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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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and the body also and endeavours the perfecting of holiness going forward and proceeding in the fear of God using one Argument for all The Promises fore-spoken of made to you by God do justly require that from you Therefore apply your selves diligently to these duties Vers. 2. Receive us wee have wronged no man wee have corrupted no man wee have defrauded no man In the rest of the Chapter hee endeavours to oblige the hearts of the Corinthians to him the signs of his love towards them being produced in the unfolding of which hee insists to the end The Proposition is clearly propounded which is to bee confirmed O Corinthians yee ought to receive us i. e. to bee perswaded of my love towards you yee ought to love mee again and to lay up my exhortations in your enlarged hearts Three Arguments are taken from the three Signs of the Apostles good will towards them No man Argum. 1. That they should receive the Apostle and the first Sign of his little ill towards them Because I do not ill deserve of any one either by bringing reproach or corrupting by perverse Doctrine or defrauding any one by any means Vers. 3. I speak not this to condemn you for I have said before that you are in our hearts to dye and live with you Argum. 2. Sign 2. Because when I speak of the things fore-going it was onely for the clearing of my self I am so far from condemning the Church of the beleeving Corinthians that out of love I have determined the contrary to cleave to you in prosperity and adversity in life and death that no change at any time may draw my affection from you Vers. 4. Great is my boldness of speech toward you great is my glorying of you I am filled with comfort I am exceeding joyful in all our tribulation Argum. 3. Sign 3. Because news being received concerning your repentance my heart so rejoyceth in the midst of afflictions that I dare safely speak the confidence of my mind towards you concerning your perseverance and glory of you amongst others Vers. 5. For when wee were come into Macedonia our flesh had no rest but wee were troubled on every side without were fightings within were fears 6. Nevertheless God that comforteth those that are cast down comforted us by the comming of Titus Hee being about to explain the experiment of his good will towards them propounds his afflictions wherewith hee was pressed in Macedonia whilst hee expected news from them hee was oppressed partly by persecution of the enemies partly by the intestine evils of the Church partly by the anxiety of his mind and also with the troubles of his body that there was no rest to his outward man Against all which troubles by mercy of God consolation was sufficiently administred to him by the comming of Titus who had now returned from the Corinthians and brought joyful news concerning their state Vers. 7. And not by his comming onely but by the consolation wherewith hee was comforted in you when hee told us your earnest desire your moarning your fervent mind toward mee so that I rejoyced the more The Apostle reckoneth eight causes of his joyfulness whereof many were signs of his good will towards them 1 Because Titus was returned safe 2 Because Titus had received consolation from you Corinthians 3 Because I had heard by Titus concerning your pious affection towards mee and desire of seeing mee concerning your weeping for the wickedness committed amongst you concerning your zeal against the Incestuous person and against my back-biters from whence hath abounded joy to mee much surpassing all that grief which I have taken for that matter Vers. 8. For though I made you sorry with a Letter I do not repent though I did repent for I perceive that the same Epistle hath made you sorry though it were but for a season Before hee propounds the fourth cause of his consolation hee solves an Objection which solution did make much to the purpose They might say Thou hast made us sorrowful in the former Epistle The Answer is fourfold Answ. 1. I was compelled and not without grief have I made you sad but this grief through your repentance hath ceased For when the Apostle writ the Epistle being uncertain concerning the event hee was sad i. e. that hee saith that hee himself repented but when hee saw the event hee was freed from grief i. e. Now hee saies hee did not repent Answ. 2 That sadness which was moved by my Epistle was short Vers. 9. Now I rejoyce not that yee were made sorry but that yee sorrowed to repentance for yee were made sorry after a godly manner that yee might receive dammage by us in nothing 10. For godly sorrow worketh repentance to salvation not to bee repented of but the sorrow of the world worketh death Hee answers 3. That sadness is turned into joy both to you and mee because it is found now good and profitable to repentance which hee proves because it brought forth repentance not to bee repented of otherwise than worldly sorrow is wont which onely encreaseth sin and misery and bringeth death as well to the soul as to the body Vers. 11. For behold this self-same thing that yee sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulness it wrought in you yea what clearing of your selves yea what indignation yea what fear yea what vehement desire yea what zeal yea what revenge in all things yee have approved your selves to bee clear in this matter Hee proveth that their sadness was after God or pious because it produced seven Effects in them even so many