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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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of it as an example to move us to suffer and that patiently but continues his speech of it and sets it out by the ends thereof and the many benefits that come to us thereby 1. That we be thereby delivered from our sin and the punishment thereof 2. Enabled to dye unto sin that we might live unto righteousness Having fallen into this argument he sticks in it and cannot easily get out but is like a friend that holds his friend long by the hand being loath to part with him Who Even Christ himself the Son of God Lord of Angels and of the whole world His own self In his own person not by a Deputy without any help in the business Bare That is suffered the intollerable and infinite wait of Gods wrath due to our sins bare our sins and all that was due to them which would have swallowed up men and Angels Our sins Even the sins of the Elect all of them and the punishment of the same In his own body Not but that he suffered in soul and therein his chiefest sufferings were but because he speaks of his putting to death the cruel usage of his body was evident On the tree Namely the Cross which death he dyed by the especial providence of God being that kinde of death which God had pronounced accursed and so fittest for our Savior Christ to endure that he might bear what we had deserved which was to become accursed that we might escape the curse which we had deserved by the breach of the Law For Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Book of the Law to do them The foregoing words set forth the passion of Christ. The following That we being dead unto sin c. The fruits that come to us thereby As a childe that hath a piece of Sugar in his mouth is loath to let it go down but would keep the sweetness still so doth our Apostle by the Doctrine of Christs passion so sweet comfortable useful admirable he cannot get out of it but doth as it were dwell on it which teacheth us not to be weary in meditating hereon or hearing hereof it should be stil fresh and new to us as the song of the Saints and Angels though the same yet is ever new The Angels themselves desire to see further into this mystery of Gods love to his Church in giving his Son They saw somewhat by the Prophets some more when he was come especially when crucified and risen again from the dead but most of all when they saw the Gentiles called and the Gospel Preached so plainly by the Apostles yet it s said They be not satisfied but stooping down as it were they pray and desire to see more yet is the benefit more to us then unto them and therefore how much more unwearied should we be Herewith our Apostle was so taken as that he desired to know nothing else but Christ crucified and esteemed all priviledges and advantages that he had of being a Pharisee an Hebrew c. as dung in comparison of Christ The Israelites were often told by the Prophets of their deliverance out of Egypt how much more should we be content to hear of our deliverance through Christ whereof that was but a small resemblance and type But alas how quickly are we weary of this argument Because we have heard often of it it s now stale and people have no more minde to hear it then the Israelites could be contented with the Manna which God allowed them but lusted after other Food As they that go to Sea think it strange and for a day or two admire the wonderful works of God but afterward cease therefrom so do we in this matter though most sweet comfortable admirable and of daily use to make us grow in hatred of sin and love of God and would also be a spur to our dulness But to come to the passion it self It s usually referred to that he suffered on the Cross as here because that was a great part and the most visible to all and the end of all but there were also infinite sufferings before and besides his death His whole life was a continual suffering from his birth to his death from the Manger to the Cross all full of Crosses His abasement to take our nature was much and to become subject to all our infirmities sin only excepted and to be in a poor condition persecuted as soon as born living obscurely with his Parents till about thirty years old in the exercise as is supposed of a mean Trade strange abasement for the Son of God as soon as he entred into his Office and was baptized the Devil set sore on him After this as a recompence to his continual toil and travel for mens Souls and Bodies he was not only content to live in a mean condition without any House of his own c. but he was so vilely railed on and slandered as is set down in the foregoing Verse as none have been more or so much yea as sometimes in policy they sought to entrap him so at other times they laid wait and used means to kill him At last they plotted by one of his own Disciples to take away his life as burning with an irreconcileable hatred against him But ere he was betrayed he entred upon his sufferings in a most grievous maner yea no doubt even before he thought thereof at sundry times which did not a little trouble and perplex him as a woman thinking sometimes of the pains of her travel before they come is set on a sweat and quakes for fear thereof But after he had finisht the Passover and instituted the Supper he knowing that the time of his death approached went into the Mount of Olives and there entred into his most bitter Passion taking with him Peter James and John the beholders of his transfiguration and glory and therefore the fitter to behold his abasement but alas pitying them he left them onely giving them a charge to watch and pray and went from them a stones cast for they were not able to behold his agony nor hear the grievous dolour that he could not but make and then began his pains as of a woman in travel save that they were a thousand times greater he fell on his face grovelling and cryed out His soul was heavy unto the death and was in such an agony that he shed drops of blood a thing never heard of and that through the extream force of his pain O it was the intollerable weight of his Fathers wrath due for all our vile sins which was so grievous as it made him pray to his Father for help and to remove that cup if it might be which was but the frailty of his humane Nature without sin desiring help feeling it self almost swallowed up and having that which would not onely have taken away the bodily life of all men
