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

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8. 1. Gal. 3. 13. as from the first so far forth as its a punishment and piece of the curse and the nature of it is changed to believers for whom Christ hath dyed it s become a Serpent without a sting yea a blessing as being hereby freed from sin and not before Hereby the soul is let out of the prison of this body into the liberty of Gods Servants and put into the possession of life Hereby also the body is freed from all toils labors infirmities and pains waiting in the Grave for an happy and glorious resurrection In which respect death is termed a sleep an advantage to the Saints and is better in the day wherein they were born So from all forerunners hereof which are curses plagues and punishments in body minde goods and name all which Christ hath born what crosses we meet withal they are to further our Sanctification and Salvation but not punishments for sin or parts of Gods judgement as they be to the wicked 2. We are hereby made partakers of all good God is reconciled to us which is more then to have our sins and punishments quite removed yea and sheweth us the light of his countenance not as David who though he staid his wrath from Absolom at his return home to Jerusalem yet was not fully reconciled to him of two years The Creatures also are at peace with us The Angels become Servants and ministring Spirits for our good in life to direct us protect us comfort us c. and at death to carry our souls to Heaven so all other Creatures the very Devils and wicked men shall do us no hurt we have also right and title to this life we lost it in Adam but have it restored in Christ. 3. Hereby he conveyeth power into the hearts of all that believe in him to enable them to dye unto sin and to mortifie their lusts more and more This is a singular comfort to all that believe in Christ who onely partake of the benefits of his death we need not fear Hell condemnation nor any enemy of our Salvation nor any curse or punishment in this life all shall be for our good we need not fear the first death but rather have cause to desire it O the happiness of such God is at peace with them all Creatures in Heaven and Earth are their friends they have right to whatsoever they have little or much therefore may they rejoyce O happy that ever we were born what pains soever we have taken to come to the knowledge of Christ Jesus by whom we obtain such unspeakable things whatsoever the world esteemeth of believers they are the onely happy persons in the world yea we shall have power to mortifie our strongest corruptions and lusts fear it not beg it and use the means if all these be put together O how happy is a Christian who can value his riches On the contrary they that have not their part in Christs death are most miserable their sins are not removed they lye under them so under the curse of God in this world and the world to come so in danger of the first death which will rend the soul and body asunder that the soul may be cast out into Hell so also of the second O that such would labor for their part in Christ Christ came into the world Christ is now Preached and offered unto us men be in a woful case and are told of it and yet how few regard to embrace Christ how few customers hath Christ one would think that all that hear of Christ should be heartily glad of him and embrace and flye unto him but alas most men for profits pleasures or love of their vile lusts are content to let go Christ and he lies as a dead commodity and they that bring him to the world be unwelcom and so indeed few have part in Christ. The consideration hereof might make us mourn for our sins the cause of Christs death might be a corrasive to eat our sin and make it odious to us might make us serve God zealously and faithfully all our days yea to suffer for his sake and rather to dye with the Martyrs then any way to dishonor him and besides to labor to finde the vertue of Christs death working mightily in us the death of sin and sinful lusts Thus of his death But quickned by the Spirit Now of his Resurrection His body and soul that had been sundred were by the power of his Godhead reunited and he made alive so continuing with his Disciples until his ascension into Heaven Touching it consider that it was so the Reasons thereof the place maner and time with the benefits flowing from thence and the duties thereupon to be performed That Christ rose again is so plain that none needs doubt thereof The Angels that rolled away the stone the Soldiers that watched the Sepulchre Mary Magdalene and the other Mary that came to see the Sepulchre the two Disciples going to Emmaus the eleven Disciples being together c. all were witnesses hereof So his appearances were many as to Mary Magdalene then to her and that other Mary then to two Disciples going to Emmaus then to them all save Thomas then both to Thomas and the others another time to Cephas another time to seven of them at the Sea of Tiberias as at another to Five hundred Brethren at once so when he was to ascend he was taken up in the sight of all those there present all which are so many evidences of his Resurrection Reasons 1. That it might appear he had fully discharged our debt 2. Because being the Son of God and Author and Lord of life it had been unmeet nay it was impossible he should be held under of Death 3. By reason of the second part of his Priesthood which was yet to fulfil One part was to offer himself a Sacrifice Propitiatory to God for the sins of his people this he did by his death now the other is to make intercession for his Church and to apply the vertue of his death to those for whom he dyed This he could not have done if he had not risen again The maner When they had rolled a great stone to the door of the Sepulchre sealed it set Soldiers to watch yet he rose They could as well have hindered the rising of the Sun in the Firmament as his rising An Angel was sent that caused a great earthquake and rolled away the stone c. No counsel or strength can hinder the work of the Lord. Place The same where he was laid which was by Gods providence to avoid cavils in a new Sepulchre hewen out of a rock wherein never man had been laid Time It was the third day early in the morning on the first day of the week the third day as was foretold by Christ himself for he was buried the evening before the Sabbath and rose
can neither take it away nor pay for it we ought to be the more careful but O Lord men commit sin as if an half peny would satisfie for it nay a straw under their feet Thus do many rap out oathes others talk ribaldry others lye others rail curse backbite c. The devil thinks nay he knows he doth us a greater spight to make us sin then to pluck away all that we have see this in his dealing with Job he desired to spoil him of his goods Why because he hoped thereby to bring him to blaspheme God and its true he doth us more mischief by bringing us to commit one sin then by stripping us of all the estate we have O do not that which when done all the world cannot make amends for But what are these things what 's their nature and quality they are corruptible things vain uncertain of no continuance fire consumeth houses water wares death cattel land is subject to barrenness to bad titles wranglings enemies all these outward things sick of a consumption They may hold out for a time but at length perish nay our selves and our own lives as frail as any thing a bubble a shadow a vapor as we heard larely yea the very heavens shall pass away 1. Therefore be not proud of these things alas they be gifts of Gods left hand common to the bad and good also they have eagles wings and are uncertain And yet how do these things lift up mens mindes and make them contemn their brethren and so lordly that they are not fit to be spoke too froward contentious c. there 's little cause they should so do but rather make them the more humble for the more a man hath the greater account he is to make If of any thing be proud of grace yet not of that and disdain not a poor Christian for though he have no wealth yet if he have more grace then thou hast he is the better man I mean in the sight of God who therefore is not to be contemned for his poverty 2. Trust not in them let them not be thy strong city hereof Job particularly acquits himself and so should we 3. Esteem of riches accordingly and seek them in their place To this purpose peruse Matth. 6. 19 20 33. John 2. 15 16 17 6. 27. 4. This condemns the common sort that seek after nothing else as if there were no other heaven nor other end of mans being here Multitudes seek after them by right and wrong yea the most unlawful and vile courses Others not so openly evil yet so seek these things as regarding them more then that one thing that is needful being so addicted hereto that in the whole day they cannot spare one quarter of an hour for prayer in their family so in the whole week no leisure to break off and hear a Sermon nay Sabbath and all onely coming to Church and some scarcely that but will lose as little time as they can for they will talk of the world till they come to the Church door and in many places in the very Church and as soon as they are out again to it again With them every little time for God and the Soul is too much no time for the world enough every small measure of knowledge a shadow of any thing in that kinde is much but much of the world seems yet small Mammon is much beholding to them God and their Soul but a little therein they are wise and have tongue enough in such things none at all in heavenly matters and so they bring up their children and so match them Thus they set the cart before the horse and speed in their souls accordingly yet is one dram of Faith Repentance Knowledge worth all the silver and gold in the world Yea it s not onely the fault of the common sort that they see no better things but even of Gods children that have the substance and yet will be catching at the shadow so did not Abraham Isaac and Jacob they dwelt in Tents and counted themselves Pilgrims neither regarded Moses the pleasures of Egypt But with the precious blood of Christ Here 's the true price of our Redemption It s true we are redeemed by the whole course of Christs obedience which he performed from his birth to his death but it s ascribed here particularly to his death and suffering being the principal part of his obedience whereby he satisfied Gods justice for our sins by his blood is here meant all his sufferings from his beginning and that not onely visible from men in his body but the inward terrors of God upon his Soul yea and death it self and no less payment would serve the turn for us for by our sin we had deserved death of body and Soul the first and second Therefore blood must be shed death must be paid else Gods justice cannot be satisfied well be it so Would not then the death of some Saints have done the turn All men are inwrapped in one and the same Condemnation unable to help themselves much less others Neither could the very Angels help us for having sinned against an infinite God we deserved an infinite punishment which being finite we could never overcome therefore it must be blood of Jesus Christ his that was both man that he might suffer and as mans nature had offended therein give satisfaction and God that he might make his sufferings of infinite worth and value and that he might overcome the same therefore it is called Precious by reason of the hypostatical union of the Divine Nature therewith and so was the blood of that man that was God and so after a sort the blood of God Hence he is called The Lord of life and glory and said to have purchased the Church with his blood No less would have served the turn so precious is the work of our Redemption and our estate before so miserably woful This was plainly prophesied Other way of Redemption there was none in the world neither is there Salvation in any other He is the Lamb of God slain from the foundation of the world He is the same yesterday and to day and for ever This was signified by the Sacrifices of the old Law which were types hereof and this indeed is an All-sufficient way He is the surety that hath paid our debt satisfied the creditor and freed us by whom we are discharged from all the wrath of God that we had deserved But how could he in so short a time dispatch that which was infinite and we should have lien under for ever Because he was God It was more that he should suffer for a moment then all men and Angels for ever As a rich man is able to pay that debt in an instant that a poor man can never be able to winde out of
above all others Oh! it rebukes our cold serving him which will scarce lay down our lusts at his request who yet laid down his life for us our proud lusts revenging lusts covetous and worldly lusts unclean lusts c. O fearful unthankfulness And how hardly are we brought to do duties No forwardness therein negligence every way and when we do them how cold and careless are we O lamentable Is a cold drowsie service suitable to such a love as this we may be even ashamed herein And for suffering alas we have no will no not to endure a mock a frown of a great person we will make friendship with the world rather then to endure the least disgrace we will forbear many duties nay to keep company with Gods servants onely lest we should be counted Puritans How shall we then be able to go to Prison and death for the cause of Christ 3. To all that mourn in Sion to all that are heavy laden hungring after Christ Jesus and willing to take up his yoke and to all other Believers this is matter of most unspeakable consolation Their sins be gone and all the punishment due to them no punishment shall befal them here as on the ungodly no wrath or condemnation hereafter Their afflictions are merciful corrections to further their Salvation To them death is no death but a passage to life that whereupon their Souls are received into Heaven their bodies committed to the earth both which at the Resurrection shall be joyfully reunited O how should we walk worthy of this in all holiness and honesty But to all that shall not have part in Christ there remains unspeakable misery it had been good for them they had never been born they must bear their own burthen and sink to Hell there to be for ever and ever This will be the portion of most because so few receive Christ so few are humbled so many through pride and profaneness refuse to be guided by him O how few will cast away their lusts and yield up themselves to be ruled by him and his Word It will be most woful to the Turks Jews and Pagans that shall perish without Christ but yet of all others their judgement will be most fearful which have had him preached daily and by the Ministers of God have been so often besought to embrace him and yet have despised him would none of him Oh it will encrease their torment to consider that they had offer of Christ and many believed in him and were converted by the same Sermons whereat they themselves were no whit moved O this will fret hearts O le ts consider this we that live in this happy time One would think every man should receive and imbrace Christ Jesus but alas how few do this for them that do not it will be their undoing O give no rest unto your selves till you can get a discharge in and by Christ confess bewail crave pardon cry to God and resolve to turn to him The water is now stirring step into this Pool of Bethesda 4. This condemneth all false ways for Salvation for other then Christ never was any neither is or shall be therefore all that reject him as Jews and Turks or embrace him onely to halves as the Papists are in a fearful case as all among our selves that trust to any thing else besides him That we being dead to sin c. Another main end of Christs death and another great benefit redounding unto us thereby namely That he dyed for us not onely to free us from sins and wrath and damnation deserved thereby but also to kill sins in us to deliver us from the power thereof and to dissolve the works of the Devil in us that being dead unto sin we might live unto righteousness Of the words first in general then in particular In general note we thus much that For whomsoever Christ dyed he dyed to kill sin in them for he dyed not to free us of half our misery and leave us in the other half nor to be at a great deal of cost with us and for us and yet leave us in a case fit to do him no service as if one should ransom a man out of the Turks galleys and leave him in the midway but hath done all this that we might be fit to do him service thereupon giving us his Word and Spirit to humble us and so to change us that sin may be mortified in us and we made live He is not onely made of God unto us Redemption but also our Sanctification as he hath redeemed us so hath he purged us to be a peculiar people unto himself Christ affords both and from him we may as well look for the one as the other yea whosoever hath indeed his part in the one cannot be without the other and in token of our thankfulness we ought to labor by all means to shew forth this latter 1. This confutes that wicked slander of the Church of Rome We talk say they that we must be saved by Christs death and by Faith in him onely and not by any thing we can do and therefore that we set men at liberty to do what they list and open a gap to all licentiousness but as the Gospel is not a Doctrine of liberty so neither do we by preaching give way unto licentiousness The Gospel requires as strict obedience as the Law doth to every of Gods Commandments though not in extremity neither freeth it us from any duty to God or men yea teacheth us That denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world and that none have nor can have part in Christ which give not themselves to good works 2. This setteth forth the wonderful goodness of Christ Jesus that hath not onely freed us from Gods wrath and the punishment of our sins which is unspeakable goodness but hath appointed to give us his Spirit to free us from sin for if we should all our life here have lived after our own lusts or under the power of Satan what a base and woful life had this been that we might both in heart and body serve him in the works of holiness and a godly life 3. This condemneth all those that lay claim to the death of Christ and yet live in their sins and old lusts Numbers in these days have got this by the end They hope to be saved by Jesus Christ They be no Papists that look to be saved by their works but they believe in Jesus Christ with all their hearts and yet they are not washed from their old filthiness but abide still in security in all or some of their lusts But let such know they speak impossible things God hath joyned these two ends of Christs death and they divide them yea blasphemous things that Christ dyed to set men at liberty to live as they list O woful