signs of their repentance whereof the first was the shaking off security with a carefulness to mend what was amiss 2 Is an Apology that now by no means they approve either the fact of the Incestuous person or their own negligence 3 Is an indignation against the sin both of the Incestuous person and their own in suffering him 4 Is a fear lest they should be compassed with divine justice or a new sin 5 Is a desire of taking off the scandal and satisfying all good men 6. His zeal and fervent desire in prosecuting all means for the removing of evil and repairing of the damage 7. Is his revenge in chastising the incestuous person and all their dulness in all which the Corinthians had declared their repentance and had shewed themselves no ways delighted with wickedness but that they were clear Vers. 12. Wherefore though I wrote unto you I did it not for his cause that had done the wrong nor for his cause that suffered wrong but that our care for you in the sight of God might appear unto you The fourth answer to the objection is I have not written that Epistle either only or chiefly that in chastising of the incestuous person satisfaction might bee given to the Father with whose wife the son had committed adultery or that the incestuous person might bee corrected which truly was not to bee neglected but especially
of necessity the Justification of Abraham consisting not in the perfection of his works but in the remission of his sins Understand the same of the Justification of all which the Apostle even now hath shewed Vers. 9. Cometh this Blessedness then on the Circumcision only or upon the uncircumcision also for wee say that Faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness The second Part. The second part of the Chapter wherein hee proves this to bee the ground of Abrahams Justification and obtaining Eternal Life to wit by Faith is common to the uncircumcision or the Gentiles and to Circumcision or the Jews The question is propounded in this verse the answer whereof follows till hee hath proved it common both to Jews and Gentiles Vers. 10. How was it then reckoned when hee was in circumcision or in uncircumcision not in circumcision but in uncircumcision Hee proves this ground of Justification and obtaining of happiness to bee common to the uncircumcised or the Gentiles no less than to the Jews that were circumcised By seven Arguments Argum. 1. From the state of incircumcision where●n Abraham was when hee was pronounced righteous as it appears in the History Gen. 15.6 Righteousness was imputed to Abraham by Faith while hee was yet uncircumcised Therefore this way of Justification is common even to Believers while uncircumcised Vers. 11. And hee received the sign of circumcision as a seal of the Righteousness of the Faith which hee had yet being uncircumcised that hee might bee the Father of all them that believe though they bee not circumcised that Righteousness might bee imputed to them also 12. And the Father of Circumcision to them who are not of Circumcision only of our Father Abraham which hee had being yet uncircumcised Argum. 2. Abraham received from God the Sign of Circumcision as a Seal of the Covenant of Grace or the Righteousness of Faith which hee had yet being uncircumcised to that end that hee might bee the Father as well of the Faithful that were uncircumcised as of those that were circumcised which were the children of the flesh and also of the Faith of Abraham Therefore the righteousness of Faith is common to Believers both circumcised and uncircumcised or those that follow the steps of the Faith of Abraham not yet circumcised Abraham is called the Father of the Faithful because hee was the first eminent example of Faith the Righteousness which is imputed by Faith and by his example a Leader to all that they may believe Vers. 13. For the promise that hee should bee the heir of the world was not to Abraham or to his Seed through the Law but through righteousness of Faith Hee proves that Abraham was not the Father of any but Believers both circumcised and uncircumcised and with this hee adds a third Argument The Promise was made to Abraham and to his Seed that hee should bee afterwards heir of the Land of Canaan in a type and of the World and Heaven in truth being restored to that right which Adam lost and hee came not to this by the Law or upon the condition of works but by the absolute Promise being j●stified ●y Faith or having the Righteousness of Faith therefore his children are not they which are by the Law looking for righteousness by Works but only they which are of Faith looking for righteousness by Faith i. e. All and only they that believe circumcised and uncircumcised who have an equal community in the righteousness of Faith and the promise of the inheritance The Argument is valid for if Father Abraham is not heir of the world and hath any righteousness but by Faith certainly none are his sons but the faithful who have their righteousness by Faith and from Righteousness the Inheritance Vers. 14. For if they which are of the Law bee heirs Faith is made void and the promise made of none effect Argum. 4. This confirms the former Argument If those which are of the Law or seek Righteousness by Works are the children of Abraham and heirs of Life and partakers of Righteousness then Faith is vain and the Promise is void But this is absurd therefore they which are of the Law are not heirs but only Believers are the children of Abraham and heirs of Righteousness and Life The Argument is strong for if Righteousness and the Inheritance are given through Faith and the Promise then they are freely given But if by the works of the Law then of debt and merit and not of grace for merit or debt leaves no place for free grace and by consequence makes faith and the promise void Vers. 15. Because the Law worketh wrath for where no Law is there is no transgression Argum. 