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B15167 A plaine exposition vpon the whole thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth chapters of the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Romanes Wherein the text is diligently and methodically resolued, the sense giuen, and many doctrines thence gathered, are by liuely vses applied for the benefit of Gods children. Performed with much varietie, and conuenient breuitie, by Elnathan Parr Bachelor in Diuinity, and preacher of Gods word. To which is prefixed an alphabeticall table, containing the chiefe points and doctrines handled in the booke. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1622 (1622) STC 19321; ESTC S114077 263,450 369

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strenuously cheerefully and watchfully In setting downe whereof there are two things first A Transition secondly An Exhortation The Transition And that not Bezaes Idque nor Chrysostoms Praesertim referring it to the eight verse of this Chapter as an enforcing of the dutie of loue to our neighbour as Piscator but rather the ancient Et hoc so that we do not with Aquinas construe it with tempus or M. Caluins Hoc etiam supplying Edico out of the third verse of the twelfth Chapter or Paraeus his Insuper or if you will Ad haec Praeterea in English Moreouer or Besides or Furthermore I say that now it is high time to awake out of sleepe I take this verse then to be as a Preface to that which followes though it may also be a conclusion of all that is before from the beginning of the twelfth Chapter for watchfulnesse is necessary to the duties precedent and that which followes is referred vpon occasion of these words So that this verse may be likened to Noah who saw the old and new world or to Ianus whose two faces beholds the old and new yeare or to Christ who is the end of the law and the beginning of the Gospell In the Exhortation we haue two parts The Dutie exhorted vnto and the Reason The Dutie It is now high time to awake out of sleepe High time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the houre of waking a short part of time being named to signifie that wee must speedily awake and not lose a minute To awake The Greeke word signifies more namely to arise which is best here and to be necessarily vnderstood if we translate awake for many awake who rise not The Drunkard common Swearer c. are awake sometime they know they doe euill and vnderstand admonitions but they lye still in their sinnes and arise not now the intent of Paul is that we should awake and arise too that is to stand vp from the dead as he speaketh elsewhere Ephes 5.14 Out of sleepe Sleepe is two fold so properly called and Metaphoricall the first is of the body only for the soule sleepeth not and it is that naturall rest which God hath appointed for the refreshing of the dissipated spirits and the preseruation of wearied Nature Metaphoricall sleepe is either of the body or of the soule That of the body Olli dura quies oculos ferreus vrget Somnus Virg. Aen. 12. is Death often called in the Scripture Sleepe Iron sleepe as the Poet called it That of the Soule and it is either the Sleepe of sinne noting an vnregenerate estate or somnus inertiae the sleepe of sloath when hauing receiued grace wee begin to drowse in the duties of godlinesse this last is here meant for hee writeth to beleeuers who somewhat began to be remisse in holy duties So is it said of the mightie men of the hoast of the Ammonites and Moabites in the dayes of Iehoshaphat or of the hoast of Sanecherib in the dayes of Hezechiah They haue slept their sleepe that is they haue languished and fainted not hauing any heart to repell dangers Psal 76.5 The Reason is from the consideration of the time knowing the time Time that is opportunitie of time fit and seasonable time As men when they call vp their seruants vrge them because the Sunne is vp so Paul requires that wee should considering the season the more earnestly apply our selues to our duties This time is set forth by a comparison the time of faith receiued and begunne compared with the time of faith continued and encreased Now is our saluation nearer then when wes beleeued Saluation Not Christ incarnate nor saluation begunne in the remission of sinnes but eternall life which is the reward of faith vnto the which we are now nearer then when we first beleeued and therefore should be the more liuely in pressing toward the same The longer we professe the Gospell Doctr. the more strong in faith and zealous in godlinesse we ought to be Hebr. 5.12 Paul reproues the Hebrewes because they profited not according to their standing and Hebr. 11.32 he vrgeth them to constant enduring and patient suffering of persecution from the remembrance of their courage in the dayes of their first Illumination then they endured a great fight it were a shame now to faint and play the cowards The time of grace is no time