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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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Emperour to his God and ours But how by pure prayer 2. Of learned and godly Preachers that may winne many thousands to Christ. 3. Of extraordinary common-wealths men 4. Of rare Christians as Philemon was Alexander counted Achilles happie that he had such a trumpetter of his praises as Homer was PHILEMON might count himselfe happie that hee had such a worthie man to pray for him as Saint Paul was KING Abimelech was beholden to Abraham for his prayers and Iobs friends to him for his prayers Constantine thought his pallace strong because it was fenced with the prayers of holy Bishops Let us rejoyce in this that we have Pauls to pray for us VERSE 5. BVt what was the motive of his thanksgiving The excellent graces wherewith GOD had adorned him where there is 1. Fama bonorum the report of them 2. enumeratio bonorum an enumeration of them 3. Objecta eorum the objects of them For the fame or report Saint Paul heard of them an admirable hearing from Phrygia to Rome sayes Chrysostome and Oecumenius There are two things that are wont to be carried in the Wagon of fame bad and good the one swiftly the other slowly the one lamely the other lustily of the one we shall heare all and more than all and scant halfe of the other as it fell out in the Wisedome of Salomon What did he heare His love and faith where is hope then tanquam media in ijs intelligitur sayes Aquin. as a midle vertue betweene both it is comprehended in both These three in a golden chaine are linked together faith sayes parata sunt mihi magna great things are prepared for me hope sayes mihi servantur magna great things are reserved for me love sayes curro ad illa magna I make hast to those great things But why hath ' love the precedencie Love is the daughter faith the mother and must the daughter bee placed above the Mother It is so 1. Because it is Saint Pauls drift in this whole Epistle to procure PHILEMONS love to Onesimus 2. Because love is Notior Nobis better knowne to us then faith which is more hid and secret These are illustrated by their objects CHRIST and the Saints The Papists refer both to both objects whereupon they inferre As we love God and the Saints too So we must believe in God and in the Saints too yet diversely in God principaliter principally in the Saints consequenter consequently There is no consequence in this argument for God hath commanded us to love all but he hath not commanded us to believe in all that hee hath reserved as a regall prerogative to himselfe and his glory he will not give to another He sayes owe nothing to any man save love but he doth not say owe nothing to any man save to believe in him 2. Here the Apostle speakes of living Saints to whom Philemon extended his liberalitie now the Papists will not have us to believe in living Saints but in dead Saints therefore this place makes not for them 3. It is said to him that worketh not but belieueth in him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse Aug. makes a worthie collection upon it whosoever dares say justifico te I justifie thee may consequently say crede in me believe in mee which none of the Saints can truly say save only he which is Sanctus Sanctorum the Saint of Saints Ye believe in God believe also in mee Credimus Paulo sed non credimus in Paulum wee believe Paul but not in Paul we believe Peter but not in Peter As we believe the Catholike Church but not in the Catholike Church because the Creed sayes I believe in the Holy Ghost Nazian concludes from thence that the Holy Ghost is God for we must believe in none but God 4. Quid est credere in cum nisi credendo in cum ire ejus membris incorporari What is it to believe in him .i. In CHRIST but by believing to goe into him and to be incorporated as members into his body Now we are not incorporated into the Saints therefore we are not to believe in them 5. They can erect no such building out of this place for the praepositions in the Greeke distinguish the objects Hearing of thy love and faith there hee pauseth a while which thou hast towards the Lord Iesus there he restraines faith and towards all Saints .i. Thy love towards all Saints regulating 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before mentioned 6. Paul is a good expositour of himselfe Since we heard of your faith in the Lord Iesus and of your love towards all Saints Here he reduces them to their proper objects so that no question can be made of it 7 If we must believe in the Saints we must hope in the Saints It is St. Basil's reason But we must hope in God alone Maledictus qui sperat in homine cursed be he that hopes in man As Saint Paul heard of PHILEMONS faith and love So it were to be wished that all the world might ring of our faith and love these be necessary for all Christians faith in the first place love in the second nec palmes sine vite nec virtus sine fide there can be no branch without the Vine no vertue no not love without faith Faith makes a Christian love makes and showes a Christian No CHRIST no heaven no faith no CHRIST Faith is the hand that layes hold on CHRIST The high Priests and Pharisees gave a strait charge that if any knew where CHRIST was he should shew it that they might take him Would yee faine take him sayes Augustine I will tell you where he is and how yee may take him He is in heaven there ye may take him Sed quomodo mittam manum in Coelum ut ibi sedentem capiam How shall I send my hand into heaven to take him mitte fidem tenuisti Send thy faith thither and thou hast taken him By faith we apprehend him and all his benefits by faith we put on CHRIST as a garment wherewith our sinnes are covered from the sight of God and as Iacob got the blessing in the clothes of his elder brother so doe we get heaven clothed with Christ like the Woman clothed with the Sun CHRIST dwelleth in our hearts by faith O happie house where the Sonne of God dwelleth Faith is the victory whereby we overcome the world we are more than Conquerours through him that hath loved us Insomuch that we may take up that triumphant song O death where is thy sting Hell where is thy victory the strength of death is sinne the strength of sin is the Law but thankes be to God through Iesus Christ that hath delivered us from you all By Faith Moses saw him which is invisible by faith wee see the joyes of heaven and Christ standing at the right hand of GOD ready to receive us into them
though we be never so rich have never so many bags of gold and silver lye on beds of downe have never so many friends and Physitions about us yet if the worme of conscience lye gnawing on us for our sins our murders adulteries drunkennesse c. That we have no hope that Christ died for them in what miserable case are we The Hypocrite would give 1000. Rams 10000. Rivers of Oile the fruit of his body for his soule as a man that is dangerously sick would give any thing for health so a man that is oppressed with the burthen of his sins would give any thing that they were removed Now CHRIST IESUS alone hath purged us from our sins Apply this purgation to thy selfe by the hand of a true and a lively faith and then thou art a happy man if CHRIST had not purged us from sin we had fried in hell for ever Therefore let us magnifie the Lambe that was killed for us and give prayses to him for ever Worthy is the Lambe who hath purged us from our sinnes to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing Againe hath Christ purged us from our sinnes and shall we tumble in them Hath the Physitian purged thy body and made thee whole and wilt thou by ill diet make thy selfe sick Christ the heavenly Physitian hath purged us from sin that made us sick to death and shall we run into sin againe O that men would effectually consider of this great benefit the purging of our sins by Christ Who hath purged us not an Angell but the Son of God with what hath He purged us not with the bloud of Martyrs but with His owne bloud to what end hath He purged us not that like swine we should still wallow in the myre of our sinnes but that we should be an holy Nation a royall Priest-hood a peculiar people to Himselfe zealous of good workes Therefore as CHRIST hath purged us from our sins so let us hurle away our sins and have nothing to doe with them least we crucifie againe the Lord of life That proverb is knowne to us all the Hogge to the myre a Hogge is washed cleane and faire he runs into the myre againe what a filthy sight is that So it is for one whom Christ hath purged from sin to returne to them againe a Dogge to his vomit Who can abide to see a Dogge take up that which he hath cast out of his belly and a loathsome sight it is to see men daily yea hourely to take up the Vomit of their old sins againe How hath Christ purged us from sin when as sin still remaineth in us all If we say we have no sin we deceave our selvs c. The answer is easie there is in sin materia forma the matter still remaines to exercise us withall but the guilt that is the forme of sin which gave an esse to it that is taken away by Christ. In so much as we may say death where is thy sting hell where is thy victory the strength of death is sin but thankes be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. The sixth and last Argument to prove the deity of Christ is taken from His exaltation which is fitly inferred upon the former humiliation He that sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high is GOD but CHRIST sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high Ergo. He doth not say standeth that belongs to Servants and inferiors but he sitteth Kings Senatours Iudges sit