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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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performed more miracles then Christ and all his Apostles and was farre greater then Iohn Baptist we could not auoid but be heretikes indeed because these and a number such are contradictory to the canon of the Scriptures reuerse the foundation of religion and yet are obstinatly defended by them And further let men see hence how inconsideratly they cast the names of old heretiques to the blemishing of the liues and waies of many godly and worthy men as when Christian and religious men are tearmed by the name of Puritans an auncient sect of heretikes with whom these haue but small acquaintance The like may we say of that reproachfull title of Scismatikes who quickly degenerate into heretikes who rent the coate of Christ and make division in the Church sometimes for some opinion but more vsually about some orderly rites and ceremonies in the Church Now then to challenge men of scisme 1. the Church must be prooued to agree and to haue the vnitie of truth both for doctrine and rites 2. men must be conuinced by the word that the doctrine is the wholsome word and the rites and ceremonies are edifying orderly inoffensiue and not superstitious Obiect But some are so peeuish they will neuer be conuinced and satisfied Answ. The reason hereof seemes to be because the Church is sometimes a partie in such a question and therefore it were wisedome to bring vpon such parties the iudgement of other reformed Churches to make vp such a conuiction And then when all such good meanes are vsed if men separate from the Church let them lie iustly vnder the reproach of their sin But farre be it that euery one who carrieth a diuerse iudgement concerning some rites in the Church wherein he liues should presently become a scismatike for such a one may still cleaue in heart in affection and in personall presence vnto the Church and be farre from interrupting the vnitie of the Church Yea farre be it that euery departure from those that call themselues the Church yea in maine points of doctrine should be scisme Were Elias and Elizeus Scismatikes because they departed from Ieroboams worship were our Sauiour Christ and his Apostles scismatikes in departing from the doctrines of the Pharisies and Saduces No it was Ieroboam it was the Preists and Pharisies who pretended themselues to be the Church departing from the truth and so from the true vnitie that were the authors of Scisme herein And so for rites how can we stoppe a Papists mouth if we shall say that those men who depart from rites tending to the weakning of faith and doctrine or offensiue and superstitious are presently to be ranked amongst Scismatikes for haue not we our selues thus departed from an hundred Romish ceremonies and yet we say they are the authors of Scisme therein Let this rectifie our iudgements and keepe vs from rash censures in matters so capitall and so difficult If any Catholike spirit will still reproach vs as Scismatikes surely we will reioyce herein that we are not of them whose canon hath taught vs that if Christ and his Apostles would not subscribe to all their decrees they should escape no other tearmes but be reputed Scismatikes at the least if not burnt for heretikes Secondly note that there haue bin and shall be to the end heresies in the Church Christ was no sooner ascended but that blessed doctrine of his euen while the Apostles yet liued was oppugned by heretikes which seemeth to be the ground of this precept Nay no sooner was there a Church but heresie the disease and corruption of it beganne to discouer it self and truth ga●e only the start was before heresie yea the ●a●es came vp with the good seed in the feild of the Lord. The reasons of this doctrine are First so long as the causes of heresie remaine it selfe must needs continue but the causes shall be and euer haue bin in the Church and these are ignorance of God pride of heart selfe conceit ouerweening of gifts want of loue to Christ and his truth Satans mallice ambition couetousnesse flattery and many moe in a word so long as there is a mixture between good and badde there will be a fight between them Secondly the Lord in his prouidence suffereth false prophets and heretikes to rise vp among his people to prooue try them whether they will cleaue vnto him or no Deut. 13.3 they are the Lords fanne brought into his floa●e to separate betweene the faithfull and vnfaithfull whereby the wicked fall off as beeing thrust away from the Lord vers 7. and the godly who are by Satan and his instruments accused to be hypocrites are manifested ●ound at the heart and faithfull to the ende So the Apostle 1. Cor. 11.19 There must be heresies that those who are approoued of God may be knowne he saith not it is possible but necessarie that heresies be as fire to trie and purge the gold Thirdly the Lord in his iustice punisheth by such the contempt of his truth and the careles and vnaffected intertainement of his word For iustly are men who will not receiue the truth in the loue of it giuen ouer to strong delusions in the beleeuing of lies If Christ and his Gospel cannot be receiued Antichrist when he commeth with all lying wonders and preuailing errors shall If the truth in Michas mouth be contemned 400. false Prophets shall preuaile with their lie So haue we seene that where a faithfull Pastor hath beene lightly set by the Lord hath one way or other remooued him and after his departure sent in some grieuous wolfe or other that hath not spared the flocke Fourthly the wisdome of God permitteth it for although it seeme to poison vtterly destroy the truth yet indeede he turneth it to the clearing and confirming of it it beeing an occasion that the truth is further sifted into that as sparkles issue out of the striking of two flints together so the truth discussed and disputed becommeth more lightsome and more victorious yea the gold commeth no brighter out of the fire then the truth out of the triall of opposition and contradiction Vse 1. Whensoeuer Sathan according to his accustomed mallice against sinceritie stirreth vp any troubles to stay the course of the Gospel to obscure the shining brightnesse of Gods glorie and to bring confusion into the most wise orders and ordinances of God then the Lord so ouerruleth the matter as that he alwaies bringeth light out of darkenes glorifieth himselfe purgeth his floare prooueth his people quickneth their zeale and traineth them in humilitie and obedience Let vs not then be discouraged if our eyes see many trials and in them many fall off if we see the truth oppugned doctrines of libertie broached backed and zealously maintained for surely although the Lord herein may iustly correct our manifest contempt of the truth yet can he not nor will forget his owne glorie 2. We ought to be so farre from troubling or hindring
prophecie though a false one to flie into the Temple for his life from before his enemies he answered shall such a man as I flie this were neither glorious to God nor honourable to my selfe he set me about this busines and he can and will deliuer me and my selfe am the captaine and set ouer all the people and can I flie who is it that beeing as I am would goe into the Temple to liue the fact then beeing in this and other respects against the law of God and against my conscience I will not for the sauing of my life do it Vse 2. Euery professor of the Gospel beeing drawne much neerer vnto God then the common sort of men must endeauour to walke worthy of God Colos. 1.10 and worthy of the calling to which he is called Eph. 3.1 namely both the generall calling of Christianitie which must be beautified and adorned as also the speciall calling and condition of life vnto which the Lord hath disposed him for euen that must be holily and wisely managed And such force hath this reason drawne from our caller and calling to mooue beleeuing hearts to watchfulnes ouer their waies as that the Apostles most frequently vrge it vpon Christians As where we are commanded to be holy because God is holy to walke in the light as God is light to walke in loue as God is loue to walke in the truth as God is the truth by all which and many moe like precepts what else is enioyned a Christian man but that the life the nature the goodnes and holines of God reuealed in Christ be the example and direction of his life and course for this is the walking worthy of God to which we are exhorted by this argument because he hath called vs 1. Thess. 2.12 And further if we consider vnto what we are called the same place of the Apostle sheweth that we are called to be very neare vnto God walke worthy of him that hath called you to his kingdome and glorie to a kingdome we were indeed farre off alients and Gentils and very despicable without all hope but now are called to participate in another manner of kingdom then that of great King Ahashuerosh to which poore Hester was called And seeing many may be in the court of a Prince and yet some of them abide in baser offices and not many of them glorious or gracious as the Queene and children are God hath called vs to a kingdome and glorie that with the residue of the Church we might become his owne spouse and so partake of his own glorie and maiestie Now how much are such beggars as we called to such aduancements bound to walke worthy of such a condition as to which in Christ we are called 2. Let euery professor consider that the falls of such as are nearer God more dishonour God and more hurt the Church then grosser sinnes of other men and therefore the Lord can lesse beare their falls vncorrected Dauid tooke it more heauily that such as did eate bread at his table should despise him then others further off and that Absolon his owne bowells should seeke his life then that Shemei should raile on him Professors of Christ must thinke that they dip in the same dish with Christ and therefore they of all should be farre from dishonoring him Which one consideration should enforce them the rather both to sorrow for sinne past and breaking off sinnes present as also the preuenting of sinnes for time to come 3. Whereas Salomon saith that the righteous falling before the wicked are as a corrupt well and troubled spring that is they trouble offend and after a sort poyson many let the godly be more carefull to make right steps vnto their feete and the rather in these daies which so much the more call for our watchfulnes by how much the wicked are more ready maliciously to disgrace our profession that before we shall go away vnreprooued they can cast reproaches on vs for well doing yea and for our sakes euen vpon ciuill conuersation often in such as haue no grace neither shew or substance of religion in them And therefore seeing we are so sure to suffer let vs be sure we suffer not as euill doers Not froward Now followeth in the rest of this 7. verse the enumeration of the vices which must be farre remooued from that man who is to be chosen for a Minister that he may be vnblameable and they are fiue in number 1. frowardnes 2. anger 3. wine bibbing 4. contention and fighting a fruit of it 5. couetousnes The first of the fiue is frowardnes The word signifieth one wayward stiffe inflexible stubborne and carrieth with it two properties the one that such a one pleaseth himselfe yea setleth and resteth himselfe wholly in his owne inuention counsell opinion or action the other that waywardly and peeuishly he reiecteth and despiseth others in their opinions and actions an instance of which we haue in Nabal who was so froward as their was no speaking to him so hardned he was against all counsell or perswasion Doctr. Frowardnesse in whomsoeuer is a matter of euill report and such a spot as must not appeare in him who is to be chosen a Minister Reasons 1. It is the mother of errour in life and doctrine yea of strange opinions scismes and heresies themselues and it cannot be otherwise seeing the eare of a selfe conceited person is shut against all counsell without which thoughts come to nought as where many counsellers are is stedfastnes And as euery where almost the wicked man is termed a froward man and a wicked and vngodly heart a froward heart so is it generally true which the wise man obserued that such a froward heart can neuer finde good but euill and woe cleaueth vnto it and therefore Dauid when he would shut the doore of his soule against much euil said a froward heart shall depart from mee I will not know that is affect and act euill 2. Whereas men thinke it a note of learning and wisedom not to yeeld an inch in any opinion they take vp the spirit of God brandeth it with a note of folly and it is no other then the way of the foole which seemeth good in his owne eyes Indeed neither Minister nor ordinarie Christian may be as shaking reeds tossed hither and thither with euery blast of winde but yet is it a wise mans part to heare and trie and not stick to his owne counsell as a man wiser in his owne conceit then seauen men that can giue a reason for there is greater hope of a foole then of such a one 3. There are many necessitudes and occasions betweene the Minister and people he must admonish the inordinate raise with comforts the afflicted restore those that are fallen and set their bones againe tenderly by the spirit of meeknes and priuately encourage those that do well Againe they must consult with him aske him
neither apprehend conceiue nor iudge of the truth propounded or the practicall facultie included in the conscience seeing this dependeth vpon the former it must also be polluted the which two faculties if they be depraued and vitiated that is if the vnderstanding be blinded and the conscience led by such a blind guid how can it be but the whole man should sinke downe in the puddle of all impious impuritie That is the scope the sense and meaning followeth To the pure all things are pure In this former branch of the verse three generall points are to be considered 1. Who are meant by pure persons 2. How all things are pure or impure 3. How all things are pure to the pure To answer the first question we must finde out what puritie both for kinde and degree is here meant All puritie is either in the fountaine or thence deriued The former is the most simple perfect and immeasurable puritie in the creator the latter is some darke image and shadowe of the former in the creature according to the measure of it so long abiding with it as it cleaueth vnto him or he vnto it The former is not meant but the latter which is of reasonable creatures either angels or men differing indeede in degree according to their capacitie but not herein that before the fall of either it was a puritie mutable in them both But to drawe to our Apostles subiect this puritie is not now considered in the Angels but in man Neither is it that puritie which we had in our innocencie for though then we were purer then the Nazarites of Ierusalem who were purer then the snowe and whiter then the milke yet by our captiuitie vnder sinne our visage is become blacker then a coale But a puritie of an other qualitie such a one as is renewed vpon vs by the Lords beholding vs cleauing vnto vs not that shining spotles purity which we had while we were able to behold him cleaue vnto him This puritie then is not set in vs by nature but made ours by grace and beeing the puritie of our Mediator is imputed vnto so many as shal stand righteous in the sight of God the Father The persons therfore here called pure are such as by faith are set into Christ by whose blood they are iustified and by whose spirit through the meanes of the word that immortall seede of regeneration they are sanctified and reserued vnto life euerlasting And hence to both these is the purifying and cleansing of sinners ascribed in the Scriptures 1. Faith not onely as a hand laieth hold on all Christs righteousnesse to make the sinner stand iust before God but inwardly by little and little purifieth the heart causeth that puritie to breake out to the eies of others as well as our selues And 2. for the word in Ioh. 15.13 Now are ye cleane through the word I haue spoken vnto you Quest. But how can such persons be called pure seeing the Lord findeth no puritie in the Angels themselues and how much lesse in those who dwel in houses of clay and besides Paul euen a regenerate man exclaimeth that he knewe no good by himselfe Answ. That place of Iob denieth not puritie to the Angels simply but onely comparing theirs with Gods it is as a little streame yea a droppe to the ocean which is nothing in comparison And for that of the Apostle it was with him as it is with other beleeuers who are able to discouer more drosse then gold in themselues and therefore neither he much lesse ordinarie and common Christians can be called pure of the greater part but onely of the better Hence is it that though beleeuers haue receiued the spirit but in weake measure yet are called spirituall and beeing farre from perfection are yet called perfect not by that legall perfection which is entire in all the degrees but that Euangelicall which bringeth all the parts forward towards those degrees Nay more Christ himselfe calleth his loue all faire and saith there is no spot in her yea as pure as the Sunne as faire as the Moone and to his Apostles that they were all cleane euerie whit saue Iudas 1. because by faith euerie member of the Church laieth hold vpon Christs most absolute puritie 2. the spirit of regeneration hath washed euery part although in part onely nor so cleane as it shall be yet so as that perfect puritie is sealed assured to the soule by it 3. the Lord doth account euerie such beleeuer pure euen for the present imputeth neuer a spot vnto them but reputeth in his Christ all faire 4. hath promised them that for time to come they shall become so absolutely cleane as though they had neuer beene defiled Doctr. The estate of a Christian is a most honourable estate because his person is pure in the sight of God euen whilest he liueth here vpon earth And this cannot otherwise be seeing such a one beeing predestinated vnto life is also iustified and sanctified by the former of which a sinner is perfectly freed from the guilt and curse of sinne and by the latter imperfectly and in part from the reliques and seruice of sinne the former in that the blood of Iesus Christ sprinkled vpon his conscience cleanseth him from all sinne the latter in that the spirit of sanctification washeth his heart with pure waters vntill it be cleane Now whereas some may thinke they haue inough confessed to endite sincere Christians of blasphemie or heresie at the least as hauing opinion of their owne puritie with a Pharisaicall despising of others saying with the Iewe stand aloofe for I am more holy then thou or with the Pharisie Lord I thanke thee I am not as this man c. let them know that we teach and true beleeuers hold that their puritie is neither their owne nor so in their owne account but onely in regard 1. of Gods washing of their robes in the blood of the Lambe and 2. of his gracious acceptance of them so washed as pure and cleane Farre is the true beleeuer from the damnable conceit of the Catharists whome in our language we tearme Puritans who following Novatus his heresie were also called Novatians who thought that the life of a iust man is to be made vp without sinne spot or wrinckle or else the Church could not be made vp of them Farre also from that accursed doctrine of the Papists who are indeede Puritane heretiks and the right successors of Iovinian Ebion Pelagius in that they affirme that in the regenerate after Baptisme there is nothing which hath the reason of sinne or which God can hate that they are able to fulfill all the commandements yea and doe more then so that they haue deuout men and women that can merit life eternall for themselues and others that men may must expect their saluation from an inherent righteousnes Why should we not then abhorre these
Αρχην απαντων και τελοσ ποιει θεον A COMMENTARIE VPON THE EPISTLE of S. PAUL written to TITVS Preached in Cambridge by THOMAS TAYLOR and now published for the further vse of the Church of God With three short Tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. Doctrines 2. Obseruations 3. Questions contained in the same Eph. 4.7 Vnto euery one of vs is gi 〈…〉 ●●cording to t●● measure of the gift of Christ. Printed for L. GREENE 1612. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE ROBERT LORD RICH Baron of Leez Grace and peace from the Father Prince and Spirit of peace Amen RIght Honourable worthy is that saying of Salomon Cant. 2.2 Like as the lillie among the thornes so is my loue among the daughters By the lillie is meant the Church and the true members of it so called 1. Because they are planted by the good husbandman in the feild of the Church watred with the dewes of heauen hedged and preserued by his continuall care 2. They are beautifull for Salomon in all his royaltie is not clothed like one of the lillies of this feild who are couered with the roabe of Christs righteousnesse who is the true Salomon 3. They are fragrant for their smell The smell of their garments that is the graces of God which decke and adorne their soules as a costly and comely garment doth the bodie are like the smell of Lebanon which in the spring by reason of the Cedars and other sweet trees gaue a most sweet sent euen so these graces in Gods children smell sweete that is are in much acceptation and delightfull to God and good men By thornes are meant wicked men hypocrites heretikes tyrants open and flagitious sinners scandalous in doctrine and life so called 1. because although the earth be a naturall mother to them as a stepmother to the lillies yet Satan the malicious man busieth himselfe in the incessant sowing and setting of them 2. They would for euer choake and keepe vnder the lillie if the hand of God were not euer with it to preserue it 3. They are dangerous to meddle withall except a man be well fenced hardly can a man carrie coales in his skirt and not be scorcht and as hardly runne into wicked companie and not be hurt So is my loue the faithfull spouse of Christ is his loue So called because 1. he maketh her louely 2. accounteth her so 3. worketh a reciprocall loue in her heart towards him 4. desireth mutuall coniunction with her and effecteth it 5. his loue beeing liberall he giueth her himselfe and with himselfe all things which pertaine to life and godlinesse euen grace here and glorie hereafter Among the daughters not virgins as Cap. 1.2 who make vp this loue of Christ but all other assemblies in the world which professe themselues daughters by challenging the Catholike Church for their mother and yet indeed cleaue vnto it but in outward profession onley From this place I gather two conclusions First what is the estate of the Church in respect of it selfe it beeing as a lillie among thornes Secondly what it is in respect of God so is his loue among the daughters The former sheweth that the condition of the purest Church vpon earth is to be beset with dangerous and noysome thornes hurtfull and gracelesse men who prick and annoie the lillies in their goods names liberties and liues For when there were but two persons borne in the world one was a lillie and the other a thorne which trod downe the lillie Cain drew his brother into the feild and slue him Afterwards when one would haue thought that all the thornes had bin destroied by the flood brought vpon the world to this purpose yet was there a Cham left of whome quickely sprowted that cursed race of the Cananites who were euer pricks in the sides and thornes in the eyes of Gods people It is no newe thing for Iacob to be ouertopped by an Esau nor for Ioseph to be pricked and molested both at home and abroad neither his fathers house nor his fathers eye can safegard him Nay the fairest lillie that euer saw the sunne was most beset with thornes that euer was all his innocencie wisedome meeknesse puritie and loue could not keepe them off him but they pricked him to the heart and wounded him to the death euen the shamefull and ignominious death of the crosse How was this lillie beset with thornes in Egypt in the wildernesse in Babylon in Iudea when Christ sent his Disciples out as sheepe among wolues how in the tenne persecutions how at this day and so shall it be till the great day in which all the thornes shall be cast into the fire And no wonder thornes do but their nature which are good for nothing but to pricke and to burne It standeth therefore the lillies in hand to be so much the more carefull to fence themselues against their molestation And this shall they doe by obseruing these fowre rules 1. Because the thornes hinder the rooting of the lillies these must double their diligence in the rooting of themselues in the grounds of true religion for this yeeldeth hope of rising stablishing and continuance in the faith 2. Because thornes seeke to keepe the sunne from the lillies and hinder the comfortable heat and light of the word from them these must so much the more carefully frequent the places where the light of wholesome pure and comfortable doctrine doth more brightly displaie it selfe 3. Because thornes seeke to pricke the lillies in their names and profession these must more circumspectly fence themselues with innocencie and godly conuersation and in nothing in no part lie open vnto them 4. Because the lillie is a weake plant to defend it selfe from the stiffnesse of the thorne it must fortifie it selfe partly with comfort in the presence care and loue of God the husbandman who is euer in his feild and partly with the prayer of faith that he would be pleased still to looke vnto it to raise vp Pastors and teachers according to his owne heart to water cherish and preserue it especially in these last daies wherein the feild is ouergrowne with scandalls Apostacies trials and reproches wherewith the lillies are daily scratched torne and in great ieopardie The second conclusion is that the Lord maketh a pretious account of euerie faithfull soule and preferreth it aboue the wicked so farre as a lillie is for the beautie sweetnes of it to be esteemed aboue all the thornes with which it can be beset And indeed beleeuers are the most precious of men the most noble persons of the earth descended of the blood of Christ neere vnto God and next attendants to the king of glorie advanced aboue all the rest by the speciall grace of free election of iustification of sanctification and adoption And who can denie seeing these are Gods peculiar an hallowed thing a chosen people the Lords first fruits his remnant called out of all nations and kinreds the sonnes and daughters of God
brethren of Christ and heires apparant to the crowne of heauen but that they are highly aduanced as the choise of God and Gods delight aboue all the people of the earth And hence followeth it that whosoeuer would be in this price and reckoning with God must be sure he be a lillie which he shall know by these three notes 1. If he be planted in the garden of God and be a true member of the Church not tied to it as a scion to a tree by a threed of outward profession but by soundnes of faith and loue the former of which setteth into the head and the latter vniteth to the members Secondly if he haue the beautie of a lillie vpon him 1. in the sight of God by the righteousnesse of Christ iustifying and couering him 2. in his own eyes by the sanctification of the spirit daily washing the conscience from dead workes 3. in the sight of other men by an innocent life and godly conuersation Thirdly if euerie where he leaue a sweet smell behind him that the places where euer he goe sauour of the graces of God laid vp in his heart by bewraying the humilitie faith loue patience hope sobrietie and the like A lillie can leaue no stinke behind it any where as many in their meetings whose speaches are if not hurtfull yet vnsauourie and vnfruitfull These things I write not as taking vpon me to teach your H. who wanteth not choice men and meanes to bring you forward both in the vnderstanding of pure doctrine and in the institution of holy life But 1. to put your H. in mind how highly the Lord hath honoured you both in his owne eyes as also in the eyes of his children The former in that vnto outward greatnes which is as a rich legacie giuen by God both to good and bad he hath vouchsafed to adde the chiefe good and made your H. RICH indeede by disposing vnto you the inheritance of his children which is apparant in that by a sound profession of the truth he hath planted you in his own ground or garden in that he hath set the beautie of a lillie vpon you and hath graced you with a sweet smell of many precious graces which euerie where you leaue behind you The latter both in that he hath put in your heart a speciall care of fencing your selfe by religious and innocent walking whereby you haue adorned your holy profession in not laying your selfe in any part open to the enuious scratching of thornes As also hath expressely engrauen this part of his image vpon you to esteeme his children as lillies among thornes whereby a good euidence is ministred to your owne heart that you are translated from death to life 2. That I might stirre vp your H. as you haue cause to reioyce in and set your heart vpon this purchase which is the portion but of a fewe to esteeme it as it is your truest honour and nobilitie your vnperishing riches and treasure whereas all earthly glorie and greatnesse worldly wealth and abundance abstracted from this neither are your owne neither if they were can they make you happie It was an excellent speach of that noble Emperour Theodosius of whome Augustine writeth that he was wont to say that hee accounted it more honour that hee was a member of the Church then the head of the Empire 3. That I might adde one incitement and prouocation to proceed as you haue begun happily in the loue and practise of true pietie wherein whilst you profit and encrease you prouide a good stocke for the time of neede Let your H. giue me leaue to encourage you to goe on in ennobling nobilitie it selfe by beeing inferiour to fewe of your honourable ranke as in your outward estate so in the beautifull gifts and ornaments of your mind such as are humilitie humanitie a lowly and louely carriage Let Caesar and Pompey other gallants striue to be superiours in pompe and envied greatnesse it is your honour to haue learned that humilitie is the first second and third staire of Christian nobilitie Go on in the strength of the Lord to continue a singular ornament and muniment of the common wealth which is not made by any thing more outwardly happie then in Godly Magistracie and nobilitie Go on in shewing your selfe a carefull patron of the Church of God in making free and vncorrupt choise of such Pastors as whose holy doctrine and life are the counterpaine one of the other in which godly care your H. hath worthily carried the palme These were the cheife motiues which drewe on this my presumption to dedicate this labour vnto your H. although I wāted not some more priuate respects also to force me therunto namely that I might giue some publike testimonie of my loue of your vertues some appobation of my christian dutie and some signification of my thankefull mind as for other fauours so also for your Honours Christian and constant loue of that worthy and vertuous Ladie the Ladie Russell whom I could not but affoard an honourable mention in this dedication which I must needs confesse had beene her right if God had seene good to haue added vnto her daies Accept I humbly beseech your H. the mind of the offerer accept also the booke offred if not for the author of the commentarie yet for the author of the text and the argument which is worthy your H. name and respect I doubt not but your H. shall redeeme many vacant houres in reading ouer many of the treatises therein contained And thus crauing pardon for my boldnesse I commend your H. to the grace of God who protract your dayes and yeares according to the large graces bestowed vpon you and prosper and finish the good worke he hath begunne by adding that which is yet lacking to your faith and graces till he haue fitted you vnto and filled you with glorie and immortalitie Amen From my house at Watford March 16. 1612. Your H. in all dutie to be commanded THOMAS TAYLOR TO THE CHRISTIAN Reader Grace and peace with all other blessings accompanying saluation THe whole Scripture is the rich treasurie of the great King of glorie wherein not one kind of precious stone or mettall is laid vp or in one roome but in sundrie drawers as in sundrie caskets many seuerall pearles and precious things are reserued and safely laid vp for the vse of the Church of God In one place lyeth the summe of holy doctrine another holdeth the precepts of godly life In one corner is the refutation of adulterate and erronious doctrine In another the reprehension of impure and scandalous life And as all the parts of Christianitie are distinct one from another so lie they heare or there in these rich coffers distinct so as euery Christian may draw out instruction direction and consolation according to his owne necessitie This Epistle breathed from the same spirit and bearing the same superscription with all the rest herein disagreeth not
from them but as by the learned it is called an Abridgment of all Pauls Epistles so is it fraught with such varietie of precepts sitted to all sorts sexs ages and conditions of men as whatsoeuer he hath in all his Epistles more largely handled the same he seemeth to haue summarily reduced into this one wherein as in a mappe or modell he would deliuer his whole spirit stile and vnderstanding in the doctrine of saluation And which he would leaue to the Church as a manuall or compendious summe of all Christian religion to the end that Christians beeing hence instructed in the matter of faith and manners might he made not only wise to saluation but profitable and fit for the place which God hath in any of the societies of 1. Church 2. Common-wealth 3. Familie assigned them vnto For if in any hee enlarge the doctrine of mans miserie by sinne or magnifie the doctrine of the Gospel and mans diliuerance from sinne If in any he cleare the doctrine of free iustification of faith alone or enforce the doctrine of good workes the fruites of that faith If in any he largely propound either such duties as belong to publike persons as namely the Magistrates and Ministers or such offices as are fitted to the seuerall conditions of priuate men If in any he prouoke to the practise of Christian curtesie and kindnesse or else if neede require of Christian seueritie and sharpnesse surely in this Epistle he doth with such admirable plainnes and shortnesse all these as no other nor all the other shew him a more skillfull workeman then this doth But accounting it follie to paint a pearle I will rather now giue some tast and reason of that I haue done as also remooue some scruples which may otherwise perhappes be mooued against it Gold lyeth not vpon the face but in the bowells of the earth and the richer any minerall is the more industrious hath nature beene to laid it vp in the deepest vaines Euen so considering that the price of the wisedome of God cannot be found to which the purest gold of Ophir nor all pearles are to be compared we may not thinke that the Lord is so prodigall of it or carelesse as to leaue it abroad for euery stranger that passeth by to take vp with an idle hand or to trample vnder his wandring feete but that hee hath disposed it as men doe their treasures which they hide and locke in their surest coffers and that vnder their eye And were it not so needlesly should we be commanded to seeke for her as for siluer and search for her as for treasures vpon which condition only it is couenanted that we shall vnderstand the feare of the Lord and find the knowledge of God For howsoeuer we may not ascribe darkenesse and obscuritie vnto the Scriptures vnlesse we will say that the Lord hath spoken something which he would not haue vnderstood and also falsifie that of the Apostle who compareth the word of the Prophets which of all parts of the Scriptures are the darkest to a light shining in a darke place yet the wisedome of God would haue not all but some places more difficult to our darke vnderstanding not only for the dazeling of the eyes of the worst who neuer care to know or comprehend any of these mysteries but that the best also might 1. see their owne dulnesse of conceit in heauenly things so to keepe them low in their owne eyes as who cannot attaine such an high knowledge of themselues 2. be stirred vp to more diligent studie reading hearing meditation and prayer that by this continuall exercise in the word they may profit and proceed in the knowledge of God and in the vnderstanding of these mysteries which are admirable to the Angels themselues 3. make so much the more both of the word and the ministerie of it the Lord foresaw that the things that are easie we easily contemne and that things lightly come by are lightly set by That any part of this booke is clasped and sealed it is in regard of our naturall blindnesse who cannot behold the brightnes of the sunne of righteousnes shining in the Scriptures But that this naturall corruption might not raigne in the elect for their hurt the Lord Iesus hath left to his Church the gift of interpretation which is as the key to open this closet of God and hath stirred vp faithfull men from time to time endued by his spirit who in attentiue and diligent reading of the Scriptures by the helpe of 1. Arts as Grammer Rhetorike Logicke Philosophie c. 2. knowledge of the proprieties of words and phrases of the tongues wherein they were written 3. comparing of Scriptures with themselues antecedents with consequents obscure places with plainer and figuratiue speaches with more proper 4. soundnesse of iudgement in the agreement and analogie of faith 5. diligent obseruation of predictions with their accomplishments of types with their truth and of the historie of the Church which it selfe is a commentarie of Scripture haue beene themselues enabled to vnderstand as also partly by liuely voice in the Ministrie and partly by their learned monuments and writings to make the people of God vnderstand euen the darkest mysteries conteyned in them so farre as is necessarie for the saluation of beleeuers Whose labours and writings to contemne sauoreth of a proud Anabaptisticall spirit who while they complaine of so many commētaries despise the gifts of God who by his seruants he communicateth to his Church and so are iustly left of God in the ignorance of the Scriptures or else in the grosse and ridiculous peruerting of them Well said that noble Eunuch How can I vnderstand without an interpreter what was Moses but an interpreter of the law what were the Prophets but interpreters of Moses what was Christ but an interpreter of the Prophets what were the Apostles but interpreters of Christ what are all Pastors and teachers wherewith Christ hath euer furnished his Church since he ascended into heauen but interpreters of the Apostles Well knew the Sonne of God commanding it and his Apostles commending it how behoouefull it was for the edification of the Church by interpretation of the Scriptures to draw out both the true sence and the true vse of them which are the two proper parts of interpretation seeing so many things are to vs hard to vnderstand and things which for their sense are easiest cannot so easily of euerie one be applyed to their proper vse without this helpe This is that edifying gift which the Apostle so highly advanceth 1. Cor. 14.3 4. He that prophesieth speaketh vnto men to edifying to exhortation and to comfort and he that prophesieth edifieth the Church This is that which the auncient Fathers since the Apostles haue fruitfuly laboured in as appeareth by their learned Sermons preached written This is that which the faithfull Pastors in all ages especially of later daies since the cleare light of
see the wonderfull things of the lawe If any man want wisedome he must aske it of God The foote of Dauids song was Teach me thy statutes Thus shalt thou be taught of God and not onely by the ministerie of man 4. Seeing the feare of God is the beginning of wisedome and his secret is with them that feare him bring a teacheable and an humble heart turned to God louing his truth desirous and industrious to obey that part of his will alreadie reuealed vnto thee for he teacheth the humble in his way and if any man will doe his will he shall knowe whether the doctrine be from God or no. 5. In thy reading let not thine ende be to seeke out and finde out curiosities and subtilties but to finde and meete with Christ desirous to knowe nothing but Christ and him crucified which is the scope of all the Scriptures as also of the gift of interpretation of them 6. Read not by halues but goe through the author thou hast made choise of once and againe nor idlely but with attention as painfully digging for the treasure nor carelesly but with dilgence trying these mettalls vnlesse thou wouldst take copper washt ouer for gold Lastly bring all thy reading into vse and practise meditate of it often by thy selfe and cheerefully communicate it to others for by vsing and laying out thy talent thou encreasest it and know that not they which reade heare or speake much are blessed but those which doe it Thus come furnished to the reading of this or any other godly booke and I assure thee thou shalt not loose thy labour but shalt so redeeme thy time as that thou shalt be able to giue a good and comfortable account of it in the day of thy reckoning If thou meetest with any doubtfull things helpe me with thy best construction If with any escapes helpe me with thy best counsell If with any helpe hereby in thy holy course praise God and helpe me with thy prayers The vnworthie seruant of God and of thy faith THOMAS TAYLOR A COMMENTARIE vpon the Epistle of Saint PAUL to TITUS The occasion of the Epistle HE hath little acquaintance with the writings of the Apostles who out of themselues cannot attaine vnto the occasion of their penning but not to wast time in the particular Arguments of each seuerall Epistle they haue all one common and generall occasion which was this So soone as the Apostles had planted any Church of God by sowing the good seede of the word fetched out of Gods owne garners in the field of the world the malitious man sent his seruants to sow tares in the same field which sprouted vp suddenly into the blade and eare to the choking of the good husbandmans good seede Hence was it that least Gods husbandrie should vtterly miscarie the Apostles were put to new trauells who hauing vpon them the care of all the Churches which they had founded and seeing Satans subtilties incessantly breaking out in his seducing instruments teachers of lies and false Apostles to the annoyance of the Church were constrained with a second hand to stablish their first worke and with no lesse labour to vphold and repaire that house and building of God which like good master-builders they had formerly reared and erected This truth is euident not onely in other Churches planted by this our Apostle the Doctor of the Gentiles as by his seuerall Epistles is clearely gathered but also in this Church planted by himselfe in the I le of Creta now called Candy for Satans rage containeth not it selfe in the continent nor contemneth a conquest against the Church in such a small Iland as this is And therefore no sooner was Paul departed hence although he left Titus behind him to further the worke but Satan thrusteth in corrupt teachers some erronious in doctrine others in life scandalous both of them exceeding infectious some of them seeking the ouerthrow of the doctrine others of the gouernment of the Church established others would for the honour of the seruant despise the Son by ioyning Moses and Christ together all of them disioyned the profession and practise of pietie and by this meanes peruerted many and drew them into their owne destruction Our Apostle therefore wrote this Epistle to Titus 1. that he might authorize and backe him in his Ministerie against such as might otherwise carrie themselues contemptuously towards him 2. That he might direct him in redressing and repressing such disorders as beganne to preuaile for which ende he both describeth what manner of persons he should place Teachers ouer the congregations as also what doctrine he would haue him particularly applie to euery degree and condition of men that by the sufficiencie of the former the false teachers might be foiled and by the euidence of the latter all sorts of men might be sensed and out of daunger of corruption by them 3. Because Titus was young as it seemeth he teacheth him how to carrie his whole doctrine how to order his life how to deale with the tractable how also with obstinate offenders who studied rather parts and ●ow to be contentious then how to content themselues with the simple truth and so shutteth the Epistle with some personall matters and the Apostolicall salutation The parts of the Epistle This Epistle containeth three parts 1. The salutation in the 4. first verses 2. The narration or proposition of the matter of it from the 5. verse of the 1. Chapter vnto the end of the 11. of the 3. chap. 3. The Conclusion containing some priuate businesse enioyned Titus and the ordinarie salutation of the Apostle CHAP. I. 1 PAul a seruant of God and an Apostle of Iesus Christ according to the faith of Gods Elect and the acknowledging of the truth which is according vnto godlines 2 Vnto the hope of eternall life which God that cannot lie hath promised before the world began 3 But hath made his word manifest in due time through the preaching which is committed vnto me according to the commandement of God our Sauiour 4 To Titus my naturall sonne according to the common faith Grace mercie and peace from God the Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ our Sauiour IN these foure verses containing the salutation which is the exordium or first part of the Epistle we haue two things to consider 1. The persons 1. saluting 2. saluted 2. The forme of the salutation it selfe The person saluting is described 1. by his name Paul 2. by his office 1. more generall a seruant of God 2. more speciall and an Apostle of Iesus Christ which is further enlarged by the ende of it namely either to preach the faith of Gods Elect as the Geneva translation hath it or rather hereby to bring the Elect vnto the faith according to the faith of Gods Elect vpon which occasion he entreth into a large and notable description of this faith and thereby proceedeth in amplifying the dignitie of his calling as we shall see in the seuerall
