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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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bookes Diuine Ecclesiasticall and Humane Diuine bookes are the bookes of God penned by the Prophets and Apostles and they are all the word of God for whether we regard the matter of them or the manner of reuealing them they are all from God the Prophets and Apostles were onely Gods hands and instruments in penning them the holy Ghost gaue the matter the order and the very words from whence it must needs follow that they are of al-sufficient authoritie of themselues Ecclesiasticall bookes are bookes of diuine matters penned by learned men in the Church and they are either generall bookes or particular Generall bookes Ecclesiasticall I call those which were either made or confirmed by the whole Church as the Creedes of the Apostles the Nicene and of Athanasius and the foure first generall Councels and these haue Catholike allowance yet not absolute authoritie but depending on Scripture Particular bookes Ecclesiasticall I call the Catechismes and Confessions of particular Churches made by them or by particular members thereof which haue not authoritie of themselues but from the Scripture or from generall consent Now both these kindes of bookes may bee called Gods word so farre forth as they agree with Scripture and yet they are also the word of men because they were penned by men and haue both order and style from men and in this regard that they were partly mens workes they are not authenticall of themselues but depend vpon the authoritie of Scripture Humane bookes are bookes penned by men either of the Church or out of the Church concerning humane things as bookes of naturall Philosophie of Policie and other Artes and these are not the bookes of God but of men alone hauing both matter and style from men many of them containe excellent truthes in their kind yet gathered onely from experience and common reason but they haue not in them that truth which is truth according to godlinesse seruing to builde vp and to binde the conscience vnlesse it bee in one case to stoppe the mouthes of Atheists and Epicures and to conuince their consciences And thus by conference of all bookes wee see that Scripture alone is authenticall in it selfe and no bookes beside Uses 1. This teacheth vs that ministers in the dispensing of Gods word should content themselues with the testimony of Scripture alone for the end of the ministerie is to worke and confirme faith and to settle and build vp the conscience in the truth of religion and matters concerning saluation which no other word can doe saue onely the word of God in Scripture that hath sufficient authoritie in it selfe from which conscience cannot appeale and for which cause our Sauiour Christ the true Prophet of the Church contents himselfe with the testimony of the Law and Prophets alone and after him his Apostles did the like See this notably confirmed by Paul who in his preaching to the Iewes professeth himselfe to haue said none other thing then that whic● the Prophets and Moses said should come Other writings haue the●● good vse in their time and place but not in the publike ministerie for authoritie and testimonie from Scripture is authenticall This the Scripture saith therefore it is so but authority from Councels and Father ●is sophistrie as Austin saith so therefore it is so this is no good reason for it implies that all that Austin said is true which indeede is false ●ee beeing as all men are subiect to errour 2. Use. This also sheweth that wee cannot beleeue vnwritten traditions thoug● they be called Apostolicall The Church of Rome intend to decei●e vs when they would beare vs in hand that halfe of those things t●●t are to be beleeued are not written in Scripture but receiued by tr●dition but these traditions we cannot beleeue by a diuine faith hovsoeuer by a common humane faith we may for they are contained in t●e bookes of Councels and Fathers which were worthie men yet subiect to errour 3. Vse Th●● also sheweth that we must submit our selues with feare and trembling to the word of God for it hath absolute authoritie to iudge vs and to con●ince our conselence in all matters of faith manners that pertaine to saluation IV. Point Wh●●eas Christ alleadgeth Moses and the Prophets to confirme his minist●●ie it may be demanded whether there be any difference for authoriti● between Christ and the Prophets for he that alleadgeth another m●●s authoritie seemes to be inferiour thereto I answer if we cōpare C●rist the Prophets we must distinguish between their doctrine th●ir persons The doctrine of Moses of the Prophets is equall to th● doctrine of Christ 2. waies First in certaintie of truth for it is as vnd●ubtedly true as if Christ himselfe had taught the same Secondly in e●ficacie authoritie for the power of binding conscience for the doct●in of the Prophets binds conscience as fully truly as if Christ himse●fe had spoken it And yet the person of Christ is aboue the person of Moses of all the Prophets for he is the Sonne of God both God ●an they were men he is the author of truth they only the instrumēts pen-mē therof frō hence it coms that Christs doctrine doth more bind vs to obedience then the doctrine of the Prophets because the person deliuering it is of more authority excellēcy and for this cause Christ alleadges Moses and the Prophets not for that his word is inferiour to theirs but that in regard of our obedience he might increase the authoritie of Moses and the Prophets because a greater measure of obedience is required to Christs word in regard of the dignitie of his person And this shewes that we now are more bound to obedience vnder the Gospel then the people vere vnder the law for we haue Christs doctrine which in regard of ●is person is of more authoritie then Moses and the Prophets see the point plainely laid downe by the Author to the Hebrewes in the irst Chapter he saith God in times past spake to hi● Church by his Propets but in these last dayes he hath spoken to vs by his sonne and in the second chapter verse 1. he laies downe the vse of this that now we haue Christ for our teacher namely that therefore we ought more aboundanly to giue heede to the things that we haue heard least at any time we le them slip c. shewing that our disobedience now shall be more seue●ly punished V. Point Ignorant people abuse this text to persvade themselue s that preaching is needlesse because no man can say moe then this doe as ye would be done to for this is the summe of the law a●d the Prophets But we wust know that this is not the summe of all tht the Prophets say but onely touching the matter of iustice and equi●e and indeede that we may attaine to saluation more is needfull for ve must not only know Gods word in generall but in particular
the God of Israel should die And it stands with equitie for hee that reuiles his lawfull Prince must die and that iustly how much more then ought hee to die that blasphemes the liuing God who is king of kings Now euery false Prophet is a blasphemer for his opinions are blasphemies against the truth of God therefore he ought to die The expresse wil of God herein is manifest Dout. 15. begin A Prophet comes and workes miracles and shewes signes that come to passe yet if he thereupon entice the people to idolatrie he must be slame and this is one way whereby the ciuill Magistrate must helpe the people to auoyde a false Prophet II. Quest. Why doth God then suffer such to liue in his Church as doe seduce men Answ. For two causes First that such as hold the truth in sinceritie may be knowne 1. Cor. 11. 18. Secondly for the punishment of the wicked and vngodly who receiue not the loue of the truth to seduce them by strong illusions and to cause them to beleeue lies The second point The danger of false Prophets They come in sheeps cloathing but inwardly they are rauening wolues In these words Christ alludeth to the practise of false Prophets in former times who counterfeited the true Prophets in their attire for the auncient Prophets were vsually cloathed in rough and course attire Elias in regard of his garments is called an hairie man 2. Kin. 1. 8. and Iohn Baptist had his garment of Camels haire Math. 3. 4. And the false Prophets did counterfeit the true Prophets in their attire for this ende that they might the more easily deceiue the people as is most plaine Zak. 13. 4. where the Lord saith of false Prophets that they shall not weare a rough garment to deceiue for when they wore such course attire made either of sheep skins or sheeps wooll wherewith the true Prophets were vsually cloathed they sought hereby to perswade the people that they had the hearts of the true Prophets when as indeede they were ful fraught with dānable errors Now Christs meaning in this allusion is to shew that false Prophets haue plausible pretences for their dānable doctrine and therfore are the more dāgerous Yet that we may the better perceiue the danger of false Prophets I will a little stand to describe their cloathing that is their pretences of deceit They may be reduced to 7. heads the first is allegation of Scripture which they will as often vse as the true Prophet hereby they blind the eies of many But the truth is that in alleaging Scripture they depraue change the sense either adde to or detract from the words following rightly their master Satan Mat. 4. 6. who alleaged Scripture to Christ but left out the principal point whereto the promise was made namely walking in thy waies And thus deale the Papists as this day sometimes they mangle the text alter the sense sometime they leaue the Scripture and go to traditions to Councels Fathers This also is the practise of the family of loue of the Anabaptists who turne the naturall sense of scripture into mysticall allegories The second cloake or pretence is the depth of their learning Reuelat 2. 24. The heresie of the Nicolaitans was by themselues called profound learning but by the holy Ghost the deepenesse of Satan So plaie the Papists at this day for sundry points of their religion for they hold that because the church in the Apostles time was weake in knowledge and feeble in faith therefore the Apostles omitted sundry deepe points especially concerning the masse which yet the Church receiuing by tradition doth now teach plainly and fully But though they match these doctrines of the Church with the holy Scripture yet we need not to trouble our selues therewith for in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles all things necessary to saluation are made known and we must not receiue any doctrine that cannot be confirmed thence and therefore in the parable Luk. 16. 3. Abraham prefers Moses and the Prophets before visions and reuelations from the dead The 3. cloake and pretence To assume to themselues the persons and titles of most worthy men 2. Cor. 11. 13. Paul speakes of such deceiuers that tooke to them the name of the Apostles of Christ therein following their master Satan who can transform himself● into an angel of light See this in the Papists especially in the Pope ho will be Christs v●car Peters successour and the seruant of seruants The doctors call themselues Ceraphicall and Angelicall doctors and the Church of Rome must be the true Church but all this is but counterfeit deceipt for succession in place onely from Peter and from Christ himselfe is no certaine note of truth The Scribes and Pharisies had their succession from Aaron appointed by God and yet Christ bids his Disciples take heed of the leauen of their doctrine Matth. 16. 12. and cal● them the blind leaders of the blind Succession then in true doctrine is the onely and sure note of true religion The 4. cloake or pretence is forged and counterfeit humilitie this Paul notes in false Apostles among the Colossians First they would not worship God directly but in and by the Angels Secondly they vsed much bodily exercise afflicting their owne bodies thirdly their worship was ●il-worship deuised by themselues If we would haue a liuely example hereof behold the Romish Priests they come to God in the mediation of Saints their whole religion stands in bodily exercises so as many of their orders are famous for their whippings and such like trumperie and their worship of God is wil-worship deuised by men The 5. pretence is working miracles hereby they labour to confirme their doctrine 2. Thess. 2. 9. The comming of Antichrist that ●an of sinne is with signes and lying wonders through Satans working and of such God forewarnes his people Deut. 13. that they should not bee d●a●ne to Idolatrie for a miracle for either they be false miracles and lying ●onders or if they be true miracles as God may suffer such to be wrought by false Prophets for the plague and punishment of the vnthankefull world yet their ende is to deceiue and to drawe men into errour from the truth We haue ordinarie experience of this pretence among the Romish Priests who by ●orcerie cast out deuils and cure strange diseases and so delude the simple but this must not drawe vs from the truth A miraculous worke truely done is not a sufficient warrant of a doctrine in religion for true and sound doctrine may want this confirmation Ioh. 10. 41. and false doctrine may haue it as Deut. 13. 1 2. c. The 6. pretence is faire speeches and blessings pretending the good and saluation of those to whom they come see this Rom. 16. 18. With faire speech and flattering ●aith Paul of false Apostles they deceiue the hearts of the simple so