5. Confirming the former the Law worketh wrath to them that seek for Righteousness by their Works i. e. it pronounceth condemnation and death upon the guilty for their transgressions which should bee none if there was no Law Therefore they that are of the Law are not heirs of Righteousness and Life but all and only they which are of Faith both circumcised and uncircumcised Vers. 16. Therfore it is of Faith that it might bee by Grace to the end the Promise might bee to all the Seed not to that only which is of the Law but to that also which is of the Faith of Abraham who is the Father of us all Argum. 6. God hath determined that the Inheritance should bee of Faith to this end that it might appear to bee of Grace or through Grace therefore all and only Believers circumcised and uncircumcised are heirs The Argument is good because Faith and Grace concur mutually standing and falling together Faith is wholly maintained by Grace which Grace is only promised and given to them that believe It being granted that the Inheritance is through Grace it follows to bee through Faith also and it being granted that it is through Faith it follows that it is by Grace also and that Believers are heirs only through Grace That it might bee firm Argum. 7. The Inheritance is of Faith and by Grace that the Promise might bee firm to all the Seed not only to that which is of the Seed of Abraham by the Law of Nature and with all Believers i. e. to the believing circumcised Jews but also to that seed which is not after the flesh but only of the Faith of Abraham that is to the believing uncircumcised Gentiles Therefore unless wee would make the Promise of Righteousness and the Inheritance hanging it upon the condition of performing the Law infirm and uncertain the whole Seed of Abraham or all and only they that believe both circumcised and uncircumcised are heirs by Faith with Father Abraham who according to Faith is the Father of all us that believe both Jews and Gentiles The matter is clear because the Law or the condition of Works would render the Promise of the Inheritance infirm and altogether uncertain seeing that whatever depends upon our works can no wise bee firm both
her Husband liveth shee bee married to another man shee shall bee called an adulteress but if her Husband bee dead shee is free from that Law so that shee is no adulteress though shee bee married to another man As to the first part taking a comparison from Marriage hee shews that the Justified which are delivered from the conjugal Covenant of the Law and Espoused by a new Covenant of Grace to a new Husband Christ should bring forth the fruits of holiness in new obedience to the Law to the glory of our new Husband Christ. In the three first verses hee propounds the protasis of the comparison after this manner As no Law hath dominion over the dead as yee know but only over them that are alive ver 1. and particularly the Law of Marriage is dissolved the one being dead so that the Wife the Husband being dead without adultery may marry another ver 2 3. so you c. as it shall appear by and by Vers. 4. Wherefore my Brethren yee also are become dead to the Law by the Body of Christ that yee should bee married to another even to him who is raised from the dead that wee should bring forth fruit unto God The Apodosis of the comparison to this manner So you that were espoused formerly to the Law by a Covenant of Works Christ being dead for you that hee might satisfie the Law Justice and the Covenant of Works in our name you are judicially dead to the Law in the body of Christ for the Law or Covenant of Works hath slain Christ and you in him and by consequence you are delivered from the matrimonial Covenant of the Law so that without the breach of Justice you may enter into a new Covenant of Grace with Christ being raised from the dead To this end hee shews that the purpose of marriage being disannulled betwixt the Law of Works and us not that wee should live as wee list but being raised from a state of death by the Resurrection of Christ that wee should bee espoused to another Husband viz. to him which is raised from the dead i. e. to Christ who rose from the dead and hath raised us with himself to newness of life and hath espoused us to himself according to the Covenant of Grace that being married unto Christ wee might bring forth fruits of obedience to the glory of God There are five Arguments of consolation to the Justified who bewail the imperfection of their own obedience Become dead Argum. 1. You are freed from the Covenant of Works which admits no obedience besides what is perfect and every way compleat Therefore all you that are Justified have consolation which bewail the imperfection of your new obedience Of another Argum 2. You are now married to another Husband viz. to Christ who is raised from the dead who when hee could answer the imperfections of your obedience and according to the Covenant of Grace render your begun obedience acceptable unto God hee took it upon himself You have this consolation that mourn over the imperfections of your new obedience Fruit Argum. 