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A68802 Iaphets first publique perswasion into Sems tents, or, Peters sermon which was the first generall calling of the gentiles preached before Cornelius / expounded in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further use of the Church of God. Taylor, Thomas. 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23830.5; ESTC S118155 214,432 413

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but Christ besides suffered the whole wrath of God due to mans sinne they suffred in way of Christian dutie and seruice but hee to make a sacrifice of expiation of sinne they hauing their sinnes remooued and taken off from them but hee bare all theirs and all beleeuers sinnes in his bodie vpon the tree Howsoeuer therefore humane wisedome stumbleth at this death of Christ yet must we by the eye of faith labour to espie glorie in ignominie esteeme of the crosse as an honourable chariot reioyce in a triumph made as the Iewes scoffe by an hanged man thus shall we see the foolishnesse of God wiser then man and the weaknesse of God stronger then man thus also shall we imitate the holy men of God who looking backe to the crosse of Christ could see him thereon triumphing spoiling principallities breaking down partitions reconciling God and man yea man and man both Iew and Gentile into one bodie vpon his crosse s●aying hatred and procuring perfect peace Secondly seeing it is cleare in the text that Christ died not for his owne sinnes it is cleare that hee died for the sinnes of his elect vnto whom this vertue of his death must be applied and this two waies 1. to their humiliation 2. to their consolation Both of them grounded hereupon that Christ was thus crucified for thee without which application the knowledge of Christ crucified excelleth not that in the deuils themselues For the former if Christ died for thee then wast thou the cause of his death thou crucifyedst him thou art as faultie and blame worthy for his death as euer was Iudas Pilat the Iewes or the Soldiers thy sinnes were the nayles and the speare and thy selfe wast one of them that pearced him which consideration seriously thought of will be forceable to cast downe the proud conceits of those for whom Christ must be thus humbled and cannot but bring bitternesse of spirit to him that truely conceiueth that himselfe deserued that death which Christ not deseruing indured for him yea and to haue beene held vnder the wrath of God for all eternitie if Christ had not freed him vrge this point vpon thy conscience to bring thy selfe to the bewayling of thy sinnes oh it was my pride that stript Christ starke naked it was the sinne of my soule that made his soule heauie vnto the death my corruptions were the cordes that bound him my malice my contempt of God my ignorance my wofull courses were the thornes and nailes that wounded him he all this while standing in my roome and stead Thus is it prophesied of beleeuers in the new Testament that when the spirit of grace shall be powred vpon them they shall looke on him whom they haue pierced and lament for him that is by faith they shall looke to Christ whom by sinne they haue pearced and this shall be an effectuall meanes to lead them further into the practise of repentance Thus Peter when hee would bring downe the stifnesse of the Iewes told them that they crucified the Lord of glorie which when they heard they were pricked in their hearts and said men and brethren what shall we doe to be saued Popish preachers so handle this matter as to stirre vp compassion towards Christ hatred of the Iewes and Iudas and the soldiers but we must labour by it to come to the hatred of our owne sinnes or else we shall come behind the Iewes themselues For the latter If Christ was thus crucified for thee then also be thou of good comfort for many things were nailed on the crosse with him euen all thy inditement all thy sinne originall and actuall the curse hell and death it selfe died with him if thou beest a beleeuer the some nailes which were driuen into his hands and feete were driven into thy sinnes so as thou maist looke vpon the crosse as the Israelites did vpon the brasen serpent and thereby be cured of all the sting of sinne and deadly sicknesses of thy soule thou maist behold his ignominie as thy glorious roabe his arrainment thy absolution his binding thy freedome his abasement thy advancement his nakednesse the couer of thy shame his death thy life and his Fathers forsaking of him an assurance that thou shalt neuer be forsaken Only this knowledge of Christ crucified in speciall for thee is it that can settle the conscience in peace when thou knowest and beleeuest that all thy personall particular sinnes were hung on the crosse with Christ and that hee in thy roome suffred for them that which in Gods acceptation was as much as if in thine owne person thou hadst borne the curse of the law for all eternitie The most content themselues generally to know that Christ died for sinners but neuer care to know what this particular application meaneth The Popish doctrine also is an open aduersarie to this most comfortable perswasion of iustifying faith but it behooueth him that would haue the right vse of this doctrine neuer to be at rest till hee can come to say with the holy Apostle who loued mee and gaue himselfe for mee Gal. 20.20 and with Thomas after hee had seene the impressions of the wounds in his hands and side my Lord and my God Thirdly seeing that of the two maine things in this death 1. merit 2. the efficacie none shall haue his part in the former that hath not in the latter our care must be if we would find life in this death of Christ neuer to be at rest vntill we find the fruite and effect thereof in some sort in our selues The most powerfull fruits of i● are reduced to two heads the former is an ingrafting of vs into the similitude of his death for hee died that we after a sort should die with him The latter is a framing in vs the qualitie of his life for therefore hee died for vs that we should liue vnto him both of these are required to the right know●ledge of Christ crucified ioyned Eph. 4.24 and enioyned him that would know Christ as the truth is in Christ called the casting off of the old man and the putting on of the new What it is to be planted into the similitude of the death of Christ the Apostle sheweth namely when our old man is crucified with him but when is that done the next words answer when the bodie of sinne is destroyed that is not when sinne is restrained or some sinnes cut off but when originall sinne that is the old man is killed in all the parts and members of sinne when men ha●e abhorre and grone vnder their corruptions yea euen their smallest and sweetest sinnes this is a fruit of Christs death and noted to be in all those that are Christs when it is said that they crucifie the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 Quest. But how are these lusts crucified by the death of Christ Answ. Not only by that deadly blow which Christ hath giuen them by his death but also
darts of Satans temptations For Satan vrgeth the poore sinner sundrie wayes as 1. by the multitude and vilenesse of his sinnes with which his conscience telleth him he is couered and thence inferreth that because the wages of euerie sinne is death and because he hath deserued eternal death he must needs perish he can expect no other But now can the beleeuer stoppe his mouth say I graunt Satan al thy premisses no sinner is worthy of or can expect saluation in or by himselfe or so long as he continueth in sinne but my sins are remitted by meanes of Christs satisfaction and though in my selfe I am worthie to perish yet in Christ I haue a worthinesse to bring me to saluation I continue not in my sinnefull estate but am drawne out of the guiltinesse the filthinesse the seruice the loue and liking of my sinnes through the grace wherein I stand and therefore thy consequent is false I feare it not beeing so forcelesse 2. From the iustice of God who cannot but reiect whatsoeuer and whosoeuer is not fully conformable to his righteousnesse but here the beleeuing heart is quieted in that through remissiō of sinnes the iustice of God is fully satisfied though not by the person offending yet in his pledge and surety Iesus Christ who beeing iust died for the vniust that we might bee the righteousnesse of God in him And hence the iustice of God is a matter of most comfort to the poore sinner in that this righteousnesse cannot suffer him to demand satisfaction twise for one and the same sinne for this directly fighteth with iustice and equitie And if Satan be still instant and say But what shall an others righteousnesse availe thee if thy selfe be not a keeper of the lawe for the soule that sinneth that soule shall die the beleeuing heart will readily answer That although the lawe require proper and personall obedience yet the Gospel translateth it to the person of our suretie who beeing God and man not onely paid the whole debt but performed all righteousnesse absolutely fulfilling the whole lawe whence it is that his obedience is called the fulfilling of the lawe for righteousnesse to euerie one that beleeueth and himselfe was made vnder the law that he might redeeme from it those that were vnder it Gal. 4.4 And whereas the tempter will alleadge But for all thy righteousnes thou hast innumerable sinnes originall and actuall which the Lord hateth and euery day addeth to the huge heape of them The heart which holdeth this article of remission of sinnes abideth vndaunted for though it feele a bodie of sinne dwelling with it yet is it not raigning sinne it is not sinne at quiet but daily battaile is maintained against it it is sinne weakened and in daily consumption and therefore shall neuer be laid to the charge of him that is in Iesus Christ Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Iesus Christ for the lawe of the spirit of life which was in Iesus Christ hath freed mee though not from all molestation and presence yet from the lawe that is the seruice and slauerie of sinne and of death vers 2. But numbers will hee say who make account to partake in the death and righteousnesse of Christ are damned and haue no benefit by it and numbers haue reuoulted and fallen away and why maist not thou to which the beleeuer will readily answer that those that were thus plucked vp were neuer of the Fathers planting onely infidels and vnbeleeuers haue fallen away and withered for want of rooting and moisture but I beleeue the remission of sinnes not by any vngrounded perswasion but with a sound lasting and vnfayling faith resting it selfe wholly vpon Christ so as I am perswaded neither death nor life can seperate me from his loue the worke of whose spirit maketh me bold to call vpon God as my tender father produceth the fruits of true faith and conversion into my whole life whereby I know as infallibly the truth of my faith as I know the presence of the sunne by his light or of fire by his heate Finally he that hath begun to make me good wil make me also perseuere in goodnes 3. This assurance of remission of sinnes yeeldeth most assured comfort in life and in death the goodnesse of Pauls conscience was his comfort when he stood at the barre Act. 23.1 and 2. Cor. 1.12 This is our reioycing euen the testimonie of our conscience and in the agonie of death this is the Christians comfort that his sinne being remitted the sting of death is gone the locks of this strong Sampson wherein his great strength lay are clipped off and he is disarmed of his weapons which are our owne sinnes So as a Christian may challenge him into the field and say O death where is thy sting which because hee is bereaued of when he intendeth to kill he cureth when he doth his worst which is to separate soule and bodie he can seuer neither from Christ nay rather hee sendeth the member of Christ and setteth him nearer to his head which is best of all The third point propounded is to consider of the lettes which hinder men from seeking the assurance of the remission of their sinnes which is indeede their true happines if they could so esteeme of it some of which I will set downe 1. An erroneous iudgement that no man can attaine certainely to beleeue the pardon of his sinnes for the common Protestant is a verie Papist in this opinion who hold that to doubt of this point is a vertue and to beleeue it is presumption because no man can certainely know it without a speciall reuelation so aske ordinarie Christians doe yee beleeue the pardon of your sinnes they will say yea for God is mercifull and they be not so many or great but they may bee pardoned Hereby wee haue brought the partie to confesse that his sinnes bee pardonable but vrge him are you sure they are pardoned and here he is set vp he stammers out a carelesse answer he cannot surely tell but hee hopeth well and this is all you can wring out of him he knowes not whether Christ be in him or no whether he be in the faith or no he beleeues hee knoweth not what But to let men see their error herein 1. doth not our text say that men must receiue the remission of sinnes and can any man receiue so pretious a gift from God and not know when and how he came by it 2. what is the meaning of that article in our creed which we professe I beleeue the remission of sinnes what beleeue wee more then the deuills if we beleeue no more then that God forgiueth the sinnes of the elect and not our owne and then how is this one of the priuiledges of the Church 3. to beleeue in the name of Iesus Christ in particular for remission of sinnes is his commandement and therefore no presumption but a
comfort I haue ouercome the world not the Deuil The Prince of this world is cast out not sinne not death both which are cast into the lake nor temptation not persecution for by Christ we are more then conquerers All these may molest vs but cannot hurt vs they may make warre vpon vs but we may plucke vp our hearts seeing we fight against conquered enemies and are through his strength that hath loued vs sure of victorie before we strike a blow Let not vs forget the consolation in that although our enemies may nible at our heeles yet the seed of the woman hath broken their heads for vs. Vers. 39. And we are witnesses of all things which he did in the land of Iudaea and in Ierusalem whom they slewe hanging him on a tree The Apostle hauing witnessed of such facts of Christ as testified him the great Prophet of his Church affirmeth in these words of himselfe and the rest of the Apostles that they were witnesses not onely of the things formerly vttered but of all things else not onely which Christ did in Iudea and Ierusalem but also which he suffered among them and so defendeth to lay downe his Priestly office in this verse and his kingly office in the next That the Apostles were such witnesses of all things which Christ did and suffered in Iudaea and Ierusalem will appeare to him that considereth that it was one of Christs first actions in his office after his baptisme to call his disciples who presently left all and followed him to the end that they might be oculate witnesses of his mightie workes of his life of his death and resurrection and that they might be ear-witnesses of all the gratious words which proceeded out of his mouth to which purpose he tooke them after a sort into his family that by their domesticall and familiar conuerse with him all the while he liued in the execution of his office they might be furnished to this testimonie hence is it that Iohn saith We sawe his glorie namely in his doctrine and workes and the things which we haue heard and seene declare we vnto you Many worthy points concerning this witnesse of the Apostles were here to be deliuered but that I referre them all to the 41. and 42. verses where we shall as fitly and more fully handle the same And now proceede to the matter witnessed namely the Priestly office of Christ in these words whom they slewe hanging him vpon a tree wherein are to be considered 1. The person that was put to death whom 2. the persons that put him to death they slew namely of Iudea and Ierusalem 3. the kind and manner of his death slewe hanging him on a tree 4. the vse of Christ his crucifying First the person that was put to death was Iesus Christ whom we haue heard to be Lord of all anointed with the holy Ghost and power to worke most powerfull miracles who went about doing good and neuer harm● with whom God so was as he neuer was with any creature before nor euer shall be hereafter who subdued mightily the very deuills themselues with one word for all this hee was killed and slaine Quest. But how could the Lord of life be subdued of death yea he that did onely good and was with out all sinne which is the mother of death Ans. Christ the mediator must be considered in his two natures 1. the Godhead ● the manhood and in that he died it was according to his manhood so Peter saith hee died according vnto his flesh for his bodie was dead being separated from his soule and his soule suffered the sorrowes of death But yet we must conceiue that he suffered not in such a manhood as was a naked and bare flesh such as ours but such as was inseparably vnited and knit to the godhead and therefore the Apostle saith that God shed his blood that is not the Godhead but such a person as is both God and man Secondly although he had no personall sinne to bring him to death yet had hee sinne imputed vnto him euen the sinnes of his whole Church which he willingly tooke vpon himselfe so as God reckoned with him not for the sinnes of one man but of all his Church and esteemed him as a captaine sinner till the price was paid and men reckoned him among sinners and esteemed him an arch-malefactor Quest. But doth not this crosse the power of Christ immediatly before mentioned whereby he controlled the deuils themselues that wicked men should thus farre preuaile against him Answ. No but it argueth a voluntarie laying downe of his power for the time of his suffring for at his apprehension he could haue commanded twelue legions of angels but that the Scriptures must be fulfilled yea and this laying aside of his power was the most powerful work that euer he wrought by which he more foyled and broke the deuills power and forces in men then euer by any shewing himselfe the true Sampson who more mightily preauailed against his enimies in his death thē in all his life Hence note 1. how Christs righteousnesse is witnessed hee went about doing good and ye● hee is slaine and teacheth that Christ himselfe deserued not death but hee endured it for some other that had deserued it and indeed Christ died for vs and in our stead that we should not die Obiect But how could he beeing innocent suffer for vs sinners or how standeth it with equitie that God should punish the innocent and let the guiltie goe free Answ. We must consider Christ in his death not as a debter but as a surety or pledge betweene God and vs who hath vndertaken our whole debt and therefore he suffereth not as guiltie in himselfe but in the roome of vs that were guiltie now it standeth with the course of iustice to lay the debters action vpon the suretie beeing 1. willing 2. able to pay the debt as Christ was Secondly we may gather hence the hainousnesse and odiousnesse of our sinnes it was no trifle nor a matter of small desert that the Lord of glorie the onely sonne of God yea God himselfe must shed his blood for and yet what a small reckoning is made of foule and open sinnes Thirdly take notice also of the loue of God who to free vs would lay the chastisement of our peace vpon his deare sonne that so his iustice might be satisfied Obiect But how could his iustice be satisfied who was infinitely offended with such a finite short death as Christs was Answ. By reason of the dignitie of the person who suffered beeing God as well as man that suffering was in value eternall though not in duration or continuance Lastly we haue here the two natures of Christ liuely set before vs the one most powerfull and glorious in mightie miracles which forced legions of deuils to flie before it the other beaten downe with wrongs and iniuries euen to the death it selfe and it was meete that
word of Christ should bee fulfilled see Iohn 18.32 Thirdly this kind of death carried with it a more speciall infamie then any other as at this day wee count hanging a dogs death that is an infamous kinde of death because it was especially execrable by the law which accursed euerie one which was hanged on a tree not that this death by any law of nature or in it selfe was more accursed then burning or pressing or by the sword for then neither the theife on the crosse could be saued nor any of our fellons thus executed whereas the scripture in the one and our owne experience in the other speake the contrary but it was onely accursed by the ceremoniall law of Moses so that euerie malefactor of the Iewes that was hanged was in the ceremonie accursed was the type of Christ the substance of all ceremonies who on the crosse was really and truly accursed sustaining the whole wrath of God which is the curse of the lawe and not only ceremonially and typically as they were This the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal. 3.13 that Christ was not onely dead but made a curse for vs his reason is because he died on a tree and therefore are we admonished Phillp 2.8 to consider not only that Christ was obedient vnto the death but to the death of the crosse for any other death had not so much concerned vs. Fourthly this death which so much concerned all the Church of Iewes and Gentiles must not be obscure and therefore the Lord would not haue Christ to die in a tumult or in secret but most conspicuously and apparantly at Ierusalem the great citie of the Iewes but tributarie to the Romanes as it were vpon the theatre of the world at a solemne feast when all the males out of all quarters must appeare before the Lord vpon a crosse high erected that all might see him and on that crosse himselfe proclaimed King of the Iewes in three seuerall languages the Latin Greeke and Hebrewe that all sorts of men might come to the knowledge of it and further because in his death standeth our life he must be thus lifted vp that all men might see him certainely dead and that he died not in shew and appearance only but indeede and in truth really and perfectly for which cause also our Apostle doubleth his affirmation they slew him and hanged him on a tree which most necessarie ground of faith and religion Satan hath mightily by many heretikes sought to ouerthrowe the Turks at this day are held off from the faith in this Messiah by that diabolicall suggestion that not Christ himselfe but Simon the Cyrenian was miraculously crucified in his stead And therefore because the assurance of the death it selfe assureth vs more fully of all the fruits and benefits of it the Scripture is carefull so pregnantly to confirme it as that it cannot be denied not only that he was in the sight of a number of thousands dead on the crosse but by his three dayes buriall by the peircing of his side out of which came water and blood by which was manifest that the verie call of his heart was peirced by the confession of his verie enemies who would beleeue nothing but their own sences and lastly by the fact of the souldiers who whereas they hastened the death of the theeues by breaking their legges they broke not his because the text saith they sawe that he was dead alreadie The fourth point is the vse of Christs crucifying First in Christ on the crosse take a full veiw of the cursednesse and execration of sinne and consequently of thine owne wretchednesse both in regard of thy wicked nature and cursed practises euery sinne beeing so lothsome and odious in the eies of God as the least could neuer be put away but by such an ignominious death of the Sonne of God himselfe If thou lookest at sinne in thy selfe or in thy suffrings yea or in the suffrings of the damned in hell it will seeme but a slight thing but behold God comming downe from heauen and him that thought it no robberie to be equall to his Father in glorie taking flesh in that flesh abasing himselfe to the death of the crosse on that crosse susteining the whole wrath of his Father and so becomming accursed for it and thou shalt see it in the natiue face of it and indeed this one consideration setteth a more vgly face vpon sinne then the law possibly can for that sheweth our sinnes to be a knife to stabbe our selues withall but this to be the very speare that went to Christs heart which is the most odious apprehension in the world all the sinne that euer was committed on the earth could not bring a man so low suppose one man had committed them all as the least sinne of the elect brought the Sonne of God seeing hee that falleth lowest falleth but from one degree in earth to another but Christ falleth from the glorie of heauen into the very sorrowes of hell whosoeuer thou art then that makest light account of sinne and pleadest that God is mercifull looke a little in this glasse wherein behold Gods iustice and sinnes desert in the Fathers iust indignation against his wel-beloued Sonne whom nothing but the cursed death of his only Sonne in whom hee professed himselfe well pleased could appease Secondly seeing all the knowledge of Christ profitable to saluation is of Christ crucified let vs desire to know nothing in comparison but Christ and him crucified seeing such a great Apostle as Paul was desired to know nothing else Now to come to the distinct knowledge of it we must consider these three points 1. The vertue and power of this death in it selfe 2. The application of it vnto our selues 3. The fruits which must appeare in vs by such application For the first Looke vpon this death of the Sonne of God not as of another dead man neither thinke or speake of it as of the death of another ordinarie fellon executed but as of a death which slew all the sinnes of all the beleeuers in the world and as a destroyer of all destroyers a death wherein was more power then in all the liues of all Angels and Men that euer were or shall be yea such a death as hath life in it quickning all the deaths of all that haue benefite by it Here we haue a mightie Sampson bearing away the gates of his enemies by death killing death by suffering his Fathers wrath ouercomming it by entring into the graue opening it for all beleeuers by his blood shedding vpon the crosse reconciling all things Col. 1.20 neuer was their such an actiue suffering of any man which tormented and crucified the Deuils themselues when the deuils instruments were tormenting and crucifying him it is peerelesse and vnmatcheable no Martyr euer thus suffered though Popish doctrine would match as Corriualls some of their Saints sufferings with it the most faithfull Martyrs suffred but dissolution of soule and bodie
