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A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

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sparkles of appetite after it and delight in it and care to have recourse unto it in all estates It quickens to a continued diligence in exercising themselves in it and therefore we should study the continuall praises of it and pray God also that he would give his Ministers a doore of utterance to set out the glory of those mysteries contained in it Col. 4.3 and besides it should much humble us for our marvellous neglect both in faith and obedience especially if any way wee have caused the word of God to be blasphemed by our indiscretion or sinne wee cannot worse vexe God then by neglecting or despising or dishonouring his word and contrariwise God is wonderfully pleased with us if hee may finde his word to be had in honour and respect with us and therefore such as love the word heartily have great cause to comfort themselves For they are deare to God and Christ ever for that reason as these places shew Ioh. 14.23 17.6 1 Ioh. 2.5 Revel 3.10 The particular doctrine may be raised either from the coherence or from the words in themselves From the coherence wee may note that the Word is the onely ordinary instrument outwardly for the begetting of the seed of true grace in us Iam. 1.18 Rom. 10.14 c. The Uses are divers 1. For first this may inform us concerning the distinct offices of the word and Sacraments The Word begets grace the Sacraments confirme it the beginning of grace we have from the Word the strengthning and nourishing of grace from the Sacraments 2. This may informe us how much we are bound to God for his Word and how much we are beholding to the ministry of the Word 1 Tim. 5.17 spirituall things are hereby ministred unto us Hereby we are begot againe to God we had perished for ever without the Word 3. This may informe us concerning the wofull estate of all such congregations or particular persons as live without the Word of God in the life and the power of it they sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death There is neither wombe to beare thee nor breasts to give thee suck Oh the depth of the judgements of God upon millions of wretched men Oh the sore famine of the Word and this distresse is the more miserable because people are lesse sensible of it Oh if men would think without grace I cannot be saved without the Word I cannot have grace and therefore what shall it profit me to win the whole world if I lose my owne soule by living in places where I cannot heare the voice of Christ Note that the Spirit of God as the internall efficient is not mentioned of purpose it is lest out to compell in us a care of the outward means in which we are sure to find the Spirit working Ministers should therefore speake it boldly and pray that God would open their ●ou●hes to speak of these mysteries as becomes the mysteries of God and Christ Phil. 1.14 Col. 4.2 Hence wee may know also how to judge of those that consent not to the wholsome words of God See 1 Tim. 6.3 4. In themselves the words afford us three doctrines 1. The Word is of God and it is of God as the Author of it For man wrote it by the inspiration of the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. ult and men preach it now by the commandement of the everlasting God Tit. 1.3 And it is of God that disposeth of the due times of publishing it Tit. 1.3 and God is the subject of it For the Word principally intreats of God his nature and his works All the successe also of the Word it depends upon God There are divers Uses may be made hereof 1. It should set us on longing after Gods word to heare God speake or write to us wee see men long to reade or heare the speeches of the King much more of GOD the King of Kings 2. It should teach us to heare the word as the word of God and not of men 2 Thes. 2.13 that is 1. Reverently as if the Lord himselfe spake to us from heaven 2. Without ascribing to men the praise and glory is due to God wee should glorifie the word Act. 13.48 3. Not daring to let it run out lest God require it Heb. 2.2 If the Angels keep them how much more we Rev. 22.9 4. With confident assurance trusting upon it infallibly 2 Pet. 1.19 5. With subjection of our reasons and conscience to it nothing but the word hath this sover●ignty 6. Without adding or detracting Rev. 22.18 19. 7. With passion or wickednesse Iam. 1.18 c. 8. With all possible care to practice it Iam. 1.18 3. We may be assured it will have effect it cannot be bound no malice of men can hinder the will of God 2 Tim. 2.9 4. Therefore let not men despise it for the Ministers sake It is of God and that will appear when the dust which we have shaken off our feet shall witnesse against the world that receives us not Mat. 10.24 Which liveth This which may be referred to either seed or God or the Word but that in the originall the word for seed is not of the same gender and the testimony of Esay in the next verse quoted shewes it must be referred to the word The word lives in God It is a fountaine issuing out of the spring of Gods knowledge and will It lives in Christ the personall word of the Father The word of life is attributed to Christ 1 Ioh. 1.1 to the Scriptures Phil. 2.15 It lives also in the heart of a Christian who conceives by vertue of the seed cast in by the word It lives by effect as it makes us live and so it doth in divers respects both in respect of our naturall life and in respect of eternall life In respect of naturall life First Man liveth not by bread but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Deut. 8.3 and the creatures are sanctified by the word of God and prayer 1 Tim. 4.4 5. Secondly because the word upholds the godly in their afflictions David saith he● had long since perished in his aff●●ctions but for the word and our Saviour Christ prayes that God would keepe his by his word Ioh. 17.14 15 16 17. Now for spirituall life The word lives by effect in that it enlives us three waies For first it quickens us in regeneration so in this verse 2. It sanctifies us to live holily Ioh. 17.17 3. It preserves us in the most deadly spirituall assaults in which else we might perish 1 Ioh. 2.14 The word may also be said to live because it is lively Heb. 4.12 It may be said to live because of the sure performance of that which God promiseth though the promise were made many ages since and because the efficacie of the Scriptures abideth still they are as lively now as in David● time or in Christs time There may be many Uses made hereof First
yet it is so rich as the tongue of man cannot utter if it be in any measure true and sincere Besides how should this fire our desires after wisedome and spirituall understanding in the world of Christ seeing it is our life and in the same degree we encrease in eternall life that we encrease in acquaintance with God in Christ and therefore above all gettings we should be getting understanding And finally it shewes the wofull estate of ignorant persons that are carelesse of the studie of the Word of God and of hearing of the Gospel preached This is their death and will be their eternall death if they prevent it not by repentance and sound redeeming of the time for the service of the soule about this sacred knowledge Now for the fourth point the things that nourish life are greatly to be heeded both to shew us what we should apply our selves to and with what thankfulnesse to receive the meanes of our good herein 1. We must know that the principall cause of the nourishment and increase of spirituall life is the influence of vertue from Christ our mysticall head by the secret and unutterable working of the spirit of Christ which is therefore called the spirit of life because it both frees us by degrees from the feares of death and from the power and blots of sin Rom. 8.2 and withall it quickens and encreaseth life in us for the better exercise of righteousnesse Rom. 8.10 2. The contemplation of Gods favour and presence doth wonderfully extend and inflame life in us To marke God any where or by any experience to find effectually his love and to taste of the sweetnesse of his goodnesse this is life from the dead better than all things in naturall life it doth a godly mans heart more good than all things in the world can doe as these places shew Psal. 30.5 63.7 8. 