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A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

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for euill workes that doth not first care to repent for euill thoughts and such like corruption in the minde There should man begin his repentance where God begins the discouery of our miserie And let vs learne to be more watchfull against the sinnes of our mindes and be more grieued for the drosse and corruption wee finde there and learne more to hate the sinnes of the minde such as are ignorance distracted seruice false opinions emptinesse of holy meditations euill dishonourable impure and vnchast thoughts against God or man pride malice frowardnesse vanitie securitie and vnbeliefe Doct. 2. There is in vnregenerate men a strange minding of sinne they imagine mischiefe they haue a spirit of fornication profound to decline deepely set they trust in their owne wayes so as many times they regard neither Gods word nor the rod nor the threatnings of God or rebukes of man neither can they be stirred with the foure last things This shewes as mans misery and death in sinne so the wonderfull mercy of God in forgiuing such sins It is a comfort that sinnes of set knowledge may be forgiuen And hence may be gathered a difference betweene the sinnes of the regenerate and the sinnes of the vnregenerate for the godly sinne not with a full minde they are not set in euill sinne rebels in them but not raignes Lastly this may let vs see how little cause wee haue to stand vpon our mindes or reason or naturall parts in matters of Hope and Saluation In euill Workes If the dependance and the words themselues be duely considered wee may here gather fiue things First that the euill workes of the sinner cause the strangenesse and enmity aforesaid Secondly that a wicked man can like himselfe well enough though his very workes and outward behauiour be euill He can blesse himselfe in his heart when his iniquity is found worthy to be hated Thirdly that where the life is euill the minde is euill the heart cannot be good where the workes are nought Fourthly that hee that allowes himselfe in one sinne will pollute himselfe with many sinnes Workes Fiftly when God lookes vpon the workes of euill men they are all euill note a difference if the carnall man looke vpon his owne workes they are all good if a godly man looke vpon them they are partly good and partly euill but if God looke vpon them they are all nought because his person is nought his heart is nought his end is nought the manner is nought c. Hitherto of their miserie both as it is propounded and expounded A Question may be asked how it comes to passe that men haue so little sence of their misery and are so loath to take notice of it For answere hereunto wee must vnderstand that this comes to passe because the God of this world hauing possession blindes their eyes and men doe not examine themselues before the Law of God And they are with-drawne by the deceitfulnesse of sinne which in particular they haue allowed themselues in neyther doe men remember their latter ends or the Iudgement of God before their death Their eyes are not annoynted with eye-salue a number haue not the word to direct them and some are deceiued by false Teachers which cry peace peace where there is no peace And the most are deceiued with false opinions and conceits for eyther they thinke that such like places as this are true of Gentiles and not of them whereas vnregenerate Israel is as Ethiopia vnto God or they feare that this knowledge will make men melancholy Yea some are so foolish they say this course driues men out of their wits thus Paul is mad and Christ hath a Diuell or they thinke late Repentance will serue the turne and then they may haue time enough to consider Thus of their misery Verse 22. In that Body of his Flesh to present or make you holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight IN this Verse the remedy of their miserie is set downe where obserue first the Meanes secondly the End The Meanes is by that body of his flesh through death the End is to present vs c. In that body of his flesh through death Here are two things 1. the Nature of Christ 2. the Sufferings of Christ. But first in the generall I obserue two Doctrines First there is no remedy for the sinner but the death of his Sauiour how foolish mankinde hath beene distracted about the cure for their miserie is lamentable to consider Adam gets Figge-leaues and Israell a foolish Couer As for Death and Hell men are at a point they haue made a couenant with them Or they thinke they are helped of their misery if they can forget it they can blesse their hearts that they will not feele the smart of any curses or they will make satisfaction the sonnes of their body shall serue for the sinnes of their soules or else the Temple of the Lord their going to Church must make God amends Others couer all with the garments of their owne ciuill righteousnesse others put their trust in the wedge of gold and say to it thou art my confidence But vnto vs there is no name by which we can be safe but the name of Iesus Christ. He must rescue vs that first created vs hee makes vs partakers of loue that was the Sonne of Gods loue hee makes vs adopted sonnes who himselfe is Gods naturall Sonne Secondly It is profitable to be much in the meditation of Christs sufferings that it might sincke into our minds that we must goe out of our selues for happinesse and such meditations open a way to godly sorrow They tend to the mortification of sinne and they incline the heart of a Christian to be willing to suffer with him for hee suffered as the Master wee are but Seruants hee suffered for others sinnes wee deserue more then wee can suffer by our owne sinne Hee suffered all sorts of crosses and infinite much we suffer butlight affliction And the thought of his sufferings may make vs willing to contemne the world seeing hereby wee discerne that his kingdome is not of this world Yea we owe vnto Christ the remembrance of his sufferings It is a small thing he requires of vs when he wils vs to thinke on him often what he hath endured for vs. In that body of his flesh These words note Christs Nature yet wee must consider which Nature in Christ there were two Natures in one person personally vnited his diuine and humane Nature His diuine Nature was from Eternitie Immutable Immortall Impassible His humane Nature was conceiued and borne in time Mutable Mortall Passible one and the same without time begotten of the Father the Sonne of God without Mother and in time borne of the Virgin the Sonne of Man without Father Sonne to both Naturall Consubstantiall These Natures are in one person for that God and Man might become one in Couenant one is
become God man in person These Natures are personally vnited this vnion is personall but not of persons and it is a vnion of Natures not naturall In these words the Apostle speakes of the Nature assumed viz. his Humane Nature And there are two things to be noted in these words First that hee saith that body not the body Secondly that he saith not simply his body but that body of his flesh That body Heere hee points out a speciall excellency in the body of Christ aboue all other bodies in Heauen and Earth for his body was without sinne formed by the ouershadowing power of the holy Ghost so is no mans else 2. It is assumed into personall vnion with the diuine Nature 3. It was honoured with speciall Prophecies Types and Sacrifices 4. This body was offered vp as a full expiatory Sacrifice 5. It is to be remembred to the end of the word in the Sacrament Body of his flesh To note that it was a true Body like vnto ours and to distinguish it from his Sacramentall and misticall body In two things Christ body was not like ours and in three things it was like It was not like first in the manner of subsisting it was not independent or a person of it selfe 2. In the vitious actions of the substance of it no sinne eyther could or ought to infect it Could not because originall sinne was restrained by the Holy Ghost Ought not because in it a purgation for our sinnes must be made In three things it was like ours first in substance he tooke our whole Nature he was the seed of the Woman of Abraham of Dauid the Sonne of man c. And hee tooke the parts of our Nature both soule and body 2. In properties and thus hee assumed both the properties of the whole Nature in that hee was finite and create And in the parts as in the soule hee assumed Vnderstanding Will Memory and in the Body Figure Quantitie and Circumscription c. 3. In infirmities for hee assumed not onely our Nature but the infirmities of Nature But wee must know that hee tooke the defects or infirmities they call miserable not those they call damnable Thus of the Doctrine of his Nature his Sufferings follow Through death The death of Christ doth reconcile vs in as much as it ratifies the couenant and takes away the guilt of the sinnes of the former Testament and the vertue of it eats downe the power of present sinnes and destroyes the power of our naturall death Christs death differs from the death of all the Elect in three things First in that in death he sustained not his owne person but dyes as our suretie and so is a sacrifice for sinne Secondly he was in death a whole burnt offering for as hee died in body so his soule was an offering for sinne in as much as he sustained the sence of the infinite wrath of God in his Agonies Thirdly in that his death was the death of him that was the Sonne of God Hitherto of the doctrine of the Nature and sufferings of CHRIST the Vses follow First for Instruction The consideration of all this should teach vs 1. to vallew reconciliation with all the graces that flow from it according to the worth of the meanes by which they are procured If there were no other way to know the worth of Gods Fauour Knowledge Spirituall refreshings and Graces yet by the price paid for the purchase of them we may discerne they are worth more then all the world 2. It is not possible for vs to hate sinne vpon the consideration of so pregnant an example of the odiousnesse of it when the imputation of sinne brought the Sonne of God on his knees to his death O the soule Lethargie that hath ouergrowen vs 3. That wee may haue the profit of the Incarnation and Passion of CHRIST in his naturall body wee must be carefull to get into his misticall body 4. The Apostle vseth the Meditation of Christs humiliation to the death as an argument to perswade vs to Compassion Mercy Fellowship in the Spirit Vnitie Humilitie Clemency and meekenesse of minde Phil. 2.1 to 9. Secondly wicked men may here see what smart they are like to feele from the vnpartiall iustice of God Doth hee not spare the body the flesh the bloud the life of his owne Sonne when he became but a suretie for sinne How shall vngodly men euer enemies and neuer sonnes that themselues haue committed sinne escape when the day of wrath shall come Thirdly godly men may heere see great reason of comfort not onely by considering the great loue of Christ and the great benefits must needes flow from his death but if but two things be weighed 1. the honour done to our Nature in that in the humanitie of Christ it is ioyned to the diuine Nature This makes amends for that breach that is made by the damnation of millians in our nature 2. The great certainty of Gods couenant of Grace and Mercy For a mans couenant if it be once confirmed no man abrogates it or addeth or taketh from it therefore much more Gods Couenant shall stand vnchangeable being ratified and confirmed by the death of Christ. Thus of the Meanes The end followes in these words To present you holy and without spot and vnblameable in his sight And in these words is both the presentation and the sanctification of Christians to be considered To present you The originall word is very significant and diuersly accepted it signifies to restore so Asts 9.41 to assemble Acts 2.26 to make present so Acts 23 33. to make ready furnish purge or make cleane Acts 23.24 to make acceptable 1 Cor. 8.8 to make manifest 2 Tim. 2.15 to proue euidently Acts 24.13 to assist and stand too Rom. 16.2 2 Tim. 4 16. to offer by way of dedication or gift to God 2 Cor. 11.2 Luke 2.22 Col. 1.28 It is true that Christ restores vs collects vs brings vs into Gods presence clenseth vs makes vs acceptable assists and defends vs and manifests vs to be holy But I take it principally in the last sence he presents vs by dedication to God Thus Christ shall present vs wholy both at the day of iudgement and in the day of death when he shall deliuer the soule to God Thus also Christ doth present vs in this life 1. When by the preaching of the Gospell he seuers and segregates vs from the world and brings vs into Gods household 2. In Iustification when clothing vs with his owne righteousnesse hee becomes our Iustification 3. in new obedience and that two wayes first when hee presents our workes couered with his intercession Secondly when hee causeth vs to present our selues to GOD both by Prayer consecration of our selues to Gods Seruice and holines of life It must be euery mans care then to seeke his presentation from Christ and to that end by Couenant Prayer and practise deuote himselfe to
