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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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so shall our reward be great above others if we be unfaithful we must look for greater damnation as being treacherous in so weighty a work 2. For people how ought they to regard Gods faithful Ministers that watch over their Souls Alas how little are they regarded how poorly maintained every thing too much every little enough for them whereas Lawyers Physicians c. live wealthily are much sought to It s a plain sign men love their Bodies better then their Souls and the Earthly Inheritance better then the Heavenly Which liveth and abideth for ever These words spoken of God are to shew how it comes to pass that the Word is able to Regenerate and beget us to a new and immortal life namely because it is the Word of him who liveth and giveth life to all and endureth for ever If it were not the Word of such a one it could not for as for the word of man it can do no such matter All the wisdom of all the men of the world put together and used to perswade a sinner are not able to change his heart The word of a man can but stir up that in a man which is in him already but to put any thing into him that was not in him it cannot 1. This teacheth us to preach the pure Word of God purely and not our own Devices for what is the chaff to the wheat not any word of man this or that how wise or ancient soever can put life into a man So nor to mingle mans word with Gods it hath no need of help from mans testimony let it alone it shall be able to perform that which its appointed for The Word of God is sharp enough to divide between the joynts and the marrow though it be not whetted on this or that mans Grindstone As Pearls need no painting so that which is of incomparable power and is pronounced to be mighty hath no need of the help of weak man 2. Let him that is born anew by the preaching of the Word be well assured he shall live and endure for ever as God so liveth and endureth as every one that is not begotten thereby shall through Gods judgement live after a sort and abide for ever but it shall be in everlasting wo and misery Verse 24. For all flesh is as grass and all the glory of man as the flower of grass the grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away Verse 25. But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever and this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you THe Apostle now laboreth to make men labor for their part in this Regeneration whereof he had spoken and that is by shewing the miserable state of a carnal and unregenerate man and that a man without this hath nothing that good is nothing that can please God that can stand him in stead and bring him to Salvation for whatsoever is in man besides this is flesh is corrupt and sinful and so consequently vain and vanishing as grass yea the best thing that is or can be in an unregenerate man is but as a flower that fadeth soon away and cannot abide the heat of the Sun no more can any thing in an unregenerate man abide the censure and judgement of Almighty God and this he doth to drive as well carnal men out of themselves and make them labor for this grace of Regeneration as to stir up them that were Regenerate to be thankful to God for this marvellous work and labor to walk worthy of it in all fruits of holiness and obedience Now having laid out the misery of a carnal men yet he leaves him not so but tells him that there is a means to help this and to bring him to an happy state and to live for ever namely The Word of God which endureth for ever whereby the Soul is converted Faith wrought we united to Christ and fetch from him as pardon of sin by his death and favor by his obedience so ability to live the life of grace here and the life of glory hereafter But lest any should say But where is this Word that is able to do thus wonderfully for us and how must it be dealt with to make it thus effectual for our Regeneration He tells them that its among them and being sincerely preached and humbly heard believed and obeyed would become effectual to their Salvation In the words we have both the Law and the Gospel 1. The miserable state of all unregenerate men 2. The mean to make us live for ever Both these are set down in two Propositions The first concerning the base estate of a carnal man hath two branches one a degree above another The first that all flesh that is whosoever is carnal and unregenerate is grass that is frail brittle fickle perishing which is not onely in respect of his bodily estate but any thing else in him The second that the glory of man that is the best things that be or can be in him are as the flower of grass vain and vanishing The second concerns the Word of the Lord that it endureth for ever and that to make us live for ever by uniting us to Christ the Fountain of life The words are taken out of Isa. 40. 6 7 8. where note by the way that no text is ever cited out of the Apocrypha the Apostle being guided by the same Spirit that the Prophet was looking upon the same sense not standing precisely upon the very words All flesh is as grass Though it be not chiefly meant of the frailty and brittleness of our bodily condition yet it is also included of which a little This our life is often compared to grass and that fitly for as grass is subject to come to an end many ways so we It may be blasted with the East-wind as soon as ever it peers out of the ground if not that yet in the spring the beasts will crop and bite it off if it miss both these yet the mower will cut it down with his sithe if it escape all these yet there is one thing coming that it cannot escape namely the cold frosty winter whereby it must needs wither away So we may be blasted as soon as we be born how many have dyed the same day they have been born or shortly after if we scape then yet some disease may bite us in our youth or if we miss both these death with his sithe may cut us down in our middle age but if yet we scape the winter notwithstanding of old age will wither us away and we cannot shift it Alas we are as a bubble a vapor of no continuance so vain a thing is man lighter then vanity A little too much heat or cold * a little blow with a Horse foot a bad savour or the like can quickly make an end of us Alas we carry the matter of many diseases daily about us in
wretches that can say They hope to be saved by Christ and that he dyed for them and yet can follow every vain pleasure and wicked lust to redeem them from which it cost even the blood of Christ more worth then a thousand worlds what is this but to set light by Christs death which none can do who hath his part therein yea what is it but to crucifie him again and to make a mock of his death what beastly unthankfulness is it for any to say Christ dyed for me and yet to live in sin nay whosoever have faith to believe their pardon in Christ it purifieth their hearts and the assurance of such a love to us must needs work love again in us and that love will constrain us yet who useth not this shift who flyeth not hereunto as Joab unto the horns of the Altar but as there he found no shelter from the Sword of Benaiah so they that flie to Christ as their refuge having nothing to do with him they shall be cut off and cast down into Hell for ever O that the death of Christ which ought to be the greatest corrasive to eat out sin out of our hearts as which cost such a wonderful price should be made a bo●ster for sin As beggers go with their licences boldly from place to place so do worldlings sin boldly because they can say O they believe in Jesus Christ and he hath dyed for them c. but as most of their licences being found counterfeit and made under a Bush are taken from them and they themselves cast into Prison So when God shall come to examine those this shall not free them or serve their turn but they shall be cast into utter darkness If you live in your lusts or have the love of any one ●in in you as yet ye have no part in Christs death 4. This may be a great comfort to those that can finde and feel sin dying in them and themselves dead to all sin and the love of any one and that they are renewed to live the life of God and yield obedience to all his Commandments Though this be not as they would yet if their hearts can bear witness with them that this in truth let them be assured they have their part in Christs death Having their part in the latter benefit thereof it s an argument of the former For how come they to be now so changed into an hatred of all the sins which before they loved and such a true and earnest care to please God Flesh and blood hath not so taught them but Gods Spirit and that 's an argument we are his even his Spirit that he hath given us But many that would not willingly offend God for any thing and having failed in the least thing are more troubled then most be at great matters yea and study and strive for nothing so much as to please God yet cannot be perswaded that Christ dyed for them Oh! I fear that Christ dyed not for me will such a one say because I feel such a corrupt and rebellious nature within me and I am often overcome of sin and Satan It s not the mark of such as Christ dyed for that they are freed from sin altogether but that they hate all sin that they resist it and often prevail against the same whereof if at any time they be overcome yet they rise again by unfained repentance and stand up upon their watch for in the best of Gods Servants