36.3 16. ult with coherence 3. The entertainment God gives his people in his house is one speciall cause of encrease of this life in us as it encreaseth both knowledge and joy and all goodnesse and satisfies the heart of man especially amongst all the things that are without us the Word of God as it is powerfully preached in Gods house is the food of this life called the savour of life unto life 2 Cor. 2.16 Christ words are the words of eternall life Iohn 6. see Psal. 36. 8. Iohn 12.50 Pro. 4.22 4. Fellowship with the godly is singular to quicken and excite the life of grace and joy and knowledge in us therefore it is an amiable thing for brethren to dwell together in unity because there God hath commanded the blessing even life for evermore Psal. 133. ult Pro. 2.20 The mouth of the righteous is a veine of life Pro. 10.11 Yea the very reproofes of instruction are the way of life Pro. 6.23 And therefore weake Christians should be instructed from hence with faith to rest upon the God of their lives who by the spirit of Christ can enable them to eternall life and with thankfulnesse to embrace all signes of Gods favour and presence and above all things in life to provide for themselves powerfull meanes in publike and good societie in private and not to be turned off from either of these by slight either objections or difficulties and to resolve to labour more for these than carnall persons would doe to have their naturall lives if they were in distresse or danger It is also excellent counsell which Saint Iude gives in this point concerning eternall life he would have us looke to foure things The first is to edifie our selves in our most holy faith striving to get in more store of Gods promises and divine knowledges and to strive to establish our hearts in our assurance of our right to them The second is to pray in the holy Ghost for he knew that powerfull prayer doth greatly further eternall life in us The third is to keepe our selves in the love of God avoiding all things might displease him chusing rather to live under the hatred of all the world than to anger God by working iniquity The fourth is to looke as often and as earnestly as we can after that highest degree of mercy and glory we shall have in the comming of Christ Iud. 1.19 20. I will conclude this point with that one counsell of Solomon Keepe thy heart with all diligence for thereout come the issues of life Christians that would prosper in spirituall life should be very carefull of the first beginnings of sin in their thoughts and desires and be very diligent in nourishing all good motions of the holy Ghost preserving their peace and joy in beleeving with all good consciences Pro. 4.23 Thus of the fourth point 5. Now for the differences of life in these degrees especially the first and last degree they are very great for though eternall life in the first degree be a treasure of singula● value yet the glory of this life doth greatly excell as it is to be held in another world I intend not to compare life in heaven with naturall life here for that is not worthy to be mentioned in the ballance with that eternall life of glory but with eternall life it selfe as it is held by the godly only in this world And so the difference is very great 1. In respect of the place where the godly live in each degree 2. In respect of the meanes of preservation of life in each degree 3. In respect of the company with whom we live in each degree 4. In respect of the quality of life it selfe 5. In respect of the effects of life eternall in each degree For the first There is great difference betweene the life of grace and the life of glory in the very place of living Here we live in an earthly tabernacle in houses of clay there we shall live in eternall mansions buildings that God hath made without hands 2 Cor. 5.1 Here we live on earth there in heaven Here we are strangers and pilgrims far from home H●b 11. there we shall live in our Fathers house Here we are in Egypt there we shall live in Canaan Here wee live where death sorrow and sin and Divels dwell there we shall live in a place where God and immortality and all holinesse dwels 2 Pet. 3.13 Here we are but banished men there we shall live in the celestiall Paradise Here we have no abiding City but there we shall abide in the new Jer●s●lem that is above The glory of the whole earth can but shadow out by simili●ude the very walls and gates of that Citie Rev. 21. Here wee can but enter into the holy place there we shall enter into the most holy place Heb. 10.19 To conclude there we shall enter into the heaven of heavens which for lightnesse largenesse purenesse delightfulnesse and all praises almost infinitely excells the heavens we enjoy in this visible world For the second In this life unto the
or to the poore or to the Church or to the service of my country or to the conversion of soules c. have I ministred the wit or learning or wealth or power the Lord hath given me Contrariwise it cannot but be wofull to some to remember on their death beds that they have spent their meanes and gifts to promote wicked courses and to procure sinne or to maintaine the riotous or gamesters or whores or dogs or any way their own lusts oh what wil they say when they are asked whom have you clothed fed comforted counselled admonished c. But unto us But why are we honoured thus and not the Prophets The Lord sheweth mercy on whom he will shew mercy I meane it for the manner and time and measure and meanes we must not herein dispute with God yet even this tends wonderfully to the praise of Gods constant love to his Church we see he doth not grow weary of his affection he did not spend all his grace and favour upon Kings Patriarchs and Prophets but he is ready to entertaine even the prodigall sonne of the Gentiles with as hearty or rather more hearty entertainment then ever he did the Jewish children that had not departed out of their fathers houshold Secondly this also shews that extraordinary gifts are not the best for us wee want the gifts of prophesie but to have the glorious grace of Christ is better then all for we see the Prophets desired it more and great reason for one may be a Prophet and yet not be saved Math. 7. but so one cannot have the true grace of Christ but they shall be saved hee is in better case that can pray with the Spirit then he that can prophesie For God is rich to all that call upon him and whosoever calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saved Rom. 10.10 Ioel 2. Besides we may note here that God will not be bound to shew his tenderest kindnesse to his best servants no doubt the Prophets were better servants to God then we are yet you see they must not envie it to know that others shall be more made on then they Finally here is implyed that Gods promises and provisions of grace can never be in vaine If it be not for the Prophets yet it must be for us For so in the originall it is as if it were rendered but yet unto us to note that no word of God shall be in vaine Esay 55.11 They did minister This phrase imports divers things 1. Wee are here againe occasioned to think of a strange depth of respect God beares to the meanest of his children none are too good in his account to doe them service the Prophets must not think scorne to minister to them yea so doth God reckon of them that Kings and Queenes must not be too good to nurse them yea we see here the Angels are desirous to know or doe any thing that concerns them yea the holy Ghost will leave heaven to doe them good Oh the bottomlesse depth of Gods love and oh the barrennesse and shallownesse and unthankfulnesse of mans heart that cannot be more inflamed towards God to render love for love yea wee should be afraid ever to challenge God for want of love we should account it a great offence to call his affection in question the Lord takes it wonderfull ill Esay 49.15 16. 