with our sins as the Jews dealt with Christ kill them bury them lay a great stone upon them set a watch over them Should live unto righteousness It s not enough to be dead to sin but we must be alive to God and to his Commandments in doing all good By righteousness is meant the whole duty of man in all godliness throughout his whole conversation to God and Men When it s joyned with holiness then it stands for the duties of the second Table but alone it stands for all as in that of the Apostle Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness and to this end hath Christ dyed for us even that we should not live after the lusts of the flesh but after the will of God serving him in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life And what should we else do how else express our thankfulness we ought to be exceeding thankful even for earthly benefits how much more for this Christ dying for us O happy change We that were sometimes the slaves of sin and drudges of Satan doing base work for woful wages are now become the Servants of God employed in holy works whereof here the fruits are peace of Conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost and the end everlasting life We ought therefore to give our selves to an holy life in all things shewing hereby whose we are and to whom we belong as it s said of the Merindolians That they were known by their godly behavior wheresoever they became It was a custom among the Romans that every one should carry some note of his Trade or Profession as he went in the streets a Carpenter his Rule a Taylor his Yard or Measure c. So ought we to carry a badge of our Profession every where about us whether we go to Church be at home in our Families go to Market to our Shops or Workfolks c. even holiness throughout our whole conversation In prosperity we must shew forth sobriety in adversity patience at all times the fruits of love faithfulness uprightness c. Are we in company our speeches must be gracious and godly if alone holy and heavenly minded And this we ought not to do a little by fits in a good mood and when we list but we must walk in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life we must be continually ready to every good work we must be a peculiar people zealous of good works If these things be in us and abound great profit will redound unto us and hereunto must we employ all our endeavors By whose stripes ye were healed Now he returns again to Servants applying the benefit of Christ to them By stripes or wales of the stripes he means not onely the stripes he had of men but all his sufferings he useth the word stripes in respect of Servants because they suffered stripes of their Masters and that for their especial comfort as who did not suffer alone and whose stripes were healed through the stripes which Christ suffered All that Christ suffered for us was wholesome and saving his shame our glory his condemnation our absolution his curse our blessing his strokes our peace his death our life The most grievous stripes that he suffered have healed the most ugly and deadly sores of our sins which otherwise had been incurable We ought therefore to be content to suffer some stripes for him and for his sake and for the profession of his Name he was mockt and reviled for us may not we then be content to suffer the like for him What are we to him He became poor to make us rich if we be cut short for his sake shall we not endure it Dost thou suffer any thing for Christ bear the same patiently and great reason Christ suffered much for thee Note further that Christ dyed even for poor Servants and that therefore the meanest are to labor after their part in Christ and yet who are more negligent then the poor are for the most part and those poor that have their part in him are to be highly thankful and bear their outward wants patiently and think that God hath dealt wonderfully for them having passed by so many great wise and learned ones In the words also these particulars are implied 1. That sin is a wound or disease as a disease weakens the body so doth sin every faculty of the soul As the former also brings deformity on the body causeth pain and thereupon followeth death so doth the latter on the soul. 2. That our bodies are subject to many sicknesses and the diseases thereof are oftentimes very grievous and if those be such what are the diseases and pains of the soul the one may put us in minde of the other 3. That Christ is our Physician both for body and soul He hath both skill will compassion healeth us freely and is ever near us he hath by his Passion purchased all good for us he wrought many cures and miracles in the days of his flesh now he worketh by means and his blessing thereon 4. That sin is hateful to God as for which Christ suffered stripes Seek we therefore help in Christ we are sick of many diseases we cannot help our selves by any Medicine we can devise Christ onely can cure us This Faith apprehends for that the wounding of one should heal another is above Nature Oh! how will men being sick in body bestir themselves that they may be cured but being inwardly diseased through sin how slack are they how do they defer it to the last when it s too late There be but certain seasons to be cured in as the man at the Pool of Bethesda observed miss we not our opportunity lest we perish altogether And that we may speed at the hands of this our Physician 1. We must feel our disease and be humbled confess also and bewail the same to him 2. Earnestly beg of him to heal us 3. Hurt our selves no more as near as we can 4. Believe he will heal us 5. Suffer the words of Exhortation the preaching of the Word being the means to cure our sinful Nature 6. Take heed of dawbers that cry Peace peace 7. Take heed of all false cures as by our selves Masses Pilgrimages Indulgencies c. 8. Abide the Lords leisure in the use of the means though we should be cured by threatnings of the Word or by afflictions yea being once cured do we acknowledge the same to his glory and be we thankful for it s he alone that hath satisfied for our sins he alone through whom our sinful Nature is cured Verse 25. For ye were as sheep going astray but are now returned unto the great Shepherd and Bishop of your souls THese words are a confirmation of those immediately going before that they were healed by Christ by comparing their former state wherein they were with their
what he calls the power of God our Apostle calls the Spirit both which are in effect one 2. Hereby cannot be meant the Fathers and godly for he speaks onely of the disobedient and Reprobate ones 3. He speaks onely of those that lived in Noah's time and no other age of the world 4. This Prison was an unhappy and miserable place and not Abrahams bosom nor the place of the Fathers 5. Even after our Saviors Resurrection when our Apostle wrote this they were then still in Prison therefore Christ had not delivered them nor fetcht them out but they that had been there were there still And where they say he went to Preach to the Reprobates this will not stand neither for he speaks here onely of the Reprobates of Noah's time and why should Christ in his soul go unto them rather then unto any other Besides to Preach to them and do them no good nor intend any is against the nature end of preaching But that there are any such places as Limbus patrum Limbus puerorum or Purgatory the Scripture gives not any inkling 1. That the Fathers went to no such place is certain but that their souls loosed by death went to Heaven Jesus Christ yesterday to day and the same for ever They had the same benefit by Christ as we after their death 2. They also believed in Christ as well as we Abraham saw my day and rejoyced They ate the same Spiritual meat and drank the same Spiritual drink and so were partakers of the same benefits of Christ. 3. Their Spirits went to God that gave them they enter into peace and so not into the Prison 4. Abrahams bosom into which Lazarus was carried by the Angels was above not beneath an happy not a miserable place Christ therefore went not to fetch them out thence there being no such place For Purgatory they say there 's such a place in the brim of Hell where the pains be almost as bad as Hell pains and the fire as hot into which are sent the souls of the godly that dye in faith and repentance but yet have not suffered the punishment of their sins in this world therefore must make up their sufferings in Purgatory for they teach that for our sins and punishments both committed before Baptism Christ suffered but for those after Baptism though Christ takes away the sins yet the punishment must be suffered by our selves and that partly in this life by penances c. and the rest by suffering in Purgatory that for every sin is due seven years of payment in Purgatory and therefore the Pope gives Pardons sometimes for fifty sometimes for an hundred years c. and therefore they say Masses for the souls of them that have been dead many 100 years and when they have suffered for all their sins paid the utmost farthing then come the souls out after they have been a while refreshed in a fair green field ful of pleasant flowers which is hard by Purgatory then they go up to Heaven notwithstanding oftentimes through the mercy of the Popes those pains are mitigated We say 1. That as they themselves do not agree about the place c. So neither is it otherwise grounded but on unwritten verities The Scriptures mention but two places whereinto the souls go immediately after death Heaven which is for the godly and Hell which is for the ungodly for the godly that they do immediately go into an happy place all the Scriptures sound with Simeon they depart in peace go not to Purgatory scorching pains Christ is to them as in life so in death advantage Having finished their course henceforth there 's laid up for them a crown of righteousness They have after the dissolution of their earthly Tabernacle a building of God an house not made with hand eternal in the Heavens Christ hath prayed for them that they may be where he is even in Heaven The thief on the right hand had as much need to have gone to Purgatory as any other yet on that day wherein he dyed he was with Christ in Paradice Blessed are they which dye in the Lord saith the Spirit for they rest from their labors After death presently comes the judgement that every man shall stick to Among all those things which God spake to Moses there 's not a word of this among all the Sacrifices that God ordained there were none appointed for souls in Purgatory and amongst all the cleansings and purifyings of all kinde of impurities of Leprosie and Issues c. there 's not a word of this What was God so unmindeful of his Church and people then Neither is there in all the new Testament any word for it 2. What a wretched thing is it to hold that our sufferings should satisfie the wrath of God and punishment of our sins when the least sin deserves eternal destruction both of soul and body And for their distinction that Christs death gives power to the pains of Purgatory to satisfie is an idle and ridiculous conceit 3. To say that Christ should satisfie for our sins and take them away but not our punishment is it not a wicked abuse of Gods justice where he forgives the sin doth he not also forgive the punishment True he chastens his servants but they are no part of satisfaction of his justice onely a means to prevent sin to come and humble for that which is past as if I had a quarrel against a man I might forgive him and yet if I see him in an Appoplexy or Swoon I may hit him a blow to fetch him again The truth is Purgatory was devised partly of a blinde and curious devotion of some Monks that thought that they that had some beginnings as they thought of goodness and so dyed it were no reason they should be damned c. who were therefore to be purged in Purgatory and so come to Heaven and that seeing most men have much sin in them even when they dye it were unreasonable they should go straight to Heaven for no unclean person shall come there and therefore they must suffer and be cleansed in Purgatory Who doth not see the absurdity of these conceits when the Scripture saith Whosoever believeth in him shal not be condemned that whosoever dyeth in the Faith all their sins and corruptions are done away and they received into Heaven But principally the Pope and his Clergy out of covetousness were chief founders hereof for hereby they did infinitely enrich themselves and every where enjoyed the very fat in the Land It was devised for the pampering of the living not the punishing or purging of the dead Through their covetousness meeting with the peoples ignorance Purgatory was hatched But what a cruelty is this of the Pope who hath power as he saith to deliver as many as he lists out of Purgatory yet will suffer so many so long to
always keep a good Conscience Wood is not more necessary and apt to nourish fire then good works and well doing to nourish Faith Also observe the dealings of God and grow by your own experience Many that have believed and were very earnest in their beginning till they got it after growing secure and worldly and withal neglecting the means have with David fallen into some one sin or other thereby losing the peace and comfort they formerly enjoyed A great loss indeed more then if a man were stript of all to his shirt O le ts take heed of this loss as we are to be wise as Serpents so let us shew our Serpentine wisdom in this one thing especially The Serpent will be sure so much as in her lies to save her head so must we our Faith for on this hangs all and if by any means we have fallen therefrom recover we our selves by all means possible 3. That which they are to hope for or trust on is Grace that is Salvation Every benefit is grace but to be delivered out of our lost and undone state and brought again into the favor of God and saved is a most special grace Our Election is of grace so our Redemption so our effectual Calling 1. This condemns the Papists that teach partly Grace partly Works No these cannot be mingled either all or none they be as contrary as light and darkness honey and gall else were grace no more grace To joyn any thing with Christ is to pervert the Gospel They now begin to be ashamed and mince this Opinion saying We be saved most by Grace yet partly by Works and that these Works be died in the Blood of Christ and that it is most safe to rest on his merits alone Well God make them so ashamed as altogether to renounce it and so let us in the mean time 2. Let us serve the Lord with a chearful and constant love and service for his free favor to us all the days of our life 3. Shew we grace and favor to others not to such as have deserved well of us but even to such as have not nay ill as we had of God Grace That is Salvation See he calls their mindes from looking for earthly preferment by Christ whereunto they had a lingring minde and calls them to look for Spiritual riches even Salvation by him What are we then to expect by Christ and by professing the Gospel zealously not Wealth Honor Peace Credit in the world but pardon of our sins freedom from Hell and Gods wrath peace of Conscience joy in the holy Ghost that our persons and works shall please God Angels to be our guard our Prayers to be heard our Souls at death to be carried into heaven both our Bodies Souls to be glorified at the great day Will this satisfie us Hereof we may be assured if we believe in Christ and zealously embrace the Gospel As for other things his Kingdom is not of this world he promiseth not plenty peace ease c. He had them not himself but contrarily troubles as all shall have that live godly in him This teacheth us to lay our hand upon our heart when we go about to profess we know what we shall finde but it may be sorrow withal if we can be content so then may we go forward else not Many having gone on in profession not so advisedly and after having found the wind and tide against profession and reproach trouble and danger for the same have shrunk away and with Demas have forsaken Paul and embraced the present world Others seeing how hardly such be dealt with though in their conscience they think best of such yet keep in their heads thinking that its best sleeping in a whole skin But alas they make but a weak choyce were they not better have these heavenly comforts and priviledges here and be acknowledged of Christ and saved at the great day though with some sorrows here then to make the world their friend and God their enemy and to have him ashamed of them at that day as he will for we cannot have it go on our side now and then too That is to be brought unto you God tarried not till they sought Salvation but he of his goodness brought it them which he useth here as an Argument to perswade them to trust stedfastly to this Salvation and look accordingly for it because God would bring them to the Faith of it when they thought not thereof Note here That Salvation is not of our own procuring or seeking Alas what could Adam and we in him do we could fall but what then towards our Salvation we could run and hide our selves and excuse our sin and encrease our danger but God was fain to bring him the seed of the woman he could not make himself an help a wife for God made and brought her to him much less a Savior So what 's the reason he hath given us the Gospel in this Land and not to our Forefathers not to many other Lands we sought it not but when Idolaters in darkness God brought it So have we not been brought by marriage or by Service into Towns where we have had the Word when we purposed no such thing So to our hearts what were any of us when God called us Did we seek him Alas no we ran from him rather long ere we yielded but he followed us and overcame us See it in Saul did he seek Salvation he was going to Damascus to persecute God brought it him so to Zacheus the Goaler c. so we This teacheth us 1. To be humble 2. To be exceeding thankful all the days of our life 3. To rest confidently on him for the time to come in the experience of that we have had as thus That he that brought us Salvation the Word to us or us to it and gave us to see our misery long after Christ have some taste of his love and some desire to please him that were far from these he will continue this and will never leave us Thus the Apostle reasons But God commendeth his love towards us c. So Jacob in danger of Esau He came over Jordan with his staff and God had given him two bands therefore he was perswaded to relie on God for present deliverance for why might he say I am perswaded thou hast not done all this for me to be lost in an instant as an ox should lick up a flower or a candle be put out at once We use not Gods mercies well when we grow not stronger by them for time to come 4. Comfort to a fearful heart that fears he shall not hold out or that God will cast him away O its impossible did he bring thee Salvation that regarded it not and now hath given thee an heart to prize it above the world and to walk