there will some of the Canaanilist brood remain as pricks in our sides but so long as we keep them Tributaries we must not be discouraged though our corruptions salley out upon us sometimes yet if we make war upon them and chase them home and so weaken them they shall not prevail over us The Church is not in this world without spot except it be by imputation of Christs righteousness for in respect of Sanctification it s but begun to be cleansed and shall be perfected in the world to come Thus in general In particular the two clauses here mentioned contain the two parts of Repentance or Sanctification namely Mortification and Vivification or dying unto sin and living unto righteousness Dead unto sin It s the duty of every Christian in token of his thankfulness to God that hath delivered him from this most woful state to set himself to mortifie his lusts and all maner of evil and that every day more and more Though we cannot be dead to sin at once it being a work of our whole life yet must we be dead to the love of all sin open or secret outward or inward and so dye daily as Christ dyed so should we labor and be more and more dead to our lusts as he was crucified so should we crucifie them c. And can we live in sin that cost the price of the blood of Christ Who would not abhor and cast from him the knife that killed his dearest friend Thus did sin to our Savior Christ it was that which brought him to his death 1. The thing then that best beseems a Christian is to mortifie his vile lusts to finde them out to hate and pursue them to the death to apply all means to the weakning and killing thereof ever hacking at the roots thereof by continual Prayer and Meditation applying the Word Mercies Corrections all to the throat of our Corruptions for as nothing is more unbeseeming a Christian then to be carried away of any lust so this should be our continual exercise to be continually weakning our Corruptions This is true Religion it stands not in hearing Sermons but in mortifying our lusts and bringing our rebellious hearts in subjection to the will of God And as we are to labor for the subduing of all so are we especially of our strongest corruptions that have most foiled us most broke our peace most dishonored God and have been of worst example 2. This rebuketh a wonderful fault in most Christians that howsoever they have general purposes to resist sin and to do well yet think that they are not continually to labor for the mortifying thereof wherein failing they do sometimes yield and give way to their lusts to break out into open evils vain speeches slight oathes worldly talking on the Lords day gaming and the like So for their inward lusts of pride covetousness frowardness security dulness to duties unbelief coldness and customariness in the service of God Alas these they look not after but almost lay the reign on the neck of them so that if they reign not in them yet they break out at every turn and are very rank in them and shew forth themselves grosly to Gods dishonor their own discomfort and the continual breach of their peace with much evil example to others As we would prove our selves Christs let us labor to crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof let us deal
what is behinde we know not how little it may be and therefore must make use of the time present in turning to God and providing for our own souls 1. This rebukes those that have spent a great part of their life in sin and yet being called to repentance cannot afford this remainder to God as yong men that think it as yet too soon c. much more horrible and wicked are they that have spent half their life their yong time in pleasures and vanities and now are as mad of the world as ever with whom even yet it s too soon to turn to God 2. Let this be a provocation unto all sorts to turn unto God Let yong men repent they be called and invited hereunto O now it would be acceptable to God when their wit is fresh their memory good their body and minde able it would be like Abels sacrifice As for old torn lame Sacrifices God hath no regard to them If we begin betimes we shall prevent a number of sins and so a great deal of smart and sorrow Besides we shall learn goodness with much more ease if God should from our youth turn our hearts after it If we delay we shall thereupon see not onely how wretchedly we have spent our time and misused our wit memory and strength but how dull we be when we are old and unfit to learn it will much vex us an old Convert lightly never gets knowledge and sees but dimly the way as he that saw men like trees If one should defer to learn a trade till age he might easily perceive that his wit were dull his fingers and joynts stiff Let the middle aged repent nay let not even the oldest despair but hasten to repent that if possible they may crowd in And for those that have long walked in the ways of God let them hold out to the end do so still many of Gods servants have been tript in old age yea and then the Devil labors most to intrap them Should live in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God We must neither live in gross actual sins wherein most men live that lust after them as a woman longeth after a thing when she is with childe nor give way to the inward corruptions of our hearts proceeding from that old man Lusts Original sin concupiscence that is in us we must not live after the lusts of carnal natural and unregenerate men called in the next Verse The lusts of the Gentiles of which as being enemies to God and to our own souls and bringing death along with them I have already spoken It s an argument that they which live after them be not Christs To those now living after their pleasures and following their lusts it will be said hereafter as to Dives Thou hast had thy pleasure as Lazarus pain now is he comforted thou tormented But we must live after the will of God To whose will should the servant be obedient but to his masters the subject but to his Princes God is our master and soveraign His will also is a most holy pure and perfect will and a rule of righteousness he requires no uncomely no hurtful thing of us but that which is holy and profitable every way The Angels in Heaven they do the will of God our Savior came into the world to do his will In his passion he had respect hereto Not my will but thy will be done saith he all the Saints do it and the godly on earth are and ever have been careful hereof as being a note of such as shall be saved All creatures in their kinde obey the will of God and do that they were appointed for we are taught to pray that this may be done To do this in all things willingly brings comfort and peace along with it 1. This rebukes those that will not be brought in subjection to Gods will but of all things that 's most irksom to them Who made thee who gave thee this comely body and reasonable soul who hath preserved thee whose will shouldest thou be subject to art thou a masterless person such should be sent to the house of correction Whose will dost thou follow what fault findest thou with Gods will is it a better will which thou followest O no it s a most corrupt and sinful will 2. It rebuketh those which will be ruled by the will of God in some things onely and at their pleasure this is not to do Gods will but our own Such was Pharaohs obedience Sauls the Devils About this there 's no small stir in the world God would have his will and men would have theirs Ministers call for Gods will and people will have their own though they dye for it say who will against it And indeed oftentimes what is it but their will that they do oftentimes It s against their profit their credit prejudicial both to soul and body Why do men follow drunkenness and riot but because they will This is the cause why Preaching is so little regarded of most so much opposed by many even because it would set up Gods will and pull down mans If any Preacher shall speak against prophaning the Lords-day Oh he is a troubler of Israel hinders people from their wills and old wonts They enquire not what Gods will is in things but what their profit and pleasure leads them to not what is the way that God would have us increase by namely by diligence in our calling by equal and righteous dealing c. is Gods way askt after and followed No but shorter cuts are sought after as by deceit oppression and the like it s a sign that such shall never come into Gods Kingdom every Creature is better then they and have a better end except they repent If they will have their wills they must have that belongs to it they must pay dearly for them as many do Israel would have flesh in the Wilderness would have a King as other Nations had they had their wills but it had been better for them they had been without Ahab would have his will in going to Ramoth Gilead he had it and there perished God will have his will of such in their condemnation as who will resist his Soveraignty and he will not cease to be a King though they refuse to be Subjects O considering the filthiness of our own will and the the dangers thereof and the holiness of Gods will and the benefit that comes thereby that we would renounce our own and follow Gods will 3. It rebuketh the Servants of God that be not so careful of the will of God as they ought O how often do we suffer our own wills to bear sway in omitting many a good duty or doing it coldly so in doing that is evil in wrath impatience worldliness c It s his will that we should forget wrongs but we do often nourish and retain them
