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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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because they are things not principally intended The Apostle desireth to be loosed and to be with Christ to bee loosed why that he might be with Christ Whence I obserue that the death of Gods Saints is nothing else but a departure of the soule out of the body vnto heauen where Christ sitteth at the right hand of the Throne of God Hee which at the first coupled soule and body together in death parteth them asunder and taketh the soule vnto himselfe to bee where he is till in the resurrection hee couple them againe ●ogether neuer after to be parted asunder Whereof all the godly in Christ Iesus at all times haue beene so thorowly perswaded that alwayes in death they haue done and doe after the example of Christ Iesus commend their soules ●nto the hands of him that gaue them saying as he did Fa●her into thine hands I commend my spirit Luk. 23.46 So wee reade that that holy Martyr Steuen when hee was stoned called on God and said Lord Iesus receiue my spirit Act. 7.59 And in death it is the very ordinary praier of all Gods Saints Wherein they plainly shew their thorow-perswasion that in death their soules are receiued by the Father of spirits into the heauenly habitations there to be ioyned vnto Christ Iesus Contra●riwise the death of the wicked and vngodly of the earth is nothing else but a departure of the soule out of the body vnto hell there to be with the Deuill and his Angels Examples of both we haue in the begger and the rich man Luk. 16.22 whose deaths vnto the one was the departure of his soule out of his body into heauen but vnto the other the departure of his soule out of his body into hell Or if the persons of these proue not strongly enough take for example the death of the two theeues which were hanged with our blessed Sauiour on the Crosse vnto the one of which Iesus said that that day hee should be with him in Paradise Luk. 23.43 but vnto the other that railed on him his death doubtlesse was a downfall into hell Is then the dissolution of Gods Saints a passage of the soule out of the body vnto heauen there to be with Christ Farre be it then from vs to thinke that the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts is euen as one condition vnto them that when man dieth hee returneth wholly vnto the dust and hath no more fruit of all the trauels that hee hath taken vnder the Sunne Thus indeede sensuall man following onely the iudgement of his weake sense and of his owne blinde reason thinketh and saith As the one dieth so dieth the other man and beast haue all one breath and in death there is no excellencie of man aboue the beast all goe to one place all to the earth as all came from the earth But the spirit of God hath otherwise taught vs in his holy word for doth not the Lord say that he is the God of Abraham Matt. 22.32 of Isaac and of Iacob And doth he not say that he is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Abraham Isaac and Iacob then are not dead but liuing Liuing How In their soules with God Dead they are in respect of the separation of their soules from their bodies But forasmuch as the earthly house of their Tabernacle being destroyed they haue a building giuen of God that is an house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens 2 Cor. 5.1 as the Apostle witnesseth euen of all the Saints of God therefore they are still liuing in their soules with God in the heauenly habitations Howsoeuer then the bodies of men be mortall and in death goe downe vnto the dust whence first they came yet their soules are immortall and in death returne vnto the Father of spirits whence they came But what needs more to this purpose then that which here our Apostle saith In death the sonnes of men are loosed that is their soules are separated from their bodies Now if the soule were mortall as the body what needed any loosing of the one from the other Surely both should fall together and not the one bee loosed from the other if the condition of both were one Euen this then that the soules in death are loosed from the bodies of men sheweth that the soules are immortall Againe in death the Saints of God are loosed that they may be with Christ After death then they are with Christ not in body for that descendeth vnto the graue there to rest vntill the resurrection In soule then In death then the soules of Gods Saints passe out of the body vnto heauen there to be with Christ And therefore farre be it from vs to thinke that in death as of beast so of man there is vtterly an end and an entire returne vnto the dust And yet so we liue a great many of vs as if we made no other reckning for do we not a great many of vs passe our dwelling here without feare in chambering and wantonnes in gluttony and drunkenesse in striefe and enuying Doe we not euen glut ourselues with sporting and pleasure and sundry delights of the flesh and say let vs be merry and take our fils of pleasure while we are here for when we are gone then all the world is gone with vs. Surely if a man may coniecture by our dissolutenesse of life a great many of vs either thinke that in death there is vtterly an end of vs or too little thinke what remaineth after death Beloued wee are bought with a price let vs therefore glorifie God both in our bodies and in our spirits We may not liue vnto our selues nor giue our members weapons of vnrighteousnes vnto sinne but we must liue vnto him that died for vs and rose againe and giue our members seruants vnto righteousnesse in holinesse Let vs so liue that in our liues wee thinke of death and let vs know that if we die the death of the Saints we shall die to liue for euer with Christ but if otherwise our part shall be in that lake that euer burneth Againe this may serue for the confutation of that foolish dreame of purgatorie The soules of Gods Saints they are loosed in death from the body and being loosed are with Christ The soules of the wicked they likewise in death are loosed from the body and being loosed do as it is said of Iudas Act. 5.25 go to their owne place euen the place of the damned Where then is Purgatorie They that trouble the Church with this fancie tell vs that of them that die some are perfect and iust men and they go streight vnto heauen others are desperately wicked and they goe streight downe into hell and others are neither perfitly good nor thoroughly badde and for these are Purgatorie But I demaund them touching this third sort of men haue they faith or no They grant they haue but a weake
high hand and as they haue begunne so continue to persecute the Church of God this is an infallible token of their perdition yea it is a cleare cause of their destruction as wee see heauie plagues and iudgements to haue ouertaken Hananiah Shemaiah Amaziah Ier. 28.16.29 25. Amos 7.17 and others because they were malicious enemies against his Prophets Ieremiah Amos and others The vse which our Apostle here teacheth vs to make hereof is this not to feare the aduersaries that oppose themselues against vs for when they persecute vs from one Citie to another beat vs imprison vs and euery way afflict vs whom hurt they Euen themselues they runne themselues vpon the rockes and bring vpon themselues swift damnation They thinke they haue great masteries ouer vs but indeed themselues smart for it Let them therefore looke vnto it how they hold on to wrecke their malice vpon vs and let vs not feare all that euer they doe or can doe against vs. Yea but though they hurt themselues yet they hurt vs also how should wee then but feare them Nay that is the next reason wherefore wee are not to feare them because their persecution and rage against vs is no harme vnto vs but a token vnto vs of saluation And to you of saluation that is The furie and rage of the aduersaries against you if yee stand fast and fight together with one minde through the faith of the Gospell is a plaine token vnto you of your saluation Whence I obserue that persecution by the aduersaries is vnto Gods children a token of their saluation Wee reioyce saith the Apostle of you in the Churches of God 2 Th. 1.4.5 because of your patience and faith c. Againe Gal. 6.17 I beare in my body saith the Apostle the markes of the Lord Iesus Whereby he signifieth that his afflictions were the very markes of his saluation through Christ Iesus as whereby hee was made like vnto him Againe If wee suffer with him 2 Tim. 2.12 wee shall also raigne with him And againe Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Matt. 5.10 for theirs is the kingdome of heauen The Scriptures are very plentifull to this purpose cleerely shewing that persecution by the aduersaries is vnto Gods children a token of their saluation A token I say but not a cause for that of the Apostle is euer true that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs. Rom. 8.15 Vnto the aduersaries indeed their persecution and rage against vs is so a token that it is also a cause of their destruction for sinne being a iust cause o● death Rom. 6.23 according to that of the Apostle The wages of sinne is death surely this great and grieuous sinne of persecuting the truth and the professors thereof must needs bee a iust cause of their endlesse destruction But vnto vs their persecution and their rage against vs is onely a token not a cause of our saluation for both to suffer for Christ is the gift of God as it is in the next verse and saluation also through sufferings is his gift by grace through faith So that it is no cause but it is vnto vs a token of saluation as both this and many other places shew Howbeit here yee must also vnderstand that so their persecution and rage against vs is a token vnto vs of saluation if wee continue in one spirit and in one minde fighting together against them through the faith of the Gospell and in nothing fearing the aduersaries It is not standing 〈◊〉 while and not continuing or fighting for a blow or ●wo and then giuing the bucklers or taking courage for a spirt and afterwards for feare falling away that betokens our saluation But he that continueth vnto the end he shall bee saued Mat. 10.22 he that fighteth lawfully and as hee should hee shall be crowned 2 Tim. 2.5 Hab. 6.6 and he that for feare flatly falleth away purchaseth vnto himselfe a fearfull iudgement The vse which our Apostle teacheth vs to make hereof is this as of the former not to feare the aduersaries which oppose themselues against vs for what if wee be tried by mockings and scourgings yea moreouer by bonds and imprisonments What if wee be stoned hewen asunder slaine with the sword afflicted and tormented many wayes This is vnto vs a token of our saluation They thinke that t●●s they hurt vs and haue their willes ouer vs but indeed thus they further our reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus Let vs therefore not feare what they doe or can doe against vs but let vs be of good courage and hold fast the profession of our hope vnto the end LECTVRE XXIII PHILIP 1. Verse 29. For vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not onely yee should beleeue in him but also suffer for his sake 30. Hauing the same fight which yee saw in mee and now heare to be in mee YEa but how and whence is it that persecution betokeneth perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto vs It is of God as our Apostle in the next words saith And this is the third motiue or reason which the Apostle vseth to perswade the Philippians not to feare the aduersaries because it is of God that persecution is perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto them Whence I obserue that it is of God that tribulation is recompenced vnto them that trouble vs and saluation vnto vs which are troubled This also our Apostle plainly witnesseth in another place where he saith 2 Thess 1.6.7 It is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them ●hat trouble you and to you which are troubled rest with vs c. Where not only this is manifestly set downe that God recompenceth tribulation to the troublers and rest to the ●roubled but withall that it is a righteous thing wi●h God so to doe A righteous thing indeed with God in respect of his iustice to the one and a righteous thing in respect of his promise vnto the other for in respect of his iustice it is a righteous thing with him to recompence tribulation to them that trouble his Saints because they deserue to haue vengeance rendred vnto them in flaming fire according to that of the Apostle Rom. 6.23 The wages of sinne that which is due in iustice vnto sinne is death and damnation and iudgement mercilesse Iam. 2.13 due in iustice vnto him that sheweth no mercy and therefore doubtlesse vnto him that without all mercy rageth and persecuteth And in respect of his promise it is a righteous thing with him to recompence rest vnto them that are troubled because he hath promised the kingdome of heauen to them that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake Mat. 5.10 saying Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen and againe If wee suffer 2 Tim. 2.12 wee
of ●od in him Here then is an exceeding great comfort for euery faithfull Christian soule Christ hath fulfilled the law for vs and his ●bedience vnto the law is now made our righteousnes so that ●ow there is no condemnation vnto them that are in Christ ●esus Whatsoeuer the law required of vs all that he hath ●ulfilled in his owne person that so the righteousnes of the ●aw which was impossible for vs to performe might be im●uted vnto vs and we deliuered from the bondage of the ●aw He made himselfe subiect vnto the law that by fulfilling ●f the law for vs he might free vs from all feare of condemna●ion by the law Doth then the law present before thine eyes 〈◊〉 curse and condemnation if thou doest not continue in all ●hings that are written in the booke of the law to doe them ●nd doth thine owne conscience tell thee that in many things ●hou hast offended and many waies thou hast transgressed ●he law of thy God Be not troubled nor feare Cast thy ●urthen vpon Christ Iesus He hath fulfilled the law not for himselfe but for thee that his obedience might be imputed for righteousnesse vnto thee Againe knowest thou that nothing that is vnpure or vncleane hath at any time entred into Gods sight and wouldest thou be presented pure and vnblameable before him in that day Here is the garment of thy elder brother Christ Iesus in this his obedience thou shalt appeare righteous before thy God in that day Thine owne obedience thine owne works thine owne righteousnes seeme it neuer so great and goodly must vanish as a morning cloud in that day for euen thy best righteousnesse is but as the menstruous cloathes of a woman as the Prophet speaketh The cloke where withall thy nakednes must becouered is the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus which righteousnesse is made thine owne if thou by a true and liuely faith lay hold on him where he sitteth at the right hand of the Father in the highest places What greater comfort can there be vnto thine afflicted soule then this both to be deliuered from the curse of the law for not keeping it and to be presented pure before thy God a that day And all this comfort thou maiest haue by this obedience of Christ Iesus And as this obedience of Christ Iesus vnto his Fathers wi●● to fulfill the law for vs may iustly minister this comfort vnto vs so may it further teach vs to yeeld all obedience vnto the will of our heauenly Father For howsoeuer we be freed from the condemnation of the law because Christ hath fulfilled the law for vs yet are we not freed from the performance of our obedience vnto the morall law of God but euen by th●● example of our Sauiour Christ we are more straitly tied therevnto 1 Joh. 2.6 For he that saith he remaineth in Christ ought euen so to walke as he hath walked in all humilitie and in all obedience to his heauenly Fathers will He that saith he knoweth God and keepeth not his commandments 4. is a liar and the truth is not in hi●● but he that keepeth his word in him is the loue of God perfect indeed and hereby we know that we are in him and that we loue him if ●e keepe his commandements 5. As therefore Christ walked in the law and performed all obedience vnto his Fathers will so remember thou to walke with thy God and to keepe his commandements with thine whole heart Beware that thou dissemble not beware that thou present not thy selfe in the assembly of Gods saints to heare his word or to receiue his holy sacrament either for fashions sake or for feare of the law onely to saue thy purse for so thou purchasest vnto thy selfe a fearefull iudgement Beware how thou dalliest with thy God for he seeth not as man seeth Well thou maiest dissemble with man but he searcheth the heart and the reynes and he knoweth all thy thoughts long before they be conceiued by thee Let thy heart be sound with thy God and his commandements let them be in thy heart to doe them And so much of Christ his obedience It followeth And became obedient euen vnto the death His death being likewise a part of his voluntarie obedience vnto his Fathers will for both in fulfilling the law and in suffering death for vs he shewed his obedience vnto his Father and wrought the works of our redemption Here then is the third doctrine touching Christ which I proposed to be obserued which is touching his death vnder which name I vnderstand not onely the separation of his soule from his bodie but all the paines and agonies which he suffered both in soule and bodie For as it was written of him He bare our infirmities Esay 53.4 and caried our sinnes he was wounded for our transgressions he was broken for our iniquities he made his soule an offering for sin the chastisement of our peace was vpon him and with his stripes we are healed as thus I say it was written of him so thus he suffered and was obedient vnto the death Will you then see what manner of death Christ suffered He suffered not onely a bodily death and such paines as follow the dissolution of nature but he suffered likewise in his soule the wrath of God for the sinnes of the world lying so heauy vpon him that it wounded his flesh and his spirit also as the scripture speaketh euen to death For if he had suffered no more but in bodie then he ouercame no more but a bodily death and then were our state most miserable but our sinnes hauing deserued not the bodily death onely but euen death both of body and soule by the death which he suffered he ouercame death and the power of it both in our bodies and in our soules Whence was it that when his death approched he began to be in sorrow and heauinesse Whence was it that he said vnto his Disciples my soule is very heauy euen vnto the death Whence was it that so often he fell on his face and praied that if it were possible that cup might passe from him Whence was it that an Angell appeared from heauen vnto him to comfort strengthen him Whence was it that as he praied his sweat was like drops of bloud trickling downe to the ground Was not this and all this euen from the paines which he felt in his soule by reason of the wrath of God against sinne Can we thinke that all this came to our Sauiour Christ for feare of a bodily death Haue his seruants that receiue of his fulnesse so despised this death of the body that either they wisht for it to be with Christ or reioyced in the middest of it before the persecutor and did our Sauiour himselfe so feare and tremble at the remembrance of it Did the Apostles sing in prison and reioyce when they were whipt and scourged Did Paul glory in the tribulations which he suffered and did our
Sauiour in such like paine crie in the bitternes of his soule my God my God why hast thou forsaken me Nay my brethren that which made Christ to be heauie would haue crusht his Apostles in pieces that which made him sweat bloud in the garden would haue sunke them into hell that which made him crie would haue held both men Angels vnder euerlasting woe and lamentation Besides his bodily death therefore and the paines that followed thereupon hee felt in his soule most grieuous paines through the wrath of God which was vpon him for our sins And thus ye see what death he suffered for our sakes when he was made obedient to the death The fruites and benefits which wee receiue by Christ his death are these 1. By his death we are freed from that death which is both of body and soule haue the victory ouer that death which is the reward of sinne as witnesseth the Apostle For our Sauiour by his death hath pulled out the sting of death Heb. 2.14 Rom. 8.1 and on the crosse hath triumphantly said O death where is thy sting ô graue where is thy victorie and therefore when we feele the pangs of death approach wee should not feare but be full of hope considering that our death is now changed by the vertue of Christ his death and is the entrance into an euerlasting ●ife 2. By Christ his death we haue remission and forgiuenesse of our sinnes as saith our Sauiour himselfe where in the institution of his supper Math. 16.28 this my bloud which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes For the remembrance of which his blessed death and fruits of his passion he hath ordained this holy Sacrament of his supper to be continued in his Church for euer In which holy supper the death and passion of our Sauiour is so liuely represented vnto vs a if we had seene it with our eies the bread betokening the body the wine the bloud of our Sauiour Christ the breaking likewise of the bread signifying the breaking of his body with those vnspeakable torments which he suffered and the pouring out of the wine the shedding of his most precious bloud when his blessed side was gored with the speare of a souldier our eating of the bread and drinking of the wine assuring vs of our incorporation into Christ to be made partakers of all the benefits of his passion When ye come therefore to this holy Supper remember that ye are called hither to continue the remembrance of his blessed death and passion vntill his blessed comming againe Repent you earnestly of your manifold sinnes for the remission whereof Christ shed his owne hearts bloud Loue one an other euen as he hath loued vs who laid downe his life for vs. And haue faith in Christ Iesus whom God hath set foorth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud By faith in Christ Iesus we receiue remission of our sinnes and all other benefits of his death and passion By loue of our brethren we testifie our loue of God who sent his sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes And with the contrition and sorrow of our hearts for our sinnes the Lord is better pleased then with all burnt offerings and sacrifices These are the things which the Lord requireth of vs euen faith repentance and loue and as at all times so at this time especially when we come to the receiuing of these holy mysteries let vs thinke of these things He that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation crucifying againe vnto himselfe the Lord of glory and King of our peace But hee that examineth himselfe and so eateth of this bread and drinketh of this cuppe is made one with Christ and Christ with him and Christ shall raise him vp at the last day so that he shall neuer see death because he belieueth in him who died for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification It followeth Euen the death of the crosse The most shamefull death that they could put him vnto Here then is the fourth and last point which I noted in these words which is the kinde of his death whereunto he submitted himselfe The kinde of his death was he was crucified betweene two Theeues where he was mocked of all sorts of men where in feeling of the whole wrath of God vpon him he cried out my God my God why hast thou f●●saken mee where hauing performed all things that were written he said it is finished and so commended his spirit into the hands of his Father Whence 1. we may learne with bitternesse to bewaile our sinnes for which Christ was thus cruelly nailed on the crosse and there suffered the whole wrath of God 2. To crucifie our flesh and the corruption of our nature and the wickednesse of our hearts Gal. 3.24 For they that are Christs crucifie the flesh with the affections and the lusts 3. It may teach vs that when wee suffer any iudgement crosse or calamity in body or in minde wee doe not suffer them as any curses of God but as the chasticements of a louing father For Christ Iesus in his crosse being accursed for vs hath deliuered vs from all curse Beloued let vs thinke of these things mourning for our sinnes mortifying the deedes of the flesh and comforting our selues in the crosse of Christ Iesus who abased himselfe for vs fulfilled the whole law for vs died for our sinnes and was nailed to the crosse for our iniquities O Lord teach vs to humble our selues both before thee and one vnto another teach vs to doe thy will teach vs to die vnto sinne that we may liue vnto thee and daily more and more crucifie the old man in vs that being renued in the spirit of our mindes we may henceforth serue thee in holines and righteousnes all the daies of our life LECTVRE XXIX PHILIP 2. Verse 9.10 Wherefore God hath also highly exalted him and giuen him a name aboue euery name that at the name of Iesus c. IT remaineth now that we proceed from the description of Christ his humility vnto the description of his exaltation into glorie after his humiliation here on earth set downe in these words Wherefore God hath also c. In which words the Apostle 1. in generall setteth downe Christ his exaltation into glory as a consequent or effect following his humiliation and obedience vnto the death when he saith Wherefore ●od hath also c. Him euen Iesus who was crucified him ●ath God raised vnto life set him at his right hand and made ●im both Lord and Christ 2. The Apostle setteth downe a ●ore particular specification and explication of Christ his ex●●tation into glorie 1. when he saith and giuen him a name c. Whereby is meant that God hauing raised him from the ●ead hath giuen him such maiestie and glorie in the heauenly ●aces that he hath appointed him Lord ouer all things and ●ade him head vnto the Church
were ●nder the law and as the same Apostle saith to the Romanes Rom. 8.4 That the righteousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in vs. Seeing ●hen it was for vs that Christ was humbled and that hee was obedient vnto the law and vnto the death great reason it is ●hat his humility and obedience should be a sufficient motiue to perswade vs vnto humilitie and obedience in the whole course of our life Should it bee my brethren a sufficient motiue vnto vs and why is it not Why it is not I know not but that it is not euery man seeth it Our high conc●●●●● our selues whether it be of our wisedome or of our riche or of our honour our contentions and vaine-glory our delight in our owne waies and our neglect to walk in the waie● of the Lord these and the like testifie vnto our faces that Christ his humility and obedience little preuaile with va●● perswade vs vnto these holy duties O my brethren let this be an healing of our errour So often as wee heare or read that Christ thus humbled himselfe for vs that he became man for vs that he bare our infirmities that he was led as a sheepe v● to the slaughter for vs that he made his soule an offering for our sinne and that he made his graue with the wicked in his death for vs let these be so many remembrancers vnto vs to plucke downe our proud peacockes feathers to put away wrath contention pride vaine-glory and in all meeknesse of minde to submit our selues one vnto an other and all of v● vnto our God So often as we heare or read that Christ became obedient vnto his Father in all things that the law required of him that he fulfilled all righteousnesse and neuer gaue ouer to doe the will of his Father till hee had tasted and drunke of deaths cuppe and all for vs let this suffice to sl●● vs vp to walke in all dutifull obedience vnto our heauenly Fathers will Yea let vs thus hereupon resolue with our selues and say vnto our owne soules hath the sonne of God my Christ and my God vouchsafed to descend from his high throne of glory to be clothed with my flesh and my skinne to suffer hunger cold pouerty and manifold tentations for mee to be slaundered reuiled buffeted spit vpon condemned nailed on the crosse and to be buried for me and shall beare my selfe aboue my brethren shall I walke with a st●●● necke and disdaine my inferiors or shall I not make my selfe equall to them of the lowest degree and passe the time of my dwelling here in feare and in all lowlinesse of minde Hat● the sonne of God my Christ and my God fulfilled all righteousnesse done his fathers busines and yeelded all obedience vnto his father for mee and shall I kick against him with ●e heele shall I draw my necke from vnder his yoke and re●●se to walke in the waies of his lawes or rather shall I not ●nforme my selfe in all obedience to his holy will and doe at which is good and right in his eyes This vse wee should ●ake of Christ his humility and obedience vnto his father ●●d to this end he maketh it the ground of his exhortation in is place It followeth Wherefore my beloued The 2. thing which I obserued in ●ese words of the Apostle was his kinde and louing entrea●e of the Philippians signified in that he calleth them his be●●ued Which kinde entreatie of them he vseth the rather to ●inne them to harken vnto his exhortation Here then is a ●te for vs whom God hath set apart vnto the holy worke of ●s ministery to wit that we should not onely bee carefull to struct them that heare vs in the wholesome words of truth at that likewise we should seeke in all kinde and louing sort ● winne them vnto that wherein we doe instruct them Here●pon are those kinde and louesome speeches so often vsed in ●e writings of the Apostles my brethren my beloued my babes ● little children dearely beloued deare brethren I beseech you ●ethren by the mercies of God and the like Not to speake of ●ther places this one place of our Apostle might suffice suf●●ciently to instruct vs in this lesson where the Apostle doth ●ot onely exhort the Philippians to walke in the way of godli●esse with humblenesse of mind and in obedience vnto God ●nd strengthen his exhortation both by the example of their ●wne former obedience and by the example of Christ his ●umility and obedience but in all kinde and louing sort hee ●roposeth his exhortation calling them his beloued that so ●e might the rather winne them to harken to his exhortation or euen so the dispensers of God his holy mysteries should ●ot onely labour in a godly care to teach them that heare ●hem the words of truth in all euidence of the spirit and to ●onfirme and strengthen the same out of the sacred worth of ●ruth but further they should seeke with all kinde speaches ●nd in all louing manner to lead them foorth vnto the waters of comfort and to bring them vnto Christ Iesus And here happily a man that should long beate vpon this point and to large it to the full might haue great applause in many place especially there where the exception against their Teacher i● that he is too sharpe and that hee presseth the iudgement of God against sinne too sore and too vehemently Here the●● I beseech you a lesson for you that are hearers our of thi● place As we that are the ministers of the Lord for your comfort are hence taught to striue in all kinde and louing sort to bring you vnto Christ Iesus so you that heare vs are likewise he●●● to learne so to cary your selues as that we may speak vnto you as vnto our brethren and vnto our beloued If the loue ● God be not in you indeed how can wee speake vnto you a vnto our beloued If your honour not God nor keepe his commandements how can we speake vnto you as vnto 〈◊〉 children If ye be not ioyned with vs in one faith and in one hope in Christ Iesus how can wee speake vnto your as to o● brethren Nay I say more vnto you if ye know not vs that labour amongst you and are ouer you in the Lord and ad●●nish you if ye haue vs not in singular loue from our works sa●● how can we speake vnto you as vnto our beloued If when 〈◊〉 labour to beget you in the faith and to present you before God blamelesse in that day you either stoppe your eares the voice of our charming charme we neuer so wisely or speak euill of vs as of euill doers can wee speake vnto you as v●● our babes and little children If you embrace not the tr●● which we preach vnto you but rather hate vs for the message which we bring vnto you can we speake vnto you as vnto on deare brethren Nay certainely if yee will haue vs to co●● vnto you