it s not seen with the bodily eye Men labor and strive to get up aloft here to fet their nest on high from which yet they may come down quickly as many do and must do at their death but how few labor to get up to this height of glory in Heaven In Heaven Hereby our Apostle meets with and seeks to cure a gross imagination of the Jews which dreamed of an earthly Potentate and thought Christ should come and deliver them from the Romans See it in the two sons of Zebedeus yea after three years teaching of Christ after his death and resurrection they were not free of this conceit our Savior used to call their mind from this to heaven Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of saith he and I came to serve and not to be served So Peter draws them to look for their glory in Heaven we must not therefore look for an happy estate here below but in Heaven Here the Cross there the Crown here the Battel there the Victory The Crown of Thorns here the Crown of Glory hereafter many would follow Christ and the Gospel if there came any preferment by him that now do not so would the yong rich man But Gods children will serve him though they undergo troubles here for the glorious inheritance hereafter Reserved for us in Heaven This meets with an Objection that these Christians might make Alas come to this inheritance it were happy indeed if we could but what hope of it Alas we are tossed up and down stript of all our goods and persecuted we are so far from hope to obtain this eternal inheritance that we cannot keep these earthly ones which we have He answered this is safely reserved for us and is out of danger to be lost and though they lost their earthly inheritances they were but uncertain and transitory things whereof God never promised that they should be other but this is eternal whereof they shall be most sure For hath the Father prepared this inheritance ere the world was and chosen us unto it hath the Son purchased it for us when we had lost it Hath the Holy Ghost assured us of it and sealed it to us and given us the earnest of it and shall we miss it God forbid the Spirit of truth cannot deceive us shall Christ lose his death Oh no it s reserved for us in Heaven where no Devil can come nor wicked men to take it from us Let this be a comfor to all the faithful servants of God that are justified and sanctified to sweeten all their afflictions here below that they may be as sure of Heaven in the end without fail as if they had it already Many children lose their temporal inheritances for want of good Gardians and Keepers they are often wasted and gone ere they come to years or are suffered to be recovered from them by some others but the Lord is a faithful keeper we are yet under age when we shall come to age and dye the Father that kept it for us will bestow it on us Christ Jesus our head and elder brother he hath taken possession of it for us and tells us that where he is there shall we be But if we say we have many ill willers there can none come into Heaven but our Friends The Devil our deadliest adversary he comes not there though he did into the earthly Paradise And for the wicked though they hare Gods children so as they could wish that as they take away their earthly Inheritances so they should never be happy if they could help it its past their power to deprive them hereof they shall go to Heaven do what they can yea oftentimes they help them sooner thither then otherwise they should be though no thank to them and at the day of Judgement to the increase of their torment the godly shall be taken up in their sight to Heaven when themselves shall be thrust into that place of utter darkness to be tormented with the Devil and his Angels for ever and ever Hereof we have need to be throughly perswaded else when great afflictions come they will be ready to overwhelm us as it did almost befal both Job and Jeremiah Oh the afflictions of this present time are not worthy the glory that shall be revealed let the assurance of Heaven keep us from wishing we had never been whatsoever troubles we do here meet withal pray we still Lord increase our Faith but more of this hereafter For us Namely himself by the judgement of certainty and them by the judgement of charity Here note that Its a Christians special comfort that he knows and believes that this Inheritance is for him in particular I know saith Job that my Redeemer liveth My Lord and my God saith Thomas This nature of Faith is signified in the particular distribution of the Sacrament To believe it in general affords no sound comfort it may indeed allure one for a while to the profession of the Gospel to hear that there be such excellent things but it will not continue but will fail and fade away They that have no more but tasted of the powers of the world to come will assuredly fall quite away but a particular assurance is the mother of all comfort and the onely foundation of a true good life and continuance therein unto the end The onely prop and pillar to uphold us in Troubles Dangers Distresses Persecutions and what not Therefore labor for it But this were presumption say the Papists and to this purpose they abuse that of the Preacher The Righteous and the Wise and their works are in the hand of God no man knoweth either love or hatred by all that is before them but hereby is meant onely that by these outward things no man can conclude whether he be loved or hated of God but that therefore we may not know at all it s most gross Indeed if we should say this of our own heads it were presumption but when we speak it from the Word and the witness of the Spirit of truth then it is not As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sons of God saith the Apostle And Know ye not that Christ Jesus is in you except ye be reprobate And the Apostle Saint John tells us how we may know that he dwels in us even Because he hath given us of his Spirit If therefore we finde the fruits of the Spirit an hatred of all sin an unfeigned care to please God in all things love to Gods Word and his people grieve that we can serve God no better strive after more power and that in the use of the means ordained to that end we should be injurious to the Spirit of God if we did not believe this inheritance to belong to our selves in particular Therefore if we finde our selves regenerate and sanctified we