when they heare causes He sits not at the commandement or appointment of another but of Himselfe He knowes His place and takes it not at the left hand but which is higher at the right hand His fathers equall Regia majestas the Kings Majesty is more magnificent then to say the King Prov. 25.27 Scrutator majestatis opprimetur à gloria Heb. 8.1 We have such an High Priest who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens Christ could not purge our sinnes but by dying He was faine to shed His bloud and to dye for us yet He rose againe ascended into Heaven and fitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high Out of this we have two notable comforts 1 If Christ sitteth above in the highest places then he beholdeth all things here below A man that is upon the top of some high Tower may see farre and Christ being in the high Steeple and Tower of Heaven can see all things on the earth He that is upon the top of an high Tower may see men but he cannot discerne who they bee Christ sees them and discernes them too If the wicked bee laying of plots and snares against His Children Christ being in Heaven sees them and in due time will overthrow them and He that sitteth in Heaven laugheth them to scorne This is a singular comfort that our Head King and defender is in Heaven and hath equall Power Glory and Majesty with God If thou hast a friend in the Court that sits daily by the King and is in favour with him wilt thou care for any in England we have a friend that siteth on the right hand of God and hath all power in Heaven and earth therefore let us feare nothing he will keepe us none shall doe us any harme but it shall all turne to our good in the end 2 As Christ sitteth in the heavens so we shall one day sit there with Him Many shall come from the East and from the West and from the North and from the South and shall sit downe in the Kingdome of God Yee shall sit on the twelve Seates and Iudge the twelve Tribes of Israel Which is not spoken of all the Apostles for Iudas never sate there nor yet of the Apostles onely but of all Christians Know yee not that wee shall judge the World wee shall one day sit in Heavenly places with Christ wee sit there already in our head but we shall likewise sit there in our owne persons with our head Let this comfort us against all the calamities of this life here the children of God are oftentimes made the wickeds footstooles they sit on them and tread on them no reckoning is made of a godly man A rich man that is a common drunkard and whore-master shall be more esteemed of by many then a godly poore man Here they sit as forlorne persons none regards them Many times they sit weeping and wayling for their sinnes for their children for crosses in goods in bodies in good name the wicked deriding them jesting at them making songs of them in the Ale-houses but let this comfort us against them all how contemptible soever we sit here wee shall sit with CHRIST IESUS though not in that degree of glory yet in the same kingdome of glory with him for ever VERSE 4. THe Iewes in generall were bitter enemies to Christ
reconciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift first seeke the kingdome of God GOD should bee first served yet he will have his owne service to stay till thou beest reconciled to thy brother If I speake with the tongues of men and Angels if I come to Church heare never so many Sermons receive never so many Communions talke never so gloriously of Religion and dwell in hatred be not reconciled I am as a sounding brasse and as a tinckling Cymbal 3. Wee can have no assurance of our reconciliation to God without it Matth. 18. ult As the King dealt with his servant So God will cast you into the prison of hell for ever This should make us all to quake 4. We have no certaintie of our lives This night may our soules be taken from us Iovinian the Emperour supped plentifully went to bedde merrily yet was taken up dead in the morning And if death take us before we take one another by the hand as a token of hearty reconciliation what shall become of us Wee should not suffer the Sunne to goe downe on our wrath Iohannes Eleemosynarius Arch-Bishop of Alexandria being angrie in the day with Nicetus a Senator towards night sends this message to him Sol est in occasu vir maximè honorande My honourable brother the Sunne is a setting let there be a setting of our anger too if we do it not within the compasse of a day and a night yet let us doe it within the compasse of our lives let not our anger be like the fire of the Temple that went not out day nor night Let us not say with Ionah I doe well to be angry to the death let our anger bee aculeus apis not aculeus serpentis the sting of a Bee that is soone gone not the sting of a Serpent that tarries long and it may be proves lethall Let us receive one another in all brotherly love and kindnesse as Saint Paul entreateth PHILEMON to receive Onesimus But who is Onesimus that PHILEMON should receive him Pauls owne bowels he doth not say my owne eyes though they be precious to us and we use to terme our deere friends Ocelli mei not my own hands which minister to my necessities my own feete which carry mee from place to place but my owne bowels our internall and vitall parts the longues the liver especially the heart the seat of love and affection Whom I doe most tenderly affect teneritudinem rarissimi amoris declarat he poynts out hereby the tendernesse of a most rare love As Saint Paul sayes of the Philippians I desire you all in the bowells of IESUS CHRIST 1. In an heartie love in CHRIST IESUS One Christian should be exceeding deere to another 1. It is a token of election As the elect of God put on the bowels of mercie Without these bowels no assurance of salvation 2. The affinitie betweene Christians require it We have one Father which is GOD one Mother the Church we are of one house the household of faith one Elder brother which is IESUS CHRIST one inheritance the kingdome of heaven 3. We are all bought with one and the same deare price the invaluable bloud of CHRIST therefore wee should bee deare one to another 3. Every one is tender over his bowels our brethren are our bowels he that toucheth them toucheth our owne bowells Oh that we did so esteeme and commiserate one another When the child was to be divided by Salomons sword the bowels of the true mother yerned within her So should our bowels doe if we see any hurt towards our brethren VERSE 13. IN the next place he unfolds the reason of his sending 1. Negativè not as if he had not beene usefull to him In that respect he would willingly have reteined him still that he might have ministred to him in the bonds of the Gospell There bee the bonds of impietie such were Zedekiah his bonds and there bee the bonds of piety Such were St. Pauls bonds not for any sinne of his but for the Gospell which were famous throughout all the judgement hall and in all other places That in thy stead he might doe it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for thee in this hee supplies thy roome and discharges thy office The Gospell is the common cause that concernes us all if any suffer for it we are all bound from the highest to the lowest to assist them with our purses our prayers and personall presence too if conveniently it may be yea though we be never so great personages It is like that obadiah himselfe hid the Prophets in Caves from the rage of Iesabel though peradventure he might send the bread and water by his servants Our SAVIOUR himselfe washed his Disciples feet Saint Cyprian writes to the Priests and Deacons to provide all things necessary for them that were in prison wishing that he himselfe were present with them Promptus lubens readily and willingly hee would performe Cuncta dilectionis obsequia all obsequious duties of love unto them Helena the mother of Constantine being at Hierusalem served in meate her selfe to the Virgins that were there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Placilla the Wife of Theodosius the Emperour in propria persona pauperibus ministravit ministred to the poore in her owne person and PHILEMON himselfe should have ministred unto Saint Paul The Angels minister to us yea when we be in prison as to Saint Peter and shall we scorne be we never so wealthie worshipfull honourable to minister to them that be in bonds for the Gospell Let us count it an honour to us In ministring to them we minister to CHRIST and he will reward it at the latter day Mistake me not I pleade not for them that are buffeted for their faults nor doe I reckon them to be in bonds for the Gospel who worthily suffer for their folly VERSE 14. WE have had the negative cause of his sending not because Saint Paul had no use of him but because he would not keepe him without his good will without thy minde thy sentence thy judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would I doe nothing In hoc negotio in this businesse otherwise in every thing he would not tye himselfe to Philemons minde Servants must not be detained without their Masters liking Eustathius Byshop of Armenia was deposed from his byshop-ricke quia servos praetextu pietatis heris abstulerat because under a colour of piety he had taken servants from their Masters Therfore the Papists themselves will not permit servants to take upon them a religious course of life to vow chastity without the consent of their masters yet children may invitis parentibus whether their parents will or no so as they be of age a man 14. a woman 12. and that their Parents need not their helpe A strange thing that servants may not but Children may But servants may not Bellar. Reason is without reason because