euen the like extremitie of sickenesse that Epaphroditus was brought vnto A step onely betweene them and death or rather no steppel but they deliuered out of the iawes of death as a pray out of the teeth of the wilde beast or as a bird out of the snare of the fouler And this the Lord may seeme to doe for these causes amongst many other 1. Thereby to make his power more to be knowne amongst the sonnes of men For what can more manifest the power of almighty God then to saue vs when the pit is now ready to shut her mouth vpon vs and nothing but present death before vs 2. To encrease their thankefulnesse who being brought vnto the gates of death are thence deliuered For how much neerer they were vnto death so much greater praises are due vnto him that hath deliuered them from death 3. Thereby to humble them for euer vnder his mightie hand by whom they yet liue moue and haue their being For what should more humble vs then plainely to see that it is no way in our selues but in the Lord only to saue our life from death and to deliuer vs from the power of the graue Seeing then it pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to bring euen his dearest children and choisest seruants into such extremities as of other dangers so of sicknesse let vs take heed how we iudge them as plagued of God for their offences because they are so extreamly visited Yee know it was the great fault of Iobs friends that still they vrged him that surely hee was a great and grieuous sinner a wicked and an vngodly man because the Lord his hand was so heauie vpon him Nay my brethren though some of our brethren in these hot and sharpe diseases through extremity of paine or otherwise howsoeuer should somtimes breake out into impatient speaches yet let vs take heede how we iudge them as forsaken of the Lord ye know the example of Iob into what execrations and words of impatiencie he brake out through that extremitie of griefe wherewith he was holden who yet was a very choise seruant of the Lord and whose patience is commended in the Scriptures Againe seeing it pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to bring euen his dearest children and choisest seruants into such extremities of sicknesse let this be a comfort vnto vs in what extremitie of sicknesse so euer we shall be For no new thing herein doth befall vs but such as oftentimes doth the dearest children of God and he which deliuered them from the hand of the graue when the pit had euen shut her mouth almost vpon them will also deliuer vs if it shall be for his glory and our good Sicknesse and extremitie of sickenesse all are of the Lord and all for the best vnto his children Let vs therefore in all things that befall vs so submit our selues vnto the will of the Lord as that both in heart and voice we euer pray and say thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen LECTVRE XLV PHILIP 2. Verse 27. But God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also lest I should haue sorrow vpon sorrow BVt God had mercy on him Where the Apostle first setteth downe the cause of his recouerie and restoring vnto health which was Gods mercy 2. The extent and bountifulnes of Gods mercy therein reaching not to Epaphroditus alone but to Paul also 3. The Apostle setteth downe the cause why the Lord in mercy towards him also restored Epaphroditus vnto health to wit left he should haue sorrow vpon sorrow .i. lest vnto that sorrow which already he had by his bands and imprisonment there should haue beene added another sorrow for his death The words are so plaine and easie in themselues to be vnderstood that there needeth no farther opening or explication of them Let vs therefore see what notes and obseruations we may gather hence whereof we may make some vse vnto our selues But God had mercy on him By which phrase of speech the Apostle signifieth Epaphroditus his recouerie and restoring vnto health Yet see how the Apostle was not content barely to say but he was restored vnto health but signifying euen this same thing he withall noteth both who restored him wherfore he was restored vnto health saying But God had c. As if he should haue said but God for his mercies sake restored him vnto health Whence I note that it is the Lord that woundeth and maketh whole that both visiteth vs with sicknesse and also holdeth our soule in life and healeth all our infirmities For so the Lord himselfe saith Behold now for I Deut. 32.29 I am he and there is no God with me I kill and giue life I wound and I make whole And againe in Exodus saith the Lord Ex. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee And therefore the Prophet thus praieth Heale me ô Lord and I shall be whole saue me I●r 17.14 Ps 103.2.3 and I shall be saued And the Prophet Dauid thus stirreth vp himselfe to praise the Lord saying Praise the Lord ô my soule and forget not all his benefits which forgiueth all thy sinne and healeth all thine infirmities or all thy sicknesses and diseases It is the Lord then yee see that healeth our sicknesse and holdeth our soule in life yea it is euen he that deliuereth vs both from the first and likewise from the second death Yet I would not here be so mistaken as if I iudged that because it is the Lord that healeth our infirmities therefore in the bed of our sicknes we should onely call vpon the Lord and neglect the meanes ordeined for the recouerie of our health For as he hath appointed the end so hath he ordeined the meanes vnto the end And albeit sometimes he worke without meanes and restore vnto health without any medicine or physicke at all yet most ordinarily he worketh by meanes and restoreth vnto health by medicine and physicke And therefore we are not at any time to neglect the meanes of physicke and such like helps for the recouerie of our health but rather we are to vse them with all thankfulnesse vnto the Lord for them and with all praier and supplication in the spirit for his blessing vpon them We see how that good King Ezechias when it had beene told him of the Lord by the Prophet 2 Reg. 20.5.6 thus Behold I haue healed thee and the third day thou shalt goe vp to the house of the Lord and I will adde vnto thy daies fifteene yeere yet for all that 7. when the Prophet said vnto him take a lumpe of dried figs and lay it vpon the boyle and thou shalt recouer he tooke it and laid it on and recouered He might haue said hath the Lord spoken and will he not performe it He hath promised me heal●h and a lengthning of my daies for 15 yeeres what neede I more then his word what neede I any medicine or prescript from any Physician
by the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus whose whole obedience in suffering death and fulfilling of the Law shall bee the couering of our sinnes and the cloke of our righteousnesse And let it teach vs to iudge all our workes in respect of that righteousnes whereby we are made righteous before God to be but losse and dung that we may be found in Christ not hauing our owne c. O Lord our God as thou hast vouchsafed to instruct vs in our true righteousnesse so vouchsafe by a true and liuely faith in thy sonne Christ Iesus to make vs partakers of that righteousnes Iudge not O Lord in that day by our own righteousnesse which is full of vnrighteousnes and vncleannesse but passing by our sinnes and our iniquities accept the righteousnes of thy sonne Christ Iesus for our vnrighteousnes that we being clothed with his righteousnes may be of the number of those vnto whom it shall be said Come yee blessed of my Father c. LECTVRE LVII PHILIP 3. Vers 10. That I may know him and the vertue of his resurrection c NOw the Apostle goeth forward and sheweth other reasons why he renounced all his owne merits as losse and dung and reioyced only in Christ Iesus 1. as we haue heard he did so that hee might gaine the righteousnesse of Christ by faith that was the first and principall gaine that he reckoned vpon by doing so 2. He did so for other aduantages that he reckoned vpon by doing so as ● he did so that he might know Christ 3. That he might know the vertue of his resurrection 4. That hee might know the fellowshippe of his afflictions and be made conformable vnto his death 5. That he might attaine vnto the resurrection of the dead What is the reason then why the Apostle hauing cause of confidence and reioycing in the flesh and in things without Christ doth renounce all things without Christ and reioyce only in Christ Iesus The reason is because reioicing in the flesh and in things without Christ is vnprofitable and hurtfull and contrariwise the renouncing of all things without Christ and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus is most profitable Why what profit comes thereby 1. Christs righteousnesse which is by faith 2. The knowledge of Christ 3. The knowledge of the vertue of his resurrection 4. The knowledge of the fellowshippe of his afflictions c. 5. The attaining vnto the resurrection of the dead All these vantages the Apostle reckoned vpon to follow his renouncing of all things without Christ and his reioycing onely in Christ Iesu● For so he saith that he iudgeth all things losse and dung that he may winne Christ and may be found in him c. as if these things could not be vnlesse he should do so All which vantages doe so follow the renouncing of all confidence in the flesh and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus as that these foure last doe issue and spring out of the first For being iustified by faith in Christ Iesus wee know Christ we know the vertue of his resurrection c. These being fruits issuing and growing out of that righteousnesse which is through the faith of Christ Thus much for the generall drift and meaning of these words Now for the more particular opening of these words wee must know that by the knowledge of Christ is here meant not such a knowledge as wherby we are able to talke of Christ of his birth of his life of his doctrine of his death and passion c. but such a knowledge as whereby we feele and proue in our selues and in our owne soules that hee is indeed our redemption our reconciliation our saluation and whatsoeuer else we haue heard or read or belieued of him in the Scriptures not a contemplatiue knowing knowledge of Christ but a liuely and experimentall knowledge of Christ in our owne soules Againe by the vertue of Christ his resurrection the Apostle meaneth that regeneration i. that dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse which is wrought in vs by the power of his resurrection 3. By the fellowshippe of Christ his afflictions the Apostle meaneth that partaking which Gods Saints haue with Christ of his afflictions for the glorie of Christ and the good of the Church and their owne conformitie vnto the death of Christ Lastly by attaining vnto the resurrection of the dead the Apostle meaneth that eternall weight of glory in the heauens which onely they obtaine that in this life know Christ by experience in their owne soules and by the power of his death and resurrection die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse and constantly endure such afflictions as the Saints of God are partakers of that so they may be conformable vnto the death of Christ who was consecrated through afflictions The summe of all is this the Apostle tells the Philippians that he hath no confidence in his merits or workes but onely reioyceth in Christ Iesus that so he may be iustified before God by Ch●ist his righteousnesse and that being iustified by his righteousnesse through faith in his name he may know Christ by a liuely feeling of him in his owne soule and may by the power of his resurrection die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse and may constantly with Gods Saints suffer such afflictions as Christ hath suffered and may be made conformable vnto Christ his death and at length may be receiued into that glory which is prepared to be shewed in the resurrection of the iust Thus then yee see that both these are the fruits of the righteousnesse of faith and that both the righteousnesse of faith and these fruits issuing out of it are all vantages which the Apostle counteth he hath hy renouncing all confidence in the flesh and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence for our vse That I may know him This is one end wherefore the Apostle would bee found in Christ hauing his righteousnesse through faith and consequently wherefore he renounced all his owne merits and works and onely reioyced in Christ Iesus euen that he might know Christ For why iudged he his owne righteousnes to be but losse and dunge That he might winne Christ and be found in him not hauing his owne righteousnesse but the righteousnes of Christ through faith And why would he be found in Christ his righteousnesse through faith that he might know Christ This is the fruit of the righteousnes of faith and both of them are vantages which follow the renouncing of all confidence in the flesh and the reioycing in Christ Iesus But what Did not Paul know Christ Had he preached Christ so many yeares yet knew not Christ Had he planted so many Churches in the faith of Christ and yet knew he not Christ For answer herevnto to omit that knowledge which is by vision in heauen when we shall see him face to face we must vnderstand that there are two sorts of knowledge of Christ here on earth
and set his affection on the things which are aboue Doth the cruell oppressor leaue off to grinde the faces of the poore and beginne to be mercifull Doth the vsurer leaue off to lend his money vpon vsurie and beginne to lend freely Doth the swearer leaue off to sweare and beginne to feare an oath Doth the filthy whore-monger and adulterer leaue off his vncleannesse and beginne to liue chastly Doth the contentious person leaue off to brawle and contend with his neighbour and beginne to loue quietnesse Doth the drunkard leaue his drunkennesse and beginne to liue soberly c. Doth any prophane and wicked person leaue off his prophanenesse and wickednesse and beginne to liue righteously and godly in this present world Nay so farre are wee from dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God that contrariwise wee liue vnto sinne in sinne and wee are dead in respect of the life of God If wee would denie it yet doe the iudgements of God testifie it vnto our faces Hath not the sword beene shaken against vs by the hand of a cruell and mercilesse enemie now a long time Hath there not beene cleannesse of teeth in all our cities scarcenesse of bread in all our places euen a great dearth and famine throughout this whole land now a long time Hath not grieuous sicknesse and mortalitie great plagues and strange diseases taken away many thousands of our people And is not the hand of the Lord still stretched out against vs Doe not dearth and famine on one hand and sicknesse and mortalitie on another hand still deuoure our people And are not these the messengers of Gods fierce wrath against vs for our sinnes Yes certainly euen for our sinnes and iniquities are all these things come vpon vs. And because he hath smitten vs and wee are not healed because hee hath laid his punishing hand vpon vs and wee haue not turned from the wickednesse of our wayes vnto him therefore his wrath is not turned away but his hand is stretched out still No man knoweth the vertue of Christ his death or careth to know it but euery man walketh after the wayes of his owne heart and drinketh iniquitie like water No man knoweth the vertue of Christ his resurrection or careth to know it but euery man in stead of rising vp vnto holinesse of life riseth vp to eat drinke and play and therefore doth the hand of God lie still so heauie vpon vs. O my brethren at length let vs follow the counsell of the Apostle let vs morti●●e our earthly members fornication vncleannesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse which is idolatrie and let vs bring forth the fruits of the spirit Let vs crucifie the flesh with the affections and the lusts and walke in the spirit Let vs put off the old man which is corrupt through the deceiueable lusts and let vs put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holines For this let vs all know that whosoeuer in this life dieth not this death which is vnto sinne no man shall deliuer his soule from the hand of the second death after this life and whosoeuer hath not his part in the first resurrection which is from sinne vnto righteousnesse he shall haue no part in the second resurrection which is vnto glory and life euerlasting And such as doe know and feele in themselues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection them I exhort in the bowels of Christ Iesus that with the Apostle they desire and labour to know and to feele this vertue in themselues daily more and more Stand fast against all the assaults of the deuill and quit your selues like men embrace holinesse and follow after righteousnesse While yee liue the flesh will rebell against the spirit but striue daily more and more to subdue the flesh vnto the spirit Consider with your selues with all godly care what sinne it is that most doth haunt you couetousnesse or licentiousnesse or pride or hatred or swearing or lying or the like and fight against that labour daily more and more against that seeke daily more and more to crush that in the head Againe consider with your selues what good thing yee are too dull and slacke vnto hearing of the word or liberalitie to the poore or patience in aduersitie or the like and labour daily more and more vnto that follow daily more and more after that seeke daily more and more after that In a word stirre vp euery good grace of God in you and refraine your feet from euery euill path that ye may know and feele in your selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection and doe this daily more and more that ye may feele in your selues this vertue daily more and more The second thing which here I note is from what root this knowledge of the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection issueth and springeth and that is from the righteousnes of faith for still wee must remember that these foure last vantages whereof the Apostle speaketh doe so follow the renouncing of all our owne workes and the reioicing only in Christ Iesus as that they all issue from the first vantage that we haue thereby namely from the righteousnesse of Christ through faith Whence I obserue that only they that are iustified by the righteousnesse of Christ through faith doe feele in themselues by the powerfull operation of the holy Ghost the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection whereby they die vnto sinne and liue vnto God in righteousnesse and true holinesse And to this the Apostle seemeth to giue witnesse where hee saith that our hearts are purified by faith Act. 15.9 for it is as if hee should haue said wee are purified and purged from dead workes to serue the liuing God but how is it It is by faith in Christ Iesus So that the Apostles meaning is that only they that are iustified by faith in Christ Iesus are purged from dead workes to serue the liuing God For if this purification bee by faith then only they that haue faith are thus purged So our Sauiour also saith Ioh. 15.4 As the branch cannot beare fruit of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can yee except yee abide in mee Whence it is most plaine that they onely that are ingrafted into Christ Iesus by a true and liuely faith in him whereby they take hold of his righteousnesse bring forth the fruits of the spirit dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God in newnesse and holinesse Why is it then that there is so little knowledge amongst vs of the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection The reason is only the faithfull children of God know it The rest they haue no root in themselues they want that true and liuely faith whence such knowledge should spring Let this then serue to rowse vs out of the dead sleepe of sinne and to awake vs vnto righteousnesse That the death and resurrection of Christ worke no
be perfect His exhortation is indeed generall vnto all that all would thinke as hee did touching the points mentioned before from verse 3. to this 15. But lest any man should thinke that he spake especially vnto the vulgar sort of men and prescribed this rule only vnto those that were babes in Christ therefore he sheweth precisely that this is a rule which whosoeuer among them thought himselfe to be or were more perfect than others ought to keepe euen to be so minded as Paul was in the things mentioned aboue And besides it was not so needfull to speak vnto them by name as it were that knew and acknowledged their owne wants that they should not thinke themselues perfect as to them that either thought themselues or were thought of others to be perfect Vnto them principally as by name the admonition was most needfull that they should be so minded as Paul was as in the rest of the points so in the acknowledgement of their owne imperfection and in the pursuit after perfection It followeth And if ye be otherwise minded c. This sheweth that the Apostle thought or rather knew that he should not be able to perswade all to be of the same minde with him in the things mentioned but that some through the suggestions of the false Teachers would thinke otherwise then hee thought of those points Yet see how kindly he dealeth with those If saith he ye be otherwise minded so that ye do not yet thinke as I your Apostle do of these points euen of Christian perfection but rather are of another iudgement yet I doubt not but as God hath begunne to reueale his sonne Iesus Christ vnto you by my preaching so hee will also in his good time reueale and make knowne vnto you this same thing wherein ye now dissent in iudgement from mee and will not suffer you to bee holden of this error he will I doubt not in his good time by the ministerie of his seruants through the powerfull operation of the holy spirit open the dimme eyes of your darke vnderstanding that ye may see both that ye erre in this wherein ye dissent from me and that this is the truth whereunto I now exhort you To gather then the summe of the Apostles meaning in these words it is as much as if the Apostle had thus said I am thus minded as I haue told you touching mine owne righteousnes which is by workes touching the righteousnesse of Christ which is through faith and touching Christian perfection in generall Let vs therefore euen all of vs not only those which are but babes in Christ or of the vulgar sort but euen as many as either think our selues or are thought by others to be perfect be thus minded as I am touching these points and if any of you dissent in iudgement from mee and doe not thinke as I doe touching Christian perfection God will no doubt in his good time by the ministerie of his seruants through the powerfull working of the holy Ghost open the dimme eyes of your darke vnderstanding that ye may see both your owne error in dissenting from me and the truth of that whereunto I exhort you Which being the Apostles meaning as I take it in this verse now let vs see what obseruation wee may gather hence for our vse and instruction 1. Therefore in the Apostles exhortation when he saith let ●s as many as be perfect be thus minded I note that as many as follow after Christian perfection are to be so minded touching workes and touching Christ as the Apostle was inasmuch as they are not perfect that thinke themselues already perfect either in the knowledge of Christ or in holy obedience but they rather that acknowledging that they haue not yet attained vnto perfection doe renounce all things without Christ reioyce only in Christ feeling a sense of the knowledge of Christ and of the vertue of his resurrection in themselues labour daily more and more to grow with all spirituall growth therein in certaine hope of the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Hence then I obserue what Christian perfection is namely a gift of the holy Ghost wherby we renounce the flesh reioyce in Christ and haue such a sense of the knowledge of Christ and of the vertue of his resurrection in our selues that acknowledging our want of perfection therein we labour to grow and encrease daily more and more therein and so incessantly runne after perfection in them that as good runners we forget that which is behind and endeauour our selues to that which is before and follow hard towards the marke for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus So that vnto Christian perfection there are foure things necessarily requisite The first whereof is iustification by the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to vs through faith without workes For so onely are we perfit if we be found in Christ Iesus not hauing our owne righteousnes which is by workes but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse of God through faith And therefore the Apostle telleth the Colossians in the next Epistle that he and Timothie preached and taught euery man in all wisdome Col. 1.28.2.10 that they might present euery man perfect in Christ Iesus And in the next Chapter he telleth them that they are compleate in Christ in whom dwelleth all the fulnesse of the godhead bodily Both which places plainely shew that were perfect but how not in our selues but in Christ Iesus And in him onely are we perfect because onely being in him no● our sinnes but Christ his righteousnesse is imputed vnto v● and because all perfection is originally in him and is only deriued vnto vs as we are in him Being then in him our s●nne and imperfections are hidde and couered being in him his righteousnesse and obedience are imputed and reckoned vnto vs and being in him that perfection which originally is in him is deriued vnto vs and so onely are our imperfections couered his righteousnesse imputed and his perfection deriued vnto vs as we are in him For if any man be not in him he is cast out as a branch and withereth Ioh. 15.6 This then is necessarily requisite vnto Christian perfection that we be in Christ Iesus not hauing our owne righteousnesse by workes but his righteousnesse by faith And from this as from the fountaine doe all those other things which are necessarie vnto Christian perfection issue and spring The 2. thing necessarily requisite vnto Christian perfect●on is our regeneration sanctification by the spirit of God for so onely are we perfit if by the power of the quickening spirit working on our soules spirits we haue a feeling knowledge of Christ Iesus in our owne soules and doe feele in our selues a dying vnto sinne and a liuing vnto righteousnesse by the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection And therefore the holy Ghost exhorting vs often to be perfect doth
Church as that they should be grieued at the heart for the wicked that trouble them for the sinnes that reigne amongst them and for the desolation that will follow if speedy conuersion and repentance preuent it not Yea they should water and wash their threatnings and their exhortations with their teares in token of their tender affection and great compassion towards their people and towards the Church And should we men and brethren mourne for you an● should you giue place to the Deuill and to such his wicke● instruments as seek to drowne you in perdition should we 〈◊〉 grieued at the heart for you and should yee walke on in th● counsell of the vngodly and stand in the way of sinners an● sit in the seat of the scornefull should we be touched in 〈◊〉 soule that our labour should be in vaine amongst you an● should yee go on in the wickednsse of your waie drinking iniquitie like water and drawing on sinne with cord● of vanitie as it were with cart-ropes Nay beloued by th●● ou● duty learne yee your duty For if we ought to be thus affecte● towards you then bethinke your selues well how yee ough● to be affected in your selues Surely if it should wring te●● from our eies to see you sort your selues with the wicked and to suffer your selues to be drawne away with their error 〈◊〉 should make you to water your couch with teares and to mingle your drinke with weeping If it should touch vs in ou● soules to see you giue your members weapons of vnrighteousnes vnto sinne and to serue sinne in the lusts thereof i● should fill your soules full of heauinesse and plunge you i● sorrow of heart vnto the nethermost hell If it should grieue vs to see you after that yee haue escaped from the filthinesse of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and of the Sauiour Iesus Christ to be yet againe intangled therein and ouercome it should vex you euen vnto the death and caus● you to powre out your soules vnto the Lord in the bitternesse of your spirit Whatsoeuer it is concerning you should grieue vs should much more cause you to mourne in soule and to be troubled in your spirits For what is it that doth o● should cause vs to mourne for you and to be full of heauinesse for you Our desire is to present you holy and vnblameable in that day And here is our griefe that you suffer your selues to be seduced by the world and wicked ones and that our labour is in vaine amongst you Consider then with your selues how yee ought to be grieued in your selues and take heede how yee be not grieued in your selues for the things whereat your godly Pastors are grieued It grieued no doubt then Noah that preacher of righteousnesse that the Gen. 6. people in his time so prouoked the Lord to anger by their ●ruelty and wickednesse but they regarded not his griefe and therefore the Lord brought in the floud vpon the world of the vngodly Gen. 19. Iust Lot vexed his righteous soule with the ●ncleane conuersation of the wicked and with their vnlawfull deeds But they regarded it not and when he told them of ●o●● iudgements hee seemed euen to his sonnes in law as though he had mocked and therefore the Lord raind vpon ●hem fire and brimstone and destroyed them Ieremiah was 〈◊〉 great anguish of spirit for the rebellion of the stiffe-necked 〈◊〉 but they regarded it not therefore the Lord deliuered ●hem into the will of their enemies and they that hated them ●ee Lords ouer them Take heede then how yee regard it not when your Pastors are grieued on your behalfe take ●●●de how yee make light of such sinnes as they grieue to see ●ou defiled withall but rather sorrow for them that their sorrow may be turned into ioy and your ioy may be full euen ●oth yours and theirs In their ioy ouer you yee haue iust ●●●e of reioycing and in their griefe for you yee haue 〈◊〉 cause of griefe Looke therefore that they may re●oyce ouer you for that shall be your ioy and take heede that they may not mourne or grieue for you for that shall be your griefe Againe hence I obserue a notable comfort for the faithf●ll and painefull Ministers of Iesus Christ Hath he in all good conscience laboured in the worke of the Lord and doth he not see the desired fruits of his labours Paul the great Apostle of Christ mighty in the scriptures and much renow●ed for many great miracles which he wrought yet laboured 〈◊〉 vaine with many which he taught insomuch that the con●●deration of them with whom he laboured so much with so ●●●le profit made him weepe and shed teares as in this place It may not then seeme strange vnto vs if our labour with many be in vaine But it standeth them vpon that heare vs to looke vnto it that our labour be not in vaine amongst them for though they be not gathered yet shall we be glorious in the eyes of the Lord and our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord but if they be not gathered they shall be scattered from the presence of the Lord and of the Lambe for eue● more Giue therefore all diligence that we may reioyce 〈◊〉 the day of Christ that we haue not runne in vaine nor l●boured in vaine amongst you for that will bee profitab●● for you Labour that we may giue accounts for you with io● and not with griefe Heb. 13.17 for that will bee vnprofitable for you L●● vs haue mutuall ioy one of another and let our ioy be in th● Lord. The third thing which I note is that the Apostle saith th● many walke vp and downe which are the enemies of the crosse 〈◊〉 Christ Whereby the Apostle signifieth the great danger th●● there was of them because they were many for that it woul● be hard for the Philippians not to light on some of them and t● be seduced by them vnlesse they should diligently looke o● him and such as he was Whence I obserue that it is not a●waies safe to follow a multitude but commonly rather dangerous Mat. 7.13 For many there are that goe in at the wide gate and walk● in the broad way but it is dangerous to follow them for th● way leads to destruction And againe our Sauiour hath told vs that many should come in his name Mat. 24.5 and deceiue many Yea commonly the multitude is the worst What were the rest of th● old world besides Noah and his familie Ten had beene bu● a small number of righteous men to haue beene found in th● great Citie of Sodom yet were not ten found there How often were all the multitude of the Israelites ready to ston● Moses and Aaron But one Elias vnto 450 of Baals Prophets but one Micah vnto 400 false Prophets And how ofte● doth Paul complaine that a great doore and effectuall being opened vnto him he had many aduersaries that there were