which should make us loath our selves that put the innocent Son of God to such things which we had justly deserved Oh! How should we hate sin and love God and Christ Jesus for ever and ever But how could it stand with Gods justice that he should suffer being every way innocent and we which were guilty persons should go free Christ was an able surety to dye and overcome death and he was willing and the Father could not refuse one in our own nature to undertake for us to satisfie his justice and free us Here also we may see how we stand righteous before Almighty God though we be not perfectly righteous though not at all till we be sanctified and then but in part How even by the righteousness of Christ imputed to us and reckoned and made ours by Faith which is not an imaginary thing as the Papists scoff at it but a true and real righteousness for as Christ was no sinner yet was counted as a sinner and being so accounted bare the intollerable weight of our sins so we by his righteousness imputed stand verily and truly just before God and shall be saved 2. This should teach us to labor for innocency of life The more means we have and the more shew we make we must be the more careful to walk warily as they that have many observers some that will be grieved if we do ill and many as the Devil and the wicked that will rejoyce Let the forwardest Towns and persons take heed to themselves that they be innocent in their example you may do much good this way else much hurt look to your selves you are watcht and that narrowly 3. If he suffered and that patiently who never offended God nor man but was the most pure and innocent Son of God how much more should we who never suffer but our hearts can tell us we have deserved the same and ten thousand times more through our sins against God we have small cause to be impatient but must submit our selves hereto yea we have not onely sinned against God and so deserved all evil and that God should make us a Reproach a By-word a Scorn of men and a Threshold for all to tread on but we have sinned against our Magistrates against our neighbors yea against them that misuse us whosoever they be for want of reverencing them praying for them doing our duties to them not carrying our selves so innocently towards them nor so wisely patiently unblameably as we ought so that though we deserve not to be thus dealt with for this that we are punished for yet in many other things we do Submit we our selves therefore in all humbleness of minde and patience What are we sinful creatures too good to suffer when as the Lord of all and he that was the Son of God did yet suffer Verse 23. Who when he was reviled reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously HEre 's our Saviors admirable patience both in what he did not and what he did being reviled and called a Samaritan a friend of Publicans and Sinners a glutton a wine bibber yea said that he had a Devil that he was a blasphemer that he cast out Devils through Beelzebub the prince of Devils that he was a deceiver and an enemy to Caesar being I say thus reviled and his Enemies having shot such arrows of most vile slanderous and cruel words against him and such as might not onely raze the skin but pierce him to the very heart yet he reviled not again he required them not like for like thereby to be revenged of them True it is in his publique Ministery he told them plainly of their sins and called them Blinde guides and Hypocrites and denounced Gods judgements against them but that was from conscience of his duty and of love to win them to repentance if it might be not upon spleen to revenge himself as the Ministers of God may rebuke sin severely and denounce Gods judgements against them that live thus and thus and yet not out of any malice or ill will but from an earnest desire of their amendment and therefore they do wickedly that call that railing yea when they posted him from the place where they took him with swords and staves brought him to Caiphas the high Priest and then led him into their counsel and then when they had bound him they led him away and delivered him to Pontius Pilat the Governor from him he was sent to Herod by whom being mocked and set at naught he was sent again to Pilat where he was mockt smitten scourged and misused beyond all measure yet when he thus suffered he threatned not He could have commanded fire as Elias to come down and consume them or Legions of Angels to destroy them He could also have served them as Corah and his Company were served but he did patiently put up all Here 's a fit patern for our imitation we must take heed of revenge The Heathens are accustomed hereunto but Christians must not be like to them This is often forbid say not I will do to him as he hath done to me give word for word taunt for taunt blow for blow c. For 1. This is a work of the flesh 2. God hath a hand in whatsoever is done against thee Job acknowledged it so David To use revenge were to resist God as the dog that bites the staff would be willing to bite the man if he could It s as if a Childe should pull the rod out of his Fathers hand and break it before his face What would we say of such a Childe The Magistrate indeed may take revenge for wrongs done us we our selves must not 3. It were in vain to fight with the world with the worlds weapons they will be too hard for us Prayers and patience are our proper wepons whereby we shall be too hard for them 4. Thus we hurt our selves more then them them a little in body goods or name our selves a great deal in our souls as the Bee by stinging loses her own life we have our wills a little but the wrath of God withal and that 's dearly bought 5. It proceeds of great weakness If we had Spiritual strength we would pass by great things we do therefore but proclaim our own weakness when we revenge Moses David and others of Gods dear servants would not give way hereunto especially beyond all comparison our Savior Christ who suffered so monstrous things of such base persons and that so unjustly as one that had never the least ill thought against God or man O this ought to move us to great patience yea of the Heathens themselves there were not a few which were admirable in patience This condemneth the monstrous practice of the world that is set upon nothing but revenge give taunt for
