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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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he hath an implicite liking to the sin If inclining to pride in apparel wear plain cloaths if to vain-glory speak not any thing that may redound to your praise if to lying tell no doubtfull stories if to whispering speak sparingly of other mens actions especially of your Enemies 10 When we are affraid of sinning in secret Lev. 19.14 Thou shalt not curse the deaf nor put a stumbling block before the blinde but shalt fear the Lord thy God The deaf man could not hear the curse the blinde man cannot see the block thou layest Oh! but God sees and his fear must keep thee and me from secret iniquities See Job 31.22 23 26 27 29 30. 11 A reverend carriage both outward and inward in the worship of God Psalm 5.7 In thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple Eccles 5.2 God is in Heaven and thou on Earth therefore let thy words be few and as in prayer so in hearing Eccles 5.1 Look to thy foot when thou goest into the house of God Gods fear in Cornelius made him reverend in hearing Peter Acts 10.2 compared with v. 33. We are all here present before God to hear all things commanded us from God Jacob saith Gen. 28.16 17. The Lord is in this place and I was not aware of it how dreadfull is this place Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him as if he should say The fear of the Lord is the best spur to holy service Heb. 12.27 28. Psalm 5.7 3 Exhortation to labour after Gods fear Where wicked men are most fearless Saints are most fearfull to wit in sin and where Saints are most fearless as in calamitous times wicked men are most fearfull Most men are like little children that fear and cry at things not to be feared as at Bull-beggars c. but do not fear things that are to be feared to wit Water Fire Knives c. so most men fear those things which are shadows of grief as Poverty Disgrace but do not fear that which will bring astonishment and endless misery if not repented of Means to Gods fear 1 God must put it into our hearts Jer. 32.40 and man must teach it Psalm 34.11 Come ye children hearken unto me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. We are ready to scatter our fear as well as other affections where it ought not to be as on great persons Prov. 29.25 on worldly troubles hence it's Gods work to place our fear on a right object hence David prays Psalm 86.10 Unite my heart to fear thy Name 2 Apprehend Gods love to thy soul and thou wilt be affraid to offend him Hosea 3.5 They shall fear the Lord and his goodness Psal 130.3 4. There is mercy with thee that thou mayst be feared 1 Pet. 1.17 If you call upon the Father that is look upon him as your Father see that you spend the time of your sojourning here in fear 2 Cor. 6.17 18. Touch not the unclean thing and I will be a Father unto you 3 Be perswaded of Gods Omniscience and Omnipresence We would fear to do evil if the eye of a man were upon us much more when Gods eye beholds us Psalm 44.17 18. Though God smote his people into the place of Dragons and covered them with the shadow of death yet they apprehending and believing God to search into the secrets of the heart they durst not lift up their hands to a strange God v. 20 21. What made Job fear to sin See cap. 31.4 Doth not he see all my ways and count all my steps 4 Look upon and believe the greatness of his power Isai 40.12 Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted out Heaven with the span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountains in scales and the hills in a ballance All Nations compared with him are as a drop of a Bucket compared with the Ocean or as the small dust in a ballance compared with the greatest weights put therein all Nations are before him as nothing v. 11 17. Hence the Lord saith Jer. 5.22 Fear ye not me will ye not tremble at my presence who have placed the sand for the bound of the sea c. Psalm 76. v. 5. to v. 10. Thou even thou art to be feared thou didst cause judgment to be heard from Heaven the earth feared and was still Especially behold Gods power in casting the soul into Hell Job 41.10 Leviathan or the Whale is set down to be a terrible creature Job saith Shall not even one be cast down at the sight of him v. 9. also v. 10. None is so fierce that dares stir him up who then can stand before me If thou art notable to stand against one of Gods creatures in thy sins how wilt thou be able to stand before God himself Besides all other he hath one power to convey an invisible Horrour into thy Conscience to make thee a terrour to thy self and others Jer. 20.4 See it in Judas Matth. 27.4 5. if thou wilt venture to go on in sin 5 Believe Gods threatnings against sin Who would venture upon such a sin did he believe the threatnings against it Heb. 11.7 Noah by faith being moved with fear to wit of Gods drowning the World prepared an Ark c. Eve contrarily mincing the threatning Gen. 3.3 when God had said In the day that thou eatest of it thou shalt surely dy Gen. 2.16 17. she changed it thus God hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye dy The threatning being thus lessened she was drawn away to ruine her self and posterity There are terrible threats against sinners See Deut. 29.18 19 20 21. Psalm 11.6 Col. 3.6 1 Thes 4.6 2 Thes 1.8 9. 1 Pet. 4.17 These and many more unless they be believed they will not preserve us from sin Quest But seeing there is a filial and son-like fear and a servile or slavish fear of God how shall we know what our fear is Answ 1 Slavish fear drives from God Gen. 3.8 Adam and Eve when they heard the voice of the Lord hid themselves from the presence of the Lord. The reason is rendered v. 10. because they were affraid Is 33.14 The sinners in Sion are affraid they look upon God as devouring fire and as everlasting burnings So the Devils believe and tremble James 2.19 Contrarily filial fear brings us nearer to God Psalm 86.11 2 Slavish fear leaves the nature filthy as in the Devils James 2.19 and wicked men Heb. 2.15 through fear of death they are all their life subject to bondage Contrarily filial fear cleanseth Psalm 19.4 The fear of the Lord is clean 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God Holy persons serve without slavish fear in holiness and righteousness all their life Luke 1.74 75. 3 Slavish fear hath torment of heart 1 John 4.17