keepe them lowe in their owne eies as also prouoketh them to walke awfully in regard of God and watchfully ouer their hearts and liues still groaning to God vnder their daily infirmities By this meanes out of the eater commeth meate as was said in Samsons riddle Iud. 14.14 2. Death is not now to Gods children as it was to Christ ioyned with a sence of Gods anger against it or paying a debt to the iustice of God for it were against the rule of Gods iustice to require the paiment of the same debt twise but wherein they haue a sweete sense of Gods fatherly loue wherein sinne is perfectly to be abolished whereby way and entrance is made vnto life euerlasting where we shall be with God and Iesus Christ which is best of all The Saints of God in these regards haue rather desired thē feared it for what man hauing bin tossed a long time vpon a dangerous sea would feare the hauen or who beeing wearied with the trauells of the day would feare to goe to his rest at night 3. Sence of hell keepeth in vs an hatred of sinne and a longing after heauen yea how beneficial the terrors of conscience are to Gods children were too long here to discourse The speach is as true as common the way to heauen lyeth by hell gates 4. The Deuill maketh vs flie to God our helpe and relie vpon his strength yea when men by no other meanes wil be drawn God setteth the deuill in their necks to dragge them to heauen as a graue Diuine speaketh 5. All the euills in the world worke to the best to them that loue God and hasten them to the fruition of the victorie obtained by Christ they weigne them from the world and the loue of it And whereas they are as prone to pitch their tabernacles here belowe as others God vseth these as meanes to keep his from being of the world euen while they are in it They conforme them to Iesus Christ their head and traine them in the imitation of him both in patience and obedience Now how could any of these parcells of Gods curse against the sinne of man or mans cursed sinne it selfe bring to any such sweete and profitable fruits but by the ouerruling power of Iesus Christ who bringeth life out of death light out of darknesse and who only can make his owne wise out of ranke poyson to sucke most sweete and soueraigne preseruatiues which who doth not hee neuer as yet knew the benefit of Christ his resurrection The second sort of blessings procured to the Church by Christ his resurrection is the fruition of good things which it putteth vs in possession of euen in this life by giuing vs our first fruits and a sweete taste but vpheapeth our measure after this life when our haruest commeth and we admitted to feed fully at the supper of the lambe The benefits which I will mention are three First we are confirmed hereby in the whole truth of all our religion the maine foundation of which laid by all the Prophets and Apostles is that Iesus Christ the sonne of Marie was the Sonne of God the true Messias perfect God and perfect man and so indeed hee was such a one as hee was foretold to be one that was to die and yet saw no corruption one who must make his soule an offering for sinne and yet must surviue to see his seede and prolong his daies one that had power to laie downe his life and power to take it vp againe In a word one that was put to death concerning the flesh but was quickned in the spirit that is by vertue of his dietie raysing that flesh vp againe Let all the Iewes and Atheists in the earth dispise the indignitie of his death we with the Angels will admire the glorie of his resurrection The second benefit is that hence we are assured that our 1. Iustification 2. Sanctification 3. perfect saluation is not only obteined but applied vnto vs. For our iustification before God by meanes of Christ his resurrection hee brought into vs an euerlasting righteousnesse in that hee not only bare our burden vpon himselfe but bare it away from vs for what is his resurrection else but his actuall absolution from our sinnes which were imputed vnto him and for which he subiected himselfe vnto the death Whence we grow vp in full assurance that the whole price is not only paid to the vttermost on Christs part but that the satisfaction is accepted also on his Fathers whose iustice would neuer haue absolued him if all the bills and writings which were to be laid against vs had not beene fastned to the crosse and so cancelled and fully discharged so as now we may with the Apostle hold out a flagge of defiance and challenge our righteousnesse for who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that iustifieth who shall condemne it is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen againe And the same Apostle thirsting after that righteousnesse which is by faith in him counteth all things losse and donge saue only to know him and the vertue of his resurrection 2. From this resurrection of Christ issueth our sanctification which is our first resurrection or raising of our soules from the death of sinne because in euery reconciliation making must be two conditions 1. A forgetting vpon satisfaction of all old wrongs and iniuries 2. A binding from future offences the former Christ effecteth by his death the latter by his resurrection into the which whosoeuer are grafted they cannot henceforth serue sinne but beeing risen with Christ they seeke the things which are aboue where Christ sitteth they cease further by sinne to offend as such who are begotten to a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead and for this cause our Sauiour was carefull after his departure hence to send out his spirit in more plentifull and abundant manner then before that hee might continually inspire his people with ardent desires after the beginnings of that life eternall vnto which Christ himselfe is risen who then manifest themselues members of such an advanced head when this new life manifesteth it selfe in them Thirdly our perfect saluation is also hence fully assured vs for if our Lord Iesus hath foyled all the powers of hell death and darkenesse in himselfe when he was yet dead how much more doth he it for vs his members beeing now aliue if he could driue backe and disperse all spirituall enmities euen when he was in hell it selfe after a sort how much more now beeing ascended farre aboue all mooueable and aspectible heauens for we must not behold the victorie triumph of Christ as performed onely in and for himselfe but as the ground and pledge of the victorie and conquest of all the beleeuers in the world Looke vpon this sonne of Dauid prostrating the great Goliah of hell for all the Israel
examining of our selues and this is when we search and fanne our selues when we sift the secret corners of our hearts and enquire narrowly and without partiallitie What haue I done that looke as the Kings Attornie sifteth out and exaggerateth euery circumstance of the crime against a Traytor at the barre to make his offence as foule as can be so should we become the King of heauen his attournie against our selues not lessning or mincing and much lesse excusing hiding or defending any sinne but labour to see our sinne in euery circumstance and make it as vile as we can that our hearts may be convinced and beaten downe in the sence of our miserie For this purpose lay thy life and euery particular action of it to the law of God that as a straight line will shew thee all thy crookednesse and fetch thee in by such circumstances as whereby thou shalt not content thy selfe with a confession in grosse that thou art a sinner but shalt confesse thy sinne to be out of measure sinnefull But many a Christian is like a desperate bankcrupt who beeing afraid to looke into his reckonings goeth on till hee be clapt vp in prison and at length they see there was no heauenly husbandrie in all this Thirdly In confessing our sinne and pleading guiltie this is the couenant that whereas hee that hideth his sinne shall not prosper hee that confesseth shall find mercie Psal. 32.4 I said I will confesse my iniquitie and thou forgauest mee the punishment of my sinne It is too neere ioyned to our natures to hide our sinne with Adam and conc●ile it in our bosome or else to summe vp all in a word without speciall greefe for any speciall sinne and herein they thinke they haue peace which is but vnfeelingnesse But those that belong to God he bringeth them to sound humiliation hee maketh them sicke in smiting them and setteth their sinnes in order before them like a bill of parcells to the breaking of their hearts and the vtter acknowledgement of themselues to be miserable bank●rupts For this purpose he maketh their owne consciences also to be iudges of their actions pronouncing sentence of guiltinesse and death against themselues As Dauid Against thee against thee haue I sinned and againe I am the man and againe I haue done very foolishly but these sheepe what haue they done The penitent theefe thus iudgeth himselfe we are righteously here To conclude this point hee was neuer truly humbled nor euer aright iudged himselfe that is more ashamed to confesse then to commit sinne Fourthly After pleading guiltie in pleading for pardon as for life and death and as the poore malefactor condemned to die cries for mercie and all his hope and longing is for a pardon euen so this is noted to be the practise of the Church Hos. 14.2.3 Oh Israel returne vnto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquitie Take vnto you words and turne to the Lord and say vnto him Take away all iniquitie and receiue vs gratiously And which of the Saints haue not placed all their happinesse in the pardon of sinne or haue not preferred the shining of Gods countenance vpon them aboue all the outward happines that the earth affoardeth Now in the seeking and suing for pardon because God will not heare him that regardeth wickednesse in his heart for wicked Esau shall find no repentance nor fauour with teares therefore thou must forthwith cease to doe euill as beeing ashamed of it and learne to doe well laie lawes vpon thy selfe be most seuere against thy selfe in the things wherein thou hast displeased thy God watch diligently ouer those corruptions which haue most foyled thee this is the way both to make and preserue thy peace Bring thy selfe then with feare and trembling before Gods righteous iudgement accuse thy selfe and bewaile thy sinnes be not ashamed to confesse but to commit them againe be so farre from purposing any wickednesse in thy heart as rather thou be strongly armed with full purpose against it And thus remembring thy sinnes God will forget them thus writing them deepe in thine owne bookes God will blot them out of his Thus if thou hide them not but cast them out of thy heart and life hee will hide them for euer and cast them vtterly out of his sight so that if thou canst thus iudge thy selfe aforehand thou shalt neuer be iudged of the Lord. Vers. 43. To him giue all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes The Apostle Peter although he hath sufficiently prooued whatsoeuer he hath formerly deliuered concerning the doctrine and miracles life and death resurrection and ascention and the comming of Christ againe vnto iudgement yet as though no proofe could be too much or as if he could not satisfie himselfe in enforcing this holy doctrine and binding it vpon the consciences of his hearers he shutteth vp his sermon in this verse with an other assured testimonie aboue all exception drawn from all the Prophets who all consent and conspire with the Apostles in all their doctrine concerning him the summe and maine end of all which is that through beleeuing in his name the elect should receiue remission of sinnes which is the summe and effect of this verse Where first may be asked why doth the Apostle induce so many testimonies one in the necke of another In the answer where of we shall see that none of them are needelesse or superfluous For 1. all the points of Christian religion are aboue and against corrupt nature as appeareth in the heathen who still esteemed the preaching of Christ foolishnesse and in the Athenians who when they heard Paul preaching of the iudgment day and Christs resurrection from the dead they mocked him The hardened Iewes at this day on whom the wrath of God is come to the vttermost doe the like and well it were for many if professed Christians in the midst of such a light made more reckoning of our painfull preaching of Christ who teach the same points then some of the former which were they so slight matters as most account them what neede they be so enforced We are therefore hence fitly enformed both to make more high account of such great mysteries which the spirit of God is so carefull to commend vnto vs as also to bewayle the infidelitie of our hearts that neede so much working vpon them to entertaine such necessarie truthes as these bee 2. Because although he was an Apostle yet would he shewe his care that in all his sermon he taught nothing of his owne which the Prophets had not formerly taught Which teacheth all ministers much more to beware least in any of their sermons they broach such doctrine or bring in such stuffe of which they cannot prooue the Prophets and Apostles to be patrons and publishers For this was the commandement of the Apostles that we teach no other doctrine neither contrary
that no other would haue answered his question nor setled his conscience now touched with sence of his sinne If hee had sent him to the word that could haue done him no good if hee did not mingle it with faith If to his prayers only the prayer of faith is auaileable If to the Sacraments they must be seales of faith or else doe no more good then seales set to blankes If to a good life it must be the life of faith which the iust must liue by If to the Church to ioyne himselfe to that hee must himselfe be first of the houshold of faith Nay more if to Christ himselfe if hee carrie not faith with him hee is after a sort disabled from doing him any good As hee could doe no great workes in Capernaum because of their vnbeleefe only thy faith in the Sonne of God is the beginning and accomplishment of thy happinesse Adde hereunto that it not only remooueth discomfort but bringeth with it all the ●ound ioy and comfort of our liues whence it is that Christian ioy is called ioy of faith and all the Sonnes of faithfull Abraham tread in their Fathers stepps who saw the day of Christ and reioysed because God hath not only reserued mercie for vs but by the faith which his spirit worketh in our hearts he letteth vs know yea and tast what hee hath done for vs so as hence haue we peace with God and with our owne hearts boldnesse in prayer and not patience only but ioy in sorrow thus giue a man faith once and sinne flieth before him bands of temptations are discomfited afflictions dismay him not death and deadly things are disarmed vnto him faith hath gotten and holdeth Christ his victorie his strength his life yea whilest hee walketh in a thousand deaths the faith of his heart hath filled his soule with that heauenly and spirituall ioy which all the world cannot giue neither can it take away Lastly by this worthy grace of faith we are not only brought into the grace by which we stand receiue increase of it through the communion of Christ his death and resurrection as also the inhabitation of the spirit in our hearts but also we are fitted vnto our glorie for faith assureth euery beleeuer of his saluation and euery beleeuer is kept by the power of God through faith vnto saluation which is prepared to be shewed in the last time 1. Pet. 1.5 Thirdly seeing that this is so speciall a grace of God bestowed but on a few it is worth inquirie by what touchstone a man may know the soundnesse of his faith and that it is much more precious then gold And therefore that a man may not be deceiued in a matter of such moment as this is the Scriptures haue furnished vs with such markes and notes as such who will vse diligence in laying their faith thereunto shall certainely know the truth or vnsoundnesse of it for else why should we be commanded to prooue our selues whether we be in the faith or no vnlesse the beleeuer know that he doth beleeue Againe who be they that know not that Christ is in them but reprobates and can Christ liue in any man and he not know it at one time or other and be able to say with Paul I liue not henceforth but Christ liueth in mee and I know whom I haue beleeued Which if any say Paul might know beeing an Apostle and hauing a reuelation which ordinarie men haue not the same Apostle answereth it 1. Cor. 2.12 when bee ioyneth with himselfe all beleeuers we haue not receiued the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are giuen vs of God Now whosoeuer haue receiued this spirit want not this reuelation who if hee reueale vnto vs any thing that is giuen vs of God then would hee not neglect the greatest gift that euer was giuen vs euen Christ himselfe and life eternall through his name The first marke of sound faith is the seat and dwelling of it and that is an humbled soule that longeth and almost fainteth for Gods mercie in Christ that not feeling faith can bitterly complaine for want of it that striueth against doubting because God hath commanded to beleeue that endauoreth to assent to the promise touching forgiuenesse of sinne with purpose to sinne no more this holy seede is sowne in no other ground but this The second marke are the essentiall properties of sound faith and they are three in number 1. It is most pliable to the word of which it is begotten the Iayler as soone as hee was conuerted would but know of the Apostles what hee might doe it will except against nothing that the word enioyneth it will picke no quarrells but with Abraham riseth early to obey God when if hee had reasoned with flesh and blood hee could haue excepted many things which all the wisedome of flesh could neuer haue answered This is that the Apostle ascribeth vnto it that it establisheth the whole law yea the whole word of God the Law and Gospel by prouoking to cheerefull indeauour in the obedience of them both 2. Sound faith being a subsistance it enableth a man to stand vnder a great burden and not be crusht Psal. 46.2 Therefore we will not feare though the earth be mooued Iob will not let his hold goe if the Lord should smite off his hand yea if hee kill him hee will trust still it resteth vpon Gods arme and truth in all estates in life and death whereas euery crosse puffe of winde of temptation or affliction vnsetleth yea and sinketh the vnbeleeuer 3. It beeing a subsistance of things not seene it careth not how little it see the lesse it seeth the more it beleeueth and the lesse it seeth of men and meanes the more it seeth of God It seeth an Almightie promiser who can doe what he will It seeth him that is true of his word who cannot lie and who cannot but doe what he hath said It seeth a mercifull and louing Sauiour whose eyes are vpon them that trust in his mercie and seeing these it seeth enough Besides it estrangeth the heart from the world which it seeth and seeketh an vnseene countrie Abraham Isaac and Iacob acknowledged themselues rather strangers in this world then inhabitants and that they came into it rather to see it and goe through it then dwell or set vp their rest in it It weigneth the heart from the things belowe as the woman at the well once meeting with Christ she forgetteth her waterpot What careth Zacheus for halfe his goods yea or all whē Christ once becommeth his ghest and bringeth saluation to his house And on the contrarie it sendeth vp the heart to those treasures which the eye of flesh cannot see but are reserued to the seekers of the countrie where they are And these are the three worthy properties whereby
hee had done from Egypt till nowe And what was it the Lord had said which Moses taketh hold on namely in verse 34. of that 32. of Exod. Goe nowe bring the people vnto the place which I commanded thee behold myne Angel shall goe before thee but yet in the day of my visitation I will visit their sinne vpon them So as this place rightly interpreted yeeldeth no patronage to any such Popish and wicked collection Further for the second obiection that death remaineth though the sinne be pardoned I answer it remaineth not as any satisfaction to the iustice of God to beleeuers nor as a punishment of sinne to such as haue their sinnes remitted but it hath lost his sting which is the guilt of sinne is become a remedie rather then a punishment Phisicke rather then poison an end of their misery and an entrance into a better life So as it still abideth firme against all such detestable deuises of Poperie that remission of sinnes carrieth with it the remoouall of all the guilt and punishment of sinne to such as haue their parts in the same And it is lastly to be obserued in this description that I say the guilt and punishment of all sinne is taken away for if any be not remitted they be either greater sinnes or lesser to remit the lesser and not the greater what were wee the better how could our saluation be effected or perfected how could grace be euery way grace or doe we pray for remission of lesser and not of greater also seeing our selues must forgiue our brethren not only lesser offences but euen the greatest Again to remit the greater and retaine the lesser were to say that the Lord is either not so able or so willing to forgiue lesser sinnes as greater Shall a man frankly forgiue a debt of thousands of pounds and will hee not forgiue also to the same partie a few pence The Popish Church confidently auouch that many sinnes need no remission as concupiscence which they say is not properly a sinne albeit indeed it is the mother sinne of all And all the heape of their veniall sinnes which they say are not against but besides the commandement because they are not attended vnto or deliberatly done with full c●ensent of reason because they cannot hinder the habit of vertue but the act of it and that a verie little nor turne vs from our end but hinder so much as it is our progresse vnto it and because they though themselues displease God yet they make not God displeased with the partie committing them for they can stand with grace and haue not properly and simply the reason and respect of sinne or offence therefore are they not to be punished with eternall but only temporarie punishment These need not the blood of Christ nor grace nor confession in particular nor absolution nor any new habit of charitie but these are easily wiped away with a little holy water or any meritorious worke or by the Sacraments receiued or by generall confession or by a small humiliation as knocking the brest fasting almes the Lords prayer an ave Maria or by entring into a consecrated Church or by a Bishops blessing or if all these helpe but a little presently after death they are all consumed in the fire of purgatorie Oh horrible blasphemies derogatorie to the blood of Christ which purgeth vs from all sinne and to the truth of the Scriptures which teach vs that when we had nothing to paie our Master forgaue vs our whole debt But I haue followed them to farre were it not that the discouerie of their impieties may bring some profit to such as are not so well acquainted or exercised in their writings Thus much of the description of this Grace The second thing propounded is what it is to receiue remission of sinnes which because it implieth a gift or oblation therefore we must know that pardon of sinne is offred generally to all in the word of grace publickly preached and conferred vnto beleeuers not only in the beginning of their conuersion but through their whole life Now to receiue this remission is when a capable that is a contrite heart by faith which is an hand taking in receiueth Christ and all his benefits among which remission of sinnes is the cheefe preached and published in the Gospel And this it doth on this manner 1. Vpon a touch of sinne and sence that without this gratious pardon there is nothing but certaine perdition the heart beaten downe beginneth seriously to meditate of the promise of mercie in Christ and of the meanes of deliuerance from this wofull estate 2. It desireth to beleeue and wisheth that mercie to belong to it selfe it sendeth groanes to God it hopeth for pardon and weakly applieth the generall promises of grace 3. After such desires and grones of the heart the Lord most gratiously answereth by his spirit and by little and little setleth and quietteth the heart perswading it that Christ himselfe and consequently reconciliation with God doth indeed belong vnto him so as hee resteth in that assurance Thus the Lord will not only giue vs mercie but letteth vs know that hee doth so that our ioy and peace and boldnes in him might be more full Thirdly the persons receiuing this remission are all beleeuers Whosoeuer beleeue in his name whose faith intitles them to the maine promise of life and all other depending thereupon they must beleeue in his name For 1. there is no other name to be saued by In him alone is the matter of our saluation seeing remission is obtained by his blood Ephes. 1.7 2. Hee alone is God and man both which natures are necessarie to our suertie by the former he hath power by the latter a right to vs not only more generall of proprietie as the Father and holy Ghost also haue but more speciall of propinquitie beeing our brother and first borne of our family the next of our kinred and therefore of right belongeth to him to recouer our weake estate as was figured in that law Levit. 25.25 If thy brother be impouerished and sell his possession then his redeemer shall come euen his neere kinsman and buy out that which his brother sould 3. Hee only was deputed of God to deriue life and grace into vs as the head into the members and therefore most meete it is that whosouer would sucke and draw of his fulnesse should beleeue in his name Now from these words wee learne two instructions 1. What is the cheife thing which euery Christian must striue to obtaine while hee liueth in this world namely remission of sinnes 2. What is his estate and condition that hath attained it For the first it is grounded in the text because howsoeuer remission of sins is here only named yet in it are included al the other gracious mercies of God not only all deliuerances and freedome from the euills and punishments that attend vpon sinne but euen all our