many which made merchandize of the word of God many which were disobedient and vaine talkers and deceiuers o● mindes How often doth Iohn complaine of many Antichrists many false Prophets Nay in what age hath not the litle flocke of Christ liued in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation beset with a world of wickednesse and wicked men Where Christ hath his Church there the Deuil● hath more then a chappell euen 500 synagogues his instruments to worke his will so farre as they can So that if wee follow the most we shall commonly follow the worst A good hold then haue they of it that make this to be one of the notes of their Church Christ calls his Church a litle flocke and Esay calls it a litle remnant and Ieremie a small ●eede But well may shee stand on her multitude that hath made all nations drunken with the wine of the wrath of her fornications and so let her doe till the smoke of her burning ascend But why or whence is it that we in our ordinarie life stand so much vpon the multitude What more common amongst vs then to say that we will doe as the most doe we will not single our selues from the rest c Nay is not that profane and wicked speech often heard amongst vs that it is good going with companie though it be to the Deuill But beloued our God hath taught vs another lesson Exod. 23.2 Thou shalt not saith he follow a multitude to doe euill neither agree in a controuersie to decline after many to ouerthrow the truth And our Apostle here tells vs that many walke that are the enemies of the crosse of Christ but we may not walke after them but after him and such as he is For we are not to looke how many doe walke thus and thus but who walke as they should not how many walke in this or that way but what the way is wherein they doe walke And though all the rest bow the knee to Baal yet we may not though all the nations of the earth fall downe before the beast and worship yet may not we What if in an election of an officer and magistrate the rest or farre the greater part consent vpon an vnfit man yet may not I. O but I shall make my selfe odious if I single out my selfe from the rest and preuaile neuer a whit Yea but good Prophet Michaiah stood vpon no such points 1 Reg. 22. but that though hee should by standing single against 400 false prophets become odious vnto Ahab the King and all the Prophets and not preuaile yet he spake the truth Here I haue a good example I must walke as I haue him for an ensample And so generally let vs not looke how many doe thus or how we may preuaile if we single our selues but let vs doe as we ought whatsoeuer come of it and howsoeuer all do otherwise Et hoc sciamus fortiorem esse qui pro nobis est quam qui contra nos sunt omnes And this let vs know that he is stronger who is for vs then all they who are against vs. LECTVRE LXIX PHILIP 3. Verse 18.19 That they are the enemies of the crosse of Christ whose end is damnation whose God is their belly c. THus farre we haue already proceeded in this first reason of the Apostles which he vsed to moue the Philippians to follow him and such as he was for many walke of whom I haue told you often and now tell you weeping c. Now follow the fiue notes whereby the Apostle describeth these many walkers of whom he had told them often and now told them weeping The first note whereby he describeth them is that they are the enemies of the crosse of Christ Which branch of his reason might well stand for a sufficient reason with the Philippians to moue them not to walke after these but to follow him and to walke so as they had him for an ensample Now the Apostle calleth them the enemies of the crosse of Christ in two respects 1. Because by vrging the necessitie of circumcision and the workes of the law vnto righteousnesse and saluation they made the crosse of Christ to be of none effect and abolished the worke of our redemption by the bloud of Christ Iesus 2. Because they would not suffer persecution for the crosse of Christ and therefore applied themselues to the humor of the Iewes and preached vnto them circumcision and the law For thus both in doctrine detracting from the merits of Christ his crosse and redemption by his bloud and likewise in life following after carnall securitie and auoyding persecution for Christ crucified they shewed themselues to be enemies vnto the crosse of Christ Hence then I obserue who they be that be the enemies of the crosse of Christ namely they that in their doctrine detract from the merits of Christ his crosse and the worke of our redemption by the bloud of Christ Iesus finished vpon the crosse and they likewise that in their life follow after carnall delicacie and flie persecution for the crosse of Christ for Christ crucified euen both these sorts of men are enemies vnto the crosse of Christ For touching the first sort of men must not they needs be counted the enemies of the crosse of Christ that in their doctrine make the crosse of Christ to be of none effect And doe not they in their doctrine make the crosse of Christ to be of none effect that teach righteousnes redemption or saluation to be any otherwise then by the onely merits of Christ his crosse and faith in his bloud The Apostle saith if righteousnesse be by the Law that is Gal. 2.21 if we may be made righteous by any worke which we can doe according to the law by the feare of God the loue of God the loue of our neighbour or any thing commanded in the morall law of God then Christ died without a cause and in vaine For to this end as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 8.3.4 God sent his Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in vs. Where the meaning is that therefore Christ was sent to fulfill all righteousnesse in our flesh and to die for vs because we were vnable to fulfill the law to be made righteous by it or to saue our soules from death For if we had beene able to purchase righteousnes by our owne workes or to saue our soules from death then what needed Christ to haue come in the flesh or to haue died for vs It had beene in vaine and vnprofitable They then that teach righteousnesse to be by the law or any thing that we can doe they make the death of Christ and his resurrection his victorie his kingdome his glory himselfe vnprofitable and of none effect and so are enemies of the crosse of Christ So againe the Apostle saith yee are abolished from
we weane men from this worldly reioycing as much as we can What is then the reioycing which we teach As the Apostle saith of sorrow 2. Cor. 7.10 that there is a worldly sorrow which causeth death and a godly sorrow which causeth repentance vnto saluation so I say of reioycing that there is a worldly reioycing when men take more pleasure in the vanities of this life and the pleasures of sinne then in the things which belong vnto their peace which causeth death a godly reioycing when men reioyce in the Lord so that they put their whole confidence in him and count all things losse and dung in comparison of that reioycing which they haue in him which causeth confidence vnto saluation The reioycing then which we teach is not the worldly reioycing which the world teaches which causeth death but the godly reioycing which causeth confidence vnto saluation We say that ye may and that ye ought to reioyce in the Lord. So the holy Ghost often exhorteth vs to doe and so the godly haue alwayes done Be glad O ye righteous saith Dauid and reioyce in the Lord. Psal 32.12 And againe Let Israel reioyce in him that made him Psal 149.2 and let the children of Sion be ioyfull in their King Let him that reioyceth saith the Apostle out of the Prophet reioyce in the Lord. 2. Cor. 1.31 And in the former chapter My brethren saith the Apostle reioyce in the Lord. Esay 61.10 So did the Church in Esay saying I will greatly reioyce in the Lord and my soule shal be ioyfull in my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of saluation c. So did Mary saying Luke 1.47 My soule doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit reioyceth in God my Sauiour So Peter giueth testimonie to the strangers to whom he wrote that they reioyced in the Lord with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Pet. 1.8 And so the godly haue alwayes reioyced in the Lord as in the onely rocke of their defence and strong God of their saluation And now see besides these exhortations and examples so to doe what great cause we haue to reioyce in the Lord and how litle cause there is to reioyce in any thing else for what haue we that we haue not from him or what want we which if we haue he must not supply Haue we peace in all our quarters and plenteousnesse in all our houses haue we a blessing in the fruit of our body in the fruit of our ground in the fruit of our cattel in the increase of our kine and in our flockes of sheepe are our wiues fruitfull as the vine and our children like the Oliue branches round about our tables haue we health strength foode rayment and other necessaries of this life Iames 1.17 And whence are all these things Euerie good giuing and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights with whom is no variablenesse neyther shadowing by turning But to come nearer vnto the causes of Christian reioycing Doth the Spirit witnesse vnto our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Is the darkenesse of our vnderstandings lightned the frowardnesse of our wills corrected the corruption of our affections purged Do we feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his resurrection by the death of sinne and the life of God in our selues Are our soules fully assured of the free forgiuenes of our sinnes by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus dare we go boldly vnto the throne of grace and crie Abba which is Father Do we know that Death shall not haue dominion ouer vs and that Hell shall neuer be able to preuaile against vs Behold then what cause we haue of our reioycing in the Lord for abundance of spirituall blessings in heauenly things for our election in Christ Iesus vnto euerlasting life before the foundatiō of the world for our creation in time after his owne image in righteousnesse and true holinesse for our redemption by the bloud of Christ Iesus when we through sinne had defaced the image wherein we were created and sold our selues as bond slaues vnto Sathan for our vocation vnto the knowledge of the truth by the Gospel of Christ Iesus for our adoption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God for our iustification and tree forgiuenesse of our sinnes by the bloud of Christ Iesus for our sanctification by the Spirit of grace vnto some measure of righteousnesse and holinesse of life for our regeneration vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus and for the assured confidence which we haue of our glorification after this life with Christ Iesus who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious bodie c. All graces of Gods Spirit and for them all such matter of reioycing in the Lord as may make our hearts dance for ioy and may rauish our soules with gladnesse And as we haue all things from the Lord that we haue whether for the body or for the soule for this life present or that that is to come so what is it that we want which he doth not supply Want we riches The Lord maketh poore 1. Sam. 2 7. and maketh rich and he is rich vnto all them that call vpon him faithfully Want we preferment Psal 75 6. Promotion cometh neyther from the East nor from the West nor yet from the South God is the Iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another Want we wisedome If any man lacke wisedome let him aske of God Iames 1.5 which giueth vnto all men liberally and reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him Want we patience in troubles That is the wisedome which Iames specially speaks of in the place mentioned wisedome patiently to endure whatsoeuer God laieth vpon vs which ye see God liberally giueth to them that lacke aske Want we comfort in our soules God is the God of patience and consolation Rom. 15.5 which comforteth vs in all our troubles and turneth our heauinesse into ioy as also himselfe saith saying I will turne their mourning into ioy Ierem. 31.13 and will comfort them and giue them ioy for their sorrowes Yea whatsoeuer it is that we want it is the Lord that must supply our wants He openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing with plenteousnes Psal 145.16 such as he best knoweth to be most meet for them and good for his glory 84.11 The Lord will giue grace and glory saith the Psalmist in another place and no good thing will he withhold from them that walke vprightly no good thing which he knoweth to be good for them and also good for his glorie Haue we then whatsoeuer blessings we haue from the Lord and doth the Lord supply whatsoeuer we want fo farre forth as he sees it to be expedient for vs and good for his owne glorie See then what cause we haue to reioyce in the
Peter saith of loue 1. Pet. 4.8 that it couereth the multitude of sinnes so it is true in this moderation and patience whereof we speake that it beares with and pardoneth many faults and offences of one man towards another likewise concealeth such faults and offences as secretly or through infirmitie are committed against God If then we will approue our selues to haue that patient mind which our Apostle here requireth we must not publish whatsoeuer fault of our neighbor we he are or know but such faults as either are not commonly knowne abroade or whereinto he hath fallen through infirmitie we must hide and couer them and so beare with them as to burie them out of the sight and speech of men A fourth rule which we must obserue is this when the faults of our neighbour are such as that they may iustly offend vs behouefull it is that we go vnto him and tel him his fault betweene him and vs alone and if thus he hearken not vnto vs then to call vnto vs one or two moe that his fault being here opened againe that which is amisse may be amended and he in the best sort that may be may be reclaimed Which rule is also the rule of our blessed Sauiour touching priuate iniuries and wrongs where he saith Mat. 18.15 If thy brother trespasse against thee he speaketh of priuate trespasses and wrongs for such as are publike and to the offence of the Church 1. Tim. 5.20 the Apostle would haue them rebuked openly but if thy brother trespasse against thee priuately giuing thee cause of offence go and tell him his fault betweene thee and him alone if he heare thee thou hast wonne thy brother and as Iames speaketh hast saued a soule from death and he repenting Iam. 5.20 thou art to forgiue him as Christ in another place warneth and if he will not vouchsafe to heare thee Luc. 17.3 to be sorie for his fault at thy priuate admonition but rather increase his stomack and stubburnnesse against thee then take yet with thee one or two that by the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word may be confirmed Otherwise if neglecting this rule of our Sauiour we shall vpon such occasions traduce him or breake out into intemperate heates against him how shall our patient mind be knowne vnto men For this is our patience and moderation that when we haue so iust cause of offence we deale as mildly and quietly with our neighbour as may be first priuately conferring of things b●tweene our selues and then taking vnto vs one or two of our neighbours and friends which may heare and helpe to order things that are out of order And if we will approue our selues to haue that patient mind which here our Apostle requireth we must thus peaceably deale in matters wherein we haue iust cause of offence and in no sort traduce our neighbours or brethren or breake out into impatient heates against them A fift rule which we must obserue and the last which now I will note is this generally in matters of this life we must remit of that which in rigor might be done For if we shall thus stand vpon it that this we may do by right and this the law will beare vs out vnto what proofe hereby shall we make of our moderation and patient mind Gen. 9.6 The law saith Who so sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed Now who will commend the moderation of that Iudge that so oft as bloud is shed pronounceth sentence of death because in rigour of the words it may seem he may do that which indeed in the equitie of the law he may not And so it fareth with vs if in matters of this or that qualitie betwixt vs and our neighbours we shall alwaies do that which in extremitie of right it seemeth that we may and not moderate right by equitie who shall commend our moderation If we haue the losse we must sometimes sustaine it if we haue the wrong we must sometimes put it vp and for peace and vnities sake we must remit and yeeld of our right if we wil haue our moderation and patient mind to be knowne Moe rules might be added vnto these but let these for this time suffice And now I beseech you to thinke on these things and in your liues one with another to practise them that so your moderate and curteous and soft and gentle and patient mind may be knowne Beare one with another in such faults as are naturally in any of you and spare sometimes to speake or do that which anothers humor cannot brooke make not alwaies the worst of such words or deeds as haply might haue not the best construction and meaning but rather when in themselues they are either doubtfull or not altogether the best make the best of them and so construe them as they may be wel meant rather then as they might be il taken Be not hastie to publish whatsoeuer fault of your neighbour you heare or know but such faults as either are not cōmōly known abroad or whereinto he hath fallen through infirmitie hide couer them as much as in you is burie them out of the sight and speech of men Traduce not one another nor breake out into intēperate heates one against another but in matters wherein ye may haue iust occasiō of offence one against another first priuately expostulate your matters one with another and if amends do not follow debate your matters one with another in the hearing of one or two of your neighbours and friends which may heare and helpe to order your matters Be not auerse from sitting downe sometimes with the losse and from putting vp sometimes the wrong but for the maintenance of peace and concord one with another remit and yeeld one vnto another that which in right sometimes ye might haue one of another that so your patient mind may be knowne vnto all And why should I need in many words at this time to exhort you vnto this moderation one towards another May not this day may not that holy table sufficiently exhort you here unto For vnlesse ye be patiently minded one towards another can ye either worthily celebrate those holy mysteries of Christ his blessed death and passion or thankfully celebrate this day in remembrance of his resurrection To celebrate these holy mysteries worthily is not to come hither as to an ordinary table and here to eate and drink but to come hither prepared with all holy reuerence hauing examined our selues before as touching our faith in Christ Iesus whether by faith in Christ Iesus we feele a full assurance in our soules of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes and of all other benefites of Christ his death and passion which in this Supper we desire for our further assurance to be sealed vnto vs and touching our repentance whether we be truly grieued in our soules for our sinnes against our God and fully purpose hereafter to
earthly Canaan was a type 2. This may teach vs to giue all diligence vnto the reading and hearing and meditating of the holy scriptures that so we may abound more and more in all knowledge and vnderstanding Very lamentable it is beloued to see and consider how many hundreths nay thousands in this cleare light of the gospell when the scriptures are or may be read and knowne of vs all yet are as ignorant in the scriptures and of the things that belong to their saluation as when they sate in the darknes of Aegypt when they could see no light of the scriptures by reason of the strange language We haue had many Ezraes that haue read in the booke of the law of God distinctly giuen the sense thereof that the rest might vnderstand many Ministers of Christ Iesus that haue read the law the gospell vnto vs euery Sabbath day in our Churches many Preachers of the Gospel that haue plainly opened the scriptures vnto vs whereby we might be made wise vnto saluation euen 40 yeares long And haue not the scriptures beene read vnto the greatest number of vs in vaine Notwithstanding so much preaching and teaching of the holy word of life are we not still ignorant and haue still neede to be taught the very beginnings of Christ the very principles of religion Haue we not many masters of Israel that thinke themselues great men like vnto Nicodemus that know not those things which the very babes in Christs schoole ought to know Haue we not many leaders of the people and masters of families vnto whose shame it may be spoken that they haue not the knowledge of God Haue we not many that if they be asked are not able to giue an account of their faith nor know truth from error religion from superstition The thing is too true and too lamentable Beloued hath not the Lord our God said vnto vs all Deut. 6.6 These words which I command thee this day shall be in thy heart and thou shalt rehearse them continually vnto thy childrem and shalt talke of them c. and shall we not hearken to his voice to doe according to all he hath commanded vs Hath not our blessed Sauiour told vs Joh. 17.3 that this is eternall life to know God to be the onely very God and him whom he hath sent Iesus Christ and shall not we labour to grow in the knowledge of God and of our Lord Iesus Christ Hath not the holy Prophet said that blessed is the man whose delight is in the law of the Lord Psal 1.2 and which meditateth therein day and night and shall wee not giue all diligence to the reading and hearing and meditating of the holy scriptures Nay let me I beseech you exhort you as that godly Father did his people Chrys Prouide you Bibles which are the medicine of your soules if you will nothing else at least get the new Testament In the Bible there yee haue the whole will of your heauenly father there yee shall see what legacies he hath bequeathed vnto you and what duties he requireth of you If the father of our bodies had bequeathed vs a great legacie by his will it would not be much needfull to wish vs get our Fathers will and to looke diligently into it to see if not what he requireth of vs yet what he bequeatheth to vs neither would wee sticke at the cost for the search of it if we knew where to haue it And shall the father of our soules leaue vs his Will and by his Will bequeath vs euerlasting life and shall we not labour to get his Will Shall a matter of ten shillings stay vs from the hauing of his Will shall not we search it and looke diligently into it Let vs beloued get the booke of Gods law into our hand and let it not depart out of our mouthes Jos 1.8 but let vs meditate therein day and night that we may obserue and doe according to all that is written therein as the Lord exhorted Iosua Let vs likewise flocke as Doues vnto the windowes vnto the places where the word is preached and when we haue heard let vs meditate and conferre of that we haue heard If the children of our bodies had gone to the schoole and in the space of seauen yeares had profited nothing what would we say vnto them or thinke of them Hardly enough no doubt And what shall we then thinke of our selues that in the space of fortie yeares are scarce yet past our A. B. C. and haue not yet attained vnto any reasonable knowledge Let vs hereafter recompence our former negligence with greater diligence and let vs slacke no holy meanes whereby we may growe into all holy knowledge Let vs labour to be rich in all knowledge and leauing the doctrine of the beginning of Christ let vs be led forward vnto perfection Let vs henceforth be no more children wauering and carried about with euerie winde of doctrine but let vs grow vp vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ that we may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the bredth and length and depth and height and to know the loue of Christ which passeth all knowledge that we may be filled with all fulnesse of God By reading by hearing by meditating by praying let your care bee to abound more and more in knowledge The next thing which here I note is that the Apostle prayeth for the Philippians that they may abound more and more in all iudgement in all iudgement that is in sound iudgement that hauing their wits exercised through long custome they may discerne both good and euill So that as hee would haue them to abound more and more in knowledge so farther he would haue them also to abound more and more in a sound and feeling experience of spirituall things in themselues that they might spiritually feele in their hearts and soules that which they knew out of the word Whence I obserue a further continuall care necessarie for all Christians and that is that they may abound daily more and more not in knowledge onely of Gods will out of his word but in sound iudgement also through a feeling experience in themselues of such spirituall things as they know out of the word that what they know out of the word they may feele the truth of it by experience in themselues This care our Apostle sheweth that hee had where hee saith that the thing which he esteemed was to know Christ Phil. 3.10 and the vertue of his resurrection Hee knew the doctrine of Christ his resurrection and hee knew this to be the vertue of Christ his resurrection that by it the Saints of God rise from the death of sinne vnto the life of righteousnesse But his desire farther was that he might feele in himselfe and know by his owne experience the vertue of Christ his resurrection by the death of sinne and the
their good in the former is signified his great desire to remoue out of the bodie and to dwell with the Lord in the latter is signified his great desire to abide in the bodie for their furtherance and ioy of their faith vnto the former his loue toward Christ constrained him vnto the latter his loue toward them constrained him for the former it was best for him for the latter it was most needfull for them and thus betweene the former and the latter he was so perplexed that he knew not what to chuse life or death death for his owne present good or life for their further good Now the thing which in the former reason I note is that the Apostle desired euen with a great desire to be loosed from the prison of his bodie or to depart out of the bodie and to be with Christ where he sitteth at the right hand of the throne of God and that he counted this better for him in respect of himselfe then to liue in the bodie Whence I obserue that a Christian in respect of himselfe is rather to desire to die then to liue to depart out of the bodie then to abide in the bodie Vnto the proofe of this point out of this place adde also that other of our Apostle where to the same purpose and in the same words almost he saith thus We loue rather to remoue out of the bodie 2 cor 5.8 and to dwell with the Lord. And that good olde Simeon ye know when once he had seene the Messias which was promised then hee desired with all his heart to die saying Luc 2.29 Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace for mine eyes haue seene thy saluation as if he should haue said now that I haue seene the promised Messias the sweet Sauiour of the world now indeed I desire rather to die then to liue Yea but was it not a great fault in Iob that he desired rather to die then to liue when in the bitternesse of his soule he cried and faid Why died I not in my birth Iob. 3.11.6 9 7.15 or why died I not when I came out of the wombe O that God would destroy me that he would let his hand goe and cut me off my soule chuseth rather to be strangled and to die then to be in my bones Yes indeede this was a great fault in Iob thus in impatiency to breake out and to search for death more then for treasures Neither is any man be his crosses or troubles neuer so great neuer so many through impatiencie and because he is weary of his life to wish rather to die then to liue much lesse is he with cursed Achitophel or traiterous Iudas to become his owne butcher and to cut off his owne daies for this were to repine against the highest and to take our owne matters out of Gods into our owne hands A Christian therefore in respect of himselfe is to desire rather to die then to liue but in no sort through impatiencie or because he is weary of his life Yea but is not death terrible euen vnto the godly and doe they not oftentimes so shrinke thereat that they are afraid of it Yes surely death in it selfe and in it owne nature is so terrible that Dauid being in great heauinesse and distresse by reason of Sauls cruelty expressed it thus saying Psal 55.5 The terrors of death are fallen vpon me Whereby he meaneth that he was so afraid of his enemies as if death had beene ready to seaze vpon him And surely but for Christ Iesus that hee hath seasoned it and that through him it is but a passage vnto a better life wee might all of vs euen the best of vs well feare death as the fruit of sinne and as the reward or wages of sinne How then doe we say that a Christian in respect of himselfe is to desire rather to die then to liue We must vnderstand that a Christian is to desire rather to die then to liue but how not simply rather to die then to liue but so as Paul did rather to die and to be with Christ then to liue He doth not say to die and to be ridd out of the miseries of this life for so many desire whose desire is not good and for whom it were better rather to liue in the bodie then to die but he saith to die and to be with Christ Are we not then while we liue here in the bodie with Christ and Christ with vs If wee will speake as the scripture vsually doth we are not While we liue here in the bodie we are in Christ by his spirit and Christ in vs by faith as appeareth by many places of holy scripture but in the vsuall phrase of the scripture then principally wee are faid to bee with Christ when after the separation of the soule from the bodie we doe in soule enioy the continuall presence of Christ in heauen where he sitteth at the right hand of the throne of God euen as the Apostle witnesseth where hee saith Whiles we are at home in the bodie we are absent from the Lord 2 Cor. 5.6 not from being in the Lord but from dwelling with the Lord in the heauenly places So that first our earthly house of this tabernacle must be destroyed before we can be with Christ where he is as he is man When then we say that a Christian in respect of himselfe is to desire rather to die then to liue the meaning is that he is rather to desire the separation of his soule from his bodie and in soule to bee with Christ where he is as man till he may both in soule and bodie bee there with him for euer then to liue in the bodie And the reasons are plaine and cleare as first because Christ is the husband and we the spouse if we belong vnto Christ As then it is better for the spouse to liue with her husband then to liue apart from her husband Eph. 5.32 so is it better for vs to be loosed and to be with Christ then to liue in the bodie secondly because heauen is our home and here we are but pilgrims and strangers As then it is better to be at home then where we are but pilgrims and strangers Heb. 11.13 so is it better for vs to be loosed and to be with Christ then to liue in the bodie thirdly because it is better for the soule to be ioyned vnto Christ then vnto a sinnefull bodie for as Dauid saith of Mesech and of the tents of Kedar Woe is me that I am constreined to dwell in Mesech Psal 120. ● and to haue mine habitation among the tents of Kedar so may the soule say of the bodie woe is mee that I am constrained to dwell in this sinfull bodie better it were for mee to be ioyned vnto Christ 4. Because the body is as a prison of the soule wherein it wanteth free libertie to doe what
shall also raigne with Christ That persecution then causeth perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto vs it is of God who in iustice rendreth vnto them as they haue deserued and for his promise sake rendreth vnto vs as he hath promised For this yee must here note and vnderstand that persecutions afflictions sufferings and wrongs by aduersaries are in themselues and in their owne nature punishments of sinne as is also death and hereby God in iustice might punish our sinnes and our iniquities for if hee should bring vpon vs the bloudy persecutions of such Tyrants as were Nero Domitian and the rest of those cruell persecutors in the Primitiue Church he might thus plague vs for our offences and himselfe be iust in all his wayes and holy in all his workes But vnto vs his beloued ones and his redeemed these things are not that which in themselues and in their owne nature they are and which in Gods iustice they might be vnto vs euen punishments of our sinnes but onely fatherly corrections and louing chastisements whereby in mercy God exerciseth vs represseth sinne in vs and bowlteth the branne of corruption out of vs here in the body of this flesh And as vnto vs in mercy death is made of God not that which in it owne nature it is a punishment of sinne but an entrance and passage vnto life so in mercy hath hee promised that afflictions persecutions and the like shall be vnto vs not that which in their owne nature are the beginnings of greater miseries but fore-runners of our saluation in the day of Christ Iesus It is not then of the nature of suffering persecution yee see but it is of God that persecution betokeneth vnto vs saluation that saluation is recompenced vnto vs which are troubled He in mercy hath promised that so it shall be and therefore so it shall be and it is a righteous thing with him that it be so The vse which our Apostle here teacheth vs to make hereof is as of the former not to feare persecution by the aduersaries which oppose themselues against the truth and against vs for the truths sake for seeing God turneth their persecution and rage against vs to their perdition and to our saluation why should wee feare them Whatsoeuer therefore they practise against vs let vs rest and repose our selues in our God He shall stretch out his hand vpon the furiousnes of our enemies but his right hand shall saue vs he shall recompense the aduersaries their wickednes and destroy them in their owne malice but hee shall wipe all teares from our eyes and after wee haue drunke of the brooke in the way lift vp our head aboue all our aduersaries Againe is it of God that persecution causeth vnto vs saluation This then may farther teach vs that by suffering persecution we doe not merit saluation For if it be of merit that our sufferings bring saluation vnto vs then it is not of God but the cause is in our selues and if it be of God then is it not of merit nor is the cause of our saluation in our selues Not according to the workes which we doe or sufferings which we suffer but according to his mercy he saueth vs for neither haue we wherein to reioyce by works nor are any sufferings of this present time worthy of that glory which shall be shewed vnto vs nor is there any other name vnder heauen whereby we may be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus He that reioyceth therefore let him reioyce in the Lord of whom it is that our persecutions and sufferings worke vnto our saluation And let this bee spoken of this third motiue or reason whereby yee see that we are not to feare the aduersaries because God recompenseth their persecution vnto them with perditi●n and vnto vs with saluation It followeth For vnto you it is giuen c. These words are both a proofe of that which went immediatly before and a fourth motiue likewise to perswade the Apostles former intendment Immediatly before he had said that God in persecution gaue them a token of their saluation The proofe here is Vnto you it is giuen of God by grace to suffer for Christ his sake therefore in suffering God giueth you a token of your saluation or thus sufferings for Christ are testimonies of grace vnto you of God therefore they are arguments and tokens of saluation vnto you of God And as thus these words serue for proofe of that so are they a notable motiue to perswade the Philippians not to feare the aduersaries for thus out of the Apostles words I frame the motiue Who will be afraid of a singular gift of God but to suffer for Christ his sake is a singular gift of God to you therefore yee are not to feare persecution by the aduersaries And that to suffer for Christ his sake is a gift of God hee sheweth à pari from the like as to beleeue in Christ is the gift of God so to suffer for Christ both gifts of God and vnto whom the one is giuen the other may not seeme strange For vnto you it is giuen to wit by grace for so the word signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ●hrist that is in Christ his cause not only that yee should beleeue in him as others professe they doe but also to suffer for his sake which many others shrinke to doe Euen both these faith in Christ and persecution for Christ his sake are the gift and grace of God towards you Here then first I note that the Apostle saith it was giuen by grace vnto the Philippians to beleeue in Christ Whence I obserue that faith in Christ is the gift of God by grace Which also Christ himselfe teacheth vs where he saith No man can come vnto me except it be giuen him of my Father Joh. 6.65 Whereby hee meaneth that no man can come vnto him that is can beleeue in him and his Gospell except it be giuen him of his Father For so by comming vnto him diuers times in that chapter is meant beleeuing in him a● when it is said He that commeth vnto me shall not hunger and he that beleeueth in me which expoundeth the former 35. shall neuer thirst and againe Him that commeth vnto me I cast not away which is all one with that 37. He that beleeueth in me shall not perish So that it is cleare that when our Sauiour saith that no man can come vnto him except it be giuen him of the Father the meaning is that no man can beleeue in Christ except it be giuen him of God And to the Hebrues Christ Iesus is called the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 And wherefore was it that when Christ preached and when his Apostles and Disciples preached some beleeued and others beleeued not but because vnto some he gaue grace to beleeue and not vnto others For only they vnto whom it is giuen of God to beleeue doe