thus If in Christ we be deliuered from the power of our sinnes by his quickning grace and from the guilt of them by the free pardon which is to be had by his meanes then wee need not goe any whither else neither to philosophie nor traditions c. but so it is and so the very Colossians found it in their case as the words of the text expresse Ergo. The words in themselues expresse the twofold estate of Christians in this world what they are by nature in their vnregenerate estate and what they are by grace in the state of grace In the state of corruption two things are true of them and are true of all men 1. They were dead in actuall sinnes 2. They were then in the vncircumcision of the flesh and likewise dead in it In their estate of grace he puts them in minde of two benefits 1. Regeneration 2. Remission of sinnes Thus of the coherence and order of the words Diuers things may be noted in the generall 1. We may from hence be informed of the fruitlesnes of philosophie traditions or ceremonies of Moses they cannot make a miserable man happie they cannot infuse the least sparke of spirituall life into any 2. We see the Apostle thinks it meet to put men often in minde of their miserie by nature and great reason for it exalts the praise of the riches of Gods grace in Christ And it may serue to humble men for their falls after calling and to keep them still suspitious and watchfull ouer a nature that hath been so prone to sinne and securitie in sinning it may serue to eat down the pronenesse of our nature to vaine boasting and confidence in the flesh and it should much excite men to the loue and care of godlinesse and pietie with all life and power seeing they haue been so long slaues to sinne And lastly the Apostle rips vp this matter of purpose to withdraw their mindes from traditions and philosophicall dreames Dead in sinnes They were dead in sinnes both if you respected their publike estate or each particular person If you looke vpon publike states before they are framed and reformed by the word what are they but heaps of men dead in the graues of sinne and senselesse in their sinfull courses and thus it is with euery particular person the words import that he is guiltie of many sinnes and he is dead in them also Naturally euery man is guiltie of secret atheisticall conceits of vnbeleefe of ignorance of hardnes of heart of swarms of euill thoughts and affections of hurtfull passions and lusts besides his defects of the knowledge of God and that warmth of the holy affections of loue feare trust and ioy in God Who can sufficiently rip open the vnthankfulnes lukewarmenes hypocrisie inconstancie and presumptuous profanenesse that is in our hearts by nature in matters of Gods seruice how do men daily offend either by not calling vpon the name of God or by taking it vp in vaine who can number the othes lyes reproches curses flatteries and filthy communication hath and did daily infect the mouths of men Oh the world of sinnes wee are actually guilty of against God or men or our owne selues publike priuate secret open inward outward in prosperitie and aduersitie in the Church or familie or abroad in mens conuersation Alas we can discerne but a glimpse of that sinne and guiltinesse that is in vs by nature and this is the increase of their miserie in all their sinnes they are dead in them Dead There is a fourefold death temporall corporall spirituall eternall The state of man being in miserie he is dead temporally The bodie of man being in the graue hee is dead corporally The soule of man lying in sinne is dead spiritually And both soule and bodie being cast into hell are dead eternally The Colossians were dead spiritually there is a death to sinne and a death for sinne and a death in sinne a death to sinne and so the godly die by mortification a death for sinne and so malefactors die by execution and a death in sinne and so euery naturall man kills himselfe by enliuing his sinne The spirituall death in sinne is an vnutterable losse of the life of God by which the sinner is senselesse and carelesse in extremitie of miserie vnto his owne euerlasting ruine if the Lord preuent it not by regeneration Now that men are in this case by nature these Scriptures proue Eph. 2.1.2 Math 8.22 Ioh. 8.25 Rom. 8.10 Luk. 15.32 Reuel 3 2. Iud. 12. 1. Tim. 5.6 Neither let any deceiue themselues about their estate for a man may be dead in sinne and yet be aliue in the flesh yea thou maiest be a wise man in the flesh or a prince of this world yea thou maiest haue a name that thou liuest spiritually and yet be starke dead Now this spirituall senselesnes is called a death because it is a priuation of spirituall life from the soule as the naturall death is from the bodie 2. because it tends to eternall death The vse may be fourefold 1. For information No wonder wicked men can come and goe from the word of God and not be touched alas they are dead men and so is it with them in respect of the iudgments of God alas if thou couldest rowle a mountaine vpon a dead man he would not feele so is it with a man dead in sinne and further we may here obserue that to liue yea to die quietly is no signe of a man in a happie case for if this death in sin be not cured thousands of people may die quietly because they die senseleslie they feele no more of the feare of hell or iudgment or Gods anger then if they were already dead in their bodies they would feele outward extremities I know that God many times can lay terror vpon the flesh of wicked men and make their spirits drinke in of the bitter anguish arising from the feruencie of Gods burning displeasure but I say if God let them alone vsually the most would die in a wretched senselesnes and inconsideration being neither able nor willing to entertaine the thoughts of what must presently and necessarily befall them 2. This may serue for confutation and so 1. of the Papists about their freewill How can there be this free will in a dead soule we are dead in sin and therefore of our selues mooue not vnto life till God quicken vs by his word and spirit 2. Of the carnall Protestant that beares himselfe so strongly vpon his supposed couenant with death and hel● his agreement must be disanulled nay his very securitie imports his vnauoidable destruction if it be not remooued by the power of Christ. 3. For instruction art thou a man that hearest this that hast liued all thy time without remorse for thy sinnes and neuer yet entertained the care of reformation of thy life be here warned of thy miserie let it be enough thou hast been dead
appertaine to filling of the flesh In these words is conteined the third branch of the conclusion and it is inforced against traditions here I obserue both the manner of propounding and the matter For the first it is to be obserued that whereas he condemned the former by way of aduise he condemnes these by bitter and tart expostulation why are ye burthened with traditions as if he should say were there not a singular proannesse of nature to corruption could they be so blinded as to suffer false Teachers to impose traditions vpon them In the matter consider first what he condemnes viz. traditions explicated in the kindes v. 21. 2. The reasons why hee condemnes them and these are 6. First ye are dead with Christ and therefore yee ought not to bee subiect to traditions of the force of this reason afterwards 2. You are dead from the rudiments of the world that is from the ceremoniall lawes of Moses which yet were are rudiments or waies of instructing the world in the principles of the Kingdome of God and therfore much more should you now giue ouer traditions 3. They are burthens and the greater by how much the lesse sence you haue of them 4. The matter of them is light and vaine and idle v. 21. 5. They are all corruptible and perish with the vsing 6. They are after the counts and doctrines of men ver 22. Ob. But there seemeth to be a depth in these traditions Sol. v. 23. He confesseth that they haue a shew of wisdome and that in three things 1. In voluntary religion 2. In humblenesse of minde 3. In not sparing the body which hee censures two wayes 1. It is but a shew or flourish no true substance either of worship or sanctity 2. It with-hoolds the honour due to the body Now that the whole may be better vnderstood we must distinctly consider what he meaneth by tradition which will appeare if it be considered negatiuely with comparison with the two former 1. They are not things required by Scripture any way For all such were condemned vnder the first kinde viz. ceremonies which though now abrogated were once required 2. They are not such rites besides Scripture as are practized with opinion of worship for they are condemned vnder the second kinde viz. philosophy So then the traditions heere condemned are such rites customes or obseruations as men binde their consciences to to obserue or practize in the ciuill life of man Besides the instances in the text such are the obseruation of euill dayes or houres to be borne in or to marry in or to set out on a iourney in the rules obserued about infants vnbaptized as that they must not be washed or they must lie in a sieue or such like about weomen that lye in Such is the not marrying with kindred at the font as they call it such are the obseruation of signes of ill lucke or of death gathered from the crying of birdes or the running of beasts such is praying at the lighting vp of candles and the burning of candles ouer the dead corps or the naming of children with names that agree to men and women to make them liue the longer such is not burying in the north side of the Church and the like silly trash with which simple people abound more then is ordinarily obserued Thus of the generall Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ In these words diuers things may be obserued 1. Heere we see the necessity of our vnion with Christ the Apostle will not a done with it he remembreth it still 2. When he saith if yee be dead it implies that men may make a faire shew and professe long and liue in true visible Churches and yet it is a question whether they be in Christor no If ye be dead with Christ. 3. Note heere the praise of a mortified life for when he saith if yee be dead in Christ it imports that to be so is an excellent condition to be truly mortified with Christ is a rare happinesse to die with Christ is better then to liue with the world 4. Penitent sinners haue life and death ioyes and sorrowes c. common with Christ. 5. In speciall they haue death common with Christ. They die with Christ 1. Because Christs death was theirs when Christ died they died because his death was for their sakes for their benefit 2. Because when their bodies die they die in vnion with Christ. 3. Because the vertue of Christs death is deriued to their souls whence flowes death to the law that is a release from the rigour and curse of it 2. Death to sinne that is a power to mortifie sin conueiued in the ordinances of Christ and applied by the spirit of Christ. 