redemption and saluation with the meanes of it and blessings accompanying the same And indeed this is the summe or epitome of all Gods mercie in which the Lord crowneth his Saints with compassion a mercie which reacheth vp to heauen and draweth them out of the most miserable thing in all the world which is to lie vnder the curse and danger of sinne and consequently vnder the endles displeasure of the Almightie Which point beeing euen as the one thing necessarie to be knowne and attained I will stand a little longer vpon it hoping to spend my time well in setting downe these fiue points 1. the necessitie of remission of sinnes 2. the benefits of it 3. the Lettes of it 4. the helpes to it 5. the companions of it by which as by so many notes we may know we haue it and so we will adde the vse of the whole doctrine First the necessitie of it will appeare if we consider 1. the multitude and abundance of our sins which are to be remitted beeing for number as our haires and as the sand of the sea which is numberlesse which cannot be other seeing we drinke in sinne as the fish doth water that is incessantly for the fish ceasing to drinke in water ceaseth to liue neither can we cease to sinne till we cease to liue Nay seeing our very best actions hold no correspondence with the law of God and in strickt iustice are no better then so many sinnes this consideration exceedingly multiplieth our sinnes in that not only in fayling in but in doing of our duties we sinne incessantly against our God 2. If we looke vpon the danger of sinne we shall better see the necessitie of remission It is a filthie leprosie which infecteth the bodie and soule the thoughts speaches and actions it maketh a man a loathsome creature in the eyes of God it maketh God our enemie who is the fountaine of life and whose lightsome countenance is better then life yea it maketh God depart from his creature and destroie the workes of his owne fingers it layeth the sinner open and naked to all the wrath of God to all the curses of the law in this life and in the life to come It setteth him as a bute against whom the Lord in anger shooteth out of his quiuer all the arrowes of his displeasure It is the only thing which vnremitted maketh the sinner absolutely vnhappie and euery way most accursed Neither doth the whole heape of sinne only make the sinner so miserable but any one sinne euen the least vnpardoned would for euer hold the sinner vnder perdition And more all the men that euer were or shall be in the world were neuer able to rise from vnder the burthen of one sinne if it were imputed vnto them and yet the most of the world see no part of this danger of sinne and therefore no such necessitie of the remission of it 3. Consider thy owne insufficiencie if thou hadst the strength and power of all men and Angels to satisfie for the least sinne and if we cannot satisfie for any what remaineth but a fearefull perdition from the Lord and from the glorie of his power if all be not remitted In one word the sinner who hath not got his discharge sealed is without all safetie in his life all sound comfort in his death and at the iudgement day shall haue the sentence of euerlasting torment with the Deuil and his angels awarded him before men and angels The second point is the benefits issuing from it and these are 1. peace of conscience an immediat fruit of our iustification by faith and reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 Beeing iustified by faith we haue peace with God and it was ordinarie with our Sauiour to ioyne them together as Luk. 7.47 Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee goe in peace This benefit the most know not what it meaneth but hee that hath the feeling of the wrath of God against his sinne and seeth nothing but an angrie face of God burning like a consuming fire hee that is so straitned as hee can thinke no other thing but that the Lord in his iust iudgement hath cast him quite away this man as of all other torments that can be suffered in the world hee lyeth vnder the greatest so nothing in the earth can content or comfort him but only the sence and perswasion of Gods fauour Now the conditions of peace with his God are the most ioyfull tydings in all the world as is the vnexpected newes of a pardon to a malefactor readie to execution for high treason against his prince 2. The right and possession also of life euerlasting ●or if we be estated vnto life eternall by our iustification and righteousnesse before God then are we so also by remission of sinnes because these two are confounded in the Scriptures and are the same Whence it is that the Apostle Rom. 4.7 beeing to prooue the point of iustification of a sinner before God without the workes of the law citeth the text Psal. 32.1 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered And further if our whole redemption put vs in possession of euerlasting happinesse so doth also remission of sinne seeing the Apostle in sundrie places confoundeth these two and expoundeth one by the other Eph. 1.7 By whom we haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of our sinnes Coloss. 1.14 In whom we haue redemption through his blood that is the forgiuenesse of sinnes And it must needs follow that if they who are iustified and sanctified are also glorified then they haue attained the beginnings of their glorie who haue attained remission of sinnes 3. The benefit of Christs intercession which meriteth all our good for hee prayeth not for the world but those that are giuen him out of the world and this is no small benefit seeing no part in the prayer of Christ no part in his death hee will not endure death for him for whom wil not vouchsafe to pray 4. Consolation in affliction strength in temptations and assured comfort in life and death are the sweete fruits arising from remission of sinne For 1. although afflictions entred with death into the world by sinne and in their nature are testimonies of Gods wrath yet sinne being remitted they proceed no further from God as a iust iudge reuenging sinne but from a mercifull father either for triall of vs and our graces or for chastisement to keepe vs from perishing with the world to make vs hate sinne the more to drawe vs nearer him in invocation and prayer to force our affections out of this present world to fray others from sinne by our example to conforme vs to the image of his Sonne and to shewe his mightie power in our weakenesse by turning them to our best And thus from the former consideration ariseth to the beleeuer euen in darkenes a great light 2. From hence obtaineth the beleeuer notable strength and sense against the fierie
not to sweare is the next way for a man not to bee trusted and except a man be as blacke and deformed as either the deuill is or can make him by drinking swearing gaming sabbath-breaking and casting off all care of ciuill honestie as well as godlines he may sit alone well enough he hath a great many neighbours that care but a little for his companie What can make it more euidently appeare that numbers there are in this age who neuer knewe and without Gods infinite mercie in their timely conuersion are neuer like to knowe what the blessednesse of remission of sinne meaneth neither in others nor yet in themselues Vse 2. Let no man be discouraged in the pure wayes of God but walke on without wearinesse or faintnesse seeing that whatsoeuer the blinde world may deeme to the contrarie thou who art a beleeuer in the name of Christ hast blessednesse betweene thy hands for thy sinnes are remitted thou must goe in peace And this happinesse by the grace wherein thou standest is surer then that of nature which Adam had in his innocencie that was lost because it was in his owne keeping this is seated in the vnchangeable fauour of God by whose mightie power thou shalt be preserued to the full fruition of it Get faith in thy heart and thou shalt clearely behold thy happinesse if all the world should set it selfe to make thee miserable Get faith into thy soule and thou shalt thinke him only happie whom God so esteemeth although it be the miserie of the world to place happinesse only in miserie Get assurance of faith to claspe the sure promise and word of God and thou shalt possesse in miserie felicitie in sorrow ioy in trouble peace in nothing all things and in death it selfe life eternall FINIS A SHORT ALPHABETICALL TABLE TO LEAD THE Reader more easily into the cheife things contained in this Exposition A Basement of Christ is the Christians advancement 145 A bundle of Popish blasphemies 333 Account must be giuen to God of all things done by vs and receiued of vs. 269 Administration of Iudgement laid vpon the Sonne for sundrie reasons 253 Afflictions though lingring no signe of Gods hatred 203 Agreement of the life of the Saints vpon earth with the life of the Saints in heauen 187 All diligence must be giuen to make our pardon of sinne sure vnto ourselues 359 Anointing of three sorts of persons what it signified 73 Antiquitie of the Gospel and of our religon 48 Apostles peculiar witnesses of Christ and why 217 A proofe by induction that all the Prophets beare witnesse vnto Christ. 288 Attendants and companions of faith 4. 309 A strong motiue to hold on in weldoing 365 B BAptisme often put for doctrine 60 Beleeuers are fellow seruants vnder one Lord. 58 Beleeuers may know they haue faith by fowre marks 306 Beleeuers may and must knowe the pardon of their owne sinnes 345 Benefits flowing from remission of sinne 4. 339 Better to goe to heauen alone then to hell with companie 351 C CAre of Christians must bee to suffer as Christians 135 Care must be had of our receits and expences because we must bee counteable for them 273 Chiefe dutie of euerie Christian whilest he is in this world 337 Children of God delayed often but not denyed in their suits 200 Christ acknowledged our Lord by 4. practises 54 Christ alreadie come prooued 70 Christ his life not monasticall 93 Christ preached to the Israelites two wayes 43 Christ first preached to the children of Israel for 3. reasons 44 Christ Lord of all two wayes 50 Christ both a Lord and a seruant how 51 Christ is not a Iesus but to whom he is a Lord. 53 Christ no sooner receiued gifts and calling but did good with them for our example 81 Christ seasonably preached after Iohns baptisme that is Iohns doctrine of repentance 65 Christ proued the onely Messiah because he was Iesus of Nazareth 69 Christ his dietie prooued by his glorious resurrection 158 Christ by dying offereth and by rising applyeth his one onely sacrifice 162 Christ went about doing good two wayes 82 Christ sent of his Father and came not before he was sent 70 Christ his righteousnesse notably witnessed 127 Christ his two natures liuely set out 128 Christ reputed an arch-traytor in his life and death 137 Christ submitted to the lowest estate of death reasons 5. 151 Christ the Lambe slaine from the beginning how 163 Christ hath powerfully trodden Satan vnder his feete and vnder our feete how 114 Christ rose early in the morning and what we learne thence 198 Christ in respect of himselfe neeedeth not any witnesses and yet he vseth them 218 Christ must be the matter of all our preaching 247 Christians must partake of Christs annointing 77 Christiās must become Kings priests and Prophets 78 c. Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 95 Chosen witnesses of Christ who 214 Comfort of the godly who meet with strange entertainement in the world wher they are strangers 32 Comfort that Christ is stronger then all 124 Common Protestant beleeueth not the Article of free remission of sinnes 358 Communication in sinne sundrie waies but all to be auoided 132 Companions of remission of sinnes 353 Consent of the Church to any doctrine to be required and receiued with fiue seuerall cautions 291 Conditions of reconciliation two 178 Consideration of the last iudgement a ground of the godlies patience 265 Consolations from Christs resurrection 180 Consolation of Gods children that their Sauiour shall be their iudge 255 Consolation issuing from pardon of sinne 244 Crosse of Christ an honourable chariot of our triumph 143 Crosses some more smart and durable why 204 D DAnger of sinne 338 Dauids sinne and punishment both forgiuen though the child must die 330 Death of Christ after a speciall manner infamous 138 Death of Christ hath more power in it then all the liues of men and Angels 142 Death of Christ a destroier of death and all destroyers 164 Death though it remaine after sinne is pardoned both the fault and punishment is notwithstanding remooued 333 Degrees of blessednesse 36● Devill not cast out but by Christs power 115 Differences betweene Christian and worldly peace 40 Differences betweene Christs annointing and all other 73 Difference betweene Christs miracles and miracles of the Prophets and Apostles 87 Difference betweene the miracles of the Prophets and Apostles those wonders wrought by Satan in three things 89 Difference betweene the life of the naturall and regenerate man in matters both ciuill religious 184 Difference betweene Ciuill and Ecclesiasticall power 222 Difference betweene the kingdome of Christ and Antichrist 223 Diuinitie of Scripture prooued 46 ENemies euen spirituall not only foyled by Christ but made after a sort freindly 175 Essentiall properties of faith 3. 308 Evangelists all large in the Article of Christ his resurrection Why. 155 Euery thing must be esteemed in the measure and degree of the goodnes of it 348
Examination of heauenly life 192 F FAith what it is 296 Faith is not of all reas 297 Faith neuer lost reas 4. 298 Faith commendeth euery thing 305 Faith of most not rightly qualified 317 Faith seateth it selfe in an humbled soule 307 Faith in the resurrection an hard point 228 Faithfull are seasonably remembred of God at least on the third day 205 Fame of Christ begunne in Galily Why. 61 And why after Iohns preaching 64 Feare of God what and wherein it consisteth 20 Fearers of God must be accepted of vs. ●3 Few men see the necessitie of preaching Why. 243 Fiue deadly enemies foyled by Christ 1. sinne 2. death 3. hell 4. the deuill 5. the world 169 Fiue excellent fruits of sauing faith 300 Fiue sorts of men all boast of faith and yet all of them want it 318 Freedome by Christ. 57 Fruits of faith foure 311 Fruits of Christs death reduced to two heads 146 Force of consent in doctrine wherein it standeth 293 G GAlily of the Gentiles why so called 62 Glorie of the last iudgement described 261 Glorie of God in his children turned into shame 364 God no accepter of persons why 10 Gods prouidence ouerruleth euery special euent with the speciall circumstances 68 God was with Christ how and how with his seruants 112 Gods wisedome and power most seene in chusing the most weake things 223 God only properly forgiueth sinnes why 326 God forgiueth sinnes not only properly but perfectly that is both the guilt and punishment 329 Godly must enquire of the truth of doctrine deliuered by the Scriptures 220 Godly enter not into the iudgement how 258 Godly must lift vp their heads in expectation of the day of their redēption 276 Godly who here haue all hard sentences passe against them shall haue iustice at the last day 265 Godly must addresse themselues to the iudgement day two waies 277 Godly life must not be shunned for the crosses that attend it 350 Graces in the soule of Christ after his resurrection were incomprehensible by all creatures but in respect of God finite as the soule it selfe is 168 Guilt of sinne is wholly abolished in beleeuers although not the whole corruption of it 171 H HAppinesse how it standeth in remission of sinnes 361 Hearers how to know they haue heard aright 249 Heauenly life discerned by the notes of it 183 Helpes to attaine the grace of remission of sinnes 351 Hope is faiths handmaid 310 How the Lord of life could be subdued of death 126 How God can be iust in punishing Christ an innocent and letting the guiltie goe free 128 How an infinite iustice could be satisfied by so short a death ibid How the Iewes are said to put Christ to death seeing they had no power to doe it 129 How Christs crucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians 147 How Christ can be said to rise againe seeing neither his deitie nor the soule of his humanitie did 152 How Christ is said to rise seeing God the Father and the holy Ghost are said also to raise him 156 How Christ hath slain our sin which yet is so stirring in the best 170 How beleeuers may know they are risen with Christ. 183 How the Apostles were furnished to their witnesse 216 How Christ could eate and drinke after he rose againe seeing he rose not to naturall life 226 How preaching could be Christs ordinance beeing so long before his incarnation 232 How Christ is ordained iudge seeing the Father and the holy Ghost iudge as well as hee 252 How Christ shall deliuer vp the kingdome to his father 254 Humiliation of Christ must humble Christians and how 144 I IEsus of Nazaret why so called 67 In Gods iudgement we must stand naked 19 In all spirituall captiuitie hasten to Christ. 116 In cases of sorcerie what to doe 117 In all diuine things we must leane on a sure ground 218 In reading the Prophets we must still be led to Christ. 295 Ingratitude of the Iewes most extreame 133 Ioshua in many things a singular type of Christ. 168 Iudging of our selues standeth in 4. things 281 L LAw of perfect righteousnesse is the charter of heauen 190 Life of faith wherein 302 Lets which hinder men from seeking the remission of their sinnes 345 Loue of God expressed in three things 312 Loue of men wherein cheifly discerned 313 Loue and thankefulnesse to God attendeth the remission of sins 355 Lowest degrees of murther condemned as murther 130 M MAgistra●s must not accept of persons 14 Mallice of the wicked against the godly neuer wanteth matter to worke vpon 1●4 Many men bodily possessed by the deuill in Christs time aboue all other times before or since why 100 Manner of Christs resurrection in 3. things 165 Mappe of humane frailty in Peter 7 Meanes by which quicke and dead shall be presented before the last iudgement 257 Meanes to encrease the stocke of faith 316 Men endure not their lusts to be pricked in the ministerie and much lesse crucified 149 Minister must be careful to remooue what may hinder his doctrine 9 Ministers must expect Gods calling as Christ did 71 Ministers must vrge themselues to diligent preaching why 241 Miracles of Christ had a threefold vse 86 Motion of sinne in the regenerate is in letting the life of it goe 172 Motiues to the practise of Righteousnesse 30 NEcessitie of preaching euinced by sundry reasons ●36 Necessitie of remission of sinnes in 3 points 337 Neither the person nor any of the offices of Christ could suffer him long to abide vnder the power of death 160 New miracles not needfull to confirme old doctrine 94 No lesse sinne to sinne by others as by our selues 131 No neede of a dumbe or blind ministerie 242 No man can avoide the last iudgement vnlesse his power be aboue Christs 260 No man can bee too precise seeing the iudgement shall bee so precise and strict 275 None capable of Christs office because none is so annointed as hee 75 No peace by Moses 39 O OBiections against preaching answered 244 Obiections against speciall faith answered 340 One way onely to salvation 49 Opening the mouth what it meaneth ● Open the eyes to see the happinesse of the saints 363 Offences are of sundrie sorts 326 Ordinarie ministers must be beleeued as Apostles while they teach things heard and seene by the Apostles 220 Ordinarie Pastors now called by Christ though he be nowe in heauen 234 Outward things cannot bring into Gods acceptance 18 P PAtterne of speciall grace in Peter 8 Peace what by it vsually meant 36 Peace by Christ with God man creatures how 37 Peace wanting how to obtaine it 42 Peace of conscience floweth from remission of sinne 339 Person what it meaneth 10 Phrase of quicke and dead what it meaneth 257 Plaine preaching of Christ wherein it standeth 249 Poperie a noueltie 48 Poperie turneth the doctrin of Christ crucified into crucifixes 150 Popish doctrine teacheth not true faith to this day 299 Popish doctrine assenteth not to the article of
wayes Gen. 12.3 Act. 3.24 Christ fi●st pr●ached to Israel why Rom. 3.2 Rom 9.5 Act. 13.46 Observ. 1. Diuinitie of Scripture prooued Gal 3.8 Isay. 44.28 1. King 13.2 Ioh. 〈◊〉 in anno praedicto Observ. 2. Our religion is the oldest religion Poperie but a noueltie Obser. 3. But one way to saluation Hebr. 13. ● Heb. 11.7 Bagnal Adon. Christ Lord of his church Reas. 1. Cor. 6.20 Phil. 2.7 Obser. 1. A man hath Christ his Lord by 4. things 1. Pet. ● 13 Make account to be counteable of all to this Lord of all To this Lord only must be giuen absolute obedience The will of Christ reduced to 3. heads Rom. 14.7 Christ beeing our Lord no other Lord can lay claime vnto vs. Observ. 3. Al beleeuers are fellow seruants to this Lord. Nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Ministerie of Iohn called his Baptisme Why. Galilaea gentium vel populoru● Why Christ begunne his ministerie in Galilie Reas 3. Permix●um à Iudaeis Gentibus inhabitata fuit Chem. Har. 3● c. Deut. 9.4 Ephes. 6 15. Heb. 6.5 Tit. 2.8 Christ called Iesus of Nazaret although he was not borne there ●hy Matth. ● 22 no ser. Iun. paral l. 1. par 8 analis in nūb 6.1 not ser. Zach. 4.10 Ioh. 1.47 Heb. 5.5 Christ expected his Fathers calling and therefore must his ministers much more Anointing what it signified God neuer calleth any man to any place but he furnisheth him wi●h gifts fit f●r it Difference betweene Christs anointing and all other mens Ioh. 3.34 Psal. 45. Colos. 2.10 None can be capable of the office of a redeemer or Mediator but Christ because non was so anointed as hee Heb. 8.6 Heb. 7.26 25. Heb. 12.25 Ioh. 6.68 Euery Christian must partake of Christ his anointing Ioel. 2.28 Christus ●otus vel Christus mysticus Euerie Christian must be a King And a Priest Rom. 6.13 Reu. 5.8 And a Prophet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Note Christ went about doing good in dispersing euerie where most holy doctrine Eph. 4. Matth. 18.3 Matth. 12 50. Ioh. 16. 10. Luk. 4.29 Cant 5 10. Vse of Christs miracles threefold Ioh. 3.2 Difference betweene the miracl●s of Christ of the Prophets and Apostles 2. Kin. 12.13 Iosh. 3.13 Ioh. 4.48 42. Difference of the miracles of the Apostles and wonders wrought by the helpe of Satan 2. Thes. 2. Exod 7.22 and 8 7. Vel lud●ficatio sensus vel occulta●am naturalium ca●sarum c●niunctio Exod 8.17 Christs life was not monasticall but ●e conversed with men to doe good vnto them Deut. 18.25 Read Ioh. 12.37.38 The ancient doctrine of the Church needeth no new miracles to confirme it Christians must imit●t● Christ in doing good 2. Cor. 8.3 Reasons Hebr. 13. Gal. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Varro Heb. 1.14 Many were bodily poss●ssed with Deuils in Christs time Reasons why God suffereth Satan to possesse 〈◊〉 bodies 4. Rom. 16. 1. Sam. 1● 18 VVhy we read of so many possessed in Christs time aboue all former times Satans tyrannie against those hee possesseth discouereth it selfe fiue waies Matth. 8.28 Why the Lord s●●fereth Satan not onely to possesse his creature but thus to tyrannize ouer it Reas 4. Ma● 1.27 More fearefull is the tyrannie which Satan exerciseth ouer the soules of men 2. Tim. 2.26 Numbers of men convinced to be spiritually possessed by sundrie instances Mark 5.7 Luk. 8.28 Act. 16.17 1. Sam. 24.17.18 Luk. 9. How God was with his Sonne and how with his seruants 1. Tim. 3.26 Christ powerfully treadeth Satan vnder his feete Mark 9.25 Mark 1.25 Mark 5 6. How the power of Christ foyleth Satan for vs. Mat 8.16 17. Col. 2.22 Christ onely by his proper power casteth out deuills In all thy spirituall captiuitie repaire vnto Christ. Matth. 8.2 In cases of sorcerie and bodily oppressions by Satan what to doe The superstitious sorcerie of such as attempt by amulets and words to driue away deuils and diseases Popish charming Against such as leaue him with whom God is and runne to the witch with whom the deuill is Deut. 18.10 Levit. 19.31 Levit. 20.6 Augustine Why God permitteth a power of curing to them of whom we may not seeke cure Deut. 13.3 The comfort of th● church is that Christ is ●●●onger thē all Ioh. 10. How the Lord of life could be subdued vnder death 1. Pet. 3.18 VVhy wicked men preuaile against Christ who had vanquished the d●●ils themselues How it standeth with Gods iustice to punish the innocent and let the guilty goe free The iustice of God doth more appeare in Christ his passion then if all the world had been damned How the Iewes are said to put Christ to death though they had no power to doe it Lowest degrees of murther condemned 1. Ioh. 3.15 Matth. 5.22 As great a sinne to sin by others as by our selues 1. King 21.9 2. Sam. 11.15 12.9 Communi●a●ion in 〈…〉 waies Horrible ingra●itude of the Iewes noted Ioh 31.35 2. Sam. ● 35 The malice of the wicked against Christ his members is neuer without matter to worke vpon 1. Pet 3.17 4.16 Why Christ w●s ●ather to die on the crosse then by any other death Col. 2.14 Christ reputed an arch traytor in his life and death The most vgly visage of sinne that can be 1. Cor. 2.2 More power in Christs death then in the liues of all men and Angels 1. Pet. 2.24 Coloss 2.14 Ephes. 2 1● Christs humiliation must humble Christians and how it doth so Zach. 12.10 Act. ● 37 Christ his abasement is the advancement of euery Christian ●om 6.6 How Christ his crucify●ng crucifieth the lusts of Christians Many will not endure to haue their lusts pricked in the ministerie and much lesse crucified Gal. 3.1 No meruaile seeing the Papists shut out the preaching of Christ crucified that they must see him in crucifixes and such Idolotrous representations Christ submitted to the lowest estate of death why How Christ can be said to rise seeing neither his diety nor the soule of his humanity arose Act. 20.28 1. Cor. 2.8 Ioh. 3.18 Ioh. 8.58 Totus Christus non totum Christi Contra. ●aust lib. 16. 1. Cor. 15.17.18 Opera ad extra com●●nia tribus personis ● Ioh. 5 7. Rom. 1.4 Vbi re●urrectio non passiue sed actiue accipitur cum sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 d●●tatis Christs deity cleared by his glorious resurrection It was necessarie that Christ should 〈◊〉 againe rea●on● Luk. 24.26 1. Pet. 1.11 Leuit 16.5 Neither the person of Christ nor any of his offices could s●●fer him to abide long vnd●r death Ioh. 17.1 1 Not his kingly Luk. ● 33 2 Not his Priestly office Psal. 110.4 Heb. 7.23 ver 16. 7.25 By dying Christ offereth and by rising he applieth his sacrifice to the conscience of beleeuers Rev. 13. ● Nor his Propheticall Eph. 4.13 Ioh. 10.28 Christus gloriam corpori suo dedit na●uram non abstulit Ioshuah a