that being God hee for our ●●kes became also man how then ought wee to submit our ●elues one vnto another in all humblenesse and meeknesse of ●inde The like motiue or reason is vsed by our Sauiour Christ himselfe where he saith vnto the people that were with ●im Learne of me that I am meeke and lowly in heart Math. 11. ●0 Ioh. 13. ●5 as also ●here he washeth his Disciples feet to teach them humility and ●hen saith vnto them I haue giuen you an example that yee should ●n euen as I haue done to you What should I go forward to ●uote Scriptures to this purpose Nothing more vsuall in the ●criptures then by the example of Christ to stirre vp vnto our ●euerall duties and what ought to be more effectuall with vs ●o perswade vs when the souldier sees his Captaine fight ●here needes no further spurre to set him into the batteil Christ is our Lord and we his seruants if hee our Lord and Master haue giuen vs such an example and haue said vnto vs ●oe as ye haue me for example should there neede any further ●purre vnto vs for this duty If he haue so humbled himselfe ●or vs that being God he became also man if hee haue had ●uch compassion on vs that when wee were enemies vnto him ●e reconciled vs vnto God if he so loued vs that he laid down his life for vs how ought we to be humble and lowly minded one towards another how ought wee to haue compassion vpon our poore brethren especially in this heauy time how ●ought we to loue one another with brotherly loue Christ my brethren is our head If we be members of his bodie we must draw our life and our spirituall nourishment from him we must in all things grow vp into him which is our head Fare be it therefore from vs to disdaine our brethren to wrong them to oppresse them to contemne them to swell in pride against them Nay rather let vs vse one another with all kindnesse with all gentlenesse with all meeknesse Let vs submit our selues one vnto another let vs be like minded one toward another in Christ Iesus Himselfe exhorteth vs hereunto he hath giuen vs an ensample Let the same minde c. Thirdly I note the humilitie of Christ whose example the Apostle here exhorteth vs to follow His humilitie is here described by the Apostle first by his incarnation in that being God he vouchsafed to take flesh of the blessed Virgin and to become man like vnto vs in all things sinne only excepted secondly by the worke of our redemption in that being man he yet againe further humbled himselfe and became obedient to the death euen the most shamefull death of the Crosse In the description of Christ his incarnation are very many things most worthy our obseruation touching both the natures in Christ his God head and his Manhood I can only point at some of the heads of those obseruations which hence were to bee made and more fully handled First for the Godhead of Christ in that it is here said that hee was in the forme of God it is thereby proued that Christ was true God for in the selfe same manner and phrase of speech that here he is said to be in the forme of God in the same is it afterward said that hee tooke on him the forme of a seruant Where by the forme of a seruant the Apostle expresseth his Manhead as here by the forme of God is expressed his Godhead Neither indeed can any be in the forme of God who is not true God And as in this place he is said to be in the forme of God whereby is meant that he is God so in other places plainly and directly heads said to be God Rom. 9.5 as in the Epistle to the Romans Of when are the Fathers and of whom concerning the flesh Christ came wh● is God ouer all blessed for euer and to the Colossians In Christ dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Coloss 29. and in the Acts Take heede c. Act. 20.28 to feed the Church of God which he hath purc●●sed with his owne bloud The phrase of speech in this place is somewhat different but it is all one as if he had thus said who ●eing God Secondly I note touching the Godhead of ●hrist that he was equall in all things vnto God the Father the Apostle plainly sheweth where it followeth that hee ●ought it no robberie to be equall with God for in that he saith thought it no robberie hee plainly sheweth that it was his ●ght and no iniurie at all vnto the Godhead for him that ●as God to be equall vnto God If then it be Christ his right ●●d no iniurie at all to the Godhead that Christ be equall vn●● God the Father then Christ as touching his Godhead is ●quall vnto God the Father howsoeuer touching his Man●ood he be inferiour to the Father And this be noted tou●●ing the diuine nature of Christ Now touching Christ his Manhood First in that it is here ●id that he made himselfe of no reputation or as the word signi●●eth that he emptied himselfe and of all brought himselfe vnto ●othing I note Christ his Manhood not forcibly to haue ●eene imposed vpon him but himselfe voluntarily to haue ●●ken on him the forme of a seruant When therefore it is said ●●at God sent his Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and againe ●●at God so loued the world that he gaue his only be gotten Sonne c. where God the Father is said to haue sent and to haue gi●en his Sonne and the Sonne is said to be sent and to be gi●en wee are to vnderstand the speeches thus that God the ●●ther sent his Sonne and God the Sonne was sent of the ●●ther yet God the Father and God the Sonne being not ●wo Gods but one God distinguished into two persons it is ●ghtly said that God the Father sent the Sonne and that the ●onne being one God with the Father made himselfe of no ●●putation voluntarily descending from his Maiestie to bee ●artaker of our miserie for if himselfe had not thus humbled ●imselfe who could haue imposed this base estate vpon him ●●mselfe being God blessed for euer The Angels which kept ●ot their first estate they were throwne downe lower than ●he earth euen to bee reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder ●arknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day But Christ ●hen he was equall vnto God in fulnesse of power glory ma●●estie knowledge abased himselfe and of almightie made himselfe full of infirmitie of immortall made himselfe mortall Secondly in that it is said hee tooke on him the forme of a seruant I note that Christ so became man as that hee ceased not to be God For it is not said that the Godhead was changed into the Manhood but that Christ being God tooke 〈◊〉 him the forme of a seruant so vniting the God head and Manhood in the vnitie of person
as we haue Christ Iesus for an example that submitting our selues one vnto another wee may be like minded one towards another in Christ Iesus that euery man esteeming other better than himselfe wee may all together in all things grow vp into him which is our head that is Christ LECTVRE XXVIII PHILIP 2. Verse 8. Hee humbled himselfe and became obedient vnto the death euen the death of the Crosse c. HE humbled himselfe c. In which words the Apostle first proposeth this second humiliation of Christ in generall saying Hee humbled himselfe Secondly the Apostle describeth it more particularly by the obedience of Christ vnto the death saying and became obedient vnto the death Where the Apostle noteth a two-fold obedience of Christ the one before his death in his whole life the other in and at his death the former consisting in Christ his fulfilling of the Law the latter in his whole sufferings of death and all the paines and sorrowes thereof for in that it is said that Christ became obedient vnto the death the Apostle his meaning is that Christ was obedient in all things that the Law required of him both doing the will of his Father in the whole course of his life and further subiecting himselfe vnto the death so that hee was not only obedient to his Father to fulfill the Law for vs but he was obedient vnto the death to lay downe his life for our sakes Lastly this circumstance of his death is amplified by the kinde thereof hee became obedient vnto the death euen the death of the Crosse which was the most shamefull and most accursed kinde of death So that the meaning of the Apostle in this place is that Christ who so had already humbled himselfe that of the Sonne of God he was now become the sonne of man did yet further humble and abase himselfe and became obedient vnto his Fathers will in all things that the Law required of him euen vnto the suffering of death for vs miserable sinners submitting himselfe vnto death for vs and that the most shamefull death of the Crosse This I take to be the meaning In these words then wee are to note foure doctrines touching Christ The first is touching his humiliation The second touching his obedience in his life The third is touching his death The fourth is touching his kinde of death In his humiliation I note first the person that was humbled secondly the manner of his humiliation both set downe by the Apostle when he saith he humbled himselfe For the first touching the person hence it appeareth that hee who being God and equall with the Father was now become man humbled himselfe and became c. The person then that was humbled was Christ God and man perfect God and perfect man subsisting of a reasonable soule and humane flesh And necessary it was that he who was now to worke the worke of our redemption should be both God and man man that as man had sinned so sinne might bee punished in man for so Gods iustice required God that he might be able to sustaine the grieuousnesse of the punishment due to our sinnes which should be temporall but yet equiualent to eternall paines for our sinnes being infinite and the punishment due vnto them being infinite because thereby wee had grieued an infinite God the person must needs be infinite which should pay the price of our sinnes Againe it was necessary that he should be man that he might suffer death because for sinne man had deserued death and necessary likewise that he should be God that he might be able to wrestle with the wrath of God which none else could doe but he that was God Needs therefore must he be both God and man And that he was so as by this place it is plaine Act. 20.28 so by that likewise in the Acts where the Apostle exhorteth the Elders of Ephesus to feed the Church of God which he saith the Apostle hath purchased with his owne bloud In which place he who hath purchased a Church vnto himselfe is both called God and also witnessed to be true man in that he purchased it with his owne bloud Here then we may see the hainousnesse and grieuousnesse of our sinnes and the greatnesse of our miserie by reason of them God blessed for euer must become man and God and man must be vnited into one Christ and being thus vnited must be humbled vnto the death and must pay the price of our sinnes by shedding of his owne bloud or else the euerlasting curse of Gods wrath abideth vpon vs and our portion is with the Deuill and his Angels in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for euer And yet what account or reckoning at all is made of sinne Surely so little that it may bee very well said vnto vs which Hosea the Prophet sometime said vnto the children of Israel Heare the word of the Lord Hos 4.1.1 ye children of Israel for the Lord hath a controuersie with the inhabitants of the land because there is no truth c. And yet what remorse of these things euen now when the whole land mourneth for them and groaneth vnder the burden of them It had not beene possible to satisfie Gods iustice for the least of our sinnes otherwise than by euerlasting death vnlesse God had become man and so humbled himselfe to suffer whatsoeuer was due for mans sinne and yet who is he that considereth in heart his sinnes to reforme the wickednesse of his way O consider this yee that forget God and grieue his holy spirit by your continuall committed sinnes lest he plucke you away and there be none to deliuer you Flie from sinne as from a Serpent Christ Iesus both God and man hath paid the price for our sinnes Let vs not therefore henceforth serue sinne in the lusts thereof but let vs glorifie God both in our bodies and in our spirits The second thing which I noted in Christ his humiliation was the manner of Christ his humiliation which I note 1. was voluntarie 2. that both his manhood and his Godhead was abased That his humiliation was voluntarie appeareth by that it is said that he humbled himselfe As then his first humiliation when being God he tooke on him mans nature was voluntarie so his second humiliation when being both God and man he subiected himselfe vnto the law and vnto death was voluntarie How then is it said that he was made obedient for so it is read in the originall He was made obedient not of any other but of himselfe neither forcedly but willingly he made himselfe obedient euen as willingly hee humbled himselfe Now for the other point that Christ was abased and humbled both according to his Godhead and his manhood 1. For his manhood it doth appeare in that it was made subiect to the infirmities of mans nature as also to the miseries and punishments which were due vnto man for sinne 2. for his Godhead it was
also abased not as it is considered in it selfe for so it is immutable but in respect of the vaile of the flesh vnder which it was so couered that it lay hid from the first moment of Christ his incarnation to the time of his resurrection without any great manifestation of his power and maiestie therein Did he then who was both God and man thus voluntarily humble himselfe in his Godhead and in his manhood did he so abase himselfe that he would be borne in a cratch conuerse with poore fishermen eat and drinke with Publicans and sinners be baptized of Iohn be tempted of the Deuil wash his Disciples feete and as a Lambe before the shearer so not open his mouth What should this teach vs my brethren Euen willingly to submit our selues one vnto another and all of vs to decke our selues inwardly with lowlinesse or minde If abundance of wisdome and knowledge if greatnes in honor and dignitie if soueraigne power and authoritie had beene sufficient motiues and inducements for our Sauiour Christ to stay himselfe from thus humbling himselfe his name was wonderful counseller the mighty God the euerlasting father the prince of peace to him did belong all honor and glory in him were hid all the treasures of wisdome knowledge of his fulnesse haue all we receiued grace for grace yet for all this he thus humbled himselfe willingly as yee haue heard Let not therefore the conceit of wisdome and knowledge in our selues let not the conceit of our wealth and riches of our preferments and honors of our birth and friends cause vs to swell with pride of our owne gifts or to lift vp our selues aboue our brethren to disdaine our inferiors let not these be any staies why ●ere should not be in vs the same mindes that was in that ●hrist Iesus Let euery man make himselfe equall vnto them of the ●est degree and let euery man esteeme other better then himselfe ●e God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble ●nd let this be noted touching Christ his humiliation It ●●●loweth And he became obedient or he was made obedient Whence I ●●te the second point which I proposed to be spoken of to ●t Christ his obedience in his life vnto the law to fulfill the ●v For if the question be asked when and how long was ●rist obedient The Apostle answereth vsque ad mortem vn●● the death not as if his death were no part of his obedi●ce but the Apostle plainely implieth thereby that as in the 〈◊〉 of his life he was obedient vnto his Fathers will to fulfill ●e law for vs so was he obedient in his death to redeeme vs ●m death hell and the Deuill Touching his obedience vn●● the law to fulfill the law the Apostle saith that when the ●nesse of time was come Gal. 4.4 God sent forth his Sonne made of a man and made vnder the law that is subiect vnto the law to fill the law And of himselfe thus our Sauiour himselfe ●aketh Mat. 5.17 thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the ●ophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them Christ ●n was made subiect to the law and came into the world to ●●fill the law And therefore he was circumcised the eight ●y he was represented to the Lord after the daies of Maries ●●rification and as the text saith Luc. 2.39 all things were done for him ●●ording to the law of the Lord. He gaue sight to the blinde ●●de the deafe to heare the dumme to speake the lame to goe c. Es 35.5 6. ●it was so written of him He preached the Gospell to the ●re bound vp the broken hearted 61.1 2. preached deliuerance to the ●tiues set at libertie them that were bruised preached the accep●le yeare of the Lord c as it was so written of him He was ●uted with the transgressors though he had done no wickednesse 53.12 ●ther any deceit was in his mouth he bare the sinnes of many and ●yed for the trespassers as it was so written of him In a word ●atsoeuer was written of him in the law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes all that he fulfilled And therefore when Iohn would haue put him backe from his baptisme he said vnto him Mat. 3.15 Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to first all righteousnesse as if he had said stay not this act of my baptizing for we must render perfect obedience vnto the Father in all things which he hath ordained Now will yee know the reason why Christ thus fulfilled the law as it was written 〈◊〉 him Gal. 4.5 The Apostle giueth it where he saith for this cause 〈◊〉 was made subiect vnto the law that he might redeeme them when were vnder the law Rom. 8.4 or as the same Apostle saith that the right●ousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in vs which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit .i. that his fulfilling of the law in o● flesh might be imputed for righteousnes vnto the children o● his kingdome as well as if they had fulfilled the law in the owne persons For when as the same Apostle there speake●● by reason of our sinnefull flesh we were not able to fulfill the law and therefore must needs perish by the law then God s●●ding his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinnefull flesh ma●● him obedient vnto the law that his fulfilling of the law migh● be imputed for righteousnes vnto vs which beleeue in Christ Iesus whom he hath sent and walke not after the flesh but are the spirit Againe the worke of our redemption consisted not onely in Christ his sufferings and death but in his ful●●ling of the law also For the sufferings and death of Chri●● considered apart from his legall obedience onely takes a● the guilt and punishment frees man from death and make him of a sinner to be no sinner but that he may be fully reconciled to God and accepted as righteous to life euerlasting this legall obedience of Christ must bee imputed vnto v● Witnes the Apostle Rom. 3.19 where he saith As by the disobedience of 〈◊〉 man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall 〈◊〉 be made righteous where speaking generally of obedience b● meaneth Christ his whole obedience which in all his life time he performed For as in the disobedience of Adam there 〈◊〉 transgressio legis vnde facti sumus peccatores sic in obedience Christi fuit impletio legis vnde sumus iusti the transgressne● the law whereby we are made sinners so in the obedience of Ch●● there was the fulfilling of the law whereby we are made iust And therefore that he might be made of God vnto vs perfect iustication and redemption besides that he suffered and died for ●s that he might free vs from sinne and death he also fulfilled ●he law for vs that so we might be made the righteousnesse
minde of Christ his resurrection so to awaken them ●rom the dead sleepe of sinne vnto holinesse of life More ●laine to this purpose is that of the same Apostle where he thus saith Rom. 6.4 We are buried with Christ by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father so we also should walke in newnesse of life In which words most plainely ye may see how the Apostle presseth the similitude of Christ his resurrection to proue that we ought to walke in newnesse of life But in this place most worthy our consideration it is how the Apostle maketh Baptisme a resemblance of Christ his death and resurrection and so by an argument from our Baptisme proueth that we ought to walke in newnesse of life By baptisme saith the Apostle we are buried with Christ into his death that at he died for sinne so we by the power of his death should die vnto sinne againe in baptisme we are baptized into Christ his resurrection that as he was raised againe from death vnto life so we should rise from sinne wherein we are dead vnto newnesse and holinesse of life Want yee then motiues to perswade you vnto newnesse of life Behold Christ is risen againe behold we are baptized into Christ his death and resurrection therefore we ought to walke in newnesse of life Art thou then a Christian and y●● wantest thou proofe that thou oughtest to walke in newnesse of life Looke backe into thy Baptisme Wast thou not there visibly receiued into the Church of Christ and communion of Gods saints Wast thou not there sacramentally adopted into the number of the sonnes of God Was not there thy name registred amongst the children of the most high Diddest thou not there receiue presse money to fight vnder the banner of Christ Iesus Diddest thou not there promise vnto the Lord thy God in the congregation of his Saints to forsake the world the flesh the Deuill Did not thy God there make a couenant with thee that he would be thy God and thou againe with him that thou wouldest be his childe Wast thou not there sacramentally borne againe of water and of the spirit as at the first thou wast naturally borne of flesh and of bloud In a word wast thou not baptized into Christ Iesus euen into Christ Iesus dead and risen againe from the dead Wast thou not baptized into Christ his death that thou mightest die vnto sinne Wast thou not baptize● into his resurrection that thou mightest liue vnto God Ye● men and brethren if you looke backe into your baptisme yee ●hall finde euery of these things true in euery one of you And ●herefore we bring litle children to be baptized that here they may receiue the seale of that great couenant whereby God is ●heir God and they his people that here they may be visibly ●eceiued into the Church adopted into the sonnes of God ●egistred amongst his children and receiue as it were presse-money to fight vnder the banner of Christ Iesus against the world the flesh and the Deuill that here they may be bapti●ed into Christ Iesus euen into the death and resurrection of Christ Iesus And want we yet a sufficient reason to perswade ●s vnto newnesse and holinesse of life Surely we want no ●ufficient reason to perswade vs but yet this reason is not suffi●ient to perswade vs and preuaile with vs. The Ministers of God may lift vp their voices and cry daily Eph. 5.14 Awake thou that ●eepest and stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee life They may cry till their hearts bleede within their bodies nay ●hey may cry till the breath goe out of their bodies Know yee ●ot that all yee that are baptized are baptized into Christ his death and into Christ his resurrection that yee might die vnto sinne ●nd liue vnto God But who doth heare Whose hearts are ●o pricked that they cry Men and brethren what shall we doe Sound a trumpet in a dead mans eares he moues not he ●eares not And surely so dead are we in our sinnes that how ●owde and often soeuer the trumpet of Gods voice sound vnto vs a retrait from sinne and wickednes vnto newnesse and ●olinesse of life yet we heare it not we are not at all moued ●herewith O my brethren the very meditation of our bap●isme with our selues and the seeing of the same administred vnto others should sufficiently preach vnto vs mortification ●rom dead workes and sanctification in holinesse of life ●specially baptisme being so notable a resemblance of Christ ●is death and resurrection as that it doth most liuely repre●ent vnto vs 1. our remission of sins by the death of Christ ●n that our soules are so clensed by the spirit from the filthines ●f sinne euen as the filth of the bodie is washed with water ● our regeneration and new birth by the power of his resur●ection in that after the washing by the spirit wee rise againe cleansed by the same spirit Let these things men and brethren sinke deepe into your soules Let the meditation of your baptisme call to your remembrance the death and resurrection of Christ and let all these stirre you vp vnto ne●nesse and holinesse of life that as he was exalted rising from death vnto life so yee may be exalted rising out of your s●●● to liue in righteousnes and true holinesse The second thing which Christ his resurrection may teach vs is that our bodies also howsoeuer they be turned into du●● torne of beasts or deuoured of fishes yet shall rise againe at that day For his resurrection is a most certaine and sure pledge of our resurrection and therefore is he called the first fruits of them that sleepe because as in the first fruits which were offered by the law 1 Co. 15.20 all the rest of the corne was sanctified so in Christ his resurrection we haue a most sure pledge of our resurrection But yet this withall thou must note that vnlesse thou haue part in the first resurrection thou shalt neuer haue part in the second .i. vnlesse thou first in this life rise from sinne in newnesse of life thou shalt neuer rise againe after this life into glory but onely vnto euerlasting condemnation which is called the second death Vnto you therefore I say as Paul spake to the Romanes If the spirit of Christ that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you Rom. 8.11 then he that raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies And by this yet know that the spirit of Christ dwelleth in you if yee mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the spirit and walke after the spirit i● newnesse and holinesse of life O striue to haue your second resurrection into glory assured vnto you by your first resurrection in newnesse of life Blessed and holy is he that hath p●● in the first resurrection Apec 20.6 for on such the second death hath no
according to both According to his godhead not as it is considered in it selfe but in as much as his godhead which fro● his birth vnto his death did little shew it selfe after his resurrection was made manifest in his manhood For as the Apostle saith Rom. 1.4 He was declared mightily to be the sonne of God by the resurrection from the dead Euen by the resurrection and after his resurrection from the dead he which was thought only to be man was most plainely manifested likewise to be God Now as touching his manhood he was therein exalted vnto highest maiestie in the heauenly places not onely shaking off all infirmities of mans nature but also being beautified and adorned with all qualities of glory both in his soule and in his body yet so that still he reteineth the properties of a true body For euen as he was man hee was set at the right hand of the father to rule and reigne ouer all till all his enemies be● destroyed and put vnder his feete To knit vp all in a word Christ God and man after his resurrection was crowned with glory and honour euen such as plainely shewed him to bee God and was set on the throne of God there to rule and reigne as soueraigne Lord and King till hee come in the clowdes to iudge both quicke and dead Here then is both matter of comfort and consolation vnto the godly and likewise of feare and astonishment vnto the wicked and vngodly For therefore is he ascended into heauen euen to prepare a place for vs that where hee is there may we be also Ioh. 14.2 for so himselfe speaketh And therefore is he exalted farre aboue all men and Angels as in all fulnesse of gifts and graces so in glory and maiesty that he may succour vs in all our miseries and helpe vs in all dangers Whatsoeuer infirmities we haue whatsoeuer persecutions wee suffer whatsoeuer crosses we endure wee neede not be dismaide or troubled For Christ Iesus who bore our infirmities whom the high Priests Scribes and Pharisies and all the Iewes persecuted vnto the death who endured the crosse and despised the shame is exalted vnto the highest glory for vs and both 〈◊〉 able to succour vs and will not suffer vs to perish If Christ ●ad not ouercome death and sinne and the world and the Deuill nay if he had not as a most triumphant King led cap●●uitie captiue and so crushed them that though they would ●et they can not hurt vs nay if hee did not now as Lord and ●ing so bridle their rage that they cannot preuaile against vs ●hen might we well feare death and sinne and the world and ●he Deuill But now that he hath ouercome all these and ●uleth all things henceforth with his mightie power so that ●ne haire of our heads cannot fall away without his heauenly ●ill and nothing can touch vs but as hee giueth leaue what ●re of death what danger of sinne what care of the world ●hat care of the Deuill Let death draw out his sharp arrowes ●gainst vs let sinne assault vs and seeke to tyrannize ouer vs ●t the world hate vs and band themselues against vs let the ●euill rage and lay what battery he can against vs our King ●nd our God which dwelleth in heauen he laugheth them to ●orne and our Lord hath them in derision Hee saith vnto ●em touch not my chosen and doe my children no harme Hee ●tteth them their bounds which they cannot passe and hee ●miteth their power euen as it best pleaseth him And there●●re death shall not deadly wound vs but onely transport vs ●nto a life that lasteth euer sinne shall not tempt vs aboue ●at we be able but together with the tentation we shall haue ●e issue that we may be able to beare it the world and wick●● instruments of Sathan shal either not at all preuaile against ● or no farther then shall be for Gods glory and our good ●either shall the Deuill rage he neuer so horribly be able to ●rre euer a whit farther then the linkes of his chaine shall be ●osed vnto him When Salomon was annointed King ouer ●rael in stead of Dauid his father 1 King 1.40 it is said that all the people came ●ter him that they piped with pipes and reioyced with great ioy so ●at the earth rang with the sound of them Shall the people of ●rael thus reioyce the crowning of Salomon and shall not ●e much more reioyce when as Christ Iesus is placed in hea●en at the right hand of his Father and hath the euerlasting ●epter of his kingdome put into his hand Shall not our soules be filled with ioy and gladnesse for the crowne of his glory and honour which is the prince of our peace and the strong rocke of our saluation Surely the Apostle so reioyced in this crowne of his glory that he bidde defiance vnto condemnation and whatsoeuer accusation could bee laid against him who shall lay any thing saith he vnto the charge of God chosen Rom. 8.33 it is God that iustifieth Who shall condemne it is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God 34. and maketh request for vs c. Where ye se● plainely how the Apostle vpon the ground of Christ hi● death or rather vpon the ground of that crowne of glorie whereunto Christ was exalted after his resurrection from the dead henceforth feareth neither accusation nor condemnation nor whatsoeuer can be laid vnto his charge And as the Apostle doth so all the children of Christ his kingdome may bidde defiance vnto accusation and condemnation and whatsoeuer can be laide vnto theire charge now that Christ sitteth at the right hand of God to make intercession for vs. The Lord is King the earth may be glad thereof hee i● great in Sion and high aboue all people Let the heauens reioyce and let the earth be glad let the sea roare and all that therein is Psal 91.1.2.3 c. Thou that dwellest vnder the defence of the most high and abidest vnder the shaddow of the almightie say vnto the Lord c. Now as this soueraigntie of power and excellency of dignitie whereunto Christ was exalted after his resurrection may be matter of comfort and consolation vnto the godly so may it be matter of feare and astonishment vnto the wicked and vngodly Psal 2.9 For he shall bruise his enemies with a rodde of iron and breake them in pieces like a potters vessell Hee shall euen deale with them as Ioshua dealt with the fiue Kings that were hidde in the caue he shall tread them vnder feete and make a slaughter not so much of their bodies as of their soules For as his exaltation into that glory is for the good of his Church and faithfull people so is it for the confusion and vtter destruction of his enemies For it is a righteous thing with him to recompence tribulation to them which
