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A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

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of his that we might admire it and adore it and embrace it and in the meane time love and delight in the Lords Supper that exhibiteth the body of Christ spiritually unto us rejoycing in such meetings above the joy of all carnall people before any other things Fiftly we should therefore take heed of sinning against our bodies b●● make conscience to serve God both in body and Spirit and say with David and Christ Lord a body thou hast given me for I come to doe thy will Sixtly what cursed monsters are swearers that reare the body of our Lord with their cursed oathes and rake their nailes in his wounds with their blasphemies On the tree The originall word signifies sometimes a staffe Mat. 26.47 sometimes a paire of stockes Acts 16.24 sometimes a tree growing Rev. 2.11 usually wood ● Cor. 3.12 here a Gallowes made of wood Christ bare our sins on the tree because he did in a speciall manner suffer bitter extremities on the tree which he suffered as our Suretie and for our sins for First to die on a tree was by a speciall Law of God made a curse and so is every one that hangs on a tree Gal. 3.13 Secondly he was debarred of the benefit of ordinary naturall comforts for he lived in paine three houres in the d●rke and had not the light of the Sunne Thirdly in that darknesse he was put to the most fearfull conflict with the Divels which at that time did with their utmost fury assault him and sight against him Col. 3.25 Fourthly he endured most grievous paines and torments of body and the effusion of his most precious bloud Fiftly he was reckoned amongst the wicked in his death and therefore hanged betweene two malefactors Esay 53.9 Sixtly he was reviled by the base multitude and mocked and derided by the chiefe Priests and Scribes Mat. 27.39 to 45. Seventhly God his Father poured out upon him the fearfull vials of his wrath in with-drawing for a time the sense of his favour Mat. 27.46 Eighthly his whole body was offered up on the tree as a Sacrifice for the sinnes of the world and the substance of all the Sacrifices in the Law Uses We have therefore cause to rejoyce in the crosse of Christ above all things for on the tree he freed us from the curses of the Law and purchased for us the blessings promised to Abraham as the father of the faithfull Gal. 3.13 14. and besides by suffering so shamefull a death he hath sanctified all sorts of wayes of inflicting death upon the godly so as now they may with comfort in a good cause or after repentance for their faults even suffer that death on a tree with joy And we should the more praise God for his favour if he suffer any of us to die of any other more easie or more honourable death And then we may againe see the hatefulnesse of sin in that God punishing our sins in the person of his owne Sonne doth not omit the very circumstances of abasement his justice exacting not onely death but that painfull and ignominious death on the tree Lastly hence we may see how little cause there is for Christians to plead merit if they think how fearfully sinne hath angred God and withall how senselesse the best of us are when wee heare reade or thinke of these sufferings of Christ they may rather see cause for ever to abhorre the doctrine of merit seeing hereby we proclaime our selves to be worthy of the very merits of Christ that can be so little affected with the thought of his sufferings Thus of the matter of Christs sufferings The effects follow and the effects in respect of us are named to be three first the death of sin secondly the life of grace thirdly the healing of our natures That we being dead to sin Men may be said to die divers wayes First in respect of nature when the Frame of nature is dissolved by the p●●ting of the soule from the body Secondly in respect of God when God is departed from men with his grace and righteousnesse and favour thus wicked men are spiritually dead Eph. 2.1 and 4.17 1 Tim. 5.6 〈◊〉 in respect of the world when a man is overwhelmed with crosses 〈…〉 as are 〈◊〉 wit● 〈◊〉 in his reputation he is said to be dead and his life to be hid under 〈…〉 being despised and 〈◊〉 as 〈◊〉 m●n o●t of ●inde Col. ● 3 Esay 26.19 Fourthly in respect of sinne and so men either are dead for sin as malefactors or dead in sinne as all wicked men or dead to sinne as the godly here To take the soule from the body is the death of all men To take God from the soule is the death of all wicked men To take sinne from the soule is the death of all godly men To be dead to sinne then is to be mortified in respect of sin Sin is said to be dead either in appearance or in deed In appearance only it is dead in such as have their sins only restrained for a time e●●her by Gods owne strong hand or else by themselves kept downe for certaine hypocriticall ends or else for want of occasion or temptation to stir the sinne thus sinne was dead in Paul when he was unregenerate and revived when the Law came Rom. 7.9 Sin is dead indeed in godly men but with a difference for though in this life they be wholly rid of many sins yet some corruptions are not wholly removed yet are they dead to them in the inchoation of it their sins lie a dying but in the life to come they shall be wholly and fully delivered from all sin Thus of the sense There be many Doctrines may be hence observed as Doct. 1. First it is evidently here implied that all men by nature and out of Christ are alive to sin or live to sin and in sinning they may be said to live or be alive or live to it in divers respects 1. Because all the parts of their life are full of sin sin infecteth their persons and their workes 2. Because they are in bondage to sin so as all their life they are at the command of sin they are servants of sin Rom. 6. 3. Because they account sin to be the life of their lives they could not esteeme life but for the hope of liberty and power of sinning It were a death to them to live restrained of sin as appeares when either by punishment or for other ends they are found to cease sinning 4. Because they doe not destroy sin in letting it live they are guilty of the life of sin in them because they will not use the means to subdue and mortifie sin that dwels in them but let it alone unresisted 5. Because they have most life or are most lively when they have most liberty to sin 6. Because they continue in sinne they spend not an houre but it is in sinne yea they so sinne now that they desire to spend everlasting
must know that in the first sense none enjoy good daies but good men Now good daies in the sense of the Scripture must be considered either in generall or in particular In generall and so first all the daies of Christ after he is revealed in a Christian are good daies and so all the daies of a true Christian from his conversion to his death are good daies Which appeares thus Saint Paul saith that Christ is our Passeover and the Passeover is a feast which we must keep 1 Cor. 5.8 and such high festivall daies are good daies especially the first and last daies of the Passeover were good daies in a speciall solemnity that is the day of thy conversion to spirituall life and the day of thy death which is the beginning of the day of eternall life Secondly all the daies in which Christians enjoy the preaching of the Gospel in the power of it and other ordinances of Christ in their glory all these daies be good daies for they are daies in which God makes rich feasts unto all Nations as is effectually described in the Allegory Esay 25.8 Thus David saith One day in Gods courts is better than a thousand any were else Ps. 84.10 The righteous flourish when Christ comes down upon their souls as rain upon the mowne grasse Ps 72.6 7. Thirdly those be good daies in which we see the Church of God in generall to prosper when God keeps his Church as his vineyard waters it every moment and watcheth it night day and destroieth every thing that might annoy it In particular a Christian finds divers sorts of good daies as first the Sabbath daies well sanctified are good daies above all other daies of the weeke when his body enjoyes rest and his soule is blessed according to Gods promise with spirituall rest and grace in Jesus Christ. Secondly the daies in which the soule of a Christian after sin and the judgement of God for it is humbled soundly and anew admitted into Gods presence and reconciled to God those daies when God entertaines the repenting sinner that prayes unto him especially at the first reconciliation are wonderfull good daies Iob 33.25 26. with the coherence 36.11 Psal. 90.14 Luke 4.21 with Esay 61.1 2 10. Thirdly all the daies in which a Christian thrives and prospers in the knowledge of Gods Word and growes in the spirituall understanding in the mysteries of Gods kingdome are all good daies for this knowledge is that wisedome Solomon speakes of which makes a man so happy Pro. 3.18 2 16. Thus of the good daies that are so in the judgement of the inward man God is pleased also to grant such good daies as are or ought to be so accounted in the judgement of the outward man and so First the daies of youth in which a man hath strength of body and vigour of mind to fit him not onely for the comforts of life but for the service of his Creator are good daies Eccles. 12.1 it being a blessed thing to beare Gods yoake in a mans youth Secondly the daies of speciall prosperity in the world which sometime God grants unto his people are also good daies when God gives his people aboundance of blessings in their families and estates and withall publike honour and respect with all sorts even the great ones of the world as was in the case of Iob which he describes in the whole 29th Chapter of his booke but then it must have this indeed that in this prosperity the godly man be imployed in all well-doing and get himselfe honour by the flourishing of his gifts and good workes as is shewed in that Chapter by Iob. Thirdly such daies in which a man enjoyes a quiet estare free from all trouble or vexation or contumely at home or abroad being free from Gods afflicting hand or mans injurious dealing are good daies and such as perhaps are specially meant in this place Thus of the sense of the words Divers Doctrines may be observed from hence 1. That the daies of men usually are evill which is true not onely of the wicked but of the godly also This Iacob said long agoe his daies were few and evill Gen. 47.9 but of this point before Only this may serve for great reproofe of those that so little minde a better life and so willingly love this life that though they live in much misery are loath to thinke of dying and make no conscience to provide for a better life 2. It is evident from hence that the life of man is but short whether he live happily or miserably yet his life is reckoned by daies not by longer measures of purpose to signifie the shortnesse of our lives This is expressely affirmed in other Scriptures Iob 10.20 Iob saith his daies were few and of all men that are borne of women that they have but a short time to live Iob 7.1 And this is resembled by divers similitudes so our life is compared to a Weavers shuttle Iob 7.6 to a Post for swift running out Iob. 9.25 to the grasse of the field Iob 7.12 Esay 40.6 to an hand breadth so as he saith his age is as nothing Psal. 39.5 to a watch in the night Psal. 90.4 to a sleep ver 5. to a tale that is told ver 9. Thus the life of man is said to be short either as he is in Gods sight with whom a thousand yeares are but as yesterday when it is past Psal. 90.4 or in his owne account if he measure time to come as he measures time past and in plaine reckoning let the life of man be improved according to mans utmost strength ordinarily a mans yeares are threescore and ten and if he live to fourescore it is but labour and sorrow to him Psal. 90. Quest. But what should be the cause that mens lives are so short Answ. If there were no other cause but the will of him that hath the disposing of the times and seasons in his owne power yet that might satisfie us but we may ghesse at other causes as both the mercy and justice of God This world is so bad to the godly that it is Gods mercie to take them quickly out of it and contrariwise it is so good to the wicked considering their desects that it is justice in God to take them hence and send them to their owne place which is hell Besides many men bring speedy death upon themselves by their owne ill courses or by sinning against their owne bodies by lewd courses and by eating up their owne hearts with worldly cares and sorrowes or by living in any grosse sin to provoke God to cut them off or by falling into such disorder as the Magistrate cuts them off or by laying of violent hands upon themselves or by getting their goods unlawfully to bring upon themselves that curse Ier. 17 11. Finally in this last age of the world there may be this reason assigned that the Lord makes haste to have the
power can keepe us to salvation His worke it is to preserve whose will it is to save Mans naturall life stands not in the abundance of the things he doth possesse neither is our spirituall life sustained by the bare having of abundance of meanes Thirdly it may serve for instruction and that divers wayes 1. First we should beg of God the spirit of wisdome and revelation to shew the exceeding greatnesse of his power that we might discerne it and beleeve it by faith seeing we doe not observe it by sense and reason 2. Secondly we should daily ascribe power unto God even acknowledging continually his power in keeping us from day to day as our Saviour Christ teacheth us in the Lords prayer when hee teacheth us to ascribe kingdome power and glory to him and with Peter wee should learne to put off praise from our selves unto God as hee did in the cure of the Cripple saying not by our power is this man made whole 3. Thirdly wee should particularly of God seeke the experience of his power As for example we should not rest in the forme or shew of godlinesse but seeke the power of it wee should not only get a little faith but strive with God by prayer till he fulfill the worke of faith with power we should not thinke it enough to pray but we should seeke the spirit of prayer and to doe it with power even to be made by the annointing of Christ Priests after the power of endlesse life so we should seeke the power of conference and utterance in the confession of the truth in admonition instruction consolation or propounding of our owne doubts for the kingdome of God is not in word but in power 4. Fourthly we should hence learne to be undaunted in afflictions though it were to adventure all even life it selfe for the Gospell seeing we are kept by Gods power we may say in any distresse as Paul did I know whom I have beleeved and he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him till the day of Iesus Christ. If God keep our soules it matters not what else be in danger 5. Fifthly Ministers should hence learne to preach with power and strive after it For it is not the ordinance of God but the power of God that preserves the hearers It is not preaching but powerfull preaching that keepes the soules of men till the day of Christ. 6. And lastly the people should learne to place their faith not in the wisdome learning paines or graces of men but in the power of God Lastly this serves for consolation to all Gods servants against all their feares troubles adversaries temptations or what else might make them doubt their perseverance For God is able to doe above all that they can aske or think according to his power which worketh in them The divine Power gives us all things needfull to life and godlinesse and though they have but a little strength yet the Lord can open a doore of knowledge and grace and comfort unto them which no man nor devill can shut and therefore let us from our hearts give praise unto the onely wise and strong God that is able to support us from falling and to present us faultlesse before the presence of his glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ By faith or through faith The meanes in us to preserve us is our faith and that this will keepe us through the power of God is apparant by the scriptures Hee that beleeveth on the sonne of God hath everlasting life he is as sure of it as if he had it and he shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life Christ is the bread of life for nourishment and he that commeth to him by faith shall never hunger nor thirst He that commeth to Christ shall in no wise be cast out Christ will be so far from losing any one soule that beleeveth in him that not so much as his flesh or any part thereof shall bee lost but the whole body that is delivered to the grave shall be raised at the last day whosoever beleeveth in Christ shall never die For hee that confesseth with his mouth and beleeveth with his heart shall be saved God will keep that which by faith is committed to him and Christ will bee at the last day made marvellous in all that beleeve but that this point may bee more plainly understood I propound three things 1. First what faith doth for our preservation 2. Secondly how it doth it 3. What kinde of faith doth it and then the uses For the first there are tenne things which faith worketh by all which and every of which wee are greatly helped and furthered in our preservation First it inflames in God a singular tendernesse of care to remove out of the way what might be an occasion of falling and therefore our Saviour Christ shewes that God so loveth the weakest Christian that is truely humble and beleeveth that if any whosoever shall offend him that is cast any stumbling block in his way in respect of the sore judgements of God upon those by whom such offences come it were better a milstone were hanged about their neckes and they cast into the bottome of the Sea 2. Secondly as it procureth the healing of the soule of temptations even of all the wounds of the serpent quenching his fiery darts by shewing us Christ the true brazen Serpent of our recovery 3. As it is the daily hand and mouth of the soule by which we feed upon Christ the bread of life and so are by the strength of that precious nourishment kept to life everlasting 4. As it lighteth us the way to heaven For as there is a light apprehended by sense and a light of reason so there is a light of faith by vertue of the promise of Christ who said I am come a light into the world that whosoever abideth in me should not abide in darknesse 5. As it bringeth us within the compasse of Christs intercession For when hee prayed the father to keepe them from evill hee expounds his meaning to be to extend that his intercession not onely to his Apostles but to all that should beleeve through their word 6. As it procures the pardon of all sins according to that of Peter to him gave all the Prophets witnesse that through his name whosoever beleeveth in him shall receive remission of their sins 7. As it will excite and compell a Christian in all suits to seeke his owne help If a man beleeve his faith will make him speake both by confession and prayer to God and by inquiry and counsell and reproof to men 8. As it procures the seale of the holy spirit of promise and the earnest of the inheritance purchased Faith opens such a fountaine of joy and incouragement within a
Church is thankfull for it to God Revel 2.6 and 5.10 And the rather should we rejoyce in it because God hath promised to take us to himselfe as his portion and peculiar treasure Exod. 19. 6. And it is his promise also to satiate the soules of his Priests with fatnesse Ierem. 31.14 And what a priviledge is it to have accesse unto the Lord and to stand before God daily which the Priests not onely might but were tyed to it by their office But then for conclusion of this point let us all be sure we have our part in the first resurrection Revel 20.6 and be carefull to be like the Priests for obedience and sanctity Exod. 19.5.6 and to get knowledge plentifully into our hearts Col. 3.16 and in the cause of God to blowe the trumpets of zeale and resolution carrying our selves with all humility and readinesse to doe good and so becomming instruments of blessing to the people And which I had almost forgotten we must remember to be like the Priests for teaching and confuting and reproving and informing our Familiars and friends as we have fitnesse and occasion Thus of the Priest-hood of Christians in generall In particular hence is further to be considered first their worke secondly their honour Their work is To offer up spirituall sacrifices their honour is Acceptation and high account with God through Iesus Christ. First then of the work of Christian Priests which is To offer secondly what they must offer viz. sacrifices thirdly the difference of those sacrifices from those in the Law of Moses they are spirituall which word notes both the substance of Christian sacrifices viz. that they are such sacrifices as were not according to the letter but according to the mysticall significations of the sacrifices of Moses Law and withall the manner how they must be offered up viz. spiritually or after a spirituall manner The maine thing here intended then is To avouch that Christians have their sacrifices which they must offer and that in a spirituall manner Now for the clearer opening of this doctrine two things must be distinctly considered of First what sacrifices can remaine to Christians since the Law of Moses is abrogated and secondly what things are requisite to the offering up of these sacrifices For the first There are divers sorts of sacrifices among Christians Some are proper to some Christians onely some are generall to all The sacrifices that are proper to some Christians are such as three sorts of men must offer First Ministers secondly Martyrs thirdly rich men First Ministers have their sacrifices which they must with all care offer to God and their sacrifice is the soules of the hearers Thus Paul was to offer up the Gentiles to God Rom. 15.16 And thus it was prophecied that in the time of the Christian Church the Elect should be brought in as an offering to God out of all Nations Esay 66.20 Ministers sacrifice their people either in this life or at the day of ●udgement In this life in generall when they perswade them to their attendance upon the House of God and breed in them a care to come before the Lord in ●erusalem Esay 66.20 In particular when they work repentance and true conversion in their hearts and when they make them goe home and mortifie their sinnes and tender their vowed service to God And thus two things are implyed for our information The one concernes Ministers the other concernes the hearers First Ministers may hence take notice of it that there can never be hope they should perswade with all their hearers for sacrifices were here and there once taken out of the whole Herd And besides the hearers may hence see that they are never so effectually wrought upon till they can give themselves over to their Teachers and to God to obey in all things though they perswade them to leave the world and binde them to the cords of restraint in many liberties they tooke to themselves before yea though they let their hearts blood by piercing their soules with sorrow for their sinnes even to the death of their sinnes 2 Cor. 8.5 and 7.15 Secondly At the day of ●udgement also Ministers shall offer up their hearers to God so many of them as are found chaste virgins unto Christ to whom they had espoused them before in this life 2 Cor. 11.3 And thus Ministers before they dye must make ready their accounts for the soules of their people Heb. 13.7 And thus of the sacrifices of Ministers Ministers have another sacrifice too viz. the particular texts or portions of Scripture which they chuse out and divide to the people as consecrated for their use For divers think that that phrase of cutting the Word of God aright is borrowed from the Priests manner of dividing the sacrifices and especially from the Priests manner of cutting the little birds The little birds is his text chosen out of the rest and separated for a sacrifice which he must so divide as that the wings be not cut asunder from the body that is he must so divide his text that no part be separate from a meet respect of the whole Levi● 1.17 and 5.8 2 Tim. 1.15 Secondly The Martyrs likewise have their sacrifices and that is a drink-offering to the Lord even their owne bloud this part is ready to be powred out as a drink-offering to the Lord for the Church Phil. 2.17 2 Tim. 4.6 and though wee cannot be all Martyrs yet wee should all denie our owne lives in the vowes of our hearts to performe our covenant with God if ever we be called to die for Christs sake and the Gospel Thirdly The sacrifice of rich men is almes and well-doing and those sacrifices they are bound unto to offer them continually Heb. 13.16 Phil. 4.18 Pro. 3.9 Almes is as it were the first fruits of all our encrease But then we must remember that our almes be of goods well gotten For else God hates robbery for burnt offering Isaiah 61.8 And in giving wee must denie our selves and not seeke our owne praises or plenary merit in it for it is a sacrifice cleane given ●way from us and consecrated onely to God and the use of his spirituall house the Church And thus of the sacrifice proper to some Christians There are other sacrifices in the Gospel now that are common to all Christians And these are divers For first Christ is to be offered up daily to God as the propitiation for our sinnes God hath set him forth of purpose in the Gospel that so many as beleeve may daily runne unto him and in their prayers offer him up to God as the reconciliation for all their sinnes and this is the continuall sacrifice of all Christians Without this there is the abomination of desolation in the temple of our hearts This is the end of all the ceremonious sacrifices the substance of those shadowes Those sacrifices served but as rudiments to instruct men how to lay hold upon