singular type of Christ wherein The first enimie foyled by Christ is sinne 1. Cor. 15.17 A great question answered at large In beleeuers the whole guilt of sinne ●s abolished by Christ ●hough not the whole corruption All the motions of sin in the elect is onely in letting the life of it goe The second enemie is death The third hell The fourth Satan The fifth the world Ioh. 16.33 How all these enemies are not o●ly f●●l●d but after a ●or● mad● freindly vnto vs. Christ by his resurrection not onely remooued euills but procured all our good as appeareth by 3. instances 1. Pet. 3.18 Rom. 8.34 Phil. 3.10 Rom. 6.5.6 Colos. 3.1 1. Pet. 1.3 Ephes. 4.10 What or who shall seperate vs from the loue of God seeing it is Christ that is dead or rather risen from the dead Ionah 2.4 1. Thess. 4.14 Rom. 8.11 Philip. 1.23 How to know that we are risen with Christ. Heauenly life discerned by two notes 1. Dissimilitude with the life of sinnefull and naturall men 1. In the matters of this life 2. In the matters of religion II. Agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heauen in two things Rev. 14.3 VVhat the Saints are called from in three things 2. Pet. 1.4 What the Saints are called vnto in 5 things Rev. 11.17 and 7.15 Rev. 22.35 Rev. 6.10 2. Cor. 5.2 Rom. 8.23 Examination of a mans selfe by the former notes Philip. 2.19 Synechdoche 1. Cor. 15 4 Why Christ would ●●se no sooner then the third day VVhy hee would no longer deferre his rising Rev. 1.10 Christ rose early and what we learne thence All the promises of God are accomplished in their due season Exod. 12.41 The Lord denyeth not to helpe his children although hee delay them till his owne due time be come Why God delayeth to answer his children Reasons Lingring afflictions no signe of Gods hatred Isa. 41.14 Eccles. 9. Some crosses more smart and durable why The Lord will seasonably remember his children at least the third day 2. Cor. 6.9 Gen. 40.13.19 It was necessarie that Christ should manifest his resurrection for these reasons Act. 1.3 Luk. 24.27.32 Matth. 18.19 Ioh. 20 2● Act 1.4 Ioh. 21 7.1● Luk. 24.33 cùm 51. Act. 1.9 Christ must not shew himselfe so openly as to all the people after his resurrection Why. Luk. 17.21 ● Cor. 5.16 Matth 23.39 Sundry sort● of witnesses of Christ his resurrection Luk. 24. 1. Cor. 15.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 VVhat these chosen witnesses were By what meanes the Apostles were furnished to their witnesse Act. 4.33 The Apostle were to be peculiar witnesses to Christ and why 1. Ioh. 1.1 Ioh. 21.24 2. Pet. 1.21 vers 16. Ioh. 8.18 and 5.39 and 5.36 In divine things we must leane vpon a sure word Exod. 24.7 Ordinarie Ministers must be receiued as Apostles while they teach things heard or seene by the Apostles Ioh. 1.14 The Lord Iesus chose meane and weake men for his witnesses VVhy Act. 4. Christ manifested himselfe to be both God and man after his resurrection by 2 sorts of actions Cib●s hic ad humanae naturae indicium non ad corporis gloriosi ●●lorum perti●ui● con●estio potestatis fuit ●ora non ne●cessitatis Til●●●s Luk. 24.41 Considerations of Christs eating and drinking after his resurrection To beleeue the res●rrection is an hard point Preaching the ordinance of Christ. Ier. 3.15 25.4 Reu. 14.6 Luk. 24.49 Psal. 95.7 Hebr. 3.7 Luk. 10.16 Necessitie of preaching evinced by foure reasons In regard of the vnconverted Ier. 23.29 Mark 1.14 Eph. 1.13 6.15 Heb. 6.5 In regard of the conuerted From the opposition of the de●●l and wicked ones The same prooued by experience Ministers must vrge themselues to diligence by this nec●ssitie No need of a dumb or blind Ministe●ie Few men see ●his necessity of preaching Many plead against it Ier. 44.17 18. Beauties of Bethel Ioh. 10.27 Ioh. 8.47 Christ the matter of our preaching Mark 1 1. Colos. 3. 1. Cor. 2. To preach Christ wherin it standeth Matth. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ioh. 13.17 The Apostles commanded in speciall to teach the doctrine of the last iudgement Reasons 2. Cor. 5.11 Habac. 3.16 Psal. 119.120 Heb. 11.7 Dan. 2.9 Ioh. 16.8 How Christ is ordained a Iudge seeing the Father and holy Ghost iudge also Ioh 5 2● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Administration of iudgment laid vpon the Son for sundrie reasons Act. 1.11 1. Cor. 15.24 The comfort of Gods children that their Sauiour shall be their Iudge Here shall iudge the wicked against whom all their villanies haue beene committed 2. Thess. 1.8 Rom. 14.12 The meanes whereby both quicke and dead shall be gathered to iudgement Wicked al●●adie iudged fiue waies No man can avoid this iudgement vnlesse his power be aboue the power of the Iudge The glorie of the last iudgement described Tit. 2.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The righteousnes of the Iudge and iudgement Eccles. 12.1 Cor. ●5 Gods children who here haue all sentences passe against them shall haue iustice at this day The workes and words of men which shall abide the triall of that day must now be tried before hand The touchstone of this triall is the word of God Ioh. 12 48. The strictnes of the last iudgment 1 in regard of persons iudged 2. in regard of things 1. done 2. receiued 3. In regard of words Matth. 12.36 4. In regard of thoughts to be iudged Ephes. 2.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sinne caried neuer so secretly shall come into a cleare light Be carefull of thy receits and expenses because thou fittest in another mans to whom thou must be counteable No man can be too precise because the iudgement shall be thus precise 1. Cor. 15. The godly may lift vp their heads in expectatiō of this day of redemption Ioh. 17.24 Godly must adresse thēs●lues to this iudgement two wayes Two things hinder this care Iudging of our selues aforehand stādeth in 4. things Prov. 20.13 Ioh. 31.33 Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies concerning Christ. Reasons 2. Cor. 2.23 Act. 17.32 1. Tim. 1.3 A proofe that all the Prophets witnesse vnto Christ. Ioh. 5.46 Deu. 18.18.19 Act. 3.21 Ier. 23. Micah 5.2 Zach. 6.12 N●h●m 1.15 Obed. v. 21. Hos. 13.14 Ioel. 2.28 Amos. 9.11 Consent of the Church to any do●ctrine to be receiued with these cautions The force of cōsent wherin it standeth In reading the Prophets thou must be led still nearer vnto Christ. Faith what it is Philip. 1.29 Opera naturalia non indigent praecepto 2. Thess. 3. Faith is not of all Isa. 53.1 Isa. 6.9.4 ●it 1.1 Rom. 4.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Insalutem animae Beza Faith neuer quite lost Popish doctrine teacheth not true faith to 〈◊〉 day Fiue excellent fruits of sauing faith Heb. 11 1. Colos. 2.7 Act. 15. Ioh. 6.28 29. Ioh. 3 16. 1. Cor. 13. Iam. 5. ●5 Rom. 4.11 Gal. 6.10 Mar. 6. Philip. 1.25 Ioh. 8.56 Rom. 5.2 Colos. 2.12 2. Thess. 2.13 A beleeuer may know he hath faith by foure markes or notes 2. Cor. 13.5 2. Tim. 1.12 1. The seate of it an humbled soule II. The essentiall properties of it 3 Rom. 4.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Cor. 6.18 Psal. 33.18 Heb. 11.13.15 III. The honourable attendants and companions of it 4. Matth. 13.44 Act. 8. IIII. The infallible fruits of it 4. Act. 15. Act. 24.16 Our loue of God expressed in 3. things Mar. 9.24 Meanes to encrease the stocke of faith Luk. 22.32 Mar 9.24 Luk. 17.5 The most common faith ●f ●en i● not thus qualified Gen. 17.1 Ioh. 20.24 Labour for the truth of faith as earnestly as for saluation Necessitie of this grace to him that expecteth saluation Rom. 4.11 1. Ioh. 5.10 Grow vp in the strength of faith Reasons Offence is either 1. against God which hee alone can forgiue 2. Against publicke peace which belongeth to the law Or 3. personall against our selues which must be forgiuen of vs. The Lord only properly forgiueth sinnes Exod. 34.6.7 Isa. 38.17 Micha 7. 1. Ioh. 1. As the Lord forgiueth properly so also perfectly both the guilt and punishment Christus communicādo nobis sine culpa poenā culpam soluit poenam August serm de temp 141. Concil Trident sess 14. Can. 14. Dauids si●ne and punishment both forgiuen notwithstanding the child must die Numb 20.12 Bellarm. lib. 4. de paenit cap. 2. Note well this answer Though death remaine after sinne is pardoned both the fault and punishment is remoued A bundle of Popish blasphemies Matth. 18.32 How remission of sinne is receiued Beleeue in the name of Christ why The cheife dutie of euery Christian while he is in this world 1. Necessitie of remission of sinnes in 3 points Iob. 15.16 Benefits flowing from remission of sinne 4. Ioh. 17.19 Satans temptations foyled by this assurance Rom. 10.4 The sound comfort of this article 3. Le ts which hinder men from seeking so pre●ious a grace 3. Beleeuers may and must know the pardon of their owne sinnes 1 Ioh. 3.23 Obiections answered Rom. ●1 34 Learne to esteeme euery thing in the measure and degree of it goodnesse Eccles. 2. Say not God loueth thee vnlesse thou haue such sure grounds as follow Eccles 9. Godly life not to be feared for the crosses attending it Reasons Better going to heauen alone then to hell with companie Helpes to attaine this grace of remission Companions of remission of sinnes Mark 1.4 Deut. 29.19 Rom. 7.25 1. Tim. 1.12 14. Eph. 4.32 Psal. 32.2 Neither Papist nor common Protestant yeeldeth to this doctrine of free reon of sinne Lutum lauant luto ignem extinguunt lignorum strue All diligence must be giuen to make our pardon of sinne sure to our selues Whosoeuer hath attained remissi of his sinnes is an happie man Degrees of blessednesse Open thine eyes and see the happinesse of the Saints Isa. 53.4 The glory of God in his children turned into shame A strong mo●tiue to hold on in weldoing
nothing more can be added Iob was a iust man fearing God and abstaining from euill Zacharie and Elizabeth were iust before God and walked in all the ordinances of God without reproofe Here two points are to be considered 1. Who is a religious man he that feareth God worketh righteousnesse 2. What is his priuiledge he is accepted of God Religion is a binder and thence hath his name for it both bindeth man vnto God as the former of the points will shewe as also God vnto man as the latter declareth The former band knitting man vnto God is the feare of God which is a peculiar gift of the spirit of God whereby the regenerate feare God for himselfe not so much that they be not offended and punished by him as that they doe not offend him An excellent grace both in regard of the excellent obiect and of the excellent vse of it through the whole life The right obiect of our feare is God himselfe who is 1. omnipotent of power to doe whatsoeuer he will who is able to cast body and soule into hell feare him 2. omnipresent he is all an eie beholding our thoughts words and deedes of which he is both a witnesse and a iudge 3. full of maiestie which euen in a mortall man strikes vs with reuerence 4. full of grace and bountie wee stand in neede of his fauour and bountie euery moment who can turne vs out of all at his pleasure In all which respects we ought to make him our dread But aboue all in that he hath beene so good and gracious a father vnto vs through his Christ we ought to feare to offend him and so turne his loue into displeasure against vs. Now the vse of this grace is manifold As 1. to beat downe pride and high-mindednes against which it is a notable medicine Rom. 11.20 be not high minded but feare Prou. 3.7 Be not wise in thine owne eyes but feare God this grace maketh a man come lowe before the Lord as Iacob fea●ing Esau came and bowed seauen times before him 2. to cause a man to renounce and restraine himselfe from sinne and therefore the feare of God and departing from euill are often ioyned together Ioseph could not commit the sinne with his Mistris because he feared God the midwiues feared God and killed not the Hebrewes children Nehemiah did not exact vpon the oppresse the people as the former gouernors that were before him because he feared God and whereas the wicked mans seruill feare keepeth him often from open sinnes but not from secret from grosse sins but not from smaller and this of paine not of conscience this grace maketh a man hate pride arrogancie and euerie euill way neuer so small and neuer so secret 3. To destroie false and fleshly feares which foyle euery good dutie and lay open to many sinnes and iudgements it is a propertie of a wicked man to feare where no feare is and not fearing God he feareth euery thing but God the face of man the arme of man the tongue of man whence many a man dare scarse professe religion or if they doe dare shew no power of it for feare of reproach and nicknames and so come to be ranked in the formest band of those which march to hel called the fearefull and that which they feare shall come vpon them euen disgrace of God of men and Angels Ieroboam feared least the people should returne to their owne Master if they should persist in the true worship of the true God and so for the establishing of his posteritie he established Idolatrie but in the very next generation his whole race was extinct The Iewes were afraid least the Romans should come and take their nation and therefore Christ must die but the Romans not long after came with a powder and tooke their nation and so dispeopled and dispersed them as they could neuer be gathered into a nation till this day Pilat feared not God but Caesar but he was not long after cast out of Caesars fauour and slew himselfe Now this grace of God fenceth a man from such fleshly feares which draw on such fearefull falls and mischeefes and preserueth him that neither hope of promotion nor gaine nor ease nor fauour of man who is but a worme shall make him forget the Lord that spred the heauens this feare which is loues keeper holdeth the heart in the loue of God himselfe of his worship of his word of his children and whatsoeuer carrieth his image all which without it either lie or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4. To driue away security awak slothfulnes prouoke to watchfulnes stirre vp to prayer keep in a fitnes to profit by the word to tremble at it when God thretneth to reioyce in the promises as those to whom they belong to helpe vs to better our selues by our afflictions as the speach of the conuerted theife to his fellow implyeth that if he had had the feare of God he would being in the same condēnation haue otherwise caried himselfe towards Christ then he did And in a word to fēce the heart which is as the market place of a citie against temptation in which speciall vse it is called a wellspring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath beene spoken euery man that would seeme religious ought to labour aboue all things for this worthy grace which God specially bestoweth vpon his children with whome he maketh his newe couenant I will put my feare in their hearts neuer to depart from me saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging vnto it for a mans selfe for his children for this life present for a better for supplies of euery good for withholding and remoouing of euery euill so as whosoeuer feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasurie such as all the Indian mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himselfe and enteyleth vnto his posteritie the rich blessing of the Almightie Blessed saith the Psalme is the man that feareth the Lord himselfe shall be mightie on earth his children shall be blessed after him his wife shall be as a fruitfull vine riches and treasure shall be in his house he shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles be neuer so great the Lord will deliuer him out of them all Here is a Iewell worth hiding and laying vp in the safest closet of the soule euen in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the heart to make roome for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such a heart in them to feare mee Isa. 8.13 Sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit vnto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediat fruit of the feare of God Where must be considered 1. what this righteousnesse is and then 2. what is the working of it For the
their peace As a Preist sacrificed himselfe and offred vnto his Father a sweete smelling sacrifice of peace for them and as a Prophet fully deliuered from his Father the whole doctrine of peace and reconciliation Both these waies was Christ preached to the Israelites whereof for breuities sake we will for the present forbeare further discourse The second thing to be explaned is why was Christ preached our peace to the children of Israel first and why was that doctrine renewed to them from time to time by the hand and ministerie of the Prophets Answ. For three reasons 1. Because they were that seed and certaine family of whom the Messiah should descend and arise for which cause they were to obserue an accurate distinction of the tribes according to that ordinance and gouernment which God had established amongst them that they might not be deceiued in his person when he should in fulnesse of time appeare 2. Because God had chosen them to be a peculiar people he set them vp aboue all nations not only in many other prerogatiues but in this which was the cheife of all had they seene it that the Oracles of God was committed vnto them Hee gaue his lawes to Iacob his couenants to Israel hee dealt not so with euery nation Psal. 147.20 The Apostle Paul when he had reckoned a number of the Iewes aduancements aboue the Gentiles such as were their adoption couenant promises fathers he shutteth vp all with the cheife of all in these words of whom concerning the flesh Christ came Now as that was the first that he came of them so this is the next that he came vnto them alone first in the promises and types then in his person and appearance then in his doctrine and miracles performed in his owne person adde hereto that he came to them in his life and death and lastly he came first and alone to them in the Ministrie and miracles of his holy Apostles who must not goe into the way of the Gentiles nor turne themselues to other nations till the Iewes by despising that grace offred had made themselues vnworthy of life euerlasting the lost sheepe of the house of Israel must first be sought vp and therefore as Paul said it was necessarie that the word of God should first be spoken vnto them 3. That both Iew and Gentile might know that Christ came not by happe or chance or on the suddaine so as his comming might not be obserued but that he came for the time and for the manner according to the promises and predictions of old of which our Apostle is willing in these words to imply the accomplishment Whence we may note 1. the diuinitie of Scripture which foretelleth beforehand things which are to come to passe many hundreths yea some thousands of yeares after The thing that foretelleth things properly to come which haue no existence in any cause or signe must needs be of God Satan indeede can gesse at some euents but which haue some grounds in nature or experience or can foretell a thing to come which God hath reuealed to him or himselfe is made an executioner of as in S●ul but to foretell a thing or euent meerely to come is proper to God Whence it necessarily followeth that the Scripture foreseeing that God would iustifie the Gentiles thorough faith that is a thing to come to passe almost 2000. yeares after must needs be of God Againe it followeth as necessarily that the Prophets in preaching and the holy penmen of God spake and writ as they were mooued by the spirit of God and directed by the immediate assistance of God and therefore could not erre in any thing for they foretold directly such things which both for matter and m●nner came to passe many yeares after Iacob in his will foretold that the Scepter should not depart from Iudah till Shiloh came this prophesie was not accomplished till aboue 17. hundred yeares after the prediction for not much aboue twentie yeares afore Christs birth Herod became king of Iudea killed the whole colledge of the Iewes called the sanhedrim wherein was the heire apparant of the Kings blood King Cyrus was named by the Prophet Isay an 100. yeares before he was borne and of him prophesied that he should build the Temple The worthy King Iosiah with his facts were declared 359. yeare before he was borne The Apostle Paul prophesied of the destruction of the Romane Empire and thereby the rising of the Antichrist which was not accomplished till about the yeare 47● after Christ. For whereas the Romane Empire was deuided into Easterne and Westerne the Westerne which onely hindred the reuelation of Antichrist was in that yeare quite ouerthrowne and Rome it selfe taken by the Gothes and after this neuer had any Romane Emperour his seat of authoritie in Rome These and the like neither ●han nor angell could euer of themselues foretell and therefore the author and director of them must needs be God Secondly from hence also note the antiquitie of the gospel in that it was preached by the Prophets to the auncient Israelites and knowne for the substance of it not onely to the Apostles and auncient Christians and beleeuers but to the Patriarks and Prophets yea euen to Adam in Paradise to all whom Christ was preached the Lord of all and that blessed seede in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed This doctrine although it be called a newe Testament is no new doctrine Let the Papists make a vaine bragge of antiquitie and charge vs with a newe religion the truth is whereas the bodie of their doctrine was not knowne to the Prophets nor Apostles nor beleeuers for many hundred yeares after Christ our doctrine is that which God sent to the children of Israel and therefore is most auncient and true And to prooue this that I say we will goe no further then our text That doctrine which preacheth peace by Iesus Christ is the doctrine which was sent to Israel which we professe at this day but so is not Popish doctrine which preacheth peace not by Christ but by our selues our merits and satisfactions and peace by the Popes pardons bulls and absolutions and indulgences now these with other dependances thereon beeing the main points and pillers of their doctrine were neuer preached to the children of Israel by any Prophet nor euer by any of the Apostles to the Church of God but haue crept in one after another many hundred yeares since Christ and his Apostles Let their owne rule stand in force therefore with good will if we cannot plead antiquitie we will lay no claime to the truth Thirdly hence we note that there is but one way to saluation and this was declared to the children of Israel for substance as well as to vs who went to heauen by the same way which we doe There is but one Christ one pretious faith one and the same Gospel
not them which can kill the bodie onely but him who can cast both bodie and soule into hell The true feare of him will eate out all those false feares of men Thirdly If Christ be Lord of all then we and all beleeuers are fellow seruants and therefore ought to liue and loue together making no dissention or scisme in our Masters house which is the Apostles reason Ephes. 4.4 perswading the Ephesians to keepe the vnitie of faith because there is one Lord. This shall be done if all of vs who professe Christ could learne to denie our selues to follow his will not our owne or other commanders yea to follow his blessed example learning daily of him to be humble and meeke patient and tender hearted one to another forbearing and forgiuing offenders hard to exasperate and easie to be intreated And these things should we rather striue in that according to the Apostles precept the same minde might be in vs which was in Iesus Christ. Phil. 2.5 Vers. 37. Yee know the word which came through all Iudea beginning in Galily after the baptisme which Iohn preached The holy Apostle here beginneth the confirmation of that which he had formerly spoken that Christ is the Messias and Lord of al to prooue which he beginneth orderly with the Historie of his life and death of which euen these Gentiles could not be ignorant therefore he saith yee know the word Where if it be asked how they should come to know the doctrine of the Gospel seeing the Apostles were not yet turned to the Gentiles and Peter was now sent extraordinarily to teach them concerning Christ which had bin in vaine if they knew the word before we must obserue that by the word here is not meant the word preached as in the former verse but as the word is different in the originall so also is the signification and betokeneth rather a thing done then a word vttered as Matth. 18.16 By the mouth of two or three witnesses shall euery word or fact be confirmed Luk. 2.15 Let vs goe to Bethlem and see this word that is this thing which the Lord hath brought to passe The plaine sence then is this Ye know the word that is the same of Christ which was quickly dispersed through all Iudaea in the mouthes of common men Which fame that they should not mistake him or themselues he describeth 1. by the place where it arose beginning in Galily 2. by the time when it most preuailed after the baptisme which Iohn preached which some expound thus after the baptisme of Christ by Iohn which he preached that is administred but the naturall sence is after the doctrine which Iohn preached concerning him for vsually in the new Testament by Iohns Baptisme especially which Iohn preached is meant all his doctrine and his whole Ministerie Matth. 21.25 The baptisme of Iohn whence was it that is the doctrine as the words after imply Why did yee not beleeue him and all men held Iohn for a Prophet Marke 1.4 Hee preached the baptisme of repentance vnto remission of sinnes that is the doctrine of repentance for 1. else were it improperly said to preach baptisme 2. Iohns doctrine was this repent for the kingdome of God is at hand Act. 18.25 Apollos knew onely the baptisme of Iohn that is his doctrine and therefore is it said in the next verse that Priscilla and Aquila tooke him home and shewed him the way of God more clearely And in Acts. 19.3.4 Into what were ye baptised that is into what doctrine were ye initiated and instructed they said into Iohns baptisme that is into Iohns doctrine the which interpretation notably freeth that hard text from the false collection of Anabaptists who thence would gather that those were by Paul rebaptised who were formerly baptised by Iohn but the difficultie will be remooued if the words of Paul be wisely distinguished from the words of the Euangelist and writer of that historie Iohn baptised saith Paul the baptisme of repentance that is taught the doctrine of repentance saying that they should beleeue which when they heard namely they which heard by Iohns ministerie they were baptized into the name of the Lord Iesus namly by Iohn not by Paul Then addeth the Euangelist vers 6. And Paul put his hands on them and the holy Ghost came on them and furnished them with such gifts as they by their owne confession ver 2. had not heard of before And thus according to the plaine sense of other Scriptures is that difficult place made verie plaine also But why is the ministerie and preaching of Iohn called his baptisme Answ. Because his doctrine was first of all sealed with the seale of baptisme in which regard as his person is called the Baptist so is his doctrine by the name of baptisme Quest. But why is this circumstance of place noted that this fame beganne in Galilie Answ. 1. To note the accomplishment of that prophesie in Isai. 9.1 which also was obserued by the Euangelist Matthew 4.14 2. To shewe that this fame was no bare or vngrounded rumor but raised vpon iust cause for Iesus was baptized by Iohn not farre from the borders of Galily about Enon Ioh. 3.23 And presently after he returned by vertue of the spirit and came into Galily preaching the gospel of the kingdome Mark 1.14 and made no ende till he had taught all their cities in all their synagogues Luk. 4.14 adde to his baptisme and doctrine that he wrought his first miracle of turning water into wine at Cana a towne of Galilie and that he called his disciples in Galilie all which beginnings must needes raise a rumor and fame of him which as Luke reporteth went through all the adiacent region round about 3. This circumstance notably befitteth this argument to prooue him Lord of all both Iewes and Gentiles because he begunne and was so famous in Galily of the Gentiles Quest. But was not Christ sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel did he not come to his owne how then did he beginne his ministerie in Galilie of the Gentiles Ans. Galilie of the Gentiles is so called not because it was not in Iudea but 1. to distinguish it from an other Galilie which was also in Iudea and called Galilaea inferior in the tribe of Zabulon where Nazaret was scituate But this was called Galilaea superior or Gentium in the tribe of Nephtali not farre from Capernaum 2. Because there were twentie cities in Galilie giuen by Salomon to Hyram a Gentile 1. kin 9.11 3. because beeing in the extremitie of Palestina neare the sea and not farre from Tyrus and Sidon they were euer mixt with many Gentiles that were forreyners besides that they were so seated within that countrie in Salomons time as they could neuer after be remooued 4. M. Iunius thinketh it to be so called not only because of the abundance of Gentiles there but also because it was a most populous countrie full of