herewith Secondly the people of God that heare his word may learne good instruction from this Title first hereby euery one may see what he is by nature namely like vnto flesh subiect to corruption nay as vnsauory flesh and stinking cation in the nostrels of God for els what needed this salt This therefore must mooue vs to lay aside all pride of heart whereby we thinke highly of our selues yea we must become base and lowly in our owne eies in regard of the vnsauourie tast of our naturall corruption else we shall neuer feele the seasoning vertue of Gods holy Ministerie Secondly euery one must hereby learne to suffer the word of reproofe whereby his heart and conscience may be ripped vp and his sores of sinne discouered when we haue a cut or a wound in our flesh we can be content to put salt vpon it to drie vp the noysome humours that otherwise would corrupt now can we endure the smart of salt for the health of our bodies and shall we not much more suffer the word of God to rip vp our sinnes and to mortifie the same for the saluation of our soules Thirdly euery one must giue all diligence to bee seasoned throughout with this heauenly salt that the thoughts of his heart the words of his mouth and the actions of his life may be all sauourie and acceptable vnto God in Christ yea in his conuersation with men hee must labour to shewe the power of this seasoning Coloss. 4. 6. Let your speech be gratious alwaies and powdred with salt that is seasoned by the word that it may sauour of grace to those that heare vs. If we liue vnder the Ministerie of the word and be not seasoned therewith our case is dangerous for therein it is of the nature of salt which causeth barrennesse where it seasoneth not as we may see in the practise of Abimelech who sowed salt in Shechem to make the groūd barren and the place despised But if the salt haue lost his sauour wherewith shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing but to bee cast out and troden vnder the foote of men Here Christ amplifieth the former reason whereby hee mooued his Apostles to sidelitie and diligence in their Ministerie by the danger of the contrarie infidelitie which is as vnsauourie salt incurable and vnprofitable and so subiect to a fearefull curse and therefore saith Christ you had neede to bee faithfull in seasoning the world by your Ministerie In this amplification we may obserue foure points First the ordinarie sinne that doth accompanie the calling of the Ministerie Secondly the danger of this sin Thirdly the vnprofitablenes of such a Ministerie Fourthly the iudgement of God due vnto it I. Point As other callings haue their seuerall faults so hath the calling of a Minister noted in these words If the salt haue lost his sauour c. Salt is said to become vnsauourie when it looseth that vertue and acrimonie which it hath in seasoning that flesh on which it is cast Now Ministers are as vnsauourie salt when they become vnprofitable in their Ministerie and either doe not or cannot dispense Gods word for the seasoning of mens soules that they may be acceptable to God and reconciled vnto him in Christ. In this calling there bee especially foure kinds of vnsauourie salt First the blind watch-men that haue no knowledge and dumb dogges that cannot barke that is such as either cannot or if they can will not dispense Gods word for the saluation of mens soules Secondly Hereticall Teachers who preach false and damnable doctrine such as doth not season but poison and destroie the soule such were the false Prophets among the Iewes who enticed to Idolatrie Deut. 30. 1 2. and the false Apostles and Heretiks in the Primitiue Church whose words did fret as a canker and destroyed the faith of many And such are the Romish teachers at this day and the Iesuits and Seminaries among vs who though they be qualified with many good gifts of learning yet by mingling the word of God with their owne inuentions and humane traditions they rase the foundation they become vnsauourie salt and hereticall Teachers And here by the way who cannot but wonder that students in Diuinitie should so much affect the Postils and Comments of Friers and Popish writers as they doe doubtlesse it argueth that the word of God hath not seasoned their hearts for where such vnsauourie salt hath relish the wholesome doctrine of Gods word hath neuer seasoned Thirdly they are vnsauourie salt who teach true doctrine but yet misapplie the same Many such were in the Church of the Iewes in the daies of Ieremie and Ezekiel who much complaine of sowing pillowes vnder the elbowes of the wicked by preaching peace vnto them when they should haue called to repentance by the discouerie of their sinnes and the denunciation of Gods iudgements as also for making sad the hearts of those whom God hath not made sadde And such are those at this day who haue sinooth tongues in respect of sinne and yet are full of bitter inuectiues against the better sort By this meanes the word of God looseth his acrimonie and sharpnesse whereby the wicked should be awaked out of their slumber of securitie and the godly further seasoned and made more acceptable vnto God Fourthly they are vnsauourie salt who though they teach the truth and generally applie it well doe yet lead vngodly and scandalous liues for an offensiue and vnsauourie conuersation in the Teacher doth hinder the seasoning vertue of the word of his Ministerie in the hearts of the people and his doctrine cannot so much edifie as his course of life destroyeth because naturall men regard not so much what is said as what is done This beeing so all Gods Ministers and those also that destinate themselues to this calling must haue speciall care so to bee qualified for this worke and so to preach the word of God that it may be sauourie in the hearts and consciences of them that heare it This is a matter of great importance as well in respect of the Minister as of the people and thus shall it appeare that they are not onely no vnsauourie salt but euen such as doe season others II. Point The danger of this sinne in beeing vnsauourie salt that is vnfaithfull in the Ministerie is very great noted in these words wherewith shall it be salted Some referre this salting to the earth as if Christ had said wherewith shall the earth be salted but it doth more truely belong to the salt it selfe as Mark. 9. 5. Salt is good but if the salt be vnsauourie wherewith shall it that is the salt it selfe be seasoned Againe the interrogation wherewith imports a vehement deniall as if Christ should say If salt once loose his naturall propertie of saltnesse it can neuer be recouered now vnfaithfull and vnprofitable Ministers are vnsauourie salt and therefore their danger is exceeding great
God 1. Peter 5. 7. Lastly euery calling hath his crosses no life is so quiet that it wanteth all vexations Now when crosses come vpon any man in his calling then must he beare the same by faith he must rest on Gods word and quiet his mind with the good will and pleasure of God He that beleeues saith the Prophet shall not make hast Isay 28. 16. that is he shall not be caried headlong with a desire to satisfie his owne pleasure and appetite either in seeking to be freed from euill or to enioy some blessing but shall content himselfe with the good pleasure of God And thus we see what it is to liue by saith which is the right way to life eternall Uses I. This sheweth that a great number are farre wide which thinke that if they liue vprightly among men then all is well this honest life is euer commendable among men but it is not sufficient to saluation It is but a worke of nature for a man by naturall reason may leade a ciuill vpright life as many haue done among the heathen but the life that must bring a man to heauen must be lead by faith and therefore they that would walke the way to life must walke by faith not by reason onely II. This also sheweth that they are deceiued which liue by sense measuring Gods loue and hatred by outward blessings and crosses and therefore when God takes away the meanes they will no longer trust on him but we count it a point of dishonestie not to trust our honest friend without a pawne much more then is it a dishonour to God when we will not relie vpon him without outward pledges of his fauour and therefore we must relie on God when all meanes faile for no man knoweth loue or hatred by all that is before him Eccles. 9. 1. III. Many that professe religion are deceiued that measure their grace and goodnes in religion by feeling in their owne hearts but we must not relie thereon for true faith may be in the heart without inward sense againe the deuill may put false comforts many times into a mans heart the bad man receiues the word with ioy Luk. 8. 13. looke to thy faith by Christs word and thereby iudge thy selfe and rest not in thine inward feeling IIII. This teacheth vs to acquaint our selues with all the commandements of God that be in the Bible and with all the promises that concerne the pardon of sinnes and life euerlasting for without this knowledge there can be no faith and therefore we must abandon all ignorance of these things and instruct our selues and those that belong vnto vs in the word of God that they and we may liue by faith V. These are happie dayes of peace and of many temporall blessings wherein we now liue but we must not liue alwayes in this peace God hath begun to set his iudgements among vs and if we doe not repent we must looke for further and more grieuous iudgements as the losse of his word and a sword vpon our selues our friends children what if these dayes come how must we then liue namely by faith in the word and promise of God lay holde on this and though thou loose friends goods and thine owne temporall life yet holde fast thy spirituall life by faith cleaue vnto Christ and then in the middest of swords and weapons of death thou shalt walke the way to eternall life And thus much of the way of life The second way is the way to destruction which is called the way of sinners and of the vngodly Psal. 1. 1. 6. This way hath many pathes which tend all to one end and meete in the same period and they may all be reduced to these three heades I. the way of nature II. the way of false faith III. the way of faith and nature ioyned both together The way of nature is when men liue onely by the light of nature of this S. Paul speaks Act. 14. 16. God suffered all the Gentiles to walk in their owne wayes wherein they were voide of God in Christ and so not vnder mercie The way of false faith is some thing more then the way of nature but yet it leadeth to destruction because their faith is false and profession vaine and this is the way of false religion whereof there be these three maine and principall at this day to which all other may be referred The religion of the Turkes of the Iewes and of the Papists The Turkes in their religion acknowledge Christ for a great Prophet but not to be God neither doe they looke for any saluation by him The Iewes in their religion acknowledge but one God yet out of Christ they acknowledge not his incarnation past but expect it yet to come they waite for an earthly kingdome they hold the old Testament onely and denie the new Now both these refusing Christ haue not the Father and so can haue no saluation in their religion The Papists acknowledge much truth formally but then againe they ouerturne it for they hold onely that generall faith which the Deuils may haue but for that speciall iustifying faith whereby a man is to beleeue his owne saluation the remission of his sinnes and his owne reconciliation with God in Christ that they renounce Againe the Christ of the Papist is no true Christ for they make him but halfe a Sauiour or not so much euen onely an instrument to make men sauiours of themselues for by his grace they doe workes properly meritorious and fully worthie of eternall life They robbe him also of his manhood saying it is euery where in his quantitie where masse is said for they haue the selfe same bodie that was crucified Also they denie his offices I. his Kingly office for they part stakes with him and giue it to the Pope in saying he hath power to make lawes which bind the conscience as Gods lawes doe II. his priesthood because euery masse Priest offers Christ anew and they make Saints intercessours especially the Virgin Marie III. his propheticall office saying the Scriptures are imperfect without tradition vncerten without the sense and meaning of the Church the originall copies are corrupted and the Church is aboue them in authoritie The third way is the way of faith and nature together this is the common way wherein most Protestants walke for we hold the right faith in word our profession and iudgement is right but yet our liues are lead according to nature And these three paths are all in the broad way to destruction And therefore as we hold true doctrine and right faith in word so let vs lead our liues accordingly and testifie the same by our workes especially in the times of dearth when God laies his hand on the poore and thereby tries the hearts of the rich III. Point The propertie of these waies The way to life