40.26 oh that God should love us so beyond all president all desert yea above all we could desire and yet we be still so slow hearted 2. From this phrase we may note that the greatest in the Church ought to account it their honour to doe service to their brethren It it charged upon all without exception to serve one another by love Gal. 5. and Christ saith of the greatest let him be your servant Mat. 20. The Use is for all of us to search our hearts to see whether we can finde such a noisome pride in our selves as that at any time we should think our selves too good to doe Gods work or to doe service to any of Gods people if we doe find it let us purge it out as vile leaven and be humbled for it before God else the Lord may perhaps finde out waies to shame us and scourge us that we dreame not of 3. This word Minister as it is in the originall excellently imports how we should serve one another For it is to serve as the Deacons did 1. out of conscience of a calling and commandement from God 2. with all diligence 3. constantly 4. cheerfully Rom. 12.5 with all humility making our selves equall with them of the lower sort All this the Deacons did 4. This word imports that spirituall things are from God onely in respect of beginning and as the primary cause For the Prophets doe but minister them They have nothing but that they have received for every good and perfect gift commeth downe from God the Father of lights which should teach us in the use of all meanes to direct our hearts to God The things which were reported unto you These words evidently shew First that the primitive Church was first taught by tradition that is by lively voice not by written Scriptures onely so was Adam so were the Patriarks for the first 2000. yeares 1 Thes. 2.15 But might some one say Doth not this wonderfully make for the Papists in their opinion about traditions No whit at all and that this point may be more fully understood I will shew out of Scripture that the word Tradition hath been taken three waies and then declare particularly that this doctrine can make nothing for the Papists 1. Sometimes by traditions are meant the inventions or precepts of men imposed with opinion of holinesse and necessity upon the consciences of men and so it is taken and taxed Mat. 15.2 3 6. Col. 2.8 2. Sometimes by traditions are meant certaine rules prescribed by the Apostles concerning things indifferent and their use Thus the Corinthians are praised because they kept the traditions as the Apostle delivered them unto them 1 Cor. 11.2 3. Sometimes by traditions are meant certaine orders appointed by the Apostles for the prevention of disorder in manners in the Churches of Christians and thus I take it to be understood 2 Thes. 3.6 when condemning such as would not work he saith they walk disorderly and not after the traditions which ye received of us It seemes the Apostle had prescribed some courses for preventing of idlenesse and such inconveniences 4 Sometimes it is taken for the very word of God delivered by lively voice so the word was delivered 2000. years before the law 5. Sometimes it is taken for the word of God as it was first delivered by the Apostles while the Scriptures was yet unfinished whether it were delivered by report or writings and so 2 Thes. 2.15 1 Cor. 11.23 15.3 According to the fourth sense or this last it is taken here Now this can make nothing for
all the meanes thereof we should labour to be affectionately perswaded that grace and the meanes thereof is better then all gold Psal. 37 16. to 23. Ier. 17 11 22. Prov. 19.1 22.1 Psal 19.14 grace 〈◊〉 called the unsear●●able riches of Christ Eph. 3.9 yea grace with reproch is better then all treasures with honour Heb. 11.26 2. ●t may informe us concerning the wofull estate of rich men especially wicked rich men that have nothing to trust unto but their wealth Alas alas could they but think of death oh how should they tremble let them remember that at the day of Christ many a rich man shall howle and wish the very 〈◊〉 to cover 〈◊〉 and yet cannot escape Rev. 6. the very rust of their riches which proved their corruptiblenesse shall witnesse against them I ●● 5.1 they should think often of that parable Luke 12.15 20 21. and that other Luke 16. of Dives in hell yea in this life th●u maist be in honor and yet be but like a beast that perisheth Psal. 49. especially they are to be bewailed if they trust in their riches and rejoyce in them and boast of them Iob 31.24 25. and will be as vaine as their auncestors Psal. 49.12 13. 3. If outward things in their lawfull use be so base what are they in their sinfull use either of getting or spending 4. How excellent then is the Lord Jesus that did redeeme us when all these could not and how worthy to be beloved 2. For instruction 1. To rich men therefore never to trust more in uncertain riches 1 Tim. 6.17 Psal. 62.10 2. Not to despise poore Christians and admire wicked rich men Iam. 2.5 4. 3. Let not the rich man glory in his riches though he be a godly man Ier. 9.24 4. Let us rather strive to be like greene olive trees in Gods house Psal. 52.7 8. Quest. But what shall we doe with riches are they good for nothing Answ. 1. Make friends with them Luke 16. 2. Buy the meanes of grace with them Prov. 17.16 3. Be rich in good works 1 Tim. 6.19 20. 4. Eate and drink and rejoyce Eccl. 2.24 5. It may teach the godly the willinger both to want gold and silver and to practice all the duties of abnegation and the contempt of them Thus of the first point The second is from what we are redeemed viz. From your vaine conversation received by tradition from your fathers The thing from which wee are redeemed is our owne conversation amplified by the quality it is vaine and by the cause of it viz. the tradition of our fathers First of redemption from our conversation in generall if any aske From what wee are redeemed in Christ if I answer fully I must say from sixe things 1. From the displeasure of God the passion of Christ being a full expiation for all our sins that angred God 1 Iob. 2.2 2. From condemnation unto which wee were justly sentenced this is a fruit of the former expiation also Rom. 8.1 3. From the power of Sathan who as a jaylor and executioner of vengeance had possession of us Heb. 2.14 4. From the rigour of the morall law For Christ having made redemption for the transgressions of the former Testament hee hath obtained for us new conditions by vertue of the New Testament ratified by his bloud Heb. 6.8 Rom. 6. 5. From the present evill world even from the judgements might have fallen upon us for our sinnes and from the bondage under the course of this world and from all the enchantments with which wee were bewitched Gal. 1. ● 6. Lastly we are redeemed from our vaine conversation even from the power of our owne corruption and the practice of a body of sins This last is here mentioned either by a synecdoche by one part meaning the whole or else to note that till we be freed from the power of sin in our conversation we can never actually attaine the comfort of any of the former as were easie to prove in the particulars Thus in generall In particular I consider of two things First of the vanity of our conversation from which we are redeemed Secondly of the cause of it here said to be the tradition of the fathers and in the explication of the first I consider of three things 1. What the vanity of our conversation is 2. I note divers doctrines to be thence observed 3. I resolve certaine questions and then make uses of all together For the first the conversation of unregenerate persons may be said to be vaine in divers respects 1. Because continuing in such an estate they faile of the happinesse unto which man was created and so they are as if they were created in vaine Psal. 89.48 2. Because in their sinfull courses they cannot attaine their owne ends but are alwaies deceived of their expectation Iob 33.27 Psal. 31.7 Psal. 127.1 3. Because of their transitory condition they are daily wearing away Psal. 144.4 4. Because unregenerate men seldome or never attaine that equall condition that might give them a sufficiency without extreames they are either too rich or too poore and this is vanity and lyes Prov. 30.8 5. Because all earthly things are vaine Ecclesiast every where 6. There are divers speciall sins in the life of man for which his conversation may be said to be vaine and this I think is here intended as 1. To worship images is a vanity 2 King 17.15 Zach. 10.2 Deut. 32. 