the words we must necessarily open 3. points First what is meant by the word 2. what by the manifesting of it 3. what is this due time here mentioned by our Apostle which beeing explaned we shall more profitably descend to the seuerall doctrines 1. By the word is meant either Christ himselfe so called Ioh. 1.1 beeing that inbred word euen that person by whome the father reuealeth all things for none knoweth the father but the sonne and he to whom the sonne reuealeth him so as the father by this word his sonne maketh himselfe and his will knowne to men as one man reuealeth his minde to another by his words This word is the matter of the Gospel Or else by the word is rather meant the doctrine of the Gospel which is the word concerning Christ both these indeede were reuealed in due time and both may be truely meant but this rather this more properly because the words containe a reddition and haue reference to the former verse which speaketh of promises which promises by the doctrine of the Gospel preached are fully reuealed to be accomplished 2. By the manifestation of this word is meant such a cleare reuelation of it as vnto which is required a great light for the word noteth so much Before this comming of Christ there was an appearance of this word but not a manifestation some light there was but darke and obscure in types and shadowes and like to that of the dawning of the day compared to the brightnesse of the sunne in his strength But now the sunne of righteousnes beeing risen as he was newly and not long before the writing of this Epistle there is a cleare publishing of the Gospel at what time not a few Prophets were sent to one people to promise the future performance of auncient predictions but that great Prophet and Christ doctor of his Church both by his appearing his preaching his life his death in his owne person cleared vnto the Iewes as also by sending out his disciples and Apostles into all the world proclaimed vnto the Gentiles the present and perfect performance of whatsoeuer was written of him This is the doctrine here meant and elsewhere so magnified by the Apostle who comparing it with former shadowes calleth it the Gospel of glorie and a ministerie of righteousnesse which exceedeth in glorie 3. The word translated due time signifieth the proper time of this manifestation that is that verie time which the Lord in his counsell appointed for this purpose called elswhere fulnesse of time that is such a full time as whereof all the parts and periods are expired More plainely this fulnes of time is when after the scepter is departed from Iudah and after Daniels seauentie weekes the Messiah is borne is put to death and raised vnto glorie then must he be preached to all the world In fulnes of time he was borne Gal. 4.4 when fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his sonne made of a woman In fulnesse of time he died 1. Tim. 2.6 he gaue himselfe a ransome in due time and in this fulnesse of time he openeth the mysterie of his will to gather into one all things Eph. 1.9.10 Quest. But why doth the Apostle so carefully adde this circumstance not here onely but also in so many other places of Scripture Ans. To stay the curious minds of men who would be inquiring into the cause why God did no sooner manifest this word in the world but suffer 4000 yeares to passe in such obscuritie Why did not he reueale things before why did he then the reason is no time was Gods time but that who hath put all times and seasons in his owne power who is most wise to dispose to all things their fittest seasons Againe no time but that was their due time their fulnesse of time was not till then their proper time compleate in all the Articles and periods of it was not till then Whereof the Scripture affordeth vs some grounds as 1. betweene the time of promise and performance must intercede a time of expectation for sundrie causes that both the wisedome and truth of God and the faith patience of his people might shine gloriously 2. There must be a time wherein the Gentiles must be suffered to walke in their owne waies before the time of calling an holy seed from among them Act. 17.30 3. There must be a time of bondage and seruitude of the Church vnder the elements of the world and rudiments of the law before this libertie and freedome was to be procured Gal. 4.4 4. If Christ and these promises had beene exhibited and accomplished to the Father the end of the world had been before we had beene borne but because God would not haue them perfect without vs the promises were deferred These words thus explaned afford vs these 3. instructions 1. That the doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times 2. That the Lord effecteth euery thing in the due season of it 3. That the euidence of the doctrine of saluation is to be sought and found in the preaching of the word Doct. 1. That saluation is more clearely reuealed then in former ages appeareth in that all the time of the law was but the infancie and nonage of the Church which then was as a childe vnder Tutors and gouernours and as a child was initiated in rudiments and elements of Christian religion and endued with a small measure of knowledge and faith because the time was not come wherein the mysteries of Christ were vnfolded Yea euen Kings and Princes who had the greatest meanes of knowledge desired to see the things which we see and could not and to heare them but yet could not as Christ himselfe witnesseth To which purpose the Apostle Peter saith that of this saluation the Prophets haue inquired and searched and prophesied of the grace that should come vnto you not that the Prophets themselues had no comfort of that grace but in comparison it may be said to haue come vnto vs as beeing so eeuidently accomplished vnto vs as it was not vnto them the waters from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie reached but to their anckles which now is become a streame which cannot be passed the cloud at the first appearance to them was no bigger then the palme of a mans hand which now couereth the whole heauen Thus had the old beleeuers ●he like precious faith with vs and Abraham saw the daie of Christ but a farre off and more darkely But not to insist in the proofe because we shall meete with the point more fitly we come to the vse of it Vse 1. How blessed were we if we could see our blessednes to whom such meanes of blessednes are offered how is the land in many places filled with the knowledge of God but would God that euen in such places men knew the day of their visitation and that the things of their peace were
priests must notwithstanding publikely not onely read but expound it Which is committed vnto me according to the commandement of God our Sauiour Our Apostle insisteth still in the iustifying of his calling and sheweth how he came to be a dispenser of such great mysteries as these are of which he hath spoken it was not ambitiō which made him thrust himself in for a Pastor neither necessitie or want which vrged him to take vp this calling as many base wretches now a dayes make it as a citie of refuge for whilest he went with commission against Christians wee neuer read that he was glad to worke with his hands to minister to his necessities neither was it ease or honour which solicited him for euer after the vndertaking of it he was in disgrace in perills in paines and labours aboue all the rest of the Apostles neither was it a voluntarie motion taken vp of his owne head which mooued him vnto this function of preaching But first it was a businesse or charge committed vnto him of trust or wherewith he was betrusted Secondly he receiued it by commandement the nature of which commandement sheweth that he was so farre from vndertaking this office of his owne will that it was rather forced vpon him the word in the originall is properly a martiall word taken from the wars wherein the Captain hath a power to presse soldiers and to place them in the foreward rearewarde or wings at his pleasure from whome or from whence they may not start vnder paine of martiall law to which he seemeth to allude when he saith that he had fought a good fight And how Paul was extraordinarily pressed into this field euen against his heart and as we say the haire appeareth in that he must be beaten downe to the ground strucke starke blind eate and drinke nothing in three dayes that of an extraordinarie waster of the Church he might become an extraordinarie chosen vessell to publish the doctrine he had persecuted And thirdly he receiueth no more commandements from the high Priests to afflict the Saints but a commandement of a faire contrarie nature from the high Priest of our profession euen from God our Sauiour Which may be meant either of the sonne to whom the title of Iesus or Sauiour is properly ascribed in Scripture whence is notably prooued the diuinitie of Christ who as God meriteth mans saluation or else rather here of the Father the epithite beeing truely referred vnto both for the Father saueth by his Sonne and the Sonne by his flesh in reconciling vs vnto the father Againe the father is called a Sauiour as he is the God of life imparting to the elect through his Christ the life of grace and glorie which message of life the Apostle was to publish by vertue of this commission and commandement which is said to shewe this order to be receiued both from the Father our Sauiour and the Lord Iesus Christ 1. Tim. 1.1 If here it be asked whether Paul was called onely by the commandement of God The answer is yea onely for herein is the difference betweene the Apostles and ordinarie Ministers the proprietie of the former was to be called immediatly by Christ of the latter to be called of God but by men beeing generall to all ordinarie Consecrations that there is required a twofold presence 1. of God 2. of the Church as Iunius out of the Schoolmen learnedly obserueth but not so in extraordinarie callings to which the former sufficeth without the latter Out of these words naturally arise these three considerations 1. That the office of preaching is an office of trust 2. That whosoeuer vndertaketh must finde himselfe pressed by this calling and commandement of God 3. A direction from the Apostles example how and when ministers may and must insist in the commendation of this office Doctr. 1. That euerie minister called by God is one of Christs committes vnto whom he betrusteth now after his departure the care and ouersight of his spouse who is deerer vnto him then his owne life appeareth in that they are called stewards of this great house hauing receiued the keyes to open the kingdome of heauen and to distribute to the necessitie of their fellow seruants chosen vessells as Paul not to containe but to carrie the pearle and treasure of the kingdome feeders as Peter husbandmen to whom the vineyard is let out till his returne Of the doctrine much more afterward Vse 1. The honour of a Minister is faithfulnesse in the diligent and carefull discharging himselfe of that trust committed vnto him the principall part of which repose standeth in the faithfull dispensing of Christs legacies to his Church according to his owne testament which as it is his dutie enioyned 1. Cor. 4.2 so is it his crowne his ioy his glorie that by his faithfull paines he hath procured the welfare of his people and bringeth with it a great recompence of reward for if he that sheweth himselfe a good and faithfull seruant in little things shall be ruler ouer much what may he expect who is faithfull in the greatest Happie is that man that out of the vprightnesse of his heart can say with Paul that nothing no not his life is so deere vnto him as to fulfill his course with ioy and the ministration he hath receiued If any man aske how he shall come to this I answer he must take the course that Paul did 1. he must teach the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe v. 27. and 2. he must dispense it sincerely not handling it deceitfully nor making merchandise of it but 1. as of sinceritie as in the sight of God 2. in the declaration of the truth approouing himselfe to euery mans conscience here by he shall become a sweete sauour to God euen in them that perish whereas the false and foolish Prophet hath a cuppe of gall and wormewood tempered by the hand of the Lord Ier. 23. and the Prophet Ezekiel sheweth both the head and tayle of this vnhappie condition the first entertainement of him is a woe and his farwell a curse and therefore I say to euery one present whom it doth or may concerne as Paul to his Timothie O Timothie keepe that which is committed vnto thee and That worthie thing which is committed vnto thee keepe it yea I charge you all in the sight of God who quickeneth all things that you keepe this commandement Vse 2. The ministerie is no calling of ease but a matter of great charge nor contemptible as many contemptuous persons thinke it too base a calling for their children but honourable neere vnto God of great trust a calling committing vnto men great matters and worthie things which not onely the Angels themselues haue dispensed sundrie times but euen the Lord of the Angels Iesus Christ himselfe all the while be ministred vpon earth the honour of which calling is such as those who are employed in
2. This apostolicall faith is not a faith of two or three but a common faith which euery beleeuer hath but the apostaticall Popish faith falsely called Catholike is not so for it is the faith of the teachers of the Church onely which their hearers may safely rest in although they haue no speciall faith of their owne neither indeed know what their Church or teachers doe beleeue but who seeth not that this grosse faith in the lumpe cannot be either sauing or Catholike sauing can it not be for the sauing faith of the elect goeth with the knowledge of the truth v. 3. neither can it be Catholike or the common faith no more then that can be a common commoditie which is ingrossed into some few mens hands and neuer seeth the open market or rather which is a monopolie for to beleeue say they as the Pope beleeueth although they know not what he beleeueth is sufficient 3. This apostolicall common faith purifyeth the heart cleanseth the conscience from dead workes and worketh by loue but the apostaticall Romish faith is a pragmatical fancie working by rage furie violence and blood filling their hearts and hands with detestable resolutions and attempts fouling their consciences with most impure and impious workes of the flesh and such as the issues of death follow as often experience hath beene their mistrisse 4. This common faith is most ancient it is the old and the good way but so is not theirs let them terme it the old religion as long as they will it is a strange doctrine a new devised faith not sauouring of apostolicall antiquitie as will appeare plainly to him that compareth that which they now professe with that which was professed when Paul writ the Epistle to the Romans Hence will it follow that their faith not beeing the common faith I say not that they must amend their faith but change it if they will be saued by it it is not all the patching and daubing and refining of their points will helpe them nor all the baulme in Gilead can so supple their positions that we may ioyne with them vntill they beginne againe and laie the same foundation with vs which is to seeke to enter into life by the doore and not as theeues seeke to creepe in at the window till this be done the ioyning with them will be the departing from the common faith till this be done we may not giue them the right hand of fellowship Let them first shake hands with Christ which is our heartie praier to the Lord for them we wil gladly and heartily reach thē ours Vse 3. If the faith be but one we must all then studie to keepe the vnitie of faith in the bond of loue which is the Apostles collection on the same ground Ephes. 4.3.4 we ought so to compose our affections as we may go out with one heart and one minde in the profession of this one common faith which maketh communion betweene the highest and lowest rich and poore Master and seruant Preacher and people for in Iesus Christ all are one Iew and Gentile bond and free Paul was Titus his father in the faith but yet this common faith made him his fellow brother 2. Cor. 8.23 so he calleth himselfe the father of the Corinthians and yet them his brethren as Onesimus a poore seruant by vertue of this common faith became the sonne of Paul and yet his faithfull and beloued brother so as howsoeuer in earthly relation we haue our difference and inequalitie yet in regard of this common faith beleeuers may say as they in the Prophet wee haue all one father and one mother yea one meate and cloath one education and one inheritance The Ministers must therefore so acknowledge himselfe a father as that he is a sonne too so a teacher as that he be a diligent hearer and entertainer of the doctrine also The Master must not forget he hath a master in heauen and that his seruant in regard of the common faith is or may be his fellow seruant and if he be a religious seruant he must be counted more then a seruant euen an Onesimus a brother in the Lord. The Magistrate must so rule as a subiect vnder Christ and not altogether stand on authoritie but cast an eye vpon the common faith The husband must not altogether stand on his headshippe but like a man of knowledge dwell with his wife as one who is with him a ioynt heire of the life of grace so in other relations Which consideration were it obserued it would cut off much discomfort in families cities societies Church and common wealth it would keepe men from offering occasions of vnbrotherly strife and contention as we see in Abraham and Lot it would cause them to forgiue and forget old iniuries as Ioseph Gen. 50.17 if they would conceiue that they are all brethren in the faith The third point in the words is to consider of the adiunct of sinceritie by which Titus is commended my naturall sonne that is not illegitimate or base borne but my rightfull true and as we say lawfully begotten sonne one that both resembleth my selfe and is a right follower of me The same word is vsed 2. Cor. 8.8 where the Apostle perswadeth the Corinths to the chearefull releefe of the poore brethren in Iudea by this reason that he might trie the naturalnes of their loue Which commendation was of good vse 1. for Titus his encouragement whom so great an Apostle so esteemed 2. that the Cretians might with more respect and reuerence receiue him thus highly commended 3. to distinguish Titus from some other of his sonnes who a while fathered themselues vpon him but after falling from the faith prooued but bastards and counterfeit as Hymenaeus Philetus Alexander Titus was not such a one not Timothy see 1. Tim. 1.2 Doctr. 1. In that the Apostle powreth not out his commendation of Titus neither this but vpon good ground obserue how warie euery man should be both whome and to what ende and how farre they commend another and yet this more especially if their iudgment be required or esteemed Thus Paul commendeth Titus 1. one well knowne to be worthy and not out of partiallitie 2. for a good end the benefit of the Church that his person and doctrine might be more louingly embraced and that this was his ende appeareth 2. Cor. 8.23 If any enquire of Titus he is my helper and fellow or of our brethren they are messengers of the Churches wherefore shew towards them the proofe of your loue 3. he commendeth him sparingly and is not lauish beyond the truth Neither is he generall in such elogyes for scarce any else but Timothie receiued such a testimonie from him Vse In this Seedplot of the ministerie whence young Titusses are to be commended vnto the vse of the Church it standeth those in hand who are to dismisse them with letters testimoniall not hand ouer head to giue a rash
vnion when Dauid and God consult together Iehoiadab and Ioash and when Iosiah standeth with Huldas the Prophetesse and for a man to oppose the ordinances of Christ with this humane ordinance is to set the bodie and soule together by the eares Not therefore the faithfull Ministers of Christ but such as stand with the beast and his ordinances and with the Antichrist of Rome are enemies vnto magistracie and weakeners of the power of Princes while they teach that all Ecclesiasticall persons are to be exempted from the ciuill power while they binde their hands in freeing their subiects from all obedience euen in ciuill commands and while they highly dishonour them in giuing the Pope a power ouer them to set them vp and depose them at his pleasure and that in thei● owne dominions where they are onely vnder God And here first may be noted that after the Apostle had taken great paines in the planting of this Church of Creta yet were many things wanting and defectiue still for Titus is left behind him to redresse things defectiue which must not be conceiued as that the Apostles either thorough ignorance forgetfulnes or carelesnesse omitted any thing but because they were cast into straights of time and could not euery where finish euery thing at least effectually and executionally but onely by way of direction Which is a ground of sundrie considerations First it noteth what was the speciall worke of an Euangelist namely that beeing the companions of the Apostles they were to bring on the work of the Lord to perfectiō both by establishing that foundation they had laid building on further by their direction where they left off The office was middle betweene the Apostle and the Pastor the calling was immediate from the Apostles as the Apostles was immediate frō Christ. Where by the name Euangelists are not meant those who in a straighter sense are so called as whose helpe the Lord vsed to write the historie of Christ and beginnings of Christian religion two of which were Apostles and other two their companions as Marke and Luke but those whom we call vice-apostles or pastors fore-runners who were in preaching the Gospel planting the ministerie and administration of holy things to be as hands and feete wholly at the Apostles appointment to call and recall whether and when they would such as Timothie Titus Marke Tychichus seruing now in one Church now in an other as the Apostles pleased to vse them whose office because their calling was from the Apostles and their worke seruing the founding and rearing of the first Christian Churches and that by the direction of the Apostles must needs also cease with the Apostles Secondly notwithstanding many defects and wants in this Church and those great ones and that in constitution for we see their cities were destitute of elders and Church gouernours yet was it neither neglected by Paul nor separated from by Titus as a cage of vncleane birds teaching vs not presently to condemne a number and societie of men much lesse of Churches for want of some lawes or gouernment for no Church is not wanting in some if they ioyne together in the profession of truth of doctrine and worship for so many of the Churches planted by the Apostles themselues might haue beene refused for wanting some officers for a time although they were after supplied How much better were it that the spirit of meekenes should lead into a patient expectation when God will further beautifie his Sion to make her become the praise of the world then that the spirit of pride should hurrie vs into a rash and peremptorie sentence against euen whole Churches Did not Paul when the Church of Galatia had reuolted from the Doctrine of free iustification by Christ yet call and account it a Church still Let them shew any of our errors of this nature Obiect But those Churches and this in Creta was in constituting but yours after a long time by publike lawes and common consent haue refused the lawes of Christ and that after you haue beene conuinced not to be the Church of Christ. Ans. But where is this sufficient conuiction If it be said in their bookes the truth is although they haue pointed vs to some wants yet none of them haue sufficiently concluded vs no Church at all and suppose our case were altogether as ill as they would make it who are they that they should giue vs a bill of diuorcement If a priuate man erre and offend must he not first be admonished and then censured and iudged but by whom by priuate men no but by the Church and shall not a whole Church or many Churches challenge the same forme of proceeding and therefore seeing this is not done by our neighbour reformed Churches which no doubt are the true Churches of God wee remaine and shall truely retaine the name of the Church and people of God and leaue them to the reforming of their error both in the matter of their plea as also in the manner of their proceeding Thirdly we learne hence that no Church is hastily brought to any perfection The Apostles themselues the master builders with much wisdome and labour and often in long time made not such proceedings but that had they not prouided labourers to follow them with a diligent hand all had beene lost Much a doe had they to lay the foundation and prepare matter for the building and yet this they did by conuerting men to the faith and baptizing them but after this to ioyne them into a publike profession of the faith and constitute visible faces of Churches among them required more helpe and labour and for most part was left to the Euangelists So as the building of Gods house is not vnlike to the finishing of other great buildings with what labour are stones digged out of the earth with what difficultie depart they from their naturall roughnes what sweate and strength is spent ere the Mason can smothe them as it is also with the timber and yet after all this they lie a long time here and there scattered a sunder and make no house till by the skill of some cunning builder they be aptly laid and fastened together in their frame So euery mans heart in the naturall roughnes of it is as hard as a stone his will and affections like the crabbed and knottie okes invincibly resisting all the paines of Gods masons and carpenters till the finger of God in the Ministerie come make plaine and smoothe way working in their conuersion And yet many conuerts although they belong to the Catholike Church make not a particular visible Church till they ioyne in some publike seruice and worship of God according to the lawes and orders appointed by himselfe 2. Besides this inward ineptitude and resistance neuer had any building except Babels towers which had Gods owne hand from heauen against them such outward opposites against it as this hath here is Satan and all
the gates of hell here is Sanballat and Tobiah Simon Magus and Amaziah here are false Christs false Apostles Heretikes Tyrants all standing against Christ and making warre against his bodie In all which regards if Salomon in the daies of peace without all opposition hauing an hundreth and three and fiftie thousand and sixe hundred workmen cannot vnder seauen yeares finish the materiall Temple how hardly thinke we must this spirituall house standing of liuing stones goe vp how slowly is it reared hauing more enemies and those no weake ones then Salomon had workmen euen as many as there be naturall men in the earth vnmortified lusts in men or deuils in hell all of them with all their power resisting the proceedings of the Church and Gospel Vse 1. This doctrine lets vs see what great things God hath done for such a people as among whom he hath planted h●s ordinances many strong holds and oppositions hath he brought down many enemies hath he subdued many engins of Satan and his instruments hath he broken before he could settle his glorie and cause it to dwell among his people For as it was at the first breaking out of this light to the world by Christs owne preaching neuer was the world on such a fire neuer was any age so fruitfull in tyrannie and heresie so hath it beene proportionally euer since in the seuerall parts of the world where this grace hath appeared Witnesse in these parts of Europe the stirres and tumults in all the countries against the light restored by Luther witnes also the fires and flames consuming the bodies of Gods seruants in our own countrie in and since the daies of King Henrie the 8. of worthy memorie that had it not bin the truth of God it could neuer haue come to this where we see it for which mercie all the land should be mooued to much thankfulnes Vse 2. Let euery man hence be mooued to helpe forward and lend a hand to the beautifying and perfecting of this spouse of Christ that as it were by many hands this difficult worke may become the lighter Among the Iewes euery man brought somewhat to the Tabernacle and so it was reared some more some lesse but euery man something so let the Magistrate bring his authoritie and countenance the Minister pure doctrine and holy life to the building of the Church the rich their riches to the honour of God the poore good affections and all heartie praiers that we may once see Sion in her perfect beautie Thus euen very meane men shall be honoured so highly as they shall become assistants to the Ruler of the whole earth as some so vnderstand the place of Iehoshuah and Zerubbabel Vse 3. A ground of moderation to beare so farre as good conscience and a mans calling wil permit the imperfections of any Church and in the wants of it carrie our selues as peaceably as may make to the honour of the God of peace and the manifestation of our selues the sonnes of peace as well knowing 1. that it is not to be expected of any Church militant vpon earth to be vnblemished which is a prerogatiue of Christs glorious bodie in heauen 2. by peace small things thriue and arise to their greatnes euen smoaking flaxe cherished groweth to a flame 3. that contention and division hindreth and ouerturneth those good things which haue gone forward but slowly when they went fastest Yet so as according to the extent of our callings we ayme and labour for the pure and perfect estate of the Church For it was a wicked speach condemned by the Prophet to say It is not yet time to build vp the house of the Lord therefore content our selues to dwell in seiled houses and sleepe in sound skins although the Lords house lie wast And hereupon that the Church afore time hath a long time beene wanting in many things tending to the perfection of it to ground a perpetuall imperfection is a peece of Satans sophistrie and argueth the want of that most dutifull affection of children toward such a mother pleading rather for her blackenes then beautie and not reioysing to see this spouse bedecked with all her ornaments The second point in this first dutie of Titus is gathered out of the word translated to redresse but properly signifieth a continuall and instant straightning of things which grow crooked in the Church Whence we learne that there is a continuall bending and inclining of good ordinances in the Church euen in their best estate After that sinne got once into Paradise and tooke the hold of our first parents innocent hearts not the best ordinances that euer the Lord instituted could so fence themselues as to keepe it from them how soone after had all flesh corrupted their waies how were his lawes ingrauen in the tables of mens hearts so forgotten as he must be forced to write them in tables of stone after that how was that law written by his owne fingers generally corrupted and violated as appeareth by Christs reformation of them how his own politie was violenced of Priest and people all the Prophets as with one voice and mouth complaine how al the ordinances of the new Testament were soone ouerturned and by degrees cleane shaken out of the Church by the rising and grouth of Antichrist who euen in the Apostles daies began to worke appeareth in the historie of the Church Hereunto adde the readines of the malicious man to sowe tares the vnwillingnes of the flesh to endure the Lords yoke the busines and curiositie of mans wit and fleshly wisedome which will be adding detracting or deprauing his institutions by a restles turkising of them the state of the Church militant now here now there exercised with continuall vicissitudes and changes as of day and night so of prosperitie and aduersitie according as God giues Kings ouer it either in mercie or wrath protectors or persecutors all these plainely prooue that which is not obscurely implyed that the best things in their best estate are on the bending hand and inclining vnto corruption Vse 1. This point letteth vs see our imperfection in this world and that all our perfection standeth in two things 1. in sight of imperfection 2. in strife vnto perfection For that the Church cannot be perfect is manifest in the continuall declinings of vs that are the members Which should make vs ashamed when we see our turnings backe daily reproouing vs. The Lord if his pleasure had beene such might haue as perfectly beautified and stablished his Church in earth as euer it shall be in heauen but he seeth it fitter for vs to be brought to an humble walking before him in sence of our infirmitie as also daily to repaire vnto him who is both the author and finisher of our faith that he would be pleased to laie as the first so the last stone of this his building that the whole praise of it may be his Vse 2. They may
many words Act. 7.44 Heb. 8.5 As they therefore in the old Testament had their pillar of fire and cloud at the going and standing of which they must goe and stand in all their iourneys so haue we in the newe likewise a watch of the Lord to keepe namely the will of God expressed in his word which must be the beginning of euery motion and rest in the Church Vse Let the bold Papists come and say one by one I haue a vision or I haue a dreame I haue found out this or that tradition concerning prayers for the dead fasts or feasts confirmed by some diabolicall delusions let them pretend their rules of perfection standing in the obseruation of Euangelicall counsels such as concerne chastitie voluntarie pouertie c. let them obtrude to vs the Church the Church and the Church must be heard and hereby thrust vpon vs what lawes they list for the holding and keeping of life in that beast of Rome We say to all these things that if any of them stand by Apostolicall authoritie we will receiue all such traditions but if they be vnder Apostolicall power who are they or what haue we to deale with them or they with vs seeing that neither an Euangelist may take vpon him nor we take from him any impositions vnder Apostolicall authoritie Obiect They alleadge Luk. 10. He that despiseth you despiseth me Ans. So long as they speake according to their commission which is teach them to keepe all that I haue commanded you Matth. 28.28 Obiect Matth. 18. Tell the Church if he refuse to heare the Church let him be to thee as an heathen Ans. But the Church must be in their Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction tied to some certaine rule which is described in the word Ob. But Paul and Timothie deliuered some decrees ordained by the Apostles and Elders to be kept Act. 16.4 Ans. 1. They must knowe their power subiected and inferiour to this Apostolicall 2. euen the Apostles themselues gaue no decrees but such as were cōprehended in the written word as in Act. 15.29 It seemeth good to the Holy Ghost and vs to lay no other burthen but in these necessarie things wherein besides that in ordering the Church we see they had such an immediate assistance of the holy Ghost that they could not erre so also the things decreed were according to the written word As the things offered to Idols and fornication were condemned in the morall law the eating of blood forbidden to Noah before Moses and in the law partly because there was some symbol in it of the blood of Christ by which the soule is purged and partly to auoide the note of inhumanitie and crueltie And things strangled were before the Apostles times prohibited for the former reason least blood not let out should be eaten Which two latter although their nature were changed and free in themselues after Christ yet the Apostle in the time of gathering the Church of the Iewes and Gentiles because he would haue no bones of dissention cast betweene them and auoide the scandall for a time required them and forbore to abrogate them but would haue them for the time retained without all opinion of worship necessitie and much lesse of merit by all which bonds the Papists would fasten vpon vs all their humane inventions so that all their allegations are too weake to remooue vs from this hold so immooueably grounded vpon the Scriptures Vers. 6. If any be vnreprooueable the husband of one wife hauing faithfull children which are not slandred of riot neither disobedient In these words the Apostle entreth that particular direction how Titus should behaue himselfe in the house of God both in the placing of Elders and redressing abuses in all sorts of persons For the former because it is the maine either beautie or blemish of any Church either to be g●aced or dishonoured with gracious or graceles Ministers they beeing as captaines or leaders to the people in whatsoeuer waies themselues take vp therefore that Titus should not laie rash hands vpon any but after triall make choice of such men as should be found worthy euery way for that worthie worke and that he should not be deceiued in his choice Paul taketh paines to draw him a patterne and giue him a liuely picture of the man whom he meaneth And this he doth by a full description of the qualities and conditions as his lineaments the proportion of which if he can espie he hath found the man he sought and whom the Church needeth Now these qualities as they concerne either his life and conuersation or else his abilitie and fitnes for doctrine and instruction so doth the Apostle in this order prosecute them the former from this to the 9. verse the latter in the latter part of this Chapter First then for the life of him who is to be called to this office in the Church it is required 1. in generall that he be vnreprooueable and that both at home and abrode as we shall see 2. more specially for his further beautifying he must both be furnished with certaine vertues which must positiuely shine in him and these are such as concerne his priuate life and family described in their kinds and partly in this 6. verse and vrged by reasons in the 7. as also he must be freed from many particular vices which are reckoned vp and amplified by the opposition of the contrarie vertues which he must exercise vers 7.8 This is the carriage of these verses the particulars whereof shall be propounded and further prosecuted in their places First it is required in generall in the life of him that is to be set ouer a people as their pastor and teacher that he be vnreprooueable By which the Apostle meaneth nothing lesse then one that is without fault or infirmitie or sinne for there is none that liueth and sinneth not and the high priest though a speciall type of Christ and the chiefe Minister of the ancient Church of the Iewes must first offer for his owne sinnes and then for the sinnes of the people yea and Christ himselfe teaching his Disciples the chiefe Ministers of the new Testament to pray taught them to say daily Forgiue vs our trespasses neither doth the nature of the word here vsed require any such angelicall puritie but meaneth such a one as no man can iustly call into question or taint with any infamie and crime Iustly I say for otherwise it is not the priuiledge of the best to keepe them from tribunalls before which the Prophets the Apostles yea and Christ himselfe had such crimes intended against them as prooued capitall but all iniustly so is it the lot of the godly to be often blamed and condemned for that wherein they are not blameworthy and if bare calling in question did disable a Minister from the office it would quickly be brought about by the malice of the Deuil that all the most conscionable Ministers in the world should soone be