3. The presence of Christ in all the duties of mortification though they be done neuer so secretly yet Christ is with them The vse may be both for triall and comfort For triall art thou not dead with Christ in respect of the mortification of thy corruptions then art thou not in Christ. For comfort to the mortified thou art in Christ and hee will neuer leaue thee nor forsake thee till hee hath raised thy body and cured thy soule Thus of the wordes in themselues they are also to bee considered as they are heere vsed against traditions and so they are two wayes Christ is dead and in his death ye are freed from all bondage of soule to any thing but the will of God and therefore t' is a dishonour to Christs death and the freedome purchased in it to make our selues seruants to traditions 2. You are dead with Christ that is you are mortified persons and these things are too light for any graue and penitent persons to take vp his thoughts or cares about them fleshly persons are onely capable of this trash mortified persons without teaching suspect them Thus of the first reason From the rudiments of the world The second reason stands thus if by the death of Christ ye be freed from the ceremonies of Moses which were then rudiments or as it were the first grounds of instruction then much more are you freed from traditions which are but beggerly obseruations that no body can tell whence they came or what good they doe This should bee of force to preuaile with vs against the multitudes of idle traditions that raigne amongst the people Why as though ye liued in the world are ye burthened c Quest. Doe not the faithfull liue in the world that he saith with such a salt interrogation as though ye liued in the world Answ. They liue in the world corporally yet not in the world in respect of their profession of spirituall and celestiall life So Christs kingdome was not of this world 2. In respect of subiection to all the frame of rites and obseruations of the world they liue not as men that are tyed and vowed to the seruice of the world in whatsoeuer obseruations it shall propound Burthened Traditions are a
to trumpet out victorie by shewing the glory of heauen and to set on the Crowne of Hope as the assured pledge of full and finall victory it is Hope that pluckes vp the heart of man to a constant desire of vnion with God by Faith and of communion with man by Loue. And the true reason why so many men vtterly neglect the care to get a iustifying Faith and an inflamed Affection to Gods Children is because they haue no taste of the comforts of the euidence of a better life by Hope Secondly Faith and Hope are two distinct things Faith beleeues the Promise to be true with particular application of the Promise to ones selfe and Hope waites for the accomplishment of it Faith vsually is imployed about reconciliation and a godly life Hope for the most part is taken vp with the retyred and affectionate contemplation of the glory of Heauen the comming of Christ the resurrection of the body and temporall blessings and deliuerance as they are shadowes and types of the last and great saluation Thirdly Hope is no more naturall then Faith and Loue the carnall man is without Hope in the world not that wicked men are cleane without all profession of Hope for few men are so vile but they professe and stoutly auouch their hope in God but this Hope is vaine emptie without euidence or promise such as can neuer profit them and therefore in the eight of Iob hee saith that the Hypocrites Hope shall perish his confidence also shall be cut off and his trust shall be as the house of a Spider It is to be obserued that hee cals wicked men euen all carnall and vnconuerted people Hypocrites and that fitly for euery Sinner is an Hypocrite in some degree and if there were nothing else to proue it their very Hope and wilfull Confidence in the mercies of God without all warrant from the Word or testimonie of Gods Spirit or their owne Conscience would vndoubtedly proue it and for the vanitie of their hope it is fitly expressed in the comparison of the Spiders webbe The silly Spider with many dayes labour weaues her selfe a Webbe in appearance able euery way abundantly to couer her and fit her turne but at the end of the weeke the Maid with a Besome sweepes all downe This poysonfull Spider is euery vnregenerate man or woman this Webbe is their Hope in the framing of which they daily busie themselues and in the couerture of which they vainely repose themselues but when any Seruant comes out of the Lords armie to sweepe with the Besome of Iudgement or Death the whole building of these imaginarie hopes come sodainely and totally downe In the 11. of Iob and the 20. verse it is said The eyes of the wicked shall faile and their refuge shall perish and their hope shall be sorrow of minde In which words the holy Ghost shewes that the time shall come when those vaine hopes shall be driuen out of the soules of the wicked and in stead thereof they shall be filled eyther with desperate sorrowes on earth or with eternall sorrowes in hell What hope hath the hypocrite when hee hath heaped vp riches if God take away his soule Iob 27.8 Noting that if carnall men againe called Hypocrites will not forgoe their fond presumptions while they liue yet by too late experience they shall finde them vaine when Death comes Obiect But then they meane to pray God to forgiue them and hope by their repentance then to finde mercy for their soules Sol. In the 9. verse it is answered thus Will God heare his cry when trouble comes vpon him Quest. But will not God heare mens prayers in the troublesome time of death Ans. Not the prayers at that time made by such men for they are Hypocrites hauing vpon them but the names of God and godlinesse and will neuer in sinceritie pray vnto God at all times neyther in their death doe they pray vnto God because they delight in the Almightie and therefore he shewes Verse 10. that seeing they delight not in God and godlinesse and will not pray at all times that is as well in health as sicknesse in prosperitie as in aduersitie while they might yet sinne as well as when they can sinne no longer therefore their hope of mercy in death shall faile them Quest. But if true Hope be not naturall what is the difference betweene the Hope of the faithfull and this common Hope that so ordinarily goeth vp and downe the world vnder the colours of it or how may wee try our selues whether we haue a right Hope or no Ans. The true Hope is described in seuerall Scriptures by diuers properties which are no where to be found in carnall men First the true Hope layes fast hold vpon the merits of Iesus Christ onely and striues constantly to be established and assured But the common Hope is neuer emptied of carnall confidence and presumption that God loues them for some good things or parts that are in them neyther doth it brooke assurance for with one breath carnall people are absurdly confident of Gods mercy and encounter the Doctrine of infallible assurance Secondly true Hope makes a man more humble but the common Hope makes men more wilfull and obstinate against God and his Ordinances Thirdly true Hope makes a man chearefull vnder all sorts of Crosses by vertue of the very reasons grounded vpon Hope but the common Hope of it selfe will not yeeld a mans heart support against any Crosse. Fourthly the faithfull man can suffer for his Hope but a wicked man can shew no chaine vnlesse it be for his sinne Fiftly true Hope rests vpon Gods promise though neuer so vnlikely to be performed by outward and ordinarie meanes but wicked men with their common Hope are perhaps able to beleeue they shall liue well so long as they see and feele meanes but without meanes they are without Hope Sixtly true Hope will acknowledge as well as know but the common Hope cannot abide profession of Religion it is enough there be a good heart to God Seauenthly true Hope is industrious in the vse of all meanes to come to the end hoped but the common Hope is singularly sloathfull it boasts of a sufficiencie of knowledge and yet neglects the sincere vse of all Gods Ordinances it affirmes deepely of going to heauen and yet cannot tell of one teare for sinne nor one houre truely spent in mortification but trust thou in the Lord and doe good Lastly the true Hope seekes Gods presence and striues in sence to draw neare to God but the common Hope is then at best rest when the heart is furthest off from the care desire or sence of Gods presence eyther in Gods house or abroad The fourth thing that I obserue from the Coherence concerning Hope is the worth of the Grace It is one of the three golden abiliments to adorne a
wade into them only a word or two of it This losse is incureable two wayes sometimes in the crosse or iudgement it brought vpon the offender sometimes in the vnstedfastnesse it selfe for sometimes though the Lord restore inward ioy and assurance yet hee will not remooue the outward signe of his wrath sometimes hee drawes backe the outward affliction but doth not restore the inward comfort or not in so great a measure so as some of Gods children may die without the sense of the ioy of Gods saluation till they come to heauen yea they may die in great terror and despaire yet the Lord may be reconciled and they may truely repent though these terrors or iudgements bee not released because God many times will thereby purge the publike scandall and cleere his owne iustice Besides such spectacles doe giue warning to a carelesse world to let them know that God hath treasures of wrath for sinne if they repent not Thus of the doctrine of stedfastnesse of faith and vnstedfastnesse also now briefely for some vses of it It may serue for great reproofe of the great neglect of seeking this stedfastnesse of faith We may complaine aswell of the common Protestant as of the Papists heerein for they are alike aduersaries to the assurance of faith let such as are touched with feare of God and desire to beleeue trauell more and more for attainement heereof and to this end cleaue to the sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and labour in the practise and exercise of all holy and Christian graces And for particular consideration of the troubles and losses of Gods children we may note 1. That it is a wonderfull fearfull thing to fall into Gods hands and that the promises of God yeeld no protection to a willing offender woe vnto prophane beasts if sinne make God angry towards his owne children and make them also vile before men then where shall those beasts that wallow in sinne appeare if they bee iustly abased that fall once into one sinne what shall be the confusion of face and heart in those men when all the sinnes they euer committed shall be reuealed before Gods Angels and men at the last day 2. They that stand haue great reason to take heede lest they fall from their stedfastnesse and bee carried away with the errour of the wicked 3. We should be wonderfull thankefull if God hath kept vs from falling it is his singular grace to keepe the scot of his Saints VERS 6.7 As yee haue therefore receiued Christ Iesus the Lord so walke yee in him 7. Rooted and built vp in him and stablished in the faith as yee haue beene taught abounding therein with thankesgiuing In these two verses the Apostle concludes the exhortation begunne in the 23. verse of the former chapter for whereas after all these reasons and the answer of sundry obiections they might finally haue sayd tell vs then at once what it is you would haue vs to doe the Apostle answers summarily that concerning holy life hee would haue them walke as they haue receiued the Lord Iesus Christ and concerning faith hee would haue them to bee rooted and soundly edified and established in the faith especially to abound in thankfulnesse to God for their happy estate in Christ Iesus The 6. verse containes a precept concerning holy life viz. to walke on in Christ and a rule by which that precept is to be squared and determined viz as they haue receiued Christ Iesus the Lord. As yee haue receiued Christ Iesus the Lord c. These words may bee diuersly vrged vpon them according to the diuers sences may be conceiued of them For 1. To walke as we haue receiued Christ may beare this sence namely to frame our obedience according to the measure of the knowledge of Christ we haue receiued it shall be to vs according to what we haue to whom God hath giuen much of them he requireth much and iudgement certainely abideth for him that hath receiued the knowledge