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A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

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repentance now it were absurd to thinke that the fruits afterwards borne should merit repentance which God gaue before for that is to affirme that not onely a wicked man might merit his owne conuersion but that hee might merit it by the workes hee would doe after his conuersion which I know not that any Papist will affirme and the like reason is there of the phrase here vsed Quest. But letting the Papist goe what is it to walke worthy of the Lord Ans. It is so to cleaue vnto God that we refuse not out of the holy estimation of Gods free mercies to forsake our selues and the world and to testifie our obedience to the Law and Spirit of God in vprightnesse with all thankefulnesse But that this may appeare more plainely if wee would walke worthy of the Lord. In generall our righteousnesse must exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees we must be so farre from resting in the custome and practise of the vile sinnes that abound in the world that we must not be satisfied with this that wee be ciuill honest men and well thought of in the world for Gods mercies challenge more at our hands then ciuill honesty In particular if wee would walke worthy of God 1 Wee must walke with God in the sence of Gods presence and in the light of his countenance so knowing his loue as wee forget not his presence And because the wandring and vnmortified heart of man is not easily brought to this therefore we must humble our selues to gaine a better abilitie to walke with our God 2 We must set the Law of God as the onely rule of our actions alwayes before vs and by all meanes be carefull to obey the motions of Gods Spirit euen the Law in our mindes that is to walke after the Spirit and according to the Spirit 3 Wee must labour to glorifie God by endeauouring by an open light to approue our selues to the world in shewing the power of Gods grace in our workes and the newnes of our liues 4 Wee must be contented to deny our owne reason wit desires delights and profits and to take vp any crosse God shall lay vpon vs 5 Wee should goe beyond all ciuill honest men in this that wee would respect all Gods Commandements and make conscience of euery sinne by Prayer and endeauour to auoid it and to obey God both in our soules and bodies and in euery part of both Lastly we should so admire Gods loue in deliuering our soules from death and our feete from falling c. that wee should seeke Gods face in the light of the liuing and neuer to come empty handed but Gods vowes should be vpon vs and we should euer be rendring praise Thankefulnesse is all wee can giue to God In all pleasing This is the second thing required in our conuersation we should not thinke it enough to liue iustly and religiously but wee must liue pleasingly also and this is true 1. In respect of God Let vs haue grace that wee may so serue God that wee may please him 2. In respect of our owne Conscience preseruing the rest and goodnesse of the conscience 3. In respect of men thus the wise careth to please her husband and the husband to please his wife It is not enough to be perswaded that that wee doe be good but wee ought to looke to it that it be pleasing So in all duties to God and in our carriage to men Quest. But what should wee doe that wee might so serue God as please him to Ans. This is answered in diuers Scriptures 1 Be sure thou be not in the flesh for no such can please God and they are in the flesh that can relish nothing but fleshly things that take no care to prouide for the life of Grace and peace of Conscience vers 6. that will not be subiect to the Law of God vers 7. that haue not the Spirit of Christ vers 9. and that dye not to sinne vers 10. Obiect But there are many wise men to whom those signes agree and may not they for their good parts otherwayes be pleasing to God Sol. No so long as they are fleshly persons their wisedome bread in the flesh is so farre from pleasing God that it is enmitie to God 2 Thou must let the will of God reuealed in this word be the rule of all thy actions a light to thy feete and a lanthorne to thy pathes for in the Word is contayned both what he requires and what will please him 3 Thou must make conscience of little sinnes as well as great sinnes if a man breake the least Commandement and then by doctrine or defence maintaine it to be a small matter our Sauiour Christ shewes that this is not onely displeasing to God but it will cause God to cast men out of heauen with indignation on the other side whosoeuer shall make conscience to obserue Gods Commandements in the things the world counts lesse matters and shall constantly by doctrine or profession declare his sinceritie herein hee shall be exceeding pleasing to God and God will shew it by making him great in the Kingdome of Heauen What commandement could be lesse then the commandement about the not eating of bloud and yet with many words their obedience herein was vrged and that with this reason as they would haue all things goe well with them and theirs and doe that which is pleasing or right in Gods sight 4 Thou must desire and pray for the best things thou must so thinke of profits and pleasures of the world as especially thy heart must desire and thy lips request of God the wisedome and grace that is from aboue It did exceedingly please God that Solomon asked wisedome and not riches or long life 5 Thou must get an humble and contrite spirit a heart able to see and hate sinne and mourne ouer it and with a tender sence of thine owne wants and vnworthinesse to implore Gods fauour and the renuing of his mercies 6 Thou must so professe respect of pietie as thou be carefull in all things to deale iustly and truely with men delighting in all the occasions and meanes to shew mercy he cannot please God that doth not endeauour to please men Sacrifice is an abhomination when men doe not iudgement and Iustice and God delights in men that will deale truely If a man will deale iustly and loue mercy not be mercifull onely and when hee hath occasion to come to God in the duties of pietie and worship will come in all humilitie and contrition of heart this is that saith the Prophet Micah that is required yea that is good that is exceeding pleasing and acceptable to God 7 Thou must be tender-hearted and mercifull to supply the necessities of the Saints for workes of mercy are Odours of smeet swell Sacrifices acceptable well pleasing to God 8 Thou
therefore be sure thou be a Saint be sure thou be more then flesh and bloud be sure thou lye in none of the sinnes God hath threatned with the losse of this inheritance be sure of the imputation of the righteousnesse of Christ be sure thou haue in thee the spirit of the Sonne be sure to commit thy selfe to the word of grace In light The Christians inheritance is said to be held in light in sixe respects First because hee now obtaynes it in the times of the Gospell which times in comparison with the times of the old Testament are called times of light the light of the Iewes being spread abroad among the Gentiles and exceedingly enlarged by the rising of the Sunne of righteousnesse Secondly because this inheritance can neuer be assured without the light of knowledge In the vnderstanding of man there is a three-fold light of knowledge Naturall Euangelicall and Celestiall the Naturall light is the light of Reason the Euangelicall light is the light of Faith and the Celestiall light is the light of Heauen Before wee can see our inheritance in the light of Heauen wee must first see it in the light of Faith and as for the light of Reason it will doe no good for any euidence in this tenure Thirdly because this inheritance is held with true ioy on earth and perfect ioy in heauen and Ioy is expressed by the word light in many places in Scripture Fourthly in respect of the admirable communion that a Christian hath with God and Christ who is light of light that true light Iohn 8.12 Fiftly because of the certainetie of this inheritance it is said to be held in light It is worthy the noting that Catharinus a Papist writing vpon this place thus vnderstands the meaning of Light and is much offended vvith those that pleade for vncertayntie of assurance Sixtly in light that is in Heauen and the light of Heauen is an excellent light both for the perfection of it and the continuance of it It is a perfect light for there shall be on Gods part a cleare reuelation and on mans part a cleare vision and for continuance that light shall neuer be ouercome of darkenesse nay it shall neuer admit any mixture of obscuritie in as much as Heauen is a Citie that needes not the Sunne nor Moone to shine in it for the glory of God doth lighten it and the Lambe is the light thereof Reuel 21.23 In the meane while till God translate vs to this light of heauen let vs labour to settle our hearts in the light of Faith and certainetie and glad our hearts with the light of the Spirit and ioy choosing rather to dye then to forsake the face and presence of God the fountaine of all true light both in earth and heauen Verse 13. Who hath deliuered vs from the power of Darkenesse and translated vs into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne IN this Verse our redemption is considered more particularly for as it is by inchoation in this life it stands of two parts the first is our deliuerance from the power of Darkenesse and the second is our translating into the Kingdome of Christ. Darkenesse This Darkenesse imports the miserie of vnregenerate men from which the Children of God in the dayes of Redemption are deliuered and it notes not onely the darkenesse of Gentilisme proper to the Pagans of that time but also the darkenesse of Sinne of Ignorance of Infidelitie of Aduersitie of Death and of Hell for euery vnregenerate man is couered with a sixe-fold darkenesse First the darkenesse of Sinne Secondly the darkenesse of ignorance which as a vayle couers all flesh Thirdly the darkenesse of Infidelitie for as there is the light of Faith in the regenerate so there is a darkenesse of vnbeliefe that possesseth euery vnregenerate man All men haue not Faith it is the gift of God both the Prophets and Apostles haue complayned Who hath beleeued our report Fourthly the darkenesse of Aduersitie miseries of all sorts breaking in vpon the soule body state and names of men Fiftly the darkenesse of Death for Death is the house of darkenesse and this is the wages of Sinne Lastly the wicked man is in danger of vtter darkenesse euen of the darkenesse of hell out of all this wee may see the extreame misery of all carnall persons vpon whom the Kingdome of darkenesse breakes in and preuayles so many wayes and therefore accursed is their misery that can liue in this estate without sense or remorse or feare If Securitie as a wretched Lethargy had not ouergrowne mens hearts how could they eate drinke sleepe marry giue in marriage c. when they finde themselues in the power of such fearefull and horrible darkenesse Power This darkenesse gets power and preuayles ouer the world by the vnwearied labour of the Prince of darkenesse who as hee seduced our first Parents to extinguish the fayre light in which they were created whence flowed an vniuersall darkenesse vpon all mankinde so doth hee still as God of the vnregenerate world worke effectually in binding mens mindes more and more that the light of the Gospell might not shine in their hearts both by hindering by all the wayes hee can the meanes of light and by leading man on from sinne to sinne till custome haue worne out sense and bred a very liking of darkenesse more then the light And thus poore man runnes from darkenesse to darkenesse and from dungeon to dungeon till hee fall vnto the euerlasting dungeon of vtter darkenesse and this would be the end of all flesh were it not that God of his infinite mercy hath prouided a meanes in Iesus Christ to deliuer the Elect from the power of this Darkenesse Deliuered Euery man hath great reason to thinke of this deliuerance out of the Kingdome of darkenesse wherein naturally hee is for while he so continueth he knoweth not whither he goeth he hath no fellowship with God his deedes are all euill his ignorance will not excuse him yea it will be his condemnation his feete treade not in the way of peace Who hath deliuered vs. Here are foure things 1. What deliuered 2. Whom vs 3. When hath 4. Who viz. God the Father Deliuered The originall word doth not signifie onely to let out or lead out or buy out but it noteth forcibly to snatch out Man is not gotten so easily out of Sathans hands nor will the World and Flesh let them goe without force or without blowes Quest. What must wee doe that wee may be deliuered from this power of darkenesse Ans. Beleeue in Iesus Christ who is the true light Know that all true light is begunne in the assurance of Gods loue to thee in Iesus Christ seeke this knowledge To this end attend vpon the preaching of the Gospell by which life and immortalitie are brought to light And because this Sonne doth not alwayes shine Walke in the light
become God man in person These Natures are personally vnited this vnion is personall but not of persons and it is a vnion of Natures not naturall In these words the Apostle speakes of the Nature assumed viz. his Humane Nature And there are two things to be noted in these words First that hee saith that body not the body Secondly that he saith not simply his body but that body of his flesh That body Heere hee points out a speciall excellency in the body of Christ aboue all other bodies in Heauen and Earth for his body was without sinne formed by the ouershadowing power of the holy Ghost so is no mans else 2. It is assumed into personall vnion with the diuine Nature 3. It was honoured with speciall Prophecies Types and Sacrifices 4. This body was offered vp as a full expiatory Sacrifice 5. It is to be remembred to the end of the word in the Sacrament Body of his flesh To note that it was a true Body like vnto ours and to distinguish it from his Sacramentall and misticall body In two things Christ body was not like ours and in three things it was like It was not like first in the manner of subsisting it was not independent or a person of it selfe 2. In the vitious actions of the substance of it no sinne eyther could or ought to infect it Could not because originall sinne was restrained by the Holy Ghost Ought not because in it a purgation for our sinnes must be made In three things it was like ours first in substance he tooke our whole Nature he was the seed of the Woman of Abraham of Dauid the Sonne of man c. And hee tooke the parts of our Nature both soule and body 2. In properties and thus hee assumed both the properties of the whole Nature in that hee was finite and create And in the parts as in the soule hee assumed Vnderstanding Will Memory and in the Body Figure Quantitie and Circumscription c. 3. In infirmities for hee assumed not onely our Nature but the infirmities of Nature But wee must know that hee tooke the defects or infirmities they call miserable not those they call damnable Thus of the Doctrine of his Nature his Sufferings follow Through death The death of Christ doth reconcile vs in as much as it ratifies the couenant and takes away the guilt of the sinnes of the former Testament and the vertue of it eats downe the power of present sinnes and destroyes the power of our naturall death Christs death differs from the death of all the Elect in three things First in that in death he sustained not his owne person but dyes as our suretie and so is a sacrifice for sinne Secondly he was in death a whole burnt offering for as hee died in body so his soule was an offering for sinne in as much as he sustained the sence of the infinite wrath of God in his Agonies Thirdly in that his death was the death of him that was the Sonne of God Hitherto of the doctrine of the Nature and sufferings of CHRIST the Vses follow First for Instruction The consideration of all this should teach vs 1. to vallew reconciliation with all the graces that flow from it according to the worth of the meanes by which they are procured If there were no other way to know the worth of Gods Fauour Knowledge Spirituall refreshings and Graces yet by the price paid for the purchase of them we may discerne they are worth more then all the world 2. It is not possible for vs to hate sinne vpon the consideration of so pregnant an example of the odiousnesse of it when the imputation of sinne brought the Sonne of God on his knees to his death O the soule Lethargie that hath ouergrowen vs 3. That wee may haue the profit of the Incarnation and Passion of CHRIST in his naturall body wee must be carefull to get into his misticall body 4. The Apostle vseth the Meditation of Christs humiliation to the death as an argument to perswade vs to Compassion Mercy Fellowship in the Spirit Vnitie Humilitie Clemency and meekenesse of minde Phil. 2.1 to 9. Secondly wicked men may here see what smart they are like to feele from the vnpartiall iustice of God Doth hee not spare the body the flesh the bloud the life of his owne Sonne when he became but a suretie for sinne How shall vngodly men euer enemies and neuer sonnes that themselues haue committed sinne escape when the day of wrath shall come Thirdly godly men may heere see great reason of comfort not onely by considering the great loue of Christ and the great benefits must needes flow from his death but if but two things be weighed 1. the honour done to our Nature in that in the humanitie of Christ it is ioyned to the diuine Nature This makes amends for that breach that is made by the damnation of millians in our nature 2. The great certainty of Gods couenant of Grace and Mercy For a mans couenant if it be once confirmed no man abrogates it or addeth or taketh from it therefore much more Gods Couenant shall stand vnchangeable being ratified and confirmed by the death of Christ. Thus of the Meanes The end followes in these words To present you holy and without spot and vnblameable in his sight And in these words is both the presentation and the sanctification of Christians to be considered To present you The originall word is very significant and diuersly accepted it signifies to restore so Asts 9.41 to assemble Acts 2.26 to make present so Acts 23 33. to make ready furnish purge or make cleane Acts 23.24 to make acceptable 1 Cor. 8.8 to make manifest 2 Tim. 2.15 to proue euidently Acts 24.13 to assist and stand too Rom. 16.2 2 Tim. 4 16. to offer by way of dedication or gift to God 2 Cor. 11.2 Luke 2.22 Col. 1.28 It is true that Christ restores vs collects vs brings vs into Gods presence clenseth vs makes vs acceptable assists and defends vs and manifests vs to be holy But I take it principally in the last sence he presents vs by dedication to God Thus Christ shall present vs wholy both at the day of iudgement and in the day of death when he shall deliuer the soule to God Thus also Christ doth present vs in this life 1. When by the preaching of the Gospell he seuers and segregates vs from the world and brings vs into Gods household 2. In Iustification when clothing vs with his owne righteousnesse hee becomes our Iustification 3. in new obedience and that two wayes first when hee presents our workes couered with his intercession Secondly when hee causeth vs to present our selues to GOD both by Prayer consecration of our selues to Gods Seruice and holines of life It must be euery mans care then to seeke his presentation from Christ and to that end by Couenant Prayer and practise deuote himselfe to
thus If in Christ we be deliuered from the power of our sinnes by his quickning grace and from the guilt of them by the free pardon which is to be had by his meanes then wee need not goe any whither else neither to philosophie nor traditions c. but so it is and so the very Colossians found it in their case as the words of the text expresse Ergo. The words in themselues expresse the twofold estate of Christians in this world what they are by nature in their vnregenerate estate and what they are by grace in the state of grace In the state of corruption two things are true of them and are true of all men 1. They were dead in actuall sinnes 2. They were then in the vncircumcision of the flesh and likewise dead in it In their estate of grace he puts them in minde of two benefits 1. Regeneration 2. Remission of sinnes Thus of the coherence and order of the words Diuers things may be noted in the generall 1. We may from hence be informed of the fruitlesnes of philosophie traditions or ceremonies of Moses they cannot make a miserable man happie they cannot infuse the least sparke of spirituall life into any 2. We see the Apostle thinks it meet to put men often in minde of their miserie by nature and great reason for it exalts the praise of the riches of Gods grace in Christ And it may serue to humble men for their falls after calling and to keep them still suspitious and watchfull ouer a nature that hath been so prone to sinne and securitie in sinning it may serue to eat down the pronenesse of our nature to vaine boasting and confidence in the flesh and it should much excite men to the loue and care of godlinesse and pietie with all life and power seeing they haue been so long slaues to sinne And lastly the Apostle rips vp this matter of purpose to withdraw their mindes from traditions and philosophicall dreames Dead in sinnes They were dead in sinnes both if you respected their publike estate or each particular person If you looke vpon publike states before they are framed and reformed by the word what are they but heaps of men dead in the graues of sinne and senselesse in their sinfull courses and thus it is with euery particular person the words import that he is guiltie of many sinnes and he is dead in them also Naturally euery man is guiltie of secret atheisticall conceits of vnbeleefe of ignorance of hardnes of heart of swarms of euill thoughts and affections of hurtfull passions and lusts besides his defects of the knowledge of God and that warmth of the holy affections of loue feare trust and ioy in God Who can sufficiently rip open the vnthankfulnes lukewarmenes hypocrisie inconstancie and presumptuous profanenesse that is in our hearts by nature in matters of Gods seruice how do men daily offend either by not calling vpon the name of God or by taking it vp in vaine who can number the othes lyes reproches curses flatteries and filthy communication hath and did daily infect the mouths of men Oh the world of sinnes wee are actually guilty of against God or men or our owne selues publike priuate secret open inward outward in prosperitie and aduersitie in the Church or familie or abroad in mens conuersation Alas we can discerne but a glimpse of that sinne and guiltinesse that is in vs by nature and this is the increase of their miserie in all their sinnes they are dead in them Dead There is a fourefold death temporall corporall spirituall eternall The state of man being in miserie he is dead temporally The bodie of man being in the graue hee is dead corporally The soule of man lying in sinne is dead spiritually And both soule and bodie being cast into hell are dead eternally The Colossians were dead spiritually there is a death to sinne and a death for sinne and a death in sinne a death to sinne and so the godly die by mortification a death for sinne and so malefactors die by execution and a death in sinne and so euery naturall man kills himselfe by enliuing his sinne The spirituall death in sinne is an vnutterable losse of the life of God by which the sinner is senselesse and carelesse in extremitie of miserie vnto his owne euerlasting ruine if the Lord preuent it not by regeneration Now that men are in this case by nature these Scriptures proue Eph. 2.1.2 Math 8.22 Ioh. 8.25 Rom. 8.10 Luk. 15.32 Reuel 3 2. Iud. 12. 1. Tim. 5.6 Neither let any deceiue themselues about their estate for a man may be dead in sinne and yet be aliue in the flesh yea thou maiest be a wise man in the flesh or a prince of this world yea thou maiest haue a name that thou liuest spiritually and yet be starke dead Now this spirituall senselesnes is called a death because it is a priuation of spirituall life from the soule as the naturall death is from the bodie 2. because it tends to eternall death The vse may be fourefold 1. For information No wonder wicked men can come and goe from the word of God and not be touched alas they are dead men and so is it with them in respect of the iudgments of God alas if thou couldest rowle a mountaine vpon a dead man he would not feele so is it with a man dead in sinne and further we may here obserue that to liue yea to die quietly is no signe of a man in a happie case for if this death in sin be not cured thousands of people may die quietly because they die senseleslie they feele no more of the feare of hell or iudgment or Gods anger then if they were already dead in their bodies they would feele outward extremities I know that God many times can lay terror vpon the flesh of wicked men and make their spirits drinke in of the bitter anguish arising from the feruencie of Gods burning displeasure but I say if God let them alone vsually the most would die in a wretched senselesnes and inconsideration being neither able nor willing to entertaine the thoughts of what must presently and necessarily befall them 2. This may serue for confutation and so 1. of the Papists about their freewill How can there be this free will in a dead soule we are dead in sin and therefore of our selues mooue not vnto life till God quicken vs by his word and spirit 2. Of the carnall Protestant that beares himselfe so strongly vpon his supposed couenant with death and hel● his agreement must be disanulled nay his very securitie imports his vnauoidable destruction if it be not remooued by the power of Christ. 3. For instruction art thou a man that hearest this that hast liued all thy time without remorse for thy sinnes and neuer yet entertained the care of reformation of thy life be here warned of thy miserie let it be enough thou hast been dead