suppressed And as the charge must be iust so it must not be frailties or infirmities that hang vpon our nature commonly corrupted but grosse and open sinnes yea and enormious crimes in the sight of the sunne the iust challenge and proofe of which disable a man from this function by this Apostolicall Canon And howsoeuer he that is the cleanest and hath washed himselfe in snow water hath his owne clothes that will pollute him yet read we of diuerse in the Scriptures that haue attained to walke without reproofe as Iob Zacharie and Elizabeth and many euen priuate Christians at this day through Gods mercie liue without crime though not any saue the Sonne of God himselfe euer liued without sinne All which open to vs the meaning of the precept Doctr. How able soeuer a man be to teach yet if he be of corrupt conuersation and scandalous in life he is not fit to be chosen for a Minister Reasons 1. Our Apostle here in the first place and more largely insisteth vpon the life of him that is to be chosen and afterwards in fewer words requireth his fitnes for doctrine and so in his charge to Timothie that he should laie hands on no man rashly addeth that some mens sinnes goe before hand and some mens sinnes follow after iudgement as though he had said more largely Vse all the circumspection thou canst yet some hypocrites will creepe into the Ministerie some are inwardly profane and such close sinners thou canst not discerne till afterward they manifest themselues others are open sinners of which thou maiest iudge aright these latter thou art to hinder the former reclaime or seasonably remooue and so salue vp the sore againe for how requisite is it that such a sweete and sauorie doctrine should be matched with a sweet and sauorie Christian conuersation 2. That such an high calling is to be graced with an vnreprooueable life was typified in the law sundrie waies as after we shall more clearely see in the positiue vertues required especially in that prohibition that none of Aarons sonnes or seed that had any blemish in him might once presse to offer before the Lord neither come neere the vaile nor stand by the Altar 3. A scandalous and obnoxious person shall neuer do good in his calling For although the things of Christ as the Word Sacraments and Doctrine depend not vpon the person of the Minister but on the ordinance of Christ neither in themselues are the worse in bad mens hands no more then a true mans peece of gold in the hand of a theife yet by our weaknes in such a mans hand they are weaker to vs and although no man can answer or warrant the refusing of pure doctrine which is not to be had in respect of persons for the spotted life of the Minister who while he sitteth in Moses chaire be he Pharisie be he hypocrite must be heard yet can it not be but that the wickednes of Helies sonnes will make the people abhorre the offerings of the Lord which what a greiuous sinne it was before the Lord see 1. Sam. 2.17 Againe how can he benefit his people whose hands are bound whose mouth is shut and cannot vtter the truth without continuall galling and sentencing of himselfe and when euery scoffer shall be readie to say to him art thou become weake like one of vs and the word shall be still returned vpon himselfe how can it be expected that he should do good amongst them Christ preuented that scoffe Phisitian heale thy selfe and Paul sheweth the dutie of euery Minister namely to minister well and the fruit of it he getteth a good report and great libertie in the faith Wherein let a Minister be wanting if he were able to speake with the tongues of men and Angels yea if he had a fierie tongue sitting on his head he shall neuer be able to preuaile with ignorant persons who must be sensibly taught and that aswell by their eie as by their eare 4. It is a most dangerous condition to himselfe to be a good teacher of a bad life for such a one is in the snare of the deuill that is when he seeth his life still more and more exprobrated and himselfe more despised euery day then other for it is iust with God that with the wicked should be reproch then he beginnes to grow so bold and impudent as that he casts off all shame and care and as one desperate and hardened in sinne prostituteth himselfe remorselesly vnto all lewdnes and vngodly conuersation Vse 1. Hence may we see the reason why the Deuill so mightily laboureth to slander the most faithfull Ministers of Christ namely that by the contempt of their persons their doctrine also might be condemned And therefore he will play at small game ere he sit out If he cannot hinder the Ministerie he can disgrace it If he cannot discontinue it he can continue a deuill still that is both an aduersarie and an accuser of it for either Christs Disciples wash not or fast not or Christ himselfe is a good companion or Iohn Baptist is too austere and precise or some natural infirmitie as Elishaes bald pate shall be cast as a rub in the way to make the Doctrine lesse welcome And all this because long experience of many ages hath taught this old serpent that the most wretched miscreant euen Herod himselfe will heare gladly Iohn Baptist if he conceiue him as he is a good and godly man carying himselfe without reproofe and exception The selfe same is the ground why he setteth himselfe in all ages to shoue in and hold in the Ministerie such persons as like vnfauorie salt are too base for the dunghil euery way for the ouerthrow of this apostolicall direction vsing and vrging most impregnable arguments drawne from affinitie affection some base and seruill demerit letters and requests of great men or gifts which blind the eyes by which and many other meanes Satans Ministers for the Apostle calleth them no better keepe out the Ministers of God What mischiefe these stratagems of Satan haue wrought in the Church we may see and bewaile and prouoke thence our prayers that the Lord would so let his kingdome come euery where that such maine pillars of Satans kingdome may be shaken and broken especially in reformed Churches which professe and auow the lifting vp of the scepter of Iesus Christ. Vse 2. Note hence what conformitie is most vrged by Christ in all his Ministers namely the ●●iting to vncorrupt doctrine an vnblameable life by these two shall all men know who are the true Ministers sent of Christ this voice and these hands are infallible distinctions not onely of Ministers from other men but euen of Ministers among themselues and the maine and intolerable inconformitie of Ministers is the suiting of Iacobs voice with Esaus hands The Minister hath not done his dutie when he hath pointed to others the way to heauen and
men into euill is because they can easilier giue credance vnto the persons of men then soundly iudge of the actions of them Hauing faithfull children After a mans owne person respect must be had of his priuate gouernment and cariage whom the Lord will haue called so neere him as to serue in holy things before him and because it is meete that such a one be a man of experience and gouernment the Apostle would haue him obserued in the priuate ordering of his family whence an aime may be taken how he is likely to behaue himselfe in publike that if his fitnes skil be tried in ruling the lesser and fewer he may the better be trusted with the greater For that this is the reason of all this diligent enquirie is plaine in 1. Tim. 3.5 For if he cannot gouerne his owne house how can he gouerne the house of God We know that he that is not able to guid a boate is not able to gouerne a great ship and he that being married cannot rule two or three of his own children so neare him much lesse can he gouerne a whole Church men and women who in comparison of the other are as strangers and few of them fully knowen vnto him Quest. But in ordering the familie the first care must be had of the wife why doth the Apostle vtterly omit that both in this place and that of Timothie and in both places only mention the gouernment of the children Ans. 1. That care is not excluded 2. The wife is not so absolutely put vnder gouernment as the children but are partly gouerners in the familie with the husband and beeing the wife of a Minister is presupposed to be of that grace and wisedome as that she is able to take vp her owne dutie without such enforcement and therefore the Apostle thinketh it sufficient to shew what a one the Ministers wife ought to be 1. Tim. 3.11 But 3. and especially because in the gouernment of his children there is a more liuely resemblance of such duties of gouernment which he is to dispense towards the Church And if we looke a little nearer the words we shall see that there is nothing enioyned the Minister as a Father of children which belongeth not vnto him as he is a spirituall father of the children of God For if we respect matter of instruction and doctrine he must haue faithfull children so in the Church by diligent teaching of the doctrine of faith must he bring men vnto the faith or if we looke at matter of manners he must do two things 1. displant vices and plant the contrarie vertues that they may not be accused of riotous or other vngodly courses which also he must publikely performe in the congregation by the word of exhortation and rebuke 2. correct and chastise the obstinate and rebellious that they be not disobedient and so as Minister he hath a rod of correction and the censures of the Church to inflict vpon the obstinate Now in the children of Ministers are required two things 1. for their institution that they be faithfull children 2. for their conuersation they must not be 1. riotous 2. disobedient By faithfull children are meant such as beeing instructed in the faith are at least in externall conuersation answerable to the profession of the faith they make Quest. But is it in the power of any Minister or man to haue faithfull children may not a good man and a Minister too haue most graceles children Ans. There is no man but he is to endeauour that his children may haue euen the grace of faith which is further laid out of his power then by getting himselfe within the couenant But there is no good man who hath it not in his power to instruct his children in the doctrine of faith and also for outward order to make them conformable and in some measure answerable to that prof●ssion so long as they abide vnder his roofe And if the Lord afterwards for some vnknowen and secret cause by leauing them shew he hath no delight in them such a father may herein comfort his conscience that to his power he hath vsed the best meanes for their good Doctr. 1. He that must reforme others abroad must first beginne at home For as true loue beginneth at home and then disperseth it selfe abroad so true religion reformeth at home first and conscionable reformation beginnes at a mans owne heart The tenour of the 101. Psalme sheweth that Dauid comming to his kingdome 1. reformeth his person 2. his Court and familie 3. his countrie The same course tooke Ioshua I and my house and Hester I and my maids And indeed sound reformation cannot correct in another what it selfe cherisheth neither can teach another and it selfe abide vntaught As if it be a zealous reformation proceeding from pure zeale it hateth disorder most of all in the owne bosome it lesse spares sinne in the owne heart then in the house and lesse in the house then abroad and the nearer this serpent approacheth the more is it feared and fled from Well knew the Apostle that he that cannot abide reformation in himselfe can neuer endure it in another and he that suffereth vanitie prophannes irreligion and disorder in his house he can neuer hate these in the house and Church of God and therfore maketh it a sufficient cause to debarre such a one from the Ministerie 2. How dangerous a thing it is for a man vnreformed in himselfe or family to take vpon him in publike the reformation of other we see in Moses himselfe Exod. 4.24 whom as he was going downe into Egypt to be the guide and deliuerer of the Church the Lord met in the way to haue slaine him and the reason was because his sonne Eliazer was not circumcised and so his owne house was vnreformed Whence we may gather how indignely the Lord taketh it that any man should come to gouerne his house that gouerneth not his owne If Moses himselfe be to plant circumcision among the people much more must all his owne males be circumsiced and this must be done or he shall die for it before euer he come where he must serue the Church of God Vse 1. Let euery man know the due season of this weightie dutie and that is when he hath done with himselfe For then he shall better see the mote in another he shall the better discerne the danger and discouer the shifts of sinne he shall more patiently and pitifully deale against it he shall more watchfully preuent it he shall more zealously purge it which not beeing first done many haue swet in redressing their wiues children seruants faults altogether fruitlesly because they neuer in earnest dealt against their owne Priuate men would faine see publike reformation of disorders and who can blame them but they must beginne by giuing religion a roome in their owne houses and hearts else shall they neuer see that they desire their eies may behold Who euer saw whole Churches
not appeare in him who is to be admitted into that calling which proposition must not so be vnderstood as that euerie hastie man is to be debarred from the ministerie for this infirmitie will dwell with the best but sheweth that he that ordinarily is so fierie and furious as euen small trifling occasions inflame him and herein is so farre from crossing and curbing his corruption as that he rather followeth and fostereth it this man is vtterly vnfit for the ministerie For 1. whereas a minister ought to be a man of iudgment knowledge and vnderstanding for these are most essentiall vnto his calling yea a man of such wisedome as whereby all his actions ministeriall and common should be ordered this flashing anger ouerturneth for the present yea and drowneth all his iudgement for what other is it then a little furie and a short madnes which the wise man had well obserued when he said that whereas the wise man ordereth all his works with iudgement anger resteth in the bosome of fooles and where it resteth it ruleth so as there is no place for wise deliberation but a rash carriage of matters according to the heate and headie violence of the distempered affection Not vnfitly therefore doth the same Salomon note that he that is slowe to wrath is of great wisedome and that he that is hastie to anger committeth folly Secondly the pestilent effects and fruits of anger and the naturall daughters resembling the mother are such as in a Minister of all men are intollerable as swelling of the minde so high and so full as there is no roome for good motions and meditations which should wholly take vp the ministers heart to dwell by it the often arming of Gods enemies and harming and wounding of his friends for anger is cruell and wrath is raging it cares not for any nor spares any that come in the way of it for who can stand before enuie And from this indignation of heart proceede vsually impietie against God for all prayers and parts of his worship are interrupted contumely against men for the bond of loue is broken clamor of speach violence of hands temeritie of actions late repentance and many moe such symptoms of this desperate disease for he hath lost all the bridle and moderation of himselfe I had almost said his reason for I thinke Salomon saith no lesse affirming that such a man as cannot refraine this reuengfull appetite is like a citie broken downe and without wals Now what gouernement is he worthy of especially in the Church of God that ordinarily looseth all the gouernement of himselfe Thrirdly the Minister standing in the roome and stead of God ought if he would resemble him to be a mortified man for till he haue put off this filthie fruit of the flesh can he neuer liuely expresse the vertues of God who is a God of patience meekenesse much in compassion slowe to wrath and much lesse can he fitly stampe and imprint that part of his image on others yea or teach them to withstand such hote and hastie affections which so suddenly surprize and enflame himselfe Fourthly as the Minister is to be a meanes of reconciling God vnto man so likewise of man vnto man which commendable dutie an hastie man can neuer to purpose performe nay rather be stirreth vp strife and marreth all whereas Salomon obserueth that onely he that is slowe to wrath appeaseth strife for this vnrulie passion will disable a man to heare the truth of both the parties indifferently nor abideth to heare the debate but it will be thundring threats before time serue to take knowledg of the matter Fiftly this vice preiudiceth all his ministeriall actions 1. in his owne world For the Minister shall often meete in his calling with those both at home and abroad who in many things are farre different from him both in iudgement and practise yea some of weakenes and others of obstinacie lothing euen his wholesome doctrine Now his calling is and consequently his care should be to gaine these to the loue and liking of the truth to which end he is not presently to breake out into anger for thus he sets them further off and scandalizeth such as otherwise he might haue wonne no more then the Physitian is or may be angrie though the weake stomacke of his patient loath and cast vp his wholesome physicke for that would set the patient into further distemper but such must be restored by the spirit of meekenesse 2. in his peoples hearts by alienating their loue and affection which are easily worne away with the distastfull fruits of this hastie anger let him instruct admonish reprooue euery one findeth this euasion one he doth in anger an other not in loue and so his whole worke is lost and become fruitlesse whereas by louing vsage hee might haue pearced his people with a permanent and lasting affection and wonne better entertainement to all his proceedings Vse 1. All this must teach the seruant of the Lord to be gentle to all men apt to teach suffering the euill and instructing with meekenes the contrarie minded Where the Apostle seemeth to conclude him not to be apt to teach who is not inclined to a gentle and meeke disposition not that they are to shewe irreligious mildnes in Gods matters nor to exercise such patience as can beare all things nor such lenitie as men should be flattred or endured in their sinnes For there is a vice which shrowdeth it selfe vnder the maske of a vertue and that is a stockish senselesnes or a sufferance of any euill without any great sense of it condemned in the Angels of the Church of Thyatira suffering the woman Iesabel and of Pergamus suffering those that maintained the doctrine of Baalam and of the Nicolaitans But such a patient nature is required as was in the Pastor of the Church of Ephesus I know thy works and patience and that thou canst not endure and beare with them that are euill but thou hatest the doctrine of the Nicolaitans which I also hate The Minister then must be patient and suffer the euill But what when he heareth them floute at the word blaspheme raile on the Ministers No but he must instruct them and so farre onely vse meeekenesse as may lead them vnto amendement so were the Apostles gentle as a nurse with her little ones tenderly handling them but not suffering them to harme or mischiefe themselues Vse 2. Seeing anger is not only an enemie to the Ministerie in the Minister but in the hearers let such as are swift to heare be slow to wrath as beeing a great enemie to a teacheable minde causing men to cast-off all such instruction as commeth neare them or wageth warre against any affected lusts And this not onely it doth in the wicked but often in the godly themselues as Asa otherwise a good King yet was wroth with the Seer and put him in prison And
his presse money that he may please his captaine forsaketh all the care of wife children house affaires and calling and wholly fixeth his minde and eie vpon the busines and victorie euen so the Minister seruing not vnder a Cyrus or Alexander but vnder the eternall sonne of God ought also to diuorse himselfe from the distractions for the things of this life which in comparison must be vtterly neglected He is in this warfare rather to expect dangers blowes wounds to forecast these to prouide for these and prepare how to encounter against Satan sinne his owne and others sinnefull lusts following his captaine at the heeles and incouraging himselfe hereto both with assurance of victorie and the expectation of his pay penie of life eternall It was the greatest policie that euer the deuill watched against the Church as the woefull experience of many ages hath taught vs to heape excessiue wealth vpon the Clergie then was the studie of the Scriptures and the care of the calling laid aside and was diuerted into plotting and policie both to get more and hold that which was gotten by this Antichrist came in hereby he rose to his height hereby he standeth at this day this wealth ioyned with pompe and state is that Davus which troubleth all the parts of the Christian world both the Churches and ciuill states as in many instances might be declared Secondly this vice will make a minister falsifie the word turne the truth into a lie and take such a course in handling the word as shall bring meale to the mill This was noted in the false prophets to be the maine cause of false vision Isai speaking of greedie dogges who could neuer haue inough maketh this their propertie euerie one looketh to his owne way and accordingly prophesied for his owne purpose and advantage so Ieremie ioyneth these sinnes together Ier. 5.31 The Prophets prophesie lies and the Priests receiue gifts in their hands and Ezekiel telleth vs that this filthie lucre made the Prophets so base minded that for verie handfulls of barley and peices of bread some of them would pollute the name of the Lord in lying to his people some of ignorance by the blinding and bewitching of this sinne and others against their knowledge and conscience powring themselues out through the deceit of Balaams wages Hence is this sinne branded iustly to bee the seede of heretikes and spawne of scismatikes false teachers and apostates What other was the white which the authors of scisme and heads of faction aymed at Rom. 16.17 they serued not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies And no other God serued the false Apostles who were enemies to the crosse of Christ but their bellie was their God why so because they minded earthly things for what any man most mindeth that he maketh his God Hence could they please all sorts of men soon turne round into square In their doctrine ioyne circumcision with baptisme and so both Iew and Gentile were contented In their liues they would suffer nothing for Christ but howsoeuer the squares goe their state and pompe must be vpheld And at this day what other is the God of Popish Priests who for their bellie haue turned all religion into gaine and almost all essentiall truths into lyes both which are readily to be prooued in particular whereas the true Apostles were most careful to remooue from themselues euen the suspition of this fearefull sinne who professed that both the Churches knewe and God bare them record that they were farre from vsing flattering words or coloured couetousnesse in their doctrine and for their practise when they might haue beene chargeable to the Churches they rather wrought with their hands that they might be eased 3. If a Minister should speake the truth yet in this tainture how powerlesly how fruitlesly for is he a fit man to raise others to heauen whose owne heart is rooted in the earth how coldly shall he perswade others that godlinesse is great gaine whose gaine is all his godlinesse with what heart can he pull other men out of the world and the loue of it when it hath wonne the strongest and most inward hold of his owne heart with what experience can he teach that the truest delight is placed in heauenly things or that Gods kingdome is first to be sought when his thoughts are taken vp as the disciples were once in dreaming of a temporall kingdome with what face can he teach the doctrine of Gods prouidence when himselfe ca●kes and laieth about him as though he had no father to prouide for him how can he curbe in others these vnnaturall desires which as the dropsie proceede most of fulnesse and abundance when as they are so setled in himselfe Thus this one lust vnfitteth him to all his duties Vse This confuteth many base minded men in the ministerie whose thoughts studie paines and labour are altogether bended and set vpon this conclusion That they wil be rich to which purpose they heape vp liuing vpon liuing cast their largest extent and contriue the building of their owne houses although in the meane time the house of the Lord lie wast Which grieuous sinne if it were so fearefully accursed in the common people of the Iewes what a grieuous plague hangeth ouer the head of that Minister whose calling laieth a further necessitie vpon him not to build a material house made with hands but a spirituall habitation for the Lord consisting of liuing stones in the hearts of men and yet all this worke is neglected that his owne neast may be well feathered And from the same fountaine floweth it that some are knowne vsurers others are farmours and husbandmen rather then Prophets others merchants buyers and sellers of Churches people and inferiour commodities others in marketting and yet in farre baser affaires spend their time and wast themselues which pitifull fruits of this filthie lust are so rife and so ripe that if old father Latimer liued in these dayes he would boldly avouch that if couetousnesse were lost we might find it in the Clergie some Iudas or other would haue the bagge Now there is no great hope of the recouerie of those who are alreadie clasped in the windings of this sinne they are desperately endangered to be drowned in perdition so sweete is the morsell and so pleasant is the bootie that they will not let it goe To them therefore I will say no more but as Peter to Simon Magus Pray to the Lord that if it be possible the iniquitie of thy heart may be forgiuen thee I will rather turne my speach to euery young Timothie and Titus beseeching and exhorting them all timely to preuent this sinne and to frame their hearts to that exhortation of Paul 1. Tim. 6.11 But thou O man of God that is who hast place or art to haue office in the Church by ordinarie calling as the Prophets and men of God of old had by extraordinarie Thou who after a speciall
are two especially 1. the deniall of a mans selfe with a daily invring ones selfe to the crucifying of his affections and lusts Paul beat downe his bodie as with clubs and kept it vnder Prooue masteries with thy selfe arme thy selfe against thy selfe make warre without truce vpon thy selfe it is a warre without bloodshed hurting none no not thy selfe but profitable to worke thy peace with God with thy selfe with others remember Salomons speach He that ruleth his minde is better then he that ouercommeth a citie 2. Prayer for neither this nor any vertue groweth in our owne grounds neither good nature nor freedome of will can make this supplie but we must haue recourse to the father of lights our selues are but our owne burdens of so miserable molde as we need no other enemies then our selues to depriue our selues of our good if the Lord befreind vs not whom we must wrastle withall by our praiers and if we would preuaile vnto our prayers we must sometimes ioyne the exercise of fasting which after a sort doubleth our forces both in strengthning our praiers as also by disposing vs to the receiuing of these graces And now to end this large treatise it wil be asked But what if any Minister be scandalous in any of the forenamed vices or defectiue in the vertues mentioned Ans. 1. If he be not answerable to these Canons it is plaine by the Apostle that he is not to be called 2. If he be called and after prooue vicious he must be delt withall as an Elder 1. no accusation must be receiued vnder two witnesses at least 1. Tim. 5.19 2. when he is accused of a knowne and scandalous vice all possible meanes must be vsed to reclaime him As 1. by open reproofe vers 20. 2. sometimes by translation of him to such a place as where are lesse meanes of that sinne as one giuen to drunkennes or contention from a drunken and quarellous people 3. sometime by a temporall deposition from his office if there be hope hereby to doe him good 4. after sufficient admonition censures and trial by a perpetuall deposition from his place yea and further if he still prooue incorrigible by proceeding to excommunicate him and cast him from the societie of the Church And the rather 1. Because Ministers are set ouer a people to edifie and not destroie them 2. Because the actions of Ministers haue a secret power not to lead onely but euen compell men to the like especially if they be lewd and wicked 3. Weaker and meaner men for manifest vices not repented of must be proceeded against to excommunication much more the Minister whose scandalous life is infinitly more dangerous and hurtfull 4. Such proceeding against notorious insufficient and scandalous wretches who neuer came in nor are kept in by the Apostles canons would doe good for example Vers. 9. Holding fast the faithfull word according to doctrine that he also may be able to exhort with wholesome doctrine and improoue them that say against it Hauing followed the Apostles meaning and method in describing the fitnes of him who is to be chosen into the Ministerie who for the innocencie of his life ought to be free from manifold vices and corruptions which are plentifull in the world and for the integritie of his conuersation seeing whatsoeuer he doth is exemplarie ought to shine with m●nifold graces and vertues as we haue heard Now we come to the second branch of the Ministers fitnes which standeth in his abillitie to discharge his high calling and place vnto which is required such ●kill and cunning in the grounds and points of Christian religion as that he may be able to hold fast maintaine and iustifie against all challengers that truth and doctrine which is agreeable to the faithfull word that so whensoeuer any blast of heresie tyrannie false doctrine or flatterie shall rise against him yet he may hold fast that faithfull word which is therefore a sure ground of sound doctrine and thence instruct and edifie the consciences of his hearers in all necessarie doctrine Whereby it shall come to passe that he keeping himselfe constantly to this truth shall be fitted fruitfully to turne himselfe to any dutie of his calling that let him be to deale with either of those kinds of hearers whether such as are obedient and teachable he shall build them further and make them sound Christians by exhortation out of wholesome doctrine or else such as are stubborne and opposite contradictors of the truth these he shall convince and with manifest reason put to silence And thus in regard of both Gods name shall be glorified true wisedome shall be iustified Gods kingdome shall be enlarged and amplified and Satans kingdome shall be destroied and damnified This is the scope of the verse which containeth two parts 1. The dutie enioyned euery Minister to hold fast the faithfull word according to doctrine 2. the end including a sound reason of it in the rest of the verse That hee may be able c. For the meaning of the former part Holding fast the word properly signifieth such an holding as men vse when some other man hath laid hold on that which they will not part withall euen an holding with all their strength and force not such an holding as a man careth not whether he hold or no for then the thing holden would of it selfe slip out of a mans hand but an holding against a contrarie hold which vseth to be the stronger and firmer inforcing thus much that the Minister must lay hold with both hands surely apprehending the truth in the vnderstanding of his soule as also in the affections of his heart in either of which if he faile he holdeth not fast seeing neither can a man loue that which he knoweth not nor hold that he loueth not But what must he hold so fast The word which is not tropically as in many other places to be conceiued but properly In which proper acceptation it signifieth all that heauenly doctrine which is deliuered to the Church in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles which we call the holy Scriptures Now this word the Apostle doth not nakedly mention but adorneth it 1. by a notable adiunct the faithfull word 2. from the porper ende of it according to doctrine which is fitted for the instruction and edification of the Church in all ages which we will further expound as we come vnto them Doctr. 1. That the word of God is a faithfull word and infallible 1. If we looke to the author he is holy and true Rev. 3.7 and vers 14. These things saith Amen the faithfull and true witnes euen God who cannot lie as vers 2. of this chapter 2. The instruments were led by the immediate direction and assistance of the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 1.21 beeing of themselues either rude and illitered men as Amos an heardman Peter and Iohn fishers Matthew a toldegatherer so as the great clarkes of those daies were driuen
into admiration to see the gifts giuen them knowing them to be vnlearned Act. 4.13 or else they were most fearce and bloodie enemies as Paul whom the Hebrewes could not beleeue that he was become a Preacher of that truth he had persecuted vntill the Lord gaue further testimonie of him Act. 9.26 3. The matter of this word is an euerlasting truth the Law an eternall rule of righteousnesse as ancient as God himselfe the Gospel an euerlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 containing promises of eternall truth which shall haue their stabillitie after heauen and earth shall be no more besides such assured articles of faith concerning God in the three persons and the Church of God that if an Angel from heauen should come and teach another doctrine he must be accursed Moreouer such diuine prophecies and predictions together with the exact accomplishments although some hundreths yea thousands of yeares passed betweene as by this one part sufficient euidence may be gathered of the faithfulnesse and steadfastnes of the whole 4. The forme of it which is the conformitie of it with God himselfe maketh it appeare that if God be faithfull this his word must needs also be so in that it resembleth him in his omnipotencie for this power and arme of God neuer returneth in vaine but doth all the worke of it In his wisedome giuing most perfect and sure directions resoluing all doubtfull cases and making wise vnto saluation In his puritie and perfection beeing an vndefiled and perfect law In his omniscience it searcheth the heart discouereth the thoughts deuideth betweene the marrowe and bone Heb. 4.12 In his iudgement acquitting beleeuers to whom it is a sweete sauour of life to life condemning Infidels both here and much more at the last day Ioh. 13.48 In his truth and veritie as here and Coloss. 1.5 it is called the word of truth 5. The ends shew the certaintie and faithfulnes of it it beeing the onely meanes of regeneration 1. Pet. 1.21 of begetting faith Rom. 10. and consequently both of freeing men from hell and damnation and of assuring them of that freedome the onely word that can supplie sound and firme consolation yea setled and assured comfort vnto distressed consciences none of which ends could it euer attaine if it selfe were vnsound and vncertaine Now as it carrieth with it all these grounds so are there without it a nūber more wherby we may confirme the same truth as 1. It is the foundatiō of the church Eph. 2.20 against which if hell gates could euer preuaile the Church were vtterly sunke 2. Hereunto hath the Lord tyed his Church as to an infallible direction to the law and to the testimonie without which there is nothing but errour and wandring ye erre not knowing the Scriptures 3. This truth hath beene aboue all other oppugned by Satan Antichrist heretikes tyrants yet neuer a whit of it was euer diminished Salomons bookes may be lost but not these of the true Salomon Iesus Christ. That the Scriptures were burnt in the Temple and that Ezra composed a newe Scripture is to be reiected as a Iewish fable Ezra might put together parcells of Scripture scattered and compose them into bookes But where were Ezechiel Daniel Zacharie Hagge or what were they doing to suffer all the Scriptures to be lost in their times or where was the watchfull eie of God could it winke or nodde or not see or not preuent the perishing of his word vtterly from the Church 4. This word hath beene so certenly sealed in the hearts of the elect of all ages that where it once was harboured in truth it could neuer be shaken out by any kind of most exquisite torture and torment All which confirme the doctrine propounded most plentifully Obiect But some bookes of the canonicall Scriptures are perished Answ. Many indeede are reckoned but they were either not canonicall or the substance of them is still contained in the canonicall Obiect But if God himselfe had written the whole Scripture as he did the law and had deliuered it to men as he did the tables to Moses then had there beene no doubt of the certaintie of it but it was written by men Ans. Yet is it as certaine as if God had immediately writ it with his owne finger for holy men spake and writ as they were mooued by the holy Ghost not as men but Gods instruments guided by extraordinarie immediate and infallible assistance of the spirit Obiect In 1. Cor. 7.12 Paul saith I speake not the Lord. Ans. The plaine sense in one word is I giue counsell in this case of mariage by collection out of the word of which the word hath not deliuered any expresse lawe and no more can be gathered of it Vse This doctrine is of speciall vse both vnto teachers and hearers vnto teachers it affoardeth a twofold instruction 1. if it be so faithfull a word to hold it fast 2. to hold themselues fast vnto it For the former the teacher must looke that he lay such hold on it as he neuer suffer it to be wrested from him no danger no fauour no power no subtiltie may force him to vnfasten his hold much lesse goe backe and recoile from it or play fast and loose with it or so carrie it as one that would swim betweene two waters but carie it and hold it out as faithfully and constantly as becommeth such a faithfull word Ieremie on this ground that he had a sure word after he had beene smitten and stocked he went not into corners nor behinde the wall to speake the will of him that sent him but as one that had laid faster hold on it in tearmes of defiance and personall application to the stoutest and proudest of them he vttereth with much boldnesse and plainnesse what he had in commission The like we read of Amos against Amaziah The like of the Apostles thorough the Acts and their Epistles and all vpon this ground that the Lord sent them with a faithfull word And if reasons will perswade to this dutie we haue not a fewe For 1. what sound comfort can any Minister finde in life or in death but in beeing found faithfull where was Pauls reioycing towards his death but that he had fought a good fight and had kept the faith 2. This faithfull word was not easily purchased vnto vs but by the blood of many a faithfull man both of Pastors and people shed in our owne and other countries and should the preachers of it esteeme lightly of so precious and so dear a purchase 3. If the Pastor depart or be driuē frō the faithfull word how can his people hold it he is guiltie of all their Apostacie from the faith Let the Pastor receiue such a blowe the sheepe cannot but be smitten 4. Looke on the danger and Gods righteous iudgement on such teachers as esteeme of mens words and writings aboue that is meet in the meane time not embracing this word in the loue of their
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
thee to life the vaile is still on thy heart and thou wilt not suffer it to be remooued that the glorious light of Iesus Christ should shine vpon thy soule But marke thy fearefull estate all this while For whosoeuer thou art that perceiuest not the mightie power of the word in thy chaunge and conuersion be thou sure it is mightie in working thy ouerthrow and confusion For God neuer speaketh but to saluation or perdition the words of his mouth returne not in vaine they are the sauour of life or of death they binde or they loose they be the sentence either of absolution or of condemnation oh then thou that louest thy soule deceiue not thy selfe for if the Gospel be hid now beeing a word so fit to teach thee and thou hauing bin so long taught and yet remainest vntaught still vnchanged still inwardly vnreformed still outwardly it cannot but be a fearefull brand that thou art as yet in the state of perdition and that the God of the world hath blinded thine eyes vnto destruction And ●l●tter not thy selfe in a course of securitie because perhapps thou seest not thy danger for this word cannot quicken thee but thou shalt perceiue it but it slayeth men insensibly so as if thou findest not the life of grace wrought by it thou hast great cause to feare and flie thy present estate 3. The last vse is directed against the Papists who hold that the Scriptures are 1. imperfect without tradition 2. obscure and difficult For the former Bellarmines position i● that all necessarie doctrine concerning faith and Christian life is not contained in the Scriptures but many things of this kind that is necessarie things are to be supplyed out of the traditions either of the Apostles or of the Church And for the second he affirmeth that the Scriptures are not so plaine and easie to bee vnderstood as that they be sufficient in themselues to decide the controversies of faith without the authoritie and expositions of the Church nay rather are so obscure that euen in things necessarie to be knowne they cannot without the instruction of the Church be vnderstood no not of faithfull men Against both which blasphemous positions this one of our Apostle opposeth it selfe in that the word was euer fitted to the instruction of beleeuers and did euer sufficiently instruct them in all ages according to the age and state of the Church Nay this word beeing perfectly fitted and sufficient for the instruction of the Church when yet there were but the fiue books of Moses are they not now much more sufficient and perfect seeing the expositions of the Prophets and the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles are added Obiect But as then the Scripture was imperfect without the writings which after were added so is it now without the decrees constitutions and traditions of the Church To which I answer that the written word was neuer imperfect for when the newe Testament was added vnto the old it was made not more perfect but more cleare for euen then it was entire if not in so many words yet in the same sense and substance of doctrine Let them a●ke then what the Scripture speaketh of this and that as the Baptisme of children of Maries virginitie after Christs birth of purgatorie or what by the Scripture we may thinke of the vncircumcision of women of infants dying before the 8. day of the sauing of the heathen c. I answer if the things of which they inquire be either false or fabulous as that of purgatorie or not necessarie to saluation as that of Maries virginitie the question is not of them it is no impeachment vnto the Scriptures to omit them wherein we see many of the words and facts of Christ himselfe omitted but if they aske of things more necessarie if they be of absolute necessitie these are taught fully and expressely as the substance of all Christian religion But for necessarie circumstances and inferiour truth about them the Scripture often entending to prouoke our studie and diligence is not so expresse and yet is not wanting in teaching them but by proportion and analogie As in the example of baptizing of children it is by proportion and consequence taught in Scripture though not in so many syllables as seeing that circumcision was administred to children so by proportion may children 2. Christ calleth them 3. affirmeth that they belong to him and his couenant and therefore the seale belongeth vnto them 4. the Apostles baptised whole housholds wherein doubtlesse were many children Obiect But Apostolike men who writ the Scripture had no commandement to write the word or if they had they had no intention to write a perfect rule to all the world but writ occasionally either some historie as the Euangelists or epistles and letters as the Apostles according to the condition of seuerall Churches or men to whom they writ Ans. ● They spake and writ not by priuate motion but by instinct which is equiualent to a commandement 2. Although they writ occasionally yet were they so guided by Gods prouidence that whatsoeuer things the Church ought to beleeue is clearely and largely deliuered in their writings So as we may conclude this point with this sure rule That the wise prouidence of God hath so furnished the Scriptures with sufficiencie and cloathed them with perfection that whatsoeuer they can alleadge to the contrarie they are either contained in the Scriptures or they are not necessarie As for the obscuritie of Scripture We graunt not that the Scriptures be obscure but that many things in them are difficult The Rhemists vpon 2. Pet. 3.16 that all Scripture is difficult especially Pauls Epistles whereas Peter saith onely that some things in Pauls Epistles were hard to be vnderstood and not all his Epistles Againe they forget that the same Apostle Peter speaking of the Scripture saith that it is a light shining in a darke place Now when we speake with the Scriptures that some things are difficult we must take with vs these three caueats 1. That this difficultie proceedeth either from the maiestie and high excellencie of the things of God contained in them or else from the lownes and weakenesse of man whether vnregenerate or regenerate The vnregenerate person beeing in his naturall estate is endued onely with a naturall vnderstanding so as the things of God are beyond his reach and compasse they are foolishnesse to him he cannot conceiue of them The regenerate although he hath an inward light of the spirit which the other wanteth yet these things euen to him are reuealed but in part after an vnperfect manner and in vnperfect meanes vntill that perfect come so as the best man is partly ignorant of the nature of the things themselues besides his failing in the meanes as the knowledge of the tongues his studie meditation and labour herein 2. Whereas they say that this obscuritie is in things necessarie to be knowne the truth
