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A54583 A learned, pious, and practical commentary, upon the Gospel according to St. Mark wherein the sacred text is logically analyzed; the meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened: doctrines naturally raised, strongly confirmed, vindicated from exceptions, and excellent inferences deduced from them: all seeming differences in the history between this and the other evangelists fairly reconciled: many important cases of conscience, judiciously, succinctly, and perspicuously solved. By that laborious and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. George Petter, late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex. Petter, George. 1661 (1661) Wing P1888; ESTC R220413 2,138,384 918

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Quest 1 Quest 1. How could he be killed or put to death being the Son of God Answ Answ He was put to death according to his Humane Nature as He was Man 1 Pet. 3. 18. Put to death in the Flesh Yet he that dyed was God and that at the very time of his death for the personal Union betwixt the God-head and Man-hood of Christ was not dissolved but continued still even in the instant of his Death and after it Quest 2 Quest 2. What kind of Death was our Saviour to be put unto Answ Answ To the death of the Cross that is to be crucified or nailed alive to the Cross and there to hang until He was dead This appeareth by the History of the Evangelists who do particularly declare the manner of his crucifying Joh. 3. 14. As Moses lift up the Serpent in the Wilderness so must the Son of Man be lifted up that is upon the Cross at the time of his Death Now the reason why He was to suffer this kind of death was this that it might appear that he was made a Curse for us by imputation in taking upon him the guilt and punishment of our sins Therefore he was to dy the death of the Cross which was an accursed kind of death not only in the Opinion and accompt of men but even by the Law of God as appeareth Deut. 21. 23. and Gal. 3. 13. where it is said that Christ was made a Curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree Quest 3 Quest 3. Was our Saviour to suffer nothing but bodily pains at the time of his Death Answ Answ Yes He was withal to suffer the wrath and curse of God due to our sins in his Soul yea the pangs of the second death such as were answerable and equivalent to the very pains of Hell which was the cause that He so cried out upon the Cross My God My God Why hast thou forsaken me Matth. 27. 46. Quest 4 Quest 4. Wherefore or to what end was He to be slain or put to death and to suffer withal the Curse of God in his Soul Answ Answ 1. That by this means He might make satisfaction to God for our sins and the sins of all God's Elect People and so might free us from the Guilt and Punishment of our Sins both temporal and eternal Rom. 4. 25. He was delivered to death for our Offences c. 1 Cor. 15. 3. He dyed for our Sins according to the Scriptures 2. That by death He might destroy the Devill that is vanquish his Power and Tyranny which He had over us by reason of our sins and so deliver us from the same Heb. 2. 14. 3. That He might take away the Sting and Curse of bodily death and free us from the same 1 Cor. 15. 55. Quest 1 Quest 5. How could Christ's bodily Death and his Suffering of God's Wrath for a short time satisfie God's Justice for the eternall punishment due to our Sins Answ Answ Because it was the Death and Sufferings of him that was not onely Man but God Acts 20. 28. This dignity of the Person Dying and Suffering gave infinite vertue and efficacy to his Death and Suffering For it was a greater matter for the Son of God to Dye and Suffer God's Wrath though but for a little time than for all Men and Angels to have suffered it for ever Now follow the Uses of this Doctrine touching Christ's Death Vse 1 Vse 1. In that Christ must be killed or put to Death even ro the Cursed Death of the Crosse and that for our sins to satisfie God's Justice for them Hence we are taught the cursed nature and effect of sin in it self in that it is the meritorious and procuring cause of Death it brings forth Death as the proper fruit and effect of it Rom. 6. 23. The wages of Sin is Death And Jam. 1. 15. Sin being finished bringeth forth Death Therefore also Sins are in Scripture called dead Works because they do of themselves naturally bring forth Death This we see in Christ who though he had no sin of his own yet because he took on him the guilt of our sins by imputation he became subject to Death and was of necessity to be killed or put to Death and not an ordinary Death but to the cursed Death of the Crosse yea he must also Suffer the very pangs of the second Death in his Soul and all for Sin See what a deadly thing sin is being the Originall Cause and Fountain of Death even of Temporall and Eternal Death both which it doth necessary bring either upon us or upon Christ for us Learn by this to fear and talk of sin as the most deadly and dangerous evil in the World as we naturally fear and shun Death so much more sin the cause and Fountain of Death And to this end labour more and more for true hatred of all sin in our hearts that we may detest it as we do Death yea as we hate and detest Hell it self Rom. 12. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to hate it like Hell How do we hate and abhorr poyson because it is deadly How do we fear and shun deadly Diseases as the Pestilence c Much more cause is there to hate and avoid sin which is more deadly to the Soul than any poyson or disease to the Body Think of this when thou art tempted to any Sin that it will bring Death of Soul and Body c. Prov. 14. 12. There is a way which seemeth right unto a man but the end thereof are the wayes of Death Use 2 Vse 2. See the unspeakable love of Christ to us manifested in this That he was content and willing to suffer Death for our Redemption yea the shameful Death of the Crosse together with the infinite Wrath and Curse of God accompanying the same Joh. 15. 13. Greater love than this hath no man that a man lay down his Life for his Friends Rom. 5. 7. Scarcely for a Righteous man will one dye c. But God commendeth his love to us in that while we were yet Sinners Christ dyed for us This must draw our love to Christ again c. Of this see before where I spake of Christ's willingnesse to Dye and Suffer for us Use 3 Use 3. The Death of Christ doth afford matter of unspeakable comfort to all true Believers and that three wayes 1. Against guilt of our Sins and the fear of God's Wrath and Curse due to them all which being fully satisfied for and taken away by the merit of Christ's Death there is now no condemnation to us being in Christ Rom. 8. 1. We may now say with the Apostle ver 33. of the same Chapter Who shall Condemn It is Christ that Dyed c. Christ by his Death hath paid a Counter-price to God's Justice for all our Sins and so fre●d us from the guilt and punishment due to them He hath freed and delivered us
c. Hereby our Saviour implyeth that after they had seen this Transfiguration they should taste of Death in the time appointed of God This he presupposeth whence we may learn that even the faithful Saints and Servants of God are subject to bodily death and shall at length in their due time taste and have experience of it As they cannot by before the time appointed of God so when that time cometh they must and shall certainly taste of Death This is true of all the Saints and faithful even of the best and most excellent Christ's own Disciples yea the most eminent and chief of them for Grace as Peter James and John who are here particularly meant must at length come unto Death Joh. 21. 19. Our Saviour foretells Peter of his Death and the manner of it And 2 Pet. 1. 14. he prophesies of his own Death Shortly I must put off this my Tabernacle even as our Lord Jesus hath shewed me Touching the Death of James we read Acts 12. 2. that Herod put him to Death And touching John although some have erroneously imagined that he should not dye at all but remain alive till Christ's second coming grounding this their errour upon those words of our Saviour Joh. 21. 22. yet that the contrary is true may appear not onely by the words of John himself ver 23. of the same Chapter and by our Saviour's words in this place but also by the testimony of sundry antient Writers of the Church who report that he dyed and was buried at Ephesus about a hundred years after the Birth of Christ Now as it is true of these three Disciples of Christ here spoken of that in their due times they tasted of Death So is it also true of the rest of Christ's Disciples and of all the Saints of God mentioned in Scripture that as they lived unto the time appointed of God so when that time was come they dyed or tasted of Death So all the holy Patriarchs Prophets religious Kings of Israel and Judah lived and dyed c. So all the Saints in the new Testament Esay 57. 1. The Righteous perisheth and mercifull men are taken away c. viz. By Death they are taken away from the Earth Reas 1 Reas 1. Bodily Death is the common condition appointed of God for all men to pass thorough Hebr. 9. 27. It is appointed unto men that is unto all men once to dye Therefore it is appointed for the Saints of God as well as others Job 30. 23. I know that thou wilt bring me to Death and to the House appointed for all living Reas 2 Reas 2. The Saints of God are tainted with the corruption of sin as well as others Therefore they as well as others are lyable to Death as the wages of sin Rom. 5. 12. Death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Object 1 Object 1. Joh. 8. 51. If a man keep my saying he shall never see Death Answ Answ It is to be understood of eternal Death not of Temporall Object 2 Object 2. Henoch and Eliah dyed not but were taken away from Earth to Heaven extraordinarily Hebr. 11. 5. Henoch was translated that he should not see Death Eliah taken up to Heaven in a fiery Chariot c. 2 King 2. 11. Answ Answ These were extraordinary and speciall Examples to whom the Lord for speciall causes did vouchsafe this Priviledge which therefore makes nothing against the general and ordinary course which God doth take with all other his Saints viz. To bring them unto Death and to cause them to taste of it every one in their time Object 3 Object 3. 1 Cor. 15. 51. We shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed Answ Answ That change of the Saints found alive at Christ's second coming shall be in stead of Death unto them Quest Quest why doth not the Lord abolish Temporal Death as well as eternal unto his Saints and wholly free them from the former as well as from the latter seeing he hath Power so to do Answ Answ The Lord will have Temporal Death to remain and that his Saints and Children shall taste of it as well as others for these Reasons 1. That they may be conformable to Christ their Head who first tasted of Death and so was Crowned with Glory Hebr. 2. 9. 2. To humble them the more in the sense of their sins which are the meritorious and procuring cause of Death in them 3. The Lord hath thought it fit that as Sin brought Death into the World so Death should carry Sin out of the World That his Saints should be freed from all remnants of sinful corruption by means of Death Use 1 Use 1. For admonition to the Saints and Faithful as well as others to make accompt of Death and to prepare and fit themselves to undergo and taste of it make a vertue of necessity Seeing they must dye therefore daily prepare to do this great and last work of a Christian Job 14. 14. All the Dayes of my appointed Time will I wait till my change come Object Object The Saints and Faithful cannot but be fit and well prepared for Death Therefore this admonition is needless c. Answ Answ There are Degrees of fitness and preparedness for Death And though all true Believers are in some measure prepared for it yet because this their preparation is mingled with much weaknesse and imperfection therefore they have need daily to fit and prepare themselves for Death in a farther degree and measure Quest Quest How is this to be done Answ Answ 1. By frequent and often meditation of Death and of the necessity of it by God's Ordinance c. Deut. 32. 29. Oh that they were wise that they would consider their latter end This is called numbring of our Dayes Psal 90. 12. So teach us to number our Dayes c. make Death present to us by meditation before it come 2. By often meditation of those Grounds of comfort which the Word of God affordeth to the Saints against Death As 1. The Death of Christ whereby he hath satisfied for their sins and so taken away the sting and curse of their Death so as now it is not hurtful to them nor to be feared at all 1 Cor. 15. 55. O Death where is thy sting c 2. The blessed estate and condition of the Saints immediately after Death resting from their Labours c. Rev. 14. 13. Their Souls carryed by the Angels into Abraham bosom c. 3. The Resurrection of our Bodies which we hope and certainly look for at the last Day c. 3. By daily renewing their Faith and Repentance that so they may be more and more assured of the pardon of their sins and peace with God in Christ and so that they shall dye in the Lord c. Use 2 Use 2. A motive to us to be willing to dye and to encourage us thereunto whensoever the Lord shall call us to it seeing Death is such a condition and
them to Repent and then Baptized them upon their profession of Repentance as we see Math. 3. So did the Apostles as Peter Acts 2. 38. The second sort of persons Baptized are Infants and such onely are wont to be Baptized with us now a daies now these having no knowledge of sin cannot actually repent before Baptism but they must repent after their Baptism so soon as they come to years of discretion Reas Of this Doctrine Baptism is a seal of God's Covenant of Grace made with us in Christ and Repentance is one condition required on our part in that Covenant As God promiseth forgiveness of sins and salvation in Christ to the Party Baptized and sealeth this Promise to him by this Sacrament so he requires this as a condition of the same Party that he repent and turn from his sins unto God Act. 2. 38 39. Vse 1 This shews how foolishly many delude themselves thinking it enough for them that they have had the outward Baptism in their Infancy Yet never caring to perform the condition required of them in their Baptism which is to repent of their sins This is a matter they think not of but know this The setting to of the outward seal of God's Covenant shall do thee no good if thou perform not the condition of the Covenant God promiseth forgivenesse of sins and salvation by Christ to thee in thy Baptism but it is upon condition of thy Repentance If thou keep not this condition thou art never the better for the outward seal of the Covenant Vse 2 Let all that have bin baptized look well to this that they perform this condition of Repentance required on their part in that Covenant of God sealed to them in Baptism Thou that hast bin baptized remember this that as in thy Baptism God promised to forgive thy sins and to save thee by Christ so he tyed thee to this condition that thou shouldst forsake sin and turn to him by newnesse of Life see then that thou stand to this condition and that thou perform it else look not that God should perform his promise to thee 2. Instruction That the Sacrament of Baptism doth signifie and seal to us the grace of Repentance and true conversion to God from sin Our Repentance and turning to God from sin is one speciall thing signified and sealed to us in and by this Sacrament this being one reason why it is here called the Baptism of Repentance Math. 3. 11. I Baptize you unto Repentance that is by this Sacrament to signifie and seal to you the grace of Repentance and true conversion unto God See Beza on the place and to tye you unto it Quest How doth Baptism signifie and seal to us the work of Repentance and true Conversion to God Answ By two outward Rites or Sacramentall Actions used in it The one is the dipping into water or sprinkling of the party baptized with water this doth signify and seal to us the first part of Repentance which is dying unto sin Rom. 6. 4. We are buried with Christ by Baptism into death c. The other Sacramental action is Rising out of the water or wiping it off this signifyeth and sealeth to us the second part of Repentance which is our spiritual quickning and rising to Newness of life See this also Rom. 6. 4. Use See how to meditate of our Baptism Not as of an idle or vain Ceremony but as of that which hath an excellent spirituall use and signification serving to represent and seal to us our Repentance and Conversion to God So often then as we think of our Baptism we must call to mind what was signifyed and sealed to us in Baptism namely our spirituall dying to Sin and living unto Righteousness And withal we must be stirred up to the daily practise of these parts of true Repentance by the meditation of our Baptism It must be the Baptism of Repentance to us For the remission of sins This is the second thing in the Description of Baptism viz. one special End or Use for which it serveth namely for the remission of sins that is to seal this benefit of remission of sins to the party baptized By remission of sins understand the acquitting of a sinner from the guilt of sin when God doth not impute it unto him as Psal 32. 1. Now from these words the Papists would infer that the Baptism of John was not the same in efficacy with the Baptism commanded of Christ to be administred by the Apostles for they say that by the Baptism which Christ instituted forgiveness of sins was actually sealed and given but as for John's Baptism it was onely a preparative unto Christ's Baptism putting them onely in hope of remission of sins but not actually sealing it to them See the Rhemists on this place But this is confuted by the Text for John's Baptism was the Baptism of Repentance as we heard before Now Repentance and remission of sins cannot be severed therefore as well remission of sins as repentance were sealed by John's Baptism and so it was of the same efficacy with the Baptism of the Apostles commanded of Christ afterward So much of the words and the sense of them Obser 1 One End and Use of Baptism is to signify and seal remission of sins to the party baptized Act. 2. 38. Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins Act. 22. 16. Arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins c. Outward sprinkling of the body signifyeth inward cleansing of the soul from guilt of sin c. Quest 1 1. Hath Baptism this Use in all that receive it Answ No but onely in such as repent of their sins and believe in Christ It seals remission of sins onely to such as use this Sacramenr aright that is to such as keep the conditions of Faith and Repentance which God requireth of those to whom he promiseth and sealeth forgiveness of sins in Baptism Quest 2 2. How doth Baptism seal remission of sins Answ Not by vertue of the outward washing of it self but by vertue of God's promise made to the right Use of the Sacrament that as certainly as the body is washed with Water from outward defilements so is the soul cleansed by the merit of Christ's Blood from the guilt of sin Use See how those that are distressed in cons●ience may comfort themselves touching the first pardon of their sins viz. by calling to mind their Baptism and labouring by faith to apply unto themselves the benefit of remission of sins which was sealed to them in their Baptism Thou that feelest thy sins to be many and great and art tempted to doubt of the pardon of them have recourse to thy Baptism which thou receivedst in thy Infancy look back unto that and by meditation of it labour to confirm and strengthen thy faith touching the pardon of thy sins It is Luther's Counsel and he tells a Story to this purpose of
preferr the good of our Souls before the good of our Bodies remembring that Matth. 16. 26. What is a man profitted if he gain the whole World and lose his own Soul Or Matth. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdom c. And John 6. 27. Observ 3 Observ 3. Ver. 34. And he healed many that were sick c. In that here is mention of so many Diseases cured by our Saviour we have good occasion to take notice of one speciall part of that misery which sin hath brought upon us viz. That it hath made our Bodies subject to such sundry kinds of Diseases So Matth. 4. 24. The Diseases of mans body are more in number then all the Physitians can reckon up The eye is one of the smallest members of the Body yet is it strange to consider how many Infirmities and Diseases it is subject unto How many then are the Diseases of the whole Body These manifold Diseases are a part of that punishment threatned against Adam if he sinned Gen. 2. 17. Thou shalt dye the Death By Death there we are to understand not onely the separation of Soul and Body but all miseries unto which man's nature should become subject by reason of Adam's Fall among which miseries the Diseases of the Body are to be accounted Therefore these Diseases are one part of that misery which Adam's sin hath brought upon himself and us As Death So all Diseases also entred into the World by sin Rom. 5. See afterwards Chap. 7. Ver. 31 c. Use 1 Use 1. To humble us by the consideration of this misery unto which our Bodies are lyable by reason of sin There is small reason for any to be proud of the beauty and good complexion or comely feature of their Bodies seeing the best complexioned and best featured bodies are subject to so many noysome Diseases Use 2 Use 2. See the cursed fruit and effect of Sin bringing so many noysom and contagious Diseases upon man's Body It shews also the foul nature of sin infecting our bodies with such Maladies Well therefore is sin called filthiness in Scripture seeing it thus polluteth not onely the Soul but the Body filling it with so many loathsome Diseases Let this consideration make all sin odious unto us As we abhorr the most loathsome Diseases of the Body so much more should we have in utter do●●station all kind of sin yea hate and shun the very occasions of sin as 〈…〉 Use 3 Use ● To put us in 〈◊〉 o● our Mortality and of the frail and brittle condition of our Bodies seeing they are subject to so many griefs and maladies These Diseases are the badges and symptoms of Death and the fore-runners of it making way for it yea every disease is a little Death Therefore from the diseases of our Bodies let us take occasion seriously and often to meditate of Death and to prepare for it In vain it is to reckon upon long life seeing the manifold diseases to which our bodies are subject do manifestly shew That these our Earthly Tabernacles and Houses of Clay must perish and reurn to dust whence they came Observ 4 Observ 4. Our Saviour healed many c. That is all that were brought to him though they were many in number Hence observe That we should be ready to do good and to shew mercy to all that are in misery if it lye in our Power Gal. 6. 10. Reasons of this 1. We have God's example for it Matth. 5. 45. 2. All Men bear God's Image in some sort in that they are created with reasonable and immortall Souls 3. All are partakers with us in the common nature of Men. 4. We would be glad to receive help from any in our necessities and to taste of their mercy in our miseries Quest Quest What if they be profane and wicked ones that are in misery or want Answ Answ Yet if their necessity or misery be extream we are to relieve them rather then they should perish for want of help Onely in relieving such we are to take heed so to do it that we give them no incouragement in their sins as common Beggars in their idlenesse c. Vse Vse To confute such as think it enough to do good to those unto whom they are bound in speciall manner as to their Kindred Friends Acquaintance near Neighbours c. and especially to the houshold of Faith True it is That our goodness and mercy ought chiefly to extend to these yet so as we refuse not also to afford help and relief even to strangers or enemies yea to the profane and wicked if they stand in present need of our help This the example of our Saviour Christ here may teach us who cured all the Sick that were brought to him Sequitur He suffered not the Devils to speak c. Of this before Ver. 25. Mark 1. 35 c. to the 40. Ver. And in the Morning rising up a great while before day he went out and departed Feb. 7. 1618. into a solitatry place and there prayed And Simon and they that were with him followed after him And when they had found him they said unto him All men seek for thee And he said unto them let us go into the next Towns that I may preach there also for therefore came I forth And he Preached in their Synagogues throughout all Galilee and cast out Devils THe Evangelist having laid down the History of Christ's Preaching and Miracles wrought in Capernaum the chief City of Galilee Now he setteth down his Preaching and Miracles wrought in other Villages or smaller Towns in Galilee And 1. he mentioneth his Preaching in those Towns unto the latter part of the 39. Ver. 2. His Miracles in the end of that Verse Concerning his Preaching he relateth two things chiefly 1. The Antecedents or Preparatives unto it from this 35. Ver. to the 39. 2. The Preaching it it Self The Antecedents are 1. His sequestring of himself into a private Place and Praying there Ver. 35. 2. His Disciples carefull following after him to find him out being gone a-part Ver. 36. 3. The mutuall Speech or Conference had between Christ and them after they had found him Ver. 37. 38. Touching the first Viz. His sequestring of himself unto prayer Here consider 1. The Circumstance of Time In the Morning c. 2. The Place whither He retired Himself Into a solitary Place 3. The Duty there performed He prayed there Object 1 In the Morning a great while before Day Object Luke 4. 42. It is said When it was Day He departed c. Answ Answ 1. It might be after the dawning first appeared and yet a good while before the clear and perfect day-light 2. Or else we may think that he arose very early before day yet did not go forth of the House untill the clear day-light began to appear Now this early rising and going forth to prayer doth shew the great care and diligence of our Saviour in the execution of his
with his sickness it brings the whole body out of due frame so it is with sinners in their natural estate lying in their sins all the powers and faculties of soul and body in them are distempered and brought out of that due frame and order in which they should be and in which man's Nature was at first created And sin is the cause of this Distemper 2. A sick Person is disabled and made unfit by sickness for Action and Employment especially when the Disease continueth long so the sinner by nature is unfit and unable to perform any spiritual Action in right manner unable to pray to meditate to hear the Word c. 3. A sick man is not able by his own power to cure himself or to give health to himself but God onely can do it so much less can the sinner cure himself of sin or raise himself out of that sickness to spirituall health See Psal 103. 3. 4. Lastly sick Persons are in danger of death Sickness it self if it continue will ar length cause death and the dissolution of soul and body so is it with all sinners in their natural estate if they continue so they are sure to dye eternally and therefore they are said to be already dead in trespasses and sins Ephes 2. 1. And sins are called dead works because they bring forth death in the end if they be continued in Vse 1 Use 1. See the misery of all unregenerate Persons in their natural estate being yet uncalled they are dangerously distempered and infected with the Disease of sin yea with many sins Many that have sound and healthy bodies yet have sick souls even sick unto death Such must think of this and be humbled and labour speedily to come out of this fearful estate Use 2 Use 2. See the Nature of sin It is the spiritual sickness of the soul which distempereth and hurteth it more than any Disease doth the body yea it causeth a spiritual Distemper in the whole man It disableth a man for all spiritual Actions and Employments and which is worst of all it causeth eternal death and destruction of soul and body if it be not repented of in time This should move us to abhor all sin and to take heed of it as we do of the worst and most dangerous sicknesses of the body Vse 3 Use 3. Have pity on such as lye and live in their naturall estate uncalled being dangerously sick of sin Afford them the best spiritual help and Physick that we are able for the healing of their Souls Shew them the danger of their sickness that is of their sins and the Remedy against it which is Repentance and wish them to use it perswade them especially to go to Christ by Faith who is the onely Physitian to cure sin But of this more in the next Observation Observ 2 Observ 2. Christ Jesus is a spiritual Physitian to cure men of their Sins therefore he calls himself by the name of a Physitian in this place by way of resemblance unto bodily Physitians and the like resemblance is made elsewhere as Luk. 4. 18. He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted c. Isa 53. 5. With his stripes we are healed And ver 4. He is said to have born our griefs or Sicknesses that is our Sins which are our spiritual Sicknesses See also Revel 3. 18. Here consider two things further 1. How Christ doth heal and cure sinners 2. Whom he do●h heal Touching the first Christ healeth and cureth men of their sins two wayes or by a twofold spiritual remedy or Medicine The first is his own pretious bloud that is the merit and vertue of his death and sufferings by which he making satisfaction to God for our sins did free us from the guilt of them thus he cureth us of them in respect of the guilt and this is done perfectly in this life The second spirituall remedy is the powerfull and effectuall operation of his Spirit by which he killeth and weakneth the corruption of sin so that it raign not in us Thus he cureth us of the corruption of sin but this is not done perfectly in this life but in part onely for the corruption of sin doth still remain in us in some degree during this life onely it is so subdued and mortified in us by the Spirit of Christ that it cannot so raign and bear sway as it doth in the wicked Touching the second thing to be shewed namely What persons they are whom Christ cureth Answ Not all sinners but first Such onely as have Faith to apply Christ and the merit of his death and suffering to themselves by which Faith also they receive and apply to themselves that Spirit of Christ by which the corruption of sin is mortified in them 2. Such as feel their Spirituall Diseases So Luke 4. 18. Use 1 Use 1. Matter of great comfort to such as feel their sins and do unfeinedly desire to be eased of them let them know that there is a Spirituall Physitian that is both able and willing to cure these their Spirituall Diseases if they seek to him It is a great comfort to a sick person to know of a good and able Physitian near at hand so as he may be had and procured to cure him Much more is it a comfort to the humbled sinner to know that Christ is sent of God to be our Spiritual Physitian to heal us of our sins and that there is no Spirituall sickness or disease of sin in us but he is well able to cure and heal us of it Besides he knows all our diseases c. Vse 2 Vse 2. Seek to Christ Jesus in the spirituall sickness and diseases of our Souls to be healed of them all Labour by true Faith to apply to thy self the bloud of Christ and the merit and vertue of it which is as a soveraign salve or Medicine to heal thy Diseased sick Soul and Conscience of the guilt of all thy sins withall pray unto him to heal the Corruption of thy Nature and to mortify and kill it in thee more and more by the work of his Spirit So much of the first reason by which our Saviour Christ proveth against the Scribes and Pharisees that it was lawfull for him to company with publicans and sinners Namely because they being Spiritually Diseased with sin had need of the Society and help of the Spirituall Physitian Now follows the second reason drawn from the end of his comming into the World set down 1. Negatively where he shews to what end he came not Not to call the Righteous 2. Affirmatively shewing to what end he came viz. To call sinners to Repentance I came not to call There is a twofold calling of Christ with which he calleth men The first outward onely by the Ministery of the Word by which he inviteth men to come out of their sins and to turn unto him offering Grace and Salvation unto them in the outward menas The second is When
natural sleep so is it much more easy with God by his Almighty power to raise the dead at the last day 3. As after natural sleep the body and outward senses are more fresh and lively then before so likewise after that the bodies of the Saints being dead have for a time slept in their Graves as in beds they shall awake and rise again at the last day in a far more excellent estate then they dyed in being changed from corruption to incorruption from Dishonour to Glory from weakness to power from natural to Spiritual bodies as the Apostle sheweth 1 Cor. 15. 42. 4. As in natural sleep the body onely is said properly to sleep not the Soul the powers whereof work even in sleep in some sort though not so perfectly as when we are waking so in death onely the bodies of the Saints do dye and lye down in the Graves but their Souls return to God who gave them Eccles 12. 7. and they live with God even in death and after death 5. As sleep is sweet to them that are wearied with labour and travel Eccles 5. 12. so also death is sweet and comfortable to the Faithfull being wearied and turmoiled with sin and with the manifold miseries of this life therefore some have even desired death as Eliah 1 King 19. 4. and Paul Phil. 1. Object Object Death is bitter and painfull even to the godly Answ Answ True in it self it is so But 1. The pains of it are mitigated and sweetned to them by the comfortable feeling and apprehension of Gods love and mercy in Christ and by the assured hope of eternal life which they conceive in the midst of death The sting of their death is pulled out because they feel their sins forgiven and themselves at peace with God in Christ 2. Though the pangs which accompany death may be bitter yet death it self is sweet to them in that it freeth them from all sin and misery and passeth them to a better and Heavenly life So much of the Doctrine Use 1 Use 1. Seeing death is but a sleep this affordeth an Argument to prove to us the general Resurrection of the bodies of all that dye If they do but sleep in their graves then there shall be a time of awaking them out of that sleep See 1 Cor. 15. Use 2 Use 2. Terrour to the Wicked and Reprobate dying in their sins Seeing death is but a sleep hence it followes That their bodies must be hereafter awaked and raised out of their graves at the last day and united again to their souls that both Souls and Bodies together may be cast into Hell-Torments for ever It were well for such if their souls and bodies might utterly perish and be abolished by death as the souls and bodies of brute Beasts but it is not so For their Souls after death go into Hell-Torments and though their bodies for a time go to the Earth yet at the last day they must whether they will or no be raised to the end they may together with their souls be cast to Hell Vse 3 Use 3. To encourage and comfort the godly against the fear of death Remember that death is to them but a sleep yea a sweet and comfortable sleep to such as dye well and in the Lord. If thou dye in Christ thou fallest asleep as it were in his Arms and then shalt thou have a most comfortable waking at the last day thy body shall then be awaked never to sleep again nor to have any more need of sleep nor yet of any earthly comforts as meat drink c. It shall also awake far more fresh lively and vigorous and in a far more excellent condition then it fell asleep in death Fear not then to fall into this sweet sleep of death when thy time shall come What weary Traveller or Labouring man is not willing when night cometh to lye down in his bed and there to fall asleep till next morning that he may be fresh again to labour So what good Christian wearied with the labours and troubles of this life and with this tedious warfare and pilgrimage which here we pass thorough should not be willing and joyful when the night of death cometh to have his body go to the grave as into a soft bed there to sleep and rest till the Day of Judgment that then he may awake fresh again c Know then if thou be a good Christian and hast thy sins forgiven end dyest in Christ death is no death but a sweet sleep to thee c. Thy body shall not be abolished or perish by death but only fall asleep that it may at length be awaked again in a far more excellent condition then it was in when it fell asleep thy vile body shall then be changed and made like unto the glorious body of Christ himself as the Apostle speaketh As for thy Soul that shall not sleep at all no not in death but shall for ever wake and live with God Vse 4 Use 4. To comfort us in the decease of Friends dying well and in the Lord. If we can be so perswaded of them then is there no cause at all of mourning but of rejoycing and thankfulness rather for them that after their tedious Pilgrimage in this life and after all the toylsome labours and miseries of it they are at length fallen into so sound and sweet a sleep and that they now rest in their beds that is in their graves Never did they before in all their life sleep so sweetly never was any bed so easie and comfortable to them as the grave Cease then our mourning for them Weep not for them but for our selves in regard of our loss of their Christian society and especially for our sins the procuring cause of that loss And yet even in mourning for the loss of our Christian friends we must beware of excess that we mourn not as those without hope but remember That though they are gone before us yet we have not utterly lost them Prae-misimus non amisimus If we be careful to live and dye well as they have done before us we shall meet with them again and enjoy them at the last day in the general Resurrection When our Friends whose company we desire are fallen into a natural sleep though we cannot then converse with them yet we hope we shall when they are awake again So think of our Christian friends departed this life though now while they sleep in their graves we have not their company yet when they awake at the last day we shall have it again and much more comfortably then ever we had in this life Mark 5. 40 c. And they laughed him to scorn c. Jan. 21. 1620. THe Evangelist from the 38. Verse to the 41 setteth down the Accidents which fell out in the house of Jairus immediately before our Saviour wrought the Miracle there 1. That our Saviour coming to the house found there a great stirr and
it or that it is their duty c. They can talk of their Parents Necessities or Infirmities but scarce ever in their lives did they send up one hearty Prayer to God for supply or help of them Well Let all that have been or are guilty take notice of their sin and unfeignedly and speedily repent hereof and for time to come beware of such unnatural Unthankfulness toward their Parents which is commonly the sin of lewd and ungracious Children c. So much of the duties of Children to Parents comprised here under the Word Honour Now a word or two of the Persons to whom it is due viz. Father and Mother Observ Observ Children owe all the duties above-mentioned unto both their Parents to Father and Mother Therefore both are distinctly named not only in these words of the fifth Commandment but also in sundry other places especially in the Proverbs as Chap. 23. 22. Hearken to thy Father that begat thee and despise not thy Mother when she is old Levit. 1. 3. Ye shall fear every one his Mother and his Father where the Mother is first named because she is most subject to contempt usually Gen. 28. 7. Jacob obeyed his Father and his Mother Reasons Reasons 1. Children are most nearly bound by bond of Nature to both Parents for their natural life and beeing whereof they are Instruments under God 2. The care and pains of both Parents in bringing forth and trayning up Children is exceeding great and so great that it seems doubtful which is greatest whether of Father or Mother Therefore Children ought to honour them both Yet so as the Father is to have the pre-eminence in this honour and in all duties as being the chief in regard of Sex and of Authority over the Mother and Children both Vse 1 Use 1. Reproof of such Children as are partial in doing Duties to Parents so honouring one that they despise the other Some respect their Mother only or chiefly because she cockereth and pleaseth them too much in the mean time not caring for their Father c. Others are careful to please their Father and to shew duty to him but none to their Mother and this fault is more common than the former Some Children even when they are young so soon as they are out of the shell learn to despise their Mothers and to cast off their Authority Such must remember the places before mentioned Lev. 19. and Prov. 23. Use 2 Use 2. Admonition to both Parents so to carry themselves toward their Children and to each other that they may preserve their Authority over their Children and that their Children may be moved to honour both as well as one To this End both Parents must be careful to maintain each others Authority and especially Fathers to maintain the Mothers Authority that she be not despised of her Children and she must beware of fond and foolish cockering of Children lest she bring herself into contempt So much of the first Precept here alledged out of the Books of Moses which is a Precept of the moral Law touching the Duty of Children to Parents Now followeth the second Precept which is of the Judiciall Law touching a grievous penalty to be inflicted upon such as break the aforesaid Commandment of the Morall Law in these words Whosoever shall speak evil c. This severe Law of Punishment our Saviour addeth to aggravate the sin of the Pharisees In the words are two things contained 1. The Sin or Breach of the Moral Law appointed to be punished Speaking evill of Parents 2. The Penalty it self Such ought to dy the death Who so shall speak evill Not every kind of evill Speech is here meant but especially two kinds 1. Cursing and banning Speeches uttered against Parents wishing or desiring some evil or mischief to befall them as to wish the Pox or Plague to take them c. And therefore the words are well translated thus Whosoever curseth Father or Mother c. 2. Railing or reviling Speeches uttered against Parents giving them vile or odious Names or Title● in way of Contempt and Disgrace of their Persons Both these kinds of evil Speaking seem to be implyed by the Hebrew Word Killel which is used Exod. 21. and Lev. 20. from whence our Saviour citeth these words Let him dye the Death that is Let him most certainly be put to death for it by the Authority of the Magistrate It is an Hebraism implying the certain performance of the matter spoken of Therefore it is not said Let him dy but Let him dy the Death Quest Quest Was the penalty of death to be inflicted on all such Children as did in any sort curse or rail upon their Parents Answ Answ There are two kinds of cursing and reviling Speech 1. Such as is uttered in sudden passon of Wrath and unadvised Anger for which the party uttering it is perhaps touched with sorrow so soon as that distempered Passion is over Now some think the Law is not to be understood of this 2. Such as is uttered deliberately and advisedly being also joyned with obstinate and wilful Contempt of Parents This I take to be here meant either onely or chiefly See Calvin in Pentateuch and Dr. Willet in Exod. 21. 17. The word Killel used by Moses is derived from Kalal which signifies properly to contemn vilify and set at nought another which argues that the Law speaketh of such cursing and reviling as is joyned with great contempt and vilifying of Parents Deut. 27. 16. Cursed be he that setteth leight by his Father or Mother c. And especially it is to be understood of such contempt as is joyned with Obstinacy and Wilfulness As Deut. 21. 18. not every disobedient Child was to be stoned to Death but such a one as was stubborn and wilful in disobedience persisting therein without Reformation so here I take it that the penalty of Death is denounced not against every reviling word uttered by a Child against Parents but against such as is joyned with some Obstinacy and wilful Contempt Observ 1 Observ 1. It is a most grievous sin in Children to curse or revile their Parents This appears by the grievous Punishment appointed by the Law of God for such viz. The penalty of Death For all sins appointed to be thus punished are very heinous as Murder Adultery Blasphemy c. Prov. 30. 11. Solomon there reckoning up four sorts of gross and notorious Offenders setteth those in the first place who curse their Father and bless not their Mother So Deut. 27. 16. they which set leight by Parents are reckoned among the cursed Crew of heinous Offenders See also Isa 45. 10. Reasons Reasons 1. It is a sin against the light of Nature and therefore condemned by the Heathen 2. It is a high contempt of God and dishonour to his Majesty forasmuch as his Image and Glory shineth in the Authority of Parents over Children Use 1 Vse 1. Terrour unto such cursed and lewd Children as are or have been