life in sinne Use. And so from hence by way of use men may discerne whether they live in sin or not for he that is a servant to his corruptions and esteemeth them as the happinesse of his life and resists them not and hath a desire to sin ever i● without doubt alive in sin and dead to righteousnesse And so contrariwise where these things cannot be found there the person is not alive to sinne Doct. 2. Hence is implied also that to live in sin is but miserable living and therefore those whom God loveth he chang●th from that condition and maketh them die to sin Now this may be shewed out of other Scriptures briefly for 1. Sin infects a man and all he goes about it staines his very conscience and like the leprosie will pollute his clothes his flesh his house and whatsoever he toucheth almost Titus 1.15 It maketh all things impure 2. To harbour sinne is to harbour the divell too who alwaye● takes possession of the soule that is given over to sin so as the heart of the sinner is the Fortresse of the Divell Eph. 2. ● 2 Tim. 2.26 2 Cor. 10.5 Eph. 4.26 3. While a man lives in sin he is in danger to be crossed and 〈…〉 in every thing he doth he shall have no portion from God nor inheritance from the Almighty Iob 31.2 Good things will be restrained from him Esay 59.2 and he may finde himselfe cursed in every thing he sets his hand unto Deut. 28.16 17 18 c. his very blessings may be cursed Mal. 2.2 his very table may be a snare For certainly God will be revenged of the sinfull man that is alive in sin Nah. 1.2 3 6. 4. His soule is dead within him while he is alive Eph. 2.2 1 Tim. 5.6 And how can it be otherwise when God which is his life is departed from him and with God all spirituall blessings are gone from his soule too The end of this life is to die miserably Rom. 8.10 and 6 2● Gal. 6. and to perish for ever with the Divell and his Angels Revel 21.8 Mat. 25.45 And in a speciall m●ner it is a miserable living to be lively and joviall as they call it in sin such men are worse than the generall sort of sinners For these wretched men that are so lively in sin have a most miserable heart in them a heart like an Adamant like a very stone within them are senselesse and brutish like the very beasts that perish Psal. 49. ult Besides in many of these God scourgeth sin with sin and giveth them up to such a reprobate mind that their wickednesse oftentimes exceeds the wickednesse of the wicked Ier. 5. Rom. 1.26 28. And further many times strange punishments light upon those workers of iniquity Iob 31.3 To which may be added that oftentimes such wretched creatures conclude in most wofull and hellish terrors so as they howle for vexation of spirit while Gods servants sing for joy of heart Esay 65.13 14. Rev. 6.15 16. But in generall of all that live in sin it is manifestly here implied that they have no part in Christ Christ in respect of them and as they are in their present condition died in vaine Use. The consideration whereof should awaken men from that heavie sleep in sin unto an earnest care to live righteously it should warne men every where to repent Eph. 5.14 and the rather because this very patience of God in bearing thus long with them and the mercy offered them in the Gospel will increase to greater wrath and condemnation if men will not be warned Rom. 2.4 5. 2 Thes. 1.8 9. Doct. 3. Hence also it is cleere that Gods Elect before their Calling have lived in sin as well as others Eph. 2.3 Tit. 3.3 Col. 3.6 Which is fit to be noted for divers uses For first it sets out the rich mercy of God and his free grace in election and manifestly shewes that we merit not the blessing Eph. 2.3 4 c. And secondly it should teach the godly divers duties as first not to be proud or high-minded but rather remembring what they were to make them the more humble all their dayes Secondly to despaire of no man but rather to shew all meeknesse toward all men 2 Tim. 2.25 Tit. 3.2 3. Thirdly to cleave fast unto Christ in whose only propitiation they can be saved from their sins 1 Iohn 2.1 2. God forbid we should rejoyce in any thing more than in Christ and him crucified Gal. 6.16 Lastly we should think it more than enough that we have heretofore lived in sin we should henceforth resolve to spend that little time that remaineth in a carefull obedience unto Gods will ceasing from sin 1 Pet. 4.1 2 3. Thus of the Doctrines implied in the Text. The Doctrines that may be gathered more expresly follow Doct. 1. None but mortified Christians are true Christians It is manifest th●t none have part in Christ but such as are dead to sin such men only doth Christ acknowledge for he is a Redeemer to none but such as turne from transgress●●n in Iacob Esay 59.20 All that are in Christ are new creatures their old thi●gs are past and all things are new 2 Cor. 5.17 None are Christs but such as beare the similitude of his death in their dying to sin Rom. 6. Men lose their Baptisme if they be not baptized into the death of Christ. Such men as place their happinesse in worldly things are not the right seed but such onely as are borne by promise that is that received life by the promises of grace and a better life Rom. 9.8 Christ was sent to preach glad tidings to such as mourne in Sion Esay 61.1 2 3. The mourners in Jerusalem were the onely men that were marked for God Ezek. 9. Christ will have no Disciples but such as will deny themselves Luke 9. and are not fashioned according to this world Rom. 12.2 And this should teach men to have mortified Christians in greater honour and to esteeme highly of such as will not be corrupted with the excesse of the times and doe shew by a sound conversation that they are weaned from the lust after earthly things and are consesecrated to God and his service We should honour and acknowledge such above all other men in the world yea in the Church It should ●lso compell upon us a care of a mortified life and a daily resisting of sin and the Divell and striving to be made like to Christ. Finally if the count must be made by mortification there will then be but a short count upon earth For looke into Christian Churches and cast out first all open profane persons such as are drunkards fornicators swearers murderers railers against goodnesse such as serve vanity and shew it by strange apparell and such like men secondly all open idolaters and superstitious persons and such as hold damnable opinions thirdly all civill honest men such as have only the praise of men for a harmelesse
heed that wee provoke not God by carelesnesse and boldnesse in favouring any corruption Deut. 32.18 19. Thirdly our adoption should be a singular consolation to us against all the miseries of this life It matters not though our life be hid and though it doe not appeare to the world what we are and though we have many crosses and losses and persecutions yet the thought of our inheritance with God should swallow up all Whatsoever we are now yet when Christ appeares we shall appeare in glory and there can be no comparison betweene the suffering of this life and the glory to be revealed upon us Rom. 8.17 Mat. 19.29 Col. 3.2 4. 1 Iohn 3.2 And that we may be the more comforted we should often pray to God to shew us by degrees and to make us know the riches of our inheritance both in what we possesse in this world and what we looke for in heaven And thus of the title of our dignities We are heires Of life Now follows to consider what we inherit and that is life wee are heires of life It is somewhat a strange speech but yet if we consider of it life is a most sweet thing there can be no happinesse without it A living Dog is better than a dead Lyon But as life is to be taken here it is a treasure above all treasures in the world But the enquirie into it is very difficult it is wonderfull hard to find out what life is especially to describe or define the life here mentioned as the glory of Gods adopted ones Life in Scripture is either naturall or spirituall as for naturall life especially since the fall that is so poore a thing as to be an heire to it is no great preferment By naturall life I meane that life that men live while they are unregenerate I say that life is a very poore thing which will appeare if we consider the qualitie of it or the meanes of preserving it or the short continuance of it or the subject of it or the things with which it is opprest or the whole nature of it 1. For the qualitie of it what is life It is but a winde or breath God breathed into man the breath of life as if his life were but his breath Gen. 2.7 and so it is said Every thing that had the breath of life Gen. 6.17 7. 15.22 My life is a wind saith Iob chap. 7.7 What is your life saith S. Iames it is even a vapour that appeareth for a little while and then vanisheth away Jam. 4.14 2. If we consider the short continuance of it It will vanish away of it selfe after a while as we see in that place It is compared to a Weavers Shuttle or at the best every houre of our life or every action addes secretly a threed till the web be woven and then we are cut off So Hezekiah compares himselfe to a Weaver in that respect Esay 38.12 Our life is scarce a span long for to live is but to die to begin to live is to begin to die for death takes away time past and every moment we yeeld something to death 3. If wee consider the poore meanes of preserving life It is such a weake thing that if wee doe not daily give it food it will faile us and if it be not kept with rayment it will be extinguished And for the meanes we use how silly are they Our life is called the life of our hands Esay 57.10 because it will not last unlesse wee make hard shift with our hands to preserve it 4. If wee consider the subject of it it is but our bodies for our soules in our naturall condition according to the sense of Scripture are dead in trespasses and sinnes They have as it were a being but not a life Our soules in respect of the substance of them are excellent things because invisible and spirituall existences but yet are destitute of that life is proper to them They are things indeed will last long but are void of that life which is spirituall 5. If we consider the miseries with which this life is infested both by sin and the punishments of it As for sinne it is leprous from the womb and charged with Adams fault and erres so often as cannot be numbred the faults of it are more than the haires of our heads As for punishment how hath God avenged himselfe upon thy wretched life to thrust thee out of Paradise and would not let thee enjoy life in any place that was not accursed The Divels also compasse about thy life to destroy it 2 Cor. 10.5 What deformities and infirmities are found in all the Vessels of life even in all the parts of thy bodie in which it dwells And without thee in the objects of life how is it frighted with cares plagues or vexed with particular crosses How doth God passe by thee in many blessings he gives before thy face to others and will not to thee And what thou hast to comfort thy life is it not cursed to thee so as thou feelest vanity and vexation in the use of it But above all how is thy life frighted with the danger of eternall death 6. Lastly if we consider the whole nature of life The Apostle here thinkes it is not worth the naming by the name of life when he saith only of the godly that they are heires of life as if there were no living men but they and as if they had beene dead all the time they were till they were adopted But it is not naturall life is here meant but spirituall life called in Scripture new life and the life of God and eternall life The words of the Apostle Paul Tit. 3.7 when he saith We are heires according to the hope of eternall life serve to expound these words of the Apostle Peter Now concerning this life it is above the reach of all mortall creatures to describe it as it is especially in the perfection of it in heaven for Saint Paul saith of what he saw in heaven that he saw things that could not be uttered 2 Cor. 12. and Saint Iohn saith it doth not appeare what we shall be ● Ioh. 3. 2. And in 1 Cor. 2.9 it is said that eye hath not seene nor eare heard nor hath it entred into the heart of man to conceive what God hath prepared for them that love him Yea Christ himselfe doth seeme to grant that as man he did not fully see the glory of this eternall life in his mortall condition where speaking of his estate after death he said Thou wilt shew me the paths of life Acts 2. And for so much as is revealed concerning this spirituall and eternall life two things must be remembred the one That the doctrine of this life lieth hid from ages and generations in extreme darknesse and when the Gospel treats of it it brings it as it were out of a darke dungeon into the light 2 Tim. 1.10 the other is That when it is
yet it is so rich as the tongue of man cannot utter if it be in any measure true and sincere Besides how should this fire our desires after wisedome and spirituall understanding in the world of Christ seeing it is our life and in the same degree we encrease in eternall life that we encrease in acquaintance with God in Christ and therefore above all gettings we should be getting understanding And finally it shewes the wofull estate of ignorant persons that are carelesse of the studie of the Word of God and of hearing of the Gospel preached This is their death and will be their eternall death if they prevent it not by repentance and sound redeeming of the time for the service of the soule about this sacred knowledge Now for the fourth point the things that nourish life are greatly to be heeded both to shew us what we should apply our selves to and with what thankfulnesse to receive the meanes of our good herein 1. We must know that the principall cause of the nourishment and increase of spirituall life is the influence of vertue from Christ our mysticall head by the secret and unutterable working of the spirit of Christ which is therefore called the spirit of life because it both frees us by degrees from the feares of death and from the power and blots of sin Rom. 8.2 and withall it quickens and encreaseth life in us for the better exercise of righteousnesse Rom. 8.10 2. The contemplation of Gods favour and presence doth wonderfully extend and inflame life in us To marke God any where or by any experience to find effectually his love and to taste of the sweetnesse of his goodnesse this is life from the dead better than all things in naturall life it doth a godly mans heart more good than all things in the world can doe as these places shew Psal. 30.5 63.7 8. 36.3 16. ult with coherence 3. The entertainment God gives his people in his house is one speciall cause of encrease of this life in us as it encreaseth both knowledge and joy and all goodnesse and satisfies the heart of man especially amongst all the things that are without us the Word of God as it is powerfully preached in Gods house is the food of this life called the savour of life unto life 2 Cor. 2.16 Christ words are the words of eternall life Iohn 6. see Psal. 36. 8. Iohn 12.50 Pro. 4.22 4. Fellowship with the godly is singular to quicken and excite the life of grace and joy and knowledge in us therefore it is an amiable thing for brethren to dwell together in unity because there God hath commanded the blessing even life for evermore Psal. 133. ult Pro. 2.20 The mouth of the righteous is a veine of life Pro. 10.11 Yea the very reproofes of instruction are the way of life Pro. 6.23 And therefore weake Christians should be instructed from hence with faith to rest upon the God of their lives who by the spirit of Christ can enable them to eternall life and with thankfulnesse to embrace all signes of Gods favour and presence and above all things in life to provide for themselves powerfull meanes in publike and good societie in private and not to be turned off from either of these by slight either objections or difficulties and to resolve to labour more for these than carnall persons would doe to have their naturall lives if they were in distresse or danger It is also excellent counsell which Saint Iude gives in this point concerning eternall life he would have us looke to foure things The first is to edifie our selves in our most holy faith striving to get in more store of Gods promises and divine knowledges and to strive to establish our hearts in our assurance of our right to them The second is to pray in the holy Ghost for he knew that powerfull prayer doth greatly further eternall life in us The third is to keepe our selves in the love of God avoiding all things might displease him chusing rather to live under the hatred of all the world than to anger God by working iniquity The fourth is to looke as often and as earnestly as we can after that highest degree of mercy and glory we shall have in the comming of Christ Iud. 1.19 20. I will conclude this point with that one counsell of Solomon Keepe thy heart with all diligence for thereout come the issues of life Christians that would prosper in spirituall life should be very carefull of the first beginnings of sin in their thoughts and desires and be very diligent in nourishing all good motions of the holy Ghost preserving their peace and joy in beleeving with all good consciences Pro. 4.23 Thus of the fourth point 5. Now for the differences of life in these degrees especially the first and last degree they are very great for though eternall life in the first degree be a treasure of singula● value yet the glory of this life doth greatly excell as it is to be held in another world I intend not to compare life in heaven with naturall life here for that is not worthy to be mentioned in the ballance with that eternall life of glory but with eternall life it selfe as it is held by the godly only in this world And so the difference is very great 1. In respect of the place where the godly live in each degree 2. In respect of the meanes of preservation of life in each degree 3. In respect of the company with whom we live in each degree 4. In respect of the quality of life it selfe 5. In respect of the effects of life eternall in each degree For the first There is great difference betweene the life of grace and the life of glory in the very place of living Here we live in an earthly tabernacle in houses of clay there we shall live in eternall mansions buildings that God hath made without hands 2 Cor. 5.1 Here we live on earth there in heaven Here we are strangers and pilgrims far from home H●b 11. there we shall live in our Fathers house Here we are in Egypt there we shall live in Canaan Here wee live where death sorrow and sin and Divels dwell there we shall live in a place where God and immortality and all holinesse dwels 2 Pet. 3.13 Here we are but banished men there we shall live in the celestiall Paradise Here we have no abiding City but there we shall abide in the new Jer●s●lem that is above The glory of the whole earth can but shadow out by simili●ude the very walls and gates of that Citie Rev. 21. Here wee can but enter into the holy place there we shall enter into the most holy place Heb. 10.19 To conclude there we shall enter into the heaven of heavens which for lightnesse largenesse purenesse delightfulnesse and all praises almost infinitely excells the heavens we enjoy in this visible world For the second In this life unto the
so Israel was Elect 2. There is an Election to salvation which is the eternall predestination of God appointing certaine men to be vessels of mercy and to enjoy the glory of heaven 3. There is an Election to sanctification which is performed in time by the power of the Gospell separating the fore-ordained from the masse of forlorne men unto holinesse of life This is nothing else but effectuall vocation 4. There is an El●ction to the administration of some office as to the Apostleship Election imports a singling of a man from some thing that is vil● and miserable and so the godly are elect from the masse of condemned men in Adam and from under the power of Sathan and the kingdome of darknesse from the first death from the company of evill men from the tyranny of sinnes of all ●o●●s from 〈◊〉 ●igo● an● 〈◊〉 o●●he law and eternall ●ondemnation These Elect men are not to be knowne by their numbers wit wealth nobility beauty personage nor by their presence paines or priority in Gods vineyard but they are to be knowne both by their birth and by their life By their birth and so they may be knowne for they are borne of God borne by promise borne againe they are then called and converted of God Rom. 8.30 By their life they may be knowne for they depart from iniquity and call upon the name of the Lord. 2 Tim. 2.19 they are fruitfull in well-doing and their fruits remaine Iohn 15.16 they are holy and unreb●keable Ephes. 1.4 they beare the image of the Son of God both in holinesse and sufferings for holinesse Rom. 8.29 They abound in faith vertue godlinesse knowledge temperance patience brotherly love and kindnesse 2 Pet. 1.5.6.10 These Elect men have admirable felicities and priviledges aboue all the men in the world For 1. They have most deare acceptation with God in his beloved Eph. 1.5 they are his delight Psal. 132.13 his chiefe treasure Psal. 135.4 his pe●uliar people Deut. 7.6 26.18 2. They are adopted to bee the children and heires of God in Christ Ephes. 1.4 3. They have the pleasures of Gods house Psal. 65.4 5. 4. In adversity they are sure of countenance Esa. 41.8 9. Protection v. 10. the avenging of their wrongs Esay 41.11 12. Luke 18.8 deliverance and victory Zach. 1.17.20.21 5. The non-suting of all actions and accusations in heaven against them Rom. 8.35 6. They are made the friends of God and from thence have audience in all suites and communication of the secrets of God Iohn 15.15 16. Deut. 4.7.37 7. They are assured of preservation to the end Mat. 24. 8. They shall obtaine glory in Iesus Christ being chosen to salvation ● Thess. 2.13 14 15. Hence we may informe our selves 1. That there is a choice God did not drive in whole Nations Cities Townes c. but a certaine number of them 2. That the doctrine of Election may be taught It is true that it is in some respects strong meate and hath in some things an Abyssus It should also inflame in every one of us both praises and prayers to God that he would above all things remember us with the favour of his people and comfort us with the joy of his chosen and above all care to care to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 What shall it profit a man to be sure of his house money lands c. and not to be sure of the salvation of his soul Know yee not that Christ Iesus is in you except you be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 Such as finde by the signes their Election should abound in all possible thankfulnesse to God 2 Thess. 2. 13. c. Further hath God cho●en us and shall we not live like Gods Elect It should teach us to endeavour to shew by our workes that we are chosen of God separating our selves from the wicked and holding forth the light of the truth in all unrebukablenesse of holy conversation not being discouraged with ill entertainment in the world Deut. 10.12 to 18. 14.1 26.26 c. Ephes. 1.5 2.10 Iohn 15.18 19 20. c. Finally we should hence learne not to be ashamed of Gods Elect but choose unto us whom God hath chosen to him choose them I say both to honor them and to sort with them and to countenance them and defend them Ministers should acknow●edge there in their teaching and great men in conversing This also may be a doctrine of singular terror to wicked men that will not be gathered and called by the meanes of salvation Esay 66.4 5. If it be such a felicity to be chosen of God what misery is it then to be rejected of God for ever If such a vexation to be disgraced and scorned of great men what is it then to be rejected of the great God and this is the more wofull if the fore-runner of the full declaration of it be upon men I meane a spirit of slumber Rom. 11.7.10 And thus of Election This Election is first amplified by the ground of it which is the fore-knowledge of God According to fore-knowledge Praescience or fore-knowledge in God is considered more largely or more strictly more largely and so it notes the whole act of praeordination so in the 20. verse of this chapter it is rendred ordained more strictly and properly for the knowledge of God praeceding in order the appointment to the end and thus it is taken two wayes For there is a praescience they call in schooles absolute by which God from eternity doth know all things simply and absolutely so the word is used 2 Pet. 3.17 There is also a praescience they call speciall by which God not onely knoweth the Elect as hee knoweth other things but acknowledgeth them for his and loves them above all others and this is called the knowledge of approbation Rom. 8.27 11.2 In the first sense there is difference betweene Fore-knowledge Providence and Predestination Praescience reacheth to all things to bee done either by God or any other and so to sinnes Providence reacheth to all that God would doe Predestination onely to the counsell of God about reasonable creatures Quest. If any aske after what maner God viewes things or lookes upon them or knowes them Answ. I answer that we are not able to expresse the maner of divine knowledge unlesse it bee by way of negation that is by denying to God those wayes of knowledge which are in the creatures and note imperfection For God doth not know things 1. By sense as by hearing seeing tasting c. For these things are in God only by an Anthropopathy or Metaphore 2. By opinion or conjecture For that knowledge is neither certaine nor evident and therefore cannot be in God 3. By faith For God knowes nothing by relation or report of others Besides though faith bee a certaine knowledge yet it is not evident Heb. 11.1 4. By Art For
as turne to him with fasting weeping and mourning Quest. But doth the Lord shew no mercy to wicked men Answ. Yes he doth but deceive not thy selfe he doth not shew them this mercy to forgive their sins or save their soules and that thou mayest know distinctly what mercy God doth shew I will instance in one onely place of Scripture and that is the 9. of Nehemiah for there thou maist see what mercy the Lord shewed to the wicked and rebellious Israelites To omit the extraordinary he gave them good lawes ver 13. and made known to them his holy sabbaths ver 14. and forsooke them not when they dealt proudly against him ver 16 17. and gave his good spirit to instruct them ver 20. and for a long time multiplied his outward blessings upon them ver 21 25. and when they wrought great provocations he sent them enemies to afflict them ver 26 27. and when they cryed sent them Saviours to deliver them ver 27. and after often revoltings he was often intreated ver 28. and did withhold his worst and consuming judgements for a long time ver 30 31. these and such like mercies the Lord may and doth shew to wicked men Hath begotten us againe c. Hitherto of the mercy of God now it followes that I should intreat of the regeneration of man As for the necessity and honor of the worke of the new birth I have touched it before I onely here propound three things to be considered of 1. The meanes 2. The lets and 3. the signes of the new birth For the first the ordinary meanes by which God doth beget us againe is the word preached as these places doe evidently shew Rom. 10. 14. 1 Pet. 1.23 1 Cor. 1.21 Gal. 3.2 Esay 55.4 For the second this great worke is marvellously hindered and that diversly For first many men are seduced seduced I say either with hope of mercy howsoever or with the colours of civill honesty and some good they doe or with pretence of after-repentance or with the examples of wise learned and great men or with prejudice conceited by reason of slanders cast upon such as are converted or with the common charity of the world 〈…〉 when they die or with false opinions as that men have all their regeneration by Baptisme or that reformation will prove an enemy to their credit or profit or contentment or else that they are as they should be because they are better then they were and have more liking of Sermons or care of religion or such like Secondly multitudes of men are senselesse and ignorant and through wretched inconsideration weare out their dayes without care or conscience they never consider either the number filth or guilt of their sinnes or the greatnesse and fiercenesse of Gods wrath and threatnings against their sins or of the certainty and dreadfulnesse of the vengeance to come or of the nearenesse of death or terror of judgement nor consider they the very effects of sin that are already upon them they perceive not their death in sin and the sleep of their conscience and the inefficacy of all Gods ordinances and the absence of Gods spirit and the impotency of all the faculties of their soules unto that which is good Thirdly many are hindered through irresolution and sluggish inconstancy they have many pangs of remorse and are neare the birth and give it over againe For either they forget it or neglect it upon experience of difficulties or objections against it or else because they finde more required then stands with their ease or credit c. Fourthly worldlinesse is a monstrous let in many I say not covetousnesse which is an excessive desire of having super●luities but a vaine over-loading of the minde with continuall cares about businesses in the world The love of earthly things and the cares of life choake all the sense they get in Gods house For they suffer their businesse to eate up their thoughts and consideration whence flowes forgetfulnesse and hardnesse of heart Fifthly this worke hath many and great adversaries if wee respect it in the truth and sincerity of it It is opposed mightily by devills invisible and by wicked men of all sorts visible sometimes by learned men sometimes by the prophane multitude Satan strives to overwhelme the beginnings of it in many with the floods of reproach and disgracefull oppositions Lastly it is hindered in the most men by the perver●e love of some speciall sin with which men are besotted and unto which they are so ingaged as God must have them excused till they finde time to give it over Thus much of the lets 3. Now for the signes of new birth amongst many I instance in foure The first is the washing of mortification by which I meane a serious secret and unfeigned voluntary godly sorow for all sin striving in particular to bewaile those sinnes unto which they have been most prone or in which they have most corrupted themselves This is to be borne of water and of the holy Ghost This is the washing of the new birth The second is the imitation of Christ by which we follow him in the regeneration Now this imitation of Christ must have in it three things First a willingnesse to deny our ease profit credit will or what else can be taking up any crosse that we may shew our desires to be like him in sufferings secondly humility and lowlinesse which will shew it selfe not onely in a continued base opinion of our selves by reason of our corruptions but also in the meeknesse and quietnesse of our affections and in readinesse to doe the meanest office in the service of Christ or his members thirdly innocency of life or a constant care to be holy as he is holy hungring after righteousnesse and loving purity and seeking the contentment of all wel-doing The third signe is the love of all such as are begotten againe of God For whosoever is borne of God loves all those that are borne of God but this love of Gods children is such a love as shewes it selfe first by a desire to love God and keep 〈…〉 godly doe secondly by a willing and ready Apology for such as feare God thirdly by fellowship with them in the Gospell fourthly by sympathy or compassion in their joyes or sorowes and fifthly by an estimation of them as the onely excellent ones The fourth signe is the inbred native desire after the sincere milke of the word By the desire to suck you may discerne a living childe from an abortive birth but then it is to be observed what kinde of desire it is For the comparison sheweth it must be a constant desire such as is renewed every day as we see it to be in the infant and besides it must be such a desire as is joyned with a secret and sound contentment in the word The childe doth almost nothing else but suck and