21. Ier. 8.19 10.18 2. Lip-service is a vanity Mat. 15. In vaine doe ye worship me c. compared with Esay 18.13 3. Hypocrisie in carriage is vanity Iam. 1.26 4. To trust in man or vaine helps Psal. 62.9 Esay 30.7 5. The care of life Psal. 39.6 6. Conceitednesse and boasting is a vanity Iob 11.11 2 Pet. 2.18 7. Opposing of the godly or disgracing them is vaine Psal. 4.2 8. The multiplying of devises and projects in the mind is vanity Psal. 94.11 and such are the fruitlesse thoughts of the mind Eph 4.17 9. Flattering and double-dealing is vanity Psal. 12.2 41.7 10. The getting of treasures by a lying tongue is vanity tossed to and fro of them that seeke death Prov. 2● 6 11. The service of the lusts of the flesh is vanity Eph. 2.3 hence debauched men are said to be vaine men 2 Chron. 13.7 12. The excesse in seeking the unprofitable pleasures of the world and delights of life Ion. 2.8 Psal. 119.37 Eccles. 11. ult Psal. 24.4 The observations are 1. That all men by nature are vaine men such is the depravation of nature in all mankind Psal. 39. 62.9 2. That there needs no more to make a man miserable on earth then to be guilty of a vaine conversation It is an extreame wretchednesse to spend our time in the vanity of conversation it is called a sore sicknesse in it selfe and besides so long as we continue in that condition wee have no part of the redemption by Christ. 3. It
son of God had no priviledge from death he was put to death in respect of the flesh 1 Pet. 3.21 Therefore this may serve first for singular reproofe of that unspeakable beastlinesse that is in wicked men that will not be moved with the contemplation of the ruine of the whole world oh the unutterable Lethargy of these mens hearts that will not consider their latter end when so unchangeable a decree is prest upon all men that at their appointed time they must once die This very doctrine may shew the horrible effect of sinne in the hearts of men that can extinguish a consideration so universally obvious to every mans sense oh yee brutish amongst the people when will yee understand Secondly this may informe us that multitude is no prerogative multitude cannot protect men against the stroke of God and death Though hand joyne in hand yet sinne cannot be unpunished It is as easie for God to smite all flesh as any flesh It is as easie for him to destroy the whole world as to destroy one man All flesh is grasse If the sithe can with few strokes move downe thousands of formes of grasse how much more easie is it for God with the sithe of his judgements to cut downe multitudes of men And besides that may informe us that the doctrine of death must be sounded in the eares of all men there is no man but this doctrine belongs to him and therefore woe unto him if he make no good use of it yea so necessary is this doctrine that the Ministers of the Gospell are commanded not to write it onely but to speake it nor that onely but to cry it out with all possible both affection and power of inforcement Cry all flesh is grass● Esay 40.6 Thirdly this may teach 1. Rich men in speciall to lay this to heart For God hath given them this doctrine to humble them and to teach them not to glory in their wealth but if they have gotten grace let them rejoyce that God hath provided better things than the things of this life for them They are more happy that God hath made them low by giving them a sight of their sins and so to be humbled for them then that he made them great in the world for their flesh is but grasse and all that glory must vanish as will be shewed afterwards The Use is urged Iam. 1.10 11. Ps. 49. 2. Strong men to whom God hath given helps of nature or arte Use thy strength but rejoyce not in it Use thy Physicke but trust not upon it For for all that thou must dye there is no arte nor remedy against death 3. All men and so we should all learne two things especially 1. To put our trust in God which liveth for ever since all men must perish and wee cannot continue here it is the best relying upon God and his favour and helpe who liveth ever to performe his promise and to provide for his servants thus David useth this consideration Ps. 102.12 13. 2. To be patient when we feele the walls of our earthly house begin to moulder down when we feele death beginning like a moth to feed upon us we should be patient seeing it is not onely unavoidable but that it is the case of all men as well as ours Thus of the extent of the affirmation The time followes Is grasse This mortality may be said to be so presently It is so in divers respects 1. It is so ●n the cause which is sin the cause of death is in us already it hath infected our very bones 2. It is so in the sentence the doome is already gone out upon all flesh It is appointed that all men shall once die The very sentence uttered in Paradise of dying the death stands still unrevoked in respect of our flesh 3. It is so in experience all flesh is dead never any scaped 4. It is so in respect of d●sposition to death we are all but dying men death hath taken hold of us and doth every day feed upon us insensibly To live is but to lie a dying The disposition to death is inflicted upon all men for all tend to death 5. Lastly it may be said all flesh is grasse for certainty that is we shall as certainely vanish hereafter as if it were now presently done The use should be the more to inforce upon us the care of providing for a change since death is so many waies made fast unto us and withall it may serve to confute the vaine hope of long life here seeing we are all but as so many dead men here to day and to morrow cast into the grave and wee should also learne hence to be continually thinking of death must we not do the worke that is present to us why death is before thine eyes why then dost thou not the thing of the day in the day It is thy every dayes worke to die to learne to die seeing we die daily Hitherto of that branch of the proposition that concerns the body of man●no● followeth the vanity of mans condition in this world The glory of man is as the flower of grasse Here first the s●●se of the words is to be considered By the glory of man he meaneth whatsoever it is in outward things which man glorieth in any thing that man rejoyceth in admireth praiseth seeketh as an ornament or happinesse to himselfe such as are riches strength honour high places and command over others beauty praise of men excellency of naturall gifts noble birth calling multitude of attendants and such like By man he meaneth here the naturall man or the outward man for of the spirituall man it is not true because he glorieth in that shall never fade nor be taken away from him Now this glory is compared to the flower of grasse for transitorinesse because it will fade and fall away as the repetition sheweth and that speedily too as the uses of this similitude in divers scriptures shew as will afterwards more appeare The doctrine then is that all the outward glory of man in this world is exceeding vaine and so it may appeare for six causes or considerations for I omit many other reasons First for the most part these things so much desired cannot be had or not as they are desired and therefore their glory is vaine because they are sought in vaine 2. If they be obtained yet the eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare with bearing of them they cannot fill the heart of man 3. Many times it fals alike in these things to the foole and to the wise both in having them and in losing them and this is a miserable vanity and vexation of spirit 4. The glory that is placed in these things is liable to be interrupted with a thousand crosses either they expire the vanity or are taken away by violence 5. If they could make us happy yet death will not let us enjoy them many men spend