1. To mooue such as are separated to the ministerie vnto the diligent reading of the Scriptures to redeeme that time which they haue or may otherwise spend in reading filthie lewde and wanton bookes superstitious pamphlets Machiauells blasphemies or Popish errors and heresies vnlesse it be 1. with sound and setled iudgement able to discerne right from wrong truth from falshood and 2. with this end either more to detest them in themselues or fore warne others of them and thus the wise marriner neede not leaue the sea if he can avoide the rockes But let a Timothie or Titus hold him to this booke he shall hence haue supply of wisedome to saue himselfe and others or what wouldst thou wish besides wisdome for thy calling wouldst thou be fitted to exhortation deceiue not thy selfe philosophie cannot fit thee onely the word of God worketh in all the parts and powers of the soule minde will and euerie affection by Philosophy thou maist enforme the vnderstanding although but darkely in the things of God but did that euer reform● or alter any mans heart reade then this booke teach this and thou shalt ransacke the affections yea and consciences of the hearers Or else wouldst thou haue a dexteritie and facultie in the quicke resoluing of doubts studie this truth be readie in it and thou shalt finde truth manifesting both it selfe and the contrarie And seeing this is the onely euerlasting veritie it will much more make the mightie to ouerthrowe whatsoeuer is contrarie vnto it Finally wouldst thou haue eloquence added to all these former abilliments without which they could not be but obscure then studie this truth of God and thou shalt feele it framing thine heart and so ministring speech yea thou shalt speake out of the fulnesse and abundance of thy heart graciously nay it will be with thee in thy measure as it was with the Apostles thou canst not choose but speake the things thou seest and knowest 2. To confute the Popish teachers who contrarily 1. teach that the Scripture beeing so hard and obscure as they say it is may be wres●ed abused by heretikes at their pleasure and that no man can be fitted vnto these duties especially the latter of conuiction of error fully by the euidence of Scripture it selfe except he borrowe some helpe and force elswhere namely from the expositions and voice of their Church And 2. in deciding their controversies of religion according to the former position they ●lie from the word vnto Bishops Fathers Councels Decrees and Popes But to the first we answer that although we are not to neglect much lesse despise the light and direction of godly mens expositions and iudgements nor such truthes as are receiued by the true Churches of God yet without them by considering the nature of the things themselues the conference of places the knowledge of tongues the suitable correspondence of the parts of the context we may come to attaine the true meaning of the place controuerted by that be able to convince withstand all gainsayers And to the latter their practise is contrarie vnto Christs and his Apostles as we haue shewed As also the practise of the auncient Churches since as may appeare by that memorable course of Constantine the Emperour who commanded the Fathers met together in the Nicene Councel about 362. yeares after Christ to referre the great controversie then in hand against the Arrians to the decision and determination of the Scriptures Which godly course Augustine backeth who liued not past 40. yeares after when he affirmeth that it was an auncient order of disputing to haue present the books of holy Scripture and to stand to the triall thereof If this was an auncient order of disputing in Augustines dayes surely the contrarie Popish practise is but a nouel●ie and we iustly presse them to antiquitie Vers. 10. For there are many disobedient and vaine talkers and deceiuers of minds cheifly they of the circumcision 11. Whose mouthes must be stopped which subvert whole houses teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake The coniunction for sheweth that the words following containe a reason of the matter preceding namely why the Minister should be a man so qualified with able parts both to maintaine the truth and confute the falshood The reason is drawne from the description 1. of teachers in these two verses and 2. of hearers in the 12. The teachers are described by three arguments 1. from their indefinite number there are many not two or three who are easily set downe but many 2. By their adiuncts which are two 1. They are disobedient or refractarie such as will not submit themselues to the true doctrine and discipline of the Church 2. they are vaine talkers that is such as beeing giuen to ostentation and vanitie contemne the studie and deliuerie of sound and profitable doctrine and search out words and matters of wit and applause both of them of more sweetnesse vnto the flesh then soundnes vnto the soule and spirit 3. By their most dangerous effects and these also are two 1. Their deceiuing of minds for which vngodly practise he especially brandeth them of the circumcision that is either by metonimie the Iewes themselues circumcised or else Gentiles Iudaizing embracing Iewish opinions mixing the Law and Gospel Moses and Christ circumcision and baptisme together making indeed an hotchpotch of religion by confounding things that can neuer stand together The 2. effect of them is their subuersion of whole houses that is they poyson and infect whole houses yea and where the grounds and foundation of religion hath beene laid they ouerturne and ouerthrowe all This last effect is declared by two arguments 1. from the instrumentall cause of it and that is by their false doctrine teaching things which they ought not 2. from the finall cause of it that is couetousnesse for filthy lucres sake Now these teachers beeing so many so dangerous and hurtfull their mouthes must needes be stopped Which is a common conclusion set betweene the two verses as hauing reference vnto them both as a common remedie against all the mischeife which any way may be let in by them and therefore those that are to be admitted into the Ministerie must be of abillitie to stop their mouthes For there are many disobedient Doctr. 1. In that the first thing taxed in these false teachers by the Apostle is disobedience we learne that disobedience commonly is the ground of false doctrine For 1. it is iust with God to giue vp those to errors and delusion that receiue not the truth in the loue of it for wheresoeuer it is receiued in loue obedience cannot but be yeelded vnto it 2. The nature of sinne is euer to be excusing it selfe and is loath to be crossed although neuer so iustly but studyeth how to defend it selfe as long as it can euen by wresting the Scriptures and by taking vp one error for the maintenance of another 3. The tenour
minde is put for all the faculties of it especially the vnderstanding reason and iudgement all which are deluded and deceiued by these vain teachers Quest. How did these false teachers deceiue mens minds Ans. Foure waies 1. by suppressing the truth for by their vaine iangling and speaking liker Poets Philosophers historians then Prophets Apostles or any successors of theirs they made a cleanly conuaiance of the light from the people and withholding the truth and light they led them from Christ from the right knowledge of the Scriptures from sound godlinesse and religion in iudgement and practise and so they remained as darke in their vnderstanding as erronious in their iudgements as froward in their affections and as wicked in their liues as euer before Secondly by flatterie for they would not deale directly against the sinnes of the age as godly Ministers doe but deceitfully that they might not displease herein imitating Satan himselfe who was wont of olde to answer in riddles as he answered Craesus that if he would transport himselfe ouer the riuer Halys he should ouerthrowe a most mightie kingdome namely his owne But Micha will not deceiue nor flatter with Ahab although it stand vpon his life Thirdly by letting men see their estate in false glasses so as they neuer see the truth of it for people taught by fables and nouelties think and are borne in hand that they are in heauens high way their soules are brought on sleepe and comming from such froathie discourses they sit downe and please themselues in that they haue done their task required especially if they can bring home a iest or some wittie sentence when perhaps they scarce heard a word of Christ of their iustification of their mortification or of their glorie 4. By placing religion in bodily exercises not in matters of spirit and truth Colos. 2.20 thus did the Pharisies in their times the Papists in these and whosoeuer more vrge the decrees of men more then the commaundements of God Quest. But whose mindes are deceiued Answ. First their owne and then others for they are blind leaders of the blind deceiuing and beeing deceiued and although here our Apostle expresseth not here who they be that are deceiued yet elsewhere he doth as Rom. 16.18 they deceiue the hearts of the simple and 2. Tim. 3.6 they lead captiue simple women and 2. Pet. 2.14 they beguile vnstable soules whence we see that ignorant inconstant and vnsetled soules which hand ouer head receiue any doctrine without examination or triall whose simplicitie disableth them to iudge betweene truth and falshood and whose leuitie makes them like shaken reeds these are the carkases on which such vultures do seaze Hence 1. note three notable properties of errour 1. it neuer loueth solitarinesse but is a spreading leauen shrowding it selfe in multitudes and compassing sea and land to procure patrons and Proselytes Example we haue in the Iesuites the arch deceiuers of minds and impostors of the world 2. It taketh the highest holds of men euen the mind vnderstanding and iudgement that the eie once beeing put out and the light turned into darknes it might cary men headlong remorslesly to all cursed practises which necessarily resemble as they proceed from the former 3. It ouerturneth all Gods order ordinances for whereas the scope of the teachers calling is to enlighten mens minds perswade their consciences rectifie their hearts so as they might growe vp in the sauing knowledge of God in Christ and the liuely sense of their owne saluation in a word whereas they are to set and containe men in the right way error in their minds causeth them to drawe men out of the right path as this word properly signifieth 2. Note what is the best fence against false teachers and an hedge against seducers namely 1. knowledge 2. loue of the truth The former armeth simple soules by letting them see the difference betweene the right hand and left without the which the minde cannot be good But the latter is the surest pace of truth and that is the loue of it for no matter it is that men know professe and can talke of the truth if their soules cleaue not vnto it for euen vpon those that receiue the truth shall God send strong delusions to beleeue lyes if they receiue it not in the loue of it Quest. But what is this doctrine to vs we all professe the truth and loue it from our hearts and therefore we hope we are fenced from deceiuers or beeing deceiued Answ. But let vs consider 1. That these are the last times which the Apostles prophecied of euen perilous times wherein many deceiuers should creepe into the Church and many should giue heed to the spirits of error 2. That these deceiuers of mindes were such as liued in the bosome of the Church among such as professed Christ and his religion 3. That they lurked secretly and that the Christians of that time could hardly of themselues descrie them and therefore the Apostle is glad to helpe them and wisheth them carefully to preuent them and therefore there may be priuie impostors among vs. 4. That we hauing set doores open for them we shal not want deceiuers for whatsoeuer many men say most men loue not the truth sincerely delt withall nay they desire to be deceiued while they hate with a deadly hatred such Michaes as would let them see their estate and helpe them out And is it not Gods manner of iust proceeding when men desire preachers that will preach of wine and strong drinke to send them such teachers as they desire that he that is ignorant and filthie may be ignorant and filthie still Those then that care not for the truth shall haue teachers which shall be Gods executioners to lead them into error that as by the great Antichrist the Lord reuenged and plagued the contempt of the light in the world so also in particular Churches and places by false teachers and pettie Antichrists If men will not abide wholesome doctrine but haue itching eares they shall haue an heape of teachers after their owne lusts to turne their eares fr●m the truth and delude them with fables Let Ahab once hate Micha the Lord presently consulteth who shall deceiue him and if this question once proceede out of Gods mouth the deuill is present and so forward in the execution of Gods vengeance as he shall preuaile against 400. false Prophets at a clappe before he shall not fall by them This truth is as a finger in the bile and beeing rubbed will perhaps make Zidkiah take his fist from Michaes face and say when went the spirit from me to thee yet ceaseth it not to be the truth of God concerning our selues who so long as we giue heede to the spirit of error cannot want deceiuers Let men therefore professing themselues members of the Church looke vnto themselues and labour to knowe the truth to affect it to stand vnto it if they would be fenced
of their mouthes and sparkles of fire leape out the smoke they send out is like a seething pot or caldron 4. As the spirit of truth is a peaceable and meeke spirit so neuer shall a man finde a bitter spirit conscionably vtter pure truths neither indeed will truth Gods darling dwell with such And what lowder lie then to charge Gods children with damnable heresies Let all antiquitie be searched and we shall finde three things which must concurre to make an heretike 1. The broching of something contrarie to the Articles of faith 2. A departing from the Church vpon it with profession of drawing Disciples 3. After solemne admonition a stiffnesse in such error and faction None of which if they can be found in such as to whome all are imputed Let euery man iudge whether such boldnesse in any man deserue not more open reprehension and censure whereby such might learne at length to spare the credit of such who are so farre beyond the reach of their enuie as that they iustly pittie their weaknesse and solly and not with them attempt any more the discouering of their fathers nakednesse which were a good way to couer their owne Vse 3. Let none looke to be spared in the Ministerie if they will be incorrigible no not great ones If any people might looke to be spared surely they of the circumcision might beeing a people of such prerogatiues But 1. Paul preferres the Churches good aboue their credit 2. As God hath no respect of persons no more hath his word 3. When great ones are more seuerely taxed inferiours will feare the more Doctr. 2. Note further who are to be reputed the chiefe plagues of the Church and the archseducers of the world euen they of the circumcision that is such as ioyne the lawe with the Gospel and works with faith in the act of iustification for they ●each such doctrine as abolisheth from Christ and maketh him profit nothing and that in such manner as men can hardly shift or auoide them for they slily glide into the extraordinarie commendation of that the Scripture also commendeth and attributeth too much vnto that which the Scripture ascribeth somewhat vnto As for example Circumcision in the prime of it was an ordinance to seale the righteousnesse of faith and for a time was worthily in such reputation as that death is iustly threatned against the neglect of it be it in Moses himselfe These seducers taking hence occasion goe one step further and will haue it a meritorious cause of saluation and consequently will not haue it dated when the Lord hath expired it but albeit the bodie hath appeared the shadowe must remaine The Popish teachers at this day are the iust heires of these seducers as appeareth in these particulars the Iewish teachers would professe and teach Christ but not alone for he must be ioyned with Moses and all the former rites and all these with Christs merits must be iumbled to iustification Euen so Popish seducers sit with Antichrist in the Church of God and professe Christ but together with Christ they must merit something themselues and so make themselues debters to the whole law And further they make the works of grace almes prayer fasting contrition yea their owne rites and traditions obserued meritorious causes of saluation for they promise life eternall to masses indulgences auricular confession vowes pilgrimages c. and so tread in the verie steppes of these seducers 2. Againe as the Iewish teachers dealt with circumcision so doe the Papists with our Sacraments which because by diuine institution they are signes and seales of Gods mercie and faithfull couenant they turne them into physicall not conduits but causes not containing onely but conferring grace euen by the worke wrought 3. Further as the Iewish teachers lead their disciples to stand vpon outward shewes and prerogatiues as that they were sonnes of Abraham had receiued the law circumcision in their flesh and were distinguished into diuerse famous sects as Scribes Pharisies Sadduces Essees c. The verie same things in effect doe Popish teachers force men to stand vpon as false antiquitie fained succession dissembled chastitie hypocriticall orders as of Francis Dominicke Benedict and an hundred more according to whose rules whosoeuer walke mercie and peace they pronounce vpon him such cannot faile of life euerlasting but as for beleefe in the Sonne of God seeking life by that means it is the least of their labour Thus doe they with those seducers publish lies and dreames of their owne hearts that Gods people may forget his name that is the grace and mercy of God in Iesus Christ. Vse 1. This point letteth vs see how pernicious and dangerous the Popish doctrine is which whosoeuer holdeth and maintaineth is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Paul is not more confident in any thing then this that the ioyning of any thing with Christ as the matter of our righteousnesse is the cutting off of a man from Christ Gal. 5.3 Behold I Paul say and testifie that if yee be circumcised that is with opinion of righteousnes by it or confidence in it for else at this time the worke of circumcision hurt him not that kept himselfe from confidence of righteousnesse by it Christ profiteth you nothing so we testifie truely against the Papists that so many of them as will be iustified by the works of the lawe are fallen from Christ. Now because their doctrine teacheth this and he is not an absolute Papist that beleeueth it not we truely conclude that it is a doctrine leading from Christ and the absolute Papist hath no part in Christ. Obiect Doth not Iames make a cooperation of faith and works Ans. Yea but not in the act of our iustification nor in the matter or worke of our saluation but onely in the declaration of the sinceritie of our faith and truth of our conuersion which by fruits of righteousnesse we shew to be voide of hypocrisie so as let faith and works ioyntly concurre in the approbation of our iustification but in case of making vs righteous before God away with the works of the law if thou meanest to haue part in Christ these will neuer stand together here let Moses die and be buried and let no man euer knowe where he was laid to raise him againe This point shall be clearer when we come to those words of our Apostle Wee are not saued by the works of righteousnesse which we had done In the meane time dare Paul affirme of the lawe of Moses Gods owne lawe that he that holds vnto it to be iustified by it is fallen from Christ what would he haue said of their desperate and irrecouerable fall who looke for iustification out of their owne traditions vowes inventions the drosse and chaffe of their owne deuises of all which the Lord will say who required these things at your hands Let vs beware of dogges the propertie of whom is to returne to their vomit
inconueniences which necessarily follow his aduersaries false positions Now alas how farre are readers and dumb men from this one part of the dutie of a Minister how dangerous are they in their places seducers may come and doe with open mouthes into their parrishes they cannot stop their mouthes nay in truth they are as the keyes to open them and vnlocke them Well were it or much better with our Church if Theophylactus his rule were obserued that he who in some competencie could not doe these things should neither be admitted nor permitted in the Ministerie Vse 2. Hence we further see that it is rather to be wished then hoped that all Ministers should be of one minde and accord in the truth and at peace among themselues For seeing it is the constant condition of the Church to haue many daubars with vntempered morter many vaine talkars deceiuers of mindes enemies to the crosse of Christ and the libertie of it what must now in this case all the world sit still and be at rest must Christs Ministers be silent and the Pastors haue neuer a voice to driue awaie wolues from the Lords foldes must hurtfull doctrine be winked at and suffered still to creepe in to the destruction of many No no there must now be opposition and strong dissention among the Ministers themselues Ieremie must set himselfe as well against Preists as Princes and people The Ministerie of the Apostles did spend much of it selfe against the false Apostles that serued not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies Christs owne Ministerie though the Prince and author of all our peace bent it selfe most against the cheife teachers of that age who sought glorie and praise of men and thus must his faithfull Ministers tread in his holy steps If Paul had not strongly opposed himselfe against many learned teachers Act. 15.2 where had the saluation of the Church of that age laid Let men learne therefore to be wise hearted and get knowledge whereby they may rather iudge of doctrines then take offence at the diuersitie of iudgements and practises of Ministers But if any one be sunke downe so deepe that he voweth to beleeue none of them all neither will follow any religion till they be all agreed among themselues to him I will say that this rocke was laid to breake the necke of his soule vpon and a fearefull signe it is that Christ himselfe is to him a stone to stumble at For came not Christ to make debate in the earth came he not to send fire desiring nothing more then that it should be kindled came not he with his fanne in his hand to diuide betweene the chaffe and the wheate the which shall neuer be wholly seuered till the haruest And meanest thou to be a looker on till the wheate and chaffe become one or hast thou well ridde thy selfe by beeing till then iust of Gallio his religion who cared nothing for these things I assure thee who wilt looke on whilest other contend for the faith thou shalt be a looker on too whilest other goe into heauen and haue lesse to doe in that businesse then thou desirest because thou desiredst it not when thou mightest yea when thou wast gratiously invited and desired to enter Which subuert whole houses In these words is contained the second dangerous effect of these false teachers declared by two arguments 1. by the instrumentall cause namely false doctrine for they teach things which they ought not 2. by the ende of it for filthie lucres sake The danger appeareth in three things 1. in that they subuert that is quite ouerturne the saluation of men 2. they subuert houses in the plurall number 3. whole houses The first of these sheweth that these deceiuers not onely shake men in the foundation of religion but vtterly ouerthrowe them and doe as a man who not onely beates downe a windowe or a bay or the side of an house but diggeth vp the foundation or as one who not only loppeth a tree or heweth it down by the ground but diggeth it vp by the roots and quite supplanteth it so doe these deceiuers quite destroy the faith of men and turne it vpside downe that is not onely lead men away from the simplicitie of the Gospel but wholly and altogether from euerie part of the sauing truth Thus is the word vsed among the heathen whereby they expresse such a raging of the sea as casteth vp and causeth to floate that filth and mire which lay at the bottome Quest. But how did they ouerturne mens faith and saluation Ans. By teaching iustification by circumcision that is the works and rites of the lawe But will some say could this beeing but one point subuert all I answer that fundamentall truthes are such and so linked and knit together as breake one and many fall yea some are such as being denied all of them fall to the ground A man that pulleth downe an arch of the Church endangereth the whole but yet the Church may stand but he cannot digge vp the lowest stones of the foundation but all commeth to ruine Of these the Apostle mentioneth two like the two pillars which Sampson pulling downe the whole house fell the one that of the resurrection which beeing denied all preaching and all faith is in vaine the other is this of seeking righteousnes elsewhere then in Christ who is Iehovah our righteousnesse for this makes grace no more grace and Christ to haue died in vaine Whence by the way note the dangerous estate of such as liue and die essentiall members of the Church of Rome who by their doctrine of merit and iustification by works are subuerted and plucked vp by the rootes and turned of their saluation Quest. But if this be so whether may a man be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point of religion or in such a one as by consequent raseth the foundation Ans. The things which all Christians are bound to beleeue may be reduced to two heads The former are such principles as make the rule of faith so neerely touching the matter of saluation as that a man cannot be saued vnlesse he knowe and beleeue them for all will confesse that he that must be ordinarily saued must in some measure knowe the causes the matter the obiect the manner the end and meanes of it If God I say ordinarily saue him he must knowe the platforme of Christian religion As for example 1. God in vnitie of dietie and trinitie of person for vnlesse he knowe God in Iesus Christ there is no life euerlasting 2. himselfe in the guiltines and vnder the curse of sinne seeing Christ came to call none but sinners to repentance and hunger after the meanes of deliuerance for the waters of the well of life are giuen onely to such as thirst after them 3. The meanes as that without shedding of blood there is no remission of sinne and consequenly that the Sonne of God must take the nature of
bookes hath this hexameter Quest. But why doth Paul call him a Prophet Ans. Some thinke him so called onely by a generall acceptation of the word Prophet which as well signifieth a publike declarer of some truth past or present as of some to come and so he openly taught the truth perswading to vertue and dehorting from vice Others thinke the Apostle calleth him so ironically or in skorne one who was a Prophet fit inough for such a people Others because he was so in the reputation and account of the people who as the other Heathen were wont to ascribe some diuinitie vnto their Southsayers and called them diuiners yea the interpreters and sonnes of the Gods But I take it the truth that he is so called because he was indeed a Prophet and did diuine answer of euents to come some of whose answers and oracles are yet extant and recorded in authors besides that some of the Heathen confesse that he was the cheefe of those who by surie prophecied of things to come Quest. But what kinde of Prophet was he or how was he and the other heathenish prophets distinguished from the true Prophets of God Ans. The Prophets of God were of two sorts First such as were more properly so called who beeing extraordinarily raised and inspired by Gods spirit did reueale some parts of the will of God which he intended to doe in and for his Church for time to come such were Isay Ieremie and many other in the old Testament vntill Christ the cheife Prophet and accomplisher of all prophecies appeared but verie few after The second sort of true Prophets were such as onely did teach and interpret the holy Scriptures and ordinarily had not adioyned the foretelling of things to come but vpon some speciall extraordinarie occasion and of these were many both in the old and new Testament In the old such were the companie of Prophets among whom Saul prophecied and the children and sonnes of the Prophets who as it is like were such as studied expounded and more accuratly explaned the writings of Moses and kept the doctrine deliuered by Moses vncorrupt in the Church although the masters and those which were more eminent had both these gifts such as Eliah Elisha and the sonnes of the Prophets so farre as they were emploied and sent by these as we reade that the young Prophet knew not that Iehu was to be annointed King till Elisha told him In the new Testament the Apostle bringeth all ministeriall and ecclesiasticall duties of ecclesiasticall persons to 1. Prophecie 2. Ministerie Rom. 12.7 the former of which is nothing but the exercise of a gift of teaching in the Church applying sound doctrine out of the word to exhortation edification consolation 1. Cor. 14.13 Both of these are truly called diuine Prophets both of them beeing raised of God gifted by God dealt in the things of God and endeauored to lead men vnto God As for the other such as were the oracles of the Gentiles whether that of Apollo at Delphos or of other groaues caues dennes and woods very frequent amongst them or else the southsayers such as were Bacchis the Sibills and this Epimedes these consent almost in nothing with the former for they differ in all the causes 1. Whereas the former spake by instinct of the holy Ghost and consequently whatsoeuer they spake must needs come to passe in that manner and those circumstances in which it was deliuered the which the Lord maketh a note of a true Prophet These latter spake by instinct of Satan who beeing a lying spirit from the beginning was often a lying spirit in their mouthes but that he couered his errors by speaking in likelihoods and amphobologyes and the things that came to passe seldome came to passe as they were foretold 2. For the meanes whereby the Lord communicated his will it is either more generall or more speciall the former was either vision to those that were awake or dreame to them asleepe the latter was by word of mouth or face to face But the deuill vseth all manner of tooles as meanes to deceiue all elements fire ayre earth water so beasts birds starres lottes herbes windes and words that looke how many kinds of creatures there be so many kinds of diuination there are so infinite is delusion 3. Whereas the matter of the former are the great things of God and of them the maine the foretelling of Christ the Messias and Sauiour of the world the latter commonly dealt in things of men as publike or priuate euents of peace and warre c. in which also the deuill himselfe could but gesse but as for God and Christ he shut their mouthes vnwilling that Christ should euen thus be heard of among the heathen Or if as may be obiected of the Sibyls some of them did vtter some things concerning Christ which Satan had snatched and stollen from the writings of Moses these were so disguised and coloured as the naturall face of that truth could neuer be beheld nay euen themselues vnderstood not the things they vttered and therefore could not vtter them with purpose thereby to make Christ knowne to the world and much lesse to establish the true worship of God in Christ as the true Prophets did What other endes the deuill had in it it were too long here to enquire 4. Whereas the former receiued their reuelations into meeke and wise hearts beeing gratious and prudent and not madde men the latter neuer powred out their oracles but when they were rapt into a trance or madnes and knew not what they said or did Whereby it appeareth that they were meere instruments and organs of Satan by whose tongues he spake the resemblance whereof may be seene at this day in some demoniakes possessed by the deuill If any here obiect that Iohn was rauished in spirit on the Lords day and that the spirit also rushed on Ezechiel on Daniel and so this was no difference betweene them I answer that farre were these holy men from beeing meere passiue instruments or as blocks and stones as the other were they were indeede meere men and such as when Gods greatnes and glorious maiestie was more then ordinarily manifest were verie much affected and almost swallowed vp of it and almost rauished and out of themselues as Paul confessed of himselfe but neither were they madde nor sensles nor foaming nor deformed nor ignorant what befell them but with knowledge faith reuerence wisedome and affection receiued the things of God which they were to deliuer againe afterward to the vse of the Church 5. Whereas the former euer serued the vse of the Church and endeauoured to lead men to God furthering them in faith and obedience the latter onely serued the vanitie and curiositie of men and although they could not well lead men further from God then they were yet they the more detained them from seeking after the true God Thus the difference plainly
to say What is it that I heare my sonnes doe so no more for this is rather a saluing and too hastie a skinning ouer of a rotten sore the fester of which quickly breaketh out againe with more rage and danger but here he must put on the zeale of God yea a iust and holy anger gounded vpon the loue of God and godlines wherein he hath Iohn Baptist Matth. 3.5 and the Sonne of God himselfe going before him Math. 23. It is thought great wisdome in men so to carie their doctrine as no man is offended at it whereas howsoeuer all meeknes and patience in our owne matters is a Christian and commendable vertue yet zeale in the matters of God may not be wanting and were all men Saints or sinners but penitent we might by tendernes and compassion raise them but some are in the fire and must be pluckt out many are fooles to whose backs stripes belong many are festred in their sinnes and must haue corrasiues and fretting waters to make them smart at the quicke in which cases if any of our patients cha●e and storme and grow neuer so impatient it will be no wisedome in such as haue the ordering of them to let him haue his owne will in his desire to be let alone but still make incision search further the depth of the wound and send in taints to the bottom for such louing wounds must go before applying of salues to sound healing 3. Let all godly hearers learne to make manifest their patience and obedience by suffering themselues to be launched and pricked euen to their hearts by those whom God hath sent as his surgions to cure mens soules otherwise by sinne wounded to death as knowing that the hurt of the daughter of Gods people is not healed with sweete words but as the bitterest pill is fittest to purge and worketh kindlier then the sweetest potion and as the thunder and lightning more purifie the ayre then the calmest sunnshine euen so gall and wormewood is the portion which the Lord hath tempered for many to take off the pleasant tast of their sweet sinnes As for vs we take no pleasure in your smart or iudgement but that without it you cannot be cured You cannot but confesse that when sores are ripe and raging the next way to cure is launcing suffer vs then a while and trie whether we are not as readie with the good Samaritan to powre oyle as wine into your wounds so it make to your soundnes But all will not come vnto the supper by entreatie some must be compelled and if we bring a true word and handle it truely it cannot but deuide betweene the marrow and the bone yea betweene the soule and the spirits and the ioynts c. Heb. 4.12 And can all this be done and a man feele no smart nay surely if our Ministrie worke no smart it worketh no cure That they may be sound in the faith Doctr. The sharpest rebukes in the Church ought to ayme at this end the recouerie of diseased Christians to soundnes in religion both in iudgement and practise Which appeareth in that the greatest ordinarie censure in the Church is not mortall but medicinable For as a surgeon cuts off armes and legges that the bodie and heart may be saued so in this bodie parts and members are cut off that themselues may be saued as well as the whole bodie Paul excommunicateth the incestuous person that his spirit might be saued Himineus and Philetus were cast out to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme Those whom Iude wisheth to be pulled out of the fire by violence must be saued thereby If any obiect against this that in 1. Cor. 16.21 If any man loue not the Lord Iesus let him be had in execration to the death and therefore edification and saluation is not the ende of this censure I answer It is one thing for the Church to excommunicate another to curse and execrate the one is an ordinarie censure the other verie extraordinarie and rare the one against those who may be freinds of the Church the other only against desperate enemies and open and obstinate Apostates euen such as Iulian whom the Church iudgeth to haue sinned the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore execrateth and accurseth So as that place nothing impeacheth the truth of the doctrine Vse 1. Much more ought Ministers in their sharpest rebukes aime at the conuersion of men what a sharpe reproofe was that of Peter to Simon Magus Act. 8.21.25 Thy mony perish with thee and thou art euen in the gall of bitternesse and yet he addeth repent therefore and pray vnto the Lord c. So is it the part of all Peters successors to whom the care of the Lords flock is committed so to reprooue not as those who would shame mens persons but disgrace their sinnes neither as insulting ouer mens euills nor delighting in their falls nor despayring of their rising but as imitating good Surgions who whilest they seare or cut or cut off still shew compassion and gently entreate the patient euer perswading him that this rough course will make to his health and soundnes 2. While Ministers thus dispense Christian seueritie in their reproofes and denunciation of iudgements the bearers must not mistake them as many doe and much lesse say vnto them as Corah and his company to Moses and Aaron yea take too much vpon you or as the Egyptian to Moses who made thee a iudge who gaue you the keyes of heauen to open and shut it vpon whom you please when did God make you of his counsell to foretell my damnation c. conceiuing that in our menacies and threatning we quite cut them off from all hope of mercie and that we take vpon vs to shut the doore of grace vpon them and to shorten the arme of the Lord that he cannot saue them Whereas the truth is while we thunder out damnation against the sinner which verie many desperately rush into while they auoid the mention of it in our mouthes it is not that we despaire of your saluation or would haue you so to doe nor we doe not admonish you to shame you but you must if you will be saued by the word we preach conceiue with vs that we desire your soundnes of faith and therefore we deale with you as with sickemen who commonly will take nothing to doe them good but what is forced vpon them which if you doe not we are not in your hearts the Surgeons of your soules but rather your executioners 3. This reprehendeth those whose rebukes tend altogether to discourage godly courses in their people and bring them from soundnes in the faith making heauie the hearts of them to whom the Lord speaketh peace 2. Those that malitiously thunder their bolte of excommunication against those that professe Christ sincerely Thus did the Iewes excommunicate whosoeuer durst confesse Christ as that blind man Ioh. 9.34 so the
vse vnprofitable 3. But the context in the verse following pointeth vs to expound them of some other then these namely of all those doctrines of the Iewes which concerned the legall and ceremoniall obseruation of daies meates drinks garments washings persons and peoples for the Iewes taught that the same difference remained to be obserued still as Moses from the Lord commanded it so as yet some meates were common and some cleane some daies were more holy then others so garments and persons much more lay open to legal pollution by issues touchings c. whereas the appearing of Christ procured finall freedome from all such impuritie so as according to Peters vision Act. 10. no man no thing is to be called polluted or vncleane Quest. But why doth the Apostle call such doctrines fables seeing 1. they were from God 2. necessarily imposed vpon Gods owne people in paine of death and cutting off from his people in case of contempt yea or omission 3. they included in them that euangelicall truth wherby both they and we are saued Ans. Yet for all this he tearmeth them so 1. Because euen these legall institutions of God himselfe when they were at the best were but actuall Apologies or shadowes of things to come carying a shew or figure of truth but not the bodie not the truth it selfe to the same effect saith Paul Gal. 4.24 that they were Allegories that is beeing the things that they were signified the things that they were not 2. Because those constitutions although they had their times and seasons yet now were they dated and now to teach or vrge them was as vaine as void of ground out of Scripture as voide of profit as void of truth as if they had taught the most vaine fictions and vnprofitable falsehoods that men could possibly devise And hence looke as if a man should relate to vs a narration not only of suspected but of knowne vntruth as for example that such a man with whom we haue eate drunke conuersed but whom we know to be dead and haue seene buried were aliue againe and not only so but of his perfect strength and state as euer he was might not we be more diffident then Thomas was and in good forme of speach say that he told vs a fable euen so if a Iew shall affirme the life of the ceremonies of the law which we know to be dead rotten and buried so long since in the graue of Christ although they once had a truth yet now this is but false and fabulous or else if a Iew should come and vrge as they doe that prophecie Isay 7. Behold a virgin shall conceiue c. as a thing which they still expect the accomplishment of is it not euident that he leaneth vnto a Iewish lie and fable for that which was once absolutely necessarie to be beleeued vnto saluation is now become so false as that he that beleeueth it is sure to be damned Commandements of men These words if they be taken by way of exposition of the former adde something to the more full answer of the former question implying that those ordinances of which we speake the which while they stood in force and till the fulnes of time was come were the commandements of God now the truth beeing reuealed cease so to be and are become the meere commandements of men But yet I take it some difference is to be put betweene these two namely this that by commandements of men are more properly meant not those which were diuine ordinances but humane constitutions and traditions thrust by the Iewish teachers vpon the Church to be obserued with like deuotion and religious respect as if they were the very commandements of God such as those our Sauiour found and left the Church of the Iewes pestered with and opposeth them to diuine ordinances Matth. 15.9 In vaine they worship mee teaching for doctrines mens precepts Which that we may a little better conceiue it is not amisse to note that the Iewes haue and doe affirme that Moses receiued the law from God either by writing which was of things more obscure more breife and difficult or else by word of mouth and that was of things more large seruing for the interpretation of that law written and for this latter sake say they was it that he staied 40. daies in the mount Sinai for else in one houre he might haue receiued the tables in which the law was written and although they themselues were at leasure to number the lawes written by Moses and gaue in the number of the affirmatiue to be 248. so many as there are members in a mans bodie and the negatiue 365. so many as there be daies in a yeare to betoken that the Lord requireth the through obseruation of them with all the strength and that all their daies which numbers added together were burthens sufficient for many euen to read ouer yet laid they innumerable and more intollerable traditionarie precepts on the people which they say Moses receiued by word of mouth from God and left them to Ioshuah who deliuered them to the seauentie elders they to the former Prophets these to the latter from them to the great Synagogue from whom they were preserued to the wise men returning from the Babylonish captiuitie and so from generation to generation euen to this day to write these explications say they is forbidden by God abusing that text Prou. 4.21 but they are kept in the heart of some wise men at this day Of these the Apostle would haue the Cretians to beware and giue no more heede to them then to the former Which turne away from the truth By truth is meant truth diuine fetched out of the word of God so called 1. because it is absolute without error 2. it is most eminent called before truth according to godlines to be turned from which is to be turned from all godlines In the word Turne away is a metaphor the speach beeing borrowed from those who turne away their bodies from the things they dislike and here translated to the mind to signifie an inward loathing and dislike of the truth which is the dangerous effect 〈◊〉 attending to fables and commandements of men Doctr. 1. Whosoeuer would keepe themselues sound in the faith and not be turned from the truth must shut their eares and giue no hee● to fables and fancies of men which haue not footing and warrant in th● pure word of God 1. Because these are things which hurt and corrup● the soule 1. Tim. 6.20 Avoide profane and vaine bablings which whil● some professe they haue erred concerning the faith Againe they encreas● vngodlinesse 2. Tim. 2.16 and more plainly 2. Tim. 4.4 men giuen vnto fables turne their eares from the truth The Physitians reduce all the causes of health or disease soundnes or sickenes from the good or euil temperature of either the matter of which we subsist or the nourishment whereby we are preserued Now the