of sleeping but of waking Vse 1 and labour Now lay hold now if euer get some thing for hereafter some faith and grace which may helpe and stand vs in stead in the euill day The Merchant obserues carefully the best time of buying in his fraught and then bestirres him The Husbandman in haruest time riseth early calleth his people together and away for it is good to take faire weather while it lasts Now is our haruest let vs be gleaning something The Sheplieard in Lambing time watcheth his flocke as Iacob did Labans let vs now watch to saue our soules Many when they come to heare the Word and to prayers then begin to nod Is this a time of sleeping for shame awake Ganst thou not watch one houre Lose not the pretious time of Repentance Non enim in tempore vtiliter viuitur Aug. Probae Epist 121. c. 7. nisi ad comparandum meritum quo in aeternitate viuatur Hee spends his time vnprofitably who gets not some grace whereby hee may liue in eternity said Augustine Our Aduersary the Diuell sleepes not The souldier that is asleepe when the enemie is come hath his throat cut Vt iugulent homines surgunt de nocte latrones Vt teipsum serues non expergisceris If the good man of the house know at what watch the theefe would come he would surely watch and not suffer his house to bee digged thorow Matth. 24.43 Besides our time is short all the time of grace is but an houre and an houre is soone out cito pede praeterit aetas said the Poet Qui hodiè habemus horam nescimus an cras habuerimus vitam Wee which haue an houre to day know not whether we shall haue a life to morrow said Anselme Anselm in loc Seuen times passed ouer Nabuchadnezzar Dan. 4.25 that is he liued seuen years like a beast but many among vs haue liued seuen yeares twice or thrice told like beasts and yet remember not to make vse of the time that remaines to turne vnto the Lord. Many of vs haue but a minute or two remaining let vs vow not to giue sleepe to our eyes nor slumber to our lids till we haue found fauour with the Lord and grace to helpe in the time of need Here is a commendation of godlinesse Vse 2 He that beleeues his saluation is euery day neerer then other as a wicked mans damnation is neerer and neerer let this encourage vs Thou meetest with many discouragements but behold the kingdome of heauen is at hand This reproues them which begin well Vse 3 but after grow sleepie and sluggish Hony at
would hide our selues yet sistemur we shall be set or presented before the Iudge The consideration of the last iudgement Doctr. should perswade vs to our duties and to refraine from that which is euill Act. 17.30.31 God commandeth all men euery where to repent because hee hath appointed a day wherein he will iudge the world c. 2 Cor. 5.10.11 We must all appear before the iudgement seat of Christ that euery one may receiue c. Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men Iudge not thy brother Vse 1 for thou thy selfe shalt bee iudged Shall the prisoner that stands at the barre for his life leap vp into the seate of the Iudge Anselmus Qui iudicat fratrem tantum crimen elationis in currit vt Christi tribunal fibi videatur assumere eius iudicium praeuenire Hee which iudgeth his brother shewes so great pride as if hee should aduance into Christs tribunall and preuent his iudgement Iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come saith Paul elsewhere 1 Cor. 4.5 Let vs not meddle with iudging wee shall haue iudging enough at that day let vs rather be carefull that wee may stand with boldnesse and confidence before the Iudge Saint Paul giueth vs here to vnderstand that one of the bils of enditement that shall be put in against vs and to bee enquired of is for Iudging our Brethren for which he cueth the Romanes to answer it before the great Iudge at that day There shall be a day of generall Iudgement Vse 2 though many scoffers beleeue it not of whom Saint Peter speaketh 2. Pet. 3.3 4. and though thousands wish it might neuer be Oh how much would the Drunkard and other abominable sinners giue to buy off that day But we must all stand before the Iudgement seate of Christ It is most true that euery particular mans soule in death vndergoeth a particular iudgement and in the same moment is eleuated intellectually to heare the Sentence of the Iudge by an illumination or locution intellectuall and so knoweth it selfe to be saued or damned by the authority of Christ by the law appointed by God and accordingly at that instant goeth vnto or is in ioy or torment But this is but Particular and there must bee a Generall Iudgement as the Scripture signifieth which may also appeare by reason 1 Many iust persons are here afflicted and wicked prospered there shall be therefore a time wherein exact Iustice shall be manifested 2 Many wicked men are punished here and many are not there must be therefore a time of generall iudgement or else there may seeme to be some inequalitie 3 Many iust persons are condemned here