of those points which he undertook to handle As the many other Treatises which in his life time be published doe verifie as much so in particular this Commentary here commended unto thee In it thou shalt finde besides the Grammaticall exposition Logicall resolution and Theologicall observations many divine points copiously handled by way of Common place which hath made the book to arise unto that bignesse that it hath In this maner of handling the holy Scriptures hee hath not gone alone Many of the main Pillars of the reformed Churches have beaten out a path before him as Martin Bucer Peter Martyr Musculus Zanchius Lavater Perkins and sundry others The large volume of Peter Martyrs Common places was gathered out of his Commentaries on the holy Scriptures The Church of God hath reaped much good by such copious and distinct handling of heads of Divinity Their labours therefore who take paines therein are not to be concealed from the Church If it had pleased the Lord to have continued the life liberty and ability of this his Servant longer unto his Church he had questionlesse gone on further in this course which he so well began and so might wee have had by his paines as compleat a Commentary on the two Epistles of Saint Peter as we have upon the Epistle of S. Paul to the Colossians published by this Author But seeing it seemed good to the divine Providence here to put a stop to the paines of this his industrious servant wee must rest content with what he hath done and expect the paines of s●me other to goe on in the finishing of that which he hath so well begun I suppose it would be a great wrong to deceive Gods Church of these good beginnings because the whole Epistle is not fully finished If a Sermon on one verse be thought meet to be published as daily we see such Sermons to be published why may not much rather many Sermons on many verses and chapters together be published That what was done by the Author in his life time may be the better accepted care hath beene had to note the heads of points in the margin and to adde an Alphabeticall index in the latter end that by the helpe of it you may the more readily finde out such points as you most desire to reade If the Author be of force to commend a Work the more this Work may receive no small commendation from the Author of it for he was a man of a profound judgement strong memory sharp wit quick invention and unwearied industry Hee was in his Ministery very powerfull and that unto all turnes as we speake When he had to doe with tender and troubled consciences he was a Barnabas a sonne of comfort but when hee had to doe with impudent and obstinate sinners he could make his face hard and strong and shew himselfe like a Boanarges the son of thunder Grave sober and temperate he was in his cariage and yet with his intire familiar friend he could be modestly pleasant God gave him a great measure of patience and he had in his very body that which tryed his patience for it appeares that he caried a t●rturing stone in his bladder fifteene yeeres together and upward I have heard it credibly reported that fifteene yeares before his death he was by a skillfull Chirurgion searched and that upon that search there was a stone found to be in his bladder whereupon he used such meanes as were prescribed to him for his ease and found such help thereby as he thought that either the Chirurgion which searcht him was deceived or that the meanes which he used had dissolved the stone But time which manifesteth all things shewed that neither his Chirurgion was deceived nor yet his stone dissolved for it continued to grow bigger and bigger till at length it came to be of an incredible greatnesse After his death he was opened and the stone taken out and being weighed found to bee 33. ounces and more in weight and in measure about the edge fifteen inches and a halfe about the length above 13. inches about the breadth almost thirteen inches it was of a solid substance to look upon like to a flint There are many eye witnesses besides my selfe who can justifie the truth hereof A wonderfull worke of God it was that hee should be able to cary such a stone in his bladder and withall to doe the things which hee did Hee was a close student witnesse the many Treatises which time after time hee published in print H●e was also a diligent Preacher for constantly hee preached twice on the Lords Daies and in Summer when many of the Gentry and City came to his Parish at Isleworth and dwelt there hee spent an houre on Wednesday and another on Friday week after week in expounding the Scripture in his Church very seldome was he hindered by the forementioned stone in his bladder This course ●ee kept till about five weeks before his death when the paine came so violently upon him as it wasted his vitall vigor yet did it no way weaken his faith but as the outward perished so was the inward man renewed in him Hee earnestly prayed that the extremity of the paine might not make him utter or doe any thing unbeseeming his vocation and profession but withall hee advised his friends to consider that hee was but as other men and thereupon to judge charitably of his cariage in that case Many heavenly meditations issued from him in that time of his visitation unto the last period thereof Quietly meekly and patiently be endured till that surest Chirurgion of all Death had eased him of all his pain In his soul he ever liveth and in his name he will continue to live so long as the Church enjoyeth his Works more lasting then Marble Monuments Now O blessed Saviour and Head of thy Church as thou transplantest some of thy Plants out of thy Nurcery the Church militant plant others we beseech thee in their roomes that thy Church may never be unfurnished of able painfull faithfull and powerfull Ministers WILLIAM GOUGE AN EXPOSITION OF THE SECOND CHAPTER OF THE FIRST EPIstle generall of PETER 1 PET. 2.1 2 3. 1. Wherefore laying aside all maliciousnesse and all guile and dissimulation and envy and evill speakings 2. As new born Babes desire the sincere milke of the word that ye may grow thereby 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is bountifull FRom the thirteenth verse of the 1. Chapter to the eighth verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all men chap. 1.13 to chap. 2.13 The speciall exhortation concernes onely some men as subjects servants wives husbands from Chap. 2.13 to Chap. 3.8 The generall exhortation stands of two parts First the one concernes the matter of holinesse Secondly and the other the meanes of holinesse of the matter of holinesse in the latter part
them for the love hee beares to his Sonne And thus wee read in Scripture that Christ presents the prayers of the Saints Besides that the Christian may not thinke too vilely of his workes but be comforted in the Lord concerning them let him further consider these things First that his good workes have the Spirit of Jesus Christ which is in him for the fountaine of them 1 Cor. 12.11 Esa. 26.12 Secondly that the blood of Jesus Christ was shed not onely for his justification but also for his sanctification Heb. 9.14 Thirdly that though his workes are not good effectu yet they are good affectu they are good in desire his desire was to have them as good as God himselfe did require And this God is pleased to accept as if the worke were perfectly done Quest. 2. What are workes good for in that they are called good workes Answ. I answer first affirmatively they are good 1 To testifie our thankfulnesse to God for all his benefits in respect of which we are debte●s unto God Rom. 8.12 2 To assure the truth of our faith as the fruits of faith Mat. 7.17 1 Tim. 1.19 Iames 2. 3 To witnesse our election and to make our calling sure 2 Pet. 1.10 4 To discharge our duty of obedience unto which we are bound even in the covenant of grace 5 To further the edification of our brethren whom we helpe both by example and by well-doing to them 6 To winne wicked men to a better estimation of our Religion and to stop their mouthes as here so vers 15. 