3. Ye● are married unto Christ which is raised from the dead that you may not abide unfruitful but may bring forth fruit to the glory of God Therefore take yee comfort who bewail your imperfect obedience Vers. 5. For when wee were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death Argum. 4. Confirming the former from the change of our condition while wee were unregenerate and by consequence under a Law-Covenant evil affections by the holy Law of God were stirred up and put forth themselves powerfully in our members and all our faculties both of soul and body to the production of the deadly fruit of actual sin Therefore it will follow when wee are now regenerated and under the Covenant of Grace holy desires stirred up by the New Covenant powerfully shew forth themselves in our members to the bringing forth the fruit of good works unto God that wee might not abide unfruitful Which is no small consolation for if wee by Faith would lay hold upon the Covenant of Grace and would stir up our souls by the promises thereof applyed unto us there is no doubt but wee should more plentifully bring forth good works That is it which Christ saith Joh. 15.5 I am the vine yee are the branches hee that abides in mee and I in him hee brings forth much fruit for without mee you can do nothing Vers. 6. But now wee are delivered from the Law that being dead wherein wee were held that wee should serve in newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the letter Argum. 5. Opening and confirming the former from the end of our changed condition Now to wit after Justification through the Grace of Christ wee are freed from the Law-Covenant that Covenant being dead in which wee were held or wee being dead in Christ in whom wee were contained judicially to that very end that wee should serve God by the power of the Holy Ghost bestowing new strength upon us by bringing forth new and spiritual fruit not superficial and hypocritical which the letter of the old legal Covenant now abolished at the most brought forth Therefore God will not fail of his end but will cause those that are justified bewailing their imperfect obedience to bring forth much fruit in the newness of the letter for the fruits which are brought forth by virtue of the Covenant of Grace are truly new and arise from the regenerating Spirit furnishing us with new strength forthwith to good works But the fruits which are brought forth by virtue of the Covenant of Works either are open rebellion of corrupt Nature against Gods Law or counterfeit obedience onely in the outward performance such as the fruits of the Pharisees are who in the letter that is the outward shew and formality obeyed without any renovation of the heart The second Part. Verse 7. What shall wee say then Is the Law sin God forbid Nay I had not known sin but by the Law For I had not known lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not covet The second part of the Chapter containing an Apology for the holiness of the Law in answering two Objections arising out of what was said before The first Objection seeing that evil and sinful motions are excited by the Law as was said the Law seems to bee sin or the cause of sin Hee answers by way of negation farre bee it from us to entertain any such thought hee gives three Reasons of his negation illustrated by his own experience wherein hee pleads for the Law The first Reason Because the Law discovers sin and manifests the evil that is in it which hee confirms by his own experience who had not known that lust which lurked in his heart to bee sin had hee not seen it forbidden by the Law Therefore the Law is holy Vers. 8. But
sin taking occasion by the Commandement wrought in mee all manner of concupiscence for without the Law sin was dead Reason 2. Because the sin that dwells in us or the habitual pravity of our nature is the cause of actual sins but the Law is not the cause but the occasion to sin not given but taken For sin that dwells in us saith hee or the evil of nature taking occasion from the Law forbidding lust so much the more is inflamed and excited And indeavouring after what was forbidden begat in mee all manner of concupiscence and evil motions against the Law For without the Law Which hee confirms by a sign Because the Law not being known sin lies hid and is as dead but when the Law comes it is stirred up and appears as filthiness is not seen in the absence of the Sun but that arising it appears and stinks not by the Suns fault but by its own Therefore the Law is holy Vers. 9. For I was alive without the Law once but when the Commandement came sin revived and I died By his own experience hee further explains the matter shewing that formerly when hee was a Pharisee and unregenerate in his own opinion hee was alive that is very just and in no wise guilty of eternal death but when his eies were opened by the grace of God the true sense of the Law was unfolded then hee understood the force of sin and that hee was guilty of eternal death Vers. 10. And the Commandement which was ordained to life I found to bee unto death From this experience hee saith that hee learned two things First That the end of the command and the effect was good in it self because the command is good in it self and by it self ordained to life if men obeyed it The other that the effect of the Law by accident was death so farre as it threatned death to the sinner and urges him from justice with the sentence of death Vers. 11. For sin taking occasion by the Commandement deceived mee and by it slew mee 12. Wherefore the Law is holy and the Commandement holy and just and good The third Reason in defence of the Law The sin that dwells in us is the cause of death onely taking