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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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James 1.10 3 Rest content in thy condition so Christ here and Paul 1 Cor. 4.11 Phil. 4.13 If at any time we are taken by poverty let us rest contentedly therein living in abundance take heed ye fall not by proud boasting and living in want take heed ye be not supplanted with sorrow of heart one and the same countenance appearing Just Mart. ad Zenam p. 391. V. 21. And another of his disciples said unto him Lord suffer me first to go and bury my Father V. 22. But Jesus said unto him follow me and let the dead bury their dead Suffer me first Here is another of Christ his Disciples who would follow Christ but it must be when his father was dead Christ here shows that nothing should be put before the observation of his commands as being a matter of eternal concernment nor must we use delay herein See Exod. 22.29 Psal 119.60 Nor must we preferre service to relations as probably this man might pretend to serve his Father while he lived or to bury him now dead for some think his Father was now dead and Christ comes to him at this time to comfort him in the want of that relation However Christ called him to follow him Luke 9.59 and he makes this excuse some think his father was old and it would not be long first before he were dead It was a moderate request to go and perform the last office of love but Christ knew others could do it and then matters of salvation are to be preferred before matters of comliness and decency But Jesus said unto him Follow me That is let thy love be so to thy relations that if Christ call thee thou mayest leave all for him Matth. 4.22 Matth 10.37 The end why he followed Christ was ●o preach the Gospel Luk. 9.60 And let the dead bury their dead By dead in the former place he means those who are dead in sins Eph. 2.1 5. Eph. 5.14 1 Tim. 5.6 Bury their dead Christ doth not condemn burying their dead friends who if godly are buried in hope of a comfortable resurrection but hereby tells us that whatsoever hinders us from a right course savours nothing but death and that the unbelieving Jews who were dead in sins might serve to bury this man when he was dead he had some brethren or kindred who might do it also Obs When God calls us to do duty we must not use delayes Gen. 22.2 3. Many sinners are like him that cryed a little more slumber Prov. 6.6 7 8 9 10. To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts Heb. 3.7 8 13. Prov. 27.1 2 Service to relations is not to be preferred before service to Christ 3 Every unbelieving man is no other then a dead man Joh. 5.24 Rom. 5.6 Not like the man that fell among the thieves dangerously wounded but quite dead dead we are by the sin of our first parents not onely temporally Rom. 5.12 but spiritually as unable to do spiritual actions as dead men are to do the actions of living men Col. 2.13 As in natural death there is a separation of the soul from the body so in spiritual death there is a separation of God from the soul For the seat of this spiritual death It is in the understanding John 1.4 5. Eph. 5.14 It is in the will Rom. 6.13 It 's in the conscience Heb. 9.14 It 's in the affections Obj. But if men be naturally dead why do you preach to them Answ 1 The word spoken is a mean to bring them to life Joh. 5.24 When the Spirit of Christ accompanies it the ministry of the word is appointed to turn persons from darkness to light Acts 26.18 2 Though men be naturally dead yet 1 Are they not without reason to consider what is spoken and upon what grounds 2 Though they be dead yet they may offer themselves to the means Obj. But there are some inward workings in the hearts of natural men as sence of sin fear of punishment thoughts of deliverance wishes for heaven therefore they are not dead Answ These and much more may be in natural men yet are they dead As in the generation of man there are many fore-going dispositions which go before the induction of the form so there are many fore-going actions preceding spiritual regeneration as we see in those converts Acts 2.36 37 38. Obj. Man hath some reliques of knowledge how then is he dead Answ Every knowledge doth not suppose life but that onely which affects the heart with affiance and love John 17.3 The devils know much remaining devils still Besides mans natural knowledge makes him inexcusable not salvable Obj. Natural men have many excellent virtues in them therefore they are not dead Answ As the evil actions of good men redound not to their persons to make their persons evil so the good actions of evil men redound not to their persons to make them righteous Good works do not make a good man but a good man makes or does good works evil works do not make an evil man but an evil man makes evil works So that it behoves the person always to be good before all good works and good works come from a good person Luth. Tom. 1 Cat. fol. 469. Their vertues are like pictures without life There are many natural men fine Schollers and Gentlemen too good to go to hell yet not good enough to go to heaven for they being in the flesh cannot please God because they are not good trees they cannot bring forth good fruit all their virtues are like flowers upon a dead mans carkasse that may adorn it and keep off the stink thereof but cannot give life thereto As in the flesh of a beast some part of it is sold at a great price other of it is cast away or little regarded yet all is flesh so some works of the natural man are abhominable and some are commendable but all are but flesh There are several sorts of madnesse some light and foolish some more sober and solemn yet all is but madness so in spiritual madness the lives of some natural men are sober grave serious the lives of others are wilde and ranting yet all are dead and mad Obj. Natural men are not dead because they have some signes of Gods image in them Answ There 's a twofold image 1 Natural standing in immortality immateriality mentioned Gen. 9.6 He that sheds mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the image of God made he him 2 A supernatural image consisting in righteousness and holiness Col. 3.10 You have put on the new man which is created in knowledge after the image of him that created him The former image may be in natural men not the latter Use Try two things 1 Whether thou art dead 2 Whether thou art alive Tryalls of a man dead 1 When he lives in sin Rom. 6.2 How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein 1 Joh. 3.6 He that abides in
2 Cor. 4.8 because God comes for our rescue persecuted of men but not forsaken of God Suppose the evil be imprisonment how comfortable was Paul and Silas in it If burning and martyrdome God will either abate the fire or give thee strength to bear it as a Martyr once comforted himself and others 2 Be exhorted that you be not swallowed up of fears This hath been the portion of the ungodly Jer. 46.5 Pashur had fear round about Jer. 20.4 Zedekiah in his fears goes from chamber to chamber to hide himself 1 Kings 22.24 The hearts of the men of Jericho melted for fear when the men of Israel came against them Jos 2.9 10 11. so that there remained no more courage in any man The men of Benjamin when they saw the City on fire on one side that they could not retreat thereto and the men of Israel turning upon them were amazed Judg. 20.40 41. We live in a time of fears and dangers Sometimes mens hearts failing them for fear looking on those things that are coming on the earth Luk. 21.26 Sometimes our hearts trembling because of the Ark of God 1 Sam. 4.13 as Eli his heart did Sometimes fearing under the sense of our unworthiness Now to quiet our hearts under all fears consider 1 That all the evils men or devils can cast upon us cannot reach the soul Matth. 10.28 2 Get out the sting of sin by obtaining pardon When this sting is taken away the soul will be couragious 1 Cor. 15.57 O death where is thy sting then death will be like a serpent without a sting Without this the heart cannot be free from terror 3 Look on grounds of encouragement as thus I have Christs righteousness for mine I have a disposition to part with all for the Lord I have comfortable answers in prayer I have a good conscience in all things I finde in my self a thorow change I endeavour in all things to eye God Discouraging fears will not be cast out without supporting reasons The soul being reasonable must needs close with reasons 4 Fore-think of evils before they come and set Christ against all So Moses Heb. 11.26 In the worst of times no enemy can take away Christ from me 5 Get Gods fear This will much eat out false fears Matth. 10.28 as the true Serpent ate up the false See Esai 8.12 13 14. 6 Exercise confidence in the promises of God Psal 56.3 4. In God will I put my trust I will not fear what flesh can do unto me What time I am afraid I will put my trust in thee when thou goest through the fire and through the water I will be with thee Esai 43.1 2. 7 Get God on your sides Psal 118.4 The Lord is on my side I will not fear what man can do unto me A Christian should be like a rock in the Sea which though the waves break themselves against it yet it remaineth firm Rom. 8.31 If God be for us who can be against us viz. to hurt us for else no man hath more enemies then a Christian This made Paul so couragious at Corinth Acts 18.9 10. Be not afraid but speak for I am with thee and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee Yea this made Paul not to fear when the Ship was every moment ready to be cast away Acts 27.23 24. The Angel of God stood by me whose I am and whom I serve saying Fear not Paul This made David not to fear though an Army of men were coming against him Psal 27.1 2 3. See Psal 46.1 2 3 c. Motives to rid the heart of these fears 1 They procure great torment to the soul 1 Joh. 4.18 Hence Ezekiel setting forth the misery of the people saith They shall eat their bread with quaking and drink their water with carefulness trembling and astonishment Ezek. 12.18 2 It 's the end of our deliverance to serve God without these slavish fears Luke 1.75 That we being delivered out of the hands of all our enemies might serve him without fear 3 These fears are sometimes worse then the evils themselves feared 2 Kings 7.5 6 7. The Syrians in a vain fear ran away from the Camp and left it to the plunder of Israel Psal 53.5 There were they in great fear where no fear was 4 Many persons have their slavish fears come upon them Saul feared David would get the Kingdome and he sought all means basely to prevent it but could not the Jews feared the Romans would come and take away their place and Nation if they let Christ alone yet when they had slain him the Romans came and took all from them 5 These carnal fears are full of mischief as 1 To exalt creatures in the place of God 2 They expose us to a snare Prov. 29.25 The fear of man brings a snare so doth the fear of hell many dare not do duty for fear they should lose their lives and go to hell 3 These fears bereave us of the comfortable enjoyment of good things we have fear of loss of estate liberty life takes away the comfort of it That good hath the truest content therewith for the loss whereof we are habitually prepared rather then lose Christ and a good conscience 4 Though these fears may sometimes put a man upon self-reformation yet usually this reformation that arises from these fears lasts no longer then the fear remains Psal 107.26 as we see in Mariners in a storm Job 41.25 When he raiseth up himself the mighty are afraid and by reason of breakings they purifie themselves We see how in time of fears men reform but see how unsound it is lasting no longer then the danger lasts Psal 78.34 35 36. When he slew them then they sought him nevertheless they did but flatter him with their mouth Then he arose and rebuked the Winde and the Sea and there was a great calm Not in a feigned way as the Heathen Aeolus rebuked the windes but in a real way as the Lord of windes and sea Hence Mark hath it Peace and be still Mar. 4.39 He reproves the wind and sea as if a Master should reprove a servant here is a plain argument of Christs Godhead Who can command winde and sea save God alone As his power was seen in quieting the storms of the sea 〈◊〉 the same power can quiet the storms in the Churches and among good men and the storms that Satans temptations shall stir up in the hearts of Saints So when there are passionate storms in our hearts the command of Christ should make a calm It 's a comfortable thing in a storm to be in covenant with him whom windes and seas obey Christ speaks alike to windes and storms diseases and devils he quiets them with the word of his mouth and so can he quiet storms in the Commonwealth Psal 65.7 Which stilleth the noise of the seas the noise of their waves and the tumult of the people Onely in these times of confusions let us awake the Lord
this bloudshed and Death of Christ did not onely ransom us from wrath Rom. 5.9 and purchase forgiveness of sins for us Rom. 3.25 but also the same Death purchases Heaven for us Heb. 9.15 He is the Mediatour of the New Testament that by the means of Death they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Heb. 10.19 Having Brethren boldness to enter into the holiest by the Bloud of Jesus that is into Heaven it self Contrary to those mistaken dictates to wit that Christ his obedience to the Law purchased Heaven for us and that his Death and Sufferings onely ransomed us from Hell 2 The Apostle saith There can be no forgiveness without shedding of Bloud Heb. 9.22 Things figuratively holy were cleansed with the bloud of beasts then things truly holy must be cleansed with better bloud Again Heb. 9.25 26. Once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself Also Heb. 9.28 Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many When he came to dy he took on him the sins of many that is of all the elect See also Heb. 10.5 A body hast thou prepared me v. 10. By which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Christ once for all Also v. 12. This man after he had offered one sacrifice both in kinde and number for sin sat down on the right hand of God Also v. 14. the Apostle gives a Reason why he hath no more offering to make nor no more suffering to endure nor needs no repetition of what is done because with one offering he hath perfected for ever sanctified persons Also v. 19. he shews the price of this purchase to be the Bloud of Jesus having boldness to enter into the holiest by the Bloud of Jesus called also the veil of his flesh v. 20. Also Heb. 13.20 Through the Bloud of the eternal Covenant we are made perfect Christ hath redeemed us that have been baptized from the most grievous sins which we have done by his being crucified upon the Cross and by the purification of water Justin cont Triph. 