it is that all creatures are not subiect vnto Christ and worship him seeing God hath giuen him such a ●ame euen such honour and glory aboue all creatures that all ●reatures should bow at his name and be subiect vnto him answer first that all creatures ought to bow at his name and ● be subiect vnto him euen all the powers of darknesse and ●l such their slaues as haue sold themselues to worke wicked●esse in this life ought to bow vnto him and to worship him ●or that Law which afterwards was giuen by Moses vnto man ● keepe Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serue him Deut. 6.13 was ●o doubt in the beginning a Law both to men and Angels ●d still continues to be a Law whereby not men alone but ●en and Angels and infernall spirits are bound to feare and ●rue him to worship and obey him euen with holy worship ●nd therefore is the iudgement and condemnation of all ●em most iust who doe not obey him that they might bee ●ued Secondly vnto the question I answer that all crea●res now are subiect vnto him so that vnto whom hee saith ●oe he goeth and vnto whom he saith Come he commeth ●d otherwise they stirre not nor cannot The Deuill him●fe toucheth not nor can touch either Iob his substance Iob 1.12.2.6 or ●s children or himselfe till hee giue leaue and then no fur●er than he giueth leaue Nay he cannot enter into the heard ●swine till he giue leaue Mar. 5.13 Esa 7.18.19 Hee hisseth for the flie that is at the ●ermost parts of the flouds of Aegypt and for the Bee which ●n the land of Ashur as the Prophet speaketh and then they ●me and light in all the desolate valleyes and in the holes the rockes and vpon all thornie places and vpon all bushie ●ces that is He bringeth the Egyptians and the Assyrians ●on the land of Iudah and they come and they lay the land ●ste without an inhabitant And euery enemy that inuadeth ●y land he is but the rodde of the Lord his wrath and the ●ffe of his indignation neither can this rodde strike but ●ere and as he will The famine which drieth the bones and fainteth the soule the pestilence that walketh in the darknesse and destroieth at the noone day the sword that deuoureth one as well as another and all alike these messengers of his wrath are sent by him for our sinnes and they come when he saith vnto them goe they goe and when hee calleth them backe they returne The like may be said euen of since and of death Sinne raigneth not nor cannot but in the children of disobedience Death woundeth not deadly nor cannot but only the vessels of wrath and eternall destruction And of all things in generall this is true that all things are so subiect vnto Christ Apoc. 7.3 that if he say Hurt not the sea nor the eart● nor the trees none can hurt the earth or the sea or the trees and if hee say to the seuen Angels 16.1.2 Goe your wayes and poure out the seuen vials of the wrath of God vpon the earth then they powre them out vpon the earth That is if he say touch not my children then nothing can harme them and if hee say let the vngodly of the earth come to an end then they are as dust which the winde scattereth from the face of the earth As he saith so is it done and all things are thus subiect vnto hi● subiect I say vnto him not by any voluntary subiection whereby they worship and honour him and submit themselues vnto him but subiect vnto him so that though they would yet they cannot but doe his will howsoeuer they do● it not to doe his will but only to worke their owne malice Lastly vnto the question I answer that in the last and grea● day when Christ shall descend from heauen with a shou●e and with the voice of the Archangell and with the trump● of God when the heauens shall passe away with a noise and the el●ments shall melt with heat and the earth with the workes that 〈◊〉 therein shall be burnt vp then shall euery knee bow vnto him then shall all creatures be subiect vnto him The Sea sh●●● giue vp her dead which were in her and death and graue sh●● deliuer vp the dead which were in them all nations shall be gathered together and all shall appeare before the iudgement se●ter Christ to receiue according to that they haue done whether it be good or euill Then the Kings of the earth which made fle●● their arme then the rich and couetous men of the work which made the wedge of gold their God then the whoremongers murtherers idolaters sorcerers blasphemers and liers then those churlish Nabals and vnmercifull men which haue not fed nor clothed nor visited nor lodged Christ in his poore members then those that rebelliously haue murmured against God for pouertie sicknes or what crosse else soeuer shall say to the hills couer vs and to the rocks fall vpon vs and to the rocks fall vpon vs and hide vs from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe But it shall be to no purpose for all shall stand before him and fall downe before him The redeemed of the Lord shall fall downe before him and worship him and willingly subiect themselues vnto him as vnto their Lord and their God The wicked and Sathan himselfe shall fall downe before him and be forced to be subiect vnder his feete and to yeeld to that last sentence as most iust Depart frō me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the Deuill and his Angels And then when all things are put downe vnder his feete he shall deliuer vp the kingdome to God euen the Father that God may be all in all Vnto the question then how it is that all creatures are not subiect vnto Christ seeing God hath giuen him such a name and crowned him with such honor and glory that all creatures should bowe vnto him and be subiect vnto him The answer is 1. that all creatures euen all absolutely ought to bowe at his name and to be subiect vnto him 2. That euen the wicked and vngodly of the earth and all the powers of darknes are now so subiect vnto him that though they would yet they can doe nothing but what his will is 3. That in the last and great day all creatures euen all absolutely shall be subiect vnto him holy men and Angels willingly subiecting themselues vnto him and worshipping him and all the rest though vnwillingly subiecting themselues vnto him and to their finall iudgement as iust in it selfe vnto them and from a most iust God By the first answer we are instructed in a necessarie dutie which is that we ought to be subiect vnto Christ in obedience vnto his heauenly will and to worship him with all holy worship walking in his waies and keeping his commandements
possession thereof Of the like assurance of his saluation our Apostle protesteth saying I 〈◊〉 perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angells c. Whe● the Apostle doth not onely speake of a probable perswasion but of such a sure confidence as whereby else where he saith from henceforth there is laid vp for me a crowne of righteousnes c. 2 Tim. 4.8 Neither groundeth he this perswasion vpon any speciall re●●lation but vpon that ground which is common to him 〈◊〉 all the faithfull euen the loue of God in Christ Iesus No● as Iob and Paul not to instance in any others assured themselues of their saluation so we by the power of the same spir●● and vpon the same ground of the loue of God in Christ Iesus may and ought to assure our selues of our saluation True● is that if our saluation and the certainty thereof stood any way in our selues or depended vpon our workes wee might indeed iustly doubt of our saluation as knowing our selues by reason of our sinnes and iniquities to haue deserued death and damnation But the ground and the foundation of the certainty of our hope is the sure promises of God in Christ Iesus who hath promised in his word eternall life to all th●● beleeue We looke not vpon our selues or our owne works or our owne worthines for then must we needs doubt b● we looke vpon him that hath promised euen as Abraham did whose faith we are to follow of whom it is said that her neither did consider his owne body which was now dead ●eing almost an hundreth yeares old neither the deadnesse of ●●raes wombe Rom. 4.19.20.21 neither did he doubt of the promise through 〈◊〉 beliefe where note how doubting is tearmed vnbeliefe ●●t was strengthened in the faith and gaue glory to God be ●●●g fully assured that he which had promised was also able to ●e it He then being faithfull which hath promised saluati●n to them that belieue in his name we are sure to be saued ●ut what neede we to looke farther for this point then into 〈◊〉 every nature of faith which the Apostles haue defined to ●e such a full assurance that if ye take away assurance ye take way faith For what else doth that meane that the Apostle ●●metimes calleth faith the ground of things which are hoped for Heb. 11.1 Coloss 2.5 ●●d the euidence of things that are not seene sometimes a stedfast ●●th sometimes a full assurance Rom. 4.21 Iam. 1.6 sometimes an assurance without ●uering and sometimes the anchor of the soule both sure and ●●●dfast Let vs draw neere saith the Apostle with a true heart assurance of faith sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience Heb. 6.19.10.22.23 ●d washed in our bodies with pure water Let vs keepe the profes●● of our hope without wauering for he is faithfull that promised ●oth the Apostle exhort vs vnto an assurance of faith vnto hope without wauering resting vpon his promises that is ●●thfull and true Surely if we ought thus to belieue if wee ●●ght thus to hope and that vpon this ground that hee is ●●thfull that hath promised then may we and ought to assure ●●r selues of our saluation Whether then wee looke vpon ●e examples of holy men in the Scriptures or vpon the sure ●omises of God in Christ Iesus made in the Scripture or vp●● the nature of faith in the writings of the Apostle still we ●ll finde that we ought not to doubt but certainely to assure ●●r selues of our saluation through a sure and stedfast faith in ●hrist Iesus who hath promised life and saluation to all them at beleeue in his name This then may serue for the confutation of that vncom●●rtable doctrine of the Papists where they teach that with●●t speciall reuelation no man ought or can assure himselfe 〈◊〉 faith of his saluation The erroneousnesse of which do●trine though it hath beene fully manifested by that which already hath beene said for confirmation of the plaine opposite doctrine which we teach yet for a further clearing of the truth in this point I beseech you in a few words to cons●●● how weake proofes they bring for what they teach Why then I demand may no man without speciall re●●lation assure himselfe by faith of his saluation Because 〈◊〉 man can say my heart it cleane Pro. 20.9 I am pure from sinne Men 〈◊〉 be cleane from sinne saith Bellarmine but no man saith he 〈◊〉 so Lib. 3. de Iustif c. 4. because they that are cleaue cannot certainly know that they o● cleane therefore no man without speciall reuelation may assure himselfe by faith of his saluation But see the weaknes of this pro●●● which 1. is grounded vpon a corrupt reading as the te●● the originall sheweth whence the words are thus to be read who can say I haue made my heart cleane and are spoken to 〈◊〉 presse the insolencie of such as thinke to be iustified by th●● owne strength And 2. leaneth vpon a point of mans p●●● from sinne in this point which plainely contradicteth the holy Ghost both in that text and throughout the whole Scripture which hath concluded all vnder sinne And 3. con●●deth without promises Gal. 3.22 inasmuch as nothing thence can be concluded against assurance by faith of iustification or sal●●tion For though no man can say that he hath made his be●● cleane that he is pure from sinne in himselfe or by himselfe yet inasmuch as the holy Ghost witnesseth that by faith 〈◊〉 purifieth our hearts Act. 15.9 1 Ioh. 1.7 and that the bloud of Iesus Christ clenseth 〈◊〉 from all sinne in him and by him through faith in his blo●● we may assure our selues of our iustification and saluation Eccles 9.1 Yea but the Preacher saying that a man speaking saith Belarmine of the iust and wise knoweth not whether he be worthy of loue or hatred but all things are kept vncertaine for the time ● come sheweth thereby that not the iust or wise and so not the faithfull can assure themselues of their iustification or saluation But see the weaknesse of this proofe also which 1. as the forme● is grounded vpon a corrupt translation as the originall 〈◊〉 sheweth where the reading is much different from the vulgar and so very obscure both there and in the Greeke that it i● an vnfit place for the proofe of such a point And 2. fail●● in vnderstanding that of the iust and wise only which is spoken of all both iust and wicked as the next verse where the ●eacher expoundeth himselfe sheweth And 3. prooueth ●ely that no man by outward things in this life knoweth ●hether he be loued or hated of God For so the words are be read that no man knoweth loue or hatred i. whether hee loued or hated of God by all that that is before them By the outward things which happen vnto them Which ●peareth to be most true in that neither the iust onely pros●●er nor the wicked onely
the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 11.32 that being chastened of the Lord they may not be condemned with the world For such is the louing mercy of the Lord towards his children that when they haue either omitted some such dutie as they ought to haue performed or committed some such sinne as they ought not to haue done he as a louing father towards his tender childe whom hee dearely loueth correcteth and chastiseth them with the rodde of sicknesse or weaknesse or some such like rodde that so they may see their owne error and be healed For this cause saith the Apostle many are weake and sicke among you 30. and many sleepe For this cause for what cause euen for not discerning the Lord his body in comming vnto the communion of the body and bloud of Christ In which place the Apostle plainly sheweth that therefore many of Gods children are weake and sicke and die euen because they doe not duely and diligently examine themselues before they come vnto the celebration of the Lord his supper But saith hee when wee are iudged and punished wee are chastened of the Lord as children of their father that we should not be condemned with the world euen with the wicked men of the world whose portion is in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for euer Sometimes then Gods children are sicke that so their error or their negligence or their wickednesse may be reformed and they brought into the right way wherein they should walke Another reason is that so they may be staied from such inordinate waies as wherunto naturally they are bent and wherein sometimes they would walke if they were not holden backe as with a bridle For whose delight in the waies of the Lord is so entire and so altogether vncorrupt before him That hee maketh as he should do his law his whole delight and his councellour Nay whose pathes are so straight that hee hath not an ouerweening delight in some crooked by-pathes or whose will and desire and affections are so sanctified that they are not often enclined and sometimes caried as it were with a maine streame vnto that which is euill And therefore the Lord only wise knowing best what is best for his children sometimes visiteth them with sickenesse that so being exercised with his rodde they may not runne into such danger of body and soule as otherwise they would A third reason why the children of God are sicke sometimes is that thereby he may make triall of their faith and of their patience to see whether they can be conrent as to receiue health so to receiue sicknes of the Lord and whether as in health so in sicknesse they will put their trust in the Lord and submit themselues vnto his will For both health and sicknesse they are of the Lord and both in health and in sicknesse wee should put our trust in the Lord and submit our selues vnto his will Yet so choise wee are that we can be content to receiue health from the Lord but hardly to receiue sicknesse from the Lord and so weake wee are euen the best of vs that howsoeuer wee doe in health yet in sicknesse we can hardly submit our selues vnto God his will and oftentimes more put our trust in Phisitions then in the Lord 2 Cron. 16. as we read that that good King of Iudah Asa did therein declining from that right path wherein he ought to haue walked Sometimes then as I say Gods children are sicke that the Lord their God may so trie whether they will still cleaue fast vnto him and patiently submit themselues vnto his will A fourth reason why the Lo●d sometimes visiteth his children with sicknesse is that they also may haue a farther triall of the mercifull goodnesse of the Lord towards them For albeit his children are neuer without great experiences of his mercifull goodnesse towards them yet wherein haue they greater experience thereof and wherein their soule more to reioyce then that in the time of their sicknesse he assisteth them with the comfort of his holy spirit and giueth them strength and patience to endure what he laieth vpon them and suffereth not their faith or their hope to faile but so prepareth them vnto him that come death come life they can willingly embrace either because they know that come death come life they are the Lords An especiall great goodnesse of the Lord towards his children Whereof they haue such triall in time of their sicknesse as that thereby not themselues alone but such as are about them are and may bee greatly comforted And sometimes no doubt they are sicke that seeing the goodnesse of the Lord towards them in time of their sicknes they may the rather praise the Lord for his goodnesse and studie to glorifie his name in the time of their health Not to trouble you with moe reasons hereof the last reason why the Lord visiteth his children with sicknesse is to put them in minde both of that sinne which dwelleth in them and also of their mortalitie For sicknesse is both the fruite of sinne and also the Harbinger of death For howsoeuer sinne be not the only cause wherefore sicknesse commeth yet is it alwaies a cause wherefore it is sent insomuch that we see when our Sauiour healed some that were sicke hee would say sometimes vnto them some be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Math. 9 2. In which speach he gaue them this note that sinne was the principall cause of their sicknesse and sometimes hee would say vnto them Behold thou art made whole sinne no more least a worse thing come vnto thee wherein in effect he told them that their sicknesse was a chasticement for their sinne And againe howsoeuer death doth not alwaies follow sicknes yet ought sicknesse alwaies to put vs in minde of our mortality Well it may be that those our houses of clay which in this or that sicknesse threaten to fall may for a time bee patched vp againe yet they which threaten now to fall at length shall fall and downe to the ground they shall be brought For as the Psal mist speaketh who liueth that shall not see death Psa 89 47. or who shall bee able to deliuer himselfe from the hand of the graue Of the dust of the earth we are and to earth we shall returne and so many sicknesses as we are visited withall should be vnto vs as so many remembrances both of that sinne which cleaueth so fast vnto vs and likewise of death which is the fruit thereof Thus then ye see the reasons why the Lord lieth this rodde of sicknesse vpon his owne children namely as a mercifull and louing father to reforme whatsoeuer error negligence or other fault is in them to keepe them backe as with a bridle from inordinate walking to make triall of their faith and patience to giue them triall of his mercifull goodnesse towards them and to put them in minde of sinne dwelling in them
But we see he vsed no such speech but as it pleased the Lord to vse these meanes in restoring him to health so he with all thankfulnes vsed the meanes and was restored vnto health Let vs therefore know that it is the Lord onely that deliuereth from death and restoreth vnto life and health and that this he doth sometimes without meanes and most commonly by meanes Let vs therefore in the bed of our sicknesse call vpon the Lord and let vs not neglect the meanes which he hath ordeined for the recouerie of our health Let vs onely trust in the Lord and let vs know that if the meanes be helpfull vnto vs it is because of the Lord his blessing vpon them He blesseth the meanes and therefore we are healed by the meanes so that he healeth and therefore we are healed Now what is the cause wherefore the Lord hauing visited vs with sicknesse doth againe raise vs from the bed of our sicknesse and restore vs vnto health This is not for any thing in our selues but for his owne mercies sake as the Apostle plainely sheweth when he saith but God had mercy on him for it is as if he had said but God for his mercies sake restored him vnto health Whence I gather this note that restoring vnto health is a mercy of the Lord. Which is farther proued vnto vs by that song or psalme of thanksgiuing which Ezechias made after his restoring vnto health where he saith Esay 38.17 Behold for felicitie I had bitter griefe but it was thy pleasure to deliuer my soule from the pit of corruption It was thy pleasure or it was thy loue to deliuer my soule c where that is ascribed to Gods loue whence his mercy floweth which in our Apostle is ascribed vnto Gods mercy So that restoring vnto health is a louing mercy of the Lord. What shall we say then When wicked and vngodly men are restored vnto health is this a louing mercy of the Lord towards them Yes surely ●or albeit so their sinne and consequently their iudgement be increased yet this not comming from this mercy of lengthning their daies but from their owne corrupt nature we are to account that health and life and wealth and whatsoeuer else they haue are temporall mercies of the Lord vpon them Howbeit the mercies of the Lord in restoring his children vnto health and in restoring the wicked vnto health are much different His mercy wherein he restoreth the wicked vnto health is a generall mercy whereby he taketh pitie vpon all men proceeding from such a loue as whereby he maketh his sunne to arise on the euill and the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust But his mercy wherein he restoreth his children vnto health is a speciall mercy whereby he taketh pitie vpon his children proceeding from that loue wherewithall he loueth vs in Christ Iesus by that the wicked are only restored vnto bodily health by this the children of God are so restored vnto bodily health that farther in soule they are more quickned then before by that the iudgement of the wicked is increased for that they abuse their health whereunto in mercy they are restored vnto the dishonor of God by this Gods name is more glorified in his children for that they vse their health whereunto in mercy they are restored to the praise of the glory of Gods grace In a word by that the wicked are made more inexcusable by this the children of God are made more fruitfull in good works and more assured of Gods loue Albeit then it be a mercy of the Lord both to the godly and likewise to the vngodly that they are restored vnto health for that the Lord might in iustice haue suffered his rod to lie longer vpon them if he had dealt with them in weight and measure yet is it such a speciall mercy proceeding from such a speciall loue which hee vouchsafeth vnto his children in restoring them to health as that the wicked and vngodly haue no part or portion at all therein Is it then such a speciall mercy vnto Gods children that they are restored vnto health Were not death rather a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto them or had not death then beene a speciall mercy unto Epaphroditus Surely it cannot be denied but that it is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children if when he hath exercised them with his rod and prepared them by sicknesse vnto himselfe he take them by death out of the miseries of this life and translate them into the kingdome of his Sonne Ap. 14.13 For so saith the Spirit Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord and why for they rest from their labours and their works follow them They rest from their labors What is that that is by death they are deliuered and freed from such griefes and sorowes and labours and troubles and reuilings and persecutions and hatreds and other manifold calamities wherevnto this life is subiect yea from that grieuious yoke and heauie bondage of sinne which made the Apostle to crie Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death Againe their works followe them What is that That is their good deeds which they did in the the loue of God and in the loue of his truth after death acompanie them and they receiue that crowne of glory which the Lord in mercie hath promised to all them that loue and feare him walke in his waies So that whether we respect the end of wretched miseries or the perfect fruition of euerlasting happinesse which the children of God haue by death it cannot be denied but death is an especiall mercy of the Lord vnto them And in these respects death then had been a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto Epaphroditus and in these respects I doubt not it was that Paul desired in the former chapter to be dissolued and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 euen that hee might bee freed from the miseries of this life and that hee might bee ioyned with his head Christ Iesus to raigne with him in his kingdome for euer in the time appointed of the Lord. But as death so likewise life and restoring vnto health is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children because so they are made farther instruments of his glory who hath restored them vnto health For being restored vnto health both they consider the mercifull goodnes towards them and so breake out into his praises who hath done great things for them Esay 38.18 whereas the graue cannot confesse the Lord neither death can praise him but the liuing the liuing as saith Ezechias they confesse him and sing praises vnto his name againe being restored vnto health they consider that the Lord hath reserued them for his farther glory to be manifested in them or by them and therefore their studie and care is so to lead their liues as that Gods name may be glorified in
wee long not for his presence if he be absent generally wee sorow not for his sicknesse if he be sicke generally wee take no such pleasure either in his presence or in his life Nay rather if he be absent we will wish him farre enough and to tarie long enough and if he be sicke vnto death wee will reioyce and be glad at his death So farre short of these Philippians that were but newly planted in the Church and had but lately embraced the truth of Christ Iesus are wee who haue long enioyed the ministerie of the word and the bright light of the holy word of truth For so they accounted that the Apostle could not haue giuen a greater token of loue of them then to send their minister backe againe vnto them and it was the greatest pleasure and ioy of heart that might be vnto them to see their minister againe thorowly well and in good health And surely if we tooke that ioy and comfort in the word that we ought we would take more ioy and comfort in the Ministers of the word then we doe But how the Ministers of the word are to be accounted of we shall see in the handling of the next verse that followeth It now followeth And I might be the lesse sorowfull In these words the Apostle setteth downe a third cause or reason why hee sent their Minister vnto them with such diligence and speede And this cause respected himselfe For it was that hee might be the lesse sorowfull 1. That howsoeuer his sorowes after this should be some for some other things yet they might bee the ●esse when their ioyes were fulfilled by their Ministers presence and when their Minister should againe bee amongst them to labour amongst them In that then that the Apostle saith not and that I might be without sorow but onely and that I might be the lesse sorowfull Hence I gather this obseruation that the children of God are not much to hope nor greatly to seeke in this life to be quit and ridde of all sorow but it is enough for them if their sorowes be abated and if they haue lesse sorow then they deserue and then they are enabled to beare Ioh. 16.33 In the world saith our Sauiour ye shall haue affliction euen many-causes of sorow and griefe and vexation of spirit For so it is ordained that through many afflictions we should enter into the kingdome of God Act. 14.22 a● the Apostle saith And therefore our Sauiour Christ saith againe if any man will come after me let him denie himselfe Luc. 9.23 and take vp his crosse daily and follow mee Daily saith he For as one day followeth an other so one crosse followeth in the necke of an other Wee looke and hope for an holy citie Apoc. 21.4 the new Ierusalem where God shall wipe all teares from our eyes and where there shall be no more death neither sorow neither crying neither any more paine But that citie is not here on earth where we be but Pilgrimes it is in our Coun●rey in heauen where we shall haue an abiding citie where we shall be euer with the Lord. Nay if it were here on earth we would not long for that in heauen Let vs not therefore looke in this life to be without all trouble or sorow or griefe Let vs rather consider how in this life our whole life is stained with many sinnes and how for our sinnes wee haue deserued not only death euerlasting after this life but troubles also and sorowes vnsupportable in this life And then when we see that we are not onely freed from that death by the death of Iesus Christ and by saith in his name but that our sorowes in this life are much lesse then we deserue let vs reioyce in the Lord and comfort our selues in his mercies that our troubles and sorowes are nothing in comparison of that wee haue deserued And againe let vs consider that howsoeuer our troubles and sorowes and griefes be many yet so onely they presse vs as that we are able to say with the Apostle 2 Cor. 4 8.9 We are affected on euerie side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie but not ouercome of pouertie we are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but wee perish not c. And then when we see that our troubles and sorowes and griefes are no more but such as the Lord hath enabled vs to beare let vs reioyce in the Lord and comfort ourselues in his mercies towards vs who doth not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that wee be able but giueth the issue together with the tentation that we may be able to beare it For surely these are great mercies of the Lord towards vs that our sorowes are so lessened and abated that they are neither such as we haue deserued neither such but that wee are able to beare them by the power of him who doth strengthen vs hereunto And therefore though in this life we be not quite free from all troubles and sorowes yet let vs account this a great mercie of the Lord vnto vs that wee are lesse sorowfull that our sorowes are lesse then the desert of our sins and lesse then he enableth vs to beare But how was it that the Apostle should be lesse sorowfull by sending their Minister Epaphroditus vnto them because by his presence they should haue occasion to reioyce For as by their heauinesse for their Minister his sorow was encreased so againe by their reioycing for their Minister his sorow would be abated Here then we may obserue another notable qualitie of Christian loue and friendshippe Rom. 12.15 which is to weepe with them that weepe and to reioyce with them that reioyce A rule which the Apostle giueth all Christians to obserue keep from which who so declineth may seem therin to crosse euen nature it selfe For naturally we see that the members of our body are so affected one towards an other as that if one member suffer all suffer with it and if one be had in honour 1 Cor. 12.26 all the members reioyce with it How much more should it be so in the mysticall body of Christ Iesus that they who are ioyned together in one faith and in one baptisme should so likewise be ioyned together in loue and affection one towards an other that the sorow of one should be the sorow of an other and the ioy of one should be the ioy of another But I haue had occasion heretofore to obserue this note vnto you and therewithall the great want of this Christian loue in vs one towards another for that we are so farre from this duty as that we weepe and are sorie one at the prosperitie of another and againe laugh and reioyce one at the calamity of another If either by that or this instruction ye be taught in this dutie then practise it and if either by that or this admonition ye see your want in the performance of