is the author of the word he deliuereth Moses could teach but the eare this Prophet teacheth the heart Moses was a Minister of the outward circumcision this circūciseth or rather baptiseth with the holy Ghost and with fire let not vs therefore dispise him that speaketh from heauen for if they escaped not which refused Moses that spake on earth much more shall not we escape if we turne away from him that speaketh from heauen And can we want reason 1. In his anointing we are commanded by a voice from heauen heare him Matth. 17.5 2. he deliuereth the whole will of his Father we shall therefore be perfectly taught if we heare him 3. we may safely rest in his doctrine because with him are the treasures of wisedome 4. In a word he hath onely the words of life euerlasting and whither should we goe Secondly hence we learne that seeing euerie beleeuer is anointed with Christ and in Christ we must all be carefull to finde this holy oyle running downe from the head vpon vs the members 1. Ioh. 2.27 The anointing which yee receiue of him dwelleth in you And indeede our verie name of Christians putteth vs in minde that we must haue our measure of that oyle of grace which was powred on Christ without measure so as if we carrie the name and title of Christ we must see that the nature and gifts of Christians appeare in our liues Rev. 1.6 he hath made vs Kings and Priests vnto God And it was long before prophesied of the Church of the newe testament that the sonnes and daughters of it shall prophesie and all this by vertue of this anointing Adde hereunto that Christ is not perfectly anointed til his Church be for Christ may be said to be anointed two wayes either properly in his owne person as considered in himselfe or figuratiuely by the vse of Scripture as he is the head of his Church which ioyned vnto him maketh vp whole Christ as the fathers call him or mysticall Christ. Thus Paul calleth Christ vnited with the Church by the name of Christ 1. Cor. 12.12 we must therefore helpe on the perfection of this latter seeing he is alreadie perfect in the former To this purpose euery man must become a King for so he is if he partake of Christs anointing in beeing euer in the field in combate against sinne in taking vp armes against Satans hellish power in getting daily dominion ouer his owne rebellious flesh and wicked lusts For if thou beest a Christian thou hast ten thousand rebells to encounter and as many strong temptations and lusts against which thou must stand out to victorie and here faith must be thy victorie which grace is attained by this anointing But Oh the miserie of infinite numbers euery where meere bondmen and captiue caytifes to Satans suggestions and held down vnder the power and tyrannie of their owne lusts in whome there is no resistance no fight neuer a stroake they strike against their owne sinnes the strong man is gone away with all verie cowards against the deuill nay couragious champions for him and yet will be called Christians no no there is neuer a droppe of Christian blood in such this anointing as yet neuer came neere them here is no spirit no power but such as ruleth in the world Againe thou that wilt be a Christian must be a Priest to offer vp thy selfe soule and bodie an acceptable sacrifice of sweet smell vnto the Lord to offer vp thy prayers and prayses the calues of thy lippes these are the odours of the Saints to offer vp thy sinnes to be sacrificed and slaine by the knife and sword of the spirit in the Ministerie of the word to offer the sacrifices of almes and mercie with which sacrifices God is well pleased to offer the sacrifice of a broken and contrite heart which the Lord despiseth not and lastly to offer if neede require thy life and dearest blood for Christ and his profession But how many titular Christians be there who indeede are no better then Belzebubs Priests who offer their soules their bodies their sences themselues wholly to the seruice of the deuill in sinne and vnrighteousnesse for praier and praise they curse sweare and blaspheme most remorselesly feirce and hard hearted in themselues and vnto others and so farre from this anointing as many of the Heathens who neuer heard of Christ would be ashamed of them and wonder what kind of God that Christ should be by whome they will be called Lastly thou must be a Prophet thou must haue the knowledge of God in thy selfe thou must hold it out and impart it vnto others within thy family and without for to this thou art anointed as also to hold out Christ in a constant profession which tyeth euery man to know and acknowledge the truth of God that he may be able to propagate it to others but especially Ministers Magistrates Parents and Masters whose speciall calling besides the generall fastneth this dutie vpon them These are the cheife things to which others might be added wherein euery Christian ought to testifie himselfe anointed by Christs anointing that hee communicateth as well in his graces as in his name and that he hath receiued some good measure of that oyle of grace which was powred out vpon him without measure for as in the head the Godhead dwelleth bodily so in euerie member though not the Godhead it selfe yet a diuine natrue is apparant 2. Pet. 1.4 Now this godly nature is nothing else but those excellent renewed qualities and precious gifts which the holy Ghost bestoweth vpon the regenerate by meanes of this anointing and is opposed to naturall lust and corruption in the same vers Who went about doing good Now we come to Christs execution of his office according to his former calling and furnishing For no sooner receiueth he gifts and calling from his father but he manifesteth and putteth forth the same in most painefull preaching and most powerfull working of miracles which hee did not for a brunt or by starts and fitts but he went about doing good By which words is noted his diligence in absoluing and finishing his course within his vocation and calling not seeking herein himselfe nor the praise or applause of men nor the kingdomes of this world but denying himselfe and glorie spent his whole life in doing good vnto others suffering himselfe to be subdued vnder a most shamefull and cursed death that hee might bring others to life who were as yet his enemies and lying in the shadowe of death Wherein he propounded himselfe a worthy patterne and example of imitation vnto all such as haue receiued gifts and calling to any office in Church or common wealth who are not to hide in a napkin those talents but bring them forth and traficke with them and that not for their priuate as seeking themselues but for the common good and not for a start or brunt but thus
mischeife of so many as are within their power and reach hee makes them beat themselues with stones continually cast themselues into fire and water that is into all perills and desperate sinnes wound their owne bodies destroie their health shorten their liues through their intemperate and greedie pursuit of sinne but most of all wound their consciences and let out the verie life-blood of their soules And that their damnation may be more and seuere hee stirres them vp to kill and destroy whomsoeuer they can meete withall by drawing in companions and partners in their wickednesse calling them to cast in their lot with them that so they may all perish together What a wofull captiuitie then are many in that yet see it not How many possessed persons are in euery corner who yet will spit at the mention of the Deuil in defiance of him why should supersticious sim-people be so afraid of bodily possession as that when they neesed or open their mouthes to take meate they vsed to fence their mouthes with the signe of the crosse least the deuil should get in at that doore and we neuer feare spirituall possession to fence our selues against it If we saw the deuil raging and tyrannising striking a person dumb and blind racking his ioynts and winding his bodie at his pleasure we would commiserate his state and we could not be so profane but to send vp prayers for his release as esteeming death it selfe a more desirable condition then so to liue But when we see lewd wretches no better then deuils incarnate wholly subdued vnder the power of the deuil ruled wholly at his will and euery way in an estate more miserable yet are we void of compassion towards them and affection in our selues We rather turne their mad pranks into a iest then turne to God in prayer for their recouerie so little we see or sauour of the things of God and his kingdome Those that are bodily possessed or mad shall be kept bound cheyned watched diligently from hurting themselues or others but many of these Beldems are at libertie in place and power to hurt and destroy many with themselues which is a manifest proofe that this wofull condition is little beheld and bewayled by the most few or none complaine of it few or none seeke the cu●e of it though euery man neede it as beeing naturally thus possessed euen from his childhood But because men if they be not openly and outragiously wicked with an high hand thinke themselues free enough from all spiritual possession and out of the reach of this doctrine we will therefore goe a little further to shewe that numbers in the world who make fairer shew then the former as though this strong man were quite cast out by a strōger thē he are not yet got out of his power but possessed disposed by him and ruled at his will and pleasure For first who would thinke him possessed that can fall downe on his knees make a solemne profession and confession of Iesus Christ that he is the Sonne of God and the most high and make loud praiers vnto him as acknowledging him to be the Lord of glorie and yet all these are the speaches and behauiours of a man possessed not with one or two but with a legion of deuills What doe the deuills honour Christ who feare nothing more then that he should be honoured and hate nothing so much as he No but all this confession and worship was by constraint partly because they knew him a Prince and a Iudge whose power they could not resist and partly they flatter him to obtaine more gentle entreatie at his hands then they deserued so many a man professeth Christ but you shall obserue at least he may himselfe that many foule spirits breath in him for although he know Christ as the deuills did yet he obeyeth him not he would faine resist him if hee were strong enough to make his part good against him which because he cannot doe he will giue him faire words and call him Lord and Master he will pray to him in sickenesse or distresse but it is but to get out of his hands and keepe his wonted hold still If the power of Christs word come neere him hee can beginne to accuse Christ and Christian profession of vnpeaceablenesse and tormenting him before the time for what time would please these that Christ should come vnto them he can aske Christ and his ministers what they haue to doe with him and Christ shal be blamed because he cannot be at peace for him if he would let him alone all should be well and quiet but the ministrie and discipline are intollerable let Christ preach and he will preach him too so it be such a Gospel as bringeth no repentance or amēdment of life to himselfe but he may remaine where he was euen in the graues alreadie lodged with death When he cannot doe the greater mischiefe that he would he will doe the lesser if he can if he cannot hinder the ministerie he can deprave it wherein as in all the rest he shewes himselfe at the command of that wicked spirit who when he could no longer torment the man would drowne the swine Secondly although the deuill might be forced through the power of Christ to acknowledge him the holy one of God so as themselues might continue deuills still yet who would thinke him guided by any other then a good spirit of God that should extoll the seruants of Christ their persons their ministerie their doctrine for would any conceiue that the father of lyes would praise the truth and yet marke what a large testimonie the deuil himselfe in the maid gaue of Paul and Silas These men are the seruants of the most high God which shew vnto vs the way of saluatiō and this she did many dayes Why did not the deuill know that they were the greatest enemies he had vpon earth yes he did but he must somtimes transforme himselfe into an angel of light he must colour all his lyes with some truth which is vndeniable he can lay all his falshoods vpon appearance of truth as his eldest sonne Mahomet enlarged the praises of Christ and his Disciples to ouerthrowe Christian religion withall he hath his fetch to make men beleeue there is an agreement betweene Christ and his Apostles and himselfe or that they needed his testimonie who therefore put him to silence and would receiue no commendation from him but for praises returned sharpe rebukes Euen so many men can praise good men and ministers before their faces whom they knowe to be deadly enemies to their vices not for loue of their vertues but least they should vse them and can call them honest men to trie if by that they can hinder them from doing the dutie of honest men as the deuils called Paul and Silas the seruants of God least they should shewe themselues so by dispossessing them Besides they would seeme heerein to be better then
righteous man done which of them could accuse him of sinne or might not hee haue taken his enemies booke vpon his shoulder and haue bound it as a crowne vnto him yes verely the Apostle hath told vs in the words before what Christ had done hee had gone about spent all his life in doing good vnto the Iewes but they returned him euill for good to the greefe of his soule and therefore as Dauid lamenteth the death of Abner how died Abner his hands were not bound nor his feete cheyned but as a man falleth before wicked men so did hee fall that is Abner was a valiant and worthy man and so would haue acquitted himselfe if hee could haue mette his enemie face to face and had not beene wickedly and trecherously slaine by Ioab euen so Christ continued a worthy person although according to the counsell of God hee fell before wicked men through malice and enuie and as Dauid amplified both the sinne and the punishment of such a wretch as so cowardly slew Abner when he said know ye not that this day a great Prince is fallen in Israel euen so the sinne of the Iewes was hereby heightned that a great Prince fell in Ierusalem and the seueritie of Gods iudgement lyeth heauily vpon them till this day in that both a mightie God and innocent man was withall extremitie of rage and furie pursued euen vnto the death Fourthly note in these Iewes what an inbred malice there is in wicked men against Christ and his members for it is neuer without matter to worke vpon if it cannot accuse iustly of euill it can vniustly condemne for doing good this Christ sheweth Ioh. 10.32 Many good workes haue I done for which of them do ye stone me They answer him no but they stone him for blasphemie so something shal be pretended as blasphemie treason mutinie faction or some such thing and a forme of lawe shall be followed nothing in the world is more easie then to finde out a lawe to put Christ to death by for that is the conclusion of all wicked lawes Christ and his members must die by them but whatsoeuer be pretended against them it maketh much for the glorie of God the patience of his Saints and the iust ouerthrowe of his enemies that whatsoeuer the godly suffer at the hands of the wicked it is for most part causles in themselues and consequently vniust in the other Let such as professe the Lord Iesus take notice hereof and content themselues if they finde returne of euil for good it was their Lords case and the seruant can looke for no better entertainement then his Lord findeth Let vs not be wearie of well-doing although it breed vs hatred of the world as knowing that the same spirit of malice is gone out into the world and doth breath in numbers that followe the way of Caine who slew his brother because his workes were good as all those titles of reproach cast vpon Gods children lowdly convince as that they are Church-gadders holy brethren too nice and precise persons the which and the like tearmes if a man sing but a Psalme in his family he cannot avoide well needes must Christians suffer let their care be to suffer onely as Christians and for well-doing for it is no shame to suffer as a Christian and seeing it is the will of God that they must suffer it is better saith the Apostle to suffer for weldoing then as euill doers many receiuing indignities from men will say if I had deserued such and such things it would neuer haue grieued me but Christians must be in a contrarie note it would grieue me if I had deserued such things as I suffer at the hands of men but I reioyce in that I haue not deserued them The third point is the manner kind of Christs death in these words and hanged him on a tree Quest. Why was Christ rather to die on the crosse thē by any other kind of death Ans. Some say that because mankind was foyled in the first Adam by means of a tree it was meet it shold be restored by the second Adam vpō a tree which although it be but inconsequent yet this the Scripture affirmeth that Christ on the crosse as vpon a glorious chariot of triumph rescued his Church foyled the deuill spoyled principalities and powers made an absolute conquest against all the enemies of mans saluation and that it was meete he should thus doe by this manner of death we want not stronger reasons out of the Scriptures As first This was the counsel of God Acts. 2.23 for the Iewes did nothing against him but by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God which counsel of God oueruled the matter brought it to this passe strangely for the high Priests had accused Christ with blasphemie had produced witnesses against him in that cause yea had his owne confession that he was the sonne of God which they tooke for blasphemie yet for this could they not put him to this kind of death seeing the blasphemer by the lawe of God must be stoned not crucified and so had Christ beene if the power of death had beene in the hands of the Iewes as not long before it was but the prouidence of God ouerruleth the matter so as he must be brought before the Romane gouernour and a newe action of treasonable affecting the kingdome be laid against him whence it was that Pilate asked if he were the king of the Iewes and he answered yea vpon which answer he was condemned to the most cruell death that was in vse among the Romanes for of those three kinds of death burning heading and crucifying this last was the most seuere and shamefull to which the chiefe malefactors were sentēced and that Christ was executed as an arch-traytor the inscription on the crosse containing the crime for which hee was condemned plainely sheweth Iesus of Nazareth King of the Iewes that no man could looke vpon or read that writing but he should presently conceiue Christ a malefactor in the highest kinde of treason and rebellion Secondly this kind of death was aunciently prefigured as also foreprophesied it was prefigured by Isaac laid bound vpon the wood and the other sacrifices which all were laid on the wood to bee consumed by fire by the lifting vp of the shoulder of the peace offering Leuit. 7.20 by the shaking of the breast of the same to and fro which as some say signifieth the spreading of our Sauiours hands vpon the crosse but especially by the lifting vp of the brasen serpent in the wildernesse which as Christ saith shadowed his owne lifting vp vpon the crosse Ioh. 3.14 Againe this kind of death was also foreprophesied Psal. 22.17 they peirced or digged my hands and feete it was foretold also by himselfe Matth. 20.19 They shall deliuer him to the Gentiles and they shall mocke him and scourge him and crucifie him and that it was necessarie that this
persons 2. in their inward proprieties as to beget to be begotten and proceede and 3. in their seuerall offices one to another as to send and to be sent these three are one in nature and essence one in power will and one in the act of producing all such actions as without themselues any of them is said to performe Secondly although here is no contrarietie yet here is an order in the working or administration of the person to be obserued for the Father as the first efficient in order raiseth Christ as man by the Sonne as a second efficient in order and by the holy Ghost as a third For as it is in all the matter of creation so is it in all the workes of redemption they are ascribed vnto the Father especially not because they agree not vnto the other two persōs but because he after a peculiar manner worketh them namely by the Son and by the holy Ghost but they not by him but from him and so neither this or any other such place where it is ascribed to the Father to raise his Sonne Iesus must be cōceiued either as making Christ as the Sonne inferiour in power to his Father or as excluding his owne mightie power in raising himselfe for they shewe onely the order of the persons but make no inequalitie in essence or power or will or working Thirdly where the Sonne is said to be raised of the Father it must not be vnderstood of the person of the Sonne but in respect of his nature assumed that is his humanitie Whence obserue that as the former point shewed that Christ was a true man because he was in the state of the dead whence he was raised so this consideration sheweth him to be a true and glorious God and notably concludeth that which the Apostle aimeth at who would hence prooue him to be Lord of all in that by his owne power he raised himselfe from death and so mightily declared himselfe the Sonne of God and Lord of all blessed for euer This is it which maketh him the fit obiect of our faith and if he had not expressed himselfe as well a true and perfect God as a true entire man we ought not to haue beleeued in him we beleeue not then as the Iewes scoffingly say in a crucified God but in a God raising and exalting to glorie by his owne omnipotent power an assumed humane nature euen then when it lay vnder the curse of all the sins that euer haue or shall be committed by the true members of the Church the which thing no power of man or angel nor any created nature could euer turne hand vnto could euer haue stood vnder and much lesse haue swumme out with conquest and victorie neither indeede had he himselfe if there had remained the least sinne of any of the elect to haue beene accounted for wee neede then no other signe to be giuen vs to prooue his dietie but this signe of Ionas and when the Iewes demanded a signe why he tooke such authority vpon him he gaue them no other but sent them hi●her destroy this temple and I will reare it in three dayes Ioh. 2.18.19 c. The third point is the raising it selfe wherein 3. points are to be opened 1. the necessitie of Christs rising 2. the manner 3. the fruit or ends of it First it was necessarie that Christ should rise a●gaine in three respects 1. For the accomplishment of things foreappointed and foretold it was from all eternitie decreed and appointed by God and therefore it behoued Christ to rise from the dead the third day Luk. 24.46 and it was impossible that he should be held downe of death Act. 2.24 Againe the Scriptures must necessarily be fulfilled all which beat vpon these two points 1. his sufferings 2. the glorie that should followe And more specially all those predictions and types of his resurrection inforced this ne●essitie Psal. 16.10 Thou wilt not leaue my soule in graue which our Apostle prooueth cannot be meant of Dauid whose bodie sawe corruption but that Dauid spake concerning him Isa. 53.10 when he shall make his soule an offering for sinne he shall see his seede and prolong his dayes Besides his owne prediction of his resurrection must either be fulfilled or he could not haue beene the onely true Prophet of his Church for himselfe had said that the Iewes should slay him and crucifie him but the third day shall hee rise againe Matth. 20.17 and this the high Priests and Pharisies remembred well when they came to Pilate and said Sir we remember that this deceiuer while he was aliue said within three dayes I will rise command therefore that the sepulchre be made sure c. Adde hereunto that all the predictions of his ascension of his triumph and of the last iudgement depended hereupon Further the types which foreshadowed his resurrection must not be frustrate but answered in the truth of them as that of Izaak bound vpon the wood but yet reserued aliue whome his father receiued from the dead after a sort of Sampson escaping the reuenge and malice of his enimies by carrying away the gates wherein he seemed fast shut of the two goates one slaine for sinne the other a scape goat shadowing Christ both slaine for sinne and yet escaping of the two sparrowes the one killed the other let flie and the most expresse of all that of Ionah which Christ himselfe mentioneth Matth. 12.39 and most properly applyeth to this verie purpose 2. It was necessarie in respect of himselfe whether we consider the excellencie of his person or of his office For his person hee was by nature the eternall Sonne of God the Lord of life and glorie and by no better meanes could hee be discerned to be this true and naturall Sonne of God or the resurrection and life then by raising himselfe from death to life by his most glorious power Hence it was that himselfe a little before his death prayed in these words Father glorifie thy Sonne As for his office as he was set out by his Father to be a perpetuall Mediator betweene God and the Church so was hee to be an euerlasting King of glorie of whose kingdome there must be no ende according to that prophesie of Daniel 7.27 The kingdome of the most high is an euerlasting kingdome And according to the oath of the Lord recorded Psal. 89.36 I haue sworne once by my holinesse that I will not faile Dauid his seede shall endure for euer and his throne as the sunne before mee hee shall be established for euermore as the moone and as a faithfull witnesse in the heauen Selah 2. Hee must be also a Preist for euer after the order not after the order of Leui or Aaron but of Melchisedech without beginning or end of daies and this also the Lord had sworne vnto his sonne and could not repent that hee should be a preist for euer wherein the