246. he names this purifying as the outward sign for pag. 177. he saith out of Esaias Wash ye c. He doth not send us into a Bath to wash away our sins which all the water of the Sea cannot but he shews this wholesom washing will follow them that repent that they shall not be washed in the bloud of Goats and Sheep but by faith by the Bloud of Christ and his Death Gal. ● 13 The Apostle shews the manner how we are delivered from the curse of the Law Even by Christs hanging on a Tree and being made a curse for us Ephes 2.16 Christ reconciles Jews and Gentiles unto God in one body by the Cross 1 Peter 1.18 We are not redeemed with corruptible things but with the precious Bloud of Christ as of a Lamb without spot 1 Peter 2.24 Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the Tree 1 John 1.7 The Bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin Revel 1.5 Hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his own Bloud Revel 5.9 Speaking of Christ he saith Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy Bloud out of every kindred and tongue Revel 7.14 John shewing how the Martyrs came to be arrayed in white Robes tells us it was by washing their Robes and making them white in the Bloud of the Lamb. One drop of whose Bloud was more precious than the whole creature Luth. Tom. 4. What means then that new opinion that part of the satisfaction is given by the obedience of Christ in fulfilling the Law Object Rom. 5.18 By the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Answ The Apostle means not the obedience of Christ to the Law but the suffering of Christ whereby he became obedient to the death of the cross Phil. 2.9 Obj. Christ is made unto us righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 and we are made the righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 Answ The Scripture places our righteousness in the death of Christ for the righteousness a Christian hath is forgiveness and covering of sins Rom. 4.7 8. Quest But what use is there of the active obedience of Christ to our redemption Answ Had he not been holy harmless and undefiled he could not have been a fitting Mediator Heb. 7.25 2 To be a patern for us how to walk 1 Joh. 2.6 we must walk as he walked with an as of similitude though not of equality 3 The humane nature of Christ is a creature for Christ is perfect man hence as he was man he owed perfect obedience to the Law Gal. 4.4 Quest If the death of Christ be the material cause of our justification why is it called by the name of righteousness Answ Because it is equivalent to righteousness for it 's all one to the Law-giver if his Law be observed or the penalty for the breach of it suffered now the penalty was death by the consent of the Law-giver either eternal death of us or temporal death of our surety now our sin being condemned in the flesh of Christ Rom. 8.3 the righteousness of the Law is fulfilled in us v. 4 5. 2 Where the nature of a thing is there the name of it may well be but in Christs satisfactory death there is the nature of righteousness to wit a taking away of guilt and filth For herein believers iniquities are forgiven and sin covered Rom. 4.7 8. therefore the name of righteousness may be well given hereto To conclude there is an infinite righteousness in Christ of which we are not capable and there is an inherent personal righteousness to qualifie him for a fit Mediator Heb. 7.25 and there is a righteousness of satisfaction this righteousness consists in forgiveness of sins Col. 1.14 Obj. But Christ suffered many other sufferings besides death inward in his soul as desertion sence of wrath outward in his body as nailing whipping mocking therefore the death of Christ alone was not the sole price Answ I suppose the death of Christ doth comprehend the sufferings of Christ which were in and about his death which in regard of pain and anguish and propinquity unto his death were as parts of the whole Such was Christs heaviness Matth. 26.37 his agony and drops of sweat like blood Luk. 22.44 For those other sufferings Christ endured in the course of his life as hunger thirst flight fasting c. these were not satisfactions to Gods justice for mans sin but onely paterns of patience 1 Because the Scripture affixes our justification and reconciliation not to his sufferings in general but to his suffering of death in special Heb. 2.9 never mentioning his fore-going sufferings of hunger thirst c. in point of justification If the other sufferings of Christ be part of the satisfaction why doth the Apostle still insist on the price of his death and on no other
receive them and relieve them even those who are the meanest members of his body Even as Rebecca when she entertained Eleazar Abrahams servant Gen. 24.17 and gave him water obtained a great reward so shall those who receive the little ones of Christ and give a cup of water to them In the name of a Disciple That is because he is my Disciple and cleaves to my Doctrine because he believes in me and belongs to Christ as Mark hath it cap. 9.41 This looking at Christ in the intention of the giver doth prove the rectitude and lustre of the action it nobilitates and commends it so that it 's done to Christ which is bestowed on a Christian and so Christ interprets it Mat. 25.40 If you do it upon other account as because he is your Tenant Servant Kinsman Friend though it may be an act of natural mercy yet doth not Christ esteem it as a kindness done to him In all our hospitality in general and for this in special ought we to eye Christ Learn we then that our deeds are esteemed of God according to our minde and intention provided the minde of the Intender be enlightened in his duty Verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his Reward The world will hardly believe that the meanest service done to Christ his Disciples will be acknowledged according to the intention and ability of the giver and that such action of so small valuation shall be rewarded hence Christ confirms it with an Asseveration Verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his Reward Yet shall he not have such a Reward herein as if the same were done to a Prophet God hath rewards affixt to all the services done for him but to some greater than other yet not by way of merit but of free grace as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 3.8 Every man shall receive a reward according to his own labour which reward flows not from any compact or from any commensuration but from Gods free grace Reward doth not always presuppose Merit as its correlate but onely labour or some preceding action Sometimes the reward is inferiour to the work as when a man works hard for a covetous person who rewards slenderly sometimes the reward is as much as the work this reward presupposeth merit sometimes the reward is far greater then the work as for a Prince for an hours service to give a man 10000 pound a year such is all our obedience in respect of that superabundant weight of glory Hence this reward is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a free gift Rom. 6.23 because all our works how great soever have no commensurate or proportionable value being compared with the reward Hence the reward of glory is called an inheritance which doth not presuppose any desert The Apostle saying The wages of sin is death doth not say eternal life is the wages of holiness but calls it the gift of God Rom. 6.23 Observe these things 1 The meanest service done to the meanest of the servants of Christ shall be acknowledged by Christ Matth. 25.36 Even Goats hair was not rejected when brought to the Sanctuary 2 There is a free gracious reward that God hath in store to distribute to them that receive persons because they belong to Christ 3 The Lord in the actions of Christians looks much upon the sincerity of their actings Zach. 7.5 To whom did ye fast did ye fast to me God not onely looks upon the sincerity of a King as Hezekiah Isai 38.3 5. but also of a poor servant Col. 3.22 23. q. d. Deceitfull servants have a double heart sincere servants have a single heart Reas 1 Because what is done in sincerity is done to God Zach. 7.5 This was Hezekiah's end Isai 38.3 Rev. 2.13 If I might have my wish I would chuse the basest work of a servant-maid before all the victories and triumphs of Alexander and Caesar Why Because here is God there is the devil the matter of the work is the same but the kinde and difference infinitely diverse Luth. in Gen. 29. He means it of works done in sincerity 2 Because sincere persons in what they do endeavour to approve themselves to Christ 2 Cor. 2.17 We are not of them who huxter the word of God but as of sincerity but as of God in the sight of God speak we in Christ 2 Cor. 4.2 commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God 2 Thes 2.4 So we speak not as pleasing men but God which trieth our hearts 3 That so he may either condemn or crown the action condemn it if it shall onely have a pretence as in Jehu's destruction of Baal who did it not out of hatred of idolatry but to get a Kingdome See Hos 1.4 Hence Jehu is charged with murther I will avenge the bloud of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu or crown it when it is done in sincerity as in Cornelius prayers and alms Acts 10.2 Use Information what kinde of services we must bring unto the Lord even such as are sincere Imitate Nathaniel to be Israelites without guile Joh. 1.47 If we pretend love to the Lord let it be in sincerity Ephes 6.22 if we feed the flock of God let it be out of love Joh. 21.15 if we preach or take the oversight of a flock let it be willingly 1 Cor. 9.17 1 Pet. 5.2 Think not any thing well done wherein thou canst not appeal to God in the doing thereof when we come to die those things will comfort us most wherin we have had most respect to God and least to men It 's not the greatness of services we do but the truth that God accepts where there is sincerity though there may be diverse failings God knows how to overlook them See 2 Chron. 30.18 19 20. and Asa 2 Kings 14.15 2 Exhort 1 To strive to be sincere in what thou doest 1 The most glorious actions thou canst do are abominable without it Isai 66.3 He that sacrificeth a Lamb as if he cut off a Dogs neck why Because not done to God Matth. 23.29 Christ pronounces a wo on those who builded the tombs of the Prophets and garnished the sepulchres of the righteous why Because they did not do it out of love to holiness to keep the memory of holy men alive but to cover their malice against Christ 2 Cor. 10.18 2 Sincerity differences the actions of one man from another Sundry gross hypocrites have done actions outwardly glorious as Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.2 Jehu 2 Kings 10.28 29 31. Those who preacht Christ out of envy Phil. 1.16 Cain sacrificed as well as Abel Ezekiels worldly hearers came to hear as well as others Ezek. 33.31 3 The conscience is not satisfied in any services save those which are done in sincerity Now every man ought to please his conscience so did Paul in his preaching Gal. 1.10 Hence he had comfort 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is the testimony of our conscience 4 God is of a spiritual
Josephs knowing her so to be but Joseph was slow in believing her till the Angel appeared to him Qu. Is there no use to be made of dreams now Answ 1 There are d vers sorts of dreams as 1 Natural so the things which the sense on the day time carries over to the understanding being more deeply setled there are sent back again to the fancy or common sense and this not only in men but in bruits A dream cometh through multitude of business Eccles 5.3 2 Moral which arises from wise discourses and reading books 3 Diabolical which come from Satan such are filthy dreams of which Jude 8 against these the ancient Church prayed H●stemque nostrum comprime ne polluantur corpora Bridle our enemy that our bodies be not defiled 4 Divine so God appeared to Solomon 2 Chron. 7.12 13. Sometimes God hath appeared thus twice Job 33.14 15. twice he appeared thus to Paul Acts 16.9.18.9 and so he appeared to Pilates wife Matth. 27.19 2 There may be use made of dreams as the Urine or Pulse are signes of sickness or health so dreams may shew us what our natural complexion is and what humour is predominant where yellow Choler abounds there we dream of fire strife and fightings where black Choler abounds men dream of smoke darkness funerals where Phlegme abounds men dream of showers of rain wells of water rivers and such things as have a cold moisture where Bloud abounds men dream of things beautifull clear and sweet Martyr out of Galen tells of a man that dream'd he had a thigh of stone and in a few days after he fell into a palsey and of another that dream'd he fell into a cistern of bloud which signified aboundance of bloud and that he stood in need of bloud letting Sometimes in sleep men seem to have such a burthen they cannot bear it sometimes to be so light that they do as it were flye which is nothing else but the excess and defect of humours To conclude dreams of preferment do too much point out ambition in us unclean dreams do too much point out wandring imaginations on the day time or excess of gluttony at night terrible dreams may put us in minde what we might look for if God were not more merciful favorable and successful dreams may put us in minde what we might expect if our sins did not stand in the way But for Divine dreams when they are it s like the understanding on the day time hath been well employed in Divine things and the frequenter they are they denote perhaps a better frame of spirit aspiring after Divine things Yet as we are not to expect direction from them God having spoken cleerly by his Son so are we not altogether to slight them seeing God hath formerly manifested himself by them besides God hath not lost any of his prerogative but that he can manifest himself by them yet The third part is the ground of Josephs consolation which is For that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost because fear will not be cast out by words but by reasons the Angel gives a reason why Joseph should not fear viz. because that which Joseph feared was an act of adultery was of the Holy Ghost and therefore he had cause rather to rejoyce then to grieve because of his spouse Mary the long lookt-for Messias was now to be born Such a message Joseph had at another time when he was in his fear Luk. 2.10 the Angel said Fear not for behold I bring you good tydings of great joy for unto you is born in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. And therefore thou Joseph mayest take her from her friends or kindred to be thy wife and thou mayest with a quiet conscience live with her Moreover the Angel calls him the Son of David to raise up Josephs heart to consider that he as well as his wife was of that family to descend from whom the Messias was promised to all the believers of the Old Testament and so he the said Joseph should have the honour to be the civil father of this Messias as the Virgin his wife had the honour to be his natural mother And therefore vers 16. it s said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which in the feminine gender Christ was begotten not of whom to prove that Joseph was onely a civil father provided to take care of the Virgin and the Messias she went with V. 21. And she shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Here is a second ground to quiet Josephs heart taken from the quality or excellency of this son whom the Virgin should bring forth he should be a Saviour to save his people Bring forth a son Not as the Valentinians who taught that Christ brought a heavenly body from heaven and passed through the Virgin as a channel but as the Virgin truly conceived Christ so she brought him forth according to Esa 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and shall bring forth a son and therefore thy spouse is not an adultress but a most pure Virgin This the Angel Gabriel told the Virgin Mary Luk. 1.31 That she should bring forth a son and call his name Jesus and here the Angel tells the same in effect to Joseph And thou shalt call his name Jesus Fathers usually gave names to their children Jacob called his son Benjamin though his mother called him Benoni Gen. 35.18 Zacharias named his son John Luk. 1.63 yet sometimes the mother as Hanna called her son Samuel 1 Sam. 1.20 His name Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from his saving Christ is the name of his Office Jesus of his Nature and Person the name in the Old Testament is Jehoscua ascribed unto Joshua the Captain and to Joshua the Priest in the Type but to Christ in the truth because he is the alone Saviour of his People Acts 4.12 Heb. 7.25 He is able to save them that come unto God by him for though Baptism is said to save 1 Peter 3.21 and Preachers 1 Tim. 4.16 Baptism doth save by way of signification Preachers as Instruments by way of publication For he shall save his People from their sins three things are considerable 1. Whom Christ saves Resp All Believers because by faith alone this salvation is received all his Body for he is called the Saviour of the body Ephes 5.23 2. From what Christ saves Resp From their sins which would bring them to Hell as a Physician brings a Potion to his Patient not to kill Death but to kill the Disease that would bring the Patient unto Death so Christ came not to quench the Flames of Hell but to save his People from their sins which would bring them to Hell Now Jesus saveth us 1. From the power of sin Rom. 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you for you are not under the Law but under