those things that are aboue where Christ sits at the right hand of God HITHERTO of christian doctrine now followeth christian life The Apostle hath before discoursed of matters of faith now he intends to intreat of matters of life and to prescribe rules of conuersation And these rules belong either to our generall calling as we are Christians or to our particular callings as we are people of such or such condition or state of life The generall rules are set downe from the first verse of this Chapter to the eighteenth and the particular rules begin at the eighteenth verse and continue to the second verse of the next Chapter The rules of the first kind may be referred to three heads for either they concerne first the meditation of heauenly things or secondly the mortification of vice or thirdly the renouation of life The meditation of heauenly things is vrged from v. 1. to the fift the mortification of vice is vrged from v. 5. to the tenth Renouation of life is generally laid down v. 10.11 and more specially opened v. 12 to the eighteenth The exhortation to the care and studie of heauenlie things is thus digested First it is expounded v. 1. Secondlie it is illustrated v. 2. Thirdly it is confirmed by motiues and reason v. 3.4 And thus for the order of the whole Chapter and the generall frame of this first part Before I open the words more particularly there are diuerse things may be noted from the coherence and dependence of these words with the Chapter before and the matter following in this Chapter From the coherence with the former Chapter I obserue these things-First that there can be no holinesse of life without faith and therefore the Apostle first instructeth them in matters of faith It is a true rule whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne and may be extended further then things indifferent while we are out of Gods fauour and know not our reconciliation and iustification in Christ our best actions are but faire sinnes For without faith it is vnpossible to please God Secondly that the terrestriall blessednesse of man is in respect of sinne two waies principally assaulted First with errors in opinion Secondly with corruptions in manners And against both we should learne from the Apostle in the latter part of the former Chapter and the first part of this to be armed and furnished with holy directions and meditations Thirdly that these men that are so superstitiouslie earnest and so zealouslie forward for ceremonies and the traditions and obseruations of men whatsoeuer they protest or pretend or seem to be are indeed void of true deuotion and feruent affection to heauenly thingsc. Fourthly that he that is by faith made a new creature must resolue to be at Gods appointment for his whole carriage in his generall and particular calling Thus of the coherence with the former Chapters From the order of doctrine in this Chapter two things may be noted First that before a man can be good in his particular calling he must first be good in his generall thou maist be painfull and diligent but thou canst not be euerie way a faithfull and sound hearted husband wife seruant child c. till thou be a good man or good woman in respect of grace and godlinesse And therefore we should first seeke the righteousnesse of Gods kingdome and it may serue for direction vnto such as choose wiues or seruants or the like if they be not faithfull to God how canst thou be assured they will prooue faithfull to thee moreouer wouldst thou haue thy seruants or children to be amended then bring them to the powerfull preaching of the word and call vpon them to get into the fellowship of the godly that they may learne to be good abroad in matters of religion and then thou maist hope to find them by proofe and daily experience trustie and faithfull in thy businesse finallie this reprooues both the sinfulnesse and follie of many carnall pa●ents and masters they neuer care so their seruants do their worke though they altogether neglect Gods worke And many times they restraine their seruants and children and will not let them heare sermons or come into godly companie as if that were the way to make them idle and carelesse whereas we see the cleane contrary to be true Secondly that men are neuer likelie to hold out and proue sound in the reformation and new obedience of their liues till they fall in loue with heauenlie things and grow in some measure wearie of the world and the things thereof Thus of the generall obseruations from the twofold coherence Now followeth the particular opening of the words In the proposition of the exhortation to the study of heauenly things laied downe in this verse two things are to bee considered first what or the dutie required viz. seeke those things which are aboue secondly why or the reasons to enforce the dutie and they are foure First ye are risen with Christ in the first resurrection Secondly these things are aboue and not attained without seeking or studie Thirdly Christ is aboue in his bodily presence Fourthly Christ sits at the right hand of God exalted in the glory of his father each of these strongly conclude the exhortation as will further appeare in the particular handling of them If ye be risen with Christ. There may be conceiued to be a threefold resurrection of a christian The first is sacramentall And thus we rise againe in baptisme The second is corporall and so we shall rise againe in the day of Iesus Christ in our bodies out of the dust of the earth The third is spirituall and so we must rise in this life in soule from the death of sinne or else we shall neuer be deliuered from the second death of this spirituall resurrection called elsewhere the first resurrection he here intreats And it is a worke of the spirit of grace deliuering vs from the power of sinne by which vve are quickned to the heauenly desires and endeuours of holy life by the vertue of the resurrection of Iesus Christ applied vnto vs by faith in the effectuall vse of Gods ordinances It is a worke by which we grow conformable to Christ b●ing risen againe by which also we taste of the powers of the life to come and are borne again to a liuely hope of an eternall and incorruptible inheritance the earnest of which we haue receiued and shall shortly receiue the whole possession purchased though for a time we be absent from the Lord. This first resurrection carieth with it a similitude or resemblance of Christ rising againe so as euery Christian in this work beares the Image of Christ and in him Christ riseth before our eies not onely because the Lord Iesus doth in this gracious worke giue vs a daily and fresh remembrance of his resurrection by renewing such fruits of it but also
thine hands be strong in the dayes that I shall haue to doe with them I the Lord haue spoken it and will doe it Let couetous persons without further enquiry assure themselues that couetousnesse is a maine cause of all the euils are vpon them or theirs and besides they may be assertained that all the seruice they doe to God is abhorred and meere lost labour it were to no purpose if they would bring him incense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre country their burnt offerings would not be pleasant nor their sacrifices sweet vnto him Ob. But couetous persons are of most men so well furnished that there is not that means to bring them to any great hurt Sol. The Prophet shewes that God can lay a stumbling blocke before them and father and sonne together mayfall vpon it and neighbour and friend may perish together The Lord means enough when men little thinke of it to bring downe rebellious sinners Ob. But we see couetous persons and wealthy worldlings scape the best longest of many others Sol. The Prophet Amos sayth the Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iacob will neuer forget any of their workes Though the Lord may deferre yet certainely he will neuer forget and therefore they are not a iot the better for scaping so long But howsoeuer they might escape outward iudgements yet they may be infallibly sure they haue sinned against their owne soules and that they shall know in the day of their death their riches shall not then profit them when the Lord taketh away their soule he that is a great oppressour shall not prolong his dayes for he that getteth riches and not by right shall leaue them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a foole How horrible then shall that voice be Thou foole this night shall thy soule be taken from thee and thus far of these words as they concerne the coherence with the former words now I consider them as they are in themselues And first of the wrath of God Wrath of God It is apparant that wrath in God belongs to his Iustice. And Iustice may be considered as it flowes from God foure wayes First as he is a free Lord of all And so his decrees are iust Secondly as he is God of all and so the common works of preseruing both good bad are iust Thirdly as a father in Christ so by an excellency he is the God of beleeuers and thus he is iust in performing his promises infusing his grace and in bestowing the Iustice of his sonne Fourthly as Iudge of the world and so his Iustice is not onely distributiue but correctiue And vnto this Iustice doth wrath belong Anger in man is a perturbation or passion in his heart and therefore it hath troubled Diuines to conceiue how anger should be in the most pure happie and bountifull nature of God And the rather seeing affections are not properly in God Neither is their declaration full enough that say it is giuen to God improperly and by anthropopathie for I am of their opinion that thinke anger is properly in God First in such a manner as agrees to the nature of God that is in a manner to vs vnconceiueable Secondly in such a sence as is reuealed in Scripture The wrath of God in Scripture is taken sometimes for his iust decree and purpose to reuenge sometimes for commination or threatning to punish So some thinke it is to be taken in those words of the Prophet Hosea I will not do according to the siercones of my wrath that is according to my grieuous threatnings Sometimes it is taken for the effects or punishments themselues as in the Epistle to the Romans is God vnrighteous which bringeth wrath it is well rendered which punisheth The wrath of God is distinguished by diuerse degrees and so hath diuerse names for there is wrath present and wrath to come Present wrath is the anger of God in this present life and is either impendent or powred out wrath impendent is the anger of God hanging ouer mens heads ready to bee manifested in his iudgements and so wrath hangs in the nature of God and in the threatnings of his word and in the possibilities of the creatures Wrath powred ●●t is the iudgement of God fallen vpon men for their sinnes by which they prouoked God and so there was great wrath vpon the people in the destruction of Ierusalem and thus he reuealeth his wrath from Heauen vpon the vnrighteousnesse of men Wrath to come is that fearefull misery to be declared vpon the soule of the impenitent at his death and vpon soule and body at the day of iudgement in the euerlasting perdition of both But that we may be yet more profitable touched with the meditation of this point I propound sixe things concerning Gods wrath further to be considered First the fearefulnesse of it Secondly what it is that works or brings this wrath vpon vs. Thirdly the signes to know Gods wrath Fourthly the meanes to pacifie it Fistly the signes of wrath pacified And lastly the vses of all For the first The fearefulnesse and greatnesse of Gods wrath or anger for sinne may appeare three wayes First by Scripture Secondly by similitude Thirdly by example That Gods anger for sinne is exceeding terrible and fearefull I will shew by one place of Scripture onely and that is the first of Nahum the Prophet for he sayth God is iealous and the Lord reuengeth the Lord reuengeth where the repetition shewes the certainty of it that God will be as sure to reuenge as euer the sinner was to sinne but this is more confirmed when he sayth he is the Lord of anger as if he would impart that his anger is his essence as if he were all made of anger and that he is the authour of all the iust anger that is in the world and if the drops of anger in great men haue such terror in it what is the maine Ocean of anger which is in God himselfe and to assure vs yet further of the terrour of his wrath he addeth the Lord will take vengeance on his aduersaries which signifieth that the Lord will account of impenitent sinners as a man accounts of his worst enemies and therefore the Lord will shew his displeasure to the vttermost of their deserts and his Iustice. And therefore if any doe obiect that they see it otherwise for the plagues of wicked men are not so many nor so great as their sinnes he answereth that and sayth that the Lord reserueth wrath for his enemies he hath not inflicted vpon them all they shall haue there is the greatest part behinde the full vials of his fury are not yet poured out And if any should reply that they haue obserued that wicked men haue prospered long and scaped for a great while without any
God the Father hath prepared and laid vp in Heauen And the more are wee confirmed in this resolution constantly to prayse GOD for these excellent Graces because they are not sodaine Fancies or presumptuous Conceits raised out of the Forge of your owne braine or conceiued for some corrupt or carnall ends but were indeede begotten in you by the mighty working of the most sweet Doctrine of Reconciliation proued in it selfe and by effect to be a Word of Truth euen that word of the LORD long foretolde now truely reuealed and accomplished also begetting the true forme of pietie in you with constancie and true vprightnesse both of heart and life This is the word of Reconciliation which is come vnto you as by incredible power and swiftnesse it is now to the greatest part of the world euen to people of all sorts and Nations causing them to shew the soundnesse of their Co●uersion by the daily fru●●s of amen●ment of life and this increaseth continually in all places as it doth and hath done with you since the very first day that you truely heard and effectually beleeued this rich Doctrine of the grace of GOD. And this very Doctrine which you haue heard of Epaphras is the selfe same diuine truth that is gone all abroad the world of Epaphras I say whom wee all reuerence as our deare fellow-Seruant being assured that hee is for your best good a faithfull and most humble Minister of Iesus Christ. Hee hath with great contentment boasted of you in reporting to vs your spirituall and heauenly affection to God and godlinesse and one towards another and for the same cause since the first time we heard of your prayses in the Gospell wee haue beene importunate without ceasing praying for you and beseeching God to increase in you and make compleate your knowledge of his reuealed will not onely for contemplation but for practise also with a gracious experience of the working of the Spirit That yee might carry your selues in a holy eminency of godly conuersation striuing to proportion your Obedience in a greater degree then ordinary as might become the great measure of Gods Mercies of all sorts towards you expressing a liuely kinde of pleasingnesse both in carriage towards God and man being refreshed with the sweetnesse of acceptation in your seruices and that you might extend your carefulnesse to beare fruit not in one kinde or some few but in all kindes and sorts of good workes daily increasing in a holy acquaintance with the sacred nature of God which is both the effect and cause of all comfortable progresse in holy life That so growing vp to a ripe age in CHRIST in the sanctification both of soule and body and spirit in all the Graces and Duties of CHRIST and Christian life through the assis●ance of the glorious power of GOD in the vse of all meanes and helpes appoynted of GOD yee might accomplish your most holy profession with singular comfort and contentment being able chearefully and with all patience and Long-suffering to beare the Crosses Tentations Infirmities Persecutions and whatsoeuer Wrongs or Indignities might befall you wayting for the Promise of GOD being neuer weary of well-doing And as wee haue thought good thus to let you vnderstand our loue towards you and our reioycing for the prosperitie of your soules so wee thought good to write vnto you both to put you in minde of the most holy Doctrine of CHRIST as also to exhort and beseech you to be constant in the Faith and Hope you haue receiued without listening to the entising speeches of false Teachers which as wicked Seducers would beguile your soules of that high prise of your most holy Calling What thankes can wee euer sufficiently giue vnto GOD the Father of CHRIST and Christians that of his meere Grace and free Loue hath by a holy Calling made vs in his account meete to haue a Lot in that heauenly Canaan in that sweet and eternall fellowship with the Spirits of the iust not onely reuealed vnto vs in this light of the Gospell but to be inioyed by vs in the light of Heauen And hath also already deliuered vs from that wofull estate in which the darkenesse of Gentilisme and Sinne and Ignorance and Aduersitie and Death and Damnation had power ouer vs and hath translated vs into the Kingdome of Iesus Christ the Sonne of his loue inrolling our names among the liuing and accounting vs as Subiects of this Kingdome of Grace and Heyres euen Coheyres with Christ of the glory to be reuealed And howsoeuer our Sanctification be as yet vnperfect yet are wee not onely bought with a price but effectually and truely redeemed and in some sort fully to for in our Iustification wee are perfectly reconciled and all our sinnes absolutely forgiuen vs as if they had neuer beene committed through his merits that shed his bloud for vs. Who is a most liuely and perfect Image of the inuisible God not onely as hee workes Gods Image in man or because hee appeared for God the Father to the Fathers in the old Law or because as man hee had in him the likenesse of God in perfect holinesse and righteousnesse or because hee did by his Miracles as it were make God visible in his flesh but as he was from euerlasting the very essentiall naturall Image of God most absolutely in his diuine person resembling infinitely the whole nature of his Father and therefore is to be acknowledged as the begotten of God by an eternall generation so the first begotten of euery Creature as he was before them so is he therefore the principall heyre of all things by whom and in whose right all the Saints doe inherite what they haue or looke for For by him all things in heauen or earth whether visible or inuisible were created yea the very Angels themselues of what Order or Office soeuer whether Thrones or Dominions Principalities or Powers were all made by him of nothing and therefore hee and not they are to be worshipped in short all things were created by him yea and for him to And hee was from euerlasting with GOD the Father before all Angels or other Creature was made and still all things are preserued and continued as consisting in him yea the very Angels haue their confirmation from him And hee is that glorious and alone Mysticall head of the Church which in an holy order and relation by the admirable worke of the Spirit as a bond vniting together is a true body vnto CHRIST and worthily is hee to be acknowledged a head vnto the Church for three great Reasons first in respect of Dignitie for hee alone hath the primacy and ought to be acknowledged to haue preheminence in all things for if we respect the estate of Grace hee is the beginning of all goodnesse and if wee respect the estate of Glory hee is the first borne of the dead not onely because hee is risen