7 To glorifie God as is in this place mentioned 8 They are good to make us capable of rewards from God in heaven Heb. 10.36 Rom. 2.7 8. yea and in this life too 2 Tim. 4.8 Secondly I say they are not good 1 To justifie us before God as it is at large proved by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians onely they are good to justifie us before men Iam. 2. 2 Not to merit or deserve heaven by them mens evill workes do merit punishment for the wages of sinne is death but our good workes cannot merit both because the Scripture denies it expresly Eph. 2.8 as also to omit other reasons because the nature of merit casteth away our workes for there must be three things in a worke that must merit First it must be a free worke that was not due by any debt whereas our workes are a part of ou● duty and we owe more to God than we can doe Luk. 17.9 Rom. 11.35 Secondly the worke that should merit must be profitable to him of whom wee would merit but no goodnesse of ours can reach to God to profit him Psal. 16.3 Iob 22.2 Thirdly the worke that must merit must be of equall value with the thing that is given for it but neither our sufferings nor our deeds in this life can be worthy of the glory that is to be revealed Rom. 8.18 and therefore is eternall life called The gift of God Rom. 6 2● The uses follow and are especially for instruction for this doctrine of good workes should teach us First to take notice of this doctrine and as we are carefull to beleeve so to be carefull to maintaine good workes and hereby to confute the malicious Papists that falsly charge us to deny and disgrace good workes Tit. 3.8 14. Secondly every man should bee ready to doe good workes yea to every good worke since they are required of God and are so many waies good and serve us for such excellent uses yea wee should bee zealous of good workes wonderfull eager and desirous to inrich our selves that way Tit. 3.1 2.14 yea wee should hereby shew that wee are indeed wise Christians and well skilled in the use of our Religion Iam. 3.13 and not men onely but women also should be forward in good workes 1 Tim. 2.10 It is their best apparell which should be a speciall motive to them that are so carefull of their attyre And indeed good workes are to be desired and laboured for as the best apparell of any Christian yea they are his armour too Rom. 13.13 yea they are a principall way for his inriching and preferment 1 Tim. 2.20 so as it is a great curse upon a Christian to have no minde to do good workes to bee reprobate to every good worke Tit. 1. ult Thirdly since there are so many things necessary to the constitution of a good worke Christians should in stead of prying into the lives of others every one trie his owne workes and turne often to the light that it may bee indeed manifest that his workes are wrought in God Gal. 6.4 for one day every mans workes shall be tried in the fire when times of triall by great afflictions either upon mens Consciences or otherwise come that mans workes that never seeme glorious and praise worthy will be rejected and cast away even by our selves as vile and unprofitable Besides at the best in our prosperity if the most of our workes be tried by the fire of these rules of Gods Word it is much to be doubted that our workes will burne though upon our repentance for the evill that cleaves to our best workes our selves may bee saved in the day of the Lord. Let Christians therefore be carefull that they lose not the things which they have wrought Now a Christian may lose his workes divers waies First if he be but a Christian in shew he may nay he shall lose all he doth The Pharisees lost all their workes because they were done in hypocrisie Secondly the Christian that hath some kindes of heavenly gifts and temporary graces by falling away in the time of temptation loseth all that hee had wrought before God requires patient continuance in well-doing Rom. ● 8 Thirdly the true Christian may lose what hee wrought if he doe his workes without respect of these Rules If it be not manifest that his works are wrought in God they are lost to him so many of his workes as are so wrought Besides he loseth the comfort of all that he hath wrought and the sense of it if he fall into grosse sinne after calling for so long time as he continueth in sinne without repentance Thus of good workes Which they shall behold It is manifest from hence that good workes may and ought to be so done as that men may see them It is not true that all good workes must be hid from the view and beholding of other men This may seeme strange because the Pharisees were blamed for doing their workes to be seene of men but yet it may be easily and plentifully proved I will first prove it and then explaine it For proofe our Saviour Christ requires that the light of mens good workes should shine that men may see their good workes Mat. 5.16 Christians in respect of their practice should be as shining lights in the midst of a froward and crooked generation Phil. 2.15 16. They must
to him he is no part of his flocke he is without God in the World and without Christ as the lost sheepe is without the protection and keeping of the shepheard Wicked men have no keeper they are left to the way of their own hearts which is a fearefull curse Esay 53.6 The wicked shall be as a sheep that no man takes up Esay 13.14 2. Because hee hath no certaine pasture The provision for his life for soule and body is altogether uncertaine Hee is like Cain a vagabond upon the earth Hee is here to day he knowes nor where he shall be tomorrow God hath not given him any assurance of the keeping or getting of any thing he hath or desires Hee is like the stray sheep that hath all the world before him but knowes not where to settle Mat. 9.26 3. Because in the midst of all the best possessions of this life they have no peace Esay 57. ult The sound of feare is alwaies in their eares If a stray sheep get into a good pasture yet he is still in feare apt to be frighted with every sound ready to runne away upon every occasion so is it with them that are rich in the world and not ri●h with God 1 Tim. 6.10 4. Because he is shut out from all comfortable society with the godly he enjoyes not the sound fruit of communion with Saints The stray sheep may sort with hogges or wilde beasts but from the sheep it is gone away Evill company is a miserable plague of a mans life to sort with such all a mans da●es from whom he may have a world of vanity and filthinesse but not any thing scarce worthy of the nature of men in an age Every wicked man is an alien a stranger and forainer from the Common-wealth of Israel Ephes. 2.12 5. A sheepe going astray is easily taken by a strange Lord it is driven any whither by anybody it is so silly And such is the fearefull estate of a man living in sinne strange Lords may easily surprize him false teachers may easily seduce him evill company may carry him to any wickednesse a Prince may turne him to any religion a very Atheist or Divell incarnate may easily lead him captive 6. A Sheep is apt to be worried with Dogs or devoured with Wolves or wilde Beasts when there is no Shepheard to tend him So it is with wicked men their soules their bodies their estates are all in danger to bee seized upon by Divels by unjust and unreasonable men especially as any of them are more simple so they are more liable to become a prey to the mighty ones of the earth 7. Men that wander out of the way of understanding shall remaine in the congregation of the dead Ps. 49.15 Pro. 21.16 And therefore he that converts a man from the er●our of his way is said to save a soule from death Iam. 5 ult And this going astray of unregenerate men is the more grievous because they are liable to many aggravations for First they goe astray from the womb they were never yet in the right way Psalm 58.3 Secondly because they wander in every worke they do as was said of Egypt Esay 19.14 All their works are abominable Psal. 14. All things are impure Thirdly because this is the curse of all unregenerate men we are turned every one to his owne way Esay 53.6 Fourthly because they delight to wander place their felicity in their sins and will not be reclaimed or advised Fiftly because they may provoke God so long that he may sweare they shall never enter into his rest Psal. 95.10,11 The third point is the cause of their going astray and that is noted in the originall word They were deceived Now then it is to bee considered distinctly who are the great deceivers of the world that cause millions of ●oules to goe astray First the Divell is the Arch-deceiver he hath beene a lier and a murtherer from the beginning he deceived our first Parents and made them and all their posterity goe astray Iohn 8.44 1 Tim. 2.14 And by him are all wicked men drawne out of the way and led captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.26 Secondly Antichrist is the next great deceiver who by his sorceries made all Nations in the time of the Gospell goe astray Eccles. 