to death as if they were wicked and many wicked dye with an opinion left of their sanctine 4 Also in the particular iudgement onely the soule is iudged but the body must also therefore there must in iustice be a generall Iudgement 5 Some affirme Bellarm. in Explicatione Symb-Apostol art 7. that our good and ill deeds are not finished in death but our sinne or worthinesse encreaseth to the day of Iudgement as any are bettered or corrupted by our example speeches writings c. and therefore because euery one shall receiue according to his workes that there must be a generall Iudgement euen for this It is a great consolation to true Beleeuers Vse 3 that there shall be a day of Iudgement and that Christ shall be their Iudge who dyed for them who yet maketh intercession for them who is their Aduocate their Friend their Brother whose members they are Surely this day will be the happiest day that euer dawned vpon vs It shall neuer repent vs that we haue serued God mortified our corruptions denyed our selues refused the pleasures of sinne which are but for a season that we haue fasted prayed wept for our sinnes endured the Crosse c. for we shall then receiue a thousand fold by the sentence of the Iudge This day is not so comfortable to the good as it will bee terrible euen a day of blacknesse and confusion to the wicked when their greatest Enemy shall sit vpon his greatest Enemies Oh how shall Iudas and Pilate tremble and be confounded at that day Thinke of it thou Drunkard thou blasphemer c. He whom thou hast condemned shall be thy Iudge How darest thou expect pardon and mercy Now indeed is the time of mercy but then only of Iudgement The remembrance of the day of Iudgement should perswade vs to repentance Vse 4 for this end Christ commanded his Apostles especially to testifie this to all men Act. 10.42 that he is ordained Iudge of quicke and dead So Saint Paul vseth this as the last Argument to draw men from their sinnes 2. Cor. 5.11 And truely who can haue any desire or delight in sinne when he shall thinke of that Iudge of that Iudgement of that Sentence of that neuer dying worme of those vnquenchable flames Magna est peccati poena Aug. ser 120. de Temp. metum memoriam futuri perdidisse Iudicij It is a great punishment of sinne to lose the feare and remembrance of the Iudgement to come said Saint Augustine But if thou dost remember it and heare of it and yet not feare it is a signe of the infinite Anger of God vpon thee The found of the last Trumpet was alwayes in the eares of Saint Hierome who wheresoeuer he was thought he heard the voyce of the Arch-angell Arise yee dead and come to Iudgement Act. 24.25 Yea Foelix himselfe trembled to heare Paul preach of the Iudgement to come Alwayes thinke of this day and repell the temptations vnto sinne with the remembrance thereof Consider what it will cost thee Now the Drunkard the vncleane person the proud the couetous c. see not the foulnesse of their faults but then thou shalt see and wonder that thou wert so mad to runne into such danger for such small and idle satisfactions When thou shalt appeare before that Iudge when Satan and thine owne conscience shall accuse thee when thou shalt behold the frowning and irefull countenance of the Iudge and those fires prepared for thee What wilt thou doe whither wilt thou goe nor friends nor riches nor promises nor prayers nor teares can auaile What shall we doe if that day shall finde vs often forewarned but vnprepared How shall wee endure that fire that cannot endure the tooth-ake the stone a fit of an Ague Let vs vse all care while wee liue here so to behaue and discharge our selues that that day may be happy and comfortable vnto vs. Amen VERSE 11. For it is written As I liue saith the Lord euery knee shall bow to me and euery tongue shall confesse to God IN this verse is prooued that wee shall all stand before the Iudgement seat of Christ and in the next verse the end of such appearance there is declared The proofe is by a Testimony In which wee may note the qualitie
not lay Dauids people flat on the ground before him hee could neuer rule them God hath appointed Doctrine ordained and in excellent order established politics and states Pro. 8.15 By me Kings reigne and princes decree iustice Dan. 4.25.32 The most high ruleth in the kingdome of men and giueth it to whomsouer he will Iohn 19.11 The Diuell saith Obiect Luke 4.6 that all the Kingdomes of the world are his and that he bestoweth them and the power of them as he will The Diuell is a lyer Answ and the father of lyes therefore hee is soone answered The order of the common wealth of the Bees is not from him much lesse of reasonable men 1 Pet. Obiect 2 13. Kings and Gouernours are said to be the ordinance of man Of man Answ is not to bee vnderstood causally but subiectiuely because it is executed by man or obiectiuely because it is about the society of man or finally because it is for the singular good of man But some magistrates are wicked Obiect as Phocas who killed his Lord Mauritius and so inuaded the Empire So the Turke and Pope are tyrants and enemies to the Gospell are these of God There are three things to be distinguished Answ the power the manner of obtaining it and the vse of it e Cons Toletū in loc Annot. 