a good Subject or say he is a mans servant and yet doth nothing that he is bidden but is drunken quarrels with his fellow-servants beats his Master children breaks down his windows rails upon him should this be counted a good servant or the other a good subject so the Lord defies that such should call him Father and counts it a disgrace to him to be call'd Father of such miscreants that live like bastards that have no care to please God no fear of offending him nor delight to be in his presence We should take it as a disgrace to have some base and filthy person come in a market to us and call us father yet this may and doth befal men yea good too who have lewd children and such be like them neither in favor nor condition yea there 's scarce one childe like the Father or one like another but it s nor so with God he hath never a childe but is like him and hath his image in him like hearted and like handed to him innocent hands and a pure heart holy as he is holy hating sin as he he doth loving his Word People Righteousness c. as he doth He that is born of God sinneth not Those are true properties of a childe of God yet even others have a father too Christ hath pointed him out Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father you will do Such as care for no goodness nor for Gods children but are Lyars Deceivers Oppressors and the like they are like the Devil God is not their Father but their Enemy with such all the Angels and Creatures are at defiance and wait for their destruction all the judgements of God hang over their heads their death will be a passage to their endless wo and misery Therefore never call God Father till thou change thy maners nor look for any priviledge of a childe from him as either protection or maintenance no nor so much as good look But shall I thus leave these God forbid for though we finde them children of the Devil yet we would be glad to bring them to be Gods Therefore humble your selves confess your sins as the Publican and the Prodigal entreat and sue for Pardon change thy behaviour and when thou canst feel thy heart effected like a Childe or truly desirous so to be then call him Father In the mean time if thou wouldest mourn for thy sins and labor for a contrite heart and abstain from every unclean thing thou shouldest be received thy sins pardoned and God would be a Father unto thee But if thou goest on in this graceless course as thou workest so shall thy wages be 2. But dost thou unfeignedly desire to fear God 1. In thy general calling as a Christian to walk holily righteously and soberly Fearest thou to offend God thy self or to see him dishonored by others carest thou to please him lovest thou to be in his presence dost thou conscionably hear his Word and patiently bare his Corrections 2. In thy special calling art thou careful to glorifie God as a Parent Childe Master Servant c. not onely in ceasing to do evil but in doing good yea and laboring to do it well Thou mayest comfortably and with good leave call God Father and make account of him so to be which is the greatest priviledge in the world Christ is thy Brother thou art Heir with him of all good things in this world and Salvation in the Kingdom of Glory hereafter Angels guard thee nay are thy Servants Afflictions Corrections Death no Death but a passage to Life O let us be perswaded to increase more and more in this care and every time we call God Father we may be put in minde and provoked to labor for the affections of dutiful Children We can readily look that God should be a Father to us that we want nothing but we for our parts can be content to be wanting in our duties many ways we neglect this and that duty yea in those we perform how cold are we little differing from Hypocrites how often do we break out into gross evils how little grieved when we offend or see others offend for these the Lord is often driven to afflict us As it s between natural Parents and Children we see that love descends but seldom ascends They look for all maintenance from their Parents but care little how small reverence or obedience they give them So we deal with God our head must not ake a little but he must presently give ease but we can be slack enough in the performance of our parts Who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man works Here 's the second Reason He whom we call Father is also a Judge and that a very sharp-fighted one that will not be carried away with shows and false glosses of good works but will look into the inside and judge accordingly If they proceed from an honest heart he will surely reward them if not they shall not onely miss the reward they look for but have for all their gay shows their reward with Hypocrites Therefore it stands us in hand not onely to renounce evil and to do good but to do the same with a right affection Here I might speak how God judgeth and will judge mens actions as 1. In this life he approveth the ways of his Servants by his Word and by his blessings upon them outward and inward and disalloweth the wicked actions of the World and their courses by his Word and by his judgements sometimes 2. In the end of this life by receiving the soul of the one into glory and by casting down the other to confusion 3. And especially at the last day by receiving the one into everlasting glory and throwing the other into endless misery Which may 1. Make us all look to our ways to walk in reverence and fear all our days To this purpose peruse Ecles 12. 13 14. Act. 24. 16. 2 Cor. 5. 9. 2 Pet. 3. 11. 2. Be a strong bit to hold back the wicked from running on nay to bring them on their faces for that which is past that it may be here pardoned that they meet not with all their abominations at that day For we must all appear before the Judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Even they that have been judges of others they that have ben quit yea they that have had their sentence here too shall appear before a wise Judge that cannot be deceived a Just one that will not be bribed from whom they cannot flee as being Infinite But because this is not the main drift of the Apostle I pass it over the more briefly the chief force lying in this That God judgeth according to mans works without respect of persons The person
Habitation for God as a King maketh a Cottage a Court so doth the Lord make a Bethel an House of God of him that was before Beth-aven an house of Iniquity which is an admirable advancement 1. This teacheth every one that is such to take heed he pollute not himself with any sin thereby grieving and wearying so happy a guest The Prophets were profitable to those with whom they sojourned The Widow of Sarepta had her oyl and meal increased and her life saved The wife of one of the Children of the Prophets had her two Children kept out of the Creditors hands The Shunamite obtained a son but much more profitable is Christ he brings Peace Joy and Life A pitiful thing that sundry Christians are so hasty so furious so full of pride worldly negligent in religious duties and the like How can Christ tarry in such an house can he abide in an heart full of these 2. To deck and trim up the house of our Souls with all graces of the Spirit of God therefore take pains and think no cost too much in Hearing Reading Praying to trim up this House for the Lord that he may take the more pleasure therein Solomon bestowed great cost on the Temple and was seven years in building thereof and shall we take no pains on this Spiritual Temple The Lord complained of his people that would dwell in fieled houses and let the House of God lie waste much more may he of us who minde many earthly things and minde nothing so much the dressing up of our hearts by Prayer Meditation Watchfulness and the like as a Bride prepared for the Lord Jesus When we dress up our houses to entertain strangers it were good to have such meditations saying to our selves Lift up your heads ye gates and be ye lift up ye everlasting door and the King of glory shall come in and thus entertain him most respectively here till he shall vouchsafe to entertain us at our death into that habitation that is not made with hands but eternal in the Heavens and when thou art at the best think that thy heart is too strait nothing good enough to entertain such a blessed guest An holy Priesthood Another branch of the benefit that believers have being received of Christ and united to him namely That whereas they were unholy now he makes them holy whereas they might not come near God neither their persons nor works now they are advanced to this dignity to be a Priesthood and every of them an holy Priest to draw near unto God and offer him Sacrifices whereas before they did nor could do nothing but was abominable in Gods sight now they are enabled to offer such Sacrifices and Services as God accepts and takes pleasure in and are not these great priviledges and all this comes by the means of Jesus Christ whom while they were without they missed all these priviledges but having him enjoy them all Holy They that are united to Christ are made holy that were nothing less before and draw sap of Grace and Sanctification from him through whom also they become new Creatures which is a wonderful priviledge that such filthy and unclean ones as we are by nature should be made holy for holiness is the greatest gift that can be a little of it is better then all the world God is holy his Angels holy therefore he gives us his Word his Sacraments Afflictions and the like means to bring us to holiness 1. They that have any measure of holiness must acknowledge that they have received it from Christ. 2. Let every one try whether he be united to Christ or not by this mark he is an holy head and all that are joyned to him partake of holiness Priesthood Believers together make a Priesthood and every Believer is a Priest to offer Sacrifice to God What are not Priests and Sacrifices at an end yet I thought they had been onely in the Old Testament and now abolished True some Sacrifices are at an end There were under the Law Priests ordained to offer Sacrifices daily to God for their own and the peoples sins all which pointed at Christ the true Priest and that blessed Sacrifice of his Body All these Sacrifices did but tend and direct to that All sufficient Sacrifice of his Death Now when he had offered himself on the Cross and dyed for our sins he put an end to all Sacrifices propitiatory as who finished all himself saying It is finished so then there is now no more need of Sacrifices for sin Christ once offered being All-sufficient Which 1. Condemns the Sacrifices of the Jews and all bloody Sacrifices which are to the Devils and not to God 2. Condemns the Blasphemous Sacrifice of the Mass where as the Papists say Christ is by the Priest offered daily on the Altar a propitiatory Sacrifice for the sins of the quick and the dead This is to overthrow Christs Cross. But though there be an end of all legal Sacrifices and Propitiatory yet there are Evangelical and Gratulatory and though those Priests that offered blood and beasts be at an end yet are there Priests still remaining in the Church of God which the Apostle mentioneth lest the Jews should think the former times better then these thereupon objecting Have we no Sacrifices now to offer to God he answereth We have though not of the same kinde We have no Propitiatory Sacrifices the date of them being out and which yet were not taken away by men but by him who ordained them but till this time who yet is not inconstant in changing them as having done away sin through the Sacrifice of his Son of whom the others were onely the types and shadows but Sacrifices of thanksgiving we have and that for the mercy of God in Christ and all other blessings flowing from thence This is no small honor and priviledge It was an honor under the Law to be Priests few were admitted to the Office they represented Christ they went near and offered Sacrifice the people standing afar off so is it now to be a Spiritual Priest to have the honor to come near to God with comfort and boldness 1. They therefore speak they know not what that use this as a name of disgrace and call Ministers in derision Priests and what is he but a Priest but it s an honor and a great one though Mass-Priests by their filthy lives have brought the same in disgrace yet is not this proper to Ministers onely which we speak not as though we were ashamed of it but that every one may have their due it s also common to all Believers and they that will none of this shake off the name of a Christian but they that are wise will take their part in it This is signified by the name Christian of Christ which signifieth anointed of that anointing by
hold on In his death he shall not be comfortless but finde enough in Christ to carry him to heaven though through the gates of death He knoweth whom he hath believed At the day of Judgement he shall not be ashamed but lift up his head with great joy when he shall see Christ coming in great glory and power to save all them that have embraced him and to receive them into the glory which he hath prepared for them then shall he be our Judge who hath been our Surety and Savior Contrarily they that believe not in Christ are never in quiet as the Papists that hope to be saved partly by Christ and partly by Works are often even the wisest of them distracted and cannot tell when they have done enough to rest in and so are ever suspitious and doubtful tost to and fro as one upon a ship mast So the wicked among our selves that believe not in Christ though some securely flatter themselves are for the most part doubtful having ever and anon thoughts that all is not well and so not knowing what shall become of them and though they love their lusts so well that they will not part from them for Christ yet often do their thoughts accuse them of their Whoredoms Deceits wicked Courses their hearts misgive them and so indeed their lives be as if one should lie in a bed too strait and the clothes too short and so they cannot sleep whereas he that is assured of his happiness and his heart witnesses his upright care to obey Gods will his bed and clothes be large enough he sleeps quietly and rests on a soft pillow his good conscience In the hour of death they are fearful disquieted and in death they are confounded when they see the Devil ready to carry their souls to hell At the day of Judgement how will the Jews and Turks that altogether reject Christ be ashamed and confounded when they shall finde that their imagined Christ and Mahomet hath deceived them and led them into a false hope O what a case will they be in when they shall see the true Christ whom they have rejected come to judge them O what wailing will there be how will they run up and down and what would they not do if they knew any way to help themselves then shall they finde it too late to sue to him Then will they sue to the hills to fall upon them and the mountains to cover them a poor request which yet shall not be granted them So all wicked men among us that have not kissed the Son but broke his bands and cast his cords from them that have had him offered to them but have not embraced him nor believed in him chusing rather to continue in their lusts then to have their part in him their condition is fearful O that all would embrace Christ whilst they may who else shall have sorrow and shame for their portion This phrase also implyeth That Believers can never fall away wholly nor finally as the Papists teach for then they might come to be ashamed They may be shaken for the tryal and strengthening of their Faith but overcomed they cannot be by all the gates of Hell Verse 7. Unto you therefore which believe he is precious but unto them which be disobedient the stone which the builders disallowed the same is made the head of the corner Verse 8. And a stone of stumbling and rock of offence even to them which stumble at the word being disobedient whereunto also they were appointed NOw that which the Apostle had cited out of the Prophet and was indefinitely spoken of all and every one he comes to apply particularly to the Jews that he wrote unto both believers and unbelievers shewing the happy state of the one and the miserable condition of the other one and the same Christ being to them diverse To Believers precious and fruitful to Salvation and all good but to the unbelievers and disobedient a stone to stumble at c. though not of his own Nature yet through their infidelity so that they should not onely have no benefit by him but destruction stumbling at the word that foretold of him and now testified of him But least any should wonder at this madness in men the cause is set down that as God ordained some to life and so to embrace Christ unto Salvation so some others to stumble against him to their ruine Besides this he also removes a common and great scandal and log out of the weak and common peoples way and that was that whereas he had spoken so much of Christ they could not see him to be such a one and their learned Doctors and Rabbies Scribes and Pharisees High Priests and Elders they could no way think well of him they judged him a deceiver and pursued him also which they would never have done if he had been the Savior and corner stone as you speak c. But for this faith the Apostle If it were a new thing that you never had had warning of it were somewhat but this is no other then was foretold in Davids time so long ago therefore it needs not seem strange to you yet their strugling was in vain for in despite of them he was made the head stone of the corner This had been indeed a great temptation if they had been to consult onely with reason For what should they have thought but as they were taught and learned of their gave Teachers of whom that People had a very great and high opinion But considering Gods decree and that he had foretold it should be thus and that God would save his Church by such a way that worldly wise men thought not of and would effect his purpose not onely without the help but even against the will of the great men of the world it could not much trouble them And in that the Apostle doth apply that which was indifinitely said of all to particular persons we may learn how to use the promises of God laid down in Scripture even to endeavor to apply them to our selves particularly This is the nature of true Faith It s but a cold and dead thing to believe those things in general to be true which Hypocrites yea Devils do but this to make them ours as David My Lord My Castle My Refuge and Job My Redeemer and Thomas My Lord and my God and Paul Who loved me and gave himself for me is that we must labor for This particular Faith is that which is to Salvation signified by eating and drinking and Faith is compared to an hand and in our Creed every one of us is particularly bound from our hearts to say I believe How may we come to this particular perswasion A person humbled and seeking earnestly God sends his Spirit to witness to his of the same wherewith that it may appear that it s no presumption nor deceiveable