profits of the world seldome or never thinking of the joyes of the world to come Who will serve a Master that is ready to dye Such a one as cannot preferre thee the world hath one foote already in the grave therefore let us serve him no longer CHRIST hath not redeemed us by the bloud of a Calfe Ram Sheepe c. not with the sacrifice of an Angell of his mother or any Saint but by the sacrifice of Himselfe no other sacrifice could save us Now as Christ in wonderfull love hath sacrificed Himselfe for us so let us offer up our selves as an holy sacrifice to him VERSE 27. THe application of the use is set forth by an elegant antithesis betweene the cursed condition of men by nature and the blessed condition of men by grace through CHRIST IESUS The lamentable condition of men by nature is double 1. They must all dye then there remaines a Iudgement for them Vnto the common death of men is opposed the death of our Saviour Christ that taketh away the sins of the world In regard whereof death cannot hurt the faithfull Vnto the fearefull judgment to come is opposed Christ's second comming amplified by the persons to whom he shall come by the manner how and the end of his comming Layd up in Gods secret Counsell Why for sin at what time so ever thou eatest thou shalt dye the death To all men It an indefinite proposition is equivalent to an universall Man that is borne of a woman is but of a short time c. that is every man Object 1 Cor. 15.51 Sol. That change shall be instar mortis Object 2. Lazarus dyed twise That was extraordinary ordinarily men dye but once But after this the judgement immediately without delay 1. The particular then the generall Then there is no Purgatory We have two purgatories in this life the fire of affliction and the bloud of Christ then wee neede feare no purgatory after this life Here we see an appointment a decree a sentence wherein foure circumstances are to be observed 1. By whom this appointment is made namely by God Almighty in whom there is not a shadow of turning and which is able to bring that to passe which he hath appointed What I have written I have written said Pilat and would not alter his writing so what God hath appointed hee hath appointed and hee will accomplish it Men are mutable they appoint and disappoint it is not so with God hath he said it and shall he not doe it Therefore as sure as God is in heaven this appointment shall stand Who at any time hath resisted his will who can breake his appointment 2. What it is that is appointed once to dye What is death properly to speake it is a separation of the soule from the body Man was made with two parts the body of the dust of the ground the soule breathed into him by God Life is a conjunction of these two death is a separation of them There is an improper death which is a change of these two conjoyned still together which shall happen to them that be alive at the day of judgment but the Apostle here speaketh of the proper death 2. There is an extraordinary dying and an ordinary Some have dyed twise as Lazarus and those that rose with Christ at his resurrection but ordinarily it is appointed to all men once to dye It is not appointed to all to be rich wise learned but to dye 3. Why was this appointment made because of sin Rom. 5.12 at what time thou eatest thou shalt dye the death Sinne is the cause of death Then why should wee bee in love with sin Wee shunne poyson because it will kill us drunkennesse adultery swearing and other sins brought death into the world therefore let them be hated by us Why are wee afraid of the plague because it will kill us Sinne will kill both soule and body therefore let us all bee afraid to sinne 4. The persons to whom this appointment is made to men to all men There is no man living but shall see death it is appointed to Kings to dye to Dukes Earles Lords Knights Gentlemen Merchants Clothiers Husbandmen to high and low rich and poore learned and unlearned It is appointed to the Ministers to dye and to the people to the Master and servant to the Husband and to the Wife We read of a Woman that had seven Husbands they all dyed and in the end the Woman dyed also None can avoid the stroake of death the Physitions that cure others at the length dye contra vim mortis non est medicamen in hortis the godly dye good Women bring forth with sorrow as well as bad so good men and women dye as well as bad as the faithfull are sicke as well as the unfaithfull so also they dye as well as others Oh that this were carefully remembred by us and that wee would lay it close to our hearts We see our neighbours Townsmen one or other almost everyday carryed to the earth yet wee lay it not to heart it workes not in us a death to sin we follow the world with such earnestnesse as if we should never leave the world Let us so live that wee may dye in the LORD IESUS rise againe and live with him for ever When or where we shall dye wee cannot tell that is in Gods hands but this is most certaine wee shall dye quocunque te verteris incerta omnia sola mors certa In all other things we may use a fortè fortè eris Dives fortè habebis liberos but when wee speake of death we may put fortè under our girdles and say certè morieris If any should aske a reason why the godly should dye seeing CHRIST hath dyed for them the answer is easie because CHRIST dyed to free them from death eternall not from the corporall death which is imposed upon all because all have sinned Christ hath taken away the curse of the corporall death but not death it selfe cogitur non obesse sed non abesse wee are all sinners therefore we must all dye Let us bee carefull to feare God while wee bee alive that wee may not greatly feare death whensoever he shall come Death is a bitter cup all of us in some sort feare to drink of it CHRIST feared it non est fortior miles quàm Imperator wee feare it as it is a dissolution of nature but let us not feare it after a slavish manner Take this sugar to sweeten this bitter Cup withall 1. CHRIST hath taken away the sting of it 1 Cor. 18.57 thankes bee to God which giveth us the victorie through our Lord Iesus Christ. Death is a great Goliah yet stripped of his armour as a roaring Lion yet without jawes or pawes as an hissing Serpent yet without a sting the sting of death is sinne Christ hath taken away the sins of the world In his owne body upon the tree he
an interrogation yet it is better to read it affirmatively otherwise they should have ceased to have beene offered Once purged from the guilt and punishment of sinne Should no more be pricked in conscience for their sins their consciences accusing them and drawing them before the tribunall of Gods justice for their sins If a medicine have once throughly cured a man it needs not againe be ministred to the man So if the ceremoniall Law with her sacrifices had healed the people of their sins those sacrifices might have ceased to bee offered but they were offered every yeare therefore they did not purge them from their sinnes The often iteration of those sacrifices shewed their inability to take away sin If the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Crosse have purged us from all sinne then Christ must be no more offered but the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Crosse hath purged us from all sinne which the Papists deny not Therefore Christ is no more to be offered as they say he is in the sacrifice of the Masse The Iesuites affirme that the Apostle here strikes at the legall sacrifices but not at the sacrifice of holy Church I but with one stroake hee woundeth them both The repetition of a sacrifice argues the weakenesse and debility of it for if it have once abolished sinne it needs not bee repeated againe CHRIST by his sacrifice on the Crosse hath taken away the sins of the world therefore Christ is not to be offered up any kinde of way neither bloudily nor unbloudily to expiate sin There is a conscience in every man that keepeth a register of all his sins It is scientia cum alia scientia There is a generall knowledge of the Law written in the hearts of us all and conscience is a particular application of it to our selves As for example the Law of God sayes Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge My conscience sayes to mee if I be guilty of that sinne thou art an Adulterer thou hast had thy Queanes in many corners therefore God will judge thee this is conscience which setteth our sins in order before us For the better unfolding of it we know that there be sundry kindes of consciences 1. There is an erring conscience a blind conscience as was in them that thought they did God good service when they killed the Children of God Such a conscience was in Paul before his conversion for the which hee was grieved afterwards when the eyes of their minde come but once to bee opened then their conscience will accuse them for it 2. There is a sleeping conscience A man knowes the will of God yet his conscience being a sleepe for a time he lyes snorting in the bed of sinne So did David in his sin of numbring the people but his conscience awoke at the length and his heart smote him for it A man may lye sleeping in covetousnesse drunkennesse adultery and God at the length awaken him out of that sleepe which is good for him 3. There is a seared conscience such as was in them 1 Tim. 4.2 when men are past feeling and hardned in their sins Custome becomes another nature They are so accustomed to drinking whoring oppressing and deceiving of their neighbours as that they thinke those to be no sins Their consciences never checke them for them These are in the ready way to Hell 4. There is an accusing conscience which is as a scolding queane in the house of a mans heart and will never suffer him to bee quiet day nor night They are like the