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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever THis duty of love is of such use and we so untoward to it and so hard a thing for us to love as we ought that it s urged with a Reason True it is so and no more then needs for the spirit that is in us lusteth after envy The Reason is taken from the grace of Regeneration bestowed upon them They were born again and therefore were to shew the fruits thereof as in other things so in this of love Where might be noted 1. That such as are not born again cannot love no more then men can gather Grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles or pour Wine out of a Bottle full of Vinegar but as Grapes are gathered of the Vine so must love come from a Regenerate man not otherwise 2. That the Regenerate man must needs love therefore they that declare no love but hate their Brethren the people of God especially shew they be not born again nor of God But I proceed to the words Being born again Here 's occasion offered to speak of the grace of Regeneration Touching it consider briefly these particulars 1. What it is to be born again It s to be made new creatures to be cast in a new mold to have the corrupt Image of Sin which we have by Nature and wherein we were conceived and born put off throughout and the contrary good one wherein we were at the first created put on to have the understanding enlightned with distinct knowledge of God the heart bowed to the obedience of God c. new thoughts desires speeches actions In the new Creature all things must become new Thus it s done to all that were elect before the foundation of the world They are changed up and down from a good state by Creation to a bad in Adam from thence to a good one in Christ by grace here in expectation of glory hereafter For the wicked they are changed from good to bad and there remain the same but still worse and worse for ever we should give God thanks that made us so good at first be humbled to see our base and woful state now and seeing there is help never to be quiet till we recover our first condition 2. That the Lord is the Author hereof he takes away the stony heart and gives a new heart an heart of flesh It s his work onely nor Man or Angel can change the heart to work a deadly hatred of that which by nature we love as our lives and to love and take delight in those courses duties companies which sometimes were as a Prison Alas the best Paul and Apollos cannot often even of their Children or very Friends not a few remain unconverted though haply in the mean time God bless their labors to convert many others Yea if an Angel should take a man and carry him to Heaven and shew him the Joys thereof and thence to Hell and shew him the Torments thereof yet this would not convert him neither all Mercies Afflictions or Plagues of Egypt It s a great work of God and so great as if all things were not possible to him he could not do it It s a greater work then the Creation of the World In that there was no opposition in this much we have not onely no aptness to good or to be wrought to goodness but a violent opposition against it there but to make the things here both to put out the corrupt nature and to put in the contrary good then he made all of nothing now he makes good of nought As its easier making a thousand glasses then the setting together one that is broke so it was easier to speak quo ad nos for all things are alike easie to God to make the world then to repair the broken Image of God in man It s a miraculous work of God greater then any miracles that Christ or his Apostles wrought our Saviors several miracles upon the bodies of men are all done in the conversation of a sinner sight restored to them that were blinde and darkness it self hearing to the deaf speech to the dumb feet to the lame Devils cast out yea many for the Devil possesseth us and all our Parts and Members Hearts Hands Eyes Tongues Feet c. as any Captain holds a Castle and hath it at command Thus it s a wonderful work of God to see a mans Soul and Life his wit will desires affections and all altered from black to white It was a wonder to see the Criple go and for him that was born blinde to see but it s more marvel to see a man converted for whereas God gave power to work all these miracles the raising of the dead not excepted to men this of regenerating is his own onely If we finde it ascribed to Ministers as Paul is said to have begot Onesimus and as a Father the Corinthians we must not conceive as if it were not proper to God onely but know that it is for that God would keep them the instruments by whom he works from contempt A good Husband or Wife may be a good means each to other but have no power of themselves Adam could easily cast away himself but none could restore him but God onely as a Childe of half a year old may break a glass which all the men in the Town cannot set together again It s wrought of God by uniting us to Christ by Faith through his holy Spirit which works this alteration when pardoning our sins past he taketh away the guiltiness and punishment thereof in his death Let all that can prove it give all glory to God for so unspeakable a mercy even that when they were going headlong to destruction when as vile as any he yet called them passing by thousands which yet lie in their sins And for them that can prove no such thing let them not delay nor put off to the last as the fashion is as though it could be dispatcht in a trice or with a wet finger but seek it both earnestly and quickly in the means appointed Why do men think they shall repent on their death bed rather then now Is it because the pain or fear of death will make them Alas all the Plagues in the world cannot change a man without God and will God be near to work then Nay he that was rejected in health and life will more likely cast off in death and if he will not bless his Word will he work in the end by other means This is little better then Sauls practise to go to the Devil when God would not help him 3. That the Lords own will is the moving cause hereof As he Elected freely and gave Christ of his love so this Nothing in us could move him hereto but whom he elected before the world those doth he of the
good work 117 Verse 18 19. 1. THe third reason of the foregoing Exhortation 118 2. A man may know himselfe redeemed 119 3. Redemption presupposeth bondage and slavery ibid. 4. There 's a way whereby to come out of our bondage 120 5. The whole life of an unregenerate man is vain 121 6. Children readily follow the evil example of their Parents ibid. 7. Whom we are here to understand by fathers ibid. 8. Popish Religion stands in patches 122 9. Parents must give their children good example ibid. 10. To follow the example of our Ancestors is no sure rule 123 11. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage ibid. 12. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 125 13. Christs blood the true price of mans redemption 126 14. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb 129 15. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear 131 Verse 20 21. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 132 2. Christ was ordained before the world 133 3. The world shall not always continue 135 4. Christ how manifested ibid. 5. God is constant and unchangeable ibid. 6. Gods promises are unchangeable 136 7. Christ was then exhibited when God decreed he should so be ibid. 8. What God hath decreed shall be in dwe time accomplished 136 9. Three differences of times and why this called the last 137 10. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done ibid. 11. We now live in the latter end of the last times ibid. 12. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world 138 13. What we are to do that others may think well of us ibid. 14. We cannot believe in God but by the Son ibid. 15. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand 139 16. The benefits which they reap that believe in Christ ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHere there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love 140 2. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love ibid. 3. There 's uncleanness in us both in soul and body 142 4. Where there is sanctification of the soul there is also sanctification of the body 143 5. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing ibid. 6. Why the Word is called Truth ibid. 7. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification 144 8. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty ibid. 9. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works ibid. 10. What love is ibid. 11. The properties of love 146 12. Two caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magigrate 147 13. There 's little love in the world 148 14. The causes of the want of love 150 15. The effects of the want of love 151 16. Reasons inciting to the duty of love 152 19. The fruits of love must accompany the profession thereof 153 20. Brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections ibid. 21. Love must reach to all ibid. 22. How we ought to love the wicked 155 23. Love must be without faining ibid. 24. Love must be mutual 156 25. The properties of pure love 157 26. A Christians love must be earnest 158 27. Love must be constant ibid. Verse 23. 1. NO unregenerate person can truly love 159 2. Such as are born again must needs love ibid. 3. What Regeneration is ibid. 4. The Lord the Author thereof 160 5. The Lords will the cause thereof 161 6. Without Regeneration all things else we have are nothing ibid. 7. Regeneration of absolute necessity 162 8. The effects of Regeneration 163 9. A regenerate man is not the same he was before ibid. 10. A regenerate man groweth by degrees 164 11. Why men grow no faster in goodness ibid. 12. A caveat for such as complain they do not grow 165 13. There 's no perfection here in this life ibid. 14. Regeneration cometh not by nature 167 15. Gods Spirit by the Word changeth mans heart ibid. 16. Gods Word is the instrumental cause of our conversion 168 17. God doth not always tye himself thereunto ibid. 18. The Ministers of the Word are appointed of God the instruments to convert souls 169 19. Whence it cometh to pass that the Word worketh Regeneration 170 Verse 24 25. 1. VVHerein mans life may be compared to grass 171 2. How to be prepared for death 172 3. The glory of a carnal man but a vain thing 174 4. Nothing in an unregenerate man can abide the Lords examination 175 5. Gods Word the means whereby to live for ever ibid. 6. The Word by preaching made the instrument of Regeneration 176 7. The Word ought to be preached in every Congregation 177 8. The Word must be so preached as that it may be avouched to be indeed the Word of God ibid. CHAP. II. THe Coherence of this Chapter with the former with the sum thereof and of the first three Verses 179 Verse 1 2 3. 1. REgeneration and the love of sin cannot stand together 180 2. There 's no perfection to be attained unto here ibid. 3. To be is a Christian a work of great difficulty 181 4. Under those here named all other corruptions are included ibid. 5. Most of the corruptions here named are inward 182 6. That 's nought which is forbidden in Gods Word ibid. 7. What malice is with the difference between it and anger 183 8. What we are to understand by guile ibid. 9. Guile is to be avoided as well in smal as great matters 184 10. What Hypocrisie is 185 11. What Envy ibid. 12. What evil speaking ibid. 13. The Word of God cannot thrive in an unsanctified heart 186 14. Our desire toward the Word must be earnest ibid. 15. Our desire toward the Word must be constant 187 16. Our desire toward the Word must be impartial 188 17. Ministers must have store of milk for their spiritual children and store of love and much patience ibid. 18. The Word why compared to milk 189 19. Nothing sweeter to Gods children then the Word 189 20. The Word is the common food of all Christians ibid. 21. The Word why called sincere ibid. 22. Why Christians are to desire after the Word 191 23. Christians must daily grow in grace ibid. 24. Such as finde the Word powerful for their Salvation do the more desire it and affect it 192 25. Christ is sweet to a Christian and sweetens all that he hath 193 26. Christ is every way bountiful to his ibid. Verse 4 5. 1. VVHerein Christs bounty doth appear 194 2. A comparison between the Temple of Jerusalem and that which Christ maketh of all that believe in him ibid. 3. Christ why compared to a stone ibid. 4. To believe in Christ which is to come to him is a great priviledge ibid. 5. Christians must come to Christ 195 6. Christ the foundation that bears up his Church 198
on Christs passion O it s a fruitful mother of many children To know that sin is enmity against God fights against the soul brings death with it is not so available to kill sin as to know and meditate on this That Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh From the necessity of Christs sufferings whereof I have already spoken in the foregoing Chapter Note 1. Our woful and miserable condition as we are of our selves 2. The ugliness and hainousness of sin in Gods account 3. The admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy with the unspeakable love of God and Christ Jesus The Jews said He loved Lazarus well because he wept for him much more may we say That he loved us because he hath dyed for us David loved Absolom well who wished that he might have dyed for him how much then hath Christ loved us having indeed dyed for us O what love do we owe for this so great love 4. The happiness of such as do truly believe and repent their debt is fully discharged and having right unto Christ there 's nothing that the Lord will deny them 5. That we are to renounce all false ways of Salvation the Jews the Turks and the Papists way all other ways besides this 6. That we are to labor to know we have part in this yea Christ having suffered we must also bear afflictions patiently Arm your selves likewise c. The duty whereunto we are exhorted is to suffer in the flesh to mortifie our flesh that is our corrupt and sinful nature and the lusts and sins thereof both inward and outward But 1. Most are so far from mortifying their lusts that they follow them with greediness and cannot endure any to speak against them These be fools indeed to destroy their own souls by living in enmity and opposition against God 2. Some it may be refrain some lusts but others they live in and yield to and yet these will claim part in the death of Christ hope to be saved by Christ but so long as it s thus with them its impossible that they should have any part in Christ. Do we therefore labor for mortification applying the edge of the Word of God to the throat of our lusts That we may not give way hereto le ts often call to minde the threatnings of the Word the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lords Supper what God offers us there and what we convenanted with him for the crosses which our lusts have drawn on us Gods manifold mercies unto us but especially meditate on Christs death and passion which is indeed a strong corrasive to eat out sin for our corruptions remain too rank and through want of care and too much yielding thereto be not subdued as they ought Let us know that he is the best Christian not that hears most or knows most or can utter most but he that hath most power over his affections and heart Note further from hence That as our lusts fight against us so we must furnish our selves like Soldiers that we may prevail against them It s no easie thing to get out of sin or to get the Mastery thereof it s to mortifie our members to pluck out our right eyes and cut off our right hands It s easier to take any pains in offering sacrifice nay fast extraordinarily and to part with our goods with thousands of Rams and ten thousand rivers of oyl yea with our first born then to part with one beloved sin They that would overcome their lust must not stand still or be without weapons we have that within us which rebelleth against the Law of God and would lead us captive to the Law of sin which is in our members Hereunto the Devil addes his power the world also joyns herewith by ill examples bad counsels mockings revilings c. and therefore we must be resolute and play the Soldiers if we would get out of our bad course Through want hereof some even under a powerful ministery be never converted some get a little way but hang behinde in sin some are a great while ere they can get out whom the Word having called and awakened the world the Devil and their own lusts do again freshly assault nay some being truly converted yet fall back again into foul security and have yet strong corruptions and many odde qualities c. 1. This rebukes most of the world who do indeed joyn with these enemies few fight against them but fewer resolutely and therefore are led captive of them to their destruction 2. This may provoke us to put on the whole armor of God to arm our selves on all occasions and in all temptations with good thoughts and meditations of the ugliness of sin danger of it its hatefulness to God with the passion of our Savior Christ O how few arm themselves or when they do it s but to halves O this must be put on and kept on continually night and day we shall sleep never the worse there can be no truce between us and our enemies This must be kept even in the times of greatest prosperity Ships usually are cast away in storms but Christians may miscarry when its calm Thus was it with David he abode constant in all Sauls storms but in the time of peace was carried away with Bathsheba's beauty It must be kept on even in our old age and till death for then will the Devil set himself most against us and both Noah Moses and others did then catch worse foils then ever before Suffered in the flesh To mortifie our corrupt nature is called suffering in the flesh and the truth is its hard to say whether is harder to suffer bodily torments and pains or to mortifie a mans lust O it s a death to part with them yea when in a man after long strife between the grace of God and his corrupt nature in the work of his conversion grace prevails it s even as the pangs of death as when the Devil went out of the childe he threw him down and he lay foaming as if he had been dead O it s not so easie a matter as the blinde and prophane world imagine Hath ceased from sin That is living in any sin For he that is born of God sinneth not and He that committeth sin is of the Devil That he no longer c. The whole time of our life that remains after we are called to repentance ought to be spent in the service of God and practice of Repentance and a new life We owe all our life to him all the days of our life the whole time we owe all to him who hath made and preserved us nothing to any other What time therefore we have spent in sin we have robb'd God of it and so ought willingly to give him the remainder redeeming that is past with all diligence The time past we know but
what colour soever it comes with the appearance thereof and occasions leading thereunto 441 26. Means whereby to eschew evil 442 27. Whoso avoids not evil cannot do good 443 28. Christians must be doers of good 444 29. We must do all the good we can ibid. 30. We must do all the good we can at all times in all places in all companies to all persons in our general and particular calling though it be hard and difficult and in a good maner 445 31. Christians must seek after peace 447 32. Covetousness pride frowardness tale-bearers the enemies of peace to be avoided 450 Verse 12. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 451 2. Why eyes ears c. are attributed to God ibid. 3. Whom we are to understand by righteous and why so called and whom by them that do ill 452 4. The Lord careth for the righteous ibid. 5. God hears the prayers of his Saints readily 453 6. What prayers prevail with God 454 7. How the same may appear ibid. 8. Why the Lord at some times hears not grants not the prayers of his children 455 9. Gods wrath and the fruits thereof always bent against the wicked 457 10. Why the wicked are not always plagued here ibid. Verse 13. PAtience and innocency of life are the way to escape harms from men 458 Verse 14. 1. SOme are so bad that they wrong the innocent 460 2. Some hate the godly meerly for their goodness ibid. 3. Such as suffer wrongfully or for Religion and conscience sake are happy 461 4. We must tarry till God call us to suffer ibid. 5. Whether we may flee from persecution ibid. 6. A godly man is happy in what condition soever 463 7. Fear is an Enemy to constant suffering ibid. Verse 15. 1. VVHat it is to Sanctifie the Lord God 464 2. Faith the mother of constancy in sufferings 464 3. As we must believe Gods truth with our hearts so must we profess it with our tongues 465 4. We must believe with our hearts before we can confess with our mouthes 467 5. Our speeches must be accompanyed with meekness and fear ibid. Verse 16. 1 VVHat conscience is 468 2. The offices of conscience to bear witness 470 3. To give judgement before our actions 472 4. To give judgement after our actions 473 5. An erroneous conscience what it is and a doubtful 475 6. Whether a man sinneth that doth according to his conscience ibid. 7. Whether a man may do any thing against his conscience being erroneous ibid. 8. Whether it be lawful to do a thing with a doubtful conscience 476 9. The several kindes of conscience ibid. 10. The kindes of a still quiet conscience drowsie secure seared 476 477 11. Means whereby the conscience may be awakened 478 12. The stirring ill conscience excusing accusing 479 13. A good quiet conscience wherein it differs from a bad quiet conscience 481 14. What a good troubled conscience is ibid. 15. Signs declaring the goodness thereof 482 16. The great benefits of a good conscience 483 17. How it is kept ibid. 18. A godly conversation is to accompany the zealous profession of our faith 484 19. A godly man will stand by the truth 486 20. The wicked are apt to speak ill of Gods servants ibid. 21. A godly conversation stoppeth the ungodlies mouthes 487 Verse 17. 1. VVHy we ought willingly to suffer for righteousness 488 2. It is better to suffer for well then evil doing ibid. 3. No afflictions comes to us but by Gods will 489 4. How far God hath an hand therein ibid. Verse 18. 1. CHrists sufferings an encouragement for Christians to suffer 491 2. How Christ was just and how we ibid. 3. Christ suffered for our good ibid. 4. The godly sow in tears but shall reap in joy ibid. 5. Several particulars laid down about Christs sufferings 492 6. Profit arising from the meditation thereof ibid. 7. All Christs sufferings make up one perfect suffering 493 8. The quality of the person that suffered and for whom he suffered ibid. 9. Why our Savior suffered and to what end 494 10. That Christ must have dyed and so did 495 11. The benefits ensuing by Christs death ibid. 12. Christ rose again from the dead 496 13. Why he rose again the maner of his resurrection the place the time 497 14. Why the Jews Sabbath was changed ibid. 15. The benefits hereof and duties to be performed 498 Verse 19 20. 1. A Further comfort to them that suffer for righteousness sake 498 2. Reasons against the Papists exposition of these words 499 3. That there are no such places as Limbus patrum and puerorum 500 4. Reasons against Purgatory ibid. 5. Why purgatory was devised 501 6. That Christ went not down to hel to preach to the reprobates 502 7. Gods Spirit preacheth in faithful Ministers ibid. 8. God will finde a time to right things when they are disordered 503 9. The woful condition of the wicked ibid. 10. Disobedience the cause of Gods judgement on the old world 504 11. Whether all those which were drowned were damned 504 12. Two necessary considerations 505 13. Disobedience the fore-runner of destruction 506 14. The sins of our times like those of the old world ibid. 15. Gods patience towards the disobedient aggravates their sin ibid. 16. The names of the godly mentioned to their honor 507 17. The old world then most disobedient when they should have been furthest from disobedience 508 18. Christians must use the means whereby to be freed from hell and destruction ibid. 19. Faith and Repentance an ark for the soul ibid. 20. How useful examples and ocular sermons are 509 21. Wicked men fear not Gods judgements 510 22. Weak means are sufficient through Gods blessing for our preservation 511 23. Righteousness shall not want its reward ibid. 24. It s good to be near the godly ibid. 25. No man can be saved by the goodness of another ibid. 26. The wicked though they escape bodily danger shall meet with everlasting judgements ibid. 27. There are but a few which shall be saved ibid. 28. The speech of an Arian at his death 512 29. Men and women be more excellent then other creatures ibid. 30. Noah and the old world a right picture of the good and bad in our age 513 Verse 21. 1. THe godly throughout all ages are saved by the same means 514 2. The uses of Baptism 515 3. Who is to baptize and who to be baptized ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHat our Saviors ascension was that he did ascend why before whom and when 516 2. They that have charge over others must be careful to leave them in good plight ibid. 3. The place from which our Savior ascended with the benefits of his ascension 517 4. Three general Observations ibid. 5. The good Angels are subject to Christ who watch and guard us ibid. 6. The bad Angels are also subject to Christ 518 CHAP. IV. THe Contents thereof 519 Verse 1 2. 1. THe parts and meaning of
And We know whom we have believed and that he is able to keep that which we have committed to him whose love also is unchangeable Why we have known of great professors who have faln finally as Judas and many in our time Yea but not such as were taken into the Divine protection and keeping of God but hypocrites They went out from us saith Saint John but they were not of us Peter was kept by the power of God though shaken by temptation yet was he not overcome Judas was never but the childe of perdition and had common graces and was never justified nor sanctified Let us then look we be found and indeed be such as are taken into Gods keeping and then safe enough then may we triumph with the Apostle If God be on our side who can be against us And who shall seperate us from the love of Christ Shall tribulation or distress or persecution c. Nay in all these things we are more then conqu●rers through him that loved us So must it needs be except we think the Lords arm to be shortened or his power weakned that he cannot help and that there should be any stronger then the Almighty Indeed if we be but Hypocrites and out of Gods keeping we may fall into any sin and miserably fall away for ever for what have we to stay us For as if God take not the care of a man all creatures are lyable to do him hurt as Cain said murmuringly Thou hast cast me from thy face and every one that findes me shall slay me Noting indeed truly that he lyeth open to a Thousand perils that is not kept by God so is it for spiritual dangers he that is not kept by God may fall into any sin irrecoverably and perish eternally This then confoundeth that hellish Doctrine of Rome that the elect and sanctified may finally fall from grace which is contrary to the whole Scripture Through Faith God keeps us but by no miracle or extraordinary way but by Faith not without us but by working and increasing the grace of Faith and true beleif in us some would understand it through hope because hereby we wait for Salvation and indeed there is great affinity between Faith and Hope so that in Scripture they are sometimes put one for another By Faith we believe the goodness of God towards us by Hope we wait till we finde and feel him so to us by Faith we believe eternal life by Hope we patiently wait for it And as there could be no Hope if there were not Faith before so Hope doth greatly help Faith it keeps it that it makes not too much haste nor break off in the mid way for God oftentimes after his promises deferreth to perform them so that the wicked also come to say Where is the promise of his coming yea ere he come he hides his face and seems as if he would not fulfil the same now therefore here doth Hope her Office and steps in and sustains Faith very well so that a Christian must necessarily have both to go along with him But I see no reason to alter the Apostles words but to take Faith properly for the grace of true Faith and believing though this is true that Hope helps well on but he speaks of Faith which includeth Hope as a necessary companion But how doth faith bring us to Salvation It is said by the Apostle Paul By grace ye are saved through Faith Now as it first apprehends Christ and Salvation so it holds this hold and continues our comfort and still carries us on in the service of God and an holy life This assurance of eternal life makes us contemn profits offered to pull us from a good conscience as Moses did Pharaohs Court and pleasures of Aegypt so to despise the Cross and overcome troubles that would draw us therefrom as the holy Martyrs did from time to time Also Faith apprehending the promise of God for our upholding to the end rests upon the goodness of God which is constant and his power which is infinite Therefore when any shall perswade us we shall never hold out we shall be forsaken Faith then puts up head and saith nay to it because God hath promised to keep us unto Salvation The wicked come and say where is now thy God by reason of troubles which befal the Godly so the Devil and their own unbelief assaults them now Faith helps and saith Why art thou cast down why art thou disquieted trust yet in God he is my present help and my God and Though I walk in the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no ill and the name of the Lord is a strong Tower the Righteous runneth to it and is safe This is the Victory that overcometh the world called therefore the shield By which we quench the fiery darts of the Devil For this purpose our Saviour when he prayed that Peter might hold out prayed that his Faith might not fail If that fail we are gone if it hold we shall be too hard for all the world so long as our Faith holds all the world with all the Engines it hath to destroy us can never overturn us Contrarily without Faith we can neither begin nor stand against any temptation or danger This teacheth men to labor for this true Faith without it they may fall to any thing as the second and third sort of ground mentioned by our Savior in the parable most people content themselves in being professors but labor not for this grace of Faith and therefore do they fall away and never come to Salvation It teacheth also the Godly still to say with the Apostle Lord increase our Faith using all other means to that purpose A little Faith will go but a little way the least if true shall get to Heaven but with much ado as a poor tattered Vessel may get to shoar especially if there come no storms but if there do it s in great danger and very hardly attains unto it but as a strong Vessel comes safely though it have strong tempests so a strong Faith though it be strongly assaulted and put to it as oft it is both in life and in the end of life yet it conquers We have had none but calm times hitherto but what we may have we know not whether common trials or particular ones accompanied with pain grief vexation c. Labor therefore for good store of Faith Unto Salvation kept not for a while but to the coming of Christ to the enjoying of Salvation and not as Moses who had only a sight of Canaan He keeps us by his power whereto Not that our finger shall not ake in this world but have all peace and prosperity and every bodies good will No but to Salvation in the end of our life for here we must suffer with him if hereafter