3. the power is of God be he a beleeuer or an Infidell that hath it but the vse of it if it bee euill and the comming to it if it bee corrupt is of our selues and of Satan The Pope if he be a Bishop is to be obeyed where hee is a Bishop the power is of God But if hee attaine the chaire by bloodshed as Damasus the first f Sozom. hist li. 6. c. 23. by compacting with the diuell and doing homage to him as Siluester the second g Plat. in Sil. 2. Fasciculus temp by subtilty as Boniface the eight and by bribery and vnlawfull suit as almost all of them as histories record this is of the Diuell If he be a temporall Prince the Power is of God and he is to be obeyed So also of the Turke God by these two taking vengeance on i●olatrous and wicked Christians God giues the Kingdome of Heauen onely to the Godly but earthly kingdomes he giues as well to the wicked as to the godly He which gaue the Empire to Augustus a sweet and gratious Prince gaue it to Nero a very monster of men he which aduanced Constantine to the Imperiall seate who was the most worthy Emperour that euer yet the world saw aduanced Iulian also a most damned Apostata For as S. Augustine saith Iniustū non est c. It is not vniust that wicked men shold receiue power ouer the world that good mens patience shold be tryed and euill mens wickednesse punished By the power giuen to the diuell Iob was tried that he might appeare to be righteous Peter was tempted that he might not presume of himselfe Paul was buffeted that he might not be puffed vp and Iudas was condemned that he might hang himselfe h August tom 6.1 de na boni aduers Man ca. 32. The vse is both for Magistrates and people For Magistrates Vse 1 Instruction that they remember that they are men that they vse the authority for God which they haue reciued from God that they maintaine true religion c. that they must giue an account of their gouernment 2 Comfort The calling of a Magistrate is full of labour and danger so that the Imperiall robes haue bin accounted not worth the taking vp for the cares which are wrapped in them This is the condition of all specially of Protestant Princes hauing the Diuell and so many Iesuites and Papists daily seeking their subuersion But good Kings and Princes may comfort themselues for they are ordained by God and he will protect them as the experience of famous Queen Elizabeth and of our most mighty and gratious Soueraigne King Iames doe manifestly declare For the Subiects and people 1 That they vse all reuerence to their Gouernours The dignity of a King or Prince is a kind of Diuinity They differ not in substance from their Subiects but in vse so much that they are called gods in the Scriptures h Exod. 22.28 Psal 82.1.6 Wee must not thinke of them looke on them speake of them as of meere men but as the Deputies Lieutenants Vicegerents and magnificent representations of the Maiesty of Almighty God honouring them next vnto God and solo Deo minores as those who are onely lesse then God For a King Sic omnibus maior est dum solo vero Deo minor est is so greater then all while he is lesse then the true God alone as said Tertullian i Tertul. ad Scapulam paulo post initium Many take a wretched liberty to taxe their Gouernours It is meat and drinke to euill Subiects to speake of the faults of their Princes k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thuci●ydes but be thou ware for it is written Thou shalt not reuile the gods nor curse the Ruler of the people l Exod. 22.28 Is it fit to say to a King Thou art wicked or to Princes ye are vngodly Iob. 34.18 It is not fit but deserues seuere punishment Feare God and the King Pro. 24.21 1. Pet. 2.17 2 That they bee obedient Hee that hath commanded vs to obey our naturall parents hath commanded vs much more to obey our Princes who are more worthy fathers Hee that forbids murther forbids disobedience also from which disobedience comes all disorder and confusion in Church and Commonwealth Many mens consciences sticke at some things commanded by the supreme Magistrates whose consciences sticke not to breake the peremptory commandement of God to obey the Magistrate 3 That they bee thankefull for their Gouernours They are the Breath of our nostrils m Lam. 4.20 As the taking away of the breath is the death of the body so the taking away of Gouernours is the death of the State Dauid is called the Light of Israel n 2 Sam. 21.17 So are all good Kings to the Common-wealth as the Sunne is to the world Some perhaps may thinke that to be left to our selues to doe that which is good in our owne eyes were best But as seruants and children left to themselues will soone ruinate the family so subiects left to themselues will soone vndoe the Commonwealth The State of the Children of Israel was neuer worse then when there was no King in Israel but euery man did what was good in his owne eyes o Judg. 21.25 Let vs be thankfull for our good Lawes and Gouernours and pray that God may continue them Amen VERSE 2. Whosoeuer therefore resisteth the Power resisteth the ordinance of God and they that resist shall receiue to themselues damnation IN this Verse is a second reason to enforce subiection to higher powers and it is taken from the contraries thus We may not resist Therefore wee
