7.14 He that doth not righteousnesse is
Gods adversaries Heb. 10.27 Reas 4. Consider the subject of all this fear and torment and that is the conscience and heart of man the judgement and will the will that before was most tough and obstinate of all the faculties these torments make it soft and tender therefore it s said Josiahs heart melted at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34.17 Job 23.16 the heart is made raw and tender that look at raw flesh would be against the fire so the tender raw conscience is anguished with this fire of Gods wrath according to that old saying He that would goe to heaven must sayl by hell gates Vse 1. To stir up all such who have any of their friends thus exercised to pity and compassionate them Is it nothing to you that passe by that Gods hand lies so sore on him to him that is afflicted pity should be shewn by his friends but they forsake the fear of the Almighty Job 6.14 Even as some Sea-men at their first voyage they can pity those that are Sea sick and tost but afterward they grow sencelesse so when Christians first lanch out themselves into this troublesome condition they could have pityed others in the like case but through custome men forsake the fear of the Almighty for though commonly these fears be safe yet they may end in despair and therefore pity should be shewed them Job never cryed out for help in the losse of his children or estate but when Gods hand touched his soul then he called upon all that feared God to pity him and indeed God is very sensible of all such as compassionate them why if ever God send them comfort he will restore comfort likewise to their mourners Isa 57.78 for those torments are not alwayes safe except you finde then mixt with some spark of faith and love but however God looks that if he be angry we should fear Vse 2. From those that are thus afflicted learn to be sensible of your estate and doe not think this estate desperate for this torment may be healed and therefore let labour in this case to seek out for healing is a man in torment and wi●● 〈◊〉 live and die what in torment and not seek out for help Quest How shall help my selfe in this case Answ 1. God would hereby have you know something which you never considered before know therefore and see that is an evill thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God we have gone on obstinately and cast aside Gods yoak therefore thy own wickednesse shall corrrect thee therefore know and see and learn by it to see the danger of sin and if thou begin to be tendable there is hope this torment will end well know that it is an evill to provoke God to such fierce anger for as you have prest God Amos 2.13 so he will presse you 2. Confesse thy sins to God lay open thy wayes and set them in order before him and by this means you will finde an unmeasurablenesse of ease Psal 32. to 6. he that confesseth his sins shall finde mercy Prov. 28.13 And with this confession adde prayer for pardon and healing of thy sins and God ordinarily will heal such Hos 14.3 4 5. Job 33.27 28. 3. Use the Ordinances the Word the Sacraments Christian Communion these are of speciall use to quiet the afflicted conscience Isa 57.19 I create the fruit of the lips peace God by the lips of his Ministers secretly drops sweet balm and so in the Sacrament behold the bloud of the New Testament shed for thee for such souls especially is Christs bloud and for Christian Communion read Job 16.5 The movings of my lips should have asswaged your griefe he would have spoke words which should have been as balm or oyl to a Christian soul 4. Bow your hearts to wait on God patiently as he hath waited on you the soul is ready soon to wax weary and to say Wherefore should I wait on the Lord any longer Isa 50.10 Tarry but a while and he that shall come will come and will not delay 5. Prize the least expression of Gods mercy to thy soul praise him for dealing thus with thee that he would take such pains with thee First Blesse him that thou art yet on this side hell crying for mercy it s a greater blessing then all the Devills or damned have Secondly It s another fruit of Gods love to thee that he hath applyed a fit medicine to the frame of thy spirit Jer. 2.17 Thou drinkest but of the cup thou brewest thy selfe that God should thus hedge thee in with his hands and break thy heart and lay it on so sure this is such a mercy as we cannot be sensible of Thirdly Another fruit of Gods love is that hereby he cuts you off not onely from the wildnesse and loosenesse of thy heart but from taking further day with him we are ready to put off repentance from time to time to the cool of the day and the evening of our age but when God imbitters our soules with this torment of conscience then we should stand out no longer but the soule longs and cryes for mercy this night before the morning then they could wish no greater blessing then Gods favour Psal 4.5 6. 〈…〉 such 〈…〉 in 〈…〉 is not 〈◊〉 to brook the 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 ●roken th● 〈…〉 〈…〉 out take 〈…〉 us 〈◊〉 what an 〈…〉 back 〈…〉 with 〈…〉 fell 〈…〉 part of 〈…〉 found 〈…〉 from 〈…〉 and ●udg● 〈…〉 is not 〈…〉 full 〈…〉 not●rious 〈…〉 there 〈…〉 ●ound hearted 〈…〉 〈…〉 is a double 〈…〉 ●he day of judgement of 〈…〉 〈…〉 When a man i● afraid of 〈…〉 men 〈…〉 ever so right and 〈…〉 men 〈…〉 ●9 〈…〉 of ●en bringeth a f●●r 〈…〉 ●●ese are ●●sound 〈◊〉 a 〈…〉 no● though 〈…〉 in the midst of the shadow of death 〈…〉 〈…〉 which is unbeliefe for faith 〈…〉 Eph. 〈…〉 We have accesse with confidence 〈…〉 therefore which 〈◊〉 fear in unbeliefe Rev. 2● 8 ●elievers together that 〈◊〉 that believe● not Gods 〈…〉 or goo● 〈…〉 fearfull heart 〈…〉 this fear it drives us from God men ●●ossest with 〈…〉 ●hall cry to the Mountains to cover them from the 〈…〉 Rev ● ult So when 〈…〉 sinned he hid ●●elfe from the presen●e of the Lord. 3. From the ●●bject of this 〈◊〉 which is an expectation of some evill terrible to him If therefore the creature look at God as terrible and to be feared it s a signe they are not sound in love for they that love Christ love his appearing the Spirit and the Bride say Come Lord Jesus come quickly be like a 〈…〉 heart for 〈◊〉 look on Christ as comfortable and his ●●esence ●● joyfull and good for th●● 4. From the adjunct of fear ●●r brings torment 〈…〉 with it 〈◊〉 a kind of torment in the soule but love brings 〈…〉 and joy and 〈◊〉 therefore this properly argues that where fear 〈◊〉 heart is not found 〈◊〉 How 〈…〉 passe then that some that are of