above all others Oh! it rebukes our cold serving him which will scarce lay down our lusts at his request who yet laid down his life for us our proud lusts revenging lusts covetous and worldly lusts unclean lusts c. O fearful unthankfulness And how hardly are we brought to do duties No forwardness therein negligence every way and when we do them how cold and careless are we O lamentable Is a cold drowsie service suitable to such a love as this we may be even ashamed herein And for suffering alas we have no will no not to endure a mock a frown of a great person we will make friendship with the world rather then to endure the least disgrace we will forbear many duties nay to keep company with Gods servants onely lest we should be counted Puritans How shall we then be able to go to Prison and death for the cause of Christ 3. To all that mourn in Sion to all that are heavy laden hungring after Christ Jesus and willing to take up his yoke and to all other Believers this is matter of most unspeakable consolation Their sins be gone and all the punishment due to them no punishment shall befal them here as on the ungodly no wrath or condemnation hereafter Their afflictions are merciful corrections to further their Salvation To them death is no death but a passage to life that whereupon their Souls are received into Heaven their bodies committed to the earth both which at the Resurrection shall be joyfully reunited O how should we walk worthy of this in all holiness and honesty But to all that shall not have part in Christ there remains unspeakable misery it had been good for them they had never been born they must bear their own burthen and sink to Hell there to be for ever and ever This will be the portion of most because so few receive Christ so few are humbled so many through pride and profaneness refuse to be guided by him O how few will cast away their lusts and yield up themselves to be ruled by him and his Word It will be most woful to the Turks Jews and Pagans that shall perish without Christ but yet of all others their judgement will be most fearful which have had him preached daily and by the Ministers of God have been so often besought to embrace him and yet have despised him would none of him Oh it will encrease their torment to consider that they had offer of Christ and many believed in him and were converted by the same Sermons whereat they themselves were no whit moved O this will fret hearts O le ts consider this we that live in this happy time One would think every man should receive and imbrace Christ Jesus but alas how few do this for them that do not it will be their undoing O give no rest unto your selves till you can get a discharge in and by Christ confess bewail crave pardon cry to God and resolve to turn to him The water is now stirring step into this Pool of Bethesda 4. This condemneth all false ways for Salvation for other then Christ never was any neither is or shall be therefore all that reject him as Jews and Turks or embrace him onely to halves as the Papists are in a fearful case as all among our selves that trust to any thing else besides him That we being dead to sin c. Another main end of Christs death and another great benefit redounding unto us thereby namely That he dyed for us not onely to free us from sins and wrath and damnation deserved thereby but also to kill sins in us to deliver us from the power thereof and to dissolve the works of the Devil in us that being dead unto sin we might live unto righteousness Of the words first in general then in particular In general note we thus much that For whomsoever Christ dyed he dyed to kill sin in them for he dyed not to free us of half our misery and leave us in the other half nor to be at a great deal of cost with us and for us and yet leave us in a case fit to do him no service as if one should ransom a man out of the Turks galleys and leave him in the midway but hath done all this that we might be fit to do him service thereupon giving us his Word and Spirit to humble us and so to change us that sin may be mortified in us and we made live He is not onely made of God unto us Redemption but also our Sanctification as he hath redeemed us so hath he purged us to be a peculiar people unto himself Christ affords both and from him we may as well look for the one as the other yea whosoever hath indeed his part in the one cannot be without the other and in token of our thankfulness we ought to labor by all means to shew forth this latter 1. This confutes that wicked slander of the Church of Rome We talk say they that we must be saved by Christs death and by Faith in him onely and not by any thing we can do and therefore that we set men at liberty to do what they list and open a gap to all licentiousness but as the Gospel is not a Doctrine of liberty so neither do we by preaching give way unto licentiousness The Gospel requires as strict obedience as the Law doth to every of Gods Commandments though not in extremity neither freeth it us from any duty to God or men yea teacheth us That denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world and that none have nor can have part in Christ which give not themselves to good works 2. This setteth forth the wonderful goodness of Christ Jesus that hath not onely freed us from Gods wrath and the punishment of our sins which is unspeakable goodness but hath appointed to give us his Spirit to free us from sin for if we should all our life here have lived after our own lusts or under the power of Satan what a base and woful life had this been that we might both in heart and body serve him in the works of holiness and a godly life 3. This condemneth all those that lay claim to the death of Christ and yet live in their sins and old lusts Numbers in these days have got this by the end They hope to be saved by Jesus Christ They be no Papists that look to be saved by their works but they believe in Jesus Christ with all their hearts and yet they are not washed from their old filthiness but abide still in security in all or some of their lusts But let such know they speak impossible things God hath joyned these two ends of Christs death and they divide them yea blasphemous things that Christ dyed to set men at liberty to live as they list O woful