Christian soule and this I note the rather because it should moue vs to vse carefully and constantly all the meanes that serue to breed or increase true Hope in vs and to get by prayer and practise all those things that cause Hope and that wee may get and increase our Hope wee must labour for First true Grace 1 Thes. 2.16 Secondly sauing Knowledge Psal. 9.10 78.7 Thirdly Experience Rom. 5.4 Fourthly Patience and comfort of the Scriptures Rom. 15.4 Fiftly the ioyes of the holy Ghost and peace of Conscience in beleeuing Rom. 15.13 Sixtly aboue all and for all these the Spirit of Reuelation Ephes. 1.18 Seauenthly the often meditation of Gods Promises Thus of Hope as it is considered in relation to Faith and Loue. Which is laid vp for you in Heauen In these words Hope is described in the obiect of it Laid vp viz by God in his secret Coffers as a most worthy Iewell this Metaphor giues occasion to obserue three Doctrines First that Grace and Glory are a mans best treasures and therefore wee should labour for them more then any thing else and if wee haue a comfortable euidence of them to be contented though we want other things Secondly that Hope is no common Grace in that amongst many fayre vertues which are common to wicked men hee locketh vp this Grace of Hope as a speciall Iewell hee intends to keepe onely for his owne Children Thirdly that the euidence and grace of Gods Children be in Gods keeping and laid vp safe in heauen and therefore cannot be lost and besides when they dye there is of theirs in heauen before they come Heauen Here I obserue two things First that there is a Heauen for the Saints after this life the Doctrine of Heauen is onely proper to Religion Nature hath but a darke glimpse of immortalitie or any beeing after this life and is full of stronger Obiections then Answeres and as any are more lewd in life they are more sencelesse of immortalitie But concerning the estate of the blessed in heauen Nature is wholy ignorant yea the Doctrine hereof is so diuine that Religion it selfe doth not fully purtray it out in this world to any yet as any are more holy it is more discerned The consideration of heauen may vrge vs to many duties in generall if euer wee would haue heauen when wee dye we must get holinesse both imputed or infused while wee liue Wee must be sure wee be of Gods Familie and that we are borne againe In particular we should therefore acquaint our selues with the Lawes and Misteries of Gods Kingdome and if we may come by the meanes to be effectually instructed in the way to Heauen we should account of this Pearle and rather then loose it sell all wee haue to buy it And wee should aboue all things labour for the meate that perisheth not but endures to euerlasting life in as much as in the Ministerie of the word is many times found the Keyes that open vnto vs the Kingdome of Heauen And in as much as riches may proue a singular hinderance we should take warning and see to it that they doe not intangle vs And because in Heauen is our treasures we should set our affections there and prepare for our change and departure Giuing allowance to no sinne no not the least constantly professing and confessing Christ before men that hee may not denie vs in that day Yea where God meanes to bestow heauen he bestowes heauenly qualities on men in this life they are poore in spirit they are eager after heauen and the things thereof they are like Children void of earthly carking and distressefull cares they are mercifull they loue their Enemies Secondly the meditation of Heauen serues for reproofe not onely of Atheists that would denie it or Papists that claime so great glory for their base merits but also of the most Protestants for are not the most such as can discerne the face of the Skie and yet haue no discerning of the season to get Grace and Heauen to say nothing of those that by their grosse and horrible sinnes haue forfeited ouer and ouer the claime of any interest in the Kingdome of heauen liuing in daily blasphemies whordomes drunkennesses c. Yea doe not the better sort giue Heauen faire words and yet haue their excuses why they will not come to Gods Feasts when hee inuites them And thus while men blesse themselues Gods curses vsually deuoure them Lastly it is a Doctrine of wonderfull comfort to Gods Children neyther is this the peculiar aduancement of some principall Saints as Abraham Dauid c. neither should the miseries of this life before we come to heauen trouble vs seeing there is no comparison betweene the troubles of this life and the glory of the world to come where there shall be no sinne sorrow labour weakenesse disgrace feare death where we shall enioy the sweet presence of God Christ Angels and iust men with vnspeakeable Ioyes perfect holinesse exquisite knowledge and a totall righteousnesse and all this for euer Secondly from hence also doth plainely arise this second Doctrine viz. that the hope of Christians is in another world there is their stay and comfort When they seeke by Faith the comforts of Gods fauours and by Loue seperate themselues to the communion with Gods Children they finde presently such a rent from the world and all sorts of carnall men assaulting so their rest that a little experience learnes them the knowledge of this truth that in this world and from the men of this world and the things thereof they must looke for no peace or contentment The Vse is first for Instruction to teach vs therefore to vse the world as if wee vsed it not and so to care for earthly things and persons as to resolue that Heauen is our portion and there onely must wee prouide to finde some rest and contentment yea therefore as strangers and Pilgrimes we should seeke and prouide for our abiding Citie Secondly this Doctrine giues occasion to answere that imputation that is cast vpon many professors viz. that forwardnesse in Religion makes them mindlesse of their businesse and much hearing of Sermons makes them carelesse of their callings Men may here-hence informe themselues that howsoeuer Religion tyes men to honest cares and daily diligence to prouide for their families else the very Scripture brands such Professors to be worse then Infidels that make Religion a maske for idlenesse yet seeing our hope is not in the world therefore Gods Children doe well first and chiefely to seeke the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof and so to minde an earthly calling as it hinder not an heauenly and prouide meanes for a temporall life as not to hinder the hope of an eternall life Thirdly this Doctrine may much settle and comfort Gods
thou vsedst prayer to serue thy turne but when thou hadst sped thou didst not returne by prayer to render vnto God his honour Thirdly if thou didst not make conscience of the vse of other ordinances of God for God will not giue all to any one ordinance Fourthly if thy prayers were ignorant proud hypocriticall prayers Fiftly if thou wast not in charitie but broughtest thy gift and diddest not forgiue or seeke reconciliation with thy brother Sixtly if thou didst aske of God for wrong ends or wrong things as to spend on thy lusts or for temporall things onely or chiefely besides many times it comes to passe that men speede not because they are not humble Wee should so prize and esteeme holy things as wee should exceedingly reioyce if wee could get but the crummes that fall from the Fathers table This Humilitie is euer ioyned with great Faith and wished successe in all suites to God Againe it is to be noted that men may be deceiued about the successe of Prayers for the decree for our succours may goe forth at the very beginning of our supplications though the knowledge of it be not reuealed vnto vs till afterwards Further God heareth prayers diuersly sometimes he heareth to grant the very thing wee desire sometimes he heareth and granteth and giueth not the very things we desire but that which hee holds to be best for vs and for the distresse wee are in so hee was said to heare CHRIST Heb. 5. Lastly God doth heare and grant and yet deferre to giue and that for our great good many times hee deferres that hee may proue vs that our faith may be the more kindled that his benefits may be more sweet when they doe come and that wee may know by the want that it is his gift when they are bestowed and that wee may be more carefull of the good vse of his graces gifts and benefits when wee haue them Thus of the Coherence For you Doct. We are bound to pray for others as well as our selues In this place I consider in this poynt onely two things First the kindes of prayers for others secondly the sorts of persons for whom wee must pray For the first I obserue here in the originall two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the translation Prayers and Desires as I take it all the sorts of prayers for others may be referred to these two heads and these two differ not so much in the matter as in the motiues to prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prayers are such suites vnto God as we are vehemently moued to by the contemplation of God and his Attributes The difference betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is somewhat shadowed out by Oration and Adoration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here rendered Desires are all suites vnto God arising from the deepe sence of mans estate eyther in dangers wants or blessings and vnder this kinde may be placed the three sorts of prayers in 1 Tim. 2.1 for our desires for others are eyther Deprecations in which wee desire God to turne away or keepe from them some great euill or Intercessions which are eyther complaints of wrongs or most importunate supplications vnto God for their conuersion and the pardon of their sinnes or lastly Thankesgiuings for Gods mercies and blessings Secondly to the Question for whom wee must pray It is shortly answered 1 Tim. 2.1 for all men excepting dead men or such as sinne vnto death or such concerning whom the will of God is reuealed for their perdition as the Man of sinne so as also by all men wee vnderstand all sorts of men not all the particular men of euery sort for wee may not desire saluation for all the men that God hath made vniuersally considered seeing the counsell of God is vnchangeably past concerning reprobates but that which in this Text is principall is that Ministers and People must pray one for another Ministers must pray for their People thus doe the Apostles in euery Epistle yea Samuel saith God forbid I should cease praying ●or you as if hee knew it to be a detestable thing for a Minister to be so retchlesse or carelesse as eyther not to pray or not to continue to pray for his people The people must also pray for their Ministers and that especially for these things that God may deliuer them from the rage of the disobedient and the practises of their enemies that God would open their mouthes and giue them vtterance with a fitnesse to discouer the secrets and mysteries of Christ and that their Gospell may runne and grow both in efficacie and credit yea in as much as they labour about sauing other mens soules the people should by prayers labour to further the saluation of their Ministers Wee cease not Note First he that loues the people of God truely loues them constantly Secondly that a heart truely sanctified is much in prayer cannot giue it ouer It is a wofull thing to neglect prayer but how cursedly miserable is their case whose hearts rise against prayer and cannot abide it but persecute it in others Thirdly the not ceasing in prayer hath in it constancie and perseuerance in prayer and teacheth that as wee are bound to pray so are wee bound to perseuer in prayer yea if wee must not cease to pray it implyes first that wee must pray in all places secondly that wee must watch to pray thirdly that wee must beleeue and hope wee shall obtaine what wee pray for fourthly wee must not appoynt God eyther time or meanes fiftly that wee must pray with all manner of prayers for all these fiue things are requisite or if any of them be wanting there will not be constant and faithfull prayer Yea not ceasing notes that there is singular comfort in prayer else men would neuer hold out Obiect But not ceasing implyes multiloquie vaine babbling Sol. Not so a man may pray earnestly and often and yet not vse many words Obiect But to pray without ceasing is to be tyed to vse idle repetitions for how can men be furnished and finde matter to pray so often and so much Sol. A Christian is furnished many wayes with needfull occasions of continuall prayer First hee is tyed to a daily Sacrifice both morning and euening by Prayer and Prayses Secondly hee findes continually new Mercies and those require new songs of prayse and prayer Thirdly as his knowledge encreaseth by the vse of the meanes he findes an increase of matter to driue him to prayer and make him pray better Fourthly new infirmities breaking out in himselfe and others and that daily giues an occasion to renue his suites to God Fiftly the Creatures and his callings must be sanctified by the Word and Prayer Sixtly varietie of crosses breaking in vpon him giues him cause to runne to God for the sanctifying or remouing of
while you haue the light and because a man can neuer sincerely seeke the comforts of God in Iesus Christ or constantly loue the word of the Kingdome the fountaine of light but that there will be great opposition from Sathan and the World Therefore euery one that is a weary of this darkenesse of Ignorance and Vnbeleefe and feeles what darkenesse of Aduersitie his sinnes haue brought vpon him and feares the darkenesse of Death and Hell must arme himselfe resolue and prepare and fight for his owne deliuerance putting on the whole Armour of light vsing all the meanes with Faith and diligence and then shall Gods power be made knowne in his weakenesse and the strong man armed which is the Diuell shall be cast out by him that is stronger then hee euen by Iesus Christ. At the time when this deliuerance from the power of darknes is wrought there are at the least these nine things in euery one that is truely deliuered First hee seekes knowledge with great estimation of it Secondly hee is carefull to amend his wayes and to auoid sinne Thirdly hee feeles and resists temptations Fourthly hee renounceth the world as being neyther besotted with vanitie nor swayed with example Fiftly hee fights against his owne flesh Sixtly hee loues the word of God Seauenthly he forsakes euill company Eightly hee mournes ouer and prayes against some speciall sinnes Ninthly he loues all the children of the light These are not all things that are wrought in man in the day his heart is changed and he deliuered but lesse then this can be in no man nor woman that is truely deliuered from the power of darkenesse Who. Doct. It is God onely that deliuers vs from darkenesse This is needfull to be considered of both that carnall men might know they can neuer see the light if they vse not the meanes God hath appoynted and that godly men might not dispayre vnder the sence of their wants for as God hath called them to the light and giuen them meanes so he is able to create light at his owne pleasure Vs. Doct. The Saints euen the dearest of all Gods Children haue beene ignorant sinfull and miserable as well as any other Hath A Question may here be asked how it can be said that Gods Children haue beene deliuered seeing they are ignorant sinfull fleshly full of afflictions and subiect to dye still Ans. They are deliuered in respect of Inchoation though not in respect of Consummation though they be ignorant yet the vayle is not whole but many pieces are torne off though they be in a dungeon in this world yet a great window is broken downe and much light appeares though there be sinne in them yet it raignes not though they must dye yet the sting of death is pulled out though they endure the same afflictions that wicked men doe for the matter yet they are not the same for nature and vse they are not curses or punishments but onely chastisements and tryals or preuentions The consideration of this that wee are not all at once deliuered from the power of darkensse may defend often preaching and the frequent vse of all good meanes publike or priuate This darknesse will not away with one dayes shining these clouds will not be dispelled with one blast what 's the light of one candle when the night hath inclosed the whole ayre And translated vs into the kingdome of his deare Sonne Or as it is in the Originall of the Sonne of his loue These words contayne the second part of our Redemption on earth in this world the redeeming of vs is the translating of vs and this translation is amplified by the condition of life into which wee are translated which for the excellencie of it is into a Kingdome and for the author of it is into the kingdome of Iesus Christ the Sonne of Gods loue Translated The word is a Metaphor and the comparison is taken from Plants in nature and there are diuers things signified vnto vs concerning our Redemption in the similitude of translating Plants As trees are translated in Winter not in the Spring so commonly our Redemption is applyed in the dayes of speciall affliction and sorrow and as the Plant is not first fruitfull and then translated but therefore translated that it may beare fruit so wee are not therefore redeemed because God was in loue with our fruits but therefore translated out of the kingdome of darkenesse that wee might bring forth fruit vnto God And as a tree may be truely remoued and new planted and yet not presently beare fruit so may a Christian be truely translated and yet in the first instant of his conuersion hee may not shew forth all that fruit he doth desire c. In particular translating hath two things in it first pulling vp secondly setting againe The pulling vp of the tree shadowes out three things in the conuersion of a sinner First seperation from the world hee cannot be in Christ that hath his heart rooted in the earth and keepes his old standing amongst these trees the wicked of the world Secondly deliuerance both from originall sinne in the raigne of it which is the moysture of the old earth and also from hardnesse of heart for translating hath remouing of the mould and stones that were about the roote Thirdly godly sorrow raised by the sense of the stroakes of the Axe of Gods threatnings and by the losse of many sprowts and branches that were hidden in the earth A Christian cannot scape without sorrow for hee hath many an vnprofitable sprowt of vanitie and sinfull profit and pleasure hee must part with The setting of the tree notes both our ingrafting into Christ by the Spirit of God through Faith and our communion with the Saints the fruitfull trees in Gods Orchard as also it notes our preseruation by the infusion of the sappe of holy graces And it is worthy to be noted that he saith translated vs to teach vs that there remaines in man the same nature after Calling that was before for our natures are not destroyed in conuersion but translated there remaines the same faculties in the soule and the same powers in the body yea the constitution and complexion of man is not destroyed as the melancholy man doth not cease to be so after conuersion onely the humour is sanctified vnto a fitnesse for godly sorrow and holy meditation and the easie renouncing of the world c. and the like may be said of other humours in mans nature Into the Kingdome The kingdome of God is eyther vniuersall ouer the whole world or spirituall ouer the faithfull Soules on earth or blessed soules in heauen till the day of Iudgement or it is both spirituall and corporall ouer all the Saints after the day of Iudgement for euer It is the Kingdome of Grace by Inchoation in the way present here below that is here meant not the Kingdome of Glory by Consummation in our Country aboue The Kingdome of
as can see in secret Hitherto our Redeemer is described as he stands in relation to God now in the second place he is described as he stands in relation to the Creatures And Christ is in relation to the Creatures fiue wayes 1. as the first begotten among them 2. as their Creator 3. as the end of them all for him 4. in respect of Eternitie as he is before all things 5. as all things in him consist All things depend vpon Christ as their preseruer as their auncient as their end as their Creator and as the first borne The first begotten of euery Creature Two things are here to be considered of Christ 1. that he is Gods Sonne by generation 2. that he is the first begotten For the first God hath Sonnes by Nature and by Grace Christ is borne as Man and begotten as God Things are begotten three wayes 1. Metaphorically onely by comparison or in some respects 2. Corporally 3. Spiritually some things doe beget without themselues as bodies doe but this is more ignobly and basely some things beget within themselues as doth the Spirit or soule more perfectly But the most perfect and vnvtterable glorious generation is the begetting of the Son of God by God The way of God in eternity who can finde out and his generation who can tell His waies are not as our wayes yet a glimpse of this great worke we may reach to two wayes 1 By way of Negation as they say in Schooles 2 By way of Comparison First by denying that vnto God which hath imperfection in it In the generation of the Creatures vve may see something into the generation of the Sonne of God There are eight things in the generation of the Creatures vvhich are not in this begetting of the naturall Sonne of God 1. The Creatures beget in time because themselues are first begotten but this is not in God Christ is of the Father but not after the Father there is here a prioritie in order but not in time 2. The Creatures beget by affection this is imperfection but God begetteth by Nature 3. The Creature begets vvithout himselfe so as Sons are diuers and diuided from the Father because they are finite we are of like nature to our Fathers but not the same nature but it is not so in God for Christ is not diuided from the Father as he is the naturall Sonne of God 4. The generation in the Creature is not without corruption or diminution of the nature of the Begetter but here God the Father begetteth without corruption or diminution by a way diuine inenarrable and incomprehensible 5. Our Children are lesse then their Parents but Christ is as well Coequall as Coeternall 6. The Creature communicates but a part of his substance but God communicates the whole 7. The father and sonne among the creatures are two in number one in Specie onely but in God it is not so for the Son of God is another but not another thing he is another viz. in Person but not another thing in Essence Lastly the creature begets mortal creatures propagates but a being for a time but God begets a Sonne immortall by nature such as can neuer die in the nature so begotten Secondly this generation is shadowed out by some comparison vvith Creatures the riuer and the spring are two yet not diuided so is the Sun and the Beames of it the Sauor the Oyntment are together and yet the Oyntment is not corrupted but the principall comparison is in the Minde and the Word the Minde begets the Word naturally without passion or corruption within it selfe so as the Word begotten remaines in the Minde the Word afterwards clothed with a voyce goeth into the eares of men and yet ceaseth not to be still in the Minde This in many things as you may see is like to the generation of God by the Father But all these are but shadowes the glory of the thing it selfe cannot be expressed by any words of man or Angels The consideration of this Doctrine should inflame vs to the loue of such a Sonne who being as hee was coequall and coeternall with the Father yet was pleased to delight himselfe in Gods earth which is man And we should for euer hearken and attend to the words of this wisedome of God who teacheth vs the secrets and the very bottome of his Father And seeing this is the Sonne of whom GOD hath spoken to the dreadfull astonishment and wonder of Heauen and Earth woe vnto them that sinne against the Sonne and prouoke him to anger How shall they be broken to pieces like an earthen Vessels But blessed are all they that with all feare and trembling and with all reuerence and affection subiect themselues to the Scepter of his Kingdome and trust in the loue of the Father through the merits of the Sonne Thus of the consideration of Christ as he is begotten of God it is here added that he is first begotten First begotten Christ is the Sonne of God He is the onely begotten Sonne of God hee is the naturall Sonne of God and here is tearmed the first begotten Sonne of God He is first begotten as God two wayes 1. in Time he was before all other things Of this afterwards 2. in Dignitie he is the foundation of all that respect by which others are made Sonnes he is first begotten as Man not in time but in dignitie and operation first in respect of the miraculousnesse and wonderfulnesse of his birth and conception so are none other borne secondly in respect of his Resurrection in which God did as it were beget him againe thus hee is afterwards said to be the first borne of the dead thirdly in respect of preheminence as he is the right of the first borne being made heyre of all things The Vse is diuers First let all the Angels of God worship him Secondly it should kindle in our harts godly sorrow for our sinnes If we can mourne for the death of our first borne how should we be pierced to remember that our sinnes haue peirced Gods first borne Thirdly we should neuer thinke it strange to suffer in this world seeing God spared not his owne first borne Lastly it may be a great comfort to Christians and that two wayes first because they shall be accepted with God in and for Christ who is the first borne and hath receiued a blessing for all the rest secondly because in Christ they themselues are accounted as Gods first borne in comparison of other men God will vse them as his first borne Exod. 4.22 Heb. 12.23 Psal. 89.27 By this Gods Children are made higher then the Kings of the earth Psal. 89.27 and therefore woe shall be to them that wrong Gods first borne Exod. 4.22 And therefore also euery Christian should so esteeme his birth-right as by no meanes with prophane Esau for any lust profit or pleasure to sell it Heb. 12.16