Faith may be tryed and so found to their honor at the last day as in the ensuing Verse Manifold Temptations They were driven from their Native country forced to fly for their lives so questiōless met with variety of troubles Whence may be noted that Even such as are highly in Gods favor and shall be heirs of Heaven must undergo not one or two but many troubles As the Israelites went to Cannan through the Wilderness where sometimes they wanted water sometimes it was bitter sometimes they met with Enemies as at other times were encountred with other difficulties so shall we in our journey to Heaven Behold it in Noah though he was saved from the flood yet was it as it were by an Hundred deaths what toil had he in making the Ark whilest the world sported Was he not also shut up in a close place amongst Beasts for a long time where questionless there could not be but a noysom savour 〈◊〉 when he came out of the Ark was he not mockt by his own Son so that his own mouth was feign to curse him The same might also be instanced in Abraham Jacob Job David Paul and others one might marvel where they should have a breathing time as one flood calleth another one wave followeth another one Cloud after another comes over the face of the Sun so did their troubles and crosses as it were strive for place and crowd to prevent one another the end of one being the beginning of another Reasons hereof may be these 1. To drive them to repentance as the death of Davids childe begotten in adultery Josephs brethrens hard usage in Aegypt They are as the Shepherds dog to fetch us out of the corn to bring us into compass again which David acknowledged again and again As they prepare some which have never repented so do they ●waken others to the renewing of their repentance 2. To keep them from sin being therefore compa●ed to an hedge of thorns 3. To humble them we have a proud nature and while we be in health we think our heads half touch the clouds therefore God pulls us down by troubles no rule in a house where children be without rods so the Lord should have no rule with us were it not that sometimes by himself sometimes by others he chastiseth us 4. To make them more holy to scourge off the rust purge out some of the rem●ant of this old man and renew the inner man Afflictions are like the furnace like the fan like physick they are Gods pruning knife to cut off our superfluous branches and make us more fruitful as the Gardiner prunes the Vine yearly that it may fructifie 5. To wean them from the world to which even the best are too much addicted and to make them willing to die and to be gone hence so setting them on work to look after and make sure of a better inheritance how loath was L●t to come out of Sod●m though it were then even ready to be burnt what would have drawn him out if it had not been that How loath were the Israelites to leave the fleshy pots of Aegypt and go to Canaan being there notwithstanding in bondage what would they have done if they had lived there in honor as Joseph God was feign to raise up a persecuting Phara●h whereby they were made to cry 〈◊〉 him and he thereupon sent them Moses and 〈◊〉 yet even then were they scant willing 6. To prove the Devil a li●● who gives out That Gods servants do serve him for wages Doth Job saith he fear God for nought that so they may triumph in their obedience 7. To keep them from hell and condemnation 8. To bring them to Heaven no marvel then if that man be blessed whom the Lord chasteneth his chastisements being indeed sight of his love Therefore 1. We should not dream all of peace and prosperity here but of trouble also accordingly looking for it one after another if God spare us it is because of our weakness but look we not long to be spared but in the mean time gather strength if we expect troubles they prove the weaker if they come on us unlooked for they daunt us the more In our prosperity we must think often hereof thus reasoning with our selves Well now I am in health how shall I do when long and strong sickness shall lie upon me now I have wealth what shall I do if all be taken away and I be put to a poor condition now I am in mine own Countrey House and Land what should I do if I were imprisoned or banished among them I know not This will partly make us use our present prosperity more soberly and also we shall be fitter to meet with adversity when it comes if it come not its labor well lost if it come well bestowed 2. We should bear them patiently seeing not onely we must needs undergo them but they are so many ways for our good We must not then be dismaid at them seeing even Gods dearest children have undergone them they have been their lot But how loath are we to think of troubles till they come They will come time enough we say but never the sooner for thinking on them it may be the longer and to be sure the lighter 3. We must be thankful for them as we would be to one that tames our wilde Horses or Steers or to a Physician for purging our superfluous humors It s no matter so as our souls gain though outwardly we smart Shall we thank and reward the Physician for very untoothsom Phisick and which makes us sick at the heart and shall we be unthankful unto God for healing our souls what means soever he useth 4. We must neither think them the better that are without affliction nor them the worse that are afflicted the latter may be happy as the former miserable 5. We must make a right use of afflictions whensoever they come upon us Temptations That is troubles or tryals But it s said God tempts none There be two kindes of Temptations one Tryals by leaving us to our selves as Hezekiah or by afflictions as here to bring to light what is in us The other Suggestions to perswade us to evil of the first God is the author of the latter the Devil and man Afflictions as Poverty Sickness Banishment Imprisonment are Temptations they serve to try what is in us not but that God knoweth what is in us already he knoweth both the heart and reins but that our selves and others may attain this knowledge Sometimes we overprize sometimes we underprize our selves But they sometimes bewray hidden grace as who would have thought of so much Faith in Abraham Patience in Job Meekness in David and Moses if they had not been tryed Sometimes also hidden corruptions for who could have thought of so much weakness in Peter and
purgeth scoureth and weedeth us that his graces in us may shine in their perfect colours As the Vine-dresser shreds his Vine and cuts off much which one would think were against the Vine yet makes it more fruitful so doth the Lord deal by afflictions with his servants which are his Vine branches Though the outward man decay by sickness poverty disgrace imprisonment and the like yet is the inner man Faith Hope Comfort c. increased daily for Faith the more its cut the more it grows the more it s trodden on the thicker it comes up And by afflictions there 's purged away a great deal of pride self-love worldliness hypocrisie and the like which long peace gathers whereof Jonah had experience when he was cast into the Sea those tame us also A man that was conceited against his neighbor for smal causes in prosperity in sickness and affliction will be glad to take every one by the hand therefore are the most afflicted for the most part fullest of Faith and Grace and purer then others and a man is never better then when he is in or newly come out of affliction Hence it is that we are willed to be thankfulfor them yea to account it exceeding joy when they come those being blessed that are so affected Being much much more precious c. He sets out tried Faith by comparing it with the most precious mettal we have even gold preferring it by far before the same which is elswhere termed also precious and much more precious is it every way 1. Gold comes out of the earth Faith from Heaven whence every good and perfect gift is 2. Faith is more rare termed therefore the Faith of Gods elect whereas most even of the most wicked are not without gold 3. Faith cannot be purchased with all the gold in the world 4. It s hardly gotten and hardly kept and hath many and strong enemies our own nature the world and the devil are all against Faith but not so against getting of gold 5. It apprehends Salvation and life eternal and so is the instrument of our happiness so is not gold but the instrument of many a mans damnation by unconscionable getting and covetous keeping the same many cast away their souls 6. It will comfort a man with true comfort in his life carry him strongly through troubles and boldly through the gates of death 7. Gold perisheth here canker and rust consume it we may be taken from it as it from us but Faith endureth till Christs appearing to our full Redemption as the fruit thereof for ever The uses hereof are 1. To them that want gold and yet have Faith know that thou art rich richer then he that hath thousands of gold and hath not Faith thou hast enough that hast Faith it assures thee of eternal life and entitles them to Christ yea hath the promises even of this life Seest thou a worldly rich man and wouldst thou change states with him Oh but both would do well Thou canst not tell if both would do so with thee besides God divides his gifts they that have much of the one have less or none of the other therefore as long as we have of the best kinde let us think our selves well dealt with 2. To the rich Rejoyce not that thou art rich but that thou hast Faith Again think all your pains to become you well and well bestowed in getting this precious Faith If any should say What you such wealthy men it s a disgrace to you to toil so in hearing Sermons which few do but mean persons do not these exclude themselves with their own mouthes But do not rich men travel to London and to Markets and Fairs to enrich themselves and take great pains and is it a shame then or a disgrace for them to travel for that which is much more precious then gold Hereat if any wonder tell them You seek that which is more precious then fined gold and that you are so far from thinking your selves too good for this that you highly thank God for vouchsafeng you this favor yea that you are so far from thinking that you credit the Gospel and its beholding to you that you confess freely that its your credit and that if you have any thing in you worth the commendation you may thank the Gospel for it for as for wealth it commends not a man even reprobates are not without it 3. To them that have not Faith poor souls labor after it that you may be made inwardly rich seek for it in the means appointed the preaching of the Word But O poor miserable creatures that regard it not for the most part but think their poverty here shall serve for all but worse in the highest degree remaineth behinde if not prevented in time could any look into your souls they might perceive them more empty of grace then the poorest houses are of provision 4. To rich men that have toiled for gold seek this that is so much better Many toil by Sea and land and undergo no small perils to get gold and to wax mighty but as for Faith they will scarce stir over the threshold for it But will your gold procure a pardon for your sins Alas it s no payment with God for any thing especially sin Will it shelter when Death and Judgement comes Alas no it bears no sway in the other world see Job 36 18 19. Prov. 11. 4. Zeph. 1. 18. No it will not abate your pains in Hell one jot O once consider your folly and labor for that whereby you may have comfort when you draw away and your friends are thinking of a Coffin to bestow you out of the house and thereafter you may enjoy life everlasting May be found unto praise and honor and glory The farthest end of our affliction that our Faith thereby tryed may come forth to our honor at the great day Tryed Faith is better then any thing that can be set by it for all else vanisheth but our Faith will be crowned at the last day Then will it be said Well done good and faithful servant enter into thy masters joy and Come ye blessed of my Father c. They that confess him before men he will confess them before God which shall be no small honor They which followed him in the regeneration shall sit upon twelve Thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel and The Saints shall judge both the world and Angels what pains soever we have taken to come to our Faith and to keep it it shall not onely comfort and honor us here in the Church but hereafter also in Heaven What an encouragement is this to them that have Faith and a provocation to all to labor for it It will not onely comfort us now and make us please God but will give us boldness also at the great Day when the fearful and unbelievers
shall stand trembling and be cast into the lake which burneth with fire and brinstone yea though our Faith be tryed by afflictions and persecutions yet we should rejoyce for they will turn to our glory Our shame reproach infamy imprisonment and troubles will turn to our praise and honor and glory at that day when we are reviled by private persons when persecuted by publique Magistrates and false Witnesses coming against us yet we should not be troubled but rejoyce For great shall our reward be in heaven our poverty shall be recompenced with great riches our shame with honor and if we be rejected of men we shall be taken in of God Yet do not our afflictions or persecutions deserve any of this honor as the Papists would gather from hence and from 2 Thess. 1. 5 c. Alas no For the afflictions of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us God indeed will crown his own graces in us and hath promised to reward the sufferings of his servants with glory and so he is become our debtor not by taking any thing of us but by promising us all things We should therefore be comforted in all our sufferings and oppose unto the ignominy thereof the glory and honor we shall then have which is infinitely greater O who would not endure casting out by men being a token that we shall be honored of God and taken in at that day Indeed if there were no day of Judgement nor reward we might be sorry but seeing there is let us lift up our heads and wait for that day As the wicked shall have a second course to mar all their mirth so contrarily the godly to swallow up their sorrow At the appearing of Jesus Christ. Namely to Judgement True it is as we have heard our souls enter into glory at death but our perfect happiness is not till the end of all besides that which we have at death is not seen but to our selves whereas then it shall be manifest to all We must be content to wait for our full Redemption till then on that most solemn day shall we be honored by the Lord himself Then shall our Savior come to judge the quick and the dead and though he defer to gather his Elect and be gone into Heaven yet he will come and that in another fashion then he came first namely in wonderful majesty glory and power which cannot but be a terror to his enemies 1. This must needs comfort all that have and do still embrace Christ Jesus as their Savior and King for he shall be their Judge and therefore shall it go well with them 2. But wo to them that have despised him where shall they appear Not to appear is impossible for He numbreth the stars and calleth every one by their name he will not be bribed for he is more just and besides we have nothing to give To escape also is impossible for he filleth all places and whether can he go that hath this revenging Judge over his head Hell under his feet to swallow him on each side Angels and Devils to torment him within a tormented Conscience and without all the world on fire And to abide his wrath its intolerable for if when it s but a little kindled no man can stand then how when its all on fire to consume his enemies utterly Kiss therefore the Sun seek to be reconciled get him thy Savior and thy King get pardon of that which is past not adding more to the score against thy self One thing more The phrase here used seems to imply that The reward of Gods servants shall not be privy but seen and known yea and that of those that have most hated disgraced and persecuted them accounting them mad and esteeming basely of them even before them I say they shall be honored of God As it will be a torment to the wicked to see Christ whom they have pierced to be in such high dignity and power so will it increase their torment to see them whom they so basely esteemed of as not worthy to live to be received into honor and stand on Christs right hand and themselves of whom they were so well conceited cast out But its just with God that they which willingly and of purpose have vexed and disgraced his servants here on earth should against their wills see the glory that he hath prepared for them Verse 8. Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory HEre he proceeds to commend these believing Jews yet withal admonishing and exhorting them and that for the great measure of their faith and the fruits thereof love and joy which are described by that which might have hindred their faith namely that they never saw Christ and yet believed in him and rested on him for salvation and so loved him as they were well content to suffer for his Name yea and rejoyce with such a joy as for the excellency and greatness thereof could not be expressed In that he commends them it s to this end that he might encourage and provoke them to go on forward and increase more and more To this end doth the Lord commend the good Churches in the second and third of the Revelation and S. Paul in all his Epistles even that he might provoke them to go on in well doing And this must be the end of all good Ministers in the commendation of their people not of flattery that were abominable and being men-pleasers they could not be Christs servants nor out of a conceit that they have gone far enough and now may stand at a stay that were sensless for that we have is nothing to that we might have had or should have and want but to be a spur to provoke them to go on forward it being a shame for them not to satisfie the expectation of such as have a good opinion of them and so must the people take such at any time not being lifted up therewith but rather humbled thereby conceiving that the Minister rather sheweth what he would were in them or should be in them then what is indeed in them and that he would not have them stand at a stay but proceed and go on more and more Speak we particularly first of their faith though last set down as without which there can be no true love They never saw Christ yet they believed in him they saw the Scriptures speaking of him to come they heard of him also by faithful witnesses the Apostles had preached of his person birth life death resurrection and ascension and that he came to save them that were lost This they believed and so believed in him for salvation though they saw him not This shews the nature of true faith namely to believe things not onely that we see
there was an end and had no heaven nor hope of any such thing most vile for 1. God gave them his Word which was to convert their Souls and to be an immortal seed to beget them to eternal life and the Prophets in their times were filled with the Spirit of God but God did not all this for nothing 2. He made a Covenant with them I will be your God and you shall be my people Now to have God to be our God contains not onely Earthly things but Heavenly and Eternal For blessed is the people whose God is the Lord Our Savior Christ saith God is the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob not of the dead but of the living so that they live not in Soul onely but in Body also to Godward for he will surely raise them up again Jacob speaking unto Pharaoh mentioned the days of his Pilgrimage both he and the rest confessed themselves Pilgrims see what construction the Holy Ghost makes hereof namely That this was in respect of some other Countrey but what Countrey Earthly or Heavenly If Earthly then that from whence they came Caldea but if it had been that they had leasure enough to have returned thereunto but they desired a Heavenly therefore God prepared for them a City even such a one as they desired an Heavenly one Job believed that his Redeemer lived and Abrahams bosom is put for Heaven But such speeches as Jobs are of some few principal men and not of the people with whom no doubt it was as with us most understood not neither believed though others did This comes of a false understanding of the Promises The Lord provokes them to keep his Law and promiseth them a plenteous Land and threatned the loss thereof if they obeyed not But who knoweth not that as Egypt was a Type of their Spiritual bondage so Canaan of Heaven and Heaven promised under it even as the Lamb in the Passover was a Type of Christ the true Paschal Lamb and Christians Passover as the Apostle affirmeth 2. That of those which affirm That they were saved by some other way not by Christ as we and what by the keeping of the Law it s otherwise The Law was not to this end given them that they might be justified thereby more then to us or that they could keep it more then we for never could any keep it but to shew Gods perfect righteousness and their own sinfulness and so drive them out of themselves to Christ the true Sacrifice Notable is that Speech of Saint Peter Now therefore why tempt ye God to put a yoke upon the necks of the Disciples which neither our Fathers nor we were able to bear He meaneth not here the Ceremonial Law wherein an hypocrite might go as far as another nor the bodily observance of the Moral Law whereof the yong man bragged so much but the true Spiritual Rule of Righteousness which never any could keep so they were saved by the Grace of Christ as we Abrahams Faith was imputed unto him for Righteousness and he was justified both before he was Circumcised and four hundred years ere the Law was given Who prophesied of the Grace that should come unto you The Doctrine of the Gospel is no new device of man nor first Preached by the Apostles but almost as old as the World The Spirit hath given testimony of it in all ages all the Prophets have looked into it some Promises were given unto particular persons some did concern all in general those especially which were delivered by the Prophets This was signified by all the Sacrifices and Washings in the Law wherein there was an acknowledgement of guiltiness and uncleanness and a promise of something to satisfie and cleanse which was not the blood of Bulls or of Goats but of Jesus Christ who is therefore said to wash away our sins by his blood and to be the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world This condemneth that wicked slander of the Church of Rome that stile our Religion The new Gospel or a yesterdays Religion Nay theirs is a new Religion who knoweth not that though the Mystery of Iniquity began already to work in the Apostles times and the Devil had spread some Heresies yet alass Popery was not then hatcht and it was not come to the top till within these three or four hundred years by-past the whole being at several times patched up with several pieces by one Pope after another and new it is as being of mans brain most things therein having no ground in the Word of God nay altogether contrary thereunto The Prophets foretold of Christ and that very fully of his Nature Offices Birth Life Death Sufferings Patience Resurrection Ascension c. See Gen. 49. 10. Isa. 7. 14. Isa. 9. 6. Jer. 23. 6. Isa. 53. 8. Zach. 12. Psal. 110. 1 4. Isa. 61. 1. Dan. 9. 25. Mic. 5. 2. Psal. 22. 16. Psal. 16. 10. Psal. 68. 18. Hag. 2. 7 c. This sheweth what an agreement and blessed harmony there is betwixt the Old Testament and the New no diverse matters but the same Christ the subject matter of both driven at in the Law pointed out in all the Sacrifices The Old Testament is the New folded up the New is the Old unfolded and opened the one proving the other and hence are these Phrases As it is written And that it might be fulfilled 1. This condemneth them that reject the New-Testament and Christ Jesus and yet retain the Old as the Scribes and Pharisees did and Jews and Turks do but hold one and hold both deny one and deny both O the lamentable blindeness of the Jews that were so well acquainted with the Old Testament which did so foretel Christ and yet when he came in whom all was fulfilled they could not see it a forestalled conceit of an earthly Potentate hindred all 2. It teacheth us to labor to be acquainted with both and reverence both the one giving light unto the other and they especially that are of better understanding and have more time let them read orderly not here and there a Chapter and that most or always in the New-Testament but going on throughout both They that are slow and dull and can read little no matter though they hold themselves most to the New but for the others let them be acquainted with both Are we ignorant of the one its for want of acquaintance with the other Hath God set on work his holy Prophets to Prophefie such things as be greatly for our Confirmation and kept them through so many storms of Persecution and shall we not be conversant therein yea those Chapters that seem of least use in Leviticus touching cleansing of many sorts of uncleanness have this main use even to teach That God cannot abide sin but that it must be cleansed
always keep a good Conscience Wood is not more necessary and apt to nourish fire then good works and well doing to nourish Faith Also observe the dealings of God and grow by your own experience Many that have believed and were very earnest in their beginning till they got it after growing secure and worldly and withal neglecting the means have with David fallen into some one sin or other thereby losing the peace and comfort they formerly enjoyed A great loss indeed more then if a man were stript of all to his shirt O le ts take heed of this loss as we are to be wise as Serpents so let us shew our Serpentine wisdom in this one thing especially The Serpent will be sure so much as in her lies to save her head so must we our Faith for on this hangs all and if by any means we have fallen therefrom recover we our selves by all means possible 3. That which they are to hope for or trust on is Grace that is Salvation Every benefit is grace but to be delivered out of our lost and undone state and brought again into the favor of God and saved is a most special grace Our Election is of grace so our Redemption so our effectual Calling 1. This condemns the Papists that teach partly Grace partly Works No these cannot be mingled either all or none they be as contrary as light and darkness honey and gall else were grace no more grace To joyn any thing with Christ is to pervert the Gospel They now begin to be ashamed and mince this Opinion saying We be saved most by Grace yet partly by Works and that these Works be died in the Blood of Christ and that it is most safe to rest on his merits alone Well God make them so ashamed as altogether to renounce it and so let us in the mean time 2. Let us serve the Lord with a chearful and constant love and service for his free favor to us all the days of our life 3. Shew we grace and favor to others not to such as have deserved well of us but even to such as have not nay ill as we had of God Grace That is Salvation See he calls their mindes from looking for earthly preferment by Christ whereunto they had a lingring minde and calls them to look for Spiritual riches even Salvation by him What are we then to expect by Christ and by professing the Gospel zealously not Wealth Honor Peace Credit in the world but pardon of our sins freedom from Hell and Gods wrath peace of Conscience joy in the holy Ghost that our persons and works shall please God Angels to be our guard our Prayers to be heard our Souls at death to be carried into heaven both our Bodies Souls to be glorified at the great day Will this satisfie us Hereof we may be assured if we believe in Christ and zealously embrace the Gospel As for other things his Kingdom is not of this world he promiseth not plenty peace ease c. He had them not himself but contrarily troubles as all shall have that live godly in him This teacheth us to lay our hand upon our heart when we go about to profess we know what we shall finde but it may be sorrow withal if we can be content so then may we go forward else not Many having gone on in profession not so advisedly and after having found the wind and tide against profession and reproach trouble and danger for the same have shrunk away and with Demas have forsaken Paul and embraced the present world Others seeing how hardly such be dealt with though in their conscience they think best of such yet keep in their heads thinking that its best sleeping in a whole skin But alas they make but a weak choyce were they not better have these heavenly comforts and priviledges here and be acknowledged of Christ and saved at the great day though with some sorrows here then to make the world their friend and God their enemy and to have him ashamed of them at that day as he will for we cannot have it go on our side now and then too That is to be brought unto you God tarried not till they sought Salvation but he of his goodness brought it them which he useth here as an Argument to perswade them to trust stedfastly to this Salvation and look accordingly for it because God would bring them to the Faith of it when they thought not thereof Note here That Salvation is not of our own procuring or seeking Alas what could Adam and we in him do we could fall but what then towards our Salvation we could run and hide our selves and excuse our sin and encrease our danger but God was fain to bring him the seed of the woman he could not make himself an help a wife for God made and brought her to him much less a Savior So what 's the reason he hath given us the Gospel in this Land and not to our Forefathers not to many other Lands we sought it not but when Idolaters in darkness God brought it So have we not been brought by marriage or by Service into Towns where we have had the Word when we purposed no such thing So to our hearts what were any of us when God called us Did we seek him Alas no we ran from him rather long ere we yielded but he followed us and overcame us See it in Saul did he seek Salvation he was going to Damascus to persecute God brought it him so to Zacheus the Goaler c. so we This teacheth us 1. To be humble 2. To be exceeding thankful all the days of our life 3. To rest confidently on him for the time to come in the experience of that we have had as thus That he that brought us Salvation the Word to us or us to it and gave us to see our misery long after Christ have some taste of his love and some desire to please him that were far from these he will continue this and will never leave us Thus the Apostle reasons But God commendeth his love towards us c. So Jacob in danger of Esau He came over Jordan with his staff and God had given him two bands therefore he was perswaded to relie on God for present deliverance for why might he say I am perswaded thou hast not done all this for me to be lost in an instant as an ox should lick up a flower or a candle be put out at once We use not Gods mercies well when we grow not stronger by them for time to come 4. Comfort to a fearful heart that fears he shall not hold out or that God will cast him away O its impossible did he bring thee Salvation that regarded it not and now hath given thee an heart to prize it above the world and to walk