raging Sea continually foaming In that case were they that went out of the Temple one by one being convicted of their owne consciences Such a conscience had Iudas when he cryed I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud This may prove a tragedy both in the end and in the beginning too as it did in him and it may end with a comedy in Gods Children It may lead some to hell and for others it may bee the way to heaven Mordeat nunc ut moriatur It is better for us that this Worme gnaw on us here to the vexation of our hearts for a while then gnaw on us eternally hereafter This accusing conscience more or lesse wee shall have in this world at one time or other they that fall into grosse sins and yet never feele a hell in their consciences in this life shall never finde an heaven in the life to come Therefore it was well said of one being demanded which was the way to heaven hell sayes he For if thou goest not by hell thou wilt never get to heaven 3. There is an excusing and cleering conscience When the bookes are cleered betweene GOD and us A debter is cleered when the booke of his Creditour is crossed so our consciences are quiet when our sins are out of Gods booke then we shall have no more conscience of sin This could not be effected by the sacrifices in the time of the Law neither can it bee obtained by any thing that we can doe in the time of the Gospell It is neither our comming to Church nor hearing of Sermons though these bee good things not our prayers fastings almes deeds receiving of Communions noe though wee should give our bodies to be burnt These are excellent duties yet these cannot acquit our consciences of sinne for when wee have done all we are unprofitable servants and we sinne in our best actions The only way to come to a quiet and excusing conscience is the application of Christ's merits to our selves being justified by faith we have peace with God If wee have laid hold on CHRIST by a lively faith wee may take up that song death where is thy sting c. Therefore let us repent and then entreat the Lord to assure our consciences that CHRIST hath dyed for all our sinnes and then wee shall have no more conscience of sins So we shall sing for joy when wee lye on our death beds and shall stand without trembling before God in the life to come VERSE 3. BVt the offerers of them have still conscience of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not onely of their present sins but of their sinnes past too All of them doe lye as a loade still on their consciences whereof the yeerely sacrifice by the High-Priest putteth them in minde Levit. 16.21 As they in the time of the Law had many sacrifices to put them in remembrance of sinne so wee in the time of the Gospell have many remembrancers of sinne Sundry Monitours to admonish us that we be sinners The Raine-bow may be a remembrance of sin to us that the world was once drowned for sinne and that it might be so still but for the goodnesse and mercy of God Baptisme daily ministred in the Church putteth us in minde of sinne for if we were not sinners we needed not to be baptized The Lords Supper puts us in minde of
remitted so Christ forgot the cruelty that his persecutors used towards him Mat. 18.3 All good turnes let us remember but as for all wrongs let them bee forgotten for ever Why will he not remember our sins any more Surely because his Son Christ Iesus hath dyed for our sins and offered himselfe for them him that knew no sin he made to be sin for us therefore he will remember our sins no more To that purpose is this testimony alleadged in this place VERSE 18. WHereupon he inferreth this conclusion Of these things that is of sins and iniquities is There may bee spirituall oblations and sacrifices of prayer thankesgiving and almes deeds Hebr. 13.17 but there remaines no more offering for the expiation of sinnes If all sinnes be forgiven for the one oblation that Christ hath offered there needs no more offering for sin but for the worthinesse of that one oblation all sins are forgiven us Ergo there needs no more offering for sin Object There is Christ's As for the Masse it is the same sacrifice that Christ offered on the Crosse therefore that may still remaine as propitiatory for sinne Sol. 1. It is not the same for Christ's body is in heaven there he tarryes still Verse 13. and Act. 3.21 therefore it is not in the sacrifice of the Masse here on earth for that cause it is not the same sacrifice that was on the crosse 2. Here it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That was bloudy this unbloudy Which differ as much as light and darkenesse death and life and if unbloudy then no remission of sins in it Hebr. 9.22 3. If Christ be offered in the Masse then he must suffer there Hebr. 9.26 but he doth not suffer there ergo 4. If CHRIST be there offered then hee is there consumed for sacrificabile must be destructibile as Bellarmine confesseth and in all sacrifices there is a consumption of the thing sacrificed the Goate the Sheepe the Heyfer was consumed and Christ was consumed or destroyed on the Crosse he is not destroyed in the Masse ergo he is not in the sacrifice of the Masse Yes sayes Bellarmine he is destroyed sacramentally because he is eaten by the Priest though not physically and really I but in a sacrifice there must be a physicall and reall destruction of the thing sacrificed otherwise no sacrifice Againe a repetition of the same sacrifice is here excluded If CHRIST must bee offered up often then that one offering on the Crosse was insufficient for the taking away of sinne but the Apostle proveth that CHRIST was to be offered but once If he be offered up often it is an indignity to him for so were the sacrifices in the Law The Masse I conclude still is no propitiatory sacrifice Here we have a most sweet and comfortable doctrine by the offering of our SAVIOUR CHRIST we obtaine remission of sins his bloud purgeth us from all sin In sin we are warmed in our Mothers belly in sin we were conceived and borne We sucke sinne as milke from our mothers breasts before wee bee regenerate wee doe nothing but sinne draw sin with Cartropes and iniquity with the cordes of vanity After we are regenerate In many things we sinne all The just man falleth seven times a day If God should enter into judgement with us for our sins we were not able to answer one for a thousand We sin in preaching praying hearing our best sort of actions are defiled with sin But here is our comfort by the oblation of Iesus Christ on the Crosse once made wee have remission of all our sins In so much as wee may say death where is thy sting Let us desire the Lord to apply this oblation of Christ to us by a true and lively faith And as by CHRIST alone we have the forgivenesse of our sins which all the sacrifices in the Law could not purchase nor any thing that we can doe under the Gospell so let the love of Christ in dying for our sins cause us to dye to sinne dayly more and more and as he in wonderfull love offered up himselfe as a sacrifice for the putting away of our sins so let us offer up our selves our soules and bodies as a holy living and acceptable sacrifice to him all the dayes of our lives that the power of Christ's passion appearing in us in this world we may reigne with him in the world to come Now hee makes an application of that discourse hee had of Christ. analysis 19 1. The foundation Then the building 22. The doctrine and the use The doctrine hath three branches 1. Our entrance into heaven 2. The way whereby we enter Verse 20. 3. Our guide and leader in the way Verse 21. In our entrance 1. The manner of it 2. The place whereinto we enter 3. The meanes whereby analysis 20 In the way 1. A commendation of it 2. The conservation of it 1. For his office he is a Priest analysis 21 2. For his dignity great 3. For his dominion over the house of God The use is threefold 1. An appropinquation to God Verse 22. 2. A profession of God 23. 3. A declaration of it by provoking one another 24. analysis 22 Our appropinquation 1. Ex parte subjecti 2. Ex parte formae 3. Ex parte medij Internall externall analysis 23 Our profession must be held fast Where 1. How 2. Why. In the provocation 1. How it must be done with consideration analysis 24 2. To what we must provoke VERSE 19. 1. WE must make a profitable use of all doctrines propounded to us The High-Priest in the time of the Law could not enter into the Sanctum Sanctorum without bloud Hebr. 9.7 no more can wee into heaven hee entered by the bloud of a Goate and an Heyfer we by the bloud of Iesus Act. 20.28 We have boldnesse of entrance into the holy places How Thieves enter into an house so doe sacrilegious persons into a Church but it is with quaking and trembling least they should be apprehended because they have no right of entring wee enter boldly into the sanctuary of heaven because we have a right to it by Iesus Christ. Not to see it afarre off on an hill as Moses did the land of Ca●an but to enter into it Into what Into the holy places which is expounded to be heaven Hebr. 9.24 In the time of the Law none but the High-Priest went into the Holy of Holies and that but once a yeere here all both Ministers and people Magistrates and subjects high and low rich and poore all that believe in Christ have entrance into heaven We may be bold by prayer to enter into it in this life and in soule and body we shall have a comfortable entrance into it in the life to come None but Gentlemen of the Privie Chamber may enter into the King we may all goe to the King of Kings and that boldly because we are reconciled to him by