Kings that eyther pride themselues in their owne ciuill righteousnesse or can fall away wholy and for euer The second Vse is for Instruction and first as Christ is considered to be our Head we should 1 Pray that God would open the eyes of our vnderstanding that wee might with sence and affection see what the hope of our calling is to become members of such a Body vnder such a Head 2 Take heed of all pollutions that might any way tend to the dishonour of our Head whether it be of Flesh or Spirit 3 Consider our place in this Body and vnder this Head and not presume to know aboue what is meet 4 Vse all meanes to grow in this Body and not pull it backe or shame our Head by spirituall securitie or vnprofitablenesse and to this end wee should sticke fast to the words of the Prophets and not suffer ourselues to be carried about by euery winde of doctrine and follow the truth in Loue without pride or discord 5 Obey as the Members doe in Vnion with the Head by faith in Communion with the fellow-Members by Loue and with a naturall voluntarie and not extorted obedience Secondly if the CHVRCH be the Body of CHRIST and wee Members of this Body wee should learne to carry our selues one towards another in all humblenesse of minde and long-suffering supporting one another and keepe the bond of peace in the vnitie of the spirit And wee should labour to profit one another with the gifts God hath bestowed vpon vs that our graces as holy oyntment may runne downe from member to member and all our Loue should be without dissimalation in giuing honour going one before another in as much as what honour one member receiueth is done in some respect to all And wee should willingly distribute to the necessities of the Saints and reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe out of the Simpathy of Members by all meanes shunning to giue offence in the least thing especially not censorious or contentious in matters of indifferencie Lastly all discontentments with our place or calling or estimation in the body and all contempt or enuy at the gifts or place of other Christians should be banished out of our hearts Thus of the excellency of Christ in relation to the Church as it is briefly propounded the explication followes The head hath three Priuiledges or excels all the Members in Order Perfection or Vertue and Efficacie The preheminence of Christ is three wayes considered First in respect of the dignitie of Order verse 18. of order I say toward the Members Secondly in respect of perfection in himselfe in the fulnesse of grace verse 15. Thirdly in respect of Vertue Efficacie and influence toward the whole body verse 20. The primacie of CHRIST in order or relation to the Members is twofold First in the estate of Grace He is the beginning Secondly in the respect of the state of Glory Hee is the first begotten of the dead Hee is the beginning Christ may be sayd to be the beginning in three respects First as he is the first fruits for whose sake the rest are accepted and blessed Secondly as hee is the repayrer of the world decayed by mans sinne Thirdly as hee is the beginning of the good things that are in the Church hee is both the obiect and efficient cause of faith Mortification flowes from his death and new Obedience from his Resurrection Iustification is wrought from his obedience And this shewes the miserie of all carnall men that are not members of Christ in respect of the life of Grace they are dead in respect of Faith they are Infidels in respect of Iustification they are without GOD in respect of Repentance they walke in trespasses and sinnes in respect of Communion of Saints they are strangers from the Common-wealth of Israell There can be a beginning of no true felicitie without CHRIST Christ is said to be the beginning of the creation of God and from thence is inferred a most seuere reproofe of mans lukewarmenesse in matters of Pietie Repentance and Grace vers 15.16.17 And if Christ be the Authour and beginning of Faith and Grace it should teach vs to perseuere in the Faith and contend for the truth and keepe that is committed to vs with all Patience Wisedome and Constancy And in as much as hee is Alpha hee will be Omega as he is the beginning so he will be the end and therefore blessed are they that doe his Commandements And let him that is righteous be righteous still and let prophane men that will not by Faith and Repentance seeke vnto Christ be filthy still Th● first begotten of the dead Christ as head of the Church holds his relation both to the liuing as their beginning and to the dead as their first begotten There is a threefold primogeniture of Christ Hee is the first begotten First in respect of eternall generation as he is the Sonne of God Of this before Secondly as hee is borne of the Virgin Mary for shee is said to bring forth her first begotten Sonne Thirdly when God raised Christ out of the Graue hee is said to beget his Sonne for so the words of the second Psalme Thou art my Sonne this day haue I begotten thee are applied to the Resurrection of CHRIST In that Christ is said to be the first begotten of the dead three things may be noted as implied heere concerning the members of Christ and three things concerning Christ himselfe as Head First concerning the Members these things may be gathered 1. That not onely wicked men but the true members of Christ dye Heb. 9. Psal. 89. 2 Sam. 14. The consideration of this that the godly must dye may serue for many Vses first Why doth vaine man dye then without wisedome secondly how shall wicked men escape their Couenant with Death must needes be disanulled thirdly it should cause vs deepely to digest the vanities of this life fourthly it should cause vs to take heede of Eues Least yee dye for it is out of all question dye wee must and therefore meete it were wee should prouide for it without mincing or procrastinating lastly we should incourage our selues and dye like the members of Christ with all willingnesse Faith and Patience 2 The gouernance of Christ reacheth as well to the dead as to the liuing Members This the faithfull were wont of old to note when they would say a man were dead they would say hee was ioyn'd to his people This should be a great encouragement vnto godly men to dye 3 From Coherence that if wee would haue Christ to be the first begotten to vs when wee are dead wee must subiect our selues to his Ordinances that hee may be the beginning of true Grace to vs while we liue Secondly concerning the Head these three things may be noted 1 That hee was among the dead
and this was good for vs for thereby hee dissolued the power the Diuell had to inflict death or the feare of it vpon his Members and thereby hee finished the expiation of all our sinnes thereby he ratified Gods Couenant thereby hee kils the power of sinne in vs and thereby he takes away the curse of our naturall death 2 That he was not onely among the dead but he was begotten among the dead that is raysed from death to life and this also was profitable for vs for hee rose to our Iustification Rom. 4.23.24 to our viuification Rom. 6.4 to our deliuerance from wrath to come 1 Thes. 1.10 3 That hee is not onely begotten but the first begotten among the dead and that in three respects First as hee was more excellently raysed then any of the dead are for he carryed no corruption to the graue and hee saw no corruption in the graue and hee was but a short time vnder the power of the graue Secondly in respect of time hee was the first that rose from the dead Thirdly in respect of efficacie it is hee by whose power all the rest rise This must needes be a great comfort to vs while wee liue against the time our bodies must goe into the house of darkenesse the darkesome lodging in the graue onely let vs seeke the vertue of the Resurrection of Christ in this world and the experiment of the vigor of it first vpon our soules in plucking vs vp out of the graue of sinne to walke before God in newnesse of life That in all things hee might haue the preheminence These words are added for further amplification or Explanation of the former They giue vnto Christ a primacie and preheminence in all things First ouer both liuing and dead as hee is the beginning to the liuing and the first begotten to the dead Christ then hath the preheminence he is first in all things Mat. 28.18 Rom. 4.9 Phil. 2.9 Ephes. 1.23 He is first many wayes first in Time as before all things first in Order hee hath a primacie of order hee is the first to be reckoned and admired in the Church first in the Dignitie of Person hee excels in both Natures all that is in the Church or euer was first in Degree first in Gouernment first in Acceptation with God lastly he is first Effectiuely as the cause of all the respect order and excellency in others hee is the Roote out of which springs all the glory in the Church The vse is first for Terrour to all those that sinne against Christs preheminence as they doe in a high degree that hauing begunne in the Spirit will end in the flesh such as hauing knowne the way of righteousnesse afterwards turne from the holy course with the Dogge to the vomit and with the Swine to the wallowing in the mire Secondly the consideration of Christs primacie and preheminence should learne vs to take heede of climbing in the Church it is dangerous to desire to be chiefe it is almost the sole power of the Head of the Church Lastly let it be our care both in heart and life to yeeld Christ the preheminence which we shall doe if we labour to know nothing more then Christ crucified if wee minde the things of Christs Kingdome more then the things of this life if wee make him our chiefe refuge by Faith for all happinesse and reconciliation if wee make him our ioy reioycing more in Christ then carnall men can doe in the World for a discontented life denyes Christ the preheminence if the zeale of Gods house can eate vs vp if in all our actions wee performe the worship of God first if we sticke not to confesse and professe Christ if wee honour the faithfull and contemne the vile and ioyne our selues to such as feare God though they be despised in this world and lastly when we can in all things rather chuse to please God then men Verse 19. For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell THere is great reason Christ should be acknowledged head as in the former Verse by reason of his primacie and preheminence so in this Verse by reason of the plenitude that dwels in him No naturall head so full of senses as hee is full of Grace It is to be noted in the generall that the head should excell the members in gifts and therefore it is a fault in Cities when the people chuse vnto themselues vnmeete men to be their Heads God may chuse Saul following his Fathers A●les because if he make Princes he can giue spirit vnto Princes but it is not so with men they may giue the Office but they cannot giue the gifts to execute it And it is likewise a great shame to such Rulers of the people as are so farre from repressing disorders that they are disordered themselues and their housholds So domesticall Heads likewise if they would not see swearing lying whoring passions idlenesse c. in their Children and Seruants they must be free from ill example themselues and be as heads excelling the rest of the family in gifts and good behauiour It pleased The mouing cause and foundation of all the grace shewed to the Creature is the good pleasure of the will of the Creator Why is Israell planted why are the great Mysteries of God hidden from the wise and reuealed to Babes why hath the little Flocke a Kingdome why hath God mercy on some and not on others why hath Iob riches and why are they taken away why is Iudgement and righteousnesse in a forlorne world that deserued nothing why is Iuda as Potters clay why is the world saued by preaching why are some predestinate to be adopted why is the Mysterie of Gods will opened now and not before To conclude why is all fulnesse in the Head or any grace in the Members but onely because it pleased him The vse of this is first to teach vs to doe likewise that is to doe good without respect of desert it is Royall yea it is Diuine Secondly it should teach vs if wee would get any grace or blessing from God to examine our selues whether wee be in his Fauour and to labour in all things so to serue him as to please him Thirdly to subiect our Reasons and Affections to Gods Will though hee should shew vs no other Reason of his doings but his Will for wee must alwayes know that things are alwayes iust because hee willed them Fourthly in our troubles and vnder crosses it should teach vs patience and to labour to pacifie God by Prayer and Humiliation in the Name of Christ and to acknowledge the soueraigntie of God referring our selues to his pleasure for deliuerance not trusting vpon the meanes Lastly it may be a comfort that nothing can befall any Christian but what pleaseth God Doct. 2. God is well pleased in
for euill workes that doth not first care to repent for euill thoughts and such like corruption in the minde There should man begin his repentance where God begins the discouery of our miserie And let vs learne to be more watchfull against the sinnes of our mindes and be more grieued for the drosse and corruption wee finde there and learne more to hate the sinnes of the minde such as are ignorance distracted seruice false opinions emptinesse of holy meditations euill dishonourable impure and vnchast thoughts against God or man pride malice frowardnesse vanitie securitie and vnbeliefe Doct. 2. There is in vnregenerate men a strange minding of sinne they imagine mischiefe they haue a spirit of fornication profound to decline deepely set they trust in their owne wayes so as many times they regard neither Gods word nor the rod nor the threatnings of God or rebukes of man neither can they be stirred with the foure last things This shewes as mans misery and death in sinne so the wonderfull mercy of God in forgiuing such sins It is a comfort that sinnes of set knowledge may be forgiuen And hence may be gathered a difference betweene the sinnes of the regenerate and the sinnes of the vnregenerate for the godly sinne not with a full minde they are not set in euill sinne rebels in them but not raignes Lastly this may let vs see how little cause wee haue to stand vpon our mindes or reason or naturall parts in matters of Hope and Saluation In euill Workes If the dependance and the words themselues be duely considered wee may here gather fiue things First that the euill workes of the sinner cause the strangenesse and enmity aforesaid Secondly that a wicked man can like himselfe well enough though his very workes and outward behauiour be euill He can blesse himselfe in his heart when his iniquity is found worthy to be hated Thirdly that where the life is euill the minde is euill the heart cannot be good where the workes are nought Fourthly that hee that allowes himselfe in one sinne will pollute himselfe with many sinnes Workes Fiftly when God lookes vpon the workes of euill men they are all euill note a difference if the carnall man looke vpon his owne workes they are all good if a godly man looke vpon them they are partly good and partly euill but if God looke vpon them they are all nought because his person is nought his heart is nought his end is nought the manner is nought c. Hitherto of their miserie both as it is propounded and expounded A Question may be asked how it comes to passe that men haue so little sence of their misery and are so loath to take notice of it For answere hereunto wee must vnderstand that this comes to passe because the God of this world hauing possession blindes their eyes and men doe not examine themselues before the Law of God And they are with-drawne by the deceitfulnesse of sinne which in particular they haue allowed themselues in neyther doe men remember their latter ends or the Iudgement of God before their death Their eyes are not annoynted with eye-salue a number haue not the word to direct them and some are deceiued by false Teachers which cry peace peace where there is no peace And the most are deceiued with false opinions and conceits for eyther they thinke that such like places as this are true of Gentiles and not of them whereas vnregenerate Israel is as Ethiopia vnto God or they feare that this knowledge will make men melancholy Yea some are so foolish they say this course driues men out of their wits thus Paul is mad and Christ hath a Diuell or they thinke late Repentance will serue the turne and then they may haue time enough to consider Thus of their misery Verse 22. In that Body of his Flesh to present or make you holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight IN this Verse the remedy of their miserie is set downe where obserue first the Meanes secondly the End The Meanes is by that body of his flesh through death the End is to present vs c. In that body of his flesh through death Here are two things 1. the Nature of Christ 2. the Sufferings of Christ. But first in the generall I obserue two Doctrines First there is no remedy for the sinner but the death of his Sauiour how foolish mankinde hath beene distracted about the cure for their miserie is lamentable to consider Adam gets Figge-leaues and Israell a foolish Couer As for Death and Hell men are at a point they haue made a couenant with them Or they thinke they are helped of their misery if they can forget it they can blesse their hearts that they will not feele the smart of any curses or they will make satisfaction the sonnes of their body shall serue for the sinnes of their soules or else the Temple of the Lord their going to Church must make God amends Others couer all with the garments of their owne ciuill righteousnesse others put their trust in the wedge of gold and say to it thou art my confidence But vnto vs there is no name by which we can be safe but the name of Iesus Christ. He must rescue vs that first created vs hee makes vs partakers of loue that was the Sonne of Gods loue hee makes vs adopted sonnes who himselfe is Gods naturall Sonne Secondly It is profitable to be much in the meditation of Christs sufferings that it might sincke into our minds that we must goe out of our selues for happinesse and such meditations open a way to godly sorrow They tend to the mortification of sinne and they incline the heart of a Christian to be willing to suffer with him for hee suffered as the Master wee are but Seruants hee suffered for others sinnes wee deserue more then wee can suffer by our owne sinne Hee suffered all sorts of crosses and infinite much we suffer butlight affliction And the thought of his sufferings may make vs willing to contemne the world seeing hereby wee discerne that his kingdome is not of this world Yea we owe vnto Christ the remembrance of his sufferings It is a small thing he requires of vs when he wils vs to thinke on him often what he hath endured for vs. In that body of his flesh These words note Christs Nature yet wee must consider which Nature in Christ there were two Natures in one person personally vnited his diuine and humane Nature His diuine Nature was from Eternitie Immutable Immortall Impassible His humane Nature was conceiued and borne in time Mutable Mortall Passible one and the same without time begotten of the Father the Sonne of God without Mother and in time borne of the Virgin the Sonne of Man without Father Sonne to both Naturall Consubstantiall These Natures are in one person for that God and Man might become one in Couenant one is
Ephes. 4.13.14 Sixtly he presseth after perfection forgets what 's behinde and lookes to the marke of the high price of his calling labouring to finde out the vertue of Christs death and Resurrection Phil. 3.13.14.15.10 9. Seauenthly hee hath a Plerophory or full assurance of the will of God towards him Col. 4.12 Eightly hee can digest the stronger Doctrines of Religion Heb. 5.14 Ninthly patience hath in him her perfect worke Iames 1.4 Tenthly he sinnes not in word Iames 3.12 Eleuenthly hee keepes the word 1 Iohn 2.5 Twelfthly he is setled in the loue of God and hath not feare but boldnes 1 Ioh. 4.18.17 Euery man Euery true Christian might be made a strong Christian which may serue for great humiliation to such as hauing the meanes haue neglected so great grace or measure of it What knowledge what power of gifts what abundance of faire fruit we might haue had and borne if wee had attended the meanes and seriously laboured to redeeme the time wee might many of vs haue beene Teachers that now need to be Catechised In Iesus Christ. All that supposed perfection that is out of Christ Iesus is not worth seeking after whatsoeuer carnall men propound vnto themselues concerning the worth of their owne proiects yet all in the end will proue vanitie that is not in Christ Iesus And contrariwise all true perfection is in Christ which should so much the more comfort fearefull Christians seeing their perseuerance and the perfecting of grace begunne is in him it is his office to see it performed and it will be accomplished by his power as it is giuen for his merits and it should teach all the faithfull to make much of communion with Christ to keepe their hold and not let goe their confidence to preserue by all meanes tendernesse in an holy intercourse with Christ for if once Christ absent himselfe the worke of grace will stand still Thirdly this shewes how perfection can be attributed to Christians namely as in Christ Iesus the euill of their workes is couered by him and what is good is presented by him to the Father Lastly it should teach vs in all our wants to seeke to Christ in the vse of all meanes appointed by him to giue or confirme grace waiting vpon him with Faith and Prayer Verse 29. Whereunto I also labour and striue according to his working that worketh in me mightily IN this Verse is contayned the seauenth reason to inforce the Exhortation and it is taken from the great paynes and strife of the Apostle and the great successe the Lord was pleased to giue to his paines Whereunto Some reade in whom viz. in which Christ that is by whose assistance and blessing and protection c. But I take it as it is here Whereunto and so it may be referred eyther to the Exhortation in the three and twentieth Verse or to perfection in the Verse before It is sure that the perfection of Ministers labours should be the perfection of their hearers It is not enough to know how to preach Sermons but it must tend not onely to beget men vnto Christ but also to build them vp which is a wonderfull hard worke and few Ministers are well skilled herein and therefore Ministers should much consult with God and the people should pray constantly and earnestly for their Teachers Labour An effectuall Ministery is a painfull Ministery the Lords worke must not be done negligently which may iustifie continuall and daily preaching Quest. But what needes all this preaching Ans. It is exceeding needfull for it is the ordinary meanes to saue mens soules and to beget Faith and in as much as there are daily still to be added to the Church therefore still the meanes is to be vsed besides the secret iudgement of God in the indu●ation of the wicked and leauing them without excuse And as there needes daily food for the body so doth there for the soule and the Lord by his word doth heale the daily infirmities of his people Men thinke it needfull the Exchequer should be open all the yeere that their Law-cases may be determined and more neede it is the Lords spirituall Exchequer should stand open for the daily determining of the Cases of Conscience which arise in the soules of Gods people and we need a daily light for our paths and Lanthorne for our feete What shall I say our very Calling needes direction out of the word and our crosses and temptations cause vs to feele a daily neede of the comforts of the word to be applyed to vs the godly are to be incouraged in well-doing and that continually and wee all neede to be called vpon daily for reformation and preuention of sinne Grace will not hold out without meanes and Knowledge must be encreased and a daily Ministerie is of singular vse to prepare vs for death and weyne vs from the world These and many other be the reasons of daily preaching which should greatly reproue such Ministers as labour not eyther for want of gifts or pluralitie of places or distraction of businesse or for very idlenesse or vnwillingnesse to take paines Woe vnto them for as they prouide euill for peoples soules so they reward euill to their owne soules According to his working that worketh in mee mightily Before I consider particularly of these words I note how feelingly the Apostle speakes of Gods Prouidence and with what affection hee sets out the obseruation he made of it which greatly shames the most of vs that are so excessiuely dull in apprehending and so affectionlesse in the thought of things Now if any would know what should be the reason wee are so dull and the Apostle so tenderly sensible of Gods power and prouidence I may answere that a number of vs are not throughly perswaded of Gods particular prouidence besides hee was excellently acquainted with the word of God and thereby hee saw liuely how euery promise or threatning came into execution there could hardly any thing fall out but hee remembred some Scripture that fore-told or fore-shewed it And no question he knew how vnable the meanes was to worke without Gods blessing he knew what vnfitnesse was in man now wee giue too much to the meanes Further it is certaine that such holy men as hee sought Gods blessing by prayer and therefore now they were affected when they obserued what followed their prayers And besides the Apostle did walke with God in a great measure of sanctitie and holy care in all things to keepe his communion with God whereas wee are estranged by our corruptions and for the most part negligent in a daily walking with GOD. Lastly hee was humble and not conceited of his owne gifts and had consecrated himselfe and deuoted his life to Gods glory and therefore hee was sensible of the glory of God in his working prouidence But the maine particular Doctrine is that in the Ministery of the Gospell there is Gods speciall working for it is Gods worke to