crosse Use 2 Use 2. Labour for hearts to be affected with grief for the sins of others that when we see or hear God to be dishonoured and offended we may shew our love to him and our zeal for his Glory by mourning and grieving for such sins whereby He is dishonoured To this end labour more more for the true love of God and for true hatred of all sin in our hearts then we cannot but be grieved for it especially for those sins that are most heinous and offensive to God as swearing profaning of the Sabbath Drunkenness Fornication c. which are the common and reigning sins of the times which when we consider and think of seriously what cause have we to wish our eyes a fountain of tears c. as Jeremy did Again Let us labour for true love to the Souls of others then we cannot but grieve for their sins which are so h●rtful and dangerous to them c. We may not sigh against others Jam. 5. 9. but we ought to sigh for the Sins of others Use 3 Use 3. If we ought to grieve and sigh for others sins then how much more for our own sins every one of us How should our hearts smite us for our own sins by which we have so much offended God Yea how should our hearts be broken and melt with godly sorrow which causeth Repentance unto Salvation never to be repented of Here should our sorrow for sin begin first at our own Sins taking them to heart and deeply sighing and mourning for them and then we cannot but mourn and grieve also in the next place for the sins of others whether they be friends or enemies Remember then and look to this that first and principally thou sigh and grieve for thy own sins and then for others withal If there be cause to sigh deeply for others sins how much more deeply for our own If there be cause of shedding rivers of tears for other sins then have we need of a Sea of tears to be powred out for our own So much of the action or gesture of our Saviour that he sighed Now to speak of the manner of it In his Spirit Observ Observ It is not enough to make outward shew of grieving for others sins but we ought truly and from the heart to be affected with sorrow for them 2 Pet. 2. 8. Lot vexed his Soul c. So Jeremiah Chap. 13. ver 17. saith My Soul shall weep in secret for your Pride So our Saviour here sighed in Spirit for the sins of these Pharisees Vse 1 Vse 1. Reproof of such as can say they are sorry for the sins and falls of others which they see or hear of when yet they are not truly grieved from the Heart and Soul for them though they formally use such words of course Nay some are worse who will speak of the sins of others to their disgrace making shew of sorrow for them when the truth is they are rather glad thereof because they are their Enemies whose disgrace they seek and therefore rejoyce at their Fall and yet stick not to say and pretend that they are sorry for them What is this but gross lying and dissembling Take heed of it therefore and see that we do not only pretend grief for others sins which we see or hear of but that we be indeed grieved in Heart and Soul for them Vse 2 Vse 2. And if our sorrow for the sins of others must not be in outward shew only but from the Heart and Soul then also our sorrow for our own sins ought much more to be from the Heart and to begin there Joel 2. Rent your Heart and not your Garments Now followeth the second thing in the manner of our Saviour's sighing He sighed deeply Observ 1 Observ 1. The heinousness and grievousness of Sin in its own Nature and how highly offensive to God and hurtful and dangerous to the Sinner in that it was matter of so great grief unto our Saviour causing him to sigh yea to sigh or groan in his Spirit deeply for it More particularly the heinousness of Sin may appear by these Reasons 1. From the Object of it being an Offence and Provocation to the infinite God 2. By the fearful and dangerous Effects of it pulling down the wrath and curse of God upon men in this life and after this life and being the true cause of all miseries temporal and eternal unto which Man's Nature is subject Rom. 6. ult the Wages of Sin is death So all other miseries are the Wages of it Rom. 2. 8. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish upon every Soul that doth evill 3. By the difficulty of making satisfaction to God's Justice for it and taking away the guilt and punishment of it in that it could by no other means be done but by the bitter death and sufferings of Christ Jesus the Son of God who must dy and suffer the wrath of God in Soul and body which made his Soul heavy to death and caused him to sweat drops of Blood or else sin could not be taken away This doth wonderfully aggravate the heinousness of it Use 1 Vse 1. See the profaness of such as make so leight a matter of sin trifling and dallying with it as if it were no such heinous matter Prov. 10. 23. It is a sport to a Fool to do mischief and Prov. 14. 9. Fools make a mock of Sin So do many now a-dayes at some sins as swearing drunkenness fornication c. But what a wretched thing is this to make leight of that which is so heinous and highly offensive to God so dangerous to the Soul of the Sinner and so hard to be forgiven and taken away Wilt thou jest with that which was matter of deep sighing unto Christ and should be so to thee Wilt thou laugh at that which should cause thee to mourn and weep Dost thou make so leight of that which made the Soul of Christ heavy to death and forced drops of Blood from his body Take heed thereof c. Use 2 Use 2. Learn so to esteem and accompt of sin as it deserveth as a matter most heinous grievous before God highly offensive to his Majesty and most pernicious to our Souls as a matter of sorrow and grief not to be thought upon without sighing yea deep sighing c. Learn thus to accompt of all sin whether our own or others sins especially our own So far we must be from making leight of sin in our selves or other that we should not think of it without grief nor without loathing and detestation We should also fear and tremble at the very motions of sin when we are tempted unto it Mark 8. 12 13. And he sighed deeply in his Spirit c. Octob. 20. 1622. Observ 2 Observ 2. IN that our Saviour did so deeply sigh and shew so great sorrow for these Pharisees in regard of their obstinate persisting in Unbelief and their malicious tempting him
God unto it This teacheth us not to undertake any Office or Function in Church and Common-wealth nor to thrust our selves into any weighty Action or Business whatsoever without a calling from God Hebr. 5. 4. No man takes this honour to himself that is the Office of Priest-hood in time of the Law but he that is called of God as Aaron So in these Times none may take upon him the weighty Office of the Ministery nor thrust himself into it under any pretence whatsoever without a calling from God None may run before he is sent Rom. 10. 15. How shall they preach except they be sent The like may be said of the Office of Magistracy and of all other weighty Offices Functions or Actions in Church and Common-wealth not any of them to be undertaken without a calling from God If our Saviour Christ waited for his Calling from God to the Office of a Mediatour much more ought we every one to wait for a calling from God to every Office Function and weighty Action we take in hand Now that we may be sure we have a calling from God Where two things are especially to be seen unto 1. That the Office Function or Action we take upon us be in it self lawfull and warrantable by the Word of God for else God doth not call us to it unlesse it be such as tend some way to his Glory or to the good of others and our selves c. 2. That we find our selves furnished in some measure with such Gifts and Graces as are needfull for the discharge of such Offices or performance of such Actions as we take in hand So he that takes upon him or enters into the Function of the Ministery must first feel this inward calling from God that he i● qualified with competent Gifts of Knowledge Utterance c. So in undertaking any other Office Function or Action c. Then may we have comfort and expect God's blessing and protection c. Use 2 Vse 2. Christ being called and anointed of God to the Office of Mediatour Hence we may gather That all that he hath done and suffered for us in the execution of his Office is pleasing and acceptable to God and by consequent effectuall for our Salvation in as much as it was done by vertue of his Calling and in way of obedience to the Will of God who ordained him to this Office Ephes 5. 2. He hath given himself for us an Offering and Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Phil. 2. 8. He became obedient unto Death c. which is a matter of great comfort to true Believers that Christ hath not only dyed and suffered for our Sins and fulfilled the Law for us and wrought all things needfull for our Salvation but that he being called and ordained of God to do and suffer all these things for us therefore God cannot but accept them as done in obedience to his Will This makes the Death and Sufferings of Christ and all his Obedience acceptable to God his Father and available for us This makes it effectuall to procure pardon of Sins Justification and Salvation for us because all that He did and suffered was in obedience to the Will of God and to his Decree and Purpose who from everlasting ordained him to this Office of a Mediatour and sent Him in time into the World to execute the same Otherwise if Christ had taken upon Him to be our Mediatour without a calling from God if He had not dyed and suffered for us in way of obedience to his Father's Will his Death had not been accepted as a Sacrifice propitiatory for our Sins neither could we have been justified or saved by it Use 3 Use 3. In that our Saviour is called the Christ or anointed of God not onely in regard of his being consecrated to the Office of Mediatour but also in regard of being furnished with perfection of all Graces needfull for execution of that Office This further reacheth us That Christ Jesus is a most able sufficient and perfit Saviour unto all his faithfull People being furnished with all sufficiency of Gifts and Graces needfull to make Him a perfit Saviour Hebr. 7. 25. He is able to save to the utmost those that come unto God by Him c. He is able not only to begin but to finish and accomplish the work of our Salvation Able to merit and purchase our Salvation not onely by dying and suffering the Curse due to our Sins but also by overcoming Death and the Curse of God which he declared by rising again from the Dead Able to fulfill the Law for us as being perfitly righteous and holy in his own person Able to vanquish Satan and to tread him under our feet Able to strengthen us against his Temptations to kill and crucifie the Power of Sin in us c. In a word able to give us eternall Life and to bring us to it through all difficulties and impediments whatsoever Joh. 10. 10. I am come that they might have Life and that they might have it abundantly that is fully and perfitly Therefore Col. 2. 10. the Faithfull are said to be compleat in Him c. This also is matter of great comfort to us against our own weaknesse and unability to save our selves or to do any thing at all towards our own Salvation This is enough That Christ being anointed of God with perfection of all Graces fit for a Mediatour is able perfitly to save us Therefore let us deny our selves and renounce all that is in our selves and seek Salvation in Him alone who is the anointed of God and a perfit and compleat Saviour Strive by Faith to lay hold on Him and to trust perfectly on Him for our Salvation and all the degrees and means of it Now here I might further take occasion to speak of the particular parts of Christ's Office as He is Mediatour namely of His Priest-hood and of his Propheticall and Kingly Office all which are implyed under this Name and Title of Christ which is here given unto Him But I have not long since handled these parts of Christ's Office upon the Creed therefore I will not here insist upon them Now followeth Verse 30. And he charged them that they should tell no man c Here is set down the Issue or Consequent of the former Conference between Christ and his Disciples and of that confession which they made of Him They Consequent is this That our Saviour straitghly charged them to tell no man of Him That is not to make known to others this Truth which they had confessed of Him namely That He was the Son of God and true Messiah Matth. 16. 20. He charged them that they should tell no man that He was Jesus the Christ Now this is not so to be understood as if he would have this truth wholly concealed and not to be made known at all but that they should not divulge or make it commonly and openly known at this time Quest
the greatest that ever was in that he being the Son of God equal with the Father and Holy Ghost and being the Lord of Glory from everlasting did in time so far abase himself as to become Man by taking on him our vile and base Nature and that into the unity of his Person that so in this our Nature he might dye and suffer for us c. That he should come from Heaven and be made Flesh and live upon Earth as Man in the true shape and fashion of a Man yea in the form of a Servant as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 2. and yet all the while be the Son of God and Lord of Glory Behold here is the greatest humility and abasement that ever was of any person which is for our Example to teach u● to humble our selves before God and one towards another as the true Disciples of Christ Phil. 2. 5. Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ c. Labour therefore for this Grace of true humility after Christ's Example Matth. 11. 29. Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart The more humility the more like we are unto Christ The very character and mark of a true Christian as on the contrary Pride is the mark of a wicked Man and a Hypocrite such as the proud Pharisees were yea it is the character of the Devil 1 Tim. 3. 6. Therefore pray and labour for true humility that thou mayst be like unto Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. Cloath or deck your selves with humility c. This Grace should adorn the whole life and behaviour of a Christian strive therefore to shew it forth in all our carriage before God and one towards another abase your selves for the good of others Gal. 5. 13. The rather because it is a Grace so necessary for a Christian that without it a man is not fit for the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. 18. 3. Except ye be converted and become as little Children ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Luke 3. 5. Every Mountain and Hill must be brought low c. Humility is all in all in a Christian The first second third thing c. as Austin saith Use 3 Use 3. By this we may see how and by what means we that are by nature so far separate and estranged from God by our Sins may come to have accesse unto God and Communion with him namely by means of Christ's humane Nature which he hath taken upon him to the end that he might in it dye and suffer for our Sins and so reconcile us to God Ephes 2. 8. By him we have access unto the Father that is by Christ incarnate or made man 1 Tim. 2. 5. There is one Mediatour between God and Us even the Man Christ Jesus that is Christ the Son of God being made true Man that in our Nature he might reconcile Us to God This he could never have done if he had not become true Man and the Son of Man as here he calls himself Therefore without this humane Nature of Christ we could never have had fellowship with God or peace with Him For by nature we are enemies to God and he to us and our sins are as a Wall of separation to keep us from him Onely by Faith in the mediation of Christ incarnate and made Man we come to be reconciled and to have entrance to God and into his favour By nature God and We are far estranged and divided asunder yea there is an infinite distance between Us But in Christ's humane Nature we meet together and have near Communion Of our selves by Nature we dare not so much as look towards God and his Majesty who is a consuming fire to Sinners yet in Christ being made Man we may by Faith behold the Face and Glory of God with unspeakable joy and comfort Let us then labour thus to do In our prayers let us set the Man Christ Jesus or Christ the Son of Man before us and between God and us and through him alone look at God and call upon him with confidence to be heard yea in all our thoughts of God set Christ incarnate between Him and Us Look at God through the Humane Nature of Christ in which we come to be reconciled to God and without which there is no comfort to be found of us in God but the least thought of him out of Christ God and Man breeds horrour and amazement Use 4 Use 4. Comfort in all afflictions and miseries of this life which our nature is subject to in that Christ partaking in the same Nature and having had experience of the Infirmities of it is the more able and willing to help and succour us Hebr. 2. 17. Hebr. 4. 15. If one come to visit a man that is sick of a grievous disease who hath himself formerly been afflicted with the same disease he will shew more compassion than 20 others who have not felt the like So here c. Observ 2 Observ 2. That although Christ Jesus was the Son of God yet he dyed and suffered for us not as God but as Man or in his Humane Nature Therefore himself saith here The Son of Man must suffer c. 1 Pet. 3. 18. Christ suffered for our sins being put to death in the Flesh Phil. 2. 8. Being found in fashion of a man He humbled himself and became obedient unto death c. For this cause it was necessary as we heard before that he should become Man that he might in this our Nature dy and suffer and that God's Justice might be satisfied for sin in the same Nature which offended Note two things here for the understanding of this Point 1. That though Christ died and suffered according to his humane Nature onely yet this his humane Nature was personally united with his God-head and so remained at the very time of his death and sufferings whence it follows that though he did not suffer as God yet he that dyed and suffered was God at the very instant of his death and sufferings 2. That though He suffered onely in his humane Nature yet He is our Mediator according to both his Natures as God and Man in one Person In his Humane Nature He dyed and suffered and wrought the Work of our Redemption But his God-head did sustain his Man-hood in all his Sufferings and gave vertue and efficacy to the same to make them meritorious for us See Heb. 9. 14. and Act. 20. 28. Use 1 Use 1. To strengthen our Faith in the merits and vertue of Christ's Death and Sufferings assuring us that God's Justice is satisfyed and we are thereby justifyed and freed from our sins and the Curse of God due unto them in as much as Christ hath not onely suffered the wrath of God and punishment of sins but hath suffered it in our Nature which He took upon him that is in his humane Soul and Body So that now the price of our Redemption is paid and God's Justice
Resurrection of our bodies and to unite them again to our Souls at the last day and therefore this must be accomplished This must strengthen our Faith to rest upon God for the fulfilling of all good things which He hath purposed and promised to us in his Word Vse 3 Vse 3. See one main cause and reason why all that will godly in Christ Jesus must in this life suffer many troubles and afflictions in one kind or other because God hath ordained them thereunto 1 Thess 3. 3. and He hath foretold as much in his Word and therefore it must be so As Christ must suffer and so enter into Glory because so God hath ordained and it was foretold by the Prophets so must we through many tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven because of God hath ordained and said it in his Word This therefore should teach us patiently to bear all such troubles seeing it must be so submitting willingly to God's Decree and to his Word So did Christ Mat. 26. 54. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that there was a necessity of Christ's Suffering not onely in regard of God's Decree and the Prediction of the Prophets but also in respect of the accomplishing of the Work of our Redemption which could by no other means be effected Hence observe the greatness and excellency of this Work of our Redemption together with the dissiculty of it in that it is such a Wo●k as could by no other means be effected but by the Death and Sufferings of Christ Jesus the Son of God He being by nature the eternal Son of God must take our Nature and become the Son of Man and being made Man He must also dy and suffer the Wrath of God and cursed death of the Cross else not possible for us to be saved See here how great and excellent is this Work of our Redemption far exceeding the Work of our Creation This must stir us up to all possible thankfulness to God all the dayes of our life for this wonderfull Work of our Redemption by the Death and Sufferings of Christ which is the blessing of all blessings unto us A Blessing not easily purchased for us it cost no small price no less than the precious Blood of Christ the Son of God 1 Pet. 1. 19. Oh how thankful then ought we to be for this unspeakable benefit If the Angels did sing Glory to God Luke 2. for Man's Redemption How much more ought we to blesse and praise God all the dayes of our life for the same To this end think often what we are without this Redemption think of the miserable bondage we are in by Nature that this may provoke us to Thankfulnesse Mark 8. 31. And he began to teach them c. July 17. 1625. NOw followeth the Sufferings themselves which our Saviour foretelleth 1. Generally He must suffer many things 2. Particularly in two kinds of Sufferings 1. He must be rejected c. 2. He must be Killed Of the first Suffer many things That is manifold Evils M●series and Punishments which were to be laid upon him for our Sins especially about the time of his Death Here is occasion to speak of the Doctrine of Christ's Passion in General An Article of our Faith Quest 1 Quest 1. How could He Suffer being God Answ Answ This was answered before c. Quest 2 Quest 2. What were those manifold Evils which He was to Suffer for Us Answ Answ They were of two kinds 1. External or Outward 2. Inward First Bodily pains which He was put unto many wayes as by being bound with Cords being scourged by Pilate's appointment being Buffetted by the High Priest's Servant being Crowned with Thorns being stretched out and nailed on the Crosse and so hanging there for the space of sundry hours even till he dyed Also by Suffering thirst while he hung upon the Crosse and by drinking Gall and Vinegar in his thirst 2. Hither also refer the pangs of bodily Death which he was at length to Suffer Of which we shall hear more afterward 3. The great ignominy contempt and reproach which was cast upon him by mockings revilings slanders and false accusations of the Jews as also by dying the Death of the Crosse which was in it self so shamefull and accursed See Hebr. 12. 2. 2. Internal which he was to Suffer in his Soul namely the apprehension of God's heavy Wrath and Curse due to our Sins which should make his Soul heavy unto Death as we see it did Matth. 26. 38. and which should also cause him to sweat great drops of Blood and to stand in need of an Angel to strengthen him as appeareth Luke 22. 43 44. which also should cause him to cry out upon the Crosse in that lamentable manner My God My God why hast thou c. This Esay foretold Chap. 53. 10. His Soul an Offering for sinne Quest 3 Quest 3. Wherefore or to what end was our Saviour to suffer all these evils Answ Answ That he might thereby make satisfaction to God for our Sins and so both free us from the guilt and punishment due to them and also reconcile us unto God Rom. 4. 25. Delivered for our Offences c. 1 Pet. 3. 18. Christ hath once suffered for Sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us unto God Quest 4 Quest 4. How could these Sufferings of Christ for a short time be a satisfaction to God for the eternal Curse due to our Sins Answ Answ By reason of the dignity of the Person because he that suffered was the Son of God which gave infinite vertue and merit to his passion Hebr. 9. 14. Through the etern●● Spirit offered himself to God c. Quest 5 Quest 5. How did it stand with God's Justice to lay the punish●●nt of our Sins upon Christ being innocent Answ Answ Because he did voluntarily become our Pledge or Surety to God undertaking the payment of our Debt of punishment for Sin Hebr. 7. 22. As if one freely becomes Surety for payment of another man's Debt it is no injustice to require the Debt of him So here c. Vse 1 Use 1. See the infinite love of Christ in being willing to suffer for our sins c. But of this before Use 2 Use 2. See here the hainousnesse of sin how offensive it is to God and hard to be forgiven and satisfaction to be made unto God for the same in that Christ Jesus the Son of God must not onely become Man but in his humane nature suffer so many and grievous things and that for this end to satisfie God's Justice for our Sins and so to justifie and save us from the guilt and punishment of the same 1 Pet. 3. 18. This was the cause of all his bitter Passion which shews the hainousnesse of Sin in that nothing could satisfie God's Justice for it but the Sufferings of Christ the Son of God This was the onely price sufficient to satisfie God for our Debt of Sin and Punishment even the
from that eternall Wrath to come and from the Power of the second Death And not onely so but from all Temporall Afflictions as they are punishments properly or penall satisfactions for sin so as now they are but fatherly Chastisements and Tryalls sent upon us for our good c. 2. Against the Power and Tyranny of Satan which he doth exercise over us in our naturall estate as we are out of Christ and that by reason of the guilt of our Sins For so long as we are in the guilt of our Sins we are lyable to the Wrath and Justice of God and consequently we are under the Power of Satan as the Executioner of God's Justice But now Christ having by his Death taken away our Sins and made satisfaction to God's Justice by the same means he hath also delivered us from the Power of the Devil so that now he hath no longer any such Power over us to execute God's Wrath upon us as before he had He hath no such Power to execute God's Wrath and Justice upon us for our Sins as he hath over the wicked God may use him as an Instrument to afflict us for Tryall as he did Job but not to execute his Wrath and Justice upon us for Sin Before he had Power of Death Temporall and eternall and to infflict it as a Curse not so now 3. Against the fear of bodily Death in that Christ by his Death hath taken away the guilt and punishment of our Sins and so pulled out the sting of Death and abolished the Curse that did before cleave unto it So that now we need not fear Death as the wicked and such as are out of Christ have cause to do but willingly imbrace it as a Blessing and passage to Life eternall Revel 14. 13. We know that an Adder or Snake so long as the sting remains in it is to be feared but if we be sure the sting be once pulled out it is no longer to be feared c. So it is here Christ having by his Death taken away the guilt of our Sins and reconciled us to God he hath by this means plucked out the sting of Death for us that we may now no longer fear it as a Curse but entertain it joyfully and comfortably as the Saints of God have done as Simeon Paul and the holy Martyrs c. See then here one main ground and comfort in Death and against the terrour of it even the consideration of Christ's Death who dyed for this very end to deliver us from the guilt of our Sins and so from all slavish fear of Death Hebr. 2. 15. Vse 4 Use 4. Seeing Christ was killed or put to Death for our Sins This ought to teach and move us to labour daily to dye unto Sin and to have the Power of it crucified and killed in us by vertue of his Death applyed to our Consciences by Faith and by his Divine Spirit Rom. 6. The Apostle urgeth this at large and many wayes upon us Ver. 3. Know ye not that we are baptized into the Death of Christ c And Ver. 6. Our old man is crucified with him that the body of Sin might be destroyed c. and ver 10 11. This is one end of Christ's Death That by the Power and Vertue of it sin might be killed in us Labour therefore more and more to feel this Divine Power of his Death as a strong corrasive to eat out and consume the corruption of sin and all sinfull Lusts in us daily c. Mark 8. 31. And he began to teach them c. Aug. 14. 1625. OF our Saviour's prediction or foretelling of his Passion ye have heard Now followeth the foretelling of his Resurrction That after three Dayes he must rise again Quest Quest Why did he foretell his Disciples of his Resurrection as well as of his Passion Answ Answ 1. To prevent that offence which otherwise they might have taken at the hearing of his Death and Sufferings lest the hearing of it should make them begin to doubt of the Truth of his ●od-head which they had before confessed therefore to strengthen their Faith he tells them that though he should Dye and Suffer yet he should rise again by the power of his God-head within three dayes 2. To comfort them also against that sorrow and heavinesse which he knew they would conceive at the hearing of his Death c. Observ Observe the order of Christ's two-fold estate of humiliation and exaltation that was to go before this He was first to be abased by Dying and Suffering and then to be exalted by rising again Luke 24. 26. Ought not Christ first to Suffer and so to enter into his Glory Phil. 2. 8. He humbled himself and became obedient unto Death c. wherefore God also highly exalted him c. See also 1 Pet. 1. 11. Use 1 Vse 1. See how it must be with all the Faithfull members of Christ even as it was with Christ the Head They must be conformable to Him As he was first to be abased in the World by suffering Reproach and Contempt and Death it self at the hands of Men so must every Believer in Christ first be abased by manifold Sufferings by great Contempt by many Troubles and Afflictions yea by Death it self before he can be advanced to the Glory of the Life to come As Christ our Head was consecrated through Affliction Hebr. 2. 10. so must we through many Tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Acts 14. 12. Therefore Revel 1. 9. St. John writeth thus I John your Companion in Tribulation and in the Kingdom c. First in Tribulation then in the Kingdom of Christ This therefore we must make sure Accompt of before hand to suffer Afflictions and Abasement in the World yea Death it self if we will attain to heavenly Life and Glory Therefore let us prepare our selves before hand for it if we desire to be Glorified with Christ we must first Suffer with Him If we will be advanced with Him we must first be abased with Him in this World If we will rise again to Life and Glory with Him we must first be content to Dye with Him c. We must first wear a Crown of Thorns c. See Rom. 8. 17. Vse 2 Vse 2. To comfort the Godly and Faithfull against all Abasement which they meet with in this World against all Afflictions and Reproaches which they Suffer and against Death it self These are the way by which Christ himself passed and entred into Glory yea all the Saints of God have gone thi● way before us to heavenly Glory Therefore no cause to be discouraged but to rejoyce being assured that after humiliation God will exalt us c. Now followeth to speak more particularly of the words In which two things are contained 1. The Resurrection of our Saviour which he foretelleth He must rise again 2. The Time when AfterAfter three Dayes He must rise again Viz. From the Dead And this is
Salvation in that he appointed his own Son to be our Redeemer and Saviour yea gave this his Naturall Son unto Death yea to the most shamefull and cursed Death of the Cross to the end that we might be redeemed and saved Rom. 5. 8. God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet Sinners Christ dyed for us 1 Joh. 4. 9. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his onely begotten Son into the World that we may live through him See Ephes 2. 7. This giving and sending of Christ to be our Saviour and that by his Death doth highly commend and set out the infinite love of God to us and doth plainly shew how dear and pretious our Salvation was unto him If Abraham shewed his great love to God in not sparing his own and onely son Isaac but being ready to Sacrifice him upon God's Commandment Gen. 22. how much greater love hath God himself shewed to us in not sparing his onely begotten Son for our sakes but giving him to Death for our sins c And so much the greater is this love of God to us if we consider how unworthy we were of it being his enemies by Nature c. Vse 1 Use 1. To draw our hearts to the true love of God who hath so loved us as to give his Son to redeem us c. And not only to love God but even with our chiefest love To love him above all things in the World preferring Him and his Glory above all and seeking his Glory above those things which are most dear and precious to us As our Salvation hath been dear and pretious to him so must his Glory be to us Be content to do or suffer any thing for his sake to part with any thing c. To this end labour to be truly sensible of his unspeakable love to us in Christ which he hath shewed in giving his own Son for our Salvation yea his onely Son yea his beloved Son as he is here also called c. Pray therefore unto God to shed the sense of his love abroad in our hearts as the Apostle speaketh and to make us feel it by Faith Then it will inflame our hearts with true love to God again and cause us to shew and express it by all possible means The true love of God will never kindle in our hearts of it self for we are by Nature most averse from it but it must come from God himself who is Love and the Fountain of it 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he loved us first Vse 2 Vse 2. To stirr us up unto true thankfulness to God for this his unspeakable and infinite love shewed to us in giving Christ his own proper and naturall Son to be our Redeemer yea to suffer Death for our Redemption c. The greater this love of God is the greater measure of thankfulness must we endeavour to shew for the same And this thankfulness must not be onely in Word and Tongue but in Deed in and Truth Reall thankfulness expressed in our Lives by consecrating our Souls and Bodies wholly to the obedience of God's Will Rom. 12. 1. This is true thankfulness for the unspeakable love of God shewed in giving his own Son to be our Saviour Labour to shew such thankfulness all the dayes of our Life To this end often think of the greatness and incomprehensible measure of this Love of God to us Think of the unspeakable length breadth heighth and depth of it consider also how free and undeserved it was on our part how unworthy we were of it c. Use 3 Use 3. A forcible motive to us to love one another and earnestly to desire and seek the Salvation of each other 1 Joh. 4. 11. If God so loved us as to send his Son to be a propitiation for our Sins we ought also to love one another Seeing God hath so loved us and been so desirous and carefull of our Salvation as not to spare his own Son but to give him to Death for us how should this affect our hearts with love to our Brethren and cause us earnestly to desire to seek their Good and Salvation And to this end to be content and willing to part with that which is most dear and pretious to us in this World yea with our Lives if thereby we may procure and further the Salvation of our Brother's Soul 1 Joh. 3. 16. Hereby perceive we the love of God because he laid down his Life for us and we ought to lay down our Lives for the Brethren Labour to be sensible of God's love to us The more we feel his love to us in Christ the more shall we be affected to love our Brethren John the beloved Disciple writeth most of Love c. Mark 9. 7 8. This is my beloved Son c. Aug. 13. 1626. Observ 4 Observ 4. SEE here the greatness and fearfulnesse of our misery by Nature in regard of our Sins and the punishment due unto them in as much as Christ Jesus the Naturall Son of God was fain to come from Heaven and to take our Nature on him yea in our Nature to Dye and Suffer the Wrath of God for us that so we might be delivered from Sin and Condemnation This shews the greatness of our Naturall misery and difficulty of the work of our Redemption in that it could by no means be wrought but by the Incarnation and Death of the Son of God See 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. And Rom. 8. 3. Suppose one to have committed some grievous offence against an earthly King and that no person could appease the King's Wrath but his own Son yea that the Kings Son himself could not make satisfaction or deliver the Offender unless he will in his own person suffer the punishment due for the Offender Should we not think such an Offender to be in a wretched case and that his offence and crime were most hainous So here c. Use 1 Use 1. To humble us before God in the sense of our Naturall misery by reason of our Sins and the curse of God due unto them and to break our hearts with godly sorrow for the same To this end often think of the greatness of our misery from which we could by no means be delivered but by the Death and Sufferings of Christ the Son of God Think of the hainousnesse and foulnesse of our Sins for which we could by no means be purged but by the precious Blood of the Son of God no other Fountain to cleanse us from it No Sacrifice to appease God's Wrath but the offering up of Christ himself the Son of God in his Death Neither thousands of Rams nor ten thousands of Rivers of Oyl c. Mich. 6. 7. Vse 2 Use 2. To stirr up such unto a great measure of Thankfulness who know and feel themselves delivered from that fearfull misery and that by such a means c. Now follows the second
love to him again by the fruit of our obedience to his will for this is the most excellent fruit and testimony of true love to God 1 Joh. 5. 3. This is the love of God that we keep his Commandments c. If thou wouldest be truely thankfull to God for his infinite love in sending Christ to be thy Saviour shew it by Obedience to his blessed will by thy care to glorify him in thy life and Conversation And to this end Pray for a true feeling of the length breadth depth and height of God's love to thee in Christ as the Apostle doth Ephes 3. 18. Use 2 Use 2. This is matter of great comfort to all penitent sinners that are truely humbled for their sins to assure them that God having Ordained and sent his own Son into the World to this very end to Redeem and save such therefore he neither can nor will reject such sinners as are truely humbled and do come unto him to seek and crave Pardon and Mercy How may this comfort such humbled sinners who having offended God and beginning to feel the burden of their sins are afraid to come unto God for mercy How should this encourage such to come unto him and to seek unto him by Repentance and by the Prayer of Faith for Pardon c. knowing that he desireth not the death of a sinner but that he should repent and be saved and this he hath sufficiently declared by sending his own Son into the World to Redeem and save sinners c. Think of this seriously and let not the greatness of thy sins hinder thee from comming to God for mercy Though they be red as Crimson c. Use 3 Use 3. Seeing God hath so shewed his love to us in sending his Son to Redeem us this ought to move us to love one another truely and to shew our love by seeking the good and Salvation of each other 1 Joh. 4. 11. Beloved if God so loved us we ought also to love one another Observ 4 Observ 4. The greatness of our sins and misery by nature in that God the Father saw no way to Redeem and deliver us but by sending his own Son into the World to take our nature on him and to dye and suffer for our sins for this was the very end of his being sent into the World viz. to Redeem us from sin by the merits of his death Rom. 8. 3. God sending his Son in the likeness of sinfull flesh and for sin c. Now in that there was no other way or means for us to be delivered from our sins and to be reconciled to God but onely by the sending of Christ the Son of God to work our Redemption and that by dying and suffring the wrath of God for us this shews the hainousness and grievousness of our sins and greatness of our misery by nature by reason of sin Our sins were they which fetched Christ from Heaven and caused him to be sent forth from the bosome of his Father into the World to take our nature upon him yea to dye and suffer for us Use Use Let us labour to see and feel this hainousness of our sins and greatness of misery in our selves and in sight thereof to be truely humbled with godly sorrow yea to hate and detest our sins as the cause of all that misery which Christ the Son of God was sent from Heaven to deliver us from Especially now we come to the Sacrament in which is represented to us the death of Christ and work of Redemption which he was sent to perform which should therefore put us in mind of our sins and break our hearts with godly sorrow for them Till we be thus humbled we are not fit to be partakers of that redemption which Christ came to purchase for us which is sealed in the Sacraments He came to heal the broken-hearted c. Mark 9. 38 39 40. And John answered him saying Master c. Sept. 2. 1627. HAving finished the fourth principal part of this Chapter in which our Saviour taught his Disciples the practice of humility in a private house at Capernaum Now we are come to the fifth and last part of the Chapter in which the Evangelist layeth down sundry other Points of Christian doctrine which our Saviour took occasion at the same time as is probable to teach unto his Disciples But first the Evangelist setteth down a Conference which happened between our Saviour Christ and John his Disciple touching the fact of the disciples in forbidding one who cast out devils in the Name of Christ and did not follow him In which Conference are two things contained 1. The speech or words used by John unto Christ Ver. 38. 2. Christ's answer unto them Verse 39 40. In the first consider two things 1. The manner of John's speaking unto Christ viz. In reverent manner calling him Master giving him this title in token of reverence 2. The matter of his speech containing a Narration or report of the fact of the Disciples in forbidding him that cast out devils c. It is likely that John took occasion from Christ's former words to relate this matter to him Observ Observ See how reverently John speaketh unto Christ calling him by this honourable Title Master thereby testifying his reverent respect of him which may teach us our duty viz. not onely to have our hearts inwardly affected with a religious fear and reverence of the Person of Christ Jesus now in heaven but also to shew it by all outward tokens of reverence in our words gestures and whole behaviour towards him And as at all times so especially when we come before him at any time to perform any special religious duty or service as in Prayer hearing his Word receiving his Sacraments c. If the disciples were so reverently affected toward Christ living on earth with them in his state of humiliation much more ought we now that he is exalted to the right hand of God in heaven Psal 2. 11. Even Kings and Judges of the earth are commanded to serve the Lord with fear and reverence● and to kiss the son that is to perform all reverent subjection unto the Person of Christ lest he be angry with them c. Of the second The matter of John's speech used unto Christ viz. the Narration or Reporting unto him of his own and his fellow disciples fact in forbidding one that cast out Devils in Christ's Name c. Which Narration consisteth of two parts 1. Touching the party whom they saw casting out devils in Christ's Name who is also further set forth by his outward profession or manner of life negatively set down He was one that did not follow Christ 2. Touching their own behaviour or practice towards him In that they did forbid him to cast out devils c. Together with the reason why they did so Because he followed not Christ First To open the meaning of the words We saw one casting out devils Viz.