in the way to it will he now disappoint thee No assuredly If he would not have saved thee he would have let thee alone as thy companions and many others and never have done this for thee O but the Devil is so strong and subtile and I so weak and simple He that hath pluckt thee out of his hands will never suffer him to get thee captive again It were else a disgrace to Christ Except therefore he be stronger then God and Christ thou needest not fear At the revelation of Jesus Christ. He plucks these Jews from Moses Law and the Ceremonies which were out of date but they could hardly be so perswaded and brings them to the Gospel which discovers Christ He was in that Law covered with Vails of Sacrifices and Ceremonies c. All these be done away in the Gospel where Christ is laid open without any covering Note We have the excellency of the Gospel that doth uncover and lay open Christ Jesus unto us brings us tidings of him who is the Way the Truth and the Life and the onely Savior of the world So that the Gospel is the glory of the World The Sun is not so necessary in the Firmament as the Gospel is to the world This teacheth us Christ which is life eternal and St. Paul desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified and counted all dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord O how welcome should this be It is well called glad tidings so it is indeed The Gospel is our pardon If we should finde evidences of great Lands and Inheritances to come to us or a Will wherein were bequeathed great Legacies to us how glad would we be of the same How often would we revise and read them over The Gospel brings us tidings and tells us the way to come to an everlasting inheritance and therein are bequeathed such blessed Legacies Item I give thee forgiveness of thy sins by my Sons death Item Eternal life by his obedience Item I give thee assurance that thou shalt be raised here from sin and that thy body shall be raised at the last day by my Sons Resurrection Item I give thee assurance of a place in Heaven by my Sons Ascension 1. Is it not a marvel then that the Gospel is so hardly entertained and that the World cares so little for it It s welcome to most people not as if it brought them news of a blessing but as if it would spoil them of all they have 2. How should they that want it be set on work to labor to get it as without which there 's no Salvation Its light food armor without which darkness famine spoil If the Sun should be wanting to a Town and could be procured how would all joyn to get it Or rain for a dry and barren ground who would not wonder at any that should be against it yet who joyns who labors for the Gospel 3. If the Gospel be the revelation of Jesus Christ then are the Ministers revealers of this blessed Secret therefore worthy to be acknowledged for their works sake for the greatness of their work and the excellency thereof Pharaoh reverenced and advanced Joseph for smaller matters O how beautiful are the feet of such Most people either rate them or at least set light by them not reverencing their calling but esteeming them more base then the meanest Tradesman But that grieves us not so much as that unkindeness that we meet with from them from whom we look for most comfort and encouragement Verse 14. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance TO Faith he addeth Repentance and Sanctification by the one to testifie the other as in the second Epistle he wills them to adde unto their Faith vertue as if he should say You that sometimes were the Children of wrath and are now by grace made Gods Children walk obediently as becomes such a mercy This Sanctification hath two parts and stands 1. In renouncing evil or the lusts which before grace we were wont to be led by 2. In putting on and embracing holiness of life that we may resemble the disposition of our Father who is holy and looks for holiness in his yea holiness in all maner of conversation For the order first goes Faith then Obedience and Sanctification for as the light and Sun-beams comes from the Sun a river from the Spring head fruit from the tree so doth obedience from Faith Till a man be pardoned and believe he cannot repent nor obey the will of God no more then a dead stick can bring forth fruit When by Faith we are ingrafted into Christ then we receive power not before one that hath never been humbled aright for sin cannot hate and flie from sin as he should He that seeth not the love of God to him cannot love God nor set upon a good life to deny his lusts being as dear as his life and to yield obedience is irksom to nature for this cause the Devil is such an enemy to our Faith and labors to shake it for then he knows he damps our care of a good life 1. This condemns Papists that boast of holiness of life and yet overthrow the foundation of it viz. A true justifying faith They may stir up good moods and a blinde devotion by scaring men with the pains of hell and telling them of the joys of heaven but no sound Obedience godly Life renouncing Lusts c. without the work of Faith from that will be Obedience even to suffering 2. It confutes them that think Repentance is before Faith they are indeed wrought at once and Repentance sheweth it self first but in order of nature Faith is as the root Many humble souls hold off and dare not believe O say they if I could repent so heartily as I see some and could serve God as I would then I could believe 3. It teacheth men that if ever they will set upon a good life indeed and in time they must begin at the right end and lay a foundation of true justifying faith for want of this many deceive themselves that have some purpose to do well being afflicted or somewhat stirred at the Word and fall out of a bad course to leave this and that evil or take up good duties and many that never had experience of the work of Faith that think they live well or some that upon some occasion thus promise You shall never hear me swear more I le never play more Never come in an Alehouse yet this lasts not but they fal to their old byase by and by because they took not the right course Many also purpose to repent and do great matters but this is a greater matter then the world thinks off a man must first be the childe of God ere he can obey and Faith must be wrought first ere he can
businesses and le ts be over nay thou mayest be dead or meet with more ere they be gone 6. Voluntarily not be haled onely by pain and misery as Pharaoh God loves a chearful servant 7. Constantly not for a while as Joash but as Caleb and Joshua followed the Lord to the end yea when most revolted See the contrary punished in the Prophet that came from Bethel We must not be weary in well doing Reasons hereof may be these 1. Gods Soveraignty over us we Clay he our Maker 2. His Will a rule of Righteousness 3. His great mercies every way even to the worst but to his children wonderful ones 1. This condemns them that are so far from obeying and that in all things and after this maner that they will obey in nothing but as if they were set to cross the Lord what he forbids they love what he enjoyns they cannot away withal They live like masterless men as if they ought nothing to any were beholding to none What art thou not a piece of Clay the Lord thy Maker even he that threw Angels out of Heaven Adam out of Paradice opened the Earth rained down fire and brimstone on Sodom c. If his Soveraignty move thee not consider I beseech thee his Goodness Who hath nourished thee up given thee a comely body a reasonable Soul and so long kept thee that thou art not now in Hell What 's all this for that thou shouldst flie in his face that gives thee bread He lets thee hear his Word calls thee to Repentance c. Is it that thou shouldst tread these things under thy feet Oh thou art of thy father the Devil whose works thou dost and except thou fall down at the Lords footstool and humble thy self before him he will confound thee O consider this all ye that now forget God 2. It condemns such also as obey God to halves and in what they list in the mean time lying still in some beloved lust So Pharaoh obeyed so Herod and Saul But as Moses would not part with one hoof so will not God have us cast off any one Commandment God will have no parting Stakes The Devil like the Harlot would be contented with the one half but God like the true Mother will have all or none If God were so revenged of half-obedience under the Law what then now This halving is an Argument of no true Faith for that purifieth the heart also of no Repentance for he that repents truly of one sin repents truly of all Whosoever therefore thou art that dost thus thou art in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity thou art in the state of damnation If thou livest in the practice and love of one known sin profitable or pleasing this one shall be enough to sink thee down to destruction as one leak in a Ship may endanger the whole and one gate in a City open let in the Enemy 3. This rebukes the servants of God that yet walk not in that obedience that were meet but leave undone this and that duty slighting over others and letting loose their affections and lusts O this is not the chearful and constant obedience that we ought to perform in all things If neither his Authority nor his outward Benefits will move us consider we his love towards us in Jesus Christ that of children of wrath he hath made us his children that by giving his Son he hath freed us from Damnation and means to save us Oh the Name of Children calls for much