come to true repentance therefore put it not off it s not the work of a day or sickness the fittest time to be allotted thereto but constantly to be set upon till we shall attain thereunto As obedient children Or children of obedience that is given to obedience and studying thereto with all their might of body and soul as if you could imagine obedience to be a creature and a mother that had children resembling her self so must we be the contrary hereof is elsewhere expressed Children of disobedience that is given over unto all disobedience and in other places the like phrases and to the same purpose are used see 1 Kings 21. 5. Psal. 50. 18 19. Mat. 7. 23. Hereunto the Apostle exhorteth for that they were called to be children which strongly enforceth this duty of obedience Obedience is that which God still calls for which he doth again and again require at our hands its better then sacrifice as contrarily rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft The Israelites doubtless spake well But O that there were such an heart in them saith God that they would fear me and keep my commandments always Neither hearing the Word nor knowing or speaking of it pleaseth God without obeying nothing else can comfort our Souls and Consciences in death nothing else can approve us to be the servants of the Lord or that we love him or that we shall continue to the end His sheep hear his voyce and follow him For the maner of our obedience 1. We must obey not to halves or where we lift but in all things not as Saul or Herod Nadab and Abihu there were the same persons incense censers altar that should be onely the fire was not the same who therefore were punished by fire from heaven 2. We must not on the other side run without our errand nor do things whereof we have no commandment this is no obedience be it never so costly or painful have it never so goodly a shew And here falls to the ground all Will-worship of the Papist to whom it will be said Who required these things at your hands as also all good intents without warrant of the actions How was God displeased with them that offered their sons and daughters to the fire having no such commandment from him Moreover we must obey the Commandment of the Lord be it never so strange harsh unpleasing or contrary to Nature denying our selves contrary to custom though all the world counsel to the contrary and that not indenting or covenanting with the Lord beforehand for wages or success as to say I would do such a thing so I thought no hurt would come of it or that I should thrive in that course or that I should not meet with trouble no we must follow the Lord as the blinde man follows the staff of his leader and chooseth not his own way Thus did Abraham in forsaking his own Countrey at Gods Commandment in his old age it was his Native Countrey that wherein he had lived so long he was to go he knew not whether He had questionless contrary counsels of his Neighbors What a mad man are you to remove now and seek a new dwelling in your old age you are here known here are your Kindred you know the Countrey and have thriven It s as if one should remove a tree that hath grown long in place into another place when its old Well for all those he persisted in his obedience to Gods Commandment The Jesuits train up their Schollars in strange obedience as that they must do whatsoever their Superiors bid them and that speedily without questioning as to water a rotten tree to pour a vessel of good wine into a gutter to set trees with the roots upward c. when his Superior calls him to go in an instant and not to stay to make up the circle of an O when he is writing and made the one part of it he must not stay to make up the other part They to justifie this and provoke to obedience tell a miracle That one thus called of his Superior and leaving his O in the midst half made at his return found it made up a perfect O and so gilded that it shined c. Such obedience owe we to God and these rules be very good so as the Commanders and Commandments were good We must obey God directly and never cast about beforehand what shall be the end we must leave it to him and to obey him must needs fall out well Abraham did not amiss but sped well in obeying God So Noah and the rest Abraham never shifted for himself but twice about his wife and he was like then to have spoiled himself if God had not helpt him out of the bryars So Jonah Our own Devices never succeed though never so likely But we have such reaches before-hand that mar our obedience Oh if I were ruled by the Preacher I should not thrive by plain dealing nor wax rich or if I should leave such a course or such a course I should be poor If I should do thus and thus I should come to trouble but let us do our duty and let the Lord alone for his part to look to us in obeying him we cannot do amiss The wicked will leave their sin a little while it may be through Sickness or Fear or Counsel as the Dog that is beat from the Carrion or called away yet hath a Dogs eye back again after it and will be at it again as soon as one's back is turned yea and if haply they give good words yet will not their doings be answerable 3. We must obey without reasoning the case or consulting with flesh and blood we must binde Reason hand and foot to follow God as it were blindefold as Abraham in offering Isaac and Joshua in compassing Jericho and not as Naaman the Syrian Our Reason proves a very great enemy to obedience 4. We must obey whosoever or whatsoever be against it If Profits Pleasure Farm Oxen c. calls us away and God invite us we must follow him else have we no part in him If Father Mother Friend nay the Wife of our bosom entice us from him we must not give ear to them nay if our right hand eye or foot offend us we must cut them off and obey God He that hates not father and mother wife and children yea his own life for my names sake saith our Savior is not worthy of me yea if any should command and threaten us contrary to our obedience unto God we must not yield to them but rather obey God then them 5. Speedily not hereafter but to day while it is called to day c. not repent hereafter when I have taken my pleasure a while longer hear Sermons when I am thus rich have Prayer in my Family when such
opposites 1. Prophaneness when men dare live as they list and their lust is their Law 2. Security when men live carnally and wretchedly contenting themselves that they be none of the worst they be not such and such kinde of persons yet go on without regard either to God or his Word The evil they abstain from as it is not from the fear of God so if good come in their way they do it after their fashion and evil also as comes to hand they dare commit sin in hope of mercy and think they shall do well enough 3. Hypocrisie which hath more shew of Religion but resteth in the outward ceremonious performance of duties and looks not to do them in the right maner and so are not guided by the fear of God in their lives 4. Slavishness when men fear indeed but never but under or in expectation of the rod they then will flie to a book have good words golden promises c. at other times they care not what they do or at least be as before Contrarily the true fear of God is known by these notes 1. To hate evil and not leave it off onely for some sinister respects 2. Not onely gross and open evils of the hand but inward corruptions of the heart as Pride Arrogancy Hypocrisie Hardness Frowardness Wordliness of the heart c. spying them out mourning for them and striving against them as being seen to God as well as gross sins to men 3. All evil the evil way every evil way 4. Such evils as a man may go closely away withal as Joseph might with uncleanness with his Mistress but would not as fearing God 5. Such as a man may carry out by strong hand by might and authority and no body to control him yet dares not do it because there 's an higher who hath forbidden it 6. It will make a man watchful to avoid evil as the Hare hath an eye to passengers as she sits 7. It will make men avoid the occasions of evil 8. It is ever joyned with the fear of his Word and as is the one in us so is the other If it be thus then I may too truly and plainly conclude That there is but a little fear of God in this Land for how few hate evil secret corruptions all evil such as they can go cleanly away with such as they can carry away by might and colour of Law How many live prophanely as if there were no God no Law no Judgement day no reckoning to be made but do what their lust leads them too and that which some would not nor durst do for a world they make no bones of Another sort live securely and carelesly not so bad as the former but such as look not to God nor set him before their eyes in their deeds Others perform more duties to God but so as they regard not why nor in what maner but rest in the work wrought not casting with themselves how they may do them aright and thereby taking notice as well of their own weakness as Satans malice Others slavishly fear in their misery but in their prosperity regard nothing but their own will These being called out a few there be remaining that truly fear God for which he may justly have an heavy controversie with this Land that after so many happy means so few should be found that truly fear him though many think they do How few keep Gods commandments all alway with delight let every man examine himself carefully by these notes If any be loth and would have a wider sieve truly I can give no wider God hath given me no wider to let Hypocrites Prophane Persons c. scape through I try you but by the Word and by it you must be judged at the last day But for those that do indeed fear God there 's abundant comfort for them they have that which is better then all the world yea Gods mouth pronounceth them blessed Both the quoted Psalms are a storehouses of promises made to such there are others also in Psal. 25 12 14. 34. 9 10. 84. 11. Mal. 3. 16 17. which are duly to be weighed Such as fear God need fear neither Man Death Devils Hell Day of Judgement c. which are indeed the terror of the world only let them be provok'd to fear him more and more for even of Gods children not a few have but a small measure hereof whereby it comes to pass that they hate not sin so heartily in themselves and others as they should neither are such enemies to privy corruptions but that they break out often and so pull many a sorrow and gripe of Conscience upon themselves which more fear of God would have prevented Our often falls argue too little fear as may appear by our small zeal to duties and our little trembling at the Word of God therefore labor we for more that it may be said of us as of Obadiah That we fear God greatly that so we may be preserved from evil Oh this is the keeper of all vertues holding all in good order a watchman indeed to look to our heart if it be there and temptation comes up starts it and says Nay This will keep the heart clean hold out ill set us on to good Means to attain hereunto may be these Let us often set before our eyes our own baseness Gods greatness power and justice with the effects thereof on Adam the old world and others especially do we consider what God hath done for us that so our care and resolution may grow how to please God If this religious awe be in us O how it will keep our lives from innumerable evils and replenish them with all goodness that having finished them well we may come to the Lord in peace at our latter end O if we did consider the unspeakable mercies of God towards us we should see cause enough though there were no hell yet to fear more then death it self to offend God but because our nature is so exceeding lewd and prone to sin its good to think often that that God under whose power we live hates all sin and will not let any go unpunished What cause have we then to grow in the fear of God that have seen his greatness and just displeasure against sin so much every year one punishment or other What cause have we also to fear God that have such experiences of his goodness in 88. when he delivered us from the Spanish Armado and after from the Gun-powder Treason and now of late hath begun to relent towards us and gives us some showers of rain But alas if we will prove our selves by the notes before mentioned it will be evident that most have not the fear of God which is a fearful thing As no better testimony can be given of a man then this that he feareth God as Job and Obadiah so none more
a good Subject or say he is a mans servant and yet doth nothing that he is bidden but is drunken quarrels with his fellow-servants beats his Master children breaks down his windows rails upon him should this be counted a good servant or the other a good subject so the Lord defies that such should call him Father and counts it a disgrace to him to be call'd Father of such miscreants that live like bastards that have no care to please God no fear of offending him nor delight to be in his presence We should take it as a disgrace to have some base and filthy person come in a market to us and call us father yet this may and doth befal men yea good too who have lewd children and such be like them neither in favor nor condition yea there 's scarce one childe like the Father or one like another but it s nor so with God he hath never a childe but is like him and hath his image in him like hearted and like handed to him innocent hands and a pure heart holy as he is holy hating sin as he he doth loving his Word People Righteousness c. as he doth He that is born of God sinneth not Those are true properties of a childe of God yet even others have a father too Christ hath pointed him out Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father you will do Such as care for no goodness nor for Gods children but are Lyars Deceivers Oppressors and the like they are like the Devil God is not their Father but their Enemy with such all the Angels and Creatures are at defiance and wait for their destruction all the judgements of God hang over their heads their death will be a passage to their endless wo and misery Therefore never call God Father till thou change thy maners nor look for any priviledge of a childe from him as either protection or maintenance no nor so much as good look But shall I thus leave these God forbid for though we finde them children of the Devil yet we would be glad to bring them to be Gods Therefore humble your selves confess your sins as the Publican and the Prodigal entreat and sue for Pardon change thy behaviour and when thou canst feel thy heart effected like a Childe or truly desirous so to be then call him Father In the mean time if thou wouldest mourn for thy sins and labor for a contrite heart and abstain from every unclean thing thou shouldest be received thy sins pardoned and God would be a Father unto thee But if thou goest on in this graceless course as thou workest so shall thy wages be 2. But dost thou unfeignedly desire to fear God 1. In thy general calling as a Christian to walk holily righteously and soberly Fearest thou to offend God thy self or to see him dishonored by others carest thou to please him lovest thou to be in his presence dost thou conscionably hear his Word and patiently bare his Corrections 2. In thy special calling art thou careful to glorifie God as a Parent Childe Master Servant c. not onely in ceasing to do evil but in doing good yea and laboring to do it well Thou mayest comfortably and with good leave call God Father and make account of him so to be which is the greatest priviledge in the world Christ is thy Brother thou art Heir with him of all good things in this world and Salvation in the Kingdom of Glory hereafter Angels guard thee nay are thy Servants Afflictions Corrections Death no Death but a passage to Life O let us be perswaded to increase more and more in this care and every time we call God Father we may be put in minde and provoked to labor for the affections of dutiful Children We can readily look that God should be a Father to us that we want nothing but we for our parts can be content to be wanting in our duties many ways we neglect this and that duty yea in those we perform how cold are we little differing from Hypocrites how often do we break out into gross evils how little grieved when we offend or see others offend for these the Lord is often driven to afflict us As it s between natural Parents and Children we see that love descends but seldom ascends They look for all maintenance from their Parents but care little how small reverence or obedience they give them So we deal with God our head must not ake a little but he must presently give ease but we can be slack enough in the performance of our parts Who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man works Here 's the second Reason He whom we call Father is also a Judge and that a very sharp-fighted one that will not be carried away with shows and false glosses of good works but will look into the inside and judge accordingly If they proceed from an honest heart he will surely reward them if not they shall not onely miss the reward they look for but have for all their gay shows their reward with Hypocrites Therefore it stands us in hand not onely to renounce evil and to do good but to do the same with a right affection Here I might speak how God judgeth and will judge mens actions as 1. In this life he approveth the ways of his Servants by his Word and by his blessings upon them outward and inward and disalloweth the wicked actions of the World and their courses by his Word and by his judgements sometimes 2. In the end of this life by receiving the soul of the one into glory and by casting down the other to confusion 3. And especially at the last day by receiving the one into everlasting glory and throwing the other into endless misery Which may 1. Make us all look to our ways to walk in reverence and fear all our days To this purpose peruse Ecles 12. 13 14. Act. 24. 16. 2 Cor. 5. 9. 2 Pet. 3. 11. 2. Be a strong bit to hold back the wicked from running on nay to bring them on their faces for that which is past that it may be here pardoned that they meet not with all their abominations at that day For we must all appear before the Judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Even they that have been judges of others they that have ben quit yea they that have had their sentence here too shall appear before a wise Judge that cannot be deceived a Just one that will not be bribed from whom they cannot flee as being Infinite But because this is not the main drift of the Apostle I pass it over the more briefly the chief force lying in this That God judgeth according to mans works without respect of persons The person
old time but rather being good and warrantable we are to follow it because Antiquity hath reverence joyned with truth yet we must not follow a thing simply because ancient evil is almost as ancient in the world as good better a new truth that is truth newly revealed then an old error This condemns the Papists most of them have no other reason for their Religion but Thus did our Forefathers So long and so long it hath been and shall we be wiser then they My Father and my Grandfather God rest their souls they did thus c. a poor blinde rule They walked in darkness and so went out of the way will you do so that have the light It s no more a rule for Doctrine or Maners to say Thus did our Forefathers they were of this minde and why am not I so to be then if any should Swear Rail Lye Curse and say I do but as I heard and saw my Father do will this go for payment trow ye Not with corruptible things as silver and gold The things whereby we are not Redeemed are silver and gold These he names in stead of all other worldly things as which answer all and by them Houses Lands yea the most costly things and most precious Pearls are bought By these men may be ransomed and redeemed out of bodily Thraldom but all the silver and gold in the world is insufficient to redeem even one man out of his Spiritual bondage See Mat. 16. 26. The Reasons hereof may be these 1. God hath no need of any of these things and they are his already The earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof The gold of Ophir and Havilah as are the beasts on a thousand mountains 2. Our soul is an immortal and incorruptible being a Creature that had a beginning but never shall have end Now gold and silver are things corruptible and vanishing therefore are not of worth or value to redeem or countervail the soul for there must be some proportion between the thing bought and the price given so is there not between the world and the soul of a man one soul is more excellent then the whole world 3. Sin is a transgression against an Infinite God and so deserveth an infinite punishment a death and that eternal and infinite now a death must be paid Gods justice hath set it down no such price therefore will be taken neither are these things infinite all the world is not 4. Many times even for a Trespass committed against men these things will not be taken for a recompence 5. These often when God sends some bodily judgement are unable to do men any pleasure nor can at all pacifie God 6. These cannot redeem a mans bodily life and save it from death for many would give much to procure that nor can they prolong a mans ones own brothers life an hour beyond his appointed time much less can they redeem his soul. 7. These cannot purchase Wit Learning Eloquence for those that want them much less Sanctification and Grace as also if a man were born Blinde Lame Deformed they cannot purchase Sight Strength or Beauty 1. This condemns those gross Absurdities nay Blasphemies of the Church of Rome they by Pardons and Indulgences sold for Money take upon them to forgive sins yea they give those to houses of Gentlemen for many years to come perswading also that by their Masses which they must purchase with their Money they shall be freed from Purgatory and sent to Heaven Among them belike the rich are in a good case they may sin freely but the poor are in an hard taking O cursed Blasphemy None can forgive sins but God onely yea whereas all the Silver and Gold of the world cannot satisfie for one sin yet will they set it at such and such a rate of Money It may be said to them as Peter said to Simon Magus Your Money perish with you because you think that the gift of God such a special gift as is the Remission of sins may be bought with Money 2. We must learn by any means not to hazard or sell our souls for Silver or Gold not for the whole world If a man should sell his soul for the whole world would the same price redeem it again no not if there were ten thousand worlds Then is it a very hard bargain to sel any commodity at such a rate as a man would give a thousand times as much for it again and yet must go without it what shall I say of the common sort which so basely esteem of their souls that they sell them away to destruction for toys of this world How many sell themselves to hell some by Robbery Bribery Oppression Simony Sacriledge Cousenage Lying Swearing c. others for a bare living and maintenance O poor woful Creatures They know not what they do They are like yong Heirs that know not the worth of their Inheritance and so part with all to some couzening companion for a Horse Dog or Hawk nothing to the true worth of it and then fret to think that they had such a living whereby they might have lived in good fashion all their life and now it s gone and they have nothing but like prophane Esau's have lost their birth-right O if men knew the worth of their souls they would then despise the whole world if it were offered for them but an Omnia Dabo pulls most of the world upon their knees to worship the Devil Many Shop-keepers say they would not give their lying for Forty pounds a year but poor blinde Creatures yong Heirs if they gate Forty thousand pounds a year they were great losers for if they would give it and as much more to it it would not recover their souls again from Damnation thereby deserved Oh the soul lives for ever and sin casts it into everlasting Wo and Torment And for enjoying a few short pleasures of sin shall we throw our selves into everlasting torment Moses would not thus do but left Pharoahs court and the delights thereof which he could not hold without sin O le ts be wise at last and royally set such a price on our souls as if the Devil would say as he did to Christ All this will I give thee we may tell him he bids like an higler and if he would give us seven worlds we would not part with our Souls 3. We wust be more afraid of sin then of any thing else seeing the price is so great that must satisfie for it even more then the loss of all that we have If we should commit sin to save all we have we lose But how little account do men make of sin whereas nothing but Christs blood can satisfie for it If we were set to pay Twenty shillings for every sin we commit how shie would we be but considering that the very greatest sum
so did he that quickly which we could never have done Therefore let every man trust to this if this be not a sufficient way thou mayest say I am content to perish thou mayest well enough and I with thee for company 1. This confoundeth all other false and devised satisfactions by any other and sheweth the most fearful state of all that know not nor embrace Christ as 1. The Jews that look for another Christ 2. The Turks that trust in Mahomet and do not acknowledge Christ so the Pagans that are utterly ignorant of him The Papists also that make him but half a Saviour and adde a number of other Merits and Satisfactions with their blasphemous Idol of the Mass their Pilgrimages Penances c. yea not onely say they are the sufferings of the Saints meritorious for themselves but even to put something into the common treasury to help others These also among our selves that hope to be saved by their good meaning good prayers and civil life and either do not at all look to Christ or but to halves being as good as not at all So those that make God an Idol all of mercy and no justice when as they are both essentially in him and he could not be God without both and the one is infinite in him as the other yet by crying God mercy they think to escape never considering how his justice should be answered but he should not be just nor God if he should let thy sins go unpunished 2. This sheweth the fearfulness of sin such was our case that as if one had committed a fault and there were no way to scape unless he could obtain the Kings son to dye for him we could not but perish unless the Son of God had dyed for us 3. This should much grieve and humble us to think what our sins have done even that they occasioned all the torment our Savior was put to It was not Judas nor the Jews Pilate nor the Soldiers that crucified Christ but our sins they being but our servants and executioners How should this go to our hearts that our lying swearing whoredom pride profaneness c. was the cause that put our Savior to all those indignities Shall he be pierced yea to the very heart for our sins and shall not we be pierced with grief for our own sins Shall he shed Tears of Blood and shall we have dry eyes Shall he say his soul is heavy to the death and shall not our hearts be heavy could we having a friend that loved us so dearly as he would take our room to endure much for us could we I say stand by and see him tortured for our cause and look on it with dry eyes 4. This should make us take heed of sin for the time to come and avoid it above all things in the world look upon every sin in blood no sin but hath a bloody face when we have committed it all the world cannot satisfie for it it must be blood the blood of the Son of God one drop of which was of more worth then Ten thousand worlds if it were but the blood of a man must be shed for every sin were 't not fearful but it s Christ Blood therefore how careful should we be But O Lord How small account is made of sin How doth the world make a May-game thereof How do men think they can appease Gods Wrath with a broken sigh or a Lord have mercy upon us for we are all Sinners or by making some counterfeit shew in their sickness or on their death-bed And do not the Papists think that it may be done away by auricular Confession Penance Pilgrimages Holy-water Popes Pardons the saying over of so many Ave-maries Paternosters c. But those that set so light by sin are such as never knew the weight of it nor have part in the remedy and therefore in vain do such say they hope to be saved by Jesus Christ and he dyed and shed his Blood for their sins and yet they still live in sin What is this but to make a light account of Christs blood a treading of it under foot an accounting of it an unholy thing a despiting of the Spirit of grace Yea if even Gods Children did so weigh this unspeakable price as they should they would be more afraid to offend then they are This also should awaken those that know no part in their Redemption that they have the greatest matter in the world to seek Such should never be quiet till they finde themselves discharged for without this there 's nothing but eternal destruction they shall bear their own burthen 5. This setteth out the unspeakable love of God and Jesus Christ that when we had plunged our selves into this miserable estate and could not onely not help our selves out but not so much as devise a way out that he did both finde out the way and was content to bestow his Son on us to suffer the curse and death that we had deserved that so we might be freed What man would beat his Son to spare his Servant What man would kill his Son to save his Enemy What Prince would give his onely Son and Heir for a base Subject nay to redeem a Traytor and that not to bondage but to death yet all this hath the Lord done God so loved the world O wonderful that the Father did not rather suffer all the world to perish then that his most blessed Son should suffer the least of those indignities that he indured And was not the love of Christ infinite that for us gave himself and did willingly lay down his life for us which could do nothing to deserve or requite it nay which were his very enemies so to endure such base and cruel dealing from men who himself was Lord of the world and could have commanded the earth to swallow them so to be spitted on mocked scourged nailed to the cross c. but above all that he would undergo his Fathers displeasures for us Rake-hells that had so provoked him 6. And what doth this call for at our hands again but admiring at the infiniteness of the price we study all our life how to walk thankfully before him giving our Bodies Souls Lives and Labors to him again most zealously faithfully serving him in all obedience yea if he should call us to lay down our lives for his Names sake to do it chearfully as he did for us we are not our own but the Lords who hath bought us and paid dearly for us and so must have neither Wit nor Will Body nor Soul Hand nor Foot but for him and which we are to employ in his service If one should redeem us with a great sum of Money we would ever be thankful and count our selves his if one should give all his Substance more if one should give himself to serve and be bond for us yet more but to lay down his