and see good dayes let him refrain his tongue from evill c. Reas 1 Reason 1. True Repentance is the way and means to obtain eternal life God having promised it to such as turn from sins in which respect it is called repentance unto life Act. 11. 18. and repentance to salvation 2 Cor. 7. 10. Now to refrain sin and the occasions of it is one part of the practice of repentance called mortification or dying to sin therefore we are not only to be humbled for sin past but to refain sin to come Reas 2 Reas 2. Sin is the main hinderance that keepeth men back and hindreth them from being partakers of eternal life Heb. 3. 19. They could not enter in because of unbelief either into the earthly or heavenly Canaan Rev. 21. 27. Therefore to refrain sin and the occasions of it must needs be a help and furtherance to the Kingdom of Heaven Use Use This ought greatly to encourage us to the practice of this duty of mortification in resisting and refraining sin and the occasions of it seeing so great good will come of it seeing it is the way and means to further us to eternal life Therefore though the practice of mortification in refraining sin and the occasions of it be most painful and tedious to flesh and blood yet be content to undergo and suffer it in hope of that blessed reward of eternal life which is attained unto by this means Therefore when thou feelest pain and grief in refraining sin and mortifying thy sinful lusts remember the reward promised of God to such as do this conscionably even life eternal Though it be painful to refrain sin yet Heaven is worth all thy pains and will fully recompence thee for the same Thou must not think to dye without pain Now to refrain a sin and to resist and to subdue thy corrupt lusts is to dye unto sin Be content then to suffer the pains of this spiritual death that by it thou mayst attain to everlasting life c. This death is the high-way to life yea to eternal life and this pain and grief suffered in mortifying thy lusts is the way to everlasting ease and comfort in God's Heavenly Kingdom Observ 3 Observ 3. See how great and excellent a blessing it is to be partaker of eternal life or of the Kingdom of heaven after this in that it is preferred here by our Saviour before the enjoying of those things which are most near and dear to us in this life Better it is saith our Saviour to enter into life and to be partaker of the Kingdom of God being maymed halt c. that is with the losse or want of those things which are as dear to us as our hands feet c. than to enjoy all these and to be deprived of eternal life or come short of it and to go to Hell Now the greatness and excellency of this benefit of eternal life may appear three wayes especially First By the excellent Names and Titles given to it in Scripture in that it is called by the name of life yea eternal life a Crown of life and glory a Kingdome 2 Cor. 4. 17. eternal weight of glory Compared to Paradise c. Secondly By the excellent Priviledges there to be enjoyed by the Saints of God Which may be referred to two Heads 1. A freedom from all evils and miseries 2. Fruition and enjoying of all good Of the first There shall be a freedom from these evils especially 1. From evil of sin Ephes 5. 27. The Church shall then be without spot or wrinckle c. 2. From all miseries and afflictions of this life which are fruits of sin from all pain grief sickness poverty c. Revel 21. 4. God shall wipe away all tears and no more sorrow crying c. 3. From bodily death 4. From the Temptations of Satan Rom. 16 20. The second main Priviledg there to be enjoyed is a fruition of all good things which may make happy As 1. The immediate and blessed sight of God and fellowship with him who shall be all in all to the Saints 1 Cor. 13. 12. We shall see face to face 1 Joh. 3. 2. As he is This alone shall make happy Matth. 5. B●essed are the pure in heart for they shall see God 2. Immediate fellowship with all the blessed Angels and Saints glorified Matth. 8. 11. We shall sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven See Heb. 12. 22. 3. Perfection of all Gifts both of Soul and Body Of Soul as perfect Wisdome Knowledg Holiness Love of God and of the Saints c. 1 Cor. 13. 10. When that which is perfect is come c. Their bodies shall be changed and made like unto the glorious body of Christ Phil. 3. 21. 4. Fulnesse of all true Joy and Contentment Psal 16. 11. In thy presence is fulnesse of joy c. Thirdly The excellency of this benefit of eternal life appeareth by the continuance of it and of those Priviledges there to be enjoyed in that it shall be for ever 1 Pet. 1. 4. Vse 1 Use 1. The excellency of this great blessing of eternal life should stir us up most earnestly to desire and seek after it to have part in it and in this life to get assurance hereof Matth. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdom of God c. Joh. 6. 27. Labour not for the meat that perisheth but for that which endureth to everlasting life c. Luke 13. 24. Strive to enter in at the strait gate c. Eternal life is no common benefit c. but peculiar to some onely to Gods chosen c. Never rest till thou know and be assured of thy title to everlasting life that thou shalt be partaker of it after this life If in this life onely thou have hope thou art most wretched What benefit to know there is such an excellent and blessed life to come unless thou be sure of thy part in it Labour therefore for this assurance now in this life To this end repent truely of all thy sins that they may be pardoned and done away by the mercy of God in Jesus Christ and labour for true Faith in Christ to be assured of Gods love and favour and that thou art his child by Adoption for then art thou sure to be an heir of his heavenly Kingdome Rom. 8. If Children then Heirs c. Then thou art already entred into the Kingdome of heaven in regard of certain hope 2 Pet. 1. 10. Give diligence to make your Calling and Election sure c. For so an entrance shall be Ministred unto you c. Use 2 Use 2. The consideration of the greatness and excellency of this benefit and blessing of eternal life ought to encourage us in well-doing that is in the conscionable practice of all good duties which God requireth of us in this life yea this should cause us not onely to do good duties but to do them willingly and chearfully yea
Martyrdom being strangled by some Heathen Marriners with a Cable-Rope and dragg'd about the City of Alexandria and then burnt to Ashes Which Story if it be true confutes the Popish Relation of Baronius and others who write that his Bones were stollen out of the Church at Alexandria by some Venetian Merchants in the Year of our Lord 820. and those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bone-Reliques being before it seems miraculously educed out of their Ashes were laid up with great Veneration in that famous Structure dedicated to St. Mark at Venice But leaving our holy Author's Dust in the secret Chambers of God's omnipotent preserving Power I come in a few words to speak to the Gospel it self and treat a little of the Language wherein the Time of it's Exaration and the Scope of the Book And then I shall descend to the Commentary of this our reverend and grave Author upon it Some have thought it was written in Latine But the general Testimony of Antiquity doth contradict it Hierom in his Preface to the Four Evangelists dedicated to Pope Damasus faith expresly Graecum esse non dubium That without doubt all but Matthew were written originally in Greek With him also agrees the learned Bishop of Hippo in his first Book and second Chapter of the Consent of the Evangelists Horum sane quatuor solus Matthaeus Hebraeo scripsisse perhibetur Eloquio Caeteri Graece that all the rest but Matthew wrote in Greek Wherefore Bellarmin in his Tract of Ecclesiastical Writers concludes from these Fathers ingeniously That the Latine Copies of Mark are but Translations out of the Greek As for the Time of its Writing the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set out by Scaliger and taken to be the Alexandrian Chronicle is the most proper Book from which we should deduce the time if it were there mentioned But all which that Digest of Years expresseth is that Mark came to preach the Gospel at Alexandria when Claudius Caesar and Kersianus were Consuls To let pass the mistake for Cajus Caligula and L. Apronianus Caesianus who were Consuls in the Year of Christ 38. It is now generally received that he wrote this Gospel before he went to Alexandria and then it must be within a few Years after our Lord's Death But I rather adhere to Eusebius in the second part of his Chronicle disertly setting down the 44th Year of Christ for his coming to that City to preach the Gospel which he had before newly received from Peter's Knowledg and Acquaintance with our Lord's Works and Miracles So that possibly about a Year before or more for we have no certain Foundation for the time was this Gospel penned The Scope of it as of all the Four is to evince the Humanity of our Lord That he was the Messiah prophesied of in the Holy Scriptures That he was the Son of God That he dyed a meritorious Death for his People the Elect of God with many other things too long to be here mentioned in this Praefatory piece but copiously and excellently handled in the ensuing Commentary The Author whereof was born in the famous County of Kent in the Lath of Scray in the Hundred of Selbrittenden in the Parish of Sandhurst near to Newenden where once stood a notable Town of the Britains called Anderida and fortified by the Romans as we find mentioned in the Notices of the Western Empire and garrisoned by a Band of Roman Souldiers called Abulci from whence possibly Apuldore a Neighbour-Market fetcht its Original Name His Parents were Godly and of untainted Reputation who though not of the highest rank yet neither were of the lowest of the People He went to the University of Cambridg as near as I can remember about the sixteenth Year of his Age and was admitted into Trinity-Colledg under the Name and Tuition of that most learned pious and justly renowned Servant of God Mr. Simon Aldrich who preached over the Epistle to the Hebrews and expounded the Ceremonial Law of Moses in a most heavenly and Evangelical manner A Tract which is yet extant in Manu-script and would doubtless prove of most eminent Service to the Church were it delivered from perishing by the Press But to proceed Our present Author was after some Proof of his learned abilities and diligence in study elected Schollar of that ample Foundation and continued in his Scholastical employments till after he had proceeded Master in Arts. The Entrance upon the high and honourable Function of the Ministry he undertook if I call to mind aright about the 24th Year of his Age being then placed in the Rectory of Bread not far West from Winchelsey in the County of Sussex where he spent the whole Remainder of his life being Pastor of that People 44 years In that place through the Lord 's gracious Blessing upon his Ministry he was notably Instrumental in the effecting of a very great Change upon the hearts and lives of the Inhabitants For whereas at the Initiation of his Work amongst them the People for the generality were very ignorant and profane he was a means under God not only to bring them to Civility and Knowledg but many of them also to an eminent pitch in Grace and Godliness It pleased the Lord to exercise this his Servant with sundry tryals and afflictions during his residence among them but none of them took him off from doing the Work of his great Lord and Master So intensely studious was he that having withdrawn himself as much as possibly he could from the Affairs and entangling Occasions of this World he conversed much with dead men in his Study delighting much in that learned Prison from whence his Soul was oft upon the Wing towards Heaven A man he was of great Reading and so constant and diligent in the Work of the Ministry that besides what of his Labours is visible in this Soul-fructifying Comment he preached over divers of the Psalms of David The whole 53d Chapter of Isaiah The Prophecy of Zephany The Epistle to the Ephesians The first Epistle to the Thessalonians The Epistle of James The Epistle of Jude entirely and compleatly Together with Sermons upon the Creed Lord's Prayer Decalogue and Sacraments The Disease which made its Preparative Assault upon him was an Arthritical Distemper in one of his Shoulders the pain whereof encreasing more and more upon him at length reduced him to a fatal Consumption of which he dyed in the 68th Year of his Age. His departure when once Death drew near was speedy and peaceable This Work as I understand at his first entrance upon it was designed for the Publick and prepared for the Press in his life-time But the Providence of God not seeing good that he should out-live the Emission of it therefore for the benefit of the Church some Schollars and Holy Men having viewed it judged it fit for a more general Service Upon whose Account and of divers other eminent Persons Heads of Houses and Doctors in Divinity together with several
1222 Cautions concerning it 1223 The heart must be free in it 1224 Children God sometimes makes them a Curse 1114 Should be nurst by the natural Mother 1115 Christians must be like them 723 724 657 673 Christ's Love to them 725 We should pray for them 725 They are naturally tainted with Sin 624 Their Duties to Parents 407 410 They should not curse their Parents 411 They ought to help their Parents 74 416 Christ 1224 1230 He rules the Devils 65 70 Why the Devil professed his Knowledge of him 67 253 Why Christ rebuked the Devill for confessing him 69 The Authour and Subject of the Gospel 3 Efficacy of Ordinances from him 26 Obedience due to him 58 92 110 Why the Devill adored him 253 Faith unites to him 285 God's Love to him 33 586 Christ the chief Teacher 370 417 587 591 713 1033 All ought to hear him 588 His Enemies 163 390 1028 1029 1030 1058 1085 1377 He is true God 4. 24 76 98 His Dignity 7 24 31 599 912 We must forsake all for him 28 58 271 He resembles the Dove 31 The ground of Ged's Love to us 34 Why he was nempted forty dayes 38 39 His Love to us 39 127 467 468 531 636 656 756 782 1311 1332 1335 He is Lord of all the Creatures 42 246 378 He governs the Church 46 47 His Kingdom 47 818 1027 1550 1564 His Power 60 89 245 366 378 497 663 813 815 1247 1649 His Holiness 68 His Mercy 76 100 247 356 384 461 489 496 His spiritual presence 82 He is a spiritual Physitian 89. 115. 147. 276. 279. 463 Why he would not have the People to flock to him 93 How he saw their Faith 97 He takes notice of our Graces 99 He knows the heart 104. 1247 When on Earth he could pardon 106 One end of his coming to convert Sinners 117. 118 Difference between his Disciples and John's 119 He is a spirituall Bride-groom 122 His humune Nature 131 515 580 829 1040 1147 1309 He hath Power over the Sabbath 132 His Miracles 135. 280 His Friends 145 Why he chose Judas among his Apostles 155 He was subject to our Infirmities 160. 1309 We should seek the Knowledge of him 190 His diligence in the Ministry 238. 501. 694 He was subject to humane Passions 241. 356. 474 Why he returned into Galilee 267 Why he asked Who touched him 281 Why he sometimes published and sometimes forbade the publishing of his Miracles 281 He comforts the humbled 284 He is Lord of Life and Death 294 His Humiliation 300. 1370. 1389. 1417. 1409 Why in Prayer he looked upward 365 He is a spiritual Pastor of Souls 369. 1290 What he prayed for in the Mount 372 In him a two-fold Will. 440 Misery of Man without him 457. 1261. 1267 His Humility 496. 656. 797. 798 He is the true Messias 510. 572. 1406. 1409. 1447 He was called of God 510. 661 His fore-knowledge 513. 1057 His Sufferings 513. 516. 518. 520. 521. 601. 602. 788. 799. 932. 1202 1240. 1246. 1253. 1258. 1290. 1303. 1306. 1310. 1323. 1329. 1381. 1485. 1506. 1508 His Resurrection 523 Why he fore-told his Passion 525. 602 We must imitate him 534. 535 His Glory 562. 569. 580. 567. 1408 Those that follow him must suffer 538. 769 His Transfiguration 563. 566. 569 His Divinity 584. 593. 538. 1024 Why his Divinity was not published in the time of his Humiliation 592 His Patience 620. 1451. 1452 His Wisdom 730 812 It was not his Work as Mediator to confer worldly honour 791 Why he came poor into the World 797 Necessity of his Incarnation 798 He dyed not for all 800 How he received Power from God 824 We should pray for his Kingdom 825 His Long-suffering 833 His Incarnation 908 910. 911 Reverence due to him 912 Causes of his Death 923 He is a Corner-stone 934. 935 His Exaltation 937. 1024. 1147. 1658 He was revealed in the Old Testament 959 He exalted not himself 1022 His Glorification 1025. 1026 1410 Many false Christs 1064. 1065 Contempt of him dangerous 1075 1120 His Prophetical Office 1134 He gave Alms. 1217 We must ask Counsel of him 1243 We should entertain him 1247 His Obedience to the Law 1249. 1382 His Sorrow 1251. 1308 1309 His Meekness 1251. 1451. 1452 Why he fore-told the Treason of Judas 1252 How we may be guilty of his Death 1261 All benefits flow from his Death 1269 Why he prayed 1305 His Fear 1398 His Trayer 1317. 1319. 1321. 1324 How could he pray against his Suffering since it was decreed 1321. 1322 Whether his sensitive Will was contrary to the Will of his Reason 1330 A two-fold Will in him ibid. His apprehension by his Enemies seems strange 1369 His Innocence 1398. 1466 Why he made no Answer to the Allegations against him 1402. 1406 How he is the Son of God 1407 What it is to deny him 1424. 1428 His Death 1443. 1492 He is a King 1448 His Work of Redemption 1385 His Humiliation 1468. 1480 He is the true Sin-Offering 1433 He was numbred with Transgressors 1463 It is honourable to bear his Cross 1486 His Love to Mankind 1494. 1530. 1611 His Poverty 1496. 1558 All his Sufferings were ordained by God 1507. 1521 Why he dyed 1542 For whom he dyed ibid. Why Miracles were wrought at his death 1546 How we may honour Christ 1562 Why he rose the third day 1577 His Presence 1605 His Apparition 1613 He is Lord of all men 1652. 1653 Causes of his Ascension 1655. 1656 The ends of his Exaltation 1659. 1660. 1661 How he makes Intercession for us 1659 Why he was baptized 1632 Church Personall succession of its Pastors no certain Mark of its Truth 1396 It may be amongst its Enemies ibid. Christ was not to abide with it on Earth 1191 Christ's care of it 901. 902. 903. 906. 930. 607. 1122. 1192. 1193. 1295 Ministers are Door-keepers of it 1196 It s weighty Affairs should be done carefully 1244 God warns it of troubles 1076 Those that are excluded out of it are odious to God 1103 It is sometimes in great troubles 376. 1121. 1126 God mitigates his Anger against it 1122 God's care of it in time of trouble 1124 It is Catholick in respect of place 1157 The sure estate of it 1170 It is like a House 1188. 1189 On Earth it is in a warfaring Condition 1189 Christ is Lord of it 46. 47. 926. 1190 God is alwayes present with it 976 It is hard to reform it 603. 835. 837 Covetousness dangerous in it 837 Not to be reformed without a Call 840 Rules concerning its Reformation 828. 840 No man should take up an Office in it without a Call 875 God plants Churches 895 It is like a Vineyard 896 God furnisheth it 899 God expects it should be fruitfull 900. 913 How Christ upholds it 935 All Attempts against it are vain 146. 936 It is often tainted with Cōrruptions 600 Gods care of its Reformation 601 It may ordain outward Ceremonies 401 The proper Priviledges
of it ought not to be common 449 It is a great misery to be shut out of the visible Church 449 No Calling in it exempts from Errour or Ignorance 103 It is never without Hypocrites 157. 194 In it all things should be done decently 184 In indifferent things we must conform to it ibid. Believers are the Glory of it 1056 Miracles are not a sure note of its truth 1130 Christ is Pastor of it 1290 Vnity is no sure note of its truth 141 Comfort The Promise of God is the ground of it 286 Believers do not alwayes enjoy it 375 Coming of Christ 557. 1153 It will be matter of terrour to the Wicked 1411 The Glory of it 559. 1412 It will be visible 1150. 1412 Carnall security is an hindrance from preparing for it 1198 It will be sudden 1199 The Calamities that shall then fill the World 1080 The Sun Moon and Stars will be then darkned 1143. 1144 The manner of it will be terrible 1146 The certainty of it 562. 1148. 1172 How Christ will then judge the World 1148 Helps to prepare for it 1149 It will be accompanied with Power and Majesty 1151 The Elect shall then be gathered together 1144. 1157 Angels shall attend on it 1158 It will be joyfull to the Godly 1161 Signs of it 1162. 1163. 1165. The time of it unknown to Men and Angels 1173 1174 1175 It is our Duty to prepare for it 1176 1177. 1181. 1186 How we may be prepared for it 1176 1177 1181 1186 It is not in our Power to prepare for it 1187 Motives to prepare for it 1188 The danger of being unprepared for Christs coming 1198 Prayers a means to prepare for it 1186 Watchfulness is a means to prepare for it 1181 Communion Communion with Christ 282 Excellency of the Communion of Saints 1306 Compassion 359. 458. 459. 466. We should compassionate others 88 Conference 481 It is a Duty 72. 502 Motives to it 502 The benefit of it 595 Confession We are naturally unwilling to confesse our Sins 647 Confession of Faith 508. 509. 552. Rules concerning Confession of Faith 509 Confession of Sin 17. 26 Auricular Confession is vain 17 Confidence We are prone to be too confident 789 1296 The danger of being too confident 1422 Confirmation It is no Sacrament 715 Conscience The guilt of it terrible 327 Terrours of it not a certain mark of Repentance 328 Terrours of it are difficultly removed 331 Men are more forward to propound Cases of Conscience than to practise the Resolution of them 1377 Contempt Christ suffered it 932 Contempt of Christ a dangerous Sin 1075. 1120 Contempt of the Gospel 263 Contempt of Ministers 296. 302. 303 314. 317 Contentment It is a Duty 1444. 83 Controversies 596. 597 The Scripture is the best judge of them 700 Conversion 48 71 1433 Conviction The Wicked are not the better for it 954 God sometimes convinceth before he punisheth 315 Corruption Corruption of our Nature 92 Corruption of our Nature should be renounced 536 Helps to renounce the Corruption of our Nature 537 Covenant God is mindfull of it 978 Death doth not null it ibid. Covetousness 923. 1217 Riches an occasion of it 752 It is dangerous in the Church 837. 1365 It is a great hindrance to a Christian 216. 751. 756 Remedies against it 217. 433. 751. 1238 Its Properties 433 Degrees of it ibid. Common to all by Nature 759 It was the Cause of Judas Treason 1237 Counsel Evill Counsel should be detested 530 Country We ought to esteem it 296 Persons of Gifts honour it ibid. Courage We must be couragious in Christ's Cause 1374 Creatures Christ is Lord of them 378 God's Power over them 1078. 1144 They should be used with Prayer and Thanksgiving 364. 1435 Cross Christians must bear it 748 Some things required in bearing it 749 Christians naturally fearfull 777 It is hard to bear it 788 We should be prepared for it 789 Cruelty The Cruelty of the Wicked 1418 Cursing 411 It is a great Sin 1431 We are subject to the Curse of God 1492 1493 Custom Custom in Sin dangerous 697 Evill Customs should be reproved 291 Hypocrites stand much for old Customs 1660. 1661 D. Damnation IT is aggravated by the abuse of means 318 Dancing Immodest Dancing is a Sin and occasion of Sin 344 Reasons against immodest Dancing 345 Immodest Dancing breeds carnall delight ibid. It is dangerous to behold immodest Dancing ibid. Danger Christians may flee from it 1109 Fear of it should not hinder us from good 1247 Darkness 1522. 1523. 1524. 1525 Dead Excessive sorrow for them is sinfull 290 Decent Burial is due to them 350 351 Death 1228. 1258. 1519. 1654 Christ is Lord of it 294 God sometimes suffers his to dy ignominious deaths 349 The Death of Saints is but partial 565. 980 It is a Sleep 291 All are subject to it 564 How to prepare for it 564. 1165. 1303 Comfort against it 1159 It is our Duty to prepare for it 1303 The greatest extremity of a Christian is at that time 1526 What it is 1544 Deceipt Two kinds of it 435 Remedies against it 435 Decree God hath appointed the time when all things happen 46 His Decrees must be fulfilled 517 The Decrees of Election and Reprobation 1123 The Decrees of God do not excuse the sins of men 1260. 1263 Defilement Nothing defileth but what defileth the Soul 424 Deliverance We should never despaire of it 615 It is often wrought by degrees 498 God often affords it suddenly 608 It is not alwayes speedily granted 623 It is sometimes deferred 624 It is often nearest in greatest extremity 638 Denial What it is to deny Christ 1424. 1428 Desires Good Desires 1469 Detestation We should expresse Detestation of Sin 313 Destruction It is the fruit of Sin 929 Devil He will assault Believers 35. 41. 204 He cannot hinder the Gospel 183 His enmity to God and Man 40 He is hardly removed from possession 70 255 When he is resisted he rageth the more 70 Why he desires to enter into mens Bodies 63 His Malice 63 66 255 246 249 625 640 1126 His Power 64. 168. 257. 1130 Why God permits him 64. 168 His Impurity 64. 258 Christ rules him 65. 70. 169. 253. 637 The Devils have not yet their full Damnation 67 He dreads the Day of Judgment ibid. Why he professed his Knowledge of Christ ibid. He hath an Historical Faith 67 150 254 Why Christ rebuked the Devil for confessing him 69 We must not hearken to him 69 635 His Policy 143 There is a difference of Order amongst the Devils 164 He opposeth not his own Interest 165 One Devill cannot be ejected by another 166 His Motion 204 He is active in tempting 205 Why he forced the possessed Person to dwell among the Tombs 251 Why he haunts solitary places ibid. He can distemper mens minds 252 He endeavours to cause men to mischief themselves ibid. It is a misery to be subject unto him 252 613 Why he adored Christ. 253 Why the
Seeing God the Father doth affect Christ with such intire love by this we see the greatness of his love to us in giving this his dear and beloved Son to dye for us That we might be saved Abraham shewed his great love to God in being content to sacrifice his beloved Isaac at his commandement How much more doth God the Father set out his infinite love to us in giving his beloved Son Christ Jesus to death for us John 3. 16. Labour to see this love of God to us and to be truly thankfull for it Use 2 Use 2. Seeing Christ Jesus is so dear unto God the Father let him be so also to us Let us set our principall love and delight on him He is worthy of our best love seeing he hath so loved us that he hath layd down his life for us Therefore say as David Psal 73. 25. Whom have I in Heaven c Ignatius said His love was crucified meaning Christ whom he most dearly affected So let us shew our love to Christ by preferring his Glory before all wordly things that are dearest to us and by our conscionable obedience to his Will John 21. 15. Peter lovest thou me Feed my Sheep c. Vse 3 Use 3. Terror to all Enemies of Christ which contemn and set leight by Him or his Will and Word God the Father loving him so dearly will certainly be avenged on all that oppose themselves or shew contempt against this his beloved Son Psal 2. He shall speak to them in his wrath c. See afterward upon Cap. 9. Ver. 7. Observ 3 Observ 3. In whom I am well pleased Hence gather That Christ Jesus is the ground and cause of all that love which God the Father doth bestow on Men therefore at the Birth of Christ the Angels sang Glory to God on High in Earth Peace Good will towards Men Luke 2. 14. Ephes 1. 6. He hath made us accepted in the Beloved that is in Christ John 17. ult I have declared to them thy Name c. That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them Reas Reas In our selves we are sinfull and so the just object of God's hatred and wrath therefore he cannot love us as we are considered in our selves but onely in Christ and for his sake alone Use 1 Use 1. See then the misery and wofull Estate of unbelievers and wicked men that are out of Christ having no part in him nor union with him by Faith they are odious to God and lyable to his wrath abiding under it yea they are the very fewell of his burning displeasure Think of this thou that art an unbeliever That hast no union with Christ by Faith what if thou have wealth and honour in the World What though thou be in favour with Men yet if thou be not in Christ thou art out of God's favour yea thou abidest under his wrath What good will wealth do to that Subject that is out of the Prince's favour c Use 2 Use 2. Comfort to all that know themselves to be in Christ and to have put him on by Faith they may assure themselves of God's love towards them For as he loveth Christ so he cannot but love all that are in Christ for his sake as he is well pleased with him so with all the faithfull in him If therefore thou be a true believer in Christ thy case is happy thou needest not to fear God's hatred or anger against thee whatsoever thy sins have bin and how much soever thou hast provoked God by them yet now his anger is appeased towards thee in his beloved Being once reconciled to God in Christ and being accepted to his favour no Creature shall ever separate thee from this love of God in Christ Rom. 8. 38. Use 3 Use 3. Would we have part in God's love and have him appeased towards us in regard of our sins then labour to have part in Christ and to have union with him by true Faith c. Mark 1. 12 13. And immediately the Spirit driveth him into the Wilderness c. Aug. 30. 1618. THe History of the Life of our Saviour containeth in it principally two things 1. His Speeches or Sayings 2. His Actings and Doings For unto these two Heads we may referr all those things which the Evangelist recordeth touching the Life of Christ So doth St. Luke abridge the life of Christ Acts 1. 1. I purpose not to lay down any generall division of all this History joyntly considered but to handle every Chapter by it self And first touching this Chapter we have in it five principal Histories recorded by the Evangelist 1. The Baptism of Christ usque ad ver 12. 2. The temptations of our Saviour Christ Ver. 12. 13. 3. His preaching in Galilee of Capernaum and the Villages near to it Ver. 14. 15. as also Ver. 21. 22. and again Ver. 35. c. unto the 40. 4. The calling of four Disciples Peter and Andrew James and John Ver. 16. c. unto the 21. 5. Certain Miracles wrought by our Saviour Ver. 23. c. unto the end of the Chapter Hitherto we have heard of the first generall part of this Chapter namely touching the Baptism of our Saviour Christ where also we have heard of the solemn installing of him into his publick Office of Mediator which followed upon his Baptism Now we are come to the second part of this Chapter which is concerning our Saviour being tempted by Satan Ver. 12. 13. As we have hitherto heard the History of his Baptism and therein of his solemn Calling and Investing to his publick Office so now we shall see the execution of this his Office and how he carryed himself in it c. Of his Baptism Hactenus dictum The History of Christ's temptation follows It is briefly set down by Mark more largely and particularly by Mathew and Luke As it is set down by St. Mark in these 2. Verses we may consider in it three things 1. The preparative unto his temptations viz. His being driven into the Wilderness Ver. 12. 2. The temptations themselves in the beginning of the 13. Ver. 3. The good Angels Ministred to him Touching the first thing namely the preparative to his temptations which was His being driven into the Wilderness This is amplyfied in this 12. Ver. by three Circumstances 1. The time when Immediately 2. The Author or efficient cause of his driving The Spirit 3. The place whither into the Wilderness Immediately That is so soon as he was baptized and solemnly authorized from Heaven to his publick Office as before we heard The Spirit Not the evil spirit that is the Devil but the Holy Ghost the third Person in the Trinity This is plain Luke 4. 1. Driveth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thrusteth him forth properly So Math. 9. ult Some by driving understand a bodily transportation of our Saviour into the Wilderness by the power of the Holy Ghost carrying him through the Ayr as
was powred out blasphemed the God of Heaven for their pains They accused God of Injustice or Cruelty for punishing them so severely So the Scribes and Pharisees in charging Christ to work by the Devil c. 2. By taking from God and denying unto him that which belongs unto him As the King of Ashur denying that God was able to save his People blasphemed So to deny God to be Holy Just Infinite c. is Blasphemy 3. By attributing the properties of God unto creatures Thus the Scribes and Pharisees as we heard Chap. 2. ver 7. falsly accused Christ of blasphemy because being but a man as they pretended he took upon him to forgive sins which is proper to God But this kind of blasphemy themselves were guilty of in attributing that unto the Devil which is proper to the Godhead of Christ viz. the power of casting out devils from the possessed 4. Lastly By speaking contemptibly of God as Pharaoh Exod. 5. 2. Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce c. And Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3. 15. Who is that God that shall deliver you c Now for the hainousness of the Sin of Blasphemy it may appear by this That the Jews abhorred the very name of it and therefore they used blessing instead of it as may appear 1 King 21. 13. The false Witnesses accused Naboth for blessing God and the King that is for blaspheming them It may also further appear both by the nature of the sin in that it tends so directly to the reproach of the Name of God See Levit. 24. 16. as we see by that which hath been said of the several kinds of blasphemy as also by the capital punishment appointed to it by the Law of God by which the Blasphemer was to dye the death Levit. 24. 16. And the Apostle delivered up Blasphemers unto Satan by the fearful Censure of Excommunication 1 Tim. 1. 20. This is sufficient to shew the greatness of the Sin Vse 1 Use 1. Learn by this to detest the Popish Religion which is so full of Blasphemies c. Of this before Chap. 2. Verse 7. Use 2 Use 2. Learn to abhor this sin of blasphemy in our selves and others being so hainous a sin and so dishonourable to God Take heed we be not guilty of it or of any degree or kind of it Take heed of the least evil thought against the Majesty of God much more of uttering words blasphemous against him Remedies against this Sin 1. Consider the fearfulness of the sin which hath been before shewed It argueth great wickedness in the heart 2. Consider how God hath been revenged upon Blasphemers even by temporal Judgments as upon Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar Sennacherib the Nation of the Jews c. 3. Our Tongues are given us to blesse God and Man c. Jam. 3. 10. 4. Labour for a reverent fear of the Name of God in our hearts This will cause us to think and speak of him with all due Reverence c. 5. Take heed of unreverent using the Name of God and of common swearing Use 3 Use 3. Give not occasion to others of blaspheming Gods Name by professing Religion and yet living profanely Rom. 2. 24. Observ 3 Observ 3. Further we learn out of these words That although blasphemy be a great and haynous sin yet that it is a pardonable sin that is being truly repented of it may be pardoned by Gods mercy 1 Tim. 1. 13. Paul was a Blasphemer yet obtained mercy All blasphemies may be forgiven except the blasphemy against the Spirit c. Use 1 Use 1. See and admire the abundant grace and rich mercy of God in being content to pardon not onely small sins but even the blasphemies with which men strike through his Reverend and Sacred Name Well may we here cry out Oh the deepness of the mercy of God c. Gods Name is very pretious unto him Vse 2 Use 2. Seeing there is mercy with God for the pardoning of the sin of Blasphemy yea of all blasphemies except that against the Spirit this should move those that have been guilty of this sin to repent of it and to sue to God for pardon in Christ of this haynous sin and for time to come let them cease from such blasphemies and labour by all means to honour the Name of God which they have formerly blasphemed and reproached Hearken to this thou that hast been a blasphemer of the Name of God though thy sin be fearful and haynous yet if thou wilt truly repent and forsake thy sin there is mercy with God even to forgive blasphemies Labour to have a part in this mercy Paul saith his blasphemy was forgiven to the end that Christ Jesus might in him shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them which should after believe in him to life ever lasting 1 Tim. 1. 13-16 Use 3 Use 3. Seeing God doth in wonderful mercy pardon such as blaspheme his Name when they truly repent let us imitate him our Heavenly Father as good Children in being ready to forgive such as reproach and speak evil of us yea in being ready to pray for such as curse us Matth. 5. 44. 1 Cor. 4. 13. Being evil spoken of we intreat Mark 3. 29 30. But whoso shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost c. Jan. 2. 1619. IN these two Verses and the former we considered 3. things 1. The Manner of our Saviours speech 1. With Earnestness implyed by the word Verily 2. With Authority in these words I say unto you 2. The Matter of his speech containing an indirect and close accusation against the wicked Scribes charging them as guilty of the sin against the Holy Ghost 3. The reason why he so charged them Vers 30. Because they said He had an unclean spirit Touching the manner of his speech we have spoken and in part of the matter In which he chargeth the Scribes as guilty of the sin against the Holy Ghost And this he doth not directly and plainly but indirectly and covertly by shewing against them the grievousness of that sin compared with other sins All other being pardonable and that alone unpardonable In the words are contained two main Propositions or Points of Doctrine 1. That all sins except that against the Holy Ghost may be pardoned unto men 2. That the Sin against the Holy Ghost can never be pardoned but maketh those that commit it guilty of eternal damnation By the former of these our Saviour sets out Gods Mercy By the latter his Severity and Justice Of the former we heard last day Now to speak of the latter Verse 29. But whoso shall blaspheme c. In the words two things are to be considered 1. The Nature of the Sin against the Holy Ghost implyed by the name given unto it in that it is called the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost Whoso shall blaspheme c. 2. The special property of this sin which is twofold 1. That it shall never be forgiven to those that