grace 2. From the punishment of sin 1 Thess 1.10 Jesus who delivered us from the wrath to come 3. From the guilt of sin Rom. 8.1 There 's no condemnation to them that are in Jesus 4. From the weariness and burden of sin Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden I will give you rest 5. From the remainders of sin this will be in another World Rom. 7.24 25. Who shall deliver me from this body of death I thank God through Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15.57 3. The means whereby Christ sayes viz. his Death and Intercession If when we were Enemies we were reconciled by the Death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his Life Rom. 5.10 1. By his living to make Intercession for us as it is expounded Heb. 7.25 wherefore he is able to save to the utmost them that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make Intercession for them This is one Argument of Christ his Godhead to save his People from sin for it 's applied to Jehova Psalm 130.8 He shall redeem his People from all their iniquities If there were a Physician in the World that could save a man from all Diseases multitudes of Patients would come to him how should Believers then come to Christ who saves his People from all their sins Psalm 103.1 2. As the Woman that had the Bloudy Issue touching Christ was healed so we touching Christ by the hand of faith the bleeding wounds of our sins are stanched This is true tidings of joy to all believing souls that such a Saviour is born Luke 2.10 11. V. 22. Now all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying The Evangelist sets down a third ground to stablish Joseph's heart and together with him the hearts of all other Believers viz. that this Prediction of a Virgins bringing forth was foretold seven or eight hundred years ago in the Reign of King Ahaz Isai 7.14 Joseph at first was ready to be startled at these strange News the Angel told him but when he heard that all that the Angel told him was confirmed by the Scriptures this brought full satisfaction The sum of the Promise was that not onely that God would save the House of David Isai 7.13 from the Syrians and Men of Israel their Enemies v. 8 9. but that also he would save the believers among them from their spiritual Enemies and because the matter seems hard to believe the Lord gives them a sign to confirm it viz. Behold a Virgin remaining a Virgin still shall be with childe● so that as in Painting or Building there are first rude Lines or Draughts made by the Painters who after by degrees perfect that which they had conceived in their mindes according to the Idaea therein so as the Lord had prophesied of a Virgins conceiving so now he perfects and fulfils it so that as the calling of the Israelites out of Egypt Hosea 11.1 was a Shadow of the Deliverance of the Sons of God out of the spiritual Egypt of Hell so these things told then by Isai did shadow out what was now fulfilled V. 23. Bernard thinks the Devil fell out of envy envying men that Dignity that God should become Man Behold a Virgin shall be with childe and shall bring forth a Son and they shall call his Name Emmanuel which being interpreted is God with us The Evangelist sets forth not onely the sum of the Prophesie but the wonderfulness of it Behold this Adverb still points out attention and admiration Behold as if he should say Men and Angels wonder at this strange unheard of thing that a Virgin should conceive and bring forth Emmanuel that is God-Man Jer. 31.22 The Lord hath created a new thing upon earth A Womam shall compass a man Some men will not wonder at any thing to conceal their own ignorance but here is a providence to admire all And they shall call his Name Emmanuel that is being interpreted God with us that is not onely spiritually that is reconciled to us 2 Cor. 5.19 but because the Word was made Flesh and dwelt among us John 1.14 They shall call all the saithfull and many others shall so call him God with us for this Pronoun Relative they hath respect unto a plurality See Luke 12.20 Luke 16.9 Quest How can Jesus be called Emmanuel Resp Not in sound but in sense Christ was called Emmanuel from the Dignity of his Person and he was called Jesus from his Office and effects of it and in all this it sell out that the Prophesie of Esaias was fulfilled Shut your eys without Christ and say that you know no other God but he that was in the bosom of Mary and suckt her Breasts Where that God Christ Jesus is there is whole God or the whole Divinity found the Father and the Spirit Luth. in Ps 130. I shall also add what a late Writer adds to interpret this Prophesie viz. that within a space of time wherein a Virgin might marry and conceive and bring forth and the Childe come to the distinguishing of good and evil Isai 7.14 15. Rezin and Pekah Ahaz his two Enemies should be brought low and from this he calls an high improved sense over and above the vulgar sense which belonged to the words that from this place the Spirit should gather that a Virgin should bring forth a Son V. 24. Then Joseph being raised from sleep did as the Angel of the Lord had bidden him and took unto him his Wife Here we have Joseph's obedience to the Angel seen first in taking unto him his Wife as the Angel bad him When we are convinced of Gods Commands we must neither dispute them nor delay them Psalm 119.60 now Joseph takes both Mother and Childe into his tuition V. 25. And knew her not untill she brought forth her first-born Son and called his Name Jesus Here is the second thing wherein Joseph's obedience to the Angel was seen viz. in not knowing his Wife he means in a matrimonial way as it is taken Gen. 4.1 to make it appear that Christ was not conceived of Joseph but of the Holy Ghost So the phrase is taken Num. 31.35 1 Sam. 1.19 No doubt the Angel had given Joseph command herein not to know her because he did as the Angel commanded this was done as for the stablishing of our Faith on Jesus Christ as being conceived in such a wonderfull manner so for to verifie the Promise that the Seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 Untill she brought forth her first-born Son It is not for us to contend to finde whether the Virgin Mary were a Virgin ever after she brought forth her first-begotten Son it is curious to seek and more curious directly to define that son is said to be the first-born before whom there was none though he were the onely begotten This word untill oft signifies an
Christ and the work of the sufferings of the Infants and therefore the Text says not There is a Reward to the Will but to the Work Of this sort are all such Infants which have been murdered for Christ and out of hatred to Christian Religion These Lambs were to be sacrificed because the Lamb of the World was to be crucified as Augustine saith Serm. 1. de Innocent In that then Christ suffered the Tyrant Herod to rage against these Infants it was not out of any careless respect unto them but in reference to their Crown and to let us see the watchfull providence of God how it 's able to dispoint the Projects of the greatest Tyrants and to let us see the frame of the hearts of tyrannous Princes that will do any mischief to get or keep a Kingdom The fourth part of the Chapter V. 19. But when Herod was dead behold an Angel of the Lord appeareth in a Dream to Joseph in Egypt In the remaining part of the Chapter we have three things 1 The Angels appearance to Joseph in Egypt v. 19. set down from the circumstance of time viz. when Herod was dead 2 The Angels Message to Joseph which was to take the young Childe and his Mother and to go into the Land of Israel amplified from the Reason For they are dead which sought the young Childe's life v. 20. 3 Joseph's obedience v. 21. He took the young Childe and his Mother and came into the Land of Israel v. 21. His faith is amplified 1 From some weakness that accompanied it v. 22. When he heard that Archelaus Herod's son did reign he was afraid 2 From the Victory over that Weakness and Fear being warned of God the second time in a Dream he came into Galilee and dwelt in Nazareth But when Herod was dead This Tyrant reigned seven and thirty years Joseph Antiq. lib. 17. cap. 10. Now he is dead but Christ lives Christ was now about four years old he went the year before Herod's death and tarried two years there in Egypt The Angel of the Lord appeareth to Joseph in a Dream God forsakes not his People in any place no not in Egypt No place so mean that Angels disdain to go into for the good of Saints Heb. 1.14 Here 's the perseverance of Joseph's faith he stirs not a foot till he was called back by the command of God V. 20. Saying Arise and take the young Childe and his Mother and go into the Land of Israel for they are dead which sought the young Childes life Here is the Angels command to Joseph backt with a Reason They are dead c. These words agree with that Exod. 4.19 Go return into Egypt for all the men are dead which sought thy life to shew some proportion betwixt the bringing of Israel out of Egypt by Moses and betwixt the Redemption of Mankinde from Sin and Death by Christ Fears are apt to startle us in our obedience hence the Angel removes the Danger that Joseph may not fear Go into the Land of Israel That the Childe might be brought up there lest he should seem to be an Egyptian and that Joseph might together with the Virgin enjoy the benefit of Ordinances whereof they had been long deprived and that their expence might be lessened which doubtless was not little being in a strange Land V. 21. And he arose and took the young Childe and his Mother and came into the Land of Israel Here 's Joseph's obedience Our obedience ought to be chearfull Psalm 119.32 I will run the way of thy Commandments Also present Psalm 119.60 I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments 3 Universal as Joseph's was to go into Egypt to stay there to come out 4 Conscientious done out of a Command of God for God's Commands ty the Conscience such was Joseph's obedience here he moved from the Command the Angel gave him from God V. 22. But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea in the room of his father Herod he was afraid to go thither notwithstanding being warned of God in a Dream he turned aside into the parts of Galilee But when he heard that Archelaus did reign Joseph hoped that now Judea would be brought into a Province of the Roman Emperour of whom he would have been less afraid than of petty Kings that are fearfull upon every suspition and therefore cruel and besides Archelaus was more cruel than the rest of his Brethren Herod had nine Wives by two of them he had no Issue by the other seven he had nine Sons and three Daughters Alexander Aristobulus and Antipater which three he put to death in his life-time Joseph Antiq. cap. 17. and lib. 1. de Bello Jud. cap. 17. Also he had Herod Archelaus Antipas Philip c. Now Herod made two Wills in the former he made Antipas the Heir of the Kingdom in the later he made Archelaus King of Judea and Antipas Tetrarch of Galilee and Philip Tetrarch of Trachonitis therefore Joseph thought either that no King would succeed Herod and indeed Archelaus was King onely by courtesie not by Caesar's appointment or if any King should succeed it should be Antipas according to Herod's first Testament but it proved otherwise hence Joseph was afraid and so much the more as Chemnicus observes because Archelaus was a bloudy man who commanding in his Horse among a Multitude of People slew and wounded three thousand persons against whom the Jews rebelled and Caesar nine or ten years after banisht him for his cruelty To free Joseph from this fear the Angel commands him to turn aside into Galilee and to dwell in Nazareth The causes why Joseph was afraid of Archelaus was lest as his Father so he should seek the Life of the Childe Christ being thus placed in Nazareth came not into Judea till he was about twelve years old because now Archelaus was banished and in Archelaus the Offspring of Herod ceased to reign in Judea and the Roman Governours ruled in his stead who probably had not so much as heard of Christ It will not be amiss to understand this History from the Egg as Cor. Lapide cites it out of Josephus Eusebius and Zonaras Herod being dead in the 37 year of his Reign his two Sons that remained Archelaus and Herod Antipas contended about the Succession of the Kingdom Augu-Caesar committed this Controversie to Caius Caesar his Nephew to be decided his Award was to judg the Kingdom to neither of them but dividing it into four Tetrarchies appointed it to be governed by four Tetrarchs he gave to Archelaus Judea to Antipas Galilee to Philip the third Brother Trachonitis and to Lysanias he gave Abilene as appears Luke 3.1 When therefore Matthew says Archelaus reigned it was not as King but onely as Tetrarch or Governour of a fourth part of the Nation after nine years of his Tetrarchy Archelaus was banished seven years before Augustus's death Archelaus being banisht Augustus placed three Presidents over Judea Coponius
God 2 Cor. 7.9 3 Reformation Jon. 3.10 No man begins a new life that repents not of his old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 post sactum sapere opponitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Doctrine was preached by Christ Matth. 4.17 by Paul he testified Repentance towards God from whom we have gone astray and faith towards Jesus Christ as the way of our return unto him Acts 20.21 In Repentance there is a Transformation or turning from Darkness to Light and from the power of Satan to God that they might obtain Forgiveness Acts 26.18 Sometimes Repentance is divided into 1 Mortification or dying to sin Heb. 6.1 1 In the reign so the Apostle How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein Rom 6.1 2. 2 In the Reliques this is gradual step after step 2 Cor. 4 16. As the outward man is perishing the inward man is renewing penitent Souls are purg'd to bring forth more grace and less sin John 15.2 2 Vivification or living to God of this see Rom. 6.11 13. 2 Cor. 5.13 The Fruits of this Repentance are besides those mentioned 2 Cor. 7.11 as care of pleasing God in all things and fear of offending him in any thing Gen. 39.9 Indignation against all sin especially our own Isai 30.22 Hosea 14.3 8. Zeal of God's glory rejoycing to see his Name glorified and mourning to see it dishonoured What are all the Palaces of the World to a contrite heart yea Heaven and Earth seeing it is the Seat of Divine Majesty Luth. Tom. 3.457 Psalm 119 139. and others mentioned there there are also 1 A shunning occasions of Evils Gen. 39.10 2 An hatred of all sin as being contrary to that Life we live Psalm 97.10 3 A sadness and grief of heart for sinning against such a Father Psalm 51.3 Luke 15.17 18. The Soul wishes O that it were to do again I would never have done it neither is this onely in the first Repentance when we first turn to God but in the repeated acts thereof after any slip or backsliding 4 Heart-bleeding Confessions that the Soul doth not onely historically but meltingly declare his sins to the Lord Psalm 38.17 5 A forsaking of all sin Isai 55.7 8. Mead in loc Diatr par quar Prov. 28.13 To have sinned condemns not but not to repent this condemns For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand That is the Kingdom of the God of Heaven so interpreted Dan. 6.24 The Heavens do rule that is the God of Heaven rules Luke 15.18 I have sinned against Heaven that is the God of Heaven The Baptism of John was it from Heaven or of Men That is from God or men Matth. 