men contend for trifles Oppress use false weights and sleights as also hinders from inviting and meeting together 4. Envy at the thriving and wealth of others about them or equal to them as Labans sons did at Jacob Cain that Abels Sacrifice was better regarded then his Esau that Jacob was blessed and Ismael that Isaac was the son of the Promise 5. Frowardness and shortness of spirit breaks love very often for angry words stir up strife 6. These very days of peace make men grow hollow and strange and to set little one by another As when Sheep see a Dog they run all together so trouble makes men to make much one of another whereas its otherwise in peace These be woful causes 4. The effects of this want of love are lamentable every where both in Church and Commonwealth O what woful breaches and contentions what wrongs and enmities So in Families so among particular persons how break they out to the dishonor of God yea sometimes Professors one with another to the shame of their Profession the interrupting of their Prayers or either the hindring of themselves from the Sacrament as many a time it is or slubbering it over and coming with festred hearts and so depriving themselves of the benefit thereof nay provoking the Lord by their unworthy receiving Seeing these things be so O let every one of us finding our selves faulty humble our selves crave mercy and labor to be reformed herein To this end learn we to pluck out of our hearts those noysom weeds that this precious plant of love may grow We must strive against infidelity and labor for more faith In humbleness of minde we must labor to esteem every one better then our selves we must labor for a moderate affection to outward things setting more by peace then them we must also avoid envy We have more then we could have look'd for Is our eye evil because our Masters is good we must also cease from frowardness and be gentle and meek and labor we that this love to our brethren may shew forth it self in all good fruits as in judging the best departing from our right not provoking or being easily provoked but forbearing and forgiving Alas we have need that others should forgive us for who lives and is not subject to offend God forgives us many and great debts and shall we catch our neighbor by the throat God bids us ask forgiveness on no other condition but to forgive our offenders and there 's no better sign that a man is forgiven of God then to shew mercy to men none can be assured of that but they will forgive Let us therefore from the sea of compassion that God sheddeth out upon us let fall some drop thereof on our neighbors and not seek revenge which every bad man yea beast can do but pass by offences which is the glory of a man Besides revenge is the Lords Office and to revenge is indeed to resist the Lord without whose Providence nothing is done this kept David from revenging himself on Shimei Not to revenge is always the best way for us and the worst for him that wrongs us There 's no dealing with a man that commits his cause to God more safe to anger a Witch then an Innocent meek spirited man that hath his recourse to God thou hadst better deal with one that will take revenge on thee to the uttermost To this end keep we out anger if we can if not yet let it not rest in us as it were sowring in our hearts Let not the Sun go down upon it This indeed the world accounts a base thing but its honorable it makes us like God Neither must we labor for this a little or some few times but for a long skirted love that will cover even a multitude of offences And let our love shew it self in giving Spiritual and Temporal things for God gives to good and bad and makes us but Stewards of that he gives us that we may dispense the same yea the more we give the more we have as which encreaseth by giving and for Temporal things the high-way to thrive therein is to be merciful as to beggary to be pinching 5. The general reasons inciting to this duty of love 1. God requireth it of us who is love and if we perform it we do not so much serve our Neighbor as please God who takes it as done to himself If we neglect it we neglect not our Neigbor onely but God who takes himself wronged in this point 2. We are all one flesh and all have some part of the Image of God upon us But for the people of God 1. We be members of the same body The members of the Natural body not onely hurt not but help each other else quickly would the body be brought to confusion 2. Brethren not Natural ones but a better Brotherhood a nearer Bond Now between Brethren there must be no contention and it were a shame for such to contend 3. Both the Word requires it and the Sacrament of the Lords Supper calls for and puts us in minde of it 4. No better Argument that we are in the light love God are Christs Disciples and translated from death to life then this 5. The beauty of a Christian is love he 's the best Christian who loves most whose lips feed most whose branches spread widest 6. As it brings us much peace to our conscience and will comfort us not a little on our death-bed that we have not lived to our selves but to be useful to many especially to Souls so it procureth us love in the places we live in and in the Church of God where we have a good name No man is well beloved though he have good things in him if he be not loving Oh say they he is a good honest man but a harsh Censurer Contentious and so hasty that no man can tell how to speak to him he is a strait man no man is the better for him by counsel encouragement admonition so for other things But if a man be full of love Oh it shall procure him love again he shall be commended while he lives and mourned for when he dyes as they wept for Dorcas but a proud churlish close man he shall live without being desired and dye without being mourned for Many would have Love and Good-will and Credit but will not seek this way to procure it they live closely to themselves neither being useful or any way liberal to their Neighbors let them never look for it Many care not so they may scrape all to themselves for their good name let it go whether it will but these are bafounded and its a curse so to live Thus in general In particular Touching the love to the Children of God which is here chearfully called for consider we both the duty and the maner how it s to be performed For the duty it self it
so shall our reward be great above others if we be unfaithful we must look for greater damnation as being treacherous in so weighty a work 2. For people how ought they to regard Gods faithful Ministers that watch over their Souls Alas how little are they regarded how poorly maintained every thing too much every little enough for them whereas Lawyers Physicians c. live wealthily are much sought to It s a plain sign men love their Bodies better then their Souls and the Earthly Inheritance better then the Heavenly Which liveth and abideth for ever These words spoken of God are to shew how it comes to pass that the Word is able to Regenerate and beget us to a new and immortal life namely because it is the Word of him who liveth and giveth life to all and endureth for ever If it were not the Word of such a one it could not for as for the word of man it can do no such matter All the wisdom of all the men of the world put together and used to perswade a sinner are not able to change his heart The word of a man can but stir up that in a man which is in him already but to put any thing into him that was not in him it cannot 1. This teacheth us to preach the pure Word of God purely and not our own Devices for what is the chaff to the wheat not any word of man this or that how wise or ancient soever can put life into a man So nor to mingle mans word with Gods it hath no need of help from mans testimony let it alone it shall be able to perform that which its appointed for The Word of God is sharp enough to divide between the joynts and the marrow though it be not whetted on this or that mans Grindstone As Pearls need no painting so that which is of incomparable power and is pronounced to be mighty hath no need of the help of weak man 2. Let him that is born anew by the preaching of the Word be well assured he shall live and endure for ever as God so liveth and endureth as every one that is not begotten thereby shall through Gods judgement live after a sort and abide for ever but it shall be in everlasting wo and misery Verse 24. For all flesh is as grass and all the glory of man as the flower of grass the grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away Verse 25. But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever and this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you THe Apostle now laboreth to make men labor for their part in this Regeneration whereof he had spoken and that is by shewing the miserable state of a carnal and unregenerate man and that a man without this hath nothing that good is nothing that can please God that can stand him in stead and bring him to Salvation for whatsoever is in man besides this is flesh is corrupt and sinful and so consequently vain and vanishing as grass yea the best thing that is or can be in an unregenerate man is but as a flower that fadeth soon away and cannot abide the heat of the Sun no more can any thing in an unregenerate man abide the censure and judgement of Almighty God and this he doth to drive as well carnal men out of themselves and make them labor for this grace of Regeneration as to stir up them that were Regenerate to be thankful to God for this marvellous work and labor to walk worthy of it in all fruits of holiness and obedience Now having laid out the misery of a carnal men yet he leaves him not so but tells him that there is a means to help this and to bring him to an happy state and to live for ever namely The Word of God which endureth for ever whereby the Soul is converted Faith wrought we united to Christ and fetch from him as pardon of sin by his death and favor by his obedience so ability to live the life of grace here and the life of glory hereafter But lest any should say But where is this Word that is able to do thus wonderfully for us and how must it be dealt with to make it thus effectual for our Regeneration He tells them that its among them and being sincerely preached and humbly heard believed and obeyed would become effectual to their Salvation In the words we have both the Law and the Gospel 1. The miserable state of all unregenerate men 2. The mean to make us live for ever Both these are set down in two Propositions The first concerning the base estate of a carnal man hath two branches one a degree above another The first that all flesh that is whosoever is carnal and unregenerate is grass that is frail brittle fickle perishing which is not onely in respect of his bodily estate but any thing else in him The second that the glory of man that is the best things that be or can be in him are as the flower of grass vain and vanishing The second concerns the Word of the Lord that it endureth for ever and that to make us live for ever by uniting us to Christ the Fountain of life The words are taken out of Isa. 40. 6 7 8. where note by the way that no text is ever cited out of the Apocrypha the Apostle being guided by the same Spirit that the Prophet was looking upon the same sense not standing precisely upon the very words All flesh is as grass Though it be not chiefly meant of the frailty and brittleness of our bodily condition yet it is also included of which a little This our life is often compared to grass and that fitly for as grass is subject to come to an end many ways so we It may be blasted with the East-wind as soon as ever it peers out of the ground if not that yet in the spring the beasts will crop and bite it off if it miss both these yet the mower will cut it down with his sithe if it escape all these yet there is one thing coming that it cannot escape namely the cold frosty winter whereby it must needs wither away So we may be blasted as soon as we be born how many have dyed the same day they have been born or shortly after if we scape then yet some disease may bite us in our youth or if we miss both these death with his sithe may cut us down in our middle age but if yet we scape the winter notwithstanding of old age will wither us away and we cannot shift it Alas we are as a bubble a vapor of no continuance so vain a thing is man lighter then vanity A little too much heat or cold * a little blow with a Horse foot a bad savour or the like can quickly make an end of us Alas we carry the matter of many diseases daily about us in
deceive them We speak it to you not of our selves but from the Word which deceiveth none 4. This may terrifie those that by just marks are left in the number of unbelievers let them not depart as if this did not concern them or touch them at all but fall down and bewail themselves for they are yet shut out of Heaven if they continue their courses shall finde Gods Ministers words true where they set them there they shal stand And a stone of stumbling c. Our life and Christian course is usually compared to a way and the stops and lets that hinder us from entring into a good life or turn us out of it or make us slack in it are called stumbling stones by reason of which men are hindred from entring in or turn out of the way are made go back again or go slowly on Now Christ and his Word are here said to be so to Unbelievers Q. How can this be that these should be le ts to men A. It s not in the nature of themselves for Christ is the way by which we come to the Father the light of the world to guide us to him and the door whom we enter and the Word of God is that blessed direction and light to guide men to the Kingdom of Heaven and sheweth us every thing that belongeth to our happiness which is therefore called the Word of Life and Kingdom of Heaven but through the default of the parties themselves even the unbelievers and disobedient some of ignorance stumble that know not these things nor desire to know them do content themselves that they be not book learned and are poor and think they have a good heart and mean well or if they know some things generally as that they must love God above all and their neighbors as themselves they perswade themselves they so do and as they say so will and that further they need not trouble themselves others stumble out of notable pride of heart others of prophaneness as not a few of malice as the Scribes Pharisees and Priests who though they were convinced in their own Consciences of the wrongs they did Christ yet would not go back from that they had said or done Note then that There is nothing so holy and good but that our wicked nature will thereby take occasion to stumble and take hurt Christ Jesus and his Gospel nothing more excellent yet many stumble at them both For Christ The world hath ever stumbled at him which was also foretold of the Jews though some received him yet the great ones especially rejected him they stumbled at his seeming baseness and poverty misinterpreting the Scriptures which foretold of his Kingdom as if an Earthly had been meant therein whereas the contrary was foretold howsoever he was Man and mean in their eyes and so unable to save the world yet he was God also and Lord and King of all and even in his greatest abasement his Godhead uttered it self notably when he lay in the Cratch the wise men from the East led by a Star came and worshipped him The Angels also appeared to the shepherds with songs set forth his Nativity He was hungry yet fed five thousand with five loaves and two fishes Slept but when he awaked stilled the winds and waters Paid tribute but out of the fishes mouth Wept for Lazarus yet raised him from death when he had lyen three days in the grave Betrayed of Judas but at the same time healed Malchus his ear and at his word caused them that came to take him to fall down backward At his death the Sun was eclipsed the Earth shook the Graves opened the vail of the Temple was rent He was buried but rose again the third day yet for all this they would none of him though he himself had told them that if he did not works that none else could do they should not believe on him They trusted for Salvation by keeping Moses his Law and so stumbled at him And as then so now also both they the Turks and Pagans stumble at him they will not believe in a crucified God So the Papists For though they give him a Name and in word acknowledge him yet indeed hoping to be saved partly by their own Merits and Satisfactions and partly by Him they overturn the Gospel make void the grace of God and deny Christ altogether for he is either a whole Savior or none at all If ye be circumcised saith the Apostle Christ profiteth you nothing And are there not many also among our selves that stumble at Christ 1. All ignorant persons that take no knowledge of the misery or danger they are in but if they see any thing amiss yet they trust by crying God mercy to do well and so know no need of Christ nor seek after him 2. Civil persons that like the Pharisee trust to their just and true dealing and honest living above a great many others These cannot think that they are so wretched as the word saith we all are namely children of wrath servants of sin and Satan and that there is no good thing in us and we unable to think even a good thought This they cannot away with nor do believe but like the yong man think they have kept the Law though in the mean time they understand not the Spiritual meaning thereof who therefore hearing the judgements of God denounced put them off from themselves to Whoremongers Drunkards Blasphemers c. and so when Christ is Preached with his benefits which glad the hearts of some more then all the world they take no comfort therein These stumble at Christ for he came to save the wretched miserable poor blinde naked lost laden mourners wounded ones and the like and as long as a man hath any thing of his own Christ will not meddle with him 3. Prophane persons who hearing that all that will have part in Christ must be truly humbled must be throughly changed renouncing all sin and embracing the contrary good think this very harsh Some like the Gaderens will not leave their excessive covetousness and gainful sins as that which they get in their shops by lying cozening and deceiving who cannot finde any time for the Word their Farms and Oxen carrying them away others like Esau for their unlawful pleasures and filthy lusts reject Christ How often is Christ offered to them who yet will not renounce their sins and turn to God with all their hearts Is not this fearful But were it not an happy change to lay down and abandon their sins which will bane them and take up Christ who would save them Is it not monstrous that sin should be preferred before Christ Is not this to spare Barabbas and crucifie Christ 4. Such as go yet further and have been professors and hearers of the word long and done some commendable things who yet
this therefore be a mean rather to draw men on to Religion then set them off from it 2. Some say They make a great shew and be very hot for a while and after they fall off and become as others as bad as who is worst which we think is because having begun they see nothing in it and so they return to their old courses as that which is better A. You might have guessed many truer Reasons It s not that a true Christian is fallen away or one that hath truly tasted of the goodness of the Lord and finding no sweetness in it returns to his old byas as the better state but it is that he that was but an hypocrite though he made a shew is discovered now he hung to the bark but was never ingrafted went out from us but was not of us and Christ coming as is foretold shal make the thoughts of many hearts to be opened It s the easiest thing in the world to be deceived and few build sure and God will have some such Revolters both for the good of his servants which are thereby made the more wary to build sure and look to themselves better then otherwise they would and for the just falling of the wicked that they which will take no benefit by any thing as by Preaching and by the godly lives of the servants of God but rather seek for lets may meet with such blocks falling in their way to their Destruction If some fall away what then The Word hath foretold there shall be hypocrites in the Church yet there be some have held out constantly yea to the death in Prison and flames and loved not their lives so well as the Truth who have found indeed the sweetness of that Christian life from which they would never part Let us therefore begin in Truth and we shall never fall from it as the hypocrites do le ts look to our selves there may be times of tryal wherein many will fall away 3. Some stumble at the falls of Professors We see not say they but they be as bad as other folks and seeing they make a shew of forwardness more then others I would have them shew it by their lives but they are as Covetous as others as Froward Hasty and Furious if they be stirred A. I see you can tell how others should live though you have no minde to it your selves True they should lead their life answerable to their Profession and do not a great many so even their Neighbors that live by them with Eagles eyes yea even their Adversaries being Judges Why doth not this provoke them and you and what if some having boisterous natures and strong corruptions which for want of heedfulness and care prevail over them for a time and so they fall to do something uncomely yea and for a long time walk not so watchfully as they ought is this matter enough for you to mislike Religion The Gospel teacheth not this but the contrary therefore is it not in fault that you should fall out with it Doth any man dislike a Trade because some of the Trade be bad persons and are at sometimes overshot therein Christianity and the denying of our selves is not so easie a matter as that it should be expected a man should straightway as soon as he hath entred upon the profession of Religion be perfect although we ought to look and labor thereto diligently 4. Some stumble at the great humiliation of some Professors who by going to Sermons have been even at their wits end and so troubled as that all their friends could not comfort them yea some have been in such dispair as they have been almost besides themseves and some have made away themselves by drowning hanging or otherwise and they that have not been so yet though they were as merry before they went to Sermons as one would wish after have been so dumpish and heavy as that they would never be merry and I would be loth will some such say to come to this pass therefore I do not mean to trouble my head about such matters A. Many through Gods goodness be truly humbled and yet in short time finde comfort others more deeply cast down and longer held without comfort whom though they walk heavily as they have cause yet God sustains and in due time they get comfort who if they should be held under all their life and yet obtain it at last were much bound to God and their estate infinitely more happy then to live as before in security Yea if any should be so deeply cast down and for want of means of comfort living in desert places wanting publique and private helps or having them be troubled also with the humor of melancholy and the Devil subtilly watching his advantage when both these meer should draw them into some temptation to lay violent hands upon themselves yet I had rather a thousand times be in the case of such a one that being lost hath sought after mercy and salvation and had it in chase and yet were held off by unbelief Satans temptations and their own distemper Being in seeking of it their state could not but be good what ever became of the body For Blessed are they that hunger and thirst c. Better I say is the case of such a one though it be somewhat grievous then either of prophane ones or civil persons that never make question about their salvation but God be thanked such examples are few and very rare Many indeed there be that make away themselves by hanging drowning cutting their throats c. of whom we hear ever and anon but not one of a thousand of those upon any such cause but upon Covetousness Pride Discontent Worldly grief meeting with such Afflictions and Persons as cross their Wills and having no Grace nor Faith to bear them up in them they sink under them and yield to the Devils temptations as Achitophel So that you need not keep away from Sermons lest you should be troubled in your wits and make away your selves but rather hear the Word and labor for Faith or else you may be more likely a thousand times for want of Faith when Afflictions come to hang your selves then otherwise And is it not strange that if one of an hundred upon trouble of Conscience come to such an end that should be a stone to stumble at and all the other should be leapt over and be no means to provoke people to the Word and to Faith a sign they are willing to stumble And whereas there are some that are upon some occasion or naturally distracted in their Wits and craized in their brains and so miscarry people must be so wise as to know that this is no trouble of Conscience yet a number are so foolish that they put no difference Therefore never fear being troubled at the Word for if thou beest not troubled in this World for thy sins thou shalt howl in Hell for them eternally And where
thy goods for how have many by yielding to the Word saved hundreds and thousands this way that they began to waste and others do How do many bring untimely death upon themselves by wretched courses How many do the gallows catch in a year how many stab'd and dye fearfully which might have lived long if they would have been ruled Innumerable sorrows do men bring upon themselves for want of obedience to God and his Word which that would save them from At least if thou wilt not obey throughly and in all things yet come into some civil order and course so shalt thou at least if thou beest not saved yet have the less torment in Hell 2. Civil persons which disobey both commandments of the Gospel do neither believe nor repent and for the Law they do some duties to men but of the first Table make small Conscience nay they have no skill neither savor of the spiritual maner of performing duties What talk they of giving every man his due when they give God no part of his as they should or of keeping promise with men if they shall break their vow with God 3. Ignorant persons of all kindes as the Heathens that worship they know not what and Papists that toil themselves about their will-worship how good soever their meaning may be yet they do not that which God commands yea numbers among ourselves that either have or might have the means but neglecting them pull in their heads 4. Hypocrites that obey in some things yea some in many and go far yet either never digged deep and laid a foundation sure or retain the love of some sin 3. This may be for instruction to us all especially that profess the fear of God that throughout our whole course and in all our conversation we cast this with our selves not what our profit or our pleasure or our minde saith but what the Word of God saith This becometh Christians and will bring comfort and will prove the surest way at long run we must not following our own reason and conceits cast off and disobey the Word we think it may be better thus and thus or hope it s no great matter or that it s but once O take heed This cost Saul dear He would go offer Sacrifice He said he was bold so he was indeed as we many times But take heed of being bold with the Word and taking leave of sin though but for once Thou knowest not what that once may cost thee To Travel on the Lords day hath many fair pretences but what evils hath ensued thereby So Usury is a hasty way to get gain but fair and soft goes far What if we get much and put it in a bottomless purse and God blow on it and melt it One man gets slowly in his Office and Trade because he dares not lye Dissemble break the Sabbath Others care for nothing and they grow rich apace with the one it holds and his Children enjoy it and he dyeth with Peace and Credit but the other dyeth with disgrace and a guilty Conscience and God scatters that he hath for God will take pity of the honest labors of men and give of the fruit thereof to their Posterity but no pity of that which was got with the price of his glory Hereby many a man loseth soul and all So many a man seeth not into some one thing who is otherwise good and so haply is too hard to his workfolks will make bold now and then with the Sabbath c. though his soul be faved yet God sets the print of his hand on him in some outward affliction Body Goods Children and the like Whereunto also they were appointed The Reason how it comes about that seeing Christ is the way of Salvation and the Word the means to bring men to Faith in Christ that yet to some they prove a rock of offence and turn to their destruction it s because God in his unchangeable and eternal purpose hath so decreed This to let pass other interpretations by the consent of the soundest is the plain meaning of the words and I come not to tell you what men say but what I am perswaded God saith As he hath ordained some to Salvation so hath he some to stumble and come to destruction which are the two parts of Predestination This is that most holy and just decree of God whereby he hath in himself eternally and unchangeably determined of the final estate of all mankinde and every particular in the same whatsoever falls out is by his decree and not a● adventure He doth all according to the counsel of his own will The means of effecting this are the creation of man in innocency and the fall of Adam which was also of him decreed It hath these two parts Election and Reprobation for though it be put sometimes for the one onely as for Election yet is it common to both This Doctrine will appear both lawful and meet to be taught upon these grounds 1. Whatsoever is written is written for our learning and the whole Scripture is profitable to teach c. whereof this is a part 2. This is a part of Gods counsel the whole whereof ought to be taught 3. It s of very great use to the people of God their strong Bulwark to flie unto and strengthen them against all Satans assaults even the unchangeableness of Gods counsel 4. The holy Apostles have Preached the same plainly to mixt Churches in most of their Epistles 5. Many Errors have been broached about this Doctrine by Satan and men of corrupt judgement whereof the Translator of Mr. Perkins his Treatise speaketh in his Epistle But it s offensive and many take hurt hereby casting off all care and saying If I be elect I shall be saved let me do as I list and if I be appointed to damnation I cannot be saved do what I can What if some take hurt by this Doctrine shall it not therefore be Preached What Doctrine almost can be taught but mans vile nature and heart will take occasion by it of ill as of Gods mercy whereupon men wax bold and secure shall not the Doctrine of Gods mercy be taught so of Christian liberty which was the reason of those preventions which the Apostles used so of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith onely yea Christ himself is a stumbling stone and rock of offence Shall he therefore not be Preached It s not the fault of the Doctrine but their own wicked corruption and Satans malice that turn holy and wholesom things to hurt as a cholerick stomack doth good meat into ill juyce and the Spiders gather poyson from the same flowers from which the Bees gather honey Do we therefore wish there were no flowers Shall the Childrens bread be kept from them because some unruly Servants will riot and abuse it Shall the use of a Knife or a Sword