Josephs knowing her so to be but Joseph was slow in believing her till the Angel appeared to him Qu. Is there no use to be made of dreams now Answ 1 There are d vers sorts of dreams as 1 Natural so the things which the sense on the day time carries over to the understanding being more deeply setled there are sent back again to the fancy or common sense and this not only in men but in bruits A dream cometh through multitude of business Eccles 5.3 2 Moral which arises from wise discourses and reading books 3 Diabolical which come from Satan such are filthy dreams of which Jude 8 against these the ancient Church prayed H●stemque nostrum comprime ne polluantur corpora Bridle our enemy that our bodies be not defiled 4 Divine so God appeared to Solomon 2 Chron. 7.12 13. Sometimes God hath appeared thus twice Job 33.14 15. twice he appeared thus to Paul Acts 16.9.18.9 and so he appeared to Pilates wife Matth. 27.19 2 There may be use made of dreams as the Urine or Pulse are signes of sickness or health so dreams may shew us what our natural complexion is and what humour is predominant where yellow Choler abounds there we dream of fire strife and fightings where black Choler abounds men dream of smoke darkness funerals where Phlegme abounds men dream of showers of rain wells of water rivers and such things as have a cold moisture where Bloud abounds men dream of things beautifull clear and sweet Martyr out of Galen tells of a man that dream'd he had a thigh of stone and in a few days after he fell into a palsey and of another that dream'd he fell into a cistern of bloud which signified aboundance of bloud and that he stood in need of bloud letting Sometimes in sleep men seem to have such a burthen they cannot bear it sometimes to be so light that they do as it were flye which is nothing else but the excess and defect of humours To conclude dreams of preferment do too much point out ambition in us unclean dreams do too much point out wandring imaginations on the day time or excess of gluttony at night terrible dreams may put us in minde what we might look for if God were not more merciful favorable and successful dreams may put us in minde what we might expect if our sins did not stand in the way But for Divine dreams when they are it s like the understanding on the day time hath been well employed in Divine things and the frequenter they are they denote perhaps a better frame of spirit aspiring after Divine things Yet as we are not to expect direction from them God having spoken cleerly by his Son so are we not altogether to slight them seeing God hath formerly manifested himself by them besides God hath not lost any of his prerogative but that he can manifest himself by them yet The third part is the ground of Josephs consolation which is For that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost because fear will not be cast out by words but by reasons the Angel gives a reason why Joseph should not fear viz. because that which Joseph feared was an act of adultery was of the Holy Ghost and therefore he had cause rather to rejoyce then to grieve because of his spouse Mary the long lookt-for Messias was now to be born Such a message Joseph had at another time when he was in his fear Luk. 2.10 the Angel said Fear not for behold I bring you good tydings of great joy for unto you is born in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. And therefore thou Joseph mayest take her from her friends or kindred to be thy wife and thou mayest with a quiet conscience live with her Moreover the Angel calls him the Son of David to raise up Josephs heart to consider that he as well as his wife was of that family to descend from whom the Messias was promised to all the believers of the Old Testament and so he the said Joseph should have the honour to be the civil father of this Messias as the Virgin his wife had the honour to be his natural mother And therefore vers 16. it s said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which in the feminine gender Christ was begotten not of whom to prove that Joseph was onely a civil father provided to take care of the Virgin and the Messias she went with V. 21. And she shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Here is a second ground to quiet Josephs heart taken from the quality or excellency of this son whom the Virgin should bring forth he should be a Saviour to save his people Bring forth a son Not as the Valentinians who taught that Christ brought a heavenly body from heaven and passed through the Virgin as a channel but as the Virgin truly conceived Christ so she brought him forth according to Esa 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and shall bring forth a son and therefore thy spouse is not an adultress but a most pure Virgin This the Angel Gabriel told the Virgin Mary Luk. 1.31 That she should bring forth a son and call his name Jesus and here the Angel tells the same in effect to Joseph And thou shalt call his name Jesus Fathers usually gave names to their children Jacob called his son Benjamin though his mother called him Benoni Gen. 35.18 Zacharias named his son John Luk. 1.63 yet sometimes the mother as Hanna called her son Samuel 1 Sam. 1.20 His name Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from his saving Christ is the name of his Office Jesus of his Nature and Person the name in the Old Testament is Jehoscua ascribed unto Joshua the Captain and to Joshua the Priest in the Type but to Christ in the truth because he is the alone Saviour of his People Acts 4.12 Heb. 7.25 He is able to save them that come unto God by him for though Baptism is said to save 1 Peter 3.21 and Preachers 1 Tim. 4.16 Baptism doth save by way of signification Preachers as Instruments by way of publication For he shall save his People from their sins three things are considerable 1. Whom Christ saves Resp All Believers because by faith alone this salvation is received all his Body for he is called the Saviour of the body Ephes 5.23 2. From what Christ saves Resp From their sins which would bring them to Hell as a Physician brings a Potion to his Patient not to kill Death but to kill the Disease that would bring the Patient unto Death so Christ came not to quench the Flames of Hell but to save his People from their sins which would bring them to Hell Now Jesus saveth us 1. From the power of sin Rom. 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you for you are not under the Law but under