be members of Christ and meeke persons then the inheritance of the earth is ours what neede haue we then to carke care so much for worldly pelfe as most men do who neuer thinke they haue enough Thirdly this serues for a iust rebuke of all those that seeke to enrich themselues by crueltie lying fraud and oppression for if thou bee in Christ thou hast right to the whole world what neede then hast thou to vse vnlawfull meanes to get that which is thine ow●e But sure it is thou hast no part in Christ while thou giuest thy selfe to these courses for if thou haddest thou wouldest bee content with whatsoeuer God sends in the vse of lawfull meanes Philip. 4. 11. Lastly hence all Gods children may learne to comfort their hearts against the feare of any punishment for the name of Christ for keepe Christ sure and whither soeuer thou art sent thou art vpon thine owne ground for the whole earth is thine and in Christ one day thou shalt possesse it when all Tyrants shall be banished into hell Now beeing on thine owne ground what need hast thou to feare Vers. 6. Blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousnes for they shall be filled Here is the fourth Rule touching blessednesse which is also mentioned by Saint Luke yet some thing different from this of Matthew for according to Luke Christ directeth his speech to his Disciples and speakes of bodily hunger saying Blessed are ye that hunger now for yee shall be satisfied as if he should say You my Disciples doe now suffer hunger and thirst but this shall not preiudice your happie estate for hereafter you shall be satisfied Now Mathew goeth a degree further and laieth downe a cause and Reason why they beeing hungrie are blessed not simply for that they were pinched with bodily hunger but because withall they did further spiritually in their soules hunger after righteousnesse Thus then the two Euangelists do agree S. Luke laies downe this Rule generally but Matthew propounds therein the reason of this blessednesse This Rule as the former containes two parts first who are blessed secondly wherein this blessednes doth consist For the first the parties blessed are such as hunger and thirst after righteousnes The exposition of these words is diuers Some giue this sense Blessed are those that are grieued with the iniquities that abound in the world and withall doe in heart and soule long for the amendment and reformation thereof Others expound the words thus Blessed are those that by wrongs and iniuries are depriued of their right 〈◊〉 this world and so are constrained to hunger and thirst after that which is their owne wayting by patience to obtaine the same But there is a third exposition which doth more fully open vnto vs the meaning of Christ to wit by righteousnes we may well vnderstand in the first place the righteousnes of faith whereby a ●inner is iustified through grace in Christ and so stand● righteous before God hauing the pardon of all his sinnes ●besides this we may here also vnderstand inward righteousnes whereby a man ●s sanctified and made holy hauing Gods image renued in him by the spirit of grace which was lost by the fall of our first parents And that this imputed and renued righteousnes may here be vnderstood will appeare by these reasons First in such places of Scripture where like sentences are repeated we must vnderstand not Ciuill righteousnes but iustification sanctification and regeneration as Isa. 55. 1. Hoe euery one that thirsteth come to the waters and buie without siluer and Ioh. 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come vnto me and drinke and Reuel 21. 6. I will giue to him that is a thirst to drinke of the waters of life freely all which places are one in substance for by waters we must vnderstand righteousnes which is that spirituall grace of God the fountaine of all blessings whereby sinners are iustified and sanctified Secondly that which is most of all to be desired must needes be the most excellent righteousnes but this righteousnes here mentioned is most to be desired for Christ saith men shall hunger and thirst after it thereby expressing a most earnest and vehement desire and therefore by righteousnes we must vnderstand Gods grace and mercie in Christ absoluing a sinner from the guilt and punishment of his sinnes with sanctification the fruit thereof whereby he is purged from corruption Secondly by hungring and thirsting we must vnderstand two things first a sorrow and griefe of heart in regard of a mans owne sinnes and vnrighteousnes secondly an earnest and constant desire of the righteousnes of God that is of iustification and sanctification in Christ. Answerable to these two things which are in bodily hunger and thirst to wit first a paine in the bottome of the stomacke for want of meate and drinke secondly an earnest desire and appetite after meat and drinke to be satisfied therewith And blessed is he that is so grieued for his owne vnrighteousnes and withall hath an earnest desire after reconciliation with God in Christ and after true regeneration and sanctification by the holy Ghost for this is true spirituall hunger and thirst whereto belongs this gratious promise that in due time he shall be satisfied and filled with plentie of Gods mercie and grace wherein this happinesse doth consist which is the second branch of this Rule This I take to be the true and proper meaning of these words whereupon the two former expositions depend for he that is thus spiritually an hungred is oft depriued of his owne right among men and so is said to hunger and thirst after that which is his owne in this world Againe such a man doth vnfainedly grieue at the iniquities that bee in the world and withall his heart doth most earnestly desire reformation thereof both in himselfe and others First this sentence must be remembred as a storehouse of true comfort in all grieuous temptations but especially against these three the want of faith the smallnesse of sanctification and despaire For the first many in Gods Church haue a true care to please God in all things and to liue in no sinne against their conscience and yet they finde in themselues much distrust and despaire of Gods mercie they feele more doubting then faith whereupon they are brought to doubt of their election and state of grace before God Now how may such bee releeued and be well perswaded of their good estate Answer The way is laid downe by our Sauiour Christ in this Rule Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse For here he teacheth that those are blessed who are displeased with their own doubting and vnbeleefe if they haue a true earnest desire to be purged from this distrust and to beleeue in God through Christ. Indeede this desire of faith and to beleeue is not true faith in nature but in Gods acceptance for
rauished with a glimpse of Gods glorie in his transfiguration that they would needs abide there still Oh then what glorie is it to see him as he is doubtlesse this sight of God is true happinesse But then will some man say the diuels shal be happie for they shall see him at the last day Answ. Their sight shall be their sorrowe for they shall see him as a terrible iudge not as a Sauiour with apprehension and approbation of his loue and mercie which is the sight here meant as the Apostle saith wee shall see face to face and knowe as wee are knowne So then the meaning of these words is this they shall see God by his effects in this life and perfectly in the world to come with approbation of his loue and mercie This gratious promise must be obserued as a ground of special comfort to all Gods children for they that endeauour after puritie of heart shall suffer much contempt and reproach in the world but they must not be dismaied for God will looke vpon them and shewe himselfe fauourably vnto them he will appeare to their ioy and their aduersaries shall be ashamed therefore they must say with Dauid I will not feare what man can doe vnto me Secondly is it true happinesse to see God then in this world wee must striue to come as neere vnto God as possible we can for the neerer we come vnto him the more we see him and the neerer we are to our perfect happinesse Now that we may come neere vnto God wee must set God alwaies before our eies that is wheresoeuer we are and whatsoeuer we doe wee must perswade our hearts that we are in his presence this was Dauids practise Psal. 16. 8. I haue set the Lord alwaies before me this perswasion will make vs to walke with God as Enoch did who for this is said to please God Thirdly this must allure our hearts towards all those meanes wherein God shewes himselfe vnto his children the Lord reuealed himselfe in his sanctuarie vnto his people and hereupon Dauid was rauished with desire to Gods courts see Psal. 27. 4. and Psal. 48. 1 2. And the like affection must we haue to Gods word and Sacraments therein he shewes his beautie as in his sanctuarie and therefore we must labour therein to see the goodnesse and mercie of God towards vs vsing them as pledges of his grace and loue in Christ yea we must endeauour to see him in all his creatures as his wisdome power and goodnesse to vs wards this is a notable steppe to our perfect blisse Verse 9. Blessed are the peace-makers for they shall be called the children of God Here is the seauenth Rule and precept of Christ touching true happinesse wherein obserue first who are blessed secondly wherein this blessednesse consists The parties blessed are Peace-makers By peace we must vnderstand concord and agreement betweene man and man Now peace is two-fold Good or Euill Good peace is that which stands with good conscience and true religion This was among the conuerts in the Primitiue Church who liued together and were all of one heart and one soule Euill peace is an agreement and concord in euill as in the practise of any sinne against Gods commandements in a word euill peace is such as cannot stand with true Religion and good conscience Hereof Christ spake saying I came not to send peace but the sword that is diuision by meanes of the doctrine of the Gospel Now in this place good peace is the qualitie of those parties that be blessed Further by Peace-makers two sorts of men are to be vnderstood first all such as haue care so much as in them lieth to haue peace with all men good and bad secondly such as not onely themselues be at peace with others but also doe labour to reconcile parties at variance and to make peace betweene man and man both these sorts are blessed that is they are in a happie state and condition because this gift of Peace-making is a grace of Gods spirit in them alone who are blessed for where Gods spirit worketh peace of conscience towards God in Christ there the same spirit doth mooue the partie to seeke peace with all men