to our selves or the use of any lawful means If he set open the door then we may go out but not break away but be content so long here to stay as God shall see meet The world cannot abide to think of death or of the day of Judgement would buy them off yea but to be deferred with much money an ill sign nay many of Gods Servants be much to blame some so addicted to the world as not willing to part with it O ye be of little faith It s base that any thing here should take up our affections from longing to be with our true Inheritance Nay thus some Christians are held lingring indeed and that for wife and childrens sake especially namely to see them brought up and kept from evil courses seeing often the contrary through the want of Parents the wrack of many children As for the most part this argueth weakness of faith in Gods providence especially if their desire be excessive for God can provide for them without us moderately to desire life for this cause or only to do God some other service is tolerable always provided that it be the love of nothing here below that detaineth our affections but that we so esteem of the world and all that is in it as we see no cause in it why it should take up our hearts and make us linger here The causes that should make us desire to be hence should be sin and the desire to be with God sin to chase us hence and the love of God and Heaven the excellency of that place and state should allure us thither Some desire to be gone but it s most ignorantly and desperately for its onely because they be in trouble full of pain have many crosses Thus many make away with themselves others impatiently wish to be gone poor mad fools not knowing what is a coming onely looking to be eased of the present grief O our poor folly also and the earthliness of many of Gods people that are not wearied hence by sin and by their corrupt nature and continual spring of sin that they cannot be rid of but annoys them daily and continually Therefore God is pleased to send them sorrows and pains and with a week or fortnights pain they are made willing to dye that were not so before A great fault of sundry Christians that have their hands and heads so full of business as they cannot desire to be gone nay had need of a twelve-moneths warning to set their matters right This is not Pilgrim-like they may hap not have a week therefore so walk as you may ever be willing to be gone and be ever of this minde that to be gone is most happy and most to be desired 10. Pilgrims the nearer their Journeys end they are the gladder So ought Christians that have passed many years and are grown old to thank God highly that now their salvation is nearer then when they first believed it that they would not their time were to begin again and that they were yong again c. but thank God they draw nearer the shore where they shall arrive at the Haven of rest Ancient Christians near their end have this advantage that they have almost past the Pikes yong ones know not what remaineth for them yea every day a Christian at night should thank God that hath brought him safely one days journey nearer his end then in the morning Many think they grow old too soon too fast if they could make their years stand still as Joshua's Sun they would be glad Verse 12. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation VNto the former Exhortation of purging the heart he adds this of looking to our outward behavior and conversation among men namely that it be honest good godly and every way such as may not onely not be offensive but may be of good example yea to the very wicked that though for a time they speak evil of us as our nature is to do of every one that differs from us thinking our own courses still to be best yet at last they looking more narrowly and seeing our constancy in well-doing may be enforced to think well of us and whensoever God shall touch their hearts with his grace they may glorifie God and say This is the onely true way of worshiping God and thank God for it and all the means that have brought them to the sight of it The parts are two 1. The Exhortation 2. The Reasons thereof The Exhortation is to godly life and that is inlarged by the circumstance of persons or company before whom namely the Gentiles that is the Idolatrous Wicked and Unbelieving The Reasons 1. That they may be prepared to their conversion by beholding our good life which is set forth by the contrary in former time namely their speaking ill of us 2. That they may glorifie God which is set out by the time namely when God shall please particularly and in a special maner to bestow his grace upon them so that by our innocent godly life led among the wicked we shall provide for our own credit their good and Gods glory which is the thing we should chiefly aym at in all our actions Here observe we first our Apostles order He begins at the right end as a wise Builder he lays a good Foundation then builds on it as a skilful Chyrurgion he first purgeth out dead flesh then heals which else would heal and break out again Reformation if ever if be good must begin at the heart No man can have a good conversation whose heart is Unregenerate and Unsanctified for from the heart proceeds the life if sin and lusts be nourished there they will break out as fire hid in straw or dry wood for our bodies are as apt to execute as our hearts to broach evil For one to purge the Channels and leave the Fountain foul were to lose his labor for one also to pull off the tops of the weeds and leave the roots still were to no purpose The heart must be washen kept cleansed from inward lusts else no godly life 1. This confutes the Papists that talk of good conversation and yet regard not the heart either seek after true justifying faith whereby to purge the same 2. This shews and rebukes the folly of those that think to frame a good life as civil persons and yet never knew the corruptions of their hearts nor what Faith means that purifieth the heart nor make Conscience of their inward lusts Hence it is that they shamefully deceive themselves especially in the first Table and in the sight of a true Christian that can tell what belongs to good conversation Numbers think upon occasion they will never do as they have done but promise great amendment as upon
with our sins as the Jews dealt with Christ kill them bury them lay a great stone upon them set a watch over them Should live unto righteousness It s not enough to be dead to sin but we must be alive to God and to his Commandments in doing all good By righteousness is meant the whole duty of man in all godliness throughout his whole conversation to God and Men When it s joyned with holiness then it stands for the duties of the second Table but alone it stands for all as in that of the Apostle Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness and to this end hath Christ dyed for us even that we should not live after the lusts of the flesh but after the will of God serving him in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life And what should we else do how else express our thankfulness we ought to be exceeding thankful even for earthly benefits how much more for this Christ dying for us O happy change We that were sometimes the slaves of sin and drudges of Satan doing base work for woful wages are now become the Servants of God employed in holy works whereof here the fruits are peace of Conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost and the end everlasting life We ought therefore to give our selves to an holy life in all things shewing hereby whose we are and to whom we belong as it s said of the Merindolians That they were known by their godly behavior wheresoever they became It was a custom among the Romans that every one should carry some note of his Trade or Profession as he went in the streets a Carpenter his Rule a Taylor his Yard or Measure c. So ought we to carry a badge of our Profession every where about us whether we go to Church be at home in our Families go to Market to our Shops or Workfolks c. even holiness throughout our whole conversation In prosperity we must shew forth sobriety in adversity patience at all times the fruits of love faithfulness uprightness c. Are we in company our speeches must be gracious and godly if alone holy and heavenly minded And this we ought not to do a little by fits in a good mood and when we list but we must walk in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life we must be continually ready to every good work we must be a peculiar people zealous of good works If these things be in us and abound great profit will redound unto us and hereunto must we employ all our endeavors By whose stripes ye were healed Now he returns again to Servants applying the benefit of Christ to them By stripes or wales of the stripes he means not onely the stripes he had of men but all his sufferings he useth the word stripes in respect of Servants because they suffered stripes of their Masters and that for their especial comfort as who did not suffer alone and whose stripes were healed through the stripes which Christ suffered All that Christ suffered for us was wholesome and saving his shame our glory his condemnation our absolution his curse our blessing his strokes our peace his death our life The most grievous stripes that he suffered have healed the most ugly and deadly sores of our sins which otherwise had been incurable We ought therefore to be content to suffer some stripes for him and for his sake and for the profession of his Name he was mockt and reviled for us may not we then be content to suffer the like for him What are we to him He became poor to make us rich if we be cut short for his sake shall we not endure it Dost thou suffer any thing for Christ bear the same patiently and great reason Christ suffered much for thee Note further that Christ dyed even for poor Servants and that therefore the meanest are to labor after their part in Christ and yet who are more negligent then the poor are for the most part and those poor that have their part in him are to be highly thankful and bear their outward wants patiently and think that God hath dealt wonderfully for them having passed by so many great wise and learned ones In the words also these particulars are implied 1. That sin is a wound or disease as a disease weakens the body so doth sin every faculty of the soul As the former also brings deformity on the body causeth pain and thereupon followeth death so doth the latter on the soul. 2. That our bodies are subject to many sicknesses and the diseases thereof are oftentimes very grievous and if those be such what are the diseases and pains of the soul the one may put us in minde of the other 3. That Christ is our Physician both for body and soul He hath both skill will compassion healeth us freely and is ever near us he hath by his Passion purchased all good for us he wrought many cures and miracles in the days of his flesh now he worketh by means and his blessing thereon 4. That sin is hateful to God as for which Christ suffered stripes Seek we therefore help in Christ we are sick of many diseases we cannot help our selves by any Medicine we can devise Christ onely can cure us This Faith apprehends for that the wounding of one should heal another is above Nature Oh! how will men being sick in body bestir themselves that they may be cured but being inwardly diseased through sin how slack are they how do they defer it to the last when it s too late There be but certain seasons to be cured in as the man at the Pool of Bethesda observed miss we not our opportunity lest we perish altogether And that we may speed at the hands of this our Physician 1. We must feel our disease and be humbled confess also and bewail the same to him 2. Earnestly beg of him to heal us 3. Hurt our selves no more as near as we can 4. Believe he will heal us 5. Suffer the words of Exhortation the preaching of the Word being the means to cure our sinful Nature 6. Take heed of dawbers that cry Peace peace 7. Take heed of all false cures as by our selves Masses Pilgrimages Indulgencies c. 8. Abide the Lords leisure in the use of the means though we should be cured by threatnings of the Word or by afflictions yea being once cured do we acknowledge the same to his glory and be we thankful for it s he alone that hath satisfied for our sins he alone through whom our sinful Nature is cured Verse 25. For ye were as sheep going astray but are now returned unto the great Shepherd and Bishop of your souls THese words are a confirmation of those immediately going before that they were healed by Christ by comparing their former state wherein they were with their
's a way that seemeth good in a mans eyes but the issues thereof are the issues of death To those whom God means to save he sends his Word and Spirit and so opens their eyes to see that they be out of their way and that not onely prophane persons but also some hypocrites that have contented themselves with some common things as Herod did and sometimes civil persons that thought their state very good that God opens their eyes to see it to be woful and make them hasten out of it saying as those in the Acts What shall we do to be saved we finde we are in the way to damnation but most men will not be perswaded of this but go on with a liking of their way though it be to their destruction To this end Ministers must preach the Law and shew men that be out of their way people must take out this lesson and this is the first till this be nothing is 3. As the sheep is most subject to wander but of all Creatures hath least wisdom to finde the way home again so no natural man can come home to God alone we can go further and further from God but to come home one step we cannot we are blinde and cannot see a step of the way have no minde but to wander All the thoughts of mans heart are onely evil continually we cannot think a good thought No man can come to me saith our Savior except the Father draw him If any be come home to God from his wandring state let him give all the glory to God and know that there was no difference between them and those that yet wander if God had not sought them and as it were fetcht them home on his shoulders if God had not thus done for us we had wandred to this hour yea to our dying day as well as others therefore wonder and praise God And for those that yet wander let them not bless themselves as if they could turn to God when they list as many think Oh they will cry God a mercy at their end c. but while you have life and time with the means entreat God to bless the means from Heaven to be mighty to open your eyes and to bring you home from straying into the way that leadeth into eternal life 4. As the sheep that is wandred is in manifold dangers so and much more certainly is every natural man in inevitable danger if he so continue He is out of Gods special providence as the stray sheep is from the tendance of the Shepherd his eye is not over him He hath no certain abiding as Cain knows not what to do he is separate from the company of Gods people and what evil may not then befal him As a sheep is in danger to be carryed away by diverse Lords into whose several grounds he cometh so is a natural man in danger of the Devil the World his own lusts in danger to fall into every sin what hath he to stop him into any plague or punishment that ever fell upon any what promise hath he to the contrary yea as sheep are apt to fall into the mouthes of Dogs and Wolves so may the natural man fall into the paws of the Devil and be turned into Hell he knows not how soon Is not he in danger that is naked in a field and beset with Bills Bows and Guns all bent against him to destroy him so is it with every wicked man as being subject to all the plagues of God Is not he in danger that hangs over a pit by a twig so is every wicked man by the threed of his life over Hell When a wicked man riseth in the morning doth he know what may befal him ere night can he tell but he may fall even into the foulest sins can he tell but that the earth may swallow him a thunderbolt may strike him through he may have any curse befal him or his can he tell but he may be in Hell ere night and at night ere morning and is not this danger enough Thus hundreds of this Land drop into Hell every day and in every corner some at one time or another by one means or another the Devil lays hold on them This may make every wicked man weary of his condition and to have little joy of himself till he be out of this state who can abide to live in a continual danger For them that be gone and of whom Hell hath already caught hold there 's no hope or help You that are alive look to your selves were you out of this condition you could not be overcome you could not be pluckt from God by Angels or Devils all the world could not prevail against you being under Christs keeping he would keep you unto the end But are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls Here 's the safe state of Believers They are now converted not by any power or goodness in themselves but by the mighty power and goodness of God to the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls Christ Jesus who having redeemed them will not now lose them but safely preserve and keep them to life eternal both in body and soul. So that All that are come to God in Christ Jesus be in a most safe state for besides that they have pardon of sin the Robe of Christs righteousness being put on them they have the Spirit to sanctifie them from the power of sin and to enable them to please God in a new life Neither can they fall from this estate nor can fall into any sin unto death there 's no condemnation to them neither the Devil nor World shall be able to draw them to their old state Christ that hath redeemed them will never lose them Who will lose a purchase dearly bought but so are we to Christ Who will not keep his Limbs we are made Members of Christ Will he suffer one to be pulled off God forbid Christ having redeemed us commits us to his Fathers keeping and who being under his protection is not in a safe Castle or impregnible Fortress Not onely they are sure they can never fall finally but also Christ hath a care of every sheep to keep him in the right way to fetch him in when he wanders to comfort him being heavy and to binde him up being broken What Christian findes not this by daily experience that God preserves him daily by his grace from many falls comforts him in many heavinesses reduceth him from many wandrings 1. Here 's matter of unspeakable comfort for those that be come into Christs sheepfold If we look to our selves or our Enemies being so strong we have cause to fear but as Elisha said to his Servant There are more on our side then they that be against us We have much opposition against our good and standing but we are not left to our selves Our Salvation now is not
can any thing cover them from the sight of God but the white raiment of Christs Righteousness if we put on this then shall not our filthy nakedness appear then shall we abound in knowledge wisdom zeal humility patience This is Royal apparel this will keep us from the Storms and Tempests of Gods heavy wrath and displeasure that will break out like a whirlwind against the ungodly who will be found naked The more we have of this we shall appear the more comely and beautiful before God his Angels and all good men This is the most costly apparel that can be of Gods own making and which none but his children wear This is apparel for all Sexes ages degrees and callings whatsoever and which doth well become and fit each of them neither are great ones to despise it for that mean ones wear it for this doth not derogate from its worth onely they that are Gods people wearing it This is never out of season as serving both for Summer and Winter never out of fashion It fits in Youth in Age in Life in Death and is to be worn as well by night as by day in sickness as in health yea is then in great account when other apparel is laid aside and not regarded yea this apparel we carry with us out of this world when we leave our gay Robes behinde us and this apparel lasts ever being the better for the wearing 1. This rebuketh those that though they go plain enough outwardly yet have no care of their soul their mindes being altogether led away with covetousness there be moe ways to Hell then one even these shall no less perish then those which are wholly addicted to costly apparel This will not serve their turn Oh we be not proud we go plainly What then if thou beest covetous if thou art not careful for the decking of thy soul what art thou the better It rebuketh also those that are very curious and careful for outward attire but are altogether careless of this inward How many wear brave clothes which have no inward adorning They savour not of this they have no leisure for it it s the inside and so not seen but God seeth it men also see it by the outward and it will be seen and found naked when God shall come to Judgement such though outwardly brave be inwardly base their souls are not onely void of good but filled with all evil and noysom lusts they are like a dead Corps stuck with flowers and like painted Sepulchres yea like the Heathen Temples especially the Egyptians whose Proches were curiously carved painted and engraven with gold and all the bravery that might by but within nothing but the base Picture of a Cat Crocadile or some ugly Serpent How gorgeous soever they are outwardly they have not inwardly in their souls the image of God shining in Spiritual graces but rather Crocadiles and ugly Serpents even noysom and beastly lusts and so are like a dunghil covered over with Snow They wanting the inward beauty of grace to commend them set out themselves as gorgeously as they can in apparel as the Painters servant who being set to make the Picture of a very beautiful woman and wanting skil to make the face beautiful dawbed on a great deal of gold on her clothes Those howsoever they please themselves herewith in their prosperity yet in sickness their deep Ruffs must be laid aside and all their costly toys and then what shall comfort them O their misery at death but especially on the day of Judgement Then shall they for ever be clothed with shame and confusion as not being here clothed with grace 2. Let all therefore be wise and moderate themselves for outward apparel if it be comely and according to our degree it s well Herein le ts be careful even to advance and enrich the soul This becomes us well and will assuredly afford comfort in sickness in trouble in death and on the day of Judgement In that which is not corruptible Grace is of an incorruptible nature and abides for ever and is not taken away from any that is possessed thereof it abides in sickness tarries with us at death and we shall carry it with us into Heaven and wear it there for ever and ever This he lays down by way of opposition to outward apparel that is vain transitory subject to Moths to be stollen lost burnt worn out worn by them that are corruptible who know not whether shall last longer themselves or their clothes so vain a thing is man Such as prefer Grace take hold of the substance as they that prefer costly attire thereunto embrace the shadow take hold of vanity The ornament of a meek and quiet Spirit This is a particular vertue most fit for wives The very proper ornament of a good wife is a meek and quiet Spirit This is the mean to comfort any husband and to draw on those that be backward to a love both of their persons and profession Oh! what a comely thing is it in a wife not onely not to provoke her husband but not to be easily provoked by him winking at small unkindenesses and bearing with their natural infirmities passing by some occasions of grief with silence as others with a soft answer O how pleasing is it for an husband to have such a wise how comely is it also for them to be quiet with their neighbors no meddlers no tale-bearers or talehearers void of contention gentle peaceable so with their family and servants not to be always chiding and complaining to their husbands but governing them in as milde and peaceable a maner as may be and especially to be peaceable and quiet with them in their husbands hearing They that are thus by grace for some are of a soft and still disposition by nature and so slow to wrath are of great wisdom They are endued with that wisdom which is from above and their meekness is out of the fruits of the Spirit Then this nothing becomes them better if they were clothed with beaten gold and pearls it were nothing to this This reproveth those that be curst cruel and vexatious to their husbands through their continual unquietness Such are fit to keep Bridewel or be Dames of some house of correction there were fit objects for their chiding and fighting Some there are who having no children or servants to bait at work their teen upon their husbands and weary them not onely out of their houses but out of their lives Wives were appointed helpers but these help their husbands no way except to their grave These certainly have no goodness in them not refraining their tongue their Religion is vain They are right fools for anger resteth in the bosom of fools Let them therefore fight against this vice mourn under it and endeavor to be of a meak and quiet spirit Which is in the sight of God of