happy indeed but Moses had respect hereunto and did clearly discern the same Q. May we then offer our selves to trouble A. Ordinarily we must not If any in extraordinary times should feel an extraordinary zeal and desire hereto as it seems the Apostle Paul had when he would needs go to Jerusalem questionless they should have joy in their sufferings we must tarry till God call us Q. May we flee persecution A. If God make make us a way we may as who haply are not as yet so fully fitted and resolved to suffer as were meet or who know not whether God will have us scatter his truth further or remain to be as feeds thereof for afterwards but if we see that its Gods minde we should be s●ffer then it s our duty willingly and chearfully to put forth our selves This confuteth the foolish world that judging it to be a most miserable thing thus to suffer will therefore never come at it either not professing Religion at all or else revolting therefrom in time of trouble yet would they be happy but they take a contrary course they being ashamed of Christ here he will be ashamed of them hereafter In saving a transitory life they lose life everlasting yea how do we our selves shun sufferings as if they were miserable which do suffer whereas the Spirit of God hath pronounced them blessed Happy are they that suffer for a good cause for righteousness for Religion for conscience sake such as stick fastest to the truth provide best and most wisely for themselves what can their enemies do to us If they take away our goods we shall have a thousand fold more in this world and in the world to come life everlasting If they mangle our bodies God will raise up the same gloriously If they separate our souls from our bodies by death the Angels will carry them into Abrahams bosom If our cause be good we have cause to rejoyce in our sufferings so are we enjoyned so did the Apostles in their sufferings so also the holy Martyrs I might to this purpose alledge the story of Alice Driver of Priests wife in Exeter of the Christians in Edessa c. but that they may be read at large in the Book of the Martyrs O that we should be so discouraged at a mock at a frown of our betters O that we should be as soon ready to give over as to begin to do well though the more religious we are the more we esteem of the word the better both God his angels and people like us yet is it not so with the world they liked us better before but do not now approve of our course howsoever this is our duty hereof shal we have the benefit yea to be disliked to suffer for this will be our honor our advancement As David being mocked of Michol resolved to be yet more humble so should we be so much the more for goodness as we see the world oppose it and set themselves against us because of the same We must not be discouraged at the very greatest much less at small trials We know not what we shall suffer For yet we have not resisted unto blood onely let us be careful that we suffer for Righteousness and for a good cause for though we have some good things in us yet haply we may be brought to suffer for some fault in us and therein we can have small peace Beware we suffer not as Separatists that flie out against and from the Church that we suffer not for contempt or usual neglect of our Ministers if they preach the Word truly that we suffer not for rash heady hasty and violent carriage of our selves that we suffer not for our censuring for our meddling with things or persons wherewith we have nothing to do or for passing our bounds in things beyond our reach Servants must beware that they suffer not for their carelesness in their places as those which having liberty granted them to hear the Word upon their not profiting thereby are restrained therefrom so if they shall suffer for being negligent untrusty sloathful stout in answering again c. they suffer deservedly not for righteousness sake yea this their carriage makes the godly housholders to grieve and those that be not so well seasoned to think ill of the profession and it makes the name of God and his Gospel ill spoken of and hereupon many say Oh I le never meddle with these Bible-wenches c. fie upon it what a fearful thing is this The like may be said of the poor which neglect their callings and are caraless of their Families c. Note further That A godly man is blessed happy in what condition soever He is happy not onely in prosperity but even in sufferings even in the very lowest abasement nothing can make them miserable having God and a good conscience though they meet with affliction from God or persecution from men as here yet are they happy Imprison him fetter him let no creature come at him put Lyons to him c. yet he is still and shall be the childe of God the member of Christ the heir of Heaven a Kings son c. and how can he be miserable that hath the Comforter within For the wicked nothing can make them happy let a wicked man have Sampsons strength Absoloms beauty Ahasuerus his wealth Nebuchadnezzars stately Babel Dives his costly apparel c. yet is he miserable he is under the curse of God there 's but a step between him and Hell As Jonah was asleep whilest God was offended with him the winds raged against him the Whale was ready to swallow him so do the wicked eat sleep and are jovial while God is offended Heaven is shut up against them Hell gapes for them and the Devil waits on them as his prey Their security will end in a fearful wakening they shall be snatched from their beds of ease and cast into everlasting torments 1. This may encourage Gods servants to suffer for righteousness They shall not be the less happy let the world do its worst it cannot make them miserable They are every way happy in poverty sickness persecution and the like O who would not labor to attain this honor and happiness 2. It may disswade the wicked from their mischievous plotting against Gods servants For why do they pursue them To make them miserable its impossible They may indeed make them the more to shine forth through their constancy in Faith and increase their glory in Heaven and so make them more happy but to make them miserable they cannot O that they would break off this their course and be weary thereof for so long as they be wicked how rich soever or how high a pitch soever of honor they have clambered to they are miserable yea these and the like make them more miserable as being fuel to their lust being to