by the signes of Gods fauour and markes of saluation And for the worser sort they shun triall because they know before hand their state is not good and besides they liue in some one master sinne or other which they cannot be perswaded to forsake and therefore resolue at least for a time to liue at a venture and referre all to the vnknowne mercie of God 4. If we would be established in beleeuing 1. we must be much in the meditation of the promises of God 2. we must be much in prayer and the acknowledgment of secret sinnes obseruing the comforts of Gods presence and keeping a record of the wonders of his presence and striuing to retaine constantly the assurance wee sometimes feele in prayer 3. wee must cast about how to be more profitable in well doing An orderly life especially fruitfulnesse in our places doth maruellously though secretly establish and settle a mans heart in faith 1. Cor. 15.58 whereas it is almost impossible that a barren life should haue much stedfastnes of assurance againe would wee yet further know how it comes to passe that some men get such a stedfastnesse aboue many others Obserue then and you shall finde that when they finde the pearles of grace and the meanes they will sell all to buy them Now the loue to the meanes is like death or Ielousie that cannot be resisted there is in them a constant coueting of the best things with a true hunger and thirst after them and if they offend God they cannot be quiet till they returne and confesse their sinne and get fauour they will not liue dayes and weeks in a voluntarie neglect of communion with God and therefore reape this vnmoueablenesse as the fruit of their daily conuersing with God Thus of stedfastnes in it selfe Now in the contrarie concerning an vnstedfast faith I propound two things to be considered 1. The effects or consequences and concomitants of it And then the kinds of vnsetled faith Not Scripture onely but vsuall experience shew the many inconueniences that attend such as are not stablished in the faith 1. They want the many comforts the stedfast faith feeleth 2. They are disquieted with euery crosse 3. They are tost with the winde of contrarie doctrine yea the very truth is sometimes yea with them and sometimes nay sometimes they are perswaded and sometimes they are not 4. They finde a secret shunning of the ordinances of God when any approach should be made vnto God 5. The feare of death is almost inseparable 6. They are sometimes frighted with feares of perseuerance besides their daily danger to be foyled by the baites of Sathan and the world Vnstedfastnesse may be considered three wayes 1. as faith is weake 2. as faith is weakned 3. as stedfastnes is lost For the first in the first conuersion of a man vnto God while they lye yet in the cradle of godlinesse They are assayled with much doubting and many feares c. Quest. But what might some one say How can faith then be discerned in the midst of so many doubts and feares Answ. The truth of their faith and grace appeares 1. By their earnest and constant desire of Gods fauour 2. By the tendernes of the conscience in all their actions and their daily feare of sinning 3. By their frequent complaints of vnbeleefe and secret mourning for it 4. By the lowlinesse of their cariage euen towards the meaner sort of those that truly feare God 5. By their desire after the sincere milke of the word Lastly by their indeuour to walke inoffensiuely Quest. But seeing their faith is true what is the cause of the vnsetlednesse of it Answ. They are vnsetled partly because they haue yet but a small measure of sauing knowledge and partly because they discerne not the consolations offered to them and partly for want of application of particular promises that belong vnto them and sometimes it is for want of some of the meanes and in some it is because they see a greater power in some of their corruptions then they thinke can stand with true grace Now for the remedies of this vnsetlednes This weake faith will grow setled more and more if they continue vpright in the vse of the meanes especially as their reformation and victorie ouer sinne increaseth and as they grow more and more confirmed in the diuorce from the world and carnall companie and they grow more expert in the word of righteousnesse especially after the Lord hath refreshed them with the frequent comforts of his promises and presence besides conuersing with the faithfull and established Christians And all this the sooner if they doe propound their doubts and by asking the way seeke daily direction especially if they resigne ouer their soules to the ministerie of some faithfull and mercifull man of God who as a nurse shall daily feed them with distinct and particular counsell and comfort Thus of the vnstedfastnes that accompanieth faith weake Now there is an vnstedfastnes accompanieth faith weakned that is such a faith as was sometimes stronger For the clearer vnderstanding hereof I consider three things 1. The causes of this weaknes of faith 2. The signes to discerne it 3. The remedies There may be diuers causes or meanes to weaken strong faith 1. Losse of meanes 2. secret sinnes ordinarilie committed not lamented not reformed 3. Presumptuously to vse ill meanes to get out of aduersitie 4. Relapse to the loue of the world The signes to discerne it are 1. the sleepinesse of the heart 2. feare of death 3. constant neglect or secret contempt of fellowship with the godly 4. The ceasing of the sensible working of Gods spirit within 5. Raigning discontentment 6. Securitie vnder knowne sinne The remedies are 1. A serious and sound examination of the wants and faults which by this weaknes they are fallen into 2. A constant and daily iudging of themselues for their corruptions till they recouer tendernesse of heart and some measure of godly sorrow for them 3. It will be expedient that they plant themselues vnder the droppings of a daily powerfull ministerie 4. The meditation of their former feelings 5. The vse of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper this is a meanes to confirme faith both weake and weakned Lastly they must hold a most strict watch ouer their hearts and liues till they be re-established in a sound course of reformed life Thus of faith weakned 3. Stedfastnes may be lost note that I say stedfastnes of faith may be lost I say not that faith may be lost that is true faith this stedfastnes was lost in Dauid Salomon and it is likely in Iob too The causes of this losse of stedfastnes are diuers in some it is the invndation of afflictions violently and vnresistably breaking in vpon them especially raising the fierce perturbation of impatiencie thus it was in Iob. 2. In some it is some horrible sinne I say horrible sinne either because it is
saued but it is most likely they are called so by a Gramaticall Relation to the Abcedaries that as little children beginne at the Alphabet and so goe on to higher studies so did the Lord giue those lawes as the A. B. C. of the Iewes to bee their Paedagogie in the infancie of the Church Now they might be said to be of the world because they were externall rites and subiect to the sight and sense and because they consisted of a glory that was more worldly then spirituall and because worldly men doe most stand vpon that which is externall T is the drift of the Apostle to disswade from the obseruation of those rites because now the law of Moses was abrogated Abrogation is a plausible doctrine in popular estates Proclamation concerning immunities from tributes and taxations or concerning Isonomie that is indifferent libertie for all to be competitors for honors or free for profits of a common-wealth those were wont to be wonderfull gratefull to the multitude and such is the doctrine of abrogation in Diuinitie yet because it may be abused by Epicures it is to be more carefully opened The Law may be said to be abrogated diuers waies 1. When it is antiquated or obsolete so as men are neither bound to dutie nor punishment and thus the ceremonies are abrogated 2. When the punishment is changed onely the obedience still remaining in force as in the law of stealth 3. It is abrogated to the guiltie when the punishment is transferred on an other so as the law cannot exercise her force vpon the guilty person 4. It is abrogated when it is weakned and eneruated by transgressors to breake the law is to loose or dissolue the law thus wicked men by their liues abrogate it Quest. But is the whole law of Moses abrogated Answ No for though Moses be said to giue place to Christ that doth not import a change of the law but of the Law-giuer Moses gaue three kinds of lawes Morall Iudiciall Ceremoniall For the morall Law it may in some sort be said to be abrogated as 1. In respect of the curse and malediction as it did worke anger and made execrable for so there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus in as much as the law of the spirit of life hath freed them from the law of sinne and death 2. In respect of the inexorable rigour and perfection of it for we are not now vnder the law but vnder grace 3. In some sense it is abrogated in respect of iustification for now it is no more required of the godly that they should seeke iustification by the law but by Iesus Christ. Againe we must distinguish of the persons for the law still lyeth on the necke of the vnregenerate but in the former respects is abrogated to the faithfull for against them there is no law but the law is giuen to the vnrighteous Now for the Iudiciall lawes of Moses they were as it were ciuill lawes concerning Magistrates Inheritance order and processe of Iudgments contracts mariage bondage diuorce vowes vsurie and trespasse between man and man These Iudiciall lawes must be considered two waies 1. As they binde the Iewes as they were men that is in a common and generall right and so those lawes are perpetuall in the nature and equitie of them 2. As they bound the Iewes as they were Iewes in a personall nationall or singular right And thus where the reason of a law is particular there the law is so and binds not other people but as it may fit their Common-wealths The Ceremoniall lawes did concerne sacrifices and sacraments and other holy things and rituall obseruations Diuines haue a saying that the Iudicialls are dead but the Ceremonialls are deadly That the Ceremonies are abrogated was signified by the renting of the vaile of the Temple yea the Temple it selfe is destroyed as will more fully appeare when I come to the 15. verse And thus of the rudiments of the world Hithervnto also of the matter of the dehortation the reasons follow And not after Christ. These words conteine the first reason against philosophie traditions and ceremonies they are not after Christ and therefore to be auoided lest our soules be spoiled These things were not after Christ 1. because they no way tended to the furtherance of heauen reconciliation with God which in Christ we should principally looke to 2. Because they were no way warran●ed or approued or commanded by Christ Christ when he came imposed no such things 3. Because they doe now no way lead vs after Christ but from him rather in as much as we rest in those works done and neglect the commandement of God Lastly they feed the humors of carnall men and draw away mens mindes from the spirituall worship of God in Christ. Hence we may note an answer to that question whether the Gentiles may not be saued without Christ by philosophie The Apostle determines that the soule is spoild by philosophie if it be not after Christ. Againe hence we may learne a note of tryall concerning the truth of religions that religion which is not after Christ is a false religion for this is a foundation that euerlasting happinesse must be expected from Christ alone Lastly here we may note that sinnes against Christ will be accompted for though they were not forbidden in the morall law we haue now another law in the Gospell so as whatsoeuer is not after Christ is a great transgress●ion neither may we thinke that we sinne not against Christ but only by traditions and ceremonies for there are many other waies of offending against him as To liue without Christ and communion with him To be an enemie to the crosse of Christ To make the doctrine of redemption an occasion of libertie to the flesh To liue after the lusts of men and not after the will of Christ To harden our hearts against the doctrine of reconciliation To hold false opinions concerning the person or office of Christ. To peruert the Gospell of Iesus Christ To persecute or despight Christ in his members To trust in the merit of our owne works To denie him before men To reproch the seruants of Christ Not to beleeue the report of his messengers Not to imitate his graces To offend one of Christs little ones To make diuision or schisme Not to discerne his bodie in the Sacrament To build againe things destroyed To breake our vowes To fall away from the doctrine of Christ To grieue the spirit of Christ To be beguiled from the simplicitie that is in Christ Iesus To cast away their confidence Or to fashion our selues to the lusts of our ignorance Thus of the first reason VERS 9. For in him dwelleth all the fullnes of the Godhead bodily These words conteine the second reason and it stands thus If in Christ there be all
diuine fullnes and sufficiencie then there needs no supply from humane inuentions either for doctrine or worship or manners but in Christ there dwells all fullnes euen from the ocean of all perfection and therefore let no man spoile you through philosophie traditions or ceremonies c. For the explication of the Minor we may conceiue of the words of the text thus There is in Christ all fullnes of wisdome as the Prophet of the Church therefore there needs no philosophie 2. There is all fullnes of merit in Christs satisfaction as Priest of the Church therefore there needs no expiating ceremonies 3. There is all fullnes of power and efficacie in Christ as king of the Church therefore there is no need that we should help him with inuenting traditions to vphold the liues or godlinesse of Christians or any way to further the ordinances of Christ. This verse conteines in it selfe an excellent proposition concerning Christ viz. That the Godhead is in the bodie that is in the humane nature of Christ And this is amplified 1. by the manner of presence he dwelleth there 2. by the measure in all fullnes The word Corporally hath been diuersly interpreted Corporally that is truly and indeed Corporally that is not in shew or shadow only but compleatly in comparison of the shadowes of the law or prefiguring signes He dwelleth not in Christ as he did in the Temple Corporally that is according to the flesh Corporally in respect of the manner of his presence not as he is in all creatures by efficacie or power nor as he is in the Saints by his grace nor as he is in the blessed by glory but corporally that is by vnion with the person of the word but I thinke it is safest and plainest to take it in the third sense viz. corporally that is in his humane nature Christ is commended in the praise of his relation 1. to the Godhead in this verse 2. to Saints and Angels v 10. In him notes his person Godhead expresseth his diuine nature corporally import● his humane nature and dwells tells vs of the vnion of the natures The summe of all is that in as much as the Lord hath saued vs by so wonderfull saluation in Christ and in that our Sauiour was true God as well as man as being the second person in Trinitie therefore we should wholy rest vpon him and not distract our thoughts or faith or seruices with either philosophie or traditions or ceremonies as supposing that our saluation should be any waies furthered by those Now in that the holy Ghost is so carefull to teach the diuinitie of Christ we should also learne to be affected with the wisdome of God that hath designed the second person in Trinitie to be our mediator Thinke of it often and weigh with your selfe the glory of Gods wisdome herein who is fitter to restore the world then he that made it Incarnation is a mission now it was not fit he should be sent by another that was not of another as the Father was not It is wonderfull sutable that the naturall sonne should make sonnes by adoption Who fitter to restore the image of the Father lost in vs then he that was the eternal image of the Father who who fitter to breake open the fountaine of Gods loue then the that was the sonne of his loue The personall word became the enunciatiue word to declare vnto vs his Fathers nature and will he that is the middle person in the Trinitie is fittest to be the middle man or mediatour between God and man Is our Sauiour God then then he is eternall omnipraesent omniscient and omnipotent The consideration of the diuinitie of Christ may and ought wonderfully to comfort vs against the greatnesse of our sinnes and Gods wrath remembring that the Lord Iehouah is he that is our righteousne●● and iustification from all our sinnes as also against the greatnes of the enemies and aduersaries of our soules and the truth or true grace of Christ in vs Our Sauiour is the mightie God and therefore can will easily subdue all our enemies vnder our feet besides hereby wee are assured of the supply of all our wants seeing he that hath all the fullnes of God in him hath vndertaken to fill all things in the Church And as this may comfort so it should instruct why should we not come willingly at the time of assemblie seeing we serue the God of heauen and haue all our seruice done in the name of the Son of God and presented by his mediation to the Father And further shall we not accompt vnbeliefe to be a monstrous sinne considering how little cause wee haue to feare or doubt but especially shall we not learne humility of him that being in the forme of God humbled himselfe for our sakes to take vpon him the forme of a man and to be subiect to the very death Lastly shall wee not learne hence the hatefulnesse of sinne and the odious filth of it we may commit sinne but God must remit it and become a sufficient propitiation for sinne Corporally Quest. How can the whole diuine nature be said to be in the humane seeing the one is infinite the other finite Answ. 1. It is no more then to affirme that the humane nature is vnited to the deuine in the fulnesse of it Or 2. That it is incorporate or made flesh incarnate or hath a body ioyned to it Or else 3. Let it be granted of the inhabitation in the flesh of Christ yet it followeth not that therefore it is there included For it is so in the flesh whole that without the flesh it is euery where For the diuinitie is not only immense that it can be euery where but also most simple that it can be and be euery where whole as the soule in the bodie and the light is in the sunne and yet not included there yet trulie and whole there Quest. But since this text plainely affirmes that Christ had a body and so by Synecdoche a true humane nature it may be heere inquired whether his humane nature was like ours and the rather since the godhead did dwell in him bodily Answ. That this may be cleerely resolued we must know that what is said in this verse notwithstanding Christ in his humane nature was like vnto vs. But for euidence I shew briefly in what he was like and then in what he was not like He was like 1. in that he tooke a true body not fantasticall 2. He tooke a true humane body and not a caelestiall body and he was indued with a reasonable soule 3. He had the essentiall faculties of both 4. He had the very infirmities of our nature I meane such as were not sinful Now Christ was vnlike vs in bodie in soule in both In body 1. In his conception there was a difference for we are of Adam and by Adam but he was of
Perfectly though not in vs yet in Christ our head it is already put away in his person though not in ours 5. It is put away in hope in that we do by hope waite for an absolute and full redemption from all sinne and miserie Thus of the forme of this circumcision the efficient cause followes By the circumcision of Christ There is a twofold circumcision of Christ. First that which he suffered in himselfe Secondly that which he works in vs the vertue of the first is a great cause of the second Quest. But why was Christ circumcised seeing there was no cause of circumcision in Christ for nothing could be signified by it seeing he was the Messias himselfe perfect God and man nor was there any impuritie in him the amputation whereof should thereby be signified he was a Lambe without spot a high Priest separate from sinners the couenant of the promised seede was in himfulfilled and he came to abolish circumcision and lastly t is hee that circumciseth the hearts of others Answ. 1. Christ was circumcised thereby to shew himselfe to be true man 2. thereby to honour the institution of circumcision as he had done other parts of the Law 3. that the Iewes might not cauill and say they would not receiue an vncircumcised Christ. 4. to commend the vertue of obedience by his example 5. that he might beare the burthens of them that being vnder the law were not able to beare the burthens of the law God by this signe as by an imitating rite did subiect him to the law he hereby professing himselfe a seruant to the law to make vs free 6. hee was circumcised and baptized to signifie his vnion with both Churches both of the old and new Testament and ●hat he came of t●●aine to make one 7. to ratifie and sanctifie the circumcision of the Fathers as his baptisme now sanctifieth ours 8. to signifie the cleansing of our natures especially by bearing of the imputation of our impurities 9. he did in his circumcision begin to satisfie God by those first fruits of his bloud it was as an earnest or pledge of his bloud to be more plentifully powred out it was a part of his humiliation and of the price of our sinnes Lastly hee was circumcised that our hearts by the vertue of it might be circumcised for as his death killeth sinne in vs and his resurrection raiseth vs vp to newnesse of life so doth his circumcision circumcise our hearts Hence we may gather comfort against the difficulties of mortification for Christ will be pleased to deriue vertue from his owne circumcision yea it is a pledge to assure vs that as certainly as he was circumcised himselfe so he will see to it that our hearts be circumcised if wee will cast our selues vpon him and by faith come vnto him there is no sinne so linked but in Christ we may haue some deliuerance from it On the other side it shewes the miserie of all such as liue in the loue of their sinnes and minde not mortification this shewes they are not in Christ yet for they cannot be in Christ except they be circumcised Lastly it may serue for instruction at once to all that hope for freedom in Iesus Christ to shew the proofe of their interest by their circumcision spiritually and to speake distinctly of it we must vnderstand that the Lord that requires this circumcision of vs extends his precept both to the heart and the eares and the tongue and contrariwise complaineth of vncircumcised both heart and eares and lips in the heart we must especially looke to the circumcision or mortification 1. of ignorance 2. of wicked thoughts 3. immoderate eare 4. prophanenes in God seruice in a wretched securitie or a neglect of inward worship 5. disordered affections as lust anger suspition 6. discontent with our estate 7. vnbeleefe Now for our eares they must be circumcised 1. in the vnpreparednes or want of attention in hearing the word 2. in receiuing tales 3. in communicating with the sinnes of others by a willing hearing of their wickednesse Lastly looke to the circumcision of the tongue and that in the care to auoide 1. the polluting of Gods name either by swearing or blasphemie 2. rash censuring 3. rotten speech 4. lying 5. bitter and furious words and the spirit of contradiction 6. flatterie 7. tale-bearing 8. idle and vaine words And thus much now of the spiritual circumcision and of the 11. verse VERS 12. In that yee are buried with him through baptisme in whom yee are also raised vp together through the faith of the operation of God which raised him from the dead In the former verse the Apostle hath laid downe the first reason and directed it principally against Iudaisme we haue spirituall circumcision in Christ and therefore we need not carnall circumcision and so by consequent none of the ceremoniall law Now in this verse he meeteth with obiections Ob 1. The reason seemeth not to follow they were spiritually circumcised therefore needed not the outward for so was Abraham yet he receiued outward circumcision Answ. The reason is of no force now in the new Testament because Christ hath appointed another sacrament in steed of it for we are buried with Christ by baptisme Ob 2. But was not Circumcision a more liuely signe Answ. It was not which he sheweth to be true both in respect of mortification and in respect of viuification baptisme liuely representing and sealing vnto both Quest. But haue all that are baptised these things signified by baptisme Answ. They are offered to all but they are inioyed only by such as haue faith in the operation of God Quest. But how may our faith be supported in beleeuing those things shadowed out in baptisme Answ. Two waies First if we consider Gods operation Secondly if we consider Christs resurrection This is the briefe order and dependance of this verse so that here he intreats of baptisme both by the effects and by the causes the effects are spirituall buriall and spirituall resurrection the causes are three faith the operation of God and the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Buried together with him Three things may here be noted 1. the buriall of Christ. 2. the buriall of the Christian. 3. the vnion of both For the first that Christ was buried was storied by the Euangelist and fore-signified by Ionas as a type and fore-prophecied of by Esay the Prophet he was buried in Ierusalem the place where the dying sacrifices had giuen warning of his death but it was without the Citie both to answer the type Leuit. 16. and to signifie that his sufferings belonged to Gentiles as well as to Iewes Hee was buried in Caluarie the place commonly appointed for condemned men and not in Hebron where some thinke Adam was buried to note that his death was to be auaileable for the condemned men of Adam as well as for Adam himselfe He was buried in another mans graue