conversation may become wicked through the tradition of our Elders So among our selves if any be reproved for this or that they will answer It hath been done thus these forty years It was so ere you came and will be when you are gone If it be a wicked and unlawful custom why plead you for it It s more then time it were banisht it stinks because thus they did in darkness therefore we should so do in the light what folly were this They will not do so in worldly things as apparel dyet building They were wont to go in hose and stockings all of one and have no chimneys in their houses who will now do thus yet better retain those then bad and unlawful customs Holy women There hath always been a company of holy women in the world as well as of men and why not both were made after Gods image at first equally good and in the fall both are equally corrupt and the children of wrath and in the recovery have equal right to Christ to the Gospel to Grace to Sanctification and Holiness Men have no priviledge this way Grace had been as well bestowed on them as in the Old Testament on Sarah Rebekah Rachel Deborah Jael Hannah Naomi Abigail c. and in the New on the three Maries Elizabeth Lidia Dorcas with sundry others as on men Women also were as forward to maintain Christ to follow him to bury him and Christ after his resurrection first appeared to them Our own experience also Sheweth that in most Congregations women be as forward as men in frequenting the Word and Sacrament And why not 1. They are of a timerous nature and so more easily wrought upon by the Word and by Gods Judgements 2. They keep at home not seeing or hearing the abominations that be abroad 3. They have many crosses and pains sicknesses and Childe-bearings putting them in minde of death and drawing them near to God and so furthering their Salvation 1. This serveth to stop the mouths of such idle heads as take pleasure to disgrace women 2. It serveth to encourage women and to comfort them There have been ever good women women therefore must stir up themselves to encrease the number especially having more means then those had in former times And needful it is that there should be good women as well as good men 1. For their own sake who have souls to save or destroy 2. That there might be an holy seed to make up the number of the Elect good Mothers bringing up their children well and good Wives being helpers to their Husbands both in soul and body As for those women that be wicked unclean prophane and ungodly notwithstanding the fearfulness of their nature their keeping at home and their manifold crosses What would they have been if they had been men They would have been monsters and of such women-monsters Hell is as full as of men-monsters Note further That he saith not wealthy women fair women but holy women Here 's the ground of his commendation A little holiness is better then a great deal of riches and beauty That that is to be desired of a man is his goodness Beauty fades with sickness wealth hath many ways to take it away but grace holds ever to life eternal and commends before God Angels and good men Therefore when God threatned to take the wealth from the rich men of Jerusalem and gay cloaths from the women yet saith he will make them amends How Every one shall be called holy They shall so profit by their affliction as where it might have been said Yonder goes a rich man yonder goes a fair woman a woman in costly apparel now Yonder goes a godly man a vertuous gracious woman This is commendation indeed and for this we ought to labor that we may have our part herein Again He calls them holy though they were married Marriage hinders not holiness nor is single life more holy then it It s the holy Ordinance of God and the bed undefiled The gift also of continence and single life is sometimes given to carnal worldlings and prophane persons but denyed to Gods dear Servants by whom he will encrease his Church and Kingdom This condemneth the Church of Rome Oh they extol single life and disgrace Marriage as if it were a living in the flesh O their vile hypocrisie they would seem holy and yet maintain Stews openly yea some of them have written in defence of Sodomy and for Fornication and Adultery the infinite skulls of murthered Infants the fruit of their Whoredoms found near the Dens of their abode witness how unholy they are The Pope would be Peters Successor yet was he a married man Till God call us to marriage we are to live in single estate purely when we are married soberly and holily If we be single we are not the more holy or if married the less holy But how could they be holy in those days By Faith in Christ whereby their hearts were purified they severed from the world to the Lords use There 's no Sanctification no Salvation but by Christ Now Christ is more clearly revealed then he was in those days more holiness is therefore now expected all ignorant unbelieving impenitent and unholy women are in a fearful case especially considering the means The Lord will one day present these holy women Look you here here be women that in the dawning of the day saw Christ and you have lived in the Sun shine of the Gospel and have not believed He calls them holy though they had their weaknesses as Sarah had so that we are not to account those as not holy that have imperfections for God accepteth of Believers in Christ and pardoneth their imperfections This therefore correcteth the over harsh spirit of those which cry down our Church as unholy and a Synagogue of Satan and no Church because of some blemishes Our Savior did not so but more charitably calleth Jerusalem The holy City which indeed was the Church though stained with many blots of error and bad life It comforteth also those that be truly sanctified and upright in heart notwithstanding their imperfections and failings God accounts you Saints and righteous persons Adorned themselves c. Of those duties which they did perform I have already spoken observe we onely this how they came to do their duties thus he sheweth they were holy and godly women and so performed the same Note then that Wives cannot perform their duties aright unless they be holy no being a good wife till a good Christian no building of a godly life on any foundation but upon Faith in Christ Whoso would do their duties aright to Gods glory their own comfort and anothers good they must fetch and draw grace from Christ by Faith they that think to do otherwise build in the Ayr build that which will fall on their heads and which will never
in their work It will be demanded of us whether Magistrates Ministers Housholders or others what good we have done 4. This condemneth all those that fail in the doing of good or in the maner thereof and so lose their labor and have no comfort of themselves as they that will do some good duties not others as Read not Pray come to the Word not to the Sacraments come to both but omit Family duties They that do not good duties at all times but take liberty to shake them off and banish them so did not David nor in any places haply devout at Church careless elswhere nor in all companies doing good onely as Saul among the Prophets nor to all persons some will seem to give God his due in the mean time dealing unjustly with men as some with civil persons are careful in this careless in that Others also will do well to strangers but not to their Families as others to their friends but cannot away with their enemies and others though submiss to their Superiors yet are harsh to their Inferiors so they that will then onely do good when they finde it easie to be done who yet in the mean time take great pains to do wickedly so they that will not do any good except when they may be commended for it and have good will for their pains so they that still say they will and they will do good but defer the same so long that death takes hold on them so they that think to do good in their end who should do it in their life the present time is indeed the time wherein to do good so they that do good for a while but after break off so they that do good things but in a corrupt maner without Faith and seeking themselves therein or meerly in hypocrisie All these mark me well that make their practice of doing good in this fashion it s as good never awhit as never the better I deny not but a good man may herein at some times fail through weakness or by reason of some temptation but whosoever usually thus doth doth bewray himself to be but an hypocrite and as he thus worketh so accordingly shall he have his reward with hypocrites 5. This serves for consolation to all those whose hearts are unfainedly affected to good and which are ready to every good God requires of them in their general or special callings at all times in all places towards all even in things most difficult and dangerous desiring unfainedly to do them in a right maner they do what 's good in the sight of the Lord hereupon they shall have comfort for the present and hereafter life everlasting Such are indeed of God 6. This is also for instruction to us all that we give our selves with greater diligence to that that is good and to do much good in our general and special callings taking pains thus to do both publikely and privately such as joyn not with us herein shall want their part in our comfort This shall be our Crown and will accompany us to life eternal the more good we do the more joy shall we have in our lives the more comfort in death and the greater glory in the world to come Let him seek peace and ensue it Another duty to be done of all those that would live long and see good days They must seek peace and ensue it Men that seek not peace shall not finde it and without peace what comfort can any have of their life Neither can any enjoy eternal life that seek not after peace for God is that God of peace and all that are his must love peace and therefore hath God given us his Gospel of peace as to reconcile us to himself in Jesus Christ so also to teach us to live in peace one with another We must therefore not onely keep it when we have it and accept it being offered but wanting it seek after the same seek after it as covetous men do after Money the hungry after meat Hunters after their prey if it run or fly from us we must run and fly after it This is again and again both commanded and commended is a fruit of the Spirit and of the wisdom that comes from above Now we must seek after peace 1. By living innocently and harmlesly with our Neighbors such as harm them either in word or deed are enemies to peace 2. By living helpfully and doing good in our places as Magistrates Ministers c. 3. By passing by such small wrongs as are done unto us not so much as taking notice thereof and for others of more moment to compound them of our selves or refer them to indifferent neighbors which notwithstanding if they must needs be determined by Law must not break off peace or occasion the omission of any neighborly duty 4. By parting with some of our right to have peace Herein we must not stand upon terms though haply it were fit our adversary should come to us as being Yonger Inferior in place or who first gave the cause of offence yet rather then contention should continue we must pass by all those and go to him even Abraham yielded to Lot And this we must do nor with some persons onely but even with all not with the rich onely but the poor also as being our fellow servants members of Christ as we are and such of whom we may stand in need both in prosperity and adversity neither with the meaner sort onely and not with the rich and wealthy as if it were of a brave minde to stand out with them and not to regard them but with the one as well as the other yea nor with the good onely though with them chiefly but with the bad also even Abraham maintained peace with Abimelech yet so as that we may keep our peace with God not consenting with them in their evil nor doing evil or neglecting our duty for their good will A just War is better then an unjust Peace A Nation may have with Infidels a League of Peace though not of Amity so we must have peace but not with ill conditions to yield to unlawful things Wo be to that peace that makes partition with God and breaks the peace of our own Conscience our Savior Christ came not to bring such peace but the Sword It will be better by being faithful to have favor with God and peace in our selves though we reap the ill will of our Neighbors then that God should curse us for our unfaithfulness and the wicked also in Hell for following their ways Thus must Husbands and Wives Ministers and People c. keep peace one with another otherwise we must be contented rather to be counted troublesom and breakers of peace This we must seek after 1. Because it s so pleasing to God he is the God of Peace and by the Spirit often
them occasions of sinning cease therefore to be wicked else shalt thou never cease to be miserable Be not afraid of their terror neither be troubled To comfort them in their sufferings for Christ he removes the enemy of constant and patient suffering namely Fear Be not saith he afraid of their terror neither be troubled that is Either be not afraid with the fear of ungodly men and such as have no hope in God who in the very least danger are altogether dismaid as the words in Isa. 8. 12. whence these seem to be taken do imply or Fear not the things wherewith they seek to afright you the Apostle using the words but to his own sense Fear not their faces big looks threats prisons censures and tortures neither be dismaid at them fear is an enemy to constant suffering as a coward can be no true Soldier and therefore are we often diswaded therefrom This hindred Nicodemus from coming unto Christ by day and multitudes from confessing him even for fear of the Scribes and Pharisees made Peter deny his Master and because of this in all alterations of Religion most turn with the time And would not many be more forward in goodness then they are if it were not for fear of displeasing O strive against this fear and be couragious so were Daniel the three Children the Apostles Moses the holy Martyrs c. Their Faith overcame their fear we need not fear men or what they can do to us for God will stand by us we must fear him fear to sin against him for unbelievers and fearful they shall have a fearful portion such as fear man more then God flye from the stroke of a childe and fall into the hand of a Gyant from a straw to a sword Verse 15. But sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear HEre 's the true means of constant and patient suffering even faith resting it self confidently on God But sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts We sanctifie God or his name as it s in the first petition of the Lords prayer not when we adde any holiness thereto which is holy beyond comparison but when we acknowledge and give that holiness which belongs to it Particularly herein we sanctifie the Lord in our hearts when we believing his faithfulness in his promises do thereupon rest on him in time of our troubles and this is to glorifie him Faith is the mother of constancy in suffering I know thy faith and thy patience Be thou faithful unto the death c. By faith those worthies mentioned in Heb. 11. did undergo all their sufferings This is the victory that overcomes the world The want of faith makes the world flye from God and his cause weakness of faith causeth fear to overflow us as in Peter and Cranmer as soon as we see some trouble to arise then are we ready to say with Peter O Master we perish If we do believe our selves to be the Lords and that our cause is just and good and that he hath all power in his hand and that none can stir further then he pleaseth and that he will strengthen his servants to endure and after this transitory life translate us unto life everlasting O this will encourage us indeed Labor we therefore for a good stock of Faith now in this time of peace and let us in our daily tryals reproaches and afflictions exercise the same and make good use of it If in these we can give glory to God by depending on him we may trust our Faith will not fail us when greater tryals shall befal us to believe God of his Word is to give glory to God as on the contrary to faint tends to his dishonor and as to believe on him is great ease to our selves so not to believe but faint very troublesom And be ready always to give an answer c. He proceeds to another duty as a fruit of the former trust in God exhorting us in token of our Faith in God that we be ready with courage to acknowledge and make confession of our Faith to those that shall demand a reason thereof This we must be ready at all times to do and so often as we shall be called thereto and to all men that have authority to call us and to any that shall demand it with a desire to learn or whensoever and wheresoever we shall see it meet and requisite so to do as the Spirit of God will direct his servants where when and to whom yet so as we do it with courage meekness and godly reverence Our duty then is not onely to believe the truth of God in our hearts but we must be ready outwardly to make profession thereof and confess the same with our tongues when God shall call us thereunto Abraham Isaac and Jacob walk'd as Pilgrims here on earth professing themselves Gods servants and Joshua professed That he and his would serve the true God Accordingly must we both by our speeches and actions declare whose servants we are so walking as that men may see we are not ashamed of God or his Word and way whatsoever others do most do yea rich and wise men do the great ones of the world do yet do we thus walk daring do no otherwise and not caring who know our carriage and behavior and though they scoff at it as scruplous too strict and precise and call us fools for our labor and ask us Why we do not thus and thus as we see most men do yet need not we be dismaid as being warranted by the Word of God So in all Companies we must make known what we are If we hear any rail at goodness speak ill of good duties oppose any part of Gods truth reproach the professors of Religion whether unknown or known unto us we must take the cause in hand standing for the defence of Gods truth and servants If by our timely answer any good may come to the Gospel we must not through our silence betray the same but if we be among scorners and dogs we must shew our dislike by departing from them Thus must we do being in company with prophane ones so if we be among Papists or other adversaries to the Truth we must have the zeal of God in us so if it be in the times of persecution that we be called forth by Magistrates or their authority we ought not to flinch nor be ashamed or afraid but shew what our Religion is what our Faith and Hope giving a Reason thereof out of Gods Word or if they demand us about any point of Religion we must in the defence of Gods cause speak our consciences freely Thus if the Jews or Turks should call us to know through whom we did hope look to be saved we must
him to kill him This is a Bailiff to arrest a Jailer to keep safe a witness to accuse a Judge to condemn an Executioner to torment c. It s of all foes the worst they accuse to men this to God one may go from them sometimes but not from this It s an evil help in adversity which like Jobs friends troubles us more then all the rest It will be a woful companion at the hour of death and day of Judgement It s like a woful contentious wife when a man hath had trouble enough abroad coming home he findes more there O their life is no life that live with a worm gnawing within Thus what joy will there be of health wealth or whatsoever else yea as we are to take heed of this so also are we of a benumbd conscience the end of both being bad the one no less dangerous then the other Thus of a bad conscience A good conscience is an excusing and comforting conscience that speaks on ones side and that for well doing Thus have the Angels in Heaven a perfect excusing conscience So had Adam in his innocency and we shall one day have in heaven Now our conscience is but so in part as all our other faculties Some corruption remains therein even in the best and therefore doth sometimes accuse or excuse when it should not but for the most part it excuseth and witnesseth comfortably on our sides this is either a good quiet or a good troubled and trembling conscience A good quiet conscience hath these two parts an heart witnessing to us 1. The pardon of our sins past in the blood of Jesus Christ for as Jonah's casting into the Sea stilled the same So believing in Christ stills the most troubled conscience if we be justified through him who shall condemn and 2. Our unfained uprightness and care to please God in all things detesting all evil and bearing true love to his Word and Saints of the former read these Scriptures Job 19. 25. Romans 8. 16. Psalm 4. 6. and 32. 1. Gal. 2. 20. Cant. 2. 16. Of the latter these Psalm 26. 2. and Isaiah 38. 3. Acts 23. 1. 2 Cor. 1. 12. Heb. 13. 18. They that believe most assuredly the pardon of their sins and walk most stedfastly with God they have the good quiet conscience at least so far as is here to be attained This is a wonderful Jewel a continual feast This causeth joy This causeth boldness to come to the Word boldness before God boldness also towards men let men say what they will we care not if our consciences witness truly on our sides yea boldness against the Devil who will lay much to our charge sifting us to the full O thou art a damned Creature will he say No Satan yes an horrible sinner and who hast deserved Hell fire I grant Satan but Christ Jesus hath paid my debt and delivered me If thou shalt scape Hell yet thou shalt never get to Heaven will he say for none come there but such as keep the Law O Christ hath kept it for me But he hath dyed but for a few whereof thou art none yes I am He dyed for none but such as truly believed in him so dost not thou Yes I do believe and do lay hold on his gracious promises But Christ dyes for none to whom he gives not power to become new Creatures so art not thou Hereunto will a good conscience answer boldly and so put Satan to flight This differs from a bad quiet conscience that comes from ignorance of their danger as a blinde man standing before a Canon this out of knowledge of Gods Word This is quiet upon examination that because never examined This is quiet upon good grounds that upon nothing but upon bear conceits This hath joy adjoyned therewith which that hath not That leaves one in deadness this quickens the heart to every good duty This holds at all times that driven away by the terror of the Ministery of the Word or by afflictions especially it fails at death and Judgement day A good troubled and trembling conscience is when one is perswaded of Gods love and the pardon of sin through Christ but cannot hold it firm and fast and this not in the beginning of their conversion onely but after they hold it with a wavering hand so doubtful and full of fears because of their unworthiness and the greatness of the mercy so that ever anon they are to seek and ready to faint And for the other their heart witnesseth the true hatred of all sin and care to please God in all things but herein they think they do nothing as they should and that they can do no good and even when they have done duties very carefully yet are they still troubled as if they did all for fear of pain and Hell and not for the love of God or out of self-love in hope of Heaven and to save their souls And because they finde some corruptions and rebellions they think that these spoil all their duties and that they themselves are vile wretches yea though they hate them deadly yet this doth not satisfie them they hate them not so much as they should Again they are so timerous and fearful whether they may eat this or that or thus much wear such good apparel do this or that go this way or that all which notwithstanding are lawful for them but they are so afraid to offend God that they often accuse themselves c. This is a good conscience though not so setled as were to be desired and as the other is This may appear by these Notes Such would not part with the comfort they have for the world nor be utterly out of hope and are glad when they can believe best They resolve to trust in God and serve him though he would kill them They are humble and both much and servent in Prayer They hang upon the Ministery of the Word hunger after the Sacrament long for the Sabbath delight in the Saints There 's no Physitian more welcome to a sick body then a godly Minister to them in time of trouble They walk usually more strictly then they that have more comfort and are more zealous and more afraid to sin and more grieve at sin in others So that this is a good conscience no less then the former Both go to Heaven the one in sharpness the other in sweetness run the way of Gods Commandments They be like to two Travellers through a Wilderness or in a dark night one of good courage afraid of nothing the other of a fearful nature afraid of every thing both which get well through So do these the one hath experience of Gods goodness in not being troubled and tempted the other of his power in being upheld that he is not swallowed up and overcome of fear and grief O that there were many such consciences And yet it cannot be denyed but
that the other is better as having more comfort in themselves and being more fit to do good unto others and yet they may scape some checks the others may meet with as Peter yea God seems more to tender these then those as a Father having two Children both beloved of him the one sick the other in health is most careful of him that is sick that he may recover To have a tender conscience checking us for the least sin idle words vain thoughts and the like as Davids for curting off the lap of Sauls Garment is a singular blessing and therefore to obtain it we must both see the odiousness of sin judging aright thereof and must bring our hearts to mourn even for the smallest sins 1. Let every man examine himself whether he hath a good conscience or not whether art thou assured of the pardon of thy sins whether doth thine heart bear witness that thou hatest all sin and art truly desirous to please God in all things as well great as small secretly as openly at least in the deep sence of thy misery art thou wearied under it as an intollerable weight hearing of the onely remedy dost thou long after it above all the world art thou as willing to turn from sin as to have sin forgiven to take up his yoke as to be refreshed by him If not thy case is fearful What have we if we have not this It s our duty then to labor for it and not rest till we obtain it What may not incite us hereto It procures Joy Peace Comfort Boldness before God and men such are bold to pray unto God bold to crave others to pray for them It s comfortable in prosperity a sweet companion at home and abroad night and day it s a sweet companion in adversity like a good wife by her kindeness chearing her husband when he comes home who hath been much turmoild abroad another Simon to bear a piece of our cross yea in the greatest crosses this assureth us that yet God is our Father he visits us in love he will assist us and at last deliver us It s a Castle of comfort an armor of proof a continual feast an Heaven upon earth It makes a man embrace the flames kiss the stake and being in the fire accounts as if he were on a bed of Roses In death its comfortable when all things else forsake us then when our eyes are shut up yet through this we shall with Steven see Christ Jesus ready to receive us and shall say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace In the day of judgement it will make us lift up our heads with joy when we shall see our Savior Christ come to receive us into his heavenly kingdom O they that have a good conscience should make much of it as of their jewel and labor to keep it It may be easily lost and is hardly recovered as may be seen in David and Peter The first part of it namely The assurance of our Salvation is kept by daily renewing our Confessions Supplications and Thanksgivings To this end we must labor to know the will of God and daily to grow in knowledge by our diligent perusal of the Scriptures The 2 part of it namely our care to please God is kept maintained by a daily and constant resolution not to offend God and so we must both strive and watch against our frowardness worldly-mindedness c. and covenant and vow to do the will of God to the uttermost of our power Hereupon we must walk carefully as in the presence of God avoiding all occasions of sinning using all good means to keep us in a good course publiquely and privately being diligent and careful in our particular calling to the glory of God and good of our brethren 2. This reproveth those that having a good conscience fail as much in laboring to keep it as the World doth in not laboring to obtain it How do Christians go on carelesly without renewing their exercises of Faith and Repentance and so their assurance is to seek or else hold it at a venture and coldly our worst day in the week might be better then our Sabbath had we but the grace to use our time aright O how many are careless watch not give way to their lusts therefore fall into many evils and so wound their consciences very often which is dangerous A place often wounded or hurt will not at last be healed We dishonor God much disquiet our consciences give evil example to others by our frowardness impatience worldliness hard dealings c. Hence it cometh that the Word pincheth us evil tidings amaze us we are loath to dye and the day of Judgement is fearful to us 3. This may encourage and comfort those that have good consciences though they be timerous What God shews mercy even to men unworthy and though thy sins be many and great ye● hast thou to deal with him that 's able to pardon them Lose not that thou hast when we lose good consciences all Gods graces diminish and vanish away neither can we thrive any whit as is seen by daily experience But nothing can do us hurt as long as our consciences hold good then are we fit to live and fit to dye fit for the Word and Sacrament fit for death and judgement Thus of the kindes of conscience and so of conscience in general Having a good conscience c. Now of the Words in particular whereof I have laid down their coherence with the former and from whence may be noted That a godly conversation in all things is to be joyned to a bold and zealous profession of our Faith to our knowledge and profession gifts utterance and the like we must adde a good life these two be two Twins St. Paul often joyns them together neither must they be parted saying and doing the tongue and hand must accompany one another Reasons hereof may be these 1. God expecteth of us that where he reveals the knowledge of his will that we adde obedience or else we shall be beaten with more stripes Where God findes this he delights in it as in Abraham who is called The friend of God in David whom he calls A man according to his own heart so in Joh in Zachary and Elizabeth c. we finde the same commended The contrary God loaths as in his own people whom he did again and again advertise hereof 2. This will prove our profession sound and not hypocritical for hypocrites go a great way but its onely Faith that purifieth the heart and that our knowledge is not swimming in our brain but sound and saving knowledge purging both heart and life when we dare compact with any other and say Shew me thy Faith by thy works as I can 3. This not onely Gods children look for when we have got knowledge and come