thereupon both in body and soul shall be cast into Hell fire though the one begin with joy yet they end with wo and though the other begin heavily here yet they end with joy in Heaven and this life is nothing to that 's to come Could we discern this we would reverence the one highly and no less pity the others yea should the ones troubles here infinitely exceed the others jollities or the troubles of the godly be here greater then they are as also the jollity of the wicked we would not change with them 1. This confuteth the blinde world that esteemeth basely of Gods servants and of their state but let us never think the worse of our estate for them as a plain rich man doth not when a vain bragging fellow in brave apparel goes swaggering scornfully by him 2. This may and ought wonderfully to comfort Gods servants that hath advanced them to this high dignity passing by so many others O that we would walk worthy hereof in an holy and pure conversation 3. This may be a choak to the wicked notwithstanding all their jollity and make them weary of their condition laboring to become godly and of Gods house that so they may be truly happy What shall the end of them be that obey not the Gospel of God Here 's implyed 1. That though the afflictions of Gods people be many and great yet they are nothing in respect of the miseries which shall befal the ungodly The Lord is Judge of all the world and he will deal justly and equally even give every one according to their works If therefore he afflict his children with rods he will plague his enemies with scourges if he will not bear with sin in his own servants that are careful to please him and stand in awe and yet be overtaken then he will be dreadfully revenged of those that make a trade of sin if his children in their conversion and often afterward upon any sin committed have gripes of Conscience and suffer the terrors of God then shall the wicked have a gnawing Worm that shall never dye if those be brought as it were along by Hell these shall be left and swallowed up of Hell The Lord began with the Israelites in Captivity but ended with the Egyptians in drowning them in the Red-sea the three Children were put into the fiery Fornace not burnt but fire seized on them that put them in Daniel was put into the Lyons Den but his Enemies and Accusers were devoured Israel was carried Captive but Ashur destroyed the children are beaten with the rod thereafter it s burnt God chastens his for a few days here to their amendment but the wicked shall be cast into eternal fire In reading hearing and seeing what grievous things the Lord hath laid on his own children the wicked may see as in a glass the woful state that abides them 2. That the torments prepared for the ungodly in death and at the day of Judgement are such as cannot be expressed The Apostle knew that they should have a fearful end but utter the further end of it and lay it out to the full he could not therefore is forced to say What shall be the end It s a wonderful love of God that he hath made us his Children but yet it s not manifest what we shall be that is it cannot be exprest what happiness is prepared for us Eye hath not seen nor ear hath not heard what God hath prepared for his children So cannot any decypher the fearfulness of the wo prepared for the ungodly Such shall be separated from God and from his Saints and have their portion with the Devil and damned O the universality of their torments both in respect of their bodies and souls O the greatness of their pangs tormented with fire and brimstone O the eternity of them They shall be world without end If a man in pain should shed a tear or drop of water from his eye once in a thousand years and no more yet sooner should he make a whole Sea before this time will end 1. O what an iron scourge should this be to drive the wicked to repentance not resting till they know they be freed from this woful lake O let them never glory in their prosperity as long as they are in danger hereof If any will not break off their sins and fear they will prove costly profits and pleasures and they that will not believe and fear here shall feel them to eternal destruction hereafter 2. How should this glad the hearts of all Gods people that know themselves freed from this fearful lake and make them walk chearfully and obediently all their days to the honor of him that by his sufferings hath freed them therefrom yea should we not bear our few afflictions patiently being freed from these endles and easeles ones and not to envy at the prosperity of the wicked seeing it shall have such an end let their beginning be what it will be if this be their end God keep us from having any part therein That obey not the Gospel of God The wicked are described by their disobedience to the Gospel and these are indeed the most wicked and and have the fearfullest answer to make and the lowest or worst place in Hell they shall speed worst for their sin is greatest For what a favor of God is it not onely to give Christ to the world but then to publish him by the Gospel being the glad tidings of Salvation to all of what sort soever though never so mean never so great sinners there is mercy upon their unfained humiliation and such God sends his Ministers to beseech men to be reconciled O this is an unspeakable f●vor as that the contempt thereof must needs deserve a fearful damnaton That men should continue yet in their sins and have no minde ● Christ as a King and Savior is fearful If a company of Rebels●ad a pardon proclaimed and sent out to so many as would come in fany would stand out and refuse the Kings grace and favor were he ●t worthy to be cut-off It shall be easier for Sodom and Gomorrah in ●e day of Judgement then for these people If they that despised the●aw were not unpunished how shall they be dealt withal that desp● the Gospel The higher they are lift up the lower they shall be casdown 1. This rebuts the most part Howsoever they talk of the Gospel and come●t Church and cry The temple of the Lord the temple of the Lord yet ●ey yield not obedience thereto but continue in their sins There are ●w that come to see any such need of Christ as highly to prize him a● most earnestly to seek him though some would have Christ the Savior and will have Jesus Christ in their mouths yet few will sto● to his yoke to renounce all their lusts and yield up themselves in abbedience to his