299. our comfort thereby 299 Christs body a Tabernacle so is ours 310 311. Christ is the sole Mediatour 361. so long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare 369. Christs second comming notably described 376. Christs flesh called a vaile why 404. Christ more manifest to us than to those of old with the use of it 534 535 Christ his death a cruell death in three respects 541. hee suffered foure kinde of wayes ibid. None so spoken against as he 543 Christians All Christian souldiers especially Christian Ministers 6 7. Reasons why one Christian should be deare to another 28. how and wherein wee are Christs fellowes 67 wee are called Christians of Christ. 68. a Christians dignity 92 93. they should not feare death 95. they are the house of God 121 122. their dignitie 138 139. their dutie ibid. Christians must be simple not subtill 30● cunning cruell Christians are like dogges that will bite before they barke 30● they must be undefiled 302 303. as soone as we become Christians we must looke for afflictions 428. Christians must not be cowards 430 Church how a house or household may be called a Church 7.8.119 All true Churches agree in substance of Religion though not in ceremonie 328. the Arke a lively representation of the Church 334. the Churches protectors and protection how shaddowed out 335. the uses of it 335 336. the Church is Gods house 406. the Ministers are in some sort over it ibid. Vniversalitie no necessary note of the Church 451 452. the Church is compared to a mountaine 572. to a city 573. the Churches universality dignity and stabilily well handled 579 580 c. City the Church compared to a citie 573. Heaven is a city which how we have already see 574 Cloud Its properties applied to the faithfull 536 Comming Christs second comming notably described 376. the joy conceived by Christs comming 390 the differences of Christs commings ibid. the comming of Christs day is fearefull to the sinfull joyfull to the Saints 419 Compasse there are two compassers 539 Condemnation many things condemne a man 452 Conscience It is the soules register to keepe a note of all our sinnes 344. what can secure our consciences ibid. no outward thing can purge the conscience 345. the sting of conscience is grievous 356. there is a conscience in every man what it doth with its divers kindes 385 386. Ministers ought to have a good conscience 635 what a good conscienc● is 635 636. divers definitions of the word 636. Wherein a Minister should examine his conscience 637. a good life is the meate of the conscience 644 Consideration the greatnesse of the word 116. it must goe before provocation 411 Constancie Christians must be constant 622 675. Foure impediments to constancie 677 678 Covetousnesse all a mans doings smell something of it 915 reasons against it 616 remedies against it ibid. a covetous man is never contented 7●4 Countrey how sweete a mans owne country is to him 455 Abrahams forsaking it was a great triall ibid. we must not forsake it without a calling ibid 456. the world is not the Saints countrey 469 Creatures All Creatures are servants to Gods children 510 Cow a red cow in the sacrifice what it signifieth 354 a tipe of Christ. 355 D. DAy how the word to Day is taken 127. Festivall dayes warrantable 333 Dead Dead things and dead workes compared 357 Death good Christians should not feare death 95. there are three that have the power of death 1. God 2. Man 3. the Devill 108 Death is a Serpent without a sting 110. Death common to all men 372. 37● the use of it ibi why the godly should die seeing Christ died for them 373. death is a bitter cuppe but sugared by Christ 374. two benefits come by death 374. after death comes judgement 375. an instance of sudden death 377. they are oft deepest in Gods bookes that are soonest taken away an instance of it 443. Death cannot hurt the godly it rather benefitteth them 4.65 yet the thought of it is bitter to some 469 happy they are that die in the faith 466 a patterne of our behaviour in death 486 487. Death a pretty story against the feare of death 574 Debts they are to be paid before we be too forward in the charges of sacrificing 37. there is little quiet in the honest debter ibid. wee must be marvellous carefull how wee come in debt for others ibid. what debt wee owe to our Ministers 38 Deceive Deceivers there are many 137. sinne deceiveth us many wayes ibid. Deliverance what it is and whom Christ delivereth 109. God doth deliver three wayes 434 Desperation we must beware of it 517 518 Despise Christ is despised two wayes 590 Devill why God suffers the devill to walke up and downe like a Lyon 109 Diligence wee cannot goe to heaven without diligence 231. to diligence we must adde perseverance 232 Diotrephes his name interpreted with the use of giving of names 997 998 Doctrine we must not looke for any mint of new doctrine 55 Doubt Christians must keepe a meane betweene doubting of their salvation and presuming 139 Draw Draw neere the vertues whereby we must draw neere to God 381. what this drawing neere is and how we must doe it 407. Christians must be no with-drawers except it be from the wicked 435 Drunkennesse it pulls on fornication 565 Dulnesse the causes of Dulnesse in hearing 203 E EArth man compared to earth 220 Education wherein childrens Education doth consist 668 Elect Election God hath his chosen among all 25 Enoch of his person and translation to heaven with many cirstances thereof 441 44● c. Esau his Acts especially that of selling his 〈◊〉 right 564. his punishment 566 Erre Errours how Israel Erred 131 Evidence Faith is our Evidence and we must make much of it 431 Evill it is soone imitated 706 what we must doe that are compassed about with Evill men ibid. c. Examples they are more avayleable than precepts 17. we must make use of the Examples of old 134. if good then to be followed 179. Patternes how prevailent 233. wee must follow our Patterne in goodnesse 314. even in all good ibid. three Reasons of the prevailencie of Examples 536 537 Excommunication its definition 705. to be excommunicated is a fearefull condition ibid. Exhort we should mutually Exhort one another 136. Exhor if it be timely taken it will awaken us out of sinne 136 F FAlling whether every falling away be a sin against the Holy Ghost 215 216. the conditions of that falling away 216 Fame of both good and bad with their feete and wings 134. it is compared to a Shippe receiving all passengers 688 Father our Fathers must not bee a Rule for us alwayes to follow 127. foure speciall duties wee owe to our spirituall Fathers 629 630 Faith it is its property to apply God to our selves 11. A justifying Faith cannot be without love 15. unto Faith must bee annexed Hope 122. we must
death the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6.23 First hee entises men to sin and then he hath power and autoritie from God to give them the wages they have deserved that is death thus he has the power of death as a thiefe and murderer Not to hold us in suspence he names him the Devill who compasses the earth to and fro ranging up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure 1 Pet. 5.8 There be three that have the power of death God Man and the Devill 1. GOD He strikes men dead and that suddenly he rayses up from the dead as Hannah speakes in her song The Lord killeth and maketh alive he bringeth downe to the grave and raiseth up 1 Sam. 2.6 hee hath supremam potestatem Gods power is immediate absolute and unlimited 2. Man a King or a Iudge hath the power of death As Pilate said to our Saviour Iohn 19.10 Knowest thou not that I have power to crucifie thee and have power to release thee True man hath a delegatam potestatem 3. The Devill hath power that is rule and empyre sed consequutam potestatem tanquam carnifex he may not kill us at his owne will and pleasure no more than the hangman may execute a malefactor at his will but according to the appointment of the Iudge VERSE 15. NOw he comes to the second end of Christs incarnation and death that hee might deliver us from the divels hands non liberaretur humanum genus nisi sermo Dei factus esset humanus August Deliver them set them free quaking at the cogitation of death in regard of eternall damnation which it brought with it for their innumerable sinnes whereof their owne consciences accused them Deliverance is a comfortable thing most welcome unto all Galley-slaves and Prisoners are glad to heare of their deliverance Not some but all so many as imbrace his deliverance Not onely those which were bound but subject to bondage that had willingly subjected themselves to the Devill which had bound themselves apprentises to him Rom. 6.16 The Indentures were made betweene them and the devill we will serve thee thou shalt be our Master this was our estate Why were we subject to him what kept us in subjection the feare of death all our life time they were subject to bondage that is to the stroake of death which they expected every moment The devill threatned death to us all our life time every houre being sinners we might looke for death every moment not onely for a temporall death but for an eternall in hell-fire Death is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we quaked at the mention of death this kept us in bondage to the devill A miserable condition but Christ hath delivered us out of it he hath taken away the feare of death that made us to shake the fetter wherewith the Devill kept us bound Now death is but a sleepe a passage to a better life yea it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Basil speakes Thus he hath rescued us out of the divels clawes and made us free Iohn 8.36 The devill sin and death are left still ad agonem to exercise us withall as Antagonists to wrastle withall but the victory through Christ is ours We sin we dye and the devill like a roaring Lion walkes up and