21.15 This Kingdom is not outward like the Kingdoms of the World having power over the Body nor of this World for then would his Servants fight to defend it John 18.36 Not stablished by Armies Swords and Garisons but a spiritual Kingdom within us Luke 17.21 Sutable to those spiritual invisible Enemies we war against who now and then employ wicked men in their Service who are but the Horses in the Devils Battels the Devils and the Angels being the Riders This Kingdom is partly militant fighting against Devil World Flesh partly triumphant 1 Cor. 15.24 Christ then ruling till he have put down all power This is called the Kingdom of Heaven 1 Because the King thereof hath his Throne in Heaven 2 Because the beginning thereof is from Heaven not from Earth 3 Because it 's governed by the power of Heaven not by earthly Magistrates Is at hand This Kingdom is said to be at hand as a Woman with childe when her tenth Moneth is come may truly say her Travel is at hand so might the Baptist say when the last Weeks of Messiah's Weeks was begun the Kingdom of Heaven was at hand To understand which consider Dan. 9.14 Seventy Weeks are determined upon thy People and upon thy holy City to finish transgression and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the Vision and to anoint the most holy The meaning is the Jews counted their years by sevens every seventh year being a year of rest for the Land and so called a Sabbatical year according to which Account the Angel tells Daniel that seventy of those Weeks of years were allotted for the standing of their Temple and Common wealth when both should be restored again after the Captivity which make in all four hundred and ninety years Now these four hundred and ninety years being expired as appeared by the coming of the Messiah and Jerusalem being destroyed within forty years after John might very well say the time was at hand V. 3. For this is he that was spoken of by the Prophet Esaias saying The voyce of one crying in the Wilderness Prepare ye the way of the Lord make his Paths straight The Baptist gives a Reason why he preaches Repentance and that in the Wilderness because he is that voice of one crying in the Wilderness prophesied of by Esaias cap. 40. and commanding that a way should be prepared for the Messias now come in the flesh by repentance This is the same with John 1.23 I am the voice of one crying in the Wilderness Prepare ye the ways of the Lord The literal sense was that the Jews in captivity in Babylon would prepare themselves to return into Judea though the Countrey of Judea were waste and the Journey long because all Impediments were to be removed by the bounty and kindness of King Cyrus whom God stirred up to shew mercy to the Jews but mystically he sets forth the Deliverance of Gods People from sin and death by Christ The way of the Lord That is 1 Do not cause any block by absenting from the present proffers of grace 2 Believe and hope and receive this Son of God who is now offered to you and the tenders of grace that your wills may not be contrary when he calls Matth. 23.37 John 5.40 Apoc. 3.20 Make his Paths straight That is by walking in an universal obedience both by doing and suffering that we may not turn out of the way of duty because of dangers and hazards Prov. 4 25. Let thine eys look right on and let thine ey-lids look straight before thee as a man that winks with one eye taking level at a Mark that seems not so much to see with his eys as with his ey-lids Heb. 12.13 Make straight paths unto your feet avoiding all crooked walkings because of the cross lest that which is lame be turned out of the way Whiles a poor Soul goes out in crooked paths it is with him as with a Traveller who going out of his way arrives not without some difficulty at his Journeys end V. 4. And the same John had his Raiment of Camels hair and a leathern Girdle about his Loins and his Meat was Locusts and wilde Honey Here John is set forth from his Apparel and Feeding The Law of the Nazarites was to consecrate themselves to God
might help their faith Whereunto some apply those prophetical Scriptures Ezek. 36.25 I will powr or sprinkle clean waters upon you and you shall be cleansed and Zach. 13.1 In that day there shall be a fountain set open for sin and for uncleanness This was called the baptism of repentance to show that none of right ought to take it up but those that repented first and those that believed first Act. 19.4 John there taught that they that were to be baptized should believe on Christ and hence his baptism was called baptism for forgiveness of sins for this John in his ministry made known Luk. 1.77 All Judaea That is persons of all age condition and sex not every individual person And all the region round about Jordan That is from all places of both sides of the river of Jordan Were baptized of him in Jordan confessing their sins That is they first confessing their sins were baptized of him together with the confession of their sins they profest a belief of the doctrine which he preached Tertul. in his book of repentance saith We are not therefore washed that we should cease to sin but because we have ceased because we are already washt in heart This very baptism in the manner of it Apol. to Antoninus was continued in Justin Martyrs time Whosoever are perswaded and believe those things to be true that are taught and spoken by us and have received that they can so live they are taught to pray fasting and to beg of God the forgiveness of their former sins we praying and fasting together with them then are they brought thither of us where there is water and with the same manner of regeneration that we our selves are regenerated are they regenerate in the name of the Father of all things and Lord God and of our Saviour Jesus Christ and of the Holy spirit then they are made a sacrifice in the water Tertul. to Quintilla cap. 1. Happy is the Sacrament of our water because the offences of old blindeness being washt away we are freed into an eternal life For the signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 take it out of Grotius The propriety of the word showes that this rite was wont to be done by dipping or covering all over with water not by sprinkling Also the places chosen for that rite prove it Joh. 3.23 John was baptizing in Aenon near to Salim because there was much water there Act. 8.38 39. The Eunuch and Philips going into the water and coming out of it and many allusions of the Apostles which cannot be referrd to sprinkling Rom. 6.3 4 5. We are buried with him by baptism into death that like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we should walk in newness of life Paul proves they should not live in sin because they were dead he proves they were dead because they were buried in baptism Heb. 10.22 We finde the dipping of the body our bodies washed in pure water not the sprinkling of the brow So that it appears that sprinkling was not the baptism of John or Christ 1 From the subject of baptism It was not a part but the whole body 2 From the form It was not sprinkling but burying Col. 2.12 Buried with him in baptism wherein ye are also risen again 3 From the matter or element It was much water Joh 3.23 which needed not if sprinkling had been enough 4 From the adjuncts of going into the water and coming out practised by Christ Matth. 3. and by the Eunuch Acts 8.38 39. Magnus writing to know Cyprians judgment of them that were baptized onely by sprinkling in sickness answers in the end of his 66 Epistle 1 That divine benefits in nothing should be either lamed or weakned 2 Necessity compelling and God pardoning divine abridgements bestow the whole benefit on believers 3 He mentions that those so baptized were called Clinici or bed Christians 4 If any man thought they had got nothing because they were sprinkled he saith If they escape their sickness let them be baptized Whereby we may gather first That the right way of baptizing was by burying 2 Because the opinion of those times was that baptism took away sin and therefore many put off their baptism till near the time as they thought of their death but death coming upon them suddenly they took sprinkling of a little water in their beds instead of baptism with an intention to be buried in water in case they recovered Moreover the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to drown dip or plunge as Scapula in his Lexicon interprets it and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sprinkle Mar. 1.9 John baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into Jordan which he could not have said had not the word baptize signified an application of the subject to the water not of the water to the subject Pareus on the 6th of the Romans saith The ancient rite in the Apostolical Church was this the persons baptized were dipped all over in a River with some tarriance under the water then they rose up again Dipping shewed crucifying and death because it was not without terrour and coming up out of the water signified resurrection with Christ Par. in Rom. 6. Mr. Fox saith Augustine and Paulinus baptized persons in rivers and not in hallowed fonts as witnesseth Fabianus cap. 119 120. Acts and Monuments Part. 1. pag. 138. After speaking of Austin he saith He departed after he had baptized ten thousand Saxons or Angles in the West River that is called Swale besides York on a Christmas day where note by the way Christian Reader saith Mr. Fox That whereas Austin baptized then in Rivers it followed then there was no use of Fonts See Acts and Mon. Part. 1. pag. 154. Also pag. 156. he saith During the life of King Edwin Paulinus christened continually in the Rivers of Gwenye and Swala in both Provinces of Deira and Bernitia Confessing their sins That is professed themselves guilty of sinful purposes and sinful customs and many sinful actions and that now they repented for them all Acts 2.37 38. Peter's hearers professed their faith and repentance for killing the Lord of life and were instantly baptized With this confession there went an holy hatred of their sins as the Ephesians shewed their wicked deeds so they burnt their conjuring books Acts 19.17 18. and if the confession of the sins of persons in these times baptized were more particular and with more grief it would come nearer the Apostolical practise Truly it argues a great change of heart when persons formerly proud unclean intemperate and unrighteous shall not onely confess themselves sinners but also such kinde of sinners Moreover they profest they fear'd the anger of God and desired to escape it at the day of judgement Also they confessed other believables that they believed on the Messias that was to come after and begin his preaching Act. 19.4 Also no doubt they made professions of their self-denial
shoes Matth. 3.14 Luke 3.22 4 Spiritual conviction that the spirit let us see our worthlesseness Rev. 3.17 q.d. thou art but thou knowest it not that thou art poor and blinde and naked Joh. 16.10 he shall convince of sin so that as the sun gives a light whereby we behold as the gloriousnes of the sun so the loathsomness of the dunghil so the spirit convinces of our own vileness and his own fulness 5 Present to your selves abasing considerations as What was I before I had mercy how unprofitably spent I my time what will these glorious things of the world be in time to come wherein we are apt to be conceited when heaven and earth shall be on fire since we were called how have we discredited our profession how barren and watchless are we how short are we of that we might have been 6 Believe the promises made to souls poor in spirit I will look to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit Esa 66.2 Yea dwell with him and revive him Esa 57.15 yea Christ came to preach glad tidings of the gospel to such Luk. 4.18 Matth. 11.3 Rev. 2.9 I know thy poverty but thou art rich God will feed such souls with grace and comfort Zach. 11.7 Luke 1.53 yea God will be a strength to such in their distress Esa 25.4 Psal 69.33 7 Look upon thy own wants and weakness the more thou seest them the more wilt thou trust in God Zeph. 3.12 From heaven did the Lord behold the earth to hear the groaning of the prisoner Psalm 102.19 20. I am poor and sorrowfull let thy salvation set me up on high Psalm 69.29 For theirs is the Kingdome of heaven That is both kingdome of grace Esai 61.1 For the poor have the Gospel preached to them Mat. 11.3 but especially the kingdome of glory is meant Luke 12.32 Matth. 25.34 though such persons are beggarly in their own feeling being sensible of their lack of faith love joy hope yet have they an interest in the riches of grace and glory We may apply this to comfort the poor in spirit who are full of miseries inward and outward The worlds proverb is Blessed are the rich because theirs is the kingdome of the earth but Christ pronounceth Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heaven V. 4. Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted By mourning Christ means such mourning as is for offending God whether it be by sighs groans or an inward grief of heart such persons though they may seem miserable in the eys of the world yet are they blessed 1 God is wont to make comforts to abound according to their sorrows 2 Cor. 7.6 God comforts them that are cast down and this proportionable to our sorrows 2 Cor. 1.5 7. 2 God is wont to bottle all their tears and sorrows Psa 56.8 Psalm 55. Consider how I mourn in my complaint 3 There 's a time coming when God will turn the mourning of Saints into dancing and their sackcloth into gladness Psalm 30.11 John 16 20. Ye shall weep and lament but your sorrow shall be turned into joy There is not onely a fountain of justification set open for such mourners now but a state of glorification hereafter Zach. 12.10 11 12 13 compared with Chapter 13.1 Hence see 1 The mistake of the world who think happiness to be placed in delights and pleasures and shun those things which may procure any sorrow or cross as confession of persecuted truths against this Christ saith Mourners shall be comforted 2 It 's consolation for distressed consciences If thou canst truly mourn for thy transgressions thou shalt be comforted Let what ever distress come upon an afflicted heart yet if thou canst mourn for offending God thou shalt be comforted 3. It 's consolation to persons who have afflicted estates in this world there 's a day coming when comfort shall come provided that with mourning for thy miseries thou specially mourns for thy sin Luke 16.25 Now he is comforted and thou art tormented Though thy comfort come not yet yet in Gods time it shall come They are not blessed who mourn for the loss of their wealth or death of their friends but they who mourn for offending God 4 In all our confessions and professed humiliations see that you do not declare them onely historically but mourn for them Psalm 38.17 I will declare mine iniquities and will be sory for my sin When thou prayes let thy heart mourn in prayer Psalm 55.2 When thou speaks of sin speak mournfully of it Now to move us hereto consider 1 God hath the joy of the Holy Ghost in store for mourners Esa 61.1 2 3. The spirit of the Lord is upon me to give the oyl of joy for the spirit of mourning and heaviness Saints seldome finde such comfortable revivings as when they are most mournful 2 This mourning is more comfortable then the lowd laughters of the world Properties of Mourning 1 Let it be continued that length of time may not wear it out length of time eats out worldly griefs 2 Universal That King that was sory for his consent to Daniels death Dan. 6.14 was not sory for his denial of the truth in refusing to venture all in a good cause Herod was sory for Johns death but could rejoyce in Herodias 3 After conversion as well as before It 's a vain opinion to think we need not sorrow after conversion and that a Christians state is altogether a state of joy Joy and sorrow may stand together in the soul but not about one and the same object joy in God and sorrow for sin 4 Let thy mourning be not onely in regard of the damning power of sin but principally in regard of the contrariety thereof to the nature of God and to the nature of him that loves thee Luke 7.38 compared with v. 48. Mary having a sense of Gods love weeps bitterly and washes Christs feet with her tears 5 Let it be joyned with faith First Christ looks upon the soul and gives some testimony of his love to it and then the soul looks on Christ with a sad heart Matth. 26.75 Christ first lookt on Peter then he went out and wept bitterly It s the nature of faith to apply the wounds and sorrows of Christ unto it self Esa 53.5 thence follows mourning Zach. 12.10 6 This mourning for sin is the greatest hence resembled to the mourning for an onely son when dead Zach. 12.11 to the drawing of water 1 Sam. 7.6 as if it had been in buckets The ground whereof is because they apprehend sin as the greatest of evils 1 Because it is the cause of all evils Deut. 28. 2 It keeps off the greatest good 3 It cannot be purged away but with the greatest price even Christs bloud 4 There 's more evil in sin then in any thing hence followes 1 A resolution not to meddle with sin as Jehoshaphat when he had smarted by joyning with Ahab in sending out a