Egypt Because it was a Country near at hand whereunto the journey would be less And be thou there until I bring thee word Gods command should be the rule of our motion As the souldier is not to leave his station without the command of his Officer no more are we without Gods command For Herod will seek the young childe to destroy him The Angel knew this by divine revelation For God knowes the thoughts of mens hearts a far off Psal 139.2 And the motions of our wills Though the Angel might suspect it from the cruel and proud disposition of Herod yet onely he knew it from revelation There is no wisedome nor counsel can stand against God Prov. 21.30 The Angel saith not Herod will destroy but onely seek to destroy Psal 37.32 V. 14. When he arose he took the young childe and his mother by night and departed into Egypt Here is the obedience of Joseph We must go from Country friends and kindred when God calls so Abraham Gen. 12.1 2 though we know not whither Here was a long and dangerous journey for Joseph an old man to carry a woman that had lately lain in and an infant of about forty days old above two hundred miles through a vast Wilderness into Egypt to sojourn among persons utterly unknown whose language probably he knew not and that in the depth of Winter but faith overcomes all difficulties he believes the Angel that he would bring him word when it was fit to remove as he said v. 13. Faith in Joseph swallows up carnal fears 15. And was there till the death of Herod that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Egypt have I called my son And was there till the death of Herod Here 's the second branch of Josephs obedience We must not onely go whither God will have us but tarry there as long as he will have have us How long Christ was in Egypt and in what place and what miracles he did the Scripture is silent herein That it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Egypt have I called my son The Scripture is fulfilled four ways 1 When that which is plainly fore-told is fulfilled as that a Virgin shall conceive a childe Esa 7.14 compar'd with Matth. 1.23 2 When the Scripture prophesies in general of such and such persons it may be applied to every particular as when wicked men contemned Isaiahs Ministry the Lord sends the Prophet Isaiah cap. 6.9 to preach That they should hear but not understand see but not perceive To such contemners Christ at several times applies it as Matth. 13.13 14 15. Joh. 12.39 40. and the Apostle applies it to such Jews Act. 28.26 27. so Rom. 11.8 as it is written God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear to this day which though spoken by Esaias and aiming at the wicked that then lived under his ministry yet being spoken in general falls upon all that have a spirit of slumber 3 Analogically or by way of proportion So this Scripture Out of Egypt have I called my Son which is taken out of Hosea 11.1 That place cannot literally be meant of Christ because that Israel there meant the Prophet upbraids with unthankfulness therefore it 's meant by way of similitude As Israel the adopted Children of God were called out of Egypt by the Ministry of Moses so was Christ the natural Son of God called out of Egypt by the Ministry of the Angel the Members were called out in Hosea The Head here 4 Prophesies are fulfilled by way of Type when the thing typified answers to the Type So the Prophets phrase of calling my Son out of Egypt being spoken singularly was a Type of the Son of God who was to be called out of Egypt by the Angel neither needs this seem strange for Sinah and Sion Hagar and Sarah which signifie the two Testaments are more unusual Types and further fetcht The third part of the Chapter V. 16. Then Herod when he saw that he was mocked of the Wise-men was exceeding wrath and sent forth and slew all the Children that were in Bethlem and in all the Coasts thereof from two years old and under according to the time that he had diligently inquired of the Wise-men We have here the History of Herod's Cruelty from v. 16. to v. 19. set down 1 From the outward cause of it viz. his being mocked of the Wise-men 2 From the inward cause viz. an exceeding Wrath he conceived in his heart partly for the Indignity he conceived the Wise-men had done him and partly to hear that there was one born that should be Heir of his Kingdom and he not know who he was 3 From the cruel Edict or Command he sent forth to slay all the Infants of Bethlem two years old and under 4 From the prophetical Prediction thereof Jeremy prophesied In Rama was there a voice heard Lamentation Weeping and Mourning Rachel weeping for her Children Then Herod when he saw that he was mocked of the Wisemen We have the outward cause of Herod's cruelty viz. his being mocked of the Wise-men for they promised they would return unto him but God having admonished them of his Treachery returned not to him neither did Herod presently go to murder the Infants for about thirty days after Christ was presented in the Temple Luke 2.22 which was about eighteen days after the Wise-men came and a little while after dwelt at Nazareth in Galilee Luke 2.39 And likewise it is probable the Tyrant Herod had endeavoured to finde Christ that he might kill him alone before he would kill so many Infants which thing he knew would render him odious to all Moreover there was a common Report that when Joseph and Mary came to present Christ to the Lord at the time when Mary was purified that the Childe Jesus was openly declared by Simeon and Anna to be the Messias and from thence Herod supposed the Wise-men had deceived him Was exceeding wroth and sent forth and slew all the Infants in Bethlem and in all the Coasts thereof from two years old and under Because the Report of the Wise-men and the Witness of Simoon and Hanna in the Temple stuck much in the mindes of men so that Herod could not without fear of a Tumult vent his Malice against Christ he deferr'd his Malice to a fitter time and hearing of his being presented in the Temple began to inquire where his abode was but when he could not finde him in all Judea he thought he was hid for fear he dissembled the matter a while thinking hereby that his Parents fearing nothing would bring him out of the place where he was hid but when after his long dissembling the Childe was no where to be found in Judea the second year when he saw his opportunity he endeavours to take away the Life of the Childe but