downe seeking how to devoure us but none of these shall be able to prevaile over us Sinne though it remaines yet it doth not reigne in us 2. The guilt and the punishment of it is taken away so that it shall not condemne us Rom. 8.1 The sting of death is gone O death where is thy sting Cogitur non abesse sed non obesse hence the servants of God have wished for it Phil. 1.23 I desire to be dissolved c. Neither can it separate us from the love of God in Christ Iesus The malice of Satan that shall turne to our good GOD may suffer him to tempt and assault us he walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion 1. That wee should not be secure 2. To stir us up to pray but 1. we are no longer in his jurisdiction 2. we shall be conquerors over him God will tread him under our feet Rom. 16.20 and will give us an issue with the temptation 1 Cor. 10.13 Satan may plot against us 1 Thes. 2.18 Luke 22.31 but God will confound him he may make us sin but he cannot make us continue in sin Sin the Divell and Death are three of the mightiest enemies that we have all these are destroyed by Christ for us therefore let us be thankefull to Christ that hath wrought for us so great and gracious a deliverance Let us not stand in an immoderate feare of death Death is a Serpent without a sting Though he gripe us yet he cannot hurt us Damocles the Parasite extolled the magnificence of Dyonisius affirming that there was not an happier man in the world than he wilt thou have a taste of my happinesse I he caused him to be set in a chaire of state the Table furnished with all delicates singing-men and women making melodie with voices and Instruments noble attendants to wait on him but therewithall he commanded a sharp naked sword to be hung over his head by a slender Horse-haire the which he espying tooke no pleasure in that Paradise but besought him earnestly to take him out of his happinesse againe So though we have the world at will though we be Gentlemen c. yet the sword of death hanging over our heads continually must needs quaile the courage of the greatest Gallant O quàm pulchrum esset dominantibus hic dominari Si mors non posset dominantibus insidiari It is appointed for all men once to dye when and how suddenly we know not our breath may be stopped on the sudden as Valentinians Luc. 12.20 We are all obnoxious to the feare of death but Christ hath delivered us from a slavish feare of it VERSE 16. HEre you have the amplification of it by the comparison of a more excellent nature refused by him the Angels far surpasse us yet he tooke not on him their nature but ours Not the seed of Adam of Noah but of Abraham because the promise was made to him In thy seed shall all Nations of the earth bee blessed If he should have taken on him the nature of Angels it was either for the good Angels or the bad The good needed it not because they never fell as for the evill Angels there was no such reason because they sinned in a more high degree than men 1. They sinned of themselves without the instigation of any man fell by the subtile provocation of the Serpent 2. They sinned in heaven in the Court of the King of Kings we sinned on earth which is his footstoole 3. They were indued with more excellent gifts of wisdome knowledge and understanding we are but babes and children to them 4. They were only of a spiritual essence they had no flesh to intise them to
ashes of that ashes a certaine water was to be made which being sprinckled on them that were uncleane by the touching of a dead body c. it did sanctifie them and made them capable of the Tabernacle being purified by that water they might goe with the rest of the people into the place of Gods worship This Cow was a type of Christ. 1. As shee was Red So was hee dyed red in his owne bloud 2. As she was without spot or scab or any disease So Christ was without the spot of sin 3. As shee was never used to the yoke no more was Christ to the yoke and servitude of sin 4. As she dyed so Christ. Therefore if the water made of her ashes was precious much more the bloud of Christ sprinckled on our consciences In the proofe of this hee doth not insist because it was confessed by the Iewes So I thinke holy water may sanctifie touching the purity of the flesh If a man have dirt on his face when he is about to enter into the Church their holy water may take it away but it cannot helpe for any spirituall thing to scare away Devills or to put away veniall sins VERSE 14. THerefore he proceeds to the Apodosis Where 1. The sacrifice of Christ. 2. The end of it Not equally but much more Then the bloud of a beast The which he illustrateth by diverse circumstances 1. By the Person that offered this bloud he was Sacerdos victima 2. By the Party or power by the which he offered it Some by the eternall Spirit understand the Holy Ghost as by him he was conceived in the Virgins wombe by him lead into the wildernesse to bee tempted Mat. 4.1 So through his assistance he offered up himselfe but by the eternall Spirit is rather meant the eternall deity of our Saviour Christ 1 Pet. 3.18 19. As hee was man consisting of flesh and bloud So he was also God an eternall and incomprehensible spirit From this his infinite and unspeakeable deity the bloud of CHRIST received a power to make satisfaction for our sinnes Whereupon it is called the bloud of God Acts 20.28 The bloud of none that was a meere man could doe it if CHRIST 's bloud had not beene offered up by his eternall spirit it could not have purchased our redemption The bloud of Martyrs was offered up by the assistance of the HOLY GHOST yet it was not meritorious it was not that but the power of the deity that made Christ's bloud meritorious 3. By the thing offered not any brute Creature not a man an Angell but Himselfe 4. By the quality of the thing offered even in respect of his humanity and for that cause his bloud was more forcible 5. To whom to God As a full satisfaction for the sins of the world Then he comes to the efficacy of the bloud of Christ deduced out of the former the bloud of Goats and Bulls did purge the flesh and outward man this the conscience and inward man In some Greeke copies it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our consciences All stand in need of purging We have a double benefit by the bloud of Christ justification and sanctification from dead workes that is sins Now from these dead workes that lay as an heavy loade on our consciences the bloud of Christ purgeth us Sinnes are called dead workes 1. Because they come from dead men 1 Tim. 5. Verse 6. Eph. 2. Verse 1. 2. Because they engender death Rom. 6. ult The bloud of CHRIST purgeth our consciences from all sinnes so as our consciences cannot accuse and condemne us for sinne because it is washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Hebr. 10.2 Rom. 8.1 The second fruit issuing from the former is our sanctification that being thus justified wee may be sanctified in soule and body to serve the living God Luk. 1.74 He is stiled the living God 1. Because he lives of himselfe and that for ever 2. Because hee makes us by his spirit to live a spirituall life in this world 3. Because hee will raise us up from a corporall death at the latter day and cause us to live with him for ever in the world to come 1. Grievous is the sting of Conscience This chest worme gnaweth sore this made Iudas to cry out I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud This made Iosephs brethren to condemne themselves when no man laid any thing to their charge verily wee have sinned in that wee saw the anguish of his soule when hee besought us and wee would not heare This made those Iohn 8. that seemed holy men to the eye of the world to depart out of the Temple one by one being convicted of their owne consciences This was truly said to be mille testes Now how shall wee stoppe the mouth of these thousand witnesses We are all miserable sinners our consciences accuse us of innumerable sinnes but here is our comfort the bloud of Christ sprinkled on our consciences purgeth us from all sinne being justified by faith wee have peace with God Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God 's Elect it is CHRIST that hath dyed yea rather that is risen againe that with his owne bloud hath entred into the holy place and hath made an eternall expiation of our sinnes Let us all entreat the Lord to apply the force of this bloud to our consciences dayly more and more 2. There bee living workes a reverent using of the name of GOD a cheerefull and reverent hearing of his word temperance chastitie sobriety liberality c. these come from us when wee live by faith in the Sonne of GOD there bee also dead workes blasphemie swearing lying covetousnesse pride oppression envie hatred malice and these are to bee abhorred of us all 1. Dead things stincke If wee meete with a dead carkasse by the way wee hold our noses even so sinnes blasphemie prophanations pride envie hatred malice covetousnesse these stincke in the nostrills of God Almighty therefore let them be detested by us 2. Dead men are forgotten I am as a dead man out of minde So let not our mindes run on these dead workes on the profits of the world the pleasures of the flesh let these dead things bee no more remembred 3. That which is dead must be buryed give me a place to bury my dead out of my sight as Abraham said to the sons of Heth Gen. 23.4 Idolatry blasphemy all sins are dead things therefore let them be buryed 4. Dead things are abhorred of us We shun dead things by the way we will not come neere them so let these dead workes be abhorred of us Wee decline those things that bee deadly wee will drinke no poyson because it will kill us we will not goe where the plague is least wee dye All sins are deadly they will bring us to everlasting death therefore beware of them If wee meet with a dead body by the way wee decline it yet the savour that comes from it can but