as also to make peace betweene those that are at variance so farre forth as it may stand with Religion and a good conscience Yet here are certaine questions to be scanned touching peace which will giue great light to the better vnderstanding of this Rule Quest. I. Seeing Peace-makers are blessed why should they be blamed which seeke to make peace betweene Papists and Protestants by reconciling these two religions Answer Because this is not good peace for there is no more concord betweene these two religions then is betweene light and darkenesse Whereas it is said they differ not in substance but in circumstances both hauing the same word the same Creede and Sacraments we must knowe that notwithstanding all this yet by necessarie consequent of their doctrine and religion they doe quite ouerturne the foundation of the Bible of the Creede and Sacraments as in the points of Iustification by workes of humane satisfaction of worshipping Saints and Images and their massing sacrifice and Priesthood may soone appeare But they haue the same Baptisme with vs Answ. Baptisme seuered from the true preaching of the word is no sufficient note of a true Church for the Samaritans had circumcision and yet the Lord saith they were not his people Againe they hold the outward forme of Baptisme but they ouerturne the inward power thereof by denying Iustification by faith alone in Iesus Christ. Thirdly Baptisme is preserued in the Church of Rome not for their sakes but for the hid Church which God hath kept to himselfe euen in the middest of all Poperie so that if they returne to vs we shall accord otherwise we may not goe to them lest we forsake the Lord. Quest. II. If Peace-makers be blessed how can any Nation with good conscience make warre Answ. The Lords commandement to haue peace with all men doth not binde men simply but with this condition if it be possible and as much as in vs lieth but when there is no hope of maintaining peace then the Lord alloweth a lawfull warre such as is for iust defence or claime of our needfull due and right for herein the case standeth with the body politicke as it doth with the naturall body while there is hope of health and safetie the Physition vseth gentle meanes but when the case is desperate then he vseth desperate meanes and sometimes giues ranke poyson to trie if by any meanes life may be saued And so may the fafetie of a State be sought by warre when Motions of peace will not take place Quest. III. How can suit in law be maintained with good conscience seeing it can hardly stand with this blessed peace Ans. So long as meanes of agreement other waies may be had between
whereof Hatred is the roote and the rest are the branches Thirdly Christ laies downe the cause for which this persecution shall be inflicted namely for my sake or as S. Luke saith for the sonne of mans sake which expoundeth this phrase for Righteousnes sake v. 10. to wit for professing beleeuing and maintaining the doctrine of the Gospel taught by Christ touching remission of sinnes and life euerlasting to them that beleeue The vses in generall We see that Christ vrgeth this Rule of blessednes more largely then the former this he doth for speciall cause first hereby he would teach his Disciples and vs in them that it is the will of God his Church in this world should be vnder the crosse in such affliction and persecution as their blood shall be sought for the maintenance of the faith And this hee will haue to bee the state of his Church for speciall causes First that the members thereof by their afflictions may be acquainted with their owne wants and infirmities which they would not much regard if they were freed from the crosse Secondly that by affliction they may be kept from many grieuous sinnes into which they would fall if they liued in peace Thirdly that others seeing the correction of the Church for sinne might learne thereby to hate and auoide sinne and lastly that the Church might glorifie God in a constant and couragious maintenance of his truth vnto death for euen in persecution is Gods truth preserued against the reason of mans wisdome patient suffering for the truth beeing faithfull witnes-bearing thereunto Secondly Christ had newely called the Twelue out of all his Disciples to be Apostles whereupon they might thinke that they should be aduanced to some outward honour ease and peace but Christ hereby calles them from that conceit puts them in mind of affliction which should befall them in time to come that when it came they might the better indure it And thus he prepares all churches to suffer affliction yea and we our selues must hereby learne in time of peace to prepare our selues against the day of triall because his will is that whosoeuer would liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer affliction Thirdly hereby Christ intends to lay a ground of comfort to his disciples in their persecution by a plaine and ful declaration of their happines that suffer for righteousnes sake in that they haue sure title to the kingdome of heauen out of which estate no sound comfort can be had And this same must we lay vp in store against the time to come for we liue now in peace by Gods mercie but we know not how long it will continue we haue beene threatened and dangerously assaulted by our enemies many a time beside the rodde of God shaken with his owne hand against vs and wee may not thinke our peace will last alwaies but seeing our sinnes increase we may be sure our ioy and peace will one day bee turned into sorrow and therefore it will be good to haue this Rule engrauen in our hearts that they are blessed which suffer for righteousnesse sake If therefore tribulation come for the defence of the Gospel we must haue recourse to this promise of blessednesse and that will be our comfort More particularly In the words of this Rule Blessed are they c. Christ would let vs see that deadly hatred which the world beares vnto Gods Church for so much the word persecute importeth The reasons of this hatred may be these First the Church of God in the ministerie of the Gospel seekes the ruine of the diuels kingdome who is the Prince of the world the diuell therefore rageth and inflames the hearts of his instruments with malice against Gods Church that they may persecute and quite destroy it if it were possible Secondly Gods Church is a peculiar people seuered from the world in profession doctrine and conuersation and therefore the world hates them Ioh. 15. 19. And this very point may serue to stay our hearts when we shall bee persecuted for the profession and embracing of the Gospel of Christ for the world doth hate Gods Church and will doe to the end there must be enmitie betweene the seed of the serpent and the seede of the woman as then he that was borne of the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the spirit so is it now Gal. 4. 29. Secondly obserue that this hatred of the world is not onely against the members of Gods Church but euen against Christs holy religion so Christ saith for my sake or for my Religions sake This is to be marked as a most excellent argument to perswade our consciences that the Gospel of Christ which we professe is the true and blessed doctrine of God because the wicked world doth alwaies hate it yea it hateth vs also for the Gospels sake now if it were a doctrine of men it would fit their natures well and they would loue it for the world doth loue his owne Ioh. 15. 19. Thirdly if they be blessed that suffer persecution then how may any man lawfully flie in persecution Answer A man may flie in persecution with good conscience these two things obserued first that he be not hindred by his particular calling secondly that he hath libertie offered by Gods prouidence to escape the hands of his enemies The intent of this verse is not to forbid flight but to comfort such as are in persecution and cannot escape for the word signifieth such persecution as is by pursuite and oppression which cannot be auoided Lastly seeing they are blessed that suffer for righteousnes sake Whether are they alwaies cursed that suffer deseruedly for an euill cause for the contrarie reason is in contraries Ans. They are alwaies accursed saue in one case to wit vnlesse they repent for their vnrighteousnes for which they are afflicted but by true repentance they become blessed The thiefe vpon the crosse had liued in theft and was therfore attached condemned and crucified and so he suffered for vnrighteousnesse but yet hee was saued because hee repented and beleeued in Christ. It is added for righteousnesse sake In this clause we are taught a speciall lesson namely that when God shall lay vpon vs any affliction or persecution as imprisonment banishment losse of goods or of life it selfe we must alwaies looke that the cause be good and then suffer willingly This is a necessarie Rule for we must suffer affliction either publikely or priuately if we will liue godly in Christ Iesus Now it is not the punishment but the cause that makes a Martyr and to this purpose Peter saith Let none of you suffer as a Murtherer a Thiefe or a busie-body but if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God in this behalfe and therefore we must be sure the cause be good yea this we must looke vnto in our particular priuate crosses Verse 11. Blessed are ye when men reuile you and
minde meekenesse c. and Ephes. 2. 10. Ye are the workemanship of God created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that wee should walke in them Now this is a most excellent thing for a man to bee answerable to his calling When Dauid was a shepheard hee kept his fathers sheepe and liued as a shepheard but when he was called to be a King hee behaued himselfe like a King in gouerning Gods people and so euery Christian ought to doe beeing a newe creature he must walke as Gods childe and testifie his vocation by shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called him 1. Pet. 2. 9. Fourthly good workes serue to be a way in which we are to walke that so wee may receiue the mercies of God promised to his children and escape the Iudgements threatened against sinners for Gods word is full of most sweet promises vnto the obedient and of terrible threatning against rebellion and iniquitie Now a man by walking in good workes eschewes the paths of wickednesse wherein Gods iudgements light and holdes the waies of righteousnesse wherein Gods blessings are scattered Prou. 3. 17. Thirdly the ende of good workes in regard of our brethren is principally this that by our example in well doing wee may winne some vnto God and keepe others in the obedience of the truth and preuent offences whereby many are drawne backe The contagion of a badde example especially in men of superiour place is such that it wil not only cast their owne soules to hell but also draw many with them When Ieroboam the King sinned hee caused Israel to sinne 1. Kings 15. 34. And therefore wee must carefully looke to all our waies in regard of others and so liue according to Christs commandement in this place that others seeing our good workes may bee wonne to the truth and so glorifie God which is in heauen And thus wee see the endes of good workes Now considering good works be of such excellent vse we are hereby admonished to exercise our selues therein with all diligence for hereby we benefit our brethren wee helpe our selues and we glorifie God neither must any mans pouertie hinder him from this dutie for not onely almes deedes and large gifts to Churches and high waies are good workes but also the speciall duties of euery mans lawfull calling done in faith to the glorie of God and the good of men bee the calling neuer so base by the doing whereof in faith and obedience he may get sure testimonie of his election This exhortation is most needfull for so soone as men haue occasion to commit any sinne then they shake off the yoake of all obedience as there were no way of good workes to be walked in The Papists indeed make the merit of iustification and life euerlasting the ende of good workes but that hath bin sufficiently confuted heretofore Hitherto wee haue spoken of the first point in this conclusion touching the manner of teaching The second point herein contained is the end of all teaching namely to turne men vnto God and thereby to bring them to glorifie God That men may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen that is so teach that men may see your good workes and be wonne thereby to the faith so glorifie God Our Sauiour Christ his Commission giuen to his Disciples before his ascension bids them God make all nations my Disciples and Paul saith that hee became all things to all men that by all meanes hee might not onely instruct but saue some Hereby then all Ministers and all those that set themselues apart for this calling must learne to propound this vnto themselues as the maine ende of all their studies and labours namely to turne men vnto God that beeing conuerted they may glorifie God Againe the same ende of the Ministerie admonisheth all hearers so to yeelde themselues obedient to the Ministerie of the word that it may take place in their hearts to turne them vnto God that after their conuersion they may glorifie God This the people ought the ra 〈…〉 to yeeld vnto because it is the maine comfort that the Minister hath of all his labours to see his hearers conuerted and so inabled to glorifie God And to mooue them hereunto they are further to knowe that if they heare and be not thereby conuerted that so they may praise and glorifie God by their obedience then this Ministerie will bee a Bill of Inditement against them for their deeper condemnation at the last daie See Matthew 11. 