of his masters will and doth it not if our practice bee according to the knowledge wee haue this may bee our comfort God will accept of vs and otherwise they are but in a miserable case that are barren and vnfruitefull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Such a sence as this may be gathered viz. So liue with care of a godly life as ye neglect not to preserue the doctrine concerning Christ ye haue receiued Certainely it ought to bee the care of euery godly minde to doe his best to preserue the purity of the doctrine hee receiued together with Iesus Christ great is the generall neglect of many sorts of people heerein 3. Or thus Let the doctrine you haue receiued from Christ Iesus bee your onely rule both for life and manners So liue and walke as you haue receiued The Apostle commandeth to separate from euery brother that walketh inordinately and not after the traditions which they had receiued of the Apostle By tradition he meaneth the holy word of God deliuered by liuely voice vnto the Churches while yet it was not written euen the same which now is written The elect Lady and her children are commended for walking in the truth as they had receiued commandement of the Father Yea so must wee sticke vnto the word receiued as if any man teach otherwise he should be accounted accursed For the Apostles receiued it not of men but by the reuelation of Iesus Christ And as they haue receiued of the Lord so haue they deliuered vnto vs Therefore wee must conclude with the Apostle These things which wee haue learned and receiued and heard out of the holy word those things we must doe 4. The sence may bee thus as yee were affected when yee first receiued Christ so walke on and continue at first men receiue Christ with singlenesse of heart with great estimation of the truth with wonderfull ioy with feruent loue to Gods children with a longing desire after spirituall things with endeauour to beare fruit and without the mixtures of mens traditions and inuentions Now then they are exhorted to take heed that they lose not what they haue wrought but preserue those holy affections and desires still striuing against the witchcrafts of Sathan and the world that they be not beguiled from the simplicity that is in Christ Iesus The doctrines hence to be noted are 1. That Christians doe receiue Christ and that not onely publikely into their countries and Churches which yet is a great priuiledge for Christ bringeth with him many blessings and staies many iudgements brings a publike light to men that sit in darknesse and shadow of death and raiseth immortality as it were to light and life againe but priuately and particularly into their hearts and soules This is the happiest receiuing of Christ. Oh the glory of a Christian in receiuing Christ for he that receiueth Christ into his hart receiueth excellent illumination vnspeakable ioy
Adam and not by Adam for he was not begotten but made and so originall sinne was auoided and some thinke his very body had all the parts at the first conception formed 2. His body was not corruptible it saw no corruption In soule he differed two waies 1. In that it was without sinne 2. In that it was indued with gifts aboue men and Angels In both there was difference For 1. They subsisted from the beginning in the diuine nature and did not make a person of themselues 2. They are admitted vnto the grace of adoration so as now Christ-man is worshipped though not properlie as he is man Thus of the natures of Christ the vnion of them followes in a double consideration 1. Of the manner in the word dwell 2. Of the measure in all fulnesse Dwell There are two kindes of vnions in Christ. 1. Of the soule and body 2. Of both those with the person of the word the later is heere meant There are 2. questions about vnion in Theologie that are wonderfull full of difficultie 1. The vnion of three persons in one nature 2. The vnion of two natures in one person This latter is in Christ hee is begotten as God created in respect of his soule and borne in respect of his body There are diuers vnions 1. Substantiall in the Trinitie 2. Naturall in soule and body 3. Carnall in man and wife 4. Misticall in Christ and the Church 5. Personall in Christ for in him as soule and body are one man so God and man are one Christ. It is much easier to tell how this vnion in Christ is not then to tell how it is Negatiuely thus Things are vnited three waies Some things are compounded and made one yet the things vnited are not changed mingled or confounded but remaine perfect as many stones vnited in one building 2. Some things vnited are perfect but yet changed and not what they were as the body of a man made of the vnion of the foure elements 3. Some thinges remaine whole and not changed but vnperfect of themselues as the soule and body of themselues apart Now this vnion of Christ is not after any of these waies Againe this vnion in Christ is 1. Not by bare assistance or presence 2. Not by habituall vnion either by affection as friends are one or by grace as the Saints are one with God 3. Not by worthinesse or authoritie 4. Not by harmonie or consent of will or opinion as the Angels are one with God and as the Saints shall 5. Not by ioint authoritie as two Consuls are one 6. Not by homonumie or giuing of the same name to each nature 7. Not of pleasure only as if it were so only because God would haue it so Lastly Not by bare inhabitation for the word is made flesh And therefore though the holy Ghost vse the similitude of dwelling heere to note the continuall residence of the diuine nature in the humane yet that similitude doth not expresse this vnion cleerely For the housholder and the house cannot be fitly called one The effects of this vnion may be considered either as they are in Christ or to vs ward In Christ from this vnion flowes 1. The predication of the things of each nature to the person and that truly and really as when his bloud is said to be the bloud of the Sonne of God c. 2. The inriching of the humane nature with admirable gifts as great as could possiblie be in a created nature In respect of which he came the neerest vnto God of any that euer was or could be Nay if all the goodnesse of man and Angels were conferred on one creature yet it were not comparable to that that is in one Christ. These gifts in Christ they were either naturall or supernaturall by naturall gifts I meane such as these in the minde the best wit or memorie and such like faculties better then euer were in any man I except not Adam himselfe in the body most faire forme and a diuine face his very countenance did expresse a diuinitie in him The verie temperament also of his body was such as nothing could be better tempered or more exce●lent as being formed by the holy Ghost His supernaturall gifts were either in body or minde in body as that hee could with his eye pierce the heauens and see there what he would for Stephen could see into heauen as is recorded Act. 7. much more must we belieue of our Sauiour for in Stephen there was but a small parcell of diuine light Now I say those gifts were aboue nature in Christ but yet not against nature In minde there was in him exceeding holines goodnesse wisedome and all the gifts of the spirit But all these supernaturall gifts both in soule and body must be considered in Christ two waies 1. In the state of humiliation 2. In the state of exaltation Such gifts as he receiued in the state of humiliation were properly the effects of this vnion the other were giuen in respect of his obedience vnto death Of the first sort I propound these 1. In the whole soule so great holinesse as can be imagined to be fall a creature 2. In the minde most exquisite wisedome 3. In the heart such bowels of charitie loue and compassion as was neuer in any man or Angell in the whole man wonderfull power Now amongst all these I only consider of his wisedome and power There was a twofold wisedome in Christ. Increate and that was only in his diuine nature and create and that was in his humane This created wisedome in Christ was threefold 1. Knowledge by immediate vision 2. Knowledge by heauenly habites infused 3. Knowledge gotten by experience By the first knowledge he knoweth immediately the word or God to which his humane nature is vnited and in God as in a glasse hee sees all other things Thus he sees God face to face and this is a certaine created light in the soule by participation of diuine light Concerning this first sort of knowledge in Christ strange things are said by Diuines but the summe of all is this 1. That the soule of Christ by this ●reated light and vision sees God and that first Whole secondly Perfectly 2. That in this vision he sees all things Obiect Then might some one say the knowledge of Christ in his humane nature is made equall to his diuine Solut. Not so For first though he see God whole yet he seeth him not wholy that is not so much a● can be seene by God himselfe though more then any Creature can attaine vnto 2. Though he know the thinges that are and shall be yet he knowes not such things as shall not be and yet God can do them 3. What he doth know by this finite light he knowes not so plainely as the word doth 4. It seeth not things at one view or altogether but one thing after another Thus
Philip in an instant they can strangely winde themselues into mens imaginations so as they can appeare to men in their dreames As euill Angels can suggest tentations so do good Angels holy motions They haue power ouer the Deuils to restrain them but worke miracles they cannot but by the power of God the Angell in the 8. of Iohn could moue the waters but he could not of himselfe cure the sicke Thus of Angels in themselues In relation to Christ so they are implied to be of the body and Christ to be their head Now we may not maruell at it that Christ should be the head of Angels for there be diuerse distinct benefits which Angels from thence do receiue which by naturall creation they had not It is a benefit that they are vouchsafed a place in the misticall body vnder Christ that they might be receiued as it were into the new order in Christ. 2. A peace is made betweene them and man in Christ. 3. The roomes of Angels falne are supplied by the elect the society of Angels being much maimed by their fall 4. They are refreshed with singular ioy for the conuersion of the elect besides the inlarging of their knowledge that they are vouchsafed the vnderstanding of the secrets of the Gospell 5. They receiue from Christ confirming grace and so assurance that they shall neuer fall which is their cheife benefit 6 Their obedience in it owne nature is vnperfect though not sinfull and therefore may neede to be couered by Christs perfections Thus of the relation to Christ. Now if any aske what relation they haue to the body of Christ and what they doe vnto it I answer by propounding both what seruice they do to the body and in what maner For the first they are like Masters and Tutors to whom the great King of heauen sends out his children to nurse God out of the rabble of best men doth adopt children to himselfe and after commit them to be kept by those most noble citizens of heauen Besides they execute iudgment vpon the enemies of the Church They attend vs at the houre of death and carry our soules to heauen They shall gather our bodies together at the last day Lastly for the accomplishment of all designments for our good they stand alwaies looking on the face of God to receiue commandements Now for the manner in the old Testament they are reported to haue sometimes appeared vnto men sometimes in their dreames sometimes in visions the Prophets being rauished into an extasie without true bodies but not without the forme of bodies Sometimes they appeared in true bodies either such as were for the time created of nothing or else formed for the seruice of some preexisting matter or else they vsed the bodies of some liuing creatures for if the Deuill could speake in the Serpent why might not some good Angell vse other Creatures as some thinke the Angell spake in Balaams Asse But for this kinde of declaring themselues to men in the new Testament it is ceased especially since the primitiue times so as now we cannot describe how the Angels doe performe their seruice to