is now vsed in some colleges Hereby also wee are kept from surfetting and drunkennesse and from feeding our selues vnto an inflaming to lust Saint Chrysostome speaketh of this excellently Opus est nos et mensam petentes et desistentes gratias agere c. It is needfull that sitting down to meat and rising from meate we should giue thankes For he that is prepared hereunto shall neither fall into drunkennesse or insolence nor be swollen with gurmundizing but hauing the expectation of prayer as a bridle to his senses Chrys loco supra citato hee will with due modesty take of those things which are set before him and so fill his body and his soule with a plentifull blessing Holy Christians eate to the Lord but such as giue not thankes but surfet themselues and are drunke eate and drink to the Diuell VERSE 7. For none of vs liueth to himselfe and no man dyeth to himselfe THis verse hath another Reason to proue that the beleeuing Gentiles and Iewes the strong and the weake doe eate or not eate to the glory of God The reason is taken à generali intentione fidelium Aquinas Caluinus Pareus from the generall intention of the faithful which is to consecrate their whole life and death also to God Or you may say it is taken à toto ad partes from the whole to the parts thus They who liue and die to the Lord doe eate or not eat c. to the Lord. But both the strong and weake beleeuer doe liue and die to the Lord. Therefore c. For all our particular actions and passages are comprehended vnder life and death and therefore Peter Martyr calleth this Argument a generall cause and Rollocke a general reason from the end of life and death Here are the Thing Life and Death and the Amplification first from the Subiect None of vs secondly from the End denyed Not to our selues Life and Death A liuing to righteousnesse and dying to sinne is not here meant though only such glorifie God Neither is here meant a good life and a dying in sinne as Chrysostome expoundeth for this will not agree with that in the next verse Wee are the Lords for they which dye in sinne are not his children But here Naturall life and death are meant comprehending generally all actions and passions and whatsoeuer befalleth vs in life or death None of vs Though all men liue and dye yet here only the faithfull are vnderstood which are set downe generally in respect of themselues None and restrictiuely in respect of others none of vs. None liue c. True of right but not of fact but here of fact is to be vnderstood and therefore he saith None of vs iudging charitably that they were beleeuers in truth as himselfe Paul from their thankesgiuing iudgeth charitably of them Obser so where thou seest any signes of goodnesse iudge the best if thou knowest not the contrary The want of this charity is the cause of much contention Liueth Dieth To himselfe The end is denyed not to our selues and it is affirmed in the next verse To the Lord. To liue and die to a mans selfe may be taken Ciuilly or Theologically To liue to a mans selfe Ciuilly hath two Expositions First to be suiiuris as they say to be his owne man not to be subiect to the command and direction of others as a seruant and bondmen are and this is a Ciuill good 1. Cor. 7.21 and therefore Paul saith to a bondman if thou mayest be made free vse it rather Secondly In liuing onely to care for and respect a mans solfe and this is euill for wee are not borne for our selues but partly for our Countrey partly for our parents c. To liue and die to our selues Theologically both must bee denyed We may not liue to our selues for we are not our owne wee must liue to God and respect him in all things preferre his will before our owne to be at his becke and to refer all things to his glory To dye to a mans selfe is to die so as that wee respect no body and no body respecteth or careth for vs No man saith Ah my brother To die to the Lord is to acknowledge God to trust in God to haue hope of going to the Lord to beare our sicknesse and death patiently and to be content to glorifie God in any manner of death which God shall appoint All Christians must liue and dye to the Lord Doctr. not to themselues 2. Cor. 5.9 Wherefore we labour that whether present or absent we may be accepted of him 1. Pet. 42. That hee no longer should liue the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God