taught in the Gospel As these for example The Incarnation of the Sonne of God That he took flesh of a Virgin That by dying he overcame Death and Hell and Satan for us That there is no way to be saved but by faith in Christ That the faithful have most near union with Christ c. These are such mysteries as flesh and blood reveals not to us Reasons of this Doctrine Reas 1 1. The matter of the Gospel was hid in the secret Will and Counsel of God untill it pleased him in time to open and reveal it to the Church first more obscurely by the Prophets and then more plainly by John Baptist our Saviour Christ and the Apostles and if it had not been thus revealed we could never have known it at all Reas 2 Reas 2. The Doctrine of the Gospel is not at all known by Nature neither is there any help in Nature to conceive it no not in pure Nature before Man's Fall Adam himself before his Fall knew nothing of it The Law was known to him and written in his heart but not the Gospel And some general Points of the Law may yet be known by Nature even since the Fall but so cannot the Gospel Reas 3 Reas 3. The things contained in the Gospel are above the reach of mans reason and such as cannot be comprehended by it though they be not contrary to humane reason directly yet they exceed the capacity of it We cannot conceive them of our selves without the special illumination of Gods Spirit 1 Cor. 1. 23. The Preaching of Christ was to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Grecians foolishness Use 1 Use 1. To confute such as think these heavenly Mysteries of the Gospel easily learned but the contrary appears by many that are sharp-witted and apt to learn other matters yet in these Points of the Gospel are blind and hard to conceive them It is not therefore needless though some do foolishly think so for these things to be often taught and for the same Points to be again and again urged and insisted upon as occasion serveth This should not be grievous to Ministers and for the People it is a safe and sure way Phil. 3. 1. Use 2 Vse 2. Ministers had need in teaching to strive to make the Doctrines of the Gospel plain to their Hearers remembring that they teach Mysteries c. Vse 3 Use 3. Marvail not that so few understand and believe the Gospel seeing it is a hidden mystery to the natural man None can know it but those to whom it is revealed of God and he doth not reveal it to all as we heard before Use 4 Use 4. See what need we have to use all pains and diligence to come to the knowledg of these mysteries and especially to desire of God in prayer to open them unto us If David prayed God to open his eyes to see the wonderful things of the Law Psal 110. 18. How much more should we c. Quest Quest If the Doctrine of the Gospel be mystical How do we say against the Papists That the Scriptures which contain this doctrine are plain and easie Answ 1 Answ 1. We do not say That all things in the Scriptures are plain for some things are set down obscurely and darkly to stirr us up the more diligently to study the Scriptures therefore some particular places and sentences are darkly set down But this we hold 1. That all things necessary to salvation are plainly taught in Scripture 2. We hold That although all things needful to salvation be plainly set down yet they are not plain and easie to us to conceive but many things hard and difficult As for example That Christ being God took man's nature That he was born of a Virgin c. These things are plainly set down in Scripture But yet it is hard for us to conceive these mysteries But this difficulty is more in respect of our natural blindness than in respect of the Doctrines themselves 2. We say That the Scriptures are plain yet not to all but to such as diligently use the means to understand them and to such as are inlightned by the Spirit of God to see into them but to others they are hard and obscure which is the reason that sometimes a plain unlearned man understands the Scripture better than some learned Doctors My sheep hear my voyce c. Joh. 10. mystery of the Kingdom of God Doctr. 2. Here we learn further the excellency of this doctrine of the Gospel in that the matter of it is so excellent teaching us those things which concern Gods Kingdome both his Kingdom of Grace and of Glory especially in that it revealeth to us the way and means of attaining to Gods Kingdom of glory after this life Hence it is called the Gospel of the Kingdome and the Word of the Kingdome and sometimes the Kingdom of God as Matth. 21. 43. But of this Point before Chap. 1 14. Use Use Highly to esteem of this Doctrine of Gods Kingdom and of the Ministery and preaching of it accounting it our happiness that we enjoy it The greatest outward blessing which God bestoweth on any Nation which he favoureth Capernaum is said to be lifted up to Heaven because they had this mystery of Gods Kingdom preached unto them by our Saviour Christ So may it be said of us Let us therefore be truly thankful to God for so inestimable a blessing and shew our thankfulness by bringing forth better fruits of the Gospel then many of us have done as yet lest God take his Word from us for our contempt and unthankfulness So much of the first thing which our Saviour here teacheth his Disciples namely the reason why he was willing to interpret his Parables to them Now followeth the second thing which he teacheth them which is the reason why he did speak in Parables unto others that is to the Scribes and Pharisees and such as they were who are said to be Without The reason is contained Verse 11 12. In the words more particularly we may consider three things 1. The Persons to whom our Saviour spake in Parables Those that are without 2. His manner of Preaching to them In Parables All things done to them in Parables 3. The reason why he so spake to them which is twofold 1. That they might be left in their wilfull blindness and ignorance That they seeing might see and not perceive c. 2. That they might be left in their wicked and sinful estate and not be brought to true Repentance lest their sins should be forgiven them lest at any time they should be Converted c. To them that are without That is to such as are without the true Church not being true members of it For the understanding whereof know that there are two sorts of persons which are said to be out of the Church 1. Such as have not so much as outward Communion with the visible Church or people of God which profess his
often heard our Saviour and did also mark and observe those things which he delivered yet in this their hearing they did not understand and in this seeing they did not rightly perceive those Doctrines and Heavenly Mysteries which he taught So it was also with the other Jews Esay 6. 9. Go tell this People Hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not c. It is spoken Prophetically shewing what should come to pass when the Word should be preached to them Thus Nicodemus heard our Saviour Christ diligently and well observed his words when he preached to him the doctrine of Regeneration and yet he conceived it not but quite mistook his meaning Joh. 3. So the woman of Samaria Joh. 4. Though she diligently heard Christ speaking to her of the water of life yet did not at first understand him yea it was long before she could understand his doctrine throughly Thus the Apostles themselves though they heard Christ often and diligently marked his doctrine and though they also did rightly understand many things yet some things they did not conceive aright as we see Luke 18. 34. when he told them plainly that he should suffer and rise again yet they understood none of those things but that saying was hid from them Neither knew they c. Reas Reason The Doctrines of the Word of God cannot rightly be understood without the special help of the Spirit of God opening the understanding to conceive them 1 Cor. 2. 14. they are said to be spiritually discerned that is by the help of the Spirit inlightning the mind to conceive and judge of them Without which special illumination of the Spirit all other helps and means that can be used are not available Luke 24. 45. The Apostles themselves could not understand the Scriptures throughly concerning Christs Passion and Resurrection till he by his Spirit opened their Understandings Use 1 Use 1. To teach us us not to rest in this that we often hear the Word outwardly and that we do also mark and observe what is taught for all this we may do and yet be as blind and ignorant in the matters of God as were the Scribes and Pharisees but labour to find our understandings opened by the Spirit of God to conceive the mysteries of the Word And to this end forget not before we come to hear to seek unto God by earnest prayer that he may inlighten our minds to conceive his Word aright If thou neglect this never look to conceive those heavenly things aright which are delivered out of the Word Though thou be sharp-witted by nature and though thou hear often and in hearing observe things taught never so diligently yet without the help of Gods Spirit opening the eyes of thy mind thou shalt still be as blind as a Mole in these heavenly matters Therefore content not thy self with outward hearing nor yet with the diligent and attentive marking of that which is delivered though these are good Duties and necessary but pray before-hand unto God for his Spirit to inable thee to understand his Word Use 2 Use 2. How much less come they ever to conceive the Word aright who do not so much as hear it outwardly or if they do hear it yet are not attentive in hearing to mark and observe in their minds those things that are taught So much of the First reason why our Saviour spake in Parables to those that were without That they seeing might see c. Mark 4. 12. Lest they should be converted c. March 26 1619. THe second Reason followeth Lest they should be converted or turn c. That is lest by means of the hearing and right understanding of the Word they should be brought to repentance and so have their sins pardoned So that this reason is a consequent of the former Seeing it was just with God to leave them in blindness so as they could not understand the Word thence it followes that they were not nor could be brought to true repentance by hearing the Word In the words consider two things 1. The Judgment of God upon wicked Reprobates such as the Scribes and Pharisees That he would not have them turned from their sins 2. The amplifying of this Judgment by mentioning the benefit and good that should have come unto them if they had grace to turn from their sins their sins should have been forgiven This aggravateth the Judgment of God in that he deprived them of this great benefit by denying them grace to repent Object Object Ezek. 18. ult I have no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth c. Wherefore turn and live And 2 Pet. 3. 9. God will have none to perish but all to come to repentance c. Answ Answ To the place in Ezekiel I answer That the death or damnation of a sinner may be considered two wayes 1. Simply As it is the destruction of man being Gods creature and so he doth not will or take pleasure in it but rather is delighted with the salvation and preservation of his creature 2. Respectively As it is a just punishment of sin and as it serveth to manifest the glory of his Justice in the just condemnation of the reprobate and so he doth will the death of a sinner after a sort that is to say not absolutely as it is considered in it self but as it maketh way to the execution of his decree of Reprobation in the just punishment of the wicked To the place in Peter I answer That the Apostle there speaks not of all men in general but of all the Elect of God as may appear by the words going before in that Verse when he saith The Lord is long-suffering to us-ward that i● toward the Elect and these he opposeth against those wicked scoffers Verse 3. Vide Bellarm. in locum Doctr. 1 Doctr. 1. In that our Saviour saith That hearing they should hear and not understand lest they should by this means be converted c. We may gather this that the right hearing of the Word preached is a special means to bring men to repentance and to turn them from their sins unto God Jer. 23. 22. If they that is the false Prophets had stood in my counsel and had caused my people to hear my words then they should have turned them from their evil way c. Act. 2. 41. Three thousand Jews were converted by Peter's Sermon Act. 11. 24. When Barnabas preached at Antioch much people which heard him were added or joyned to the Lord. Thus the Eunuch Act. 8. was converted by hearing Philip and Lydia Act. 16. by hearing Paul See Act. 26. 18. Paul was sent to the Gentiles that by hearing him they might be turned from darkness to light c. Therefore the Word preached is said to be the seed of our new birth 1 Pet. 1. 23. Quest 1 Quest. 1. Wherein stands the right hearing of the Word that it may be effectual to work repentance Answ Answ 1.
mourn immoderately for the dead it must disswade all Christians from using it lest they become like to the profane Gentiles herein Gods people are often in Scripture forbidden to imitate the profane and Superstitious Customes of the Heathen which knew not God nor his Word So Levit. 18. 3. After the doings of the Land of Egypt shall ye not do nor after the doings of the Land of Canaan neither shall ye walk in their Ordinances Ephes 4. 17. This I say and testify in the Lord that ye walk not as other Gentiles c. Now as in other profane Customes we must not follow the Gentiles so not in this of excessive and Superstitious mourning for the dead but seeing we know out of the Word of God that the dead shall rise again at the last day we must learn to comfort our selves in the death of our friends with this hope and assurance that their bodies do not utterly perish in death but that they shall be raised again in due time and that if they be such as dyed well and in the Faith of Christ they shall both in Soul and body together be made partakers of a Heavenly and Eternal life at the last day So much of the Tumult and great Mourning which was in the house of Jairus when our Saviour came into it It followeth Ver. 39. And when he was come in He saith to them Why make ye this ado and weep c. That is why make ye this tumult or confused noise with your excessive lamenting for the dead By these words our Saviour doth reprove their Superstitious and immoderate mourning And he addeth a reason of his reproof in the next words The Damosell is not dead but sleepeth Is not dead That is she is not irrecoverably dead as you ignorantly suppose not so dead as if there were no hope or possibility of her being raised to life again But she sleepeth This our Saviour speaketh of her body and that for two reasons The first common to all that dye who are said in Scripture to fall asleep or to sleep because bodily death is like unto natural sleep of the body The second reason of this phrase used by our Saviour was peculiar to the Damsell who is said to be asleep and not dead because she was immediately to be awaked that is to be Miraculously raised to life again by the power of Christ Therefore he thus speaketh of her partly to reprove their immoderate mourning in the house and partly to comfort Jairus by putting him in hope of the life of his daughter So much of the sense of the words Observ 1 Observ 1. In that our Saviour comming to the house of Jairus and perceiving their Superstitious and excessive mourning for the dead did reprove it in them We learn from hence that when we come occasionally into such places where we see profane or Superstitious Customes used and practised we should shew our dislike of them either by reproving them if we have a Calling to do it as our Saviour now had or else some other way Act. 17. 22. Paul being at Athens and there perceiving their Superstitious and Idolatrous worshipping of an unknown God did shew his dislike thereof by reproving it So our Saviour comming into the Temple and there finding a profane Custome of selling wares and changing of Money shewed his dislike by reproving and casting out thence the Buyers and Sellers and Changers of Money Joh. 2. 14. So if we come where profane Customes are used we are some way or other to testify our dislike and detestation of them either by reproving them if we have a Calling thereto and see likelihood or hope of doing good by such a reproof or else some other way as either by a sad Countenance testifying our dislike of them or else by departing quickly out of the places and companies where such abuses are practised Use Use This reproveth such as are so far from shewing dislike and detestation of such profane Customes in the places where they come that they rather countenance and seem to approve of them by their carriage towards such as use them either commending them or joyning with them or at least winking at them altogether and taking no notice of them yea though they be gross or notorious abuses But take heed of this countenancing or seeming to allow of such sinfull practises in others lest we be found accessary to them Rom. 1. 32. The Apostle condemneth such as applaud the sins of others or shew good liking of them Contrà Ephes 5. 11. Have no fellowship with works of darkness c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour saith of the Damsel that she was not dead but onely asleep we learn this That bodily death is but as a sleep unto those that dye for though this be here spoken of this young Maiden in a special respect because she was presently after to be restored to life yet it is in some sense true of all others that dye I say of all that dye whether they be godly or wicked Dan. 12. 2. Many of them that sleep in the dust of the Earth shall awake some to Everlasting life some to everlasting contempt Here both the death of the Godly and wicked is resembled to a sleep and elsewhere also in Scripture the death of the wicked as well as of the Godly is called a sleep 1 King 14. 20. Jeroboam slept with his Fathers c. and ver last the like is said of Rehoboam And the reason why the death of all both Godly and Wicked is resembled to a sleep is this because all both godly and wicked shall be awaked again that is their bodies shall be raised again at the last day the bodies of the godly to be partakers of everlasting life and the bodies of the wicked to be cast into Hell torments But it is especially true of the godly who live and dye well that death is to them as a sleep So Joh. 11. 11. Our friend Lazarus sleepeth c. And Act. 7. ult Steven dying is said to fall asleep 1 Cor. 11. 30. Many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep And hence it was that the Antient Greek Church called their places of Christian burial 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Places to sleep in according to that Esay 57. 2. They rest in their beds that is in their Graves Now the reason why the death of the Godly is called a sleep in Scripture is this because there is a fit resemblance between it and natural sleep which resemblance standeth chiefly in these things 1. In bodily sleep men rest from the labours of mind and body So the Faithful dying in the Lord are said to rest from their labours Rev. 14. 2. After natural sleep men use to awake again so after death the bodies of the Saints shall be awaked that is raised up again to life out of their Graves at the last day And as it is easy to awake one in a
will still shew himself powerful in the Ministery of his own Word and will not suffer the course of it to be stopped by all the policies and practise of the Devil and wicked men against it Let this discourage and daunt all enemies of the Word and make them weary of plotting and practising any thing against the Ministery of the Word or against those that preach or profess it remembring that in so doing they fight against God who will be too strong for them and will prevail against them and punish them too most severely if they repent not of this sin Vse 2 Use 2. Comfort to Ministers of the Word and to all sincere Professors of it Though they see never so great opposition made by the Devil and wicked men against the Gospel of Christ yet let them not fear that either the Gospel or Ministery of it shall ever be utterly abolished Though all the World should conspire against it yet still the Lord will give power to his Word and make it prevail more and more if not in one place yet in another and though for a little time he may suffer the free course of it to be hindred yet he will soon after make it to run and be glorified again as the Apostle speaketh 2 Thess 3. 1. Observ 2 Observ 2. Our Saviour by preaching and working Miracles groweth famous and that even in the Court of Herod yet he sought not his own glory by his Doctrine and Miracles but the glory of God his Father who sent him as he saith Joh. 7. 18. and 8. 49. Hence we learn That the way to true honour even amongst men is to glorifie God by obedience to his will and by doing the duties he requires of us and to be far from seeking our own glory Never was there any so far from ambitious seeking after vain-glory as our Saviour was never any so careful to glorifie God his Father therefore his heavenly Father honoured him somuch even amongst men for though he were despised of some yet was he honourable and renowned among others Here then we see the truth of that 1 Sam. 2. 30. that God will honour such as honour him The truth of this see also in John the Baptist Matth. 3. 5. Use Vse Let this move us to be far from ambitious hunting after our own glory in the world and above all to seek Gods glory in all our wayes walking diligently and faithfully in our Callings and being conscionable in performance of all duties which he requires of us This is the way to true honour before God and men The less we seek our own honour and the more we seek Gods glory the more will he honour us So much of the Occasion of Herod's Opinion touching Christ Now followeth the erroneous Opinion or Judgment it self which he conceived of him which is first laid down in the end of the 14. Verse and afterward Verse 15. 16. it is compared with the different opinions of others whereby the Evangelist sheweth how firmly he was settled in it in that he would not be removed from it by any perswasions or reasons of those that were of different Opinions Touching the Opinion it self it consists of a twofold Errour 1. That he thought our Saviour to be John Baptist raised from the dead 2. That he thought the great Miracles wrought by Christ to have been wrought by John Baptist That John the Baptist was risen c. It is not likely that Herod thought John to be risen in body in such sort as we believe that the dead shall be raised at the last day with the same bodies in which they dyed but he rather spake thus according to the common errour then holden by many touching the dead namely that the souls of the dead do after death enter into other new bodies and so converse again upon earth This was the opinion of many wise Philosophers among the Gentiles as of Pythagoras Plato and others And it is likely that Herod and the Jews under his Government in our Saviour's time were tainted with this errour of the Gentiles Vide Joseph de Bell. Jud. lib. 2. cap. 7. where he writeth of the Pharisees that they were of this opinion That the souls of good men after death did passe into other bodies Vide Bezam in Joh. 9. 2. contra Maldonat in Matth. 14. 2. Quest Quest What moved Herod to think that John was risen Answ The guiltiness of his own Conscience For being guilty of that grievous sin of murdering so innocent and holy a Prophet as John was whom himself feared and reverenced for his holiness in his life-time no doubt but his conscience did much accuse and trouble him for this sin ever after the committing of it and now hearing of the great Miracles wrought by our Saviour and not knowing who he was that wrought them his guilty conscience made him to fear that John Baptist whom he had so cruelly murdered was risen and lived upon earth again and wrought those Miracles and that now he would either seek just revenge upon him or at least that he would more powerfully and plainly reprove his sins then ever before And that it was the guilt of his own conscience and the fear of John's person that moved him thus to think that he was risen from the dead may appear because Verse 16. he doth make mention of his beheading of John and because Luke 9. 7. it is said that he was perplexed or in great doubt when it was said of some that John was risen from the dead Now this perplexity argueth the guiltiness of his Conscience and the great fear which he was possessed with Object Object Luke 9. 7. It is said He was perplexed or in doubt c. How then is it here said by Mark that he directly affirmed that John was risen Answ Answ It is most probable that at first he was in great doubt by reason of the different opinions of others touching Christ but at last the guiltiness and terrour of his conscience made him resolve that it was indeed John Baptist Therefore great works are wrought by him Though John in his life-time wrought no Miracle Joh. 10. 41. yet Herod's guilty Conscience makes him fear that he is now grown more powerful than before c. Observ 1 Observ 1. Here we see that Herod did not only fear John being alive as we shall see Verse 20. but even after he had put him to death the consideration of John's innocency and holiness of life doth strike him with fear and terrour in his Conscience Whence we learn That the innocency and uprightness of God's faithful servants is of great power to strike terrour into their wicked enemies and that not only whilest they are living but even after the death of such servants of God Thus the innocency of Abel did strike Cain with great terrour of Conscience for murdering him and that even after Abel was dead So the innocency of our Saviour Christ bred great
Devil sets them awork c. Use Use Pray unto God to restrain the rage and malice of the wicked and to deliver us from evill and unreasonable men 2 Thess 3. 2. It followeth But she could not Here is shewed the cause which hindred Herodias from accomplishing her bloody purpose against John namely her unability to do that she desired One reason whereof is shewed in the next Verse because Herod kept John from her c. But the main and principal reason was this That God himself did by his power and special providence so restrain the power and malice of this wicked woman that she could not as yet have her will against John though afterward she had as we shall hear Observ Observ Though the wicked bear deadly malice oftentimes against God's Saints and Servants yet the Lord doth by his power and special providence restrain their malice and power that they cannot alwayes do that hurt and mischief unto Gods Servants which they desire to do Sometimes indeed he permitteth them to annoy and hurt his servants in their bodies goods and outward estate for the greater and more through tryal of his servants and for other just causes but he doth not alwayes suffer them so to do but often restraineth and bridleth their power and malice so as they cannot have their wills against his servants Thus the Lord restrained the power and malice of Saul that he could not take away the life of David though he sought to do it Thus he bridled the malice of Haman against the Nation of the Jews that he could not root them out though he laboured to do it Thus he bridled the rage and malice of Sennacherib King of Assyria against God and his people 2 King 19. 27. I know thy rage against me Therefore I will put my hock into thy nose and my bridle in thy lips c. Use 1 Use 1. Comfort to the faithful Servants of God against the fury and rage of their most malicious and deadly enemies They cannot do what they list against them but that only which the Lord suffereth them to do and he will suffer them to do nothing but that which shall in the end turn to the good and salvation of his servants Though they may hate and persecute them even unto death yet not a hair of their head shall perish without the Will of God See Matth. 10. 29. Use 2 Use 2. Be thankful unto God for his goodness and mercy to his Church and People so restraining the malice of the wicked that they cannot do them so much hurt and mischief as they would If they might have their will the Devil and wicked men would root out all the faithful servants of God from the earth It is therefore the Lord 's infinite mercy and goodness to us that we are not consumed and cut off from the Land of the living by such wicked instruments of Satan Mark 6. 20. For Herod feared John c. July 15. 1621. IN the former verse is shewed that Herodias bearing inward grudg against John would have killed him but could not effect her bloudy purpose Now the Evangelist in this verse mentioneth a special reason why she could not kill him and what hindered her namely this that Herod himself who had cast John in Prison yet did so fear and reverence his person because he was a Holy and Just man that he would not suffer Herodias to put him to death but kept him alive for a time notwithstanding all her rage and malice against him And withall the Evangelist mentioneth not onely this speciall favour and kindness shewed by Herod unto the person of John in keeping him safe from Herodias for a time but also the good respect and liking which he shews to his Doctrine in that he heard it gladly and obeyed it also in part This is the sum of the verse More particularly and distinctly consider in it three things 1. Herod's fearing or reverencing of John's person 2. The ground or motive of it Because he knew him to be a just and holy man 3. The manifestation of it by the effects 1. Toward his person keeping him from Herodias 2. Toward his Doctrine or Ministry 1. In hearing him 2. Hearing him gladly 3. Doing many things General Doctrine from the whole Verse In that Herod did so many good things and yet was but a wicked man we may hence gather That one may go very far in Religion and Christianity and yet not be truely Religious nor a sound Christian but remain an Hypocrite and wicked man Herod had many good things in him and he did many good things and yet neither had enough nor did enough to prove him a good Christian He bare a kind of love and liking and reverence to Johns person and Doctrine being willing and desirous to hear him and ready to obey him in many things and not onely so but he shewed him special kindness and mercy in keeping him alive and safe when Herodias would have killed him and yet all this while Herod remained but an Hypocrite and wicked man which shews that one may go very far in a shew of true Religion and Grace and yet be void of it See also for proof of this Hebr. 6. 4. and Luke 8. 13. See also what hath bin said before of this point upon Mark 4. 16. But more particularly to open this point here There are three sorts of good things which may be found in a wicked man or Hypocrite which yet are not sufficient to prove him a sound Christian The first respecteth the mind and understanding The second the Heart and affections The third the outward life and Conversation Touching the first the mind and understanding a wicked man may be enlightened with a good measure of knowledg in the Word of God and the Doctrine of it so as to be able to speak and discourse readily of it to others yea to Preach it to others as Judas did Hebr. 6. 4. such as commit the sin against the Holy Ghost are enlightened with knowledg So Hebr. 10. 26. and 2 Pet. 2. 21. Some know the way of Righteousness and yet fall away c. Touching the second which is the Heart and affections a wicked man may have his heart moved and stirred with some good affections as a kind of love and desire to the Word of God and a kind of joy and delight in it for a time See for this Hebr. 6. and Luke 8. 13. and here in the example of Herod So also a wicked man may be affected with a kind of love and reverence to Gods Ministers and to other good men as we see also in Herod here He may also have some other good affections as a kind of love and desire after Heaven and Salvation such as was in wicked Balaam wishing to dye the death of the Righteous c. and Hebr. 6. 5. They are said to taste of the powers of the World to come Again a wicked man may be affected
with men and that they may be well accounted of in the world if they come in company they will do as others do though it be never so unlawful or wicked which they do that so they may be well spoken of and accounted good fellowes kind men c Such forget what is said Luke 16. 26. Wo to you when all men shall speak well of you Well let us look to it that we do not so hunt after mens favour and commendation as to purchase it with shipwrack of conscience Such credit with men is dearly bought which is purchased with the loss of God's favour and wounding of our own Conscience Mark 6. 27. 28 29. And immediately the King sent an Executioner and commanded his Head to be brought and Sept. 16. 1621. he went and beheaded him in the Prison And brought his head in a Charger and gave it to the Damsell and the Damsell gave it to her Mother And when his Disciples heard of it they came and took up his Corps and laid it in a Tomb. HItherto we have heard the Occasions and Preparatives going before the beheading of John Baptist Now the Evangelist setteth down the Fact it self Ver. 27. And the Consequents of it Ver. 28 29. Touching the beheading of John the Evangelist mentioneth three things especially 1. The time when Herod caused him to be beheaded Immediately 2. The manner and means of effecting it He sent an Executioner and commanded his Head to be brought and he went and beheaded him 3. The place where In Prison From the Circumstance of time Observe The diligence and forwardness of the Wicked in committing sin c. Of this before Ver. 25. Touching the manner of executing this Cruell murder of John He sent an Executioner The word in the Originall signifieth one that was of the King's Guard which was near about him one of his ordinary Followers whereby it seems that it was the custom of Kings and great Rulers in those times to imploy some one of their Guard or ordinary Followers and Servants in doing such executions of Death upon Malefactors In Prison This shews how cruelly and unjustly Herod dealt with John in Commanding him to be put to Death presently and that in the Prison it self where he lay bound so that he neither came to his answer in any publick place of Justice nor was suffered to plead his own Cause or speak for his innocency neither had he in the Prison any of his Disciples or others present with him to Minister any comfort to him at his Death Observ 1 Observ 1. See here how the Faithfull Ministers of God are often rewarded in the World for their Faithfulness in their Ministery they are for this Cause not onely hated of the Wicked but most unjustly and cruelly used yea persecuted even unto Death Of this before Ver. 17. Observ 2 Observ 2. From the joynt consideration both of the manner of John's beheading and of the place where he suffered in that he was beheaded as a Malefactor by one of the Kings Guard and that in the Prison after a most vile base and ignominious sort Hence observe That God doth sometimes permit his dear Servants not onely to be put to Death by the Wicked but even to base and ignominious kinds of Death Thus Stephen was stoned to Death And Hebr. 11. 37. some were stoned some sawed asunder some slain with the Sword So we read in the Histories of the Church of sundry kinds of reproachfull Deaths suffered by the Martyrs both in the Primitive Church and afterward in latter times And our Saviour Christ himself suffered the most ignominious and accursed Death on the Crosse Use 1 Use 1. See then that we are not to judge any to be wicked or out of favour with God because they dye some base and ignominious kind of Death Such as have lived well and in the fear of God cannot but dye in the favour of God and be happy after Death whatsoever kind of Death they dye Psal 116. 15. Pretious in the sight of the Lord is the Death of his Saints Though the World and wicked Men think basely of such when they dye because somtimes they are put to base and reproachful kinds of Death as to be Stoned Beheaded Burned c. yet the Lord doth not so think of them but hath them in precious accompt Vse 2 Use 2. Comfort to the Faithfull if God Call them to suffer any vile or opprobrious kind of Death Let them know they are never the lesse in favour with him never the more miserable never the further from Salvation because they dye in such a base manner but they are most blessed and happy if they live well and dye in the Lord what kind of Death soever they dye though never so ignominious or contemptible in it self Revel 14. 13. Many of God's dear Children have dyed such kinds of Death The basest Death that is to a good Christian is no other but a passage to Heaven to a better and eternall Life So much of the beheading of John Now follow the Consequents of it which are two especially 1. The Ignominy and Disgrace offered unto his Head being taken off The Executioner brought it in a Charger and gave it to the Damsell and the Damsell to her Mother Ver. 28. 2. The honour done to the Corps of John by his own Disciples When they heard of his Death they came and took up his Corps and laid it in a Tomb. Touching the former of these It is said The Executioner brought his Head in a Charger This was a most cruell and bloody Fact not onely to cut off the Head of John but also to bring it in a Platter as a Dish to help to furnish Herod's Feast and that presently after it was cut off even before it had done bleeding as is likely This I say was a most cruell and unmercifull Fact and it was a bloody and ruefull Spectacle to behold And he gave it to the Damsell and the Damsell c. This also shews the cruell minds and hard hearts of Herodias and her Daughter in that they are so far from being moved with any pity towards John after he is Beheaded that they delight themselves with the beholding of his Head yet bleeding afresh in the Platter yea they make a scorn and derision of his Head being thus brought in at the Feast and given from one to another Observ 1 Observ 1. See here how fearfull a thing it is for any to be hardned in fin and to be given over of God unto it as Herodias and her Daughter were such are so far from being touched with the feeling of sin or with any remorse for it that they can even delight themselves with sin yea with the fowlest and most hainous sins making but a sport of them But of this I spake before Ver. 25. Observ 2 Observ 2. Further we may here observe that it is the property of the Wicked to exercise cruelty not onely against