the Church Now for the vse of the whole in as much Christ is the head of principalitie and powers we may comfort our selues diuers waies If Christ fill the Angels how much more can he out of his fulnesse fill vs in the supplie of all our wants againe shall we not reioyce in the grace here is done to vs in that wee are vnited into communion with Angels vnder our head yea and that such glorious creatures are appointed to be our attendants why should wee feare when Christ and his Angels will be so readie about vs further this may also instruct vs we neede not be ashamed of Christs seruice seeing the very Angels follow him and depend vpon him A prince that kept great princes to be his domesticall seruants were like to be much sought to for preferment of such as would follow him Oh how should we long after Christ who is head ouer such glorious creatures as the Angels are VERS 11. In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands in putting off the bodie of the sinnes of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ. Here is the fifth reason and is peculiarly addressed against those Christians of the Iewes which ioyned the Law with the Gospell as necessarie to saluation By circumcision they were initiated to the Law of Moses and if circumcision can adde nothing to vs nor perfect vs any way in Christ then neither can the Law it selfe We haue that in Christ of which circumcision and the law were signes we are circumcised in the spirit and therefore neede not to be circumcised in the flesh and in Christ we haue the accomplishment of what was shadowed in the law Might some one say the consequence is strange we are circumcised in spirit therefore we need not be circumcised in the flesh Why Abraham was circumcised in spirit as well as we yet he needed to be circumcised also in the flesh For answere hereunto we must know that in the time of the old Testament this consequence was of no force yet now in the new it is exceeding strong For now we haue not only accomplished what was signified by circumcision but Christ hath appointed another signe in steed of it viz. Baptisme especially this is cleare amongst the Gentiles which neuer were circumcised in the flesh There is imported vnto vs in this verse a twofold circumcision 1. The circumcision made with hands 2. The circumcision made without hands The one externall in the flesh by Moses The other internall in the spirit by Christ. Concerning circumcision made in the flesh there is an obseruation of a fourefold time 1. There was a time wherein it was not viz. from the creation till Abrahams daies 2. There was a time wherein it was necessarie viz. from Abraham till Christ. 3. There was a time wherein it was tolerable viz. for some few yeares after Christ. 4. There was a time wherein it was intollerable and vtterly vnlawfull viz. since the Apostles times to the end of the world Circumcision had a double signification for partly it looked to Christ and partly to the members of Christ. As it looked to Christ it signified 1. That they should haue a Sauiour that was circumcised that is free from all sinne 2. That he should come of the seede of Abraham 3. That he should satisfie for sinne by effusion of bloud for all bloud in the old testament was tipicall Now as it looked to man it signified 1. That by carnall generation we were vncleane and out of couenant with God 2. That the faithfull haue interest in the blessed seede 3. That our hearts must bee circumcised by the painefull mortification of sinne and the painefull casting away of sin as a wretched foreskin and that we should suffer affliction of
Perfectly though not in vs yet in Christ our head it is already put away in his person though not in ours 5. It is put away in hope in that we do by hope waite for an absolute and full redemption from all sinne and miserie Thus of the forme of this circumcision the efficient cause followes By the circumcision of Christ There is a twofold circumcision of Christ. First that which he suffered in himselfe Secondly that which he works in vs the vertue of the first is a great cause of the second Quest. But why was Christ circumcised seeing there was no cause of circumcision in Christ for nothing could be signified by it seeing he was the Messias himselfe perfect God and man nor was there any impuritie in him the amputation whereof should thereby be signified he was a Lambe without spot a high Priest separate from sinners the couenant of the promised seede was in himfulfilled and he came to abolish circumcision and lastly t is hee that circumciseth the hearts of others Answ. 1. Christ was circumcised thereby to shew himselfe to be true man 2. thereby to honour the institution of circumcision as he had done other parts of the Law 3. that the Iewes might not cauill and say they would not receiue an vncircumcised Christ. 4. to commend the vertue of obedience by his example 5. that he might beare the burthens of them that being vnder the law were not able to beare the burthens of the law God by this signe as by an imitating rite did subiect him to the law he hereby professing himselfe a seruant to the law to make vs free 6. hee was circumcised and baptized to signifie his vnion with both Churches both of the old and new Testament and ●hat he came of t●●aine to make one 7. to ratifie and sanctifie the circumcision of the Fathers as his baptisme now sanctifieth ours 8. to signifie the cleansing of our natures especially by bearing of the imputation of our impurities 9. he did in his circumcision begin to satisfie God by those first fruits of his bloud it was as an earnest or pledge of his bloud to be more plentifully powred out it was a part of his humiliation and of the price of our sinnes Lastly hee was circumcised that our hearts by the vertue of it might be circumcised for as his death killeth sinne in vs and his resurrection raiseth vs vp to newnesse of life so doth his circumcision circumcise our hearts Hence we may gather comfort against the difficulties of mortification for Christ will be pleased to deriue vertue from his owne circumcision yea it is a pledge to assure vs that as certainly as he was circumcised himselfe so he will see to it that our hearts be circumcised if wee will cast our selues vpon him and by faith come vnto him there is no sinne so linked but in Christ we may haue some deliuerance from it On the other side it shewes the miserie of all such as liue in the loue of their sinnes and minde not mortification this shewes they are not in Christ yet for they cannot be in Christ except they be circumcised Lastly it may serue for instruction at once to all that hope for freedom in Iesus Christ to shew the proofe of their interest by their circumcision spiritually and to speake distinctly of it we must vnderstand that the Lord that requires this circumcision of vs extends his precept both to the heart and the eares and the tongue and contrariwise complaineth of vncircumcised both heart and eares and lips in the heart we must especially looke to the circumcision or mortification 1. of ignorance 2. of wicked thoughts 3. immoderate eare 4. prophanenes in God seruice in a wretched securitie or a neglect of inward worship 5. disordered affections as lust anger suspition 6. discontent with our estate 7. vnbeleefe Now for our eares they must be circumcised 1. in the vnpreparednes or want of attention in hearing the word 2. in receiuing tales 3. in communicating with the sinnes of others by a willing hearing of their wickednesse Lastly looke to the circumcision of the tongue and that in the care to auoide 1. the polluting of Gods name either by swearing or blasphemie 2. rash censuring 3. rotten speech 4. lying 5. bitter and furious words and the spirit of contradiction 6. flatterie 7. tale-bearing 8. idle and vaine words And thus much now of the spiritual circumcision and of the 11. verse VERS 12. In that yee are buried with him through baptisme in whom yee are also raised vp together through the faith of the operation of God which raised him from the dead In the former verse the Apostle hath laid downe the first reason and directed it principally against Iudaisme we haue spirituall circumcision in Christ and therefore we need not carnall circumcision and so by consequent none of the ceremoniall law Now in this verse he meeteth with obiections Ob 1. The reason seemeth not to follow they were spiritually circumcised therefore needed not the outward for so was Abraham yet he receiued outward circumcision Answ. The reason is of no force now in the new Testament because Christ hath appointed another sacrament in steed of it for we are buried with Christ by baptisme Ob 2. But was not Circumcision a more liuely signe Answ. It was not which he sheweth to be true both in respect of mortification and in respect of viuification baptisme liuely representing and sealing vnto both Quest. But haue all that are baptised these things signified by baptisme Answ. They are offered to all but they are inioyed only by such as haue faith in the operation of God Quest. But how may our faith be supported in beleeuing those things shadowed out in baptisme Answ. Two waies First if we consider Gods operation Secondly if we consider Christs resurrection This is the briefe order and dependance of this verse so that here he intreats of baptisme both by the effects and by the causes the effects are spirituall buriall and spirituall resurrection the causes are three faith the operation of God and the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Buried together with him Three things may here be noted 1. the buriall of Christ. 2. the buriall of the Christian. 3. the vnion of both For the first that Christ was buried was storied by the Euangelist and fore-signified by Ionas as a type and fore-prophecied of by Esay the Prophet he was buried in Ierusalem the place where the dying sacrifices had giuen warning of his death but it was without the Citie both to answer the type Leuit. 16. and to signifie that his sufferings belonged to Gentiles as well as to Iewes Hee was buried in Caluarie the place commonly appointed for condemned men and not in Hebron where some thinke Adam was buried to note that his death was to be auaileable for the condemned men of Adam as well as for Adam himselfe He was buried in another mans graue
thine hands be strong in the dayes that I shall haue to doe with them I the Lord haue spoken it and will doe it Let couetous persons without further enquiry assure themselues that couetousnesse is a maine cause of all the euils are vpon them or theirs and besides they may be assertained that all the seruice they doe to God is abhorred and meere lost labour it were to no purpose if they would bring him incense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre country their burnt offerings would not be pleasant nor their sacrifices sweet vnto him Ob. But couetous persons are of most men so well furnished that there is not that means to bring them to any great hurt Sol. The Prophet shewes that God can lay a stumbling blocke before them and father and sonne together mayfall vpon it and neighbour and friend may perish together The Lord means enough when men little thinke of it to bring downe rebellious sinners Ob. But we see couetous persons and wealthy worldlings scape the best longest of many others Sol. The Prophet Amos sayth the Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iacob will neuer forget any of their workes Though the Lord may deferre yet certainely he will neuer forget and therefore they are not a iot the better for scaping so long But howsoeuer they might escape outward iudgements yet they may be infallibly sure they haue sinned against their owne soules and that they shall know in the day of their death their riches shall not then profit them when the Lord taketh away their soule he that is a great oppressour shall not prolong his dayes for he that getteth riches and not by right shall leaue them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a foole How horrible then shall that voice be Thou foole this night shall thy soule be taken from thee and thus far of these words as they concerne the coherence with the former words now I consider them as they are in themselues And first of