most part of old folks are so silly and ignorant that they have no good counsel in them nay are blockish and unteachable they spent their own time badly and never made conscience thereof therefore do not they call on others not being converted how can they strengthen others Many also are so far from rebuking them for disorder and making the wicked afraid as they will sit still on their benches and look upon youths rioting dancing c. and laugh at them aud so they strengthen them in their naughtiness and if a yonger man reprove them whether Officer or other they do not make any reckoning thereof for why such an ancient old man will stand and look on us and when they see such coming they are so far from fleeing as were meet as they are the more emboldned because they know they shall be countenanced by them yea these do in effect as Saul who held the garments of those that stoned Stephen others there are who though they will not stand looking on them yet will pass by and say nothing to them but rather bid them God speed and so are partakers of their evil These also should give good example be paterns of piety godliness hatred of sin zeal for Gods glory love to the house of God c. as those that have had much time many means and now have but a while to live If their example be good it may do much good if ill then no hoe Abraham Isaac Jacob were godly old men so Noah Job Samuel Simeon their example did much good But Oh how vain frothy and unsavory are the words of some being so prophane as youths might rather open their mouth to reprove them then give any attention to hear them Some talk as filthily as if they had never repented of the whoredom of their youth some talk and tell to youths and laugh at the lewd pranks of their youth so reading their Lectures of evil they shew themselves zealous to do evil that not onely will do so themselves as long as they can but would that others should after them the contrary is a good sign Some also even aged are Swearers Sabbath breakers Al●househaunters c. some also though for the time they might have been Teachers though not publique ones yet of the youths had need to be taught even the easiest Principles of Religion they can onely tell you of old Stories they can remember since King Henry went to Bulloign and can remember the old learning and that they helpt the Priest say Mass many a time If they could remember that they had repented of it it were well or could remember of any good they did forty years ago or that they were greatly moved at a Sermon and ever since have made conscience of their ways took such and such pains to hear such delight to read in the Scriptures and other good Books have sate up half nights in doing good O this were well If they could talk of our Saviors birth life miracles death of his Apostles their acts of the Israelites carrying into captivity coming out of Egypt so of the Flood of the Creation c. these things indeed would become them as they can tel you how old they are and in what Kings Reign they were born so if they could tell you when they were born again and how old they are in Christ it were happy But alas in such things they have no more skill then Nicodemus had when he first came to our Savior They are dumb when they are put from their old Stories I knew his Grand-father his great Grand-father c. the older a man is the worse he is if he be not godly O that such would consider why they came into the world how near death is what good counsel or good example they have given whom they have kept from evil or furthered in good what good they have done for their own Souls how they should have served God in holiness and righteousness all the days of their life and that they have not thus served him for which they have a fearful answer to make Though there be no great hope in respect of your dullness as also that God will not accept such a lame Sacrifice and the Devils leavings who requireth the firstlings and lest the Devil will not be put out nor sin accustomed unto be done away yet nothing is impossible to God therefore despair not onely ply you with exceeding haste lest you be shut out and that you may turn to God get some assurance of his love redeem the time make some amends do some good ere you dye as the good Thief that rebuked his fellow If old folks would not live without being desired nor be a burthen nor dye without being mourned for let them live to good use and do good so shall their age be honorable and honored There be some good old ancient men but alas their ●umber is but small and they not so zealous as they should be old men also in Towns must use their power and place to the good of the yonger and Church wherein they live and not to ease their own bodies or purses laying the burthen on their inferiors and as old men so are old women also here meant who must give good instruction and do good also by example they must speak graciously and to good purpose not given to Tale-telling Malice idle Talking c. as most are 2. For youths it rebuketh the notorious pride and malepart boldness of the youths of our times in their gesture carriage speech to their elders whether in publique or private what a universal complaint do men make of their children what a complaint especially of Servants that there were never the like for pride idleness untrustiness c. never looking for more maintenance never less duty In former times when they had not the tythe of the means they now enjoy servants were plain diligent trusty careful to please painful c. What a shame is this Hereupon they that be ill minded blame us and the Gospel never good servants since so much preaching O woful mouth is our preaching or the Word of God in the fault Is there one word in the Bible or doth any one come from us at any time that teacheth them so to do Do not we teach them the quite contrary and do not you give God a good mends for the Gospel There are some which do even profess Religion that yet suffer civil servants to go beyond them in diligence and trustiness and gentleness and good behavior Oh what may we not fear upon the Land for the ungraciousness of this generation seeing they will not bear the easie yoke of Government of their Elders they may look for some heavy yoke or other God will set up houses of Correction for such How few youths make any account that it belongs to them to be Religious or that their youth should be otherwise spent then