obedience as the Name of Brethren should still all Controversie And this is the Argument which the Apostle here useth to perswade to obedience Oh we be Gods Children Children ought to obey their Parents there 's nothing more uncomely then the contrary much more we the Father of our Spirits Christ the natural Son was obedient to the death How obedient then must we be being but adopted ones Again That he hath called us to the hope of such an Inheritance what obedience doth this challenge For this is the force of the coherence of Verse 13. with those that go before Wherefore gird up the loyns of your minde c. That is Seeing God hath done such and such things for us let us trust perfectly on that grace that is brought unto us and walk obediently Yea the more we profit in obedience the more comfort we may have that we be the Lords and have true Faith the more will our comfort be also in our death So many of us therefore as can prove our selves the Lords do we labor to walk worthy hereof in all due obedience and for others that know not they are the Lords let them try it by obedience Many Covetous Usurers Oppressors Swearers c. will say they believe no be tryed by this rule If your heart stand to obey all Gods commandments it is so but while you live in any thing you know is sin you are voyd of Faith Other poor humble Christians that hate sin deadly and unfeignedly desire to please God in all things yet say they cannot believe Why who hath wrought these things in you Not flesh and blood they are the gifts of Gods sanctifying Spirit therefore they come from Faith as if we see a Sun-beam we say the Sun is risen if an Apple that is good we say there is a good Tree Except therefore you will say that men can gather Figs of Thistles or Grapes of Thorns you cannot deny but that you have Faith wheresoever Sanctification is there Faith went before O but I finde it but weak yet as long as it is in truth with desire of increase it presupposes Faith as if we see a Sun-beam though but dimly yet we say the Sun is up after it will shine out more clearly So we say it s a good Tree though the fruit be small at first so long as it is good If any shall say I feel in me no such thing now therefore I have no Faith what shall become of me Was it ever so with thee Look to the time past and thou must not deny the mercy of God shewed thee Thou canst not deny but it hath been so then thou hast had Faith then hast thou Faith still though it seem raked up in the ashes when thou with the bellows of Prayer and the Word and God with his Spirit shall blow away these ashes it will uncover it self and burn out again Not fashioning your selves c. There are two parts of Obedience or Repentance a dying unto sin and a living unto righteousness a renouncing of lusts and imbracing holiness a ceasing to do evil and a learning to do well an abhorring of that which is evil and cleaving to that which is good a putting off of the old man and putting on of the new he that hath the one hath also the other they
thereof whereby it hath a deadly wound given it which it shall never recover so from his Burial his Spirit conveyeth power to hold under our corruptions that they get head no more so from his Resurrection power to rise to newness of life so that now being graft into such a living stock by such a cunning hand of the Spirit of God the Regenerate man receiveth vertue accordingly He was before a branch of the wilde olive but now of the true olive therefore the fruits are and must needs be accordingly so that though he sinneth yet it s not as before before he was guided by the Spirit of Satan and the world now by the holy Spirit of God and therefore must needs bring forth the fruits of holiness as it is holy must needs be renewed throughout though not wholly and perfectly 1. Here 's a great comfort to Gods children and infinite cause have they to praise God that whereas before they brought forth nothing but fruit unto death now they are enabled to bring forth fruit to God and to life before servants to the flesh reaping corruption now to the Spirit the fruit thereof being everlasting life There must needs be joy in doing such work 2. This condemneth them that say they believe and they are converted and hope to be saved by Jesus Christ and yet continue in their course No every one that 's in Christ is a new creature it s a disgrace to Christ to say such fruit comes from him 7. The growth of one that 's truly Regenerate he is not at his pitch the first day It s not with him as with Adam who was perfect at once in his creation but he comes to it by degrees as every thing that moveth from one place to another doth it in some space of time so in this motion from sin to righteousness and life eternal it s done in time and by degrees and that not in all alike But as some men are of greater stature some of smaller and sometimes the yonger are taller then the elder so it may be in this but all do and must grow and that by the Ministery of the Word and Sacraments as Corn by the early and latter rain springs up by degrees and a Babe first small and weak yet by good tendance and Gods blessings grows bigger and stronger in every part then can go alone speak digest strong meat begin to bear burthens and do the works of a man so must a Christian grow from a Babe to be stronger to digest strong meat higher Points of Doctrine to be able to go alone in good Duties by the finger as in Prayer Reading anothers Prayer but now can go alone in it so in other Duties then stronger to bear Afflictions Temptations Mocks Discouragements and also to put up wrongs and go through duty and service 1. This may rebuke them that are so far from growing as they go back and are worse then sometimes they were These may suspect that either they never begun in truth but were suddenly moved had but some common gifts and were but built upon the Sand or else that they have ill behaved themselves beginning in the Spirit to end in the Flesh Were you too well what fault found you that you are weary and gone back to your old Master If you belong to God and do not awaken your selves the Lord will whip you home will send you as Runnagates to the house of Correction 2. For those that stand at a stay and no difference can be discerned between that they were many years ago and now they also are in a woful case Doth not a man look his childe should grow in learning every year and would it not grieve if he should stand always at one stay We love to see our children grow and would grieve to see them Dwarfs and no bigger now then they were many years ago and have we no care of our own or their growth in grace As men every year aym more and more to grow in wealth and as in a Race men press hard forward towards the mark so should we to grow in grace But why do men grow no faster A. 1. Some are proud and conceited they have more then they have and so strive not 2. Some compare themselves with them that are under them and not with them that exceed them in grace and so think they have enough whereas in worldly things they reach always at those above that they may not onely equal them but over-top them 3. Some are so cloyed with the love of the world and multitude of businesses that they can spare no time for this This is the bane of Religion and hinders from many a duty publike and private choking the Word in the obedience thereto and practice thereof and causing many a duty to be but poorly performed 4. Ill company is as great a hinderance to Spiritual growth as the East and North winds to tender flowers and plants 5. Neglecting and failing of the means of growing as if any man want his meals he will soon faint and if any Tradesman want his Markets he will soon be Bankrupt 6. Some use them negligently as Hearing Praying c. and thrive accordingly He that keeps the Market but once in a moneth will not gain much so they that hear the Word but now and then at their leisure will not get forward very fast especially they that keep not the main Market nay the Mart of their Souls The Lords day when they should make off their corruptions and provide themselves with all Spiritual commodities 7. Such as hear often but without preparation before or regard after Do men thrive by meat taken into a full or foul stomack or by swallowing their meat whole no more shall we Spiritually thrive though we swallow down whole Sermons unless we chew them by Meditation and Practice they will never nourish us And whereas many humble Souls complain that they do not grow though earnestly desirous thereof and diligent in the use of the means they must examine themselves whether indeed they have used the means and that diligently with preparation and prayer If not they must reform the same if yea they may be of good comfort for assuredly they cannot but grow somewhat though not as they would They must yet be constant and that God who hath given them an heart to use the means of growing will also enable them to grow we must be growing as long as we live here If we had Methuselahs years to live and still took pains yet still there would be work so hard is it to get victory over and to subdue this Army of our lusts and to draw dry this ocean of our corrupt affections Blessed is he that makes this his chief or onely work to mortifie more and more his sinful nature applying the Word Promises Threats Mercies Judgements general particular on our selves or others To this end God
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
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