21. 24. Verse 17. Thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them In this verse and the rest which follow to the ende of this Chapter is contained the Third part of Christs Sermon wherein hee goes about to restore the Morall law to his true sense and meaning which was much corrupted by the Iewish teachers And to the ende the same might bee the better accepted hee makes way thereto by a notable Preface verse 17 18 19 20. Wherein hee seekes as well to preuent and to remooue the false opinion which the Iewes had conceiued of him in respect of the Law as also to procure all reuerence and loyaltie to bee shewed therevnto For the Iewish teachers seeing our Sauiour Christ condemne and neglect the traditions of the Elders and not so much to respect the ceremonies of the Law as they thought hee should did thereupon iudge him to bee a deceiuer and one that went about to ouerturne the whole law of Moses This opinion Christ confuteth by three arguments First from the ende of his comming in this verse The second from the nature of the law in the 18. verse whereupon he infers two notable conclusions to procure reuerence thereunto verse 19. And thirdly from the scope of his Ministerie verse 20. For the first The Exposition Thinke not that I am come c. This comming of Christ must bee vnderstood of the manifestation of the godhead in our nature for otherwise his godhead being euery where cannot be said to come properly and as for his manhood it had not beene in heauen To destroy the Law The Law in generall is that part of Gods word which commaunds things iust honest and godly and beeing thus conceiued it is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall The Ceremoniall law is that part of Gods word which prescribed to the Iewes ceremonies rites and orders to be performed in the worshippe of God this law is laid downe in the bookes of Moses especially in Leuiticus The Iudiciall law is that part of Gods word which prescribed ordinances for the gouernment of the Iewes common wealth and the ciuill punishment of offendours The Ceremoniall lawe concerned the Iewes onely the Iudiciall lawe did indeede principally concerne them but yet so farre forth as it tendeth to the establishing of the Morall law hauing in it common
of Gods predestination whereby we teach that God hath decreed the condemnation of some This doctrine many doe renounce as a doctrine of crueltie and thereupon frame vnto themselues priuate opinions which will not stand with the word of God The way to auoyde this occasion of offence is this First to graunt vnto God himselfe so much in this case as we will yeeld to mortal man in the like Among our selues we allow of this libertie one to another that a man may kill a flie or a worme and for his lawfull vse and pleasure kill sheepe oxen and other creatures and yet be a mercifull man shall we not then allow vnto God that he may glorifie his name in the iust and deserued condemnation and destruction of his creature This is lesse then we grant to men for a worme is something vnto man but a man is nothing in respect of God Againe among our selues in some things we giue libertie one to another to doe as we will and yet thinke the action iust and lawfull much more then ought we to giue freedom of will vnto God in all his actions without conceit of crueltie in any one of his workes for all his workes are done in equitie Secondly it must be remembred that we teach not that God doth simply ordaine some men to hell fire but touching reprobation our doctrine is this that God hath decreed and purposed to glorifie his name in the due and deserued condemnation of some for in ●an● reprobation God hath two actions First he decrees to passe by some men without shewing his eternall mercie vnto them and onely to declare his iustice vpon them then after hee decrees when they are by themselues fallen into sinne to inflict vpon them deserued condemnation for the same The vnlearned also from this doctrine of Predestination take occasion of most fearefull falling for thus they reason If I be predestinate to saluation I am sure to be saued let me doe what I will and if I bee predestinated to condemnation I am sure to be condemned though I liue neuer so godly for Gods decree changeth not and therefore I will liue as I list Thus doe desperate persons imbolden themselues to sinne and to cast away their soules The way to cut off this offence is this they must remember that in Gods decree the ende and the meanes that bring men to that ende goe alwaies together and therefore that such as are ordained to saluation are ordained to the means thereof namely to vocation iustification sanctification Rom. 8. 30. The end and the means in Gods decree must neuer be seuered Now righteousnes and holines in Christ is the means whereby God hath decreed to bring men to saluation and therefore they sinne grieuously that vpon the immutabilitie of Gods decree take occasion to liue profanely Hezekias is sicke vnto death yet God promiseth to adde vnto his daies fifteene yeares now if Hezekias had consulted with these men they would haue told him thus be of good cheare O King neither eate nor drinke nor vse any thing to cure thy sore or to preserue life for thou shalt certenly liue fifteene yeares God hath saide it and it must be done but Hezekias taketh no such course nay he vseth the meanes both to cure his sore and to preserue his life And so did Paul for his owne and others preseruation keepe the mariners in the shippe who were the meanes vpon the sea to bring them safe to land though God had giuen vnto him all that sailed with him The second speciall doctrine of the Church whereat some take occasion of offence is concerning the fall of Adam for we teach that God in some sort decreed his fall whereupon some obiect that we make God the author of sinne considering his decree is vnchangeable Now to preuent this offence two Rules must be remembred I. that Gods will may be distinguished It is either generall or speciall Gods generall will is that whereby he willeth that sinne shall be by his iust permission But Gods speciall will is the approouing will of God whereby he taking pleasure in any thing will haue the same done and brought to passe Now we say not that God willed Adams fall by his approouing will but onely by his permitting will because it was good in regard of God that man should fall II. We must remember that Gods decree went before Adams fall onely as an antecedent not as a cause thereof for the vnchaungeable decree and will of God takes not away the libertie of mans will or of the second causes but onely inclineth and ordereth the same as the first and highest cause of all The Third speciall doctrine of the Church whereat offence is taken is this That man of himselfe can doe no good but all goodnes and grace in man come from God Hence our common people take occasion of loosenesse of life for tell them that they must repent and beleeue if they will be saued their answer is that they doe it so well as God will giue them grace all goodnes say they must come from God yea the wiser sort amongst vs will not sticke to lay the fault of their loose life on God who giues them no more grace But for the auoyding of this occasion of offence we must know that when we are not able to doe our duties as we ought and to pray to repent and beleeue as God requireth the fault is in our selues and not in God for we were created righteous in Adam and in him had power and grace to haue done whatsoeuer God required at our hands but Adam lost this power through his owne default and we in him lost it also and therefore our inabilitie commeth from our selues Againe we must consider that God giues grace indeede yet not miraculously in Ale-houses and Tavernes but then when men vse the meanes to come by grace and doe that which by nature they are able that is come and heare the word attentiuely endeauouring to beleeue and to obey the same for though the good vsage of the gifts of nature cannot merit any grace yet ordinarily we may obserue that in the vse of meanes is grace receiued Act. 2. 41. At one sermon there were conuerted three thousand soules among the rebellious Iewes Act. 16. 14. Lidias heart was opened in hearing Paul preach and ordinarily men are conuerted in the meanes for faith commeth by hearing the Gospel preached Rom. 10. 17. The last point of doctrine from whence many take occasion of offence is the doctrine of Iustification by faith alone without workes Hence the Papists condemne our Church as an enemie to all good workes and many hereby take occasion of a leud life because good works must not iustifie them before God Now to cut off this offence we must hold and know that good works and faith are disioyned in the worke of our Iustification before God but they are
conioyned in the whole course of our liues and conuersation both before God and man No worke in man but faith is required to his Iustification though in God there be respect to his owne free mercie and to Christs merits but in our liues faith and works must goe hand in hand together Now that these may thus be well distinguished I shew it plainely In the fire is both heate and light yet in the warming of the bodie the heate hath force onely and not light though to many other vses it serue necessarily euen so in a child of God are required both faith and workes but to iustifie him faith onely is required though works be necessarie thorough his whole life for they iustifie vs before men and winne vnto vs a testimonie of our iustification before God not onely in our owne hearts but from the Lord Iam. 2. 