this end they must walk wisely and religiously toward their Children being careful to train them up in instruction and information of the Lord Eph. 6. 4. and to go before them by holy example This is a great means to move reverence in their Children toward them And they must take heed on the other side of foolish vain and loose behaviour before their Children especially when they are young lest this breed contempt c. Mark 7. 10. And who so curseth Father or Mother let him dye the Death Mar. 17. 1621. THe third Duty of Children to Parents is obedience Ephes 6. 1. Children obey your Parents in the Lord c. So Col. 3. 20. This obedience consisteth in sundry things But especially in these five 1. In submitting to Parents instruction and teaching As Parents are to bring them up in good nuture and instruction so Children are to yield themselves willingly and gladly to be instructed shewing themselves teachable Prov. 13. 1. A wise son heareth his Fathers instruction Contrarily Prov. 15. 5. A fool despiseth his Fathers instruction See also Prov. 1. 8. 2. In obeying the Precepts and Will of their Parents in things lawfull and indifferent Jer. 35. The Rechabites being forbidden of their Father to build Houses plant Vineyards or drink Wine c. obeyed therein and are commended and rewarded of God for their obedience Isaac shewed obedience to his Father Abraham in suffering himself to be bound and laid on the Altar for a Sacrifice Our Saviour Christ himself was also subject to his Parents Luke 2. 51. 3. In submitting patiently to the Reproofs and Corrections of Parents and in being carefull to reforme the faults for which they are either reproved or corrected yea though they should reprove or correct unjustly yet Children ought not to refuse or rebell against them Though this seem tedious and against stomack yet seeing God requires it Children must shew obedience even to unjust reproof and correction Touching Reproof Prov. 15. 5. He that regardeth his Father's reproof is wise Et contrá Prov. 13. 1. Solomon makes it the property of an undutifull scorner not to hear his Father's rebuke Therefore every good Child must thence learn on the contrary to hear and obey their Parents rebukes Numb 12. 14. The Lord saies thus of Miriam If her Father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven Dayes By which Speech he implyeth That if a Parent shew a signe of displeasure against the Child for any fault it is fit the Child should not onely take it patiently but shew himself also ashamed thereat Touching Correction Hebr. 12. 9. We have had Fathers of our Flesh which corrected us and we gave them reverence c. A Duty of Parents to correct Children when there is cause therefore Childrens Duty is to sumbit unto it as being for their own good A means through the Blessing of God to reform vice and sin in them yea to deliver their Souls from Hell Prov. 23. 14. 4. In yielding to their Parents Will and Appointment for choyce of their Particular Callings As Parents are to take order and see that their Children live not idly without a Calling but that they be trained up in some honest and lawfull Calling wherein to do good in Church or Common-wealth So Children are willingly to be guided by Parents therein and to take upon them that Calling which their Parents appoint them unto so that it be a lawful Calling in it self and they fit for it Our Saviour himself therein submitted to Joseph and Mary living under them in the Trade of a Carpenter Mark 6. 3. So the Patriarchs were Shepheards by the Appointment of Jacob their Father So David before he was called to the Kingdom was a Keeper of Sheep by the Appointment of Jesse his Father See 1 Sam. 16. the 11th Verse compared with the 19th 5. Lastly The Obedience of Children stands in being directed and ruled by their Parents in the matter of their Marriage when they come to years fit for Marriage and are willing or desirous to en●er into that estate The choice of a fit Husband or Wife being a very serious and weighty matter and such as doth very nearly concern the good of the Child therefore in this matter all Children are to be guided by their Parents and not to presume without their Will and Consent to enter into the state of Marriage Parents by the Law of God have power to dispose of their Children in Marriage 1 Cor. 7. 38. The Father is said to give his Virgin in Marriage Deut. 7. 3. Thou shalt not give thy Daughter to the Canaanites c. Exod. 22. 17. There is a Law that he which defloured a Maid should marry her but not without her Father's Consent Isaac at the Age of forty years was at his Father's choice for a Wife And so Jacob was sent by Isaac his Father to Laban's House or Family to take a Wife thence Gen. 28. 2 Sam. 13. 13. Thamar saith to her Brother Ammon The King will not deny me to thee The Heathen knew this by the light of Nature See Gen. 34. 3. in Sichem It is also decreed by all Laws Civil Canon c. The Papists require it Concil Trid. Reas 1 Reas 1. Children are a part of the Goods and Substance of their Parents over which they have power to dispose of them as of other of their Substance Exod. 21. 7. The Jews might by the Law sell their Children to become Servants to others according to the Custom of those times And it seems that the Devil took this for granted that Job's Children were part of his Substance and Possessions and therefore having power given him over his Goods and Possessions he slew his Children Psal 127. 3. An heritage of or from the Lord. Reas 2 Reas 2. By Marriage Children are called to leave their Parents after a sort Gen. 2. 24. For this cause shall a man leave his Father and Mother c. Therefore it is fit that this leaving of Parents should be with their consent Reas 3 Reas 3. By Marriage the power of Parents over the Child is in some sort passed over to the Husband or Wife and is it fit it should be so passed over without Parents consent Here two or three Questions are needful to be briefly resoved Quest 1 Quest 1. Whether a Parent may urge or compell his Child to marry against the Child's Affection Answ Answ He may not because without free consent of the parties to be married there can be no lawful Marriage this consent being of the Essence of Marriage yet a Parent may command or require his Child to marry in some case and the Child ought not without weighty and just cause to refuse Quest 2 Quest 2. May a Parent restrain or keep his Child from Marriage Answ Answ He may keep him from this or that Marriage in particular with such or such a Party for some just cause but not from Marriage in generall
but like the Fish which swimm continually in the salt Sea and yet are not at all seasoned but still as fresh as before miserable is the state of such better for them never to have heard the sound of Christ's Voice among them c. It followeth And He entred into an House What House this was is not expressed but it was no doubt in some private place of the Country because it is said He would have none to know of his going in thither He would have no man know c. This is to be understood of Christ's humane Will as He was Man for otherwise as he was God he could not will or desire this That no man should know of his going into the House For he knew that he should not be hid but that his entrance into the House would be known to this Woman and that the knowledge of it would move her to come to him as she did to seek help for her Daughter Quest Quest Why did our Saviour enter so privately into this House Answ Answ 1. That being there in private with his Disciples he might for a time rest and refresh himself after his former Labours in travelling preaching and working sundry Miracles 2. To avoid all shew of Ambition and Vain-glory at his first coming into these Coasts where he had not been before neither was much known among them therefore he would not openly and publickly shew himself lest his malicious enemies should charge him with Ambition and desire of Vain-glory. 3. It is probable also That because he knew the time appointed for the Calling of the Genetiles was not yet come and he was sent to preach to the Jews and not to the Gentiles therefore being now in the Borders of the Gentiles and so near unto some Cities of their's he did forbear to preach and work Miracles in such open and publick manner as he used to do in other Regions of Judea and rather kept himself private during his abode in these Coasts See Jansen Observ 1 Observ 1. The truth of Christ's humane Nature and that he was subject to humane Infirmities such as were meerly naturall and not sinfull as wearinesse pain hunger thirst c. appeareth here in that he had need of rest and refreshing being wearied with the Labours of his Calling and therefore betook himself to this private House c. See before Chap. 6. ver 32. Observ 2 Observ 2. It is both lawful and fit for Christians after Christ's own example to take occasion of rest and refreshing their Minds and Bodies for a time being wearied with the Labours of their Callings See Chap. 6. ver 31. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that it is said of Christ here That he would have none to know c. We may gather That as there are two different Natures in Christ's person viz. The Divine and the Humane Natures So also there are two different or diverse Wills in Christ the one as he is God whereby he absolutely willeth all things which come to pass though not so as to approve of them all yet at least to permit them The other is his humane Will as he is Man whereby he willed some things and in some respects which yet did not come to pass neither was it his Will as he was God that they should come to passe For example as he was God his absolute Will and Desire was to dye in his humane Nature for man's Redemption But as he was Man his Will and Desire was in some respect not to dye I say in some respect because he did not simply desire or will as Man not to dye for even as he was Man he dyed willingly but only so far forth as Death was the destruction of Nature and a violent separation of Soul and Body asunder so he abhorred it and was willing to be freed from it yet conditionally also if it might have stood with his Father 's Will. See Matth. 26. 39. So here the Will of Christ as God was that this Woman should know of his coming into the House c. But as he was Man his Will and Desire was That none should know of his coming thither Note that though these two Wills in Christ are diverse yet not contrary to each other but one is subordinate to the other His Humane Will being subject to his Divine Will and both of them being in themselves just and good Indeed they are in some respect contrary sometimes namely in respect of the object or things willed but they are not simply or absolutely opposite or contrary because though the things willed are contrary yet they are not willed in the same respect but in different respects and upon different Grounds and Reasons So here Christ as God willed that his entring into the House might be known but as Man he willed not to have it known here are two contrary things willed yet not in one and the same respect but in different respects and upon different Grounds and Reasons and both just and good He would have his entring into the House known that so this Woman seeking to him for her Daughter he might have occasion to manifest his Divine Glory by this Miracle On the other side he would not have his going into the House known that so he might be private there for a time to refresh himself c. as hath been shewed Vse Use To confute those old Hereticks called Monothelits who deny this truth holding that the Will of Christ both as he is God and as he is Man is one and the same Will not differing in nature or substance c. This Heresy was condemned in the sixt general Council holden at Constantinople about the the year 678. It followeth But he could not be hid That is he could not enter so privately into the House but that he must needs be known of some to have gone in thither The reason hereof was because his Fame and Renown was so great as it was in all places and parts of Judea even in these which were most remote and neerest to the Gentiles And though Christ himself had not been before in these Coasts yet many which dwelt in those Coasts had before resorted unto him to other places to hear his Doctrine and to see his Miracles as appeareth Mark 3. 8. and Luke 6. 17. He could not c. This is not to be understood of his absolute Power but that he could not be hid by those means which then he pleased to use Observ Observ In that our Saviour who was so far from all ambition and desire of vain-glory that he sought nothing but the glory of his Heavenly Father which sent him yet was so Famous and Renowned in all Places where he came We may observe That the way to true Honour is not to seek our own Honour but the Glory of God in the course of our Life and in all Duties of our generall and particular Callings See Chap. 6. Ver. 14. Mark 7. 25 c. For
and take notice in some measure of the contrary Errours and false Doctrines holden against the Truth and to shun and avoid the same They had not need to be strangers in the Scriptures nor yet to content themselves with a small and slender knowledge therein but to labour that the Word of God may dwell in them plenteously in all Wisdom Col. 3. 16. They had not need to be Babes in Knowledge or unskilful in the Word of Righteousness but to have their senses exercised in the Scriptures to discern good and evill to discern both truth and falshood by the light of the written Word Hebr. 5. 13. This therefore should stir up all sorts of Christians to the searching of the Scriptures and dilident study of the Word of God that they may not onely be grounded in knowledge of the Truth but able also to discern and avoid such damnable Errours and Heresies as are contrary to the truth and which tend to the overthrow of it Especially Ministers of the Word had need be well-studied in the Scriptures and to be mighty in them as Apollos was Act. 18. 24. else how shall they not only hold the Truth and teach it to others but also be able to discover and confute Errours and false Doctrine and to teach others how to shun and avoid the same He must be a Scribe well-instructed to the Kingdom of Heaven Mat. 13. 52. Now followeth the Answer of the Disciples They answered John the Baptist but some say Elias and others One of the Prophets They mention three several erroneous Opinions which were holden of Christ The first of those that thought him to be John the Baptist The second of those that thought him to be Elias the Prophet The 3d. of those that held him to be one of the other old Prophets risen again Luke 9. 19. Besides these there is also a fourth Opinion added Mat. 16. of those that held him to be the Prophet Jeremy But I will here speak only of the three former mentioned by St. Mark 1. Some held him to be John Baptist Of this Opinion was Herod the Tetrarch of Galilee as we heard before Chap. 6. for he having not long before beheaded John in Prison and afterward hearing of the Miracles wrought by Christ did out of the guiltiness of his Conscience begin to be perplexed and to fear that John Baptist was risen again from the dead and did those mighty Works And of the same Opinion were others also as appeareth Luke 9. 7. He was perplexed because it was said of some that John was risen from the dead c. 2. Some said He was Elias they thought that Elias the Prophet who was so long before taken up into Heaven was now returned to live upon Earth again Luke 9. 8. It was said of some that Elias had appeared For the better understanding hereof know that the Jews and particularly the Scribes in our Saviour's time held this opinion of Elias the Prophet that he was to return in Person and to live upon the Earth again before the coming of the Messiah Matth. 17. 10. Why say the Scribes that Elias must first came and Joh. 1. 21. They asked John Baptist whether he were Elias If he were not the Christ Now this erroneous conceipt was grounded upon a false exposition of a place of Scripture Mal. 4. 5. See before Chap. 6. 14 15 c. The same errour they still hold at this day 3. Others said He was one of the Prophets that is one of the old Prophets risen again ut suprà dictum Now in what sense or how some of the People did think Christ to be John Baptist risen again and others that he was one of the old Prophets risen again is somewhat doubtful But it seems most probable that the Jews in our Saviour's time were infected with that heathenish Errour of Pythagor as Plato and other Philosophers of the Gentiles which they held touching the transmigration of Souls that the Souls of men dying do pass from one body into another and so come to live upon Earth again after death in other new bodies Vide suprà Cap. 6. ver 14. c. And this is the more probable because the Jews are reported by their own Authors to hold the like opinion at this very day viz. that every man is born three several times and so that his Soul comes to live in three severall bodies one after another See Purchas his Pilgrimage page 182. Observ 1 Observ 1. That there have been in all Ages of the Church sundry different Sects and maintainers of Heresies and corrupt Opinions in matters of Religion Though there hath been alwayes and is but one truth yet are sundry Errours and corrupt Opinions held against the truth Thus in our Saviour's time there were sundry different Sects as the Pharisees Sadduces and Herodians all differing in Opinion and holding opposite Errours The Pharisees held many corrupt Traditions contrary to the written Word of God by which they made void the Word of God so far as lay in them as we heard before Chap. 7. The Sadduces denyed the Resurrection and held that there is neither Angel nor Spirit wherein they differed from the Pharisees Act. 23. 8. which was the cause of great dissension between those two Sects as appeareth Ver. 7. The Herodians were another Sect differing from both the former who held Herod the Great to be the Messiah as we heard before Ver. 15. of this Chapter Yea there were in our Saviour's time sundry different Sects and erroneous Opinions touching one and the same matter of Faith as here wee see that touching the Person of Christ there were sundry different Opinions and all false and erroneous Some holding him to be John Baptist some Elias c. So was it in the Apostles dayes afterward there were sundry different Sects and Errours maintained against the truth in matters of Religion as those Jews which held a necessity of Circumcision and other Ceremonies after the death of Christ also the Sect of the Nicolaitans holding Fornication to be no Sin who are mentioned Rev. 2. 6. Also Ebion and Cerinthus with their Followers who denied the God-head of Christ Also those that followed Simon Magus the Sorcerer in the City of Samaria holding him to be some extraordinary great Person and to be indued with Divine Power See Act. 8. 10. So afterward in succeeding Ages How many different Sects and Followers of corrupt Opinions in Religion do we read of in the times of the ancient Fathers St. Austin in his Book De Haeresibus reckoneth up the Errours of 90 several Sects or kinds of Hereticks which had been in severall Ages from the Apostles dayes until his own time So in these times of ours there are also many different Sects and maintainers of corrupt Opinions in matters of Religion as Turks Jews Papists Lutherans Anabaptists c. Reasons Reasons 1. God hath decreed to permit such different Heresies and Errours to be holden for the better
Quest Why did our Saviour forbid them to publish it at this time Answ Answ 1. The main reason was this because the time appointed for Christ's glorification was not yet come he was now in the state of his Humiliation and he was yet farther to be abased being shortly to dye yea to suffer the shamefull Death of the Crosse In the mean time the Glory and Majesty of his Godhead and the Excellency of his Person was to be concealed and hid till the time of his Resurrection which was the beginning of his Glorification He was first to suffer and so to enter into his Glory Luke 24. First to be abased before he was to be exalted in Glory This reason is plainly implyed Luke 9. 21. He straitly charged them to tell no man c. Saying The Son of Man must suffer many things and be re●ected of the Elders c. and to be slain and rise again the third Day q. d. Now is no time for you to speak openly of the glory and excellency of my Person that I am the Son of God c. This sutes not with this time of my abasement for I must yet be more abased even to Death and then afterward I am to declare my glory by rising from the Dead the third Day And then after my Resurrection shall be a fitter time than now is for you to publish this Truth which ye have confessed touching my person that I am the Son of God c. This also was one main cause why our Saviour so often forbad his Miracles to be published and made commonly known because the Glory of his God-head which appeared in his Miracles was not to be fully manifested till after his Resurrection And for this cause also Chap. 9. Ver. 9. he forbad his Disciples to tell abroad the glorious manner of his transfiguration in the Mount till after he should be risen from the Dead 2. Another reason may be this because the publishing hereof at this time was not like to do good but much hurt rather For 1. This would have moved many to take the greater offence at the Crosse of Christ if it should have been openly published that he was the Son of God and yet soon he should be so abased and suffer the reproachful death of the Cross 2. If the Truth and Glory of his God-head should have been made openly known this might have hindred his death for none would have dared to put him to death 1 Cor. 2. 8. Sic Piscator Catrwr in Harm et Musculus in Mat. 16. Observ 1 Observ 1. The Truth and Doctrine of God is not to be published or openly professed by us out of due time and season when it may do hurt but in fit and convenient time when God may be glorifyed by the publishing of it See this Point before observed Ver. 26. Observ 2. See here that our Saviour was far from an bitious seeking his own Glory out of due time or before the due time appointed of God for his Glorification By the Apostles publishing of this Truth that he was the Son of God and the true Messiah he might have purchased great Glory yet he would not have it published because the time was not yet come in which his Glory was to be clearly manifested In then ean time he is content to live in a base and contemptible estate To teach us not to seek our own glory honour or credit amongst men out of due time or before the time appointed of God to give us honour either in this life or after this life at the day of Christ We are not then to seek honour or credit with men when God calls us rather to uffer contempt and reproach for his name's sake but we must be willing and well content for a time to be abased and despised in the World till the time come in which the Lord doth think fit to exalt and give us honour we must wait for this time and not prevent it by seeking honour and advance our selves before the due time Joh. 7. 6. when the Kinsmen of our Saviour would have him go into udea there to make himself famous by his Miracles he answereth them My time is not yet come c. that is the due time appointed for clear manifestation of my Glory is not come Vse Use For reproof of such as ambitiously seek their own honour out of due time at such time as God calls them to suffer contempt and to be humbled and abased in the World It was the fault of Baruch Jer. 45. 5. that he sought great things for himself at such a time as the Lord had appointed to humble him by great trial● The fault also of Zebedees Children and their Mother that they ambitiously sought their own honour out of due time namely when they should rather have thought of suffering affliction and reproach with Christ a● he doth imply in his Answer to them when he tells them they should drink of the same Cup with him c. that is of the Cup of Affliction and Reproach Mat. 20. 20. We must take heed of this untimely seeking of our own Glory waiting till the time come which God hath appointed to honour us either in this life or after this life if we be his Children In the mean time be willing to be abased 1 Pet. 5. 6. Humble your selves that God may exalt you in due time Mark 8. 31. And He began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected of the June 26. 1625. Elders c. IN this Verse and the two next is laid down the sixth principal part of this Chapter in which our Saviour taketh occasion to foretell unto his Disciples his Passion and Resurrection which were after to be fulfilled In the words consider 1. The Prediction it self or foretelling of his Passion and Resurrection in this Verse 2. The manner of his foretelling it in the beginning of the next Verse He spake it openly 3. The Consequents that followed thereupon 1. Peter took him and began to rebuke him 2. Our Saviour turning about and looking on his Disciples rebuked Peter Of the first There are two parts of the Prediction or Prophecy of Christ touching himself The first touching his Passion The second touching his Resurrection In the former we may again consider 1. The Prediction or foretelling of this Passion That he was to suffer 2. The Person who was to suffer these things which was himself whom He calleth the Son of Man 3. The necessity of this Suffering in that it is said He must suffer 4. The Passion it self Foretold 1. Generally He must suffer many things 2. Particularly in two kinds 1. Re ected 2. Killed Of the first He began to teach them that is to foreshew or foretell unto his Disciples touching himself And it is not said simply that He taught them but He began to teach them the reason whereof is because our Saviour did not onely this
once foretell his Disciples of his Passion and Resurrection but at sundry times repeating the same matter unto them and putting them in mind of it again and again afterwards as may appear Cap. 9. 31. and Cap. 10. 33. Quest Quest 1. Wherefore or to what end did our Saviour foretell unto his Disciples his Passion Answ Answ 1. To prevent that scandall or offence which otherwise they might have taken at his death and sufferings if these things should have suddenly and unexpectedly hapned to him after they had confessed him to be the Son of God and true Messiah therefore He gives them notice and warning before-hand of his Sufferings that they might not think strange to see him that was the Son of the living God to be reproached and put to death by wicked men and that they should not think He suffered these things out of weakness c. therefore he shew that He knew of all before-hand 2. The better also to fit and prepare them to the bearing of that great trial and affliction which was to happen unto them by occasion of his death and suffering See Mat. 26. 31. Joh. 16. 20. 3. To correct an Errour which the Jews and Christ's Disciples had conceived touching an earthly Kingdom of Christ which as they dreamed should be accompanied with outward Glory and prosperity in this World as may appear Mat. 20. 21. and Act. 1. 6. Therefore our Saviour to draw them out of this Errour tells them before-hand that his Kingdom stood not in outward pomp and glory in this World but that it must be accompanyed with ignominy and baseness and with suffering many things Quest Quest 2. Why did our Saviour at this time and not before foretel his Disciples of his Sufferings Answ Answ 1. To shew one reason why he forbad them before to publish that truth which they had confessed touching his Person that he was the Son of God c. because being afterward to be so much abased in his Sufferings and Death it was not fit the Glory of his God-head should be publickly and openly professed till the time of his sufferings and abasement was past that is till his Resurrection which was the due time for the clear manifesting of his Glory as we heard upon the former Verse 2. Because it was necessary that the Disciples Faith should first be throughly confirmed in the truth of his God-head before he did plainly foretell them of his Passion lest otherwise the hearing of his Sufferings and Death should have caused them to doubt and waver in this Point of Faith Therefore they having now newly confessed him to be the Son of God and he having confirmed them in this Faith by approving and commending that their Confession now was the fittest time for him to begin plainly to teach them the Doctrine of his Sufferings Till now they were not fit to hear this Doctrine because not sufficiently confirmed in the Faith of his God-head Observ 1 Obs●rv 1. Here is an evidence and proof of Christ's God-head or Divine Nature in that He did of himself foresee and know before hand things which were to come as if they were already present and was able to foretell them namely his own Death and Sufferings with the manner and circumstances of it as that it should be a reproachfull Death that he should be rejected and despised at the time of his Death and by what persons he should be so rejected by the Elders c. Also the very place where he should suffer which was at Hierusalem c. Math. 16. 21. All these things our Saviour did of himself know before hand and was able to prophesie of them certainly and particularly before they were fulfilled And this he did by the divine Power of his God-head for it is proper to God onely to know and foretell things to come of himself and without Revelation from any other all things being present to God whether they be thing past or to come This therefore must strengthen our Faith touching the God-head of Christ Observ 2 Observ 2. That our Saviour Christ suffered and dyed for us willingly and of his own accord not by compulsion or being drawn to it against his Will This may appear hence in that he knew before hand that he was to dye and suffer and the very Place and persons that should be the Instruments of his Death namely the Elders chief Priests c. and was able to foretell these things and yet for all this he did not go about at this or any time afterward to escape these Sufferings or to save himself from Death as he could have done as easily as he did foretell it therefore also though he knew that Hierusalem was the place where he was to Suffer yet did not he refuse to go up thither but rather made haste both to the Place and Time appointed for his Suffering Mark 10. 32. As they went up to Hierusalem Jesus went before them c. to shew his forwardness Luke 22. 15. With desire have I desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer Luke 12. 55. Therefore also Joh. 18. 1 2. though he knew that Judas was appointed to betray him and that the same Judas knew the Garden whither he was wont so much to resort yet he did not refrain going thither a little before his Passion but entered in there with his Disciples And being there when Judas and his company came to take him he shewed himself not unwilling but willing to be apprehended For he went out to meet them and when they told him that they sought for Jesus of Nazareth He answered I am He ver 5. See also Joh. 14. 31. To this purpo●e also is that which our Saviour speaketh Joh. 10. 18. No man taketh my Life from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down c. For this cause also he rebuked Peter so sharply for disswading him from it as we shall hear afterward He could have prayed to his Father for more than twelve Legions of Angels to rescue him yet would not Matth. 26. 53. thereby shewing his willingnesse and readinesse to dye and suffer for us and hereof he gave evident Signs also at the very time of his Death as that he dyed sooner than those that were Crucified used to do for when the Souldiers came to break his Legs as the Custom was he was dead before they could do it whereupon Pilate marvailed that he was so soon dead Also in that it is said Joh. 19. 30. That he bowed his Head and gave up the Ghost which shewed his willingnesse to dye Therefore also he is said to have given himself to Death c. to offer himself c. Tit. 2. 14. Object Object He prayes afterward Chap. 14. Ver. 35. that if it were possible c. Answ Answ 1. It was a Conditionall prayer If it might stand with God's Will 2. He prayes not simply that he might not taste of the Cup but