are fellows to the Saints Prophets and Apostles the honor is great the cause is good how base or grievous soever the punishment be Both John the Baptist and Barabbas were imprisoned Achan and Steven stoned and Witches and Martyrs be burnt the cause was not the same and in the cause the shame lies If a Christian as Paul be a prisoner and have chains on him and being demanded why he came there and is there so used if he can truly say It s neither for Treason nor Fellony I thank God but for preaching the truth of God to the world then it s well yea this will quiet his conscience when he knows its Gods cause who will take care of him strengthen him and receive him to glory If the will of God be so Here 's the other Reason We must be patient and comfortable in suffering for well-doing for its Gods will it should be so Here note that No affliction or persecution comes to us but by the will of God Whatsoever was done to our Savior Christ was done by Gods determinate counsel not an hair falls from our heads without our heavenly Father Christ foretold Peter of his bands before they came and so Agabus forewarned Paul of his which sheweth that they came by the will of God Obj. How can this be by the will of God seeing its a wicked thing and displeasing to God that his servants should be persecuted for well doing and he hath both forbid it and will punish the same Answ. As it comes from the Devil and persecutors it s a sin and they do wickedly and it s forbid but God hath an hand in it so far forth as it is good and he that brought light out of darkness can and doth bring good out of the evil of the wicked They intend evil but God good as in Jobs losses so in crucifying Christ Judas the High Priests the Jews Soldiers and Pilate did evil yet all this was by the will of God even so far forth as it was the mean of our Salvation and thereupon Peter that gave counsel against it was rebuked sharply so in the affliction of Gods children by the ungodly the devil and they of spite punish them for their goodness and to discourage them quite but God wills this for many good reasons as to try his that they which be approved might be known and to exercise and try their faith and patience and shew that they serve not in shew and for wages to confirm the truth not for it self for their sakes which are weak ones and to leave the others inexcusable to manifest the wickedness of the wicked and make way for the manifestation of the glory of Gods justice in plaguing them as the glory of God is made manifest by the constant and patient suffering of the Righteous which they could never have done of themselves 1. Here 's a comfort to Gods servants that we are not left here to the will of the Devil and wicked men to do what they list against us O no they are set their bounds beyond which they cannot pass The Devils could not enter into the Swine without permission nor go one whit further with Job then God gave Commission A Sparrow falls not to the ground without his providence and we are of more value then they The Lord appoints out our troubles and measures them they shall not be as little as we would for then should they be too little our tender nature loathing troubles and being unwilling to undergo the same nor so great as our adversaries would for then would they be too great but as God will The wicked are but the Lords drudges to scour us and make us bright They are his Landresses to wash us white not so little as we should be never the better nor so much as should rend the Lords linen 2. When we be ill dealt with in word or deed by the men of the world we should sit down quietly and bear it It s the will of God it should be so and he doth all things in infinite wisdom and lovingly for the good of his accordingly when Paul would needs go to Jerusalem where he was to be in great danger his friends said The will of the Lord be done thou mayest say If the Lord hath sent this to try me I pray God strengthen me if to chasten and purge me then to awaken me out of security and love of the world I thank God for it if he will any way have glory by me I am glad blessed be God it s his will I am content to wait upon him not but that we may with our Savior and the Apostle Paul plead our innocency as also use lawful means for our freedom if God see it good 3. But yet let the wicked think never the better of themselves nor look ever the more to be freed from punishment because its Gods will for they do it to no such end and therefore he will cast the rod into the fire when he hath chastened his children as he did by Ashur and the enemies he used to punish his people Did Judas or the Priests and Jews aym at the Salvation of the world in Christs death Nothing less Covetousness drave on the one malice the other If God brought good out of it what thanks to them He is to be praised for his goodness they to be plagued for their sin 4. We must not bring trouble upon our selves for in that we can have no comfort but if God bring us into it we may comfortably look up to him Vers. 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit ANother Reason to perswade to couragious suffering for righteousness sake from the example of Christ Christ suffered therefore need not we shrink or think much He that was just yea that just one therefore much more may we that be sinners and by infinite degrees deserve more grievous things then we suffer He for the unjust for us wretches and to take away our sins and reconcile us to God therefore ought we to bear somewhat for his cause that is most just and hath done so much for us Speak we first of the words briefly as they are the reason of the point in hand and then more particularly and largely of the matter contained therein namely The Sufferings Death and Resurrection of Christ. Christ suffered Suffered every way in Body Minde Name at the hands of men wretched and base persons misused him railed at him slandered him spit on him smote him scourged him crucified him between two Thieves c. Now The servant is not greater then the master If they misused Christ so what may we look for In thy sufferings help thy self with this meditation Christ Jesus suffered and what am I to him
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.
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
on Christs passion O it s a fruitful mother of many children To know that sin is enmity against God fights against the soul brings death with it is not so available to kill sin as to know and meditate on this That Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh From the necessity of Christs sufferings whereof I have already spoken in the foregoing Chapter Note 1. Our woful and miserable condition as we are of our selves 2. The ugliness and hainousness of sin in Gods account 3. The admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy with the unspeakable love of God and Christ Jesus The Jews said He loved Lazarus well because he wept for him much more may we say That he loved us because he hath dyed for us David loved Absolom well who wished that he might have dyed for him how much then hath Christ loved us having indeed dyed for us O what love do we owe for this so great love 4. The happiness of such as do truly believe and repent their debt is fully discharged and having right unto Christ there 's nothing that the Lord will deny them 5. That we are to renounce all false ways of Salvation the Jews the Turks and the Papists way all other ways besides this 6. That we are to labor to know we have part in this yea Christ having suffered we must also bear afflictions patiently Arm your selves likewise c. The duty whereunto we are exhorted is to suffer in the flesh to mortifie our flesh that is our corrupt and sinful nature and the lusts and sins thereof both inward and outward But 1. Most are so far from mortifying their lusts that they follow them with greediness and cannot endure any to speak against them These be fools indeed to destroy their own souls by living in enmity and opposition against God 2. Some it may be refrain some lusts but others they live in and yield to and yet these will claim part in the death of Christ hope to be saved by Christ but so long as it s thus with them its impossible that they should have any part in Christ. Do we therefore labor for mortification applying the edge of the Word of God to the throat of our lusts That we may not give way hereto le ts often call to minde the threatnings of the Word the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lords Supper what God offers us there and what we convenanted with him for the crosses which our lusts have drawn on us Gods manifold mercies unto us but especially meditate on Christs death and passion which is indeed a strong corrasive to eat out sin for our corruptions remain too rank and through want of care and too much yielding thereto be not subdued as they ought Let us know that he is the best Christian not that hears most or knows most or can utter most but he that hath most power over his affections and heart Note further from hence That as our lusts fight against us so we must furnish our selves like Soldiers that we may prevail against them It s no easie thing to get out of sin or to get the Mastery thereof it s to mortifie our members to pluck out our right eyes and cut off our right hands It s easier to take any pains in offering sacrifice nay fast extraordinarily and to part with our goods with thousands of Rams and ten thousand rivers of oyl yea with our first born then to part with one beloved