occasion from the Law or the command as hee had learned by experience for sin while hee thought of what was forbidden in the Law invited and inticed him to forbidden things and polluted him and so by the Command made him more and more obnoxious to death Therefore the Law is altogether holy and particularly that which forbids Concupiscence is holy just and good because it is given by an holy God according to equity and for our profit Vers. 13. Was that then which is good made death un●o mee God forbid But sin that it might appear sin working death in mee by that which is good that sin by the Commandement might become exceeding sinful The second Objection Some might say Therefore hath that which is good been the cause of death Hee answers by rejecting the reproach for the occasion is to bee distinguished from the cause and the use of a thing from the abuse of it Hee therefore acquits the Law and casts all the blame upon the sin that dwells in us Truly saith hee it is not the Law but sin that dwells in mee which is the cause of death and discovers it self to bee sin so farre forth as it is stirred up in mee and kindled by the good Law of God it enkindles rebellious motions to the Law of God and so much the more upon this account doth it cause death that so sin in mee by the Command might appear above measure sinful Which is spoken most seasonably to stop the mouths of all who otherwise would deny inborn concupiscence now natural to all to be sin was it not found to bee the cause of actual sins and death and this defence hee makes for the Law The third Part. Vers. 14. For wee know that the Law is spiritual but I am carnal sold under sin The third part of the Chapter wherein is set down the second head of comfort to those who bewail the imperfection of their obedience to the Law from the Apostles example wrastling with the same evil and getting the victory by the favour and benefit of free justification as appears from vers the last This is the force of the Argument I bewailing in my self the power of sin wrastle against it taking comfort from justification by faith in Christ Therefore you holy Champions take comfort in your wrastling and conflict In the conflict of the Apostle appears a threefold difficulty and a threefold victory in the retreat in all which are mixed some Arguments of comfort drawn from the Apostles experience The first difficulty arises from a threefold contention The first is of the Law and himself I saith hee with the rest of beleevers acknowledge the Law to bee spiritual which wholly favour● the holiness of the Spirit of God and is wholly referred to a spiritual course of life But when I look upon my self and compare the imperfection of my obedience with the spiritualness of the Law I am compelled in respect to the Old Man in mee not yet mortified to acknowledge my self carnal and as a slave sold to subjection under sin out of whose bonds I cannot deliver my self but I am carryed away whither I would not Vers. 15. For that which I do I allow not for what I would that do I not but what I hate that I do Hee proves what hee hath said and shews the second contest betwixt his actions and his judgement renewed That which I do I do not approve viz. when I examine my actions to the perfect Rule of the Law I am forced not to approve but condemn many things in my actions The third disagreement hee shews to bee betwixt his actions and his will renewed I do not that good which I would saith hee hindered by the body of death in mee and that evil which I hate that I do failing of the Rule where I would not for I would perform perfect obedience to the Law of God but I fall short and in many things I offend Vers. 16. If then I do that which I would not I consent unto the Law that it is good The first difficulty you have seen the victory follows and three Arguments of Consolation whereby the Apostle comforts himself and the rest of his fellow-combatants Argum. 1. I my self am in the number of those who bewail their imperfect holiness and finde the same conflict in my self as they do from the imperfection of my obedience Therefore they have Consolation that mourn over the imperfection of their holiness seeing they suffer nothing different from other Saints nay not from the Apostles themselves I consent Argum. 2. Of Consolation Because from this con●●ict it appears that sanctification is begun in him that wrastles and a consent to the Law of God that it is holy and good
in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Artic. 2. Wherein premising the Arguments of his confidence that hee should be heard the Apostle praies for the Hebrews that God would fully sanctifie them i. e. joyn them together perfect compose them as members of one body and make them compleat in every good work to do his will Whereby hee intimates that wee are unfit for every good work Because wee as members out of joynt can neither do that which is our duty to do nor concur with others to do or promote any good until God draw us near unto himself and joyns himself to us unless hee moves our will and incites us to will good working in us both to will and to do or to perform that which hee himself commands to be done by his preceptive will Which the Apostle more fully explains by adding the manner whereby God perfects them Working saith hee in you that which is well pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ i. e. working efficaciously in you by his Grace and through you works that are pleasing to himself and working every good work whereby yee may please him under which good necessarily are contained the principles of good actions and namely the very assent of the will and its co-working And hee adds through Iesus 1 Because all those good works are purchased for us by the desert of Christs death 2 They are derived to us through him as through a chanel 3 Those good works are effected by him 4 They are purged by him and made acceptable Therefore glory is attributed to God and Christ for ever Amen Hee useth four Arguments of his confidence in praying vers 20. The God of Peace Argum. 