expresse no such thing in their life and conuersation they haue only drawn a faire gloue ouer a foule hand For looke a little nearer them and consider their persons so polluted they are as that they are abhominable such as are worthy that both God and good men should turne away from as from things noysome to their sences for so is the nature of the word vsed also Luk. 16.15 And looke yet further into their liues in stead of sanctimonie you shall meet with rebellion in stead of subiection vnto God you shall discouer disobedience and whereas if they were the sonnes of Abraham as they professe they would doe the workes of Abraham They are reprobate to euery good worke which word is sometimes taken passiuely as 1. Cor. 9.27 I beate downe my bodie least I should be reprobate Heb. 6.8 The ground that beareth thornes and briars is reprobate and neere vnto a curse and so indeed are these refuse and reiected fellowes as souldiers cassierd or as base persons and banquerupts are passed by and not called into office so these are reiected of God and good men Yet it better fitteth the place to accept the phrase actiuely and then the sence is this that they are so farre from the practise of pietie that as men of corrupt minds are said to be reprobate concerning the faith so those corrupt minded men are reprobate concerning good workes and actions which are the fruits of faith that is so giuen vp to sinne and with the Gentiles Rom. 1. to a reprobate minde that they seeme to haue lost all difference and distinction of good and euill and can turne their hand to nothing which is not euill Which disposition of theirs seemeth to be well expounded Ier. 4.22 They are wise to doe euill but to doe well they haue no knowledge In the verse three points are to be marked and handled 1. That there will alwaies be Hypocrites in the Church 1. The Characters or notes of them which in the verse are fowre 3. Their miserable estate and condition in the word abhominable vnto which we will adde the vse For the first That there euer will be in the Church together with sound members many hypocrites appeareth With Abel will be a Cain of two men borne in the world one is an hypocrite with Isaac an Ismael if Abraham himselfe beget two sonnes one is an hypocrite with Iacob an Esau making shew of purchasing the blessing as well as he with the wheat the tares must grow to the haruest the branne abideth with the meale till the boulting the same net couereth good and bad fishes and much filth is drawne along with the fish Iudas lurketh in Christs owne family The purest primitiue Churches planted by the Apostles could not long continue a pure virgin as all the Apostles foresaw and forewarned neither can it be but in the peace of the Church as in a sweet and rainie season many weeds come vp and make a great shew among the good hearbs so many thrust themselues into the profession bringing with them the cares and loue of the world whom the first sonne of persecution causeth to wither and appeare to be themselues And although the Lord could easily at once purge his floore of them yet in great wisedome he suffereth them 1. in regard of his own glorie that his holinesse might appeare in the daily discouering of them and purging his Church for he cannot abide that hypocrites should long goe in the tale and account of his children but one time or other one way or other will be sanctified in all them that come neere him at which time his glorie also shineth out vnto others in their iust iudgement 2. In regard of the wicked that they should the more stumble at the truth by reason of some hypocrites among professors 3. In regard of the godly that they should partly be exercised by this meanes partly driuen to examine what truth is in them 4. In respect of the truth it selfe which getteth some testimony hence as Christ on the crosse by the very title of his enemies affirming that he was the King of the Iewes Vse 1. Let euerie man trie himselfe and the soundnes of his heart he is not a Iewe that is one without and therefore euerie man had neede lay a good ground of his faith and religion he beginneth wel that beginneth in the truth The outward profession may ioyne thee to the Church indeede which verie thing deceiueth many who conceiue that because we haue changed the mattins into preaching and the masse into the Lords table therefore they cannot but be of the Church but the time will come which shall separate those whom now the bare profession ioyneth when two shall be in a house two in the field yea two in a bed whereof the one shall be taken and the other refused one taken like Ruth going on to Iudah another like Orpah going backe to Moab when the fan shall separate wheate from chaff● the one to the garner the other to the burning when the sheepheard shall diuide the sheepe from the goats which now grase together liue together feede together are folded together the one to the right hand the other to his left Let not thy profession deceiue thee for many hypocrites are in the bosome of the Church 2. Let no man be offended if in trialls many by falling away be discouered to be hypocrites who haue long made a shewe of godlinesse for in this great house there must be vessells of dishonour as well as of honour Let no man entertaine any dislike either of the doctrine or the Church because some men turne from it for beeing the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles if Apostles themselues yea or angels should come and teach a contrarie or a diuerse doctrine from it we must deeme them accursed for God is faithfull and no vnfaithfulnesse of man can make him otherwise And for the Church that is the fame euen a number of beleeuers sanctified and sealed to eternall life of which number they neuer were They went out from vs but they were not of vs for had they beene of vs they would haue continued with vs 1. Ioh. 2.19 For what bonds haue they broken but some outward and visible bonds such as are externall profession of doctrine externall conformitie vnto it outward worship communion in the administration of the Sacraments whereby they were tyed onely to the members of the Church all which are easily broken and dissolued but not any internall or invisible bond such as is the bond of eternall election or the bond of the spirit of Christ whereby they should haue bin first knit vnto the head which is of absolute necessitie to be truely vnited to the Church for these knots once tyed could neuer be dissolued Neither let any child of God hence too much torment himselfe with feare least he should not perseuere in the grace receiued but if any
to bearing of children then surely for women to despise the ministerie which is the meanes of beginning and continuing in faith loue and holinesse is fearefully to despise fellowship with God and life euerlasting Secondly women must walke in as straight waies to heauen as men sinne is as odious in Eue as in Adam vnder the same lawe are they borne by the same lawe are they to be ruled in this life and iudged in the life to come the same pretious promises of life are made vnto them the same pretious faith must lay hold vpon them the same spirit must inhabitat them the same graces which accompanie saluation must beautifie them Women must worship God as well as men Lydia Act. 16.14 must feare God Act. 17.4 the chiefe women not a fewe must be disciples full of good works and almes to the Saints as Dorcas all or any of which graces if elsewhere they can attaine or performe then by the direction and institution of the word we will giue them leaue to contemne it with the whole ministerie of it but if this be the word of faith which we preach the word of the kingdome and if we haue the words of eternall life let them goe elsewhere or by any other direction saue this whether of naturall reason fleshly wisedome lewd custome or what euer may perswade it they shall surely faile of faith of the kingdome and of life eternall in the ende Obiect But how often haue we heard Popish or profane men alleadge to the contrarie What should women minde the Scripture or meddle with religion what haue they not huswiferie at home haue they not children seruants and a calling to tend and how often doth our religion heare it selfe disgraced in that it is embraced by women who they say are simple and easily seduced Answ. To all which I answer that if these wretches had prooued that women had no soules to loose or to saue such gracelesse discourses were more easily to be admitted 2. Might not a man haue come vpon Marie with the like interrogatories why haue you nothing to doe but to sit downe at Christs feete to heare words which concerne you not haue you no huswiferie to set your selfe about doe not you see you haue a great Prophet to giue entertainment vnto doe you see your sister Martha medling with such matters But if any had thus rebuked her would Christ haue recanted that which he had affirmed of her that she had chosen the better part and if Martha had done so too would Christ haue said that she had failed in the due regard of one thing which was more necessarie then all that busines which shee encombred her selfe withall 3. Salomons mother requireth two things in a vertuous woman one the ouerseeing of the wayes of her familie the other to open her mouth with wisedome and haue the lawe of grace sitting vnder her lippes without which latter should a woman excell the life and death of some bruit beasts assuredly if the former were all shee should liue and die a little more ciuilly but neuer a whit more religiously then they 4. It is so farre from being a iust reproach to the Gospel that women professe it that it is rather a note of the truth of it God chooseth the weake and simple of the world to confound and prouoke the wise and mightie Christ himselfe prouoked Simon the Pharisie by an example of loue which a poore woman had shewed vpon him farre beyond him and thought it no disgrace that Marie out of whom he had cast 7. deuills nor the noted harlot the woman at the well should follow him and entertaine his profession neither did his wisedome thinke it preiudiciall or not beseeming the simplicitie of the Gospel to shew himselfe after his resurrection first to simple women and to make them preachers of it euen to the Disciples themselues Obiect But women are to rest in their husbands instruction and need not depend vpon the Ministers mouth 1. Cor. 14.35 Let them aske their husbands at home Ans. The Apostle there forbiddeth open and publike speach in the congregation where if in the exercise of prophesiyng they had any doubts rising concerning the things handled they were not permitted to stand vp as the men were either to teach or aske questions but keepe silence for the time and consult with their husbands at home for the resolution of their doubts but this place taketh it for granted that they must resort to the Church and heare in the congregation ver 34. And pittifully should most women be taught if they should content themselues with their husbands instruction Vse 1. We see hence what to thinke of the Popish doctrine who will neither admit women nor men but their learned Licentiats to meddle with the Scriptures and least they should so doe they shut them vp in an vnknowne tongue an high wickednes against the commandement of Christ to Laiks and common men Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures and the practise of the Church and beleeuers in the old and new Testament Deut. 31.11 Nehem. 8.3.4 Act. 17.11 2. Let no woman please her selfe that her husband goeth to Church and neglect the meanes her selfe for an vnbeleeuing wife may be sanctified by a beleeuing husband but she shall neuer be saued but by her owne faith he sanctifieth her mariage but not her person 3. The husband may not suffer his wife to incurre such danger but if he loue her he must extend his loue to her soule and better part seasonably giuing gentle admonitions and reproofes if with Martha they grow heauy or careles of this dutie 4. Let no woman be discouraged but incouraged rather in the powerfull profession of religion and frequenting the exercises of it of hearing and reading it reuerent speaking and carefull practise of it imitating herein those good women who followed Christ and ministred vnto him of their substance It is the modestie of women neuer to be ashamed to professe Christ and godly women haue many times become more zealous then men and their sanctified affections haue vsually exceeded mens in strength and tendernes And although the darknes of the world endure no manifest light in men much lesse in women yet Christ and his word highly esteemeth the least appearance of grace in men and much more in women how carefull was Christ to instruct comfort and reueale himselfe to the women that followed him honouring their profession of him in some things aboue his dearest Disciples what a great and worthy praise was it that Priscilla as well as Aquilla her husband should take such a man as Apollos home to instruct him in the waies of God and of how many women doth the Apostle in his salutations giue more then common report of their loue and faithfulnes in the truth As goe no further then the Romans Priscilla was ready for his life to laie downe her owne necke Marie bestowed much labour on the Apostles
the plagues of God which enter into the house of the vniust person yea often whippeth him with his owne rodde bringing often vpon such as haue beene vnfaithfull seruants by meanes of vnfaithfull seruants pouertie and want or worse things that their sinne might returne vpon them with much more bitternesse 4. That a good meanes to learne rightly to vse our owne portion of goods is by the carefulll vse of other mens comming into our hands For he that wretchedly rioteth and squandreth his masters goods for most part is giuen ouer by Gods iudgement to bee a waster of his owne And here taketh place that speach of Christ If you be vnfaithfull in an other mans goods who shall giue you that which is your owne teaching that he that is vnfaithfull to an other seldome is faithful in his owne affaires That they may adorne the doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things First for the meaning The doctrine of the Gospel is called the doctrine of Christ. 1. Because he is the argument and subiect of it whence some of the Euangelists beginne their writing thus The beginning of the Gospel of Iesus Christ and the Apostle Paul beginneth his writing with his setting apart to preach the Gospel of God concerning his Sonne for Christ Iesus deliuered to death for sinne and raised again for iustification is the whole matter Whence Paul calleth it the word of the crosse not onely because the crosse followed it but also in that it is the doctrine of Christ crucified 2. Because he is the first and chiefe messenger and publisher of it who in Paradise promised that the seede of the woman should breake the serpents head and none but the sonne who came from the bosome of the father could reueale and shewe the fauourable face of his father vnto vs who also in fulnesse of time to shewe himselfe the cheife doctor of his Church came in his own person and went about preaching and teaching this doctrine of the kingdome 3. Whosoeuer haue beene the teachers and publishers of this doctrine from the beginning either by word or writing not excepting Prophets and Apostles themselues or shall be vnto the ende they all do it by commandement from him yea himselfe preacheth in them and in vs. Thus the Apostle saith Eph. 2.17 that Christ came and preached peace to them that were farre off that is to the Gentiles in the persons of his Apostles for otherwise in his owne person as he was not sent so he preached not but to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel And therefore although Paul sometimes call it his Gospel and speaking of other Apostles also our Gospel yet must it be meant onely in regard that they were the publishers but not the authors of it for that is Christ himselfe 4. As it proceedeth from him so it tendeth wholly vnto him and leadeth beleeuers to see and partake both of his grace and glorie shining in the same Secondly Christ is called God our Sauiour 1. To prooue his owne dietie not onely in expresse tearmes beeing called God but also by the epithite agreeing onely to a diuine nature our Sauiour 2. To imply our owne miserie whose infinite wretchednesse onely God could remooue and whose infinite good none but God could restore 3. And especially in regard of this doctrine 1. to confirme the diuinitie of the same it beeing a doctrine of God and a doctrine of saluation proceeding from our Sauiour 2. To enforce the dutie towards it namely that seeing the author of it is God the matter diuine the effect saluation meet it is that such a sauing doctrine a doctrine of such tidings should be beautified and adorned Thirdly this doctrine is adorned when it is made bewtifull and louely vnto men and this by two things in the professors of it 1. By an honest and vnblameable conuersation for carnall men commonly esteem of the Doctrine by the life and the profession by the practise of the professor Hence the Apostle would haue Christians so compose all their actions as whosoeuer should see their good workes might be mooued to glorifie God And this appeareth more clearely in the contrarie for when the worke answereth not to the word it causeth the name of God to be blasphemed among vnbeleeuers and to glorie in the law yet breaking the law is a great dishonour to God 2. By Gods blessing which is promised and is attending such walking whereby euen strangers to the Church are forced to beginne to like of the profession for Gods blessing vpon his people is not onely profitable to themselues but turneth to the saluation of many others We read of many of the Heathen people that when they saw the great aduancement of Hester and Mordecay they became Iewes And when the Egyptians saw the great workes that God did for his people among them it is said that many of them ioyned themselues to the Israelites So we read in the Ecclesiasticall storie that when Licinius was ouercome by Constantine and the persecutions ceased which had almost for 300. yeares together wasted the Church how innumerable of them who before had worshipped their idols were contented to be receiued into the Church On the contrarie the Gospel is dishonoured when the Lord is forced to iudge and correct the abuse of his name in the professors of it Ezech. 36.20 When they that is the Israelites entred among the Heathen they polluted my name when they said of them these are the people of the Lord and are gone out of his Land Fourthly Seruants adorne the Gospel when professing it they by performing all faithfull seruice to their masters in and for God seeke and obtaine the blessing of God in the condition of life wherein he hath placed them whereas the casting off of the yoake in beleeuing seruants would make men conceiue that God whose name they professe were the author of confusion and not of order and that the Gospol were an enemie to ciuill and humane right For what is more right and equall then for masters to enioy their seruants as they do the other parts of their goods and bet●er might a man misse a great part of his goods then the person and labour of his seruant Doctr. The meanest Christian in his place may and ought to bring glorie vnto the Gospel These seruants were sould and bought like beasts in smithfeild yet must such poore creatures by their faithfulnesse diligence and conscience decke and bewtifie the Gospel which euen by their liues receiueth either honour or discredit In the Tabernacles building euery man must bring lesse or more The Lord esteemeth not of men by the places they hold but by their carriage in them A poore wise child or seruant here is better then an old foolish King In a word no man is called to the truth but on condition to shew forth the vertues of him that hath called him Vse 1. Let seruants who
for most part leaue the care of religion to others consider of this priuiledge which the basenesse of their calling cannot depriue them of As in euery nation so in euery calling and condition of life he that feareth God and worketh righteousnes is accepted of him yea the poorest soule called to partake of the liberties of the Gospel and freedome in grace is also called to this glorie that he is one who adorneth the Gospel Which consideration may both comfort and encourage poore despised Christians in good waies and prouoke them by expressing Christianitie in their whole course to shew their cognisance and manifest to what house and family they belong 2. How much more doe those in higher place set vp for many eyes to looke vpon either credit or discredit the Gospel and yet we may say of our age as Christ of his the poore receiue the Gospel and this doctrine is much more beholding to seruants then masters to inferiours then superiours 3. Masters must vse meanes that their seruants may adorne the Gospel and not with the Egyptians looke only for taskes and businesse to be done but neuer exhort them to sacrifice And yet more wretched are some Masters who when their seruants entreate to goe and worship in the Church doe therefore euill entreate them as those that are too idle Vers. 11. For that grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men hath appeared 12. And teacheth vs that we should denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and that we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world 13. Looking for that blessed hope and appearing of that glorie of that mightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ In these words our Apostle layeth downe a generall reason confirming and enforcing all the former precepts and it is drawne from the end of our redemption which calleth all sorts of men out of their vaine conuersation vnto a profitable and religious course amongst men Grace hath appeared to all men euen the basest aswell to seruants as masters to slaues as superiours to one sort as another that all sorts of men might by new life and obedience walke answerable thereunto By Grace is meant the doctrine of the Gospel called Act. 20.32 The word of grace so Iude 4. Turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Because 1. it is a gift of grace 2. it teacheth that remission of sinnes and life euerlasting are obtained only by the meere grace of God in Christ. 3. it is a meane vnder God to bring beleeuers to the participation of this grace through remission of sinnes by his blood This grace is described 1. by the adiuncts 2. by the ends of it The adiuncts are two first the light and cleare euidence of it in the present manner of propounding in the word appeared which in the Greeke signifieth a shining out in greater brightnesse then euer before for before the rising vp of the sunne of righteousnes●e the greatest part of the world was in darknes and where most light was in the Goshen of the Church it was but in shadowes and obscuritie but now a light is sprung vp to them that were in darknes the doctrine of grace is gloriously preached to all the world The second adiunct is that saluation which this grace bringeth and goeth with this light for it is the power of God to saluation And this is amplified by the subiect all men that is mankind or all conditions of men seruants aswell as masters bond as free poore as rich women as men young as old c. The ends of the appearing of grace are two the former is nearer namely to become our schoolmaster or teacher in this present world And it teacheth two lessons 1. What we must forbeare and auoid 1. vngodlinesse 2. worldly lusts Secondly what we must incline vnto 1. sobrietie 2. righteousnesse 3. pietie And this we must doe in this present life 1. That others may witnesse with vs our faith to be vnfained for true godlinesse must not be hid onely in the heart but visible also to the eie of man both that it may be an acceptable testimonie to the truth as also for direction to some and conuiction of others 2. Because this present world is our nonage time wherein we must be schooled to these lessons which time if it be neglected there is no time hereafter alloted to learne them in The latter ende is further remooued and concerneth the life to come namely the fruition of our hope that is by Metonimy our glorie hoped for in the appearing of Christ the mightie God which that it may be a spurre to our more godly course we are willed to expect So that the briefe scope and summe of the words is as though he had thus plainly spoken There is great reason O Titus that thou shouldest thus vrge all sorts of persons young and olde men and women bond and free vnto such seueral duties and vertues as may most beautifie their profession because that blessed doctrine of grace offring saluation freely not onely to Masters but euen to seruants hath more brightly shined out in these last then euer before in former ages and like a schoolemaster instructeth that we should both denie vngodlines and vnlawfull lusts as also that we should moderate our owne affections with sobrietie exercise righteousnesse towards others and in regard of God practise the power of that religion which we professe and further vrgeth vs with thirsting desire to expect and long after that heauenly blessednesse and immortall glorie now onely possessed by hope but which shall be fully assured vs when Iesus Christ that great God and our Sauiour shall appeare the second time to our full redemption For the grace of God Doctr. Although the doctrine of the Churches of the olde and newe Testament be the verie selfe same in regard 1. of the author who is God 2. substance and matter which is perfect righteousnes required in both 3. scope and ende to the iustification of a sinner before God yet are there diuerse accidentall differences betweene them which that we may the better vnderstand both the offices and the benefits by Christ are meet to be knowne some of them we shall note out of these words as we shall come vnto them The first difference is in that the Gospel is called grace which word the Lawe acknowledgeth not nay these two are opposed to be vnder the lawe and to be vnder grace To be vnder the law is not to be vnder it as a rule of life for so all beleeuers on earth yea the Saints and Angels in heauen are vnder it but to be vnder the yoke of it which neither we nor our fathers were able to beare For to omit the least part of the yoake standing in the obseruation of 1. many 2. costly 3. laborious 4. burdensome ceremonies what a killing letter is the law which commandeth inward and perfect righteousnesse for nature and actions and that in our owne persons which promiseth
Moses couer his face with a vaile without the which the children of Israel were not able to behold him signifying vnto vs that they were not able to comprehend those manifold obscure types of the Law till the vaile was remooued which saith the Apostle ver 14. In Christ is now put away In this respect our Sauiour affirmeth that although among them that were borne of women there was not a greater then Iohn who yet in regard of his person was inferiour to sundrie of the Prophets because of them all he was nearest vnto Christ and in his ministerie pointed at him with the finger now exhibited into the world yet the least minister in the kingdome of heauen that is of the new Testament is greater then he For he can preach that the sonne of man is lifted vp dead raised ascended which Iohn could not doe as neere as he was and much lesse Abraham Dauid and the other Prophets who sawe his daie further off Obiect But hereby it seemeth that before Christs appearing the doctrine of the Gospel appeared not Answ. We must consider the Gospel in a double respect 1. As it is a doctrine conteyning a promise of grace freely for the Messiah who was to be the sonne of Abraham and Dauid and thus was it euer in the Church deliuered by God immediatly to Adam after the fall Moses writ also of him and to him giue all the Prophets witnesse 2. As a doctrine propounding free grace in Christ exhibited dead raised c. and thus it appeared not before his owne appearing before which time it was onely a Gospel fore-promised Rom. 1.2 Vse 1. In that the doctrine of the Gospell is such a shining light we may see the miserable estate of such as want the meanes of it who abide in obscuritie and darkenesse euen as those are in the night to whom the sunne is not risen for man naturally perceiueth not the things of God and therefore vnlesse this instrument of the spirit come the spirit himselfe by whom onely we knowe the things giuen vs of God must needes be wanting The which consideration should mooue vs to pittie the estate of such poore creatures who are in a farre more miserable blindnes then the Egyptians in their three dayes darkenes What a lamentable thing is it that a kingdome beeing giuen for going vnto it and men beeing blind of themselues and not able to see one foote of the way cannot get any guides or meanes to helpe them one steppe forward but as blind me● desperately runne vpon pikes and swords into pittes and ponds no one recalling them from present death and deadly things Vse 2. Note hence with how little danger we can shut our eyes against such a light as is risen vp vnto vs shall we without blame now liuing as at midday see no more nor so much as those who liued in the dawning shall the light of the sunne be seauen fold greater vnto vs then euer before and yet we stumble and fall as if we were cast into the midnight What a fearefull iudgement hangeth ouer our negligence if vnder our ministerie which exceedeth in glorie we come behind the ordinarie beleeuers of the olde Testament in knowledge faith and fruition of Christ with his graces Is all the pedagogie of the lawe past wherein euen the Prophets and arch-beleeuers so farre as we consider the ordinarie ministration were to vs but as children in their elements Is Christ come crucified raised vp to glorie and so the fulnesse of time come wherein we haue the bodie and substance Oh what a disgrace is it that we should be inferiour to those who obtained but the shadowes what a great condemnation will it be that we who are reserued to such means should sinne against such a light In a misty night to stumble and fall were no such disgrace no such danger but with many Christians to say I am in the light I see my way well enough and yet to come behind not onely the Iewes who walked in a darke light but euen the Gentiles who not onely walked in darkenes but were darkenesse it selfe in the practise of sobrietie iustice mercie chastitie and such like is an heauie condition and yet the condition not of a fewe professed Christians It will be here said but God forbid that we should not receiue this light and walke also in the direction of it and to say the contrarie were to broach a slaunder To which I say that when Christ himselfe preached most of the Iewes were blind still so true it is that many who heare and professe the Gospel yet neuer receiued the light to walke by it Some receive indeede this light superficially vpon themselues as the light of the sunne falling vpon trees and stones it enlighteneth the outside and warmeth the barke a little but peirceth not into the heart and midst of them so the Gospel shineth round about many professors and it may be conformeth some outward actions and set them forward to speake of it and for it at least for a while but it gets not within them nor peirceth their hearts there is no change there the soule nastie corners of them lie vnswept still and so they remaine hypocrites still Others receiue this sunshine no otherwise then the aire receiueth the light of the sunne when the bodie of the sunne is present it enlighteneth the whole aire but the bodie of the sunne departing darkenes succeedeth againe so many hea●ers may be affected with the present sound of the word and thinke themselues sufficiently enlightened but the sound beeing gone the former darkenes commeth they heare many things but keepe nothing and so make themselues fit for many stripes Quest. But how shall I knowe whether I receiue this light aright or no Answ. By these notes 1. If thou wilt not attempt any thing without the direction of it no more then thou wouldst thy earthly businesse without the light of the sunne or of a candle A fewe naturall actions a man can doe in the night time as eate drinke sleepe c. but in any matter of weight he will haue light so for workes of darkenes men neede no light nor desire any but for the least worke of grace thou must first call for a light The Apostle wisheth vs to walke as children of light but how shall we doe that the Apostle Iohn telleth vs namely if wee walke in the light and while we haue the light The Israelites might not mooue a foote towards Canaan but by direction of the pillar and the wise men could not goe to Christ without his starre Secondly light is a pleasant thing to the eie saith Salomon and a comfortable thing it is to a poore prisoner to behold the light of the sunne through neuer so small a creuise In like manner is the glad message of the Gospel to the Christian soule that knowes it aright as if vnexpected tydings of a pardon were brought to a malefactor readie
it with them but as in a theeues lanthorne that none can know there is any light there besides themselues for feare of reproach or danger they will not be knowne what they are a doing but they mistake this light if they thinke it can be kept so close for where euer it is it is a glorious shining light and can no more abide hidde then the sunne can be couered with a bushell or put into a lanthorne 5. A last sort haue walked in the light heretofore and made good beginnings but haue thought the day too long and are growne wearie of the sunne and therefore as the people Exod. 35. at the first brought too much to the Temple but after wards sacrilegiously deuoured these holy things as the Prophet witnesseth euen so in the beginning of her late Maiesties raigne this light was accounted of followed and happily entertained but since the verie length of the day hath wearied the labourers A third Vse might here be fitly followed against those who still accuse the Scriptures of obscuritie now when the vaile is gone and the light is gloriously shining and thence frame a consequent more impious and absurd then the premisses namely that therefore they must not be medled withall of common people but onely by the Popes licentiates against whom I only affirme that they as yet neuer saw the expresse face of Christ in the Gospel and that when all vailes and shadowes continued vnremooued it was not lawfull for any Iew thus to reason And teacheth vs to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts This doctrine of the Gospel is a schoolemaster and full of instruction wherein it differeth not from the law for euen that also teacheth the deniall of vngodlinesse and a sober righteous and godly life Quest. What neede the Gospel then teach ouer the same thing againe Answ. Because though they teach these same things yet they differ in the manner of teaching For 1. the law can teach and command them onely but the Gospel by sanctifying and inspiring a new life into beleeuers giueth them with the commandement a power to obey it which the law could neuer do which power if it went not with the Gospel in beleeuers all the commandements of the law for performance were but in vaine and more vainely repeated in the Gospel 2. The Gospel perswadeth to bring that power into act by such an argument as the law neuer knew namely from the great price that was paid for sinne euen the blood of that immaculate lambe wherewith we are washed which to count profane or to tread it vnder our feete were horrible impietie yea much more fearefull then to transgresse that law which was confirmed with the blood of bulls and goats and yet if a man willingly transgressed against that law there was no sacrifice for that sinne And this manner of perswasion the Apostle here vseth in saying that the doctrine of grace which bringeth saluation teacheth vs. Doct. 1. In that the Gospel is a teacher note that it is a schoolmaster of manners aswell as the law So soone as any were conuerted by Christ himselfe or his Apostles they were presently called Disciples for thenceforth they depended on his or their mouthes for direction and instruction And such as giue vp their names to Christ must not looke to be lawles for they come to take a yoke vpon them and to learne of him yea they are bound to fulfill the law of Christ called Ioh. 13.34 a new commandement so that Christians must still vnder command neither would Christ by any other touchstone try the loue of a professor towards himselfe then by keeping and obeying his word Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that slaunder of the Popish Church whereby they accuse our doctrine of licentiousnesse and affirme that we teach that a iustified person is freed from all keeping of the law that all the law is fulfilled in beleeuing that there is no sinne but vnbeleefe and that nothing but faith is commanded in the Gospel as for other things they are indifferent not commanded nor forbidden All which with many moe to this purpose be there owne words whereby according to the auncient cunning of Satan they would bring in disgrace with simple people the truth of doctrine concerning our free and full iustification in the sight of God through faith without the workes of the law as though this doctrine were a destroier of the law Whereto we answer with the Apostle Rom. 3.31 Doe we through faith destroie the law God forbid yea we establish the law For although the regenerate be not vnder the law in regard of 1. iustification 2. accusation 3. coaction 4. condemnation yet are they vnder it in regard of direction instruction and obedience so as it is not yet destroied nay it is established by the Gospel 1. by apprehending Christs righteousnesse for the perfect obedience vnto it and fulfulling of it by our suretie 2. by our owne inchoate obedience vnto it which by meanes of the Gospel beeing a quickning spirit we are enabled vnto and by the same is also made acceptable and pleasing vnto God through his Christ. Vse 2. Many a loose Christian can well endure to heare that the doctrine of grace bringeth saluation and the brighter it shineth to this purpose the better but oh that the Apostle had staied there and not come to teach them their dutie for they are slow of heart to beleeue and dull to learne Let a man come and offer saluation and preach promises who will not pinne himselfe on such a mans sleeue but let him teach the same men their duties and the way to become partakers of these promises and they will fall off as fast or faster then they did from Christ when he asked his owne Disciples if they also would goe away But in great wisedome hath the Lord happily ioyned these two together saluation and instruction to shew that he that hath no care for the latter hath no part in the former grace bringeth saluation to none but to the schollers of Christs schoole it is then no matter to thee that grace hath appeared nor any benefit to thee that it bringeth saluation vnlesse thou be also instructed by it in the lessons following Doe thou become docible as a child for so the word implieth yea as an obedient child fashiō thy selfe and suffer thy selfe to be moulded into the obedience of it or els in vaine expectest thou saluation by this doctrine neuer dare to diuorce the things which God hath coupled Secondly out of the manner of perswasion to yeeld an obedient eare to the Gospel namely because it bringeth saluation we learne what is a notable meanes both to represse any temptation or stirring lust by which we might be ouercaried vnto euill as also a pricke and motiue to prouoke our selues forward vnto good namely to consider of Gods goodnesse towards vs and what he hath done for vs. This argument is frequent in