couragious in a good cause then stomackful if patient then blockish if wise in their matters then subtle fellows if diligent in their place very officious busie medlers troublesome if they run not to the same excess with others then precize fools c. Thus even for their godliness do they speak evil of them and so call light darkness and darkness light 1. Therefore Gods people must walk wonderful warily 2. They must not think it over-strange nor be discouraged if notwithstanding all their care of well-doing they be ill spoken of 3. We must not readily believe of men that have carried themselves well all that we hear but try it out ere we censure or change our minde 4. For ill speakers It s a woful badge of Ishmaels generation that shall be shut out of Heaven and of Satans brood who accuseth the Brethren Cursed are they God hath appointed a time to judge them for their cruel speakings Nay the world will not only speak ill of Gods Servants but do ill to them slay them as Cain dib Abel imprison them and pinch them as Ahab did Micaiah cast them into a dungeon as the people did Jeremiah into the Lyons den with Daniel spoil them of their goods as those in Heb. 10. 34. rack them torment them torture them even such as the world is not worthy of and that for their good works so Herod dealt by John Baptist and thus were the Apostles served and after the Martyrs in the Primitive Church and since multitudes under Antichrist If therefore we meet with hard dealing and doing as well as speaking we must not think it strange If we can hardly bear a few ill words how shall we bear stripes how Imprisonment and loss of all yea toturings and death ye have not yet resisted unto blood or undergone the fiery tryal we have infinite cause to be thankful together for our governors for if they were so minded as many particular persons there would be no peace for any zealous Christian If I had authority will some say I would hang up all these Puritan knaves c. Neither must we think the worse of those that be troubled for the the very best have been thus dealt withal They may be ashamed c. The best way to stop the mouthes of the world and to make them think well that they have done otherwise is not by goodly great words but by a good and constant godly conversation Thus David convinced Saul for he spared him when he could have once and again killed him Thus have many who have thought very hardly of such and such upon reports which they have heard of them upon the view of their godly and innocent carriage been much grieved that they were so far abused Thus were the Martyrs thought well of by the common people yea by great ones yea by their very Jaylors 1. As therefore we would muzzle and stop the mouthes of our adversaries that they may have nothing to say against us nay may be brought to acknowledge and love the truth and be converted and glorifie God in the day of their visitation let us live holily and innocently else if they finde us halting we set open their mouthes to speak ill continue them in their ill minde and hard conceit and set them further off from all goodness Too too many professors fail this way either they fall into foul sins or live not so christianly or else at least with zeal they are very rash and indiscreet by every of which much hurt hath been done from time to time 2. This sheweth them to be odde persons that knowing and seeing the innocent conversation of Gods Servants yet cannot be satisfied nor quieted but still speak evil of them a sign of a very bad heart who therefore will hate them because they be good whereas those that be but indifferently minded and civil seeing their good conversation will think and speak well of them Cain had no other cause to kill Abel but for his godliness nor Ishmael to mock Isaac but because he was the Son of the promise nor these to speak evil of those but because they are godly Assuredly a life agreeable to their profession should stop their mouthes Verse 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that ye suffer for well-doing then for evil doing NOw follow some reasons to perswade to willing suffering for righteousness sake which was then common and the profession of the faith dangerous 1. For that this being a world wherein we must suffer its better a great deal to suffer for well then for ill doing 2. Because the Lord will have it so to whose will we must be subject For its better c. Naturally we will chuse the better if we know it so should we in this seeing we are subject to suffering and that we are apt by nature to evil and so to suffer for it we must chuse rather as being far better to suffer for well then for ill-doing It s every way better better as being more pleasing to God he delights in the one not in the other pronounceth those blessed these accursed Besides it s no credit to suffer for ill doing but matter of shame and reproach whereas its honor to suffer for a good cause That of the penitent Thief seems to import so much we indeed justly for we receive the due reward of our deeds and so have cause to be humbled but this man hath done nothing amiss Again there 's no comfort in suffering for ill-doing as there 's for well-doing Suffering of it self is ill and grievous therefore there had need be somewhat to mitigate it but if it be for well-doing a good conscience will bear it out it s for Gods sake it s that wherewith all his servants have met and hereof the conscience takes notice and that to this there 's a reward none at all for the other 1. This rebukes those that suffer for their foul offences Theft Adultery and the like howsoever they be punished yet have they cause of hanging down the head not for the punishment but for the cause O how many refusing to be ruled by God and his Word bring misery upon themselves and ruine The Gaols are full the gallows catch many It s a fearful thing when they go to their punishment impudently and be not ashamed and humbled it s but the forerunner of fearful judgements When therefore men have brought themselvs into trouble justly their best way is to be humbled and repent so shall they finde favor with God and men We must avoid evil as we would avoid suffering for ill-doing avoid the sin if we would avoid the punishment We are also to be careful that we suffer not for Railing Slandering Backbiting Meddling with other folks matters 2. This may comfort them that suffer for well-doing its pleasing to God they
are fellows to the Saints Prophets and Apostles the honor is great the cause is good how base or grievous soever the punishment be Both John the Baptist and Barabbas were imprisoned Achan and Steven stoned and Witches and Martyrs be burnt the cause was not the same and in the cause the shame lies If a Christian as Paul be a prisoner and have chains on him and being demanded why he came there and is there so used if he can truly say It s neither for Treason nor Fellony I thank God but for preaching the truth of God to the world then it s well yea this will quiet his conscience when he knows its Gods cause who will take care of him strengthen him and receive him to glory If the will of God be so Here 's the other Reason We must be patient and comfortable in suffering for well-doing for its Gods will it should be so Here note that No affliction or persecution comes to us but by the will of God Whatsoever was done to our Savior Christ was done by Gods determinate counsel not an hair falls from our heads without our heavenly Father Christ foretold Peter of his bands before they came and so Agabus forewarned Paul of his which sheweth that they came by the will of God Obj. How can this be by the will of God seeing its a wicked thing and displeasing to God that his servants should be persecuted for well doing and he hath both forbid it and will punish the same Answ. As it comes from the Devil and persecutors it s a sin and they do wickedly and it s forbid but God hath an hand in it so far forth as it is good and he that brought light out of darkness can and doth bring good out of the evil of the wicked They intend evil but God good as in Jobs losses so in crucifying Christ Judas the High Priests the Jews Soldiers and Pilate did evil yet all this was by the will of God even so far forth as it was the mean of our Salvation and thereupon Peter that gave counsel against it was rebuked sharply so in the affliction of Gods children by the ungodly the devil and they of spite punish them for their goodness and to discourage them quite but God wills this for many good reasons as to try his that they which be approved might be known and to exercise and try their faith and patience and shew that they serve not in shew and for wages to confirm the truth not for it self for their sakes which are weak ones and to leave the others inexcusable to manifest the wickedness of the wicked and make way for the manifestation of the glory of Gods justice in plaguing them as the glory of God is made manifest by the constant and patient suffering of the Righteous which they could never have done of themselves 1. Here 's a comfort to Gods servants that we are not left here to the will of the Devil and wicked men to do what they list against us O no they are set their bounds beyond which they cannot pass The Devils could not enter into the Swine without permission nor go one whit further with Job then God gave Commission A Sparrow falls not to the ground without his providence and we are of more value then they The Lord appoints out our troubles and measures them they shall not be as little as we would for then should they be too little our tender nature loathing troubles and being unwilling to undergo the same nor so great as our adversaries would for then would they be too great but as God will The wicked are but the Lords drudges to scour us and make us bright They are his Landresses to wash us white not so little as we should be never the better nor so much as should rend the Lords linen 2. When we be ill dealt with in word or deed by the men of the world we should sit down quietly and bear it It s the will of God it should be so and he doth all things in infinite wisdom and lovingly for the good of his accordingly when Paul would needs go to Jerusalem where he was to be in great danger his friends said The will of the Lord be done thou mayest say If the Lord hath sent this to try me I pray God strengthen me if to chasten and purge me then to awaken me out of security and love of the world I thank God for it if he will any way have glory by me I am glad blessed be God it s his will I am content to wait upon him not but that we may with our Savior and the Apostle Paul plead our innocency as also use lawful means for our freedom if God see it good 3. But yet let the wicked think never the better of themselves nor look ever the more to be freed from punishment because its Gods will for they do it to no such end and therefore he will cast the rod into the fire when he hath chastened his children as he did by Ashur and the enemies he used to punish his people Did Judas or the Priests and Jews aym at the Salvation of the world in Christs death Nothing less Covetousness drave on the one malice the other If God brought good out of it what thanks to them He is to be praised for his goodness they to be plagued for their sin 4. We must not bring trouble upon our selves for in that we can have no comfort but if God bring us into it we may comfortably look up to him Vers. 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit ANother Reason to perswade to couragious suffering for righteousness sake from the example of Christ Christ suffered therefore need not we shrink or think much He that was just yea that just one therefore much more may we that be sinners and by infinite degrees deserve more grievous things then we suffer He for the unjust for us wretches and to take away our sins and reconcile us to God therefore ought we to bear somewhat for his cause that is most just and hath done so much for us Speak we first of the words briefly as they are the reason of the point in hand and then more particularly and largely of the matter contained therein namely The Sufferings Death and Resurrection of Christ. Christ suffered Suffered every way in Body Minde Name at the hands of men wretched and base persons misused him railed at him slandered him spit on him smote him scourged him crucified him between two Thieves c. Now The servant is not greater then the master If they misused Christ so what may we look for In thy sufferings help thy self with this meditation Christ Jesus suffered and what am I to him
8. 1. Gal. 3. 13. as from the first so far forth as its a punishment and piece of the curse and the nature of it is changed to believers for whom Christ hath dyed it s become a Serpent without a sting yea a blessing as being hereby freed from sin and not before Hereby the soul is let out of the prison of this body into the liberty of Gods Servants and put into the possession of life Hereby also the body is freed from all toils labors infirmities and pains waiting in the Grave for an happy and glorious resurrection In which respect death is termed a sleep an advantage to the Saints and is better in the day wherein they were born So from all forerunners hereof which are curses plagues and punishments in body minde goods and name all which Christ hath born what crosses we meet withal they are to further our Sanctification and Salvation but not punishments for sin or parts of Gods judgement as they be to the wicked 2. We are hereby made partakers of all good God is reconciled to us which is more then to have our sins and punishments quite removed yea and sheweth us the light of his countenance not as David who though he staid his wrath from Absolom at his return home to Jerusalem yet was not fully reconciled to him of two years The Creatures also are at peace with us The Angels become Servants and ministring Spirits for our good in life to direct us protect us comfort us c. and at death to carry our souls to Heaven so all other Creatures the very Devils and wicked men shall do us no hurt we have also right and title to this life we lost it in Adam but have it restored in Christ. 3. Hereby he conveyeth power into the hearts of all that believe in him to enable them to dye unto sin and to mortifie their lusts more and more This is a singular comfort to all that believe in Christ who onely partake of the benefits of his death we need not fear Hell condemnation nor any enemy of our Salvation nor any curse or punishment in this life all shall be for our good we need not fear the first death but rather have cause to desire it O the happiness of such God is at peace with them all Creatures in Heaven and Earth are their friends they have right to whatsoever they have little or much therefore may they rejoyce O happy that ever we were born what pains soever we have taken to come to the knowledge of Christ Jesus by whom we obtain such unspeakable things whatsoever the world esteemeth of believers they are the onely happy persons in the world yea we shall have power to mortifie our strongest corruptions and lusts fear it not beg it and use the means if all these be put together O how happy is a Christian who can value his riches On the contrary they that have not their part in Christs death are most miserable their sins are not removed they lye under them so under the curse of God in this world and the world to come so in danger of the first death which will rend the soul and body asunder that the soul may be cast out into Hell so also of the second O that such would labor for their part in Christ Christ came into the world Christ is now Preached and offered unto us men be in a woful case and are told of it and yet how few regard to embrace Christ how few customers hath Christ one would think that all that hear of Christ should be heartily glad of him and embrace and flye unto him but alas most men for profits pleasures or love of their vile lusts are content to let go Christ and he lies as a dead commodity and they that bring him to the world be unwelcom and so indeed few have part in Christ. The consideration hereof might make us mourn for our sins the cause of Christs death might be a corrasive to eat our sin and make it odious to us might make us serve God zealously and faithfully all our days yea to suffer for his sake and rather to dye with the Martyrs then any way to dishonor him and besides to labor to finde the vertue of Christs death working mightily in us the death of sin and sinful lusts Thus of his death But quickned by the Spirit Now of his Resurrection His body and soul that had been sundred were by the power of his Godhead reunited and he made alive so continuing with his Disciples until his ascension into Heaven Touching it consider that it was so the Reasons thereof the place maner and time with the benefits flowing from thence and the duties thereupon to be performed That Christ rose again is so plain that none needs doubt thereof The Angels that rolled away the stone the Soldiers that watched the Sepulchre Mary Magdalene and the other Mary that came to see the Sepulchre the two Disciples going to Emmaus the eleven Disciples being together c. all were witnesses hereof So his appearances were many as to Mary Magdalene then to her and that other Mary then to two Disciples going to Emmaus then to them all save Thomas then both to Thomas and the others another time to Cephas another time to seven of them at the Sea of Tiberias as at another to Five hundred Brethren at once so when he was to ascend he was taken up in the sight of all those there present all which are so many evidences of his Resurrection Reasons 1. That it might appear he had fully discharged our debt 2. Because being the Son of God and Author and Lord of life it had been unmeet nay it was impossible he should be held under of Death 3. By reason of the second part of his Priesthood which was yet to fulfil One part was to offer himself a Sacrifice Propitiatory to God for the sins of his people this he did by his death now the other is to make intercession for his Church and to apply the vertue of his death to those for whom he dyed This he could not have done if he had not risen again The maner When they had rolled a great stone to the door of the Sepulchre sealed it set Soldiers to watch yet he rose They could as well have hindered the rising of the Sun in the Firmament as his rising An Angel was sent that caused a great earthquake and rolled away the stone c. No counsel or strength can hinder the work of the Lord. Place The same where he was laid which was by Gods providence to avoid cavils in a new Sepulchre hewen out of a rock wherein never man had been laid Time It was the third day early in the morning on the first day of the week the third day as was foretold by Christ himself for he was buried the evening before the Sabbath and rose
the day after so long between to approve the truth of his death and no longer that he might see no corruption Early in the morning to shew that he was the light of the world the Son of Righteousness a light to be revealed unto the Gentiles one that was to lighten every one that came into the world namely that is lightned even us that are by nature darkness it self from hence must every man fetch light On the first day of the week for so God disposed of it This first day was answerable to the first day of the world it was the morrow after the Jews Sabbath As he began to make the world the first day of it when before it was not so now that it was decayed and corrupted by sin he now came to make it up again which he did by his Death and Resurrection Hence the Reason of the alteration of the Sabbath from the Jews Sabbath to the day following which is ours to keep a memorial as of the Creation of the world so especially of the renewing of the world by the work of Redemption and as the first Sabbath continued from the Creation to Christs Resurrection so no question ought this to abide to the worlds end The benefits ensuing hereupon are 1. To assure us that Christ hath fully paid all our debts If Christ be not risen saith the Apostle we are yet in our sins and our preaching is in vain 2. To give us power to rise to a new life 3. To assure us of our Resurrection O then who shall lay any thing to the charge of Believers It s Christ that is dead nay rather which is risen again for whom therefore there 's no evil remaining They shall have power given them to walk in holiness of life as the Syon graft into a stock receiveth juice and life therefrom yea they shall enjoy a comfortable and joyful Resurrection Contrarily miserable is the case of the wicked their debt is all on the File against them they shall rise but to their cost and smart to a dreadful judgement when they shall stand trembling and wishing that the hills might fall on them on them the second death shall have power Now they lie snorting neither will be awakened by our preaching notwithstanding their present and approaching misery The duties which are hereupon to be performed are 1. In imitation of Christs Resurrection in a spiritual maner to rise out of the graves of our lusts and sins to a new and holy life O awake thou that sleepest the Word is appointed for this end 2. To endure any thing rather then to be deprived hereof The faithful in Heb. 11. endured racking and would not be delivered therefrom with an ill conscience that they might have a better and joyful Resurrection 3. Set our affections on those things which are above Thus of his Resurrection Verse 19. By which also he went and preached to the Spirits in Prison Verse 20. Which sometime were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the Ark was a preparing wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water THe Apostle proceeds to comfort the faithful that suffer for Righteousness sake He had said before That as Christ rose again after his sufferings and had a good end of them so shall all that suffer for his sake Now lest this should be doubted of he sheweth how it cometh to pass namely by the help assistance and power of the Spirit of God who as he shewed himself mightily in Christs person so hath and will in his members and for instance he looks back a great while ago when long before Christs coming the Spirit shewed himself to the confusion of the wicked and disobedient and to the comfort and deliverance of Gods servants as Noah whom as this Spirit enabled to preach the to wicked world so they disobeying and mocking him the same Spirit preserved and saved in the common destruction And therefore if the Spirit of God shewed himself so in the people of God for their good so long ago then we need not fear but that he will much more shew himself in and with us inasmuch as now the Spirit is bestowed in a larger and fuller maner then before our Saviors coming into the world Now he reckons this rather then any other example because it was a famous one both of convicting the wicked world and preserving the servants of God in such a bad time and because it was so long ago I come to the meaning of the words By which his Spirit namely his Godhead and Divine Nature which raised him from the dead He went and preached namely by the mouth and ministery of Noah To the Spirits in prison even them that be now and were in Peters time Spirits and Souls in Hell but when Noah preached were disobedient men and women when God seeing the notorious corruption of the times threatned to destroy the world with a flood if they did not repent To them Noah preaching both by word and by deed also in preparing the Ark they not being moved hereat nor at the long suffering of God were at the length drowned Noah onely and his wife with his three sons and their three wives being preserved in the Ark. This Scripture hath suffered as Mr. Luther saith of the Lords Prayer much Martyrdom by false interpretations and erroneous constructions whereof that of the Papists is most gross They understand it thus that Christ being dead in his soul went down to the lower parts of the world where be four several places together one above another Limbus patrum Limbus puerorum Purgatory and Hell which is the lowest and hottest of all that Christ went into Limbus patrum to fetch out all the godly Fathers that dyed from the beginning til his coming and all such as in Noah's time seeing the flood come indeed repented and went to Purgatory and had there suffered all and so were gone into Limbus patrum also to deliver the souls then in Purgatory and into the lowest part namely Hell to Preach to the convicting of the Reprobates there c. But though in truth Christ had done thus which yet he never did this proves no such matter will afford no such sence for 1. By Spirit whereunto the word which hath relation is not meant Christs soul but his Godhead not his soul for then it was that Christ was quickned in his soul or by his soul but neither can be true not in his soul for his soul never dyed nor was mortal not by the soul for it was not the soul that raised him again but the power of God that joyned them both together as the Scripture testifieth and that his Godhead is hereby meant will appear by the like places as Rom. 1. 3 4. 2 Cor. 13. 4. 1 Tim. 3. 16. where that which our Apostle calls flesh Saint Paul calls infirmity and
what he calls the power of God our Apostle calls the Spirit both which are in effect one 2. Hereby cannot be meant the Fathers and godly for he speaks onely of the disobedient and Reprobate ones 3. He speaks onely of those that lived in Noah's time and no other age of the world 4. This Prison was an unhappy and miserable place and not Abrahams bosom nor the place of the Fathers 5. Even after our Saviors Resurrection when our Apostle wrote this they were then still in Prison therefore Christ had not delivered them nor fetcht them out but they that had been there were there still And where they say he went to Preach to the Reprobates this will not stand neither for he speaks here onely of the Reprobates of Noah's time and why should Christ in his soul go unto them rather then unto any other Besides to Preach to them and do them no good nor intend any is against the nature end of preaching But that there are any such places as Limbus patrum Limbus puerorum or Purgatory the Scripture gives not any inkling 1. That the Fathers went to no such place is certain but that their souls loosed by death went to Heaven Jesus Christ yesterday to day and the same for ever They had the same benefit by Christ as we after their death 2. They also believed in Christ as well as we Abraham saw my day and rejoyced They ate the same Spiritual meat and drank the same Spiritual drink and so were partakers of the same benefits of Christ. 3. Their Spirits went to God that gave them they enter into peace and so not into the Prison 4. Abrahams bosom into which Lazarus was carried by the Angels was above not beneath an happy not a miserable place Christ therefore went not to fetch them out thence there being no such place For Purgatory they say there 's such a place in the brim of Hell where the pains be almost as bad as Hell pains and the fire as hot into which are sent the souls of the godly that dye in faith and repentance but yet have not suffered the punishment of their sins in this world therefore must make up their sufferings in Purgatory for they teach that for our sins and punishments both committed before Baptism Christ suffered but for those after Baptism though Christ takes away the sins yet the punishment must be suffered by our selves and that partly in this life by penances c. and the rest by suffering in Purgatory that for every sin is due seven years of payment in Purgatory and therefore the Pope gives Pardons sometimes for fifty sometimes for an hundred years c. and therefore they say Masses for the souls of them that have been dead many 100 years and when they have suffered for all their sins paid the utmost farthing then come the souls out after they have been a while refreshed in a fair green field ful of pleasant flowers which is hard by Purgatory then they go up to Heaven notwithstanding oftentimes through the mercy of the Popes those pains are mitigated We say 1. That as they themselves do not agree about the place c. So neither is it otherwise grounded but on unwritten verities The Scriptures mention but two places whereinto the souls go immediately after death Heaven which is for the godly and Hell which is for the ungodly for the godly that they do immediately go into an happy place all the Scriptures sound with Simeon they depart in peace go not to Purgatory scorching pains Christ is to them as in life so in death advantage Having finished their course henceforth there 's laid up for them a crown of righteousness They have after the dissolution of their earthly Tabernacle a building of God an house not made with hand eternal in the Heavens Christ hath prayed for them that they may be where he is even in Heaven The thief on the right hand had as much need to have gone to Purgatory as any other yet on that day wherein he dyed he was with Christ in Paradice Blessed are they which dye in the Lord saith the Spirit for they rest from their labors After death presently comes the judgement that every man shall stick to Among all those things which God spake to Moses there 's not a word of this among all the Sacrifices that God ordained there were none appointed for souls in Purgatory and amongst all the cleansings and purifyings of all kinde of impurities of Leprosie and Issues c. there 's not a word of this What was God so unmindeful of his Church and people then Neither is there in all the new Testament any word for it 2. What a wretched thing is it to hold that our sufferings should satisfie the wrath of God and punishment of our sins when the least sin deserves eternal destruction both of soul and body And for their distinction that Christs death gives power to the pains of Purgatory to satisfie is an idle and ridiculous conceit 3. To say that Christ should satisfie for our sins and take them away but not our punishment is it not a wicked abuse of Gods justice where he forgives the sin doth he not also forgive the punishment True he chastens his servants but they are no part of satisfaction of his justice onely a means to prevent sin to come and humble for that which is past as if I had a quarrel against a man I might forgive him and yet if I see him in an Appoplexy or Swoon I may hit him a blow to fetch him again The truth is Purgatory was devised partly of a blinde and curious devotion of some Monks that thought that they that had some beginnings as they thought of goodness and so dyed it were no reason they should be damned c. who were therefore to be purged in Purgatory and so come to Heaven and that seeing most men have much sin in them even when they dye it were unreasonable they should go straight to Heaven for no unclean person shall come there and therefore they must suffer and be cleansed in Purgatory Who doth not see the absurdity of these conceits when the Scripture saith Whosoever believeth in him shal not be condemned that whosoever dyeth in the Faith all their sins and corruptions are done away and they received into Heaven But principally the Pope and his Clergy out of covetousness were chief founders hereof for hereby they did infinitely enrich themselves and every where enjoyed the very fat in the Land It was devised for the pampering of the living not the punishing or purging of the dead Through their covetousness meeting with the peoples ignorance Purgatory was hatched But what a cruelty is this of the Pope who hath power as he saith to deliver as many as he lists out of Purgatory yet will suffer so many so long to