sin They that would overcome their lust must not stand still or be without weapons we have that within us which rebelleth against the Law of God and would lead us captive to the Law of sin which is in our members Hereunto the Devil addes his power the world also joyns herewith by ill examples bad counsels mockings revilings c. and therefore we must be resolute and play the Soldiers if we would get out of our bad course Through want hereof some even under a powerful ministery be never converted some get a little way but hang behinde in sin some are a great while ere they can get out whom the Word having called and awakened the world the Devil and their own lusts do again freshly assault nay some being truly converted yet fall back again into foul security and have yet strong corruptions and many odde qualities c. 1. This rebukes most of the world who do indeed joyn with these enemies few fight against them but fewer resolutely and therefore are led captive of them to their destruction 2. This may provoke us to put on the whole armor of God to arm our selves on all occasions and in all temptations with good thoughts and meditations of the ugliness of sin danger of it its hatefulness to God with the passion of our Savior Christ O how few arm themselves or when they do it s but to halves O this must be put on and kept on continually night and day we shall sleep never the worse there can be no truce between us and our enemies This must be kept even in the times of greatest prosperity Ships usually are cast away in storms but Christians may miscarry when its calm Thus was it with David he abode constant in all Sauls storms but in the time of peace was carried away with Bathsheba's beauty It must be kept on even in our old age and till death for then will the Devil set himself most against us and both Noah Moses and others did then catch worse foils then ever before Suffered in the flesh To mortifie our corrupt nature is called suffering in the flesh and the truth is its hard to say whether is harder to suffer bodily torments and pains or to mortifie a mans lust O it s a death to part with them yea when in a man after long strife between the grace of God and his corrupt nature in the work of his conversion grace prevails it s even as the pangs of death as when the Devil went out of the childe he threw him down and he lay foaming as if he had been dead O it s not so easie a matter as the blinde and prophane world imagine Hath ceased from sin That is living in any sin For he that is born of God sinneth not and He that committeth sin is of the Devil That he no longer c. The whole time of our life that remains after we are called to repentance ought to be spent in the service of God and practice of Repentance and a new life We owe all our life to him all the days of our life the whole time we owe all to him who hath made and preserved us nothing to any other What time therefore we have spent in sin we have robb'd God of it and so ought willingly to give him the remainder redeeming that is past with all diligence The time past we know but
was dishonorable and dangerous and murther most odious and fearful he gave way to the third which was drunkenness but then when he was drunk fell into both the other for having committed folly with another mans wife the husband coming in he killed him This puts out the eye of the soul and takes away the use of Reason for a time even that whereby a man differs from a beast and indeed makes a man so that being drunk he knows neither what he doth nor what is done to him as it fared both with Noah and Lot For a man to cut or hurt his own flesh were bad but to hurt the principal part the soul how dangerous is it That were but as if one should kill a Subject this as if he did take the Prince and binde him hand and foot and turn him out of his place of Government Who would put out his bodily eyes but too too many do thus put out the eyes of their soul. This disguiseth the body which is Gods workmanship and comely and ought to be preserved in holiness and honor and kept as a Temple for the holy Ghost and makes it the stye of the Devil From hence are red eyes an inflamed face a swoln body the hands quiver the feet reel and stagger yea it not onely disguiseth but endangereth it it dulls the wit spoils the memory breeds diseases Dropsies Imposthumes Palsies oppressing and drowning the natural heat before the time as a Lamp with too much oyl or a candle thrown into the water ere it be half burnt and so bringing untimely death They that are addicted hereunto are self-murtherers and though they had need to prolong their lives while they can unless they were fitter for death yet do they long as it were and hasten to be in Hell This is a stinking sin both to God and all good men It s a wicked abuse of Gods Creatures appointed to be received with prayer and thanksgiving to the glory of the giver thereof It s a wasting of the portion which God hath given us whereby we might live comfortably and do much good to others in Church and Common-wealth O how many do hereby squander all away rob Church Common-wealth Poor yea their own Families their Wives portions and Childrens Patrimony all going down their throat What cruel murtherers be these If he that provides not for them is worse then an Heathen then what is he that having already wherewith to maintain them thus pulls it as it were from them This also is a wicked mispending of our precious time This brings infamy and reproach with God and men This brings beggery along with it many having spent all on strong drink in their youth are fain to drink water in their age This hath wo sorrow and wounds attending thereon Many in their drunkenness have been stabb'd as others have come to the gallows for that they have done in their drink yea custom and continuance herein breeds not a delight onely but from thence another nature and a kinde of necessity upon the body that they cannot leave it they swallow not the wine so much as the wine swallows them up and they are buried in wine as unfit for any good as one that is buried to do the work of a living man Hereunto may be added that as there are fearful judgements threatned against this both in respect of this and the life to come for the cup of the fierceness of Gods wrath is prepared for such to drink to the bottom and the full Vials of his judgements will be poured out upon them eternally so amongst others this is the main that they seldom or never repent I have known some toucht at the Word because of this weep for it promise yea vow against it who have yet again fallen into company and could never get out 1. If this be so horrible a sin what shall we say to the Land wherein it is grown to such an horrible height and to abound in such a fearful sort It was wont to be the sin of other Countreys now we have got it and may we not boast of our gettings think ye It was wont to be rare but is now common in all places wont to be done in a corner and the parties ashamed thereof now it staggers abroad in the open streets none being ashamed of the same wont to be the sin of base ones according to the Proverb He is as drunk as a beggar but now it s the sin of Gentlemen and herein our Yeomens sons exceed to the wasting of their Revenues St. Peters argument were now a very slender one for men rise early to drink strong drink yea men are now grown into such an horrible height of impiety as that they labor and strive to excel therein they get Beer of extraordinary strength and call it by names Snapdragon and which is most horrible Blasphemy Hosanna in the highest c. drink by the yard by the dozen in pails in crooked horns that cannot be set down make matches who shall drink each other drunk under the Table O fearful Is this the fruit of the Gospel and of this peace and light It s indeed a work of darkness though it abounds in the light of the Gospel a lust of the Gentiles and so not beseeming Christians Do we marvel at unseasonable Weather at Famine and Scarcity c we may rather wonder at Gods patience And were it not that our Governors and the chief of the Land have taken it to heart and Enacted good Laws to suppress it both by prescribing a penalty upon it and preventing it by diminishing of Ale-houses the sinks of all disorder and mischief and by forbiding excessive strong Beer and enjoyning a moderate size thereof c. We might have looked for some notable judgement of God but when men of authority take sin to heart and seek to punish the same then God takes it well and is pacified Contrarily when Magistrates have not grace and courage to put life into his Laws by the due execution of Justice the Lord is enforced to take his rod into his own hand 2. This condemneth those which are addicted unto this sin of drunkenness What Think they that God gave them their souls and bodies their goods health wealth his good creatures and their precious time to use thus hath he bestowed on them the days of the Gospel that they should make themselves Beasts unfit for any good● what answer and account think they to make to Almighty God for these things They may justly fear some notable judgement from God to be inflicted on them as of late there hath been on divers and do not these things affright you dare you go on in the like were they not sent for your admonition and to be warnings unto you Awake therefore you Drunkards and howl humble your selves on the knees of your soul confess your horrible wickedness to Almighty God