preisthood of Christ is aduanced aboue all the preists that euer were who hauing receiued their office in time in time also ceased their office with their life but Christ his preisthood was not limited in any time but was euery way eternall They were many who succeeded one another because they were not suffred to endure by death But this man because hee endureth for euer hath no successor but an euerlasting preisthood They were made Preists after the law of the carnall commandement but hee after the power of the endlesse life that is hee was not made a Preist by the law namely ceremoniall which established for a time dying and vanishing things signified by the name of flesh but hee was made by the efficacie of the word and oath of his Father which gaue him endlesse life and perpetuall duration so as neither death it selfe nor the graue could hold any dominion ouer him when they seemed to haue clasped him fast in their bands which yet were powerfull inough to haue held downe any or all other men in the world besides himselfe and the Apostle to the Hebrewes giueth a double reason why hee must necessarily outliue death it selfe the former because hee must not onely make a perpetuall oblation that need no repetition but also hee must liue euer to make intercession and that perpetually without which the Apostle implieth that hee had not perfectly saued his people This is most clearly prooued Rom. 8.34 It is Christ who died yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God and maketh requests for vs and Hebr. 9.24 Christ is entred into the very heauen to appeare now in the sight of God for vs which appearance of his in heauen with his merits hath the force of the most effectuall prayer that euer was The latter is that hee may not only make one offring for sinne as those Preists did many but that hee may alwaies liue to apply it as they did not and see that his people haue the benefite of it not only before God for the appeasing of his wrath but also for the purging of their consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God as the same Apostle noteth Hebr. 9.14 and in the last place to bestow vpon euery beleeuer the spirit of faith whereby they may apprehend apply his sacrifice to their owne saluation Neither doth it any whit impeach the eternitie of Christs preisthood because foure thousand yeares almost of the world were passed before hee suffered for howsoeuer the execution of it was not all those ages after the beginning of the world yet the vertue efficacie and benefite of it reached to the first beleeuer that euer was in the world Adam himselfe whose faith in this seede of the woman saued him Abraham also saw his day and reioysed and the holy Ghost feareth not to call him the lambe slaine from the beginning of the world namely 1. in Gods counsell and decree 2. in the vertue and efficacie of his sacrifice 3. in regard of Gods acceptation of it for beleeuers 4. in the types and shadowes of it whereof the ceremoniall law was full And much lesse doth that hinder it from being eternall in that after the day of iudgement it shall cease when we shall stand no more in need of Preists or Sauiours for howsoeuer the execution of this office shall then cease yet the vertue and efficacie of it shall last for euer and euer 3. Hee must be also the perpetuall Prophet of his Church the vnchangeable Doctor of his Church the Apostle of our profession who must constantly send his spirit to lead vs into all truth raise vp teachers and hold them in his right hand for the gathering of the Saints vntill we all meete in the vnitie of faith and knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ so as it is cleared that no part of his offices could admit that hee should abide vnder death and therefore necessarily in this second respect must rise againe Thirdly It was necessarie hee should rise again because hee was so to die as that thereby hee must ouercome yea and destroie death which he had not done if he had laine conquered of death still in the graue yea more he must so die as that he must giue eternall life to his sheepe and by his death merit it put and hold them in possession of it for euer all signified in the phrases following they shall neuer perish neither shall any take them out of my hands which could neuer haue beene accomplished if himselfe had perished and had beene left in the hands and house of death But hence hath hee brought his Church strong consolation in that beeing risen from the dead hee hath fully ouercome death satisfied for euery sinne of euery beleeuer and risen from vnder all that waight of sinne and death which would haue oppressed vs for euer yea euen himselfe if hee had left one of our sinnes that beleeue in his name vnsatisfied for Out of this that hath beene spoken commeth to be answered that obiection that seeing Christ by his death paid the price of sinne vnto God what need we more of him we can be but acquitted and discharged Answ. The prouiding of the most soueraigne plaister is not enough to worke a cure but the applying of it also Neither was it sufficient for Christ to performe the former part of his priesthood namely satisfaction for sinne if he had not added the latter thereto which is the application of it This latter maketh the former ours and comfortable vnto vs. And both these the Apostle affirmeth of Christ Rom. 4.25 Christ was deliuered to death for our sinnes and is risen againe for our iustification where by iustification is meant by a Metonimie the application of iustice The second point propounded to be considered of in the rising of Christ is the manner of it which will appeare in three things the 1. concerning his soule the 2. his bodie the 3. his whole humanitie standing of both First the soule of Christ which on the crosse was separated from the bodie commended into the hands of his Father and translated that same day into Paradise was by the mightie power of God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost brought backe into his dead body lying in the graue quickened it and made it a liuing bodie moouing and sensible in it selfe and vnto others Secondly the selfe same bodie which was borne of the Virgin Mary educated in Egypt and Galilie which was apprehended condemned crucified and laid in the graue came out of the graue a liuing bodie God by the ministerie of the Angels remoouing all lets loosing the bands and apparell of death from off his blessed bodie by the earthquake tumbled away the stone that held him downe droue away the souldiers for feare who would haue assayed to haue killed
for these hee rose againe for these hee spoiled principalities and powers for these hee slew hatred yea not for these only but in these also and in these only As for all the rest hee praieth not for the world namely the wicked of the world hee died much lesse for them his death killed none of their sinnes but they are left in their sinnes and vnto the raigne and damnation of their sinnes without all benefit either of the death of Christ or of his resurrection When we say then that Christ killed sinne we must be vnderstood according to the Scriptures only for and in true beleeuers who only can receiue of his fulnesse The latter distinction concerneth sin wherein wee must consider two things 1. the guilt 2. the corruption of it The whole guilt of sinne is wholly and at once abolished to all beleeuers by meanes of Christ his death and resurrection but not the whole corruption which while they dwell in the bodie will dwell with them yet so as they neither liue in it nor it scarcely liue in them For the former the Apostle asketh this question Rom. 6.2 How can we that are dead to sinne liue in it and hence it is that such as are in communion with Christ are not only said to be dead but buried also with Christ and consequently they leaue their sinnes in his graue euen as Christ himselfe left them there where if they be left there will be a rotting and consuming of them away that they will be euery day lesse then other euen as it is with the bodie that lyeth in the graue and those which remaine yet vnmortified they will be euen as dead carkases lothsome and stinking which aboue all things the godly desire to be couered Now how impossible is it that these should be the practises of such as liue in sinne Nay I say more that all the corruption of sinne left in the godly can scarcely be said to liue in them I graunt indeede some moouing and stirring of it in them but it is such a motion as is in a beast which hath the throat cut it strugleth and striueth in letting life goe but the beast is killed and the vncleane issues of sinne in the godly which indeed are many are like such issues which come from a dead man and are a very parting from them rather then any argument of the life of sin or of any delight in them This is that which the Apostle aimeth at Rom. 6.7 Hee that is dead is freed from sinne as the theefe once hanged stealeth no more so sinne once dead and executed in Christ liueth no more in state or strength the sinewes of this giant are cut and what strength of motion can be in it In a word it is in beleeuers but dying sinne sinne destroied the whole hoast of sinne is discomfited though some stragglers of the armie wander here and there as rebells in another mans dominions The second enemie is death which entred into the world by sinne and went ouer all men in that all men had sinned and standeth in full force and state by sinne whersoeuer it raigneth Now Christ by remoouing the cause hath also remooued the effect for sinne beeing slaine death is also swallowed vp in victorie he hath made his word good O death I will be thy death who although he be the last enemie that shall be fully destroyed yet hath he disarmed him taken away his dart and sting from him and so spoyled him as he hath left him nothing to harme the elect withall The third enemie is hell the gates of which was set wide open by sinne for In the day thou sinnest thou shalt die the death namely the second death as well as the former But Iesus Christ by discending into hell and suffering the sorrowes of the second death loosed the same from himselfe and all such as shall beleeue in his name vnto the worlds ende Reu. 1.18 I was dead but am aliue for euermore Amen and I haue the keyes of hell and death which phrase seemeth to be borrowed from great commanders and conquerours who hauing wonne and entred any citie presently haue the keyes deliuered vnto them in token of that regiment and authoritie which now of right belongeth vnto them and plainely importeth that howsoeuer Christ was once dead yet by his death he hath vanquished hel and death and so hath obtained full power and command ouer them both The fourth enemie is Satan the arch enemie of mankind most malitious beeing a manslayer from the beginning and most powerfull beeing the Prince yea the God of this world yet hath the victorious lyon of the tribe of Iudah put to flight this roaring lyon whose rage and malice made him bold to set vpon the Sonne of God himselfe that so he might worke his owne ruine and ouerthrowe How Christ avoided his sundrie fierce assaults and temptations in the wildernes broke his power and forces by his powerfull dispossessing and casting him out of men and women trode vpon his necke by the power of his death and resurrection we might at large out of the Euangelists shewe but that wee haue spent some time alreadie in this argument so as now the gates of hell can neuer preuaile against the faith of the godly the seede of the woman hath broken the serpents head the strong man is cast out by a stronger then he the spoyler is spoyled and lead in triumph by him that appeared for this ende to destroy the workes of the deuill who hath this tyrant also in chaines reserued for the blackenesse of darkenesse for euer The last enemie but not the least in strength is the world Satans seruant and armour-bearer which by all the power and pollicie it could vse could not keepe Christ downe in the graue but he rose againe notwithstanding all the opposition of it this is that our Sauiour professeth of himselfe a little before his death Be of good comfort for I haue ouercome the world As if he had said trouble not your hearts although you haue all the strength and malice of the wicked world against you all which shall be no more able to preiudice your saluation or hinder your glorie then myne owne who haue ouercome it so as you fight against a conquered enemie By all this that hath beene said that of the Apostle appeareth to bee true that he hath subdued all things vnto himselfe and hath put all his enemies vnder his feet that none nor all of them can separate vs from God or Christ or our saluation purchased and preserued for vs by him Now we are to see in the next place that Christ by his resurrection hath not onely spoyled these enemies for vs but that he hath made them all after a sort friendly vnto vs that whereas they desire still indeede and seeme to wound vs they doe nothing else but heale vs. 1. For sinne that nowe serueth to humble Gods children and
of God as for gold and treasures he accounteth of the graces of faith loue hope humilitie and the feare of the Lord aboue all pearles and precious things he prouideth for himselfe and his the food that perisheth not and thinketh himselfe warmely and comely arraied when he hath put on the Lord Iesus Christ as knowing that onely the garment of this righteousnesse can fence him from all the iniurie of wind and weather The naturall man doth not more seriously listen after great purchases of land and fields as he doth cast with himselfe to purchase the pearle hid in the field for which he will sell himselfe as we say into his shirt nay and further his owne selfe libertie life and if he had any thing dearer then that As for the things of this life if he haue them not he wanteth not his portion If he haue them his care is that they haue not him or become his portion If riches increase hee setteth not his heart vpon them If they decrease his heart faileth not with them In abundance hee carrieth himselfe warily and weanedly In want cheerefully and contentedly The things he hath hee vseth as not vsing them the things he hath not he knoweth he hath no good vse of them or else hee should haue them And thus as the naturall man bestirreth himselfe and all his motion tendeth to the bettring of his outward estate at home so contrarily doth an heauenly minded man accounting himselfe from home while hee is heare in the bodie bend his cheife care to settle his estate at home in heauen and all his trading and conuerse in this straunge country tendeth to the enriching of him in his owne country Further if we looke to the naturall mans course in the matter of his religion we shall see as great difference betweene them For it is cleare that whereas matters of religion are a burthen to the one they are the ioy of the other The one as heauie to pray to heare to read and meditate on the word and of his owne estate as a beare to the stake if law or shame or some such by-respect mooued him not it were all one to him to be on his horse backe as in the Church the other would account his life tedious were it not for these meetings of God and his people in the assemblies and those sweet refreshments they bring backe from thence The one if hee pray sometimes in publicke he maketh little conscience of priuate prayer in his family and so of other priuate duties to which God and a good conscience would bind him as strait as to the former The other walketh wisely and religiously in the midst of his house and preserueth the worship of God at home and maketh his house a little Church and house of God The one maketh little or no conscience of such sinnes as either in comparison of other or in his owne corrupt conceit are smaller sinnes such as are inferior oathes idlenesse gaming sinnes of omission idle words or hurtfull vncleane or wandring thoughts words hee thinketh to be but wind if he meane no hurt and if he meane hurt but doe none thoughts are free As for the sinnes of the time hee will not be so vndiscreete as to swimme against the streame he is here violently carried without resistance into a gulfe of knowne euills and all is well he doth but as others doe and it were worse for him if he did not the other maketh conscience of all sinne lesser sinnes and secret sinnes hee can hate all euen those which hee cannot auoid he hateth the euill that himselfe doth and willingly will not displease God though all men be therefore offended with him To conclude this point the one seeketh to approoue himselfe vnto man the other to approoue his heart to God because hee knoweth hee made it and knoweth what is in it And this shal serue for a tast of the opposite disposition betweene naturall and spirituall life The second note to discerne this heauenly life by is the similitude or agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heauen For the life of the Saints in heauen must be a counterpaine of the beleeuers vpon earth to which they must be daily framed in sundry regards 1. In respect of the things they are called from 2. In respect of the things they are called vnto 1. The Saints in heauen are called from three things 1. the world it selfe 2. the corruptions that are in the world through lust 3. The companie of the wicked of the world Euen so must beleeuers in the world in their degree and measure carrie themselues as those that are chosen out of the world and such as are bought from the earth medling no more with earthly things then needs must enioying them so as they ioy no more in them then in things which are not their owne but borrowed only for a time vsing them so as they abuse them not because they are to be counteable for them abiding in their earthly businesse and callings so as they be neuer earthly minded in one word so desiring pursuing hauing holding and parting from the profits of this life as those to whom God hath shewed better things then any below yea and esteeming of their present life it selfe so indifferently as that they can account the day of their death better then the day wherein they were borne 2. As the Saints in heauen beeing deliuered out of the prison of the bodie haue all the bolts and chaines of their corruption struck off so the godly who haue their parts in the first resurrection haue after a sort changed their liues and put on a diuine nature they haue bid farewell to the follies of their former times yea renounce and as farre as frailty will permit loath their sinnes saying vnto them as Ephraim to his reiected Idols get you hence what haue I to doe with you they that were of the Synagogue of Satan are now in the Temple with true beleeuers Thus is it said of the 144000. that were bought from the earth that they were not defiled with women but were virgins that is sanctified in part and washed from their filthinesse and will haue no more fellowship in the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse wherein sometimes they were cheife actors 3. The Saints in heauen neuer ioyne with the wicked of the world any more that beeing verefied which Moses spake to the Isralites concerning the Egyptians The enemies whom your eyes haue seene this day you shall neuer see more euen so the faithfull hate the companie of the wicked with whom they can neither doe good nor take any whereas before their calling they were mixt with them and ran with them to the same riot of excesse Now their fellowship is dissolued they are no more companions with them the light of the one admitteth no communion with the others darknes and that they are often forced to dwell in Mesech with them it
rather had good assurance of this which is present and in stead of wishing and wayting tremble at the mention of Christ his comming againe Yet most of these men professors of Christ all of them baptized into his name and all of them will be reputed as good Christians as the best But all this forenamed course hath no sauour or rellish of heauen all that take it vp minde nothing but earthly things and the end of it without timely repentance will be damnation The fourth generall point is the time of Chists resurrection set downe in the text to be the third day To vnderstand which we must knowe that Christ lay not in the graue three whole naturall dayes each of them standing of 24. houres for then he should haue laine 72. houres and haue risen also on the fourth day whereas he lay not in the graue aboue 39. houres and rise on the third But the Scripture vseth a grace or forme of speach whereby two parts of dayes are called by the whole and three dayes put for the time which passed in three seuerall dayes euery day hauing his night belonging vnto him The first day of the three saith Augustine is to be reckoned by his latter part in which Christ was dead and buried not passing three houres of the foure and twentie yet so as both the night before when the Iewes day begunne and the most of that day was spent in taking examining whipping misusing condemning and executing him The second day is to be accounted wholly and perfect from the euening of the day before the passeouer to the euening of the Saboath following standing of full 24. houres The third day is to be accounted from the former part of it beginning at the euening of the Iewish Saboath for Christ lay all night neere twelue houres in the graue and rose in the morning betime about the midst of that naturall day standing of 24. houres And thus is Christ truly said to haue risen the third day Now that Christ should rise the third day and no sooner nor later these reasons shew 1. Hee must rise the third day according to the Scriptures For they had foretold this to be the particular time Hos. 6.2 After two daies hee will reuiue vs and in the third day hee will raise vs vp namely in his owne person for we also were raised with him as we haue seene The Scriptures had also further figured this distinct time in the type of Ionas who hauing laid three daies and three nights in the bellie of the whale was the third day cast on the drie land as our Sauiour himselfe while hee was yet aliue expounded of himselfe Math. 12.40 As Ionas was in the bellie of the whale three daies and three nights so shall the Sonne of man be three daies and three nights in the heart of the earth 2. It pleased him not to rise sooner hee would not presently come downe from the crosse nor reuiue himselfe before hee was buried nor rise presently after hee was laid downe as hee easily could because he would manifest that hee was truly dead as also because hee would lead his Church into some suspense therefore he rose not till the case seemed desperate Luk. 24.21 We trusted that it had beene hee that should haue deliuered Israel and as touching all these things this is the third day that they were done Again hee would no longer deferre his rising 1. least he should vtterly haue endangered the faith of the Disciples which in that short time was sore shaken as not only the former example but the heauinesse of the Disciples themselues to beleeue the newes of it and the wilfulnesse of Thomas plainely bewrayeth 2. Because vpon this euent and keeping touch in this very circumstance of time he had laid all the credit of his person ministerie doctrine miracles life and death For when they come to aske him a signe to prooue himselfe the Messiah he referreth them to this euent after his death that when they had destroied the Temple of his bodie if hee did raise it either after or before the third day or did not on that day raise it they should neuer take him for the Messiah And of this verie circumstance Angels and men had taken notice from his owne mouth Luk. 24.7 when the women came to the sepulchre to seeke Christ after he was newly risen the Angels told them hee was risen he was not there and further wisheth them to remember what he had said to them while he was with them that the third day hee must rise againe nay not only his freinds but his verie enemies had got this by the end and therefore came to Pilat saying sir we remember that this deceiuer said that hee would rise the third day let vs take such order that the last error become not worse then the first 3. The blessed bodie of Christ was not to enter into the least or lowest degree of corruption and therefore hee would lie no longer in the house of corruption Quest. But how could his bodie be preserued so long seeing Lazarus his bodie and our bodies in that time enter into many degrees of it Answ. Christ was indeed balmed and sweetned with odours but all this could not haue preserued him if his soule and bodie had not now beene freed from sinne the mother of corruption Obiect But hee had sinne imputed vnto him Answ. Yea but hee had ouercome all that and slaine it on the crosse for had he not destroied it himselfe had beene destroied by it and subdued for euer vnder the corruption of it In all which regards that is verefied which himselfe beeing risen affirmed Luk. 24.46 Thus it is written and thus it behooueth Christ to suffer and to rise againe from the dead the third day Other things the Euangelists obserue in this circumstance as that it was the first day of the week that is the first day wherein he had created the heauens and the earth and wherein he would create now a new heauen and a new earth and as before he had set vp a meruailous frame of the world but since exceedingly shaken and defaced by sinne he would now restore the world againe and repaire the ruins of it by abolishing sinne as formerly he had filled heauen and earth with the glorie of his power in creation so would he now fill them with the glorie of his power in redemption which is a second creation Hence is it that that day is now conuerted into the Christian Sabbath and called the Lords day or if you wil Sunday but not as the heathen in honour of the sun but as Christians in honour of the the Sunne of righteousnesse Againe the Gospel noteth that this our glorious Sunne rose about sunne rising earely in the morning or a little before it Matth. 28.1 To shewe vnto vs 1. the power of his Godhead who could while his bodie was dead performe the promise which he had