to signifie that he died for other mens sinnes Now for the second viz. the buriall of Christians they may be said to be buried euen whiles they liue for of the buriall of the bodie he cannot meane here in diuers respects 1. In respect of disgrace and reproch the throats of wicked men are often an open sepulchre into which if the names of the godly fall they are buried for the extremitie of disgrace and reproch with which they couer them 2. In respect of abnegation or the deniall of the loue and care for earthly things and so we are buried to the world when like dead men we care not for it but deuote our selues to the contemplation of heauenly things 3. In respect of mortification of our sinnes the scripture by diuers metaphors expresseth the diuers degrees of mortification For first there is the wounding of sinne when the sinner is pricked with remorse by the law Secondly the condemning of sinne when the sinner keeping a spirituall assise doth examine confesse and iudge himselfe guiltie before the Lord. Thirdly the crucifying of sinnes when the sinner racks his owne soule by godly sorrow driuing in the nailes of Gods threatnings with acknowledgment of his owne deserts and restraining his flesh through a spirituall reuenge not caring to expose himselfe to the shame of the world so that in Christ hee may finde atonement for his sinnes Fourthly the killing of sinne when the sinner puts off the bodie of sinnes and forsaketh his euill waies Now then after this followeth the last degree and that is here the buriall of sinnes Certainly there remaines euen after true repentance in the very godly a great deale of hidden corruption of nature inward wādrings distractions after the world sudden euill propositions against God or his word or prouidence or presence or promises or peoplei mpatience secret pride and somtimes hypocrisie a frequent rebellion within against good duties vnthankfulnes frequent omissions e●ther of holy duties or the care of the power of them hastines or anger impure desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in himselfe both at home and abroad Now it is not enough nor may he rest in the former repentance but he must proceed euen to the remoouing of these remainders of corruption death commonly ariseth out of the disease of someone part but buriall couers all The worke of reformation and repentance many times begins at the care of some few principall sinnes but wee must neuer be quiet till we burie the whole old man with his works so that in one sense the buriall of sinnes is nothing else but the progresse of mortification Againe after we haue forsaken our sinnes to burie them is to keep a diligent watch ouer our nature and to take downe our flesh yea sometimes with refraining of lawfull delights or pleasures Further the buriall of sinne it may import our care after we haue left our sinnes to remoue them out of sight both out of Gods sight by suing out our pardon and out of the sight of our consciences by quieting them in the application of the bloud of Christ and the promises of grace and out of the sight of others so farre as our sinnes were scandalous also by shewing forth our repentance and care to auoide all appearance and occasions of like sinning Great is the glory and happinesse of Christians that haue attained to this buriall of sinne for these serue God in a neere acquaintance with him these haue ouercome the world these can stand before death and iudgment vnapalled these are mightie in the power of Gods ordinance these know the secrets of the kingdome of God these are without the reach of the Law and feele not the sting of crosses these are had in singular honour with God and the holy Angells of heauen and the prouidence of God is vsually eminent towards these Now for the third might someone say what hath the Christians buriall to doe with Christ how is there any relation between them Answ. Our spirituall buriall in the progresse of mortification depends vpon Christ diuers waies 1. In that he hath required and made gratious promises to it 2. In that the efficacie of the meanes by which it is wrought comes from Christ. 3. In that it is accepted of God onely for Christ and through his intercession 4. In respect of example he was buried as well as we But chiefly in respect of vertue our buriall of sinne is wrought by a vertue arising from Christs buriall in the graue The Vses of all this followes First for information here we may see how God stands vpon mortification and that men must not thinke alwaies they haue done inough when they haue left their faults and withall wee may see how dangerous a course they take that so soone giue ouer the exercises of mortification for by this meanes we cause the old sinnes many times to breake out againe and their consolations are small and seldom crosses daily trouble them and the heart is often grieued and griped with feare and terrible doubts or else they are quickly ouergrowne with a spirit of slumber Secondlie for instruction to be carefull to bury our sinnes but here take heed of the dissimilitude for in some things the comparison cannot hold as here in two things for first when we bury the bodies of our friends we bury them in hope they shal rise againe And secondly we mourne because we must part with them but both these must be denied here It is the propertie of the wicked to part with their sinnes with sorrow because they must leaue them or else with hope that at length they may returne to them againe But let all such as feare God be otherwise minded especiallie let vs learne from this comparison of buriall to aduantage our selues in what we may in mortification if the master be buried we know all his seruants will attend the funerall so is it with vs in the mortification of sinnes if wee light vpon the master sins and drag them to the graue we shall be sure of all the attendants they will follow to the funerall The Iewes manner was to bury with odours so should we our odours and sweet smelling pra●ers offered vp in the mediation of Christ. And howsoeuer this worke may seeme difficult yet God many times strangely releiues our infirmities After Iezabel was cast downe and dead ●hey had not been long within but sending out to bury her they found nothing but the skull and her feete and the palmes of her hands so many times would it be with vs if we cast downe the Iezabels our sinnes when wee come ●o fin●sh our mortification we may by the strange help of God finde the body of the master gon we know not how so as wee shall not be troubled vn●esse it be with some skull or
in sinne doe not lie still rotting in the graues of iniquitie but rise so soone as thou hearest the trumpet of the Gospell the voice of Christ sounding in thine eares and pierce thy heart 4. Lastly here is consolation implied vnto weake Christians If thou canst feele thy miserie and struggle in any measure of true constancie against the corruption of nature and the transgressions of thy heart and life thou art not dead there is some breath of life in thee there is motion and therefore life Thus of their actuall sinnes Their miserie in respect of originall sinne is exprest in these words And in the vncircumcision of the flesh These words be diuersly interpreted some thus In the vncircumcision of the flesh that is in the flesh which is vncircumcision that is a thing hatefull vnto God Some make these words to be the signe of their death in sinne as if he would say your very vncircumcision that is in your flesh which are Gentiles is a token that you are strangers from the life of God Some thus And you hath hee quickned which were dead in respect of your sinnes and carnall life which ye liue in the vncircumcision that is in your estate of gentilisme Some make these words expresse the cause of their death in sinne Thus in the vncircumcision of the flesh that is for your fleshly vices which caused that death in sinne But I thinke with those that vnderstand by the flesh originall sinne and by the vncircumcision their miserie in respect of it implied in the allusion to the circumcision literally taken Originall sinne is called flesh because the flesh is the instrument by which it is propagated 2. Because it is the subiect in which it is 3. Because it is the end it driues vs to viz. to satisfie the flesh and to seeke fleshly things This originall sinne here called flesh is a spirituall kinde of disease gall leauen and poyson which daily diffuseth it selfe throughout the whole man and still infecteth it though this be not the whole nature of the sinne for to speake distinctly in originall sinne there are three things 1. The guiltines of Adams fact deriued vnto vs by iust imputation 2. The want of that originall iustice was in vs in the creation 3. The deprauation and corrupt disposition of our natures Here the word vncircumcision imports our miserie in respect of our very corruption of nature for it imports 1. That we are hatefull to God children of wrath 2. That we haue no portion in the heauenly Canaan 3. That we haue no fellowship in the communion of Saints 4. That we haue no part in the promised Messias for all these were shadowed out by the want of circumcision in the time of the Law The vses follow First from hence wee may informe our selues in diuers things as first we may see why the faire works of wicked men as their almes prayers teares sacrifices prophecyings preaching fasting and professing are not accepted of God for the fountaine is poysoned the flesh infects all it puts to either ill ends or ill effects or ill meanes besides that it keeps the person still loathsome to God Oh what cause haue ciuill honest men to know that though they come to Church and pay euery man his owne and be no drunkards nor adulterers c. yet their case cannot be good for though they liued neuer so honestly outwardly yet the very vncircumcision of the flesh makes them miserable the inward corruption of nature is an abomination to God who searcheth the heart and reines yea what cause haue all men to be humbled and abased in themselues considering how vncleane a beginning they haue how can men be so quiet and yet be so diseased with so filthy a leprosie as is originall sinne if this disease were in the bodie as it is in the soule how would men lament their distresse Hence also may we see what a wofull estate all wicked men are in that take care for the lusts of this leprous flesh and sow to it What should I say may we not see hence the necessitie of regeneration assuredly except we be borne againe we can neuer enter into the kingdom of heauen this impure poysoned nature of ours may not enter into Gods holy place Secondly we may here discerne the fountaine of all actuall transgressions when we fall into euill courses we must not cry out of our ill fortune or of ill companie or of the deuill only but especially we must lay the fault vpon our ill natures t was thy wicked disposition made thee so to sinne Lastly from hence we may learne to know our selues and accordingly to keep a narrow watch ouer our wretched natures and daily striue and struggle against this infectious corruption and disease that hangs so fast vpon vs yea we should by confession and contrition indeuour the daily crucifying of our wicked flesh with the lusts thereof condemning our selues by a daily verdict and sentence as we are men according to the flesh so suffering in the flesh that we may cease from sinne yea we should learne constantly to denie our selues and not to giue way to the reasons or obiections or desires or excuses or delaies of the flesh yea and to this end we should be willing to suffer afflictions and to endure any hardship rather then the flesh should preuaile in vs. You hath he quickned Hitherto of mans miserie and the state of corruption now of Gods mercy in the state of grace In two things is their happinesse here described 1. In their quickning 2. In their forgiuenes We are quickned two waies 1. In Christ. 2. In ourselues when our head Christ Iesus was raised from the graue we were quickned in him In our selues we were quickned three waies 1. Sacramentally in baptisme 2. By inchoation in our conuersion 3. Perfectly by hope of perfection in heauen by baptisme by conuersion by hope The quickning he here speaketh of is the quickning of conuersion when we are begotten to God This life is called the life of God the life of grace the life of Iesus the life of immortalitie It is begotten in vs by the whole Trinitie the Father calleth vp these generations the Sonne giueth this life so doth the Spirit quicken also The meanes by which we are quickned is ordinarily only the word and that preached also which is therefore called the word of life Psal. 19.8 1. Pet. 1.22 Phil. 2.15 Ioh. 5. The necessitie of this quickning is such as without it wee cannot possibly enter into the kingdome of heauen Ioh. 3.5 They that are thus quickned and conuerted are stiled by diuers names or titles they are called the holy seede the called of Iesus the children of the most high the brood of immortalitie they that follow Christ in the regeneration and the heires of eternall life Many are the singular prerogatiues of such as are conuerted
out taking out of the way and fastning it to the Crosse. The vse of all is 1. For information we may see what a case sinne sets vs in by nature and how hatefull the nature of sinne is if wee haue any thing to doe with God why our sinnes lie like so many blocks in our way and Christ Iesus only can lift them out of the way and can our wretched hearts delight in sinne seeing they nailed Christ to the Crosse It is an easie thing to rent an obligation amongst men but it was not so easie to get ours cancelled it could be rent in no place but on the Crosse Christ Iesus himselfe must be fastned to the tree that he might fasten our cancelled hand-writing therto and if God spared not his owne Sonne when he came about this businesse of cancelling the hand-writing what thinke we shall be the case of all wicked men that die in their sinnes and must suffer the whole forfeiture to fall on their necks if what Christ endured on the Crosse were so painefull they must not thinke to escape Hence also we may see what wonderfull cause we haue to loue the Lord Iesus that hath done all this for vs Oh how precious should his memorie be amongst vs Finally here the faithfull should gather singular comfort against the law sinne death and hell seeing here they may be informed all these were nayled vpon the crosse and Christ hath openly declared that he hath cancelled whatsoeuer might be to shew against vs for any forfeiture or debt of ours whatsoeuer And shall not wee take heed of running in debt againe by sinning after the sprinkling of the bloud of Iesus Christ or shall wee wretchedly binde our selues to the law againe by pleading our iustification before God by the works of the law VERS 15. And hauing spoiled principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing ouer them in it These words are an amplification of the former wherein he sheweth that not only the Bill in which we were made infinitely indebted was cancelled but the deuills also who had power to serue executions vpon vs and proofe from the ceremoniall Law as is before declared mightily conquered by Christ and therefore to reuiue againe the ceremonies was to renue the bond and to stand still in danger of the deuills executions The words are a most portly and deep allegorie and they carrie newes of a remarkable victorie the battell was fierce cruell prodigiously difficult bloudie on the best side and if Christ had been a iote lesse then he was there had been no remedie nor hope The battell was first fought between Sathan and man with a depth of fraud and crueltie and hellish inuisible spight the day was lost man with the wofull issues of the conquest was either cast downe wallowing in bloud or scattered with pursuing crueltie no sooner sprouting in the life of nature but smitten with the venome of spirituall infection plagued with the bondage of more then cruell seruitude not pittied not helped more forfeitures laid vpon him then he could finde words to acknowledge Now one man commeth into the field in the right of millions that could not stand in their owne quarrell challengeth the victors with singular compassion calleth backe the scattered raiseth a mightie expectation exposeth himselfe to the danger with incredible furie is encountred one with millions or legions of deuills of incomprehensible rage and long beaten experience and the infinite anger of God was kindled against this one man as a suretie for the rest Now in this text is a report of the happie successe of the battell newes of a most victorious conquest the deuills spoyled the elect restored with vnutterable hymnes attend the conquest the wretched spirits are in chaines exposed to infinite shame and dragged after the chariot of triumph as he ascended into the new Ierusalem In generall two things may be obserued First that Christ is God he was brought in before quickning pardoning filling circumcising the heart now here spoyling the deuills and triumphing ouer them 2. We may here comfort our selues with this that the deuill shall neuer haue successe against Christ and his kingdom God hath cursed all his waies and yet we finde by experience the deuill will not giue ouer though he hath neuer so ill successe from day to day which may awaken many wicked men who are herein like the deuill no ill successe can make them giue ouer their ill courses Againe would we not be spoyled and crossed in the successe of that we take in hand and be made like the deuill in ill successe then let vs take heed of his qualities be not like him in crueltie in fraud in lying in accusing or enuying the children of God for if thou be thou art sure with the deuill to be accursed and rebuked of God Now for the particular opening of these words wee must vnderstand that they haue been three waies interpreted First some Papists say this battell was fought in hell when Christ fetched the Fathers out of Limbus This interpretation I reiect not only as a fond conceit obtruded vpon the world but because the most popis● writers could see no such thing in this place but expound it otherwise Secondly some orthodox writers say this battell and triumph was both begun and ended before Christs death The deuills encountred Christ two waies vpon the crosse visiblie and invisiblie Visiblie by inspiring wicked men with vile prouocations to vexe him and molest him as the impenitent theefe the Rulers of the Iewes and the souldiers Invisiblie the deuills themselues with all might furie malice and sleight encountred him vpon the crosse in the sight of God and the holy Angells The victorie i● described in this verse and it is said first he spoiled them which is diuersly read and referred For some vnderstand it he spoyled the deuills some of the Fathers put in a word and read it after he had spoyled himselfe of his flesh and so it is a comparison borrowed from wrestlers or runners that first put off all might hinder them and so Christ that hee might ouercome first laid downe his flesh vpon the crosse And where the text saith he made a shew of them openly the Holy Ghost alludeth to the trophies of great Victors their manner was in the place where they did ouercome either to cut downe the armes of great trees and therevpon hanged the spoyles or weapons of the vanquished or else they built some stately pillars and there painted or wrote vpon the conquest with other monuments of victorie So did Christ openly serue the deuills openly before God Angels and the world he defeateth them and by a new way by suffring gaue occasion to all to see the shaking of the hellish kingdom where he is said to triumph ouer them therein is an allusion to the third degree of victorie they were won to lead their captiues after the chariot of triumph into the Citie