laid down in the Old Testament which was not either ceremonial or proper to the Jewish Common-wealth onely and peculiar to their Church-state onely or hath not been nullified by some Commandment of the New Testament is and ought to be of perpetual observation by all Christians as being holy just and good and I must say as Justin to Tripho I am altogether perswaded there is no Scripture diverse from another I will rather confess I understand not the things that are spoken Page 225. For to diminish any thing from Gods Word is far from me onely I have endeavoured to reconcile where any thing seems contrary in the New Testament to the Old One Title of the Word is greater than Heaven and Earth said Luther Among all the gifts of God this is one of the largest he that takes away this doth as it were take away the Sun out of the World for take away the Word what is the World but a Hell notwithstanding all the glorious things in it Howbeit I shall not forbear to write what Justin Martyr who when he writ his second Epistle to the Emperor Antoninus he saith it was then 150 years from the birth of Christ from which taking the 33 years of Christ his being on earth and the years of the life of Justin he was within much less then an 100 years after Christ his ascension yet see how he disputes against Tripho p. 175 Apol. 2. p. 65. 176. Justin have you nothing against us but that we are not circumcised nor keep your Sabbaths and holy days nor live according to the prescript of the law Tripho we wonder at you that boast of true Religion and would excell other men when your life differs nothing from them as that ye keep neither holy days nor Sabbaths neither have circumcision moreover you place your hope in a crucified man hast thou not read that the soul that is not circumcised shall be destroyed you slighting this Covenant and Testament you have no respect of the following commands and ye go to perswade your selves that you know God doing nothing of those things which those that fear God do Justin we worship no other God but him that made heaven and earth and hope not in any other God but in him in whom you hope but we hope not by Moses nor by the law for then should we do as you but now I have read O Tripho that there hath been a latter law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a Testament most soveraign of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Testament I say it behoves all mortal men to keep whosoever aspire to inherit the kingdom of God for the law which was proclaimed in Horeb is now old and is onely yours but this is common to all seeing that a law brought against a law the latter abolishes the ancienter and the latter Testament derogates from the former Christ the everlasting and final law is given to us and a faithful Testament after which Testament there will not be further law precept nor any command These and much more Justin saith I cite this to abate the heat of some who are too much inclining to Jewish observations for my self I judge as before the old Testament to be in force the former restrictions and limitations by me laid down being observed and so doth Justin pag. 190. Dost thou acknowledge these things O Tripho they are laid up in your writings yea rather in ours then in yours for we believe them and obey them but ye whiles ye read them do not attain the mind and sense of them cont Triph. and we confess those Commandements are sweeter then hony and the hony comb as appears by that that we do not deny his name unto death Ibid. see the same more fully pag. 202. ibid. V. 20. For I say unto you except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven Christ retorts the accusation of the Scribes and Pharisees that they opposed and depraved the law not in the least Commandements but in the greatest which Christ sets down generally in this verse specially in the following verses in this verse because they teach such a righteousness as excludes out of heaven for they did not onely teach a righteousness of works but obliged their hearers onely to outward duties so that if they did not kill a man or lye with another mans wife nor take away with their hands another mans goods they were just in those commands respectively Except your righteousness exceed That is except your righteousness overcome that obedience which they require The righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees He names these sects because they had gotten an opinion of holiness above other sects as the Herodians and Esseans from which holiness they were far enough but if you ask what this righteousness was we may see from Paul brought up at the feet of Gamaliel 1 Phil. 3.6 which consisted 1 In an outward unblameableness and in opposing such sins as hindred civil society Now whereas the law forbad heart sins as well as outward offences the Pharisees interpreted sin rather according to to the mind of their counsel then to the mind of Gods law and for these inward sins they were done away by their daily sacrifice And therefore Tripho disputing against Justin saith The commandements of the Gospel seem to be so great and wonderful that they cannot be performed of any man to wit the commands of inward innocency And therefore Josephus censures Polybius for ascribing the death of Antiochus to an intentional sacriledge though not committed For the Pharisees outward righteousness see Matth. 23.25 26. 2 In civill righteousness and just dealing with men otherwise they could never have gained that opinion of sanctity 3 In partial righteousness for doubtless they observed some of Gods commands with much seeming devotion as in paying tithe of Mint Annise and Cummin Matth. 23.23 mean time they omitted judgement mercy and faith Hence 1 See the folly of men Carnal professors who content themselves with either 1 Civility in dealing justly with men as the Pharisee Luke 18.12 Or 2 With formality because they pray read fast give almes yet all these things did the Pharisees External righteousness is that most look after never looking to the evils of their hearts as malice pride c. neither to suppress them nor to be humbled for them 2 See how far many are from heaven who have not so much as these Pharisees had not so much as an external righteousness open swearers drunkards scoffers at goodness 3 See that if you come to heaven you must get a righteousness exceeding all pharisaicall righteousness this is had onely by Christ who being made over unto us for righteousness by faith Gal. 2.16 Phil. 3.9 is made over also for sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 working in us uprightness which is called by the name of righteousness Job 27.5 6. Psal 32. ult If
that is that want of love my Neighbour oweth me but the damage is to be forgiven when Wisdom and Charity requires for we are not to stand upon our right in every trifle 1 Cor. 6.7 Quest In what order are we to forgive Answ We are to forgive if a person do not ask pardon Mark 11.25 but we are not to profess our forgiveness unless he profess his repentance Luke 17.4 Motives to Forgiveness 1 Our selves stand in daily need of forgiveness from God Matth. 18.35 2 Gods forgiveness of us as the Wall being heated with the Beams of the Sun warms them that stands by Object If it were once or twice I could forgive A. We are to forgive till seventy times seven times that is four hundred and ninety times a definite number for indefinite Object But he had no cause to do me wrong Answ Thou hadst as little cause to sin against God yet he forgave thee Verily thou shalt not come out thence till thou hast paid the uttermost Farthing There is no Allegory to be sought here 1 Because of the foregoing dependance and connexion 2 Because Christ preached it to the people and multitudes Onely Christ would teach us from vvhat vve see done among men to conjecture vvhat vve may expect from God Luke 12.58 they make better conditions vvith their adversaries that yield in time then they that stand out but the scope of the place aims at reconciliation with men lest we standing out they use extremities against us by imprisonment or otherwise Adversary By adversary he means our neighbour who is offended at us whether by our fault or his and the scope is that besides the mischief coming unto our selves by his suing of us we do not fulfill the sixth commandement unless we be reconciled to him Ob But this will take away all courts of justice and what will become of Lawyers Answ Christ speaks of composing common offences which will never be wanting in this world for titles of land c. he leaves them to Magistrates Besides Christ aims principally to instruct disciples not citizens or civil men for Christ would have no disturbance of civil peace among his followers Whiles thou art in the way with him Here is an argument to reconciliation from the opportunity this life is a short passage and thou knowes not whether thou shalt live till to morrow Least the adversary deliver thee to the judge Christ had brought two reasons moving to agreement 1 Because strife and hatred defile the worship of God 2 From the opportunity A 3 reason is from the danger of deferred reconciliation least the adversary deliver thee to the judge its dangerous both in respect of God and man to defer reconciliation Paid the utmost farthing Here 's a fourth reason from the extremities that will come upon standers out they shall be made pay to the least mite quadrans is the least coyn hence that phrase of meretrix quadrantaria for a farthing whore To seek for allegoricall expositions as to make this adversary to be Satan or our flesh or our conscience which bites till we agree with it or the law of God is frivolous Such is that to make the judg to be Christ the officer to be the devil the prison to be hell or purgatory as if the least debt of offence were to be paid in purgatory all which is to seek a knot in a bulrush as the proverb is V. 27. Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time Thou shalt not commit adultery V. 28. But I say unto you Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart Christ comes to shew how the Pharisees had depraved the seventh Commandement concerning adultery Concerning strumpets that they have been of old appears Gen. 38.14 onely they did not live in the Cities but in the Country and went veiled whereas honest women were uncovered When Judah saw Tamar in the high way he thought her to be an harlot because she had covered her face Gen. 38.15 and desired to come in to her Adultery is the breach of wedlock when one of the parties are maried And therefore adulterium quasi ad alterius thorum accessio the coming to another mans bed as to the relation of husband and wife they are equally obliged having power of one anothers body 1 Cor. 7.4 We may see the greatness of this sin in that it was not onely forbid by the Pharisees but by Christ To disswade from this sin consider besides that burning concupiscence burns up this natural heat the adulterer sins against his own body 1 Cor. 6.17 he doth as it were dip his body into a filthy sink and mi●es himself and withal he alludes unto a custome that they had who when they came from their beds of uncleanness used to wash themselves all over as Chrysostom observes Such persons though they escape the judgement of the Magistrate yet shall they not escape Gods judgement Heb. 13 4. This sin by the Law of nature was capital God threatens he would slay Abimelech if he committed it with Abrams wife and hence Abimelech threatned death to any of his servants that should defile Abrams wife Gen. 20.11 Judah sentenced Thamar for this sin Gen. 38.24 Nebuchadnezzar Jer. 29.22 23. caused two adulterous Prophets to be burnt in the fire their names were Zedekiah and Ahab To disswade from this sin consider 1 It 's exceeding difficult to be recovered from this sin It 's as hard as to get out of a narrow pit Prov. 22.14 so that Solomon saith One man among a thousand have I found repenting of this sin but not one woman Eccles 7.26 27 28. The reason why is because this sin takes away the understanding Hos 4.10 and transforms a man into a bruit so that Jer. 5.7 8. the Jews are compared to horses neighing after mares and as if fornication had been an indifferent action as the heathens counted it they assembled themselvs by troups in harlots houses 2 Other sins carry singly to hell this draws others with it which increases trouble to the conscience that though the adulterer himself hath repented yet hath he drawn another into that sin whereof she perhaps hath not repented 3 The mischief it brings to a man to his estate Thy labours will be in the house of a stranger Prov. 5.10 Yea thy self hereby will be brought to a morsel of bread Pro. 6.26 Also it destroys reputation which will hardly ever be made up Prov. 5.9 yea it destroys life Prov. 5.9 Prov. 6.26 The adulteress hunts for the precious soul also Prov. 5.10 11 12. Yea it brings consumption to the flesh and bones and horrour to the conscience Job 24.17 4 Whoredome inslaves a man Of all things we are most jealous of our liberty Sampson with Dalilah Herod with Herodias Solomon with his Concubines how inslaved were they to come upon the call of a strumpet to have all that he hath at her command to
our pains and care is nothing unless God give a blessing Psal 127.1 2. 6 To bridle our immoderate covetousness 7 That we should not take that which is anothers but that which is our own either left us or got with honest labour Psal 128.2 8 To acknowledge our own beggery and want Psal 104.27 28. Acts 14.17 and that what we have becomes ours by Gods gift Jam. 1.17 9 To put us in minde of our frailty in that every day we are a new to beg for bread Obj. But I am rich what need I ask daily bread A. The greatest heaps you have without Gods blessing will not profit Deut. 8.3 Man doth not live by bread onely but by Gods word In vain put we meat into our stomacks unless God give meat power to nourish and the stomack ability to digest 10 In that we are onely to pray for bread we are to learn contentment in any little that the Lord shall send Phil. 4.12.13 and not greedily to pray for wanton abundance Onely know that this bread is to be measured according to mens several callings and charges as if a man be a publike person a Magistrate or Preacher a beggerly maintenance makes their callings contemptible so where there is great charge of children there is need of more and the reason why abundance is not to be prayed for is because in abundance we are apt to forget God Deut. 8.12 13 14. See it in Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32.26 David 2 Sam. 24.1 1 Tim. 6.17 In respect of our proneness to abuse plenty a competency is the safest estate to pass through this world 11 It denoteth to us that we must pray every day for the good things we want if God give us good things this day for to morrow let us to morrow pray for supplies for the 3d. day Give us He saith not me but us 1 To show that we must not onely regard our selves in our estates but be also mindful of others many covetous persons instead of praying for a supply of their brethrens wants cry give me all give them none 2 We are hereby taught so to use our portion that others may have part with us God makes rich men Stewards for the poor Eat the fat and drink the sweet and send portions for them for whom nothing is prepared Neh. 8.10 Stewards receive sometimes the wages of the whole family not to keep them but to distribute them Job 31.17 Job did not eat his morsels himself alone but the fatherless did eat with him also v. 19. And forgive us our trespasses By trespasses Christ means sins Luk. 11.4 Because sin is the greatest debt Hence no man is without sin contrary to the Pelagians who said righteous men pray for pardon of sin for others not for themselves or if they said so for themselves it was not in truth but out of humility and modesty but to say that which is false is not humility but Hypocrisie Now we see there 's none so holy but needs pardon and pardon of sins from Christs advocation and intercession is a continued act in God This word Forgive is a metaphor taken from creditours who upon occasion forgive debts And though God in the new covenant forgive our sins Heb. 8.12 and hath promised so to do yet would he not deliver us from eternal death but upon these