Pauls drift is to perswade to vnity Vse 1 whomsoeuer therefore we see to haue a care to please God and to auoid the sinnes of the times wee ought not to iudge and censure them and to contend with them but to loue and embrace them for with whom should a man liue louingly if not with them which liue to the Lord ayming at nothing but how to please him Our whole life and Death must be to the glory of God Vse 2 Euery thought euery word and deed must bee directed to this maine end the glory of God at home abroad in the Church in the market in prosperitie in aduersitie Many wil shew a face of glorifying God and liuing to him while they are taking and while they thriue but if God beginne to take and in stead of health and riches send the Crosse then they murmure It was falsely said of Iob Doth he serue God for naught let vs take heed it be not truly said of vs that we serue God onely for our bellies Some would be contented to dye to the Lord but haue no care to liue in the Lord It was Balaams wish to dye well but the onely way to this is to liue well True Christians both liue and dye to the Lord. Hee that liues to God shall die to God hee that liues to himselfe shall dye to himselfe and it is a thousand to one but that he which liues not to God shall die to the diuell None of vs Vse 3 as if wicked men had no such care as indeed they haue not Here we learne that the conuersation of beleeuers and the godly must bee otherwise directed then is the conuersation of wicked and profane beasts Their practices become not vs as they care not how they liue so they care not how they dye neither doth God care for them which is fearefull But all our care ought to bee for a good life and a comfortable death Wouldst thou not dye like a drunkard nor rise to the last iudgement as the Reprobates then liue not as they liue to themselues to Satan to sinne to vanity but to the Lord. A good death followes a good life Vse 4 and to liue well is to liue to the Lord and the first and hardest
Lord will haue it so willingly resigne them vnto him Whether the one or the other it is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good as sayd old Eli. Not as I will 1 Sam. 3.18 but as thou wilt Mat. 26.39 said our blessed Sauiour So Saint Paul Christ shall bee magnified in my body whether it be by life or by death If I liue by preaching if I dye by suffering A great comfort Vse 4 If we beleeue we are Christs He preserues vs while we liue and he takes care for vs when we dye Not as we doe doth Christ we when a seruant growes old turne him away But our Master tenderly cares for vs to old age in death and after death We cannot doe as Christ doth when our seruants dye it is out of our power both to command them and to doe for them But death cannot separate vs from Christ but it euen lets vs in to our Masters ioy O how sweet a thing is it Christ to be a good Master to vs when we are dying not to be forsaken in death and left to our selues O the miserable estate of an impenitent sinner As hee hath liued like a wretch and a beast so he dyes Thinke of it you drunkards c. you may liue in some pleasure here for a time but your death shall be a very euill death then you shall bee cast out The Hauke while it liues is in price and vpon the Masters fist sometimes but when it dyes it is cast vpon the dunghill The Partrich is hunted while it liues but when it dyes it is prepared for the Masters owne Table such is the difference betweene a wicked man and a true beleeuer in death He which hath no care to liue to Christ it is iust that in death Christ should take no care for him It belongs to him to care for vs in death to whom we haue directed our liues To whom hast thou liued to Satan O truly miserable for whom none takes care in the houre of death but the diuell our deadly enemy Happy is the man that in the houre of death hath the God of Iacob for his helpe so haue all those which haue liued to him If thou forsakest not God in thy life he will neuer forsake thee in death thy Master Iesus Christ will then stick close to thee when thou hast most need and all the world can doe thee no good Thou shalt haue assurance of the pardon of thy sinnes Thou shalt tread downe Satan vnder thy feet Thou shalt lye downe in the peace ioy and comfort of a good conscience For thy blessed Lord and Master lesus Christ careth for thee and his honour is great in thy saluation VERSE 9. For to this end Christ both died and rose and reuiued that he might be Lord both of the dead and liuing THat we are the Lords was concluded in the end of the 8. verse of which the reason is in this verse where we haue two parts 1. who is this our Lord. 2. what is the cause of his Lordship ouer vs. The person who is our Lord is Christ a title of the second person in the sacred Trinity noting both the Diuine and Humane nature in one person being the name of our Mediator declaring his office In the cause of his Lordship are the actions causing