sinne error and error euerie sinne or euerie error doth not cut vs off from Christ there be some sinnes be sinnes of infirmitie Some sinnes be such as there remaines no more sacrifice for them There be some ceremonies may be borne withall Some ceremonies that abolish from Christ There be some errors of meere frailtie and ignorance Some errors that altogether corrupt the minde and make men destitute of the truth And therefore we should learne with all discerning to put a difference 4. That it is an vtter miserie not to be ioyned vnto Christ which imports a singular feeblenes in the hearts of men that cannot be stirred with all heedfulnes to make sure their vnion with Christ. Head The dreame of Catharinus that the Pope should be here meant is to be scorned not confuted The words notes the relation that is between Christ and the Church The creature stands in relation to Christ 1. More generallie in existence and ●o all things are in him Col. 1.16 more speciallie in vnion and so man only is ioyned to Christ but this vnion is threefold for it is either naturall or sacramentall or mysticall in the vnion of nature all men are ioined to Christ. In the vnion of Sacrament or signe all in the visible Church are ioyned to Christ. In the mysticall vnion in one body onely the faithfull are ioyned to Christ and this is here meant And so we haue here occasion againe to take notice of this truth that the Church of Christ is ioyned vnto Christ in a most neere vnion euen to Christ as her head The Doctrine hath beene largely handled in the former chapter only from the renuing of the meditation of it we may gather both comfort and instruction comfort if we consider the loue presence simpathie influence and communication of dignitie with which Christ doth honor vs as our head instruction also for this may teach vs to be carefull to obey Christ willingly as the member doth the head and to carrie our selues so godly and discreetly that we dishonor not our head From which all the body c. Hitherto of the danger as it is laide downe now followeth the aggrauation by a digression into the praises of the Church the mysticall body of Christ in generall three things may be obserued 1. That by nature we are wonderfull blinde in the contemplation of the glory of the mysticall body of Christ and therefore we had need to be often put in minde of it 2. That one way to set out the fearefulnesse of sinne is by the fairenesse of the blessings lost by it the fairenesse of the body of Christ shewes the foulenesse of lumpes of prophanesse and apostacie 3. Digressions are not alwaies and absolutely vnlawfull Gods spirit sometimes drawes aside the doctrine to satisfie some soule which the teacher knoweth not and sparingly vsed it quickneth attention but I forbeare to plead much for it because though God may force it yet man should not frame it and it is a most happie abilitie to speake punctually directly to the point But in particular in these words the Church which is the body of Christ is praised for foure things 1. For her originall or dependance vpon Christ of whom 2. For ornament furnished 3. For vnion which is amplified 1. by the parts knit together 2. by the meanes iointes and bandes 4. For her growth increasing with the increase of God Of whom Doct. All the praise of the Church is from her head for of her selfe she is blacke she is but the daughter of Pharoe she was in her bloud when Christ first found her she needed to be washed from her spots and wrinkles and therefore we should denie our selues and doe all in the name of Christ who is our praise All the bodie Doct. The care of Christ extends it selfe to euery member aswell as any obserue these ph●ases in scripture euery one that asketh euery one that heareth these words euery one that confesseth Christ euery one that is wearie and heauie laden euery one that the father hath giuen him euery one that calleth on the name of God and the like Vse is first for comfort let not the Eunuch say I am a drie tree or the stranger say the Lord hath seperated me from his people Nor let the foote say I am not the eye c. And secondly we must learne of Christ to extend our loue also to all Saints Body It were to no purpose to tell that there are diuers bodies terrestriall celestiall naturall spirituall a body of sinne a body of death it is Christs body is here spoken of Christ hath a body naturall and a body sacramentall and a body mysticall t is the mysticall body is here meant The mysticall body of Christ is the companie of faithfull men who by an vnutterable vnion are euerlastingly ioyned to Christ though they are dispersed vp and downe the world yet in a spirituall relation they are as neere together as the members of the body are if we be faithfull there can be no seperation from Christ and Christians whatsoeuer become of vs in our outward estate This body of Christ is commended for three things ornament vnion and growth and well are all put together for not one can bee without the other especiallie the first and the third cannot be without the second it is no wonder Christians cannot grow nor be furnished if they bee not knit to Christ they may be neere the body but not of the body There is great difference betweene our best garments and our meanest members the worst member of the body will grow yet the best raiment though it sit neuer so neere will not so is not betweene wicked men professing Christ and the godlie that are members of Christ indeed Of these three vnion is of the essence of the body the other two are adiuncts the one needfull to the being the other to the wel-being of the Church First therefore of this vnion This vnion is two waies here set forth 1. that it is in these words knit together 2. How it is in these words by iointes and bands Knit together The faithfull are knit together 1. with Christ 2. with Christians Great is the glorie of Christians knit to Christ for from that vnion with him flowes many excellent priuiledges such are these 1. The communication of names the body is called sometimes by the name of the head viz. Christ and the head by the name of the body viz. Israel 2. The influence of the vertue of the death resurrection of Christ 3. The inhabitation of the spirit of Christ 4. Intercession 5. The communication of the secrets of Christ 6. The testimonie of Iesus 7. Expiation as he is the sacrifice and passeouer offered for vs 8. Consolation in affliction 9. Power against tentations 10. The annointing or power of
seeke the true knowledge of his nature We must seeke his fauour and the pacification of his iust anger for our sinnes We must seeke his face and presence We must seeke his honour and glory And we must seeke his saluation and if you aske how wee must seeke God I answer wee must seeke God with acknowlegdement of our faults with weeping and repentance for our sinnes with the desire of our hearts with prayer and supplication with feare of his mercies with meekenesse and in the way of holy life Secondly Christ is aboue for so he sayth to the Iewes ye are from beneath I am from aboue ye are of this world I am not of this world and he is the Lord whom euery Christian ought to seeke now Christ is two wayes sought principally First in the sincere and constant vse of all his ordinances both publike and priuate that by them we might find his presence of grace on earth And thus the Church sought him in the Canticles Secondly in the desires prayers and preparations for our owne dissolution and his appearing Thirdly the new Ierusalem is aboue for so the Apostle to the Galathians expressely sayth Euen that heauenly society of glorious spirits in illustrious splendor And these are to be sought two wayes 1 By the constant desire of their presence and to be gathered to them 2 By the imitation of their graces and vertues which they shewed when they were on earth Fourthly Heauen is aboue For it is the price of our calling that is aboue and the glory of that eternall and immortall honour is to be sought and that fiue wayes 1 By prayer for preparation and that daily for so our Sauiour hath taught vs in the second petition of his prayer 2 By seeking the assurance of faith and hope and the pledges and earnest of it 3 By meditation and contemplation striuing to expresse our desires and sighes after it 4 By carrying our selues as strangers and pilgrimes in this world weaning our hearts and retiring our liues from the world confessing and professing our trauailes towards a better countrie that is aboue 5 By continuing in wel-doing striuing to liue a Citizen like life heere in all things prouident to send our workes and prayers to Heauen before vs as our prouision and treasure Fiftly holy graces are aboue for S. Iames sayth Euery good giuing and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the father of lights And it is apparent that they are a part of the Kingdome of Heauen and they tend to Heauen and therefore the Prophet Esay cals grace by the name of glory and they come downe from Heauen which will also appeare in the particulars Wisdome is from aboue so is zeale for it is the zeale of Gods house so is lowlinesse so is faith so is peace and ioy and all the rest And that these are to bee sought many Scriptures euidently proue if you aske how they are to be sought it is shortly answered by prayer and the vse of the meanes which the Lord hath appointed as holy vessels and instruments and as it were wombes to conceiue conuey and deriue grace vnto vs. Sixtly the meanes of saluation themselues are things aboue for they are called the Kingdome of Heauen and the Kingdome of Heauen is sayd to be taken away when the meanes is taken away and these we must seeke though it cost vs much trauaile if there be a famine or much cost if the Lord giue vs to finde such pearles of instruction or comfort in the field of any Church or congregation Seuenthly holy duties are many of them from aboue for the Wise man sayth the way of life is on high to the prudent to auoyde from hell beneath and that because both the will that enioynes them and the power to doe them and the succes or effects of them are all from God aboue And therfore the Author to the Hebrews when he would discourse of doing of Gods wil quoting the place in the Psalmes seemes to intimate that the true speech of such duties is to speake from aboue and these good things are to be sought wee must seeke the old and good way we must seeke Iudgement and Righteousnesse Eightly many of the priuiledges of Christians are from aboue as the righteousnesse of Gods Kingdome forgiuenesse of sinnes deliuerance from this present euill world both in respect of the contagions and punishments of the same all spirituall blessings in heauenly things the reuelation of hid mysteries the spirit of the sonne the influence of Christs death and resurrection the word with all the treasure of it and the honour which is aboue and all these are to bee sought Thus of the particular things that are aboue and we must seeke The consideration of all this may much abase and humble vs for our deadnesse of spirit and egregious slownesse of heart in these things that so greatly concerne vs. The Diuell takes more paines in seeking to destroy vs then we either doe take or are willing to take to saue our owne soules by seeking these things all of them so worthy to be sought The worldly man is more industrious to seek riches and the ambitious man more to seek honor and the luxurious man to seeke his sport lust or pleasure then Christians are to seeke those things that are aboue though neuer any truly sought but did find and neuer lesse was found then either the euidence or the possession of a kingdome and that of God Nay nay how haue euery one of vs sought out all wayes and all inuentions while we liued in the seruice of the flesh and had no fruit or wages but that of which we are now ashamed and yet are seldome or neuer weary of such vnprofitable and shamefull labour But I referre the vrging of motiues till I come to the next verse it followeth Where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God These words containe the later reasons and comprehend a principal part of Christs exaltation the meditation whereof is here vsed to excite vs to the loue of heauenly things seeing our Sauiour Christ that so intirely loues vs not only is in heauen but is there in great fauour and honor and maiesty and power There is a foure fold presence of Christ For first he is euery where as God Secondly he is in the hearts of the faithfull only by his spirit of grace and regeneration Thirdly he is by representation in the sacrament Fourthly he is bodily in heauen Que. But is not Christ with his Church on earth still Ans. he is as God but not as man I say not as man locally for else he is present in his members that
ministery of his angels to translate the blessed soules to their place of peace rest and ioy And lastly hee shall appeare in the end of the world in glorious Maiesty to iudge all men and Angels and this is the appearance heere mentioned There is noted to be a threefold Iudgement The first Iudgement and that was accomplished on man and Angels at their first fall then there is a middle Iudgement and so God iudgeth the wicked and the righteous euery day And there is a last Iudgement and that is this Iudgement about which Christ is heere sayd to appeare The doctrine of the last Iudgement is in a manner onely to bee found in the Church They were darke and vncertaine things the Philosopher could see by the light of nature And the Lords messengers haue in all ages from the first beginning till now mightily vrged the terror of this day to awaken the secure worlde Henoch prophesied of it so did Moses and Dauid and Solomon and Daniel and Ioel 〈◊〉 ●●lachie so did Christ himselfe and Paul and Peter and Iohn and Iude Neither is the assurance of the Iudgement to come waranted by the words of Gods seruants onely but the Lord hath left many works of his owne as pledges that he will once at length for all iudge the whole world for sin The drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the destruction of Ierusalem were assured foretokens that the Lord would not put vp the infinite iniquities of the world but will most seuerely punish for sinne the pleading of the conscience foretels a iudgement to come the sentence of death pronounced in Paradise and renewed with such terror on Sinay did euidently assure that God meant to call men to an account The lesser Iudgements in this life are but foretypes of that last and greatest Iudgement to come And lastly the dragging of men out of the world by death is nothing else but an Alarum to Iudgement Yet as there is a necessary vse of the knowledge of this dreadfull and glorious doctrine So there is a restraint to be layd vppon vs this is one of the things wherein we must be wise to sobriety We must represse the itching of our eares and be content to be ignorant of what is not reuealed this is a doctrine to be inquired into more for vse of life then to feede the curiosity of contemplation Concerning the Iudgement to come if any aske Who shall iudge I answer that in respect of authority the whole trinity shall Iudge but in respect of the execution of that Authority Christ onely shall iudge and that as man it is true that the Apostles and the Saints are sayd to iudge the tribes of Israel and the world but they ony iudge as assessors that is they shall sit as it were on the bench with our Sauiour Christ when he iudgeth And if any aske in the second place Whom Christ shall iudge I answer hee shall iudge the euill Angels for they are reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day He shall iudge also the man of sinne euen the great Antichrist that hath made such hauocke in the Church and seduced the nations with the wine of his fornications euen him shall he consume with the brightnesse of his comming He shall iudge also all reprobates men women and children of all ages nations and conditions for though he shall not know them in respect of approbation yet he shall iudge them and make them vnderstand he knew their transgressions Further he shall iudge the very Elect though it shall be with a different Iudgement For we must all appeare before the tribunall seat of Christ that euery one may receiue the things which are done in his body Lastly in some sence it may be sayd he shall iudge the whole world for the heauens and the earth that now are are kept by the word of God reserued vnto fire against the day of condemnation and of the destruction of vngodly men and the Apostle Paul sayth that the feruent desire of the creature made subiect to vanity by man waiteth for this reuelation of the sonnes of God at the last iudgement for they are subdued vnder hope and shall at that day by the sentence of Christ be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Thirdly if any aske where this iudgement shall be I answer that seeing the Lord hath not determined it it is curious to enquire and more curious to assigne the very place as some haue that wrote it should be in the valley of Iehoshaphat or as others would haue it on Mount Sion whence he ascended This we know it shall bee neere the earth in the clouds of Heauen where Christs throne shall be set and further then this we need not enquire There haue beene also many opinions about the time when it should be Some thought that as the world was sixe dayes in creating and then the Sabaoth of rest came So the world should last 6000. yeares reckoning a 1000. yeares as one day and then should come the eternall Saboath Others distribute the times thus 2000. yeere before the Law 2000. yeeres vnder the law and 2000. yeers after the law and then comes the iudgement Others thought the world would last after Christ so long as it was to the flood from the creation and that was as they say 1656. yeers Others thought it should be as long to the iudgement after Christ as it was from Moses to Christ and that should be 1582. yeers this experience hath proued false Other say Christ liued 33. yeeres and the world should continue for 33. Iubilies after Christ. What can be said of all or the most of these opinions and such like but euen this that they are the blind fancies of men For is there not a plaine restraint laid vpon men in this question when the Lord Iesus said it is not for you to know the times and seasons which the father hath put in his owne power And of that day and hower knoweth no man no not the Angells of heauen but my father only And the Euangelist S. Marke addeth that the sonne of man himselfe knoweth not the day and hower Not that simply Christ is ignorant of the time of the last iudgement but he was said not to know because he kept it from our knowledge Or else he knew it not as he was man or rather in his estate of humiliation and in his humane nature he did not precisely know it But that hinders not but that in his estate of exaltation as he is now in heauen and hath all power and iudgement committed vnto him he may and doth fully vnderstand it But letting these things passe the principall things for vs to be informed in is concerning the
the Prophet Hosea and the Apostle in the Reuelation Lastly there is corporall fornication and that sometimes notes whoredome in the generall and somtimes it notes that filthinesse that is committed actually by vnmarried persons and this later kinde of filthinesse was exceeding common among the Gentiles in all nations especially where it was committed with such as professed to be whores And so it was an effect of that horrible blindnesse into which the nations fell vpon their idolatry But I suppose it may be heere taken for all Adulterie and whoredome And then I come to the reasons which may be collected against this sinne out of seuerall Scriptures and generally it is woorthy the noting that euer the more the world lessens the hatefulnesse of this sinne the more the holy Ghost aggrauates it it as heere it is set in the forefront that the first and greatest blowes of confession and prayer might light vpon it But I come to the particular reasons against fornication 3. It defiles a man worse then any leprosie it is filthinesse in a high degree of hatefulnesse 2. It makes a man or woman vnmeet and vnworthy all Christian society as the Apostle shewes if any that is called a brother be a fornicator with such a one eat not 3. It is one of the manifest workes of the flesh 4. It is so hatefull that it ought not once to be named among Christians 5. It brings with it horrible dishonour If a theefe steale to satisfie his soule because he is hungry men doe not so despise him but he that committeth adulterie with a woman is destitute of vnderstanding He shall finde a wound and dishonor and his reproach shall neuer be put away It is better be buried in a deepe ditch then to liue with a whore 6. It vtterly makes shipwracke of innocency and honesty A man may as well take fire in his bosome and his clothes not be burnt or goe vpon coales and his feet not be burnt as goe into his neighbours wife and be innocent the strange woman encreaseth transgressours amongst men T is impossible to bee adulterous and honest 7. T is a sinne of which a man or woman can hardly repent for whoredome and wine as the Prophet notes take away their heart The guests of the strange woman are the most of them in hell for the wise man further auoucheth surely her house tendeth to death and her pathes vnto the dead 8. It will bring Gods curse vpon a mans estate many a man is brought to a morsell of bread by it Yea it may bring a man into almost all euill in the midst of the congregation for fornication is a fire that will deuour to destruction and root out all a mans encrease and therefore to be accounted a wickednesse and iniquity to bee condemned 9. By this sinne a man may make his house a very stewes the Lord may iustly plague his filthinesse in his terrible wrath suffering his wife children or seruants also to defile his house with like abhominations 19. If it were not otherwise hatefull yet this is sure it will destroy a mans soule Lastly the Apostle Paul in the first Epistle to the Corinthians and the sixth chapter hath diuerse reasons against this sinne First the body was made for the Lord aswell as the soule Secondly the body shall be raised at the last day to an incorruptible estate Thirdly our bodies are the members of Christ Fourthly he that coupleth himselfe with an Harlot is one body with an Harlot Fiftly this is a sin in a speciall sence against our owne bodies Sixtly the bodie is the temple of the holy Ghost Finally the bodie is bought with a price and therefore is not our owne These reasons should effectually perswade with Christian mindes to abhorre and auoyd this wretched sinne and those that are guiltie of it should make haste by sound repentance to seeke forgiuenesse hauing their soules washed in the bloud of Christ for howsouer for the present they liue securely through the methods of Sathan and the deceitfulnesse of sinne yet may they be brought into the midst almost of all euils before they be aware Let them assure themselues that th●●nd will be bitter as wormewood and sharpe as a two edged sword for he that followeth a strange woman is as an oxe that goeth to the slaughter and as a foole to the stockes for correction till a dart strike through his liuer as a bird hasteth to to the snare not knowing that he is in danger for if the filthy person could escape all manner of Iudgement from men yet it is certaine that whoremongers and adulterers God will iudge but because God for a time holdeth his tongue therefore they thinke God is like them but certainly the time hasteth when the Lord will set all their filthinesse in order before them and if they consider not he will cease vpon them when no man shall deliuer them especially they are assured to lose the Kingdome of Heauen and to feele the smart of Gods eternall wrath in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone neither let them applaud themselues in their secrecy for God can detect them and bring vpon them the terrors of the shadow of death when they see they are knowen the heauens may declare their wickednesse and the earth rise against them and the fire not blowen may deuoure them Neither let any nurse themselues in security in this sinne vnder pretence that they purpose to repent heereafter for they that goe to a strange woman seldome returne againe neither take they hold of the way of life for whoredome takes away their heart If they replie that Dauid did commit adultery and yet did returne I answer it is true of many thousand adulterers one Dauid did returne but why mayest thou not feare thou shouldest perish with the multitude did not returne besides when thou canst shew once Dauids exquisite sorrowes and teares I will beleeue thy interest in the application of Dauids example Vncleannesse by vncleannesse heere I suppose is meant all externall pollutions or filthinesses besides whoredome As first with diuels and that either sleeping by filthy dreams or waking as is reported of some witches Secondly with beasts and this is buggery Thirdly with men and that is Sodomitrie Fourthly with our owne kindred and that is incest Fiftly with more wiues then one and that is Poligamie Sixtly with ones owne wife by the intemperate or intempestiue vse of the marriage bed as in the time of separation Seuenthly with a mans owne selfe as was Onans sinne or in like filthinesse though not for the same end These as the Gentiles walke in the vanitie of their minds their cogitations are darkened they are strangers from the life of God through their ignorance and hardnesse of heart being for the most