terms that whiles we are in this life we should humbly acknowledge before God our sins past and persevere in asking pardon for them The Lords prayer teaches us that we are daily sinners and alwayes sin and that our whole life is a repentance Luth. Tom. 1.301 Under sins Christ means original and actual sins Obj. But these are all forgiven to Gods children Rom. 8.1 There 's no condemnation to them that are in Christ Why then should they ask pardon Answ Because there is not a justified person that sins not Psal 130.3.143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant David committed Adultery and Murther after justification and Peter denyed Christ This petition is put next to the former of begging daily bread that after we have got a natural life we should seek for a life of justification when God pardons our sins we are thus alive as malefactors that have obtained pardon from the Prince are then said to be alive Besides we could not begg pardon of sin if God should not continue our natural life and this petition is joyned to the former to show that all the bread or outward things in the world are no comfort to us if together with them we obtain not pardon of sin In desiring forgivenness we see 1 There must be an acknowledgement of our sins Psal 32.5 I said I will confess my transgressions and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin David first confessed saying I have sinned and then Nathan saith the Lord hath put away thy sin 2 Sam. 12 13. He that confesses and forsakes shall find mercy Prov. 28.13 1 Joh. 1.8 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us them The sick sinner Job 33 26. confesses I have sinned and perverted that which was right and it profited me not then follows ver 58. he will deliver his soul from going into the pit And this according to Christs preaching Mar. 1.15 Repent ye and believe the Gospel To preach remission of sins to faith without repentance is a dangerous doctrine seeing both of them are together in the soul Zach. 12.10 They shall look on the Lord as crucified and mourn and in that day when there is such mourning which alwayes includes confession of sins in it there is a Fountain set open for sin and for uncleanness 1 As to obtain pardon there must be the blood of Christ Heb. 9.22 without shedding of blood there 's no remission and with the blood of Christ the whole Church is purchased Act. 20.28 Rev. 1.5 Rev. 7.14 so must this blood be applyed to every individual soul that hath the power of believing this blood washes white yet must there be washing before whiteness Pardon must be had not onely from bloodshed but from blood sprinkled See Esa 52.15 Ezek. 36.25 Heb. 9.13 14.10.22.12.24 1 Pet. 1.2 Yet as the Spirit must besprinkle thee and apply this blood to thee so must thou by faith wash and besprinkle thy self Rev. 7.14 They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. God hath fore-appointed Christ to be the propitiation for our sins yet is it not before believing but through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 Faith is the hand of the soul and the soul by faith puts her hand into Christs blood and so washes off its guilt Zach. 13.1 Christs blood is resembled to a Fountain opened for sin and uncleanness but it s not standing by the Fountain but the washing with the water thereof that will cleanse hence Luk. 7.49 50. Thy faith hath saved thee go in peace 2 To obtain pardon there must be repentance As there is a faith unto
life Joh. 6.47 A justification to life Rom. 5.18 So is there repentance unto life Act. 11.18 Ezek. 36.25 26. With Gods sprinkling clean water there 's a taking away the stony heart where God gives repentance he also gives forgiveness and appoints his Appostles to preach repentance and remission of sins together Luk. 24.47 Some doctrines of these latter times suppose a forgiveness not onely before repentance but also before the sinner was born nay some go as high as to say from eternity if it was so to what purpose was it then for Christ to preach repentance and remission together Reasons why pardon follows upon repentance 1 Faith that looks on Christs blood shed for us looks at the same time on its own sin as the cause of its shedding and every believing sinner is at the same time a repenting sinner Zach. 12.10 Thou sayest thou hast faith that apprehends pardon and applyes Christ if thou doest this rightly thy faith is a repenting and a mourning faith Zach. 13.1 There 's a Fountain set open in that day in what day not simply in that day when they see him but when they see him and mourn for him 2 God walks by his own rule now Christ bids that upon a brothers repentance we should forgive him Luke 17.3 4. So upon our repentance God will forgive 2 Sam. 12.12 13. 3 From the rule of justice it stands not with justice for God to forgive sin to a man that goes on in a purpose of sin therefore at the time God gives pardon he gives repentance 4 The want of assurance of pardon doth greatly disquiet as well as the want of pardon Suppose a person upon believing have his pardon yet is it but dim he cannot lightly be assured of it until he do repent upon repentance God gives the assurance and seals it to the conscience Zach. 2.3 4. As the Lord takes away the filthy garments from Joshua so to Joshua's conscience hespeaks I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee Preachers must take heed they do not preach remission to faith without repentance The summe of the Gospel is that whereas we are all dead men in Adam remission of sins is tendered to all that do believe and repent this is signified in baptisme and the supper which are signes on Gods part to confirme unto us his faithfulness in remission and signes on our parts to binde us to believe and repent We see in this petition 1 who forgives even God He to whom a debt is own can onely forgive it Esa 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy sins for my own Name sake Others may remit the wrongs that concern themselves or they may remit declaratively they are to preach deliverance to captives Esa 61.1 Luk. 4.18 The state of a man unpardoned is like the state of a man imprisoned as the words shutting and opening and keyes Matth. 16.19 import now when persons repent preachers say to souls as Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12.7 The Lord hath put away thy sin The Lord hath done it I onely declare it Christ spake to his Apostles whose sins ye remit they are remitted but first he said receive ye the Holy Ghost for it is the Holy Ghost puts away sin and not you God onely forgives authoritatively Christ gave the power of teaching to his Disciples but kept the power of forgiveness to himself Now for the ground upon which pardon of sin is founded it is the meer mercy of God it s for his own Name sake the graces that are in us are not causes that God forgives fin to us but evidences thereof for the onely groundis mercy which is seen 1 In that he hath found out and appointed a way to satisfie his justice even Christs satisfaction Rom. 3.25 Esa 53.6 2 In his acceptation of that satisfaction and not requiring the debt of us Esa 53.11 3 In giving us to Christ Joh. 6.37 4 In giving us grace to receive Christ so tendered in the Gospel Joh. 1.12 5 In that there was nothing in us to move him thereto but our misery so that as tender hearts show mercy to persons in misery so did God What was there in Paul when he was going to Damascus to persecute For Application 1 begg forgiveness of sins of God Reprobate men may have other mercies this onely belongs to the elect Esa 33.24 The people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity Though Saints have prayed for removing judgements yet have they specially prayed for pardon of sin 2 Sam. 24.10 Grounds of begging pardon 1 From the painfulness and anguish that is in unpardoned sin lying on the conscience compared to a thorne in the flesh Ps 38.3 There 's no rest in my bones because of my sin to a heavy burthen Psa 38.4 To the breaking of the bones Psal 51.12 To a Serpents sting 1 Cor. 15.56 Yea to the stinging of an adder Prov. 23.32 To a scorching heat Psal 32.4.5 Freedom from wrath law sin death are easily spoken but to feel the fruit of it in agony of conscience and to apply it to a mans self is very hard Luth. Tom. 4. Fol. 149. 2 The comfort and content that is in the soul when sin is pardoned it is as if you should take off a talent of lead or a heavy weight from the soul Matth. 9.2 Be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee Look upon a poor debtor that ought a thousand pound and was ready to be cast in prison for it the creditor shall not onely forgive the debt but cancell the bond how doth this cheer the debtor so did Christ for us Col. 2.14 Blotting out the hand writing of ordinances that was against us he took it out of of the way and nayled it to his Cross so that it can never be pleaded against us Hence when God would comfort Mary Magdalen weeping he doth it from this ground because her sins were forgiven Luk. 7.38 9 49 50. Matth. 9.2 To the Palsey man Christ saith Be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee Esa 40. Comfort ye my people but how tell them their iniquity is pardoned Object But drooping souls cry out Hence I doubt my sins are not pardoned because I have so little peace in my soul Answ 1 Though comfort arise from pardon yet must God make us to hear the voice of it Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear the voice of joy and gladness God makes the voice to speak higher or lower as he thinks good 2 The more even the soul walks without back sliding the more doth the Lord speak peace to the soul Psalm 85.8 The Lord will speak peace unto his Saints but let them not turn again to folly as if he should say If they relapse or turn to folly their peace will be interrupted 3 Observe whether thy conscience speak truly or scrupulously If thy trouble come from thy conscience witnessing that thou livest in sin as Cain's conscience did Gen. 4.13 this must needs destroy
all comfort and peace but if thy conscience speaks onely scrupulously in time of temptation as David's conscience did Psalm 31.22 I said I am cast out of thy sight Be not discouraged when thou knowest the constant tenour of thy life to be holy 4 According to our care of keeping our Evidences clear so peace and comfort is wont to abound in the soul and fears and doubts are wont to vanish Isai 48.18 O that thou hadst hearkened to my Commandments then had thy peace been as a River and thy righteousness as the waves of the Sea By Righteousness the Prophet seems to mean the manifestation of righteousness Isai 32.17 The work of righteousness shall be peace and the effect of righteousness shall be quietness and assurance for ever 5 Pour out thy soul to the Lord in melting Prayers for in such God in wont to come in with comfort as in Hanna 1 Sam. 1.18 David Psal 6.8 6 Consider what it is that turns the conscience out of its peace and removes it as sometimes thou slightest Prayer It may be some injustice is upon thy conscience committed by thee in thy natural state for which thou hast not made restitution confidence in thine own righteousness conscience calls upon thee to do some duty and thou wilt not for fear or shame do it to finde out what that is and to remove it is the way to rejoycing Gal. 6.4 but if upon search thou canst finde nothing then chide thy heart for thy causless fears and doubts and say Why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me Psal 42.11 3 The third ground to be earnest in begging pardon of sin is taken from the evils of sin which are 1 General as 1 Filthiness of it it 's compared to Excrements as to a Dogs vomit 2 Peter 2.22 to a menstruous cloath to loathsomness Prov. 13.5 2 Guiltiness this twinges the soul like so many Furies whiles it bindes over the soul to punishment Guilt is compared to a Dart that strikes through the Liver Prov. 7.23 Guilt pursued Adam Gen. 3.10 it 's like bodily sickness which will never let a man be in ease till it be expelled Isai 48.22 3 The wearisomness of it Jer. 9.5 Hab. 2.13 what a weariness to be under the slavery of covetousness pride uncleanness and sometimes to have contrary lusts domineering in us that the soul knows not which to satisfie 4 The punishment of it both here and hereafter Here it brings sickness poverty disgrace crosses in wives children and servants now when God forgives he forgives all Papists mistake to think that God forgives the sin but the sinner must suffer the punishment which is changed by Christ onely from an eternal to a temporary punishment which must be suffered here or in Purgatory but we see the contrary the King frankly forgave all that the Debtour ought even though they were ten thousand Talents Matth. 18.32 that is both sin and punishment And though God chasten his People for sins after Pardon as David's childe born in Adultery died 2 Sam. 12.13 also God forgave the Peoples sins but took vengeance of their Iaventions Psalm 99.8 yet these punishments were not satisfactions to divine justice but cautions to themselves and others that whiles they smarted so bitterly for their sins they might not dare to commit them 1 Cor. 11.32 5 The particular evils in it as 1 It 's the greatest evil because if not pardoned it deprives of the greatest good even of God himself Isai 59.1 2 Sin is more filthy than the Devil because sin made the Devil to be what he is being formerly a glorious Angel 3 Sin is the cause of all inward and outward troubles 4 Sin turns away the good things that we have and withholds the good things that we want See Jer. 5.25 5 Sin is that that takes away all the content of the soul and fills the Soul with discontent and amazement 6 The bitterness of sin after commission is infinitely more than the sweetness thereof in and at the commission of it Job 1.20.12.13 7 The shame of sin sinners are ashamed as a thief is ashamed Jer. 2.26 See it in Adam Gen. 3.10 4 Ground pardon of sin eats out the slavish fear of death That death which is as the king of terrours to ungodly men Job 18.14 becomes less and less to pardoned persons Heb. 2.15 Luke 2.29 Psalm 91.5 6. Not affraid of the arrow that flies by day or night Death to Saints is like Sampson's Lion out of which came sweetness No preparative for death can be like this hence Job 7.21 Job saith Why dost thou not pardon mine iniquity for now shall I sleep in the dust Thou wouldst willingly have nothing trouble thee when thou comest to die O get then thy sin pardoned and nothing then need trouble thee 5 Ground the suddenness and inexpectancy of death by it men are taken as birds in a snare and fishes in a net Eccles 4.12 Now what a fearfull thing is it then for to die in thy sins John 8.21 24. It 's a fearfull thing to die in a Goal yet a man so dying may go to Heaven but if he die in his sins the soul goes to Hell 6 Till thou gets thy sins pardoned thou art in a cursed and wofull condition Gal. 3.10 Consider how dreadfull sin unpardoned was in the conscience of Judas and Achitophel so will it be in thy conscience when thou comest to die if it be not pardoned I say if conscience be enlightened or awakened for its possible for some men from a stupid and ignorant estate though their sins be unpardoned to dye in peace because they know not their danger Psal 73.4 there are no bands in their death Ignorance of a danger and a deliverance from a danger breed a like confidence but not a like safety A man would wonder how any soul that is awakened can dye in his right wits when he knows nothing of the pardon of his sin seeing the day that he dyes he goes to Hell into utter darkness Matth. 22.13 7 Pardon of sin sweetens all other things 1 Comforts to us I have wife and children and credit c. but what are these without a reconciled God what comfort hath a condemned man in friends relations lands dwellings till he get a pardon Psal 32.1 2 It sweetens crosses If a man be to dye at a stake as Steven was and can behold Christ by faith as his what cares he for the stones thrown at him so the thief on the Cross Paul and Silas when they were in the stocks praised God when their sins were pardoned Act. 16.25 8 If we get not pardon of sin now we shall never get it There 's no forgiveness in another world There 's no place of repentance there 's no effect of satisfaction then as Cyprian saith for that place Matth. 12.32 Cont. Demetrium Whosoever speaketh against the holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this world