21. and therfore we must not content our selues with a faith in speculation voide of workes but within the compasse of our callings doe what good we can for Gods glorie and the comfort of our brethren The Third head from whence offences are taken is the state of the Church first in regard of the wants that be in the Church and namely in this our Church Hence sundrie men take occasion to condemne our Church as no Church our Sacraments as no sacraments our Ministers as no Ministers and our people as no Christians and therefore doe seperate themselues from our Church as beeing no true members of the Church of God To preuent this occasion of sinning three Rules must be obserued first that to beleeue and confesse the doctrine of saluation taught and deliuered by the Prophets and Apostles is an infallible and inseparable note of a true Church of God for Gods Church is nothing els but a companie of Gods people called by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles vnto the state of saluation This doctrine is the seede of regeneration whereby men are begotten vnto Christ and it is that s●ncere milke whereby they are fedde and nourished vnto eternall life Now I say that this our Church of England through Gods mercie doth maintaine beleeue and professe this doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for the proofe hereof let him that doubteth haue recourse to our English confession and to a booke intituled the Articles of Religion established in the Church of England in which are set downe the foundations of Christian Religion allowed and held by all Euangelicall Churches And further to shew that this our profession is not in hypocrisie but in truth this our Church is readie to maintaine and confirme the same doctrine by the shedding of their blood against all foes wha●soeuer and this thing indeede hath beene the onely cause of all our disse●tions with the Church of Rome whereupon wee see there is iust cause our Church should be reputed the true Church of God and a good member of his Catholike Church Secondly obserue the practise of Christ and his Apostles towardes the Church of the Iewes which in their time without all doubt was exceedingly corrupt for the office and place of the high Priest was bought and sold and through ambition and couetousnes became annuall y●a there were two high Priests together at one time all which were against Gods ordinance Againe the Scribes and Pharisies which were the Doctors of that Church erred in some fundamentall points of doctrine teaching Iustification by workes and withall they greatly corrupted the law of God both by their doct●ine and traditions and the Temple became a denne of theeues and yet for all this Christ did not separa●e from that Church neither taught his Disciples so to doe but was present at their sacrifices and assemblies and kept his Passeouer with them and so did his Apostles till they saw them of obstinacie and malitiousnes refuse the grace of God off●red vnto them in the ministerie of the Gospel Now their example must teach vs that so long as our Church holdeth Christ wee must esteeme it to be the Church of God and not for some wants thereof depart from it Thirdly all the reformed Churches in Europe doe with one con●ent honour our Church as a true Church of Christ now their iudgement is not slightly to be regarded but to be preferred farre before the rash opinions of priuate men for the Church hath a gift of discerning in waightie ma●ters shee can iudge of bookes of Scripture which be authenticall which not shee can iudge of spirits and of doctrines and therefore also can iudge what companie of men is a true Church and what is not and this their iudgement also must confirme vs in this truth that this our Church is a true member of Gods Catholik church Now whereas some alleadge the wants of our Church to make it no Church I answer though I will not excuse any default in it wherein i● is wanting to that which Gods word requireth but rather desire that the righteousnes thereof may breake forth as the light and saluation thereof as a burning lampe yet this may be saide in behalfe of our Church that the wants thereof are not such as doe anyway rase the foundation of religion or of Gods holy worshippe and so can not make it to cease to be a true Church and therefore none ought to separate from it for such wants and yet this hindereth not but that Gods seruants may in a godly manner desire the Reformation of things that be amisse for a good Church may be bettered and we ought to striue after perfection The Second offence taken from he Church is from the d●uersitie of opinions that be therein for hence many reason thus learned men be of so many opinions that we know not what to follow and therefore we will be of no religion till the truth be established by some generall Councell and all agree in one For the auoiding of this offence we must know that though men dis●er in sundrie opinions in the true Church of God yet they all agree in the Articles of faith and in the foundation of Gods worship their difference is in matters beside the foundation and therefore it must hinder none from receiuing and embracing true religion Againe it is Gods will that there should be diuersities of opinions yea scismes and heresies in his Church that men might be prooued whether they hold the truth in synce●itie or not as we may see 2. Cor. 11. 19. Deut. 13. 1 2. Now in this ●ase Ieremias direction must be obserued Stand in the parting of the wa●es saith hee and inquire for the olde and auncient way ● that is the doctrine of the Prophets what God willeth and commandeth by them and by his Apostles and that we must follow with all good conscience This Christ intended whē he bade the Iewes to search the Scriptures which testified of him and this we must sanctifie by earnest praier as Cornelius did Act. 10. 1
name and mediation of Christ for in our selues we are sinners our iniquities make a separation betweene God and vs so that wee cannot haue accesse vnto the father saue only by the mediation of Iesus Christ. If we would come with boldnesse into the holy place it must be by the new and liuing way which Christ hath prepared for vs through the vaile that is his flesh 5. In praier we must haue faith wherby we beleeue that the thing we aske shall be done vnto vs Mark 11. 24. whatsoeuer ye aske in praier beleeue that ye shall haue it and it shall bee done vnto you now the ground of this faith must be Gods commandement and his promise which I mentioned before The duties after praier are chiefly two 1. Wee must call to remembrance the praier wee made to God if one man talke with another he will be so attentiue that as neere as may be he will remember the words that passed betweene them and much more ought we so to doe when we talke with God now we must thus meditate on our praiers for this ende that we may the better doe the thing wee aske as we craue in praier the pardon of our sinnes so wee must after praier indeauour to leaue the practise of them What a horrible shame is it for men to begge at Gods hands the pardon of sinne and when they rise from praier to fall againe to the practise of it This is with the dogge to returne to his vomite and with the desperate thiefe to stealing after he hath intreated fauour of the Iudge 2. After praier wee must bee carefull to be as plentifull in thanksgiuing for blessings receiued as wee were in petition to craue them This indeede may bee done in the beginning of our praier though here I mention it last but omitted it may not be Ordinary men haue this humanitie that where they find friendship they will be more plentifull in rendring thankes then in making new requests and if we deale thus with men shall wee not much more doe it with God with whom true thankfulnesse for one blessing is a speciall meanes to procure many moe Now this thankfulnesse must not be onely in word but in deed testified by due obedience in life and conuersation and these are the duties whereby a man shall auoide all carnall ostentation in praier and approoue his heart vnto God therein By this description of the true manner of praier we may learne three things First that the Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practise the dutie of praier aright they pray not in knowledge for they pray in an vnknowne tongue and allow of ignorance as the Mother of deuotion they commend doubting by speaking against assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience they praie not in humilitie for mercie for their sinnes for they thinke to merit by their prayers and which is worst of all they direct not their praiers to God only in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the virgin Marie their Mediatresse yea they pray to the wooden crosse which is most horrible Idolatrie Secondly that our common people come farre short of their dutie in this part of Gods worship for their praiers consist chiefly in the bare repetition of words which is onely a lip-labour they pray without knowledge and feeling so must needes faile in many other duties Now this bewraies the manifold wants that be in the praiers of the best Christians for besides their ignorance of many duties in praier their doubting and distrust their dulnesse and deadnesse of heart and their by-thoughts doe all shew that their hearts are not wholly taken vp with Gods glorie as they ought to be Lastly hereby we may see the grosse ignorance of our common people about spels and charmes because they consist of good wordes and many strange things are done thereby therefore they thinke them to bee good praiers but herein they are deceiued through ignorance in the right forme of praier for they that make them and vse them are either gracelesse persons that haue societie with the deuil or grosly deluded through palpable ignorance and they cannot set themselues before God to approoue their hearts vnto him in this action nay the worship that is done herein is to the deuill and the cure that is wrought thereby is his worke for these charmes are his watch-word to stirre him vp to such exploits Furthermore in this clause Pray vnto thy Father which is in secret that is an inuisible God is couched a reason to induce men to the obedience of this commandement to this effect He to whom thou praiest i● an inuisible God therefore thou must endeauour to approoue the hidden man of thy heart vnto him Hence I gather first that it is an horrible thing to make an image to represent the true God or to worship God in it for God is inuisible The second commandement condemneth thē both as Moses himselfe doth so expound it Deut. 4. 15 16. Ye saw no Image in the day that the Lord spake vnto you in Horeb therefore corrupt not your selues by making you a grauen image or representation of any signe Secondly that there should be no outward pompe in prayer either for gesture or for garments for praier is made to an inuisible Father This ouerthrowes the whole worship of the Popish Church which stands in outward shews of carnall pompe if there be any pomp it must be inward in the graces of the heart among which humilitie is the first ornament Thirdly that all places are alike in respect of Gods presence and of his hearing for hee is a God in secret wheresoeuer a man hath occasion to praie there God is which confuteth them that make the Church a more holy place for praier then other-where and therefore reserue all their praiers till they come thither for now difference of place in respect of Gods presence is taken away God is as well in the fielde and in the priuate house as in the Church and yet Churches are ordained and vsed in a godly policie because a congregation may more conueniently there meete to their mutuall edification in the publike exercise of the word and praier otherwise priuate houses were as good places for Gods worship as Churches if they were so decent and conuenient for edification for in all places men may lift vp pure hands vnto God as the Apostle teacheth And thy father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly These words containe a two-fold reason wherby Christ perswadeth his hearers and in them all others to the carefull practise of the former dutie of sinceritie in praier The first reason is drawne from Gods All-seeing propertie the second from his bountie Gods all-seeing propertie is set out in these words the father which seeth in secret that is though the father himselfe be inuisible yet when thou