God to come and yet they feared nothing Note that wicked men fear not Gods judgements Thus was it with the Sodomites with Lots sons in law with the Israelites This is indeed a token of a wicked man as being an argument of unbelief Atheism and hardness of heart and that they are mad on their sins These are sure to fall into destruction This condemns the common unbelief and impenitency of most men for though they hear Gods judgements denounced against sinners and that they hang over the pit of Hell and that he will judge Whoremongers and Adulterers c. and that no such shall inherit the Kingdom of Heaven and that they are thieves for every bit of bread they eat that if they come to the Sacrament without their wedding Garment they shall be bound hand and foot c. yet they fear no colours but go on like blinde Bayard People were of old afraid of Purgatory but these are not whatsoever can be said of Hell or the day of Gods dreadful judgement But they that now fear them least shall one day feel them most whereas Gods Servants which tremble and humble themselves with David Habakkuk and Josiah hiding themselves with God shall escape and they that fear them least before they come and are boldest in sin they are most stricken with horror and most cowardly when they come as Ahaz Saul Belshazzar c. Wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water Here 's the proper use and end of the Ark The preservation of Noah and his Family from drowning By souls we are to understand men and women and by being saved their temporal deliverance 1. In that the Ark preserved them and was not overturned with the raging of the waters and that Noah with his were not choaked being so long there with beasts Note That What God will have a thing to do though it seem never so weak or unlikely yet it shall be sufficient to effect it as Sampsons jaw-bone the compassing of Jericho Daniels pulse which he eat the Whales belly for Jonah Jordan to cleanse Naaman so by the foolishness of Preaching by the Ministery of a few mean men to speak of in comparison to convert the Gentiles c. If God shut up Noah in the Ark he shall be safe enough yea and how many poor live and prosper with a short and bare allowance and many of them in sickness get up with poor help and means O the happy condition of Gods Servants what means soever they have if God bless the same they shall suffice to do them good Hereof how often in time of danger when means have failed or weak means onely were to be had have we had experience 2. In that Noah with six other righteous persons besides himself were preserved Note Both the reward of righteousness though not for merit but Gods mercy and what a dignity and priviledge it is to be righteous one such is more worth then ten thousand others As they are the glory the wicked are the dross so do they finde that godliness hath the promises both of this life and that which is to come O what a provocation and encouragement ought this to be unto us to labor to approve our selves to God to be righteous in Gods sight and to walk with him Such shall be preserved from all evil of body and soul for those that be otherwise they lie open to all judgements here and to eternal destruction hereafter O that men could believe the odds between the one and the other Cham being with his Father in the Ark was preserved from the Flood but after was cursed and condemned for his sin and is in Hell Note both that Its good to be near the godly The place and they that be with them fare the better for their sake as Laban for Jacobs and Potiphar for Josephs wicked Jehoram for Jehoshaphats all in the Ship for Pauls and here Cham for Noahs and none can be saved by any other bodies goodness The soul that sinneth shall dye and every one shall be saved by his own Faith C ham perished though he had Noah to his Father who was such a good man Note further That Though the wicked both may and do often escape bodily dangers as Cham did yea live wax old and grow in wealth c. yet they shall not escape the everlasting judgement of God for their sins While they continue their sins whatsoever their prosperity be their judgement sleepeth not neither doth their damnation slumber 4. In that of those which were saved from drowning being but few yet one was not saved eternally Note That It ever hath been is and will be that a very few have been or shall be saved thus you see it was in the old world So was it under the Law when all the Nations lived without God in the world onely God was known in Jury yea though Israel was as the sand of the sea yet but a remnant of those were saved How few in the wilderness but were disobedient how few under the Prophets but were idolatrous and stiff-necked In the days of Christ where was faith to be found and now not to speak of the Jews Turks and Pagans even among Christians doth not the love of most wax cold Narrow is the way to Heaven and there be few that finde it Many are called but few are chosen Gods people are a little Flock Faith and Repentance without which none can be saved be so difficult things as few attain them An Hypocrite and civil man may go far but come far short If indeed to speak two or three good words at ones death were a sign of repentance as numbers hold or Heaven were so easily come by in vain did Gods Servants humble themselves and labor to cleanse themselves in innocency I would never care for coming into Heaven if it were so easily obtained as the Arrian at Norwich about to be Executed said to one standing by Do you think Christ would forgive me if I did confess and believe in him and acknowledge him O saith the party without all doubt he would To whom the Arrian If your Christ be so easily to be entreated I 'le never believe in him But not every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Faith and Repentance with the change of a man is the greatest work in the world Though we cannot judge the precise number of those which shall be saved neither yet who they are yet generally this is true That in the visible Church but a few shall be saved We must not therefore content our selves to do as most do or the rest of our Neighbors do but rather as the fewest do else we can never enter into Heaven or be saved we must crowd and strive hard and labor to be of the number of those few which shall be saved we must give all
in our thoughts It s his will that we should be patient but we burst out upon small occasions It s his will that we should keep holy the Sabbath day but we do for the most part prophane the same Herein we do but foolishly for if we mark it as we do if we be of God and I speak to such we have ever checkings of conscience and smart for it as peace in cleaving close to his will O how often do we lose our comfort and pull crosses on our selves Note we further from these words 1. That to live after the lusts of men and to the will of God be opposite each to other our inward lusts with the desires and fruits thereof are enmity against God and as contrary to the holy will of God as light and darkness God and the Devil for the Devil and our corrupt hearts be much alike no marvel then if we think so well of our selves and make so much of our lusts 2. That we cannot at one and the same time both walk after our lusts and live to Gods will or live to Gods will and walk but after our lust God and Satan can never dwell in one heart together as neither the love of sin and goodness This well considered would discover some to be in a worse case then they think they think seeing they have renounced many lusts and most sins and are in many things obedient one sin is not so much but though they love that they do love God and goodness too Deceive not your selves its impossible it should be so one lust loved is sufficient to prove a man unconverted sufficient also to condemn him and all his other obedience is vain If thou wouldest indeed please God and be saved renounce the love of every lust and walk in obedience to all Gods Commandments 3. That in the course of Sanctification we must begin at renouncing our own will and the lusts of men None sow or plant till weeds be pulled up None put on new apparel till they have put off their rags So must we abandon all the love of evil ere we can entertain any good This rebukes the common course of the world that set upon goodness ere they have bid adew to their lusts All their service is abomination before God 4. That it s not sufficient that we do renounce our lusts and evil except we yield obedience to the will of God Thus the Scriptures run Cease to do evil and learn to do well abhor that which is evil and cleave unto that which is good deny godliness and worldly lusts and live holily and soberly c. dye to sin and live to righteousness put off the old man and put on the new cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light It s nothing or at least but half if a man hath renounced ill company if he hath not taken up the love of good It s not for il-doing that men shal be condemned but for the not doing good Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit shall be hewn down and cast into the fire It s not enough we have no disorder in our families or be no ryotors or ill example givers therein except we take up good orders in stead thereof It s not enough we do no hurt if we do no good He that gathereth not scattereth and he that doth no good in a Town doth hurt An house empty and swept if it be not garnished with goodness its fit to be possest of Satan again yet how many think highly of themselves because they have done no hurt have not wronged oppressed defrauded any who yet have done no good 5. That it s not one action or two whereby a man is discovered what he is but his constant course of walking or living The best man may be and is overtaken as Noah Lot David Peter doing according to his own lusts and will not Gods but such is not his constant course yea when he doth otherwise then is fit he is grieved and humbled unfainedly repenteth and earnestly desireth to be more watchful over his own ways We must not because of some corruptions conclude against our selves that we are not the Lords if in the mean time our hearts bear us witness that what we do is contrary to our intent and purpose our course and drift of life on the contrary it s not one good action or two that makes a good Christian if a mans course be contrary thereto for even a Thief will be sometimes in the Kings highway when it s for his advantage whereas usually he keeps in back lanes and blinde ways Thus many a bad man will come to hear the word this is one of Gods ways but all the day after he will be in his own course even lying swearing drinking deceiving without any reformation either in heart or life Verse 3. For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles when we walked in lasciviousness lusts excess of wine revellings banquettings and abominable idolatries HEre are more Reasons to perswade to holiness of life They had already spent a great deal of time in the service of sin and following their own lusts and therefore were not now to continue any longer therein Again whereas before the Gospel they lived in ignorance now having the light thereof another maner of behavior judgement and practice was looked for of them But one would think a few words might serve to disswade men from such filthy lusts so odious in themselves so hateful to God so harmful to the doers thereof and to perswade to holiness of life so beautiful in it self so acceptable to God and so profitable to those which did seek after the same True if we were as we should be or as we were in Adam but we are altogether corrupted and depraved and now we have no minde to that which is good nay its death and bonds to us but that which is evil we eagerly minde and seek after whereunto may be added that hereunto the Devil and the world egg us on as they hang on us to hold us back from goodness Hence it is that so few are converted that men count goodness a prison naughtiness their heaven that they mock at goodness and onely except against some men because they are good whom they could love for all other things but for that they hate him 1. Let us take knowledge of our vile disposition le ts not follow the bent thereof lest we perish It misleads us altogether let us use all diligence to mortifie our lusts and to strengthen us to good for it s no easie matter to attain this 2. Let us be perswaded that there is continual need of preaching and all other good means to bring this to pass and not say with most What need all this preaching c 3. Let Ministers be
they should have To flee therefrom they cannot whether should they all being on fire To resist they cannot they have nothing wherewith they are naked of their pomp and retinue Hide themselves they cannot from his all-seeing eye to abide the presence of this Judge is impossible O they will then call to the hills to cover them we think that the Jews Judas Pilate and the Soldiers shall have a fearful appearance but many among our selves shall have a worse then some of them Do not we prefer our lusts before Christ as the Jews did Barrabas Do not many among us pierce him with their sins Crucifie him again persecute him in his Members This will not be the state onely of poor snekes or of the common multitude but of the greatest and mightiest potentates Nimrods Gyants O these shall wail before him beating their knees one against another They that have sit as Judges of Gods Servants in their Velvet coats and Gold Chains shall now stand naked before this Judge Here they dare appear any where yea where Gods Servants oftentimes care not for appearing but we shall one day appear with joy where they shall not shew their faces O that this might strike terror into wicked mens hearts to think of this day and might be a choak to all their ungodly profits and pleasures O this day will pay for all O that they could be perswaded now to kiss the Son now to humble themselves before him now to stoop to him and imbrace him as their Savior yet how many wicked wretches be there that will hope to be saved as well as the best even notorious ones O fearful impudency you saved then who shall be damned The Turks and Heathens that know not God True but not with such a destruction as shall befal you your stripes shall be worse and more then theirs your day is coming you have had the start of Gods Children you have been first in prosperity as they in trouble but ere long their mourning shall be turned into mirth your joy into everlasting misery Verse 19. Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in well-doing as unto a faithful Creator THe conclusion containing an Exhortation to commend and commit our selves and our state in all our troubles to God holding on our good course and keeping a good conscience without turning awry one way or other who both can being our Almighty Creator and will being faithful in all his promises whereof he hath many of protecting and defending his Servants who will either deliver them out of their troubles or give them strength to bear them and when their life shall end will take up their souls to Heaven keeping their bodies to a joyful resurrection This also hath the force of another Reason to perswade to the point in hand namely patience and joyfulness in troubles and may be gathered thus If we may in all our troubles as long as we keep a good conscience in them confidently commend our selves to God in assurance to be cared for as shall be best for us then ought we to be joyful in our troubles but the former is true therefore the latter Here 's an Exhortation to commend our selves to God in our troubles those are described by the efficient cause of them they come by the will of God whereunto Reasons are annexed to move us to commend our selves to God in them 1. Because of his omnipotency 2. Because of his faithfulness To all which is added a caution how far forth we may commend our selves to God in our troubles namely in well-doing even so long as we be careful to continue in our uprightness without swerving Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God Here note That Whatsoever troubles befal us in this life either afflictions from the hand of God for chastisement or persecution from the world for our tryal c. that they come not to us by chance or the will of the Devil or man without God but by the determinate purpose and counsel of God But of this before Commit the keeping of their souls to him c. Here note That God hath a care and special regard of his Servants in the time of all their trouble and adversity of what kinde soever He cannot forget them they be as the apple of his eye There are infinite promises of God to this purpose in the Psalms and Prophets He will either deliver them out of their dangers as Let Noah Daniel c. or comfort and provide for them as for Joseph in Prison whom at last he advanced as he did also David and Jeremiah else he will strengthen them to bear their pains give them faith and patience to bear all the malice and torments of their Enemies as he did Steven and the holy Martyrs that had such invincible courage and constancy as they wearied their tormentors even in the middle of their torments singing Psalms And their souls and bodies being parted he takes their souls to himself into Heaven in the mean time reserving their bodies safely to a joyful resurrection Neither is it any wonder For He hath created them redeemed them with his Sons blood sanctified them preserved them and prepared Heaven for them ere the world was This teacheth Gods Children in all their troubles of what kinde or degree soever to commend themselves into his hand with confidence and assured trust that he will take care of them and dispose of them to the best c. Let 's never be dismaid but cast our care and roll our selves upon the Lord be we assured that he will be with us and not fail us He is Almighty and can do it He is also most loving and hath made many promises in his Word so to do Be we faithful unto the death and he will give us a Crown of life Faithful is he that hath promised He loves that we should rely on him If it be poverty sickness pain persecution c. say not I shal never be able to get through it but cast thy self on God who never failed any that put thier trust in him Do not we rely on our selves for this were the way to fail like Peter and Origen who fell shamefully but trust in God Pray use all good means and set thy faith on work to depend on God to be well carried through thy trouble to the end and from death to Heaven Thus did our Savior and after him St. Steven commend their Spirits into the hands of God O our unbelieving hearts that fail as soon as any great tryal comes as the Israelites upon Pharaoh's pursuing them yea are ready to sink to be dismaid to put our hand to some unlawful means If we had faith enough what Victories might we get what Conquerors might we be we shrink and are dismaid as if we had none to trust in or as if
preach to them he writes which would stick to them and whereunto they might resort again and again at their pleasure Hence I might speak of the profitableness of writing Epistles how much good Gods servants may do to each other being absent by Prayers by Letters How much good hath been done by the Letters of the Fathers and of godly men in latter times as of Calvin Beza the Martyrs c. who knoweth not what a fault is it that it s no more used as Parents to their Children being absent friends to friends c. whereas wanton Letters and Letters about worldly businesses are frequent enough Written Thus God moved the hearts of his Servants and assisted them extraordinarily to pen the parts of holy Scripture O what a a benefit it is that we have the whole and most holy Word of God written and before us and how should we in token of thankfulness be exercised therein But most busie their heads with other matters namely Their worldly profits and pleasures fools bables in the mean time little using or regarding the Bible Briefly 1. Because he would have them the oftner in it and take the more delight to read it over 2. Because he sent Silvanus to open and unfold it at large by preaching out of it and making application thereof for their good Here see how God in his infinite wisdom hath provided us his Word wherein is all his minde and that in few words to provoke us to be exercised therein for if the Word had been written as large as we had need for our understanding the world could not have contained the books that must have been written but the Lord hath revealed his will briefly laid down much in few words yet for our further benefit God hath Ordained the Ministery of his Word and given gifts to men to preach it expound it apply it to every bodies use so that both together do most happily How should God have provided better for us If therefore people profit not their answer must be heavy Exhorting and testifying c. These words afford sundry points as 1. In that the Apostle testifieth by sound Arguments that they were in the right way note that Its needful for every one to know and be well assured of the Religion he professeth that it is the truth of God for there be many Religions yet but one truth miss that and perish we must not go by guess in our Religion It s not enough that we have the true Religion except we know it to be so that we be not wavering and carried about with every wind of contrary Doctrine 1. This rebukes those that take occasion because there be so many Religions therefore they will meddle with none but take their ease and tarry till all agree 2. It rebukes those that profess a Religion as all do but know not whether it be truth or not but believe as the Church believes as they be told but have no ground from the Word for the same Turks may not its death to question about their Religion Papists may not especially the Laity who are forbid to read the Bible or any good Book that way but we may yet how do the most in this Land profess the Gospel which by Gods goodness is the truth indeed alas how few know and are able to prove it 3. As it s our duty to testifie and prove our Religion to be the onely true way of Salvation so it s yours to know and acknowledge it that if an Angel should come and inform you otherwise you might not give ear to him 2. In that the Apostle thought it not enough to prove to them that that was the true Religion they were in but exhorted them to continue constant in the same note that They that know the truth ought so highly to esteem it and be so thankful to God for it as they never suffer themselves to be removed therefrom whether for hope of gain or fear of trouble c. we must buy the truth not sell it The Martyrs would rather lose their lives then the truth if we let that go we lose our Souls 3. In that the Apostle takes such care and pains with those Jews that now stood in the truth to hold them therein we may note that Its an hard matter for those to hold out stedfast that have begun to do well for our heart is deceitful the Devil is subtile and strong and there are also many Seducers many baits many discouragements c. What are they then that say there 's too much Preaching and Reading They know nothing that belongs to true Christianity A little means may serve to keep men in a loose carnal and prophane course but to keep us in a good course there must be precept upon precept line upon line c. and all little enough Therefore Ministers ought to continue with all diligence not onely to gain home more but even to hold on and confirm them that be gained that they fall not away into error sin and security and people have also need to use all good means to this end 4. In that his Epistle consisteth in testifying by sound reasons for the confirmation of their judgements and then of the Exhortation for the whetting on of their affections Note That Both parts are necessary in Preaching the one still to accompany the other 1. Ministers therefore must labor in and for both 2. People must make use and account of both regard Doctrine for knowledge and suffer Exhortation for practice Some cannot endure Application and Exhortation but are all for knowledge and to feed the understanding and it appears in their lives for they cannot endure but to live at elbow-room as they list notwithstanding the profession some make in hearing Sermons Verse 13. The Church that is at Babylon elected together with you saluteth you and so doth Marcus my son ANother part of the conclusion consisting of Salutations from the whole company of the faithful with him and particularly from Mark. The Church The company of the faithful that were at Babylon knowing of our Apostles writing to these his dispersed Brethren entreat to be remembred to them and pray the Apostle for he would not send their commendations without their knowledge that he would signifie to them that they remembred them loved and reverenced them and were glad of them praying to God for them c. Gods people though far distant one from another yet must be mindeful one of another Which is at Babylon Namely a City of Assyria whither the Jews were carryed Captive by Nebuchadnezzar and there abode for Seventy years There were here now sundry believing Jews as God hath his Church in the worst places where Satans Throne is and though most of the Jews rejected Christ yet some here and in other Cities embraced him The Papists will needs have this meant of Rome but upon
2. 37 and 16. 29. Simile The stirring ill conscience Excusing Accusing Use. 1 Iohn 3. 20. See Psal. 32. 5. Prov. 28. 13. Isa. 1. 18. Ezek. 33. 16. Mat. 11. 29. Simile A good quiet conscience Heb. 9. 14. Ionah 1. 15. See Act. 16. 30. 2 Cor. 1. 12. Ioh. 30. 20 21. 1 Iohn 3. 21. Acts 23. 1. Wherein it differs from a bad quiet conscience A good troubled conscience Signs declaring the goodness thereof Simile 1 Sam. 24. 5. Use 1. The great benefits of a good conscience See Pro. 14. 10 Heb. 13. 18. Acts 7. 56. How it is kept Use 2. Use 3. A godly conversation is to accompany the zealous profession of our Faith See Iosh. 1. 8. Mat. 5. 16. Iohn 13. 17. Iam. 1. 22. Reasons Luke 12. 47. Isa 41. 8. 1 Sam. 13. 14. Isa. 1. and 58. Ezek. 14. 33 Acts 15. 9 Iames 2. 18. Gen. 13. 7. Iob 31. 35. 2 Sam. 12. 14. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. A godly man will stand by the truth The wicked are apt to speak ill of Gods servants Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Isa. 5. 20. Prov. 17. 15. Iude verse 14. Heb. 12. 4. A godly conversation stoppeth the ungodlies mouthes See Acts 16. Use 1. Use 2. 1 Iohn 3. 12. Gal. 4. 29. Why we ought willingly to suffer for righteousness It s better to suffer for well then evil doing Reasons Mat. 5. 10 11. Acts 5 41. Phil. 1. 29. Luke 23. 41. Use 1. Use 2. No affliction comes to us but by Gods will Acts 2. 23. and 4. 28. Mat. 10. 17 18. Acts 21. 11. How far God hath an hand therein Mat. 16. 23. Iames 1. 12. Rev. 2. 10. Use 1. Mat. 10. 31. Simile Use 2. Acts 21. 15. Use 3. Use 4. Christs sufferings an encouragement for Christians to suffer Iohn 13. 16. Acts 3. 14. How Christ was just how we Use. Another help in our sufferings Christ suffered for our good Use. The godly sow in tears but shall reap in joy 1 Tim. 4. 8. Use 1. Iames 4. 4. 2 Cor. 10. 18. Use 2. Particulars here laid down about Christs sufferings Profit arising from the meditation hereof 2 Tim. 1. 12. Iohn 3. 16. Eph. 2. 4. 1 Pet. 1. 3. Use. All Christs sufferings make up one perfect suffering Heb. 9. 26. Use 1. Use 2. The quality of the person that suffered Heb. 7. 26. For whom Christ suffered Use 1. Matth. 11. 29. Isa. 1. 17. Use 2. Why our Savisuffered To what end he suffered Use 1. Use 2. Isa. 2. 2. Iohn 1. 40 45. Iohn 1. 14. 1 Tim. 3. 16. That Christ must have dyed and so did Isa. 53. 9. Dan. 9. 26. Rom. 4. 25. The benefits ensuing by Christs death 1 Iohn 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. See Rom. 3. 25. Col. 1. 21. 1 Iohn 4. 10. Hosea 2. 18. Psal. 91. 13. 1 Iohn 3. Use. Christ rose again from the dead 1 Cor. 15. 5. Why he rose again Acts 2. 24. Rev. 1. 28. The maner of his Resurrection The place from which he rose When he rose Psal. 16. 10. Why the Iewish Sabbath was changed The benefits hereof 1 Cor. 15. 17. Use. The duties to be performed Eph. 5. 14. Heb. 11 35. Col. 3. 1. A further comfort to them that suffer for Righteousness sake The meaning of the words How the Papists understand them Reasons against the same That there are no such places as Limbus patrum and puerorum Iohn 8. 5 6. 1 Cor. 10. 3. Eccles. 12. 7. Isa. 57. 2. The Popish opinion about Purgatory Reasons against it Luke 2. 29. Phil. 1. 21. 2 Tim. 4. 8. 2 Cor. 5. 1. Iohn 17. 24. Luke 23. 43. Rev. 14. 13. Why Purgatory was devised Iohn 3. 18. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Eccles 11. 3. That Christ went not down to Hell to preach to the Reprobates Gods Spirit preacheth in faithful Ministers 2 Pet. 1. 21. Luke 10. 16. Use 1. 1 Cor. 2. 4. Use 2. See 1 Cor. 14. 25. Use 3. God will finde a time to right things when they are disordered Use. The woful condition of the wicked Matth. 25. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. 2 Cor. 5. 11. Disobedience the cause of Gods judgements on the old world Whether all those which were drowned were damned Use 1. See Act 12. 23 Ibid. 20. Dan. 4. 5. Simile Use 2. Psal. 5. 4 5. Leut. 26. 14. Deut. 28. 15. Two necessary considerations Disobedience is the forerunner of destruction Use. Iohn 3. 36. 1 Iohn 3. 8. The sins of our times like those of the old world Gods Patience towards the disobedient aggravates their sin Use 1. See Psal. 50. and 55. Isa. 57. 11. Heb. 2. 13. The names of the godly mentioned to their honor 1 King 15. 34. See Prov. 10. The old world then most disobedient when they should have been by Noahs making of the Ark feared therefrom Christians must use the means whereby to be freed from Hell and destruction Faith and Repentance an Ark for the soul. Use 1. Gen. 19. 14. 1 Kings 6. 7. Use 2. How useful Examples and occular sermons are See Luk. 17. 32 1 Cor. 10. Ezek. 12. 3● Iam. 5. 10 11. Use. Dan. 5. 22. Wicked men fear not Gods judgements Prov. 14. 16. and 22. 3. and 28. 14. See Mr. Dod on Psal. 14. Weak means are sufficient through Gods blessing for our preservation Righteousness shall not want its reward 1 Tim. 4. 8. Use. It s good to be near the godly No man can be saved by the goodness of another Ezek. 18. 20. The wicked however they escape bodily dangers shall meet with everlasting judgements There are but a few which shall be saved The speech of an Arrian at his death Matth. 7. 21. Use. Gen. 46. 27. Rom. 13. 1. Men and women be more excellent then other creatures Use 1. Use 2. Noah and the old world a right picture of the good bad in our age The godly throughout all ages are saved by the same means 1 Cor. 10. 3. Baptism what it is c. The uses of Baptism Use. Rom. 6. 4. Who is to Baptize and who to be Baptized See Rom. 4. 25. and 8. 34. What our Saviors ascension was That he did ascend Luke 24. 51. Acts 1. 9. Iohn 6. 14. 19. 20. 17. Why he did ascend Before whom he did ascend The time when he did ascend They that have charge over others must be careful to leave them in good plight The place from which our Savior ascended Acts 7. 56. The benefits of his ascension Eph. 4. 8. Iohn 14. 2. Three observations in general Isa. 49. 23. The good Angels are subject to Christ. Use 1. Use 2. They watch and guard us Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. The bad Angels are subject to Christ. Col. 2. 15. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. The contents of the Chapter The parts and meaning of these two Verses Doctr. The passion of Christ is an especial means to stir us up unto mortification Tit. 3. 7. 2 Cor. 5. 15. Use. Rom. 8. 7. 1 Pet. 2.