because no man could certainly shew him who or where that Childe was unless that he was of the House and Linage of David and born in the City of Bethlem hence he came to this bloudy Result that if he were in Bethlem or in any of the Coasts thereof Herod's Executioners should kill all the Infants therein and so him among the rest And lest there might be any errour in the Children he computed the time from the Appearance of the Wise-men and lest the Computation should not fully answer Herod adds something both above and below the Compute Two years old and under From two years old and under How Herod could gather all the Infants together is no difficulty seeing no doubt he had the like pretence that he had to the Wise-men some one or other specious pretence Macrobius writing the Jeasts of Augustus Saturnal lib. ● cap. 4. saith that when Augustus heard that by the Command of Herod the Children in Syria under two years old were slain and that in the company his own Son was slain said I had rather be Herod's Hog than his Son Joseph mentions also Lib. 17. Cap. 3. that the Pharisees foretold that it was decreed of God that the Kingdom should be taken from Herod and all his Offspring and past over to a new King for which cause he slew many of the Pharisees he slew also as Philo mentions the Sanhedrim or 72 Judges who were of the Family of David about the same time It 's thought he slew these Judges as a Preparative to his wickedness of Infant-killing that he might not give account thereof in judgment Now Herod deferr'd the killing of the Infants so long 1 That he might inform himself of the Rise Person Parents and Place of Christ 2 That he might obtain leave of Augustus to do it 3 That he might get a Catalogue of all the Infants names which was easie to get among the Jews that had Books of their Genealogies and perfect Registers in order to the Birth of the Messias Now perhaps this slaying their Infants might be some Judgment upon them for their not receiving the Son of God but causing him to lodg in a Stable Nor did Herod act all this wickedness without punishment for a little after he was taken with an insatiable Appetite of taking Nourishment sharp Ulcers of his Bowels also with a Rottenness in his secret parts which brought forth Worms a difficulty of Breathing and a drawing together of his Sinews which brought him into intolerable pain of which in a short time he died and a little before his death he secured sundry principal Jews and calling his Sister Salome and her Husband Alexander said I know these Jews will triumph at my death but if you will execute my Commands I will make them to bewail me those men that I have in custody as soon as I shall dy without delay kill ye that all Judea and every particular house even against their wills may bewail my death Euseb lib. 1. cap. 8. ex Joseph lib. 17. cap. 8. also lib. 1. cap. 21. The Coasts thereof or Territories A Territory is all those Fields which ly within the ends of every City so Grotius out of Pomponius the Lawyer I suppose he means the Liberties of every City we reade Matth. 15.39 of the Coasts of Magdala V. 17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the Prophet saying V. 18. In Rama was there a voice heard lamentation and weeping and great mourning Rachel weeping for her Children and would not be comforted because they are not Fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy Cap. 31.15 There the Prophet because the living Jews of Judah and Benjamin were not moved with their going into Captivity by a kinde of Prosopopeia he brings in dead Rachel bewailing their misery now because something like it fell out it may be said analogically to be fulfilled 2 Rachel was buried near that place where the Infants were slain Gen. 35.26 28 29. That therefore the Prophet might shew the tragicalness of that dolefull sight he brings in Rachel weeping as if the Misery both of the Captivity and of the killing the Infants were so great that the living could not sufficiently bewail it It 's usual in Tragedies to call up the spirits of dead persons In Rama Rama was a City in the Tribe of Benjamin Josh 18.25 Bethlem in part of the Tribe of Judah near to the Coasts of Benjamin Gen. 35.16 19 20. neither was Rama far from Bethlem Judges 19.13 compared with v. 18. The Prophet shews the mourning was so great that it should be heard unto the Tribe of Benjamin Rachel weeping for her Children By Rachel may be understood the Mothers of the Infants who by weeping and crying out did in vain endeavour to resist the Executioners whom Herod sent And would not be comforted It 's credible the Executioners in the Kings name excused the slaughter of the Infants and comforted the weeping Mothers that the King would recompense their loss with other benefits but they would not be comforted because they saw they were deprived of their most dear Infants Because they are not In vivis they are not alive To be is the same with to live Psalm 39.14 Before I go hence and be no more that is live no more Psalm 37.36 It 's said of a wicked man He passed away and lo he was not that is he was not alive Gen. 5.24 Enoch was not that is lived not among the sons of men here for God took him up to Heaven Quest But seeing the Son of Man came not to destroy but to save why would he suffer so many Infants so near allied to him in Bloud and Affinity to be slain for him Answ In the thirtieth Chapter of Jeremy the Prophet speaks comfort of restoring Israel by Christ so here Christ shews the way to his Kingdom was by a bloudy slaughter either actually or habitually It 's like these Infants were all saved because though their wills did not consent yet as soon as they came to knowledg in a glorified estate they did actually consent to have not onely done that but much more for Christ In the Gospel-times Salvation is by Destruction Life by Death Matth. 10.39 He that loseth his Life for me shall finde it eternally Now when these Infants could have no will to undergo their sufferings by reason of their not understanding the very suffering it self was a material Martyrdom for Christ the formality whereof was made up in the free grace of God Besides whereas Rachel Jer. 31.15 weeps for her Children and would not be comforted because they were not that is she feared the Promises of the Messias profited them nothing seeing they were so cut off from the Land of the Living the Lord answers her v. 16. Refrain thy voice from weeping and thine eys from tears for thy works shall be rewarded that is the work of the patience of the Mothers who willingly part with them for