the same vnto vs. So that it is not here to be taken as it is commonly onely for a bare assent of the people answering the Minister in the congregation but for a part of the praier belonging both to Minister and people that pray in faith whether publikely or priuately and that so much more excellent then the former by how much our faith excelleth our desire yea it is the seale of our hearts which we must set to euery petition for to ratifie and confirme the same vnto our selues as when we say Halowed be thy name our hearts must say Amen that is as I desire grace to glorifie thy name so I beleeue Lord thou wilt enable me thereunto and so for the rest The vse I. Frō the vnion of this word with the petitions we learne that euery child of God must beleeue particularly and certenly the pardon of his own sinnes endeauour by grace to attaine thereunto if as yet he cannot be perswaded of it This the Papists denie teaching that a man must onely beleeue in generall that remission of sinnes belongs to Gods Church hope well for himselfe and they make it presumption for a man to arroga●e particular certenty vnto himselfe But it is no presumption because we must beleeue to receiue frō God that we aske according to his will now God bids vs aske forgiuenes of our particular sinnes therfore we must beleeue it so by faith may be assured of it as for their generall faith it differeth not from the faith of deuills for they beleeue there is remission of sinnes in Gods church And to say we hope well when we are not assured by faith is to bewray both ignorāce negligence in the matter of our saluation for faith is the ground of things hoped for therefore their hope without faith must needs be a blind presumption And here further we may note that by their opiniō they abolish a great part of the Gospel for with the gracious promises of mercy in Christ made therein the Gospel cōmandeth euery penitent person that beleeueth to applie the same promises particularly to himselfe this part of it they cut off so depriue the child of God of all true comfort II. This testification of our faith ioyned to our requests shewes that all praier ought to be made in a knowen tongue for els the assent affiance of the heart cannot be giuen together Ob. The word here vsed is an hebrew word which was vnknowne to the Greek churches now if one word of maine vse in praier may be in vnknowne tōgue why may not many so a whole praier Ans. Though this word Amen be hebrew yet by vse it became as familiar wel knowne in the Greek Church so in other Churches as any word of their owne dialect as many Latine words as nisi prius and other tearmes of law by common vse become familiar and wel knowne in our English tongue The vse of the Lords prayer The principall vse of this prayer is to be a patterne and direction whereby the Church of God and euery member of it may frame their praiers to God on any occasion And because many through ignorance faile in this point therefore I will stand somewhat to shew how the Lords praier must be made a patterne to our praiers For this ende we must applie the seuerall petitions of this praier both to the speciall times of praier as morning and euening and also to the speciall occasions whereupon we pray which may be reduced to some of these three to wit 1. some waightie businesse we haue in hand 2. some affliction we are in or in danger of 3. or in regard of death Now to applie the petitions to each of these seuerally I. In the morning A fit praier for that time before we set vpon the duties of our calling may thus be framed from these petitions 1. we must desire the Lord to giue vs grace to seeke the aduancement of his glorie that day following in the duties of our calling in euery thing we take in hād 2. that he would rule in our hearts by his grace guide vs by his word that whole day 3. enable vs to doe his will that day and not our owne euen with readines delight 4. strengthen vs to depend vpon his prouidence that day for all things needefull for this life 5. that he would humble vs in our selues for our sinnes giue vs repentance for them pardon in Christ Iesus that so no iudgment light vpon vs for them and that our hearts may be enclined to loue mercy towards our brethren as we desire mercie with God for our owne soules 6. That God would strengthen vs against temptation that neither the world the flesh nor the deuill preuaile against vs. And of all these we must gather assurance because all soueraigntie and power and glorie belongs to God II. At euening also we may fitly applie these petitions for the comfortable cōmending of our selues to God that night 1. intreating God to blesse our rest vnto vs that thereby we may be fitter to glorifie God 2. That we may rest and sleepe safely as his true subiects vnder his gracious regiment 3. That we may doe his will as well in rest as in labour in the night and secretly as in the day sight of men 4. That he would blesse our rest sleepe that it may cōfortably serue for the preseruation of our liues 5. That he would forgiue the sinnes of the day past that so no cu●se terrour nor feare meete with vs for them the night following 6. That he would keepe vs in our rest from all sinnefull lusts from all wicked motions and suggestions either waking or sleeping III. When we enterprise any waightie matter or businesse of our callings we may fitly applie these petitions in praier to God for abilitie good successe therein for whatsoeuer we take in hand we must doe it in the name of the Lord 1. we must pray that in this whole businesse our hearts may be set sincerely to seeke the aduancement of Gods glorie 2. That the Lord would vouchsafe to guide and gouerne vs in doing the worke whatsoeuer it be 3. That in doing of it we may make conscience to doe the will of God and to obey him from the beginning to the ende of it 4. That we may by faith relie vpon Gods prouidence for the issue and effect of our whole endeauour 5. That none of our sinnes may bring a curse vpon vs in the worke 6. That neither Satan nor any other enemie of our soules may hinder vs by temptation but that God would deliuer vs from them all IV. When any affliction lies vpon vs or ours we may hence frame holy requests to God Intreating 1. that we may honour God by patience and obedience in that affliction and not dishonour him 2. That God would shew in vs the
shall be giuen you seeke and ye shall finde knock and it shall be opened vnto you In this verse and those which follow vnto the twelft is laid downe the third part of this chapter concerning praier and it consisteth of two branches a commandement to pray and effectuall reasons to perswade vs thereto The commandement is propounded in three seuerall teannes Aske seeke and knocke each whereof hath his promise annexed thereto Ye shall haue ye shall find and it shall be opened vnto you Now for our better vnderstanding of Christs meaning herein two rules must be obserued I. That Christ here speakes not of euery kind of asking in praier but of that onely which himselfe commandeth and alloweth for we may aske and not receiue because we aske amisse as S. Iames saith but he that asketh according to Christs direction in this place shall receiue Now in all acceptable praier to God foure conditions must be obserued I. We must aske while the time of grace and mercie remaineth for if the day of grace be once past we may aske seeke and knocke but all in vaine this is plaine by the fiue foolish virgins who asked sought for oyle but found none yea they called and knocked but it was not opened vnto them Matth. 25. 8. 9. 12. Now the time of this life while God offers mercie vnto vs in his word is the acceptable time and the day of grace 2. Cor. 6. 2. and therefore herein must we aske seeke and knocke II. We must not aske as seemeth good vnto our selues but according to Gods will and as his word alloweth The sonnes of Zebedie were denied their request because they asked they knew not what Matth. 20. 22. But this is our assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs 1. Ioh. 5. 14. III. We must aske in faith that is beleeue that God will graunt vs those things which we aske according to his will Iam. 1. 5 6. If any man lacke wisdome let him aske of God but let him aske in faith and wauer not for the wauering minded man shall receiue nothing of God therfore saith Christ Whatsoeuer ye desire in praier beleeue that ye shall haue it and it shall be done vnto you Mark 11. 24. IV. We must referre the time and manner of Gods accomplishing our requests to his good pleasure It was the sinne of the Israelites that they limited the holy one of Israel by prescribing him what they would haue for their prouision and when they would haue it Psal. 78. 41. we therefore must waite on God as Dauid did Psal. 40. 1. I waited patiently for the Lord and he enclined his eare vnto me and heard me God deferres the graunting of our requests because he would trie the affections of his children Cantic 3. 1. The Church seeketh Christ but cannot finde him that is where and when shee will And indeede herein doe we shew forth faith when we referre the time and manner of receiuing our request to the good pleasure of God for he that beleeueth will not make hast Isa. 28. 16. The second rule to be here remembred concerning prayer is That these promises are not made directly to the worke of prayer but to the person that prayeth and yet not to him simply as he doth this good action of praier but as he is in Christ for whose merite sake the promise is accomplished and therefore Christ here speakes to them whome he takes for graunted to be the true members of his mysticall bodie which is his Church This rule must be remembred for the right vnderstanding of the promises of God concerning prayer for hereby it is plaine that our prayer is not the cause of the blessings we receiue from God but onely a way and instrument in and by which God conuayeth his blessings vnto his children for a true praier is a fruit of our faith in Christ in whome alone all the promises of God are yea and amen that is sure and certen vnto vs. Now hauing found Christs meaning let vs come to such instructions as are to be gathered hence First obserue that Christ doeth not barely propound this commandement to pray but repeates the same by a kind of gradation in three distinct words Aske seeke and knocke whereof the latter imports more vehemence then the former And this he doth to checke the slacknesse and coldenesse of our prayers and to stir vs vp to feruent zeale and diligence in this duetie both in publike and priuate And to mooue vs to godly zeale and diligence in this dutie consider the reasons following I. Christs owne example which in morall duties is a perfect rule Now though he had little need to pray in respect of himselfe for he did neuer sinne yet how often and how long and with what feruencie did he giue himselfe to this dutie he spent whole nights in prayer Luk. 6. 12. and in prayer in the garden he swet water and blood We haue also Moses example who spent fourtie dayes and fourtie nights in praier and fasting for the people when they had sinned Deuter. 9. 18. 19. If he were thus feruent in prayer for their sinnes how earnest would he be for his owne And Daniel humbled himselfe many dayes and prayed feruently for his people Dan. 9. 3. 4. c. Dauid prayed seuen times a day and rose vp at midnight to giue thankes to God Psal. 119. 164. 62. And Paul willeth the Romans that they would striue or wrestle with him by praier to God Rom. 15. 30. All these are worthie examples vnto vs and if we compare our selues with them we shall see we haue much more cause so to doe for our sinnes abound aboue theirs and therefore we had need to pray for the preuenting of Gods iudgements which our sinnes call for against vs. Also we come far short of them in grace and therefore had need to pray for supply thereof against the time of neede for our dayes of peace will not alwayes last wee haue enioyed it long and therefore must looke for dayes of triall for the state of Gods Church is interchangeable II. Reason All of vs must come to deale with God both in the day of death and at the day of iudgement at both which times all worldly helpes and comforts will forsake vs and by no meanes can wee shunne that accompt therefore it will be good for vs while we liue often to set our selues before the Lord that so we may make our selues familiar and acquainted with him against that day But if now we estrange our selues from God in regard of this exercise of prayer then at our ende wee shall finde the Lord to be strange vnto vs and to professe that he knowes vs not which will be woe vnto vs. III. Reason Euery good thing we haue or stand in need of comes from the mercie and bountie of God in Christ and prayer is an