Evangelists published by the Apostles and demonstrated by six severall apparitions Now for the second The resurrection of Christ i●● fountaine of singular benefits unto us For from thence flowes 1. our glorification for hee went away to provide a place for us even to prepare those heavenly mansions for us 2. The resurrection of our bodies for the spirit that raised Christ from the dead hath thereby given us assurance that he will raise our mortall bodies also 3. The confirmation of our faith and that in divers things For his resurrection assures us that he is the promised Messias and sonne of God and that our debt is payed and that hee hath discharged the uttermost farthing for else he had not beene let out of prison and that he hath vanquished all our spirituall enemies and utterly foiled and disarmed them in that they could not keepe him downe when they had him in the grave but he hath triumphed over them 4. Our justification and regeneration for so the Apostle shewes in the 4. to the Romans that he rose againe for our justification and here it is expresly said that we are begotten againe through the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Quest. But may some one say If this be true that we are begotten again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ then it seemes men were not b●gotten againe in the old Testament or else not by the resurrection of Christ For he was not then risen Answ. For answer hereunto wee must consider in the resurrection of Christ two things 1. The act of his resurrection and 2. the vertue of it we are not regenerate by the act of his resurrection and for the vertue of it Faith could receive it aswell as the act was to come as now in us it doth the act being past Christ was risen in the old Testament three wayes 1. In the counsell of God 2. In the word of prophesie 3. In the efficacie of it Quest. But how doth it follow that we are regenerate because Christ is risen Answ. I answer Christ must be considered two wayes first naturally as man secondly mystically as head If Christ be considered barely as a man it doth not follow but if he bee considered in the mysticall union with his members as he sustaineth their person and was surety for them it will follow he rose againe to this end that he might receive power to raise our soules by the first resurrection and our bodies at the last day Or more plainely thus Our regeneration depends upon the resurrection of Christ three wayes 1. As his resurrection was a pledge and assurance that he would raise us he shewed his power that he could doe it he laid downe his body before our eyes and quickned it againe before our faces and gave us that signe to assure us of what he could doe fo●us 2. As by his resurrection he merited ours 3. The spirit of Christ applies the vertue of Christs resurrection for the quickening of us and the accomplishment of our whole vivification and new obedience The uses of Christs resurrection are both for consolation and instruction It may comfort us against all the accusations or temptations of Satan or the censures of the world who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen who shall condemne them Is not Christ dead or rather risen againe and sitteth at the right hand of God and maketh request for us hath hee not paid our debt hath he not fully triumphed over death sinne and hell Againe would we have a signe that in Christ all the promises of God shall be yea and Amen we need no other signe then this that as Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the belly of the whale so the sonne of man was three dayes in the heart of the earth and the third day rose againe Finally why should we now be afraid of death or any other spirituall or terrible enemy why should those last things dismay us hath not Christ had a most glorious 〈…〉 them in a most ●e●rible m●nomachy when they did the worst they could and therefore we may solace our selves in the conquest and say insultingly O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Is not death swallowed up into victory thankes be to God which hath given us victory also through Iesus Christ our Lord. But if we would have benefit of Christs resurrection we must then seek the vertue of it to our selves as the Apostle shewes in his owne practise Phil. 3.9 Quest. But how may we extract vertue out of Christs resurrection Answ. We may get out the vertue of his resurrection by meditation seriously thinking of it and of the end of it by found contemplation pondering of it and by prayer begging the working of the spirit therein but especially laying hold upon it by faith and glorifying God by beleeving that it shall be according to Gods promise effectuall unto us And we must also attend to the motions of the spirit yeelding our selves over to bee framed by them and we must not thinke much to suffer the labours of Gods messengers to worke upon our stony hearts as the Angells of God rowling away the stone that lyeth sealed upon our hearts by nature And thus much of the resurrection of Christ and of the first argument of our consolation Now the second followes in the fourth verse Verse 4. To an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us or for you THis argument is taken from our glorification which is here generally described to be the inheritance of the Saints which is amplified foure wayes First by the properties of it and they are three For it is 1. incorruptible 2. undefiled and 3 immarcessible or that withereth not Secondly by their present interest in it it is not now possessed it is held only in title being laid up for them Thirdly by the persons that shall inherite and they are you that is you that are begotten againe Fourthly by the place and that is heaven the best place For it much commends an inheritance if it lye in convenient and commodious places Incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not c. Three things are here said in the praise of this inheritance which I purpose in the doctrine of them to handle together The first thing affirmed of this inheritance is that it is incorruptible and so it is in foure respects 1. because there we shall need none of those meanes of preservation which of necessity are requisite in this corruptible world neither for the body nor soule For our bodies wee shall need no aire food sleep heat or cold apparell or the light of the Sunne or Moone or mariage or physicke And for our soules wee shall need no sabbaths sacraments temple 2. Because our happinesse shall not bee annoyed with any thing that might corrupt it either without us or upon us
doctrine may serve for three uses First It may confute that cavill of carnall men that Religion will make men dumpish and melancholy whereas the cleane contrary we see here is true 2. It greatly reproves the uncheerfulnesse of many professors who doe thereby greatly darken the glory of Religion and cause the way of God to be evill spoken of besides the hurt they doe themselves through unthankfulnesse and unbeleefe exposing themselves to the tentations either of sinne or apostasie together with a continuall unfitnesse to all duties of piety and this ariseth out of aptnesse either to passion of anger or worldly griefe 3. It may teach us to seek the ioyes of God and having found them to be carefull by all meanes to preserve them But what shall I doe to preserve the ioyes of God in my heart First keep thy self free from the allowance of the least sin violate not the peace of thy conscience Secondly digest the promises concerning infirmities after calling Thirdly take heed of omission or carelesse use of Gods ordinances Lastly care not for the world but retire thy selfe else from thence will flow unavoidable unrest Before I passe from these words yet two things more may be briefly touched First in that he ●aith yee rejoyce he seemeth to import that true ioy is onely in converted Christians For as for the ioyes that the men of this world have they are not true For besides there is much vanitie and madnesse in them there is also much danger in them for they breed security and men shall be called to account for them yea men may lose their soules for them Secondly where he saith wherein hee meanes in which benefits of regeneration glorification preservation c. whence may be briefly noted that the chiefest ioyes of Christians are in spirituall things it ill beseemes Christians to set their hearts on earthly things But is it not lawfull to delight our selves in earthly pleasures It is with these rules First thou must be sure thou hast repented of thy sins before thou allow thy selfe liberty for pleasures 2. Thou must not make a vocation of recreation 3. Thou must spend onely thy owne time upon them not the Lords 4. Thou must avoid scandalous delights and such games as are of evill report 5. Thou must watch over thine owne heart that thy recreations steale not away thine heart from the delight of better things but be used rather as an helpe unto them Lastly note from hence that they onely are fit to give testimony of the ioyes of a converted estate that have had experience of it themselves trust not the iudgements of carnall persons for the dignity utility and durablenesse of the graces of godlinesse And thus of the first reason Though now for a season you are in heavinesse There are divers sorts of heavinesse 1. There is the heavinesse of the desperate such was that in Cain and Iudas 2. and the heavinesse of the disappointed such was the heavinesse of Haman Ahab and Ammon when they could not compasse their ambitious covetous and voluptuous ends 3. And there is the heavinesse of the melancholy and of the scandalized 4. There is the heavinesse of the penitent for sinnes 5. and of the afflicted for crosses 6. There is a heavinesse in Gods children after calling for spirituall respects as for corruption of nature for absence of Christ for want of the meanes for the dishonour of God in publike abominations for the miseries of the Church for Gods threatnings and anger for the desire of death for hardnesse of heart and for speciall sins after calling Quest. But may not Gods children be heavy for crosses Answ. They may and I think that may be meant here but then these rules must be noted First that their heavinesse be rather for some sinne in themselves which might cause the crosse then for the crosse it selfe Secondly that their heavinesse be moderate Quest. But when is sorrow for afflictions moderate Answ. First when it exceeds not the measure of sorrow for sin 2. Secondly when it withdrawes not the heart from God and holy duties through passionate and incredulous perturbations but it is to be noted in the generall that the Apostle is very loth to grant them liberty for heavinesse but it is with many limitations as 1. it must be but a little season 2. they must be sure need doth require it 3. it may not be allowed for many crosses that will not be allowed for lesser or fewer tentations For a season The troubles and griefs of Gods children are but for a season for a moment God hides his face but a little while and the reason is because afflictions are used of God but as plaisters or medicines or as a ●urnace Now in as much as the godly will quickly judge themselves and make their peace therefo●e the Lord will soone draw off the crosse the plaister shall lie no longer than till the sore be whole and the goldsmith will let his metall lye in the fire no longer than till the drosse be● melted off or it be fit to be wrought upon Now if crosses should continue long in our reckoning say it were the whole life of a man what is mans life even a vapour that appeareth a little time Besides what can thy longest crosses be in comparison of the paines of the damned from which thou art delivered or of the joyes and glory of heaven which thou shalt possesse Yea what is that thou dost suffer in comparison of what thou deservest but yet I say it is but a season as wee account seasons even a small part of the life of the godly For either the Lord removes the crosse or takes away the sting of it or sweetens it with his mercies The Use may be to teach us to check the unquietnesse and failings of our hearts and to be ever ashamed of our selves that we should make so much of our crosses and so little of Gods mercies we should learne seeing they are but for a season to hold fast the confidence of our hope and live by faith and if the Lord be angry to hide our selves for a little season till his indignation be past If need require Here three things may be observed First that Christians man● times make crosses to themselves and draw heavinesse upon their hearts through feares and suspitions and unquietnesse where there is no need this is a great fault and usually is a great scourge For by such distempers they many times lessen the comforts of God and their credit with Gods children Secondly crosses and griefes are sometimes needfull needfull I say to hide our pride to weane us from the world to put us in minde of death to make us desire heaven to drive us to seeke more grace and holinesse to prevent sinne to come to humble us for sinnes
a while and heard her speak with such affection and admiration they are turned and will now goe seek Christ as well as shee Cant. 5.9 to the end and 6.1 3. Thirdly such as have felt this love of Christ should be carefull to keep it now there are seven things to be observed if wee would preserve the love of Christ in our hearts 1. First we must establish our assurance of both our loves to Christ and his love to us we must labour our owne edification in the faith if wee would keep our selves in the love of God Iud. 20. 2. Secondly if we would preserve this love we must keepe uprightnesse For if we relapse to the love of sin the love of Christ will decay in us 3. Thirdly we must keep our selves out of the company of such as might intice us from the love of Christ namely out of the company of Idolaters and all profane persons 4. Fourthly we must take heed of worldlinesse for the love of God and the love of the world will not stand together The cares of this life will be a snare and bait to draw us away 5. Fiftly we must take heed of security after feelings For if the Church be so sleepie after communion with Christ that when he comes again she will be slumbring and not rise when he calls Christ will be gone and not answer no though afterwards she call Cant. 5.2 6 7. 6. Sixtly we must walke in the steps of the flock and feed our kids neere the tents of the shepheards we must converse with holy Christians and keepe our selves under the powerfull instructions of profitable Ministers Cant. 1.7 c. 7. Seventhly wee must be much in the preparation for the second comming of Christ. To be much in thinking of or praying for the comming of Christ will preserve us from declination in our affection to Christ Iud. 20 21. The doctrine implyed in these words is that when we shall come to heaven and shall see Christ face to face we shall love him and admire him wonderfully For the Apostle takes it for granted that it is no hard thing to love Christ if we once saw him And thus of the first signe The second signe is the joy of the holy Ghost expressed in these words In whom though you see him not yet beleeving ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious There are six kind of joyes 1. Some are unnaturall such is the joy of those mentioned Iob 3.22 that are glad at heart to find the grave 2. Some are naturall such are the joyes Solomon commends Eccles. 8.15 Prov. 15.13 3. Some are sensuall such are the joyes Epicures conceive in the pleasures and sports of this life Eccles. 11.9 Iob 21.12 4. Some are fantasticall when men rejoyce upon meere conceits and fancies without any ground For as in some diseases there are abundance of sorrowes without cause so are there also joyes without reason in divers 5. Some are diabolicall and there are three sorts of devilish joyes 1. The first is to joy in sinne 2. The second is to joy in the misery of Gods people Ezech. 25.6 3. The third is the joy we call illusion when Sathan to feed the security of men doth tickle their hearts with a great deale of joy and ravishing of the heart 6. Lastly some joyes are spirituall joyes and these are either 1. Temporary or 2. Eternall Temporary joyes are those which wicked men may feele in the hearing the word Mat. 13. Eternall joyes are such as onely the Elect feele I call these Eternall not because they are felt without interruption for ever but because they are so now in the hearts of Gods children that they shall never either totally or finally be lost but shall be felt againe Now there are two sorts of this joy in Gods elect The one is a duty the other is a signe the one man brings to Gods service the other God gives as a token of his acceptance of mans service The joyes given of God are here meant these are here called unspeakable and glorious But how may we discern these joyes of the holy Ghost from all the other sorts especially the temporary joyes and illusions of Sathan The true joy in the holy Ghost may be known by these marks 1. It is given of God in the due use of some ordinance of God the soule being retired into Gods presence especially these joyes are felt in prayer this joy is drawne out of the wells of salvation 2. It usually follows humiliation for sin Esay 6.2 3. Ioh. 16.20 22. 3. It may be felt in adversity as well as prosperity Hab. 3.17 18. Rom. 5.3 Phil. 2.17 4. It is accompanyed with righteousnesse It can never be felt of any in whom the love of any sin raignes Rom. 14.17 5. It ratifies the written promises and doth assure nothing but what the word assures Eph. 1.14 6. It is kindled upon the sense of Gods favour it followes here bele●ving 7. It is unspeakable and glorious above all carnall or earthly joyes it doth ravish the heart as if a man were already in heaven 8. Lastly it may be knowne by the effects For 1. It will make a man more humble and apt to acknowledge his owne vilenesse and unworthinesse 2. It will make a man lesse censorious of others and with more compassion to tender the wants and sorrowes of others 3. It will marre the taste of carnall joyes it causeth us to find lesse rellish in the taste of earthly delights 4. It breeds a great love of God and godliness and quickens to diligence in well-doing Whereas the joyes that are illusions or temporary joyes will make men more proud and carelesse and contemptuous and more negligent in the use of the meanes and the care to doe good But are these joyes felt of every Christian Distinguish of Christians and of feeling and of joyes 1 Some are Hypocrites and so have not any power of godliness at all but onely a shew 2 Some have temporary grace onely these have joy but not such as will abide the tryall For 1 These joyes are not accompanyed with humiliation for sinne or not for all sinne 2 They arise not from any grounds of particular assurance 3 They are not felt in the time of temptation 3 Some Christians are alwayes diseased with some spirituall malady and that many times till death as with passion or with strange effects of melancholy these may possibly dye without any evident comfort Some fall after calling into some grosse sinne for a time and these may so lose the joy of their salvation as they may never recover it till their very end Againe distinguish about feeling 1 Some have those joyes but observe them not eyther through ignorance of the doctrine of the joy of the holy Ghost or through neglect 2 Some haue this joy and observe it and are affected established with it for the time but presently eyther forget it or
or to the poore or to the Church or to the service of my country or to the conversion of soules c. have I ministred the wit or learning or wealth or power the Lord hath given me Contrariwise it cannot but be wofull to some to remember on their death beds that they have spent their meanes and gifts to promote wicked courses and to procure sinne or to maintaine the riotous or gamesters or whores or dogs or any way their own lusts oh what wil they say when they are asked whom have you clothed fed comforted counselled admonished c. But unto us But why are we honoured thus and not the Prophets The Lord sheweth mercy on whom he will shew mercy I meane it for the manner and time and measure and meanes we must not herein dispute with God yet even this tends wonderfully to the praise of Gods constant love to his Church we see he doth not grow weary of his affection he did not spend all his grace and favour upon Kings Patriarchs and Prophets but he is ready to entertaine even the prodigall sonne of the Gentiles with as hearty or rather more hearty entertainment then ever he did the Jewish children that had not departed out of their fathers houshold Secondly this also shews that extraordinary gifts are not the best for us wee want the gifts of prophesie but to have the glorious grace of Christ is better then all for we see the Prophets desired it more and great reason for one may be a Prophet and yet not be saved Math. 7. but so one cannot have the true grace of Christ but they shall be saved hee is in better case that can pray with the Spirit then he that can prophesie For God is rich to all that call upon him and whosoever calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saved Rom. 10.10 Ioel 2. Besides we may note here that God will not be bound to shew his tenderest kindnesse to his best servants no doubt the Prophets were better servants to God then we are yet you see they must not envie it to know that others shall be more made on then they Finally here is implyed that Gods promises and provisions of grace can never be in vaine If it be not for the Prophets yet it must be for us For so in the originall it is as if it were rendered but yet unto us to note that no word of God shall be in vaine Esay 55.11 They did minister This phrase imports divers things 1. Wee are here againe occasioned to think of a strange depth of respect God beares to the meanest of his children none are too good in his account to doe them service the Prophets must not think scorne to minister to them yea so doth God reckon of them that Kings and Queenes must not be too good to nurse them yea we see here the Angels are desirous to know or doe any thing that concerns them yea the holy Ghost will leave heaven to doe them good Oh the bottomlesse depth of Gods love and oh the barrennesse and shallownesse and unthankfulnesse of mans heart that cannot be more inflamed towards God to render love for love yea wee should be afraid ever to challenge God for want of love we should account it a great offence to call his affection in question the Lord takes it wonderfull ill Esay 49.15 16. 40.26 oh that God should love us so beyond all president all desert yea above all we could desire and yet we be still so slow hearted 2. From this phrase we may note that the greatest in the Church ought to account it their honour to doe service to their brethren It it charged upon all without exception to serve one another by love Gal. 5. and Christ saith of the greatest let him be your servant Mat. 20. The Use is for all of us to search our hearts to see whether we can finde such a noisome pride in our selves as that at any time we should think our selves too good to doe Gods work or to doe service to any of Gods people if we doe find it let us purge it out as vile leaven and be humbled for it before God else the Lord may perhaps finde out waies to shame us and scourge us that we dreame not of 3. This word Minister as it is in the originall excellently imports how we should serve one another For it is to serve as the Deacons did 1. out of conscience of a calling and commandement from God 2. with all diligence 3. constantly 4. cheerfully Rom. 12.5 with all humility making our selves equall with them of the lower sort All this the Deacons did 4. This word imports that spirituall things are from God onely in respect of beginning and as the primary cause For the Prophets doe but minister them They have nothing but that they have received for every good and perfect gift commeth downe from God the Father of lights which should teach us in the use of all meanes to direct our hearts to God The things which were reported unto you These words evidently shew First that the primitive Church was first taught by tradition that is by lively voice not by written Scriptures onely so was Adam so were the Patriarks for the first 2000. yeares 1 Thes. 2.15 But might some one say Doth not this wonderfully make for the Papists in their opinion about traditions No whit at all and that this point may be more fully understood I will shew out of Scripture that the word Tradition hath been taken three waies and then declare particularly that this doctrine can make nothing for the Papists 1. Sometimes by traditions are meant the inventions or precepts of men imposed with opinion of holinesse and necessity upon the consciences of men and so it is taken and taxed Mat. 15.2 3 6. Col. 2.8 2. Sometimes by traditions are meant certaine rules prescribed by the Apostles concerning things indifferent and their use Thus the Corinthians are praised because they kept the traditions as the Apostle delivered them unto them 1 Cor. 11.2 3. Sometimes by traditions are meant certaine orders appointed by the Apostles for the prevention of disorder in manners in the Churches of Christians and thus I take it to be understood 2 Thes. 3.6 when condemning such as would not work he saith they walk disorderly and not after the traditions which ye received of us It seemes the Apostle had prescribed some courses for preventing of idlenesse and such inconveniences 4 Sometimes it is taken for the very word of God delivered by lively voice so the word was delivered 2000. years before the law 5. Sometimes it is taken for the word of God as it was first delivered by the Apostles while the Scriptures was yet unfinished whether it were delivered by report or writings and so 2 Thes. 2.15 1 Cor. 11.23 15.3 According to the fourth sense or this last it is taken here Now this can make nothing for