businesse giues them best leaue Businesse belike they haue of greater importance then this and which they are more to regard then the saluation of their soules Others they turne their backs vpon the Preacher and stay they cannot or they will not I cannot but speake of it What an vnseemely thing was it when the last Lords day after the celebration of that holy sacrament of Baptisme which seeing the opportunitie was giuen might well haue beene celebrated after the Sermon but what an vnseemely thing I say was it to see so many then turne their backs and goe their waies some vpon that occasion and others therein keeping their wonted manner But take heede men and brethren how yee despise the word and turne your backs vpon it For howsoeuer now yee turne your backs vpon it Joh. 12.48 yet shall it iudge you in the last day If there be a fault in any of you studie to amend it and let the word of Christ dwell in you all plenteously and in all wisdome Rom. 1.16 For it is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth Receiue the Ministers of Christ in the Lord and harken vnto their message for the Lord. For though they be men that come vnto you yet are they men sent from the Lord and their words are to be heard not as the word of man but as it is indeede as the word of God Happy are yee if yee heare these things and meditate thereupon with fruit vnto your soules Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it LECTVRE XLVII PHILIP 2. Verse 29. Receiue him therefore in the Lord with all gladnes and make much of such 30. Because that for the worke of Christ he was c. WIth all gladnesse This is the second manner of entertainment that the Apostle would haue giuen vnto Epaphroditus their Minister at his returne vnto them He would haue them to receiue him in the Lord and to receiue him with all gladnes that is with such gladnes as that both all should reioyce at his comming and that with an exceeding great ioy so that he would haue both their ioy to be vniuersall that all should reioyce for him as he had longed for them all and againe no ordinarie ioy but an exceeding great ioy as the same words are very well translated Iam. 1.2 What such ioy so vniuersall ioy so exceeding great ioy for their Ministers returning home in health vnto them Was Epaphroditus their Minister Was their Minister thus to be receiued Indeede this would make a man to doubt as the world goes now whether Epaphroditus were their Minister Enough for a noble man a great man one of the Peeres o● the Realme thus to be receiued A Minister thus to be receiued it is a scorne a meere iest Well let it seeme vnto th● world as it will a scorne and a iest the Apostle here we see would haue them thus to receiue their Minister and the Ministers of the Gospell are thus to be receiued euen with a● gladnesse so that all their people should reioyce and tha● with exceeding great ioy for them Esay 52.7 O how beautifull vpon the mountaines are the feete of him that declareth and publisheth peace saith the Prophet that declareth good tidings and publisheth saluation saying vnto Zion thy God reigneth Now of whom speaketh the Prophet this The Apostle plainely applieth this vnto the Ministers of the Gospell of Iesus Christ Ro. 10.15 They are they that declare and publish our peace and our reconciliation with God the Father by Iesus Christ his Sonne they are they that declare the good tidings of the full and free remission of our sinnes by the death and passion of Iesus Christ they are they that publish saluation vnto euery one that calleth vpon the name of the Lord departeth from iniquitie How beautifull then should their feete be vnto vs When they come vnto vs or when the Lord rather sendeth them vnto vs with what gladnesse should wee receiue them Surely I will tell you Consider that place yet a litle further The Prophet there speaketh first and primarily of the deliuerance of the children of Israel out of the captiuitie of Babylon and of them that should bring the message and gladd tydings therof With what gladnes then may we thinke would the children of Israell when they were in the land of their captiuitie receiue them that would bring them good tydings of their deliuerance out of captiuitie and returne vnto their countrie and ancient libertie Would not all of them receiue them with great gladnesse Would not all of them receiue them with exceding and vnfained ioy and reioycing With what gladnesse then should we receiue the Ministers of the Gospell of Christ Iesus who bring vnto vs most ioyfull tidings of a most blessed deliuerance out of the most wofull thrall and captiuitie that euer was euen out of the most tyrannicall captiuitie of sinne death and the deuill Surely we should receiue them with an vniuersall ioy we should receiue them with an exceeding great ioy we should all of vs be glad euen in our very soules for them euery way that we could we should testifie this our gladnes for them A good shew of such gladnesse many of the Iewes then gaue when Christ riding into Ierusalem on an Asse they spred their garments in the way and cut downe branches from the trees and strawed them in the way and cryed through the streets of Ierusalem and said Hosanna the sonne of Dauid Mat. 21.8.9 blessed be he that commeth in the name of the Lord Hosanna thou which art in the highest heauens Here were tokens as of great honor done vnto him so of great gladnesse for him that was the high Priest of our profession And the Euangelist S. Luke storying the same thing saith that the whole multitude of the Disciples reioyced Luk. 19.37.38 and praised God with a loude voice saying blessed be the King that commeth in the name of the Lord peace in heauen and glory in the highest places The whole multitude reioyced and that with no small ioy when they lift vp their voices and said Blessed be he c. So we read that when Philip came to Samaria Act. 8.5.6.8 preached Christ vnto them the people gaue heede vnto those things which Philip spake with one accord hearing and seeing the miracles which he did and it is said that there was great ioy in that Citie They heard Philip when he preached Christ vnto them they gaue heede to the things he spake and that with one accord and vpon this there was great ioy in that Citie So we read that when the Apostles passed through Phanics and Samaria Act. 15.3 declaring the conuersion of the Gentiles and no doubt strengthning the brethren also in the faith wherein they stood it is said that they brought great ioy vnto all the brethren no ordinarie ioy but a great ioy not vnto a small
was the profit of circumcision vnto the Iewe that and more is the profit of circumcision vnto vs. For thus we are the circumcision and not they we are that peculiar people of the Iewes and not they Rom. 2.28.29 inasmuch as now he is not a Iew which is one outward neither now is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh but he is a Iew which is one within and the circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Let this men and brethren teach vs to descend into our selues and see whether we bee circumcised or vncircumcised whether we can with the Apostle truely say that wee are the circumcision that we are circumcised with the true circumcision Do we worship the Lord in the spirit with holy worshippe not after the foolish fancies of mans braine Do we reioyce in Christ Iesus as in the horne of our saluation and renounce all confidence in all outward things whatsoeuer Are our vnderstandings instructed in the things which are spiritually discerned Are our affections enclined to the rule of Gods spirit Are our desires bent to the things that belong vnto our peace Are we purged from all carnall affections and vngodly desires Are our lippes faine when we sing vnto our God and are our tongues glad when we talke of his righteousnesse and saluation Doe we refraine our feete from euery euill path and doe we giue our members as weapons of righteousnesse vnto God to serue him in righteousnesse and in holinesse If the spirit do witnesse those things vnto our spirits then let vs know that we are circumcised with the true circumcision so that wee may say with the Apostle We are the circumcision For this is the worke of the spirit thus to consecrate vs to his holy worship thus to settle our reioycing on Christ Iesus and on him alone thus to teach vs his will thus to sanctifie our desires thus to purge and cleanse vs from inordinate affections thus to make vs vessells holy vnto the Lord and thus to guide our feete in to the way of peace And working thus in vs he doth circumcise vs with circumcision made without hands making vs ne creatures But if we worshippe the Lord so that we bowe both to him and Baal if we trust to be saued by our workes or by any thing but onely by Christ Iesus and faith in his bloud if the Gospell be yet hid vnto vs so that we cannot sauour or perceiue the things of the spirit of God if our affections be so inordinate as that we be full of striefe enuie hatred malice wrath contentions backbitings whispering swelling and discorde if our desires be so vnbridled as that we runne wholly after the pleasures of the flesh and neuer minde the things of the spirit if as yet we will bee euery one more loth then other to talke of matters of religion of things belonging to our saluation of the mercies of God in Christ Iesus and the like but will straine no curtesie at all to talke filthily and vncleanly and vnseemly and scoffingly and irreligiously if as yet either we will not open our eares to heare the voice of the charmer charme hee neuer so wisely or else will grinne and gnash our teeth at him that shall roundly knocke at the doore of our hearts to rowse vs out of the dead sleepe of sinne whereinto we are fallen if I say things stand thus with vs are we not of vncircumcised hearts and lippes and eares yes my brethren if it be thus whatsoeuer we say or what shew soeuer we make yet are we of vncircumcised hearts lips and eares For therefore is our vnderstanding full of darknesse our will and desires peruerse and crooked and our affections inordinate because the Lord by his spirit hath not circumcised our hearts therefore are our mouthes filled not with talke of such things as belong vnto our peace but with corrupt communication and iesting and taunting and profane talking because the Lord by his spirit hath not circumcised our lippes and therefore are our eares open vnto euery wicked profanation of Gods name and euery bad suggestion of our neighbours rather then vnto the word of our saluation because the Lord by his spirit hath not circumcised our eares In one word are we and walke we as children of disobedience it is because the Lord hath not yet regenerated vs by his holy spirit because we yet are not circumcised with the circumcision of Christ Let euery man therefore descend into his owne heart and as he doth finde himselfe by thus searching his heart and his reynes to be circumcised or vncircumcised so let him thinke himselfe to be receiued into the couenant or yet to be a stranger from the couenant of promise And hee that is circumcised let him not gather his vncircumcision i. as now I expound it let him not defile himselfe with the corruptions which are in the world through lust but hauing escaped from the filthinesse of the world let him giue his members seruants vnto righteousnesse in holinesse and worship the Lord with holy worship But he that hath walked either 40 or 4. yeeres in the wildernesse of this life and is not yet circumcised let him know that euen that person that is not circumcised that man that is not regenerated by the Lord his spirit euen hee shall be cut off from the Lord his people and shall haue none inheritance among the Saints of God Vnto such therefore I say as the Lord by his Prophet saith to the men of Iudah and to Ierusalem Ierem. 4 4 breake vp the fallow ground of your hearts and some not among the thornes be circumcised to the Lord and take away the fore-skins of your hearts least the Lord his wrath come foorth like fire and burne that none can quench it because of the wickednesse of your inuentions And with the Prophet Hosea I say farther Hos 10.12 sow to your selues in righteousnesse reape after the measure of mercie breake vp your fallow ground for it is time to seeke the Lord till he come and raine righteousnesse vpon you Weede out al impiety and wicked affections from your hearts put off the sinnefull body of the flesh 1 Cor. 15.50 Ap●c 20.6 and be renued in the spirit of your mindes For this I say vnto you that flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God Blessed and holy is he that hath his part in the first resurrection i. by the power of God his spirit regenerating him riseth from sinne wherein he was dead vnto newnesse and holinesse of life for on such the second death hath no power And let this suffice to be spoken touching both the carnall and likewise the spirituall circumcision by occasion of these words we are the circumcision It followeth Which worshippe God in the spirit By this and the rest that followes is described as I told you who are circumcised with spirituall
for righteousnesse and saluation let vs runne vnto our Christ 1 Cor. 1.30 for he is made of God vnto vs wisedome and righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Let vs be ready to doe good and to distribute and to procure things honest both before God and men and let vs assure our selues that a cuppe of cold water giuen in Christ his name shall not lose his reward But let no man say in his heart or thinke with himselfe that it is for his righteousnesse and the merit of his workes For if he so iustifie himselfe the Lord shall condemne him and iudge him wicked To cease to doe euill to learne to doe well to seeke iudgement to relieue the oppressed to iudge the fatherlesse to defend the widow to fast to watch to pray to be iust mercifull and liberall to feed the hungrie with our morsells to cloth the naked with our fleece to comfort the sicke and to helpe the troubled in their distresse are all good workes odours that smell sweete sacrifices acceptable and pleasant vnto God Let our faith worke by such loue and let our knowledge bee filled with such fruits of righteousnesse Such workes God accepteth well at our hands though he doe not accept vs for our workes but onely in his well-beloued sonne Christ Iesus In a word let vs alwaies bee occupied in doing that which is good but let vs not repose any confidence of our saluation at all in any good that we doe The last thing which I obserue is the reason why the Apostle counted all outward things whatsoeuer but losse and dung which was for Christ his sake for the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus that he might winne Christ and that he might be found in him c. Here was his vantage here was his gaine here was his merit and for the gaining of this pearle he would willingly sell or loose all that euer he had But I must deferre to speake of this point at this time O Lord our God graunt vnto vs we humbly beseech thee the grace of thy holy spirit that the bright beames thereof shining into our hearts all mysts of blindnesse darknesse and ignorance may be expelled thence and we enabled to see the mysteries of thy will and the wondrous things of thy law Humble vs ô Lord in our selues we humbly beseech thee that we seeing and knowing our owne vnworthinesse and vnrighteousnesse may sue from our selues vnto thee and in thee may finde rest vnto our soules Encrease ô Lord our knowledge in thee and our obedience vnto thee that our knowledge being filled with the fruits of righteousnesse and our faith working by loue wee may be knowne truely to belong vnto thee LECTVRE LIV. PHILIP 3. Vers 9. And that I may be found in him that is not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through c. IT remaineth now that wee see what it was that the Apostle counted vantage vnto him for which hee counted all things else in the world but losse and dung It was the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus his Lord that he counted vantage vnto him for which hee counted all things else but losse and dung For the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus that hee might winne him and that he might be found in him hee thought all things losse and iudged all things to bee dung Where 1. let vs see what is meant by the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus 2. How all things else are to be iudged losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus 3. What the excellencie and vantage is of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus Touching the 1. we must vnderstand that there is a threefold knowledge of Christ One by the law in the old Testament another by the Gospell in the new Testament and a third in heauen when we shall see him face to face In the law Christ was figured by the heauenly Manna by the Rocke in the wildernesse by the brasen Serpent by the paschall lambe by the rites and ceremonies and sacrifices of the law Of his comming Iacob spake in the blessing of Iudah Gen. 49.10 and Balaam likewise in his prophecie of the great prosperitie that should come vnto Israel Num. 24.17 Of his incarnation and birth of a virgin Esay prophecied Esay 7.14 Of his conception by the holy Ghost Daniel is thought to haue prophecied Dan. 9.24 Of the place of his birth Micah prophecied Micah 5.2 Of his kingdome and gouernment Esay prophecied Esay 9.6.7 Of his preaching and office as he was a Prophet Esay also prophecied Esay 61.1.2.3 Of his infirmities and sorowes and of his oblation and sacrifice of himselfe as hee was our Priest Esay likewise prophecied Es 53. Yea so full fraught with arguments touching Christ were both the books of Moses and the writings of the Prophets especially of Esay that in this respect it may be well said as I thinke Gal 3.24 that the Law was a schoole-master to bring vs vnto Christ So that ye see Christ might be knowne by the Law in the old Testament But this knowledge of Christ is compared by the Apostle Peter vnto a light or candle that shineth in a darke place 2 Pet. 1.19 An obscure knowledge it is and such as in comparison of the knowledge of Christ by the Gospell is as darknesse in comparison of light The second knowledge then of Christ is by the Gospell of Christ in the new Testament where we see plainely that fulfilled which before was prophecied of Christ Iesus There wee know not his person onely that he is the euerlasting sonne of the Father that he is both God and man that he is very God of very God begotten before all worlds that he is very man of the substance of his mother borne in the world perfect God and perfect man subsisting of a reasonable soule and humane flesh but there also we know that he came from the bosome of his father for vs that he made himselfe of no reputation and tooke on him the forme of a seruant for vs that in infirmities and sorowes and sufferings and affections and passions of the minde and in all things he was like vnto vs sin only excepted that he might be mercifull vnto vs that hee humbled himselfe and became obedient vnto the death euen the death of the Crosse for vs that he ouercame the powers of death and rose againe and ascended into heauen for vs that he hath paied the price for our sinnes and freed vs from the bondage of sinne death and the Deuill that he as our Priest liueth for euer and sitteth at the right hand of his father to make continuall intercession for vs that he as our King continually protecteth and preserueth vs that hee as our Prophet by his word the word of our saluation teacheth vs that in him we are accepted and beloued that for him Gods blessings are showred downe vpon vs that he is made of God vnto vs wisedome
iustified by them his wages is not counted by fauour but by debt and is not iustified by grace through faith Who then are iustified by faith euen they that disclaime righteousnesse by workes And who are they that are not iustified by grace through faith euen they that stand vpon their righteousnesse by their workes Wilt thou be pertaker of Christ his righteousnesse by faith thou must disclaime all righteousnesse by thy workes Wilt thou stand vpon thy righteousnesse by thy works thou canst not be pertaker of the righteousnesse of Christ by faith For there is no communion or fellowship betwixt them but as the Apostle saith of the election of the Iewes so I say of our iustification by the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus if we be pertakers of Christ his righteousnesse if we be iustified by grace Rom. 11.6 then not of workes or else were grace no more grace but if of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke Wee must therefore disclaime all righteousnesse by workes if we will lay any claime vnto righteousnesse by Christ we must iudge all our workes to be losse and dung if we will winne Christ Let this then teach vs to beat downe euery thought and euery imagination of our hearts that exalteth it selfe against God and to bring into captiuitie euery thought vnto the obedience of Christ Let vs not thinke of the best workes that we doe aboue that is meet neither let vs beare our selues vpon them aboue that wee ought Let vs be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse but let vs not thinke them any part of our righ●eousnesse before God If wee will be righteous before God we must be clothed with Christ his righteousnesse We cannot lay any claime vnto Christ his righteousnesse vnlesse we will disclaime our owne righteousnesse Let vs therefore humble our selues before God let vs acknowledge our selues to be sinners and the best things that wee doe to be so full of pollutions and imperfections that they cannot possibly abide the triall of Gods iudgement And seeing wee cannot winne Christ and be partakers of his righteousnesse vnlesse we iudge all things without him to be but losse and dung let vs with the Apostle iudge them to be dung that wee may win Christ let vs disclaime all righteousnesse by them that wee may bee clad with the righteousnesse of Christ So shall our vnrighteousnesse be hid and our sinnes couered and whatsoeuer imperfection is in vs it shall not be imputed vnto vs. Fourthly in that he addeth and may be found in him I note that another branch of his reason why hee iudgeth all things and so all his workes to be dung is that he might be found in Christ that is that when God shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead and enquirie shall be made what euery man hath done in his body hee may be found in Christ not in Moses not in the flesh not in any thing but in Christ Whence I obserue that either wee must renounce all confidence in our owne righteousnesse and iudge euen our very best workes in that respect to be but losse and dung or else w● shall not be found in Christ in that last and great day For that which our Sauiour Christ spake in the dayes of his flesh vnto his Disciples then present with him hath now also his vse to this our purpose Mat. 16.24 If any man saith hee will follow mee let him forsake himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow mee Let him forsake himselfe Luk 14.33 that is let him forsake all that hee hath as Luke expoundeth it all outward prerogatiues touching the flesh In which place he signifieth that he that would bee his disciple must put off all carnall affections and renounce all carnall confidence and so reioyce in him alone as that no crosse nor any thing shall take his reioycing from him And euen so he that will be found in Christ in that day he must so reioice in Christ alone as that he haue confidence in nothing else but iudge them all to be losse and dung Otherwise as well might he be Christ his disciple which did not forsake all as hee may bee found in Christ in that day which doth no● iudge all his workes to be losse and dung in respect of any righteousnesse by them Let this also be another motiue vnto vs to disclaime all righteousnesse by our workes for as there is no righteousnesse by faith vnto him that claimeth righteousnesse by his workes as before wee heard so is there no saluation in that day vnto him that reposeth any confidence of his righteousnesse in his workes There is no condemnation saith the Apostle Rom. 8.1 to them that are in Christ Iesus Which as it is true in this life that they that are ingrafted into him by faith are freed from the Law of sinne and of death and so of condemnation so is it true that they that shall bee found in Christ Iesus in that day shall bee freed from the sentence of condemnation That therefore we may bee found in him and so freed from condemnation in ●hat day let vs with the Apostle iudge euen our best workes ●o be but losse and dung and disclaime all righteousnesse by our workes And surely this hath so preuailed with many great maintainers of iustification by workes that when death hath ●ummoned their iudgement and appearance they haue dis●laimed all their owne works and all righteousnesse by them ●nd with heart and voice desired to be found in Christ in that ●ay I should now shew how wee may bee found in Christ in ●hat day O Lord our God open our eyes wee beseech thee that we ●ay daily more and more see and behold those infinite trea●ures of righteousnesse and saluation which are laid vp for vs in ●hy Sonne Christ Iesus As thou hast vouchsafed to make him ●nto vs righteousnesse and saluation so giue vs an heart to ac●nowledge him our whole righteousnesse and the horne of ●ur saluation that disclaiming all righteousnesse by any works ●f our owne wee may daily more and more grow vp in thy ●onne and in that last and great day may be found in him LECTVRE LVI PHILIP 3. Verse 9. Not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteosnesse c. NOw the Apostle goeth forward and hauing made this one branch of his reason why hee iudged all his workes generally to be dung that hee might hee found in Christ in that day now hee explicateth that phrase and manner of speech and shewes what it is to be found in Christ in that day which is to be found not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ c. Why then doth the Apostle iudge all things to be dung He doth so that he may be found in Christ in that day Yea but what needed him
which we haue by this holy sacrament of the Lords Supper for the strengthning and increasing of our faith Many things yee see here are fully to assure our faith that we should not doubt but as surely as we receiue the bread and wine into our bodies to become wholly ours so withall our soule receiueth Christ together with his passion and righteousnesse to be wholly ours as surely as if we had wrought them in our owne persons Yea such assurance our faith groweth vnto by the vse of this holy Supper as that now we know by the powerfull operation of Gods holy spirit within vs that God is in vs indeed and that now Christ is ours and we Christs and that together with Christ we haue all things euen all the benefits of our saluation And the more that our faith is strengthned hereby the more also is this feeling knowledge of Christ increased in vs so that together with the growth of our faith there is a growth of this knowledge Seeing therefore this knowledge of Christ groweth as our faith in Christ groweth and seeing our faith is so strengthned and increased by the holy vse of this holy Supper let vs so often as we are called vnto this holy table prepare our selues with all holy reuerence and feare to the celebration of these holy mysteries Great is the benefit that here we doe receiue if we eat of this bread and drinke of this cup worthily for then we eat spiritually the flesh of Christ and drinke his bloud then we dwell in Christ and Christ in vs we are one with Christ and Christ with vs and these things are so sensibly represented vnto our eyes and taste as that our faith is fully assured thereof so that henceforth we know by the working of the spirit that Christ is ours together with whatsoeuer is his But if we present our selues at these holy mysteries without due preparation and examination of our selues we haue no such benefit but rather we are guilty of the bodie and bloud of our Lord and Sauiour Proue therefore your selues whether you are in the faith whether yee feele your hearts assured by the spirit of God that the punishment of your sinnes is fully discharged in Christ and that whatsoeuer Christ hath done pertaineth not onely to others but euen to you also If you beleeue these things and know these things though it be not without some doubts and without some imperfections behold by the vse of this Supper your weake faith and imperfect knowledge shall be strengthned and increased But if as yet yee haue no such faith in Christ no such knowledge of Christ then may yee not presume to present your selues at this holy table The vse of this Supper is for the confirmation and strengthning of our faith it is not for the begetting of faith in vs but that being begotten by the word is by the word and the vse of the Sacrament thus confirmed The last thing which hence I obserue is that if we will haue this experimentall knowledge of Christ in our owne soules by faith in Christ Iesus then must wee renounce all confidence in our owne merits and in our owne righteousnesse whatsoeuer For wherefore is it that men trust in their owne merits and in their owne righteousnesse Wherefore is it that men make reckoning to be iustified and saued by the worth of their owne workes Wherefore is it that men grow to a pharisaicall pride and conceit of themselues as if they had somewhat in themselues that might abide the tryall Surely it is because of the want of this feeling knowledge of Christ They neuer felt in their owne soules the sweetnesse of Christ the comforts of Christ the treasures of Christ They know not by experience in their owne soules that Christ is all in all vnto them they know not what Christ is made of God vnto his children They haue a knowledge of Christ but the knowledge of Christ hath not seazed vpon their soules and therefore they doe not know the full sweetnesse of Christ and the full worth of Christ For if they knew in their owne soules that Christ were made of God vnto them wisdome and righteousnesse sanctification and redemption they would onely reioyce in Christ Iesus and haue no confidence in the flesh But therefore they reioyce in the flesh and haue confidence in their owne workes and in their owne righteousnesse because they know not Christ If therefore we will know Christ with a sauing knowledge and a feeling knowledge of him in our selues we must vtterly renounce all confidence in our owne merits and all trust in our owne righteousnesse whatsoeuer What shall we say then vnto them that stand vpon the merit and worth of their owne workes and of their owne righteousnes Surely euen thereby they shew that howsoeuer they say they know Christ yet they haue not this experimentall knowledge of him in their owne soules for if they had they would know such infinite treasures of all spirituall graces to be hid in him as that they would minde nothing without him To conclude this point therefore let these trust in their merits let those follow their vaine delights and pleasures let these seeke after riches let those spend their whole time in the studie of humane knowledge but let vs studie to know Christ If we haue this feeling knowledge of him in our owne soules then come pouertie come sicknes come famine come sword come persecution come affliction come aduersitie come what crosse can come our soule notwithstanding all these is at quiet rest and in him we haue comfort enough against all these In him because we know him we know that treasures enow and comforts enow are hid for vs whatsoeuer trouble or aduersitie we finde in the world Let vs therefore studie to know him and because faith is the roote of this knowledge let vs vse with all religious reuerence those meanes whereby faith is either wrought or confirmed And because confidence in our owne merits and righteousnes is an enemie to this knowledge let vs renounce all such confidence and reioyce onely in Christ Iesus that we may know him c. LECTVRE LVIII PHILIP 3. Verse 10. And the vertue of his resurrection and the fellowship of his afflictions c. THat I may know him and the vertue That is and that I may know the vertue of his resurrection .i. that I may daily more and more feele in my selfe the vertue of Christ his death resurrection .i. that I may daily more more die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse by the power of the spirit which raised vp Christ Iesus from the dead For by resurrection in this place I vnderstand both Christ his death and resurrection and by the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection I vnderstand not that power whereby Christ ouercame death and rose againe from the dead but that regeneration that dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse which the Holy Ghost worketh in
vs by the power of Christ his death and resurrection The third vantage then which the Apostle reckons vpon by disclaiming al righteousnes by his own works and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus is that hereby he shall know the vertue of Christ his resurrection in himselfe whereby he shall daily more and more die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse which vertue of his resurrection he greatly desired to know and which otherwise he could not know So that it is as if the Apostle had thus said I doe iudge all my owne workes whatsoeuer to be but dung and quite renounce all confidence in my owne righteousnesse to the end that being iustified by the righteousnesse of Christ through faith in him I may know and daily more and more feele in my se●●e by the powerfull operation of the Holy Ghost the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection whereby I may die vnto sinne and liue vnto God in righteousnes and true holinesse Thus much for the sense Now for the obseruations And that I may know the vertue Here first I note the Apostles great desire to know and to feele in himselfe by the worke of the holy Ghost the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection He reckoned this knowledge amongst the chiefe vantages which he had in Christ Iesus and for this vantage sake he made no reckoning at all of his owne righteousnesse by any workes that hee had wrought Such a longing and thirsting desire hee had to know the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection He knew Christ his death and resurrection that he died and was buried and that hee rose againe the third day but hee desired to know the vertue of his death and resurrection He knew likewise this vertue of Christ his death that thereby he had vanquished sinne death and the deuill and this vertue of his resurrection that thereby hee had purchased for him righteousnesse life and euerlasting saluation but he desired to know and to feele in himselfe the death of sinne by the vertue of his death and the life of righteousnesse and holinesse by the vertue of his resurrection This vertue also of Christ his death and resurrection he knew in that hee felt in himselfe by the power of the spirit a dying vnto sinne and a liuing vnto righteousnesse but hee desired to feele this vertue of his death and resurrection in himselfe daily more and more that hee might daily more and more die in the old man and be quickened in the new man that in euery combat betweene the flesh and the spirit the flesh might daily more and more be subdued to the spirit Whence I obserue what a vehement and earnest desire there should be in vs all to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection and in whom there is some feeling thereof to know and to feele it in themselues daily more and more Wee all of vs know that Christ died for our sinnes and that he rose againe for the full accomplishment of our iustification wee know that by the power of his death wee are deliuered from the first and from the second death from the death of sinne in this life and from the death of damnation for sinne after this life and that by the power of his resurrection wee haue our part both in the first and in the second resurrection in the first resurrection from sinne vnto righteousnesse and in the second resurrection from the power of the graue vnto life euerlasting Wee know that wee are buried with Christ by baptisme into his death that like as he was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father so wee also should walke in newnesse of life We know that if we be grafted with Christ to the similitude of his death dying vnto sinne by the power of his death euen so wee shall be to the similitude of his resurrection liuing vnto God by the power of his resurrection These things I say wee know at least we should know and I wish that they were farre better and more knowne then they are But there is a further knowledge of the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection which in our soules wee must long and thirst after This is the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection that we must long and thirst after to know and to feele in our selues the death of sinne and the life of God to know and to feele in our selues that the strength of sinne is abated in our flesh and that the life of God is renewed in the spirit of our minde to know and to feele in our selues a loathing of sinne and a loue of righteousnesse to know and to feele in our selues a mortification of the flesh with the affections and the lusts and a quickening in our spirit by the fruits of the spirit to know and to feele in our selues that delight which sometimes wee tooke in vnrighteousnesse in vncleannesse in couetousnesse in pride in crueltie in contention or the like sinnes to be cooled and a desire to liue righteously and soberly and godly in this present world to bee kindled in vs. For hereby we know in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection if we feele in our selues this mortification of the old man and this quickening in our inner man when his death workes the death of sinne in vs when his resurrection workes the life of God in vs then wee know in our selues the vertue of his death and resurrection The sacrament hereof is the sacrament of baptisme for when wee are baptized wee are baptized into the similitude of his death that like as he died once for sinne so we should euer die vnto sinne and into the similitude of his resurrection that like as he rose from the dead so wee which were dead in sinne should not henceforth serue sinne but liue vnto God in righteousnesse and true holinesse Euen our baptisme doth witnesse vnto vs that so many of vs as are baptized into Christ Iesus wee should die vnto sinne and liue vnto God in righteousnesse and true holinesse Which death vnto sinne and life vnto God seeing the holy spirit of God doth worke in vs by the power of Christ his death and resurrection how should we not most earnestly desire to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection But doe wee desire to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection Doe we with our Apostle in this place reckon this knowledge amongst our chiefest vantages Nay alas we know it not neither care we to know it for what dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God is there amongst vs In whom is the strength of sinne abated and the life of God renewed in the spirit of his minde Doth the Atheist leaue his Atheisme and embrace godlinesse Doth the couetous person leaue off to set his affection on the things which are on the earth