is needful let us avoid wicked suspicions of others concerning us and our received opinion of them is to be tried envy not any man who is dearly loved before others Just Mart. ad Zenam Serenum p. 390. Let no worldly conference flow from us but that which fits us for virtue Our neighbour speaking let us not laugh at him nor hinder him until by our silence he be ashamed and be silent Ibid. p. 391 392. 2 Exhortation to Christians to be like unto salt 1 As salt draws out putrifying humors out of meat and makes it rellishable for the palate so Christians by their doctrine and examples and in particular Preachers draw out the rottenness in the hearts and tongues of men and makes them fit for society of Christians hence they are called the salt of the earth to show that they should not season one or two or a few but even the whole earth and to press it the more upon them he used this similitude not once but often as Mark 9. ult John 14. ult 2 For profitableness Sale sole nihil utilius salt is most profitable called by some the balsome of nature it is mingled with all mixt bodies and preserves them from corruption So Christians are very profitable Philemon 11. Formerly unprofitable now profitable to thee and me 3 Christians are like salt for wisdom salt was an embleme of wisdome as salt seasons meat so wisdom seasons the mindes of good men Hence Sapientia is derived à sapore from savor because wisedome is the savor of the minde that which the soul is in the body that are Christians in the world 4 Salt is of a hot and fiery nature because cast it into the fire it kindles and of a watry nature because if you pour water upon it it turns into water So the Disciples of Christ should be hot and zealous for God yet should this heat be mingled with knowledg and discretion lest we fly out as those Luke 9.53 who called for fire from Heaven to consume the Samaritans or those who out of zeal to God persecuted Christ and his Righteousness Rom 10.2 5 As Salt stirs up Thirst so Christians should stir up others to thirst after Christ and heavenly things John 7.37 Revel 22.17 We should not so much look for Examples from others as give Examples to others Lyvy called Greece the Salt of the Nations it is more truly said of Christians 6 As by Salt Meat is made fit for our Taste so by the Salt of an holy Conversation the Word is made fit for the Rellish of others 1 Peter 3.1 Hence Christians are called the Salt of the earth that is of earthly minded men 7 As for preservation of Meat and other things from putrifaction there must be a just measure of Salt neither too much nor too little so Christians in general nor Teachers in special ought by an unseasonable application of the Law to swallow up afflicted Consciences Psalm 69.26 They persecute him whom thou hast smitten and talk to the grief of him whom thou hast wounded nor by an unseasonable application of the grace of God to encourage impenitent persons Rom 2.4 5 8 As Salt brings Desolation and a Curse to that which is not seasoned by it Gen 13.3 Zeph 2.9 so the Word in the Mouths and Lives of Christians to whom it is not a savour of life is a savour to death 2 Cor 2.16 2 Exhort to live savoury Lives our selves else how can we season others If the Salt have lost its savour what is it good for Take heed therefore of all scandalous sins for 1 By these the Name of God is blasphemed Ezek 36.20 The Babylonians seeing the loose lives of the Jews cried out These are the people of the Lord these are come out of the Lords land Rom 2 24 The Name of God is blasphemed by you Loose Christians are called Spots Jude 12 Deut 32.19 When David committed folly with Bathsheba by that thing he made the Enemies of the Lord to blaspheme 2 Sam 12.14 When the strong despised the weak and the weak judged the strong they caused their good to be evil spoken of Rom 14.16 How carefull are we to preserve the name of a Friend how carefull should we be to preserve the Name of God 2 An holy savoury walking free from scandalous sins is a mans glory 1 Sam 12.3 4 Whose Ox have I taken or whose Ass or of whose hand have I received a Bribe and they said Thou hast not defrauded us nor taken any thing of any mans hand 1 Cor 9.15 It were better for me for to dy than that any man should make my glorying void See 2 Cor 1.12 1 Thess 2.10 Contrarily it 's a dishonour to a Christian to be guilty of a spot of uncleanness c. Demetrius had a good report of all men yea and of the truth it self 3 Epist of John v. 12 3 Scandalous sins are worse to keep men off from embracing the truth than persecutions for by scandals men are hardened from embracing the truth Rom 14.13 Let no man lay a stumbling block or a scandal to another for sometimes persons were made by the contentions among strong and weak to stumble and so not to joyn to Gods people sometimes they were made to fall yea to fall off from Christian Assemblies Holy example is a duty we ow to the whole world and as by holy examples persons are built up towards Heaven so by wicked words and works yea by indifferent things done unseasonably persons are made worse and built up towards destruction Lev 19.14 Thou shalt not lay a stumbling block before the blinde Scandals are as Pits and Snares to catch living creatures wherein the unwary and blinde are taken 4 A savoury Life free from Scandals is a special means to stop the mouths of wicked men Dan 6.4 they found nought against Daniel but for the Law of his God 1 Peter 2.12 Have your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may glorifie God in the day of visitation 1 Peter 3.16 having a good Conscience whereunto an holy Life is joyned that whereas they speak evil of you as of evil doers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ Titus 2.8 They that are of the contrary part will be ashamed having no evil thing to say of you contrarily when persons that profess shall fall into scandals wicked men draw these Conclusions as 1 Because some professing persons are bad therefore their Religion is bad 2 Because one is bad thus they are all 5 By an unsavoury scandalous Life thou hast a hand in other mens damnation A mans own personal guilt is heavy enough he need not add the weight of other mens sins Matth 18.6 Wo to the World because of offences there is not onely a Wo to the person that gives the offence but to the World This is a Rock on which thousands dash their souls Therefore as