Psal. 31.22 Secondly this should teach us to looke to our faith and to provide for the daily use of it to live by it that if it might be we might be so ready and prepared that Christ when hee came at any time might find us so doing Now that we might attaine unto this daily use of our faith divers rules must be observed 1. We must be more afraid of doubts and cavils against our faith making conscience of unbeliefe to avoid it as a grievous sinne and to see manifest reason from the Word before we doubt 2. We must more study the promises of God and shake off the slaggishnesse of our natures especially wee should be more carefull to attend upon the carefull application of them 3. We should speedily run to Christ when we find any disease or neglect in our faith whose glory it is to be the finisher of our faith 4. We should often think of those that have been examples of much faith that have been full of faith Heb. 11. 12.1 5. We should watch against all things that might slacken our love to the meanes For it is certaine the love of the means is strong like death 6. If we find we have offended God let us not goe long without humiliation but quickly run and confesse our sins and not be quiet till we be reconciled It is dangerous to defer our repentance and neglect our communion with God long 7. Especially we should study for businesse to be imployed in well-doing in our generall or particular calling 1 Cor. 15.18 Hitherto of the sixt point Who raised him from the dead and gave him glory These words containe the seventh motive in the doctrine of redemption namely the ratification of it God himselfe was pleased after an admirable manner to ratifie the work of our redemption and therefore it should much work upon us for holinesse of life Now God ratified it two waies First by raising Christ from the dead Secondly by giving him glory in heaven 1. Of the resurrection of Christ from the dead divers things may be here noted 1. That Christ was amongst the dead this may shew the hatefulnesse of sin when Christ became a surety for it it divided his soule from his body and chased him downe among the dead Hath Christ been among the dead then let us beleeve him in all the comforts he hath taught us against death For he speaks by experience we may trust what he saies for he hath been there himselfe 2. Therefore dead men have a being it were good for us so to live as we may have comfort in our being after death For Christ found a world of dead men with whom he was after his death 3. How worthy is Christ to be loved that thus adventured himselfe for us how is it meet he should reap of the travailes of his soule 2. That Christ was raised from the dead Therefore it is not impossible for dead men to rise we see the proofe of it in Christ Secondly we should never be out of hope in the desperatest afflictions if we were brought as low as ever Christ was 3. God raised Christ from the dead Therefore it is wonderfull evident that our debt is paid in that the creditor came himselfe and set open the prison doore and released our surety especially in the time of distresse wee should know that God doth not require our debts at our hands For he hath hereby acknowledged ful payment by our Saviour and we did owe nothing but unto God Secondly this imports that the righteous God may sometime forsake us for a time and leave us to our thinking in unmedicinable distresses so as we should cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and yet hee will returne speedily to our succour and put to the proofe of his greatest power rather then abandon those whom he loves 4. That the resurrection of Christ is a great wonder therefore it is here mentioned as a marvellous course that God held in the ratification of our redemption The Use is Therefore cursed be those mockers that scoffe at the resurrection of the dead and let us glory in the faith knowing the victory of our Messias as also that the time will come that God will glorifie us also before men and Angels by mising our bodies also from the grave Rom. 8.11 1 Thes. 4.14 5. God lookes we should be specially affected with his glory in this great work of raising Christ from the dead The Use is Therefore let us be humbled before the Lord for the deadnesse of our spirits and slownesse of our hearts and beg of him pardon and the renting of the cursed vaile of ignorance that lets us from beholding the great glory of God herein 6. Lastly we see that the exaltation of Christ stands of two parts viz. Resurrection and Glorification and that all works of humiliation ended with his comming out of the sepulchre And thus of his resurrection And gave him glory This is the second part of the ratification The glory God gave unto Christ shewes that he is fully pleased with him and that Christ hath perfectly paid our ransome Quest. What glory did God give unto Christ upon his death for us Answ. Great and greatly to be praised and admired For 1. He assigned him all the honour of a triumph is his ascension when ●ee led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men Eph. 4.7 Col. 2.15 2. He removed from him all infirmities both of body and mind 3. He gave him all power in heaven and earth even preeminence in all things Mat. 28. Col. 1.18 For he made him 1. Prince of Angels Col. 2.10 2. Head of the Church Col. 1.18 3. Heire of all things Heb. 1.3 4. Iugde of the world Act. 17.30 4. He assigned him his owne best house to dwell in and that with equall honour with himselfe at his right hand in heaven 5. He bestowed all the Elect upon him Ioh. 17. 6. He commanded all creatures to worship him This was the grace of adoration Phil. 2.10 7. He gave him promise to grant whatsoever he asked Psal. 2.8 9. 8. He proscribed all his enemies and undertooke to make them his footstoole Psal. 110.1 The Use may be first for consolation All these honours done to Christ may assure us of our reconciliation with God and that our redemption is accomplished and it may encourage us to goe unto God trusting in his mediation for God can deny him nothing yea his glory is our glory The crowne is set upon our head when Christ is exalted and therefore being his members we should rejoyce as if it had beene done to us and the rather when he appeares we shall appeare with him in glory Col. 3.4 Secondly in all affliction it should teach us to live by faith and with patience to run the race that is set before us thinking upon the end of our faith the salvation of our soules which
into the actions of three severall daies 1. Some things were to be done the first day verse 4. to 9. 2. Some things the 7. day ver 9. 3. Some things on the 8. day ver 10. to 32. These severall daies noted the different degrees in the sanctification of the sinner In the first dayes worke we may consider 1. what the Priest doth ver 8. 2. what the Leper to be clensed was to doe ver 8. In the first consider the things prepared ver 4. and the application of them or use of them ver 5 6 7. LEVITICUS 14. VERSE 4. The things prepared were two live cleane birds cedar wood byssop and scarlet 1. The two live birds did signifie the twofold estate of Christ his suffering estate and his triumphing estate as will appeare more plainlie after 2. And Christ is shadowed out in the likenesse of birds first then of lambs after and then of a bullocke at last to note the degrees of the revelation of Christ in the heart of a sinner at the first though he have true grace yet he seeth Christ but in a little forme as it were afterward God revealeth his Son in him more and more manifestly 3. The cedar wood hyssop and scarlet might signifie the graces of Christ with which he was to enrich and sanctifie the sinner viz. Faith Hope and Love Faith signified by the high growing cedar which though it have a root in earth yet it aspires towards heaven above all other trees Hope was signified by the Hyssop which though it grow low and secret as it were in the heart yet it is alwayes greene according to the severall seasons of Gods providence and Love was signified by the scarlet the double dye whereof might note our double love to God and men all sanctified and inflamed in the bloud shedding of Jesus Christ. 4. The summe of all then in the signification of the things prepared is that wee need two things for our clensing viz. Christ and the graces of Christ Faith Love and Hope 5. Now it is to be observed that these are to be taken not for the whole congregation of Christ or Israel at once but for him that is to be clensed alone to signifie that there must be a particular application of Christ and sanctification with the graces of Christ in every beleever or else it will not serve the turne that there is a Saviour provided for the Church in generall which is further shadowed out in the particular taking of the birds for this use and gathering of the cedar wood and hysop and providing of scarlet 6. It is further to be noted that the Priest is said to command the taking of these things not to prescribe them only which might shew Gods willingnesse to bestow Christ and his graces he doth not only offer him but commands us also to take him by faith he is ready to give and reproacheth no man yea this command might enforce some care and terror into the penitent sinner not to dare to neglect the time in this great businesse of purifying the soule and it might also incourage the fearefull for God is not only contented that they rest upon Christ but shewes himselfe to be discontented if they doe not seeke unto Christ when they finde need of him Thus of the things to be prepared the application or use of them followes in the three next verses VERSE 5. The application concerns either the dying bird or the living bird The dying bird in this verse the living bird in the two next 1. The one of the birds must be killed to note that without the death of Christ there can be no purging for sinne and that in the conversion of a sinner the onely thing the soule of man lookes upon is Christ slaine for sinne 2. This bird is to be killed by commandement to note that Christ was by speciall appointment from the Father set apart unto death 3. This bird was to be killed over running water This running water was a signe either of the Gospell or of the grace of sanctification The bloud falling into the water either did signifie that the Gospell of Christ crucified should be preached all over the world or else it noted that the bloud of Christ should then onely be effectuall to the sinner when the fountaine of grace was opened and both bloud and water met together that is the merit of Christ and the Spirit of Christ There ran out of the side of Christ both water and blood which it seemes was to signifie the same mystery 1 Iohn 5. 4. It is the more comfortable also that by the running water is signified the continuall flowing of the fountaine of grace dyed in the blood and merits of Christ in the heart of a sinner 5. This water was to be in an earthen vessell to note 1. That God did measure unto every Christian according to his proportion Rom. 12.6 2. That the Ministers of the Gospell should have the power of dividing this treasure unto men and that God would glorifie himselfe by the service of men otherwise contemptible in the world 2 Cor. 4.6 VERSE 6. 1. The living bird signifieth Christ alive from the dead and who cannot die but ever liveth at the right hand of God 2. The Cedar wood hyssop and scarlet signified the graces of Christ Faith Hope and Love 3. The joyning of both these together shewes that we cannot bee saved by Christ without the grace of Christ. It is to no purpose to thinke of Christ without care to receive his graces also 4. All these must be dipped in the blood of the bird that was slaine over running water to teach us three things 1. That it is the merit of the death of Christ that makes the presence of Christ in heaven acceptable for us 2. That all the graces we are to receive from Christ must be dipped in his blood also for by his blood it is that we have accesse unto grace or acceptation for any grace in us though received from him 3. That by the Gospell and the Spirit of Christ all this good is conferred unto us from Christ out of heaven VERSE 7. 1. The sprinkling upon him that is to be cleansed notes 1. Application There must bee a particular application of Christ to the beleever 2. Imputation For this sprinkling is the worke of God imputing Christ and his passion and holinesse to the beleever 3. Valuation of the worth of the least drop of Christs blood His blood though but sprinkled justifies a sinner 4. Lesser manifestation For sprinkling imports not so much a restraint in God as a defect in us that doe not so fully discerne our interest in Christ. 5. Strong consolation For if we can by faith lay hold but upon a drop of Christs blood it sufficeth if we discerne but sprinkling though we are farre from powring out it is sufficient 2. When he adds from his leprosie it is to assure us this comfort that in the justification
preaching of the Gospell he being diversly shaked to and fro in the divers manners of propounding of Christ in the Gospell 3. The moving of the lips of the sinner in his confession and prayer before God 4. It might note the trembling of the Christian when hee comes first unto God and the various conflicts in his soule with which he is shaken and yet Christ is accepted as an offering for them before the Lord for all their feare and doubtings and tossings of temptations for the Christian holds his sacrifice in his hands for all his feares 3. The pinte of oyle that was to be waved also may note 1. That there is abundance of joyes will follow care and conscience in faith and repentance for trespasses 2. That before we can get abundance of joy it must be waved before the Lord that is Christ must beg it for us in heaven and preach it often to us in earth we must heare joy and gladnesse 3. It may perhaps note that marvellous feare and sorrow of heart for sinne which a Christian feeles when he is most joyed by the holy Ghost He rejoyceth with trembling Psal. 2.11 VERSE 13. The killing of the lambe followes amplifyed by the place and the person to whom it belonged and the worth of it Foure things were here signified 1. That Christ must be killed for us and in his death is our sacrifice 2. That the place where being the holy place notes 1. That Christ was slaine onely by and for the Elect. 2. That Christ crucified is taught and knowne onely in the Church 3. In that the Priest must have all the offerings is noted 1. That Christ onely can make an atonement 2. That the honour of our sanctification belongs to the Ministers 4. In that it was most holy is noted that this way of holinesse in Christ is an absolute way as ever was devised VERSE 14. The sprinkling followeth and is twofold 1. Of the bloud ver 14. 2. Of oyle ver 15. to 19. 1. The sprinkling of bloud noted the worke of God and the Gospell applying CHRISTS bloud to the distressed sinner 2. The sprinkling of the eare hand and toe noted that our hearing of the Word the principall meanes is sanctified by the bloud of Jesus Christ so as our unworthinesse shall be no barre to our successe in the meanes Secondly that our practice likewise is sanctified in the bloud of Christ. Thirdly that our progresse also and perseverance depends upon the merit and vertue of Christs passion and these are the three things Christ undertakes for the penitent sinner VERSE 15 16 17 18. The sprinkling of oyle followes where note 1. Who doth it viz. the Priest 2. How he doth it He poureth into his left hand and dippeth his finger 3. How many wayes he doth it 4. Where he doth it 5. Wh●t he doth with the remainder 1. The Priests sprinkling of the oyle noted that Christ and his Ministers are the chiefe fountaine of our joy 2. The warinesse of the Priest in the manner shewes that God would have his consolations warily propound●d unto men 3. He was to sprinkle both before the Lord and upon the party 1. The sprinkling before the Lord noted the joyes of Gods presence and that he is privie to all the comforts befall us 2. In that it was done many times is noted 1. The perfection of the joyes God hath prepared c. 2. Our imperfection in beleeving it 3. The sprinckling upon the partie noted the particular interest of the penitent in the joyes of Christ. 4. The sprinkling of the eare thumb and toe assured comfort in hearing practice and perseverance and in that it must be put upon the bloud of the trespasse offering it signified that wee cannot have true joy but in the sacrifice of Christ and the application thereof It is all merited in his death and to be applyed by P●ith 5. The remainder was to be poured out upon the head of the person which might note either 1. The fulnesse of joy which Christ our head hath in heaven the same with ours saving in the measure 2. That our consolations are given us that we might comfort others by the running downe of our c. 3. That we were abundantly consecrated unto God and annointed as Priests Kings and Prophets unto the Lord and shall have everlasting joy in our callings Esay 35. ult So that that joy upon their heads was shadowed by this type Quest. But why joy upon their heads Answ. Though the seat of joy be the heart yet the cause of joy is in the head and that is the understanding of our happy estate in Christ. Where he addes that the Priest shall make an attonement for him wee must understand it thus that the Priest hereby shall ratifie the attonement 〈◊〉 in the sacrifice of Christ c. These joyes shall abundantly settle his heart in the assurance of Gods favou● in Christ and so it notes that usually Gods servants have not that setled pe●swasion of their happinesse in reconciliation with God untill they have had abundance of experience of the joyes of the holy Ghost in the knowledge of their calling in Jesus Christ. VERSE 19 20. Quest. Now that the 〈◊〉 i● satisfied in Gods goodnesse and favour what is more to be done Answ. There must be yet a sinne offering and a burnt offering For after he hath taken a course for outward sins by which he trespassed against God and man he returnes and finds a marvellous deale of drosse in his nature and of secret corruptions that hang upon him daily and therefore now he needs a new application of the sacrifice of Christ to comfort him against his sinnes that hang on so fast though he be freed from grosse sins or outward trespasses that men take notice of The repetition of his clensing from his uncleannesse imports that for sinnes after calling a child of God is afresh humbled with a loathing of his impurities of heart as he was at his first setting out his daily corruptions and frailties make him seeme wonderfull uncleane in his owne eyes and therefore he seeks a new atonement Now when he addes And afterward he shall kill the burnt offering it was to signifie either 1. That God in this life after long conflicts doth at length reveale Jesus Christ in a great measure so as the Christian is fully satisfied in the application of all the merits of Jesus Christ as knowing his discharge from all his sinnes in him 2. That at our death Christs sacrifice shall fully free us from all the guilt and staine of sinne The repetition that the Priest must offer all these offerings shews wee need still both Christs intercession in heaven and the ministery of Christs servants to preach him crucified while we live in the world The meat offering annexed to the burnt offering shews either that Christians grow marvellously in this life after they have full assurance of their pardon for all sins or else that Christ will
is the temptations of unbeliefe 2. Against present affliction when wee consider what wee are borne to 3. Against the scornes of the world we are borne not of blouds but which is better of the bloud of Christ Ioh. 1.12 2. For Instruction for the remembrance of our new birth quickens us to a care to live as becomes our new birth which is the true reason why it is mentioned here The Use is first 1. First for Ministers to bend the whole course of their ministery hitherto what doe we profit them if we gain them not to God Yea hereby the glory of many Ministers is to be judged He is the excellentest teacher that can convert most to God Here God will be free 2. For all sorts of men as 1. For all godly men 1. If they be strong to build themselves up in the contentment of their birth 2. If they be weake to looke to the establishing of their hearts in the assurance of it 2. For unregenerate men it should awaken them to a care to shake off their lamentable security procrastination prejudice silence sinfulnesse or what else hinders them from this glorious worke To this end Think of death and the threatnings and anger of God seriously Judge thy selfe for thy sinnes Pray with David for a cleane heart beg a new heart Ezech. 36. Parable Get out of ill company Be warned to fly from the wrath to come Neglect not so great salvation Be not deceived Gal. 6.7 1 Cor. 6.9 Take heed lest God leave you with the very discourse of regeneration What shall it profit to be borne of great bloud c. if thy soule perish for ever I beseech you therefore by the mercies of God save your soules that you perish not in the condemnation of the world Consider God would not have you die c. The second thing that may be noted from hence is that our blessed immortality begins at our new birth for by the Gospell God brings immortality to life and light 2 Tim. 1.10 and by the Spirit of Christ we are then quickned Eph. 2.1 4. being by nature dead in respect of true immortality For from this moment of time Christ lives in us Gal. 2.20 we are alive to God though we be dead to the world The Use should be first to put vs in mind of the marvellous power and glory of the Gospell that brings this life light unto us 2 Tim. 1.10 2. We should be comforted against all our feares and doubts and against all the afflictions or temptations of our naturall life for immortality is begun in us already Those divine sparks are so kindled as they shall never be quenched God hath kindled the light of heaven in us This is very eternal life we have here on earth Ioh. 17.3 God hath made us immortall creatures already for though we have not yet attained to the full degree of the shining brightnesse of our immortall happinesse yet from degree to degree wee shall proceed till we be like the a●●ient of dayes Immortality may be distinguished into foure degrees or states 1. The first i● the life of the infant in grace and then we live as babes two things being eminent companions of that estate viz. weaknesse and crying that is many frailties and much griefe for sinne and wants 2. The second is the life of young men in grace 1 Ioh. 2.14 Heb. 5.13 and here two things are eminent 1. affections and 2. strength or might or power of gifts 3. The third is the life of them of ripe age or of fathers in grace 1 Ioh. 2. 14. Heb. 5.13 Here likewise two things more shine 1. greatnesse of judgment or experience 2. an habituall conquest over all sorts of sinnes so as the very taste of them or temptations to them are enseebled and more seldome These three are on earth 4. The fourth estate is that wherein we shall be like the an●ient of dayes even God himselfe in the perfection of all gifts and possession of all happinesse Lastly this doctrine may shew the miserable estate of all such as will not be informed by the Gospell They faile of immortality and must die in their sinnes for if they be not borne againe they perish for ever Thus much of the fountaine of new birth The manner followes considered 1. negatively 2. affirmatively Not of corruptible seed Two things are here imported concerning the naturall birth and propagation of all men The first is that our naturall birth doth not advance our immortality and everlasting happinesse we hold not our happinesse by any title from our carnall birth Mat. 3. Rom. 9. We are not borne heires of heaven In our birth we receive the beginning of naturall life from the seed of our naturall parents but not of eternall life The second is that this naturall seed is corruptible we so live that we must die we cannot hold out even in that estate for men will die and they come of men that have dyed H●b 9. Iob 10. Ps. 89. and therefore the Use should be 1. To abate the great thoughts that arise in great persons about the noblenesse of their birth 2. We should all be thereby the more quickned to the care of new birth 3. Therefore we should looke for death and prepare for it and patiently beare the infirmities accompany our mortall bodies till the time of our change come 4. Impenitent sinners should awake to live righteously seeing their perfections must come all to an end they cannot long abide in the greatest glory of the world they can attaine to 5. Here is a manifest difference betweene the children of the two Adams the children of the first Adam are borne corruptible the children of Christ are borne incorruptible 6. Lastly here is a singular consolation to the godly about their perseverance They are confirmed as the Angels of heaven they cannot fall away they are not borne of corruptible seed Thus of the manner negatively considered In the affirmative observe two things 1. what the meanes is 2. and by what it is Or thus The meanes is seed described by the properties It is incorruptible and by the cause or instrument of generation viz. the word of God Seed To omit the usuall acceptation of the word seed It is taken in Scripture in a restrained sense many wayes Sometimes for Christ Hee is that seed in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed Sometimes for the godly The children of the promise are the ●eed Rom. 9.8 Sometimes for the body of man within the grave which is cast into the earth as seed in the day of buriall 1 Cor. 15.43 Sometimes spirituall things in generall 1 Cor. 9.11 Sometimes the fruits of righteousnesse or mercy Iames 3.18 2 Cor. 9.6 So there is sowing to the Spirit Gal. 6.7 8. Sometimes for the word of God Mat. 10.13 Sometimes for saving graces conceived in the hearts of the godly and so I take it here And thus grace is like seed either
that is sowed in the field or in the wombe If it be taken in the first sense then the seed is grace the sower is Christ the field is the heart of man or the world the sowing time is the day of redemption and the harvest is the end of the world But I rather take it in the other sense and then the seed is grace the womb is the heart the Father or sower is Christ 1 Cor. 15.43 the instrument of generation is externally the word internally the Spirit of God the birth is the practice and exercise of the gifts of grace the nurse is the minister and the meanes of nursing are preaching and the Sacraments Saving grace is likened to seed in the wombe because first it is formed by an admirable coition of the Word and Spirit in the heart of man causing unspeakable delight in the soule Secondly because the gifts of grace doe thrive and grow up in the godly from small beginnings though at the first but as a graine of mustard seed yet after it is once conceived it will grow marvellously and speedily This doctrine may serve for a threefold use 1. It may comfort and that divers waies 1. Because it imports a marriage of the soule with Christ. It is God that gave the soule in marriage with Christ a great preferment 2. Because thou art cured of barrennes and therefore rejoyce oh thou soule that wast barren Christ hath made thee a mother of many children 3. It may comfort thee against the weaknesse of thy gifts and the grace received though thy faith joy feeling c. be but as a grain of mustard seed yet that God that giveth to every seed his body can make his grace to thrive and prosper in thee 4. From hence a godly man may know that he is truely borne againe for if thou have felt that sweet delight when the Word and Spirit of God did joyne with thy soule this delight is an infallible signe of thy regeneration and that Christ is formed in thee Ob. But the temporary faith feeleth joy Ans. There is great difference betweene the joy of the godly and the joy of the wicked in receiving the word for first in the wicked there is no grace left in the soule after hearing nor new gifts or dispositions the soul is empty and void of seed for all that joy Secondly if there were some seeds of grace yet it abideth not it is like the morning dew there is no true ●once●tion Or thirdly if it did abide for a time yet it increaseth not as the fruit of the wombe doth the godly grow in grace 2. It may serve to teach us 1. highly to prize the graces of the soule they are the divine seed of Christ in us Christ in the same is formed in us The light love desires joyes humility c. in the heart have the true picture of Christ upon them 2. To be carefull to preserve the grace we have received seeing it is the seed of God in us 3. To carry a high opinion of all the godly seeing they are the beloved ones of Jesus Christ. 3. Lastly for great reproofe of the whorish affections of all wicked men that shutting the doores of their hearts against Christ suffer the devill and concupiscence to engender in them and to fill the soule with multitudes of bastardly births of sinne Iam. 1.14 Incorrupt●ble The grace begotten in the hearts of the godly is incorruptible and so it is in divers respects 1. In respect of the matter of them For this grace consists of innocency and in●●r●uption so meeknesse is called incorruption 1 Pet. 3.3 2. In respect of the Author of it it proceeds from the incorruptible God 3. In respect of the continuance of it it never dieth 4. In respect of the end it tends to it is that faire fruit that will grow up to eternall life This may serve for consolation and instruction for consolation many wayes 1. This shewes that every godly person is an excellent one they are immortall creatures they have divin● sparkles in them How dare wicked men despise them when God hath thus honoured them His God King Crowne Inheritance gifts are all immortall 2. They may conceive comfortable hope that God will bee carefull to preserve and blesse his owne worke Gods blessing shall be upon thy seed and his Spirit will refresh thy buddes For upon all the glory must be a defence 3. It may comfort thee against death when thy corruption hath put on this incorruption of true grace thou being made thereby immortall thou maist triumph over death as 1 Cor. 15.54 Art thou an immortall one take heed of discontentment This was the first s●one even the devills sinne This may comfort thee in thy perseverance to the end the seed is immortall and therefore thou shalt never fall away Therefore hath God given thee his Spirit within thee to tend these little graces yea the Angels of God performe their service no doubt to the spirits of the godly That thou canst not fall from grace these Scriptures may establish thee 1 Ioh. 5.9 Mat. 12.20 Esay 65.22 23. Ier. 23.4 1 Cor. 1.8 9. 1 Pet. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.12 Ioh. 13.1 Ier. 32.40 41. Heb. 12.3 7.37 For instruction and so it may teach both godly men and wicked men Godly men should the more enforce their affections to the love of the Lord Iesus Christ in incorruption Eph. 6.24 and be carefull to avoid all the inticements of sinne and Sathan by which their hearts might be corrupted they should walke in the spirit Rom. 8.1 And keepe themselves from all filthinesse both of flesh and spirit desiring to know no other happinesse then Christ and him crucified And wicked men should take notice of it that corruption cannot inherit incorruption and unlesse they repent of their sinnes and set their hearts upon the word of Christ they can never be made immortall Hitherto of the property of the seed the instruments of the generation of it follow viz. the word of God which is f●rther praised 1. For the Author of it 2. For the vigor and effiacie of it it liveth 3. For the continuance of it it liveth for ever By the word of God Before I enter upon the particular observations of it we may observe the effectualnesse of the Apostles speech concerning the word Hee doth not mention it but with a lively praise of it and that hee doth not casually doe but with a great deale of reason For it is exceeding needfull to have the praises of the word often and lively exprest For it may be a means to heale that contempt of the Word that usually raignes in the most Besides the praise of it may lift up our hearts to consider the greatnesse of Gods mercy in bestowing his word upon us The word he gave to Iacob was a greater gift then he bestowed upon all the world besides And the praises of the word doe also raise up in the godly