better vpon vs that wee subdue not the flesh vnto the spirit that we serue sinne and giue not our members seruants vnto righteousnesse in holinesse it is a plaine argument of the want of faith in vs. And therefore our Sauiour made it an argument against Iudas that hee beleeued not because he would betray him Ioh. 6.64 But there are some of you saith our Sauiour that beleeue not For saith the Euangelist Iesus knew from the beginning who they were that beleeued not and who should betray him Where the argument is that Iudas had a traiterous heart therefore he beleeued not In like manner let vs make the argument against our selues Our hearts are sett on mischiefe we drinke iniquitie like water wee die not vnto sinne but wee suffer sinne to raigne in our mortall bodies wee liue not vnto God in righteousnesse but wee giue our members seruants vnto vnrighteousnesse wee feele no vertue at all of Christ his death or resurrection in our selues therefore we beleeue not The conclusion is hard but if it bee altered the premisses must be altered Let vs cease to doe euill and learne to doe well let vs die vnto sinne and liue vnto God let vs mortifie our earthly members and be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse and then shall wee haue a good testimonie vnto our selues of our righteousnesse by faith In a word iustification which is by faith and regeneration which is by the spirit killing our old man and quickening our new man are so linked the one with the other as that they are affirmed and denied both together For if we be iustified by faith then are we regenerate by the spirit and if wee be regenerate by the spirit then are we iustified by faith And againe vnlesse wee be iustified by faith wee are not regenerate by the spirit and vnlesse we be regenerated by the spirit we are not iustified by faith As therefore we desire to haue our iustification by faith sealed vnto our soules so let vs desire to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection by dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God in righteousnesse and true holines It followeth And the fellowshippe of his afflictions c. This is the next vantage which the Apostle reckons vpon by renouncing all his owne workes as losse and dung and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus the knowledge in himselfe of Christ his afflictions euen such as he did suffer in the daies of his flesh and such as he doth daily suffer in his members And the reason he addeth why he would know in himselfe the fellowship of Christ his afflictions namely so to be made conformable vnto Christ his death It is then as if the Apostle should haue said I make no reckoning of mine owne righteousnesse by workes but my desire is that being iustified by the righteousnesse of Christ through faith in such afflictions as Christ suffered in his owne person for the glory of God and the good of his Church and such as still hee suffereth in his members for his owne glory the good of his Church I may haue fellowship and bee partakers with them because I desire to be made comformable vnto Christ his death i. like vnto Christ who is dead and through many afflictions is entred into his kingdome What then did the Apostle desire outward afflictions in his body yea hee counted it a great vantage to suffer afflictions such as Christ had suffred in his own person and such as hee did suffer in his members for the glory of Christ and the good of his Church Hence then I obserue that affliction and trouble for Christ his sake and the good of his Church should not seeme grieuous vnto God his children but rather they should count it a vantage vnto them to be afflicted for his sake Thus the holy Ghost almost euery where teacheth vs. Mat. 5.12 Reioyce saith our Sauiour and be glad when men reuile you and persecute you and speake all manner of euill sayings against you for my sake falsly And the Apostle Iames Iam. 1.2 Count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into tentations i. afflictions and tribulations whereby ye are tempted And the Apostle Peter Thinke it not strange concerning the fiery triall 1 Pet. 4.13 which is among you to proue you but reioyce inasmuch as you are partakers of Christ his sufferings c. And lest the holy Ghost should seeme without all reason to will vs to reioyce in afflictions and to count them vantage vnto vs hee hath set do●ne many reasons why afflictions should not daunt vs or seeme grieuous but rather ioyous vnto vs. As 1. affliction hath been alwaies the lot of Gods children It beganne we see euen with Abell Gen. 4 8. whom his brother Caine slew Iacob and Ioseph the children of Israell Dauid Iob the Prophets the Apostles of Christ what afflictions suffered they Reioyce saith our Sauiour when they persecute you for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you yea such persecutions and affliction● both Patriarches and Prophets and Apostles and all the holy men of God haue suffered 2. Afflictions are profitable instruments which God vseth thereby to draw vs to the obedience of his will Hos 5.15 For so saith the Lord by his Prophet In their affliction they will seeke mee diligently Ier. 31.18 So saith Ieremy that before the Lord corrected and chastised him by afflictions he was a● vntamed calfe Ps 119.67 71. And Dauid before I was afflicted I went wrong but now I keepe thy word And againe it is good for mee that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes 3. Afflictions are a token of Gods loue and fauour towards vs. For as the Apostle saith Heb. 12.6 Whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne that he receiueth Sometimes we wander astray out of the right way wherein we should walke and then as a good shepheard he sends his dog after vs to pinch vs and to ranke vs in our right order againe 4. Afflictions make w● like vnto Christ as both the Apostle sheweth here and in the Epistle to the Romanes Rom. 8.29 for as Esay had prophecied of him so he was full of sorowes he wanted no sorowes but he was full of sorowes 5. The afflictions of Gods children they are Christ his afflictions whereinsoeuer they suffer hee suffereth ●th them And therefore when Saul persecuted them that ●lled vpon his name he called vnto him from heauen say●ng Saul Saul why persecutest thou me because he persecuted ●is children he counted that he persecuted him 6. It pleaseth ●he Lord through afflictions to bring his children vnto the ●ingdome For it is ordained that through many afflictions ●e should enter the kingdome No chastising Heb. 12.11 saith the Apo●tle for the present seemeth to be ioyous but grieuous but afterward 〈◊〉 bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse vnto them which are ●ereby
exercised And againe Peter speaking to this purpose ●aith Wherein ye reioyce 1 Pet. 1.6.7.4.13 though now for a season ye are in heaui●esse that the triall of your faith being made much more precious ●hen gold that perisheth though it be tried with fire may bee found ●nto your praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ These and many moe reasons the holy Ghost com●endeth vnto vs in the holy Scriptures wherefore wee should ●eioyce in afflictions and why wee should count them a van●age vnto vs. Art thou then afflicted and brought low through any op●ression through any crosse or trouble There hath no ten●ation taken thee but such as appertaineth to the children of God If thou belong vnto him he thus afflicteth thee that he may keepe thee in obedience vnto his will that hee may trie thy faith and thy patience that thou maist know his loue towards thee that thou maist be made like vnto him and that after thou hast suffered with him thou maist also reigne with him Wheat by the flaile is purged from the chaffe flowre by the seiue is purged from the branne and gold by the fire ●s purged from the drosse If we will be good wheat for the Lord his barne the flaile must go ouer vs and wee must be winowed If we will be fine floure wee must be boulted and sifted if we will be pure gold we must bee purged in the fire Onely let our care be that we suffer not as euill doers but as Christians for Christ his sake for the good of his Church O Lord as thou hast by the death of thy Sonne destroyed the death of sinne and by his c. LECTVRE LIX PHILIP 3. Vers 10.11 And the fellowshippe of his afflictions and be made conformable to his death if by any meanes I may attaine c. OH but thou wilt say that thine afflictions thy troubles and thy sorowes are exceeding great and vnsupportable Looke vpon Iobs afflictions in his goods in his children in his owne person He had 7000. sheepe and 3000. Camels and 500. yoke of oxen and 500. she asses and of all these he was quickly depriued some the Shebeans some the Chaldeans tooke away violently and some the fire of God consumed and burnt He had also seuen sonnes and three daughters and a very great familie and these all were slaine at once by the fall of a house Himselfe likewise was smitten with sore boyles from the sole of his foote vnto his crowne so that he sate downe in the ashes and tooke a potsheard to scrape himselfe withall His wife which should haue beene his helper bid him blaspheame God and die His friends which should haue comforted him encreased his sorowes so that euery way he was most grieuously afflicted Compare now then thine afflictions and sorowes with his and see what comparison there is betwixt them for greatnesse and grieuousnesse And if the Lord blessed his last daies more then the first in goods and in children and in euery good blessing then let not thy great affliction trouble thee but hope thou in the Lord and abide patiently on him and he shall make thy way to prosper Againe looke vpon Christ persecuted Christ euen from his birth forced to flie euen then into Egypt for feare of Herod tempted Christ by the Deuill in the wildernesse poore Christ not hauing a hou●e to put his head in betrayed Christ by the hands of one of his owne Disciples afflicted Christ so that his sweat was like drops of bloud trickling downe to the ground punished Christ so that he cried my God my God why hast thou forsaken mee crucified Christ euen between two theeues What are thine afflictions thy sorowes in comparison of thy Christs He hath seasoned all thine afflictions and thy sorowes with his so that be they neuer so great thou shouldest not be troubled therewith Oh but they come so thicke vpon thee one on the necke of another that thou art not able to looke vp What come they thicker vpon thee then vpon Iacob the Patriarch Of whom we read first that he fled to Laban least his brother Esau should kill him when he was with Laban hee dealt ill with him and changed his wages tenne times when he went from Laban Laban pursued him and if the Lord had not forbid him would surely haue hurt him when hee had escaped Laban then he was againe in great danger by his brother Esau when hee had escaped that danger then his daughter Dinah was rauished and his sonnes Simeon and Leuie slew the Shechemites and brought him into great danger there when he went from thence his wife Rahel in the way died in trauell soone after Reuben his eldest sonne went vp vnto his fathers bed and lay with Bilhah his fathers concubine Could sorowes well come thicker vpon a man Iobs sorowes likewise how thicke came they vpon him A messenger came to Iob and said the oxen were plowing Iob. 1.14 and the asses feeding in their places c. to vers 20 Anon after this he was smitten with sore boyles in his owne person as we haue heard when he was so his wife came and spake as we haue heard and then after her came his miserable comforters If thy sorowes then come thicke vpon thee thou seest that nothing doth befall thee but such as appertaineth to the children of God Tarie thou therfore the Lords leasure be strong and he shall comfort thine heart Oh but thou hast waited long and yet dost finde no case What longer then Dauid waited for the kingdome of Israel after that he was annointed King ouer Israel by Samuel After he was annointed by Samuel hee waited in great affliction persecution and perill many yeares before he reigned ouer Iudah and after that hee waited seuen yeares and a halfe before he rigned ouer Israel Hast thou waited longer then Christ himselfe did He was full of sorowes all his life long Thou maist not prescribe God a time thou must in patience possesse thy soule Heauinesse may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning And what if it come not the next morning what if it come not the next week the next month the next yeare nay what if thy daies bee consumed with mourning O in the morning when his glory shall appeare thou shalt be glad and reioyce For the present thy faith and thy patience is exercised and for the present it is grieuous but afterwards it bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse vnto thee that art exercised thereby Oh but thou wilt say what comfort can I haue in the meane time seeing he afflicteth mee as the wicked and maketh no difference betweene me and the wicked Oh but thou art much deceiued He afflicteth thee and he afflicteth the wicked and it may be with like afflictions but yet not in like sort Hee afflicteth thee as a father him as a iudge thee in mercy and in loue him in anger and displeasure thee for thy
correction and chastisement him for a plague and punishment He chastiseth thee with roddes but he woundeth him with the swords of an enemie thou by thy corrections art kept in a child-like awe hee in a slauish feare the effect of thine afflictions is reformation of things past and obedience afterwards to thy good but the effect of his is hardnes of heart and rebellion against the highest the end of thine is ioy euerlasting the end of his is woe euerlasting Though therefore your afflictions seeme to be like yet is the whole course of them altogether vnlike in the beginning in the manner in the vse in the effect and in the end What then though thine afflictions be great It is a token that he hath giuen thee great grace and strength to stand For he will not suffer his to be tempted aboue that they be able 1 Cor. 10.13 but will euen giue the issue with the tentation that they may be able to beare it What though thine afflictions be many It is that as gold purified seuen times in the fire thou maist bee found more precious at the appearing of Iesus Christ what though thou hast waited long It is that thy patience may haue her perfect worke and that thou maist be perfit and entire lacking nothing What though there be no oddes vnto thine outward sense between thy sufferings and the wicked It is that thou maist grow out of loue with that restlesse and wretched life and maist long after that life where there shall be no more death nor sorow nor crying nor paine but life without death ioy without sorow rest without crying and pleasure without paine If this will not serue to make thee brooke thine afflictions be they great or many or whatsoeuer they be then consider these points Christianly and with a wise heart 1. Consider what thou hast deserued if the Lord should deale with thee in weight and measure Are thine afflictions and thy troubles proportioned to the desert of thy sinnes Nay if hee should dispute with thee thou couldest not answere him one thing of a thousand if he would straightly marke thine iniquities thou were not able to stand when he is angrie No sinne that thou committest in the whole course of thy life but the wages of it is death euen euerlasting death both of body and soule without the Lords speciall mercy What are then thine afflictions vnto that that thou hast deserued 2. Consider how light and momentanie thine afflictions are For what if they be for a yeare what if for twentie what if for thy whole life when the Lord had punished his people with 70. yeares captiuitie for a moment saith he Es 54.8 in mine anger I hid my face from thee for a little season but with euerlasting loue haue I had compassion on thee Seuentie yeares captiuitie it was but a little while a moment in comparison of his euerlasting loue Euen so the afflictions that thou sufferest if they be for seuenty if for a 100. yeares what is this in comparison of eternity Who would make account of taking very bitter potions and very sharpe phisicke for three or foure daies together in hope of health for euer after What then if thy potions if thy phisicke if thine afflictions be for 70. or 100. yeares It is not so much as three or foure daies nor so much as three or foure houres nay nothing in comparison of eternitie And therefore the Apostle very well calleth the afflictions of this life light and momentanie afflictions in respect of that eternall weight of ●●ory reserued for them that stand fast vnto the end 3. 2 Cor. 4.17 Heb. 12.11 Consider what fruit in the end followes thine afflictions They bring saith the Apostle the quiet fruit of righteousnesse vnto them that are thereby exercised And in another place he saith that they cause vnto vs a farre most excellent 2 Cor. 4.17 and an eternal we●● of glorie Which is not so to be vnderstood as if by our afflictions we did merit an eternall weight of glory Fo●● count saith the Apostle in an other place Rom. 8.18 that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory that shall be shewed v ●o vs but his meaning is that God in mercie rewardeth the light momentanie afflictions of this life with an eternall weight of glory afflictions wi●h glory light afflictions with a weight of glory moment any afflictions with eternall glory light and momentanie afflictions with an eternall weight of glory Let not afflictions then daunt vs but let vs rather without Apostle desire to know in our selues the fellowship of Christ his afflictions Pro. 3.12 and let vs count them a vantage vnto vs. For the Lord correcteth him whom he loueth euen as the father do●● the childe in whom he delighteth Heb. 12.8 And if we be without correction whereof all are partakers then are we bastards and not sons The finest clothe yee know which a man weareth next vnto his skinne will sometimes be nastie and slurried and then it must be beaten and washed and wrung and if yet it be not cleane then to it againe and beat it and wash it and wring it till it be cleane and fit to be worne next the skinne but a sack-cloth or haire-cloth we care not how blacke it be neither doe we wash or wring it Beloued we are so neere vnto Christ as that we are not next vnto his skinne but wee are flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones And therefore to purge vs and to make vs cleane he washeth vs and hee wringeth vs with afflictions Sack-cloth and haire-cloth be it as blacke as it wi●l he cares not for the whiting and cleansing of it because it shall neuer come neere vnto his skinne Hee taketh no pleasure in it and therefore he regardeth not the cleansing of it Let vs not therefore be troubled at afflictions They are nothing proportionable to that we deserue they are but light and momentanie whatsoeuer they are and in the end they cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory Let vs therefore endure with patience and let patience haue h●● perfect worke that we may be perfect and entire lacking nothing For if we endure chastening Heb. 12.7 Iob. 5.17 God offereth himselfe vnto vs as vnto sonnes and blessed is he whom God correcteth It followeth And be made conformable c. Or as Beza readeth it whiles I am made conformable vnto his death i. vnto Christ being dead and so the sense is this I iudge all things without Christ to be dung as for other vantages so for this that whilst I am made like to the image of Christ that is dead by sufferings I may know and feele in my selfe the fellowshippe of Christ his afflictions such as he suffered in his person and doth now suffer in hi● members Here then I note two reasons why the Apostle reckoned affli●tions a
instruction Not as though c. Here you see that the Apostle acknowledgeth that as yet hee had not attained to the full knowledge of Christ to a thorow-feeling of the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection in himselfe to a perfect fellowship of Christ his afflictions He laboured to attaine to the resurrection of the dead in glory by communicating with Christ in his afflictions by dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God through the power of Christ his death and resurrection by knowing Christ with a feeling knowledge of him in his owne soule But hee saith that he hath not yet perfectly attained vnto these thing● whereby he might attaine vnto the resurrection of the dead And he amplifieth it by this particle Now saying that now be had not attained vnto these things now that hee had shaken off all impediments and hinderances vnto perfection in these things now that he had renounced all confidence in his owne workes and in all things without Christ now that he laboured to attaine to the knowledge of Christ in his owne soule to the knowledge of the vertue of Christ his resurrection to the knowledge of the fellowship of Christ his afflictions in himselfe if by any meanes he might attaine to the resurrection of the dead yet not as yet he had attained to the full knowledge of Christ in himselfe to a thorow-feeling of the vertue of Christ his resurrection in himselfe to a perfect fellowship of Christ his afflictions My obseruation hence is that all the faithfull children of God how plentifully soeuer endowed with the knowledge of Christ the hatred of sinne the loue of righteousnesse the fellowship of Christ his afflictions yet only know Christ in this life in part onely die vnto sinne and liue vnto God and are partakers of Christ his afflictions in part not one that perfectly knoweth Christ that perfectly feeleth the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection in himselfe that is perfectly partaker of Christ his afflictions For is it not a good reason Paul that holy Apostle of Christ Iesus that chosen vessell of God to beare Christ his name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel aged Paul that had begotten many in the faith and knowledge of Christ Iesus that had now long borne in his body the dying of Christ Iesus that had his conuersation in heauen that had suffered more then all the rest he I say knew Christ and the vertue of his resurrection and the fellowship of his afflictions onely in part not perfectly therefore none of all the faithfull children of God in this life either knowes Christ or dies to sinne or liues to God or is conformed by afflictions and sufferings vnto Christ his death perfectly but only in part Yes surely the reason holds most strongly Pauls prerogatiues being not any way inferiour to any of the best and most faithfull children of God Now the reason why in this life our knowledge our loue our faith our death vnto sinne our life vnto God our whole obedience all our righteousnesse all our holinesse is in part only why these things in this life are not perfect in any of the children of God the reason I say is because our regeneration and sanctification in this life are not perfect wee are not perfectly renewed in the spirit of our mindes God giueth vnto vs the spirit by measure Joh. 3 34. Rom. 12.3 for vnto Christ alone hath God giuen the spirit without measure but vnto euery one of vs hee hath giuen the spirit by measure Hee is made of God vnto vs wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of these things plentifully and of his fulnesse we all receiue not fulnesse of his fulnesse but of his fulnesse of the spirit and all spirituall graces wee receiue as it were the first fruits of the spirit and of all spirituall graces wherewith then only wee shall be filled when mortalitie shall put on immortalitie and when corruption shall put on incorruption Which the Apostle also witnesseth where hee saith 1 Cor. 13.12 that now wee see through a glasse darkly but then shall wee see face to face now wee know in part but then shall wee know euen as wee are knowne no● in this life in part and imperfectly and then onely when wee shall see Christ face to face shall we know him perfectly For when that which is perfect is come then shall that which is in part be abolished but not before Neither is it only so in our knowledge but in our faith in our loue euen in our whole obedience Paul himselfe while he liues shall haue messenger of Satan to buffet him hee shall haue prickes in the flesh and hee shall feele a law in his members rebelling against the law of his minde and leading him captiue vnto the law of sinne which is in his members Here then first is notably confuted that imaginarie perfection which some dreame that the children of God may haue in this life This holy Apostle attained not vnto the perfection either of the knowledge of Christ or of obedience vnto his will what perfection then can there be in any of Gods children in this life They say that no man indeede can attaine to that absolute perfection either of that knowledge or of that righteousnesse which shall be in heauen but that they may attaine vnto such perfection as is required in this life As if either God might not require of vs in this life such perfection as he gaue vnto vs in our creation or as if where such remnants of sinne and ignorance are as sticke fast vnto vs there could be such perfection Gal. 3.22 For I demand hath God concluded all vnder sinne The Apostle Paul saith so and Iohn likewise saith 1 Ioh. 1.8 that if wee say wee haue no sinne wee deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs. What perfection then where there is such transgression Againe did not God create vs after his owne image in righteousnesse and true holinesse without sinne or ignorance or any such thing It is cleere and cannot be denied And what was our perfection then Now that ignorance hath blinded vs and sinne hath defiled vs haue we such perfection now Or may not God require such perfection of vs now in this life How did wee lose it Was it 〈◊〉 by our owne default And may not then God require it of v● True it is he cannot haue it of vs because we haue lost it B● because wee haue lost it should wee not haue it Yes surely wee haue lost it but wee should haue it and therefore he may require it of vs wee should haue it but wee haue lost it therefore is the punishment due vnto vs for it True it is wee are often exhorted to be perfect but those exhortations onely shew vnto vs what perfection should be in vs not what perfection is in vs. Yea the whole Law is a perfect rule not of
vnto God but he is as dead vnto sinne and li●ing vnto God as if hee were already in the bosome of God ●ee doth not endeuour to runne forward from perfection to ●erfection but hee hath already attained vnto that whereat ●ther men are to runne So that as it is said of some Rom. 1.22 that when ●hey professed themselues to be wise they became fooles so may it ●e said of these that when they professe themselues to be per●ect they shew plainly that they are void of all Christian per●ction at least if the Apostles description of Christian per●ection may preuaile before theirs for by the Apostles de●cription it is cleare that indeed they are not come vnto any perfection in the schoole of Christ but are quite void of all Christian perfection The second vse which we may make of the former obseruation is that thence we may learne to trie what perfection we are growne vnto in the schoole of Christ For doe wee reioyce only in Christ Iesus renouncing all our owne righteousnesse which is by workes and quietly reposing our selues in his righteousnesse through faith in his bloud Doe wee feele in our selues a dying vnto sinne and a liuing vnto God in righteousnesse through the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection by the power of the spirit regenerating vs vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus Doe wee in our soules feele and from our hearts acknowledge our regeneration and our sanctification by the contagion of the flesh to be so vnperfect as that wee finde in our selues many wants and many imperfections Doe wee labour and endeuour to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ to be perfect as he is perfect to be holy as hee is holy and to proceed from strength to strength vntill we become perfect men in Christ Iesus Here is the substance of that perfection which o●● good God requireth of vs in this life If it be thus with vs we may assure our selues that we haue well profited in the schoole of Christ and that we are growne vnto very good perfection There was a time indeed when it was said vnto vs This doe and thou shalt liue and againe Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things that are written in the booke of the law to doe them and in this time there was no perfection but in the perfect fulfilling of the whole Law of God so that all of vs were vnder the curse and all of vs were in thrall vnto that mortall enemie of mankinde the deuill because it was impossible for vs to fulfill the Law of God But when it pleased the euerlasting King of glory in infinite mercy towards vs to send his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinfull man for sinne to condemne sinne in the flesh then this thrall vnto Satan this curse of the Law this yoke of the Law which neither we nor our fathers were able to beare was taken from our shoulders for that which the Law required of vs but which was impossible for vs to performe Rom. 8.3 that Christ Iesus himselfe fulfilled in our flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in vs which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit And now if by faith wee put on Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse and by the vertue of his resurrection die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse and acknowledging our owne wants and imperfections doe studie and endeuour daily more and more to liue righteously and soberly and godly in this present world this is the perfection which Christ requireth of vs. A blessed sending of such a Sonne and a blessed birth of so sweet a Sauiour worthy to be celebrated by a perpetuall remembrance for euer The sending of him vnto vs was the greatest token that euer was of God the Fathers loue towards vs and his comming into the world in the similitude of sinfull flesh was the ioyfullest comming that euer was so ioyfull that an Angell from heauen brought the tidings thereof and therein of great ioy that should be to all people that a multitude of heauenly souldiers praised God thereat and said Glory be to God in the high heauens and peace in earth and towards men good will that certaine wise men came then from the East Country to worship him that the shepheards when they had seene the babe with his mother published abroad the thing that was told them by the Angell of that childe that Simeon taking him in his armes praised God and said Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace c. and that Anna spake of him to all that looked for redemption in Ierusalem Of which most ●oyfull birth wee at this time doe celebrate a most ioyfull remembrance and should so celebrate it euen as these holy Saints of God did not in excesse of banquetting and feasting not in immoderate gaming and sporting not in idlenesse or wantonnesse but in honouring of his name in singing vnto him praise and thanksgiuing and in telling of his saluation from day to day So did they celebrate his birth as wee haue heard and so should wee celebrate the remembrance of his birth All other celebration is rather an heathenish imitation then any religious obseruation Let vs therefore as at all other times so at this time sound out his praises in the middest of the great congregation who hauing fulfilled that for vs in his flesh which wee could not doth now require of vs no more then he giueth vs for he requireth of vs perfection and he giueth vs perfection not an absolute perfection but such as he requireth of vs in this life To come then againe vnto our point will we trie how wee haue profited in the schoole of Christ and vnto what perfection wee are growne Sift the points and see If wee haue faith in Christ Iesus whereby wee take hold of his righteous●esse if wee feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection by the death of sinne and the life of righteousnesse if in heart and voice through a Christian feeling thereof we acknowledge our owne imperfection and if thereupon wee labour to increase in holinesse and righteousnesse with all godly increasing then haue wee well profited in the schoole of Christ and then are wee growne vnto good perfection For as I told you before this is the substance of that perfection which God requireth of vs in this life Howbeit this withall wee must note that there be degrees in this perfection for when by Gods mercy we are come so farre that the spirit beareth witnesse vnto our spirit that in some measure we haue attained vnto all these points of Christian perfection yet may we not here stand still but we must goe forward from grace vnto grace Vntill wee come vnto the marke at our races end wee must runne forward and daily grow from perfection to perfection We must labour daily to increase in faith that we may daily