the wrath of God Wrath of God It is apparant that wrath in God belongs to his Iustice. And Iustice may be considered as it flowes from God foure wayes First as he is a free Lord of all And so his decrees are iust Secondly as he is God of all and so the common works of preseruing both good bad are iust Thirdly as a father in Christ so by an excellency he is the God of beleeuers and thus he is iust in performing his promises infusing his grace and in bestowing the Iustice of his sonne Fourthly as Iudge of the world and so his Iustice is not onely distributiue but correctiue And vnto this Iustice doth wrath belong Anger in man is a perturbation or passion in his heart and therefore it hath troubled Diuines to conceiue how anger should be in the most pure happie and bountifull nature of God And the rather seeing affections are not properly in God Neither is their declaration full enough that say it is giuen to God improperly and by anthropopathie for I am of their opinion that thinke anger is properly in God First in such a manner as agrees to the nature of God that is in a manner to vs vnconceiueable Secondly in such a sence as is reuealed in Scripture The wrath of God in Scripture is taken sometimes for his iust decree and purpose to reuenge sometimes for commination or threatning to punish So some thinke it is to be taken in those words of the Prophet Hosea I will not do according to the siercones of my wrath that is according to my grieuous threatnings Sometimes it is taken for the effects or punishments themselues as in the Epistle to the Romans is God vnrighteous which bringeth wrath it is well rendered which punisheth The wrath of God is distinguished by diuerse degrees and so hath diuerse names for there is wrath present and wrath to come Present wrath is the anger of God in this present life and is either impendent or powred out wrath impendent is the anger of God hanging ouer mens heads ready to bee manifested in his iudgements and so wrath hangs in the nature of God and in the threatnings of his word and in the possibilities of the creatures Wrath powred ●●t is the iudgement of God fallen vpon men for their sinnes by which they prouoked God and so there was great wrath vpon the people in the destruction of Ierusalem and thus he reuealeth his wrath from Heauen vpon the vnrighteousnesse of men Wrath to come is that fearefull misery to be declared vpon the soule of the impenitent at his death and vpon soule and body at the day of iudgement in the euerlasting perdition of both But that we may be yet more profitable touched with the meditation of this point I propound sixe things concerning Gods wrath further to be considered First the fearefulnesse of it Secondly what it is that works or brings this wrath vpon vs. Thirdly the signes to know Gods wrath Fourthly the meanes to pacifie it Fistly the signes of wrath pacified And lastly the vses of all For the first The fearefulnesse and greatnesse of Gods wrath or anger for sinne may appeare three wayes First by Scripture Secondly by similitude Thirdly by example That Gods anger for sinne is exceeding terrible and fearefull I will shew by one place of Scripture onely and that is the first of Nahum the Prophet for he sayth God is iealous and the Lord reuengeth the Lord reuengeth where the repetition shewes the certainty of it that God will be as sure to reuenge as euer the sinner was to sinne but this is more confirmed when he sayth he is the Lord of anger as if he would impart that his anger is his essence as if he were all made of anger and that he is the authour of all the iust anger that is in the world and if the drops of anger in great men haue such terror in it what is the maine Ocean of anger which is in God himselfe and to assure vs yet further of the terrour of his wrath he addeth the Lord will take vengeance on his aduersaries which signifieth that the Lord will account of impenitent sinners as a man accounts of his worst enemies and therefore the Lord will shew his displeasure to the vttermost of their deserts and his Iustice. And therefore if any doe obiect that they see it otherwise for the plagues of wicked men are not so many nor so great as their sinnes he answereth that and sayth that the Lord reserueth wrath for his enemies he hath not inflicted vpon them all they shall haue there is the greatest part behinde the full vials of his fury are not yet poured out And if any should reply that they haue obserued that wicked men haue prospered long and scaped for a great while without any
and their profits and pleasures Yea they must denie and forsake and which is more rather then leaue Christ and the sincerity of the Gospell they must hate father and mother wife and children and brethren and sisters or else they cannot be Christs disciples But I restrain the sence as it is heerevnto sinnes onely And so it notes that euery man that will truely repent must resolue to part with all sins aswell as one hee must desire and endeauour to hate and put away euery sinne aswell the sinnes haue been named as the sinnes are to be named As we would haue God to receiue vs graciously and take away all iniquity aswell as one so wee must resolue sincerely to put away euery sinne aswell as one If the Lord should leaue one sinne vnforgiuen it might be enough to condemne vs and so if wee leaue but one sinne that we haue no desire nor will to repent of that one sinne would plead against vs that we had not truly repented of the rest If we marke the true catalogue of sinnes which heere followeth it shewes that wee must forsake all sorts of sinnes aswell as one For we must forsake and put away inward sinnes aswell as outward for he sayth put away anger and wrath wee must put away lesser sinnes aswell as greater for he saith put away filthie speaking aswell as before he had sayd mortifie fornication and vncleannesse Now that we may be encouraged to this sincerity in forsaking all sinne aswell as one wee may consider diuerse motiues First Christ suffered for all sinnes aswell as one and therefore we should arme our selues with the same minde in suffering in our flesh to cease from sinne indefinitely that is from all sinne Secondly we should haue God grant all our requests and not leaue one out Nay we haue a promise that we shall obtaine whatsoeuer we aske in Christs name and therefore it is reason when God cals for the repentance of all our sinnes we should doe it and not leaue one out Thirdly Christ is all in all things and ●illeth all in all things and therefore it is as easie for thee if thy heart bee right to receiue and procure from Christ vertue and strength against euery sinne as well as against any sinne 4. This is all fruit euen the taking away of euery sinne what pleasure or profit soeuer they might bring to vs. When God lookes for signes and markes of truth and vprightnesse this fruit of true desire to repent is all finite it is wonderfully liked of God and if he may finde this heart and desire in vs hee accounts it in steede of all other things 5. Christians are made partakers of euerie heauenly gift euen euery spirituall blessing in heauenly things Men as they would put on euery grace so they must put of euery sinne Lastly God will shew vs all his good he will with-hold from vs nothing that may be good for vs euen till he giue vs proofe of his glorie in euerie diuine attribute And why then should not we by serious and sound confession striue euen to shew him all our euill that we might obtaine pardon for them and strength against them but if none of these reasons may perswade with vs to be vpright and sincere then let vs know that though we fauour and hide and extenuate our sinnes yet the time will come when all shall bee naked and manifest before God euen all the sinnes that are found vpon vs. And therefore it were better to confesse them now that God might not charge them vpon vs then and to forsake them now that being washed from them by repentance and iustified from them by the spirit of the Lord Iesus we may then be accepted as if wee had neuer committed them Q. But can a Christian put away all his sinnes in this life Answ. He may and I will shew you how by a distribution 1. Vnwilling defects as belonging to originall sinnes are pardoned the first moment of conuersion 2. Sinnes of ignorance are remoued by generall repentance and by the daily sacrifice 3. Sinnes not loued nor rooted are done away by an absolute forsaking of them He that will continue any longer in sinnes that bring him no profit nor pleasure and such euils as he hath power to leaue if he will if these be not giuen absolutely ouer it is to no purpose for a man to talke of repentance 4. Particular sinnes that a man hath greatly loued they are put away by serious and distinct labour in praier and sencible sorrow and griefe of heart for them For lesse then this will not suffice for particular beloued sinnes Now lastly there will remaine certaine remnants of some sins that haue rootes in our corrupted dispositions euen after the first repentance Now these are said in Gods acceptation to be put away when a man prayes against them and mournes ouer them and daily iudgeth himselfe for them and so they may be in his nature and yet be truly though not perfitly put away And thus of the generall charge The catalogue followes And the sinnes are either sinnes of the heart or sinnes of the tongue The sinnes of the heart are anger wrath malice The sinnes of the tongue are blaspheming or cursed speaking filthy speaking and lying First of the sinnes of the heart Anger wrath I suppose these words expresse one and the same sinne it may be the two words import two degrees of anger For there is inward fretting without wordes or signes and there is open anger a signified passion that discouers it selfe by outward shewes both are iustly condemned Anger may be considered 1. as indifferent 2. As laudable 3. As a vice Anger is a naturall passion and so in it selfe neither good nor euill as it is a sence with dislike of iniurie So Adam might haue conceiued anger against the serpent The reason of the stoicks that condemne anger as a naturall passion for euill because it is a perturbation is without reason For all perturbation is not euil but vniust perturbation only for Christ was angrie and vexed and grieuouslie troubled as at the death of Lazarus and yet he was without sinne Now for the second anger may be considered as laudable and good for that there is such an anger I will not stand vpon the distinction of the schoolemen that there is anger of zeale and anger of vice the Scripture manifestly shewes there may be good anger The Apostle saith be angrie and sinne not And Salomon saith Anger is better then laughter and the Euangelist saith our Sauiour looked about vpon them angerly and Saint Mathew saith he that is angrie with his brother without a cause as if he would acknowledge a iust anger when there was a iust cause of anger Now this good anger is a godly passion of iust zeale of iustice conceiued against sinne in our selues or others that desireth