and the effect caused The actions are three 1. He died I call this an action because it was voluntary Potuit mori Iohn 10.18 he could dye if it pleased him No man taketh my life from me but I haue power to lay it downe saith himselfe The 2. He rose that is from death 3. He reuiued Ambrose inuerts the order of these speaking in the first place of his life as meaning his naturall life Hee liued he dyed and rose againe Chrysostome leaues out the second his resurrection the Vulgar which the Papists follow leaues out the last He reuiued Tolet censures the third to be superfluous Caietamu but one of his owne side approues it noting thereby such a reuiuing which shall neuer be subiect to death or one might say the pretertense is put for the present He reuiued that is Erasinus Beza he now liueth or rather hee reuiued to a new state of life not subiect to hunger wearinesse c. but free from such things The effect caused or the end That hee might bee Lord both of the dead and the liuing where we haue the authority that he might be Lord and the obiect both of the dead and liuing That he might be Lord that is so Lord as to protect and saue vs as well as command vs a Lord not onely ouer vs but for vs to deliuer vs from the bondage of other cruell Lords we haue need of such a Lord to defend vs he hath no need of such seruants as we are to serue him Both of the dead and of the liuing sometime quicke and dead comprehends all men both good and bad as in the Creed but here it is meant onely of beleeuers of whom some be dead and some are now liuing and some shall be liuing at the comming of Christ His sauing power reacheth to all beleeuers it is sufficient for all but in regard of the Application the wicked are excluded Christ by dying Doct. rising and reuiuing obtained power ouer vs to saue vs and bring vs to heauen Matthew 28.18 All power is giuen me in heauen and earth which words he spake after his rising and reuiuing Iohn 17.2 Thou hast giuen him power ouer all flesh that hee should giue eternall life to as many as thou hast giuen him Ephesians 1.19 seq Philippians 2.6.7.8.9 Obiect But God is said not to bee the God of the dead Matth. 22.32 Answ The Sadduces denied the resurrection of the body and the Immortality of the soule holding that men dyed as doe beasts now Christ affirmeth that God is not the God of men so dying Then by dead the Sadduces vnderstood men ceasing to liue at all Paul here by dead vnderstands men ceasing to liue this naturall and common life Quest Did he merit and deserue this Lordship for himselfe by his death and resurrection Answ c. So say the Schoolemen but I find no sound ground for it Amb. de fide resur c. 24. The Scripture no where saith that hee died or rose for himselfe but for vs men and for our saluation as saith the Nicene Creed Si nobis non resurrexit vtique non resurrexit qui cur sibi resurgeret non habebat If he rose not for vs he rose not at all who had no cause why he should rise for himselfe Also such power and glory was due to him as hee was God for euer as he was man from the time of his Incarnation by reason his manhood was assumed into the vnity of his person But God appointed and ordained that he should this way enter vpon the execution of his right and that it should be thus made manifest
diuersorum or a procedit When one and the same meaning and speech proceedeth out of the mouthes of diuers men Secondly from a description of God the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ adding force to his prayer by the mention of Christ whom the Father gaue to death to vnite vs to himselfe and together The members of the same Church Doctr. ought to be like minded one to another that God may be glorified 1. Cor. 1.10 Paul prayeth that the Corinthians may all speake the same thing that there be no diuisions among them but that they may perfectly be ioyned together in the same mind and in the same iudgement Phil. 3.16 and the Apostolicall Church is an example Act. 4.32 And the multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and one soule In trouble seeke patience and consolation from God Vse 1 and hauing obtained them be thankefull Many thinke by their owne strength and manly stomack to beare trouble but if God giue not patience a little paine or crosse will moue vs to impatience Also to finde comfort in their calamities from their purses from their friends from merry company seeking to driue away the euill spirit by musicke as Saul but it is the Holy Spirit which is the Comforter Resort thou in thy trouble to God the Author and to the word of God the Instrument of Patience and Consolation Paul vnto his preaching Vse 2 and writing and disputing addes Prayer for disputation and sound arguments will not preuaile vnto concord though they doe to conuiction vnlesse God moue the heart as wee haue experience with the Papists and Brownists Many learned Preachers profit not their hearers for want of Prayer Paul may plant