c. on the contrary consider the woful estate of the wicked For what be they be they Kings Priests or Prophets no such matter Believers be so They be Kings Priests and Prophets but the wicked are the slaves of sin and Satan slaves to the flesh to their own lusts to the world What though they be rich yea though they be Emperors and not Believers they are the vassels of Satan and have nothing but their drudgery in sin and Hell for their own place as their desert Neither are they Priests but prophane ones let them stand off for the holy God cannot abide unholy persons they and their Sacrifice are abomination to the Lord They offer no Sacrifices at all of Prayer Praise or Alms or if they do its abominable because they offer not themselves soul and body to God first but they offer themselves to the Devil and him they serve with body and soul might and main Neither are they Prophets but dumb beasts not savoring of the mysteries of Gods Kingdom or if uttering any thing thereof yet their ill lives disgrace it again O that such considering their own base and the others happy estate would have an holy emulation to be as they and indeed nothing in this world is worthy to be envied but a Christian Humble therefore thy self for thy sin past turn to God for thy pardon in Christ and labor to have thy part in him and by him and by Faith in him thou shalt attain to be a Christian and so consequently a King Priest and Prophet and be enabled to the duties of the same An holy nation Here 's a third priviledge not meant of all the Jews but of the elect among them and of all believing Gentiles as Acts 2. 38 39. so called 1. Because they had the Oracles of God the Word and Sacraments which no other had This belonged to all the Jews True but it might be said that they onely had them which had the power of them to the conversion of their souls and Salvation and others had them not which had no fruit and benefit by them 2. Because they were sanctified and set aside by special grace to be holy ones to the Lords use Note then That All that be the Lords are holy persons that is Not onely having Christs holiness imputed to them but in whom God worketh inherent Righteousness and Holiness by his Spirit conveying vertue from Christs death to kill sin and from his Resurrection to raise them to newness of life to alter and change them throughout in soul spirit and body This though not perfect in any yet is sound and upright in them all therefore he gives them his holy Word and holy Spirit to work this and holy Sacraments to encrease it and its requisite that as God is holy so also all his should so be and these be they shall see his face with comfort no other and for these onely is Heaven prepared O let every man examine himself whether he be a sanctified person or not if yea Then 1. To thy comfort know hereby thou art one of the Lords number a greater priviledge then to be written among the Potentates of the earth There 's Consolation to thee thou wert elected and shalt be glorified 2. Seeing thou art set aside for the Lords use and sanctified in body and soul never defile thy self again or put any part of thy body and soul to any common or unholy use of sin or Satan In the Law it was ever most fearful to take any Consecrated thing as the Holy Oyl Shew-bread or Vessels and put them to any common use so is it that we should put Hand Foot or Tongue to any use of sin or corruption for any part of our souls or lives Oh many contrarily can let loose their tongue to impatient proud and most unseemly speeches yea and their bodies and mindes some to excessive following the world as they were wont and as worldlings do and some after their pleasures and vanities O that we would grow and abound in Sanctification that here having our fruit in holiness we may have the end everlasting life If not but contrarily you either live in prophaneness the open breach of some of the Commandments or be only superstitiously holy in some odde devotions and loose in other things as Papists and a number of old Folks or such as have a counterfeit holiness in the first Table and make no conscience of the duties of the second or contrarily civil persons that seem very just in the second Table but savor nothing of the duties of the first Table Know you are yet unsanctified persons and therefore out of Gods number you may be members of the visible Church where good and bad chaff and corn are but not of the invisible who onely are sanctified ones Let such be what they will be having Wit Learning Wealth Wisdom Civility all skill of Languages yea if they could measure the Heavens number the Stars c. and be not sanctified they are of the Devils rabble and shall perish everlastingly O that you would awake out of your courses What fruit have ye had or look ye to have therein The end of these things is death Come to the Word crave the Holy Spirit desire Pardon and Sanctification till this be you are not out of the state of Damnation and all things are impure to you Word Sacraments yea your Meat Drink Apparel c. A peculiar people That is a people proper to the Lord which he himself hath purchased and which he now takes as his own and sets great store by called therefore his secret ones whom he keeps under his protection to whom also he reveals his secrets his Beloved ones his Spouse his Love his undefiled as the Apple of his eye the Signet on his right hand whom he cannot forget In the flood he saved his Church when all others were drowned he saved Lot when Sodom was destroyed he makes more account of one Christian then of thousands of others If one of them pray it s so forcible that he says Let me alone and if thousands of wicked it s but as the howling of Dogs an abomination They are his glory all the world are dross to them vile persons and base The wicked though never so many are but servants to the Church as the seven Nations were to make the Land of Canaan fit for the people of God yea even then when they seem to dominier most over them they are but their drudges They as a wisp scour the Church to make it bright in the eyes of God but the wisp is to be cast into the fire they are Gods rod to bring it to obedience when that 's effected the rod is to be flung into the fire And No marvel though the Lord set such store by his Church seeing he hath been at such cost therewith as
of it as an example to move us to suffer and that patiently but continues his speech of it and sets it out by the ends thereof and the many benefits that come to us thereby 1. That we be thereby delivered from our sin and the punishment thereof 2. Enabled to dye unto sin that we might live unto righteousness Having fallen into this argument he sticks in it and cannot easily get out but is like a friend that holds his friend long by the hand being loath to part with him Who Even Christ himself the Son of God Lord of Angels and of the whole world His own self In his own person not by a Deputy without any help in the business Bare That is suffered the intollerable and infinite wait of Gods wrath due to our sins bare our sins and all that was due to them which would have swallowed up men and Angels Our sins Even the sins of the Elect all of them and the punishment of the same In his own body Not but that he suffered in soul and therein his chiefest sufferings were but because he speaks of his putting to death the cruel usage of his body was evident On the tree Namely the Cross which death he dyed by the especial providence of God being that kinde of death which God had pronounced accursed and so fittest for our Savior Christ to endure that he might bear what we had deserved which was to become accursed that we might escape the curse which we had deserved by the breach of the Law For Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Book of the Law to do them The foregoing words set forth the passion of Christ. The following That we being dead unto sin c. The fruits that come to us thereby As a childe that hath a piece of Sugar in his mouth is loath to let it go down but would keep the sweetness still so doth our Apostle by the Doctrine of Christs passion so sweet comfortable useful admirable he cannot get out of it but doth as it were dwell on it which teacheth us not to be weary in meditating hereon or hearing hereof it should be stil fresh and new to us as the song of the Saints and Angels though the same yet is ever new The Angels themselves desire to see further into this mystery of Gods love to his Church in giving his Son They saw somewhat by the Prophets some more when he was come especially when crucified and risen again from the dead but most of all when they saw the Gentiles called and the Gospel Preached so plainly by the Apostles yet it s said They be not satisfied but stooping down as it were they pray and desire to see more yet is the benefit more to us then unto them and therefore how much more unwearied should we be Herewith our Apostle was so taken as that he desired to know nothing else but Christ crucified and esteemed all priviledges and advantages that he had of being a Pharisee an Hebrew c. as dung in comparison of Christ The Israelites were often told by the Prophets of their deliverance out of Egypt how much more should we be content to hear of our deliverance through Christ whereof that was but a small resemblance and type But alas how quickly are we weary of this argument Because we have heard often of it it s now stale and people have no more minde to hear it then the Israelites could be contented with the Manna which God allowed them but lusted after other Food As they that go to Sea think it strange and for a day or two admire the wonderful works of God but afterward cease therefrom so do we in this matter though most sweet comfortable admirable and of daily use to make us grow in hatred of sin and love of God and would also be a spur to our dulness But to come to the passion it self It s usually referred to that he suffered on the Cross as here because that was a great part and the most visible to all and the end of all but there were also infinite sufferings before and besides his death His whole life was a continual suffering from his birth to his death from the Manger to the Cross all full of Crosses His abasement to take our nature was much and to become subject to all our infirmities sin only excepted and to be in a poor condition persecuted as soon as born living obscurely with his Parents till about thirty years old in the exercise as is supposed of a mean Trade strange abasement for the Son of God as soon as he entred into his Office and was baptized the Devil set sore on him After this as a recompence to his continual toil and travel for mens Souls and Bodies he was not only content to live in a mean condition without any House of his own c. but he was so vilely railed on and slandered as is set down in the foregoing Verse as none have been more or so much yea as sometimes in policy they sought to entrap him so at other times they laid wait and used means to kill him At last they plotted by one of his own Disciples to take away his life as burning with an irreconcileable hatred against him But ere he was betrayed he entred upon his sufferings in a most grievous maner yea no doubt even before he thought thereof at sundry times which did not a little trouble and perplex him as a woman thinking sometimes of the pains of her travel before they come is set on a sweat and quakes for fear thereof But after he had finisht the Passover and instituted the Supper he knowing that the time of his death approached went into the Mount of Olives and there entred into his most bitter Passion taking with him Peter James and John the beholders of his transfiguration and glory and therefore the fitter to behold his abasement but alas pitying them he left them onely giving them a charge to watch and pray and went from them a stones cast for they were not able to behold his agony nor hear the grievous dolour that he could not but make and then began his pains as of a woman in travel save that they were a thousand times greater he fell on his face grovelling and cryed out His soul was heavy unto the death and was in such an agony that he shed drops of blood a thing never heard of and that through the extream force of his pain O it was the intollerable weight of his Fathers wrath due for all our vile sins which was so grievous as it made him pray to his Father for help and to remove that cup if it might be which was but the frailty of his humane Nature without sin desiring help feeling it self almost swallowed up and having that which would not onely have taken away the bodily life of all men
which is That thus to put up wrongs were the way indeed still to have more and more wrongs put upon us as if they should precisely follow the Rule of the Word in their dealings poverty and beggery could not but quickly come upon them both which are and have been found contrary 2. Whoso desires to live and that peaceably let him take this course hating and avoiding trouble and vexation so much as in him lieth Let us learn to be wise and thus provide for a quiet life that we may be the fitter to serve God and do good to our selves and others if we do not believe and practice the same we shall do him less honor then we do a Physician whose prescripts we use for procuring health and when trouble comes upon us we may justly blame our selves for the same O be guided by the Word how else shall you live a comfortable and quiet life David and Peter who here urge the same knew this by experience What is herein required of us hath been throughout all ages long taught though not much learn'd Thus in general For he that will love life Life and long life are blessings of God to be desired and delighted in of Gods children See to this purpose Gen. 25. 8. Exod. 20. 12. Job 5. 26. 1 Chron. 29. 28. Psal. 128. 6. Prov. 3. 16. yea the Apostle counts it a mercy of God that Epaphroditus was restored to health To be taken away untimely is as an apple pulled from the Tree before it be ripe by living long we shall get to our souls an assurance of Gods love with more and more evidences thereof to the encrease of our joys hereby also we have time and means to grow in grace and sanctification and to have the image of God restored in us more clearly and fully hereby also we shall do God much service in Church and Commonwealth and that better at the last then at the first as being bettered through experience and hence it is that Gods servants have sometimes prayed against death and desired still to live as David and Hezekiah Quest. How is this to be counted a blessing seeing many of Gods dear servants go without it and are taken away betimes R. It s but a Temporal blessing and so Gods people may be debarred thereof as of health wealth and such like and that sometimes for correction of sin howsoever God saveth their souls as on the Corinthians for their unworthy receiving of the Sacrament so good Josiah going to war without Gods command was killed in the battel so many a Minister is taken from his people for their making no better use of him as many a husband from his wife for not regarding him or trusting too much on him the like might be instanced in other sometimes in mercy that they may not see the evils to come and thus also amends is made them they are paid weight in gold for weight in silver in stead of long life in this world they have longer time in Heaven Q. How is long life a blessing seeing even many of the wicked enjoy it R. Though it be in it self a blessing as whereby they enjoy many good comforts in this life and are not so soon in Hell as they deserve and besides have space and time to repent yet as they handle the matter it s no blessing but contrarily proves a means of the encrease of their sin and so of their condemnation Quest. How is life and the continuance thereof to be desired as a blessing seeing it hath been the desire of Gods people to be dissolved and to be with Christ R. We must not desire to live because we would live but because we would live to Gods glory our own and the good of others neither must we desire to dye for it self for that is against nature nor because of our crosses and troubles but that we may cease to sin and be with God in his heavenly Kingdom perfectly both holy and happy We must desire to be with God but yet we must not be so importunate as though we would prevent the Lord and make away our selves wittingly or negligently shorten our lives Again we must not so love our life as that we should be unwilling to yield it up if God will or to redeem the continuance thereof with an ill Conscience and denying God for he that so loves his life shall lose it and his soul too Both then may be desired but because we know not what is best we must not be our own carvers but commend our selves to God to be disposed of It s a base thing to desire life to be great enjoy pleasures be revenged of our enemies and the like Q. Whence is it that most men are strongly carried after long life R. 1. Through the corruption of nature To love life is natural but to love it so exceedingly is of corruption 2. Through ignorance and unbelief of the things of a better life 3. Through the love of worldly profits pleasures and prefermentss That such fail herein may thus appear we should not love the world nor the things thereof The whole world cannot satisfie the soul our life is but a breath a blast our days are determined beyond which we cannot pass we are here but strangers and pilgrims So long as we live we are lyable as well to sin as crosses by reason thereof Of the things here wherein we place happiness what certainty is there friends may forsake us fail us remove from us dye wealth also and honor are uncertain There 's no small labor both in getting and keeping them as there cannot but be grief in parting with them yea for the most part they prove hurtful and drown men in perdition In a word the commodities of a better life are infinitely beyond all those in this life 1. Seeing long life is a blessing we ought to be heartily thankful to God that we have lived thus long and do yet live 2. When we crave of God the continuance thereof we must so use it as that it may be a blessing to us wherein we may get the assurance of our Salvation grow in grace and do good They that do thus may account their life a blessing for those that do otherwise it had been good they had dyed long ago 3. We must take heed that we do not shorten our lives and so deprive out selves of this blessing through Whoring Drinking Gaming too too many thus do as if they should not be ni Hell time enough 4. We ought to use all good means for the continuance of their lives that be dear to us be careful especially not to provoke God to deprive us of them so should Subjects of their Prince and godly Magistrates People of their faithful Pastors Husbands and Wives each of other c. And see good days That is enjoy here in this world