that it might passe from him c. Matth. 26. 39. See afterward upon Chap. 14. Ver. 35. 3. There might be and was in our Saviour as he was Man some Natural loathness to suffer that cursed Death as it was an enemy to Nature It is no sin by a meer natural fear to abhorr Death But when he looked higher at God's Will c. See Dr. Field Vse 1 Vse 1. See by this the unspeakable love of Christ unto us and his earnest desire of our Salvation in that he not onely dyed and suffered for us but also did so willingly readily and chearfully undergo all his Sufferings in that he did so willingly drink of that bitter Cup of the Wrath and Curse of God for us Joh. 15. 13. Greater love hath no man then this that a man lay down his Life for his Friends that is dye willingly for them c. This is that infinite love of Christ which passeth Knowledge Ephes 3. 19. which he manifested by dying and suffering for us so willingly Therefore Ephes 5. 2. Walk in love as Christ hath loved us and gave himself for us c. Now this must draw our Hearts to love him truly again who hath so loved us and to shew our love by our obedience to his Will and by seeking his Glory above all things in the World As our Salvation hath been dear and pretious to him so must his Glory be to us c. Use 2 Vse 2. This is also matter of endlesse comfort to Us and all the Faithful in that Christ's Death and Suffering being voluntary and freely undergone by him are therefore acceptable to God and consequently available to justify and save Us which otherwise they could not have been Therefore Ephes 5. 2. He gave himself for us an Offering and a Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Why was his Death a Sacrifice so pleasing unto God because he willingly gave himself c. If it had not been a free Will-offering it had not been accepted neither could have been a propitiation for us hereupon depends the Efficacy and Merit of Christ's Death and Sufferings that he dyed willingly and in way of obedience to God his Father and so his Death and Sufferings were accepted for us If he had dyed and suffered a hundred times yet if his Sufferings had not been a Sacrifice pleasing to God they could have done us no good nor ever have reconciled us to God c. And they could not have been pleasing to God if not voluntary c. See Hebr. 10. 10. compared with Psal 40. 8. Use 3 Use 3. Christ having been so willing and ready of his own accord to dy and suffer for us this teacheth us our duty which is to be in like manner ready and willing to suffer any thing even death it self for his sake As he willingly for our sakes suffered death yea that most shameful and cursed death so we must willingly suffer any thing in this life for his sake as reproach shame loss of Goods Friends Liberty and life it self if we shall be called to it as Paul Act. 21. 13. So did the Apostles Act. 5. 41. They rejoyced that they were counted worthy c. So the Martyrs suffered willingly for Christ Use 4 Vse 4. We should willingly part with our sins for his sake Tit. 2. 14. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that our Saviour foretelleth his Disciples of his death and sufferings thereby to prepare and arm them before-hand to the bearing of that grievous trial and affliction which was to happen unto them by occasion of his death Hence we learn that Christians have need to be prepared and armed before-hand to bear trials and afflictions as they ought when they come upon them whether they be outward or inward trials Matth. 26. 41. Watch and pray that ye enter not into temptation that is prepare and arm your selves before-hand by Prayer and Watchfulness against the time of trial that ye be not over-come of it Ephess 6. 13. Take unto you the whole Armour of God that ye may be able to withstand in the evill day and having done all to stand Joh. 16. 1. These things have I spoken that ye should not be offended They shall put you out of the Synagogues c. Reason It is a very hard and difficult matter to bear crosses and afflictions well as we ought which cannot be done without special Grace of God enabling us Phil. 1. 29. Unto you it is given to suffer for the Name of Christ Therefore we had need be well prepared and armed before-hand Use 1 Use 1. See by this how needfull for Ministers of the Word often to teach the Doctrine of the Cross instructing their people touching the necessity of Afflictions and touching the nature uses and ends of them and in the helps and means to bear them as they ought Thus doth our Saviour often put his Disciples in mind of the Cross and Afflictions which they should suffer as verse 34. of this Chapter Whosoever will come after me let him take up his Cross and follow me So at other times So the Apostles also do often teach this Doctrine of the Cross As Paul and Barnabas Act. 14. 22. taught the Disciples at Lystra Iconium and Antioch that We must through much Tribulation enter into the Kingdome of God So Paul in all his Epistles So 2 Tim. 3. 12. All that will live Godly c. Use 2 Vse 2. For Admonition to stir us up daily to prepare and arm our selves before-hand for times of tryall and for the bearing of Crosses and Afflictions inward and outward The not doing of this is the cause that many are so unfit and unable to bear troubles when they come and that they are so soon dismayed and discouraged casting away their hope and confidence in God being not able to comfort themselves in God as they should do in the midst of their troubles but are ready to despair of help from God and to fall to murmuring and impatiency All this is for want of being well armed and prepared before-hand to bear trials Therefore let every one of us look that we daily prepare and arm our selvs for the bearing of crosses and troubles when they shall come and for greater trials than we have as yet felt Quest Quest How may we prepare and arm our selves Answ Answ 1. Labour to be well instructed in the Doctrine of the Cross touching the necessity of it for all that will live godly touching the ends and uses to be made of Afflictions and the excellent fruit that cometh of them being sanctifyed to us and patiently suffered 2. Often meditate and think of troubles before they come accompt of them and making them present to us in Meditation even before they come This is to take up our crosse daily as we are required to do Luke 9. 23. 3. Get true Faith in Christ whereby to be assured of God's Love and that all crosses and trials shall work for our
to be understood of his humane Nature for his God-head could neither dye nor rise again Therefore as he dyed according to his humane Nature as we heard before so he rose from Death according to the same Nature Neither is it to be understood of his whole humane Nature but of his Body For his Soul dyed not and therefore did not rise from Death Now for the further opening of the words and of the Doctrine of Christ's Resurrection certain Questions are to be Answered Quest 1 Quest 1. By what power Christ's Body was to be raised from Death Answ Answ By the power of his God-head 1 Pet. 3. 18. Quickened by the Spirit that is by his God-head Joh. 10. 18. I have power to lay down my Life and power to take it up again This was the power of his God-head Object Object God the Father is said to have raised up Christ Ephes 1. 20. Answ Answ It is the same Divine Power which is in the Father and Son by which Christ was raised Joh. 5. 19. Whatsoever the Father doth the same doth the Son also The raising of Christ is the Joynt-work of all three Persons though sometimes attributed to the Father as being the first Person in order of Beeing and Working Quest 2 Quest 2. With what Body was Christ to be raised from Death Answ Answ With the same Body for substance which died and was buried Luke 24. 39. Behold my Hands and my Feet that it is I my self c. I say with the same Body for substance because it was al●ered in quality from what it was before For whereas before it was a meer natural Body now it was become a spiritual Body as the Apostle calleth the bodies of the Saints in the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 44. that is a supernaturall or heavenly Body which was now freed from all naturall Infirmities as from pain weariness h●●ger and thirst c. and was withall endued with more heavenly qualities and properties than before yet so as it was still a true Body c. Object Object Acts 10. 41. He did Eat and Drink with his Disciples after his Resurrection Answ Answ Not for the necessity of Nature but to confirm the Faith of his Disciples and Us in the Truth of his Resurrection Quest 3 Quest 3. Why was it needfull for Christ to rise again from the Dead Answ Answ For these Reasons 1. That the Scripture might be fulfilled which foretold this 1 Cor. 15. 4. He rose again according to the Scriptures His Resurrection was foretold Psal 16. 9. My Flesh shall rest in hope For thou wilt not leave my Soul in Hell or in the Grave or among the Dead c. That as by his Death and Sufferings he made satisfaction to God for our sins and so freed us from the guilt and punishment of them and from the power of Satan So by his rising again he might openly declare and manifest the vertue of his Death that by it he had fully satisfied for our sins and procured pardon and reconciliation with God for us Rom. 4. ult He was delivered for our sins and rose again for our justification that is to declare that we were justified and reconciled to God by his Death Therefore Contra 1 Cor. 15. 17. If Christ be not raised we are yet in our Sins 3. To declare himself to be the Son of God Rom. 1. 4. He was declared to be the Son of God with Power by the Resurrection from the dead 4. That his Resurrection might make way to those other degrees of his Glorification which followed namely to his ascension and sitting at God's right hand c. Use 1 Use 1. To prove unto us the Truth of Christ's God-head and to confirm our Faith therein Rom. 1. 4. He was declared to be the Son of God with Power by the Resurrection from the dead To this very end our Saviour here foretelleth his Resurrection to confirm the Faith of his Disciples touching his God-head Ut suprà dictum Use 2 Use 2. To be matter of unspeakable comfort to the faithful having part in Christ's Death and Resurrection in that He was not onely to dy and suffer for them but also to rise again by the Power of his Godhead thereby to declare and manifest the vertue and efficacy of his Death and Sufferings that thereby He had made full satisfaction to God for all their sins and so freed them from the Guilt and Punishment of the same As if one be Surety for another's debt and be cast into Prison for it if afterward he be let out of Prison this argues that he hath paid the debt or some way made satisfaction to the Creditor So here Christ being our Surety and being cast into the Prison of Death and the Grave for our debt of Sin and Punishment when afterwards He came out of this Prison by rising again the third day hereby He declared and shewed to all the World that he had fully discharged our whole debt to God by his Death and Sufferings even to the uttermost Farthing and so had fully satisfied for our sins and freed us from the Guilt and Punishment of them all For if any one of the sins of the Elect had not been satisfied for Christ could not have risen again but must still have been holden in the Prison of Death and the Grave But now by coming out of this Prison He declared that all our sins are taken away and we justified from them and reconciled to God so that now we need not fear the Guilt of our sins or the Wrath of God due to them nor the sting of bodily death nor the Power of Satan c. but in Christ's Resurrection we may triumph over all these Enemies of our Salvation as the Apostle doth Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect It is God that justifieth Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen again c. Use 3 Use 3. To confirm our Faith touching the certainty of our own Resurrection unto life eternal at the last day to assure us that though our bodies dy and come to the Grave and to dust and rottenness yet shall they be raised again to life yea to a better life which is everlasting in Heaven and that by vertue of Christ's Resurrection For as he that is our Head was not onely to dy but to rise again from death for us so we that are his Members though we dy yet shall we at the last day be most certainly raised to life again by vertue of Christ's Resurrection He was to be raised as the first-fruits of the dead 1 Cor. 15. 20. therefore He being now actually risen we and all the whole Harvest of God's Elect and faithful People shall follow in our time For Christ did not rise again as a private but as a publick Person as our common Head and Saviour to draw all us up from the Grave after him at the last
these things And then in the latter part of the Verse and in the Verse following is mentioned the Event or Consequents following thereupon which are two 1. Peter's carriage towards Christ Taking him aside and beginning to reprove him hoc versu 2. Christ's carriage toward Peter again as also toward the other Disciples When he had turned about and looked on his Disciples c. ver following First Touching the manner of Christ's foretelling his Passion c. He spake that saying openly That is plainly expresly and directly affirming that he must suffer many things c. and not obscurely or darkly foretelling or speaking of these things unto them as formerly he had done as we see in other places Joh. 2. 14. The Son of Man must be lifted up c. This was a dark foretelling of his Death So Joh. 2. 19. Destroy this Temple that is the Temple of my Body by Death and in three Dayes I will raise it up And Matth. 12. 40. As Jonas was three Dayes and three Nights c. In these plaecs he darkly spake of his Death and Resurrection but now more plainly and expresly Quest 1 Quest 1. Why did he now so plainly foretell these things c Answ Answ Because though he had formerly spoken of them yet his Disciples did not yet conceive or understand this Doctrine of his Passion Death and Resurrection by reason it was a high and mysticall Doctrine which seemed unto them to be against reason that he being the Son of God should Dye and Suffer c. And that he who was the Messiah and Saviour of others should not save himself from Death Therefore this Doctrine being so hard for them to conceive and they being yet so ignorant in it our Saviour now doth more plainly teach it them than ever before that so they might conceive it the better and take the more speciall notice of it and to be the better prepared and armed against the scandall of the Crosse Object Object They remained still ignorant here even after this plain teaching as appears in Peter who after this would have perswaded Christ that he should not Suffer as we shall see out of the words immediately following yea Luke 9. 45. Luke 18. 34. though our Saviour foretold them of these things two or three times after this yet they understood him not Therefore it may seem That this his plain teaching and foretelling of his Passion and Resurrection was in vain in respect of his Disciples Answ Answ This followeth not 1. Because though they did not yet comprehend the Mystery of his Death and Resurrection and the reason of it yet they did in some measure conceive his words and believe them also to be true for they were exceedingly grieved to hear him speak the same afterward Matth. 17. 23. 2. Though for the present they understood not his meaning fully yet these Predictions of his passion and Resurrection did long after come into their minds and so did confirm their Faith the more when they saw all fulfilled as he had foretold Quest 2 Quest 2. Why did he not before this time speak to them plainly of his Passion and Resurrection Answ Answ 1. Because this Doctrine was to be revealed by Degrees and not all at once or at the first unto them 2. Because they were not fit to hear this Doctrine plainly taught till now that is to say till after our Saviour had sufficiently confirmed their Faith in his Person that he was the Christ and the Son of God as they had immediately before confessed him to be Observ 1. How hard we are by Nature to conceive and understand the Mysteries of Faith revealed in the Gospel touching Christ and our Salvation by him They are as Riddles to us by Nature before our minds be enlightened by God's Sprit to conceive them See this here in Christ's own Disciples Though he had often before spoken to them and others in their hearing of his Death and Resurrection yet they understood not these things but were still ignorant of them insomuch that he is now fain more plainly than ever before to speak to them of these things yea though he did now speak so plainly yet for all that they did not conceive his meaning as appears by Peter's going about after this to perswade Him that He should not Suffer And therefore our Saviour was fain after all this again and again to teach them this self-same Doctrine as may appear Chap. 9. 31. and Chap. 10. 33. And yet after all this they were still ignorant herein ut suprà dictum est 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man receiveth not the things of God c. How hard was Nicodemus though a chief Pharisee and Ruler to conceive the Doctrine of Regeneration Joh. 3. The Woman of Samaria Joh. 4. Therefore Hebr. 5. 11. the Apostle tells them the things he was to speak touching Christ were hard to be uttered because they were dull of hearing Vse Use See before upon ver 16. Observ 2 Observ 2. Here Ministers are taught their Duty how to carry themselves in the exercise of their ministeriall Function of preaching viz. That in dispensing the hidden Mysteries of Faith they are to labour to teach them with plainnesse and evidence of the Spirit remembring that these Doctrines of Faith are Mysteries to the naturall man yea hard for the Regenerate to conceive And therefore they had need the more to labour for evidence and plainnesse in teaching such Mysteries So our Saviour here c. This plainnesse Paul used in teaching of these Mysteries 1 Cor. 2. 4. My speech and preaching was not with entising words of mans Wisdom but in demonstration of the Spirit and of Power This kind of teaching is most necessary and profitable for the People and therefore they also should desire it So much of the manner of Christ's foretelling his Passion and Resurrection to his Disciples Now followeth the Event or Consequents And 1. The carriage of Peter towards our Saviour set down in the latter part of this Verse And Peter took Him That is took Him aside or apart from the rest of the Disciples 1. That he might the more freely and boldly speak unto Him and admonish Him of this matter being alone and that our Saviour might the sooner hearken unto Him and be perswaded by Him 2. It is also likely That he did this out of reverence to the Person of Christ that he might not seem to disparage Him by an open rebuke before others And began to rebuke Him That is to blame or find fault with Him for affirming that he must Dye and Suffer so many things c. For this was the matter for which he blamed him as appeareth by his words to Christ Matth. 16. 22. He began to rebuke him saying Be it far from thee Lord This shall not be unto thee that is be it far from thee to Dye and Suffer so many things c. or God-forbid that thou shouldst suffer Death c.
of death might pass from him c. Therefore it must needs be very hard for a Christian to overcome this natural fear of death and to be willing for Christ's sake to undergo it Use 1 Use 1. See here again the truth of that we heard before on the former Verse That it is a hard matter to be a good Christian in life and practice For he that will be so indeed must make accompt to lose his own bodily life that is to lay it down and part with it for Christ's sake and the Gospel's if he be thereunto called of God yea before he be called to do it actually he must do it first in heart and affection and that daily He must dy daily for Christ and his Name 's sake as Paul speaketh 1 Cor. 15. 31. Now this is no easy thing to do but very hard and difficult as we have heard To hate our own lives in comparison of Christ and daily to put our life in our hands for his sake c. Oh how hard a thing is to Nature So hard that Nature can never do it of it self neither can it be done without the special gift and grace of God enabling us to it Phil. 1. 29. To you it is given in behalf of Christ to suffer for his sake See therefore how many do deceive themselves in thinking it an easy matter to be a good Christian Vide supra Use 2 Use 2. See what need there is for us daily to fit and prepare our selves for performance of this difficult duty viz. the suffering of bodily death for the Name and Profession of Christ to lay down our lives for his sake if we shall at any time be called to it as we may be and must make accompt to be if God see it good and necessary for his Glory and the furtherance of our own and others Salvation Therefore let us daily fit and prepare our selves unto this great work As we must prepare for other lesser trials and afflictions so especially for this the greatest of all other This is the trial of all trials the cross of all crosses when God calls us to dy for the Name of Christ or to give testimony to his truth This is most properly to take up our cross as Christ did for he took up and did bear the cross on which he was immediately after to dy for us c. So must we daily prepare to take up our dying Cross or the Cross and Affliction of Death for his Name 's sake Hard it is to take up the Cross in our life-time by Sickness Poverty Disgrace Loss of Goods Friends c. but all this is nothing to this taking up our Cross in death and by death for Christ's sake and the Gospel's Therefore if there be great need to prepare daily to bear other trials how much more to endure this Therefore be careful hereof and because of our selves we cannot do it seek to God by Prayer and use all other good helps to enable us But more of this afterward Now to speak more particularly of the words Whosoever will save his life that is Whosoever shall desire or seek to preserve his bodily life from danger and shall refuse to hazard or lay it down for my sake or for the Profession of my Name and Gospel when he shall be called thereunto and will rather deny me c. That this is the meaning may appear by that which followeth Our Saviour doth not simply condemn the care of preserving our bodily life for this care is necessary and it is a sin to neglect it but his purpose is to condemn the inordinate and preposterous care of preserving bodily life when it is preferred before the seeking of Christ's Glory by Obedience to his Will and by Profession of his Name and Gospel He shall lose it that is He shall forfeit and deprive himself of life yet not onely of his bodily life although he shall at length be deprived of that also forasmuch as it is appointed for men once to dy Hebr. 9. 27. but he shall lose and be deprived of that eternal life of Soul and Body which God hath prepared in Heaven for his Elect. Note that this threatning of the loss of eternal life is not to be understood absolutely but with the condition or exception of Repentance as all other like threatnings found in Scripture that is to say unless such a one do afterward repent of this sin of preferring the safety of his own life before the honour of Christ and the Obedience which he oweth to his Will Doct. Doctr. That such as desire or seek to save the temporal life of their bodies with the denial of Christ or of his Word or do refuse to part with their bodily lives when they are called so to do for the Profession of Christ and the Gospel they are in danger to lose and to be deprived of eternal life The manifest Doctrine of this place lying plain in these words Whosoever will save his life shall lose it that is Whosoever seeketh to save or keep his bodily life from danger by the denial of Christ c. shall be deprived of life eternal The same Doctrine is taught else-where by our Saviour as Matth. 10. 39. He that findeth his life shall lose it that is He that seeks to find it or thinks to find or save it by the denial of Christ when he should lose it by confessing him And Ver. 33. Whosoever shall deny me before men though it be for the saving of his life him will I also deny before my Father which is in Heaven So Joh. 12. 25. He that loveth his life shall lose it viz. He that loveth it too much and inordinately so as he will rather deny Christ or His Word than part with his life c. Reason Reason 1. It is a great Sin against God and dishonour to Christ for any to prefer the safety of their bodily lives before his Glory and the Profession of his Name Now all sin deserves eternal death and consequently the loss of eternal life 2. The Justice of God requires that such as refuse to part with their temporall Life in this World for Christ's sake should be deprived of eternal life in the World to come unlesse they speedily repent for this Errour Vse 1 Use 1. See how fearful and dangerous for any to deny Christ or his Truth or any part of it for the saving of their bodily Lives in time of Persecution or otherwise No small sin but hainous and grievous a damnable sin such as is like to cost them dear who commit it unless they truly and in time repent of it It shall cost them the loss of Heaven and of eternal Life as our Saviour here threatneth This was the sin of Peter which through infirmity he fell into and it had cost him the loss of eternal Life if he had not repented of it with bitter tears The like sin have many other fallen into in
time of Persecution for the Gospel both in antient and latter Times of the Church So in Queen Maries Reigh though many lost their Lives for Christ and the Gospel yet divers others did for the saving of their Lives either deny or dissemble the Truth when they were called to confesse the same before the Enemies of it Let us by these and the like Examples be moved to fear and take heed of this dangerous sin of preferring our bodily Lives before the profession of Christ and the Gospel Let us beware of seeking or going about to save our Temporall Life by denyall of Christ or of the Gospel or of any part of the Truth of God at such time as we are called to profess it Though we may seek the safety of our bodily Life by all lawful means yet not by unlawful not by denying Christ or his Word or by refusing to confesse the same when we are thereunto called Then we must contemn our Lives yea lose a hundred Lives if we had them c. Therefore take heed of so doing consider the danger that will follow This is the way to hazzard yea to lose the eternal life and happinesse of our Souls and Bodies in Heaven Be not so foolish therefore as to adventure so great a loss for so small a gain to hazzard eternal Life for this Temporal Life c. He were a foolish Marchant who would adventure the losse of a thousand pounds for a Commodity not worth a hundred pence So here c. Use 2 Vse 2. See how such deceive themselves who think to do good to themselves and to provide for their own welfare and happinesse by denying or not confessing Christ or his Truth when they are thereunto called thereby to save their bodily Lives For the Truth is They are here in their own greatest Enemies doing themselves the greatest hurt that may be and providing worst for themselves of all other For to gain a Temporal Life for a short time they deprive themselves of eternal Life to escape Temporal Death of the Body they bring upon themselves eternal Death of Soul and Body in Hell Thus by seeking to save their Life by unlawful and sinful means they lose it and by seeking to escape Death they run into it Now followeth the second Reason used by our Saviour to perswade Christians to take up their Cross in Death or by dying or laying down their Lives for Christ's sake which is taken from the great Benefit or Reward promised to all such as do so in these words But whosoever shall lose his Life for my sake c. The meaning Whosoever shall lose his Life That is shall be content and willing to part with the Temporal Life of his Body or to be deprived of it For my sake That is For my Glory and for profession of my Name And for the Gospel's sake That is for the profession of the Gospel and in defence and maintenance of the truth of it By the Gospel understand the Doctrine of eternal Life and Salvation preached by Christ himself in his own Person upon E●●th and commanded by him to be preached afterward by his Apostles and other Ministers of the Church to the end of the World The same shall save it That is he shall not onely recover again his bodily life at the Day of generall Resurrection but shall also be partaker of eternal life of Soul and Body in my heavenly Kingdom Observ 1 Observ 1. It is the Duty of all good Christians to be content to lose and part with their bodily Lives for the Name of Christ and profession of the Gospel whensoever God calls them so to do This is the Duty which our Saviour here commendeth and unto the practise whereof he perswadeth all Christians by promising a great Reward to such as do it viz. Eternall Life So in other places also he requireth this as a Duty at the hands of Christians Luke 14. 26. If any come to me and hate not his Father Mother c. yea and his own Life also he cannot be my Disciple Not that he must simply hate his Life but in comparison of Christ and so as to be willing for his sake to part with it See also ver 33. Example of this in Peter Luke 22. 33. Lord I am ready to go with thee to Prison and Death And though he failed in performance of what he professed yet it is enough to shew that he thought it his Duty to dye for Christ So Paul Acts 21. 13. Rev. 12. 11. They loved not their lives unto the Death This hath also been practised by sundry Saints and Martyrs in all Ages of the Christian Church which shews They thought it to be their Duty The Apostles Stephen Justin Martyr Cyprian c. And the Martyrs of latter times Quest Quest When is a Christian called of God to part with his bodily Life for the profession of Christ and the Gospel Answ Answ When the case so standeth That he cannot retain or keep his Life in safety without denyal of Christ or of the Gospel or without concealing or dissembling of some part of the Truth and Doctrine of Christ at such time as he is called to confesse the same As in time of Persecution if one be called before Authority and required to deny Christ or the Gospel under pain of the losse of his Life or to confesse any part of the Truth of the Gospel with the hazzard of his Life Thus were the Martyrs in all Ages called to part with their Lives for the profession of Christ and of the Gospel And in like case it is the duty of all Christians willingly to forgo their Lives for Christ and the Gospels sake Reas 1 Reas 1. The Glory of Christ ought to be more dear and pretious to us than our own Lives Now by professing Christ and the Gospel we glorify the Name of Christ Ergo for this professions sake c. Acts 20. 24. Reas 2 Reas 2. Christ himself was content to lose and part with his bodily Life for our sakes thereby to work our Redemption and Salvation Joh. 10. 15. I lay down my Life for the Sheep Ergo. Reas 3 Reas 3. Examples of the Saints and Martyrs Vide supra Vse 1 Use 1. See here again how hard it is to be a good Christian in practise For how hard is this To lay down our Lives for Christ and the Gospel c Vide Supra the general Doctrine Use 2 Use 2. Teacheth us not to be too much in love with this Temporal Life of our Bodies nor to set our Hearts upon it but to use and enjoy it and all things of this Life as if we used them not Seeing we must part with this Life for the Name of Christ and profession of the Gospel whensoever we shall be thereunto called Now this we can never do so long as our Hearts be too much set upon this Life Therefore take heed hereof Matth. 6. 25. Take no thought for your
Life c. Remember that if we will be Christ's Disciples we must hate our Lives c. No cause to be in love with this Life being so vain and transitory yea so wretched and miserable full of Troubles c. Use 3 Use 3. To examine our selves whether we be truly willing and content to part with our Life for Christ c. Are we content to part with all things of this Life c Use 4 Use 4. To move us every one to prepare and arm our selves before hand for the practise of this Duty viz. to part with our own bodily Lives for the profession of Christ and his Gospel if we shall at any time be called so to do as we know not but we may Though now we enjoy our Lives in peace together with the free profession of Christ and the Gospel yet Times may alter and God may call us to hazzard our Lives yea to lose them for the Name of Christ as the Martyrs did c. Therefore good wisdom it is to provide for the worst that may come and to fit and stirr up our selves before hand to lay down our Lives for Christ's sake and the Gospel's if we be called to it And so much the rather we had need thus to prepare forasmuch as this is so hard and difficult a matter to put in practise c. Vide supra the second use of the general Doctrine from this Verse Therefore labour daily to fit and prepare our selves to take up our Crosse in Death and by Death as well as in our Life time for the Name of Christ c. That we may be the better prepared use these Helps 1. Pray unto God daily to fit and prepare us to this great and difficult work if he shall call us to perform it Seek to him for spirituall strength to enable us for Christian courage and resolution of Heart that we may not be dismayed with fear of Death but that we may be able to vanquish this fear which is so natural to us and willingly to lay down our Lives for the Name of Christ c. 2. Labour for true Faith to be assured of the pardon of our Sins and of God's love and favour in Christ Then the sting of Death being taken away we shall not fear it but willingly Suffer it for Christ c. 3. Get true love of Christ in our Hearts This will constrain us to professe his Name and Gospel even with losse of our Lives To this end labour for true feeling of his infinite Love shewed to us in laying down his Life for us c. 4. Labour to be well grounded in the certain hope of the Resurrection of our bodies unto Life at the last Day 5. Lastly Look at the Reward of eternal Life promised But of this afterward in the next Observation Use 5 Use 5. If it be our Duty to lose and part with our bodily Lives for the profession of Christ and the Gospel how then much more to part with all other things of this Life which are but accessaries to it as Goods Lands Houses Liberty Country Friends Children c. See Luke 14. 26. And ver 33. Whosoever he be of you th●t for sakes not all he hath he cannot be my Disciple Mark 8. 35. For whosoever will save his Life c. Dec. 4. 1625. Observ 2. SUch as are content to lose and part with their Temporal Life for the profession of Christ and of the Gospel shall receive the Reward of eternall Life after this Matth. 10. 39. He that loseth his Life for my sake shall find it Joh. 12. 25. He that loseth his Life in this World shall keep it unto life Eternall Revel 2. 10. To the Church of Smyrna Be thou faithfull unto Death and I will give thee the Crown of Life If such as forsake House or Lands or Friends for Christ's Name shall hereafter receive the Inheritance of Eternal Life Matth. 19. 29. much more such as forsake Life c. Caution Caution Though they shall receive the Reward of Eternal Life yet they do not merit or deserve the same at the Hands of God by suffering Death for Christ's sake and the Gospels as Papists teach that the Martyrs do but this Reward shall be freely given them by vertue of God's Promise in Christ It shall not be given for the Dignity of Martyrdom or for the merit of Suffering but because the Martyrs are in Christ shewing their Faith in Him by suffering for his Name and Gospel Reason Reason Such as lay down their Lives for Christ do thereby honour Him and his Truth Therefore He will honour and reward them not onely in this Life but especially after this life with Eternal Life and Glory hereafter Vse 1 Use 1. See the happy and blessed estate of such as Suffer Death for the Cause of Religion that is for the Name of Christ or for profession of the Gospel That which is spoken in generall of such as suffer Persecution in this World for the Name of Christ Matth. 5. 12. the same is true of such as Suffer Death for the Name of Christ or the Gospel That great is their Reward in Heaven They are sure to be partakers after this Life of that eternall Life and Glory of God's heavenly Kingdom If they be blessed and happy who suffer smaller Afflictions and Trialls in this Life for the profession of Christ and the Gospel As 1 Pet. 4. 14. If ye be reproached for the Name of Christ happy are ye c. Then much more blessed are they who suffer Death it self the greatest of all outward Trialls for Christ's sake and the Gospels If they be blessed which dye in the Lord Rev. 14. 13. because their Works that is the Reward of their Works doth follow them then much more happy are those which dye not onely in the Lord but for the Lord. The World doth use to judge them miserable who suffer Death of the Body though it be for Christ's sake c. because such are deprived of the benefit of this present Life and of all Earthly things here enjoyed but the Word of God doth call and accompt such to be most happy and blessed because in stead of this Temporal Life they are made partakers of a heavenly and eternal Life in God's Kingdom Therefore let us so esteem and accompt of all the holy Martyrs who have thus suffered Death for Christ's Name and Gospel that they are most happy and blessed in their Life and Death yea whatsoever kind of Death they dyed though never so painfull c. This hinders not their happinesse but they are now Crowned with eternal Life and Glory as the Reward of their Suffering Therefore great cause have we to bless God for the Faith constancy and patience which he gave to the Martyrs in suffering Death for the Name of Christ and for Testimony of his Truth in that they are by this means translated out of this wretched Life and made partakers of so blessed