I meane christian loue to Gods children and such a loue as hath both affection and society and spirituall imploiment in the furtherance of the Gospell When the Apostle would charge the Ephesians to auoid fornication and all vncleannesse he doth first aduise them and that seriously to walke in loue as knowing that the exercise of true christian loue breeds such contentment and desire of holinesse that it mightily fenceth the heart against all base lusts whatsoeuer For they cannot stand together and vsually such as are withdrawne by concupiscence are likewise withdrawen from all profitable fellowship with Gods children The fift preseruatiue is watchfulnesse in the daily obseruing of the first motions of lust and in carefulnesse in directing the heart into Gods presence deuoting in our couenants and desires our thoughts and affections to God Thus Salomon when he would giue direction against the whorish woman aduiseth My sonne giue me thy heart and let thine eies delight in my waies The last preseruatiue is to auoide the causes and occasions of lust and vncleannesse The first is idlenesse This was one of the causes of the detested vncleannesse of Sodom as the Prophet Ezechiel shewes And contrariwise diligence in our callings is a notable helpe to keep out inordinate desires and vain thoughts and commonly persons ouertaken with vncleannesse abound with idlenesse The second is fulnesse of bread that is by a synechdoche excesse in meats and drinkes either for the measure or daintinesse of them And contrariwise to beate downe downe our bodies either by abstinence or sobriety in the vse of the creatures is a notable meanes to quench and abate those flames if they be risen and to keep them also from that speciall aptnesse to rise The third is the high estimation of earthly things and the too great liking of them for this loue secretly brings in lust Thus the Apostle to Timothie saies that the loue of mony and riches breeds noisome lusts which in short time drowne man in perdition The like may be said of the estimation and too much viewing of apparell beauty c. The fourth is ignorance and hardnes of hart For thus it was in those the Apostle mentions in the fourth to the Ephesians That greedinesse to defile themselues with all sorts of vncleannesse arose and increased in them by reason of the insensiblenesse of the heart and the blindnesse and emptinesse of their minds And on the other side lust cannot get such a head so long as any sound measure of knowledge is stirring in the mind or tendernesse remaines in the heart lust desires both a darke house and a darke mind The fift is euill company And therefore the holy Ghost giues this rule to those that would not be ensnared with the strange woman walke thou in the way of good men and keepe the way of the righteous The last is care for the flesh It is the liberty men take not only to feed themselues in contemplatiue wickednesse but also to plod and cast about how to satisfie fulfil their lusts that doth so much confirme them in the custome of vncleannesse And therefore the Apostles counsell is take not care to fulfill the lusts of the flesh Thus farre of the sinnes of the seuenth commandement The sinne against the tenth commandement followes Euill concupiscence This vice containes all sorts of euill thoughts and inclinations and desires after any kind of pleasure profit honor but especially lustfull inclinations or thoughts And it differs from inordinate affection because inordinate affection hath in it principally the burning of lust and a kind of effeminatenesse the soule being ouercome and inthralled with the power of lust Now I thinke this concupiscence notes lust as it is in inclination or euil motion before it come to that high degree of flaming or consent and it is well called euill concupiscence for there is a good concupiscence both naturall and ciuill and spirituall Naturall after meate sleepe procreation c. ciuill which is an ordinate desire after lawfull profits and pleasures Spirituall and that is a lust for and after heauenly things And so the spirit lusts against the flesh Now that we may know the Apostle hath great reason to counsell men to mortifie euill thoughts though they neuer come to consent these reasons may shew First concupiscence in the very inclination and first thoughts is a breeder it is the mother of all sorts of wickednesse if it be not betimes killed in the conception The Apostle Iames shewes that concupiscence will be quickly enticed yea it will entice and draw away a man though from without it be allured with no obiect And when it hath drawne a man aside it will conceiue and breed with very contemplatiue pleasures and when it hath conceiued and lien in the wombe of the minde and laine there nourished from time to time vnlesse God shew the greater mercy it will bring forth bring forth I say a birth of some notable externall euill action and when it hath gone so far like an impudent beldame it will egge on still vnto the finiishing of sinne by custome in the practise and so indeed of it selfe it will neuer leaue till it hath brought foorth as a second birth death and that both spirituall and eternall death and somtimes a temporll death too Secondly if these lusts goe no further then the inward man yet sinne may raigne euen in these There may be a world of wickednesse in a man though he neuer speake filthy words or commit filthy action There is a conuersing with the very inward lusts of the flesh which may proue a man to be meerly carnall and without grace as well as outward euill life Thirdly this secret concupiscence may be a notable hinderance to all holy dutie This was that the Apostle so bitterly cries out against in the seuenth to the Romanes This was it that rebelled so against the law of his mind and when he would doe any good it would be present to hinder it This is it whereby the flesh makes war and daily sights against the spirit t is the lust after other things that enters into mans hart and choakes the word and makes it vnfruitfull What is the reason why many pray and speed not is it not by reason of their lusts that sight in their members Qu But is there any man that is wholly freed from these Ans. There is not Euery man hath in him diuerse kinds of euill thoughts but yet there is great difference for then is a mans estate dangerous when these lusts and euill thoughts are obeied serued fulfilled and cared for For those are the termes by which the power of them in wicked men are exprest but so they are not in a child of God that walkes before God in vprightnesse The consideration of all this may break the harts of ciuill honest men For hence they may see that
religious or politicall For religious truth being asked of our faith wee are ingenuously to professe it Now politicall truth is to be considered either as it is required in iudgment or as it is to be vsed in cases out of iudgment As for the truth before a Iudge it may not bee concealed when thou art called to answer the truth but in priuate conuersing wee are not alwaies bound to reueale all the truth for the precept Speake euery man the truth is an affirmatiue precept and so doth not binde alwaies and at all times and in all places Besides charitie bindes vs to conceale and couer many infirmities and a wise man keeps in some part till afterwards and besides it is apparant men are not bound to discouer their secret sinnes to all men Samuel also is taught to conceale a part of the truth when he went to anoint Dauid And thus of the catologue of Iniuries Seeing you haue put off the old man with his workes In these words with the verses that follow to the 12th is conteined three reasons to inforce the mortification of iniuries I. They are the works of the old man and they haue by profession put off the old man and so they should do his works II. They are now in the state of grace they are new men and therefore haue new manners they are by the meanes renued in knowledge and therefore ought to grow in practise euen in the mortification of what remaines of corruption they are renewed after the image of Christ and Christs image is the patterne of all holinesse and they must therefore leaue those sinnes because how like soeuer they bee to the humors and dispositions of the most men yet they are not found in the Image of Christ. III. God is vnpartially righteous and iust if men minde not mortification he cares not for them though they were Iewes circumcised freemen and contrariwise if they do conscionably striue after the holinesse of Christ and the mortification of sinnes he will accept them though they were Graecians Scythians bond c. In these words is heedfully to be noted the matter to bee auoyded both the old man and his works 2. the maner imployed in the metaphor put off with the time haue and the persons yee The old man is by some taken to be their old condition of life in the time of Idolatry by others to be their custome and habit in sinne but it is generally by the most taken to be the corruption of nature and inborne prauitie that vicious humor and ill disposition that naturally is in euery one of vs it is the image of the first Adam in our hearts This corruption is here said to be the man because it is seated in euery part of man and because it rules and frames a man and because it liues in man so as sinne onely seemes to be aliue and the man dead and because God will take notice of nothing in the sinner but his sinne 2 The old man partly in respect of the first Adam whose sinne is ours by propagation and who is called ould to distinguish him from the second Adam and partly in respect of our state of corruption which in the renewed estate we change so that our condition after calling is said to be new and our disposition before calling said to be old This corruption may be said to be ould also by the effects for in godly men it waxeth old and withereth more and more daily by the power of Christ in them and in wicked men it spends the strength and vigor and power of the faculties of the soule and makes him more and more withered and deformed in Gods sight and withall it hasten● old age and death vpon their bodies also in some men sinne may be said to be old in repect of continuance this is most fearefull age in any corruption is a most grieuous circumstance of aggrauation it is best not to sinne at all and the next to get quickly out of it Thus of his nature now of his workes The works of the old man are in generall workes of darknesse of iniquitie of the flesh vaine vnfruitfull corrupt abhominable deceiueable shamefull and tend to death And now particularly if we would know what he doth and how he is imployed we must vnderstand that he giues lawes to the members against the law of God and the minde that he frames obiections and lets against all holy duties that he striues to br●ng the soule into bondage and captiuitie vnder imperious lusts that he inflames the desires of the heart against the spirit that he infects our vaine generation and works both sinne and wrath for our posteritie but more especially his workes are either inward or outward inwardly he workes Atheisme impatience contempt carnall considence hypocrisie he forges and frames continually and multiplies euill thoughts he works lusts of all sorts he works anger rage malice griefe euill suspitions and the like Outwardly he works all sorts of disorders impieties vnrighteousnesse and intemperance A catalogue of his outward works are set downe in the Epistle to the Galathian he is heere in the coherence described to be couetous filthy wrathfull cursed and lying and all these are well called his works because he rests not in euill dispositions but will burst out into action besides it is his trade ●o sinne and they are well called his works because they are properly a mans owne for till a man repent he hath nothing his owne but his sinne and it is to be obserued that his works indefinitely must be put away as if the holy ghost would imply that all his works were nought for his best works are infected with the viciousnesse of his person or else they are not warranted in the word or they are not finished or the end was not good or the manner not good or they were wrought too late or being out of Christ they were not presented by Christ vnto God in whom only they can be accepted Thus of the matter to bee reformed the manner followes Put off The faithfull are said to put of the old man six waies 1 In signification or sacramentally and so in baptisme 2 In profession or outward acknowledgment and so we professe to leaue off the practise of sin 3ly by Iustification and so the guilt of sinne is put off 4ly by relation and so in our head Christ Iesus he is euery way already perfitly put off 5ly by Hope and so we beleeue he shall be wholy remooued at the last day 6ly by Sanctification and so he is put off but in part and inchoatiuely the last way is heere principally ment Now in respect of Sanctification the old man and his works are put away first in the word for so Christians are said to be cleane by the word and to be sanctified by the word The word first begins the worke of reformation it informes renewes chaseth away the
The lets of comfort are either 1 in men or 2 in God In men they are either of frailtie without any great sinne or such as arise of sinne The lets of frailtie are specially two 1 Bodily distemper by sicknesse or melancholy but this may be tried thus if they be dead hearted in all other things aswell as hearing and praier c. 2 Waiwardnesse in the distresse of conscience when the soule refuseth comfort Psal. 77.3 The lets of comfort that arise of sinne may be considered two waies first as they are in the worser sort of men Secondly as they are also in the better sort In the worser sort these are the lets First impenitencie Ier. 8.6.8 Secondly Prouidence Ier. 6.10 Thirdly vile affections such as are 1 Worldly griefe or fretting 2 Worldly cares these are thornes 3 Rage and passion Rom. 15.4 4 Lust 2. Tim. 3.6 5 Enuie 1. Pet. 2.12 4 A spirit of slumber Rom. 11.7.8 c. 5 Contrarietie or contradiction in opinions Phil. 2.1.2 In the better sort 1 want of preparation plowing must go before sowing Math. 17. Of attention Isa. 55.3.4 Of estimation of comfort receiued Iob. 15.11 Of godly sorrow Isa. 61.62 2 Preuailing of other ioies 3 An ouer high expectation 4 Presumptuous sinnes 5 Spirituall satietie and fulnesse when they seeme to haue grace enough and want nothing too like the Laodiceans Reuel 3. Thus in men 2 God doth restraine consolation sometimes for reasons secret to himselfe sometimes for reasons reuealed but not to vs as 1 To teach vs to know that comfort is his gift and to draw vs to looke aboue the meanes 2 To teach vs to liue by faith and not by sence 3 To scourge vnthankfulnesse 4 To compell vs to the vse of other of his ordinances too much neglected Thus of the lets To passe from this point we may here obserue 1 An immutable praise in the Apostle he enuies not the labours of his brethren he is so farre from it that he reioyceth in it 2 we may see that the wisest and greatest men haue neede to be comforted of meaner men 3 Heere is a reproofe of such workemen as by their labour grieue Gods people and are as thornes and goades in their sides but comfort them they do not Thus of the salutations of the Iewes The salutation of the three Gentiles follow the first is Epaphras who besides the report of his salutation is described 1 by his office the seruant of Christ. 2 By his relation to them who is one of you 3 By his loue to them shewed by striuing in praier for them 4 By his zeale not onely for them but for the two neighbour Churches vers 13. This Epaphras was the Cities preacher among the Collossians he is kept back at Rome for a time that so Tichicus might confirme the doctrine before taught by Epaphras Quest. But why is the Apostle so long in speaking of him being so short in the mention of the rest Answ. It is the Apostles discretion to honor him before his owne people A seruant of Christ He was a seruant of Christ first as a man and so by the necessitie of creation he must serue Christ whether he would or not 2 As a Christian man and so he serues him willingly and in religious workes 3 As a Preacher of the Gospell and so he serues Christ in a speciall function in the Church Doctr. 1 Ministers are Christs seruants whence followes two thinges first they must do his workes Secondly they must not be seruants of men Doctr. 2 The estate of the Ministers of God is an estate of seruing not of raigning they are not Lords ouer Gods heritage nor must they thinke to be like the Princes of the Nations Doct. 3. It is a great honour to be Christs seruant for all his seruants are freemen and their wages is euerlasting and therefore wee should loue to be his seruants neither should it euer seeme euill vnto vs to doe his worke Besides it is a great comfort to poore Christians though they cannot be Kings and Apostles yet they may be Christs seruants which Kings and Apostles haue accounted their greatest honour Thirdly men must take heed of despising or abusing Ministers seeing they are Christs seruants yea it is not safe to abuse any Christian for that very reason Lastly seeing it is so great a dignitie to serue Christ both Ministers and people must be carefull to performe Christs seruice with obseruation of what Christ requires for the manner or rules of his seruice Ministers must not seeke their owne things Phil. 2.21 they must not be giuen to wine not to filthy lucre not fighters not couetous not profane in their families not young schollers not scandalous 1 Tim. 3.3.4.5.6.7 2. Tim. 2.24 they must faithfully care for all the matters of the Church Phil. 2.20 they must serue with all modestie and teares Act. 20.19 Christians in their seruice of Christ must remember to lay aside all immoderate cares for the profits and pleasures of this world ye cannot serue Christ and mammon 2. That Christ will not be serued but in newnesse of spirit the old heart can doe Christ no worke Christ will accept Rom. 7.6 Quest. But who are Christs seruants Answ. If you speake of ministers it is answered negatiuely Gal. 1.10 Hee that preacheth mans doctrine or goeth about to please men he is not the seruant of Christ. If you aske of Christians in generall it is answered Rom. 6.16 His seruants you are to whom ye obey If ye conscionably endeuour to obey the word of Christ you are the seruants of Christ otherwise yee serue sinne vnto death For conclusion let vs so settle our hearts to serue Christ that we remember to doe it 1. constantly at all times 2. sincerely by doing all his workes both publike and priuate Which is one of you Doct. There is a speciall loue due to fellow-citizens This I haue noted before But I adde that the loue of Citizens must shunne fiue things as great rockes to make the shipwracke of true affection vpon 1. Opposition or quarrell and suits in matter of estate 2. Enuie at the prosperitie or trade of others 3. Faction or banding into sides in matters of gouernment 4. Schisme in matter of Religion but it is to be noted that it is prophane and fleshly men that haue not the spirit of God that cannot abide others because they runne not with them into the same excesse of riot for Gods seruants would faine liue at peace Iud. 18.19 5. A reioicing together in euill The loue that leads men from their calling to goe from tauerne to tauerne or from sport to sport is not true Citizen-like loue it is base and vnwarrantable The third thing in the description is his loue to his people shewed by praiing for them In his praier note 1. The action that he doth pray 2. The subiect persons for whom for you 3. The circumstance he praies absent 4. The varietie of his praiers praiers
k Esay 9.6.7 l Ephes. 1 vlt. m Psal. 110.3 n Psal. 2. Math. 11.29 How the deuine nature can be in the humane How Christ was like vs how vnlike Distinctions of vnions o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 t 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Act. 20. Gifts naturall and supernaturall in Christ. x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A twofold wisedome in Christ. A threefold created wisedome in Christ y Mat. 11.27 z Esay 11 a Luk 2. ●2 b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the power of Christ. d Matth. 28. e Acts 17.30 Vses a Ioh. ● 16 b Ephes. 1.23 c Ephes. 4 10. d Mat. 11 2● Rom. 15.14 e Ioh. 1.16 f Acts 6.8 g Rom. 14.17 h Hebr. 2. i Rom. 15.29 Christians are compleat both comparatiuely and positiuely k Ephes. 1.23 4.16 l Heb. ● 15. m Heb. 6.14 n 2. Tim. 3 16. o Ioh. 17.3 The compleatnes of the weake Christian. p Ezek 36. Ier. 42.39 The compleatnesse of strong Christians q Col. 1.16 r Col. 1.17 s Eph. 1.4 t Rom. 1.17 1. Cor. 5.21 u 2. Cor. 1.20 * 1. Cor. 1.5 x Eph 2. ●6 y Eph. 2.20 z 1. Ioh. 5.11 a 2. Cor. 5.17 b Rom. 8.9 c 2. Tim. 4.8 2. Thess. 3.5 2. Pet. 3.12 d I●h 15 18.20 e 1. Ioh. 3.14 Eph. 4.16.17 f 1. Ioh. 1.6 Hebr. 9.14 1. Ioh. 3.6 g Iob 38. h Genes 3. i Esay 6. k Iob 38 7. l Dan. 4.10 m Psal. 104. n Dan. 7.10 Hosea 12.24 Math. 26.53 o Elohim p Math. 1. The benefits Angels haue by Christ. q Iob. 4. What the Angels do for the body of Christ. r Psal. 34. s Luk. 16. t Math. 24. u Math. 18.10 Ob. Sol. A twofold circumcision a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of circumcision in the flesh c Gal. 5.2 What circumcision signified The end of circumcision d Gal. 5.3 e Rom. 4.11 f Gen. 17.7 g Gen. 17.12.14 Why it was abolished i Rom. 15. Note 8 Reasons why there be such hard phrases and kindes of speech in Scripture k Math. 13. Esay 6. l Hebr. 2.3 m Dan. 12.8 What circumcision without hands is n Heb. 2.1 o Psal. 2.3 2. King 9.11 Ier. 29.26 The time of circumcision without hands o Luk 14.17 p Ioel. 2 12. q 2. Cor. 6.2 r 2. Cor. 6.2 s Matth. 3.10 t Esay 55.1.6 u Ioh. 15.2 * Rom. 1. 11.8.9.10 Esay 6. Math. 13.13 x Psal. 9. The defects of the carnall Isralite The practises of the flesh Courses for taming the flesh Esay 40. 1. Pet. 1.2.4 1. Cor. 1. Eccles. 2. Pet. 2.9.10 Eccles. 11.9 Rom. 8 3. Similes Vses How sinne must be put off 4. Things in mortification What the flesh doth in the godly When sinne is put off Sinne is put off fiue waies A twofold circumcision of Christ. Why Christ was circumcised * Ier. 4.4 x Ier. 6.10 7.51 y Exod. 6. The sinnes in the heart to be circumcised Sinnes in the eares to be circumcised Sinnes in the tongue to be circumcised a Ioh 19. b Matth. 12.39.40 c Esay 53.9 d Psal. 5. Of the buriall of sinne Their priuiledges that haue attained to the buriall of sinne How our spirituall buriall depends vpon Christ. Uses The state of such as neglect mortification Dissimilitude in two things Note this rule Similitudes How many waies Christ ruseth men vp A fourefold resurrection The resurrection of graces A resurrection of 13. graces in a childe of God g 1. Pet. 4.14 h 2. Tim. 1.7 i Zach. 12.12 k Ephes. 1.18 The resurrection of duties in a childe of God of diuers sorts in which he differs from the wicked l Reuel 12.1 m Esay 56. n Cor. 1.12 11.3 * Psal. 1 19.31 o Math. 5.6 p Rom. 1.16 q Psal. 1.2 Luk 8.15 r Gal. 4.6 s Esay 56. t Rom. 2.26 u Act. 24.16 * Psal. 14.1 x Ier. 6.10 y Ioh. 15.19 z Ier. 5.2 a Reuel 3. b Esay 25.8 c Ephes. 2.12 d 2. Thes. 3.2 e Ephes. 4.17 f Psal. 14.4 Vse For terror For comfort to afflicted consciences The ends of baptisme Three waies baptisme respecteth mortification and viuification The benefits signified in baptisme g Math. 3.8 1. Pet. 3.21 h 1. Cor. 15. i Math. 28. k Gal. 3.27 l 1. Cor. 12.13 m Act. 2.38.39 n Math. 3.38 o Cant. 2.41 p Mar. 16.16 q 1. Pet. 3.21 What faith doth in baptisme The vse of faith about sanctification r Heb. 11.6 s Gal. 5.20 t Ephes. ● 16 u Ioh. 12.46 * Act. 15.9 x 1. Ioh. 5.4 y Rom 5.2 z Gal. 6. a 2. Tim. 3.15 b Mat. 21.22 How we may come to bel●eue the effects of baptisme Vses 3 Rules if we would reason for Gods power to the effect * In what things wee may beare our selues vpon Gods power c Phil. 4.13 Esay 41.10 d Esay 27.7 e Iob 36.22 Esay 27.11 Zach. 13.9 f Psal. 71.20 Esay 43. g Iob 12 16. Esay 54.16.17 h Ex●d 15.6.7 Esay 42.13 41.15 i 1. Cor. 10.12 2. Cor. 12.9 Esay 27.1 k Ezech. 36.28 Esay 26 12. l Esay 40.29 vlt. c. Esay 57.15 m 2. Tim 4.18 n Phil 1.6 ●●de 24. 1. Pet 1.5 1. Sam. 2.9 o Psal. 8.9.7.8 p Gal. 2.8 Col. 1. vlt. q Esay 44.26 r Esay 55.11 s Rom. 1.16 1. Cor. 1.18 t 2. Cor. 10.4 Vses u Psal. 111.2 * Psal. 68.28.33.45 x Heb. 11.35 y 1. Cor 2.5 z 1. Cor 15.16.20 a Act. 13.33 b Rom. 4 vlt. c 1. Pet. 3.21 d 1. Cor. 15.14 1. Pet 1.3.4 The swarmes of sinnes in vnregenerate men A fourefold death a Esay 26.19 Death to sin for sinne and in sinne What spiritual death in sin is b Rom 8.7 c 1. Cor. 2.9.14 d Reuel 3.2 Why originall sinne is called flesh What original sinne is 3 Things in originall sin Our miserie in respect of originall sin Vses e Heb. 12 1. f Gal. 5. g 1 Pet. 4.6 h 1. Pet. 4.1 We are three waies quickned i Eph. 4.17 k 1. Cor. 4.16 l Isai. 41. m Heb. 7.16 n Ioh. 6. * The author meanes necessitie titles and priuiledges of spirituall quickning o Esay 6. p Rom. 1.6 q Luk. 6. r Math. 19. s Tit. 3.7 11 Prerogatiues t Iob. 1.13 u Esay 53. * Esay 43.4 Rom 1.7 x Gal. 1.4 y Ephes. 1.3 Esay 61.10 z Heb. 12.22 a Ezech. 39. vlt b 2. Cor. 3. ●● c 2 Cor. 3.18 d Rom. ● 3 e Gal. 4.6 f R●m 8.26 Hos. 12.5.6 h Ezech. 36.27 i 2. Cor. 1.22 Ephes. 1.14.15 k 1 Pet. 1.3 4. Signes of the new birth g Gal. 5.22 l Act. 2.41 m Eze. 20.43 n Esay 4.4 o Esay 61.2.3 p Math. 13. q Iob. 23. r Esay 60.8 s Math. 11. t ● Cor.