happy indeed but Moses had respect hereunto and did clearly discern the same Q. May we then offer our selves to trouble A. Ordinarily we must not If any in extraordinary times should feel an extraordinary zeal and desire hereto as it seems the Apostle Paul had when he would needs go to Jerusalem questionless they should have joy in their sufferings we must tarry till God call us Q. May we flee persecution A. If God make make us a way we may as who haply are not as yet so fully fitted and resolved to suffer as were meet or who know not whether God will have us scatter his truth further or remain to be as feeds thereof for afterwards but if we see that its Gods minde we should be s●ffer then it s our duty willingly and chearfully to put forth our selves This confuteth the foolish world that judging it to be a most miserable thing thus to suffer will therefore never come at it either not professing Religion at all or else revolting therefrom in time of trouble yet would they be happy but they take a contrary course they being ashamed of Christ here he will be ashamed of them hereafter In saving a transitory life they lose life everlasting yea how do we our selves shun sufferings as if they were miserable which do suffer whereas the Spirit of God hath pronounced them blessed Happy are they that suffer for a good cause for righteousness for Religion for conscience sake such as stick fastest to the truth provide best and most wisely for themselves what can their enemies do to us If they take away our goods we shall have a thousand fold more in this world and in the world to come life everlasting If they mangle our bodies God will raise up the same gloriously If they separate our souls from our bodies by death the Angels will carry them into Abrahams bosom If our cause be good we have cause to rejoyce in our sufferings so are we enjoyned so did the Apostles in their sufferings so also the holy Martyrs I might to this purpose alledge the story of Alice Driver of Priests wife in Exeter of the Christians in Edessa c. but that they may be read at large in the Book of the Martyrs O that we should be so discouraged at a mock at a frown of our betters O that we should be as soon ready to give over as to begin to do well though the more religious we are the more we esteem of the word the better both God his angels and people like us yet is it not so with the world they liked us better before but do not now approve of our course howsoever this is our duty hereof shal we have the benefit yea to be disliked to suffer for this will be our honor our advancement As David being mocked of Michol resolved to be yet more humble so should we be so much the more for goodness as we see the world oppose it and set themselves against us because of the same We must not be discouraged at the very greatest much less at small trials We know not what we shall suffer For yet we have not resisted unto blood onely let us be careful that we suffer for Righteousness and for a good cause for though we have some good things in us yet haply we may be brought to suffer for some fault in us and therein we can have small peace Beware we suffer not as Separatists that flie out against and from the Church that we suffer not for contempt or usual neglect of our Ministers if they preach the Word truly that we suffer not for rash heady hasty and violent carriage of our selves that we suffer not for our censuring for our meddling with things or persons wherewith we have nothing to do or for passing our bounds in things beyond our reach Servants must beware that they suffer not for their carelesness in their places as those which having liberty granted them to hear the Word upon their not profiting thereby are restrained therefrom so if they shall suffer for being negligent untrusty sloathful stout in answering again c. they suffer deservedly not for righteousness sake yea this their carriage makes the godly housholders to grieve and those that be not so well seasoned to think ill of the profession and it makes the name of God and his Gospel ill spoken of and hereupon many say Oh I le never meddle with these Bible-wenches c. fie upon it what a fearful thing is this The like may be said of the poor which neglect their callings and are caraless of their Families c. Note further That A godly man is blessed happy in what condition soever He is happy not onely in prosperity but even in sufferings even in the very lowest abasement nothing can make them miserable having God and a good conscience though they meet with affliction from God or persecution from men as here yet are they happy Imprison him fetter him let no creature come at him put Lyons to him c. yet he is still and shall be the childe of God the member of Christ the heir of Heaven a Kings son c. and how can he be miserable that hath the Comforter within For the wicked nothing can make them happy let a wicked man have Sampsons strength Absoloms beauty Ahasuerus his wealth Nebuchadnezzars stately Babel Dives his costly apparel c. yet is he miserable he is under the curse of God there 's but a step between him and Hell As Jonah was asleep whilest God was offended with him the winds raged against him the Whale was ready to swallow him so do the wicked eat sleep and are jovial while God is offended Heaven is shut up against them Hell gapes for them and the Devil waits on them as his prey Their security will end in a fearful wakening they shall be snatched from their beds of ease and cast into everlasting torments 1. This may encourage Gods servants to suffer for righteousness They shall not be the less happy let the world do its worst it cannot make them miserable They are every way happy in poverty sickness persecution and the like O who would not labor to attain this honor and happiness 2. It may disswade the wicked from their mischievous plotting against Gods servants For why do they pursue them To make them miserable its impossible They may indeed make them the more to shine forth through their constancy in Faith and increase their glory in Heaven and so make them more happy but to make them miserable they cannot O that they would break off this their course and be weary thereof for so long as they be wicked how rich soever or how high a pitch soever of honor they have clambered to they are miserable yea these and the like make them more miserable as being fuel to their lust being to
as well as man he both endured the infinite wrath of God and besides his person was of such infinite worth as gave such value to his sufferings as fully satisfied the justice of God 1. This confutes the Papists who make Christs sufferings imperfect two ways namely by teaching that we our selves must suffer the punishment of our sins hence are all their masses penances pilgrimages alms-deeds and charitable Works to take away the punishment of their sins after Baptism and by their renewing of Christs Sacrifice in the Mass which is as they say a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the sins of the quick and dead Their distinction of bloody and unbloody is but a shift 2. This is a wonderful comfort to all Gods children that our debt is so fully dischaarged that there 's nothing remaining for us to suffer Thus of the first The second concerneth the quality of the person which suffered He was that just one the Lamb of God which was undefiled and without spot conceived by the Holy Ghost in the womb of the Virgin had he not been such a one he could not have been our Savior Though he was innocent yet were our sins imputed to him and though we have not suffered neither of our selves have Righteousness yet as verily as he had pain and sorrow we shall have mercy and Salvation through him what can be more comfortable Thus of the second The third concerneth the persons for whom he suffered The unjust not the Devil nor Reprobates but for the Elect which yet are by nature unjust and wretched servants of sin and children of wrath as well as others He hath suffered for them that be never so unjust provided they feel their misery and have course unto him for help 1. Then for them that be in great distress for their sins and think they be so many and so great that they cannot or shall not be forgiven let them be comforted Christ came to dye for the unjust to call sinners to repentance to seek and save that which was lost If being weary you will come unto him as he invite you you shall be refreshed Though their sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wooll Paul was a great sinner yet forgiven 2. Let such as bad as they be yet come to Christ and be truly humbled He came to save such as thou art as Mary Magdalene Zacheus the Jaylor and such others His mercy on them may put thee in hope and provoke thee to seek unto him Thus of the third The fourth Why he suffered for sins for our sins to take them away for they onely are our wo our sins caused all Christs sorrow and his sorrow is our happiness Thus of the fourth The fifth To what end he suffered that he might bring us to God Ever since Adams fall we are gone from God and born strangers nay enemies to God and therefore further and and further off from God and are gone to the Devil indeed Now Christ by his death reconciles us to God and him to us and makes a blessed peace so as we may look up to him as to our Father and come into his presence with comfort He also gives us grace by his holy Spirit to be renewed sanctified and so to do works pleasing unto God and when we dye brings our souls to God as afterwards possesseth both body and soul of Heaven 1. Then how infinitely are we bound to God how welcome should Christ Jesus be to us all One would think all should flock unto him for as none are with God but such as came by him so neither shall there be All that mourn for their sins come to him believe in him and obey him he will bring them to God such as continue in their enmity against God shall for ever be separated from him Many hope to go to God that were never reconciled to him through Christ nor sought after it but it s as possible for a dog for the Devil to enter into Heaven as for us without being reconciled to God by faith in Christ Is it not lamentable that Christ should have so few that enquire and search after him nay that reject him being offered again and again 2. How welcome faithful Ministers should be to the world The worst hurt we wish you is but to bring you to God we are appointed Christs instruments herein we must Preach him and perswade you to embrace and believe in him by whom you may be brought unto God we have a worthy task and work and so must not either be idle or by false teaching and wicked living drive you from Christ but be faithful that your Salvation may be our Crown yet of all persons and kindes of people the world thinks we may be best spared and are unto most of all others most unwelcome But not alone Ministers but even every private man must help men to God as much as he can They that by vile counsel bad example or otherwise drive men from him are not Christs but the Devils instruments and Factors Thus of Christs sufferings Being put to death in the flesh This clause concerneth his death as the following his resurrection He was put to death concerning his Humane nature for as for his Godhead it could not dye and he was quickned and raised again by his Divinity and Godhead By flesh is meant his whole Humane Nature as in the following By Spirit his Divine Nature Our Savior suffered not onely in body and soul things intollerable but he also dyed gave up the ghost as all the Evangelists set down and other Scriptures testifie as they also that speak of Christs blood of his offering himself a Sacrifice for our sins of his bearing our sins on his Body on the Tree and the like This was prefigured of all the Sacrifices of the Old Law The Prophets also foretold that he should be slain Neither could it have been otherwise or otherwise he been a Savior for us for our sins deserved death and God had pronounced that death should be the reward thereof This his death was voluntary accursed as we had deserved it for our sins and for a common good Which meets with that wicked opinion of the Jews that neither think it voluntary nor that it is a propitiatory Sacrifice for sin as it is indeed and wherein our happiness lyeth and without which we must all have perished for ever The benefits ensuing to us hereby are divers 1. We are delivered hereby from all kindes of evil from the first and second death and all forerunners of both and from our sins the cause of all It s the blood of Christ that cleanseth all our sins So from all Spiritual enemies See Luke 1. 71 74. Col. 2. 15. Heb. 2. 14. 1 John 3. 8. So from the second death Rom.
lie there frying But he knows well what he doth if he should make it too common or let out too many then would the people care the less and say Though I go to Purgatory yet the Pope of his clemency will deliver me and so I mean to give my goods and lands to my children and not beggar my posterity by giving them for Pardons or Masses c. Thus indeed their trade would go down 1. This may stir us up to give thanks to God for his mercy in delivering us from those cousenages and revealing unto us his truth We ought to be so much the forwarder in every duty towards the worship of God the Ministers maintenance the poor c. you save it an hundred times over through the preaching of the Gospel truly It s a foul fault in people that they cannot be content thus to enjoy their goods lands and leave them to their children which they could not do but pull and rake from the Minister care not how little they allow him yea and are so miserable as they will scarce allow their part to keep the house of God upright or in decent sort neither give the poor without grudging or upon necessity It may comfort the godly There is no delaying place by the way to keep them from the joys of Heaven 3. It may teach men in any wise to look to themselves how they live for as soon as the breath is out of them they go presently to the place where they shall abide for ever as the Tree falls so it shall lie Neither went he down to Hell to preach to the Reprobates for as its absurd for one soul to preach to another so preaching is to do some good and thereby onely to do hurt is against the end thereof But say they he onely went and preached experimentally by his presence and shewed himself to them to convict them but they were already sufficiently convicted condemned and put in their place of torment if Christ should have gone thither to convict them again they were not sufficiently convicted before But if they say he went to triumph over the Reprobate there c. it may be answered That he triumphed on the Cross and shall triumph over the Reprobates mightily on the day of Judgement I proceed unto the Doctrines of the Text. By which also he went and Preached Here note 1. That when Gods faithful Ministers Preach it s the Spirit of God that preacheth in them Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost He that heareth you saith our Savior heareth me 1. Therefore Ministers must endeavor so to preach that it may appear unto all that its the Spirit of God which Preacheth in them their matter must be sound and wholly agreeable to the will of God and for the maner it must not be with enticing words of man wisdom but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power we must not seek our selves but Gods glory in the Salvation of our people Such as for their matter Preach contrary to the Word it s not the Spirit of God which Preacheth in them but the Spirit of Error and for the maner such as use a dark kinde of Preaching or curious and quaint terms or in such sort as the people cannot understand or profit do they woo for Christ or rather do they not speak for themselves Such kinde of Preaching is blasted and cursed of God and the Preachers thereof shall have their reward accordingly 2. Let people know that when they come to the Word they come not to hear such a man whosoever he be but to hear what the Spirit of God saith to them a great priviledge we must therefore prepare our selves rich accordingly with all reverence and fear as having to do with God himself laying the same to heart and endeavoring to be profited thereby in yielding obedience thereto O how many come hand over head sit sleeping at Church and are no whit moved with whatsoever is said Did we but believe that it were Gods Spirit that did Preach to us we would give better heed If we speak according to the Word in rebuking you for your sins you are not to fret and say O some body hath told him hereof or he doth this of ill will but acknowledge that its Gods Spirit which rebukes you and that God is there indeed 3. Gods people may be comforted by the promises delivered in the Word as the wicked may be terrified by the threatnings thereof They shall come to pass for that the Spirit of truth hath uttered them 2. That God will finde a time to right things when they be disordered Though the wicked may prevail for a time and iniquity abound and overflow yet will the Lord in his due time come to visit and reform all Thus did the Lord deal with this people Let the godly have patience and wait Gods leisure and for the wicked let them be never the lustier for that the Lord is patient and defers for a time for he will come to give every one his due and will come too soon for their turn In prison That is Hell the place appointed for the souls of the wicked a fearful place of Gods own preparing and whereof the Devil is the Jaylor For the wicked 1. They shall be separate and cast from God in whose presence stands happiness that as they regarded not his presence here so hereafter they shall not enjoy it 2. They shall be cast into the society of Devils and Reprobates whom they have served and whose society they have loved Yet 3. Not in their company to be with them in jollity and merriment c. as here but in torments howling and wailing c. those are both intollerable and eternal their souls are presently after death cast hereinto as both their bodies and souls which have been companions together in sin shall be on the day of Judgement And for that though many be called few be chosen and in the parable of the four kindes of seeds onely one of them was good as most of the old world perished so shall and have most of every age of the world Though Israel be as the sand of the Sea yet but a remnant shall be saved O how might this cool the wicked the proudest that live in jollity and set all others at nought Now they are lusty and swear and curse and do what they list poor woful creatures There is a prison prepared for them that will pull down the proudest of them sour sauce to their sweet meat but most live as if there were no such matter O what fools be they that for a few short profits ill gotten or onely sought after or some transitory pleasure or honor sell themselves to this woful place These count themselves wise and Gods servants fools but the contrary will be seen one day and that they themselves