religious or politicall For religious truth being asked of our faith wee are ingenuously to professe it Now politicall truth is to be considered either as it is required in iudgment or as it is to be vsed in cases out of iudgment As for the truth before a Iudge it may not bee concealed when thou art called to answer the truth but in priuate conuersing wee are not alwaies bound to reueale all the truth for the precept Speake euery man the truth is an affirmatiue precept and so doth not binde alwaies and at all times and in all places Besides charitie bindes vs to conceale and couer many infirmities and a wise man keeps in some part till afterwards and besides it is apparant men are not bound to discouer their secret sinnes to all men Samuel also is taught to conceale a part of the truth when he went to anoint Dauid And thus of the catologue of Iniuries Seeing you haue put off the old man with his workes In these words with the verses that follow to the 12th is conteined three reasons to inforce the mortification of iniuries I. They are the works of the old man and they haue by profession put off the old man and so they should do his works II. They are now in the state of grace they are new men and therefore haue new manners they are by the meanes renued in knowledge and therefore ought to grow in practise euen in the mortification of what remaines of corruption they are renewed after the image of Christ and Christs image is the patterne of all holinesse and they must therefore leaue those sinnes because how like soeuer they bee to the humors and dispositions of the most men yet they are not found in the Image of Christ. III. God is vnpartially righteous and iust if men minde not mortification he cares not for them though they were Iewes circumcised freemen and contrariwise if they do conscionably striue after the holinesse of Christ and the mortification of sinnes he will accept them though they were Graecians Scythians bond c. In these words is heedfully to be noted the matter to bee auoyded both the old man and his works 2. the maner imployed in the metaphor put off with the time haue and the persons yee The old man is by some taken to be their old condition of life in the time of Idolatry by others to be their custome and habit in sinne but it is generally by the most taken to be the corruption of nature and inborne prauitie that vicious humor and ill disposition that naturally is in euery one of vs it is the image of the first Adam in our hearts This corruption is here said to be the man because it is seated in euery part of man and because it rules and frames a man and because it liues in man so as sinne onely seemes to be aliue and the man dead and because God will take notice of nothing in the sinner but his sinne 2 The old man partly in respect of the first Adam whose sinne is ours by propagation and who is called ould to distinguish him from the second Adam and partly in respect of our state of corruption which in the renewed estate we change so that our condition after calling is said to be new and our disposition before calling said to be old This corruption may be said to be ould also by the effects for in godly men it waxeth old and withereth more and more daily by the power of Christ in them and in wicked men it spends the strength and vigor and power of the faculties of the soule and makes him more and more withered and deformed in Gods sight and withall it hasten● old age and death vpon their bodies also in some men sinne may be said to be old in repect of continuance this is most fearefull age in any corruption is a most grieuous circumstance of aggrauation it is best not to sinne at all and the next to get quickly out of it Thus of his nature now of his workes The works of the old man are in generall workes of darknesse of iniquitie of the flesh vaine vnfruitfull corrupt abhominable deceiueable shamefull and tend to death And now particularly if we would know what he doth and how he is imployed we must vnderstand that he giues lawes to the members against the law of God and the minde that he frames obiections and lets against all holy duties that he striues to br●ng the soule into bondage and captiuitie vnder imperious lusts that he inflames the desires of the heart against the spirit that he infects our vaine generation and works both sinne and wrath for our posteritie but more especially his workes are either inward or outward inwardly he workes Atheisme impatience contempt carnall considence hypocrisie he forges and frames continually and multiplies euill thoughts he works lusts of all sorts he works anger rage malice griefe euill suspitions and the like Outwardly he works all sorts of disorders impieties vnrighteousnesse and intemperance A catalogue of his outward works are set downe in the Epistle to the Galathian he is heere in the coherence described to be couetous filthy wrathfull cursed and lying and all these are well called his works because he rests not in euill dispositions but will burst out into action besides it is his trade ●o sinne and they are well called his works because they are properly a mans owne for till a man repent he hath nothing his owne but his sinne and it is to be obserued that his works indefinitely must be put away as if the holy ghost would imply that all his works were nought for his best works are infected with the viciousnesse of his person or else they are not warranted in the word or they are not finished or the end was not good or the manner not good or they were wrought too late or being out of Christ they were not presented by Christ vnto God in whom only they can be accepted Thus of the matter to bee reformed the manner followes Put off The faithfull are said to put of the old man six waies 1 In signification or sacramentally and so in baptisme 2 In profession or outward acknowledgment and so we professe to leaue off the practise of sin 3ly by Iustification and so the guilt of sinne is put off 4ly by relation and so in our head Christ Iesus he is euery way already perfitly put off 5ly by Hope and so we beleeue he shall be wholy remooued at the last day 6ly by Sanctification and so he is put off but in part and inchoatiuely the last way is heere principally ment Now in respect of Sanctification the old man and his works are put away first in the word for so Christians are said to be cleane by the word and to be sanctified by the word The word first begins the worke of reformation it informes renewes chaseth away the
Gods Image first that Image of God in man and the Image of God in Christ differs in two things 1. Christ was the substantiall Image of the father as hee was God and we are his Image but by similitude 2. Christ as man by reason of the personall vnion is filled with almost infinite perfections aboue measure which are in no man else besides Againe it differs from the Image of God in Angels in three respects 1. Because they excell in nature for they are wholy spirituall and in action they performe Gods will with greater glory and power 2. They are free from all humane necessities euer since their creation 3. They enioy the vision of glory in the presence of glory in heauen in a manner peculiar to their place and natures Now for the differences of the image of God in man according to the different estates of man we must know the image of God according to the threefold estate of man is likewise threefold 1. there is the image of nature which Adam had 2. the Image of grace which the Saints now haue and thirdly the Image of glory which the blessed haue in heauen The Image of God in Adam had distinct specialties Adam was a perfect Diuine and a perfect Philosopher euen in an instant he knew the nature of all things in the instant of his creation which now is attained vnto with extreame labour and singular weaknesse 2. he had an immortall nature free from infirmities diseases death 3. he should haue propagated an immortall seed after the image of God whereas now grace will not be propagated 4. his obedience was charged with the obseruation of the tree of life and of good and euill The image of grace hath these specialties 1. faith 2. godly sorrow 3. the cohabitation of the flesh 4. a feeblenesse and defect in the measure of grace 5. a peculiar kinde of inhabitation of the spirit of Christ. Lastly the image of glory hath these differences a freedom like the Angels from all terrene necessities 2. an vtter abolishing of the sinfull flesh and of the very naturall disposition to dye 3. a full perfection of all graces 4. a losse of faith and sorrow and all the works of repentance 5. a speciall vnutterable communion with God and good Angels in glory The consideration of this doctrine of gods image should serue to teach vs to loue and admire all that feare god since the Lord hath graced them with this honor to be like god t is a greater fauour then if they had resembled the noblest Princes that euer were on earth no all the carnall men on earth in all their glory cannot reach to that absolutenesse of excellencie that is in one of the poorest of gods seruants 2. since the seat of this glorious resemblance of god is in the heart it should teach vs especially to looke to our hearts and keep them with all diligence euen to be conscionably carefull to see to it what thoughts and affections are lodged there the deuill desires no more aduantage then to haue liberty to erect in the heart houlds for euill thoughts and sensuall desires 3. If it should be our glory to be fashioned after the image of god then it condemnes the abhominable securitie of the most men that are so mindlesse of the repaire of the losse of this diuine gift and in stead thereof with so much care fashion themselues after this world or after the lusts of their owne and old Ignorance or after the wills and humors of men 3. how are wee bound vnto god for this vnsearcheable loue that is pleased to restore vnto vs this diuine gift through the gospell of Iesus Christ. Thus in generall of gods image But before I passe from these words there is further to be considered first the forme of speech in that he saith not his Image but after his Image 2. the efficient cause noted in those words of him that created him For the first we must vnderstand that to say man is the Image of God and man is after the Image of God is not all one for man is said to be the Image of God because hee is truely so and he is said to be after his Image because he is not perfectly so Christ onely resembles God in full perfection Now for the efficient cause of Gods Image he is described heere by a Periphrasis he that created him Man was two wayes created first in respect of being and so God created him 2. in respect of new being and so Christ created him neither of these senses can be well excluded And if the words be vnderstood of the first creation then these things may be obserued that Adam was not to be considered as a singular man but as he susteined the person of all mankinde else how could we be said to be created after Gods image and as in him we receiued this image so by him we lost it 2. That the interest we haue now to creation is not sufficient to saluation and therefore they are grossely deceiued that think God must needs saue them because he made thē 3. That the Lord would haue the doctrine of the worke of Creation to be remembred and much thought vpon by conuerted Christians and the rather because it serues for great vse in our regeneration for it furthers both repen●ance and faith and therefore in diuers places of Scripture where the holy ghost intreats of doctrine of repentance and faith the word Create is metaphorically vsed to assure vs that God will performe his promise though it were as hard a worke as to create all things at first Thus he hath promised to create a cleane heart and to create the fruit of the lips to be peace and to create vpon euery place of Mount Sion and vpon the assemblies thereof a cloud and smoake by day and the shining of a flaming fire by night that vpon all the glory may be a defence and to create light and deliuerance out of afflictions Besides the doctrine of the creation teacheth vs the feare of that dreadful maiestie that was able to worke so wonderfully and it inforceth humilitie by shewing that wee are made of the dust in respect of our bodies and that our soules were giuen vs of God with all the gifts we haue in our mindes as also by giuing vs occasion to consider the image of God that we haue lost and thus of creation as it is referred to God Secondly it may be referred to Christ and so be vnderstood of our regeneration which is as it were a re-creation or a new creation and in this sense it shewes that we should conforme our selues to the likenesse of him that doth regenerate vs by his word and spirit But may some one say is there any difference betwixt the image of God in vs and the image of Christ in vs I answer that to be fashioned after the image of Christ hath two