go no further But God bids us use the means and look for good success and cast our selves on him I grant indeed if we should look upon the world the Devil our selves we might fear as also considering that many great ones have faln but its like either they trusted to themselves or neglected the means which if we do not God will keep us If we should use the means and yet torture our selves with care how miserable were our lives Another saith he shall never be able to abide persecution and the fire let such labor for faith and love and yield to God in what he calls for bearing present afflictions patiently whom God will enable to greater if he shall call them thereto So some are afraid they shall dye a raving death some that they shall be bedrid and lame some that if they should have the Stone or such a grievous torment they were never able to endure it c. It s good in some sort to hove some such forethought to quicken our care but not distrustfully to discourage our selves Again if a man should be so careful for his soul as to neglect his Calling and think he should not follow it this were excessive care Excessive care for the body it s either for fear of evils or for obtaining good things For the 1. O what if I should lose all I have and come to misery by Bankrupts fire c What if I should fall into such a cruel mans hands he would undo me Also what if I should for my well doing and profession have my Landlords displeasure be put into Courts brought into trouble c. we must labor for grace to bear us out in such things and for heaven doing our duty wisely and godly as Daniel and leaving the issue to God on whom we must cast our selves and our care For the 1. It s either when we take care for the successes of things which is Gods part or when we use excessive care that makes us sin by neglecting some duty or committing some evil For successes as when we have made a bargain and used the means then we fall to take thought for the success too but Oh if it should not prove well I should be hindred or undone but we must use the means and leave the success to God when we have used the outward means and prayed and so sanctified our labors then ought we to live by faith and be assured that we shall have that success that God shall see best If it shall fall out to my desire I shall desire to be thankful if otherwise I know God will dispose it to the best as Esther If I perish I perish For excessive care for worldly things when men will for these neglect good duties to God their own Souls Families Poor Word Sacraments Prayer c. or shall commit evil by stealing oppressing dissembling defrauding breaking the Sabbath c. This is wicked Would God have us provide for our selves with his dishonor with the wounding of our own souls and hurting our brethren or cannot he provide for us sufficiently without these When we follow our Callings all duties discharged and be provident and thrifty that nothing be lost this is as far as we must go further we must not any further is too far 1. This rebukes the universal sin in this Land Poor people take such thought what they shall eat c. that they lye steal c. The richer sort use all unconscionable courses dare not come to the Word for fear of wanting nor read nor pray in their Families but dare do any evil or at least be so excessively careful as that thereupon they use lying deceit oppression racking rents c. and this is not the fault of the bad onely but even of Gods servants who be tainted with too much care under the the colour of lawful care going too too far They are careful oftentimes about the successes of things when they might by faith rest quietly on God They do often neglect good or post it over and do evil with more care The root of this in the men of the world is want of Faith for had they any perswasion of Gods love and care they would not be thus careful so also the want of prizing seeking and regarding Heaven and Spiritual things In Gods children the weakness of Faith is the ground hereof as also their too little esteeming of heaven and heavenly things For if we were assured of Gods particular caring for us aud that heaven so excellent a place is ours and did more highly esteem of Spiritual graces with the means thereof we would spend much time in them and so be kept from so much worldly care 2. Let us therefore labor to be purged of this distrustful care or being free to keep our selves so To this end we must labor for faith and to encrease therein and highly to prize grace and the rather must we thus do because as this vice hath so ill roots so the fruits are as bad Excessive care for the world hurts the body brings gray hairs distracts and rends the minde asunder makes a man unfit for any good unfit to be a good Magistrate as who will never tend or regard the publique good so to be a good Minister nay to be a good housholder as which will justle out or hinder Reading Prayer good Duties c. It hinders a man from the Word or if he doth come thereto he is already so full as all runs beside or falls asleep and so cannot meditate thereon or receive any comfort thereby it choaks the Word yea in time makes a man mock at it It makes him unfit to pray or perform any other duty yea unfit to dye and for Christs coming but fit for all evil for its the root of all evil and easily leads a man to the breach of any Commandment The Devil can fasten any temptation on such a one Let us therefore take heed of it and the rather for that 1. These things be good in a very mean degree cannot breed contentment nor make a man happy 2. They are base bones for Dogs such as Reprobates have more in plenty then Gods Children more meet as wages for slaves then portions for Children even the wicked have these but the godly have spiritual graces here and hereafter eternal life 3. They be very vain subject to many losses and changes yea and we are as vain as they which if we should never lose yet might be taken from them not twenty or forty years hence but ere to morrow and whether we shall leave them to our children we cannot tell haply it may be to strangers yea enemies if to our children we know not how they will spend them If some miserable men that have robbed God stoln from the poor sold themselves to the Devil had but leave to look out of their graves a little and see who dwells in their houses and have