time of Popery they wondred at the Martyrs that they would not at some times yield a little as to speak a few words c. Thus it is now for the world lives still and is like it self If any dare not play or riot or talk of the world on the Lords Day they are thought to be mopish fools who had rather be poring on a book then doing as others If any care not to get by Lying Deceiving and the common ways of the world they are wondered at as fools so if any now and then omit some of their businesses and go to hear the Word they are accounted idle as Pharaoh said to the Israelites and such as have little to do If any be humbled for their sins they think them melancholy and that they will be out of their wits and they would not be in their case for no good and would have them be merry and play it away If any at the hearing of the Word perceiving it to be high time to forsake his old wont and take a better course now dare not do as he hath formerly they wonder at him What! art thou turned Puritan will they say Wiltst thou forsake thy sports and merriments which they think a little heaven cast off thine old companions and sworn brethren c. What wondrest thou at them for thus doing What for coming out of the fire for taking pains to save their souls for not daring to wound poyson or destroy themselves by provoking God for taking pains to do that which must keep them by Gods appointment with all needful graces for being troubled about their sins and the danger thereof for longing to be in the favor of God c Assuredly thou hast small reason so to do but it s for that they savor not the things of the Spirit of God for that they perceive not the things that are of God are blinde and cannot see afar off If we should see one of a strange Country come through our Town we would wonder at their strange attire nothing like ours The children of God be not of this world but chosen out of the world and may not fashion themselves like the world but be of the fashion of Heaven the world therefore wonders at them 1. Therefore let none think that if they turn to God and take a good course that they shall be generally beloved and well thought of of God Angels and good men they shall but of the world they shall be wondered at and hated ere you begin make account hereof even to have the ill will of those which have loved you yea it may be the displeasure and frown of Father Mother c. yet let not this hold you off nor keep you still in your old course as long as God and good men love you what need you care Wo be to you when all men speak well of you better be wondered at and hated of the world for well-doing then condemned of God for ill-doing 2. For those that are entred into a good course already and finde it thus let them not be discouraged it s no new thing the worthy servants of God have been counted fools and madmen for well-doing We must have an Heroical courage not to be daunted herewith we must not think the worse of our selves because the world thinks basely of us who know us not nor our course which of them that be very fools indeed is counted foolishness we may wonder as much and much more at them that be so desperate to go on in their sins and take no thought for death or day of Judgement that hang over a pit and yet can be merry that run on in the score and never think of reckoning that dare buy a few short profits and pleasures at so dear a rate at the loss of their souls that deprive themselves of the inward and true comfort and peace they might have in God and spiritual things as the Word and Sacraments for the short and vain pleasures of honor and deceiveable riches that prefer Hogs meat before Angels food We have cause I say to wonder at their folly and madness and to pity them thanking God that hath not left us in their woful blindeness and miserable estate If thus by wondering at them we can do them any good so it is but let not their wondering hurt us 3. For those that think strange of Gods servants for not doing ill or for well doing they bewray themselves to be of the world and so to be carnal They that mislike the fashion of Gods children it s a sign they be of another Countrey not of Heaven and that they be none of wisdoms children for all they justifie wisdom wheresoever they see her and in whomsoever Labor therefore not onely not to think their course strange but to acknowledge it the best course in the world and accordingly to follow it That you run not with them This sheweth that Though we be dull and dead and slow to that that is good yet our proneness and eagerness to that that is naught is exceeding great We can run to Play-sports Vanities and Follies please us but we come to the Word Prayers and good Duties with a leaden heel at this we are drowsie but at the other watchful enough Many run so fast in the ways of sin and make such haste that they run themselves quite out of state and credit with God and man and out of their health too and have brought untimely destruction upon themselves they have made such haste that it seemeth they thought long till they were in hell Too too many also are now a running but it s in the broad way wherein the faster they run the sooner they come to destruction if it were well considered they can see small cause to make such haste O that they could be perswaded to turn head and enter into the way of good men and then let them run as fast as they will run the race set before them so run that they may obtain and as before we rejected all counsel that might do us good so now let us shake off all impediments whether within or without us that would hinder us in our Christian course or from running the way of Gods Commandments The faster we have heretofore run in vanity run we now the faster in the right way we could then take great pains think the time short spend our money in vanity now after the same maner le ts do the contrary it s our great fault that we did run apace after the world with the profits and pleasure thereof but now our fault is that we go a foot pace nay a Snails pace in goodness To the same excess of riot When men give way to sin and their hearts are set on evil there is no hoe but they will run over head and ears As the Sea if it break over a bank it can scarcely
God were not Almighty or had made no promises or at least were not faithful O let us rebuke our unbelief and gather up our selves and Gods promises and examples of his goodness to his and rest upon them as on an unmoveable foundation In well-doing While we continue in a good course without turning out of the way we may comfortably commend our selves to God but not otherwise If we falter and shift for our selves and put our our hands to unlawful means then God takes no charge of us then have we cut off our selves from all hope and comfortable commending our selves to him with what face can we so do and what promise have we when we have broken our faithfulness 1. Therefore be we perswaded that our greatest comfort in our trouble must be to stick close to God and so long God hath tyed himself to us but if we shall do otherwise we defeat our selves of this Therefore in what danger soever we be let us never put out our hands to unlawful means as to run to wizards in poverty to steal in any danger to forfeit a good conscience Our comfort is then gone and Gods promise belongs no further to us at least till we humble our selves and be reconciled upon our repentance for it 2. No ungodly man in any strait can have any warrant or comfort to commend his soul or case to God where hath God made any such promise to such nor can they in their death A bad man cannot say Lord receive my soul upon what acquaintance God knows not this soul It s not redeemed washed It hath not used to serve him no such unclean souls ever came or shall come to Heaven No they go to him whom they have served they that have given their souls to God in believing and obeying here may with comfort yield up their souls and say Lord The soul thou gavest me and hast redeemed sanctified preserved and with which I have unfainedly served thee or which now in suffering I have sacrificed for thee I do now commend it to thy keeping This soul God will most readily take it s more his then thine he loves it well But for a wicked man either he cannot have the face to commend his soul to God as wherewith he hath at no time served him but the Devil his Enemy or if he be so impudent God will take no knowledge thereof In well-doing This may be taken particularly for patience and freeness from revenging our selves of them that persecute us for should we so do God would not take charge of us but if we pray for them love them wish their good we may the more confidently commend our selves to God O then rely we on God and in all constancy in well-doing commend we our selves to him in much assurance as unto a faithful Creator CHAP. V. THe Apostle proceedeth in holy Exhortations to sundry excellent and necessary duties and vertues from the begining of this Chapter to the tenth verse from which to the end there 's the conclusion of the Epistle The Exhortations be either Special or General Special to some special kindes of persons as to Ministers and to the yonger sort Ministers from the beginning to the fifth verse yong folks in the fifth and sixth The General belongs to all being to Faith to rely on God to sobriety watchfulness c. of which in particular when we shall come unto them Verse 1. The Elders which are among you I exhort who am also an Elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed THe Apostle knowing that there are three vices incident and very hurtful to the Ministery and Ministers of the Word of God namely Idleness Covetousness and Pride seeketh to prevent these in all Ministers by exhorting them to the diligent and faithful performance of their duties belonging to them namely 1. To feed the flock of God that is to Preach the wholsome Word of God diligently to them 2. To take the oversight thereof that is to have a special care of them and regard of all their lives and behavior applying themselves to them accordingly 3. To be examples to them of pure humble and godly conversation nor doth he onely exhort to the doing of these but to the right maner of performing the same They must be done 1. Not by constraint that is out of fear of Gods wrath or force of mens Laws but willingly 2. Not for filthy lucre but of a ready and free minde seeking Gods glory and the peoples Salvation 3. Not being lordly or haughty in their carriage but examples of humility and godliness The Reasons whereby he urgeth the same are diverse The 1. taken from his own person verse 1. where are three motives to perswade them to obey his counsel even for that he was a Minister as they were a witness of the sufferings of Christ and a partaker of the glory to come in Heaven The 2. For that the people were Gods flock and his heritage The 3. For that they did depend on them for instruction and means of Salvation The 4. For that hereupon they should receive a Crown of glory that fadeth not away Speak we first of those duties in general then in particular In general Ministers being here instructed in their duty as people elsewhere Note 1. That the Scripture is not partial binding some to duty and leaving others at liberty but indifferently teacheth all yea the greater place that any is in the more duty it requireth every honor carrying a burthen of duty and the more need have such to do their duties for the example of others Above all others Ministers have most need both to be instructed in their's and also to perform the same for on theirs depends the well-doing of the people both in their general and special callings for how shall the people have these things if they receive them not from the Ministers of God put apart for that end how shall they else be either good Christians or good Magistrates Husbands Housholders c. If the great wheel of the clock that should turn all the rest do stand still so also must all the rest 1. When people are informed of their duties and amongst others of their duties towards their Ministers as of love honor reverence obedience maintenance c. they must yield thereto not think much hereof for God hath laid as great a burthen on their Ministers which they are charged with yea they must be thankful to God that hath had such a special care of their souls as so weightily to charge Ministers therewith as it s no small comfort to the poor that God hath taken such order for them by so many commandments so many promises also and threats to the rich People also ought in any wise to be careful of their own souls and joyn with the Lord in care who is so careful of them Heavy
and consider well and tarry till they have a calling and let them not intend to live at ease to follow their pleasures to gather riches c. but let them make their reckoning to prove Laborers Soldiers Watchmen c. else no coming here Thus in general The elders which are among you I exhort c. This verse containeth the first Reason of the following Exhortation which is taken from his own person being one every way fit to exhort them namely 1. An Elder and Minister as well as they for the name Elder is of dignity and office here and not of age who therefore knew what belong'd to his place and did what he required of them to do 2. A witness of Christs sufferings and so well acquainted with his minde 3. A partaker of the glory that shall be revealed who therefore would not exhort you unto any thing whereby either I my self may be deprived hereof or you hindred from attaining hereunto 1. In that he an Elder exhorts them Elders note That Ministers are fittest to teach Ministers and to judge of their actions True people may and ought try our Doctrine modestly and humbly they may also dislike and speak against foul things in our life and conversation but of things not so apparent people must not be ready to censure much less think to teach their Ministers For the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets This rebuketh the too much rashness and pride of some this way ready to control every course of a Minister that is not pleasing to them yea their maner of teaching prophanely calling it railing and that they should have spoke thus and thus when such dislike any thing in a Minister it were their wisdom to ask the judgement of some godly Minister before they censure or give judgement against him 2. In that he requireth nothing at their hands but what he himself did note That The most forcible and profitable way of teaching whether private or publique is first to do that in our own persons which we require of others Jesus did and taught Parents may not rebuke swearing in their children and swear themselves Housholders bid their Servants go to Church and stay at home themselves having no necessary occasion to keep them from thence Abraham was circumcised with his Houshold Joshua and his Houshold served God the Jayler and his Houshold were baptized He is not the best Husband that puts over his work to be done by others saying Go but who puts his hand thereto saying Go we c. He is an ill Captain that bids his Soldiers go fight himself in the mean time tarrying behinde It s woful teaching by Ministers that do quite contrary Shall we not condemn our selves while we call for that in another which we our selves do not observe Neither is there likelyhood that in such a case any will give ear unto us 3. In that he besseecheth Note as his modesty and humility So that Peter was no Pope had no Supremacy was not Christs Vicar as the Pope of Rome affirmeth of him and challengeth of him by succession Had it been so there had been no fitter time wherein to have shewed it then this Howsoever what had it been to the Pope who hath wofully degenerated He calls himself a Pastor yet challengeth authority over all the Church not Kings themselves excepted He is an hideous Beast and Monster If he send any commands it s not I that am a fellow-Minister and that take pains in the same calling do beseech you but he proudly thundereth and threatneth c. A witness of the sufferings of Christ So be we it s an Article of our Faith and we look thereby to be saved but we are witnesses onely of that we have heard he of that he saw he was with him when he was apprehended when he was brought before the High Priest c. he was a witness by seeing them preaching them imitating them Now in that he urgeth this as a reason to back his Exhortation we may note 1. That if we have any Credit Honor Favor Dignity we ought to improve the same to the benefit of the Church and furthering of Gods cause 2. That Ministers must use all Spiritual wisdom and skill to perswade unto obedience as cunning Chapmen they must use many reasons to perswade Customers to buy their Commodities 3. That the troubles of Gods Ministers are so far from disgracing them as they honor them and make their persons and counsel the more to be regarded for their sufferings are a seal to their Ministery and shew their faithfulness for those we should respect them the more not think the worse of them And also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed Here note briefly 1. That we should much regard those and their counsels whom we see much graced of God and like to be heirs of glory 2. That such as are Partners with Christ in suffering shall also partake with him in glory 3. That God hath prepared glory for his Saints in Heaven 4. That a man may come to know in this life that he shall be partaker of the glory of Heaven whereof whosoever is as yet ignorant he must endeavor by all means to make it sure Q. How shall we come to know this A. If here we partake of grace we shall hereafter partake of glory on the contrary no grace no glory Lassure you This knowledge is that which doth here uphold us amidst our many troubles it 's Mount Nebo whence we see the Land of Canaan all the Grapes we have to comfort us in the wilderness of this world 5. That Faith makes things invisible to be seen things absent as the glory here spoken of to be present Through this a childe of God hath Heaven already in possession whereinto his Soul shall enter immediately after his death as his body also being coupled to his Soul on the day of Judgement He that believeth saith the Scripture hath eternal life and Whom he justified them he also glorified Verse 2. Feed the flock of God which is among you taking the oversight thereof not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready minde THe first duty required of Ministers is laid down in these words Feed the flock of God which is among you Feed namely by preaching the word soundly and diligently The flock of God namely The whole company which is under your charge which is not yours but Gods and that whether by creation as all are or by redemption as some are Which is among you or dependeth on you for Instruction Comfort and Direction Feed This implies divers things as 1. That Ministers must preach the Word of God Now preaching is an opening of the Scriptures wherein as many things be dark and hard to be understood which God hath done in his great wisdom