Jesus knowing their thoughts said Why think ye evil in your hearts Jesus knowing their thoughts Here was one note of his God-head to know the thoughts 1 Cor. 2.11 What man knows the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him He must needs be God which did this 1 Joh. 2.24 25. Jesus did not commit himself to them because he knew all men and needed not that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man He did not know their hearts by outward gestures as by whispering laughing but he knew their hearts without signes when they sat quiet and still nor did he know them by the revelation of another as the Prophets did 1 King 14.3 4. as the Prophet Ahiah did the wife of Jeroboam but by his own power as being the searcher of hearts which God onely is And needs must he know the thoughts because he created the heart Psal 94.10 11. besides else how should he make manifest the counsels and secrets of the heart Rom. 2.16 1 Cor. 4.5 Why think ye evil in your hearts That is false malitious and blasphemous things as if I were onely a man when I am God These thoughts were evil 1 coming from the devil and their wicked hearts 2 In respect of matter as being derogatory to the majesty of Christ From this two observations 1 The thoughts of men are known to Christ 2 The consideration of this that our thoughts are known to Christ should be a check unto us from thinking evil in our hearts Obs The thoughts of men are known to Christ 1 Because he is God now all thoughts are known to God Gen. 6.5 God saw that every imagination of the heart of man was onely evil continually Job 21.27 I know your thoughts and the devices which ye wrongfully imagine against me Job 42.2 No thought can be withholden from thee yea God perceives and knows the inward thoughts of the heart Psal 49.11 Their inward thought is their houses shall continue Amos 4.13 he declares unto man his thought Psal 139.23 Try me and know my thoughts Psal 50.22 1 Cor. 3.20 2 Because he is the searcher of the heart Rev. 2.23 All the Churches shall know that I am he that searcheth the reins and the heart now the thoughts being a great part of the heart he must needs know them Luke 9.47 When the Disciples were thinking which of them should be greatest Jesus perceiving the thought of their heart took a little childe and set him before them Matth. 12.24 25. 3 Because he hath discovered to men their thoughts as here to these Scribes and to Judas before he acted any treason Luke 5.32 Luke 24.38 when the Disciples were affrighted Christ says Why do thoughts arise in your hearts The woman of Samaria John 4.29 He told me all that ever I did Use 1 To confirm unto us the God-head of Christ why because he knows our thoughts 2 Beware 1 Of vain thoughts which is 1 For matter when we shall think on foolish things Prov. 24.9 The thought of foolishness is sin 2 For manner when we shall think of God and good things in an unholy manner either irreverently or idolatrously Psal 50.23 Thou thoughtest I was such an one as thy self 3 For order when we shall think of good things disorderly If a Printer print never so well yet if one word stand where another should it will quite spoil the book 4 For end when we shall be thinking of good things for a bad end as to be thinking of the Scriptures how to colour over some sin to be thinking of God in extremities that he might deliver us out of this or that trouble resolving still to follow our lusts 2 Beware of wicked thoughts Prov. 30.32 If thou hast thought evil in thy heart lay thy hand upon thy mouth Esai 55.6 7. Let the righteous man forsake his thoughts Acts 8.22 Repent of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee 5 Though they think of God they delight not to think of him Rom. 1.28 they think of God but they know not how to shun it Obj. But thoughts are free Answ In Courts of men they are because man cannot make a Law that can reach the thoughts but not in the Court of heaven Jer. 6.19 I will bring upon them the fruit of their thoughts Obj. But we cannot hinder wicked and vain thoughts from arising in the heart Answ We cannot hinder them from being but we may hinder them from lodging in us Jer. 4.14 We cannot hinder persons from coming to our house but we can hinder them from lodging in our house we cannot hinder a Bird from flying over our heads but we may keep it from making a nest in our hair Q. Whence come these wicked thoughts in the heart Answ 1 From Satan who inspires and injects evil motions These sometimes are discerned by the suddenness coming like a flash of Lightning by their violence It 's a sad thing to have the devil Lord of our imagination as in Judas John 13.12 By their strangeness being thrown in as Josephs cup in Benjamins sack By their unnaturalness tending to destroy so to Christ Cast thy self down Thus Satan suggested to David to number the people 1 Chron. 21.1 Some think it more sad for the devil to run away with our thoughts then estates 2 From corruption Matth. 15.19 Out of the Heart proceed evil thoughts Jam. 1.14 15. Now whether they come from Satan or corruption they shall not be imputed to us if we disallow them Obj. I disallow them Answ If thou doest they will be burdens to thee and thou wilt complain to God in prayer against them and strive to turn thy imagination from them to God that the thoughts of God may be the possessions of thy heart 3 Try what thy thoughts are whether they be good or bad Trials 1 When they come from a good principle within A good man hath a good treasure in his heart Matth. 12.35 and from thence he brings forth good things hence his purposes are onely good Prov. 11.23.12.5 2 When good thoughts are not onely cast into the soul but we study them Many think because they have some thoughts of death judgement heaven and hell of repentance God and Christ therefore their hearts are good but these thoughts are onely the hauntings of the spirit to leave them more inexcusable Contrarily godly men strive to study good thoughts Psal 119.59 3 Whether are the good thoughts thou hast transient or permanent and abiding Gen. 6.5 The Lord saw all the thoughts of mens hearts were vain Obj. They had some good thoughts how could this be Answ They were vain for want of duration 4 Whether are thy thoughts brought forth into act Godly men act the good they think of Psal 119.59 I thought upon my wayes what then followed I turned my feet into thy testimonies Luke 15.18 The Prodigal thought of his misery what followed