inward voice he should say thy sins are pardoned Rom. 8.16 2 Cor 1.22 Eph. 4.30 It s not enough onely to have a general foundation laid that God and Christ bare good will to all believers but the Spirit comes and saith Christ hath a special good will to me and stirrs up in me a liking to him again and a willingness to take him with the parting with every lust and enjoyment And to this there follows after we have gone on in believing a while a further sense of the Spirit which is sometimes interrupted after sealing thereof through remaining unbelief and practical weakness so far as to question our condition but in some this seal of the Spirit is so clear and strong that the soul questioneth not its estate in grace ever after conscience of unkindness to such a friend should much trouble us Now we may know this voice of the Spirit from delusion because it is given to us when the soul is humbled and melts in prayer or forsakes some dear enjoyment for God and it leaves behind it a holy self abasement in respect of our unthankfulness and our ill requiting the Lord and a lifting up the head to think upon death and judgement as dayes of redemption We see then that besides the acts of faith which is to take Christ and to cast our selves upon the mercy of God there is the fruit of faith to be assured hereof in order thereto the Spirit first gives us those graces and workings which are our evidences then helps us to feel those evidences in our selves and then raises comfort in the soul upon those discoveries Obj. But doth not the doctrine of assurance breed security loosness presumption Answ The favour of God believed breedeth love of God where there is love there is a fear of every thing that may divide betwixt the soul and God Nothing more quickens a soul to chearful obedience then the assurance of Gods love 2 Cor. 5.1 compared with ver 15. He is a graceless child that will venture to offend his father because he knows he neither will nor can disinherit him So graceless should we be if knowing of Gods love to our souls we should presume to sin against him Rom. 6.1 compared with ver 15. Shall we sin because we are under Grace God forbid 2 Those that are sure of salvation though they need not fear damnation yet may they fear to bring upon themselves wrath as sickness trouble of conscience c. Obj. But we cannot be sure of perseverance without which what is assurance Answ Yes from these promises Joh. 10.28 29. None shall pluck them out of my hands Joh. 10.28 29. and from Christ his prayer Luk. 22.31 3● God will not suffer us to be tempted above the power of grace to unsettle any habit though to the unsettlement of some act Rom. 8.38 39. 4 Use Seeing God forgives sins 1 pray for sensibleness and sight of thy sins Lam. 3.39 For daily we fall into not onely sin but sins 2 For humiliation under them 1 Cor. 11.31 4 For forgiveness of others Eph. 4.32 5 Seeing God forgives sins 1 Take notice of Gods patience that bears with our sins from day to day 2 Pet 3.9 2 Note that humane satisfactions can be of no force 3 That we should not onely have a care of our own salvation but of the salvation of our brethren in asking pardon for them if we see them sin a sin that is not unto death 1 John 5.16 4 That even righteous and justified persons stand need of being justified still Rev. 22.11 5 That our sins being called debts we may see that all sorts of punishments are owing unto us for our sins till God forgive them in Christ and the sin being forgiven the punishment also is forgiven hence that which Luke calls Sins Luke 11.4 Matthew calls Debts 6 Seeing God forgives sins and assures thereof do not you from Satans temptations misdoubt those Evidences which you have seriously examined and found to be true Suppose your Friend give you an Inheritance and good Evidences to assure you of it and a cavilling fellow shall come and tell you your Evidence is naught will you upon his prattle judg your Title nothing So the Lord hath forgiven your sins and you have good Evidences thereof will you then upon Satans cavils judg your Evidences nothing When I die I descend into Hell I am undone what shall I do no help remains besides the Word I believe in God c. We were created of the Word and it behoves us to be returned into the Word Luth. in Gen. 37. 9 If we have not this assurance we shall be in no better condition than Heathens who have no hope 1 Thess 4.13 Ephes 2.12 So Justin Martyr speaks of Socrates these words Now is the hour of going away at hand for me to death for you to a longer life but whether of us go to a better estate is unknown unto all save to God Cohort ad Graecos pag. 26. How much better spoke holy Luther The Devil in the hour of death will shew thee all thy wicked life do not despair which Satan desires but believe and say I know all my life is damnable if it should be judged but God hath commanded me to trust not in my life but in his mercy This wisdom we ought to follow in the hour of death there the flesh trembles that it must go into a new life and doubts of salvation if thou follows these thoughts thou art undone here thine eys are to be shut and say with Stephen Jesus into thine hands I commend my spirit then certainly will Jesus be present with his Angels and be the guide of the way Bernard when sometimes he was sick to death sounded no other thing than this I have lost my time because I have lived wickedly but one thing comforts me thou wilt not despise a broken and a contrite heart Also Lord Jesus thou holds the Kingdom of Heaven by a double right 1 Because thou art the Son of God 2 Because thou hast purchased it by thy Death this thou keepest for thy self by right of nativity that thou givest me not by the law of works but of grace As we forgive our Debtours This is a motive or as some call it a sign because we frankly forgive our Debtours therefore we desire God to forgive us From hence learn 1 That unless we pardon the wrongs done to us we desire Gods vengeance against our selves 2 That wrongs done by others to us make them Debtours to us which though in respect of the sin against us we are bound to forgive yet in respect of the damage we sustain in our Estates we may require satisfaction 3 It 's an evidence that God hath and will forgive us if we do freely without exercising private revenge forgive others Col. 3.13 Forgiving one another if any man have a quarrel against any as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you In nothing do we more
the detraction from another mans reputation is an addition to their own but Christ here tells them the contrary Use Caution against rash judgement Beware we neither lessen things well done or well spoken nor interpret doubtfull things in the worse part nor aggravate light infirmities nor be ready to receive scattered reproaches Obj. But is all judging here condemned Answ No to judge a tree by the fruits is lawfull It 's not the minde of Christ that his Disciples should be blinde towards the evils of others and not to censure and punish them but that we bridle the corruption of our hearts which is much inclining to rash judgement Our hearts are like crooked rules that are ready to pervert straight things Neither is credulity here commended such as was in Jacob who erred in too much charity thinking the wild beasts had devoured Joseph when his sons onely shewed him a blooded Coat which Joseph wore Neither the judging in Churches 1 Cor. 5.4 5 12. or in Commonwealths 2 Chron. 19.6 is forbid Neither the judging of private persons betwixt brethren 1 Cor. 6.5 is forbid But that judging is here condemned which arises 1 From pride and domination Jam. 3.1 2 From spleen discontent envy passion and hatred whence mens narrow inspection ariseth 3 From hypocrisie when men endeavour to cover their own vicious practises by judging others so the Pharisee Luke 18.12 13. 4 To judge finally of any mans reprobation having not committed the sin against the Holy Ghost 5 To be Lord and Law-giver to and of another mans conscience Jam. 4.12 13. There is one Law-giver who is able to save and to destroy who art thou that judgest another thus the strong and weak did Rom. 14.3 4. Thou art onely a fellow servant therefore not a judge 6 That judging which is used to get an opinion of holiness Obj. But we finde even godly men and professors to judge others Answ It 's possible even for godly men to judge amiss as Abraham Gen. 20.10 11. and Eli 1 Sam. 1.14 and to insult too much over unregenerate men but usually either 1 They judge themselves or 2 To preserve themselves from being accessary to other mens sins by a secret invisible allowance of them 3 Lest Knaves should go for honest men 4 When men merely civil or formal or such as live in some sin are cried up by some time-serving flatterer for good men here a godly man may pass his judgement of this wicked man lest ignorant persons hearing him so commended might gather such a dangerous principle viz. That a man may be a good man and yet live in some way of wickedness That silence is no less sinfull which suffers a profane man to carry away the repute of a godly man then that silence which suffers a godly man to be charged with hypocrisie provided there be time and place for a wise and charitable contradiction V. 2. For with what judgement ye judge ye shall be judged and with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again The second reason why we must not rashly judge others because God by his providence will afford us the like V. 3. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye and considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye Here 's a third reason against rash judging taken from the adjunct Such persons have beams or gross sins in themselves who are prone to censure motes or infirmities in others Self love blindes many that they cannot see gross sins in themselves but can see supposed sins in others V. 4. Or how wilt thou say to thy brother Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beam is in thine own eye A fourth reason taken from unprofitableness and dishonesty such judgings do not tend to the amending but to the hardening of the sinner He that will judg others had need examine himself Quest Whether may not a Judg condemn those sins in another which he knows himself to have committed or at present knows he liveth in Answ Yes because every Judg is bound to judg according to Law where evils are prosecuted and witnessed in any outward Court of men but not where they are prosecuted and witnessed in the inner Court of conscience for that Court onely belongs to God and though the Apostle Rom. 2.1 say that such men are inexcusable who judg others for those things themselves do it 's meant onely in the Court of conscience or the Court of Heaven not in the Courts of men which looks upon all men as innocent against whom there is no witness of guilt Besides how wilt thou say to thy Brother that is with what face upon what ground of conscience or honesty wilt thou say Let me pull out thy Mote when thou hast the Beam of a reigning sin in thee Luke 13.14 15. Obs All sins are not equal some are reigning sins some are sins of infirmity 2 Many persons though guilty of great sins yet are not sensible of them some have beams yet see it not 3 Men that would reform small sins in others must first reform great sins in themselves V 5. Thou Hypocrite first cast out the Beam out of thine own Eye and then thou shalt clearly see to cast out the Mote out of thy Brothers Eye The words are an Answer to an Objection It seems then I need not care how my Brother lives whether well or ill Answ Yes thou must Hence Christ adds v. 5. that we should perform towards them the duty of admonition See Levit. 19.17 But Hypocrites upon pretence of admonition sometimes exercise a masterly power of judging contrary to the Rule of Charity which requires with all tenderness that we inquire into and deal with the weaknesses of our Brethren with a desire of healing of them but this cannot he do who hath greater faults of his own Thy Brother whom thou reproves cannot learn a better amendment by thee than that he sees in thee Reproof is so to be ordered that not onely the faults of our Brother be blamed but that reproof may attain the true end thereof to wit the amendment of the sinner which will be brought about the better when thy life reproves him as well as thy words As it 's impossible for him that hath a beam in his eye to pull out a mote out of another mans because the beam blindes him that he cannot see the mote so a man blinded with any reigning sin he cannot see infirmities in others to amend them Object But what Beam is it that is to be cast out Answ 1 Reigning sin Rom. 6.12 2 The beam of scandalous sin This was in Davids eye when he so severely judged him to death that took the the Ew-lamb 2 Sam. 12.5 6. Quest But how shall we come to see the greatness of our sins that they are beams 1 Consider the infinite majesty against whom committed 2 Consider the great knowledg thou hast sinned against 3 The length
of time thou hast lived in them Hosea 8.3 4 Upon what small temptations thou hast committed them 5 That thou hast been instrumental to carry persons to Hell by thine evils Acts 26.11 6 That thou hast caused persons to turn away from the way of truth by thine evils 2 Peter 2.1 2. and caused them to turn to evil by thy example as Jeroboam who made Israel to sin 7 The sore punishments God hath inflicted upon persons for committing such sins as thou hast been guilty of 1 Cor. 10.7 8 9 10 11. Quest But how must we cast out this beam Answ 1 Believe that there 's pardon for great sins in Christ and bathe thy soul in Christ's bloud Do as they that were stung with fiery Serpents John 3.14 1 John 1.7 2 Repent and turn to God with all thy heart Joel 2.12 Let thy repentance appear in the three parts of it 1 Confession 1 John 1.8 2 Humiliation Jerem. 13.17 18. 3 Reformation Hosea 14.2 Take away all iniquity Prov. 28.13 And then thou shalt see clearly to cast out the Mote out of thy Brothers eye See who is to be admonished even a Brother Lev. 19.18 Matth. 18.15 16 17. 1 Cor. 5.11 2 Thess 3.6 whether he be of our own or of another Church if our Brothers Ox or Ass straying are to be brought home by us Deut. 22.1 2 3 4. much more himself yet may others that are not Brethren be reproved because reproof is a kinde of spiritual alms that ought to be given to all as well as bodily alms where there 's hope of amending V. 6. Give not that which is holy to Dogs neither cast ye your Pearls before Swine lest they trample them under their feet and turn again and rend you Clemens Alexandrinus mentions that among the Chaldees Egyptians and Hebrews their Professours were wont to deliver their Precepts in Proverbs and so doth Christ as before so here and elsewhere it is a demonstrative kinde of teaching practised by Solomon Eccles 12.10 In the words two things 1 A Precept Give not that which is holy to Dogs 2 The Reasons 1 Lest they trample them under their feet 2 Lest they turn again and rend you 1 The Precept Give not that which is holy to Dogs Some by Dogs understand Unbelievers as if the Word Baptism and Supper should not be given to them For Baptism and the Supper it appears they ought not to be given as being not converting Ordinances but signs and declaratives of conversion already wrought Were they converting Ordinances they should actively effectively and operatively produce the grace of Regeneration and after a physical manner work upon the soul whereas they work onely in by and through the understanding and therefore must be administred on those believers that have understanding to receive them but for the Word it being Gods means to bring persons from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to Gods Kingdom Acts 18.26 it ought to be offered to all Therefore by Dogs is meant the stubborn and professed Enemies of the Gospel who having formerly been convinced of the truth of it are now apostatized and cease not to rail and persecute that truth Acts 19.9 when divers spake evil of the way of God before the multitude Paul departed from them Others more pertinently restrain that which is holy to admonition whereof he had spoke this ought not to be given to Dogs and Swine of which Prov. 9.8 Reprove not a Scorner lest he hate thee reprove a wise man and he will love thee Prov. 23.9 Speak not in the ears of a fool for he will despise the wisdom of thy words onely we must not forbear the duty of admonition to them that it may do some good to upon this pretence as if they were Dogs or Hogs when we perceive no such thing by them for our hearts are but too backward to perform this duty because we see it so unwelcome to most men By dogs Christ means contradictors and blasphemers against admonition whether publickly in the ministry of the Word as the Jews of Antioch did Acts 13.46 who hereby adjudged themselves unworthy of everlasting life and the Apostles upon their contradiction turned to the Gentiles See Matth. 