doe streame out nothing but such as Christ speaketh of adulteries murthers thefts couetousnesse deceit vncleannes pride the wicked eye and cursed speaches and yet charge them with such filthinesse they iustifie themselues with the Pharisie they thanke God they serue God as well as the best haue as good hearts as the best they doe as well and liue as well as the best of them all you cannot fasten on them any sence of their foule sinnes they neede no purging nor washing whereas the godly daily groane and grieue in the sence of the presence of that with them which they hate worse then death it selfe Vse 2. Hence may be noted that wheresoeuer sinne is pardoned it is also purged Rom. 8.2 There is no condemnation to them that are in Iesus Christ for the law of the spirit of life freeth them from the law of sinne and of death that is not only from the curse of the law but euen that law and power of sinne it selfe which would still hold vs in the seruice of it He shall die in his sinne that dieth not vnto his sinne not that sinne can be so dead as not remaine but if it lie not bleeding by vertue of that stroake which Christ in his death hath giuen it if the force of it be not abated and thou escaped from the rule of it Christs blood doth thee no good How excellently doth the Lord Iesus himselfe in his speach to Peter approoue this truth If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee and no part in Christ no pardon of sinne Dare any man then dreame of his reconciliation with God that finds not holinesse daily preuayling against corruption and the endeauour of puritie in heart and life against that foule impuritie that stickes fast and cleaueth vnto both or dare any vnsanctified heart which in that it hath set it selfe vpon a resolued course in sinne is a rebell vnto God laie claime vnto any part of the death and merit of Christ when Christ hath said that vnlesse he wash the soule that partie hath no part in him No no the wedding garment and this our elder brothers garment is wouen of holines as well as righteousnes and there is no admittance to the supper of the Lambe no blessing without either Vse 3. Let both these considerations mooue vs to be euer washing and clensing our selues from our vncleannesse and neuer to be at rest till we finde our selues although not free from blacknesse yet comely as the Church confesseth of her selfe And because this is the cheife vse of this doctrine I will stand a little longer to propound in it two points 1. the meanes and notes which we must vse and by which we must discerne our selues to be washed and purged 2. the reasons or motiues to vse carefully those meanes For the former A man that meaneth to be neate and cleanly 1. hee willingly looketh himselfe in a glasse he is not angrie with the partie that setteth the glasse before him but he calleth for it that he may see what spots are about him and looketh neere that he may discerne them euen so a man that would be purged must often set the glasse of the law before him will not be angrie with him that preacheth and propoundeth the law vnto him whereby he may see his foule spotts and disorders And here is one difference betweene the cleane and vncleane one cannot endure to take notice of his filthinesse his heart will abide no gaging nor sounding the other hath a purpose to be cleanly and would haue the least filth about him discouered that it may be remooued Secondly A man that is in this way to be purged beginneth with the foulest spots first and those which are most conspicuous and commonly first remooueth those in his face Now the foulest and most noted defilement which is most conspicuous and consequently odious vnto God is an vngodly and wicked heart which as the Lord beginneth his washing withall for the first thing he doth in the conuersion of a sinner is to take away the heart of stone so he that would haue euidence of his cleannesse must beginne here and first wash the inside so the holy man Dauid although his sinnes were in the eyes of the world yet to be soundly purged of them he craueth a cleane heart and a renewed spirit And thus as he that meaneth to be cleane beginneth at his head and so washeth all downeward so the pure of heart beginne at the heart and this carrieth all other parts and members they know that of the filthinesse of the flesh and spirit the latter is more filthy and therefore they seeke first to be renewed in the spirit of their mindes and to wash their consciences from dead workes whereas those that meane neuer to be cleane beginne as it were at their feete if they can abstaine from murther adulte●ie drunkennesse and such open sinnes in the act which is apparant to euery eye they thinke all to be cleane and well because they neuer see the hardnes the pride and foulenes of their hearts but euen this conceit that they haue washed their hands in innocencie neglecting their hearts is a brand and marke of their vncleannes and impuritie Thirdly hee that will be cleane proceedeth on to the other parts of his bodie and will see that they be sutable so this grace of sanctification as it beginneth in the minde so it proceedeth to worke in all the members it is carefull that all the vessels be preserued in holinesse and honour A pure heart will not be without pure hands chast eyes an ordered tongue c. Where is to be obserued another maine difference betweene the cleane and vncleane the former endeauour to cleanse themselues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and to grow vp vnto full holinesse but the latter can content themselues with a supposed goodnes of their hearts and yet let loose their tongues to all obsene and lewd speaches and open their eyps to all wandring and lustfull spectacles and their hearts thinke no ill but are good inough for all that but halfe an eye can discerne what impure wretches they are both within and without Fourthly such a person will proceed on to his garments and will not endure filth or spots on them euen so that soule whom Christ purgeth hateth euen the garment spotted by the flesh euen all occasions inducements and appearances of euill yea such as he cannot auoid yet he can hate Whereas the carelesse and slouenly Christian runnes into all companies into all courses and thrusts himselfe into all occasions of sinne because he is filthy he careth not to be filthy still yea and to foule and besmeare all that come in his companie Fifthly The sanctified person vseth all good meanes whereby he may become cleane and beeing so he is carefull to preserue himselfe cleane so long as he can For 1. he desireth to be euer sprinkling himselfe with the
out of the world and set highly in his fauour aboue all others For they lie before him in the righteousnesse of Christ in whom the Father is well pleased they are bought from the earth and stand before him in the worke of his owne fingers namely their new birth and second creation in which he also delighteth to behold Hence are they called an holy nation the spouse of Christ the daughter of God the choise of God and Gods delight Thirdly they are a peculiar people in regard of their whole maner condition of life which made Balaam say of Israel that it was a people dwelling alone and numbred not himself among other nations that is altogether different in lawes customes manner and condition of life But let vs see this truth in some instances 1. Their originall are not some few families comming out of some corner of the earth but they sprung of Christ of whom all the families in heauen and earth are called 2. Their countrie is no part of earth for they are here but strangers and pligrimes but heauen to which they tend and from whence they looke for a Sauiour 3. Their King is neither borne nor created but the euerlasting King of glorie who ruleth not some one countrie but from sea to sea yea to the worlds end and not for an age but as he is a King for euer and his kingdome an euerlasting kingdome so he ruleth for euer and euer and of his kingdome there is no ende 4. Their lawes are spirituall to gouerne the conscience as well as the outward man most perfect neuer changed neuer abrogated as mens bee 5. Their warre and weapons are not carnall but spirituall as their cheifest enemies be their captaine was neuer foyled nor can bee and therefore before they strike a blowe they are sure of victorie and for their externall enemies they conquer them not by smiting as others but by suffering 6. Their language is the language of Canaan their speach bewrayeth them to be citizens of heauen hence are they called people of a pure language no filthie vnsa●ourie or corrupt communication commeth out of their mouthes but such as is holy tending to edification and ministring grace to the hearers 7. Their apparell is deuised and put on by God himselfe euen garments of innocencie long white robes died red in the blood of the lambe 8. Their diet not rising out of the earth but descending from heauen Iesus Christ is the bread of life and that Manna that came downe from heauen and that water which gusheth out of the rocke of whom whosoeuer feedeth and drinketh he hath tasted of the tree of life and of the water of life he cannot but liue euerlastingly Thus we see how the mēbers of the Church are called a peculiar people Vse 1. Hence we may note a liuely description of the Church of God namely that it is a peculiar people selected and called out of all nations peoples tongues and kinreds of the earth for the Lords owne possession and vse That which the Lord once spake of Israel is true of all the true Israel of God Israel is a thing hallowed vnto the Lord and as his first fruits for as the first fruits were of all the fruits of the earth separated and sanctified vnto the Lord so out of all the people of the earth are a remnant set apart and separated to become his and belong vnto him see Hos. 1.10 2.23 Vse 2. Hence is affoarded no small consolation to the members of the Church and that sundrie wayes for God will not forsake his people whom he hath chosen whom he hath made his peculiar But 1. his protection watcheth ouer them Zach. 2.5 I will be a wall of fire round about her he will suffer none to doe them wrong let them be kings who will not be reprooued by any other yet he will reprooue them for their sakes this was the ground of the Iewes safetie Deut. 32.9 The Lords portion is his people Iacob is the lot of his inheritance he found him he taught him he lead him and kept him as the apple of his eye Be thou then a child of the Church and although thou maist finde thy selfe in thy selfe lost blind ignorant and in a thousand perils feare not the Lord will finde thee lead thee teach thee and keepe thee as safe in the chambers of his prouidence as thou wouldest keepe safe the apple of thine owne eie Secondly his prouidence is euer with them his eies vpon them his eares his hand his treasurie open vnto them yea himselfe becommeth the portion of those that are his portion and no good thing can be wanting to such who haue the Lord their portion in whom is no lacke Art thou poore despised base and abiect in the world let thy care be to become Gods peculiar he was neuer contemptible whom God honoureth as he cannot be honourable whom God despiseth Vse 3. For instruction to teach vs who professe our selues the Lords peculiar to liue vnto him to whose vse we are set apart And this is the Apostles reason Ye are not your owne therefore glorifie God in your soules and bodies for they are his and that we may this doe we must propound two rules before vs. 1. We must see that the whole course of our liues be carried according to his pleasure for looke whose we are to him we must giue vp our selues to obey If we be the Lords peculiar then no creature in earth can lay claime vnto vs not the Pope not the deuill not sinne no nor our owne lusts must command vs for thus the Apostle reasoneth ye are a chosen generation a peculiar people dearely beloued I beseech you abstaine from fleshly lusts this inference sheweth what a dishonourable and disgracefull thing it were for Christians so farre to forget their nobilitie and dignitie to stoope to such base seruices they should rather call to mind that beeing set apart to the Lords vse and like so many nobles beeing to attend the nearest seruices of their King they are to heare and fashion themselues according to his good pleasure Deut. 26.18 The Lord hath set thee to be a pretious people vnto him that thou shouldst keepe all his commandements Neither may beleeuers frame themselues according to the guise of the world seeing they are called out of the world to be the Lords peculiar Those that are the next seruants in a princes court liue not according to the fashions of other courts but according to the manner of their owne so the Lord from this reason chargeth his people that they should not conforme vnto the heathen in their fashions for ye are an holy people and the Lord hath chosen you for a pretious people in like manner we must not conforme to Romish or Italian fashions nor the courses of loose and profane men amongst our selues but as we professe our selues the Lords so must we square and
speake let him speake as the word of God and the embassadors of Christ must speake his message euen as himselfe would vtter it 2. The soule of the word is the presence of the spirit which euerie Minister must striue to make demonstration of for else it is but a dead letter or sound it is the spirit that quickeneth it and maketh it liuely and mightie in operation it is not the demonstration of the person nor manifestation of the man that getteth authoritie to the word but when out of good conscience a man faithfully striueth to make it appeare to the consciences of others that not he but the spirit of God speaketh in him that when simple men shall perceiue the secrets of their hearts made manifest they may fall on their faces and worship God saying God is in this man indeede 3. The Prophets and Apostles haue gone before vs as presidents in this behalfe Micha 3.8 I am full of power by the spirit of the Lord and of iudgment and of strength to declare Iacob his sinne and Israel his transgression Before Isai was sent on his message his lippes were touched with an hote coale from the altar The Apostles accordingly were not sent to witnes of Christ vntill the spirit had descended vpon them and that in the forme of fierie tongues to signifie that themselues beeing kindled with zeale and feruencie in the Lords businesse they should also by their doctrine enflame others and that their speech should not light any where but it should kindle and enflame the hearts of the hearets But the most perfect patterne of imitation herein we haue in the cheife doctor of his Church who not onely after his resurrection could and did make the hearts of the disciples burne within them euen in his ordinarie talke but all the time of his humilitie it is truely verified of his whole doctrine that he taught with authoritie and not as the Scribes Indeed neuer man spake so nor can speake by the confession of his verie enemies for neuer man spake so in his owne name verily I say vnto you neuer man confirmed his speaches with such powerfull and proper miracles neuer man spake with such peculiar grace zeale libertie and command of the spirit in the conscience but yet all his Ministers are to imitate him in zeale in power in libertie of speach and spirit for the glorie of God and come as neere this copie as they can Vse Ministers must take heede of coldnes in their ministerie of liueles and spiritles preaching of powerlesse and a frozen manner of deliuering the word alwaies preseruing a fire of zeale and conscience in themselues mettals we knowe will not worke without fire no more will the steely and stonie heart of man melt or soften without the spirituall fire taken from the altar And yet here I must not be vnderstood as condemning all coolenesse or moderation of speach for doctrine may be ponderous and weightie where the speach is calme and treatable still waters often runne the deepest and Salomon saith that a man of knowledge spareth his words but yet it followeth that he must be of an excellent spirit so there must of necessitie be at the least a soft fire in these distillatiōs But the thing iustly condemned is when men by their owne default beeing giuen ouer either to pride sensualitie or worldlynesse haue benummed their spirits and are become frozen without power or life in their ministerie and so bring forth their doctrine as many women doe their children stil-borne teaching as the Scribes onely of forme without zeale or conscience or experience of that they speake And before I leaue this point it must be knowne that whereas I require heate and authoritie in the deliuerie of the word that therefore euerie heate should be warrantable for some is iustly condemned as 1. all heate of humane affection proceeding from perturbation and passion 2. all inconsiderate heate of youth 3. all heate not well guided although in good men full of godly affections but suffered to boyle ouer so farre as a man looseth his memorie and interrupteth his doctrine and whole discourse 2. A flattring Ministrie is an enemie to this authoritie for when a Minister must sing placebo and such sweet songs it is impossible for him not to betraie the truth 3. To withstand this authoritie or to weaken it is a fearefull sin whether in high or low and the Lord will not suffer his messengers feet to be cut off 4. Hearers must 1. pray for their Teachers that they may deliuer the word with authoritie with boldnesse and with open mouth Ephes. 6.19 Coloss. 4.4 2. Not deeme this authoritie in Ministers humor or anger or bitternes and much lesse madnesse with Festus and least of all to cast them in prison as men rauing as Ieremie was cap. 29.26 3. Not to refuse to yeeld subiection vnder this authoritie nor be angrie when it beateth down some practise which they are loth to part with seeing it is iust with God to reprobate put out the light of such as refuse the conuiction of the light offred The third and last precept of this Chapter and verse Let no man despise thee teacheth two things First how people and hearers should entertaine the Ministers sent them of God seeing they cannot without great sinne despise them for seeing the Lord who could by himselfe worke the saluation of men yet is pleased to vse as his helpers herein weake and base men whom he assumeth into fellowship with himselfe to become coworkers with him although not in the act of conuersion yet in the Ministrie of it who dare despise such whom the Lord so farre honoureth and therefore calleth them his white horses horses in that he vseth them in his battailes against sinne Satan the world and wicked ones and white for the puritie of their doctrine and integritie of their liues yea his Angels namely such as by whom he reuealeth his good pleasure vnto vs and his owne voyce by whom he beseecheth men to be reconciled Secondly how carefull is the Lord to preserue his Ministers from contempt when he affirmeth that such as despise them despise himselfe that sent them In which sence we read that the posteritie of Caine contemning the preaching of Noah dispised and contended against Gods spirit so Israel murmuring against Moses and Aaron Moses saith he hath heard your murmurings against the Lord for what are we that yee haue murmured against vs. Thirdly how vnnaturall a part were it for children to despise their Fathers and what seueritie hath the Lord shewed against it in his law but godly Ministers are the Fathers of their people I am your Father saith Paul and Onesimus yea and Titus here begotten by him vnto the faith he calleth his sonnes Let no cursed Cham presume to scorne them which is not so hurtfull to them as dangerous to themselues beeing the next way to bring themselues vnder
could delight in Gods statutes they would not forget them 3. They neuer vse the right meanes of remembring the word and yet they complaine of forgetting it for before they heare they prepare not themselues by repentance nor by prayer for the spirit to teach them nor after they take no paines by meditation repetition or conference to make the word their owne it is not worth any such labour and therefore complaine no longer of thy memorie but of thy sinnefull securitie negligence and profanenesse accuse thy selfe and bewayle thy sinne who hast suffered thy memorie and mind to be taken vp with olde worne lusts and delights with reckonings of summes of money with earthly profits and commodities and thus hast spent thy dayes in the forgetfulnesse of God And for time to come performe the forenamed duties carefully and although thou canst not remember euerie particular thou hearest yet God by his spirit will fasten so much in thy memorie as shall be meet for thee to practise and sufficient for thy comfort especially when thou shalt stand in greatest need of it as in temptation danger distresse in the day of thy death and iudgement But suffer now in thy prosperitie the things belowe to take vp thy senses it shall be iust with God in the day of thy darkenesse and miserie to leaue thee without the comfort of any one place of Scripture that what thou wouldst not take vp into thy mind when thou mightest thou shalt not be able then when it is offered and thou gladly wouldst So much of the manner of deliuering this doctrine now we come to the matter of it In the matter consider 1. the duties required which are two 1. subiection 2. obedience The difference I take to be this The former is an acknowledgement of subiection vnder which Gods ordinance hath necessarily put a man which therefore he cannot resist for it is vsed in Scripture commonly not only to note that inferioritie which the Lord hath laid on wiues seruants children inferiours and subiects which in verie naturall light cannot but be acknowledged Gods ordinance but also that powerfull subduing euen of such as are vnwilling and resisting for the same word is vsed there where it is said that Christ subiected and subdued all things vnder his feete and the Apostle Rom. 13.5 fastneth this necessitie vpon it it is necessarie to be subiect The latter rather intendeth a free and voluntarie obedience vnto the lawful commandements then such necessarie subiection vnto the persons which may be considered as an effect of the former and a branch of the same roote for where there is a conscience of subiection there will be cheerefulnes in obedience The second point in the matter and substance of the precept is the persons first to whom the duties belong namely all Magistrates who are here distributed into 1. principalities 2. powers The former of which two meaneth those who haue primarie and plenarie power vnder God and by their proper power and command administer within their seuerall dominions such are Kings Cesars and cheefe gouernours in free states The latter signifieth such as exercise delegated authoritie and hold from those higher powers such are vicegerents or viceroyes vnder the King presidents of prouinces Le●f●enants ouer countries Mayors of citties or townes c. Thus are Magistrates ranked into Kings and those that are in authoritie 1. Tim. 2.2 and into Kings and those that are sent of them 1. Pet. 2.12 Thus subiection and obedience is due to them both euen to the latter aswell as to the former and because these are sometimes meane men as the other are often bad men the text calleth vs to turne our eyes from the persons and fixe them especially vpon the ordinance of God which maketh these duties their right for here is a metonymie of the adiunct it is not said let them be subiect to Princes as those that haue power from them but to principalities and powers as though he had said let them not looke so much to the men exercising rule and power as vnto the power and ordinance it selfe and seeing there is no power but of God let them submit themselues vnto euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the persons from whom these dues must be paid are all Christians in generall without exception for the Apostle includeth them all in the word them and therefore clergie as well as laytie yea euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers if euery soule then the clergies as well as others Doctr. 1. Christianitie eateth not vp Magistracie nor destroyeth gouernment and ciuill authoritie but ratifyeth confirmeth it for Christians are here called to subiection and obedience to ciuill authoritie The reason is 1. the kingdome of Christ is not of this world his authoritie deuideth not ciuill inheritances his crowne and scepter detract not from earthly crownes and scepters his weapons are not carnall the keyes of his kingdome are no temporall iurisdiction he could both be the true lawfull King of the Iewes and yet conuey himselfe away when they would haue giuen him his right 2. For one ordinance of God to destroie another would argue want of wisedome in God the ordainer the very thought whereof were blasphemous The orders of Christ in his Church then cannot bring confusion in the commonwealth for then the Lord should not be a God of order but of confusion nay on the contrarie for the Churches sake which he loueth he keepeth order and maintaineth gouernment in common wealths that his Church while it is a gathering in the world might find safe harbour therein and this doue of Christ haue place where to set without danger the soale of her foote 3. Moses so wisely from God constituted both ecclesiasticall and politicall ordinances as that the one was so farre from violencing the other as one of them could not stand without the other and was Christ the Sonne any lesse wise a law-giuer in his Church then was Moses a seruant Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that wicked opinion of Anabaptists and Libertines who hold that Christians need no Magistrates nor ought to be subiect vnto any and why so 1. Because they are the Lords freemen 2. They are the iust who need no laws but are a law to thēselues 3. They need no protection but the Lords 4. Their badge is loue which suffreth and couereth all things and therefore they may not reuenge nor resist euill by carrying before the Magistrate But for the first the libertie of the Lords free men in this life is spirituall and inward and no●●utward and bodily till the life to come For the second if the law be not made against them yet it is for them and their good for suppose they do no euill yet may they suffer much wrong and euill without defence of law so as the old saying will here be true Kings were ordained for men and not men for
of those deare children of God And where should the gunpowder treason haue beene laid if the blowe had beene giuen had not Satan deuised shoulders which had borne a many such malitious imputations before But notwithstanding such bug-beares whereby Satan would scare men from the sincere imbracing of the truth and entertaining of the ordināces of Christ as the greatest enemies of states and kingdoms let vs be wise hearted and bold to giue Satan the lie seeing the sincerest preachers and professors of the Gospel are so far from denial of the right of Princes as that the doctrine which they bring establisheth their power in their hands rather like the workemen of Salomon who built the Temple and built his throne too And let Protestant preachers and professors carrie this garland and tryumph against all Popish spirits that although the enemies of the truth haue narrowly in all ages sifted them to finde iniquitie in them that thereby they might iustly get the ciuill sword drawne against them yet haue they found no such thing in them Vse 3. If Christian religion confirme ciuill authoritie then the way to bring men to become subiect to superiours is to plant the Gospel and take order that it may preuaile amongst them The teaching and practise of true religion is the conseruant cause of commonwealths because it is a principall meanes to bind vnto obedience without which all politike courses fayle and are found by experience too weake It is not power it is not policie that will still subdue and keepe vnder a rebellious people without the power of the word in their consciences for till obedience be willingly yeelded vnto God it can neuer be conscionably and then not constantly yeelded vnto his Leiftenant This may be a ground of our prayer that the Lord would be pleased to put into the hearts of our gouernours that the Gospel may be throughly planted in Ireland for this is the most direct way to subdue the rebels and bring the whole countrie vnder willing and free subiection Doctr. 2. Euerie Christian must yeeld obedience and subiection vnto Magistrates and higher powers To the explaning of which point three things must be opened 1. who must must be subiect 2. wherein 3. wherefore The first of these was touched before where we affirmed that all sorts of men cleargie as well as laietie must be subiect Romish policie that they might become the absolute libertines of the world and carrie their bad matters vnder a cloud that secular eyes should not prie into them hath withdrawne the neckes of the cleargie from vnder ciuil power and will be iudged by none but their compeares which is as if a theife should be tried by a quest of cutpurses and therefore when they meete with that generall conclusion Let euery soule be subiect they beate their wittes as beeing at a stand but seeing something must be bolted out for a shewe one Pope saith that the person of the speaker is excepted in giuing such preceps whereupon it commeth to passe that Paul and Peter and consequently their successors while they call for subiection of others are themselues exempted from it a silly and weake shift as though Christ did not pay tribute for Peter as for himselfe and as though Paul pleaded not before and appealed to a ciuill iudge Act. 25.11 Another procter of theirs by euerie soule will haue meant onely animall men that is secular and worldly but spirituall men and the cleargie are still exempted as though the Popish cleargie were become and all vanished into spirits or as if where Luke saith that there were in the shippe 376. soules it must needes be concluded they were all secular and animall men among whom Paul and Luke were or as if they were all naturall and animall men in the Arke because it is said there were in all eight soules of which Noah was one who was a preacher of righteousnesse much like the poore proofe of that Iesuite who because Paul would not haue the Corinths goe to lawe vnder the vniust but vnder the Saints surely concludeth that this must be vnder the Bishops for is it not likely that that Epistle was written onely to Bishops because it was sent to the Saints yet vpon such grounds as these hath their cleargie cast off the yoake of obedience these many 100. yeares cleane against the expresse word of Scripture and the vniuersall practise of holy men yea the Sonne of God in the Scriptures Aaron the high Priest must obey Moses Ahimelech when wicked Saul sent for him to slay him obeyed him beeing summoned he came and appealed not from the vniust sentence of death so did Christ so did his Apostles and so must and ought their successors vnto the ende yet sometimes as it is seene in all tenures which are not from God men knowe not what to hold to after the Popish cleargie hath challenged their exemption and authoritie by diuine right from the word beeing pressed they forget themselues and claime it iur● humano that is from the priuiledges don●tions and exemptions of Princes and Emperors wherein besides that they should not haue suffered the Princes by departing from their right to breake Gods commandement for Princes haue not power to loose him from obedience whom God hath bound as also by flying to a priuiledge as their best and last refuge is plainly implyed what of due by the lawe of God and nature belongeth vnto Princes from them The second point is wherein and how farre we ought to obey Magistrates Answ. Euery Christian is bound to take heede to the mouth of the king in all things and so farre as he hath power to command Now because the ciuill Magistrate is alwaies bound to command in the Lord and 2. is the father of our bodies after a sort and of all our outward man hence two grounds of great moment are concluded The former is that euerie man must obey all possible commandements which are not against the lawe of nature and the lawe of God for the Magistrate in all his commandements as well as executions must be the Minister of God onely vrging that vpon his subiects which God himselfe whose place he sustaineth would vrge It is said of Cyrus that he must be Gods sheepeheard and he shall performe not his owne but all my desire The iudgement is not mans but Gods and it is the honourable style of Princes to be assistants to the ruler of the whole earth neither is this to denie any supremacie to Princes to tie them to the tables of which God hath made them the keepers but it is to ascribe vnto them such soueraigntie vnder God ouer all causes and persons Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill as that they may not depose the care of Church or Common-wealth as a thing wherein they will not be wearied but must prouide that sincere and vncorrupt doctrine be published in all their Churches that the Sacraments be duely and seasonably administred
of receiuing grace must needs goe before the action of receiuing it Answ. But this will as it is the beginning of conuersion in the very first moment and motion of it is from grace and none can will and desire grace truly but by grace This conclusion directly bendeth it selfe against that which is the maine of the Controuersie betweene vs and the Church of Rome about this point of free-will which not to bring downe so farre as from their master Lumbard who was Bishop of Paris about 400. yeares since and the schoolemen after him Thomas Scotus Bonaventure Byel c. we will gather out of the present doctrine of the Church of Rome as it is auouched in the councell of Trent the Romish Catechisme and Bellarmine himselfe from whence I take out the maine difference betweene vs into these two positions The former that a man hath free-will left in his nature in things pertaining to saluation although not without all grace The cursed Conventicle curseth those that dare affirme free-will since the fall to be lost or extinct and that they meane in spirituall things the other Canons following shew Bellarmine affirmeth that men vnregenerate onely by the strength of nature without the speciall aid of God can so performe a morall good that they sinne not in it if they be without the molestation of some more grieuous temptation The latter conclusion of the Romish Church is that in the first moment of conuersion the will of man concurreth and cooperateth with the grace of God by a certaine kind of naturall power not wrought but helped by the holy Ghost The counsell curseth those that denie that free-will cooperateth with God and that it disposeth not it selfe to obtaine the grace of iustification or is meerely passiue Bellarmine in the tenth cap. of the former booke affirmeth that where the Scriptures call vs coworkers with God so often is the facultie of our freewill affirmed in such works and that not as it is wrought by the grace of God but as it is in it selfe and in it own nature Such testimonies out of their writers were infinite but these as cleare inough shall suffice We teach the cleane contrarie vpon good grounds of which I will giue a tast briefly 1. If we be wholly flesh which is flat contrarie to the spirit then can there be no preparation to iustification before regeneration That which is contrarie maketh no preparation to the contrarie the flesh cannot make way but necessarily resisteth the spirit neither can any contrarie bring forth the effect of the contrarie no more then darknesse can either prepare to light or produce the effects of light 2. If before conuersion we be dead in trespasses and sinnes then can we rot away and consume in them but to know or performe the things of spirituall life we no more can then a man naturally dead can prepare himselfe vnto or performe the actions of naturall life But howsoeuer the Papists mince the matter and say we are like the Samaritane left halfe dead and wounded the Scripture saith plaine inough that we are dead in trespasses and like Lazarus dead and rotting in the graue to which purpose we might amplifie those many phrases of our quickning of our raysing of our new birth and of our new creation I hope they will blush to say that a thing not created can dispose it selfe to the creation of it selfe 3. In how many places are these things laid out of the power of man as where it is said ●e imagineth onely euill continually that is naturally Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse can a blackmoore change his skinne or a leopard his spottes can euill trees bring forth good fruits how can ye speake well beeing euill I knowe saith Ieremie it is not in man to dispose his way and we are not able to thinke any thing of our selues and much lesse are we able to thinke any thing well and yet steppeth out a Popish spirit and saith yes by Saint Pauls leaue we can both thinke well and will well and dispose well and doe well without the speciall aide of God let them beleeue him that preferre Romish traditions before Apostolicall writings 4. How often is our whole conuersion for the beginning and proceeding the first middle and last of it attributed wholly to the grace of God None commeth to the Sonne vnlesse the Father drawe him drawe me and we will runne after thee without mee yee can doe nothing It is he that worketh both to will and to doe If the Sonne set you free ye are free indeede conuert vs Lord and we shall be conuerted we are his workemanshippe created to good works I will giue an heart of flesh But I may not be infinite in testimonies 5. We haue heard that the whole vnderstanding is corrupted and therefore much more the will which is nothing but a facultie of willing or ●illing that which is first vnderstood and iudged of in the minde yea indeede if either be worse then other it is the will hence is that speach the good that I see and approoue I doe not by the benefit of vnderstanding men often see their dutie but by rebellion of will performe it not although it want not direction sufficient Thus the obstinacie of the will of the Gentiles oppugned and darkened the light of the mind in them of whome Paul speaketh that they knewe God but glorified him not as God The maine obiections are briefly answered alreadie and we will spend no more time in them but come to the second point or degree of this corruption The second degree of corruption of will is that it serueth lusts and diuerse pleasures Sinnes are called lusts because they be indeede so many inordinate desires against the commandement And pleasures because of the imagination of them that commit sinne beeing carried away with the present pleasure and sweetnesse of them And diuerse pleasures 1. because they are many in themselues and though euerie man yeeld not seruice to euery one yet some serue this and some that and euery wicked man some Samson will be a slaue to his Dalilah in the lust of the flesh and vncleannesse Nabal to his wealth in the lust of the eye Herod to his vaine glorie in the lust of pride of life 2. because they diuersly carrie men euen as a man in the sea is carried backeward and forward and hurryed with diuerse waues for there is no stabilitie nor ●etlednes but in the feare of God the wicked are like the raging sea and there is no peace to them saith the Lord but as slaues hauing serued one lust they must presently be at the call and command of another and if it command they must obey although it call to the cleane contrarie course Vse 1. These two degrees lead vs further into our miserie then before when we see the will yet more rebellious then the minde was blind and yet more then
the partie is recouered and safe we speake truth although he be not attained to the second degree which is a perfect recouerie of all parts to former soundnesse which shall certainely follow the former because it is not another recouerie but a further degree of soundnesse the principles of which he hath alreadie attained and is in possession of euen so is our case God looking vpon vs in his Christ accepteth vs as perfectly saued our selues are freed from the imputation and damnation of sinne and so perfectly iustified our reliques of sinne by the spirit of God are daily mortified and so our selues in good measure sanctified it must needes be granted that our saluation is in our hands and that sinne death hell and the graue cannot hinder vs from the highest degree of it nay rather we must certainely expect death the graue and the iudgement day to set vs in full fruition of our perfect glorie Vse 1. Whosoeuer would be saued hereafter must be saued here a Saint hereafter a Saint here the gate of heauen is here below and the suburbs of that great citie into which the iust doe enter Christ is the doore by him we must enter into the paradise of God Laie hold on him with his merits by the beleefe of thy soule thou hast gotten saluation alreadie and in not beleeuing in him thou art condemned alreadie Fearefull is the estate of men that neuer acquaint themselues with saluation before the end of their daies and then they will be other men and dreame of another condition But Saints in heauen must be the same men they are vpon earth and change not their condition but onely in obtaining a further degree of grace glorie holinesse life and happinesse which they had beginnings of euen in this life they purchased heauen while they were vpon earth treasured in heauen while they wandred in the earth conuersed in heauen while they liued vpon the face of the earth Alas how few are acquainted with such a life as this which is the beginning of all happinesse and saluation We call men to forsake the world in affection as the Saints in heauen haue actually done to flie the corruptions that are in the world through lust as they haue put off all corruptions and sinnefull lusts to haue no fellowship with the vngodly ones of the world no more then they whose sole conuerse is with God and his Saints But how knocke we as they say at deafe mens doores the most haue no portion no treasure but below and therefore their hearts must be below where their treasure is As for the auoiding of sinne whereby as the elect of God they might shine in vnblameable and vndefiled conuersation and so reprooue the darknesse of this euill world they say they cannot be Saints here where all men are sinners and because they cannot be so their lusts are let loose and are at all manner of libertie As for the societie of the vngodly they must goe out of the world if they would auoid it it is inough if in heauen after the finall separation they haue nothing to doe with them but while they are in earth mixed with them they settle themselues to runne with them into all riot and excesse of wickednesse Is this now a beginning of the kingdome of heauen or is it not rather a course that tendeth to nothing else but destruction And as we call men from earth earthly courses and companie so also we call them vnto the beginnings of fellowship with God with the Saints of God to a perpetuall Sabboath or rest from sinne and a constant and cheerefull performing before him all the parts of his worship and seruice both publike and priuate because in the perfection of these consisteth the heauenly life of the Saints But how vnwelcome is our counsell it seemeth to seeke their torment before their time How many be there that cannot abide the least shew of heauenly life in themselues how many scorne it in others and how many who thinke it more necessarie then vtterly to neglect it yet are content to cast the care of it into their last accounts as if they were loth to be saued before they be dead or as if they would leape into the perfect libertie of the sonnes of God at one iumpe But let it be well remembred that he that is not saued before death shall neuer be saued after death and that he that findeth not heauen vpon earth looseth it for euer The Apostle maketh two degrees of the vision of God the former is as in a mirror or glasse and that is here vpon earth in the word Sacraments and meanes of his worshippe the latter is face to face in heauen when the kingdome in regard of these meanes shall be giuen vp to the Father and concludeth that we must knowe in part before we can come to knowe as we are knowne Vse 2. Whosoeuer would haue assurance of saluation let him haue recourse to his sanctification and change of heart and life doest thou finde that the word hath beene powerfull to subdue thy rebellion and frame thy soule to a sanctified condition and thy outward man to an holy conuersation in part here is an assurance and seale of saluation vpon which thou maist ground good hopes for this small measure of sanctification is an earnest pennie confirming all the bargaine and couenant of God with thee and it shall get daily strength and encrease vntill it bring thee to meete God in that celestiall Sion where shall be no faintnesse but where all the remainders of sinne and rellickes of corruption and mortalitie shall be put off In this regard is the worke of our sanctification called the first fruits of the spirit because as the offring of the first fruits was the sanctification of the whole field so these first fruits of our sanctification giue assured hope of the full glorification of the whole man both in soule and bodie This blessed change is called also the first resurrection which whosoeuer haue part in haue alreadie escaped the second death It contracteth the Christian soule as a pure spouse vnto Iesus Christ so as it may with boldnesse and much reioycing expect the mariage of the lambe Where come to be controlled those blind hopes of presumptuous men they are perswaded of their saluation and as sure as any man can be by hope of life eternall yea but where is your assurance oh no I am not sure nor I thinke can any man be but I haue a good hope but whence is this hope of yours because I loue God aboue all I will doe no man any wrong I will pay euerie man his owne I serue God and goe to Church am good to the poore that a man would verily thinke he had a Papist in hand who will be saued by his good deedes rather then one that euer heard of the doctrine of free iustification by faith in the sonne of God But the doctrine we haue