1. With relation to the peace of the Church God is the God of Peace Therefore yee must confidently ask of God that hee give you to endeavour after Peace amongst your selves and towards God in following after holines● Who hath brought again Argum. 2. God hath brought again Christ from the dead Therefore hee both can and will perfect you his sheep and members of his body in every good work for which Christ is both dead and risen The great Shepheard Argum. 3. Christ is that good Shepheard and chief Pastor of his Sheep Therefore it is to be expected from him that hee sanctifie and fully perfect you his Sheep Through the blood Argum. 4. The everlasting Covenant is made touching the Redemption of the sheep i. e. touching the perfecting of their holiness and salvation and that is established by the blood of Christ Therefore yee shall be perfected in every good work by the Covenant Vers. 22. And I beseech you Brethren suffer the word of Exhortation for I have written a Letter unto you in few words Artic. 3. In which hee praies for the Hebrews that they not onely take in good part whatsoever may seem sharp in this hortatory Epistle but also that they suffer and take well the word of Exhortation wherein their ordinary Pastors were more especially to bring and apply those things to them For in few The Reason of this Petition is Because those things were more briefly written by the Apostle without any allay which might mollifie his reproofs and they want explication larger handling a more ample and quick application from their ordinary Pastors Vers. 23. Know yee that our Brother Timothy is set at liberty with whom if hee come shortly I will see you Artic. 4. Is joyful news of the setting Timothy at liberty being his daily companion which hee knew was acceptable for whom when they had heard that hee was in bonds they grieved and knowing that hee is at liberty they may be refreshed For the same end hee hopes that hee with Timothy shall come unto them Vers. 24. Salute all them that have the rule over you and all the Saints They of Italy salute you Artic. 5. Wherein are contained salutations For first hee sends salutation to all the Pastors and Governours of the Churches in Iudea As also to other Beleevers that they may know hee loves them all alike In the third place hee salutes in the name of the Saints all the beleeving Hebrews in Italy Vers. 25. Grace be with you all Amen Artic. 6. Wherein Paul after his accustomed seal 2 Thes. 2.17 concludes the Epistle wishing Grace to all i. e. all saving gifts or whatsoever was necessarily requisite to their perfection from the fountain of Gods free goodness As for the subscription after the Epistle there is no credit to be given to it For it is manifest out of this Chapter vers 23. that Timothy was absent when this Epistle was writ Therefore the subscription seems to be added from some unskilful Scribe And therefore wee omit them all THE EPISTLE OF PAUL TO THE HEBREWS WITH OBSERVATIONS gathered from the TEXT By DAVID DICKSON Professor of Divinity in the University of Glascow LONDON Printed by R. Ibbitson for Francis Eglesfield and are to bee sold at the Marygold in Pauls Church-yard 1659. TO THE READER Christian Reader BEfore the time that something of mine did pass the Press without my knowledge or allowance I did not minde to come abroad in this Learned Age wherein many more able Men than I am do keep silence my Furniture being fitter for my present Charge than for more publick Edification in my judgement and my Employments so frequent as my spare time is little for farther extent of what the Lord hath bestowed upon mee But since that time my just fears from apparent grounds that numbers of my Sermons which were rudely and popularly delivered as thrice or four times preaching a week might yeeld and taken from my Mouth as it was possible to overtake the current of running speech the judicious Writer making what hee had overtaken to cohere the best hee could and Copies going from him to many with numbers of faults and mistakings of the Transcribers I being unable to revise for straightness of time any thing which was written by them first or last My just Fears I say that these should Come to thy Hands rude and faulty as they are made mee willing rather when God should grant mee leasure hereafter to draw up in short the points of Doctrine delivered by mee in these Sermons that thou mightest have a twenty or thirty of them or m●e possible in the bounds and price of one at large With this passage of Gods providence another hath concurred to draw forth this piece unto thy view in the mean time which is this When I considered how largely God hath provided Helps for understanding of holy Scripture by large Commentaries and sweet Sermons especially from His Church in England whereby encrease of Knowledge is given to the Learned and such whose means to buy and leasure from their calling to read and victory over their own lasiness for taking pains doth concur with their capacity for making use of this the Lords Liberality I have often requested the