18.23 with his divellish doctrine and by wicked sorceries he deceived the Christian world Thirdly a ●●arme of wicked ministers have deceived whole Townes and Countries and made the sheep goe astray even their whole flocks in many places some of them because they take the fleece and never feed the flock Ezech. ●4 2 c. Iohn 10.12 some of them by preaching lies and flattering the people with devices of men and say Peace when there is no peace Ierem. 23.17 19 20 32. Fourthly the world is a mischievous deceiver and it deceiveth by evill example and evill company and evill report raised against the godly and the good way and the inticements of profits and pleasures and vanities of all sorts and honours and the like Fiftly mans owne heart deceiveth him yea the heart of man is deceitfull above all things Ier. 17.19 It will use such carnall reasons pretend such vaine excuses entertaine such deceivable hopes and joyne it selfe to such swarmes of temptations and lusts as it cannot avoid wandring if there were no other deceivers to go withall the way of our own harts is alwaies to go out of the way Sixtly ignorance of the Scripture is a chiefe cause of erring and going astray both in opinion and life Mat. 22.29 Seventhly the love of some particular sin doth utterly undoe many a man that will not be warned of the deceitfulnesse of sin Heb. 3.12 Thus covetousnesse made many a man to erre from the faith 1 Tim. 6.20 Eighthly God himselfe in a fearefull kinde of justice many times not only consents but permits a very spirit of perverinesse and errour to seize upon some men that refused to be guided or kept by God so as they are given over to eternall perdition and destruction by reason of it Fourthly the signes of a lost sheepe follow and they are First he that refuseth reproofe is out of the way Men that cannot abide to be told of their faults are not healed Pro. 10.17 as he is in the way of life that keepeth instruction Secondly he that liveth in any knowne sinne without repentance is a lost sheepe Thirdly he that fouleth with his feet that which the good sheepe should eate or drinke and he that thrusts with the side and pusheth the diseased with his hornes is no good sheepe Ezek. 34.17 19 21. They are so farre from feeding upon the good Word and Ordinances of God that by wicked reproaches they soule it as much as they can and they that if they find a poore Christian that is diseased with some infirmities will push at him to dishearten him utterly from a religious course these are wicked beasts they are no good
their daies in getting these things and then in learning how to put them to their delightfullest use and then when to possesse them might seeme a happinesse they die 6. Lastly that which is now our glory will not be remembred when we are gone as we care not for the glory of those that are past It is a poore praise to say of a man when he is gone he was a rich man a strong man a noble man c. and yet even this also will be forgotten The holy Ghost in divers Scriptures points at divers uses of this doctrine and first for instruction it should teach us divers duties 1. Not to trust upon these outward things if God give them not glory in them nor boast of them Psal. 49.4 to 15. Ier. 9.24 yea if God give us to taste some sweetnesse in them yet be not too confident for the comforts of mans heart wither like grasse Psal. 102.5.4 Iam. 1.10 11. 2. Not to contend for precedency in these things nor to strive that our glory should exceed the glory of others for God many times ends the quarrel with his judgments and staines their glory on al sides as Zach. 12.7 3. Not to feare wicked men when they are made rich or grow great and when their glory is increased For their glory will not last when they dye they carry nothing with them their glory cannot descend after them Psal. 49.15 16 18. and therefore we should never envy their prosperity for the same reason as Psal. 37.1 2. 4. Not to know any man after the flesh nor to measure mans happinesse by the possession or want of this glory 2. Cor. 5. 5. If thou possesse these outward things doe good to thy selfe eate and drinke and let thy heart rejoyce and deny not contentment to thy heart through vaine care or bootlesse feares Psal. 49.18 Eccles. 8. 6. It should teach men faithfulnesse in their particular calling For seeing these things last but a while wee should take heed to our charge whilst God leaves them to our disposing or using so Pro. 27.23 25 26. Heb. 13.5 6. 7. If God give thee but a little yet be content it is no great restraint to have the abundance of such transitory things withheld see Pro. 27.23 25. Heb. 13.5 6. 8. It should teach us then to enquire after true glory that may enrich the spirituall man seeing this glory of the outward man is so transitory now here is a great and profitable question to be propounded and resolved and seriously to be received and practised Quest. What are those things wherein true glory lyeth and in the profession of which we possesse true glory seeing all those things be not worth the seeking after Answ. For answer hereunto if wee follow this word glory through the scriptures we shall find it lighting downe and setting upon divers particular distinct excellencies worthy the utmost labour of all men to studie them and seeke after the fruition of them This glory is either in this world or the world to come In this world if we marke the scriptures quoted we shall find divers things to be mans true glory as 1. Christ is the King of glory the fountaine of all true glory Ps. 24. and he is unto us the foundation of all our hope of glory Col. 1.27 2. The spirit of adoption is the spirit of glory and of God and if this rest upon us we cannot be miserable 1. Pet. 4.14 3. Our soules are our glory and if we provide for them we provide richly for our selves so are our soules called Ps. 16.8 30.13 Gen. 49.6 Esay 5.14 4. The meanes and signes and pledges of Gods presence and our communion with him are our glory Thus the Arke was called the glory Rom. 9.5 and thus plaine and powerfull preaching is accounted glory 1 Cor. 2.7 2 Cor. 3.9 10 and thus our godly teachers are the glory of our lives 2 Cor. 2.14 5. The favour of God and the assurance of his mercy is our glory an incomparable treasure Psal. 90.14 16 17. 6. Faith is a mans glory and will be so acknowledged in the day of Christ Iam. 2.1 1 Pet. 1.7 7. True grace and the gifts that resemble Christ the vertues of Jesus Christ even these are our glory 2 Pet. 1.3 Esay 1.5 and thus wisdome is durable riches Prov. 8.18 8. A free estate in the profession of the Gospell and serving of God 1 Cor. 9.15 9. The testimony of a good conscience 2 Cor. 1.12 In one word God is our glory Esay 6.19 Ps. 3.4 Thus we see what is our glory in this life and unto those things we must aspire The Lord give us understanding to lay these things to our hearts Now because these things are not fully possessed in this life therefore our greatest glory is in the world to come Rom. 5.2 Col. 3.4 9. Seeing all the glory of man is as the flower of grasse in this world therefore we should thinke the oftner of death and pray to God to teach us to number our dayes that we may apply our hearts unto wisdome Ps. 90.6 12. Io● 14.1 2. 