sanctified persons are iustified Hence is it that we read this inheritance to be entayled to them Act. 20.32 Inheritance among them that are sanctified by which note mocking Ismael is cast out close hypocrites lurking in the bosome of the Church and open profane Esaus the childrens bread is not cast to such dogges Read for this 1. Cor. 6.10.11 3. This doctrine teacheth vs to set our hearts vpon this inheritance a man that hath any possibilitie to befall him cannot keepe his mind but it will be running after it insomuch as many wicked children in regard of their patrimonie will enquire into their fathers yeares and grow sicke of their mothers and it is ordinarie that such as looke for windfalls by decease will be feeding their hearts with their hopes so should it be with vs who may without iniurie to our Father long after our inheritance in heauen and as wee see men take no content in any part of the earth no nor in the whole comparable to that peece or portion which is their owne euen so should not we suffer our hearts so to wander after earth or earthly things as that we settle our contentment any where but where our inheritance and our treasure is The which desire if it filled our hearts three worthy fruits of it would manifest themselues through our liues 1. It would moderate the eagar cares of this life and would not suffer men to become drudges or sell themselues as slaues vnto the earth for he that taketh himselfe to be an heyre of heauen is well inough prouided and cared for alreadie his father hath left him so well as he need not basely shift for himselfe 2. It would content the minde with any present condition This it was which contented Abraham Isaac and Iacob with their continuall pilgrimage vpon earth because they looked for a better citie when as once this tooke vp their hearts they could cheerefully sit themselues downe in their tents they could dwell in strange countries contentedly they could receiue the promises a farre off thankfully they could goe on in obedience to God what way soeuer he called readily and in all this they did not for the present desire a better outward condition but thought that the best portion which their heauenly Father allotted out vnto them So we see how men expecting reuersions are content for the time to liue bare and goe neere the wind and swallow vp their present wants in hope of that to which they are heyres they thinke the time of their further enlargement is not farre off and this helpeth well to put off the present 3. It would strengthen the heart in induring chastisments and corrections vnder Gods hand or from mans for they know they are heyres indeede but as yet in their minoritie and for the time must be put vnder Tutors and the rodde as well as others but the time commeth which will bring their lands into their owne hand and then they shall be at their owne hand and haue libertie inough and herewith may the children of God raise their hearts from vnder the heauiest afflictions 4. Set thy selfe well to keepe this inheritance and the deeds of it laie vp the couenant safe in the closet of thy soule hide the word which is the indenture of God passing it vnto thee in the midst of thy heart let not Satan or any cheater defraud thee of it There are many vnthriftie prodigalls in the world who no sooner can their lands or portion come within their hands but by riotous and vnthriftie courses they soone become their owne executors but let it be written to euery child of God Art thou borne by thy second birth to such faire demeanes art thou heyre to such a goodly birth-right oh prize it aboue all that can be giuen in exchange for it Beware of profane Esaus speach What is this birthright to mee No rather take vp Naboths answer to King Ahab who would haue gone beyond him for his patrimonie God forbid that I should sell the inheritance of my Fathers God forbid that I should for this or that sinfull pleasure this or that messe of pottage or trifling commodity or whatsoeuer coyne hauing Satans superscription vpon it sell mine inheritance 5. This doctrine affoardeth sundrie grounds of most sweet consolation 1. The meanest beleeuer is a great heire and that to all Gods best blessings a truth which fewe see as they might and ought and therefore faile of that comfort which God hath put into their hands Obiect Alas wil a poore despised soule say I am lesse then the least mercie of God and am not worthy to gather the crummes of mercie vnder the Lords table Answ. Exercise thy selfe in the duties of faith repentance invocation loue of God and men and thou shalt not want a worthinesse to bring the inheritance home vnto thee for neither doth the Lord immediately giue it thee nor canst thou immediately receiue it but by Christ the Mediator who hath worthinesse inough at his hand thou hast it Obiect But I am a weake creature and vnable to receiue it at his hand Answ. Ye● but goe on sincerely in a good course let it be neuer so weakely or faintly he will not breake a bruised ●eede comfort thy selfe for be it thou canst not as thou wouldst know and apprehend him yet he can knowe and apprehend thee and this will be thy saluation 2. Gods children beeing such heires they cannot but in the meane time be well prouided for till their patrimonie fall We know that great heires in their minoritie are well and honestly maintained their fathers beeing rich and kinde will not suffer them to want things fit for them and what they want in the purse they haue in their education and if they be any way scanted for the present they shall afterward find it with much aduantage 3. In any want thou beeing thy fathers heire mayst boldly repaire to thy Father with good hope to speede in any request which he seeth fit for thee and making for thy good and he will be so farre from sending thee away emptie that it will be his ioy that thou canst discerne and make request for things good for thee this wil● be a prevailing motiue with him oh this is mine heire I may not denie him that which is so good for him 4. Whatsoeuer losse may befall thee beeing the child of God thou loosest not thine inheritance Thou maist loose thy libertie thy living thy friends thy life but thine inheritance is reserued in the heauens thou shalt cease sooner to be a man then an heire yea when other by death loose all thou shalt by it be entred into thy full estate This expectation of a durable substance caused the Saints to endure with ioy the spoyling of their goods Heb. 10.34 5. In the enduring of afflictions comfort thy selfe herein thy Father may frowne chide buffet and scourge thee but he will neuer disinherit thee Other fathers sometimes out
commanded not done of faith Answ. No for though both be condemned yet the iudgement of the latter is farre easier and the stripes farre fewer for it is easier for some then for others of them who are all condemned Vse 1. There can therefore be no iustification by workes as the Church of Rome teacheth if they can be onely the fruits of persons alreadie iustified 2. Neuer content thy selfe that thou doest good workes of charitie liberalitie mercie or deuotion publike or priuate vnlesse thou hast a ground in thy selfe that they are fruits of sauing faith which hath purified thy heart and so brought thy person and worke into acceptance for before this time let them seeme in thine eies neuer so bright glistring yet are they no other in Gods then shining darkenesse and beautifull deformities It is not thy honest meaning nor diligent deuotions nor good intents which bring acceptance to a worke but faith working by loue deceiue not thy selfe in that thou hast done that which thou wast commanded for it is the presence or absence of faith that putteth a difference in the same worke done by vertue of the same word Caine offereth sacrifice to the Lord so doth Abel Phineas is zealous for the Lord so is Iehu Peter weepeth for his sinne against Christ so doth Iudas also here is the same worke but not the same acceptance where is the difference now By faith Abel offered a better sacrifice then Caine and if Peters faith had failed so had his fact too as well as Iudases If thou prayest pray in faith beleeue and thou shalt receiue If thou hearest mingle the word with faith else it becommeth vnprofitable and so in other dutyes 3. This sheweth that numbers are vncapable of the doctrine of good works and therefore Ministers must be wise to propound it in the due season of it and first labour in rooting faith in mens hearts these fruits will easily rise Doctr. 2. Professors of the Gospel are aboue all other not only called to the practise of good workes but to be the first and forwardest yea lights and leaders vnto others 1. In regard of their present estate they are the children of their heauenly Father and therefore must resemble him and so walke as they may testifie themselues of this houshold of faith for what a dishonour were it to their high calling to be exceeded and outstripped of Infidells They are Gods workmanship created in Iesus Christ vnto good workes They haue receiued the spirit of grace which onely can make them fruitfull as good trees laden with the fruits of righteousnesse They are inlightened in the knowledge of Iesus Christ wherein it were a shame to be either idle or vnfruitfull and not to shine out as the lights of the world in holding forth the word of life in all godly conuersation Secondly that such as beleeue may be blamelesse and so put to silence the ignorance of foolish men for this is Satans olde policie whereby in all ages he hath turned away the hearts of many from the truth and whereof though he be discouered he disarmeth not himselfe at this day that when the Apostles themselues and the teachers in the Church succeeding them deliuered the truth of the doctrine of iustification by faith alone without the workes of the Law he would alwaies thrust in some professors into the Church that vpon this occasion did ruine the grace of God into wantonnesse and then raise a generall slaunder of the doctrine as though it were onely a doctrine of libertie euen as at this day the Papists slaunder vs as enemies to good works onely because we thrust them out of Christs chaire Now to auoid this ordinarie scandall the professors of this same doctrine must especially for the honour of God and his Gospel and their profession of it be carefull to become patterns in their liues of the faith they doe professe The fruit whereof shall extend it selfe yet further then the stopping of the enemies mouth euen to the winning of them or others that are yet without who by such godly conuersation shall be by little and little enclined to like the word and so be conuerted to the profession and practise of it at the length Nay this fruit is not onely reaped by others without but no small benefit redoundeth to the professors themselues who hereby make their owne election sure and iustifie to themselues and others that faith which iustifieth them before God 3. The danger of the neglect of this dutie vrgeth it he that knoweth his masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with moe stripes Tribulation and anguish shall be to euery sinner first to the Iew and then to the Gentile Why first to the Iewe because they were the professed people of God professors of the law possessors of the oracles hearers of the Prophets but despisers of the meanes of saluation they therefore shall be first and heauiest iudged Vse 1. If we professe our selues by faith to be set into Christ we may examine the truth of it hereby that then we cannot but be fruitfull trees of righteousnes beeing remooued into so sound a stocke and fruitfull a soile Whosoeuer then are not much and often in the workes of godlines loue and mercie may well suspect their estate 2. Whatsoeuer things are honest pure iust and of good report let beleeuers thinke on these things let them thinke that such precepts belong properly to them it beeing a truth that all exhortations in Scripture are first and directly made to those who in some measure are freed to acceptable thogh not full performance of the same whereby let beleeuers prouoke themselues to more diligence seeing vnbeleeuers cannot tell what way to beginne in them 3. Carrie a diligent eye and watch ouer thy life and euery action of it before thou entrest into any action examine whether it will glorifie God and dignifie thy profession or expose it to contempt and make that holy way euill spoken of 4. Watch opportunities to do good take them when they are offred before they slippe thee yea seeke them that thou maist euer haue something between thy hands to glorifie God and his Gospel withal 5. Craue wisedom at the hands of God wait at her gates heare counsell from her mouth lay vp the rules of the word for the ordering of thy heart and life thus shalt thou be able not onely to passe euerie day more innocently then other but become also a clearer patterne of weldoing and more conformable to this rule of our holy Apostle But how may Christ come and find a number of lazie Christians in his vinyard to whom he may say why stand ye idle all day long why did you not promise me you would goe into my vineyard work and do ye not or are you in so goodly a field and can you want worke haue yee done all your husbandrie about home in your own hearts
his genealogie Phares the incestuous sonne of Iudah and Bathsheba that was the wife of Vriah And in these vses these genealogies may be still with sobrietie read taught and heard Quest. What is it then the Apostle condemneth Answ. Not any such as serue to the edification of the faith of the Church whereof this of Christ a publicke person and Sauiour of the world is the cheife of all neither the keeping of the descent so farre as serueth to the preseruation of right iustice and ciuill peace In which respect Kings and Nobles yea and other inferiour persons may enquire into that right which their ancestors haue made their due and must so hold their genealogie as they may hold their right against all claimes But here is condemned all that recounting of kinred and petegree in all sorts of men which proceedeth from a vaine minde and tendeth to worldly pompe and vaine-glorie For this was the sinne of the Iewish teachers that whereas now by Christs appearance all distinction of families was in religious respect abrogated and now was no such need of genealogie as before vnlesse it were before Infidells and such as were not perswaded of the right descent of Christ yet they out of their pride would be much and often in extolling of their tribes and kinred and so not only for these accessories let goe the substance of religion but as if they would build vp that politie again which now was abolished to the great hurt of their hearers would much busie themselues in such fruitles discourses These genealogies must Titus withstand By brawling and contentions about the law are meant those hote contentions which yet many Iewes and Iudaizing teachers did trouble the puritie of religion withall striuing still to bring backe againe the obseruation of Iewish ceremonies such as was circumcision differences of meats and daies and garments as though Christ were not yet come wherewith the Church in that tender age was much molested But now our Apostle pointeth to another end of the law namely to institute the life contain in obedience and lead vnto Christ but not to shadow Christ to come as before who by his comming hath put an end to all such ceremonies Of all these endlesse questions idle genealogies and brabling contentions the Apostle giueth this censure that although they may seeme to haue a puffing kind of knowledge and be stood for as for fire and water as if the whole substance of religion were placed in them yet are they vnprofitable and vaine farre from instruction and edification of men in true godlines yea indeed great hindrances thereto as taking vp time and labour and wits of men which should better be imploied which as we said is a forceable reason to auoid and represse them Hitherto the meaning Doctr. 1. The Deuil is readie in the purest Churches to corrupt the puritie of doctrine by stirring needles endles questions either in substance of doctrine or in ceremonies wherein men will be as hote as if all religion were placed in them And thus shall the peace of the Church be troubled the free passage of the Gospel hindred the godly teachers greeued and all for things vnnecessarie and idle things sometimes so farre from profiting the Church as that they much hinder it and obscure the doctrine of true religion All this appeareth plainely in this our example The malicious man is euer sowing tares in Gods feild and if he cannot extinguish all the light of Christian doctrine if he cannot pull downe as he would the substance of truth he will doe what he can he will make dissention in smaller matters whereby many shall be offended many cast backe that were comming on and many other kept back who might come on in time So when the Disciples of Christ and Iohn consented in the substance of doctrine yet could he make them quarrell in washings and fastings and such ceremonies Paul and Barnabas consented in substance of doctrine yet for a verie trifle and indifferent thing the companie or leauing behind of Marke were so exasperated and deuided that they did seperate one from the other And if he be so forceable in good men that he taketh the aduantage of flesh in them much more doth he effectually worke in vnconscionable men who are all flesh and all corruption Easie were it in all ages to discouer this eminent note of Satans mallice in false teachers namely that they were euer more earnest in vrging and constraining of men in their owne deuises then to the duties of the morall law Christ charged the Pharisies that they placed more religion in washing potts cuppes and beddes then in keeping Gods commandements These Iewish teachers Act. 15.29 are branded that they troubled the Church with words and combred mens minds euen in the Apostles daies with things dead and vnnecessarie with circumcision and ceremonie And is not Gods iudgement come vpon the Papists at this day to the vttermost who haue called backe all these Iewish ceremonies againe and so long contended for them that they haue lost the substance of pure religion and the truth hath betaken her to her wings Their schoole diuinitie is turned away from Christs bodie to his garments their maine disputes are taken vp about workes of preparation free-will merit of workes workes super errogatorie purgatorie differences of garments meats dayes vowes pilgrimages which are such things as Christ wrapped vp together and left in his graue when himselfe rose againe And their doctrinall diuinitie to the people as we read it in the postills but schoole distinctions and legends fables or of latter times bitternes against the first restorers of religion who oppose their former false doctrines And for their heat in vrging these things aboue all the commandements of God none is so blind but may see that they more seuerely punish him that fasteth not their lent then such as are manslayers more him that keepeth not one of their Saints dayes then him that keepeth neuer a Sabboath thorough the yeare that they make it a greater sinne for some sorts of men to marie a wife then to liue in secret filthinesse all their liues long Thus the deuil hauing gotten in his head easily thrusteth in all his bodie and if he get a Church or people at this aduantage that he can comber mens mindes with needlesse things and stirre vp brabbling contentions about vnprofitable and vaine deuises of men he is in great hope and probabilitie ere long to put out that light which he hath al●eadie so farre darkned Vse Let vs acknowledge the worke of Satan when we see men who are all of one sound iudgement in the substance of religion and so should be brethren to be at such hote strife and opposition for matter of ceremonie and for things in comparison vaine and vnprofitable 2. Let vs not count it a strange or new thing to be too much offended at it 3. Let vs pray the Lord who can rebuke Satan to dissolue such
such doctrine as Ministers may not teach Nature desireth to change pasture often and the eare so farre as vncircumcised is Athenian itching after nouelties children would be in newe lessons before the old be halfe learned so Christians cannot away to dwell in that pure doctrine which would lead them in true godlinesse whereby often by the iudgement of God they forfeit their faithfull Pastors and in Gods wrath haue hirelings set ouer them that feede them with wind they desire fine words and profound matter and are wearie of plaine doctrines and they haue a pickt language and vaine speculations they aske and haue But no sooner is Manna loathed but quailes are rained but with vengeance it is flesh but a meat that rotteth in the mouth euen betweene the teeth Vse 3. In priuate conferences man with man auoid these vaine questions that all our priuate cōmunication may tend to edification fathers must teach their children with Abraham in Gods wayes children must depend vpon their fathers and aske them of such things see Psal. 44.1 Mothers must teach their young children the Scriptures as Eunicha did Timothie Masters of familyes should make their families petty schooles and nurseries of diuinitie we reade how Apollos a great man proceeded a doctor in Aquilaes house our priuate houses should be Churches or Chappels therefore such idle and vaine questions should find neither time nor place in these our priuate Churches Vers. 10. Reiect him that is an heretike after once or twise admonition 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe The fittest dependance of these words with the former I conceiue to be this Paul hauing exhorted Titus both to teach the truth according to godlinesse as also to resist all such foolish and vaine doctrine as might do hurt in the Church of God Titus might obiect This indeede is my dutie wherein I entend to exercise my selfe with diligence but when I haue laboured and done all I can many there are who will not yeeld to the truth nor submit themselues to this ordinance of God how am I to carrie my selfe toward such Ans. The Apostle carefull to preuent all such things as he foresaw might be hurtfull to the Church giueth direction in these two verses how to proceede in this businesse also The former giuing direction and laying downe the dutie and the latter enforcing the same by moment of reason In the former are three things to be considered 1. the persons against whom Titus is to deale here called heretikes 2. The direction how he is to behaue himselfe towards them reiect them 3. The orderly manner of proceeding after once or twise admonition The latter verse containeth the reason of this seueritie because such persons are incurable and incorrigible which is prooued by two arguments 1. such a one is subuerted that is turned or cast off the foundation 2. he sinneth against his owne conscience beeing damned of his owne selfe that is he wittingly and willingly spurneth against that truth of which his conscience is by the former admonition convinced For the first who is an Heretike Answ. He that professing Christ yet inuenteth or maintaineth any errour against the foundation of religion and that with obstinacie For the opening of which description three things are to be noted First that an heretike must professe Christ. For Iewes Turkes or Pagans cannot properly be Heretikes although they fight against Christ and all religion in all the foundations of it These are more properly called Heathens Infidells and Atheists without God in the world But the person whom Titus hath here to deale withall is one within the Church and cast off from a foundation vpon which he seemed to stand Secondly he must maintaine an error in doctrine for if men erre in practise they are rather hypocrites and profane wretches and this error must be fundamentall that is ouerturning some ground or article of our faith for it will not make a man an heretike not to beleeue the fables of Saint Francis although Pope Benedict 4. so determine Nay if a man should hold something wherein the Scriptures are his aduersarie as that an oath is not to be taken and warre is not to be made by Christians such a one were in a grosse error but not presently sunke into heresie But if any man shall maintaine iustification by works a daily sacrifice for satisfaction for sinne or any other righteousnesse or worke to stand before God in besides Christ the defence of this will easily prooue heresie And hereby the Popish doctrine is clearely prooued hereticall Thirdly this error must be willfully and obstinatly mainteined for he must reiect admonition and striue after conuiction and this properly maketh an heretike For euery one that holdeth an hereticall opinion is not an heretike a man may by simplicitie leuitie or rashnes or gentlenes of nature be drawne into such an opinion but if admonished of his error he contend not but is readie to yeeld vp himselfe to the perswasion of truth he is no heretike For these three things make vp an heretike 1. error 2. conuiction 3. obstinacie or weddednes to his opinion Hence first note by the way what an heauie thing we charge him with whom we brand with the title of an heretike for we charge him to be one who resteth not in the wholsome word but maintaineth such an error as hath turned him off his foundation one that contemneth the iudgement of the Church despiseth wholsome admonitions continueth in his damnable opinion against the light of his minde against the check and accusation of his conscience and beeing condemned of himselfe heapeth vp sinne vpon sinne All which censure if we shall hastily passe we shall hardly auoid rash iudgement for if euery error in diuinitie presently made an heretike the Apostles themselues had beene no other then heretiks who at first were so erronious and ignorant in many things of the greatest moment in religion What a false witnesse then hath that Apostate Church of Rome passed against ours and all the reformed Churches whose teachers in all their sermons and writings stile vs by no other name then heretikes whereas they cannot shew wherein they haue conuinced vs to haue departed from the Catholike and Apostolike faith and much lesse that we haue with pertinacie and against our owne consciences maintained any falsehood Indeed if our rule be their Canon law which iudgeth him an heretike who speaketh against the Romish Church or obeyeth not whatsoeuer the Pope decreeth we cannot auoid that name Or if we should teach as they doe and that after conuiction that the Saints in heauen are mediators by their merit and prayer that prayer is to be made to Saints and dead men that we can be iustified by the merit of our workes by fasting prayer pilgrimage or any such obseruance that concupisence is no sinne in the regenerate that a man can perfectly fulfill the law that Saint Dominike
as if he be a leader a seducer or wilfull in his error as also of the degree of his offence and error as if it be a direct ouerthrowe of the foundation or an high blasphemie or such as may turne to the ouerthrowe of pure religion established or the disturbance of publike peace or otherwise according to the nature of the fact may and ought to proceede to a proportionall degree of punishment whether by mulcts or imprisonment or banishment yea in the extremitie of euill to the extreame remedie euen of death it selfe for there is no remedie but if a soare prooue a gangreene it must be cut off True it is that the charitie of the Church must aime at the cutting off of errors rather then mens persons but if the nature of the error so require euen the last punishment by death as it is in the hand of the Magistrate so will it be most iust and proportionall That it is in the power of the Magistrate to cut off incurable and invincible heretiks is cleare 1. by precept Deut. 13.5 of slaying the false Prophet and Deut. 17.5 of stoning the idolater 2. by example of Moses Exod. 32.35 slaying 3000. of the Leuites for the idolatrie of the calfe of Helias 1. Kin. 18.40 who slewe 400. of Baals Priests when there was no Magistrate to do it so of Iosias 2. King 23.6 of Iehu 2. King 10.25 yea wicked Nebuchadnezzar made a decree that whosoeuer blasphemed Daniels God should die the death The same might easily be prooued out of Imperiall constitutions and iudgements of Fathers and Councels Now that this is the fittest punishment for some heretikes we may gather by the instance of Arrius whom Constantine the great banished indeed but how much better had it beene for the world if he had taken such a monster from the face of the earth how much better had that sparkle beene with himselfe extinct before it had come to set the whole world on fire and if he that reuileth his Prince deserueth death as a traitor how much more he that blasphemeth the name of God or any part of his truth Obiect But Christ biddeth vs beware of false Prophets but not to slay them yea wisheth to suffer both to growe together till the haruest And Paul neuer giueth other commandement concerning them then to avoid them and withdrawe our selues from them And Musculus expounding the place in 1. Cor. 5. concerning the incestuous person hath these words he commaundeth not to kill him but to remooue him from among them Answ. 1. Some such places are such precepts as are di●ected vnto the Churches whose weapons are spirituall and hath no such power of life and death ouer the bodie or outward man 2. Some other institute and informe the Pastors of the Churches how to carrie themselues towards such offenders as this in hand and the like to Timothie but intend not to speake any thing of the Magistrates dutie So Bullinger affirmeth that here Paul enformeth Titus and not Sergius Paulus how to carrie himselfe towards an incurable and desperate heretike 3. These precepts were deliuered when there was no Christian Magistrate to performe the dutie and therefore the Chuches were more carefully vrged vnto theirs 4. They must all be vnderstood with respect 1. of the qualitie of the persons and offences which must be distinguished 2. of the Church as whether such tares can be plucked vp without apparant hurt of the Church for else they must be let stand and so must that place be meant least ye also plucke vp the good wheat and this is agreeable also to the doctrine of the auncient who aduised rather to tollerate some lesser euill then that a greater good should be hindered or a greater euill occasioned Vse 1. Seeing excommunication is such a grieuous censure it is not to be inflicted rashly or for trif●les but delibe●ately in matters of waight and much moment yea heauily and not without inward griefe that the Church is vrged to such seueritie For 1. if it be a greiuous thing to be disfraunchized and cast out of a wel ordered common wealth how much more to be cast out of the church the commonwealth of Israel Which made some of minde that this censure is not to be vsed but in such cases as wherein the Iewish lawe condemned to the death the which strictnes in that it may seeme to confound the Iewish Iudiciall lawe with Euangelicall discipline howsoeuer I will not maintaine yet surely as Musculus well noteth I thinke it ought not to be vsed but in such cases as more expressely shut out of the kingdome of heauen and such as the Apostle mentioneth 1. Cor. 6. because it is a declaration of that which is by God done in heauen who for a non apparance or not paiment of a trifling fee thrusteth not out of heauen Secondly it must be vsed as a last and desperate remedy euen as the Surgeon trieth all gentle meanes before launcing seating or cutting off Thirdly it must be done with griefe and sorrowe of the whole Church euen as a member in the bodie cannot be cut off without extreame paine to the whole This is a fitter affection then anger couetousnesse or any other such sordid and base selfe seeking in dispensing the iudgements of the Lord. Fourthly It must be done verie sparingly in wisedome and moderation whereof we haue a notable patterne in the Church of Geneva wherein such was the power of the word and wisedome of the Pastors in restoring offenders by the spirit of meekenesse that in the space of whole tenne yeares as M. Beza himselfe confesseth onely two persons were stricken with this censure Now of the fearefull abuse of this censure whereby it is daily turned into an idle scarecrow sold and bought at a vile price I neede not speake any thing seeing the thing it selfe speaketh so loud would God it were as well reformed as it is by a number of the godly learned discouered Vse 2. If heretikes must be avoided then it followeth that Protestants ought to avoid all communion and mixture with hereticall Churches persons namely with that hereticall Apostaticall Church of Rome and the members of it To prooue it an hereticall Synagogue I shall not neede to spend time after those two famous lights our learned D. Whitakers and Reynolds the former of whome hath prooued that the present Church of Rome is no particular Church but hereticall and ouerturning the foundation and grounds of faith as by eighteene seuerall points he instanceth and concludeth that whosoeuer would be saued must necessarily forsake her as an antichristian and Satanicall synagogue The other in his fifth Thesis of his learned booke defendeth that the Romane Church is neither Catholike nor a sound member of the Catholike Church in explaining the tearmes whereof he saith that the newe Romane Church is tainted with a gangrene of most pestilent heresies which euerie
deeds denie him but this is not that which is in our question which is of diuersitie in religion and not of infidelitie or hypocrisie where the same religion is professed the former is a barre of marriage but not the latter Obiect But then you will say that such marriages made ought to be dissolued● I answer 1. that marriage is an externall thing and properly hindereth not faith and saluation of it selfe and 2. that it is not against christianitie to keepe contracts made with Turks and heathen 3. Besides in the Apostles dayes the faithfull beeing married to an infidell he was not to put her away 1. Cor. 7.12 if she would abide with him But as M. Zanchius after he had learnedly discussed this question and propounded reasons out of the Scriptures Fathers Councels and ciuill lawe that such mariages ought to be disanulled yet doubtfully leaueth it to the iudgement of the Church so will not I be too bold in defining this great question Vers. 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe Hauing in the former verse shewed both the persons to be proceeded against called heretikes and the manner of proceeding against them namely after once or twice admonition to auoid them Now in this verse our Apostle discendeth to giue some reasons of this seueritie which are two in number First he is such a one as is subuerted or turned off the foundation Secondly he wittingly and willingly spurneth against the knowne truth sparkling and shining in his conscience and therefore is remedilesse and desperatly incurable For the former By beeing peruerted or turned off the foundation is not to be meant any falling off from the foundation of Gods election which abideth so sure as that not any one of Gods elect shall euer fall away as Hymencus and Philetus did but a falling off from some fundamentall points of Christian religion held and maintained by the Church whereof this partie yet seemeth a member As for example The maine foundation aymed at in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles is to teach that Iesus Christ God and man is the alone and perfect Sauiour of his Church and whosoeuer teacheth or holdeth any doctrine tending to ouerthrowe either of his natures or anie of his offices he is truely said to be turned off that foundation Againe the maine grounds of all our religion for matter either of faith or manners are the commandements of the law and promises of the Gospel and whosoeuer either directly or by direct consequent ouerthroweth any of the commandements of God or articles of our faith he is truly said to be turned off the foundation Now this cannot euery error in religion doe For to keepe our Apostles allegorie comparing the profession of religion to the building of a great house some errors are lesser and as it were besides the foundation such as may be thought as the breaking downe of some window some greater as the breaking downe of some side of the house and yet the house standeth although much defaced But some are such as ouerturne the whole house and rase the verie foundations of all such as is the doctrine of iustification by workes which point alone putteth men quite out of their estate in Christ and shutteth them out of the kingdome of heauen Gal. 5.2.4 Whence might be obserued how needfull a thing it is for euery one to be well grounded in points of Catechisme which is a thing most dangerously neglected by the most and beeing so grounded to looke well to themselues least they be turned off from them and so depart from the holy commandements for thus the end of such would be far worse then the beginning But we will come to the latter degree of this sinne Hee sinneth beeing damned of himselfe that is he wilfully sinneth or addeth sinne to sinne not only by maintaining an errour but 1. against the light of the word shining in his conscience 2. against the wholesome admonition of his faithfull pastor yea and of the whole Church the voice of which he will not heare 3. euen against besides other convictions that of his owne conscience whereby he is resolued to take part with the wickednesse of his heart and persist an heretike in his heresie This man if he had no other iudge is iudged and condemned of himselfe and sheweth that he is damned of himselfe Obiect But there is no man so monstrous and gracelesse that will persist in error against the light of his conscience Answ. Yes and this commeth partly by the naturall impuritie of conscience which can excuse not only intentions vnwarrantable but euen sinnes committed against the law As in the young man Mar. 10.20 who boasted that he though he had liued in the breach of all had kept all the commandements from his youth and 2. partly by the increase of that corruption through a sencelesse numbednesse and vnfeelingnes which springeth from a custome of sinne and 3. especially by the iust iudgement of God who striketh them with a reprobate sence by withdrawing euen the very light of nature from those who would faine put it out or deteine it in vnrighteousnesse and by deliuering them vp to strong delusions that they might beleeue lies who would not embrace the truth in the loue of it Now he that is such a wilfull offender and knowne so to be must be auoided But it is hard will some say to know any man thus to sinne Answ. Because we speake not now of the iudgement of certaintie which is proper to God whereby he alone can iudge of the finall estate of a man but only of the iudgement of humane wisedome which is giuen to the Church who iudgeth only for the present by the present fruits it is not so hard to doe for such a man hath beene brought to conference to the tryall of the Scriptures to the analogie of faith and to the admonition of the Church by which his reasons haue bin refelled his iudgement informed his conscience conuinced himselfe forewarned of his danger but he obstinately hath refused all these good meanes and persisteth in his error Where note 1. What patience the Lord vseth in his iust proceedings euen against the worst men whom he will not haue condemned nor cast out of the Church vpon suspicions or surmises no nor presently after an open sinne is committed but their must be a time between wherein the Church must rightly informe her selfe that she may know the nature and degree of the sinne before she turne her to any censure or sentence Yea and further the sinne beeing apparant she must not reiect any till all good meanes of reclaiming haue beene in vaine vsed Which may teach vs that to heape or hasten excommunications ipso facto or as it is often before the partie can come to the knowledge or suspition of any such proceeding is to swarue from the rules of the word and those weightie
shamefull thing it were to marrie a wife in hope to beget children by another mans helpe what an equall thing it is that he who doth not his dutie in his owne person but by a deputie should also goe to heauen by a deputie but not in his owne person as merily and wittily Iodocus a famous French preacher witnessed by Espenceus From all which I may conclude this reason with the words of a Papist that seeing neither nature is the principle or ground of nonresidencie for that is contented with a little nor yet grace which is contented with lesse therefore the corruption of the heart of man is the cheefe counseller and perswader vnto it Neither is his reason to be neglected for though a man saith he dare liue a nonresident yet would he not willingly die one And as for the matter of substitution whereon the whole frame of nonresidencie is set as on a foundation he saith he seeth not why one man might not haue as well an hundreth liuings as one by this plea for he might get substitutes inough neither doth he see any reason but women might also be capable of Church liuings by this plea as well as men for they also might performe the duties by substitutes But I remit the reader to the author as also to other of our later Diuines who haue largely and learnedly handled the same argument 5. We may adde hereunto the example of the Preists vnder the law who were fixed in their courses neere the Temple and had their chambers and roomes adioyned vnto the Temple that they might waite on their offices and be readie for their seruices and there is no reason why the Ministers of the Gospel should not now as diligently waite on their office as they vnder the law vnlesse we will say that the standing Ministerie of the new Testament is not so necessarie not so certaine as that walking Ministerie of the old Let Ministers therefore see that the occasions of leauing their flockes for a time be vrgent and weightie not pretences proceeding from couetousnesse nor ambition nor any other sinister respect neither let them dare to remooue themselues no not for a while but for some occasions which are more necessarie then the attending of the flocke for howsoeuer they may shroud themselues by the protection of humane laws yet in the court of conscience only such necessary and weighty occasions wil beare plea and giue a man leaue for a time to be absent 2. As it must not be a small matter that must draw a Minister from his charge so if such weightie occasions fall out as require the gifts of some men to be otherwise employed for the time for the greater good of the Church then in his priuate charge then we see what must be our rule If Titus be remooued an Artemas or Tychicus a faithfull and furnished man must be sent in his roome that while the whole bodie is cared for no particular member be lost or neglected Where also great and noble men may be put in minde what a grieuous sinne they bring vpon themselues when they call Ministers from their charges into their houses or vnto the seas or any such employment and in the meane time neglect to prouide sufficiently for their flockes and the sinne is the greater in that they might be ordinarily better serued by such as haue no charges and why should they not rather send to the Vniuersities then to the Churches if they did not chuse to wrong them both when as yet no necessitie vrgeth or forceth them hereunto Vers. 13. Bring Zenas the expounder of the lawe and Apollos on their iourney diligently that they lacke nothing In this verse is contained the second priuate busines which is enioyned Titus commanding him that he should set forward on their iourney both Zenas set out by his profession an expounder of the law and Apollos and this he should doe 1. by accompanying them in some part of their way and 2. by prouiding that they wanted no necessarie for their long iourney being to saile from Creta in Grecia For the persons of Zenas and Apollos they were Apostolike men of notable gifts for the Ministerie The former is here said to be by profession an expounder of the law that is of Mos●s lawe as is most likely rather then the ciuill lawe but howsoeuer he was not like our lawyers he ioyned himselfe with Apollos and was a poore man and had wanted but for the churches contribution For Apollos we reade of him Act. 18.24 that he was borne at Alexandria that he was an eloquent man mightie in the Scriptures and feruent in the spirit yea so powerfull in his doctrine as that of some he was accounted not inferiour to the cheife Apostles for as some said they were Pauls so some cleaued to Apollos as other some to Cephas and therefore both of them were worthy to be respected by Titus who therefore must performe vnto them this part of Christian curtesie to lead them forth on their way Doctr. Whence note that Christianitie hindreth not but commendeth and enioyneth ciuill curtesie and all kinde of humanitie For 1. whatsoeuer pertaineth to loue and good report that must beleeuers thinke on and doe Philip. 4. Secondly the wisedome which is from aboue is gentle peaceable full of mercie and good fruits Iames. 3.17 Thirdly those many commandements that Christians should salute and greete one an other and that with an holy kisse 1. Thes. 5.26 called by Peter the kisse of loue vsuall in those East countries by which outward testimonie they declared mutuall loue and kindnesse Fourthly outward curtesie is a necessarie vertue euen for the maintaining of the bond of Christian peace yea availeth much for the nourishing and encreasing the communion of Saints and societie with Gods people Fifthly how disgracefull a thing were it for the profession of Christ that such as professe faith in the Lord Iesus should shew themselues inhumane or hoggish who should be as lambes and little children for such are they who haue entred into the kingdome of Christ as the Prophet witnesseth Let this point therefore be well thought of that as faith and loue cannot be separate so must good conscience and good manners goe together Now for this speciall branch of curtesie to bring the seruants of God and the Church on in their iourney it is from an inferiour to a superiour a dutie of honour as we see in Barzillai 2. Sam. 19.36 who would go ouer Iordan with king Dauid set him so farre on his way to Ierusalem then returne back to Gilead And of the equall to the equall it is a dutie of kindnes and towards the teacher of both and as it seemeth was verie common among beleeuers in the Apostles times Thus we read how the Elders of the Church of Ephesus accompanied Paul to the ship Act. 20.38 so the disciples whom he found at Tyrus with their wiues and children accompanied