hath borne the sinnes of us all therefore let us not feare death 2. It is but a sleepe Lord if hee sleepe then shall hee doe well enough Men are refreshed after sleepe so we after death Apoc. 3.14 13. There bee two benefits which wee shall receive by death 1. Wee shall rest from our labours Here wee are like Noahs Dove wee can finde no rest either day or night wee shall rest from the workes of our calling Now indeed wee are early up in the morning sit up late at night and eate the bread of carefulnesse all the day long but then wee shall rest from that toiling and moiling wee shall rest from the workes of piety and Religion All that wee shall doe then will bee to sing Hallelujahs to our blessed redeemer Wee shall rest from sinne wee shall no longer cry out like tyred Porters Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee from this body of death We shall rest from all miseries and sicknesses cry out no more my head my head nor complaine of troubles in our selves Wives Children or servants Wee shall rest from weaknesses and infirmities Now wee eate drinke sleepe c. but then wee shall eate of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God and never hunger or thirst any more 2. Their workes follow them our labour is not in vaine in the Lord. The almes of Cornelius the garments of Dorcas the Centurions Synagogue a Cup of cold water given in CHRIST 's name shall be rewarded so that we may sing like a Swanne before our death as St. Paul did 2 Tim. 4.8 henceforth there is layd up for mee a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give mee at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing 4. Comfort against death is a glorious resurrection Iob 19.25 26.27 Phil. 3. Christ's glorious body Our bodies putrifie in the earth yet there is not an end of them We have praeludia in the Old and New Testament the Widow of Sareptas Son raysed up by Elias the Sonne of the Shunamitish Woman by Elisha In the New Testament Christ raised up three the one in domo Iairus daughter the other in feretro on the Beare the Widdowes Sonne of Naim the third in Sepulchro that was Lazarus which had lyen foure dayes and began to stincke all which are pledges of our resurrection The same God that raised them up will raise us up at the last day Death goes not alone there is one that followes her and that is judgement Iudgement either of absolution for the godly come yee blessed of my Father or of condemnation for the wicked goe yee cursed into c. If there were no judgement after death the godly of all others were most miserable and if no judgement the ungodly were the happiest men But let us know that after death comes a judgement one way or other salvation or damnation We must all appeare before the judgment seate of Christ c. The drunkard must give an account of his drunkennesse the covetous man how he hath imployed his riches we must give an account of our oppressions thefts secret or open of our negligent comming to Church and contempt of the Word of God Let this cause us with a narrow eye to looke into our lives let us judge our selves in this world that wee bee not condemned hereafter Yet there bee a number in the Church that thinke it a scare Crow and make a mocke at this judgement as the Athenians did at the resurrection Acts 17.32 they will believe the Assizes at Bury and in other places but count this a tale of a tub Felix though a wicked man trembled at it Let us all tremble at the naming of this judgement Let it be a meanes to pull us from sin and to make our peace with God in this world that we may stand without trembling before the Sonne of man Iudgment followes upon the neck of death either come thou blessed or goe thou cursed The good thiefe the same day he dyed was with Christ in Paradise that was his judgment the rich man the same day he dyed was in hell in torments that was his judgement Wherefore whilest wee have time let us repent while God giveth us a breathing time on the face of the earth for when death commeth it is too late then there is no mercy but judgement to be expected While we be alive Christ knocketh at the doore of our hearts with the hammer of his Word if we will open to him he will sup with us and we shall sup with him in the kingdome of glory but if now we shut him out and will not suffer him to enter he will shut us out and though we cry Lord Lord with the foolish Virgins he will not open to us VERSE 28. AT the which offering he dyed To take away not existentiam peccati but reatum dominium paenam Of many Matth. 26.28 he dyed for all sufficienter What is CHRIST dead and gone then wee shall never see him againe Yes he shall appeare in the heavens with his mighty Angels Without sinne Why the first time he appeared without sinne for He knew no sinne I but then hee came with his fraile body to offer up for sinne Verse 26. Now he shall appeare with no more sacrifice for sinne Then he came as a Lamb to be slaine for sin now as a King and a Lion Then he came as a Priest with a sacrifice to offer now as a Iudge to sit on the Throne To the salvation of the godly but to the damnation of wicked and reprobate men Here is another argument against the Masse Men may as well dye often ordinarily as Christ be offered up often As this is an unmoveable truth that a man ordinarily dies but once So this is a firme position in Divinity that CHRIST can be but once offered properly But to whom shall the day of Iudgement be comfortable to them that are weary of the loade of sin and looke for their deliverer Phil. 3.20 Tit. 2.13 2 Pet. 3.12 The mother of Sisera looked out at a window for the comming of her Sonne So we the spirituall mother brethren and sisters of Christ must looke out at the window of our hearts for him A Woman lookes for her Husband and we look to our money our Sheepe and Oxen but we looke not for Christ. It is to be feared if he were a comming we would entreat him to tarry still and say with the devills why art thou come to torment us before the time hee is our deliverer let us looke for him as faithfull servants for their masters and say come LORD IESU come quickly The second comming of CHRIST is here notably described 1. He shall come potenter because it is said he shall appeare 2. Innocenter without sinne 3. Finaliter to them that looke for him 4. Vtiliter to salvation He
are desirous to loade our selves with them they presse us downe and hinder us exceedingly in our race The Young man was so laden with his wealth that he could not follow Christ. Can a Bird flye when she is in a snare can a Man goe when he is fettered Riches are snares yea the devils snares which is a strong and cunning Fowler therefore beware how yee are intangled in them Ye may have riches and yet not be had of riches if they be weights and incumbrances Martha thou art cumbred about many things then away with them these Camels hardly go to heaven It had beene better for the Young Man to have parted with his riches than with CHRIST Many a rich Man is so pressed downe with his wealth with the cares of the world about Sheep and Oxen Silver and Gold as that he cannot goe to Church hee can finde no time to pray to read Scripture to occupie himselfe in heavenly meditations How can he run the race that leadeth to heaven If thy eye offend thee cut it out much more if thy riches offend thee if they clog thee in this race away with them it is better to goe a poore man to heaven than a rich man to hell If a man be pressed to death though it be with gold what gets he by it And if thou be pressed to eternall death though it be by thy golden riches what doth it advantage thee The Mariners Ion. 1.5 for the saving of their lives cast away their goods and with their owne hands hurled them into the sea and for the saving of our soules shall we not cast away our goods shall we suffer them to drowne us and that in everlasting perdition whatsoever presses thee downe cast it away If an Executorship Stewardship Lordship multitude of Farmes presse thee downe and make thee to have an ill conscience before God and Man too cast it away But we love our burthens too well we had rather lose heaven than them The third thing that presseth down is pleasure Luke 21.34 Surfetting and drunkennesse are great pressers We may run with drink and wine but not with drunkennesse When a mans belly is full he is unfit to run in a bodily race much more in the spirituall race Fasting and prayer are good for this race fornication and adultery are Heavie burthens to presse us downe Hos. 4.11 they take away the heart no heart to run 1 Tim. 5.6 The voluptuous person is dead while he lives That man in the Gospell said I have married a wife therefore I cannot come how much more will an adulterer say I have gotten a whore I must solace my selfe with her therefore I cannot come Let them runne that will I cannot runne the race of Christianity Therefore let us cast away every thing that presseth downe bee it never so neere or deere to us This universall particle is worthy to bee observed every thing Some flatter themselves in one thing or other In this the Lord bee mercifull unto mee as Naaman said Herod cast away many things but his sweet sin of Incest he would not cast away A drunkard will cast away any thing save his drunkennesse in this the Lord be mercifull unto me that I may take a cup of Nimis now and then A covetous miser will cast away any thing save his love of money In this the Lord be mercifull unto me that I may keepe my purse I will come to the Church but I will give nothing so neere as I can