made aliue euen in the instant of which he had spoken 2. The impotencie of his enemies who although they watched him sealed him vp laid an heauie stone vpon him were euery way cautelous to keepe him down till the third day was past and he not stealing away secretly in the dead time of the night but rose with noise and warning euen in the morning yet could they no more stay him then they could the sunne from rising and running his course 3. The benefit which the world of beleeuers obtaine by his rising againe set down by the Euangelist Luk. 1.78 Through the tender mercie of our God the day spring from an high hath visited vs 79. To giue light to them that sit in darkenesse and to guide our feete into the way of peace The Chronologers further obserue that this was the day wherein Moses lead the Israelites through the sea wherein all the troupes of Pharaoh and his hoast were drowned Euen so our Lord Iesus this third day lead all the Israel of God out of the spirituall Egypt of blindnesse and filthinesse but gloriously triumphed ouer all the bands of Satan sinne and death all which were sunke like a stone into the bottomelesse pit of hell Other obseruations concerning this day might be inserted out of authors which because I see no sound ground for them out of the Scriptures I will omit them that I may now come to the lessons which out of this circumstance wee may drawe for our further instruction First we learne hence that all the promises of God shal be in due season accomplished whatsoeuer may seeme to come betweene them and vs For seeing Christ beeing dead both could and did performe his promise to his Church will not hee much more beeing aliue and in his glorie doe it The Israelites had a promise of a good land they must in the meane time suffer much oppression in Egypt for the space of 430. yeares together but the selfe same night when the tearme was expired they went out against the heart and yet at the entreatie of Pharaoh and his people In like sort Ioseph had a dreame that the Sunne and Moone and the 12. starres should worship him in the meane time he must be cast into the pit and dungeon where he can see neither sunne moone nor starre many dayes and yeares passed wherein he saw nothing but the cleane contrarie yet in the due season of it this dreame was accomplished And the reason is because 1. God is true of his word hee cannot lie nor repent and 2. he is able to fulfill whatsoeuer passeth from his mouth for shall any thing be hard or impossible to God or shall any power or death or the graue it selfe falsifie it Leane thy selfe then vpon this truth of God hast thou a promise of outward or inward peace health wealth or any other good thing which thy heart can wish hold this promise fast in the midst of thy heart wait for the accomplishment of it it shall not faile thee so farre as thy Father seeth good for thee if it be delaied and deferred euen this also shall turne to thy best Hast thou a promise of life euerlasting hold it by the faith of thy soule as the ayme and end of all thy faith religion for all the miseries of this present life shall not be able to defeat thee of it Hast thou the promise of the resurrection of the bodie after death sticke to this article of thy faith also nothing could hinder the rising of thy head no more can let but the members shall be where the head is not the graue not fire not water not the bellyes of beasts or fishes but they shall giue vp their dead and further the accomplishment of the word of their Creator The second obseruation is that as the Lord of life raised not his Sonne as soone as he was dead but he must lie in the graue two dayes yea and the third also till his case seemed desparate to the Disciples themselues euen so may the members of Christ lie long in the graues of their miserie yea so long as their case seemeth desperate and all that while the Lord not onely deferreth but seemeth to denie their helpe and vtterly to neglect them Abraham had the promise of a sonne by Sarah he looked euery yeare for him ten twenty yeares together nay till the thirtieth yeare till it was not with Sarah as with childing-women in so much as she laught when she heard it the case in nature was desperate who would haue thought but that God had forgotten his promise which Abraham himselfe in all that time if God had not shoared vp his faith might haue forgotten but though long first yet at length the Lord found out a time fit enough to bring his word to passe Dauid in like manner had the promise of the kingdome but in the meane time hee was so traced and hunted by Saul that he said in himselfe I shall surely one day fall by the hands of Saul but howsoeuer the Lord still deferred his promise he knewe not how to breake it the kingdome was rent from Saul and giuen to him that was better then he Now the cheife reasons of this dealing of the Lords with his children are these 1. In Gods delayes there is a seasonable time for all the graces which he giueth to be set on worke such as are faith patience hope prayer all which cease in the accomplishment Secondly he will haue his childrens case often desperate that his owne hand may be acknowledged in giuing them vnexpected deliuerance How could Israel but acknowledge his outstreached arme in their deliuerie when they saw nothing but the mountaines before them the enemies behind thē and the sea as a wall on either side and if the Lord had deliuered them before they came into the bottome of the sea as he easily could haue done the glorie of his worke had been obscured which all ages since haue admired and extolled till this day How did Ionah and the Niniuites acknowledge the finger of God in calling him to that ministerie when as he seemed vtterly cast away beeing buried in the whales belly three dayes and three nights for when by the powerfull word of God the fish was commanded to cast him on the drie ground what a worthy fruit of conversion it had in them generally the history doth declare What great glorie the Lord wonne to himselfe by sauing Daniel not from the den but from the lyons teeth in the denne and the three children not from the furnace but the verie fire in the furnace it appeareth in that the verie heathen Kings themselues made publike edicts that no God but Daniels and no God but Sadrachs c. should be worshipped through all their dominions because no God could deliuer their worshippers as he had done Thirdly the Lord often longer absenteth himselfe from his owne children that when he is returned they might make
men bethinke themselues and then tell vs whether the holy Gospel beeing the power and arme of God to saue euery beleeuer the glad tidings of saluation and word of life can make the world worse then it is For if that be the vse of it our blessed Sauiour was farre ouerseene to leaue his glorie of heauen to take our flesh and in it to submit himselfe to the obedience of the whole lawe and to the suffering of the whole curse of it for our disobedience if by all this he leaue the world or make the world worse then he found it How shal it be true that is written of him that the Sonne of man came not to destroy but to seeke and saue that which was lost if the preaching of him make the world worse then it was we will easily graunt that the Gospel beeing a great light it daily discouereth that corruptiō and darkenesse which before lay hid as the sun rising manifesteth all those things which were wrapped vp in the darkenes of the night But to say that sinne is the more because it is more seene by the light of the Gospel is a fancie or if sinne it selfe in these dayes of the Gospel by the multiplication of people be multiplied shall we say the gospel is the cause or rather the malice of men who peruert it to their owne destruction taking occasion by it to turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Let not vs therefore looke as the olde idolaters in Ieremies time who told him plainly that they would not heare the word that hee spake in the name of the Lord for while they serued the Queene of heauen they had plentie of victualls and were well and felt none euill but since they left to burne incense vnto her it was neuer well with them they had scarsenesse of all things and were consumed by the sword and by famine and therefore they were resolued to doe as their Fathers did But let vs with thankfulnesse cast our eyes vpon the grace of God that hath appeared and learne as it teacheth to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world Many other allegations of simple people against this ordinance I might alleadge but they are well met withall by some others and my selfe haue elsewhere answered many of them and therfore referring the reader thither I content my selfe with these fewe for the present and conclude this point with this exhortation to these poore seduced people that considering the strait charge and commandement that lyeth vpon vs to preach in season and out of season they would be willing to picke out their dutie therein implyed which is to be diligent yea swift to heare to attend as earnest suiters at the gates of wisedome for their owne good to lay vp instruction as they would treasure gold and to call after the wisedome of God revealed in this ordinance without which neuer was any made wise to saluation And let them further know that seeing God doth not extraordinarily saue men where the ordinarie meanes are afforded or offered the neglect of this meanes is to despise great saluation and to make themselues vnworthie of life eternall And from the euidence of truth I avouch against euery soule that turneth his eare from hearing the word preached that he despiseth the pardon of the king of heauen he rufuseth life saluation offred he chooseth death and forsaketh his owne mercie he is no sheepe of Christ for then would be heare his voice and if he were borne of God he would heare the words of God Secondly the obiect of this ordinance or what we must preach and that is Christ. The scope of the whole Scripture is Christ and it is wholly resolued into him The Lawe that is a schoole-master to Christ for by convincing of sinne and making the sinner exceeding sinnefull it leadeth him forth of himselfe to seeke saluation in Christ. The Gospel preacheth nothing but Christ and him crucified for sinne 1. Cor. 2. We preach Christ the power of God and the wisedome of God Hence is it called the Gospel of Iesus Christ and the word of Christ not onely because it is from him beeing God as an efficient cause and preached by him as the cheife teacher of his Church but also for the materiall cause which is Christ. The Apostle Paul calleth it the word of truth not onely for the truth of it but because it publisheth that eternall truth Iesus Christ as also the word of the crosse not onely because the crosse ordinarily attendeth the faithfull preaching and profession of it but because the matter of it is Christ crucified Quest. What is it to preach Christ Answ. It standeth in two things 1. In plaine manner to teach the doctrine of Christ concerning his person his natures his offices and the execution of them from his incarnation to his ascension 2. In powerful manner so to apply this doctrine to euery hearer that euery one may feele a change to follow both in his heart and life For to teach only the Historie of Christ his doctrine his miracles his life his death is not the full teaching of Christ for thus the vnbeleeuing Iewes know Christ and the Infidell Turkes can easily come to this knowledge of him But to teach Christ as the truth is in Christ is to apply euery particular to the heart of a sinner that he may be framed to conuersion and repentance which is the most difficult labour of the ministerie and most to be striuen in Many teachers who can choose hard texts and make learned discourses and shewe much dexteritie of wit reading and humane literature haue not thus learned Christ themselues nor can after such a liuely manner teach him to others And pitty it is to see that whereas so great an Apostle as Paul who wanted not Arts tongues and humane learning desired to knowe nothing but Christ and him crucified among the Corinths themselues it should be the studie of many men to shew the knowledge of any thing rather then of Christ and how they may paint out themselues rather then Christ in their preaching Is not the end of preaching to make Disciples of Christ was it instituted to please the eare or to pricke and pearce the heart Let the minister therefore striue to ransacke the hearts of men with whom hee is to deale that discouering their secret things they may fall downe and say God is in him indeed Let him thinke hee hath spoken the word of Christ when hee hath both taught him and led his hearers vnto him And this will not be done but by the plainnesse of words and euidence of the spirit It is thought a reproach to preach a plaine sermon whereas indeed that is the best sermon which teacheth Christ most plainely 1. By true interpretation of Scripture 2. By wholesome sauorie and proper doctrine gathered thence 3. By sound application of
nor diuerse from it no priuate opinions which are the causes of scismes and heresies nor vaine conceits or iangling which breede questions but no godly edifying It was not onely their precept but practise also as Act. 26.22 Paul spake no other things then those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should be the first that should rise from the dead Nay the Lord of the holy Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe preached no other doctrine of whom it is said Luk. 24.27 that he beganne at Moses and all the Prophets and interpreted vnto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him shall the Sonne of God who might haue made euery word he spake Scripture tie himselfe to the Scriptures and make them the ground of all his sermons and shall not weake men who cannot without error depart an haire breadth from them be carefull to containe all their doctrine within the limits of them especialy seeing nothing else bindeth the conscience of the hearer 3. The Apostle knewe that this was a conuincing argument if hee could perswade his hearers that he did deliuer nothing but propheticall doctrine for all men Iewes and Gentiles were easily perswaded that Moses and the Prophets spake directly from God yea and the most blinded and wilfull Iewes at this day professe that if wee can prooue Christ the Messiah from Moses and the Prophets they will beleeue in him so as in great wisedome did the Apostle adde this testimonie to all the former knowing that that is the onely ●ound ground of teaching when men can be perswaded that what they heare is vttered from the mouth of God as by this testimonie his hearers were Now in the verse we haue three things to consider of 1. The generallity of this testimonie that all the Prophets beare witnesse vnto him 2. The scope and ende of their witnesse that men might beleeue in his name 3. The fruit of this beleefe that beleeuers might receiue remission of sinne For the first we will by a briefe induction make it appeare that all the Prophets bare witnesse vnto Christ and then gather some obseruations from it To beginne with Moses who by Christ his owne confession writ of him In Genesis the first thing after the creation and fall is the maine promise that the seede of the woman should breake the serpents head Exodus setteth out Christ our Passeouer Leuiticus in all those sacrifices pointeth out Christ our sacrifice Numbers setteth before our eyes Christ our brasen serpent lifted vp vpon the crosse Deuteronomie describeth Christ our chiefe Prophet whom whosoeuer wil not heare he must die the death Ioshuah beareth his name and most liuely resembleth him in slaying the enemies of Gods people and bringing them into the promised land The Iudges were all Sauiours and types of him The booke of Ruth sheweth the family whence he sprung Samuel Kings and Chronicles his genealogie and the verie persons of whom he discended especially Dauid and Salomon both eminent types of him Ezrah and Nehemiah built the second Temple into which hee was to enter and so to become the glorie of it as both Aggee and Malachie foretold Iob knew that his redeemer liued and that hee should see him last on the earth David in the Psalmes acknowledged that the stone which the builders refused was become the cheefe stone of the corner and expresseth the pearcing of his hands and feete Salomon in the Proverbs describeth his wisedome and eternitie In the Canticles his contract and espousalls with the Church Isay is called the euangelical Prophet then whom no Euangelist could more liuely expresse his person his doctrine his life death buriall resurrection and ascension that hee seemeth rather to write an historie of something past then a prophecie of things to come Ieremie plainely stileth him the Lord of righteousnesse Ezechiel in all his darke shadowes figureth out the gouernment of Christ from point to point Daniel reckoneth the very yeare and time when the Messiah shall be slaine at the end of whose 70. weekes Christ was put to death The small Prophets testifie of him also with as ioynt consent 1. Malachie mentioneth with him his forerunner Iohn Baptist. 2. Micha describeth the place of his birth And thou Bethlem of Ephrata art little among the thousands of Iudah yet out of thee shall hee come forth that shall be ruler in Israel whose goings forth haue beene from the beginning and from euerlasting 3. Zacharie nameth the place of his education which was Nazaret There must hee grow that must build the Temple of the Lord. 4. Hagge prophesieth of his comming into his Temple and purging it 5. Nahum wisheth Iudah to behold on the mountaines the feete of him that declareth and publisheth peace which tydings none can bring but through Iesus Christ the prince of peace 6. Obediah promiseth to Iudah and Ierusalem such Sauiours as should aduance and set vp the kingdome of the Messiah and s● the kingdome shall be the Lords that is Christs who shall raigne in his Church for euer and of whose kingdome there shall be no end 7. Ionas in his owne person preached his death buriall and resurrection in that hee was swallowed of the whale and lay three daies in the bellie of it and in the third day was cast aliue on drie land 8. Hosee recordeth his triumph and victorie ouer death O death I will be thy death O graue I will be thy destruction 9. Abacuk the sending out of his blessed Gospel into all the world by his Apostles so as all the earth should be filled with the knowledge of God as the waters couer the sea 10. Ioel foretelleth of his ascention and the powring out of his spirit vpon all flesh 11. Amos of the calling of the Gentiles a fruit of that ascension which hee calleth the raising of the tabernacle of David as Iames notably applieth it Act. 15.16 12. Zephanie shadoweth his second comming to iudgement and sheweth what a fearefull and terrible day it shall bee to all the wicked of the earth Thus haue we shortly seene all the Prophets witnessing vnto the doctrine taught in this sermon by our holy Apostle And that the cheife aime and drift of all these Master builders was to lay this the maine foundation of all our religion that Iesus Christ the Sonne of Marie was the Sonne of God the true Messias the Lord of all and the onely Sauiour and Redeemer of the world First note hence what is the true consent which all teachers must ayme at in the deliuerie of any doctrine vnto the people of God namely the consent of the Prophets and Apostles it forceth not a doctrine to be orthodoxe or auncient for a man to say all the Fathers are of this minde which is the Popish cry for all their heresies but to this doctrine giue all the Prophets and all the Apostles
witnesse and therefore it is ●ound and perswasiue Yet we refuse not but challenge to the doctrine which we teach the consent of the ancient church but with these cautions 1. With the Primitiue and Apostolicall Churches which as they were most auncient so were they the purest 2. With the Churches which were after them fiue or sixe hundred yeares so farre forth as they consented in doctrine and discipline with the former for many Popish errors are auncient and the Apostle telleth vs that Antichrist begun to worke in a mysterie euen in their dayes And some of the Fathers were carried into some superstitions and errors and so not espying the mysterie helped vp Antichrist whom they entended to hold downe 3. The holy Ghost hath revealed euery doctrine necessarie to saluation more holily more clearely and more eloquently then all the Fathers put to●gether who if they had any true wisedome had it from the Scriptures to which we must still hold our selues both as the ground as also the iudge of consent 4. If any Father or fathers shall by a common error by word or writing condemne any point of our doctrine without the authoritie of the Scriptures we will willingly dissent neither doe we giue credance to any doctrine because the Fathers haue taught it but because that which they teach is founded in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 5. We cannot hold consent to bee a note of the true Church vnlesse it be in the true doctrine and therefore we iustly blame sundrie of the learned Papists who make vnitie a note of the Church but make no mention of veritie at all for the strong man may hold all at peace and vnitie whilest Paul and Barnabas hauing the truth may be at oddes betweene themselues On which conditions as we are able to iustifie our whole religion by antiquitie and consent of the most auntient Churches and Fathers so also hath it beene and may be made as cleare as the light that the doctrine of the Church of Rome wherein they dissent from vs is a stranger and noueltie neuer knowne to the Prophets and Apostles nor the purest Churches after them neither had it euer that which they bragge of the consent of the auntient Fathers neither doe they consent in it among themselues Secondly note hence what is the force and worke of consent of the Church in doctrine it is not to worke faith for that is in the next words tied to the word and witnesse of the Prophets and Apostles which is called the word of faith because it is by Gods ordinance a meanes to worke that faith by which it selfe is beleeued but to mooue the heart and prepare the way to faith For it cannot be that any spirituall grace such as faith is can be wrought by any but supernaturall meanes of which kind no outward testimonie if it come backed with the voice of all the Churches in the world can be for all this is but an humane witnes simply and in it selfe considered If they say the Churches testimonie is a diuine testimonie I answer so farre as it carrieth with it the agreement of the Scriptures and holy Ghost speaking therein it may be said to witnesse a diuine truth And thus in no other respect can the voice of the Church be called a diuine testimonie then the preaching and writing of some other teacher in the Church who deliuereth nothing but what is agreeable to the Scriptures From this ground it followeth that the doctrine of the Church of Rome is wicked and derogatorie to the glorie and maiestie of the Scriptures in that they stifly after conuiction auouch and maintaine that the authoritie of the Scriptures depend vpon the testimonie of the Church some of them blaspemously saying that they haue no more credit then Esops fables further then the Church giueth it vnto them which is to say that God must not be beleeued for himself and as if the Kings word should haue no credit or command but from his guard 3. Hence note that in our reading of the Prophets we must still be led further vnto Christ for as all the Scriptures so the writings of the Prophets were reserued for this purpose and set apart by God to be the ordinarie outward stay and foundation of the faith of the Church And if our Lord Iesus himselfe whilest hee was yet in the flesh present with his Disciples did for the confirmation of their faith in his doctrine life death and resurrection interpret vnto them the writings of the Prophets how much more need haue we now in his bodily absence to reade with diligence these same writings to helpe vs forward beeing so wauering and staggering in our faith and the attendant graces of it And hereunto answereth that commandement Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures namely Moses and the Prophets that is doe not only procure these writings to your selues nor only reade perfunctorily but diligently and studiously search to find out the cheife scope and matter conteined therein which lyeth not in the crust or shel but within in the verie bowells of them and this kernell himselfe in the next words sheweth to be himselfe and life eternall through him And why must we thus search the Scriptures of the Prophets himselfe rendreth the reason the very ground of our exhortation because they testifie of mee This is the naturall scope of them to bring men to the acknowledgement of the persons offices benefits of Christ. Thou loosest all thy labour in searching the Scriptures if thou searchest any thing but Christ if thou hast not and holdest him not in thine eye if thou giuest ouer searching before thou hast met with him and then thou hast met with him in the Scriptures not when thou historically knowest something of him which thou didst not know before nor when thou art able to discourse or dispute of deepe points of diuinitie but when thou commest vnto him as the context sheweth when by the quickning of thy faith and repentance thou laiest faster hold vpon him for life euerlasting Alas how few searchers of the Scriptures thus search them to say nothing of them who search them not at all but cast them aside as refuse wares of whom we may renew the wofull complaint of Christ against the Iewes who when hee had exhorted them to search the Scriptures presently addeth But yee will not come to mee that yee might haue life Ioh. 5.40 The second point is the scope of all the Prophets witnesse and this is to bring men to beleeue in the name of the Sonne of God which is by faith to receiue Christ as he hath described and propounded himselfe in the word and promises of the Gospel For although the Apostle might sooner haue said that whosoeuer beleeue in him yet he vseth this phrase rather of beleeuing in his name thereby secretly to referre vs vnto the word of the Prophets and Apostles which testifie of no other name to be saued by but onely the