imputation of the Church of Rome against our doctrine who beare the world in hand that our religion is a destroyer of good workes and an enemie vnto all charitable actions whereas we call for them as fruits of the Gosspel as ornaments to our calling as pledges of our election as witnesses of our sound faith and graces and as the very way which God hath appointed to walke to heauen in Our religion permitteth not any to stand idle in the vinyard we say let him not eate that will not worke yea we teach a necessitie of good workes i● beleeuers as well as the Papists do howsoeuer not as causes of saluation and iustification yet as inseparable companions of liuely and sauing faith only let Christ hold his place and they shall not set them higher then wee and let them giue them no more then the Scriptures doe and we will giue them neuer a whit lesse Vse 2. Seeing by good workes we glorifie God edifie our brethren and doe our selues so much good let vs be prouoked to the diligent practise thereof Neither let any man thinke himselfe exempt from this doctrine be he neuer so poore for we are not of the Popish beleefe who thinke that only such great and glorious workes as building Churches Colledges high-waies or giuing goods and Lands to the Church or almes deeds and such like deserue the name of good workes but euery man hath a double calling namely the generall calling of a Christian and the speciall calling of life wherein God hath set him and there is neuer a dutie of either of these be it neuer so base or seruill if performed in saith and obedience but it is a good worke and pleasing vnto God But what shall we say of them who by open wicked life professe contempt of God and his word hatred of the light and the bringers of it that cast backe yea pull backe many others who might be brought on and so accustome themselues to graceles courses as they can no more change them then the Ethiopian his skin certainly these although they also will bragge of a good faith to God-ward yet is it no better then the deuils haue who shall as soone be saued by their faith as these by this if timely they repent not That they be not vnfruitfull These words containe in them the reason of the former precept wherin by an excellent metaphor or borrowed speach he prouoketh Christians to the practise of good workes The metaphor implieth that as the Church is Gods orchard or garden and his Ministers are his planters and waterers so the faithfull are the trees euen trees of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord and planted by the riuers of waters that they might bring forth their fruits in due season And teacheth that true Christianitie is not a barren but a fruitfull profession vnto which Christians are euery where called In Ezech. 47.12 we haue a notable resemblance of those manifold fruits which by the power of the Gospell should be by beleeuers produced in the Church of the new Testament The vision was of waters which runne from the Temple and from vnder the threshold of the sanctuarie And wheresoeuer these waters should runne they should cause admirable fruitfulnesse in so much as on both sides of the riuer shall grow all kind of fruitfull trees whose leafe shall not fade and their fruite shall not falle These waters are the Gospel which issue from vnder the threshold that is from Christ the doore typified by that bewtifull gate of the Temple from the Temple at Ierusalem these waters were with swift current to runne not only ouer Iudea but all the world in a short space hence was the Church mightily increased for though these waters runne into the dead sea wherein if we beleeue Histories abideth no liuing thing yet such a quickning power they carrie with them as euen there euery thing shall liue such as were dead in trespasses and sinnes are hereby quickned and become trees of righteousnesse greene and flourishing yea and constantly fruitfull in all godly conuersation And this is the same which our Sauiour noteth Ioh. 15.1 that his Father is the husbandman himselfe is the vine Christians are the branches of that vine who if they be sound his Father purgeth that they may bring forth more fruite teaching vs hereby that it is the Lords scope and ayme that Christians should be abundant in fruits beseeming their profession The Apostle Paul accordingly exhorteth the Philippians to be much in goodnesse to abound in loue in knowledge and in all iudgement yea to be filled with fruits of righteousnesse which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glorie and praise of God And the same Apostle calleth rich men to be rich in good workes Now this beeing so necessarie a dutie to which euery Christian is euery where called we will for the further clearing of it consider these three points 1. The conditions of this fruitfulnesse 2. the reasons to prouoke vnto it 3. the hindrances of it vnto which we will adde and annex some profitable vse First the conditions of this fruitfulnesse are these 1. Euery Christian must be fruitfull for euery fruitlesse branch is cut downe and made fewell for the fire not only Churchmen or the Clergie as we say nor only rich men nor men only of lesser imployment but euery man high and low rich or poore learned or vnlearned must testifie himselfe a Christian by answerable fruits this word euery branch admitteth of no exception but is as a bush which stoppeth euery gap 2. Euery Christian must bring forth good fruite Matth. 7.17 Euery good tree bringeth forth good fruite and euery tree which bringeth not forth good fruit shall be hewen downe and cast into the fire and therefore the fruits which are called for at our hands are called in respect of the efficient fruits of the spirit in respect of the instrument fruits of faith and in respect of their qualitie good fruits acceptable to God and profitable to men 3. This fruitfulnes must proceede from good causes for first the tree must be good for men gather not grapes of thistles 2. he must haue a good roote that is he must be set and abide in Christ Ioh. 15.4 abide in me the branch cannot beare fruit of it selfe vnlesse it abide in the vine 3. he must draw thence good sappe and iuyce through the fellowship and communion of Christ his death and resurrection without which we can doe nothing 4. he must haue the spirit of the Sonne to be a principall agent in the setting and ripening of these fruites for they must be fruites of the spirit 5. he must haue the loue of God within him constraning him which will be as the sunne helping on these fruits to their perfection 6. he must haue good endes in his eie namely Gods glorie and mans good Philip. 1.11 4. Euerie Christian must bring forth much fruit and not for clusters
from the Apostles mouth that for the same all good men approoued him and wished him all good proceedings And hence we may note 1. what is the vse of this most auncient and approoued custome of saluting one another by writing namely to signifie a louing remembrance of the partie saluted with an earnest desire of their good and welfare for that is a common affection to all salutations to signifie such a desire And yet there is great difference betweene one salutation and an other which riseth from the difference of the persons saluting Whereof some are meerely ciuill men without all religion and these could not reach to wish their friends the best blessings although they wished them the best they could reach as the ordinarie formes both of the Greekes and Latines testifie Others haue more in them then humanitie in that they apprehend the higher graces of God in his Christ reuealed in the Gospel and hauing their owne parts therein they most freely feelingly in their salutations wish their friends to partake with them first in such graces as may accompanie their saluation and then in all that outward prosperitie that shall make for their good and these are the salutations of the Apostles and of good Christians they be no court holy water nor salutare libenter from teeth outward but heartie and vnfained testimonies of loue much making for the encrease of mutuall loue yea and the strengthening of the bond of the communion of Saints Now if this be the vse of salutations we may see how grossely the Papists are besotted in martyring that I may vse Luthers word the Angels salutation to Marie For 1. whereas a salutation is a ciuil thing they haue turned this into a deuout praier 2. not to Marie whome the words concerned alone but vnto God at whose hands the repeating of it meriteth pardon of many sinnes 3. whereas salutation is to be done to a partie present among vs this saluteth one absent 4. whereas it was the angels dutie to carrie this message once to Marie they thrust euerie man and woman into the Angels office to carrie the same message euerie moment as if it were a thing not alreadie accomplished 5. what further good can they wish to Marie now in heauen But they haue despised the wisedome of God and what wisedom can be in them 2. Note what a great incouragement and comfort it is for the godly to haue the hearts the commendations the good words and wishes of them that fea●e God it is an excellent support against the disgraces of the times and reproaches of vngodly men when Gods people reach vnto a man the right hand of fellowship little neede he care for the causles curses and reproaches of the wicked that hath the blessing of the Saints with him although therefore we haue another rule to walke by then the iudgement of men and in doing our dutie we may say with the Apostle I care not for the iudgement of any man yet it will be good for a man to conceiue how he is esteemed of the best to whom ordinarily God giueth a spirit of discerning that if it be possible with a good conscience he may ioyne a good name which is not onely sweete as a pretious oyntment but will supple and asswage such wounds and stroakes as the ●●icked will be still inflicting Neither can these two things be easily disioyned the approouing of the heart vnto God and of the wayes vnto Gods people 3. Note from the Apostles example what a good office it is to be a peace-maker and to knit the members of the bodie of Christ close together this argueth men to be endued with that wisedome which is from aboue the properties whereof are to be pure peaceable full of mercie and good fruits especially the Ministers of God must account it a part of their office not onely to reconcile man to God but euen man to man And let euerie man conceiue and remember that our Lord Iesus maketh it one of the pathes and rules of true happinesse when he saith blessed are the peacemakers 4. Note how the Saints of God ought to embrace one another and especially such as are of the best desert in the Church for their labours and gifts euen as the Saints with Paul did Titus many of whom doubtlesse had neuer seene his face but had heard of his faithfulnesse euen such should be our loue to the godly as we should affect them that are absent as well as present and wherein we can testifie that affection to those whom we haue heard well although by face we neuer knew them Greete them that loue vs in the faith Quest. May we not salute any but beleeuers Answ. There is a common salutation which is due from euery man to euery man and that is a ciuill curtesie and kind of honour which is to be shewed to all men our Sauiour Christ commanded his Disciples whensoeuer they entred into an house they should salute the same Matth. 10.12 and gaue them a forme of salutation which they must vse whether the sonne of peace were there or no saying peace be to this house Yea if men be our enemies and will not vouchsafe to salute vs againe yet we must not omit this branch of courteous behauiour towards them Matth. 5.47 If yee be freindly to your brethren only what singular thing doe yee doe not euen the Publicans the same The word tra●slated be freindly is the same with this here signifieth such freindship as was in those countries testified by salutations and embracings which euen the worst could well inough performe to their freinds but Christ sheweth that we must doe more we must not expect to see whether we be saluted first but kindly salute our enemies although we be not saluted againe And the reason is because it was counted a signe of hatred not to salute a man 2. Sam. 13.22 Absolon said neither good nor bad to his brother for Absolon hated Amnon Whereas Christians on the contrarie must thinke on such things as may preuent offence procure loue and winne if it may be euen estran●ed affections But yet howsoeuer this salutation is generally due from equall to equall yet there are some excepted cases in the Scripture 1. such a one as lyeth in some open sinne and hateth to be reformed not yeelding to godly counsell out of the word a superiour here may forbeare to speake to such a one by way of correction but so as he must haue care that he aime at the fault and not at the person and make it so known to the person that he testifieth not the hatred of his person but of his sinne Thus Dauid banished Absolon from the court for killing Amnon 2. There are open enemies of God and of his truth of his Church who haue sold themselues to maligne it such sworne enemies wee may not thus embrace 2. Ioh. 10. If any man bring not this doctrine
indeed his bowells were not straitned toward Titus and the Church committed vnto him seeing he wisheth the verie fountaine of grace to be opened vnto them for this word as we shewed in the beginning signifieth both the free loue and fauour of God towards vs in Christ as also all other spirituall blessings flowing from that fountaine such as are remission of sinnes reconciliation with God iustification sanctification life eternall and all the meanes tending thereunto 3. That beeing an Apostolicall prayer it might also be a meanes of obtaining and conuaying vpon them the grace requested and although he had made the same request for them before yet it is no vaine repetition for partly he prayeth for the encrease and further feeling of this grace for them and partly teacheth vs thereby that it is the only blessing to be prayed for the cheife if not only grace which our selues are to labour for and which we must by all meanes endeauour that others may haue their portion in with vs. 4. To shew that all our greeting must beginne and end in grace and that our formes of salutation should fauour of grace and not be profane gracelesse or formall as the most are 5. Beeing a Minister of grace he beginneth and endeth with it and teacheth Ministers that their first and last action of the day and of their Ministeriall dutie should be the commending of their people vnto the grace of God in their praiers and besides if ordinarie letters much more other more weightie actions of men must be vndertaken and performed with praier and praise Secondly in that he saith Grace be with you he sheweth that howsoeuer this Epistle was inscribed to Titus alone yet was it intended to be of common vse to the whole Church and therefore we haue not vnfitly applied the most of the doctrines to the vse not of Ministers only but of all sorts of men so farre as they concerned them Last of all in that he saith grace be with you all he meaneth all the elect and only they for only they are effectuall partakers of this sauing grace called often elsewhere the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the treasurie and fountaine of it The wicked are indeede endued with excellent gifts of Gods spirit but they want this grace of God in Christ which is the only foundation of our election to the grace of life of our effectuall vocation to the grace of God wherein we stand and of that assured hope of that heauenly inheritance which he hath purchased of his grace By this grace we are happily reconciled vnto God and adopted to be heyres of grace hereby also we haue receiued the word of grace which is made fruitfull to the planting and watering of all other sauing graces in vs and so to the furthering and finishing of the whole worke of our saluation in glorie This grace be euer with vs and all them that loue the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ to their immortalitie Amen So shall it be And so be it To God the Father of lights and to Iesus Christ that eternall word together with that annoynting euen the blessed spirit the only one true and wise God who hath happily led vs through these labours be all praise and glorie in all the Churches for euermore Amen A SHORT VIEWE OF SVCH Doctrines as are enlarged with their reasons and vses A Man may sometimes lawfully change his name Pag. 4. Such names are to be giuen to children as may put them in minde of some good dutie Pag. 4 The name of a seruant of God is full of honour Pag. 6 The chiefe offices in the Church are for the service of it Pag. 10 God hath some who are elect and other are not Pag. 11 The elect haue a faith by themselues Pag. 13 The faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought by the ministerie of the word Pag. 16 The doctrine of the Gospell is truth it selfe Pag. 18 The knowledge of the truth is the ground of faith Pag. 19 The truth intertained in truth frameth the heart vnto godlinesse Pag. 21 The ende of the ministerie is to drawe vp mens mindes from earth to heauen Pag. 24 True faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene attended with many other graces especially with hope Pag. 27 Life eternall is the beleeuers by free promise Pag. 30 God is truth itselfe and cannot lie Pag. 33 The free loue of God appeareth in that whatsoeuer he doth for his elect in time the same he decreeth before all time Pag. 39 The doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times Pag. 43 The Lord effecteth all his purposes and promises in due season Pag. 44 Saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Pag. 48 The office of preaching is an office of trust Pag. 52 Whosoeuer entreth into the ministerie must finde himselfe pressed by the calling and commandement of God Pag. 53 Ministers may be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the disposition and necessitie of their people require Pag. 55 Gods calling to grace is free and powerfull Pag. 56 Ministers ought to be spirituall fathers in begetting children to God Pag. 58 Faith is one and the same in all Gods elect Pag. 62 Euerie man must be carefull 1. whome 2. to what 3. how farre he commendeth an other Pag. 65 All are not naturall sonnes that are so accounted 66 The free and euerlasting grace of God is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall Pag. 69 True peace is the fruit of Gods grace and mercie Pag. 71 Whosoeuer is called to labour in the Church must by all his care further the worke of the Lord. Pag. 75 He that would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through his calling must euer haue the ende of it in his eie Pag. 76 Churches must not be condemned as no Churches for want of some lawes or gouerment if they ioyne in the profession of the truth Pag. 80 No Church is hastely brought to perfection Pag. 81 There is continuall bending of good ordinances euen in the best estate of the Church Pag. 83 Such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie there is where a Church is planted that without it religion cannot possibly thriue or continue Pag. 86 The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Evangelist but Apostolicall direction must guide him Pag. 89 How able soeuer a man is to teach if he be of a scandalous life he is vnfit to be chosen a Minister Pag. 92 Marriage of Ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God Pag. 97 Polygamie was euer blameworthy euen in the best Pag. 103 He that would reforme others abroad must begin at home Pag. 110 To haue the blessing of gracious children thou must beginne at religion Pag. 111 The carriage of a mans children is a great credit or disgrace to his profession especially of the Minister Pag. 113 Riot is an hatefull vice to be
auoided Pag. 114 Children ought to be obedient to their parents Pag. 117 Lewdnesse of children is often from want of gouernment in parents Pag. 118 Euery Minister ought to keepe the Lords watch ouer his flocke Pag. 121 A Bishop ouer others must first watch ouer himselfe Pag. 123 Euery Minister beeing Gods steward must haue a fit calling and properties answerable to that office Pag. 124 The nearer a man is to God in place the more carefull must he be of his carriage Pag. 129 Frowardnesse is euery where of euill report but in a Minister intollerable Pag. 131 Hastinesse to anger a foule blot in a Minister Pag. 134 To be giuen to wine odious in all especially in a Minister Pag. 140 A Minister of all men may not be a quareller or a man of a word and a blow Pag. 145 Couetousnesse in a Minister is a most base sinne Pag. 148 There is much filthy lucre in the world which euery Christian must abhorre Pag. 152 The verie phrase of Scripture speaking of riches should pull our hearts from them Pag. 155 The Minister for the honour of his place must not only be free from common vices but also shine in positiue vertues Pag. 159 The poorest minister must and may be harborous Pag. 163 Wisedome most necessarie to a minister Why. Pag. 172 Righteous dealing a shining ornament in a minister Pag. 175 Ministers must be arraied with roabes of holinesse Pag. 176 A temperate and equall course necessarie to a minister Pag. 179 The word of God is most certaine and infallible Pag. 182 The word is euery way fitted for the instruction of the faithfull Pag. 188 Euery man ought to be a learner of holy doctrine Pag. 194 The men of God in speaking of the word haue euer set some marke of excellencie vpon it Pag. 196 Ministers must set an edge on their doctrine by exhortation Pag. 197 Exhortation is then powerfull when it is grounded on wholesome doctrine Pag. 198 Ministers must resist resisters of the truth Pag. 199 A Minister ought to be a man of knowledge Pag. 201 The Scriptures fully furnish the man of God to euery ministeriall dutie Pag. 203 Errour in life is commonly a ground of errour in doctrine Pag. 206 They spend much labour in vaine who are disobedient to the doctrine themselues teach Pag. 207 The greater the danger is the playner must reproofe be Pag. 215 The Arch-seducers of the world are they of the circumcision who ioyne faith and workes in the act of iustification Pag. 217 Faithfull teachers must timely oppose themselues against seducers Pag. 220 Seducers secretly infect and creepe into houses Pag. 227 Errour is exceeding infectious Pag. 229 An heart set vpon gaine will feed it selfe by falshood Pag. 230 A minister may be plaine in his reproofes Pag. 233 A minister must ioyne wisedome to playnes in reproouing Pag. 234 The Gentiles had their Prophets so called to witnesse against their impietie Pag. 238 It is not simply vnlawfull to alleadge the saying of a profane man in a sermon Pag. 242 Falsehood in word or deed is condemned by the verie light of nature Pag. 245 The Scriptures call brutish men by the name of beasts Pag. 249 Many men are so degenerate that they haue cut themselues from the account of men Pag. 250 A life led in idlenesse is condemned by the light of nature and of the Scriptures Pag. 253 Idlenesse and intemperance are seldome disioyned Pag. 256 Euery truth is Gods and must be receiued whosoeuer is the instrument of it Pag. 258 Ministers must not be discouraged though they be to deale with a wretched and brutish people Pag. 259 No reproofe may be vngrounded but the cause must be iust and knowne so to be Pag. 261 Euery reproofe must be tempered to the nature of the sinne Pag. 263 The sharpest censure in the Church must ayme at the recouerie of offenders Pag. 265 Christians must not content themselues with spirituall life vnlesse it be attended with health and soundnesse Pag. 267 A speciall meanes of soundnesse of faith is to shut the eares against fables and fancies of men Pag. 274 A fearefull iudgement of God it is to be turned away from the truth Pag. 277 The Scriptures account Christians pure but not Puritans Pag. 283 All indifferent things must be vsed in 1. faith 2. loue 3. sobrietie Pag. 291 Divinitie of Scripture is prooued by discouering the inward thoughts of wicked men Pag. 309 A wicked man is euery way a most odious person Pag. 311 Before naturall vncleanesse be purged away euery thing is vncleane to a man Pag. 313 There will be euer hypocrites in the Church Pag. 317 There be many characters by which hypocrites may be known discouered Pag. 320 No example of man must turne vs out of a godly course Pag. 331 Ministers must feede their people with wholesome doctrine Pag. 333 Wholesome doctrine must be applyed to the seuerall ages and conditions of men Pag. 339 Olde men must first be taught their dutie why Pag. 342 Sobrietie especially enioyned vnto old men Pag. 345 Elder men ought to carrie a seemely grauitie through their course Pag. 346 Moderation of lusts and passions is a most seemely grace in an old man Pag. 347 Soundnes of faith especially required in the Elder Pag. 351 Euerie man must learne to repaire the decay of nature with soundnes of grace Pag. 352 Soundnesse of loue is iustly called for of olde men Pag. 355 Sound patience is more especially commended to the elder sort Pag. 358 Women are as straitly bound to the meanes of their saluation as men Pag. 362 The generall rule for womens behauiour is that it must become holinesse Pag. 365 False accusing specially forbidden to women Pag. 368 Drunkennesse in elder women a most hatefull sinne Pag. 370 It is a note of corruption to yeeld our selues seruants to the creatures made to serue vs. Pag. 371 Euerie Christian woman must cal on others with her selfe to a godly course Pag. 373 The fruits of the Christian carriage of the Elder women must appeare in the younger Pag. 375 Christian women must loue their husbands Pag. 377 Women ought to loue their children and how Pag. 382 A discreet carriage is a beautifull grace in a young woman Pag. 384 Chastity is an essential mariage dutie Pag. 385 Women ought to keep their own houses Pag. 389 Goodnes is required in women what it is how Pag. 390 Women must be subiect to their husbands wherein and why Pag. 391 Profession without practise causeth the holy name of God to be blasphemed Pag. 398 Young men must order their wayes by the word Pag. 404 The Pastor must sometimes entreate where he may command Pag. 408 Sobrietie is a vertue fitly commended to young men Pag. 410 Consent of good life and holy doctrine make a sweete harmonie in a Minister Pag. 413 It is possible for a man by grace to liue vnblameably Pag. 416 Faithfull Ministers shall not want withstanders Pag. 417 Resisters of
14.4 Whatsoeuer shall plea● for the entertainment of lusts a Christian must resolutely denie them all No way can profiting in grace be better shewed then by this resistance Heb. 11.13 1. Pet. 2.11 Rom. 13.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. king 22.24 Rom. 8.13 Onely our religion teacheth true mortification 2. king 5.12 Gal. 6 14. Plato of Diogenes Act. 17.18 Doctrine of grace teacheth not onely to abstaine from euill but doe good Eph. 4. Act. 26.18 vers 20. Rom. 6.17 The Gospel bringeth saluation but looketh for an answerable returne and recompence ● The proper worke of sobrietie 1. in things inward Coloss. 2.23 1. Cor. 4. ● Iam. 3.17 2. in outward Luk. 21.34 Iam. 1. ● Eccles. 2.1 1. Cor. 7.29 II. Rules of practise 1. The proper worke of iustice 2. Rules of practise Luk. 13.36 Eph. 4.28 Motiues to practise these rules 1. The proper work of pietie 2. Rules of practise Ier. 9.23 Gal. 6.10 Many sorts of men bewray the vngodlines of their hearts Reasons to 〈◊〉 to the exercise of godlines Godlines must be exercised in this present world The right ende of this present life is to learne the way to a better Philip 3.13 Spes pro re sperata meton adiunct Blessed hope why so called Christ called a mightie God Why. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gospel receiued in truth lifteth vp the heart to waite for Christs second appearing Reasons Eph. 2.12 Philip. 3.20 Triall of our selues by the former doctrin Cant. 2.5 Cant. 2.17 To this expectation of Christ are required 1. a sound ground Lumbard 3. sent distinct 26. 2. sound qualities which are fowre Heb. 6.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa. 28.16 Prou. 13.12 Rev. 19.7 1. Pet. 5.4 1. Ioh. 3.3 3. sound effects which are also foure Heb. 12.2 Numb 14.7.10 vers 23. Act. 23.8 Motiues to the expectation of Christ. Matth. 24.46 Luk. 12.46 Ignoratur vnus dies vt observentur multi Curiosi ad cognoscendam vitam alienam desidiosi sunt ad corrigendā suam August confess lib. 10. The expectation of Christ is a notable meanes to prouoke men to Christian duties 1. To attempt them Eccles. 11.9 Act. 3.18 19. Act. 24.26 Rev. 14.7 2. To hold on in them with chearefulnes Act. 24.15.16 1. ●im 6.14 2. Tim. 4 1. 1. Pet 3 4. 1. Cor. 16.13 3. To hold out in them with perseueranc● Iude 22. Luk. 22.29 Iam. 5.8 In that most perfidious Councel of Constance 1. Cor 9.7.10 Prou. 27.18 2. Cor. 9 6. Heb. 11.26 Psal. 27.13 Christs glorie shall shine out in full brightnes at his second appearing Matth 25.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Thess. 1.10 Coloss. 3.4 Philip. 3.21 1. Pet. 1.11 Act. 26.22 We must neuer speake of God or Christ but in a weightie matter and reuerent manner Reasons Ier. 10.6 Act. 17.24 25. How Christ gaue himselfe for vs. Ioh. 10.18 Luk. 2.7 There can be now no other Priest nor sacrifice besides Christ hi●s●lfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 H●b 10 ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ioh. 17.19 Heb. 7.23 2● 26. The Popish distinction of Priests into primarie and secondarie ouerthrowne vpon Hebr. 7. Hebr. 9.11 12. Mors necessarius modus oblationis tolle mortem tollis oblationem The Popish distinction of oblation of primarie an● commemoratiue confuted Sess. 6. cap. 2. Christ gaue himself therfore wholly both bodie and soule and why Isa. 53.11.9 Christs death and passion was voluntarie seeing he gaue himselfe Ioh. 10.17 18. 1. Tim. 6.13 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church not for euery particular man Reasons Expiatio intercessio sunt partes inseparabiles sa●●rdotij Christi Psal. 32.1 Eph. 2.25 Eph. 5. How Christ is said to reconcile the world to God Tractat. 87 ●n Ioh. How Christ is said to die for all men 2. Cor 5.21 Christ suffered not for his owne sinne for he was giuen for vs. Christus praeter ●a bona quae suis laboribus peperit nobis meru●t etiam sibi corporis gloriam nominis exaltationem Bellar. l. 5. de Chro. cap. 9. We must receiue this gift and make our best benefit of it We must giue our selues to him who gaue himselfe for vs. Seeing Christ hath giuen himselfe there neede no other satisfaction for sinne Christ redeemed his church from the captiuitie of sinne ●wo waies How so short a suffering could redeeme from infinite euills Mortem re non tempore infinitam tolleravit Christus Before this redemption we were bōdslaues vnder sinne death 2. Pet. 2.19 Ioh. 8.34 Sinne resembleth a tyrant many waies Rom. 5.21 Miserable is their estate who a●e out of Christ because they haue no part in this redemption Deale with sin as with a tyrant The Sonne hauing set vs free great is our freedome Bellarm. lib. 4. de poenit cap. 2. Concil Trid. sess 6 c. 14. Heb. 9.12 26 Christs satisfaction is not partiall but freeth vs from all iniquitie both guilt and punishment Matth. 18. Isa. 52.3 Mors piorum est medicinalis non poenalis He hath well deserued al our loue who hath paied all our debt Beware of sin which bringeth back the former bondage Full consolation to the godly from the former doctrine Christ purgeth his people two waies Hebr. 9.14 Redemption sanctification are inseparable companions 1. Cor. 1.31 Exod. 30.18 1. king 7.23 1. Ioh. 5.6 There must needs be much vncleannesse where is neede of continuall clensing Philip. 3.12 Sinne is neuer pardoned but where it is purged Rom. 6.2 Ioh. 13. Meanes of our purging to be vsed Ezek. 36. Psal. 51. 1. Thess. 4.4 2. Cor. 7.1 Malac. 3.2 Zach. 13.1 Motiues to vse carefully the former meanes Luk. 1.71 Iun. in Exod. 19.5 Deut. 7. The Church is Gods peculiar sundrie waies Cant. 6.7 Num● 23.9 Eph. 3.15 Ferendo non feriendo Qui in Christū credunt linguis loquuntur novis Bern. de ascen dom Ier. 2 3. Many consolations to Gods people from the former doctrine Psal. 105.14 We must liue vnto the Lord whose we are 1. Pet. 2 9.1● Deut. ●4 1 ● Deut. 7. Loue the Saints because they are Gods peculiar Phil 4.18 19. Zach. 2.3 cap. 3.8 The worker must be good before the worke can be so August epist. 120. Honorato Rom. 3.10 A good worker cannot but bring forth good works Ioh. 15.1 Heb. 9.14 1. Ioh. 1.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What vertues must attend zeale to guide it aright Act. 19. How necessarie zeale is to a good worke Psal. 119.136.158 Ier. 9.2 Ezek. 9.4 Nehem. 23.22 Numb 25. Ioh. 2.14.17 The effects of zeale about the effecting of good things Rom. 12.12 Act. 20.24 Philip. 2.17 Rom. 9. Sundrie sorts of men bewray the want of zeale Act 23.12 see cap. 1.9 ● Tim. 3.16 All proofes reproofes must be fetched frō the Scriptures The word must be so handled as the authoritie of it be preserued Reas. 1. Cor. 14.25 Isa. 6.6 Matth. 7. Prov. 17.27 Act. 26. A grieuous sin to despise Gods ministers R●as●●s 2. Cor. 3.9 Rev. 6.2 Rev. 1.20 Exod. 16.7
4.8 Application The Popish religion was most without for the shew whereas none was within their walls Many Protestants are priuatly religious but little breaketh out True religion is little beholding to either Doctrine must be both true truly dealt with Ier. 14.13 14. Matth. 24.11 What people must pray for in comming to the word 2. Pet. 2.1 Iude 4. 2. Thess. 2. Prou. 1.30 2. Tim. 2.23 Foolish questions of Papists Proofe hereof the learned haue in Doct. Whitak de Eccles quaest 5. cap. 8. Rom. 1.22 Vse of Genealogies in the Scriptures Satan seeketh to corrupt the purest churches by bringing in needles questions Act. 15.39 Ministers must teach things profitable and resist the contrarie Motiues to the former dutie Dan. 12.8 People must not desire such doctrine as the Minister may not teach Per verba legis legem oppugnat Ambr. Aliud est haereticus aliud h●ereticis cred●ns August de vt●l credendi ad Honorat An heauie imputation to charge any man to be an heretike Errare possum haereticus esse nolo To charge a man to be a Puri●ane is to call him an heretike There alwaies haue bin and shall be heresies in the Church why Ad hoc sunt haereses vt ●ides habendo tentationem habeat probationē Tertul. de praescript advers haeret cap. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Thess. 2. Per eos qui ecclesiam discerpserunt recta fidei dogmata emerserunt Euagr lib. 1. cap. 9. M Greenam Meanes to auoid heresie Psal. 25. Scripturarum ignoratio haerese peperit Chrysost in homil de Lazaro Patriarchae haereticorum Philosophi Tertul. This Mr. Ardesty confessed in S. Maries was the persuasion of the Papists and the chiefe ground of his owne resolution to fly the land and become a Preist ●uen heretikes ●nd enemies to the Church must be louingly dealt with Gal. 6.1 2. Cor. 13.2 How much more freinds and bretheren 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ioh. 9.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui neque in svnedria recipiebantur religionis obtent● quòd cum incircisis 〈◊〉 vitae cons●etudinem haberent Beza Iosephus explaneth the cause of this contention betweene the Iewes and Samaritane● which was most ●ote about 140. yeares afore Christ. lib. an●iquit cap. 6. Excommunication how farre it stretcheth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ius diuinum quod est ex gratia non tollit ius humanum quod est ex naturali ratione Thom. Aquin. 2.2 quest 10. art 11. Excōmunicatio est gladius non hostis perimentis sed medici sanantis One chief end of the Churches censures is to preserue holy things from contempt Epist ad Florin Euseb. lib. 5. c. 19. Reasons to auoid excommunicate persons ●● in regard of the party 2. In regard of the Church Eph. 5.3 1. Culpae contagio 2. Tim. 2.17 Zozom lib. 7. c. 7. 2. Poenae communio Numb 16.26 3 Exempli monitio How farre priuate Christians are to avoid open sinners not excōmunicate 1. Cor. 5.11 ●●pp polit eccl●s l. 1. c. 19. It is lawfull to put heretikes to death ●rrores intersiciendi non homines August Duritia vincenda non suadenda Tertull. Vetus Christiana ecclesia contra Samo●aten● haereticum opē auxilium A●driani Imperatoris quamvis ethnici imploravit Non dicit vt tolleretur è medio sed è medio vestrum Muscul. Apostolum informat quomodo se gerat in officio erga haereticum deploratum si ad S●igium Pa●lum aut praesidem aliquem scripsisset hinc procul dubio praescripsisset officium Bulling decad 2. serm 8. In regimine humano aliqua mala recte tollerantur ne vel aliqua bona impediantur vel mala pe●ora incurrantur Aquin. 2.2.4.10 art 11. Excommunication must not be inflicted for tri●●es Declaratio occultioris facti in coelo Beza de praesbyt excom 1. Cor. 5.2 In ecclesia Genevensi toto decen●io non plutes duobus proprie excommunicati Beza de Praesbyt De eccles qu. 6. cap. 3. Recens Romana ecclesia laborat pestiferarum haeresium gangrena pernagante nuper quaqua ver●um latius longe plurimorum fidem subvertent● pag. 134. Periculosa est vna habitantibus idcirco fidelium castris exterminanda pag. 193. Toleration of a diuers religiō is vnlawfull in a countrey which can cast it our and consequently of Poperie Reas. The tabernacle of God had the censer s●●ffers and besome to purge sweep away the filth of the sanctuarie all which haue their truth in the Church of the new testament 2. Chr. 17.6 cap. 19.2 The Lord will haue the drosse taken from the siluer that there may be a pot for the siner Deut. 21.11 A Protestant may not marrie a limb of the Pope Reas. Primum amoris vinculum cum pectora coniugium in Deo copulata sunt 2. Cor. 6. 1. Cor 7.39 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coni●gium Quam male inaequales vent●t ad aratra invenci Ezr. 9.2 Longum divor●ium mandat Deus ab id●lolatria in nullo proxime agendum Tertul. de cor milit Ne nubat femina non suae religionis viro vel vir talem ducat vxorem Iubet deus docet Apostolus v●runque praecipit testamentum August lib. 1. ad Pollent c. 21. 2. Chr. 21.6 Nemo diu tutus periculo proximus Cypr. lib. 1. epist. 11. Malac. 2.12 Ezr. 9 7. Quomodo potest congru●re charitas si discerpit fides Ambros. Psal. 128. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. de legib 4. Homil. against perill of idolat p. 1. pa. 16. Indicium esto ecclesiae 2. Tim. 2.19 Quia omne sanum iudicium in terris monitiones ecclesiae recusat Cypr epist. lib. 1.3 idem Fulg. de Christ. sacrific ad Mon. Tit. 1.15 Rom. 1.28 2. Thess. 2.11 The Lord vseth great patience euen to the worst So must his children Open and obstinate sinners must be auoided The Lord maketh good vse of the most wicked conscience Gen. 4.14 Act. 24.26 Dan. 5.4 Act. 24.26 Heb. 10.27 Act. 23.1 and 24.16 Good conscience is a sweet companion 1. Tim. 1.19 An euill conscience the mother of heresies Prov. 17.1 Rom 5.3 It is dangerous for the Churches to be left destitute of their teachers though for a short time Prov. 27.23 Heb. 13.17 1. Pet 5.4 Negligenter pascens convincitur non amare summum pastorem Damas epist. 4. Cle●●●s ne connu●neretur in d●●bus eccle●●●●●●egotia●●onis 〈◊〉 hoc est 〈…〉 lucri proptium ab ecclesiastica consuetu●●●● peni●us 〈◊〉 Synod p. cap. ●5 1. Cor. 10.23 Pastoris nomen significat p●rsonalem actionem sicut nomen medici Maldonat ex Hier. August Perald 2. tom tract 4. in avar part 2. cap. 11. D. Willet in 1. Sam. cap. 14. v. 28. 1. Chr. 28.12 13. 1. Cor. 1.12 Christianitie enioyneth all kind of curtesie 1. Pet 5.14 Such as are in the Lords work must be carefully prouided for that they want nothing 1. Cor. 9.11 Si non habes provideant subditi tui Aquin. in locum Bellarm. de iustis l. 4. c. 15.17 Deut. 32.4 Vbi Christus non est fundamentumibi nullum est boni operis aedificium Gregor decr Rom. 14. Heb. 11. Faith doth fiue actions to make any worke good Gal. 5.14 Rom. 3.8 Gen. 19. Nemo computet bona opera sua ante fidem vbi fides non erat bonum opus non erat in Psal. 30. praefat Gal. 2 16. Loquitur Apostolus de omnibus operibus tam ceremonialibus quam moralibus Aquin in cap. 3. ad Gal. lect 4. Tollet instr sacer lib. 6.21 Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 32. Rhem. on Matt. 6. sect 2. Bellarm. lib. 5. de iustif cap. 7. Necessarie vses of good works 1. In respect of God 2. Of our neighbour 1. Pet. 3.1 1. Pet. 2.12 1. Pet. 2.15 2. Cor. 7.15 3. Of our selues Iam. 2.16 Opera non sunt causa quod aliquis sit iustus apud deum sed potius executiones manifestationes institiae Aquin in Gal. 3. lect 4. Iam. 2.18 Prov. 22.1 Dan. 12.3 1. Cor. 15. Necessitas haec est praesentiae non efficientiae Cant. 4.16 1. Cor. 3.6 Isa. 61.3 Ier. 17.8 Doctr. Christianitie is no barren and fruitlesse profession Plin. nat hist. lib. 2. cap. 103. Philip. 1.11 1. Tim. 6.18 Conditions of fruitfulnes 5. Ioh. 15.5 Psal 92.14 Reasons to fruitfulnes 4. Iam. 3.17 Galat. 5. Isa. 5.6 Ioh. 15.6 Luk. 19. Matth. 21.20 Ier. 17.6 Isa. 6.10 Hindrances of this fruitfulnes three Psal 34. Ioh. 15.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grae. Salutem lat Iam. 3.17 Matth. 5.9 1. Pet. 2.17 Luk. ●0 5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philip. 4. ● 2. Sam. 14.24 Religion the strongest binder of man to man Eph. 4.3 2. Ioh. 2. 1. Cor. 13. Verus amicus qui vere in Deo diligit Scribit vni sed propter totam ecclesiam Aquin