Wine to new bottles To communicate Gospel truths to such is a double loss 1 Of the Wine whiles unregenerate men reject the Gospel because it 's contrary to their lusts or scandalize that Gospel they profess 2 The bottles are broken that is these men perish whiles by degrees they apostatize Luke adds c. 5.39 No man having drunk old Wine straightway desires new for he saith the old is better As if Christ should say it befals my doctrine as it befals them who have been accustomed to old Wine for as they cannot endure new Wine because it hath a certain fowrness so ye being accustomed to old superstitions and pompous traditions cannot away with my doctrine which is humble sharp and powerful even to the renewing of the whole man which when they are renewed then are they capable to receive the doctrine of the Gospel So that the sum is the doctrine of the Gospel can neither be joyned with ceremonial services nor carnal natures the Law of Ceremonies is made old like an old garment or old bottles by my coming in the flesh therefore my Disciples do well that they do not fast according to the Law Of these three interpretations I prefer the first and third V. 18. While he yet spake these things unto them behold there came a certain Ruler and worshipped him saying My daughter is even now dead but come and lay thy hand upon her and she shall live We have in this story 1 The request of a Ruler of the Synagogue at Capernaum whose name was Jairus as Mark and Luke sets him down Mark 5. Luk. 8. Which is amplified 1 From the time which was whiles he was speaking to the Disciples of John and the Pharisees 2 From the place which was Capernaum where he healed the Palsey man where he was feasted by Matthew and where the Pharisees cavilled with him for not fasting 3 From the devotion and submission of the Ruler he worshipped Christ v. 18. 4 The thing requested which was that whereas his daughter was dead or at the point of death that Christ would come and heal her 5 The weakness of his faith in that in healing his daughter he limits Christ to such a means lay thy hand upon her and she shall live 2 We have the healing of the woman who had a bloody flux Amplified 1 From the length of time wherein she was afflicted with this disease which was twelve years 2 From the means of her healing which was her faith she said within her self If I may but touch his garment I shall be whole ver 20.21 3 The comfortable absolution Christ pronounces to her trembling soul who was not without doubts and fears because she had closely and surreptitiously obtained her healing Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole v. 22. 3 We have the healing of Jairus daughter Amplified 1 From his dismissing the Minstrels and people and taking the father and mother of thed amosel in Mark 5.40 and Peter James and John Luke 8.51 who saw the miracle 2 The consolation he gives to the mourners who were there wailing She is not dead but sleepeth v. 24. 3 The derision that was cast upon Christs words They laughed him to scorn v. 24. knowing that she was dead as Luke hath it Luke 8.53 4 The manner of his raising her up He took her by the hand v. 25. saying Maid arise Luke 8.53 5 The effects of this 1 Her spirit came again and she arose straightway Luke 8.55 and Jesus bade they should give her meat 2 The fame of the miracle went abroad into all that Land v. 26. notwithstanding Christ charged the damosels parents that they should tell no man what was done V. 18. While yet he spake these things unto them That is in Capernaum where Matthew feasted him Behold there came a certain ruler Called a Ruler of the Synagogue Mark 5.22 Luke 8.41 called Jairus All the three Evangelists put a note of admiration upon it Behold It 's a great thing for a Governour to come to Christ but most wonderfull for a Ruler of the Synagogue He vvas one of the Rulers of the Synagogue Mark 5.22 that is of the Synagogue of Capernaum He vvas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there vvere divers of these as appears Acts 13.15 who had an inspection over or into the Synagogue Among these there was one that did excel who for his ability to instruct vvas set over the rest vvhose office it was to interpret the Law and to pray Just cont Triph. of these Luke 13.14 And worshipped him The ruler is set down from his devotion that he worshipped Christ Mark hath it he fell at his feet and besought him greatly Mark 5.22 23. He fell down at his feet and besought him that he would come into his house Luk. 8.41 whether this worship were religious or civil I shall not at present determine howbeit some think it was a bare bending of the knee My daughter is even now dead Christ orders afflictions so that he can make one or other bring us to Christ so here the death of a daughter brings the ruler to Christ Now that he saith his daughter was dead he spake herein conjecturally considering how sick she was when Christ left her It s like at first he cryed that she was at the point of death Now he cryes that she was dead upon the report the messengers brought and because when he left her she was breathing out her soul or near thereto And so we may reconcile Marks saying Mark 5.23 She was at the point of death and Luke and Matthews saying she was dead so that the messenger that came seeing the case desperate bids him that he would not trouble the Master that is Christ Christ therefore seeing him wavering in his faith and hope strengthens him saying Fear not believe onely and she shall be made whole Luk. 8.50 so gracious is Christ to bear with the weaknesses of his peoples faith But come and lay thy hand upon her and she shall live His faith was weaker then the Centurions The Centurion believed that Christ though absent with a word of his mouth could heal his servant but Jairus saith Come and lay thy hands on her Here was the weakness of his faith that he limits Christs power to laying on of hands yet are not persons weak in faith to be rejected but encouraged as Christ doth encourage the ruler Luk. 8.50 Besides its like he had seen or heard that Christ had healed sundry persons at Capernaum by laying on of hands and therefore he hoped he would do the same to his daughter Laying on of hands is an act 1 Of power or dominion 2 Of a will ready and inclining to do good as to heal and help I shall speak a little concerning this doctrine of laying on of hands There is a threefold laying on of hands 1 Curatory or healing Mark 16.18 They shall lay hands on the sick and they shall recover Act. 28.8 Publius his