uttered nor conceived what it is It s described according to our weak conceit by a feast a marriage feast of a Kings Son a City whose Walls and Streets are Gold and Gates Pearls c. It s a State free from all evil whereas here there 's nothing but crying and complaining one of his head lungs back c. another of his unruly children losses by sea by Bankrupts c. There all tears are wiped away there also there 's no want of any thing no need of any thing whether for body or soul but a perfect enjoying of all good for we shall enjoy God himself the fountain of all goodness we shall also enjoy the society and fellowship of the Lord Jesus who hath so loved us and who is the joy of our hearts So of the holy Ghost the Comforter so of the Angels of the Patriarks Prophets Apostles Martyrs of our godly Friends Children Ministers that begat us to God c. where we shall be so filled with all comfort as we shall joy continually for we shall sing night and day the place also adds unto our happiness Needs must Heaven be excellent as being prepared by God for himself to set forth his magnificence what it s within appears by its glorious outside and the glory thereof by the fairness of the world given to dogs and Gods Enemies this also is eternal The glory of this world as it s not worthy to be so called so it s inconstant and fickle see it in Nebuchadnezzar Belshazzar Herod one day yea one hour knows us often both happy as the world accounts and miserable but such is not the glory of Heaven it endures for ever This is here as elsewhere promised to faithful Ministers they shall enter into their Masters joy 1. This may exceedingly encourage Ministers to take all the pains that possibly they can in their calling we serve a good Master O how men strive for a corruptible Crown how much more should we for an incorruptible how careful should we be in Studying Preaching living well c 2. It may serve to uphold us in the midst and against all discouragements our office is not onely painful but oftentimes fruitless thankless and perilous A Minister shall have to do with such dull ones as he must teach them as a childe new weaned with line upon line precept upon precept others are so wretched as that by no means they will be reclaimed yea oftentimes they may receive unkindeness where they least expect it people count our labors nothing which yet we finde such as we are scarce able to undergo others grudge at our maintenance otherwhile we shall having delivered things never so carefully be taxed by some of ignorance by others of malice others will raise up lyes and slanders against us and so requite our pains others will persecute us as Demetrius and Alexander the Copper-Smith did the Apostles yea the more painful we are the harder we shall be dealt with Now against all those and the like hath not a Minister need to have something to comfort and hearten him This will do it fully the incorruptible Crown will pay for all we must look up to that Contrarily what will be the reward and end of all unfaithful Ministers that starve and mislead their Flock that live in jollity and at ease c Oh their reward will be with the unfaithful Servant to be taken and bound hand and foot and thrown into utter darkness Then shall they pay for all the wages taken without doing any work so for all their ease which will be turned into pain and wo They shall then give an account for all the souls that they have caused to perish Q. But when shall Gods Ministers have their Crown Answ. When Christ shall appear and come to Judgement O then if he never come we shall never have our Crown O doubt not once hereof He shall certainly come to Judgement It s an Article of our faith and which is often mentioned in Scripture See Matth. 25. 31. Acts 2. 11. 1 Thess. 4. 14. 2 Thess. 1. 10. Rev. 1. 7. Therefore let neither the good doubt hereof to become slack or faint nor the wicked to continue careless Obj. But when will it be It will be long first Answ. It cannot be long ere it be for we be in the latter end of the last times but if it were our life is not long and in the end thereof we shall have one half of our Crown and our bodies shall rest for the other until the day of Judgement therefore live by Faith and wait and be not short breathed If one part tarry a while it will be so wonderful when it comes as that it will abundantly pay for all 3. For People If they be good sheep brought from their wandring turn'd from goats to sheep and be ruled by the government of their godly Pastors they shall also have this incorruptible Crown of glory For the stubborn and disobedient that will retain their goatish qualities that wil not be brought home by any means that can be used their condition will be fearful but in death when their souls shall be carried into Hell and on the day of Judgement when they shall stand on the left hand they which here would not hear that voice that called them so often to him shall then be charged to depart from him As this day will be joyful to the godly so shal it be terrible to the wicked Verse 5. Likewise ye yonger submit your selves unto the elder yea all of you be subject one to another and be clothed with humility for God resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble THe Apostle proceeds to the duty of another special sort of people namely the yonger ones shewing what duty they owed to their elders and then goes to Exhortations to sundry particular duties Likewise ye yonger submit your selves unto the elder Although I use to trouble you little with divers interpretations or mens judgements taking it that my duty is to shew you rather what God saith then what men say yet at this time it will not be amiss to propound fome Elders may be taken as in the preceding uses not for elders in years but by office and so by the yonger may be meant not the yong in years but inferior in place namely the people or if yong in years are to be understood then a part for the whole is meant All the people must submit themselves to their Ministers whereof a great part are yong ones and they commonly the most unruly and so the duty of people towards their Ministers is here taught as the word likewise seemeth to imply Or Elders may well be taken for Elders in age properly and so the yonger in like sort for the yong sort of people and so the duty of youth towards them that are aged be here taught as it may well be and the more likely
most part of old folks are so silly and ignorant that they have no good counsel in them nay are blockish and unteachable they spent their own time badly and never made conscience thereof therefore do not they call on others not being converted how can they strengthen others Many also are so far from rebuking them for disorder and making the wicked afraid as they will sit still on their benches and look upon youths rioting dancing c. and laugh at them aud so they strengthen them in their naughtiness and if a yonger man reprove them whether Officer or other they do not make any reckoning thereof for why such an ancient old man will stand and look on us and when they see such coming they are so far from fleeing as were meet as they are the more emboldned because they know they shall be countenanced by them yea these do in effect as Saul who held the garments of those that stoned Stephen others there are who though they will not stand looking on them yet will pass by and say nothing to them but rather bid them God speed and so are partakers of their evil These also should give good example be paterns of piety godliness hatred of sin zeal for Gods glory love to the house of God c. as those that have had much time many means and now have but a while to live If their example be good it may do much good if ill then no hoe Abraham Isaac Jacob were godly old men so Noah Job Samuel Simeon their example did much good But Oh how vain frothy and unsavory are the words of some being so prophane as youths might rather open their mouth to reprove them then give any attention to hear them Some talk as filthily as if they had never repented of the whoredom of their youth some talk and tell to youths and laugh at the lewd pranks of their youth so reading their Lectures of evil they shew themselves zealous to do evil that not onely will do so themselves as long as they can but would that others should after them the contrary is a good sign Some also even aged are Swearers Sabbath breakers Al●househaunters c. some also though for the time they might have been Teachers though not publique ones yet of the youths had need to be taught even the easiest Principles of Religion they can onely tell you of old Stories they can remember since King Henry went to Bulloign and can remember the old learning and that they helpt the Priest say Mass many a time If they could remember that they had repented of it it were well or could remember of any good they did forty years ago or that they were greatly moved at a Sermon and ever since have made conscience of their ways took such and such pains to hear such delight to read in the Scriptures and other good Books have sate up half nights in doing good O this were well If they could talk of our Saviors birth life miracles death of his Apostles their acts of the Israelites carrying into captivity coming out of Egypt so of the Flood of the Creation c. these things indeed would become them as they can tel you how old they are and in what Kings Reign they were born so if they could tell you when they were born again and how old they are in Christ it were happy But alas in such things they have no more skill then Nicodemus had when he first came to our Savior They are dumb when they are put from their old Stories I knew his Grand-father his great Grand-father c. the older a man is the worse he is if he be not godly O that such would consider why they came into the world how near death is what good counsel or good example they have given whom they have kept from evil or furthered in good what good they have done for their own Souls how they should have served God in holiness and righteousness all the days of their life and that they have not thus served him for which they have a fearful answer to make Though there be no great hope in respect of your dullness as also that God will not accept such a lame Sacrifice and the Devils leavings who requireth the firstlings and lest the Devil will not be put out nor sin accustomed unto be done away yet nothing is impossible to God therefore despair not onely ply you with exceeding haste lest you be shut out and that you may turn to God get some assurance of his love redeem the time make some amends do some good ere you dye as the good Thief that rebuked his fellow If old folks would not live without being desired nor be a burthen nor dye without being mourned for let them live to good use and do good so shall their age be honorable and honored There be some good old ancient men but alas their ●umber is but small and they not so zealous as they should be old men also in Towns must use their power and place to the good of the yonger and Church wherein they live and not to ease their own bodies or purses laying the burthen on their inferiors and as old men so are old women also here meant who must give good instruction and do good also by example they must speak graciously and to good purpose not given to Tale-telling Malice idle Talking c. as most are 2. For youths it rebuketh the notorious pride and malepart boldness of the youths of our times in their gesture carriage speech to their elders whether in publique or private what a universal complaint do men make of their children what a complaint especially of Servants that there were never the like for pride idleness untrustiness c. never looking for more maintenance never less duty In former times when they had not the tythe of the means they now enjoy servants were plain diligent trusty careful to please painful c. What a shame is this Hereupon they that be ill minded blame us and the Gospel never good servants since so much preaching O woful mouth is our preaching or the Word of God in the fault Is there one word in the Bible or doth any one come from us at any time that teacheth them so to do Do not we teach them the quite contrary and do not you give God a good mends for the Gospel There are some which do even profess Religion that yet suffer civil servants to go beyond them in diligence and trustiness and gentleness and good behavior Oh what may we not fear upon the Land for the ungraciousness of this generation seeing they will not bear the easie yoke of Government of their Elders they may look for some heavy yoke or other God will set up houses of Correction for such How few youths make any account that it belongs to them to be Religious or that their youth should be otherwise spent then
They say as the Olive and Fig Tree in Jothams Parable Shall I leave my Fatness Shall I forsake my Sweetness Usury Deceit Lying Fornication Adultery and the like so must not we we must be doers of the Word All other duties do but tend to practise which is the end and perfection of all 1. God is our Soveraign Lord and King and we be his Subjects and these his Laws and by these means doth he speak to us gives every body leave to read his Laws and Statutes yea requires it and besides sets Expounders thereof This is the Word of GOD This is the minde of GOD He that despiseth this despiseth GOD himself This Bible shall save or condemn the World and by this we shall all be judged He being our Soveraign and we such poor Worms we should count it our happiness to obey 2. He is exceeding bountiful towards us he who both gave us life and continues to maintain it by so many mercies which all ought to binde us neither doth he thus for us to strenghthen us to rebel and fight against him but to the contrary 3. His will is a perfect rule of Righteousness and he doth not first see a thing good and then wills it and commands it but first commands it and wills it and so it becomes good Whatsoever is agreeable to this is holy and good whatsoever is contrary to this is wicked and to be abandoned 4. All creatures in heaven and earth obey The Sun runs his course ordinarily that God set it at first and slacketh not and not so onely but if it be put out of course it resisteth not If he bid it stand still it doth if he bid it come back it doth He appoints the Sea to flow and it doth but if he bid it stand up and let his people pass it obeyeth and stands as two Brazen Walls so when he sets it on work it rageth to toss Jonah and whom God will and when he bids it and the winds be still they obey as to our Savior He commanded the east wind to bring in the Locusts and another wind to carry them out how much more then should we obey that ought to be best of all being Lords of the rest and all they to serve us Summer and Winter obey the Lords Word and why not we These may rise up against us 5. Obedience exceedingly pleaseth all else is to no purpose Sacrifices burning of Incense observation of Feasts or Fasts c. Unto the wicked saith God What hast thou to do to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldest take my Covenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and casteth my words behinde thee Nay it s so far from pleasing him as it incenseth and provoketh him He that turns away his ear from the cry of the poor shall himself cry unto the Lord but not be heard They are blessed that hear the Word and keep it If ye know these things saith our Savior happy are ye if ye do them yea such as do the will of God he accounts as his Mother Brethren and Sisters by this we may know that we are the Lords This also opens the storehouses of all Gods blessings and musles the mouthes of all the Creatures that they can do us no hurt 6. Disobedience is that which hath ever troubled the world At first in Adam and Eve it put all out of course and so hath done ever since This is the cause of all Evils Plague Pestilence Famine and the like yea of the increase and continuance of those and others more grievous yea this is that which brought all Judgements not onely upon Israel but upon all the world and that which sends men to eternal confusion 1. This is an exceeding comfort to all those whose hearts the Lord hath inclined bowed and humbled to be obedient to his will in all things and that have no greater grief then that they can obey no better but glad when they can obey and most when best let these know it s a brand of Christs sheep and mark that they love God that they are of the blessed ones that hearing also obey that they shall never fall as being built on the rock This is a certain band to tye the Lord to you he can fail you of no good thing Obey my voyce saith he and I will be your God yea and a certain assurance of eternal life is gained by obeying Herein continue and encrease your care its perfect freedom it brings sound and true comfort here and hereafter when they that disobey have a corrasive and gnawing Conscience 2. This condemns all sorts of disobedient persons which are many and this is the reason that Hell is fuller then Heaven because so many are disobedient to the Word and so few will be held within compass as 1. Those notorious monsters that live in open prophaneness that are set to cross God what he commands they will none of it and what he forbids they are mad on which shake off all care and live as they list as if they were masterless and no body had to do with them or to call them to any account as if they ought no duty to any who will not learn Gods ways but with Pharaoh say Who is the Lord c. Do these poor woful creatures know what they do alas no Knowest thou with whom thou hast to do and against whom thou rebellest against the Lord of Heaven and earth that made the world that toucheth the mountains and they smoke that thundereth with his voyce But who art thou that strivest with thy maker that darest rebel against thy Soveraign who is able to cast thee into the Jail of Hell for ever and ever O consider this you that forget God The wicked shall be turned into Hell upon the wicked God will rain snares and fire c. Dost thou think to speed better then thy Predecessors Adam was cast out of Paradise the old world drowned Sodom burnt c. If Pharaoh that proud hearted Tyrant could not hold it out nor Nebuchadnezzar nor Belshazzar nor Herod dost thou think to get any thing by wrestling with thy maker by casting out thy gantler and as it were bidding battel to the Lord O therefore humble thy self on thy face fall flat at his footstool and crave pardon send out messengers of Peace and submit thy self saying Lord what wilt thou that I shall do obey and that gladly or else he will lay thee where thou shalt have small joy yea he will make thee obey in spight of thine heart There will come a voyce that thou shalt nor resist Go ye cursed of my Father and if thou wouldst bring thy minde to obey thou shouldst finde it every way thy safest course thou shouldest save not onely thy soul which is the greatest but even thy body thy good name