they are communicated the more are they diminished and euery mans share is the lesse but heauenly things are by communication the more increased for we reade not of any man that laid out his tallent but to increase and as the light of the s●nne is neuer a whit impaired by communicating it selfe to the whole world or as hee that lighteth one candle of another diminisheth not in either but increaseth the light so is it in the light of the Sonne of righteousnesse much more and in the kindling of these heauenly sparkles whose propertie is to diffuse themselues as fire the further they spread the greater and brighter is the flame The third fruit or effect of faith is an vndaunted confession of it Rom. 10.10 With the heart we beleeue to iustification and with the mouth we confesse to saluation For where faith is in the heart it will be also in the mouth The spirit of faith and the speach of faith are vndeuided as 2. Cor. 4.13 And because we haue the same spirit of faith according to that which was written I beleeued and therefore I spake euen so we beleeue and therefore also we speake Now there be three actions of faith which helpe forward this free confession 1. It maketh a man bold in a good cause Act. 5.29 Peter beeing full of faith with a bold spirit told the Counsell that had the power of life and death in their hands and himselfe in their power we ought rather to obey God then you 2. Faith keepeth a man in a preparednesse to suffer by leading him along in the deniall of himselfe and hereof we haue a notable example in Paul Act. 21.13 who professed how readie hee was not only to be bound but to die also at Ierusalem if God called him thereunto 3. It worketh ioy yea much reioysing in the heart in the suffring for Christ and a good cause Rom. 5.3 after the Apostle had laid downe the iustification of faith as a ground hee saith that we then reioyce in tribulation and that they did so indeed is plaine Act. 5.41 They departed from the Counsell reioysing that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for his name hence could they sing Psalmes at midnight in the dungeon and fetters and hence could the Martyrs embrace the fire kisse the stake and testifie such ioy in the flames as all men might acknowledge the truth of the speach of our Sauiour Your ioy shall no man take away from you no Tyrant no tormentor nor any kind of torment The fourth and last fruit or worke of faith is that wheresoeuer ●ound faith is it is most diligent in preseruing yea and increasing of it selfe The most couetous man is not more complaining nor gathering then the beleeuer who is euer complaining of want of faith or of the weaknesse of it and knowing the want of it to be so dangerous and hurtfull as without which hee wanteth Christ himselfe as also that the weaknesse of it depriueth him of much comfort and many good things for a man of weake estate must needs want many rich commodities and sweete comforts which the wealthy enioy in abundance Therefore hee vseth all good meanes to encrease his stocke as 1. Hee is much in hearing reading and meditating in the word because hee knoweth faith commeth by hearing and euery thing is preserued and nourished by that whereof it is begotten 2. Hee is much in godly talke and Christian conference by which as the fire by the bellowes so is the grace of God blowne and stirred vp in him 3. Because hee seeth how without prayer both his owne but especially Christs his faith is as readie to faile as Peters was hee is much in prayer and with the Father of the child crieth with teares often Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeleefe and with the Disciples Lord increase our faith And these are the markes by which the soundnesse and currence of faith as by a touchstone may be tried and distinguished from all that false and counterfeit faith which is so stirring in the world and whereby most men are lamentably deceiued The vse of this doctrine is 1. to stirre vp men to examine and by these notes to prooue themselues whether they are in the faith or no to try their faith of what kind it is least in the ende they finde that they haue leaned vpon a staffe of reede By which examination I feare it will bee too euidently seene that these are the last dayes wherein the Sonne of man shall come and scarcely finde faith vpon the face of the earth Sure it is that the common faith of men is neither thus 1. founded 2. nor qualified 3. nor attended 4. nor thus fruitfull as will briefly appeare in the particulars First euery man saith hee hath faith but whence had hee it it was neuer begotten by the word he neuer cared for that that was euer as a sixt finger and superfluitie vnto him It was neuer founded in repentance nor dwelleth with humilitie for most men neuer saw change in themselues they haue loued God and beleeued in Christ euer since they can remember It was neuer cherished with the duties of prayer and invocation they could neuer pray in all their liues except after the minister or by set formes but the spirit of prayer neuer dwelt there It was neuer cōflicted with vnbeleefe they wonder what that should be or that any man should not euer beleeue so as indeed here is no character of the faith of the elect and nothing all this while but a voice and verie carkase of faith 2. Others say they beleeue and bragge of a sauing faith in Christ but they feede a bare fancie for they could neuer beleeue God for lesser things they want the faith of Gods prouidence euen for meate and drinke which is apparant in that they can vse wicked vnwarrantable meanes for them their strong faith they bragge of waiteth not for Gods prouision but will shift for it selfe by hooke and by crooke it holdeth not the heart to patient bearing of the crosse but flingeth out in distempers it putteth not forth in inferiour businesses to giue directions to the particular actions of life and therefore seeing this faith faileth in lesser and smaller things how can it be found in the greatest of all 3. Others boast of a sound faith which were it so it would lay hold vpon the promise and beleeue for themselues and their seed but this it doth not for many who for themselues would rest in the prouidence of God vpon the good and warrantable meanes will yet endanger themselues for their children And hence is it that many who haue liued conscionably in single estate haue remitted much of their care and feare in their married condition and come short of their former vprightnesse and why is this else but that they conceiue not the Lord to be all-sufficient for them and theirs 4. Others there be that challendge as sound a
good heart but much thankfulnesse for apprehension of much mercie how Dauid in the sence of mercie reaching to the pardon of his sinnes melteth into the praises of God see Psal. 103.1 2 3. c. And the Apostle Paul considering what a weight of corruption did still oppresse him whereof hee expected to be fully eased concludeth his comfort with thankes vnto God in Iesus Christ. And remembring what a bloodie persecutor and an extreame waster of the Church hee had beene formerly yea what an enemie vnto God what a blasphemer of his name he breaketh with vehemēce into the praises of God for his happy chāge But I thanke him who hath counted mee faithfull and put mee in his seruice and the grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant towards mee The fourth is a sound and sincere heart hating and striuing against all sinne euen secret and small aswell as open and greater Dauid in the Psal. 32.1 pronouncing him a blessed man whose iniquitie is couered and whose sinne is pardoned true but it might be asked how shall I know such a blessed man or my selfe to haue attained that blessednesse The Prophet giueth vs this note to know him by in the next words and in whose spirit is no guile namely to hide and foster any sinne of which guile hee there directly speaketh The fifth note or companion is a tender affection to forgiue our brethren priuate wrongs and iniuries euen great as well as small hee that hath ten thousand tallents forgiuen him will not easily take his brother by the throat for two pence The commandement is to forgiue one another euen as God for Christs sake forgaue vs. The example is set downe Luk. 6.36 Be mercifull as your heauenly Father is mercifull but hee forgiueth all and freely is the first in forgiuenes and perfectly he forgiueth and forgetteth too The forme of our petition of mercie is forgiue vs as we forgiue c. Thou wouldst haue God to forgiue thee all and forget all and to make thy wrongs against him as though they had neuer beene goe then and doe so to thy brother otherwise the threatning will meet thee Iam. 2.13 Iudgement mercilesse to him that sheweth no mercie Vse 1. All this doctrine concerning this Article sheweth that there is no other meanes in the world to be free from sinne but by Gods free remission of it Whence it is that remission of sinne is called the couering of sinne in that the faith of the heart laieth hold on Christ and his righteousnesse who is our propitiatorie couering vs and our sinnes against the two tables as the propitiatorie couered the arke in which those tables were without which couer euery sinner is next to the deuill and his Angels the most vile and lothsome creature in the eyes of God This vse must the rather be thought of because neither the Papists nor yet the common and carnall Protestant yeeld consent vnto it The Papist he beleeueth that many sinnes are veniall and properly no sinnes among which hee reckoneth concupiscence which indeed is the mother sinne of all and these need no remission Hee holdeth also that men redeemed by Christ and hauing receiued the first grace of God are now fitted to merit by their workes remission of their sinnes And further hee thinketh that because no man knoweth whether hee haue workes inough to please God no man can know that his sinnes are remitted All which with many moe assertions like to these are most blasphemous heresies against this most comfortable article of free remission of sinnes through beleefe in the name of the Sonne of God which so long as thus they hold them cut themselues off from the remission of their sinnes by Christ and consequently from the grace of life But the common Protestant also contenteth himselfe with simple defences against his sinne like Adams couer and garment of figgeleaues which will scarce hold the sewing Some will hide their sins from mens eyes and then all is safe others striue to forget them and hauing choked the voice of their conscience they lie them downe securely and neuer thinke to heare of them any more Others couer grosse and foule sinnes such as are ignorance of God contempt of his word hardnesse of heart hatred of the light and all irreligion with an outward ciuill life and an honest conuersation as it seemeth to be not thinking that God seeth many a wicked heart through a ciuill life Others will goe beyond the former in acknowledging themselues sinners and will make some shew of making vp their peace but it is with some ceremonie or bodily exercise they will fast and pray and giue some almes or some mony to good vses when they die but as for the grace of faith which should be as a soule to quicken these actions they neuer knew what that meant But howsoeuer most men are carried headlong with such strong delusions as these let no man that would not deceiue himselfe wilfully thinke in any such course to meete with sound peace nothing but the blood of Iesus his Sonne that clenseth from all sinne In the garment of our elder brother only we can carrie away the blessing and our text teacheth vs that remission of sinnes standeth not in the doing of any thing but in the receiuing of it at the hands of Christ by so many as beleeue in his name Vse 2. Is this so worthy a grace of so excellent vse and sweetenesse through the whole life then it standeth euery man in hand to labour and giue all diligence to make sure vnto himselfe the pardon of his owne sinnes But lamentable it is to note the generall carelesnesse of men in a matter of such moment and consequence as this is And surely it will prooue the great condemnation of the world that whereas the whole liues of men are thought too short and all their time too little to be eaten vp in worldly cares which breake their sleepe their strength and often their braines yea and their very hearts onely the last day of all and their dying day is scarcely deuoted to this care of seeking remission of sinne and the way to life euerlasting See we not how busie and earnest most men are in the infinite incumbrances of the world whilest this one thing is the only thing neglected May we not obserue how sure men deuise by learned counsell at their great charge to make to thēselues their deedes leases bonds and other instruments and assurances of the things of this life who in all their liues scarse euer dreamed of this assurance Oh how wilfully herein doe men forsake their own mercie how carelesly do they cast out of their hands the onely comfort of their life and death Whosoeuer therefore thou art that hast hitherto dispised so great saluation that hast set light by Gods gratious invitings to repentance that hast frowardly reiected his kindest offers of mercy now at lēgth begin to take vp
shame in thy face and sorrowe into thy heart in earnest accuse the securitie of thy soule the deadnesse of thy spirit the hardnesse of thy heart the vnthankefulnes of thy whole life say with thy selfe Ah my folly that haue neglected my mercie so long alas how haue I hated instruction how vnkindly haue I dealt with so louing and patient a God I see now that it is high time to looke to the maine businesse of my life to make vp my peace with God to get my pardon sealed I will hie me to the throne of grace I will henceforth lay hold of life eternall I see now that there is one thing necessarie and that is the good part which I will choose and which shall neuer be taken from me Now we come to the second point propounded which is the last of this worthy sermon namely what is the condition of euery one that hath attained this excellent grace of remission of sinnes and that is to be a blessed and happie man for such a one hath part in Christ and with him of forgiuenesse of sinnes in which Dauid Psal. 32.1 placeth blessednesse Quest. But how can this man be a blessed man seeing hee is compassed with a bodie of sinne and death and subiect vnto infinite afflictions then whom no man is in this life more miserable no sort of men more perplexed inwardly with sence of sinne none more outwardly disgraced for well doing Answ. There be three degrees of blessednesse 1. In this life when God bringeth his children into the kingdom of grace and giueth them his Sonne and with him their whole iustification and sanctification in part 2. The second degree is in the end of this life when God brings the soules of the faithfull to heauen and their bodies to the earth safely to be kept vntill the last day 3. The third in and after the day of iudgement when hee bringeth both soule and bodie into the glorie prepared for the elect Of this last which is happinesse by way of eminencie the two former are certaine forerunners he that hath attained the first hath also assurance of the last and must needs be a blessed man not only in time to come but euen for the present whether we respect his outward estate or inward For his outward estate Gods blessing neuer faileth him but affoardeth him all good things and that in due season and in due measure his riches are often not great but euer pretious and his little shall nourish him and make him as well liking as the water and pulse did the Iewish children in Chaldaea The same prouidence which watcheth to supplie all his good keepeth him from all euill it pitcheth the Angels round about him to guard his life let him be persecuted hee is not forsaken his losses become his gaine his sicknesse is his phisicke his heart is cheared euen in trouble which maketh that part of his life comfortable his soule is bound vp in the bundle of life with God death shall not come before hee can bidde it heartily welcome yea let violent death come it shall not be to him deadly slaine he may be but not ouercome victorie attendeth him and blessednesse euery where abideth him But all this is the least part of his blessednesse for if we looke yet a little more inwardly into him we shall see the boundlesse extent of his happinesse farre more large whether we respect the spirituall miserie hee hath escaped or else the spirituall good which with the pardon of his sinnes hee hath attained for on the one hand hee hath escaped the heauie wrath of God due to sinne and so is discharged of an infinit debt healed of a most deadly poyson and pardoned from a fearefull sentence of eternall death and perdition readie to be executed vpon him and on the other hee hath obtained a plentifull redemption hee hath purchased the pearle receiued Christ with his merits and graces such as are wisedome faith hope whence issue our peace and ioy of heart which is heauen before heauen for in these stand the kingdome of God and the comfort of a good conscience which is a continuall feast By all which it appeareth that hee is no small gainer that hath got his part in Gods mercie reaching to the remission of his sinnes Vse 1. We are here admonished to open our eyes that we may more clearely see and growe in loue with the felicitie of the Saints which the most see not because 1. it is inward the glorie of the spouse is like her head and husbands glorie she is all glorious within 2. because of their infirmities frailties which wicked eyes altogether gaze vpon 3. because of their afflictions wherewith they are continually exercised If the tower of Siloam fall on any of them they are thenceforth greater sinners then all other men holy Iob because hee was afflicted cannot avoid the note of an hypocrit euen among his owne friends and visiters And no meruaile if the members looke thus blacke when the sunne looketh vpon them seeing their head Christ himselfe was reiected because they sawe and iudged him to be plagued and smitten of God But we must looke beyond all these as the Lord himselfe doth who in his iudgement goeth beyond the outside and pronounceth sentence according to the grace which himselfe worketh within Let vs imitate our Lord Iesus who notwithstanding all the infirmities yea and deformities of his Church pronounceth of her that shee is all faire and no spot is in her not because there are none but because all are couered and none are reckoned and imputed vnto her yea let vs remember that the pure and holy spirit of God is contented notwithstanding much blackenesse to take vp his lodging in those hearts where he findeth raigning sinne dispossessed Now how farre are they from the mind and iudgement of this blessed Father Sonne and Spirit who haue nimble eies to spie out euery infirmitie of Gods children to blase them nay rather then they will not accuse and slander them can of themselues coine raise vp and impute vnto them that wherof they are most innocent Assuredly these are of neere kindred to the devill who is the accuser of the brethren And surely were Christ on earth againe euen this most innocent lambe of God should not want accusers wherein are so many of Cains constitution who hate their brethren because their workes are good and so many sonnes of men who seeke to turne the glorie of God in his children into shame Alas religion is at a lowe ebbe alreadie and not so reckoned of as it should be by the forwardest and yet so malitious is the deuill in his instruments as vnlesse this smoaking flaxe also be quenched we can see nor heare of any hope or treatie of peace the beautie of Gods people goeth disgraced vnder titles of nicenesse precisenesse puritie holy brotherhood and the like To goe ordinarily to sermons is to bee a sermon-munger
him the second time if they had seene him rise and so opened the graue that all might see the bodie was gone Thirdly the whole humanitie was raised glorified For 1. his bodie put off all such infirmities and passions as he pleased to make triall of for our sakes that he might be a more merciful high Priest such as are hunger thirst cold wearinesse paine and death it selfe and contrarily put on such excellent qualities as are fit for a glorified bodie such as are agilitie brightnesse incorruption immortalitie and the like But here two rules must be remembred the former that none of these qualities are diuine properties for although the deitie personally inhabiting this humane nature doth adorne it with all perfection of most excellent qualities yet must they still be conceiued as finite and created accidents which destroy not the nature of a bodie they beautifie it but deifie it not they make it not omnipresent nor yet invisible for then should it cease to be a bodie and become a spirit to which onely these can agree The latter rule is that although Iesus Christ rose most glorified yet did he still while he was vpon earth vaile his maiestie and shewed not himselfe in that perfect glorie the degrees of which he was now entred into not onely because he would reserue the full manifestation of it vntill the last iudgement but also in regard of his disciples and faithfull ones that they might be able to discouer the selfe same bodie which they had formerly well knowne and that his surpassing glorie should not hinder or affray them from that further familiar conuerse with him whereby they beeing to be his witnesses might be confirmed and fitted to their testimonie by seeing hearing yea and touching him Hence was it that while he was on earth after his resurrection he would carrie the scars and prints of the speare and nayles that they might put their fingers into them for their better discerning of him Hēce also although he rose naked out of the graue and left the cloathes behind him for that was agreeable to the state of a glorified bodie which standeth no more in neede of cloathing for necessitie nor ornament then Adam did in the state of innocencie yet in respect of their infirmitie to whom he was to appeare he vsed cloathes and although he needed neither meate nor drinke yet for their sakes and ours he ate and drunke as we shall after see Secōdly as for the soule of our blessed Sauiour it was beautified with such a measure of knowledge as excelled all creatures men or angels euen such as was meet for such an head the Godhead reuealing vnto it all things which either it would know or in regard of his glorious office ought to know The like is to be said of righteousnesse holinesse and the rest of his graces wherein he was set so farre aboue all creatures as they all are not able to comprehend them and yet in regard of God all of them finite as his soule it selfe is The third point in this rising of Christ is the fruit or benefits of it which will appeare to be not so many as great if we attentiuely consider either 1. the euills that hereby he hath remooued or 2. the good things he hath procured vnto his people The former is manifest in that hence all the enemies of mans saluation are not onely vtterly subdued but made not onely not formidable and terrible as before but after a sort friendly at least beneficiall vnto beleeuers the which point after wee haue a little cleared we wil proceed to the second sort of benefits hence also accrewing Ioshua in leading the people and putting them in possession of the land of Canaan was in many things a singular type of Iesus Christ As that he beginneth where Moses endeth his calling was confirmed to him by the voice of God himselfe the ende of his calling to guid the people to the promised land of Canaan the destroying and casting out all the enemies that lifted vp hand against them the deuiding of the land according to their tribes and so preparing after a sort to euery one his mansion the establishing of lawes and ordinances to be obserued of all the subiects of that kingdome the peoples acknowledgment of him for their captaine their promise of franke obedience and of subiecting themselues to whatsoeuer hee commanded them In one word the whole historie doth represent our true Ioshua or Iesus who is the accomplisher of all Gods promises concerning the heauenly Canaan and the leader of Gods people to true felicitie but in no one action did this worthy Captaine of the Lords hostes more liuely resemble the truth or true Ioshua then when at one time in one caue hee slewe fiue Kings who beeing deadly enemies against the people of God made out a strong head and vnited their forces to hinder their peaceable possession For our Ioshua or Iesus which is all one went into the graue or caue where hee was buried and there met with and slew fiue mightie Tyrants and came out a most glorious conquerer The names of these fiue Kings were 1. Sinne. 2. Death 3. Hell 4. Satan 5. the World ouer all whom Christ by his powerfull resurrection most gloriously triumphed The first of these enemies is Sinne who had for euer raigned in vs to death and held vs vnder his power if Christ had not broken his power by his resurrection So saith the Apostle If Christ be not risen againe We are yet in our sinnes But it is plaine this enemie is foiled for if the guilt of one sinne had remained vnabolished and Christ had not paied the vttermost farthing he had neuer risen againe But against this wil be obiected that notwithstanding Christs rising we see sinne rule and raigne in the most and hath as much dominion and power as it euer had or can haue and if we looke at the best they haue many sinnefull actions found in their hands plainely arguing that sinne mooueth and stirreth and is not dead in them How say wee then that Christ by his resurrection hath slaine it Answ. We must here obserue a two-fold distinction whereby we shall more easily loose this knot First of persons some are members of his bodie and some yea the most are not some are sheepe but the most are goates some are in communion with him as the science set and growing in the roote but the most are out of fellowship with him and are no otherwise knit vnto him then a science tyed to a tree by a thred I meane by the slender thred of outward profession Now as the head only imparteth of the life sence motion protection light and comfort which it hath to the members of it owne bodie and no other euen so the head of this mysticall bodie quickneth mooueth protecteth enlightneth graceth saueth only such as are in true communion with him for these sheepe only hee giueth his life