I but we must cast away everything that presseth downe lest we misse the gold of eternall glory My life sayes S. Paul is not deere unto me so as I may fulfill my course with joy and shall our pleasures and profits be so deere to us that they shall keepe us from fulfilling our course Let us cast every thing away rather than perish eternally But there is one thing which above all others we must strive to cast away .i. the sin this is ready to give us a fall at every turne it is inclusus hostis The Snaile carries his house with him but we carry our enemy with us The Snake of Originall sin is in our bosome wheresoever we become That doth so easily compasse us about As a paire of Compasses that compasse the whole Circle so doth this the whole man It compasses about our soules and bodies our eyes eares hands feet and is ready alwayes to molest and stop us in our race therefore away with it There be two compassers the one is Sathan he compasses the earth to and fro the other is our owne corruption that compasses all men on the earth We cannot utterly cast it off so long as wee live we cannot cast off the being of it but we may the dominion of it Though it bee in us let it not reigne in us though wee cannot ejicere let us dejicere Gods grace is sufficient for us as he said to S. Paul Let us pray to him for his grace that by little and little we may cast it off The foundation being layed he comes to the building it selfe and sets the admonition on it The race that we must run is illustrated by the efficient cause and the manner of our running He doth not say run you and I will sit still but let us run All must run Ministers and People Magistrates and Subjects We must not goe but run not creepe like Snailes but runne like Roes Our life is not compared to a sitting but to a walking or running yet we must not be like foolish runners that run themselves out of breath at the first Faire and softly goes farre Wee must not come in such a rash and heady zeale as that we runne quite out of the Church as some doe Let us run but wisely and discreetly What race not that which is set before us by the devill the race of pride envie hatred malice contention the race of drunkennesse uncleannesse c. but the race that is set before us by God the race of Christianity cleaving stedfastly to Christ and his Gospell 1 Cor. 9.24 By God Almighty Hee hath appointed to every one his race some a longer some a shorter Some have many crosses some fewer all have some Yet let us all run this race 3 How long must we run not for a while but to the end Not run while we be young men till our juvenilis ardor be a little over as many doe but though we be old Mnasons we must run still never cease running till we cease breathing I have finished my course sayes S. Paul We must never leave running till our course be finished 4 How must we run with patience This must be the staffe that we must walke withall and the principall leg that wee runne withall In patience possesse your soules The best man that is shall have one thing or other to exercise his patience withall Though David be a King he shall have a rayling Shimei we must
is the same for ever Doe not thinke that the Apostles had one Christ and wee an other they one doctrine and we an other The doctrine of Christ hath beene is and ever shall be the same Socrates among the heathen was semper idem but Christ is our semper idem alwayes the same therefore let us cleave to him VERSE 9. HEre followes the dehortation which hath two parts the one negative which wee must not doe the other affirmative what wee must doe Be not carryed about as chaffe feathers c. With diverse by this understand the legall rites and ceremonies which were diverse that are of diverse sorts Falsum multiplex verum simplex And strange doctrine which the Scripture doth not acknowledge Strange birds strangers out of an other Countrie not bred and borne in the Scripture Worshipping of Images a carnall eating of Christs flesh by transubstantiation c. are strange doctrines Now the heart cannot bee established with erroneous doctrine about meates c. but with the true doctrine of the grace and mercie of God towards us in Christ being justified by Faith wee have peace with God there is no condemnation to them that bee in Christ. This doth establish the conscience that the gates of Hell cannot prevaile against us Let our hearts bee established with this grace Not with meats .i. with unnecessary questions about the ceremoniall law A part is put for the whole There was a time when distinction of meates was strictly to be observed some had rather bee cruelly tormented even to death then to eate swines flesh but now the difference is abrogated God hath said to Peter and in him to us all arise kill and eat no creature now is uncleane all are sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer The severall Observations injoyned us in the Ceremoniall Law cannot make us acceptable to God these cannot strengthen the heart but the grace of God towards us in Christ that his bloud hath purged us from all sin this is the true Cordiall that strengthens the heart Therefore sticke to that and be not carryed away with other doctrines What went yee out into the wildernesse to see said Christ of Iohn Baptist A reede shaken with the winde Wee that bee Christians must bee as stones firmely built on Christ the rocke not as reedes If the East winde blowes the reed goes with that If the West winde arise it goes with that Christians must not bee weather Cockes that turne with the winde wee must be like the steeple it selfe that standeth firmely not like the weather Cocke on the steeple not like Ecebolius that changed his Religion alwayes as the Emperours changed In the time of Constantine and Constantius hee was a Christian In the Reigne of Iulian a Gentile offering to their gods When Iulian was dead a Christian againe lying at the Church doore and saying to the people Calcate mesalem insipidum Thus some now a dayes are carryed about there is no stay in them one while Protestants an other while Papists one while Brownists an other while Anabaptists Thus they are carryed hither and thither Be not as children c. Children are easily carryed won with an apple lost with a nut of one minde to day of an other to morrow ye may make them say and unsay yee may make them call a man good or naught with the turning of an hand Wee must not be like them wee must bee as men well advised what to doe Yee may carry a cow up and downe in the field with a lock of hay ye may carry some horses whither ye will with a horse loafe So the profits and commodities of the world carry many to any Religion So as I may enjoy my goods lands and living I care not of what Religion I be Let us carry other men to Christ but let us not be carryed by any from Christ. In the way of kindenesse any friend may carry us but let neither friend nor foe carry us from Christ. When certaine of Christs Disciples went away Christ asked the twelve Will yee also goe away but sayes Saint Peter in the name of the rest Whither shall wee goe so let us be as resolute though there bee never so many turne-coates let us say Whither shall wee goe to Popery Anabapt to Brownisme no We know whom wee have believed we will never depart from the truth and Word of God established amongst us Since the reformation of Religion in England God wonderfully blessed this land how did hee miraculously preserve it in Q. Elizabeths dayes how many treacheries have beene discovered how was the invincible Navy of the Spaniards foyled How prosperously without the shedding of one drop of bloud came King Iames to the Crown to the great joy of us al How graciously hath God protected him and his Realme since There hath beene treason on treason but God hath broken the nets of them all Among them all the powder treason that should have beene effected by a match is most unmatchable hell it selfe cannot devise such another Fight neither against more nor lesse said the King of Aram to his souldiers save against the King of Israel only So the Papists heretofore cried away with Queene Elizabeth fight against her that is enough Now not the King alone but the Queene Prince and all their royall Issue the Nobility and Clergy the Iudges the Knights and Gentlemen all the Parliament should have beene blowne up at once if this had gone forward where had we beene Here a leg there an arme here the head of such a Noble man should have beene carried about with gunpowder but GOD be thanked we all remaine still and pure Religion in despight of all is continued among us Therefore let us not bee carried about with diverse and strange doctrines As God hath upheld religion among us strangely and miraculously so let us hold it fast and persevere in it to the end Though an Angell from heaven much more though a Priest or Iesuit from Rome though a Papist an Anabaptist a Sectuary preach to us any other Gospell let us be carried by none of them all Let us carry to Christ let us not be carried from Christ. Let us say with Ruth we will live and dye with thee and with S. Peter Thou hast the words of eternall life we will not depart from thee but continue in thy truth for ever and not fall into errour VERSE 10. IT is taken from a contrariety betweene the Ceremoniall Law and Christ. If they that will bee justified by the observation of meats and other parts of the Ceremoniall Law cannot be partakers of Christ then that is to be abandoned but they that will bee justified by the observation of meats c. Ergo. Where first the Doctrine 10 11 12. secondly the Vse The Doctrine is first propounded then confirmed An Altar that is a Sacrifice upon an Altar which is IESUS CHRIST So the word is used 1 Cor. 9.13 2 The word eating doth