thy goods for how have many by yielding to the Word saved hundreds and thousands this way that they began to waste and others do How do many bring untimely death upon themselves by wretched courses How many do the gallows catch in a year how many stab'd and dye fearfully which might have lived long if they would have been ruled Innumerable sorrows do men bring upon themselves for want of obedience to God and his Word which that would save them from At least if thou wilt not obey throughly and in all things yet come into some civil order and course so shalt thou at least if thou beest not saved yet have the less torment in Hell 2. Civil persons which disobey both commandments of the Gospel do neither believe nor repent and for the Law they do some duties to men but of the first Table make small Conscience nay they have no skill neither savor of the spiritual maner of performing duties What talk they of giving every man his due when they give God no part of his as they should or of keeping promise with men if they shall break their vow with God 3. Ignorant persons of all kindes as the Heathens that worship they know not what and Papists that toil themselves about their will-worship how good soever their meaning may be yet they do not that which God commands yea numbers among ourselves that either have or might have the means but neglecting them pull in their heads 4. Hypocrites that obey in some things yea some in many and go far yet either never digged deep and laid a foundation sure or retain the love of some sin 3. This may be for instruction to us all especially that profess the fear of God that throughout our whole course and in all our conversation we cast this with our selves not what our profit or our pleasure or our minde saith but what the Word of God saith This becometh Christians and will bring comfort and will prove the surest way at long run we must not following our own reason and conceits cast off and disobey the Word we think it may be better thus and thus or hope it s no great matter or that it s but once O take heed This cost Saul dear He would go offer Sacrifice He said he was bold so he was indeed as we many times But take heed of being bold with the Word and taking leave of sin though but for once Thou knowest not what that once may cost thee To Travel on the Lords day hath many fair pretences but what evils hath ensued thereby So Usury is a hasty way to get gain but fair and soft goes far What if we get much and put it in a bottomless purse and God blow on it and melt it One man gets slowly in his Office and Trade because he dares not lye Dissemble break the Sabbath Others care for nothing and they grow rich apace with the one it holds and his Children enjoy it and he dyeth with Peace and Credit but the other dyeth with disgrace and a guilty Conscience and God scatters that he hath for God will take pity of the honest labors of men and give of the fruit thereof to their Posterity but no pity of that which was got with the price of his glory Hereby many a man loseth soul and all So many a man seeth not into some one thing who is otherwise good and so haply is too hard to his workfolks will make bold now and then with the Sabbath c. though his soul be faved yet God sets the print of his hand on him in some outward affliction Body Goods Children and the like Whereunto also they were appointed The Reason how it comes about that seeing Christ is the way of Salvation and the Word the means to bring men to Faith in Christ that yet to some they prove a rock of offence and turn to their destruction it s because God in his unchangeable and eternal purpose hath so decreed This to let pass other interpretations by the consent of the soundest is the plain meaning of the words and I come not to tell you what men say but what I am perswaded God saith As he hath ordained some to Salvation so hath he some to stumble and come to destruction which are the two parts of Predestination This is that most holy and just decree of God whereby he hath in himself eternally and unchangeably determined of the final estate of all mankinde and every particular in the same whatsoever falls out is by his decree and not a● adventure He doth all according to the counsel of his own will The means of effecting this are the creation of man in innocency and the fall of Adam which was also of him decreed It hath these two parts Election and Reprobation for though it be put sometimes for the one onely as for Election yet is it common to both This Doctrine will appear both lawful and meet to be taught upon these grounds 1. Whatsoever is written is written for our learning and the whole Scripture is profitable to teach c. whereof this is a part 2. This is a part of Gods counsel the whole whereof ought to be taught 3. It s of very great use to the people of God their strong Bulwark to flie unto and strengthen them against all Satans assaults even the unchangeableness of Gods counsel 4. The holy Apostles have Preached the same plainly to mixt Churches in most of their Epistles 5. Many Errors have been broached about this Doctrine by Satan and men of corrupt judgement whereof the Translator of Mr. Perkins his Treatise speaketh in his Epistle But it s offensive and many take hurt hereby casting off all care and saying If I be elect I shall be saved let me do as I list and if I be appointed to damnation I cannot be saved do what I can What if some take hurt by this Doctrine shall it not therefore be Preached What Doctrine almost can be taught but mans vile nature and heart will take occasion by it of ill as of Gods mercy whereupon men wax bold and secure shall not the Doctrine of Gods mercy be taught so of Christian liberty which was the reason of those preventions which the Apostles used so of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith onely yea Christ himself is a stumbling stone and rock of offence Shall he therefore not be Preached It s not the fault of the Doctrine but their own wicked corruption and Satans malice that turn holy and wholesom things to hurt as a cholerick stomack doth good meat into ill juyce and the Spiders gather poyson from the same flowers from which the Bees gather honey Do we therefore wish there were no flowers Shall the Childrens bread be kept from them because some unruly Servants will riot and abuse it Shall the use of a Knife or a Sword
their work God will not put it up but defend even the meanest Servant in his Family 4. It may be for direction let us prove our selves his true Servants Covenant-Servants and no hang-by's for as about Princes and great Mens Houses be many that be not in Covenant for wages nor are setled Servants of whom any charge is taken So in the Church the Lords House there are a number that work not the Lords work but the Devils and are of his Family for he hath two Families one of reprobate souls in Hell the other of unbelievers and wicked here on Earth These work earnestly for the Devil yet they will come into Gods House and the Devil is content they should so long as they keep their heart and life to him yea they will put over their leg and sit down at the table to eat of the bread prepared for the Lords Family but he will come in and view them and finding them without a wedding Garment and such as be not in Covenant with him he will cause them to be bound hand and foot and cast into utter darkness These shall have their wages where they have done their work Hast thou been such a one humble thy self before God bid adieu to thy old master and come in good earnest and enter Covenant and purpose to be a true and dutiful Servant to God and he will have mercy on thee and take thee into his Service and then mayest thou have comfort and challenge the priviledge of the Family If it first begin at us c. Here note 1. That the Apostle puts himself in the number of such as were of Gods House So that its possible for us to come to be assured that we are of the Lords Family Labor we therefore to attain hereunto else what joy can we have of our lives we are bid make our calling and election sure and why do we it not wouldst thou know to what family thou dost belong thou mayest by the works thou doest If we work the works of God of Holiness and Righteousness in our general callings and be faithful in our special callings then are we of Gods Family if the works of sin then are we of our Father the Devil You may come into Gods House as many an hypocrite and Beast doth but of his house you be not try whose work thou doest Thou doest some work of Gods and some of the Devils no if we do any work willingly for the Devil we do none for God aright nor that he accepts Again if thou dost not believe nor repent thou art none of Gods Family if thou art an unrighteous person thou art none of his yea if we be of Gods house we cannot abide to hear our Master ill spoken of nor any of our fellow-servants for their goodness but our hearts will rise against it contrarily if we be such as dishonor God reproach the sincerity of the Gospel and power of Religion with them that desire so to walk yea or can hear them ill spoken of and are not grieved thereat it s a sign we be none of Gods Family but the Devils 2. That there 's no small difference between the state of Gods children and the wicked even the state of the godly notwithstanding the many troubles wherewith their life is filled is to be preferred before the state of the wicked notwithstanding their present jollity The state of the godly is infinitely better then the wicked's both in this life in death and at the day of Judgement Those are freed from the curse and wrath of God and all evil are reconciled and made the children of God and are covered with Christs righteousness These are in danger of all condemnation remain children of the Devil Enemies to God altogether in their own filthiness all Creatures both in Heaven and Earth are at Peace with those but all at odds with these Angels guard the one the other are a prey to the Devil the one working the works of holiness are acceptable to God and shall have eternal life the other the filthy scullery of the Devil shall have Hell the one are beloved of God the other hated the person and prayers of the one are acceptable to God the others abominable in his sight of the one all things their afflictions yea their sins turn to their good to the other the mercies of God yea his holiest Ordinances turn to their hurt Those are called the glory these dross those are as a tree planted by the rivers of waters c. these as the chaff which the wind driveth away those are as wheat for the garner these cockle and tares to be bundled up for the fire the wicked seem more excellent outwardly but they are like painted Sepulchres like rotten wood shining in a dark night the godly are like a plain leather Casket with a precious Pearl therein of unspeakable worth Turn them which way you will if both in prosperity infinite odds one being the childe of God the other of the Devil the godly hath more joy and peace in well-doing then the wicked of all their jollity the ones prosperity is a pledge of better things in Heaven the others is sent in wrath to fat them to their destruction If both in adversity alike yet infinite odds the one chastened of God as a Father doth his children for their great good the other pursued in vengeance by a just Judge as fore-goers of greater plagues for the one Gods arrows are dipt in poyson for the other the poyson is taken away in Christs Sufferings On the one God hath promised to lay no more then they are able to bear the other have no such promise the one have Gods promise to comfort and uphold them in them as also assurance as of good by it so of a good and happy end and after this life their joys to begin that never shall end but the other have no such promises nay when this life ends then shall begin their Torments which shall never end nay put the godly in the greatest misery that can be and the ungodly in the greatest jollity like Dives and Lazarus or if ye will chain the one in a Dungeon about his feet middle and neck and let the other ride in all pomp and with all the attendance and honor that the world can afford yet the one is infinitely more happy then the other In death the Righteous have hope the wicked none but are either full of horror or blockish After death these go to Hell those to Heaven the children are taken up into the Chambers of Christ the Dogs and ungodly are cast out of doors At the day of Judgement the one shall stand with comfort on the right hand the other with terror on the left both being raised up The wicked shall have the wound that death gave them healed up as Traytors be healed of their hurts that they may come to execution and
thereupon both in body and soul shall be cast into Hell fire though the one begin with joy yet they end with wo and though the other begin heavily here yet they end with joy in Heaven and this life is nothing to that 's to come Could we discern this we would reverence the one highly and no less pity the others yea should the ones troubles here infinitely exceed the others jollities or the troubles of the godly be here greater then they are as also the jollity of the wicked we would not change with them 1. This confuteth the blinde world that esteemeth basely of Gods servants and of their state but let us never think the worse of our estate for them as a plain rich man doth not when a vain bragging fellow in brave apparel goes swaggering scornfully by him 2. This may and ought wonderfully to comfort Gods servants that hath advanced them to this high dignity passing by so many others O that we would walk worthy hereof in an holy and pure conversation 3. This may be a choak to the wicked notwithstanding all their jollity and make them weary of their condition laboring to become godly and of Gods house that so they may be truly happy What shall the end of them be that obey not the Gospel of God Here 's implyed 1. That though the afflictions of Gods people be many and great yet they are nothing in respect of the miseries which shall befal the ungodly The Lord is Judge of all the world and he will deal justly and equally even give every one according to their works If therefore he afflict his children with rods he will plague his enemies with scourges if he will not bear with sin in his own servants that are careful to please him and stand in awe and yet be overtaken then he will be dreadfully revenged of those that make a trade of sin if his children in their conversion and often afterward upon any sin committed have gripes of Conscience and suffer the terrors of God then shall the wicked have a gnawing Worm that shall never dye if those be brought as it were along by Hell these shall be left and swallowed up of Hell The Lord began with the Israelites in Captivity but ended with the Egyptians in drowning them in the Red-sea the three Children were put into the fiery Fornace not burnt but fire seized on them that put them in Daniel was put into the Lyons Den but his Enemies and Accusers were devoured Israel was carried Captive but Ashur destroyed the children are beaten with the rod thereafter it s burnt God chastens his for a few days here to their amendment but the wicked shall be cast into eternal fire In reading hearing and seeing what grievous things the Lord hath laid on his own children the wicked may see as in a glass the woful state that abides them 2. That the torments prepared for the ungodly in death and at the day of Judgement are such as cannot be expressed The Apostle knew that they should have a fearful end but utter the further end of it and lay it out to the full he could not therefore is forced to say What shall be the end It s a wonderful love of God that he hath made us his Children but yet it s not manifest what we shall be that is it cannot be exprest what happiness is prepared for us Eye hath not seen nor ear hath not heard what God hath prepared for his children So cannot any decypher the fearfulness of the wo prepared for the ungodly Such shall be separated from God and from his Saints and have their portion with the Devil and damned O the universality of their torments both in respect of their bodies and souls O the greatness of their pangs tormented with fire and brimstone O the eternity of them They shall be world without end If a man in pain should shed a tear or drop of water from his eye once in a thousand years and no more yet sooner should he make a whole Sea before this time will end 1. O what an iron scourge should this be to drive the wicked to repentance not resting till they know they be freed from this woful lake O let them never glory in their prosperity as long as they are in danger hereof If any will not break off their sins and fear they will prove costly profits and pleasures and they that will not believe and fear here shall feel them to eternal destruction hereafter 2. How should this glad the hearts of all Gods people that know themselves freed from this fearful lake and make them walk chearfully and obediently all their days to the honor of him that by his sufferings hath freed them therefrom yea should we not bear our few afflictions patiently being freed from these endles and easeles ones and not to envy at the prosperity of the wicked seeing it shall have such an end let their beginning be what it will be if this be their end God keep us from having any part therein That obey not the Gospel of God The wicked are described by their disobedience to the Gospel and these are indeed the most wicked and and have the fearfullest answer to make and the lowest or worst place in Hell they shall speed worst for their sin is greatest For what a favor of God is it not onely to give Christ to the world but then to publish him by the Gospel being the glad tidings of Salvation to all of what sort soever though never so mean never so great sinners there is mercy upon their unfained humiliation and such God sends his Ministers to beseech men to be reconciled O this is an unspeakable f●vor as that the contempt thereof must needs deserve a fearful damnaton That men should continue yet in their sins and have no minde ● Christ as a King and Savior is fearful If a company of Rebels●ad a pardon proclaimed and sent out to so many as would come in fany would stand out and refuse the Kings grace and favor were he ●t worthy to be cut-off It shall be easier for Sodom and Gomorrah in ●e day of Judgement then for these people If they that despised the●aw were not unpunished how shall they be dealt withal that desp● the Gospel The higher they are lift up the lower they shall be casdown 1. This rebuts the most part Howsoever they talk of the Gospel and come●t Church and cry The temple of the Lord the temple of the Lord yet ●ey yield not obedience thereto but continue in their sins There are ●w that come to see any such need of Christ as highly to prize him a● most earnestly to seek him though some would have Christ the Savior and will have Jesus Christ in their mouths yet few will sto● to his yoke to renounce all their lusts and yield up themselves in abbedience to his