son of God had no priviledge from death he was put to death in respect of the flesh 1 Pet. 3.21 Therefore this may serve first for singular reproofe of that unspeakable beastlinesse that is in wicked men that will not be moved with the contemplation of the ruine of the whole world oh the unutterable Lethargy of these mens hearts that will not consider their latter end when so unchangeable a decree is prest upon all men that at their appointed time they must once die This very doctrine may shew the horrible effect of sinne in the hearts of men that can extinguish a consideration so universally obvious to every mans sense oh yee brutish amongst the people when will yee understand Secondly this may informe us that multitude is no prerogative multitude cannot protect men against the stroke of God and death Though hand joyne in hand yet sinne cannot be unpunished It is as easie for God to smite all flesh as any flesh It is as easie for him to destroy the whole world as to destroy one man All flesh is grasse If the sithe can with few strokes move downe thousands of formes of grasse how much more easie is it for God with the sithe of his judgements to cut downe multitudes of men And besides that may informe us that the doctrine of death must be sounded in the eares of all men there is no man but this doctrine belongs to him and therefore woe unto him if he make no good use of it yea so necessary is this doctrine that the Ministers of the Gospell are commanded not to write it onely but to speake it nor that onely but to cry it out with all possible both affection and power of inforcement Cry all flesh is grass● Esay 40.6 Thirdly this may teach 1. Rich men in speciall to lay this to heart For God hath given them this doctrine to humble them and to teach them not to glory in their wealth but if they have gotten grace let them rejoyce that God hath provided better things than the things of this life for them They are more happy that God hath made them low by giving them a sight of their sins and so to be humbled for them then that he made them great in the world for their flesh is but grasse and all that glory must vanish as will be shewed afterwards The Use is urged Iam. 1.10 11. Ps. 49. 2. Strong men to whom God hath given helps of nature or arte Use thy strength but rejoyce not in it Use thy Physicke but trust not upon it For for all that thou must dye there is no arte nor remedy against death 3. All men and so we should all learne two things especially 1. To put our trust in God which liveth for ever since all men must perish and wee cannot continue here it is the best relying upon God and his favour and helpe who liveth ever to performe his promise and to provide for his servants thus David useth this consideration Ps. 102.12 13. 2. To be patient when we feele the walls of our earthly house begin to moulder down when we feele death beginning like a moth to feed upon us we should be patient seeing it is not onely unavoidable but that it is the case of all men as well as ours Thus of the extent of the affirmation The time followes Is grasse This mortality may be said to be so presently It is so in divers respects 1. It is so ●n the cause which is sin the cause of death is in us already it hath infected our very bones 2. It is so in the sentence the doome is already gone out upon all flesh It is appointed that all men shall once die The very sentence uttered in Paradise of dying the death stands still unrevoked in respect of our flesh 3. It is so in experience all flesh is dead never any scaped 4. It is so in respect of d●sposition to death we are all but dying men death hath taken hold of us and doth every day feed upon us insensibly To live is but to lie a dying The disposition to death is inflicted upon all men for all tend to death 5. Lastly it may be said all flesh is grasse for certainty that is we shall as certainely vanish hereafter as if it were now presently done The use should be the more to inforce upon us the care of providing for a change since death is so many waies made fast unto us and withall it may serve to confute the vaine hope of long life here seeing we are all but as so many dead men here to day and to morrow cast into the grave and wee should also learne hence to be continually thinking of death must we not do the worke that is present to us why death is before thine eyes why then dost thou not the thing of the day in the day It is thy every dayes worke to die to learne to die seeing we die daily Hitherto of that branch of the proposition that concerns the body of man●no● followeth the vanity of mans condition in this world The glory of man is as the flower of grasse Here first the s●●se of the words is to be considered By the glory of man he meaneth whatsoever it is in outward things which man glorieth in any thing that man rejoyceth in admireth praiseth seeketh as an ornament or happinesse to himselfe such as are riches strength honour high places and command over others beauty praise of men excellency of naturall gifts noble birth calling multitude of attendants and such like By man he meaneth here the naturall man or the outward man for of the spirituall man it is not true because he glorieth in that shall never fade nor be taken away from him Now this glory is compared to the flower of grasse for transitorinesse because it will fade and fall away as the repetition sheweth and that speedily too as the uses of this similitude in divers scriptures shew as will afterwards more appeare The doctrine then is that all the outward glory of man in this world is exceeding vaine and so it may appeare for six causes or considerations for I omit many other reasons First for the most part these things so much desired cannot be had or not as they are desired and therefore their glory is vaine because they are sought in vaine 2. If they be obtained yet the eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare with bearing of them they cannot fill the heart of man 3. Many times it fals alike in these things to the foole and to the wise both in having them and in losing them and this is a miserable vanity and vexation of spirit 4. The glory that is placed in these things is liable to be interrupted with a thousand crosses either they expire the vanity or are taken away by violence 5. If they could make us happy yet death will not let us enjoy them many men spend
necessity of the doctrine when God saith a thing over againe it shewes us that that point must be knowne we must take notice of it it is a doctrine cannot be missed in the Church no worke of God will well go forward without it He must cry aloud that all flesh is grasse God lo●g● 〈◊〉 it were to have this doctrine take in our hearts He knowes a great part of the hardship of godlinesse were over if this were soundly digested oh that they were wise and would consider their latter end men would apply their hearts to wisdome if they had once learned to number their daies Thirdly it imports that God finds us wonderfull dull of hearing and forgetfull and carelesse of this doctrine and that naturally we are wonderfull impo●●nt in these considerations The Lord doth reproach us as it were for negligence that a plaine point should need to be repeated And therefore we should examine our selves seriously herein and not vexe God with our unteachablenesse in this point Oh how might God be displeased with us if he should call us to account herein have we not heard have we not seene from the beginning that all flesh is grasse yea hath not God heard our attestations we shake our heads we confesse it is true we are sometimes comforted and conceive some weake resolutions to thinke better of it and provide for death when God hath us here in the Church as it were in his schoole wee seeme as if wee had learn'd this lesson perfectly and yet miserable wretches that the most of us are we go home and forget all as if wee had never bin taught it nay is it not needfull for the most of us to be taught againe the same doctrine which the very last Sabboth we heard of this argument oh who is effectually perswaded amongst us indeed to lay it to his heart doth not this repetion smite us all certainly if we be not warned death may come before wee are aware and surprise us when wee shall not have time to learne to die There are many incoveniences come from this forgetting of the doctrine of our latter end and suffering it to runne out 1. Mens sins cleave fast unto them their filthinesse is in their skirts because they remember not their latter end Lam. 1.9 men live securely while they keepe out the thought of death 2. This brings many miseries upon men For when God cannot prevaile by doctrine he wil set upon us by judgment and then we may come downe wonderfully Deut. 32.29 30. where●s we might avoid our distresses by thinking of death voluntarily 3. We keep our spirits void of true magnanimity we can never tell our strength till we know whether we can die or no one would chase a thousand one I say of these that will consider of their latter end Deut. 32.30 4. We can never tell whether our knowledge bee right or no till wee have tryed it with thoughts of death they are a people without understanding that consider not their latter end Deut. 32.28 29. 5. Our hearts will grow harder and harder if we put out these remorses wrought in us concerning death as ●ron is harder the oftner it is heated and cooled 6. We keepe our selves without those joyes would come of the frequent contemplation of the glory of heaven we dare not thinke of heaven because we would avoid the thought of death 7. We give wonderfull advantage to the temptations of life 8. We keepe our selves without the comfort of one excellent signe of our salvation viz the love of the appearance of Christ we pray not that Gods kingdome may come wee desire not to be dissolved we dare not say with the Church Come Lord Iesus come quickly wee are loth to pray God to teach us to number our dayes for these things which have beene the excellent praises of the Saints we suffer not to be found in us 9. Lastly as I touched it before death may come suddenly and then what case are we in that suffer the thoughts of death thus to go out and be lost in us so as they produce no sound effect of preparation in us But what must we doe that wee might bring our selves to a more serious consideration of our mortality vanity how may this fault in us be helped Goe to God by prayer to forme this in thee strive with God by importuning his assistance in teaching thee to number thy dayes it is Gods worke we see the Israelites sentenced to death yet could not mind it and therefore Moses makes that prayer Ps. 90.12 2. It is an excellent helpe to inure our selves to die dayly to trie how wee could die by the most effectuall supposition of our present death compelling our selves to put the case what if I should now die 3. The thought of death would not be so put off if we had got a sound assurance of our salvation and of the remission of our sins it is want of assurance that makes many so afraid of dying And thus in generall In particular these words of the repetition afford us some observations that are common to both some speciall to each in which they differ one from another The observations that are common to both are these 1. That men both in their bodies and glory will decay man continueth not in one stay if you looke either upon his person or his estate 2. That man in both decaieth speedily he is of few daies in his body and full of trouble in his estate he commeth up like a flower and fleeth away as a shadow Ioh 14. 1 2. it shall be accomplished before his time that is before the time he fancieth to himselfe Ioh 15.33 The glory of may shall flee away as a bird from the birth and from the wombe and from the conception Hosh. 9.11 3. That man decaies insensibly he goes away by degrees both in his body and honor he declineth like a shadow and is consumed as it were by the moth 4. That man would come to this decay even without violence as the grasse and flowers perish though they were never cut downe 5. That when man is decaied either in body or estate he growes extreamely base vile he is but as a little stubble or as a rotten leafe or flower And all this should the more force upon man the care to provide for immortality and not to glory in or trust upon his outward condition especially it should make every one of us affraid of procrastination death doth not alwaies give warning nor can we alwaies foresee our ruine or losse of outward things And thus of what is common to both Now in speciall we may note 1. That the text acknowledgeth more stability in the body of man than in his glory For the flower falleth off or fadeth immediately after the spring usually whereas the stalke is greene long after and therefore it shews the vanity of such men as so greedily pursue the getting of outward
of those points which he undertook to handle As the many other Treatises which in his life time be published doe verifie as much so in particular this Commentary here commended unto thee In it thou shalt finde besides the Grammaticall exposition Logicall resolution and Theologicall observations many divine points copiously handled by way of Common place which hath made the book to arise unto that bignesse that it hath In this maner of handling the holy Scriptures hee hath not gone alone Many of the main Pillars of the reformed Churches have beaten out a path before him as Martin Bucer Peter Martyr Musculus Zanchius Lavater Perkins and sundry others The large volume of Peter Martyrs Common places was gathered out of his Commentaries on the holy Scriptures The Church of God hath reaped much good by such copious and distinct handling of heads of Divinity Their labours therefore who take paines therein are not to be concealed from the Church If it had pleased the Lord to have continued the life liberty and ability of this his Servant longer unto his Church he had questionlesse gone on further in this course which he so well began and so might wee have had by his paines as compleat a Commentary on the two Epistles of Saint Peter as we have upon the Epistle of S. Paul to the Colossians published by this Author But seeing it seemed good to the divine Providence here to put a stop to the paines of this his industrious servant wee must rest content with what he hath done and expect the paines of s●me other to goe on in the finishing of that which he hath so well begun I suppose it would be a great wrong to deceive Gods Church of these good beginnings because the whole Epistle is not fully finished If a Sermon on one verse be thought meet to be published as daily we see such Sermons to be published why may not much rather many Sermons on many verses and chapters together be published That what was done by the Author in his life time may be the better accepted care hath beene had to note the heads of points in the margin and to adde an Alphabeticall index in the latter end that by the helpe of it you may the more readily finde out such points as you most desire to reade If the Author be of force to commend a Work the more this Work may receive no small commendation from the Author of it for he was a man of a profound judgement strong memory sharp wit quick invention and unwearied industry Hee was in his Ministery very powerfull and that unto all turnes as we speake When he had to doe with tender and troubled consciences he was a Barnabas a sonne of comfort but when hee had to doe with impudent and obstinate sinners he could make his face hard and strong and shew himselfe like a Boanarges the son of thunder Grave sober and temperate he was in his cariage and yet with his intire familiar friend he could be modestly pleasant God gave him a great measure of patience and he had in his very body that which tryed his patience for it appeares that he caried a t●rturing stone in his bladder fifteene yeeres together and upward I have heard it credibly reported that fifteene yeares before his death he was by a skillfull Chirurgion searched and that upon that search there was a stone found to be in his bladder whereupon he used such meanes as were prescribed to him for his ease and found such help thereby as he thought that either the Chirurgion which searcht him was deceived or that the meanes which he used had dissolved the stone But time which manifesteth all things shewed that neither his Chirurgion was deceived nor yet his stone dissolved for it continued to grow bigger and bigger till at length it came to be of an incredible greatnesse After his death he was opened and the stone taken out and being weighed found to bee 33. ounces and more in weight and in measure about the edge fifteen inches and a halfe about the length above 13. inches about the breadth almost thirteen inches it was of a solid substance to look upon like to a flint There are many eye witnesses besides my selfe who can justifie the truth hereof A wonderfull worke of God it was that hee should be able to cary such a stone in his bladder and withall to doe the things which hee did Hee was a close student witnesse the many Treatises which time after time hee published in print H●e was also a diligent Preacher for constantly hee preached twice on the Lords Daies and in Summer when many of the Gentry and City came to his Parish at Isleworth and dwelt there hee spent an houre on Wednesday and another on Friday week after week in expounding the Scripture in his Church very seldome was he hindered by the forementioned stone in his bladder This course ●ee kept till about five weeks before his death when the paine came so violently upon him as it wasted his vitall vigor yet did it no way weaken his faith but as the outward perished so was the inward man renewed in him Hee earnestly prayed that the extremity of the paine might not make him utter or doe any thing unbeseeming his vocation and profession but withall hee advised his friends to consider that hee was but as other men and thereupon to judge charitably of his cariage in that case Many heavenly meditations issued from him in that time of his visitation unto the last period thereof Quietly meekly and patiently be endured till that surest Chirurgion of all Death had eased him of all his pain In his soul he ever liveth and in his name he will continue to live so long as the Church enjoyeth his Works more lasting then Marble Monuments Now O blessed Saviour and Head of thy Church as thou transplantest some of thy Plants out of thy Nurcery the Church militant plant others we beseech thee in their roomes that thy Church may never be unfurnished of able painfull faithfull and powerfull Ministers WILLIAM GOUGE AN EXPOSITION OF THE SECOND CHAPTER OF THE FIRST EPIstle generall of PETER 1 PET. 2.1 2 3. 1. Wherefore laying aside all maliciousnesse and all guile and dissimulation and envy and evill speakings 2. As new born Babes desire the sincere milke of the word that ye may grow thereby 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is bountifull FRom the thirteenth verse of the 1. Chapter to the eighth verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all men chap. 1.13 to chap. 2.13 The speciall exhortation concernes onely some men as subjects servants wives husbands from Chap. 2.13 to Chap. 3.8 The generall exhortation stands of two parts First the one concernes the matter of holinesse Secondly and the other the meanes of holinesse of the matter of holinesse in the latter part
Christ and to carrie him into the presence of God and laying hands upon his head to plead their interest in his death who was offered up as a whole burnt sacrifice for their sinnes Wee are Christs and Christ is given unto us as our ransome we must every day then lay hold upon him and see him bleed to death for our sinnes and be consumed in the fire of Gods wrath for our sinnes Secondly A broken and contrite heart is a sacrifice God will not despise yea such hearts are the sacrifices God especially calls for from men He ever loved them better then all the outward sacrifices in the Law Psal. 51.17 It is the heart God calls for and yet not every heart but a heart wounded with the knife of mortification that is cut and bleedeth in it selfe with godly sorrow for sinne and is broken and contrite with the daily confession of sin This is required of all Christians and this very thing makes a great deale of difference betweene Christian and Christian. Thirdly Prayer and thanksgiving to God are Christian and holy Sacrifices as many Scriptures shew Psal. 141.2 Heb. 13.15 Hos. 14.4 Psal. 51.21 Fourthly We must offer our selves our soules and bodies as a living sacrifice to God Rom. 12.2 2 Cor. 8.5 and that First in respect of obedience devoting our selves unto God living to him and wholly resolved to be at his appointment Psal. 40.6 Loe I come to doe thy will this is instead of all burnt offerings Secondly in respect of willingnes to suffer affliction of what kind soever as resolving that through many afflictions as through so many flames wee must ascend up to heaven as the smoake of the incense or sacrifice on the Altar Acts 14.21 Hence are tryals called fiery tryals 1 Pet. 4.12 Thus of the kinds of sacrifices which remain unto Christians The lawes about those sacrifices follow For there bee many things to bee observed by Christians in their sacrifices if they would euer have them acceptable to God which the shadowes in the old law did evidently signifie as First the sacrifice must be without blemish Malach. 1.7 which the same Prophet expounds Mala●h 3.11 Our offrings must bee pure offrings wee must tender them in the sincerity of our hearts Our sacrifices are without fault when we judge our selves for the faultinesse of them and desire they might have no fault Secondly it must be presented before the Lord and consecrated to h●m which signified that we must walk in Gods presence and do all in the sight of God devoting all to his glory Gen. 17.1 Mic. 6.8 Thirdly our sacrifices must be daily some kindes of them There were Sacrifices every day in the Temple and it was an extreme desol●tion when the sacrifices ceased so it must be our every daies work to imploy ourselves in some of those spirituall sacrifices Heb. 13.15 Fourthly There must bee an Altar to consecrate the gifts Matth. 23.19 This Altar is Christ who is the onely Altar of Christians Heb. 13 1● Rev. 8.3 No service can be acceptable to God but as the Apostle here faith by Jesus Christ We must doe all in the name of Christ Col. 3.17 Fiftly there must be fire to burne the sacrifice This fire is holy zeale and the power and fervencie of the spirit in doing good duties The fire on the Altar first came downe from heaven to signifie that true zeale is kindled in heaven and comes downe from above It is no ordinarie humor nor a rash fury It is no wilde fire And it was required about this fire that they should preserve it and never let it goe out but put fuell still to it and so it was kept for many yeares so must wee doe with our zeale wee must labour by all meanes to preserve the fervencie of our hearts that wee never want fire to burne our sacrifices Our zeale should be as the love mentioned C●●t 7.10 that much water could not quench it Every sacrifice must have fire Mark 9. Sixtly the sacrifices must be salted with salt so must our Christian sacrifices as our Saviour Christ shewes Mark 9.49 50. And thus we must have the salt of mortification and the salt of discretion and we must looke to it that our salt lose no his faltnes but that it have a draining power in it to extract corruption out of our sacrifices our words to God and men must bee powdred with salt Col. 4.6 and so must all our actions Seventhly the Sacrifices must bee without leaven Levit. 2 1● Leaven in wickednes or malice or sowrenes or deadnes of heart or worldly griefe even whatsoever leaveneth that is infecteth or maketh the meat offring to be heavie or sow●e 1 Cor. 5.8 Eighthly in the same place of Leviticus 2.12 Hony likewise is forbidden to be mingled with their sacrifices and by bony may be meant our beloved sinnes or particular corruptions wee should especially watch against them in the time of 〈◊〉 of holy duties that they mi●gle not themselves with our sacrifices by infecting our ●●gitations Ninthly the offring must be waved and shaken to and fro before the Lord Levit. 7.3 And this signified the waving of our lips in praier to God for his acceptation our sacrifices should be soundly tossed to and fro in praier before the Lord Iob praied before he sacrificed Iob 42. Tenthly on the Sabbath the sacrifices were to be doubled to signify that in a special manner wee should consecrate our selves to piety and mercy on the Sabbath day Eleventhly our sacrifices must be offred upwith all gladnes of heart and spirituall delight Thus Gods people were said to bee a free-hearted and willing people Psal. 47.9 110.3 And this was shadowed out partly by the oil● that was poured into the meat offrings which is expounded to be the oile of gladnes and partly by the feast they made at the end of their solemne sacrifices unto which they invited their friends to joine with them in rejoicing before the Lord and it is likely David alludes to this feast when hee faith hee would take the cup of salvation and praise the name of the Lord For as yet the Lords Supper was not instituted nor do we read of any use of a cup in the sacrifices or Sacraments themselves Ex. 18.12 1 Chron. 16.1 2 3 4. Psal. 116.13 Twelfthly if we be called to it we must not deny unto God th●fat of the kidneis and the inwards By the fat was meant the things which are dearest to us most beloved and that most delight us and if the service of God and the Church and the poore require it we must deny our selves and sacrifice what is most deare to us Thirteenthly the Apostle to the Hebrewes Chap. 13.13 addes that wee must not leave off well-doing for reproach sake but be contented to be like Christ who suffered without the gate as scorned of men and like the sacrifice was burnt without the campe Though all men hate us and speak evill of us and