and Apollo may water but God will be intreated for the encrease As in the nourishment of the body many feed of the daintiest and yet are leane and sickly so many heare and reade the Word which is the food of the soule and yet are not nourished because they pray not Be at the Prayers as well as at the Preaching if thou wouldest profit Vnity and Concord are here specially commended vnto vs Vse 3 not in error or euill but in truth and goodnesse How good and pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in vnitie It is pretious as the oyntment of Aaron Psal 13. ●● and profitable as the dew of Hermon The Lord make this dew abundantly to fall about the Tents of the Church of England Herod and Pilate shake hands against Christ set on it may be by the High Priests Annas and Caiphas and the wicked Iewes Let vs agree and hold together for the defence of Christ and his Gospell The Papists bragge of Vnity as of an infallible note of the Church and surely Hierusalem is a City compact together Psal 122.3 they also face the world downe that wee cannot haue the Truth because of our Contentions this is that which they lay in our dish in all their Pamphlets the more guiltie are they which broach new opinions which contend for trifles and so cause the Truth which we professe to be euill spoken of by the Aduersaries God is not glorified there where there is no vnity Vse 4 where men agree not in affection and speech and gesture He cannot endure them which call him Father and will not liue quietly and in vnity with their brethren By strife and contention God is not glorified but blasphemed The Lords Supper is instituted as a band and nourisher of Vnity and Concord but it is made a fountaine of discord and variance by some and that for a gesture there can bee no religion in this neither is God glorified thereby What is the reason that our contentions are not coniured downe by that most effectuall charme of the Apostle to the Corinthians in the beginning of his first Epistle to them Now I beseech you brethren by our Lord Iesus Christ that there be no diuisions among you 1. Cor. 1.10 c. And by the end of the last Epistle to them Finally my brethren farewell be perfect be of good comfort 2. Cor. 13.11 be of one mind liue in peace and the God of Loue and Peace shall be with you Whom should not that Patheticall prayer of our Sauiour going to his Crosse moue to vnity Holy Father keepe through thine owne Name those whom thou hast giuen me that they may be one Iohn 17.11.21 as wee are that the world may beleeue that thou bast sent mee Surely if wee haue not put off Christianity these speeches must and will preuaile with vs vnto Peace and Vnitie VERSE 7. Wherefore receiue yee one another as Christ also receiued vs to the glory of God IN this Verse is the Conclusion of the Argument taken from the Example of Christ vers 3. Christ pleased not himselfe Therefore we ought to receiue one another The phrase Receiuing one another being put for Not pleasing our selues because pleasing our selues is the cause why wee receiue not one another Not to please our selues To beare the infirmities of our brethren To receiue one another are Synonima with Paul here And thus not onely is repeated the Argument of Christs Example but also the maine Admonition set downe Chap. 14.1 and Chap. 15.1 The Argument is repeated nouo modo after a new manner vt pondus addat Aretius that he might adde weight thereunto The Admonition is now the third time iterated here the word Receiuing being vsed that so by a holy kinde of Art Pet. Martyr he might end this disputation in the same tearme in which he beganne it This Conclusion is set downe by way of precept that it may be the stronglier imprinted in vs. In it wee haue the Duty commanded and the Rule of it wherein is the Argument of the example of Christ The Duty hath the action Receiue and the obiect one another Receiue as before Chap. 14.1 not onely to entertaine our brethren comming to vs but to seeke them vp not to shunne their company but with all loue to embrace them and to admit them to familiar conuersation fellowship and communication of offices One another In the 14. Chapter verse 1. the admonition was charged vpon the strong toward the weake but here both are charged the strong must receiue the weake and the weake the strong As Christ also receiued vs to the glory of God In these words is the Rule in which we haue the Note of the Rule and the Argument from Christs example As This notes the Rule Wee must receiue one another as Christ hath receiued vs this note signifies syncerity not aequality there being as much difference in the degree of receiuing and disprop●rtion as is betweene that which is infinite and that which is finite The Argument is taken from the effect of Christ where is the Action hath receiued which containeth all his loue hee redeemed vs purchased life for vs with his bloud of enemies made vs the children of God reconciled vs to God