he was without forme and despised among men Thirdly his life was hid in the graue Fourthly it was hid in respect of the horrors he felt in his soule the Lord as it were hiding his louing countenance from him for the time Fiftly his glory in Heauen is hid from the world and the Saints on earth haue but a glimpse of it All this may comfort vs seeing nothing can befall vs but what hath befallen our head and if the world will not acknowledge our glory and the beauty of the profession of sincerity it matters not it could not see the excellency of Christ when he was on earth In God our life is hid in God either in respect of obiect because it principally consists in the vision of God or causally as God is the first cause to beget it and still to preserue it or els with Christ in God that is with Christ who incomprehensibly rests in the bosome of the Father Or lastly in God that is apud Deum in the power of God to dispose of it at his pleasure which should comfort vs seeing none hath power ouer our life but God and teach vs to commend our spirits into his hands Ver. 4. When Christ who is our life shall appeare then shall yee also appeare with him in glory These words containe the second motiue to perswade to the meditation of heauenly things if men would consider of the certaine and glorious appearance of the Lord Iesus Christ when hee shall come to take account of all the actions of all men and put an end to all the earthly felicities which man hath with so many inuentions sought and withall but thinke how vnauailable all earthly things will be at that day either to deliuer from the terror of the Iudgement or the horror of the euerlasting misery will certainely follow if men bee not more carefull to prouide for their soules beforehand by following the study of better things but especially if men would consider the great gaine and profit that godlinesse at that day will bring and the incomparable glory that all heauenly minded Christians shall then bee exalted vnto The thought of these things daily and truely layd vnto mens hearts would much excite and stirre vp to a constant care of preparing our selues against that day and would greatly weane vs from the cares and delights in these transitory and earthly things heere below that will so little auaile the owners in they day of death and will be of so little vse in that immortall estate vnto which after this Iudgement the godly shall be translated So that these words offer two things to be intreated of First the glorious appearance of Christ. Secondly the glorious appearance of the Christian in the day of Christ. But before I enter vpon the particular and full discourse of those two glorious appearances some things may be briefly and generally noted 1 That the knowledge of those last things is not a curious or vnprofitable knowledge but contrariwise ought to be searched after as exceeding vsefull in the life of man 2 That the doctrine of the glory of Christ and Christians in that last day is now but little knowen or discerned and that the word appeare imports so as the fulnesse of Christs Maiesty or of the Christians glory will not appeare till the very Iudgement day the better sort know but in part and the worser sort are so blinded by the diuell and besotted with sensuality and the loue of earthly things and withall are so conscious to themselues of the euils they are guilty of that they haue no desire to discerne or to be taught to know the doctrine of Christs comming 3 Those words which is 〈◊〉 yo● are not to bee altogether passed ouer they plainely a●●irme that Christ is our life and this is an honor that the Lord challengeth to himselfe and therefore as he would be acknowledged to bee the way and the truth so also he addeth I am the life and to to this end hee came that men in him might haue life And with great reason is Christ sayd to be our life for he formed vs at first when we were not and quickned vs when we were dead and hath prouided a better life for vs and doth preserue vs vnto eternall life and daily renew life and power in the hearts of his people and will raise our bodies at the last day The consideration heereof may both teach vs and trie vs it may teach vs as to acknowledge that we haue receiued life from Christ so to dedicate what remaineth of our life to the honour and seruice of him that is the Authour and sole Lord of our liues and withall to runne vnto him for the daily preseruation and renuing of life and louelinesse in vs. And it may trie too For till we can trulie say out of feeling and experience Christ is the life of our liues we shall hardly finde reason of comfortable hope in our appearance before him at the last day And they onely may truely professe that Christ is their life that first can liue by the faith of Christ accounting themselues to haue enough if they may see comfort in Gods promises made in Christ and feele the ioyfull fruits of Christs fauour and presence howsoeuer it goe with them for outward things Secondly that doe continually sacrifice and deuote vnto Christ their best desires and endeauours and that with resolution to cleaue to his seruice all the dayes of their life And thirdly that can bewaile his absence or displeasure as the most bitter crosse so as they could feele and out of affection say of such times and such a condition that the true life of their life was absent or remooued from them Now I come to the appearance of Christ. I haue not heere to doe with the appearance of Christ as it is considered in the fore ordination of God before the foundation of the world but of the accomplishment of it and so christs appearance is of diuerse kindes For first he hath appeared vnto the whole world as the true light that made the world and lightneth euery man that commeth into the world and thus he appeared in the light of nature Secondly he appeares to the whole Church consisting both of good and bad by the genenerall light of doctrine and Scripture but many receiue not his testimony Thirdly he hath appeared corporally in the daies of his flesh once in the end of the world to put away sinne by the sacrifice of himselfe and to dissolue the worke of the diuell then was fulfilled that great mystery God was manifested in the flesh Fourthly he hath and doth daily appeare in the hearts of all the faithfull by the manifestation of the spirit of grace whereby hee doth not onely shine but also dwell in them Fiftly he hath and doth appeare in the day of death by the
ministery of his angels to translate the blessed soules to their place of peace rest and ioy And lastly hee shall appeare in the end of the world in glorious Maiesty to iudge all men and Angels and this is the appearance heere mentioned There is noted to be a threefold Iudgement The first Iudgement and that was accomplished on man and Angels at their first fall then there is a middle Iudgement and so God iudgeth the wicked and the righteous euery day And there is a last Iudgement and that is this Iudgement about which Christ is heere sayd to appeare The doctrine of the last Iudgement is in a manner onely to bee found in the Church They were darke and vncertaine things the Philosopher could see by the light of nature And the Lords messengers haue in all ages from the first beginning till now mightily vrged the terror of this day to awaken the secure worlde Henoch prophesied of it so did Moses and Dauid and Solomon and Daniel and Ioel 〈◊〉 ●●lachie so did Christ himselfe and Paul and Peter and Iohn and Iude Neither is the assurance of the Iudgement to come waranted by the words of Gods seruants onely but the Lord hath left many works of his owne as pledges that he will once at length for all iudge the whole world for sin The drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the destruction of Ierusalem were assured foretokens that the Lord would not put vp the infinite iniquities of the world but will most seuerely punish for sinne the pleading of the conscience foretels a iudgement to come the sentence of death pronounced in Paradise and renewed with such terror on Sinay did euidently assure that God meant to call men to an account The lesser Iudgements in this life are but foretypes of that last and greatest Iudgement to come And lastly the dragging of men out of the world by death is nothing else but an Alarum to Iudgement Yet as there is a necessary vse of the knowledge of this dreadfull and glorious doctrine So there is a restraint to be layd vppon vs this is one of the things wherein we must be wise to sobriety We must represse the itching of our eares and be content to be ignorant of what is not reuealed this is a doctrine to be inquired into more for vse of life then to feede the curiosity of contemplation Concerning the Iudgement to come if any aske Who shall iudge I answer that in respect of authority the whole trinity shall Iudge but in respect of the execution of that Authority Christ onely shall iudge and that as man it is true that the Apostles and the Saints are sayd to iudge the tribes of Israel and the world but they ony iudge as assessors that is they shall sit as it were on the bench with our Sauiour Christ when he iudgeth And if any aske in the second place Whom Christ shall iudge I answer hee shall iudge the euill Angels for they are reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day He shall iudge also the man of sinne euen the great Antichrist that hath made such hauocke in the Church and seduced the nations with the wine of his fornications euen him shall he consume with the brightnesse of his comming He shall iudge also all reprobates men women and children of all ages nations and conditions for though he shall not know them in respect of approbation yet he shall iudge them and make them vnderstand he knew their transgressions Further he shall iudge the very Elect though it shall be with a different Iudgement For we must all appeare before the tribunall seat of Christ that euery one may receiue the things which are done in his body Lastly in some sence it may be sayd he shall iudge the whole world for the heauens and the earth that now are are kept by the word of God reserued vnto fire against the day of condemnation and of the destruction of vngodly men and the Apostle Paul sayth that the feruent desire of the creature made subiect to vanity by man waiteth for this reuelation of the sonnes of God at the last iudgement for they are subdued vnder hope and shall at that day by the sentence of Christ be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Thirdly if any aske where this iudgement shall be I answer that seeing the Lord hath not determined it it is curious to enquire and more curious to assigne the very place as some haue that wrote it should be in the valley of Iehoshaphat or as others would haue it on Mount Sion whence he ascended This we know it shall bee neere the earth in the clouds of Heauen where Christs throne shall be set and further then this we need not enquire There haue beene also many opinions about the time when it should be Some thought that as the world was sixe dayes in creating and then the Sabaoth of rest came So the world should last 6000. yeares reckoning a 1000. yeares as one day and then should come the eternall Saboath Others distribute the times thus 2000. yeere before the Law 2000. yeeres vnder the law and 2000. yeers after the law and then comes the iudgement Others thought the world would last after Christ so long as it was to the flood from the creation and that was as they say 1656. yeers Others thought it should be as long to the iudgement after Christ as it was from Moses to Christ and that should be 1582. yeers this experience hath proued false Other say Christ liued 33. yeeres and the world should continue for 33. Iubilies after Christ. What can be said of all or the most of these opinions and such like but euen this that they are the blind fancies of men For is there not a plaine restraint laid vpon men in this question when the Lord Iesus said it is not for you to know the times and seasons which the father hath put in his owne power And of that day and hower knoweth no man no not the Angells of heauen but my father only And the Euangelist S. Marke addeth that the sonne of man himselfe knoweth not the day and hower Not that simply Christ is ignorant of the time of the last iudgement but he was said not to know because he kept it from our knowledge Or else he knew it not as he was man or rather in his estate of humiliation and in his humane nature he did not precisely know it But that hinders not but that in his estate of exaltation as he is now in heauen and hath all power and iudgement committed vnto him he may and doth fully vnderstand it But letting these things passe the principall things for vs to be informed in is concerning the