a condition in God's heavenly Kingdom Vse 2 Vse 2. See here a forcible motive to move and encourage us willingly to suffer Death or to part with our bodily Lives for the profession of Christ and of the Gospel if at any time we shall be called of God unto it Consider the excellent and blessed Reward promised to us for so doing viz. the Reward of eternal Life and Glory in Heaven after this Life ended An eternal weight of Glory A Crown of Life shall be given us So we shall gain much more then we lose by losing this Temporal Life we shall gain eternal Life This losse shall be no losse to us but the greatest gain that may be If to dye any Death be a gain to the Saints Phil. 1. 21. then much more to dye for Christ or the Gospel No Death indeed but an exchange of Temporal Life for Eternal of Earthly for Heavenly A gainful exchange as of Copper for Gold c. We lose not our Lives but lend them to the Lord for a time to receive them with advantage Think well of this excellent Reward of eternal life promised to such as lay down and lose their Temporal lives for Christ's cause and the Gospel's that it may encourage us to do it willingly if God call us thereunto Moses in suffering Affliction with God's People had respect to the recompence of Reward Hebr. 11. 26. So must we if we would willingly suffer Death for the Name of Christ or for the Gospel we must look beyond Death at the joy set before us as Christ did Hebr. 12. 2. This will make us willingly to part with this Life and to imbrace Death for Christ's sake c. When Stephen was ready to Suffer Death for the Name of Christ he looked up stedfastly into Heaven and saw the Glory of God and Jesus standing on the Right hand of God So must we by Faith labour to do c. This will comfort and encourage us against Death and cause us willingly to lay down our lives for Christ c. Thus have the Martyrs comforted themselves at the time of their Death with the hope of eternal life which they expected after this Life Mr. Bradford to his fellow Martyr Be of good comfort saies he we shall have a merry Supper with the Lord this Night c. Saunders kissing the Stake said Welcome everlasting Life John Noyes kissing the Stake also said to his fellow Martyrs We shall not lose our Lives in this Fire but change them for a better and for Coals have Pearls c. Observ 3 Observ 3. Our Saviour doth not say Whosoever shall lose his Life c. But whosoever shall lose it for my sake c. Here we are taught That it is not simply the suffering of Death or of any other affliction which hath the Reward of eternal Life promised unto it but it is suffering in a good cause which shall be so Rewarded Not all that suffer shall be partakers of eternal Life but such as suffer for well-doing for professing Christ and the Gospel and for giving testimony to the Truth of God 1 Pet. 4. 16. If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God c. Matth. 10. 39. He that loseth his Life for my sake shall find it Martyrem facit non poena sed causa Cyprian Though a man could suffer not one but many Deaths yet if it be not in a good Cause as in way of well-doing and for the keeping of a good conscience he is never the nearer to eternal Life 1 Cor. 13. 3. Though I give my Body to be burned and have not love it profiteth me nothing that is if I do it not out of true love to God and Man and to a right end as for the glorifiing of God by constant profession of his Truth or otherwise Use 1 Vse 1. See what to judge of such as suffer Death in evil Causes or for evil ends as either for vain-glory as the Heathen to shew contempt of Death and Fortitude of mind or in defence of errour or sin as Hereticks Donatists Papists c. No promise of Reward to such c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See that if we would by suffering Afflictions or Death it self gain eternal Life it is not enough that we suffer but we must see it be in a good Cause as in the cause of Christ or of the Gospel for profession of the Truth or otherwise for the keeping of a good conscience This is the main thing to be looked to in Suffering The matter is not what we Suffer but for what cause and to what end c. Observ 4 Observ 4. For my sake and the Gospel's In that our Saviour joyneth these two together Himself and the Gospels as one and the same cause of loving Life and of Suffering Death Hence we may gather That to Suffer Death for the Gospel of Christ is to Suffer it for Christ himself And that these two causes of Suffering Death are one and the same in effect and substance neither can they be divided or severed one from the other He that loseth his Life for Christ's sake loseth it for the Gospel's and he that loseth it for the Gospel's loseth it for Christ's Therefore our Saviour here joyneth these two together as one and the same in substance For my sake and the Gospels So Revel 2. 13. To the Church of Pergamus Thou holdest fast my Name and hast not denyed my Faith in the dayes wherein Antipas my Martyr was slain among you c. My Name That is The profession of Me. My Faith That is My Doctrine of Faith Reason There is a near affinity and special relation between Christ and the Gospel and that in three respects 1. In that Christ as He is God is the Authour and efficient cause of the Doctrine of the Gospel It is not a Doctrine devised by Men or Angels but proceeding from God the Father Son and Holy Ghost as from a Fountain 2. In that Christ as Mediatour doth reveal this Doctrine from the bosom of his Father See Joh. 1. 17 18. 3. In that Christ is the main substance and matter of the Gospel which is contained in it The whole Doctrine of the Gospel is concerning Christ directly or indirectly either concerning his Person and Office or concerning the Benefits we have by Him or the means of applying Him c. Use Use To be a motive and encouragement unto us willingly to lay down our Lives and to suffer Death not onely for Christ's sake but also for the profession of his Word and Gospel to seal and confirm the Truth of it even with the loss of our Lives if we shall be called so to do as the Martyrs have been To encourage and move us hereunto let us know and consider That in laying down our Lives for the Gospel we do lay them down for Christ himself whose Gospel it is and who is himself not onely the Authour and Revealer but
also the substance of this Divine and heavenly Doctrine of Salvation Therefore if we would willingly dye for Christ's sake let us as willingly dye for the Gospel's sake and for the profession of it Remember how Christ doth in this place promise the Reward of eternal Life not onely to such as lose this Temporal Life for His sake but also to such as lose it for his Word and Gospel's sake And let this move us to be willing to part with our Lives not onely for Christ's sake but also for the Gospel's sake especially seeing it is so that in suffering for the Gospel we do suffer for Christ also c. Now that we may be able and willing thus to lay down our lives if need be in defence of the Gospel of Christ we must daily prepare and arm our selves for the practice hereof To this end 1. Labour to be well grounded in the sound Knowledge of this Doctrine of the Gospel using all good means to this end as diligent hearing of this Doctrine preached to us diligent searching of the Scriptures that the Word of Christ may dwell in us richly Col. 3. 16. 2. Labour by true Faith to believe and be perswaded of the divine truth and certainty of this Doctrine of Christ and not onely so but to apply the same unto our selvs particularly for our comfort Then we shall be moved to stand out unto the death in defence of it 3. Labour to entertain the true love of the Gospel and Doctrine of Christ in our hearts else we shall never be content to lay down our lives in the defence and maintenance of it c. Such as esteem so little of this Word and Doctrine of Christ and have so little love and desire to it how would they be content to dy in defence of it Mark 8. 36 37. For what shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole World and lose his own Soul Or Jan. 1. 1625. what shall a man give in exchange for his Soul IN the beginning of the former Verse our Saviour shewed the great hurt and danger which cometh of seeking to save the temporal life of our bodies by denying Christ or his truth and Gospel or by not confessing the same when we are thereunto called That such as so do shall forfeit or lose the eternal Life and Salvation of their own Souls and Bodies And this he used as one Reason to perswade Christians to part with their bodily lives for Christ's sake and the Gospel's Now in these two next Verses he confirmeth his Reason by shewing further how great a loss and dammage it is for a man to lose or be deprived of the eternal Life of his Soul which he sheweth 1. By comparing this losse with the gain of the whole World and shewing it to be greater in the 36th Verse What shall it profit a man c. 2. By shewing the irrecoverableness of this losse or the impossibility of redeeming the losse of a man's Soul by any way or means in the 37th Verse Or what shall a man give in exchange c. What shall it profit a man What good shall it do him What benefit shall it be to him q. d. None at all This Interrogation hath the force of an earnest Negation If he shall gain the whole World This is not so to be taken as if it were possible for any one man to gain the Right and Possession of all the World but it is an Hyperbole by which more is spoken than is to be understood q. d. If he shall gain or get unto himself never so much even the whole World if it were possible By the World understand metonymicè all temporal good things in this present World which may be any way helpful to a man or do him any good as profits pleasures honours c. 1 Joh. 2. 15. Love not the World nor the things that are in the World c. Ver. 16. All that is in the World the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eyes and the Pride of Life And lose his own Soul that is If he shall be deprived of the eternal Life and Salvation of his Soul in God's heavenly Kingdom or if he shall fail or come short thereof Note here also that the Soul being the principal part of man is by a Synechdoche named for the whole Person consisting of Soul and Body Therefore Luke 9. 25. it is said If he lose himself Doctr. 1 Doctr. 1. That the eternal Life and Salvation of Man's Soul in God's heavenly Kingdom is a matter of great worth and excellency A Blessing of great value and price if it be rightly estimated This appears here in that our Saviour doth prefer it before the gain of this whole World and of all the good in it affirming that the gain of all that is in the World will not countervail the loss of one Soul 1 Pet. 1. 8. This is reckoned as the greatest Blessing which the Faithful have by believing in Christ that by this means they receive the end of their Faith even the Salvation of their Souls Therefore also the Apostle the more to set forth the excellency and worth of this benefit doth call it there the end of our Faith For if Faith be a precious Grace as it is called 2 Pet. 1. 1. being but the means of attaining to Salvation how much more precious is Salvation it self being the end of our Faith Now the Worth and Excellency of the Salvation of Man's Soul may further appear by these following Reasons 1. By the excellency and dignity of the Soul of man in its own Nature in that it is a spiritual Substance and immortal never dying or perishing as the Souls of Brute-beasts do but living for ever even after the death of the body And this excellency of the Soul is confirmed by the manner and order which God himself observed in creating the Soul of the first man in that he did not make it of the dust of the earth as he did the Body but made it of nothing breathing it immediately from himself to shew that it is of a more divine Nature than the Body Gen. 2. 7. Vide Chrysost in Psal 48. pag. 668. 2. By the excellency of that estate and condition whereof the Soul of Man being saved is made partaker after this life in Heaven which is an estate of perfect happiness Set forth in Scripture by most excellent Names and Titles it is called a Crown of Life and a Kingdom 1 Pet. 1. 4. An Inheritance immortall undefiled c. 2 Cor. 4. 17. An eternall weight of Glory 1 Cor. 2. 9. Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard c. 3. By the excellent and precious means ordained of God for the procuring and working of the Salvation of Man's Soul viz. The precious Blood of Christ the Son of God that is to say his precious Death and Sufferings 1 Pet. 1. 18. Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver
appears in that our Saviour threatens that he will be ashamed of such at his second coming Therefore Paul gives special warning to Timothy to take heed of this Sin of being ashamed of the testimony of the Lord that is of the Profession and Preaching of the Gospel before men 2 Tim. 1. 8. Be not thou ashamed c. This was the sin of Nicodemus that he was ashamed to profess Christ openly before men and therefore he came to him in the night lest he should be seen Joh. 3. 2. It was also the Sin of those Rulers mentioned Joh. 12. 42. who believed on Christ but durst not confess him lest they should be shamed by being put out of the Synagogue For they loved the praise of men c. and this is there noted as a great fault and sin in them Reas 1 Reas 1. To make outward profession of Christ and his Word before men is a especial duty required of all Christians as we have before heard Therefore to be ashamed to do it is a great sin Reas 2 Reas 2. It is a great dishonour to Christ and disgrace to his Word and Doctrine for any to be ashamed of professing Him or his Word before Men and consequently a great sin As for a Souldier to be ashamed of his Captains or a Servant of his Master c. Use 1 Vse 1. To reprove such as are guilty of this sin of being ashamed of professing Christ or his Word before Men Some are afraid they shall be mocked or counted Puritans c. No small or leight sin but hainous Our Saviour threatens to be ashamed of such at the Day of Judgment This sin alone therefore is enough to condemn a man at that Day if it be not repented of Such also are reproved here who are ashamed to give accompt of Faith being required by such as have Authority over them as by Pastors Parents c. Such of younger sort who are ashamed to answer questions of Carechism c. Such also as are ashamed to pray read conferr of the Scriptures before others c. Use 2 Vse 2. For admonition to take heed of this great sin of being ashamed of Christ and his Word before Men. Let not fear of worldly shame hinder us in this Duty of professing Christ and the Gospel of Christ before Men when we are called so to do Be content to suffer any shame or disgrace in the World rather then deny Christ or not confess Him and his Truth c. Remedies against this Sin 1. Consider the dignity and excellency of Christ and of his Word how worthy they are to be professed by us The dignity of Christ in that he is the Son of God and true Messiah our onely Saviour and Redeemer c. The dignity of the Word of Christ in that it is the onely Word of Life and Doctrine of Salvation c. Therefore it is no shame but a great honour to be a professour of Christ and of the Gospel If it be an honour for the Servant of some Noble man or Prince to profess his Master's name much more for a Christian c. Paul Gloryed in the Cross of Christ Gal. 6. 14. that is in the profession of Christ Crucified And he often calls himself a Servant of Jesus Christ 2. Look at the examples of the Saints and Faithful who have not been ashamed of professing Christ and his Word before men when they were called to it Paul Rom. 1. 16. I am not ashamed of the Gospel c. David Psal 119. 46. not ashamed to speak of God's Testimonies before Kings The Martrys were not ashamed to confesse Christ and his Truth before their Adversaries These we must imitate not being ashamed to profess Christ and his Word yea to suffer for this profession if need be 1 Pet. 4. 16. If any suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but Glorifie God in this behalf 3. Consider that Christ our Saviour was not ashamed to dye and suffer the wrath of God and cursed Death of the Crosse for our sins Hebr. 12. 2. He endured the Cross despising the shame c. Therefore we are not to be ashamed to confesse Him and his Truth though with hazzard of Life c. Despise all shame that may be cast on us for the Name of Christ 4. The Wicked are not ashamed to commit sin they are not ashamed to deny and dishonour Christ and his Truth Esay 3. 9. They declare their sins and hide them not c. And shall we be ashamed of professing Christ and his Truth both by Word and Deed c 5. Lastly Consider the danger of being ashamed to confesse Christ or his Truth He will be ashamed of such at his second coming c. But of this afterward Mark 8. 38. Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of Me c. Febr. 5. 1625. NOW followeth the occasion of this sin of being ashamed of Christ c. The profane and wicked People or Persons amongst which they lived Described by a twofold property or attribute 1. Adulterous Generation 2. Sinfull The meaning In this Adulterous Generation c. Or amongst this Adulterous Generation He seemeth principally to understand the wicked Nation of the Jews as they were at that Time especially the Scribes and Pharisees with such other who were greatest Enemies of Christ and the Gospel The more probable because he had before called them thus Matth. 12. 39. An evil and adulterous Generation seeketh a Sign c. So the words contain a sharp reproof of the Jews indirectly yet this is further to be extended to all other profane and wicked Nations or People amongst which the Disciples of Christ or any other good Christians should live at any Time Generation Put here for a Naturall Stock Progeny or Posterity Adulterous Generation That is a degenerate spurious or bastardly Brood or Progeny such as were not the true and lawfull Posterity of those whose Posterity they professed and boasted themselves to be that is to say of Abraham Israel and the other Patriarchs and Fathers in the old Testament Joh. 8. 39. They boasted That Abraham was their Father Therefore our Saviour here to convince their Hypocrisie calls them an Adulterous Generation that is a bastardly Brood to shew That although they were by natural Birth descended of Abraham and the other holy Fathers yet they were not the true and lawful Posterity of those Ancestors in regard of spirituall Birth because they did not walk in the steps of the Faith of Abraham and the Fathers but were Unbelievers neither did they do the Works of Abraham that is they lived not holily and uprightly as he did but profanely and wickedly therefore he calls them a sinfull Generation So Joh. 8. 39. If ye were Abrahams Children ye would do the Works of Abraham And he does not call them Adulterous Children but an Adulterous and sinfull Generation implying that not onely themselves but their next and immediate Parents and Ancestors were degenerated
it up for his Name 's sake and profession of his Truth and having for their better encouragement thereunto mentioned his Glorious coming at the last Day and that to this end to give reward to such as have suffered for the profession of his Name as appeareth by comparing the last Verse of the former Chapter with Matth. 16. 27. Now the better to confirm their Faith touching the certainty of that his Glorious coming at the last Day notwithstanding the deferring it he doth in these words assure them that some of his Disciples there present should ere long see an extraordinary and sensible Representation of that his Glorious coming namely at the time of his transfiguration in the Mount Where 1. Consider the manner of our Saviour's foretelling the Glory of his Transfiguration with an earnest Asseveration Verily I say unto you 2. The matter foretold by Him That some of those which stood there should not taste of Death c. Of the first And he said unto them Verily I say unto you Touching this Asseveration see before Chap. 3. 27. Observ 1. It is lawful sometimes to use such vehement or earnest Asseverations to confirm the Truth of that we speak so it be not too commonly nor in leight matters but in matters of weight c. See Chap. 8. Ver. 12. Use Vse Reproveth the too common and frequent use of such obtestations even in trivial matters which is an abuse of them Contra Mat. 5. 37. Observ 2 Observ 2. A difference between our Saviour Christ's teaching and the Teaching of all other Ministers of the Church whether Prophets Apostles or other Pastors He taught in his own Name and by his own Authority as Lord of his own Doctrine Therefore he used this Preface often I say unto you But all other Teachers teach in the Name of another that is to say in the Name of God or of Christ and by Authority from him See more Chap. 3. 28. Of the second The matter it self foretold by our Saviour in these words There be some of them that stand here c. First I will open the meaning of the words being somewhat obscure Some of them that stand here that is Some of Christ's twelve Apostles or Disciples which were there present with the Multitude and before our Saviour when he uttered these words Now how many of his Disciples and who they were that are here meant we shall hear in the following Verse viz. Peter James and John who saw Christ's Transfiguration Shall not taste of Death that is Shall not dy or depart this life by bodily death Shall not feel or have experience of Death It is a Metaphorical Speech borrowed from the Hebrews who were wont to compare Afflictions and Death it self to some bitter Potion or Cup of Drink and the feeling of such Afflictions and pains of Death to the drinking or tasting of such a Cup. So here and else-where Heb. 2. 9. that Christ should taste death for every man So Joh. 8. 52. Thou sayest If a man keep my Saying he shall never taste of Death Till they have seen The meaning is they should see it while they were alive in this World or being in this life and there is more to be understood than is expressed viz. that they should not onely see it before they dyed but even out of hand or shortly within a few dayes as appeareth in the following Verse After six daies c. The Kingdom of God come with Power These words are diversly interpreted Some by the Kingdom of God understand the Preaching of the Gospel to all Nations after Christ's Ascension into Heaven and upon the sending of the Holy Ghost in that extraordinary manner Act. 2. And in this sense the Kingdom of God is sometimes taken Now further by the coming of God's Kingdom with Power the same Interpreters do understand the manifestation of God's wonderful Power in the Preaching of the Gospel to all Nations But if the words be taken in this sense they do not seem to have so plain a coherence with the former words of Christ in the end of the former Chapter Therefore other learned Interpreters do refer the words unto the glorious Transfiguration of Christ which the Evangelist recordeth in the Verses immediately following And so by the Kingdom of God they understand nothing else but the Kingly Glory and Majesty of Christ himself the Son of God and true Messiah and by the coming of this Kingdom with Power they understand to be meant the powerful manifestation of that Glory of Christ which was soon after to be fulfilled at the time of his Transfiguration in the Mount And this I take to be the meaning of the words for these Reasons 1. Because in this sense they agree well with the words immediately going before in the last Verse of the former Chapter And Matth. 16. 27. where our Saviour mentioned his glorious coming to Judgment at the last day whereof his Transfiguration was a special shadow and resemblance 2. Because immediately after these words all the Evangelists do set down the story of Christ's Transfiguration 3. Because 2 Pet. 1. 16. the Apostle who was one of the three that saw it making mention of the Transfiguration of Christ doth speak of it in like manner as our Saviour himself doth in this place calling it The Power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ In the words thus explained consider these particulars 1. The Persons of whom our Saviour foretelleth this That they should see the Glory of his Transfiguration Some of his Disciples that stood there 2. What they should see The Kingdom of God come with Power 3. The time when they should see this Before they dyed They shall not taste of Death till they have seen c. Touching the Persons we shall hear more particularly out of the Verse following Therefore I defer to speak of them till we come to that place Now followeth the matter it self which they should see accomplished shortly The coming of God's Kingdom with Power Where are two things expressed 1. That they should see the Kingdom of God come that is The sensible manifestation of Christ's Glory and Majesty at the time of his Transfiguration 2. The manner of declaring or manifesting that his Glory with Power Observ 1 Of the first Observ 1. Though the Glory and Majesty of Christ's God-head did for the most part ly hid under the Veil of his Flesh during the time of his Humiliation upon Earth that is to say until his Resurrection yet even in that time of his Humiliation he did sufficiently manifest that his Divine Glory as occasion was offered So here he tells his Disciples and the rest of the People present that his divine Glory and Majesty should shortly be so clearly and sensibly manifested at his Transfiguration that some of his Disciples should see the manifestation of it with their bodily eyes And so they did afterward as we shall hear in the following Verse So at many other
estate as the Saints of God as well as others must come unto and passe through A cup which they all have or must taste of in due time And shall we then refuse to taste of it together with them Shall we desire to be exempted from the common condition of all the Saints and Servants of God which have gone before us or shall follow after us How unfit and unequal a thing were this Let us therefore labour willingly and chearfully to do that which all the Saints of God either have done before us or must do after us that is to dye or taste of Death when our time shall come What though Death be painful in it self and tedious to Nature yet remember that the pains of Death are no other but such as the dear Saints and Children of God have suffered and tasted of before us or must do after us And shall we then fear them or be dismayed at them In the pains of any Sickness or Disease it is a great comfort to us if one tell u● he hath suffered the same or the like pain before us especially if he be a good man that hath indured it before us So here c. Besides the Death of the Godly usually is nothing so painful as of the Wicked because the bitterness thereof is sweetned to them by the comfortable feeling of the pardon of their sins and of God's love in Christ c. as also with hope of the Life to come Vse 3 Use 3. To comfort us in the Death of our Christian Friends Children c. They are gone the same way that all the Saints of God are gone before them or must go after them Therefore if we have any good Ground whereupon to perswade our selves that they have dyed well and in the Lord Death cannot make them miserable but happy c. Observ 4 Observ 4. From this manner of Speech used by our Saviour They shall not taste of Death we may gather That although the Saints of God as well as others must dye or come unto Death yet they shall but taste of it They shall not drink of thi● bitter Cup to the bottom or dreggs but leightly sip of it as it were that is have some leight feeling and experience of the pain of it Besides though they do dye yet they shall not remain under the Power of Death nor continue in the state of it for ever but shall be raised again to Life yea to an eternal and most blessed and glorious Life at the last Day Though they must taste of the Cup of Death yet they shall not be drunken with it as the wicked shall be that is overcome of it or overwhelmed by it but it shall passe from them as it did from Christ Therefore the Death of the Saints is called a Sleep and they are said To rest in their Graves as in Beds for a Night that is for a short time till the Day of Resurrection Use 1 Use 1. See a difference between the Saints of God and the wicked in their Death The wicked drink deep of the Cup of Death even to the dreggs so as to be overcome and swallowed up of it But the godly do onely taste leigthly of Death and so as they scarce feel the bitterness of it in comparison of the wicked The bitternesse of Death is past to them even before they dye Again the wicked remain in Death being passed from Temporal Death to Eternal not so the godly c. Vse 2 Use 2. Comfort to the Godly and Faithful against Death consider that though Death be in it self bitter and grievous to Flesh and Blood yet they shall not feel the pains of it in extermity or in great measure but rather leightly and moderately they shall but leightly taste of this bitter Cup and that for their good and furtherance of their eternal happiness after this Life The pains of Death shall be mitigated to them by the feeling of God's love and mercy towards them in the midst of Death and with hope and assurance of eternal Life which shall make Death so sweet that it shall seem no Death unto them Besides they shall have but a sho●t taste or feeling of Death Though they dye they shall not continue in Death nor under the Power of it but their Bodies shall be raised to Life again at the last Day and in the mean time their Souls immediately after Death do live with God in his heavenly Kingdom Mark 9. 2. And after six Dayes Jesus taketh with him Peter and James and John and leadeth them up into a April 16. 1626. high Mountain apart by themselves and he was transfigured before them IN the former Verse as we heard our Saviour darkly foretold the Glory of his Transfiguration which was shortly after to be manifested to some of his Disciples then present with him Now in the next place the Evangelist recordeth the actual fulfilling of that glorious transfiguration of Christ setting down the History of it ver 2 c. Which History is the more excellent because it doth set forth before us alively representation of the divine Glory and Majesty of Christ's God-head together with the excellency of that blessed estate of the Saints in Heaven after this Life in which they shall more fully see Christ's Glory and be partakers in it Amplitudinem majestatem hujus historiae neminem puto mortalium concipere animo nedum linguâ exprimere posse saith Musculus upon this place Which being so we are to attend the more diligently to the matter of Doctrine which shall be taught us out of this excellent History and to be the more affected with it Now in this History we have sundry things to consider as they are set down by the Evangelist 1. The circumstance of Time when this transfiguration of Christ happened After six Dayes 2. The persons chosen by our Saviour to be present with him at the time of his Transfiguration as witnesses of it Peter James and John whom he took with him 3. The place where he was transfigured A high Mountain into which he led up those three Disciples apart 4. The transfiguration it self set down partly in fine ver 2. and partly ver 3. He was tranfigured before them And his Rayment became shining c. 5. Some special accidents or circumstances which happened at the time of his Transfiguration and did accompany the same set down to u● ver 4 5 6 7 8. 6. The Consequents which fell out immediately after this Transfiguration of our Saviour which are set down ver 9 c. Of the first After six Dayes These words have relation to the time or day in which our Saviour uttereth those words mentioned in the former Verse That some there standing should not taste c. q. d. Six dayes after that he had spoken those words to his Disciples and others then present Object Luke 9. 28. It is said It was about eight Dayes c. Answ Though there be some
at his Crosse that is at this Death and Sufferings whereof he had a little foretold them as we heard Chap. 8. ver 31. lest they should think he dyed of weakness or willingly and not rather because it was the Will of his Father that he should suffer for man's Redemption therefore he now manifested his divine Power and Glory of his God-head to shew that he was as well able if he would and if it might stand with the Will of God his Father to save himself from Death as he was to manifest his heavenly Glory at this time in this wonderfull manner Therefore no cause for them to take offence at his Sufferings or thereupon to doubt of his Person whether he were the Son of God and true Messiah but that they ought undoubtedly to believe him so to be notwithstanding his Death and Sufferings which must after be fulfilled For though he should dye and Suffer yet not unwillingly or of weaknesse but to fulfill the Counsell and Will of God his Father touching man's Redemption And besides though he dyed yet should he not remain in Death but raise himself by the Power of his God-head c. 3. To confirm their Faith touching the certainty of his glorious coming to Judgment at the last Day and of that heavenly reward which he would then give them for all their sufferings for his Name and so to comfort them against the Cross c. 4. To comfort them with hope and assurance of that blessed state of the Saints in Heaven after this Life in which they should more perfectly see his Glory Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this Glory of Christ in his Transfiguration was revealed to him and to the three Disciples while they were at prayer in the Mount as we have heard we may observe and learn The excellent Fruit and Benefit to be reaped by being conversant in the duty of prayer This is a speciall means whereby God doth reveal himself and his Glory to his Saints and a speciall means whereby the Saints of God do usually attain to a more clear sight and knowledge of divine and heavenly things Hence it is That we read in Scripture that the Lord hath so often revealed himself and his Will in speciall and extraordinary manner to such as have been exercised in prayer as to Damel Chap. 9. ver 21. while he was speaking to God in prayer the Angel Gabriel is sent to him to touch him and to inform him both of the deliverance of the Jews out of Captivity and of the Coming and Death of the Messiah c. So Acts 10. 3. Cornelius being in prayer had an Angel sent to him c. So ver 9 10. Peter at prayer fell into a Trance and saw Heaven opened c. So Acts 9. 12. while Paul was at prayer Ananias was sent to him to put his hands on him and to open his eyes and to baptize him And experience may teach this unto the Saints of God that prayer is a speciall means to obtain from God the sight and knowldge of his Glory and of his heavenly Will and that the Lord doth never so clearly and comfortably reveal himself and his glory to them nor the knowledge and experience of things spirituall and heavenly as he doth by means of prayer and oftentimes in the very time of their prayers Use Vse To encourage us to be frequent and diligent in this excellent duty of prayer upon all occasions not onely in publick or in company with others but also in private Ephes 6. 18. Pray alwayes with all manner of prayer c. that so by this means the Lord may be pleased to reveal himself and his glory and his heavenly Will to us more and more that by frequency and constancy in this holy exercise we may come to have nearer communion with God and to see his Glory yea to partake in it after a sort in this Life As Christ by prayer received this heavenly Glory from his Father which made his face to shine as the Sun So by this holy and heavenly exercise we shall be in some sort tranfigured or changed into that glorious Image of God by it we shall obtain more and more heavenly Wisdom and Knowledge of God which will make our faces to shine as the face of Stephen did like the face of an Angel Acts 6. 15. or as the face of Moses after he had been with God in Mount Sinai Exod. 34. Eccles 8. 1. The wisdom of a man maketh his face to shine c. True of heavenly Wisdom which is obtained by prayer Jam. 1. 5. Not that we are now to expect such extraordinary Visions or Revelations from God in prayer or that Angels should be sent in visible shapes to us as they have been to many heretofore in the beginning of the Church but because the Lord doth still reveal Himself and his Will and his heavenly Glory to his Saints in and by this holy exercise of prayer To quicken and stirr us up unto it Observ 2 Observ 2. From this brightness and glory of Christ's Face and Garments which appeared in his Transfiguration we may have a manifest proof and evidence of his God-head or divine Nature that he was not onely true Man but true God in one and the same Person For this outward Glory of his humane Body was nothing but an effect and sensible Sign and Token of the divine Essence of his God-head nothing but a little beam issuing or proceeding from the body or sustance of that uncreated Sun viz. the God-head of Christ Therefore as the created Sun in the firmament is known and discerned by the beams of it So here c. As this God-head of Christ was proved by all his Miracles as we have often heard before so also by this his Glorious Transfiguration which may likewise be reckoned amongst his Miracles But having often spoken of this point before I will not here insist on it Mark 9. 3. And his Raiment became shining c. May 7. 1626. Observ 3 Observ 3. FRom this Glory of Christ which appeared in his Transfiguration we may gather the greatness and excellency of that Glory and Majesty which now he hath and enjoyeth in Heaven at the Right hand of God which also he shall manifest in his second coming at the last Day If the Glory which he shewed in the Earthly Mount were so great that it made his Face shine as the Sun and his Garments to become as perfectly white as the Snow and as the Light how much more Glorious is he now being in heaven not onely as he is God but in humane Nature c His face doth now far exceed the brightness of the Sun and of all the Starrs joyned together in one See this Point further opened ver 6. Infra Note here that the Glory of Christ's which was manifested in his Transfiguration is the same in nature and substance with that Glory and Majesty which he hath now in Heaven even