by the bodily eyes The fourth thing to be proved is that the soule is immortall it cannot die when it is once kindled it will never goe out or be extinct as the Sadducees wickedly imagined and some Athiefts still thinke the contrary This is a point necessary to be knowne as for the truth it selfe so for the use of it in our lives For to doubt of immortality makes us miserable and to beleeve the soules are mortall makes men Epicures Let us eate and drinke for to morrow we shall die But to be fully assured of an estate after life makes a man carefull so avoid sinne lest his soule live for ever miserably and to serve God that hee may live for ever happily Now things may be said to be immorrall two waies either absolutely and in their owne nature and so God onely is immortall or else they are so by the will and pleasure of God and not by their owne nature and so the soules of men and so the Angels are immortall There have beene two sorts of men that have denyed the immortality of the soule the one were the Sadducees among the Jews who held that in death the soule of man is utterly extinct as the soule of a beast the other were certaine Arabians of whom Eusebius and Saint Augustine make mention who said that the soule died with the body and so remained dead till the day of Judgement and then they revived with the resurrection of the body Now against the first sort may be produced many reasons as also evident Scriptures The reasons are such as these 1 The providence and justice of God proveth the immortality of the soule For here in this life good men have not all their happinesse and evill men live in prosperity so there must be another life where justice must be done 2 Religion confirmes this for to what end were religion and serving of God if the soule died like the soule of a beast seeing in this life the most godly are outwardly in great misery many times For if S. Paul say If the dead rise not then of all men are we most miserable it will hold much more strange if the soule live not at all after death 3 The wisedome of God proves it for else man were not in better case than the beast yea in some cases worse For man from his infancie to his death is liable to many diseases subject to cares and griefes which the beast is free from yea this addes to mans misery that he knowes he must die which the beast doth not Now shall man that was counted like God be thought to have no better end than the beast that did exalt himselfe so much in the glory of his beginning 4 The conscience of malefactors proves this who feare a judgement after this life and an estate of misery 5 The nature of the soule proves it for it is simple and void of all contrariety and accidents and causes of corruption or putrefaction and is besides the Image of God Now no mortall thing can be the image of that which is immortall These reasons make it exceeding probable But I am of their mindes that thinke it may be beleeved by faith but not be proved by reason The Scripture therefore onely makes this point cleere such as these First our Saviour proves it out of the Word of God saying I am the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob c. Secondly it is most plaine Mat. 10.28 Thirdly eternall life is every where promised to them that beleeve Fourthly such places as treat of the Resurrection last Judgement and the Glory of heaven prove it Now for the other sort that confesse the life of the soule after the last Judgement but deny that the soule lives after death till then there are divers Scriptures against their opinion As First the former Scriptures The soule cannot be killed at all Matth. 10. And God was presently the God of Abraham as then living and for eternall life it is not said He shall have but He hath eternall life that beleeveth Secondly Christ said to the theese This day thou shalt be with mee in Paradise not at the last day Thirdly Ro. 8.38 Death cannot separate us from God in Christ as it would if the soule were dead or a-sleepe and did not enjoy God Fourthly the dead that die in the Lord are forthwith blessed Rev. 14.14 Fifthly the soules of Abraham and Lazarus were in joy and alive after death so was the soule of Dives in hell Sixthly Iohn saw under the Altar the soules of them that were slaine for the testimony of Jesus and they cryed with a lowd voice O Lord how long c. Revel 6. Seventhly the soules of the wicked die not but are kept in prison and are now in prison too 1 Pet. 3.19 Before I leave this point of the immortality of the soule it is profitable briefly to answer certaine objections which may be brought out of some words in the Scriptures as Ob. 1. The soule that sinneth shall die Ezek. 18. Therefore it seemes the soule is mortall or at lest for sinne it must die and the rather because it was threatned in Paradise That day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death Sol. The Scriptures evidently shew that since the fall and sinne yet the soule doth not die as the places before alledged prove But the answer is That this death threatned or inflicted is not the destruction of the beeing of the soule but the depriving of it of the grace and savour and presence of God Ob. 2. Eccles. 3. It is said that there is one end of the man and of the beast As dieth the one so dieth the other Sol. These are not the words of Salomon but of the Epicure who is here as in other places of that booke brought in declaring his mind of things For Salomon himselfe concludeth evidently that the soule returneth unto God that gave it as in the last Chapter The other objections are the objections of the dreamers that is of such as imagine that the soule lieth a-sleepe till the day of Judgement and perceives nothing and is without operation which is to say it is dead seeing life is nothing else but the continuall motion and action of the soule Object 1. It is said that man when hee dies sleepeth as Christ said of Lazarus He sleepeth Ioh. 11. and Stephen slept in the Lord Act. 17. Sol. Other Scriptures adde another word viz. in the grave or in the dust Iob 7.21 and Psal. 78. sleeping in their graves but it is evident that the soule cannot sleepe in the grave but the body only And Stephen delivered his Spirit to Christ. Object 2. Paul saith that if the body rise not we are of all men most miserable That it seemes cannot be true if the soule enjoy blessednesse without the body Sol. The immortality of the soule and the resurrection of the body are conjoyned For the Soule without the body can bee
he is not more unperfect in generation than any other creature for First the Virgin Mary did beare Christ-man in her wombe and Christ-man is said to be of the seed of the Virgin and yet his soule was created of God as hath beene shewed before Secondly though there bee some dissimilitude in the generation of man and of a beast yet it doth not follow that man is more unperfect As for instance The bea●t begets his young and brings him forth strong covered with a hide able to feed himselfe presently full of leaping and other actions But man brings forth an Infant weake crying naked unable to feed it selfe What is man therefore more unperfect No for the perfection of generation doth not consist of these things or in these things For here man excels all other living creatures in the world in generation because he is Gods instrument for the begetting of a body fit to be united to such a soule God also doth hereby commend the generation of man and dignifie it that he is pleased so to worke in mans generation as he doth not in any other creature vouchsafing to give unto mans generation such an admirable soule to his body For therefore was the creation of the first man more excellent than the creation of other creatures because God having framed his body of the dust of the earth did infuse such a soule into him Object 3. It is a peevish objection that some make thus If God create the soule in all men then when any is borne of Adulterie God should cooperate with the adulterer and so be either the author or the approver of sinne that will give the soule to such a wicked generation Sol. Some answer thus That God is not the author or approver because out of evill he onely workes good for his owne glory Others answer That God onely cooperates with the action not with the sinne of the action or the evill of the action or the evill which is in the will of the agents But the best answer is theirs that answer by a similitude thus The earth hath received her nature and vigour from God to nourish and bring forth the seede that is cast into it without difference whether the seed be lawfully taken out of the barne or stolne by fraud The stolne graine doth not cease to grow in the earth nor is it to be expected that nature should cast out such seed and yet the earth doth not justifie the action of him that stole the graine so is it with God that workes according to the grounds of nature and his owne decree and providence Hee is not to bee blamed for the evill of the action when hee workes according to the rules of nature and will glorifie himselfe by raising a frame of good out of that which by men was ill done Object 4. Wee see that children resemble the vertues or vices of their parents and therefore as from the bodies of their parents they receive a likenesse to them in body so is it that from their soules they receive this similitude of their vertues or vices Solut. Experience shewes that this is not alwaies true For many children have no resemblance in them of their parents qualities Secondly where this is true it is not because their soules are derived from the soules of their parents but they have it from the bodies of their parents For the soule after suffers from the sympathie with the bodie as by reason of certaine humours in the bodies of parents that incite wrath or griefe or lust or the like may come infection to the child but not from their soules Thirdly rather the argument may be retorted upon them that in asmuch as the soules of all children are not like in qualities to the soules of their parents that therefore they receive not their soules from their parents Ob. 5. Gen. 9. Lev. 17. The soule is said to bee in the blood Now it is evident that the blood is from the parents Solut. The soule is in the blood but how By the effect of it which is life otherwise the soule is neither devoured in the blood nor depends upon it in it selfe Ob. 6. It is said Gen. 2. That God rested from all his workes Now if hee did daily create new soules then he rested not from all his workes but continues creation still Solut. The meaning of Moses cannot be that God rested simply from all creation For then it must needs follow too that the soule of Christ was not created but propagated which cannot be true But his meaning is that hee rested from creation of things in specie hee made no more new sorts of things That hinders not creation in individuo which is a worke of God preserving those sorts he had made at the first by creating successively a new supply as in this case of the soules of men That God did not rest absolutely is plaine by the words of our Saviour Christ My Father worketh hitherto and I worke Ioh. 5. Hitherto of the originall of the soule The union of the soule with the body followes which is a consideration of no lesse difficulty than the former no lesse needfull to be knowne no lesse certaine That it is united to the body so as to make it one man is apparent by the words of God in the creation Hee breathed into him the breath of lives and so Adam became a living soule Hee became then a man or a living creature distinct from other creatures upon his conjunction of the soule with the body And by this union with the body doth the spirit of man differ from the Angels who are spirits separate and such as exist without relation to a body whereas the soule of man in the creation of it and the disposition of it also tends unto this conjunction with the body and doth not fully exercise it selfe living without the body and that is the reason why man is not absolutely perfect after death in his soule till the day of judgement For though the soule doe enjoy an estate free from sinne or paine or misery yet two of the faculties of the soule are without exercise till it be united againe to the body viz. the faculties of vegetation and sense which cannot be exercised but in the body The manner how the soule is united to the body is full of difficulty to expresse The question is whether the soule worke upon the body from without and so is by that meanes joyned to it or whether it be placed in the body and worke there and from thence This latter is the truth for the soule doth not worke from without which I shew by a comparison The light and the eye are joyned together in seeing But how The light from without extends it selfe to the eye and so is joyned to it so is not the soule joyned to the body but is seated within the body which appeares so partly by experience for we may all perceive that our thoughts
view of our owne naturall dispositions to bee able to discerne distinctly what it is the flesh usually is prone to or imployed in 2. We must bee sure to commit our selves to God and by faith lay hold upon Jesus Christ and settle our selves in our assurance for that cuts off many of the maine advantages of the flesh especially it quencheth all those hellish darts that arise from doubtings and despaire which is to discerne the flesh 3. Wee must quicken in us our hope of a better life for that will shew us so much glory to bee had in the service of Christ as all the motions of the flesh will seeme vaine in comparison wee are never allured by the lusts of the flesh but when wee have forgotten heaven or are destitute of the lively hope of it 4. We must bee sober in the use of outward things 1. Pet. 1.13 and remove from the flesh those things wee observe the flesh to bee apt to dally withall if the flesh could be divorced from the world there were little or no danger 5. We must with all readinesse upon all occasions entertaine all good motions any way cast into us by Gods Spirit for as those are set up and nourished the flesh is subdued and kept under 6. We must daily commit our selves and our soules to God by prayer and beseech him to keepe us and accordingly to begge strength to avoid those evils which by nature wee find our selves most prone to 2. Tim. 1.12 Now if the flesh notwithstanding doe on the sudden either provoked by the world or entised by the devill make assault and lust after evill things then in the conflict our armour must be 1. Contrary lustings Gal. 1.17 The Spirit must lust against the flesh by raising up holy desires and loathing of those base affections of the flesh 2. Prayer we must crucifie them drag them before the Crosse of Christ and there accuse them shame them judge them condemne them and begge vertue from the death of Christ to kill them 3. The Word of God For as Christ beat away the devill by alledging what was written so should wee get store of places of Scripture which wee might alledge to our owne hearts when wee are entised to any sinne and so the promises of the Gospel would bee as shooes to our feete that neither thorny care prick nor vaine pleasures defile us and so those promises are because they both shew us greater things then fleshly pleasures can bee and withall shew us such treasure in Christ as may free us from living in care Two rules are of excellent use for this purpose 1. To silence the flesh When it assaults not to suffer it to plead much but presently resist it 2. To looke to the beginnings of any corruption not to dallie with it and give it way upon pretence of safety for it may strangely provoke and beyond expectation if it bee not looked to at first After the conflict wee must remember two things 1. To give thanks to God for the help of his presence as accounting it a singular favour to be protected against so vile an enemy 2. To take heed of our security so to consider of present deliverance as to for more conflicts In the frft place it is profitable considering what reasons Christians have to be carefull of themselves and attend their soules in respect of the flesh For 1. This combate is a daily combate the warre is never at an end it is an adversary that never takes so much as a day of truce 2. There is no safety or help by running away for thy adversary is seated within thee and thou canst not runne from thy selfe 3. The flesh hath might and continuall aid from the divell and the world which almost with infinite variety of occasions ministers obstinacy to the flesh 4. For want of care many worthy Champions have beene for the time foiled shamefully as were Noah Lot David Peter and others 5. No Christian can avoyd it but hath this combate within him Gal. 5.17 And as these or the like reasons may breed care and watchfulnesse so hath the true Christian no cause of despaire but rather many arguments of hope of good successe and daily victories and triumphs over the flesh if he be watchfull For 1. God hath provided him of armour against those kindes of assaults and it is mighty to preserve and subdue 2. Cor. 10.3 4. 2. Christ in his power doth rest in us for this end to assist us in the combate as we cry for help 2. Cor. 12.10 3. We fight against an adversary hath beene often foiled by all sorts of Godly Christians and by our selves in divers particular combates yea against an adversary that hath received a deadly wound that cannot bee cured for so the flesh the first day of our conversion was mortified All that are Christs have mortified the flesh with the Insts thereof 4. Wee have assurance of victory if wee resist Rom. 8.38 5. An incorruptible Crown is laid up for all that overcome 2. Tim. 4.7 8. Re. 2. Now for the seventh point wee obtaine victory against the flesh divers waies as 1. In our justification when wee by faith obtaine the pardon of our sinnes committed and a righteousnesse able to cover us notwithstanding all the spite the flesh doth us This is our victory in Christ Rom. 7. 2. In our sanctification and so wee get victory 1. When we conquer some sins wholly so that we never commit them again 2. When we turne and subdue the power of the sins that remain so as they cannot reigne though they rebell 3. We shall have our finall and full victory in our glorification in the day of Christ when the flesh shall be utterly abolished for ever Now for the eighth point wee may knowe that wee are not at any time overcomne by these signes if we finde them in us 1. If wee judge our selves for all knowne sinnes so as there be no sin arising from the flesh but wee condemn it and keep our selves as men condemned in the flesh being grieved at the rebellion of the flesh in us Rom. 7.1 Pet. 4.7 2. If we hold fast our assurance of faith we are safe so long as we keep the faith 2. Tim. 4.7 3. If wee goe on in our Christian way or course and doe not give over the practice of knowne duties against the light of our consciences if we finish our course 2. Tim. 4.7 Use. The use of all should be First for information and so two waies for 1. It shewes the miseries of such persons as never feel this combate that have all quiet in them it is a signe the flesh and the divell rule all and there is no sanctified Spirit to resist 2. It shewes the folly of some godly persons that are troubled as if their states were not right because they finde such a combat in themselves whereas they should rather conclude the contrary that therefore there is some workmanship
subti●● Esau. This ought much to bee sought after by Christians that men may see their hearts by their words 2. Cor. 1.12 The sixt is profitablenes rendred in the end of this verse good works They lead a faire conversation that doe good and are helpfull to others and ready to shew any kindnes or mercy to any that live neere them or have occasion to use them This is an admirable prayse The use should be therefore to teach us to study how to adorne our conversation with such integrity and vertuous behaviour as may winne prayse and reputation to our profession especially we should at least shunne all those hatefull evils which by experience we finde to bee grievous and loathsome and are to be accounted as blemishes in our conversings being things as are in a speciall manner loathsome and provoke ill opinion in others as being against honesty and that faire conversation should bee found in us as First the sins of uncleannesse and whoredome and fornication and lasciviousnesse and filthy speaking Rom. 13.13 Eph. 5.3.4 Secondly the sins of drunkennes and riotousnes Rom. 13.13 1. Pet. 4.3 Thirdly the sinnes of passion malice wrath bitternesse clamour and evill speaking Eph. 4.31 Fourthly sinnes of deceit lying dissimulation and hypocrisie Fiftly pride statelinesse desire of vaine glory Gal. 5.26 Sixtly backbiting cōplaining censuring judging Mat. 7.1 Iam. 4. Gal. 5.13 Seventhly idlenesse and slothfulnesse 1. Thes. 4 11.12 Eighthly to bee a busie-body in other mens matters prying and inquiring and meddling with things that belong not to them 1. Thes. 4.11.12 1. Pet. 4. To which adde pratling and talkativenesse 1. Tim. 5.13 Ninthly such courses as have appearance of evill in them such are the use of vain apparell and wilfull resorting to persons and places that are of evill report Thus of the matter to which he exhorts The reasons follow why they should bee carefull of an honest and faire behaviour and first because they live among the Gentiles Among the Gentiles Those Gentiles were such as lived in their naturall idolatry the nations that had not received the Christian faith Those that think this Epistle was written onely to the provinciall Jews alledge the words of this verse to prove it for say they it was written to such as lived among the Gentiles and were no Gentiles and they only were the Jewes But this reason is of no force for those Gentiles that were converted to the Christian faith became Christians and so were no more Gentiles or Pagans And so these words may bee understood of all sorts of Christians that lived among the unconverted Gentiles whether they were in their naturall estate either Jewes or Pagans In that the Christians lived among the Gentiles and must by their faire conversation bee rightly ordered towards those Gentiles divers things may be observed First we may hence note how hard a thing it is to recover men from a false religion though their religion bee grossely absurd In this place whither the Gospell came we see multitudes of men remained Gentiles still and would not receive the Christian faith And this is the more to be noted if we either consider the reasons the Gentiles had to remain in their religion or the manifest causes they had to moove them to imbrace the Christian Religion For for their owne religion they might easily observe these things amongst many other First their palpable and sottish idolatry in worshipping so many gods and those so accounted to bee gods being many of them apparently but senselesse creatures as the Sunne Moon and Starres others of them but dead men and others of them such as of whom there was not the least colour or appearance of Divinity Secondly the most notorious wickednes of life which did every where abound in all the nations that were Pagans Rom. 1. Thirdly that they followed a religion that gave them no hope of a better life after death nor could describe any estate worth the desiring Fourthly there was no agreement among them what should be the chiefe good while they lived but men were carried according to the sensuall desires of their owne hearts On the other side for the Christian Religion they saw that the doctrine of it was every where prooved by miracles and that their owne Oracles in every place where the Gospel came were put to silence Besides they might observe that the Christian Religion did teach the most absolute way for holinesse of life and that the Christians did live the most unrebukeably of all others yea did with gladnes dye in the defence of their religion and further the Christian Religion did shew them the glory of heaven and discovered that certain estate of most blessed immortality Quest. But may some one say what might be the motives to the Gentiles to make them continue so obstinate Ans. There were chiefly five things which caused this obstinacy in the Gentiles The first was the tradition of their fathers forefathers thy would not forsake that religion which for so many hundred yeers their Ancestors had professed 1. Pet. 1.18 Secondly the God of this world did mightily labour to blinde their eyes that they might not understand the Gospell 2. Cor. 4.4 Thirdly they saw that the Christian Religion was persecuted in all places both by reproaches and martyrdome Fourthly they would not receive the Christian Religion because there were but few that professed it and that their wise men and great men of the world for the most part did reject it 1. Cor. 1. The last and chiefe reason was the love of their sins which they saw they must forgoe if they embraced the Christian Religion It was true also that the wickednesse of some hypocrites that crept in among Christians did make the way of God evill spoken of and many Gentiles to blaspheme Rom. 2. I might adde that the doctrine of Christs Passion was a scandall unto many Gentiles who accounted it as a foolish thing to beleeve him as a Saviour that could not save himselfe from so ignominious a death being willingly ignorant of the necessity of that oblation of Christ as the Surety and Sacrifice for our sinnes It is profitable to consider of the obstinacy of these Gentiles together with their motives for first we may see that they stood upon the same grounds in effect upon which the Papists do rest at this day for the Papists maine allegations are the traditions of Fathers and Fore-fathers together with the multitudes of people that follow their Religion but especially the consideration of the wofull estate of for●orne men should teach us with the more thankfulnesse to celebrate the prayse of Gods mercy to us that did subdue our natures and draw us out of blindnesse and wickednesse into the true Religion and into the kingdome of Jesus Christ. And Ministers should hence learne with patience to doe their worke and not to be discouraged though multitudes of people be not brought to the obedience of Christ. They must not look to