cry for mercy and pardon and if it be possible turn from this base vice renounce hate detest vow covenant swear against it pray also to be kept therefrom avoid all company of lewd ones which will either by flattery allure you or if you yield not to them reproach and mock you But what do I speak to them that have lost their wits Is there any hope of repentance for such Well yet nothing is impossible to God The harder it is labor the more and weep and lament for that is past redeem the time to come give your souls and bodies to please God in all good life and sober conversation you have spent your goods and time hereon do so no more If thou wiltst not be perswaded but go on still and hate to be reformed thou mayest look for some one or other dreadful judgement to be here inflicted on thee and at thy death to be cast into utter darkness who hast wallowed in the works of darkness and for thy drunkenness to drink off the full cup of Gods judgement for ever and ever Neither are common drunkards onely to be rebuked but such also as will now and then drink with their friends and sit so long talking and bibbing or gaming and drinking that they be caught and are scarce wise enough to finde the way home they may count themselves wise men but Solomon saith nay to it they shall not be counted innocent Nor are those only to be condemned that be so drunk as they be like beasts but even such as take delight to quaff and to carouse and spend their time in swilling having yet strong brains to bear it and herein they glory that they can drink others under-board and because they be never so drunk but they can carry it away therefore they think themselves no such persons but they are as bad drunkards and as guilty as the other they waste as much time as much wine or strong drink as the others they waste also their substance and delight in this course nay haply they drink much more then the others for some are so weak brained that a little t●rns them over There 's a wo denounced against such their brain was not given them for this end but for the service of God they should prove their strength in good things and strive to exceed others in goodness not in dishonoring God by abusing his Creatures There are also that delight to see others drunk that allure or enforce them so to do to delight herein how horrible is it how ill a sign no childe can delight to hear or see his father misused he is else a bastard not a son Gods Children delight in his Commandments in his Sabbaths in his Saints in the publike performance of his worship contrarily they are grieved and vexed as David and Lot at the dishonor which is done unto him so are not the wicked but God will laugh at their destruction and mock when their fear cometh when judgement cometh those mourners for sin shall scape when as these rejoycers therein shall not go unpunished and who indeed could laugh to see a man running on his own sword or casting himself in the fire To make others drunk enticing them hereto and to this end under colour of kindeness to drink to them often as is usual in Gentlemens Butteries and Cellars in Inns and Taverns c. where men will be at great cost to dishonor God this also is fearful these be zealous Servants of the Devil But if one should allure another to go in such a way where he were sure to fall into a pit or be drowned or be robbed c. would not every one cry out of such a treacher no less treacherous are those which make others drunk We are willed indeed to provoke each other to love and good works to call one another to the house of God to exhort and edifie one another but in no sort to destroy one another as those allurers and enticers do To compel others to drink till they be drunk or to drink more then they can bear is usual to refuse is accounted of sundry ruffians in our days a matter of great disgrace which they will not put up and therefore stab or challenge to the field those that will not drink as many and as big carouses as they that have begun them What inhumanity is this what folly hath nature made all alike can one of low stature reach as high as he that is far taller can a weak man bear as heavy a burthen as a strong man Besides what greater wrong then to force a man to do that which will hinder his health shorten his life wound his conscience and destroy his soul But especially what an outragious wickedness is this against God cannot we our selves be content to do wickedly but as ringleaders we must enforce others whosoever scape such traytors shall not What woful wretches are those have they not sins enough of their own to answer for but they must needs desperately pull other mens sins on their heads whereof they themselves are the principal cause For those they shall answer on that dreadful day Against such shall Ahasuerus his injunction though an Heachen rise up for their condemnation It s the duty of all those which as yet are free from this sin to be truly thankful to God for keeping them therefrom They must also endeavor for the time to come to avoid the same with all the occasions inducing thereto God gives us his benefits to provoke us to well-doing we must not use them to sin like the Mastiffs that flies in his face that gives him meat Wiltst thou so foully dishonor God shall thy body and soul appointed for Gods service be for the service of the Devil in this base sin Wiltst thou thus make thy self unfit for any good in danger to run into any evil Wiltst thou so disguise thy self as to make thy self a scorn so abuse Gods creatures to hazard thy health bring diseases and untimely death on thy self Wiltst thou so wound thy conscience and provoke the Lords judgements against thee here and hereafter O God forbid Be earnest always with God to keep thee see the ugly face of sin think of the judgements denounced and lighted upon many that are past help how pleasant soever it be at the first in the end it will bite like a Serpent Flie from Alehouses and Taverns as from infected houses think it an odious disgrace to be seen in any such house except in travel or for necessity flee the company also of such as are addicted to this vice as infectious and dangerous together with their enticements and provocations follow also your calling diligently whereby both this and other sins may be prevented together with the judgements due thereto 4. It s the duty of all those which are in Authority to set themselves against this sin whether Ministers Magistrates
it therefore none ought to require of me to give out of it but as I list my self Alas what if it be so as thou sayest yet its Gods free gift for thou hast made many forfeitures whereby thou hast deserved to have it taken away for any thing thou hast any Land Living Place Skill give glory to God for it thou hast no cause to be proud what hast thou which thou ha●● not received were it not absurd for one to brag of a borrowed suit of apparel as if it were his own and he were able to maintain the like He that gave it thee found thee without it unworthy of it and could have given it to any other and can yet take it from thee and give it another nay rather be humble because of of the account As the Master of the Talents called his Servants to an account so will the Lord call thee To whom much is given of him is much required The more gifts and the greater the more is thine account thou art the farther in debt and therefore should be the less proud As every man hath received the gift even so minister the same c. Here 's the main duty required every man must be faithful in communicating the gift which he hath received and after that measure that he hath received it For the kinde Though a Christian be the freest man in the world as being freed from Satan Sin Hell the Law c. yet is he to be of all others the most serviceable He must employ his gifts as a member of the body for the good of the whole He must not put his light under a bushel nor hide his Talent in a Napkin The Magistrate must administer justice duly and truly relieve the oppressed judge the fatherless defend the widow break the jaws of the wicked c. as he who beareth not the sword in vain The Minister must do service with his gift Preaching in season out of season c. The Housholder must instruct and train up his Family employing all the wit and knowledge he hath to this end as Abraham he must pray with them and go before them in an holy example The Husband must minister his gift by living with his wife as a man of knowledge c. The wife must live in subjection and build up her house and as a mother lay out her breasts for her yong ones if God hath given her milk and strength The Servant must put out his gift in his business and not be idle untrusty an eye-servant c. He that hath knowledge must teach the ignorant admonish the disordered exhort them that begin to slack comfort the heavy c. If any hath wealth he must distribute thereof as need requires If any have skill in Physick or in any thing that is useful to man yea or to beast they must minister it nay there 's not the meanest work done in faith and for conscience which pleaseth not God as a Preacher in the Pulpit or Magistrate on the Bench. Reasons 1. As the Sun shines not for it self nor the Earth bear for it self so have not we our a gift for our selves but for the common good 2. The perfection of gifts consists not onely in the having of it but in the use thereof 3. The Communion of Saints which we believe requires it and this makes a man likest to God 4. This brings most peace to our consciences both in life and death 5. This procures credit while we live as a good name and