us then work out our Salvation as the Apostle willeth us let us strive to enter in at the straight Gare as our Saviour warneth us Luke 13. The rather because many shall strive and not be able because they strive not enough or not in due time or not in due manner and by the right way and means See then that we strive as we ought by true Repentance of our sins taking pains to mortify our wicked Lusts daily And by true Faith in Christ fight the good fight of Faith and so lay hold on eternal Life strive also by patient Suffering of the Crosse and all Afflictions of this Life though never so painfull and tedious for the Name of Christ and for obtaining of that incorruptible Crown of Glory in the Life to come Heaven is worth our pains c. It is an everlasting Reward which shall never cease c. Observ 4 Observ 4. If the Body of Moses were now raised to Life by the Power of God and united to his Soul as it seems probable that it was that so he might appear with Christ in the Mount in his own Soul and Body then here is one proof and evidence to confirm our Faith touching the Resurrection of our bodies to eternall Life and Glory at the last Day The same Power of God which raised the Body of Moses to Life and re-united the same to his Soul after he had been dead so many hundreds of years can also quicken and raise our bodies and joyn them to our Souls again at the last day c. But I will not insist upon this Now followeth the Conference of Moses and Elias with Christ while they appeared with him in the Mount They were talking with Jesus What they talked of is particularly expressed by Luke Chap. 9. ver 31. That they spake of his decease or death which he should accomplish at Hierusalem that is they fore-told or prophesied unto Christ touching his Death and Sufferings which he was afterward to suffer at Hierusalem Quest Quest Why did they now foretell his Death and Sufferings seeing our Saviour himself had plainly foretold the same before unto his Disciples as we heard in the former Chapter ver 31. Answ Answ The more to confirm the Disciples Faith touching the truth and certainty of his Death and Sufferings and the better to arm them against the scandal and offence which otherwise they might afterwards take when they should see him whom they had confessed to be the Son of God to dy and suffer therefore besides his own testimony foretelling his Sufferings as we heard before here is also added another extraordinary testimony beyond all exception even the testimony of Moses and Elias brought down from Heaven to testify before-hand of the Death and Sufferings of Christ because the Disciples were hard to conceive and believe that he who was the Son of God and Saviour of others should himself be subject to death and they were very apt to be offended hereat as we heard before in Peter Chap. 8. 32. Therefore to prevent this offence as much as might be and to strengthen their Faith the more it was appointed of God that Moses and Elias appearing now in heavenly Glory with Christ in the Mount should in their Conference wit him give testimony of his future Death and Sufferings Where also it is to be observed that it seems probable this Conference was in the hearing of the three Disciples being present because it was for the strengthning of their Faith and not to teach or inform our Saviour himself touching his own Death which he knew well enough before Observ 1 Observ 1. In that the Disciples were so hard to conceive and believe the Doctrine of Christ's Death and Sufferings that they must be often told of it and now Moses and Elias must come down from Heaven to testify it again to them We learn that by Nature and of our selves we are very slow and hard to conceive and believe the mysteries of Christian Faith and Doctrine taught in the Gospel concerning Christ as concerning his Person and Office concerning his Death and Sufferings and our Salvation by it c. Also concerning the necessity of the Cross and Afflictions in this life for all Christ's Disciples that through many tribulations we must enter into the Kingdom of God c. How hard are we by Nature to conceive and understand these and such like mysteries of Christian Faith and much more to believe and apply them effectually and savingly to our selves So hard that we cannot with once or twice teaching learn and embrace these Doctrines as we should but we have need to be often taught the same over and over again yea we have need not onely of earthly but even of heavenly Teachers to instruct us in these mysteries we had need of Moses and Elias to come from Heaven if it were possible to teach us these things as here they did unto Christ's Disciples on the Mount Luke 24. 25. O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken Ought not Christ to have suffered these things c. Use 1 Use 1. See what need we have to be often taught and instructed in these hidden mysteries of God's Kingdom which are above humane reason and therefore so hard for us to conceive and believe We have need of precept upon precept line unto line c. Vse 2 Use 2. See what need both for Ministers and People to joyn Prayer unto God with all their preaching and hearing that the Lord may by his Spirit enlighten our minds and open our hearts as the heart of Lydia to conceive and believe these heavenly mysteries of God's Kingdom Observ 2 Observ 2. In that Moses and Elias appearing with Christ in glory did talk with him about his Death and Sufferings to be fulfilled afterward and that in the hearing of the Disciples We learn further that in the life to come we shall not onely enjoy the company but the Conference of the Saints and especially of Christ himself we shall not onely be with him but we shall also speak with him and hear him speak to us though not after an earthly manner yet after a far more excellent and heavenly manner So also with the Saints in Heaven we shall have Conference in heavenly manner Reason Reason We shall have true bodies consisting of all the parts and members of them and among other parts we shall have our tongues and lips which are instruments of Speech and our ears which are instruments of Hearing Now these parts of the body may seem to be in vain and to serve for no use in Heaven if it were so that there should be no use at all of Speech or of hearing others speak unto us Therefore it seems most probable that we shall in some sort both speak and confer with the Saints of God and with Christ himself as he is man and hear them also speaking to us in that heavenly life But if
cold and from the annoyance and injuries of Wind and Weather Such Tabernacles or Tents Peter would have to be suddenly built or set up for Christ and for Moses c. Therefore he does not mention the building of great or strong Houses which was a matter could not be so soon done as he desi●ed Now whereas he doth not desire that one Tabernacle onely should be built for them all but three severall ones The reason hereof may be this because he thought it not meet or convenient for three such excellent and worthy Persons to have but one Tent or Pavilion to dwell or abide under Therefore he would have three Tents built and the rather as it is likely to the end that himself and the other two Disciples then present might the more conveniently dwell and remain with Christ in his peculiar Tent or Tabernacle Further we must here note That although it was a good and commendable thing in Peter to be affected with joy and delight in the presence and company of Christ and of Moses and Elias in the Mount and with the sight and beholding their Glory and to desire the society of Christ and the Saints yet in uttering these words he failed and was faulty many wayes yea he committed grosse Errours and Absurdities 1. He was faulty in desiring that our Saviour should continue and dwell there in the Mount in Glory and not depart thence any more But how unfit and inconvenient had this been 1. By this means our Saviour should have been hindred in the course of his Ministery that is in the execution of his publick Office of preaching and working Miracles in other places as he was appointed of his heavenly Father 2. By this means the work of our Redemption had been hindred for if he had continued still in that heavenly Glory in the Mount then could he not have gone up to Hierusalem to Dye and Suffer there neither would any man living have ever dared to lay hands on him or to put him to Death if he should still have continued in this heavenly Glory and Majesty in which he now appeared 3. This was also flat contrary to that which both our Saviour himself and also Moses and Elias had a little before foretold concerning him viz. That he must Dye and Suffer at Hierusalem 2. He erred grosly in desiring that Moses and Elias being glorified Saints of Heaven should not onely appear on Earth with Christ for a little time as now they had done but should also take up their dwelling upon Earth again and so utterly forsake their heavenly Mansions in which they had hitherto lived so many hundreds of years This was impossible for so they should have lost and been deprived of the blessed sight and immediate presence of God in the third Heavens which hitherto they had so long enjoyed He should rather have desired to go up to Heaven with them than that they should stay on Earth with him 3. He erred in supposing that either Christ or Moses or Elias remaining in such heavenly Glory as now they appeared in upon the Mount could stand in need of earthly Houses or Tents to dwell in and to cover and defend them from the injuries of the Sun or Ayr. 4. He seemeth faulty also in comparing and equalling Moses and Elias which were but Servants with Christ himself their Lord and Master for he motions the building of severall Tabernacles for them all three alike and without difference Thus we see how many Errours and Absurdities Peter committed and how great corruption and weaknesse he discovered in this one Speech here uttered to our Saviour One Question yet remans for the cleaing of the words Quest Quest How Peter knew Moses and Elias now appearing in Glory and could call them by their Names seeing he never saw them before Answ Answ It is probable That he knew them either by the conference which passed between Christ and them or else by speciall and extraordinary Revelation from God some other way Vide Calvin in locum Now follow the Instructions from the words And 1. From that which was good and commendable in Peter 2. From those things wherein he failed and was faulty Of the first Observ 1 Observ 1. In that Peter was affected with such joy and delight in the presence and company of Christ and of Moses and Elias appearing with him and at the sight of that heavenly Glory in which they appeared that all his desire was to stay and continue there in the Mount and to build Tabernacles c. Hence we may gather That the state and condition of the Saints in Heaven after this Life shall be a most joyfull delightfull and comfortable condition to be in so full of joy and contentment that they which are once partakers of it shall desire above all things to continue in it and never to come out of it or to part with it If it were thus with Peter and the other two Disciples on the earthly Mount when they had but a little taste and saw but a little glimpse of that Life to come How much more with the Saints in Heaven when they shall fully enjoy that blessed condition If they conceived so great delight and contentment in the bare sight of Christ's heavenly Glory and of the Glory of Moses and Elias that they desired to dwell there with them how much greater contentment shall the Saints in Heaven find and feel when they shall in their own persons be made partakers of that heavenly Glory If they felt such joy and delight in the sight and beholding of the Glory of Christ and of Moses and Elias notwithstanding that they were at the same time astonished with some fear at the sight hereof how much joy and delight shall the Saints in Heaven feel being then freed from all fear and astonishment Now that the state of the Saints in Heaven shall be full of joy delight and contentment to those that enjoy it and such an estate as they shall still be in love with and desire to enjoy may thus be-further proved 1. By the excellent and comfortable Names and Titles given unto it in Scripture It is sometimes called by the name of Joy Matth. 25. 21. Enter into thy Master's Joy where also note the greatness of it in that it is not said That joy should enter into him but he into it It is called also fulness of Joy Psal 16. 11. It is called sometimes a Crown and a Kingdom and an eternall weight of Glory an incorruptible Inheritance c. All which are joyfull and comfortable Names and Titles which argue great and unspeakable joy comfort and contentment to be in that estate It is called also eternall Life for the same cause Life being a joyful sweet and comfortable thing which every one desireth naturally and which we are never weary of but desire still to enjoy it So that heavenly Life c. Heaven is called a Paradise c. Rev. 21. compared to a rich
necessity of them in regard of the fulfilling of the Prophecies which went before of him The rather because this Article of Christ's Sufferings is the ground of all true comfort against our sins and fear of God's Wrath. For to this end suffered he to make satisfaction to God for our sins and so deliver us from the guilt and punishment due unto them as we have heard before Mark 9. 12. That he must suffer many things c. Januar. 7. 1626. Observ 2 Observ 2. HEnce gather that whatsoever Christ suffered or was to suffer for us it was ordained appointed of God before-hand and that it was agreeable to the Counsel and Will of God for otherwise he would not have in spired and moved the Prophets to fore-tell these Sufferings of Christ so long before This therefore shews that it was the Purpose and Will of God that Christ Jesus his Son should dye and suffer so many things for us So it is expresly said Act. 2. 23. that he was delivered to death by the determinate Counsel and fore-Knowledge of God Now this maketh greatly for our Comfort For if Christ suffered according to the Counsel and Will of God then we need not doubt but his Death and Sufferings were acceptable and pleasing to God and consequently effectual to redeem and save us from our sins and to pacify the Wrath of God towards us Therefore Ephes 5. 2. it is said that Christ gave himself for us an Offering and Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour The Sufferings of Christ were an acceptable Sacrifice to God The reason was because this Sacrifice was offered according to the Will of God and Christ Suffered all that he Suffered by his appointment as appears by this that God did by his Prophets fore-tell long before whatsoever Christ was to Suffer Think of this for our comfort That as Christ hath Suffered many things for us so he Suffered all according to the Counsell and Will of God who did fore-tell all those Sufferings long before by his Prophets and therefore we may be assured that God could not but accept of the Sufferings of Christ as a satisfaction and full price for our sins Our comfort stands not simply in the Sufferings of Christ but in this that his Sufferings are accepted of God for us c. So much of Christ's own Sufferings which himself here expresly mentioneth and fore-telleth Now further by this express mention of his own Sufferings which were to come he doth hereby secretly imply that in like manner Elias that is John Baptist was to Suffer much at his coming that is many Abuses and Indignities at the hands of men And so much is here to be understood by us though it be not expressed in the Words for otherwise the sentence seemeth to be imperfect And by comparing this place of St. Mark with that Matth. 17. 12. it may appear that our Saviour's purpose in these words was so to compare his own Sufferings and the Sufferings of John together as to exemplify and prove the one by the other mutually that is to say not onely to confirm the Truth of John's Sufferings by example of his own but also on the other side to confirm the truth and certainty of his own Sufferings to come by example of John's Sufferings which were already past Jansen in locum ex Beda Observ 1 Observ 1. There must be a conformity and likeness between Christ himself and his faithfull Servants in Suffering many Afflictions and Miseries in this Life it is so ordained of God Our Saviour here implyeth that as it was written in the Prophets that himself should Suffer many things so also it was ordained and appointed of God that John Baptist his faithfull Servant and Harbinger should Suffer in like sort many Abuses and Indignities in the World at the hands of wicked men The same is true of all other faithfull Servants of Christ that as in other things they must be conformable to the Image of Christ their Lord and Master So in this particular of suffering and induring many and great Afflictions and Tryalls in this World Rom. 8. 39. He that will be Christ's Disciple must take up his Crosse and follow him as we have heard Chap. 8. 34. 1 Pet. 2. 21. Christ in Suffering left us an example that we should follow his Steps His Suffering was not onely meritorious but exemplary not onely to merit forgiveness of Sins and Salvation for us but also to be a president of Suffering to us to shew that as he Suffered many Afflictions and Miseries for us So must we be like unto him in Suffering many Crosses Afflictions and Tryalls in this World for his sake The true members of Christ must be conformable to him their Head As he Suffered many things before he entred into Glory so must they Therefore Revel 1. 9. John professeth himself to be a Companion with the rest of the Faithfull in the Kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ and not onely in his Kingdom but in his patience that is in the patient Suffering of such Afflictions as Christ himself Suffered before him Use 1 Use 1. See then that if we will be Christ's true Disciples and Servants indeed and truth as we professe to be we must make accompt to Suffer many Afflictions and Miseries in this World as Christ our Master hath done before us We must follow him and be like unto him in Suffering the Crosse if ever we look to be like him in Glory Let us therefore prepare and arm our selves daily for the bearing of the Crosse yea for the Suffering of many Troubles and Afflictions after the example of Christ our Head prepare to undergo many Abuses Wrongs and Indignities in the World as he hath done before thee To this end pray and labour for true faith patience and Christian courage without which Graces thou canst never be able to Suffer so many Afflictions and Tryalls as thou must make accompt to Suffer in this World Vse 2 Use 2. This is a ground of comfort and patience to us to move us willingly and contentedly to take up our Crosse that is to submit our selves to the bearing of Troubles and Afflictions in this Life Seeing it is so ordained of God and therefore necessary and fit that by this means we should be conformable to Christ our Head which we should by all means desire to be Therefore if thou be a good Christian never be dismayed with thy Troubles nor unwilling to bear them but rather rejoyce and comfort thy self in them all with the example of Christ The more Troubles thou Sufferest the better the more like thou art to Christ who was a man of sorrows 1 Pet. 4. 12 13. Think not strange concerning the fiery Tryall c. But rejoyce in as much as ye are partakers of Christ's Sufferings c. In all thy Troubles thou art a sharer with Christ himself be glad of this Phil. 3. 10. Paul counted all things Dung that he might
he was before us It is the Speech of an antient Father Voluit Christus deseri voluit prodi voluit ab Apostolo suo tradi ut tu cum sis desertus à socio proditus ab amico moderatè feras Ambros in Luc. Mark 9. 30 31 32. And they departed thence c. July 1. 1627. THese words contain our Saviour's prediction or foretelling of his future Passion and Resurrection to his Disciples where three things have been propounded to consider 1. The occasion of the prediction His departure with his Disciples from the place where he wrought the former miracle and his private passage through Galilee with them ver 30. 2. The prediction it self ver 31. 3. The effect in the Disciples ver 32. They understood not that saying c. Of the first The occasion I have already spoken last day Of the second The prediction itself 1. He foretelleth his Passion 2. His Resurrection Touching his Passion or Sufferings two things to be considered 1. The person who was to Suffer viz. Himself whom he calleth the Son of Man 2. The Sufferings themselves Of the former I spake lately upon ver 9. Touching the latter they are set down by the parts or kinds of them being two 1. That he should be delivered into the hands of Men. 2. That he should be put to Death by them Of the first I spake the last Sabbath Now followeth the second part of his Sufferings foretold viz. His Death And they shall kill him Of this see before chap. 8. ver 31. Now followeth the foretelling of his Resurrection upon the third day which is also handled before chap. 8. 31. To proceed therefore to the 32. ver where is laid down the effect which followed in the Disciples which was two-fold 1. That they understood not that saying That is the Doctrine of Christ's Passion and Resurrection which he taught them 2. That they were afraid to ask him Touching the first See Luke 9. 45. Object Object Matth. 17. 23. It is said They were exceeding sory upon his foretelling his Death Now if they understood not what he meant Why should they be striken with sorrow upon his words Answ Answ No doubt but they understood the words themselves uttered by our Saviour for they are plain and easy to be conceived but they understood not the matter it self throughly that is to say the mystery of his Death how he that was the Son of God and true Messiah as they had confessed him to be should dye or be put to death much less did they conceive fully the mystery of his Resurrection how he being dead should rise again the third day after Quest Quest What was the cause of this their ignorance that they could not conceive this mystical Doctrine of Christ's Death and Resurrection Answ Answ There was a three-fold Cause especially 1. Their natural blindness and dulness to conceive these mysteries of Faith 2. That erroneous and prejudicate opinion which they had conceived and were so much rooted in touching a Temporal and Earthly Kingdom of Christ as we have often heard before 3. Their natural unwillingness to hear of Troubles which they might well conceive would befall them when Christ should Suffer Observ Observ Even the best Christians are by nature and of themselves hard to conceive and understand the mysteries of Faith and Doctrines of the Gospel as touching Christ's Person and Office and our Salvation by him c. Especially such Doctrines as are most contrary to natural reason and our carnal affections as the Doctrine of the Cross c. See before ver 10. of this Chapter and chap. 8. ver 16. Now followeth the second Effect or Consequent in the Disciples They were afraid to ask him Viz. Touching the meaning of his words and of the Doctrine which he had now taught them concerning his future Death and Resurrection Quest Quest What was the cause of this fear in them Answ Answ 1. They feared shame and disgrace by acknowledging their ignorance 2. They feared lest for this their ignorance and blindness in the Doctrine of Christ's Passion and Resurrection they should be sharply taxed and reproved by Christ their Master even as Peter had been not long before for the like ignorance discovered in going about to disswade Christ from Suffering chap. 8. ver 33. And herein they discovered their great infirmity in that they would rather remain still in ignorance then suffer shame or reproach for their ignorance Observ 1 Observ 1. The preposterous fear of getting shame and disgrace by acknowledgment of our ignorance is one great hinderance to the gaining of more knowledge by the instruction of others in things spiritual and heavenly This hindred the Disciples from being further and better instructed by Christ at this time in the mystery of his Death and Resurrection because they were afraid of shaming themselves by acknowledging their ignorance c. And experience shews this to be true in many amongst us who being ashamed to bewray their ignorance by asking profitable questions about matters of Religion or the Word of God either of their own Pastors or of other Christians do thereby deprive themselves of a great deal of Christian knowledge and instruction which they might receive from others But let us take heed of this preposterous and vain fear of shame or disgrace by bewraying our ignorance in asking questions or seeking instruction from others in the things of God and of his Word For the truth is this is no shame at all but a shame it is to continue in ignorance blindness and errours for want of seeking knowledge when we have the means vouchsafed us of God Observ 2 Observ 2. See here how backward loth and unwilling we are by nature to be admonished and reproved for our faults and corruptions yea how backward even good Christians and the Saints of God are to suffer the word of Reproof in that Christ's Disciples were so afraid of being reproved by him for their ignorance that they would rather continue in it than acknowledge it and seek to him for further instruction at this time See 2 Chron. 16. 10. Now if this be true of good Christians such as Christ's Disciples much more of others being void of sanctifying Grace Hence it is That men are so apt to hate and dislike such as reprove their Sins Amos 5. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the Gate c. And for this cause Ahab hated Elijah and Michajah because they told him of his Sins c. And Gal. 4. 16. The Galathians thought Paul to be their enemy because he reproved the corruptions amongst them in Doctrine and Life And experience shews the truth of this how backward and unwilling men are to be admonished and reproved for their sins so backward that many shun the very company and sight of such as have a Calling to reprove them And some refuse to come to their own Pastor if he send for them to admonish them in private of some
the Son c. seeing this sending doth imply a superiority of power c. Now there is no superiority or inferiority of Power or Authority amongst the persons in the Trinity but they are all equall Answ Answ 1. C●r●st is to be considered of us two wayes 1. As he is God in respect of his Divine nature and essence and so he is equall with God the Father 2. As he is Mediatour as God incarnate or made man and in respect of his Office now thus he is inferiour unto the Father and that by voluntary submission of himself to take on him this Office and thus he ●s said to be sent of God the Father 2. The Calling or sending of Christ to be Mediator is the joynt action of all the three persons al●hough it is in Scripture attributed to God the Father as being the first person in order of beeing and of working Observ 1 Observ 1. That the love and honour that is shewed unto Gods Messengers which are sent of him unto us is shewed unto God himself Therefore our Saviour here sayes That whosoever should receive him that is sh●w love and respect to him while he lived on earth the same should be accounted to receive and honour God the Father who sent him into the World Now that which Christ here speaketh of himself as he was a Messenger sent from God into the World the same is true of all other Messengers of God which he sendeth unto us that look what love and respect or honour we shew to them the same we shew to God himself who sends them unto us Joh. 13. 20. Verily verily I say unto you he that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me Use Use See then how carefull we should be to shew all due love and respect to Gods Messengers and Ministers sent unto us to do his Message that is to teach and reveal his will unto us seeing the love and honour we shew to them is shewed unto God himself who sends them and so doth the Lord himself accept and take it As on the contrary he takes it as a dishonour to himself when his Messengers and Ministers are either hated or dishonoured and despised Luke 10. 16. He that despiseth you despiseth me c. Take heed therefore of this reigning sin of these times and on the contrary remember and think often of that exhortation of the Apostle 1 Thess 5. 12. We beseech you Brethren to know them which labour among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you and to esteem them very highly in love for their works sake and be at Peace among your selves Observ 2 Observ 2. That Christ Jesus our Saviour did not take upon him the Office of a Mediator of himself without a Calling but he wa● Called and appointed thereunto of God the Father he was sent of his Heavenly Father into the World to execute that Office Joh. 6. 27. Him hath God the Father Sealed that is appointed him to the Office of a Mediator Hebr. 5. 5. Christ glorified not himself to be made an High Priest but he that said unto him Thou art my Son c. Joh. 8. 42. I proceeded forth and came from God neither came I of my self but he sent me Use 1 Use 1. This teacheth us herein to follow Christ's example not thrusting our selves into any Office Calling or Action whatsoever without a lawfull Calling and warrant from God himself but first to be assured in our Consciences that we are thereunto designed and appointed of God And this assurance must be in two things 1. That the Calling Office or Action which we take upon us be in it self lawfull and good 2. That we are thereunto lawfully Called and appointed being qualified and fitted of God in some measure with gifts for the same Especially this is true of those Callings and Offices that are most weighty and important as the Calling of the Ministry that none ought to enter into it without warrant from God that is untill he find himself in some measure furnished with Gifts fit for that Calling that so he may have the seal of his Calling in his own Conscience c. Then shall he be able to perform the Duties of that Calling with comfort and to go therein with courage and constancy notwithstanding all difficulties and troubles and dangers c. He may look for Gods Protection c. So in every other Calling Psal 91. 11. Use 2 Vse 2. Hence gather that God cannot but accept and be well pleased with all that Christ did and suffered for us as Mediator and in the work of our Redemtion in that he did and suffered nothing but by speciall Calling and appointment from God his Father who Ordained and sent him into the World for this end to work our Redemption by dying and suffering for us which being so God could not but accept well of his death and sufferings as a satisfaction for our sins which is matter of great comfort to us c. See before upon ver 12. of this Chapter Observ 3 Observ 3. The great and unspeakable love of God towards us and care of our Salvation in that he Called and sent his Son Christ Jesus into the Word to be our Mediator and to work the work of our Redemption 1 Joh. 4. 9. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his onely Begotten Son into the World that we might live through him This Calling and sending of Christ to be our Mediator and Redeemer doth exceedingly commend the love of God towards us especially if we consider that he Ordained him to this Office from everlasting before the Foundation of the World even before we had sinned or had Beeing he provided a remedy for us against sin to deliver us from it and that such a remedy as this even the sending of his own and onely Son to dye for us and that when we were sinners being so far from desiring or deserving this love that we were his enemies All this considered together how doth it set out the greatness and infiniteness of Gods love unto us and his most earnest care and desire of our Salvation and that we should not perish in our sins and it shews the truth of that which the Lord himself professeth of himself Ezek. 33. 11. As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that he turn from his way and live c. Use 1 Use 1. To work in us true love to God again who hath so loved us and shewed his love in sending his own Son to redeem us being lost and being his enemies c. If this be duely considered it cannot chuse but draw our hearts to love the Lord again and that not with an idle or barren love but as his love was fruitfull to us so it being felt in our hearts it will cause us to shew our true
would not deny him By these speeches they shewed their willingnesse and readinesse of mind to suffer with him and for him when they should be called to i● And although afterward when it came to tryal they shewed much t●norousnesse and weaknesse in bearing the Crosse yet it is clear that there was in them a willing mind and affection to suffer with him and this they shewed by their words unto Christ The like readiness and willingness ought we to shew This is taking up of our Crosse c Vse 1 Use 1. For reproof of such as are so backward and unwilling to suffer the crosse with Christ and for his sake so loth to yield their necks to this yoak they abhor and shun troubles by all means and all their desire is to enjoy outward peace and freedom from the crosse How can these be said to take up their crosse c. Use 2 Use 2. Pray and labour for this willingnesse and readinesse to suffer with Christ and for him to drink of the Cup of the crosse with him c. and to shew this willingness on all occasions when God shall call us to suffer for a good conscience Seeing there is a necessity of this taking up our crosse if we will be Christ's Disciples make a vertue of this necessity c. Good wisdom to do that willingly which we must do necessarily This willingnesse is not from nature but from grace Matth. 26. 41. The Spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak Observ 2 Observ 2. From that which is evill and discommendable in the Disciples here viz. their confidence and presumption of their own strength to bear the Cross c. This teacheth us that by nature we are apt to be too confident of our selves and to presume too far on our own strength to bear the Cross So were these two Disciples So also was Peter afterward in professing that though all men should deny Christ yet he would not and both he and the rest in professing that they would rather dye with him then deny him as we heard before And that herein they were too confident of their own strength appeared afterward by their timerousness in that they all fled from him and Peter himself denyed him Now the cause of this confidence and presumption of our own strength is this that we are ignorant of our selves and of our own strength and ability to bear the Cross supposing that we have much strength this way when indeed we have none at all but such as is given us of God Phil. 1. 29. Vse Use Take heed of this confidence in our selves and presumption of our own strength for the bearing of the Cross Multos impedit à firmitate firmitatis praesumptio sayes Austin de verbis Dom. 6. 73. On the contrary learn to know our selves and our own weakness and unability to bear the least affliction as we ought that this may cause us to deny our selves and so to take up our Cross The weaker we are in our own opinion the stronger we are indeed to bear afflictions Therefore renounce out own strength and labour to be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might Ephes 6. 10. Now followeth our Saviour's reply to their answer in which is included his further and more full answer to their Petition His reply consisteth of two parts 1. A concession or granting that they should indeed partake with him in his Passion Ye shall indeed drink of the Cup c. ver 39. 2. The reason which he alledgeth of his denying their Petition Because to sit at his right hand c. was not his to give c. ver 40. Of the first Ye shall indeed drink c. Though they answered rashly in saying that they were able to drink of the same cup with him c. shewing too much confidence and presumption of their own strength yet he doth not reprove them for it but bearing with their infirmity replyes to them in mild and gentle manner and although he do not grant that to be true which they rashly affirmed of themselves that they were able to drink of the same Cup c. yet he granteth that they should indeed drink of it in some sort and be in some sort Baptized with the Baptism wherewith he should be Baptized that is they should partake with him in suffering the same or the like afflictions which he should suffer And so it came to passe afterward for James was unjustly killed with the sword by Herod Act. 12. 2. and although John did not dye a violent death yet he suffered in his life time grievous afflictions and persecutions for he together with the other Apostles was cruelly beaten or scourged by the Jews Act. 5. 40. and afterward he was banished by the Emperour Domitian into the Isle Patmos for the Word of God c. Revel 1. 9. where also he professeth himself to be a companion with Christ and the Church in suffering tribulation It is also reported by Hierome out of Tertullian that being at Rome he was put into a barrel of scalding hot Oyl from the which he was miraculously delivered comming out of it again more fresh and lively then he went in Hieronym lib. 1. contra Jovinian cap. 14. Observ 1 Observ 1. In that our Saviour doth deal here so mildly with his two Disciples not reproving or censuring them so as he might for their rash answer but beareth with their infirmity this should teach us to shew like ●eekness and gentleness in bearing with such as do offend of infirmity not alwayes reproving or censuring them as they deserve but sometimes passing over such infirmities Prov. 19. 11. And when we do reprove or admonish such to do it in mild and gentle manner See Gal. 6. 1. We are to shew all ●eekness to all men Tit. 3. but especially to such as offend of infirmity Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour here granteth that they should drink of the cup of the Cross with him c. thereby foretelling unto them the great afflictions which they should suffer Hence we learn that good Christians must make account in this World to suffer the Cross and afflictions yea many and great tryals c. not onely to drink of the cup of the Cross but to be baptized in the deep waters of affliction c. For that which our Saviour saith of these two Disciples James and John is true of all other good Christians Joh. 16. ult In the World ye shall have Tribulation This inheritance Christ left unto us when he was to dye and go out of the World 2 Tim. 3. 12. All that will live godly in Christ c. Act. 14. This must teach us to prepare for many and great troubles if we profess and resolve to be Christ's true Disciples especially in these evill times of the Church c. cast our accompts what this profession of Christ will cost us c. Prepare for that which must come Cristianus