visible mortall and immortall passible and impassible passible on earth and impassible in heaven But we have learned from the Prophets and Apostles to beleeve three Persons and so to acknowledge that the second Person suffered onely and that in his humane nature Secondly we may hence learne that Christ was subject to the Law after a peculiar manner so as no other man was subject for he did not onely fulfill the Law by a most perfect obedience but he suffered the malediction and curse of the Law also Some men are subject to the malediction of the Law onely and so are all the wicked reprobates that obey it not Some men are subject to the Commandements of the Law and not to the malediction and so our first parents were while they continued in their innocency because God did not require them to suffer so long as they obeyed the Law and so all godly men in Christ are under the Law in respect of obedience but not in respect of malediction only Christ is subject to the malediction and obedience of the Law as our surety Thirdly hence we learne a plain demonstration of the truth of the humane nature of Christ He had not a fantasticall body but a true body because he did verily suffer in the flesh as followes afterwards Fourthly hence we may be informed of the excessively vile disposition of the world in that it is so set on wickednesse that the very Saviour of the world if he come into the world shall suffer from the world Fiftly we may hence learne that Christ suffered willingly and of his own accord For in that he that is God suffered it shewes he had power to preserve himselfe so as all the world could not have forced him to suffer and therefore we have cause so much the more to admire his love to us that suffered for our sakes as the next point will shew Sixtly we may hence learne to know how abominable sinne is that makes the Son of God suffer miserable things if he become a surety for sinne Seventhly we may hence learne to know the inevitable destruction and fearfull perdition of impenitent sinners For if God spared not his owne Sonne that was but a suretie for sinne and did none himselfe will hee ever spare them that are principals and monstrous offenders Eightly did even Christ suffer then we should evermore arme our selves with the same mind and provide to suffer in the flesh 1 Pet. 4.1 It is a shame for us to expect or desire a life of ease and prosperity seeing the Prince of our salvation was consecrated through afflictions Heb. 2.10 and 12.3 And the more should we be confirmed to suffer in willingnesse in this life because God hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his Sonne in sufferings Rom. 8.29 Lastly in that it was Christ that suffered we may hence gather comfort to our selves in his passion all the dayes of our life because his sufferings must needs be of infinite merit being the sufferings of him that is God as well as man Thus of the Person suffering The persons for whom he suffered follow For us The sufferings of Christ were not casuall such as befell him for no use nor were they deserved by himselfe For he never offended God nor did hee seeke his own peculiar good in them but he suffered all he did for our sakes Isa. 53.5 He was wounded for our transgressions the chastisement of our peace was laid upon him and verse 8. Hee was plagued for the transgression of Gods people and as the Apostle saith he was delivered to death for our sinnes and rose againe for our justification Rom. 4.25 Hee was sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5.7 He gave himselfe for us Ephes. 5.2 Now he suffered for us in divers respects as First to make satisfaction unto the justice of God for our sinnes and to appease the wrath of God toward us as the former places shew His sufferings were a sacrifice for sinne He bare the curses of the Law which were due to us Gal. 3.10 And thus he paid our ransome and pacified God especially in his death and buriall He nayled the hand-writing that was against us to his crosse Col. 2.15 And as Ionas was cast into the bowels of the sea to still the raging of it so was Christ cast into the bowels of the earth to make the seas of Gods wrath quiet for us Secondly he suffered as to make satisfaction for our sinnes so together with that satisfaction to remove from us the many miseries might have falne upon us for our sinnes Thus he was judged and condemned at the barre of Pilate that we might be acquirted at the barre of God He endured all sorts of paines and torments in soule and body that wee might be delivered from eternall torments in hell He died that hee might deliver us from death and the feare of it and from him which had the power of death which is the divell Heb. 2.13 He was crucified that he might abolish the power of sinne in us Rom. 6.10 Thirdly he suffered for us that so by his sufferings he might merit the supply of our wants and the possession of happinesse Hee suffered to make us blessed Thus he died to ratifie the eternall counsell Heb. 9.15.16.17 He was poore to make us rich 2 Cor. 8.9 He was bound to make us free Hee was unclothed to cover our nakednesse He was forsaken of God for a time that we might be received to everlasting mercy Hee was crowned with a crowne of thornes that he might merit for us a crowne of glory Hee found no mercy from the Priests and Jewes that we might finde sure mercy with God He was cast out of the earthly Jerusalem and suffered without the gates that he might provide a place for us in the heavenly Jerusalem Fourthly he suffered for us in this that he suffered that so he might have a sympathy of our sufferings and have a feeiing of our miseries He suffered being tempted that he might be able to secure us being tempted Heb. 2.17 18. and 4.15 The consideration hereof may serve for divers uses Uses First it should breed in us an admiration of the love of Christ to us that could ever be willing to become surety for us and suffer for us especially considering what we were viz. unjust men 1 Pet. 3.18 wicked men Rom. 5.6 enemies to him Rom. 5.8 10. That one should die for a good or righteous man or for one that is a common good for or to other men is very rare But it might be Ionathan might die for David or a subject be willing to die for a good Prince about no man would die for his enemies as Christ died for us Secondly it should worke in us sorrow and hearty griefe for our sins wee should now mourne as heartily for piercing Christ by our sinnes as if we had lost an only childe c. We complaine of the Jewes and Iudas and Pilate for
conversation in the world but have no taste of religion or conscience of zeale for Gods glory fourthly all open worldlings that minde not heavenly things and savour nothing but the things of this world and lastly all hypocrites that make a shew of mortification and yet are not mortified and then suppose how small a number will be left in every place to be reckoned in this lift of true Christians Doct. 2. Mortification is the very first step of grace and the entrance into all power of godlinesse Till our sins be soundly crucified and dead no worke of Religion that is acceptable to God can be done and therefore Iohn Baptist and Christ and the Apostles call for repentance as the first thing that opens a way into the kingdome of heaven because else sin unrepented like a prison will infect all wee doe Esay 1.13 to 16. Besides the heart of man being naturally like a stone or iron till it be softned no impression of grace can be fastned upon it and if the ground of our hearts be not well plowed up the seed of the Word cannot but be lost Ier. 4.4 The seed cast upon the high way will be picked up by the fowles of the aire and not grow or if any seed or plant of grace did grow for a while in the heart yet the weeds of sin would overgrow and choake all as is evident in seed sowne i● thorny ground or plants set in ground that is not digged and weeded And f●●ther while the person is evill the worke will be vile and abominable An evill tree can●ot bring forth good fruit And therefore this shewes that such Christians as leape into the profession of Religion so easily and thinke it is no more but to give-ov●r ill courses and fall to the practice of good duties are deceived for if by ●ound mortification their sins past be not bewailed and they soundly humbled either their sins will after a while grow and revive againe or else the conscience of these sins will secretly throughout their lives torment them or else the Divell on a sudden may seize upon them with de●paire having so manifest a reason against them that they did never practise mortific●tion for their sins Besides lamentable experience shewes in those places where Christians are not soundly formed at first in the exercise of mortification they leade their lives in a dull course of profession and have not the experience of the life and power of Religion in themselves for the joyes of it or towards others in the practice of it The mourners in Sion and such as are broken-hearted are the most glorious and the most fruitfull Christians Is. 61.1 2 3 4. and continue in the greatest power of Religion And further it may be noted in the best of those that their separation from the love of the world is most really performed as hath appeared when in any speciall workes of men or for the help of the Church of God they are called upon to shew their zeale by their bounty in such cases one poore Macedonian would shame a hundred of those rich Corinthians 2 Cor. 8. Doct. 3. True repentance for sin doth in divers respects kill a man it strikes him dead to repent is to be a dead man not only in respect of the world which casts off a man that will not run in the excesses of the time as a dead man indeed Col. 3.3 but in respect of themselves For first by the assise a man must keep upon himselfe he will be found dead by sentence when he judgeth himselfe before the Lord he stands as a man condemned in the flesh he sentenceth himselfe to eternall death for his deserts by confessing what he meriteth 1 Pet. 4.6 Now a condemned man is reckoned for a dead man in Law Secondly repentance destroyes the senses and affections and conceits and reason that were wont to be alive in men it dissolves the very frame of the old conversation The word rendred dead signifies to undoe what was done about the life of man to unmake him as I may say so as all the old things passe away and all becomes new 2 Cor. 5.17 Rom. 6.6 1 Iohn 3.8 In the new Convert there is not left the savour sent lust or affections after sin and the sinfull profits and pleasures of the world he doth not find that inflammation or inticement he was wont to feele from evill example or the glory of the world or evill compa●y or the things before he most esteemed and delighted in Thus he is dead to himselfe because he denies himselfe and could be well contented to forget that ever he had beene such as he was before Thirdly in some of Gods children their repentance is performed with such griefe and sorrow as brings their life almost to the buriers as is noted Iob 33.19 20 21. Fourthly they may be said to be dead in repenting because repentance is never fully finished till their naturall death sin sticks so fast as they have daily cause of mortification in some degree and it will never be gotten wholly out till they be indeed dead men though in the mean time God accepts of their first repentance as if it were perfect This Doctrine serves effectually to discover the estate of multitudes of Christians not to be right as they That doe nothing at all about their sins That excuse their sins and hide them and favo●r them and cast the fault upon others Pro. 28.13 Gen. 3. Iob 20.11 12 13. That blesse themselves in their hearts when their iniquity is found worthy to be hated Psal. 36.2 That haunt with such persons as may make them sin more That say It is no profit to walke humbly before the Lord Mal. 3.14 and rather blesse the proud That hate and revile such as are mortified That are dead rather in faith and good workes and finde a deadly savour in the Word That have sense and savour onely in the things of the flesh Secondly this should teach all that mind their owne salvation to looke carefully to the truth of their mortification and not to thinke it is such a sleight and easie worke but to consider that in repenting for sinne they must never cease till they be like Christ dying for sinne and that is in the sense before given So our bearing of the similitude of Christs death in our repentance notes divers particular things in our repentance as 1. That our sorrowes be voluntary not inforced he gave his life it was not taken from him we must not tarry till the Divell fire us with the terrors of despaire 2. That we be pained at the very heart for our sins so was Christ it must be a hearty griefe 3. That wee shew forth the fruits of our repentance so hee suffered openly 4. That he suffered by degrees and ceased not till he died so must we by degrees resist sin and never cease untill it be quite abolished Hence also we may know whether we have truely
repented It is a signe of true mortification when 1. A man hath seriously condemned himselfe before God for his sin 2. When he feeles the wonted violence of affections after sinne and the world to be deaded and his heart growne dull and out of taste in matters of sin and the world He is crucified that hath his lusts and affections crucified Gal. 5.24 3. That he is weary of life is selfe by reason of the remainders of sin in his flesh Rom. 7. 4. That hath felt as sensible sorrowes for his sinnes as he was wont to doe for his crosses sorrowes I say that are voluntary and for sinne as it is sinne Do●t 4. The Passion of Christ is the best medicine to kill sin in us he died that we might die to sin There is a vertue in the death of Christ to kill sin Rom. 6. Now the death of Christ may be said to kill sin First in respect of the guilt of sin Christ in his death paid all that was needfull for satisfaction and ●o destroyed the imputation of it and stilled the clamour of it It cannot cry against us in heaven because God is fully satisfied and the bond discharged and cancelled the plea of our sins died in the Passion of Christ. Secondly in respect of the hatefulnesse of it or the demonstration of the hatefulnesse of it The Passion of Christ gives all men occasion to see how unworthy sin is to live that made him die when it was only imputed to him and not done by him Thirdly in respect of the power of it in us actually There is a secret vertue in the wounds of Christ to wound sin and in the death of Christ to kill sinne and therefore the Scripture speakes not only of the merit but of the vertue of his death Rom. 6. Phil. 3. which vertue is secretly derived unto the penitent sinner by the ordinances of Christ his Word Prayer and Sacraments Uses The Use should be for triall men may know whether as yet they have any part in the death of Christ by inquiring whether they be dead in their sins First they have no interest in the merit of his death that have not experience of the vertue of his death in killing their corruptions Secondly for instruction When godly men find any corruption begin to be too strong for them they must flye to Christ for this medicine and then there is no sin so strong in them but by constant prayer to Christ for the vertue of his death will be subdued if they pray in faith Prayer gets the medicine and faith applies it to the disease Doct. 5. True mortification doth not encounter one sin only but sins in the plurall number and indefinitely It notes that in true repe●tance there is a respect had to amendment of all sins To amend only one or two faults is not true repentance for he that is truely dead is dead to sins there is no sin but the true Convert desires and endeavours to be rid of it so far as hee knowes it to be a sin Her●d did mend in some things but yet was not sound because in one sin he minded no repentance And this point doth give an infallible rule of triall of mens estates in Christ for no wicked man on earth doth so much as in true desire forsake all sin There be some corruptions he knowes that he would upon no conditions part with To desire and endeavour to be rid of all sins is an infallible mark of a child of God Doct. 6. Mortification makes a man dead only to sins it doth not make him of a dead and lumpish disposition in doing good duties Heb. 9.14 nor doth it require that it should destroy his nature or naturall temper or the parts of his body but his sin only nor doth it kill his contentment in the creatures of God and the use of lawfull things nor doth it destroy his liberty in lawfull delights and recreations it kils his sin only Might live unto righteousnesse These words containe the second effect of Christs death and passion viz. the raising of us unto a righteous life his death makes us live and live righteously Divers Doctrines may be hence observed Doct. 1. First that men truely mortified shall live happily These dead men will live there is no danger in great sorrow and the other workes of mortification It kils sin but the soule lives by that meanes He is sure to live that is dead to his sins Rom. 8.13 Esay 26.19 1 Pet. 4.6 Ezek. 18. Hos. 14.2 The reasons are first because God hath promised comfort to such as mourne for sin Mat. 5.4 Pro. 14.10 Secondly Christ hath a speciall charge given him to looke to those mourners that they miscarry not Esay 61.1 2 3. Thirdly they are freed from eternall death they cannot be condemned 1 Cor. 11.31 32. Iob 33.27 28. Fourthly because the fruit of the lips is peace to these they are ever after interessed in the comforts of the Word Esay 57. 15 18. Fiftly the nature of godly sorrow is only to tend to repentance it is worldly sorrow that tends to death 2 Cor. 7.10 Sixtly they that are conformed to the similitude of Christs death by mortification shall be conformed to Christs life by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 6.5 8 11. Uses The Use may be first for confutation of such as think that mortification is a way full of danger and makes many men come to great extremities whereas they may here see there is no danger in it Hellish terrours and despaire and some kinde of diseases may make strange effects in some men but never was any hurt by godly sorrow for sin if we will beleeve the Scriptures and therefore it should incourage men to fall to worke soundly about searching their wayes and confessing their sins and judging themselves in secret for their sinnes Iames 4.7 2 Cor. 7.10 11. But here men must looke to some few rules First that they see the warrant of the course in the Word and know the places that require these duties that they lay up such promises made to the duties of mortification as may uphold their hearts in the practice of them Thirdly that they refuse not consolation but when they have found true humiliation for their sins and comfort from God in his ordinances that they turne their sorrow into joy and their prayers into thanksgiving and spend their dayes alwayes rejoycing in the Lord. Doct. 2. It is not enough to die to sinne unlesse wee also live to righteousnesse it is not enough to forsake our sinnes but wee must spend our dayes in good workes we are so charged to cease to doe evill as withall we are charged to learne to doe well Esay 1.16 we must bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life as well as confesse our sinnes Matth. 3.8 A man will cut downe his fig-tree for want of good fruit though it beare no ill fruit Luke 13.6 It will not please any
hearts break that is they let the doctrine runne out and never thinke of it when they are gotten out of the Church Heb. 2.1 Or else they have resisted the light of the truth so long that God hath now delivered them over to a spirit of slumber lest they should convert and he should heal them Mat. 13.15 16. Isa. 6.10 Secondly in some the world is the cause of it For either they are entangled with the examples of the multitude especially of the wise Ones and great Ones of the world 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28. Or else they are affrighted with the evill reports with which the good way of God is disgraced in the world Act. 28.22 Or else they are insnared with respect of their carnall friends they are loth to displease father or mother or sisters or brothers or any they have great hopes from or dependance upon Mat. 10.35 37. 1 Pet. 4.2 Or else they have so much businesse to doe and so many cares about their worldly affaires they cannot be at leisure ●o long as to thi●ke they cannot bring their lives into order Mat. 13.22 Luke 17. Or else they live at hearts-ease and prosper in their estate and so desire not to alter their course of life and so their prosperity destroyes them Pr● 1.32 Thirdly in some men the cause is the lust after some particular wickednesse of life in which they live either secretly or openly which sinne is the very Idol of their hearts and hinders a good resolution Fourthly in some the cause is conceitednesse they are pure in their owne cic● and yet are not cleansed they rest in the outward profession of religion and the feare of godlinesse and regard not the sound power of it in their lives Lastly in all unregenerate men there are three causes why they are not perswaded to a religious life First the one is the forgetfulnes of their death therefore their filthinesse is still in their skirts because they remember not their latter end Lam. 1.9 Secondly the other is that they are dead in sin What should hinder the conversion of multitudes at once but that we preach to congregations of dead men Thirdly the divell workes effectually in all the children of disobedience striving to hide the Gospel from them and the glory of a righteous life that so they might perish 1 Cor. 4.4 And thus of the second Use. Use 3. Thirdly such as consent to obey and feele themselves raised from death to life and are now desirous to spend their daies in a religious and righteous course of life must observe all such rules as may further them and establish them in an orderly and fruitfull conversation Hee that would live in righteousnesse must thinke on these directions following as the very gates of righteousnesse First he must give over all needlesse conversation with vaine persons and profane men hee must shunne their company as he would such as have the plague running upon them hee must not come neere them as is urged Pro. 14.15 For what fellowship can bee between righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse 2 Cor. 6.14 Depart from me ye evill doers saith David for I will keep the commandements of my God Psal. 119.115 Secondly he must redeeme time he must buy time from his worldly occasions and settle such an order in his worldly estate or outward estate that he may provide to serve the Lord without distraction abstayning from all things that may intangle him or interrupt him Eph. 5.16 1 Cor. 7.29 35. and 9.28 2 Tim. 2.4 He must provide to him time for Gods service and for commerce and fellowship with the godly and for works of mercy Thirdly he must be wise for himselfe that is he must in all the meanes hee useth for or in religion especially apply what hee can for his owne use and study himselfe and to understand his owne way and provide whatsoever he doe for his justification and sanctification and finall salvation Pr● 9. 12. and 14.8 And to this end he must meddle with his owne businesse and take heed of being a busie-body in other mens matters so much as in his thoughts 1 Thes. 4.11 12. And he must also avoid vaine janglings and doubtfull disputations in religion and quarrels that tend not to his edification but to shew wit or science Tit. 3.9.1 Tim. 6.20.2 Tim. 2.23 And he must keep his eye straight upon the mark to proceed directly and distinctly in building himselfe up in knowledge and grace not losing his time or going about but keeping a straight path to supply what he wants and grow in what he hath Pro 4.25 Ier. 31.32 Hee must take heed of uncertaine running but bee sure to take accounts of himselfe for all his courses to see that hee goe very straight towards the mark and finally hee must not respect company to goe the pase of other men but run as if hee alone were to obtaine striving to excell 1 Cor. 9.24 and 14 12. Fourthly he must esteeme the Word above all treasures Psal. 119.72 Mat. 1● and take hold of the instruction thereof as that must bee the very life of his life Pro. 4 1● For by the Word doth God sanctifie us and make us righteous Ioh. 17. And he must order his whole course of life so as that he may see the meanes of all his actions from the Word he must live by the rules of Scripture that will live righteously Gal. 6.16 Now that he may doe thus he must looke to divers things First that he place no confidence in the flesh neither trusting upon his owne wit nor carnall reason nor gifts nor yet yeelding himselfe to be a servant to any mans humour or opinions or example or commandement Secondly he must provide to live so as he suffer not a famine of the powerfull preaching of the Word hee must labour for the meat that perisheth not Ioh. 6.27 and so exercise himselfe in the Word morning and evening that the Word may dwell plenteously in him Psal. 1.2 Col. 3.16 Thirdly he must take heed of adding any more sinnes or duties than are discovered in the Word and of detracting from any thing that is forbidden or required there Psal. 30.6 detesting conceitednesse and singularity having his conversation in all meeknesse of wisedome Iam. 3.13 Fiftly he must daily lift up his heart to God to seeke a way of him whose glory it is to teach to profit and who giveth his Spirit to lead men in the paths of righteousnesse Psal. 23. Esay 48.17 Sixtly he must remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it For this will be both the meanes and the signes of his sanctification and true righteousnesse It is the market day for the soule Esay 58.13 14. Exod. 31.13 c. Seventhly he must haste to the comming of Christ hee must dispatch his worke as fast as he can and to this end he must cast about to finde out waies of well-doing and when he hath any projects or opportunities of well-doing he must not
3.9 Phil. 2.2 3. 5. Men miserably neglect thankfulnesse to God for the good they receive daily from his mercies Col. 3.17 6. Many faile publikely and shamefully in want of care to come time enough to Gods service Zech. 8.21 Esay 60.8 In these things Christians should be admonished to mind their wayes and their workes and to strive to walke as becommeth the Gospel and the death of Christ that they may hold fast the light of the truth and shew out better the glory of a Christian life And thus of living to righteousnesse Now followes the third forme of speech By whose stripes we are healed The healing of our sicknesses is reckoned as another fruit of the Passion of Christ or else it is the same with the former exprest in other words These words then are borrowed from the Prophet Esay ch 53.5 who doth chiefely understand the spirituall healing of our soules of our sins as the coherence shewes in the Prophet but yet the Evangelist saith Mat. 8.17 and understands of the healing of our bodies also And therefore I consider of the death of Christ both in respect of soule and body And first as this healing is referred to the soule divers Doctrines may be observed Doct. 1. The soules of all men are diseased by nature even the very soules of the Elect are so till they be healed by Christ. The soule is diseased divers wayes especially by sorrowes and sins it is the disease by sin is here meant Quest. It would be inquired how the soule comes to be sick of these diseases and why sin is called sicknesse in the soule Ans. This spirituall sicknesse comes into the soule by propagation Adam hath infected all his posterity and every man hath increased the diseases of his nature by his owne wilfull transgressions Now sin is called sicknesse because it doth worke that upon the soule which sicknesse doth upon the body for sin hath weakned the strength of the soule in all the faculties of it which all men may discerne and observe in themselves by nature Besides it causeth spottednesse and deformity in the soule as sicknesse doth in the body and therefore sin was likened to the leprosie in the Law Further it often causeth pain and torment in the soule as wounds and diseases do in the body for there is no peace to the wicked especially when God fighteth against them with his terrours Besides it will cause the death of the soule as sicknesse will of the body if it be not helped and so men are said to be dead in sins Use. The Use may be to shew the fearfull negligence of worlds of people that are exceeding carefull to help their bodies to health but never think of the poore soule that lieth lamentably full of diseases And withall it shewes that all wicked men are men of ill natures because their dispositions are all diseased though there be degrees of ill nature or of this evill in men natures as there is difference of sicknesses in mens bodies And godly men should be compassionate when they see the grievous diseases in the natures and lives of other men remembering that they also were by nature subject to the same diseases as well as they Doct. 2. The diseases in the soules of men by nature are very grievous which is here also implied in that God was faine to send his owne Son to help and heale us Now that the diseases of mens soules are so grievous may appeare many wayes First because such a multitude of men are infected not some one person in the whole world in the body of mankind not on some part but from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot all full of sores and diseases There is no man that sinneth not and so no man that is not sick and that is the reason why men feare the pestilence because it makes so many sicke Secondly because the soule of man by nature is sicke of a multitude of diseases at once for even sin is a sicknesse and so our sicknesses are innumerable because our sins are so And hence it is that in Scripture so many metaphors are used to expresse the sicknesse of the soule as leprosie wounds plagues poyson gall c. Thirdly because the disease lieth in the soule it selfe Of diseases those are most mortall that get into the spirits and doe most enfeeble man how much more when it is in the soule Fourthly because in respect of our selves our sins or our diseases are incurable we can give our selves no remedy that can help us Ier. 30. Fiftly because in the Colledge of spirituall Physicians there is scarce one of a thousand that can help the poore soule out of these diseases Iob 33. Sixtly because there be but certaine seasons onely in which men can be healed as it was with the lame man at the poole of Bethesda and if men misse these seasons they are in danger to dye of these sicknesses There be seasons of grace and dayes of salvation and men must not harden their hearts while it is called To day Use. The Use should be to awaken wicked men to a serious consideration of their danger and at length to thinke of helpe for their soules being thus diseased as they would doe for their bodies if they were desperately sicke Ob. We feele no such diseases in our soules Sol. First wicked men have a kinde of spirituall lethargie upon them and so are in grievous danger but by reason of their spirituall sleepinesse they feele it not Secondly though they feele not their diseases now they shall doe hereafter and then thinke what a paine it will be unto them when God awakens them whether they will or no. It may be it will be in this life as it was with Cain and Iudas and then a wounded spirit will ake so who can beare it Thirdly the matter is not altogether so easie with wicked men as they pretend f●r they doe feele so much as may shew they are very sicke Sometimes they feele their consciences galling and paining them at the very heart for the time and what are the passions and perturbations of their soules but as so many fits of●a Feaver And that they are grievously sicke may appeare by the want of their spirituall senses they can hardly see or heare any thing Besides they may know they are sicke by the potions of afflictions which God gives them who doth nothing in vaine Doct. 3. That in Christ the diseases of our soules may be healed Esay 53.5 Mal. 4.2 Luke 4.18 He is a sure Physician for our soules God hath undertaken it that he will cure and heale us he challengeth it as a glory to himselfe which he executes by Christ Iob 5.17 18. Deut. 32.39 Now in as much as our diseases may be healed by Christ and that he is our Physician appointed by God we may gather many arguments of great comfort even from hence that he is the Physician First because