liue here in the body climing vp into heauen that when death comes and ye must remoue out of the body ye may dwell for euer with the Lord and be receiued into the full possession of that inheri●ance immortall and vndefiled which is reserued in heauen for you LECTVRE LXXII PHILIP 3 Verse 20.21 From whence also wee looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body c. FRom whence This is the second Christian profession which the Apostle maketh in behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked as he did and it is of their expectation of Christ his second comming to saue them Which also yeelde●h a reason why they haue their conuersation in hea●en Our conuersation saith the Apostle is in heauen And why so From heauen we certainly looke and wait for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ when hee shall come as a swi●● Iudge against all them that haue made their bellie their Go● but as our Sauiour to giue vnto vs an inheritance among the● that are saued therefore our soule-conuersation is in heaue● where now Christ is and whence he shall come in that day t● saue vs. In that the Apostle saith from whence hee noteth th● place whence Christ his second comming shall be and consequently the place where now he is according to his humanitie● for there now he is whence at that day hee shall come sittin● now in glory at the right hand of the throne of God in heauen whence hee shall also come in glory to iudge both th● quicke and the dead Againe in that he saith from whence als● wee looke for the Sauiour he signifieth their patient expectation and waiting for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ when he shall appeare the second time without sinne vnto saluation 〈◊〉 for Christ being then already descended from the bosome o● his Father and hauing offered vp himselfe without spot vnto God to take away the sinnes of such his chosen children a● through faith in his bloud haue their consciences purged from dead workes to serue the liuing God now they waited and looked for the promise of his second comming when he should come in the clouds to be glorified in his Saints but to render vengeance vnto them that know not God nor obey the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ Againe in that he saith from whence also wee looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ he noteth the person of him whose second comming from heauen in the clouds they waited and looked for which is the Lord Iesus Christ the Sauiour The Lord who is to be feared hauing all soueraigne power giuen vnto him in heauen and in earth The Lord Iesus who is to be feared and loued hauing laid downe his life for vs to saue vs from our sinnes and to free vs from condemnation the due desert of our sinne The Lord Iesus Christ who is to be feared loued and reuerenced hauing as our Priest reconciled vs vnto God and as our Prophet instructed vs in the will of God Vnto all which the Apostle addeth this that further he calleth him the S●uiour for that then in his second comming he should not only saue them and free them from sinne and condemnation which he did at his first comming in his humilitie but shou●d ●●ue them and free them from death and corruption and ●ring them into the full possession of that inheritance pur●hased in heauen for them So that yee see the generall point ●ere spoken of is Christ his second comming in glory the ●articular points are the place whence the second comming ●hall be the patient expectation and waiting of the faithfull ●or the second comming and the person of him that shall ●ome in this second comming which the faithfull so looke ●or Now let vs see what notes and obseruations wee may ga●her hence whereof to make some further vse and instruction ●or our selues The first thing which I note is the Apostles Christian pro●ession which he maketh in the behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked so as he did touching the place whence they waited for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ They loo●ed for the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ from heauen ●here they had set their affections where they had their soule-conuersation Hence then I obserue a ground of that point of an article of our faith wherein we beleeue that Christ shall come from heauen with glory to iudge both the quicke and the dead Whereunto also the Scriptures giue witnesse often elsewhere as where the Angels told the Apostles saying Act. 1.11 This Iesus which is taken vp from you into heauen shall so come as yee haue seene him goe into heauen and againe where the Apostle saith that the Lord shall descend from heauen with a shout 1 The. 4.16 and with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpet of God and againe where our Sauiour himselfe tels his disciples Mat. 24.30 that the sonne of man shall come in the clouds of heauen with power and great glory But what needeth further proofe of this point It is a thing which wee all beleeue and confesse that Christ being ascended into heauen where he sitteth at the right hand of the throne of God shall come againe from heauen in his appointed time with power and great glory so that euery eye shall see him yea euen they which pierced him thorow and shall render vnto euery man according to that he hath done whether it be good or euill The vses which we are to make hereof are these First to beware of such false teachers as tell vs that the body of Christ is not only in heauen but in earth also in euery Kingdome in euery City in euery parish in euery loafe i● euery peece of bread and cup of wine where the sacrament i● receiued For doe wee looke that he shall come from heauen the second time with power and great glorie And shall we● not thinke that now he is there whence then hee shall come True it is that Christ as hee is God is not in heauen alone o● limited vnto any place but filleth all places being infinite and incomprehensible But as he is man so is he there alone whence hee shall appeare the second time vnto saluation for so it is written Act. 3.21 that the heauens must containe him vntill the time that all things bee restored And wat else is it but to destroy the nature of a true body to say that it may bee in diuers places at one time Let this for this time suffice vs Wee looke for Christ as he is man from heauen therefore as hee is man he is in heauen the heauen must containe him till all things be restored therefore he is alone in heauen hee hath a true body therefore hee cannot be in diuers places at once Beware therefore of such deceiuers that yee giue no place vnto their errour and trust perfectly that Christ sitteth at
Heb. 9.28 as saith the Apostle the second time vnto saluation Is the message then of Christ his second comming gladsome vnto you Is the remembrance of it ioyfull vnto you It is a sure token vnto you that ye belong vnto Christ Iesus and it is a notable fruite and effect of your faith and hope in Christ Iesus It may be that some of you looking more vpon your selues and your owne sinnes then vpon Christ and the bowels of his mercies and being more sharpe and seuere toward your selues then quick-sighted to looke toward Christ Iesus may feele some appalling in your selues or at least not that cheerefulnesse in expectation that should be But let not your harts be troubled nor feare Ye looke not only vpon your sinnes or so on Christ as only a seuere iudge and so despaire in your selues and vtterly abhorre his comming but yee looke for him though not without hope yet without that cheerefulnes which ye ought In this weaknesse the Lord will perfit his praise and vnto these beginnings hee will giue a good issue Only let my counsell be acceptable vnto you turne away your eies from your selues and cast them vpon Christ Iesus He shall be your iudge that is your Sauiour He hath bidde you looke vp and lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere Joh. 5.24 And he hath said it that hee that belieueth in him hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death vnto life Tit. 2.13 Waite therefore patiently and cheerefully for the Lord for the grace of God which bringeth saluation to all c. The third and last thing which heere I note is in the person of him whom the Apostle saith that they looke for from heauen which is the Lord Iesus Christ the Sauiour Wherein I obserue a reason both why wee should walke in this like as citizens of the heauenly Ierusalem hauing our conuersation in heauen and why wee should looke and long for the second comming vnto iudgement For why should it seeme strange vnto any man that liuing here in the body wee should haue our soule-conuersation in heauen Is not our Lord and King mightie in power to saue and defend vs and to reuenge vs of our enemies in heauen Is not our Iesus who not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercie hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renuing of the holy Ghost in heauen Is not our Christ the Mediator of the new Testament that hath reconciled vs vnto God maketh continuall intercession for vs and teacheth vs outwardly by his word and inwardly by his spirit in heauen Is not our Sauiour who in that day shall make vp the full complement of our saluation in heauen where then should our conuersation be but in heauen where should the body be but where the head is where should the spouse be but where the bridegroome is not one of vs all but we are stung with fierie Serpents cursed sinnes and noysome lusts which fight against the soule If wee will be healed and liue we must looke vp vnto the brasen Serpent lift vp for that purpose In heauen is our brasen Serpent euen the Lord Iesus Christ We must therefore while we are in the body lift vp our eies vnto him and haue our soule-conuersation in heauen if now we will be healed of our infirmities and if when we remoue out of the body we will dwell with the Lord. And as this should bee a sufficient reason to moue vs to haue our whole conuersation in heauen so should it also moue vs to looke and long for the second comming vnto iudgement For shall our Lord and King come which shall tread downe ●he Deuill and all enemies vnder his feete and leading captiuitie captiue shall make vs to triumph in the heauenly places Shall our Iesus come then to be our iudge that first came to saue his people from their sinnes Shall our Christ come that offered himselfe vpon the crosse for vs and opened his fathers will vnto vs Shall our Sauiour come to saue vs from death and corruption by glory which first saued vs from sinne and condemnation by grace What cause then haue wee to hearken vnto the counsell of Iames Iam. 5.7 exhorting to bee patient vnto the comming of the Lord yea what cause to crie with the soules vnder the Altar Apoc. 6.10.22.20 How long Lord holy and true dost thou not iudge and auenge our bloud on them that dwell on the earth Yea to crie with Iohn Come Lord Iesus come quickely Vnto this which hath beene taught the example of our brother lying here before vs may as I heare be a good prouocation My selfe knew him not and therefore I can say the lesse of him But by the report of them that knew him hee was very studious and for his time had profited well in the knowledge of such Arts as he applied himselfe vnto He was also as I heare religiously affected and godly minded hauing in good measure while hee was in the body his conuersation in heauen And in the time of his sicknesse willingly submitted himselfe vnto the will of his God as one that looked for the blessed hope and appearing of the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ in whom his soule reioyced and in the merits of whose death and passion his heart was comforted The Lord grant that wee may all liue in his feare and die in his fauour LECTVRE LXXIII PHILIP 3. Vers 2● Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious body according to the working c. IT remaineth now that wee proceede vnto the third and last branch where the Apostle in the behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked as he did maketh Christian profession of their certaine hope of the glorification of their vile bodies by the powerfull working of Christ Iesus set downe in these words who shall change c. They had their conuersation in heauen looking for the Sauiour from heauen euen the Lord Iesus Christ and from heauen they looked for the Lord Iesus Christ knowing that then hee should change their vile bodies and make them like vnto his glorious body c. The generall point then here spoken is the glorification of our vile bodies in the day of Christ by the power of Christ The particular circumstances which here the Apostle noteth are these 1. who shall glorifie vs namely the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change c. 2. What he shall glorifie in vs namely our bodies whose soule-conuersation hath beene in heauen 3. the condition of our bodies what now they are namely bodies of vilenesse basenesse and abiectnesse i. Vile base and abiect bodies subiect to corruption sinne and all kinde of vanitie 4. The time when he shall glorifie our vile bodies namely in that day when he shall come in the cloudes of heauen to iudge both the quick and
out of my band My Father which gaue them me 29. is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand Hath not he prayed for them whom the Father hath giuen him Ioh. 17. that they may be one with him that they may be kept frō euil that they may be sanctified through the truth And doth not Iohn say that whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not 1. Joh. 3.9 namely that sinne that is vnto death so that he fall away finally from God Men may haue tasted of the good word of God and come to some knowledge of the Lord Iesus Christ and yet fal way but they that haue truly tasted of the powers of the world to come shall be euen as the mount Sion which may not be remoued but standeth fast for euer Why then doth the Apostle exhort vs to continue in the Lord if it be sure that we shall continue in the Lord It is to remoue from vs carnall securitie and to teach vs to depend on the Lord by whom we continue in his faith feare and fauour To conclude this point therefore as the Apostle here speaketh vnto the Philippians so say I vnto you Continue in the Lord euen in the faith and knowledge of Iesus Christ so as ye haue bene taught in Christ Iesus Let it neuer be said to you as it was to the Galatians Ye did runne well who did let you that ye did not obey the truth But as ye haue begun to loue and like the truth so continue to walke in the truth that when Christ Iesus shall come in the clouds of heauen ye may be the crowne of our reioycing and that ye may also appeare with him in glorie LECTVRE LXXVI PHILIP 4. Verse 2. I pray Euodias and beseech Syntyche that they be of one accord in the Lord. 3. Yea I beseech thee faithfull yoke-fellow c. NOw follow certaine particular exhortations vnto particular and priuate persons touching some discord fallen out amongst them In the second verse his request is vnto Euodias and Syntyche that they would be of one accord in the Lord. What Euodias and Syntyche were it is not certaine neither are they mentioned elsewhere in the Scripture Like it is by this place that they were two women of good note and such as had much stood with Paul at his first planting of the Church at Philippi But now it seems they were at oddes whether the one with the other or both with the rest of the Church and whether about matters of faith and religion or about ordinary matters of common life it is not certaine This we see the Apostle would gladly compose the strife and therefore he exhorteth them to be of one accord in the Lord that is of one mind and one iudgement in the things of the Lord betwixt themselues and with the Church If we vnderstand that they differed in matters of faith and religion or if we vnderstand the words in generall of what dissensions soeuer then the exhortation is that laying aside all debates and dissensions they would be of one accord in the Lord that is they would dwell together in such vnitie as is pleasing to the Lord. I pray Euodias and beseech Syntyche c. It followeth Yea and I beseech thee c. In this verse the Apostles exhortation or request is vnto his faithfull yoke-fellow that he would be a meanes to compose the strifes of Euodias and Syntyche with this reason implied because they were women which had laboured with him when he preached the Gospell at Philippi nor with him onely but with Clement also and with diuers others which labored with him in the same work whose names are written in the booke of life What this faithfull yoke-fellow was whom he maketh this request vnto it is not certaine Much disputation there is who it should be Like it is that it was some speciall man that preached the Gospell purely and sincerely there with him at Philippi Him he requesteth to helpe those women namely Euodias and Syntyche How to helpe them Namely to order their matters and to compose their strifes whatsoeuer they were And why should he do so That which the Apostle addeth seemeth to be added as a reason to moue his faithful yokefellow to help them and to compose their strifes for they laboured with him in the Gospell that is when the Gospell was first preached by him at Philippi they laboured yea and euen stroue for so the word signifieth putting themselues in hazard for the hearing of the Gospell preached and for the defence of the Gospell For in the Acts mention is made of women among whom was Lydia that came together to a place besides the riuer Act. 16.13 not daring as it may seeme to haue their assemblies in the citie of Philippi and there heard the word at Pauls mouth These two women it may seeme were two of them of whom the Apostle for that cause saith that they labored and stroue with him in the Gospell he being willing to preach and they desirous to heare when there was great danger for both and they standing much in his defence when he was much contradicted Neither doth he commend them to haue laboured with him alone in the Gospel but with Clement also and with other his fellow-labourers which laboured with him in the worke when the Gospel was first preached at Philippi Who this Clement was it is not certaine as neither who these his fellow-labourers were Silas it is like by that place in the Acts was one Ministers of the Gospell they were which ioyned their labours with Paul to the gathering of the Church at Philippi whose names though they were not written by him in this Epistle yet he saith that they were written in the book of life Whereby he meaneth that their life was as certainly sealed vp with God as if their names had bene written vp in a booke to that purpose For the speech is borrowed from the maner of them that bill the names of them in a booke whom they haue chosen into their seruice whom then they know to be theirs because they haue their names billed in a booke So God knoweth who are his as certainly as if their names were written in a booke and their life is as surely sealed with him as if their names were registred to that purpose The summe then of the Apostles reason is this these women for their labour with him and other his fellow-labourers in the Gospel were worthy that he should do this for them and therefore he requests his faithful yoke-fellow that he would help them compose the strifes which were either betwixt themselues or betwixt them and the Church there And let this suffice to be spoken touching the scope of these particular exhortations and the meaning of the words in them both Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our further vse First then in the person of Paul I note his
appeareth that their ioy is not Christian because it is not constant but ebbeth and floweth according to the ebbe and floud of aduersitie and prosperitie What shall we say then when the Lord afflicteth vs with pouertie sickenesse and the like crosses must we reioyce in the Lord Yea verily 1. Sam. 2.6.7 for it is the Lord that killeth and maketh aliue that woundeth and healeth that bringeth to the graue and raiseth vp that maketh poore and maketh rich that bringeth low and exalteth Amos 3.6 There is no euill in the Citie which the Lord hath not done No euill that is no crosse or affliction no plague or punishment which he sendeth not And whatsoeuer crosse or affliction it is vnto his children it is but either a probation that the triall of their faith being much more precious then gold that perisheth may be found to their praise and honour and glorie at the appearing of Iesus Christ such as was Iobs affliction or else it is a fatherly correction that being chastened of the Lord 2. Sam. 12.14 they may not be condemned with the world such as was the death of Dauids child for Dauids sin and such as was the weakenesse and sickenesse and death of many of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11 30. for eating and drinking vnworthily at the Lords Table Are then our crosses of pouertie sickenesse or whatsoeuer they be from God Then are they good and we are to reioyce in them For all things fall out for the best for those that loue and feare him Are they for the triall of our faith My brethren saith Iames James 1.2 count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into diuerse tentations and trialls c. Are they to correct and chastice vs If we endure chastening Hebr. 12.7 God offereth himselfe vnto vs as vnto sonnes for whom he loueth he chasteneth O but sometimes he shutteth vs euen vp in despaire and infidelitie how shall we then reioyce in the Lord I demand then Dost thou know it and lothe it and long to be brought againe into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God Thou hast good cause to reioyce in the Lord for he hath onely hid his face from thee for a while that he may haue mercie on thee for euer And what if thy faith or hope be but as a graine of Mustard seed what if being as it were couered vnder the ashes they seeme not to be Christ Iesus is most plentifull to helpe them that are most weake and he is all-sufficient to supply all wants If any seede of God be there in thy weakenesse he will perfite his praise Yea but in that our Sauiour pronounceth a blessing vpon them that mourne Matt. 5.4 it appeareth that we are not alwayes to reioyce Not so neyther for euen then when we sigh and mourne for the affliction we haue in the world we are to reioyce in the Lord and to be of good comfort in Christ Iesus because he hath ouercome the world euen then when we mourne through a sence of Gods iudgements we are to reioyce in his tender mercies that he deales not with vs after our deseruings euen then when we mourne in the body because of affliction we are to reioyce in our soules because of our strong consolation in Christ Iesus and because our light affliction in the body causeth vnto vs a far most excellent and an eternall weight of glorie And therefore our Sauiour in the same place where he saith Blessed are they that mourne exhorteth also to reioyce and be glad in persecution for that great is our reward in heauen Let this then teach vs to take heed how we murmure against the Lord for pouertie sickenesse or any crosse whatsoeuer They are from the Lord whatsoeuer they be and if we be his children they are onely eyther for the triall of our faith and patience that patience hauing her perfect worke we may be perfect and entire lacking nothing or else as a louing correction of a mercifull father that we may be reclaimed from the wickednesse of our wayes And if we do not now reioyce in the Lord when he seemeth thus to hide his face from vs certainly whatsoeuer shew we made before of reioycing in the Lord we plaied but the hypocrites Howsoeuer therefore looking vnto our selues vnto our sins vnto our infirmities vnto our afflictions vnto the world we may sigh and mourne yet let vs reioyce in the Lord. We are not bid to reioyce in our selues Nay in our selues we shal be sure to haue cause enough of mourning We must therefore go out of our selues vnto the Lord and we must reioyce in him We must looke vnto him and remember that he is good and therefore whatsoeuer he doth is good that he is Almightie aod therefore can raise vs out of the dust of death and set vs with the Princes of the earth that he is mercifull and therefore will not suffer the rod of the vngodly to rest on the lot of the righteous And againe we must remember that he was poore that we might be made rich in him that he was weake that we might be made strong in him that he was tempted that he might be able to succour them which are tempted What cause therefore soeuer of mourning there be in our selues let vs looke out of our selues and let vs reioyce in him alwayes If he blesse vs then we thinke and yeeld easily that we haue cause to reioyce in the Lord and if he crosse vs with any plague or trouble then we haue also cause to reioyce in him because it is for our good and his owne glorie Reioyce therefore in the Lord alwayes LECTVRE LXXIX PHILIP 4. Verse 4. Againe I say reioyce 5. Let your patient mind be knowne to all men The Lord is at hand THese words are as we heard the last day an exhortation vnto the Philippians to reioyce not as the world doth but to reioyce in the Lord not with a momentanie and flitting ioy but alwayes both in weale and in woe not vnaduisedly made or about a light and easie matter but seriously made and about a matter very needfull and yet hard to be perswaded and therefore doubled Againe I say reioyce in the Lord alwayes Now see how it pleaseth the Lord that as the Apostle comes againe and againe vnto this holy exhortation and leaues it not with once or twice but euen the third time also exhorteth them to reioyce in the Lord so I should come vnto you againe and againe euen three seuerall times with the same exhortation to reioyce in the Lord. Againe saith the Apostle I say reioyce euen in the Lord alwayes for that is to be added and resumed to the former place From which doubling and redoubling of this exhortation I obserue both how needfull and withall how hard a matter it is to perswade this constant reioycing in the Lord to reioyce in the Lord alwayes For to this end doth the holy Ghost often in
conforme our selues vnto the will of God set downe in his word as touching I say our faith and repentance so touching our loue whether we loue one another so that as members of the same bodie we beare one with another and helpe one another For as faith and repentance towards God so this loue also towards our neighbour is so necessarily requisite that otherwise we do not worthily celebrate these holy mysteries And therefore if we will be worthie partakers of this holy Supper as here we that are many do all eate one bread and drinke of one cup are all confirmed in one faith and nourished to grow vp into one bodie whereof Christ is the head so must we loue one another and as members of the same bodie beare one with another and helpe one another So that at this time the verie celebration of these holy mysteries may sufficiently put vs in mind of that moderation patient mind which ought to be in one of vs towards another Neither that onely but this day also wherein we celebrate the remembrance of Christ his blessed resurrection may sufficiently put vs in mind hereof For hath Christ loosed the bands of death and by his resurrection from the dead triumphed ouer death and mightily declared himselfe to be the Sonne of God Yes he hath and this day we celebrate the most ioyfull remembrance thereof And how should not thi● put vs in mind of rising from the death of sinne vn●● the 〈◊〉 of God Or how shall we thinke that we are risen 〈…〉 ●fe of God if there be not this moderation and p● 〈…〉 in vs one towards another Since then by the res●●rection of Christ as this day we are put in mind of our r●●●●●ection from the death of sin vnto the life of God thereby also we are put in mind of that moderation and patient mind which ought to be in one towards another let therefore the celebration of those holy mysteries of Christ his death and passion let the memoriall of his blessed resurrection as on this day be sufficient to stirre you vp vnto this moderation which our Apostle here requireth and whereof hitherto we haue spoken And whosoeuer findeth himselfe to haue failed herein heretofore let him giue all diligence hereafter that his patient mind may be knowne vnto all men The second thing which I note in this exhortation is this that the Apostle would haue this their moderation and mildnesse so conspicuous and euident as that it might be knowne and that to all men no doubt to this end that all men as occasions were offered might haue triall of their moderation and mildnesse and that thereby religion among all men might be increased and the name of God in whom they beleeued glorified Whence I obserue the extent of the moderation and mildnesse that ought to be in vs how farre the practise thereof is to reach that they may haue triall and experience thereof namely not to them alone that vse vs kindly and gently or to them alone which are within but to them also which are without euen vnto all men is our patient mind to be made knowne For as our Sauiour saith in somewhat another matter If ye loue them which loue you what reward shall ye haue and if ye be friendly to your brethren onely Math. 5.46.47 what singular thing do ye So may it well be said in this matter if our patient mind be onely knowne vnto them that vse vs with all mildnes and gentlenesse what singular thing do we and if we moderate our affections and yeeld onely vnto them that yeeld vnto vs what praise shall we haue Our moderation then and patient mind is not to be restrained in the vse thereof vnto these and these men but it is to be shewne vnto all men with whom we liue be they better or worse So the Apostle speaking of charitable beneficence Gal. 6.10 Rom. 12.18 Let vs do good saith he while we haue time vnto all men And againe Haue peace with all men And generally the precept is that we haue our conuersation honest amongst all men As lights therefore for so we are called we must communicate the light that is in vs vnto all men holding forth our lights of gentlenesse goodnes meeknes temperancie moderation patience c. vnto all men imitating therein our Father which is in heauen Math. 5.45 who maketh his Sunne to arise on the euill and on the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust And now why are we to vse this moderation towards all men that our patient mind may be knowne vnto all men The reason is that all men seeing our moderation and mildnesse towards all men may thinke the better of the Religion which we professe and the rather glorifie the Lord of glorie in whom we beleeue For if they shall see vnto wardlines and vnkindnesse in one of vs towards another quickly do they speake euill of the name of God and of the doctrine which we teach And therefore the Apostle alwayes exhorts all sorts vnto all holy duties and why that the name of God and his doctrine be not euill spoken of 1. Tim. 6.1 Tit. 2.5 Iam 2 7. that the word of God be not euill spoken of that the worthy Name after which they be named be not blasphemed But if they shall see moderation and mildnesse meeknesse gentlenesse and patience in one of vs towards an other we cannot better draw men vnto the glory of our God and to a good opinion of our religion and of the truth which we professe And in this respect it is that our blessed Sauiour thus exhorteth all men Mat. 5.16 saying Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen And in the same respect also it is that the Apostle Peter exhorteth saying Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles 1. Pet. 2.12 that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of the visitation For an ornament then of the truth which we professe and for the glorie of our God in whom we beleeue our patient mind is to be made knowne vnto all men not to our brethren onely or such as vse vs kindly but euen to all men Here then first were to be reproued those braules and quarels which fall out amongst neighbours and brethren about matters of two pence matters of nothing Our Apostle would haue our moderation and patient mind knowne vnto all men How is it then that neighbours and brethren will not one yeeld vnto another wil not one beare with another One wil haue his right and not yeeld a iote another will auenge his wrong or else he will die for it a third will beare coles at no mans hands but such as he brewes such shall he drinke and this amongst neighbours and brethren And how shall it be