memory when we dye 6. We are divers ways partakers of the gifts of others and so must make them partakers of ours 7. Our gifts encrease by using the more we bestow them the more we have them nay even for outward things he that soweth liberally shall reap liberally 〈◊〉 1. This rebuketh those that employ not their gift at all and that either through discontentedness because it s not so great as they would or others have but he is unworthy of more that will not make use of one talent one well used would encrease or through envy as desiring to be singular or through laziness both Magistrates Ministers Hous-holders c. failing this way these are warts and scabs no true members of the body droans and not true laboring Bees 2. It rebuketh those which employ their gifts not for the common good but meerly for their own private advantage as most men would not work or employ themselves in a calling were 't not for their own ends and to grow rich thus were it base and mercenary in a Minister to Preach for filthy lucre thus many do their work and make their wares so slightly and deceitfully that others are thereby cousened though themselves be enriched 3. It rebuketh such as do hurt with their gifts as if a Magistrate by his authority would pervert judgement oppress the righteous maintain bad causes or persons c. If a Minister would by his preaching discourage the godly and strengthen the hands of the wicked If a Lawyer would employ his wit and skill to finde quirks and quillers to hinder a good cause or make good a naughty matter If a Chyrurgion would keep his Patient long in pain and keep back his cure that he might gain the more by him If a strong man would abuse his strength to pour in strong drink If a wealthy man would abuse his means to oppress his inferiors hunt good men out of their places set up disorder and riot c. If such as have wit would abuse it in devising mischief If any having knowledge in the Scriptures would cavil against the truth defend sin give ill counsel to others c. might they not be taxed for ministring their gifts cursedly It had been happy not onely for others but even for themselves as whose condemnation will be the greater that they had never had these gifts If even he that hid his talent doing no good therewith was so severely punished and if even the fig-tree was cursed that did ba●e no fruit then what shall become of them that bring forth bad fruit that employ their talents for the hurt of others Even here judgements do attend them They shall not be established upon Earth they shall hot live out half their days evil shall hunt them to destruction For the measure Every man must minister according to the measure he hath received having received much he must not minister a little he that had five Talents was called to an account for five to whom men commit much from them they look for the more Obj. The Apostle saith If there be a willing minde God accepteth of a man according to that he hath Answ. True it is not beyond that he hath but according to that he hath he doth and will account with men This rebukes those that having received much yet care not how little they distribute Many men of great knowledge yet
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
To send his holy Spirit into our hearts 5. To make intercession for us And is on the right hand of God In general 1. He gathers his Church by raising up Christian Kings and Governors where he hath any Elect. 2. He governs and keeps the same defeating all subtile plots of his Enemies and confounding all their devices Thus did he on the behalf of the Church in Egypt Thus also by overthrowing Hamans conspiracy Thus did he by dissipating the Spanish Armado and defeating the Gunpowder Plot. 3. Exerciseth his Church with crosses to scour off the rust which usually long Prosperity brings thereon In Particular for the Members of his Church that shall be saved he gathers them guides them and exerciseth them to obedience by crosses and represseth a great part of the rage of their Spiritual Enemies strengthening them against the same and for the Enemies of his Church he brings confusion upon them as on Pharaoh Senacherib Haman Herod c. Thus do we also see many Enemies of Christs Church daily cut off what else would become of the Church Angels and authorities and powers c. That is both good and bad the good willingly the others against their will are subject unto Christ. 1. For the good Angels If such glorious Creatures be subject to Christ then 1. How great a one is he and how glorious is his Kingdom He that hath Kings and Princes under him is an Emperor What 's he then to whom angels and authorities and powers are subject 2. The greater honor and dignity our head hath the more joy and comfort may we have which are his members Again In that he appoints them to watch and guard us then 1. What a great honor is this to us as if a plain Countrey man should dine at a Noble mans Table and have great Gentlemen with gold Chains to attend him 2. How may we hereby be comforted and encouraged against Satans malice 3. We must keep within compass and walk carefully in Gods ways we must take heed we do no uncomely thing lest thereby we make the Angels loath to attend on us or to carry ill tidings of us to God or be Messengers of some displeasure against us They themselves are very zealous for God and accordingly look that we should so be 2. For the evil Angels I shall not need to speak of their number power subtilty malice watchfulness to do hurt as neither of their office and work which is to hinder all good and further all evil Note we onely 1. That all these are subject Christ and he hath triumphed over them 2. That as it s no small honor to him our head to have all these under him so the meditation hereof cannot but be comfortable to us both in regard of him and our selves 3. That those evil Angels cannot do that evil they would and if they cannot much less can their instruments If even the Devils be subject to him that they cannot do what they would much more can he repress the rage of wicked men notwithstanding both of their malice and power But of these points I have spoken at large by way of Catechism CHAP. IV. THis Chapter consists of three parts 1. An Exhortation to Sanctification in general being the common duty of all Christians and belonging to all that shall be saved from Verse 1. to Verse 7. 2. An Exhortation to some particular duties of Sanctification from Verse 7. to Verse 12. 3. A comfort against persecution or an encouragement to the suffering of affliction for Christs and Righteousness sake from thence to the end of the Chapter Verse 1. Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same minde for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin Verse 2. That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God HEre is 1. An Exhortation and 2. A motive to perswade thereto The Exhortation is to resolve to mortifie and subdue the lusts of our corrupt nature and to cease from sin namely living in any sin which is both explained and amplified explained by setting forth the parts of Sanctification severally where 's shewed 1. What must be laid away the lusts of men these we must not follow nor walk in 2. What we must do even walk according to Gods will amplified by the circumstance of time even so much time as remaineth in this life behinde The motive to perswade hereto is For that Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh namely in his humane nature both in body and soul for that are we to understand by flesh in the first place as thereby in the second the mortifying of our corrupt nature or that sinful disposition which is in us called flesh which spreadeth it self both over our bodies and souls and in the third this natural life of ours while the soul lives in this body of ours for us not for himself but our sins for us not angels who are reserved undereverlasting chains of darkness but for us men for us even me and thee whosoever thou art that believest for us the Apostle himself being one for every man must labor to know it to be for him and the rest of Gods elect Forasmuch then I say as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh we must arm our selves with the same minde even not onely to bear afflictions patiently and if it were to suffer persecution for his cause but also to dye unto sin not living any more to the lusts of men but to the will of God As Christ hath dyed for sin so should we dye to sin and not live in that for which Christ paid so dearly and God so hated and from which we are freed but rather in token of our thankfulness for our deliverance we must labor by all possible means to mortifie these our wicked lusts and to lead an holy life to the glory of our Redeemer Our Note may be this That The passion of our Savior Christ ought to be a mean to mortifie our lusts and to kill sin in us for who can love the knife that killed his dearest friend or that would have been his own certain destruction neither can any man have any perswasion upon good grounds of his part in Christ death except he dye to sin for as one end of Christs death was to free us from condemnation so another was to kill sin in us for he purgeth those whom he redeemeth He is a perfect Savior and Redeemer not setting us free from some but out of the tyranny of all our enemies therefore of sin as well as wrath again would Christ dye for a company and have no use of them but leave them still to live in sin As therefore we would not live in sin let us often meditate