10.14 15. so did Paul in the like case Act. 19.9 depart into the school of Tyrannus upon the contradiction the Jews made against his doctrine Such were those circumcision teachers whom Paul calls dogs Phil. 3.2 Beware of dogs and perhaps those Rev. 22.15 without are dogs are here meant and also Christ means private admonition Prov. 23.9 When persons shall rage against it the Lord provides for the safety of his servants least for their good will they be rent in pieces by the ungodly By holy things and pearls then Christ means publick and private admonition they are called holy because the persons that give it are holy and because the subject matter even the admonition is holy and because of the end which is the sanctification of souls They are called Pearls for their preciousness and excellency Psal 141.5 Admonition is compared to an excellent Oyl By hogs Christ means they do not contradict but by the uncleanness of their lives they show their contempt of your admonitions It s one thing to tread holy admonitions under our feet as hogs do and those that wallow in their sins and another thing to bite and rend him that reaches holy admonitions to us as dogs do such an one was Crescens the Cynick Philosopher from whom Justin Martyr expected his death As Christ would not have publick and private admonition to be given for their sake so would he not have it altogether kept silent for their sake Of this sort of dogs are many who stir up not onely Magistrates but the common people against the professors of truth because the truth such hold forth is contrary to their profit and praise as we see in Christ and the Apostles The reasons of this are 1 The unprofitableness and unworthiness Your labour will be spent in vain they will trample these precious things under their feet Things that are slighted and counted nothing worth are trod in the mire as pearles c. to them that know not their worth 2 Your own safety they will turn again and rend you they will prepare fire sword prisons and banishment against you and therefore as no man will meddle with a mad Dog for fear he be bit by him so should we beware of such Dogs There are some wicked men though they be not cured yet are they curable to these admonitions may be given but some are incurable to whom they are not to be given And though we are to give a reason of the hope in us to every man yet is it onely to them that ask a reason thereof which Hogs and Dogs do not So that as in the former Verse Christ showes who and what kinde the reprovers should be such as were free from beams or gross evils so here in this
must be just ruling in the fear of God 2 Sam. 23.3 3 God is wont to deal well with such as fear him Exod. 1 20 21. God dealt well with the mid-wives because they feared God Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear me that it might be well with them Neh. 1.11 Eccles 8.12 I know it shall be well with them that fear God which fear before him but it shall not be well with the wicked Why because he feareth not before God Mal. 2.5 My covenant was with Levi of life and peace and I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared me and was affraid before my name Luke 1.50 His mercy is on them that fear him from generation to generation Deut. 6.18 He that feareth God shall come forth out of all trouble Eccles 7.18 4 The fear of God is a special mean to lengthen our days in this world Deut. 6.2 That thou mightest fear the Lord thy God to keep all his statutes that thy dayes may be prolonged now the reason why Gods fear lengthens our daies is because it makes a man take heed of such sins as would cut off life Prov. 10.27 The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life to depart from the snares of death see the contrary threatning to wicked men Eccles 8.13 It shall not be well with the wicked neither shall he prolong his daies which are as a shadow why because he feareth not before God 5 Gods fear is one of the first graces that showes it self in the soul hence called the beginning of wisdom Job 28.28 and they that have it are said to have a good understanding Psalm 111.10 Deut. 10.12 What doth the Lord require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God c. 6 God hath excellent loving kindness laid up for those that fear him See this 1 in spiritual mercies as 1 understanding Gods secrets Psalm 25.14 The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him 2 Pittifull affection as in a father towards his childe Psalm 103.11 so the Lord pittieth them that fear him 3 Healing and comfort Mal. 4.2 Unto you that fear my name shall the son of righteousness arise with healing under his wings 2 See it in temporal mercies as 1 strong confidence in evil times Prov. 14.26 in the fear of the Lord is strong confidence which is grounded upon promise of deliverance Psalm 85.9 Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him 2 A special eye of providence for the providing outward things for such Psalm 31 18 19. Behold the eye of the Lord is on them that fear him to deliver their soul from death and to keep them alive in famine Psalm 34.9 O fear the Lord ye his Saints for there is no want to them that fear him Psalm 111.5 He hath given meat to them that fear him he will ever be mindfull of his Covenant q.d. Its part of Gods Covenant to give meat to them that fear him meat is put for all other provisions 3 There 's much contentedness of minde comes along with this grace of Gods fear in them that have it Prov. 15.16 Better is a little with the fear of the Lord then great revenues and trouble therewith Pro. 19.23 The fear of the Lord tendeth to life and he that hath it shall abide satisfied Psalm 7.16 4 It 's a mean to obtain riches honour and life every man wishes for these three things oh then get Gods fear Pro. 22.4 By humility and the fear of the Lord are riches and honour and life 2 Use Trial whether we have Gods fear in us 1 when we think nothing too good for God but will let it go rather then sin Gen. 22.12 Lay not thine hand upon the lad for now I know thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thine onely son 2 When we fear to do any thing that is of bad report 1 Cor. 6.1 Dare any of you meaning Christians go to law before the unjust and not before the Saints Neh. 5.9 Ought we not to walk in the fear of the Lord because of the heathen 3 When we fear not the greatest of men in opposition to God Exod. 1.15 16. The King bad the Hebrew mid-wives kill the male children but they would not obey the King why was it the Text vers 17. gives the reason because they feared God they would not obey the King How did the three children out of fear to God not fear Nebuchadnezzar his burning fiery furnace Dan. 3.17 18 28. The Parents of Moses hid Moses three moneths and they not affraid of the Kings commandment Heb. 11.23 4 When we are fearfull of the private and secret stirrings of corruption in our own hearts Job 31.1 2. Job so apprehended Gods eye that he durst not have or harbour a lustfull thought see vers 4. This fear of God kept him from lifting up his hand against the fatherless when he saw his help in the gate for destruction from God was a terrour unto him vers 21.23 Deut. 15.9 10. Gods fear will be opposing proud revengefull unclean and hypocriticall thoughts in the soul 5 When hope or proffer of gain will not make us sin against God Peter would not take Magus his money Acts 8.20 Nor Elisha Naamans talents 2 Kings 5. Why he knew in his conscience it was no time for it Contrary in Balaam how fain would he have been fingring Balaks gold so Judas Demas 6 When we will not deliberately venture upon sin for fear of losse Gen. 39.9 How can I do this great evill and sin against God 1 Kings 22.13 14. Micaiah durst not flatter the King as the false prophets did John Baptist durst not forbear Herods sin though the Princes favor lay on one side and the loss of his life or hazzard thereof on the other Mat. 14.3 Such a man will not be drawn to sin for fear of offending a wife or husband where Gods fear is there will be a choice of affliction rather than iniquity 7 When we are affraid of doing any thing with a doubting conscience Rom. 14.22 23. 8 When we are affraid of the least evil Carnal men for shame of the world may avoid gross evils but where Gods fear is the soul is affraid of small sins 1 Sam 24.5 even for cutting the skirt of Sauls garment how much more was he of hurting Sauls person 1 Sam. 26.9 It s said of a godly man that he keeps his hand from doing any evil Isai 56.2 9 When we are affraid of sinfull temptations and occasions Gen. 39.10 Joseph would not hearken to his Mistris to ly by her or to be with her Prov. 5.8 Come not nigh the doors of her house Hos 4.15 that Judah might not offend with Israels Calve-worship the Prophet bids them not to come to Gilgal or Beth-aven where the Calves were God will not keep us from sin if we do not keep our selves from the occasions of it He that ventures upon the occasions of sin
in against thee are non-suted Rom. 8.33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect When God would comfort his people wherewith doth he comfort them he tells them their iniquities are pardoned Esa 40.22 Obj. But my Sins are many my guilts haynous how can I take comfort Answ 1 God was in Christ Reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them and delivered from the curse all that believe on him John 3.36 1 Thess 1.10 2 We must look on Christs death as able to drown Mountains as Mole-hills All the fiery stingings how great soever were taken away when they lookt on the Brazen Serpent John 3.14 15. God did not onely save just Abraham Isaac and Jacob but unrighteous Thamar Reuben Simeon Levi that no man should presume of his righteousness or wisdom nor that any man should be discouraged because of his sins Luth. in Gen. 38. 3 The Fountain of Christs Bloud is set open for all bleeding and believing souls Zach. 12.10 compared with cap. 13.1 In that day they believe and repent the Fountain is open 4 All hand-writings of Ordinances of what kinde soever that might testifie a believers guilt is taken away as to the accusatory and damnatory power thereof Col. 2.14 If the Jews rejoyced at the revoking Ahazuerus sentence let us much more at this 5 All the power of Hell is led in triumph by Christ to the faith of the believer Col. 2.15 Having spoiled principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly viz. to the faith of the believer triumphing over them on the Cross 6 In his Redemption Christ had in his eye all the sins that should fall out to the end of the world and he paid not onely for sins that were at present but for those which should come after though one sin be committed to day another to morrow and another the third day yet the travel of Christs soul gave the Father full satisfaction Isai 53.11 Object Could I believe or repent I could take comfort but alas I cannot saith many a poor soul Answ All the promises of remission of sins are belonging and so consequently to be tendered unto those who believe and repent not to believing without repenting nor to repenting without believing Luke 24.47 Mark 1.15 Acts 20.21 Paul preached Repentance towards God and Faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ but the promises are to be tendered to both together Thus we comfort the afflicted Brother It 's impossible thou shouldest be so righteous in this life that thou shouldest feel no sin and that thy body should be clear without spots as the Sun but thou hast yet spots are in thee yet art thou holy but thou sayest How can I be holy seeing I have and feel sin That thou feelest sin and acknowledges it give thanks to God despair not It 's a step to health when the sick person acknowledges his Disease But how shall I be delivered from my sin run to Christ the Physician who heals the broken in heart thy reason being sacrificed believe in him Luth. Tom. 4.76 2 Mourning under unbelief and impenitency and hardness of heart doth usually argue there is some measure of these graces in thy soul for whence could a soul mourn for the want of these graces but because it hath some measure of these already those that mourn under wants and hunger and thirst for supplies are under the promise of blessedness John 7.37 If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink 2 Every thirsting soul is invited to Christ Revel 22.17 Let him that is a thirst come and whosoever will let him come and take of the water of life freely 3 Cast thy thy self upon Christ resolving if thou perishest thou wilt perish in his arms Job 13.15 2 Use Righteous persons may draw comfort from the righteousness of uprightness though not by way of satisfaction yet by way of evidence 1 Chron. 29.9 The People rejoyced because they offered willingly because with perfect heart they offered willingly 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is the testimony of our conscience Doing judgment is accompanied with joy Prov. 21.15 Men persecute for righteousness Matth. 5.10 Devils rage at it but Saints must walk in it Luke 1.75 Those Heb. 11. first wrought Righteousness then obtained promises v. 35. In the name of a righteous man Not because he is a kinsman or friend or because we hope to receive like for like or shall get some gain thereby or ingratiate our self thereby unto some men we would be in favour with but as before he had spoken because he was a Prophet so here because he is a righteous man Gal. 6.10 We should principally look to the moving cause that moveth us to do good to Gods Saints even because we see Christ in them though all other considerations were taken away as of neighbourhood meekness love to us Shall receive a righteous mans Reward That is they shall not onely receive the examples of those holy men they receive and their edifying speeches usually holy either for matter or manner of speaking and sometimes their powerfull prayers for them but they shall also receive the same reward of eternal glory which the righteous man himself shall receive for the just shall live by faith Heb. 2.4 V. 42. And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water onely in the name of a Disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his Reward Here 's a third ground against fear of not being received which the Disciples and other Christians might expect for the cause of Christ to wit that the smallest kindness done to any of Christs little ones shall not go without a reward Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water That is being able to give no more for if we can give a cup of wine and shall put the matter off with a cup of water Christ will think this but cold entertainment The meanness of the benefit shall not make the kindness less respected with Christ 2 Cor. 8.12 If there be first a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man hath He names cold water as Augustine supposes lest any man should excuse himself that he wanted fire or a vessel to heat it By little ones Christ means those who are base and vile in their own eys from the sense of their Infirmities and despised by the proud men of the world Against offending and despising these little ones Christ warns Matth. 18.6 1 Saying It were better a man had a Mill-stone hanged about his neck and he be cast into the Sea as the Jews were wont to punish some Malefactours than offend such little ones 2 The Angels of these little ones do always behold the face of God therefore take heed how ye despise them God dignifies them with attendance of Angels therefore do not ye despise them If not despise them then must you