sheepe Fourthly he that lives without God and Christ that can spend whole daies and nights without any communion with God yea that when he is present before God finds his heart continually carried with wandring distractions that constantly draw him away from all inward attendance upon God Ephes. 2.12 Esay 29.13 he erres in his heart Psal. 95.10 Fiftly he that hath no other companions of his life but swine and wilde beasts that is wicked men of all sorts especially when it is joyned with willing neglect and shunning of the society of the godly Psal. 5. 2 Cor. 6. Sixtly he that tastes nothing but earthly things and findes no savour in spirituall things it is a signe that he is out of the pasture and feeds in the wildernesse Rom. 8. 1 Iohn 2.18 Seventhly he that when he is told he is out of the way blesseth himselfe in his heart when it is plainely found that he openly wandereth Psal. 36.1 2. Deut. 29.19 Eighthly he that lives in any of the grosse sins expressely mentioned in the Catalogue in Scripture without repentance as swearing Com. 3. adultery covetousnesse drunkennesse railing extortion 1 Cor. 6.9 or the knowne sins of deceit Micah 6.10 Ninthly he that doth his workes of purpose to be seene of men resting only in the praises of men not seeking the praise of God Mat. 6. Rom. 2.26 Tenthly he that knowes not Gods wayes especially if he desire nor knowledge or entertaine wilfull objections against the meanes of knowledge Psal. 95.10 Eleventhly they that spend their zeale in meeting with other mens infirmities neglecting sound reformation in themselves It is the wisedome of the prudent to understand his owne wayes but to be a busie-body in other mens matters is erring and the folly only of fooles Pro. 14.8 Every busie-body is out of the way The Doctrines follow and so divers things may be observed out of these words Doct. 1. Even godly men before their calling were out of the way as lost sheep as well as others Ephes. 2.2 Tit. 3.3 Which should serve first to set out the riches of Gods free grace as the only first cause of the happinesse and salvation of the Elect. Secondly it should teach the godly divers duties both toward God other men and themselves As for God they should live to his prayse and spend their dayes in magnifying his great compassions in their deliverance that deserved so ill at his hands And withall it should teach them to put all their trust in God seeing they carry about them a nature that hath beene apt to wandring and therefore have cause to mistrust themselves And for other men that are out of the way they should pity them and carry themselves with all meeknesse and charity remembring what themselves have beene Tit. 3.1 2 3. And for themselves they should be the more humble and abased hating all pride and conceitednesse and contempt of others Doct. 2. A man may be a sheep and yet lost Not only Dogs Goats Swine Lyons c. may be out of the way but even sheep may wander and be clean lost Men of harmlesse natures and such as are profitable members of humane societies and such as are of a gentle disposition and free from grosse offenses yet may be utterly lost and cleane out of the way of happinesse and if they returne not by repentance may perish for ever And this is a point which should marvellously affect civil-honest men and move them at length to see the weake vanity of their confidence in their prayses for civillity of nature or life This is a doctrine very hardly entertayned by this sort of men and the rather because they think they want nothing unto the prayse of a good life never considering that they are not religious though they be civill and that they have a world of inward impurities though they are free from outward grosse uncleannesse of life and that they never felt the joyes of the holy Ghost to approove of them though they have beene tickled with the prayses of men and that they have not sought or desired the assurance of Gods favour or a better life but spend their time in a still dreame without providing for what is most necessary and that they never serve ●od not have had any sociable fellowship with him in any of his Ordinances in respect of the inward power of them Doct. 3. To breake out from the meanes of Religion and from the society of godly Christians is the very way to undo many a soule A sheep is 〈◊〉 when it is gotten from sheep and is out of the pasture and hath no discreet shepheard to take the care of it Thus of the first part that is mans misery by nature The meanes of recovery out of that misery followeth and that is noted in the word Returne Where first may be observed that wicked men may returne It is not impossible for men that have spent a 〈…〉 lives in sinne and vanity at the length to be saved And it is the first part of a mans work that would return to inform himselfe seriously of 〈◊〉 ●●●●ments that may proove that he may bee helped out of his misery The fi●●t thing a diseased man inquires after is whether his disease be curable or no. Now there are divers things that give hope of curing and salvation even to men that are as yet cleane out of the way as First the disposition of God towards sinners which appears first because he sweares he desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he should return and live Ezech. 18.21 Secondly he is patient and hath been with thee all this while and he is therefore patient that men might repent and be saved Rom. 2.4 2 Pet. 3.9 Thirdly he hath declared himselfe to be willing to forgive all sinnes but only the sinne against the holy Ghost One sinne only is unpardonable all other sinnes may be forgiven Secondly the sufficiency of the sacrifice of Christ He is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Iohn 1. Rom. 3.25 Thirdly the worke of Gods grace already shewed unto them For first God hath placed them in the visible Church where repentance and salvation may be had Secondly he hath bestowed upon them many temporall blessings to allure them to seeke to him for mercy Thirdly he causeth the Gospell to be preached to all sorts of men without exception And so grace is offred to them and there is no other let but their refusall of grace offred Fourthly the example of all sorts of sinners that have returned As great sinners as they have beene received to mercy and they are set out as examples to encourage other men to seeke mercy as Manasses Mary Magdalen David Peter Paul and others Many among the Corinthians have beene notorious offenders but were justified and sanctified The explication of the doctrine of returning followes where these things are to be considered of First the motives to perswade men to returne
cloake of malice five wayes 470 How Christian Libertie is a cloake of malice in things indifferent 472 Cases in things indifferent wherein Christian Libertie is vilely abused 473 Life Live How we may live like Gods children 13 A religious Life is the best Life 541 Naturall Life but a meane thing in divers respects 649 The degrees of a spirituall Life 650 Whence it hath its originall even from God and that in three respects 651 Divers things nourish this spirituall Life 654 It differs from eternall Life in many wayes 657 Mans Life is grasse 193 Excellent uses of it 193 194 What we must doe to attain eternall Life 661 A Christians helps hereto 662 Sixe signes of it 663 Five properties of it 664 What duties this Life should imprint in us ibid. For what reasons men should take off their affections from the love of this Life 698 699 In what cases some men may be in love with this Life 702 Mans Life short in what respects and why 705 The uses of it 706 Light The acceptation of the word Light 342 Gods servants are brought into great Light ibid. Excellent instruction and consolation drawne from it 342 343 In how many respects the Light of the godly is called A marvellous Light 343 344 Excellent uses thereof 344 Love Seven signes of the Love of Christ in the sparkle and seven more in the flame 71 What we must doe to get that Love 72 Seven things to be observed to keepe our hearts in this Love ibid. Christs Love to the godly 332 How many wayes the people of God are Gods only beloved ones 361 How to preserve this Love ibid. How we should shew our Love to the Brotherhood 477 Nine signes of unfained Love 180 The impediments of brotherly Love 181 Seven signes of fervent Love 182 Nine causes of the want of it 183 What to doe that we may have and hold it ibid. Reasons to perswade to the Love of the Brethren 680 With what kind of Love we ought to love them 681 Rules for it 682 Three caveats to be looked unto in loving our Brother 683 Lusts. The sorts of Lusts which must be hatefull unto us after our Calling 114 Eight reasons why we should avoyd Lusts after our Calling ibid. Foure preservations against Lusts 115 Lusts how to be avoyded 362 Three differences of Lusts in the godly and wicked 363 Helpes to avoid them ibid. Lusts are fleshly in divers respects 365 How Lusts hurt the soules of godly and wicked men both 366 How we may get victory over our Lusts 387 How we may know that we have gotten this victorie ibid. M MAdnesse Signes of spirituall Madnesse 460 Magistrates They are to be submitted to 424 This submission hath in it sixe things 425 Objections against it answered 427 428 We must be subject to all sorts of Magistrates 428 429 In what things Magistrates are not to be obeyed 431 In what matters Ecclesiasticall Magistrates have no power ibid. In what he hath power 432 Whether we must obey Magistrates in things unlawfull 437 Divers motives in God to move man to the obedience of Magistrates 438 Excellent uses of the point 439. c. In what cases not fit to complaine to the Magistrates 529 Malice It s acceptation 203 Signes of it and reasons against it ibid. Remedies 204 Aggravations of it ibid. Men may use the libertie as a cloake of Malice five wayes 470 Man He is but grasse 193 194 c. His glory vaine in sixe respects 196 What his true glory is 197 Manifest Manifestation Christ manifested five wayes 153 We must shew our affection to this his Manifestation foure wayes 153 154 Marriage Sixteene motives for man and wife to live together quietly and comfortably in Marriage 576 Masters The originall of Masters 492 Signes of good Masters 493 Reasons against frowardnesse in Masters 494 Signes of good Masters 495 Meditation Rules for Meditation 289 Meeknesse It is shewed in foure things 330 What things are requisite to Meeknesse 613 Motives to it ibid. c. Helps to attaine to Meeknesse 616 Mercy Gods Mercy abundant 32 33 It ought not to be any cause of libertie either to the godly or wicked 33 Whether the Lord shewes any Mercy to the wicked 33 34 Shewed foure wayes● 331 What sorts of people God will not be mercifull unto 352 What wicked men in particular are not under Mercy 354 Why many obtaine not Mercy 355 Foure properties of Gods Mercy 356 It is tender many wayes ibid. It is free many wayes ibid. c. Eternall 357 Nine effects of it 358 Excellent uses of it 358 359 Helps to obtaine mercy 359 What Bowells of Mercy doth import 683 Milke The word called Milke in many respects ●30 Excellent uses thereof 231 ●32 Mind Vide Unitie Our Minds must be rightly ordered 6●4 For what reasons we ought to be all of one Mind ibid. Minister This word Minister sounds Servic● 89 Miserie All Miserie referred to 〈◊〉 heads ● of 〈◊〉 ● Of 〈◊〉 3. Of adversities 4. Of death 77 The remembrance of our past Miserie is profitable in sixe respects 338 Mortification None but mortified Christians are true Christians 536 Repentance for sin doth in divers respects kill a man 538 Signes of Mortification 539 Men truely mortified shall live happily 540 N NAme Of a good and evill Name Vide Report Nature The naturall condition very miserable many wayes 608 New Newnesle The necessitie and honour of our New birth 32 The meanes of the New birth 34 The lets ibid. Foure signes of it 35 Uses of it 35 36 Speciall duties of such as are new borne 229 Priviledges of such ibid. Speciall-signes of a New heart 415 A New behaviour discovered divers wayes 416 Why repentance is called a New birth 184 Why we had need to be put in mind of our New birth 185 Lets of it ibid. O OBedience What the causes of it with sixe rules for it 19 Motives to it 20 Of obedience in word● ibid. Our Obedience must be the Obedience of children in sixe respects 113 Our Obedience to God a speciall sign● of his feare 482 Sixe things required to 〈◊〉 sound Obedience 588 The extent of our Obedience in respect of times truths places and persons 176 177 How 〈◊〉 may know their Obedience to be right 177 In 〈◊〉 things the Spirit worketh 〈◊〉 Obedience ibid. P PArents How many wayes children are infected by the traditions of their Parents 142 Why they are so infectious ibid. Seven rules for Parents ordering their children ibid. c. Passeover The manifold passages concerning the sprinkling of the Passeover expounded 25 26. c. Patience It is to be shewed foure wayes 331 People Many sorts of People in Scripture 346 Why wicked men are said not to be a People ibid. Who are not Gods People 347 Men are Gods people three wayes 348 The miserie of those that refuse their calling to be Gods People 337 How Gods people excell all others 349 The uses thereof 350 Rules for Gods People
of the people Matth. 15.31 Luk. 7.16 so the contemplation of such great workes may worke the same effect in us and the same effect also may the thoughts of the workes of Gods speciall justice or mercy have Ezek. 38.23 Esa. 13.13 especially the consideration of those workes of favour or deliverance by which God hath declared his speciall goodnesse unto us Gen. 19.19 1 Chron. 17.24 David also clotheth the thoughts of God with glory greatnesse in his heart by thinking of the monuments of Gods wonderfull Power and Wisedome in the heavens earth and seas c. Psal. 104.1 c. yea by thinking of his owne forming and making in the wombe Psal. 139.15 Thirdly wee must pray earnestly to God with Moses and begge this of God that he would shew us his glory Thus also of the third thing The next thing is to learne how to establish the thought of Gods glory in us and this is done especially two waies First by striving to set God alwaies before us as David did Psal. 16.8 Secondly by remembring God in all our wayes doing all our workes unto the glory of God 1 Cor. 10.31 Lastly to make us in love with God thus conceived of according to his glory the thorow meditation of his mercies to us is of singular use to thinke either of the variety of them or of the speciall respect God hath had of us above many others and the frequencie of his mercies that he sheweth us mercy daily but above all to consider that his mercies are free to thinke how vile we are upon whom God lookes with such grace and goodnesse Thus the blessed Virgin taught her selfe to magnifie God and to love his name Luk. 1.46 48. Thus of making God glorious in our hearts by knowledge Now for the second which is to make him glorious by acknowledgement The particular waies how that may be done have beene reckoned before in the explication of the doctrine only we must labour by prayer to fashion our selves to that worke that God in any of those particulars doth require of us and that is the most speciall helpe which I know thereunto But by the way let me warn thee to looke to two things First that in any course of glorifying God which is to be done by thy words thou be carefull to avoid hypocrisie and be sure that thy heart be lifted up and affected according to the glory of God for the Lord abhorres to be glorified with thy lips if thy heart bee farre from him Esa. 29.13 And the next is that thou presume not in any case to make the pretence of Gods glory a covering for any wickednesse as the Pharisees that would hide their devouring of widowes houses under the praise of long prayer or those in the Prophet Esay's time that would persecure godly men and molest them with Church-censures and say Let the Lord be glorified Esa. 66.5 Thus of making God glorious in our selves Lastly that we may make God glorious in the hearts of other men and cause them to speake of his praises we must carefully looke to foure things 1 That when we speake of God or his truth wee do it with all possible reverence and feare that wee be carefull in all our discourses of Religion instructions admonitions reproofes confutations or the like to treat of these things with all meeknesse and reverence God hath given us a commandement of purpose to restraine the taking up of his Name in vaine 2 That we strive by all meanes to live unspotted and inoffensive in life that if any perverse men did seeke occasion against us yet they might finde none and to this end striving to avoid those things distinctly which we perceive by the miserable example of others do vexe and provoke men to speake or thinke evill such as are idlenesse frowardnesse deceit conceitednesse and the like Phil. 2.15 3 That we shew forth the vertues of Christ. It is a singular meanes to stirre up others to glorifie God if they might perceive in us the sound habit of such Christian vertues as are not to be found in other sorts of men such as are humility lowlinesse contempt of the world subjection to Gods will love of the godly and the like The most of us have but the bare names of these there is not a reall demonstration of them Christian vertues set forth to the life are amiable and will compell men to conceive and speake gloriously of God and his truth 4 That we be helpfull upon all occasions to others ready to every good worke and hearty in all workes of mercy it is our good workes must make men speake well of us and our God and Religion Hitherto of the doctrine of glorifying God In the day of visitation This word Visitation is in Scripture attributed both to men and to God To men in such cases as these as first to shepheards who when they did specially survey their ●●ocke with intent to redresse what was amisse were said to visit them Ier. 23.2 As also to such men as had the gathering of tribute when they came to exact their tribute to the great vexation of the people they were said to visit them So the word rendred Exactors Esa. 60.17 in the Originall is Visitors or Visitations Thirdly to visit was a tearme given to the Bishops Apostles in the Primitive Church that went about through the Churches to take notice of the estate of the Churches and to reform what was amisse Act. 15.36 And so the originall word here used is translated a Bishoprick Act. 1.20 agreeable to the Hebrew word used Ps. 109.8 Finally to visit is reckoned among the works of curtesie or mercy Iam. 1.27 The Hebrew word in the old Testament signifies oftentimes to muster or number up the people as 1 Chro. 21.6 But in this place visitation is not referred to men but to God Now God is said to visit not onely men but other creatures so he visited the earth graven Images the vessels of the Temple and Leviathan He visits the earth when he makes it in an especiall manner fruitfull Psal. 65.9 He visited Images when he brake them to pieces and confounded them He visited the vessels of the Temple by causing them to be brought backe again into the Temple Ier. 27.22 He visited Leviathan the divell by restraining his power and disappointing his malice Esa. 27.1 But most usually Gods visitation is spoken of in Scripture as it concerneth men And so God holdeth two sorts of visitations the one is the visitation of all men the other of some men onely The visitation called the visitation of all men concernes either life or death In respect of life God is said to visit all men in that he doth by his daily providence both give and preserve life till the appointed time so Iob 10.12 And in respect of death God keepes his visitation when he causeth men to die an ordinary death at the time thereunto
appointed so Num. 16.29 But it is not the common visitation is here meant Gods speciall visitation of some men is when in a speciall providence he takes notice of certain men and comes among them to work the redresse of sin and that is here meant And this visitation must be considered either according to the kinds of it or according to the time of it here called The day of visitation For the kindes God doth visit men either with the visitation of justice or with the visitation of mercy in wrath or in grace and the former words of this Text are true of either of these kindes For if God visit wicked men by his speciall judgements they will then give glory to God and commend godly Christians whom before against their consciences they spake evill of which they will also doe much more if God visit them with his grace and convert them First then of the visitation of justice and so the point to be here observed is That though God may spare wicked men long and seem to wink at their faults yet hee will find a day to visit them for their sins he will hold a visitation for their sakes he will discover their wickednesse and avenge himselfe on them Psal. 50.20 Eccl. 8. Ps. 37.13 Iob 18.20 As they have had their daies of sinning so will he have his day of visiting and that not onely at that day of the universall visitation in the end of the world but even in this life also Use. And this doctrine should especially humble wicked men and awake them out of their security and the rather if they consider seriously of divers things about this day of their visitation First that it shall certainly come upon them Rom. 2.5 Secondly that when it doth come it will bee a marvellous fearfull time with them for 1 God will then discover their sins and make their wickednesse manifest in the hatefulnesse of it Lam. 4.22 2 God will inflict sore punishments upon them hee will be avenged on them The day of their visitation will be the day of their calamity Ier. 46.21 3 The punishments determined cannot be resisted there will be no helpe Esa. 10.3 and 29.6 and 26.14 4 God will not then respect their strength but their sinne He will recompence them according to all that they have done Ier. 50.29 31. 5 If they escape one judgement another will light upon them Ier. 48.44 6 God will give them the repulse in all they do even in his service he will not accept them Ier. 14.10 7 It will be a time of great perplexitie and counsell will perish from the prudent Mic. 7.3 4. Ier. 49.7 8. 8 God will declare himselfe to be in a speciall manner against them Ier. 50.29 31. Hos. 9.7 Quest. But what sort of men are in danger of such a fearfull visitation Answ. All men that live in any grosse sinne against their knowledge such as are the sinnes of blood whoredome deceit swearing profanation of the Lords day reproaching of Gods people and the like Ier. 5.9.29 and 9.9 especially where all or any of these things be found in them First extreame security in sinning God will surely visit such as are settled in their lees Zeph. 1.12 Secondly such as place their felicity in offending such as love to wander Ier. 14.10 such as do evill with both hands earnestly as the Prophets phrase is Mic. 7.3 4. Thirdly such as continue and persist in wicked courses such as cast out wickednesse as a fountaine casts out water as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 6.6 Fourthly especially when men are shamelesse and impudent in offending Ier. 6.15 and 8.12 Use 2. And therefore men should be instructed and take notice of their condition and danger and foresee this day and use all means to prevent it for if men would turn unto God speedily repent with sound sorrows for their sins the Lord would perhaps be intreated and forgive the punishment of their sins Ier. 6.6 Thus of the visitation of justice The visitation of mercy followes The visitation of mercy is when God comes amongst men to shew some speciall mercy and so hee visits either about temporall or about spirituall things In temporall things hee visits either in the case of blessings or afflictions In respect of temporall blessings he visited Sarah Gen. 21.1 when hee gave her a sonne In respect of afflictions God visits first when he sends such crosses as do trie the innocencie and sinceritie of his servants so Psal. 17.3 Secondly when he lets his people know that hee takes speciall notice of their distresses and sorrowes so Exod. 4.3 Thirdly when he sends his servants speciall deliverances and so to visit is to deliver Thus of the visitation in temporall things which is not here meant The visitation in spirituall things is the gracious providence of God revealing his marvellous and everlasting mercies unto his Elect and so he visits man either by Christ or by the Gospel He visited his people when hee sent his Sonne to redeeme them Luk. 1.68 78. and 7.16 And so he doth when he sends his Gospel by his servants to this end to reconcile the world to himselfe in Christ and thus God visited the world when he sent his Apostles unto all Nations preaching the Gospel And thus he doth visit a Nation when he sends the Gospel thither or a Congregation when by the preaching of the Gospel he gathereth a people to himselfe There is also a personall and particular visitation when God singles out this or that man from the rest and converts him And so in this place to visit the Gentiles is to gather out of the Gentiles a people to his Name as in the case of this Apostle is said Act. 15.14 Which place may well expound this So that the day of visitation if we respect whole congregations is the time when God sends them the powerfull preaching of the Gospel and doth thereby muster and presse a people to himselfe And if we respect particular persons it is the day when God effectually calls them and converts them Six things may be observed here concerning this visitation of grace Doct. 1. First that till God do visit wicked men with his grace from heaven there will bee no sound reformation in them Their naturall conscience the shame and punishment of men with the Laws of Princes or Churches may restraine somewhat of the excesse of sinne but it is Gods visitation only that can worke a sound and thorow reformation There is little hope these Gentiles which speake evill of Christians will ever cease till the day of this visitation and the reason is plaine because the lawes and punishments of men cannot give a new nature to the offenders which God in his visitation doth Use. The use is therefore to confirme the patience of the Saints They have endured and must endure the evill words of wicked men and if any be weary of their injuries they must pray