this nothing for the worshipping the reliques of Saints for it was not the touching the garment of Christ but her faith that made her whole V. 22. But Jesus turned him about and when he saw her he said Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole and the woman was whole from that hour Luke adds some body hath touched me for I perceive that virtue is gone out of me as if a man perceived when blood goes out of his veins Quest Why would not Christ have this miracle kept secret Answ 1 To free the woman from scruple who was troubled in her conscience as if she had stole her health 2 To propound her faith for imitation 3 To prove his God-head by his omniscience 4 To strengthen Jairus his faith whose daughter he was about to raise from death 5 That she might know that she was healed not from the touching of his garment but from Christ himself who knowingly and wittingly healed her hence Christ saith virtue is not gone out of my garment but out of me Christ doth not give his Spirit to old raggs and clouts had the virtue been in the garment it would have had the same effect on others that touched it Christ was touched by her Faith Many follow Christ that onely press him but they onely touch him that lay hold on him by Faith and know that Christ doth not as Princes cast their alms they know not to whom 6 That the woman might come forth as a witness Probably they would not have believed Christs testimony of himself but her confession must needs prevail with them Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole Christ helps the weakness of her Faith Unless her trembling had been faulty Christ would not have raised her up She comes to Christ trembling Mark 5.33 Luk. 8.47 knowing what was done in her and tells him all the truth Persons that do things privily are wont to tremble fearing least they be found out so this woman Now Christ encourages her signifying withall that it was not her touching his garment but her perswasion of his divine power that conduced to her healing Yet doth not every faith touch Christ but that onely which is saving Now as she got healing so we remission of sins by such a faith in Christ and as she went away in peace hereby so by faith in Christ we have peace Rom. 5.1.15.13 Thy Faith hath made thee whole My power hath done it efficiently I perceive virtue is gone out of me thy Faith hath done it instrumentally not by way of merit nor as if the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 credere or the act of believing did it but by way of apprehension receiving my grace and favour Poor believers though they come trembling to Christ yet they go from him comforted and supported so true is that promise Joh. 6.37 he calls her daughter as being by him begotten to a new life so when Christ forgave the Palsey-man he called him Son Matth. 9.2 V. 23. And when Jesus came into the Rulers house and saw the minstrels and people making a noise V. 24. He said unto them Give place for the maid is not dead but sleepeth Jesus came into the Rulers house Christ goes from healing the woman with the bloody issue into the Rulers house where is seen both his wisdom in deferring to help the Rulers daughter till his daughter was dead and also his goodness in helping the Rulers Faith by this miracle on the woman 2 In raysing up his Faith Fear not onely believe so Mark. He saw the minstrels and people making a noise Who were hired at the Funeral to sing some sorrowful song containing the virtues of the deceased and to stir up mourning and tears from friends and neighbours there were both men mourners Eccles 12. and women mourners Jer. 9.17 The heathens thought this a mean to appease the infernal Spirits Ambros in Luc. 8. also Marcellinus lib. 19. writes they mourned seven dayes the Men and Women singing sad funeral songs but for piping at funerals it was more late Not as if mourning for the dead were unlawful for Abraham mourned for Sarah Gen. 23.3 also Gen. 50.10 Josephs house mourned for Jacob with a great and fore lamentation and himself made a mourning for his Father seven dayes the Egyptians mourned for Jacob threescore and ten dayes ver 3. Israel mourned thirty dayes for Aaron There were great lamentations made for Josiah Zach. 12.13 Bos bovem requirit non ego te frater Amb. One ox lows for another and shall not we bewail one another We are bid to go to the house of mourning Eccles 7.1 Bewail the burning the Lord hath kindled Levit. 10.6 Stephen was mourned for Act. 8.2 but mourning becomes sinful 1 When it is excessive Matth. 2.15 Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted 2 When it is hopeless 1 Thess 4.13 Sorrow not as others that have no hope 3 When it is feigned As in these hired mourners The mourners go about the streets Eccles 12. Many pretend to mourn for those of whose death they are glad 4 When it is heathenish Levit. 19.28 Deut. 14.1 the heathens thought these to be funeral dues to the dead He said unto them give place 1 Because of the troublesome noyse they made 2 Because they were no fit witnesses of the miracle The maid is not dead but sleepeth 1 Because death to the Godly is as a sleep for after sleep we arise refreshed so in the resurrection 2 Because in respect of God dead men are as if they were asleep so Lazarus is said to sleep Joh. 11.11 All godly souls live to him 3 She was not absolutely dead as the multitude thought as if she could not be brought back again to life but onely for a while 4 Though death and sleep are distinguished yet are they near one to another for death seems a continual sleep and sleep seems a short death Let us not fear death for God can as easily raise up men from death as men that are asleep from their sleep 4 She is not dead in respect of her soul which is the better part Eccles 12.7 the Spirit returns to God 5 In respect of Christ his omnipotent power death it self was to him but as a sleep because he knew he could as easily raise her to life as any man could awaken a person asleep yea more easily for sometimes we call three or four times to a man in sleep though yet she might be dead to others Hence he saith Talitha Cumi i.e. Damosel arise But sleepeth The death of the godly is as a sleep Steven fell asleep Act. 7.60 Sundry of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.30 Lazarus Joh. 11.11 David fell asleep and saw corruption Act. 13.36 Christ is the first fruits of them that slept 1 Cor. 15.20 Death is resembled to a sleep 1 Because of refreshment we have thereby as the body is refreshed after sleep so shall we be in the