10. Lastly we should all be perswaded to subscribe easily and willingly to the tried doctrine of Salomon that hath written a booke of purpose to record his experiences concerning the vanity of all those earthly things such was his Ecclesiastes Oh that we could beleeve it without trying conclusions and further engaging our selves to these base and fading things And thus of the Uses for instruction Secondly wee may hence be informed concerning the misery of wicked men For since they have no glory in another world and their glory in this world is so transitory and vaine it may evidently prove that their distresse is extreamely great and their misery the more that they cannot understand the basenesse of their owne condition This very similitude of grasse and the flower of grasse is used in divers scriptures to this end as Psal. 91.7 8. 49.20 Ioh 8.12 13. Ps. 129.6 37.36 Especially how wofull is the estate of those men that glory in their sinnes that have no better felicity in their desires but that which is properly their shame For if their estate be vaine that have no other happinesse then in the riches and honors and pleasures of life oh how wofull is the case of these men that glory in their shame their end is damnation as their God is their belly oh woe unto them they have rewarded evill unto their owne soules Phil. 3.18 19. Esay 28.1 4. Thus of the proposition The repetition or exposition of it followes The grasse withereth The repetition importeth generally three things First the certainty of our vanity and mortality we must flee away hence all outward glosse and glory will decay what man liveth and shall not see death It is appointed by a decree irrevocable that all men shall once dye there can be no redemption for our lives death passeth upon all men Secondly the
necessity of the doctrine when God saith a thing over againe it shewes us that that point must be knowne we must take notice of it it is a doctrine cannot be missed in the Church no worke of God will well go forward without it He must cry aloud that all flesh is grasse God lo●g● 〈◊〉 it were to have this doctrine take in our hearts He knowes a great part of the hardship of godlinesse were over if this were soundly digested oh that they were wise and would consider their latter end men would apply their hearts to wisdome if they had once learned to number their daies Thirdly it imports that God finds us wonderfull dull of hearing and forgetfull and carelesse of this doctrine and that naturally we are wonderfull impo●●nt in these considerations The Lord doth reproach us as it were for negligence that a plaine point should need to be repeated And therefore we should examine our selves seriously herein and not vexe God with our unteachablenesse in this point Oh how might God be displeased with us if he should call us to account herein have we not heard have we not seene from the beginning that all flesh is grasse yea hath not God heard our attestations we shake our heads we confesse it is true we are sometimes comforted and conceive some weake resolutions to thinke better of it and provide for death when God hath us here in the Church as it were in his schoole wee seeme as if wee had learn'd this lesson perfectly and yet miserable wretches that the most of us are we go home and forget all as if wee had never bin taught it nay is it not needfull for the most of us to be taught againe the same doctrine which the very last Sabboth we heard of this argument oh who is effectually perswaded amongst us indeed to lay it to his heart doth not this repetion smite us all certainly if we be not warned death may come before wee are aware and surprise us when wee shall not have time to learne to die There are many incoveniences come from this forgetting of the doctrine of our latter end and suffering it to runne out 1. Mens sins cleave fast unto them their filthinesse is in their skirts because they remember not their latter end Lam. 1.9 men live securely while they keepe out the thought of death 2. This brings many miseries upon men For when God cannot prevaile by doctrine he wil set upon us by judgment and then we may come downe wonderfully Deut. 32.29 30. where●s we might avoid our distresses by thinking of death voluntarily 3. We keep our spirits void of true magnanimity we can never tell our strength till we know whether we can die or no one would chase a thousand one I say of these that will consider of their latter end Deut. 32.30 4. We can never tell whether our knowledge bee right or no till wee have tryed it with thoughts of death they are a people without understanding that consider not their latter end Deut. 32.28 29. 5. Our hearts will grow harder and harder if we put out these remorses wrought in us concerning death as ●ron is harder the oftner it is heated and cooled 6. We keepe our selves without those joyes would come of the frequent contemplation of the glory of heaven we dare not thinke of heaven because we would avoid the thought of death 7. We give wonderfull advantage to the temptations of life 8. We keepe our selves without the comfort of one excellent signe of our salvation viz the love of the appearance of Christ we pray not that Gods kingdome may come wee desire not to be dissolved we dare not say with the Church Come Lord Iesus come quickly wee are loth to pray God to teach us to number our dayes for these things which have beene the excellent praises of the Saints we suffer not to be found in us 9. Lastly as I touched it before death may come suddenly and then what case are we in that suffer the thoughts of death thus to go out and be lost in us so as they produce no sound effect of preparation in us But what must we doe that wee might bring our selves to a more serious consideration of our mortality vanity how may this fault in us be helped Goe to God by prayer to forme this in thee strive with God by importuning his assistance in teaching thee to number thy dayes it is Gods worke we see the Israelites sentenced to death yet could not mind it and therefore Moses makes that prayer Ps. 90.12 2. It is an excellent helpe to inure our selves to die dayly to trie how wee could die by the most effectuall supposition of our present death compelling our selves to put the case what if I should now die 3. The thought of death would not be so put off if we had got a sound assurance of our salvation and of the remission of our sins it is want of assurance that makes many so afraid of dying And thus in generall In particular these words of the repetition afford us some observations that are common to both some speciall to each in which they differ one from another The observations that are common to both are these 1. That men both in their bodies and glory will decay man continueth not in one stay if you looke either upon his person or his estate 2. That man in both decaieth speedily he is of few daies in his body and full of trouble in his estate he commeth up like a flower and fleeth away as a shadow Ioh 14. 1 2. it shall be accomplished before his time that is before the time he fancieth to himselfe Ioh 15.33 The glory of may shall flee away as a bird from the birth and from the wombe and from the conception Hosh. 9.11 3. That man decaies insensibly he goes away by degrees both in his body and honor he declineth like a shadow and is consumed as it were by the moth 4. That man would come to this decay even without violence as the grasse and flowers perish though they were never cut downe 5. That when man is decaied either in body or estate he growes extreamely base vile he is but as a little stubble or as a rotten leafe or flower And all this should the more force upon man the care to provide for immortality and not to glory in or trust upon his outward condition especially it should make every one of us affraid of procrastination death doth not alwaies give warning nor can we alwaies foresee our ruine or losse of outward things And thus of what is common to both Now in speciall we may note 1. That the text acknowledgeth more stability in the body of man than in his glory For the flower falleth off or fadeth immediately after the spring usually whereas the stalke is greene long after and therefore it shews the vanity of such men as so greedily pursue the getting of outward