the written word to be right Scripture and the ground of that which is in the heart for the word written carries a most certen sense beeing both text and glosse whereas their inward Scripture varieth as men doe vnlesse it be grounded on the written word II. Use. The certentie of Scripture must teach vs to beleeue Gods word and not to feare to rest our selues vpon it The Author of Scripture by his prouidence preserues his owne word so as all the men in earth for substance cannot corrupt the same and therefore whatsoeuer it saith we neede not doubt but it is the will of God III. Point From this reason we may also gather the Authoritie of Canonicall Scripture for we must doe as we would be done to because the law and the Prophets say so and hence it followes that the law and Prophets haue an high soueraigne and absolute authoritie This authoritie of Scripture stands in two things I. in power to giue iudgement II. in the all-sufficiencie thereof in and of it selfe and both these are noted here by our Sauiour Christ in this reason For the first the power of giuing iudgement is that whereby Scripture doth fully and absolutely determine of all things needfull to saluation concerning faith and maners and for this cause the laws of God are oft in Scripture called iudgements There be diuers iudgements ascribed to sundrie sorts of persons in Scripture First it giues a iudgement to euery priuate man The spirituall man discerneth or iudgeth all things and Saint Iohn biddes the beleeuers in the Church p●●●●● the spirits that is trie by iudgement the doctrines deliuered Secondly the Scripture giues iudgement to publike persons as to Pastors Ministers and to the gouernours of the Church Let two or three propheci● and the rest iudge 1. Cor. 14. 29. and the spirit of the Prophets is subiect to the Prophets v. 32. Thirdly Iudgement is ascribed to the Prophets Apostles in Scripture Act. 15. 28. It seemed good to the holy Ghost and to vs and this is an high Iudgement which befals not any priuate man or any ordinarie minister or general Councel ordinarily but is peculiat to extraordinarie Prophets that were the pen-men of holy Scripture And these three kindes of Iudgements must be distinguished the two first kinds are inferiour ministeriall kinds of Iudgement depending on an higher and more soueraigne Iudgement for priuate men and ordinarie ministers and Councels giue Iudgement yet not of themselues but by their rule which is the word of God and this Iudgement is nothing else but a ministerie pronouncing and declaring the meaning of the will of God reuealed in his word But besides this there is a soueraigne kind of Iudgement you c●safed to the Prophets and Apostles determining absolutely in matters of faith conscience what is to be done what is not and this is the Iudgement of God himselfe whereupon the Apostles might say It seem●th good to the holy Ghost and to vs Act. 15. 28. And that this their Iudgement is absolute appeares by Scripture He that heareth you heareth me saith Christ to his Apostles he that ref●s●th you refuseth me Luk. 10. 16 and Paul deliuering the Gospel of Christ to the Galatians bids them hold him accursed that teacheth thē otherwise Gal 1. 7. and the promise of sending the spirit of truth Ioh. 16. 13. was directly intended to the Apostles and onely in them fully accomplished For our better conceiuing hereof wee haue a resemblance of this soueraigne iudgement in the common wealth the high Court of Parliament giues iudgement of matters in law and so doe Lawyer● and Iudges in common Courts but yet there is great differen●e betweene these two the court of Paliament makes the lawe and determines absolutely in ciuill matters without controlement what must be done and what not but the Lawyers make not the law but pronounce the meaning of the law vnto men Now the Scriptures the Prophets and Apostles they are like to the cour● of Parliament in giuing iudgement priuate men and ordinarie ministers giue iudgement like vnto the Lawyers which is not absolute but ministeriall depending on an higher iudgement Vses 1. If the Prophets Apostles haue soueraigne power to giue absolute iudgement in matters of faith and manners then we must here learne to make choice of a right Iudge for vnto one must wee appeale in matters of faith and conscience and this right Iudge is Gods word which wee must sticke vnto and to none other The commandement is plaine for matters of difficultie that concerne the conscience Isay 8. 20. To the law and to the testimonio and our Sauiour Christ referres vs to Scripture for all matters that concerne saluation Ioh. 5. 39. Search the Scripture If you would know what is true in religion what is erroneous what is equitie in any matter of conscience wee must haue recourse to Scripture It will be said Scripture is an vnfit Iudge it cannot speake I answer It speakes sufficiently to determine of all matters of faith and conscience wee see in common experience a man may resolue his friend in matters of doubt as well by letter as by word of mouth why then may not the word of God sent from heauen vnto his Church resolue mens consciences in all matters of doubt for faith and manners And indeed let any man come in humilitie seriously search the Scripture and he shall finde resolution therein for any matter of conscience whatsoeuer Vse 2. By this authoritie of Scripture in giuing soueraigne iudgement we are taught to take heed of an incompetent Iudge which men for many hundred years haue set vp in their hearts to relie vnto in matters of faith and conscience and that is to put the Church in roome of the word for soueraigne iudgemēt The Church of Rome teacheth that the Church must iudge of the Scripture yea without Scripture giue soueraigne determination in matters of conscience as hauing more authoritie then Scripture because it giues authoritie thereunto but this is the ground of Atheisme and heresie and the path way to Popery the true Church of God must haue the honour of Christs spouse but yet the authoritie of soueraigne iudgement must not bee giuen to her but onely to the word of God himselfe The second part of the authoritie of Scripture is that euery part of Canonicall Scripture is Authenticall that is of sufficient authoritie of it selfe though it bee not confirmed by any other testimonie for Scripture is the word of God and the testimonie of Scripture is the testimonie of God himselfe then which none can be greater as Saint Iohn saith If wee receiue the testimonie of men the testimonie of God i● greater 1. Ioh. 5. 9. For the better conceiuing of this point conferre all the bookes that are or euer were together and thereby it will appeare that the Scripture is of it selfe Authenticall There be three sorts of
required to make a false Prophet the Scripture is plaine There shall bee false Teachers among you saith Saint Peter which priuily shall bring in damnable heresies 2. Pet. 2. 1. There is the first propertie and for the second that they must be seducers Christ himselfe teacheth vs Matth. 24. 24. There shall come false Christs and false Prophets and shall sh●we great signes and wonders so as if it were possible they should deceiue the very elect And of both these properties ioyntly S. Paul speaketh Rom. 16. 17. I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye haue receiued and auoyde them for they that are such serue not the Lord but their owne bellies with faire speech and sl●ttering deceiue the hearts of the simple So then Christs meaning in this commandement is this You shall bee troubled with many false Prophets which shall bring in damnable doctrines among you and withall labour to seduce you from the truth and therefore take heed of them And these two notes wee must marke in a false Teacher to distinguish him from a schismatike and from an hypocrite for euery false Teacher is a schismatike but euery schismatike is not a false Teacher If wee would haue examples of false Teachers behold the Iesuites and Romish Priests for they come among vs and bring false doctrine with intent to deceiue and seduce our people Such likewise are the Familie of loue and such were the Arrians in time past that denied the godhead of Christ as for others that hold priuate errours not rasing the foundation neither seeking to seduce others they may be hypocrites schismatikes and bad Christians but they are not false Prophets Thus much for the meaning of the commandement The Uses 1. By this caueat Christ would teach vs that the deuill shewes his exceeding great malice against Gods Church and people in these last times of the world he subornes false Teachers to bring in dānable doctrine and mooues them to seduce men from true religion This thing Christ did plainely foretell Matth. 24. 24. and Saint Paul chargeth the Elders of Ephesus to take heed vnto themselues to their flockes for I know saith he that after my departing shall grieuous wolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Moreouer of your owne selues shall men arise speaking peruerse things to drawe Disciples after them And Saint Peter foretels of the like as we heard before 2. Pet. 2. 1. The truth hereof is verefied by experience for in the first foure hundred yeares after Christ which were the prime and chiefest times of the Church there arose fourescore and eight seuerall kinds of false Prophets which seduced men from the faith and true religion and preuailed greatly And no doubt in the end of the world Satan wil now shew his malice as great against the Church as hee did then and therefore Christ bids take heed of them And for this cause when we see men that professe religion fall away to heresie and be corrupted seeking also to seduce others we must not much maruell at it or be thereby discouraged but rather watch more carefully for the deuill will stirre vp false Prophets daiely to deceiue the Church of God II. Instruction From this commandement wee may also see that we are feeble full of weakenesse in the faith so as a little thing will easily make vs forsake our faith and true religion if this were not so what should we neede this exhortation who was more couragious and forward in profession then Peter and yet the voice of a sillie damsell made him denie his master and to forsweare his faith and religion The Galatians receiued the Gospel so gladly from Paul at the first that hee professesseth they would haue pluckt out their own eies to haue done him good and yet when he writ vnto them hee wonders they were so soone fallen to another Gospel receiuing the doctrine of iustification by works Yea this sheweth that we haue itching eares whereby we will readily and willingly receiue wholesome doctrine for a time but soone after desire new doctrine againe like vnto the Iewes who for a while delighted in the light of Iohns ministerie Ioh. 5. 35. and to the old Israelites who liked Manna at the first but after a while were wearie of it and complained that their soule dried away whereupon they lusted after the flesh-pots of Egypt againe So wee at the first did willingly receiue the Gospel of Christ but now many waxe wearie with it and beginne to like of Popish doctrine preferring their corrupt writers before those that haue beene the restorers of true religion vnto vs. III. Instruct. We must labour to maintaine faith and good conscience and not suffer our selues to be drawne there-from by Gods mercie we haue had the Gospel of truth among vs a long time and doe still enioy it for which we haue great cause to praise the name of God and in this regard we must labour to bee constant in holding it yea to liue and die with it This is the principal point which Christ here aimes at and therefore we must carefully learne it and for this purpose let vs remember these particular directions which follow First that God hauing restored vnto vs true religion doth require we should loue it as the chiefest treasure that euer this kingdome enioyed Wicked Ahab could not abide Elias and Michaiah Gods true Prophets but hated them for which cause God left him to himselfe and suffered him to be seduced by foure hundred false Prophets of Baal and thereby brought him to destruction And the Apostle speaking of the kingdom of Antichrist saith that God therein giues men vp to strong illusions that they should beleeue lies because they haue not loued the truth 1. Thes. 2. 10. 11. Now this loue we must shewe by our obedience in duties of pietie to God and in the exercise of iustice and mercy towards our brethren else God will translate his Gospel from vs and giue it to a nation that wil bring forth the fruits thereof A second rule to be obserued for the maintaining of true religion is this that ministers especially and those that intend that calling should highly esteeme and reuerently account of those men and their writings which by Gods mercie haue beene the meanes to restore vnto vs pure religion for though they were men subiect to error and in some things might slippe yet they were the worthy instruments of Gods mercy for the planting of his Gospel among vs which since their time hath beene sealed with the blood of many Martyrs in England Germanie and else-where in which regard though we must onely depend on the pure word of God for certaintie of truth yet we are to giue much vnto them and be followers of them for the substance of religion wherein they doe most soundly consent in one truth
This I note because they beginne to be in disgrace with many and corrupt Popish writers are farre better accounted of Thirdly if any among vs doubt of any point in religion let him doe these two things for his resolution which are the ordinarie meanes to know the truth First let him search the holy Scriptures diligently not by priuate studie onely but by conference with the godly Secondly let him in true humilitie of heart pray vnto God for the illumination of his spirit whereby he may in minde rightly conceiue of the truth embrace it by faith in his heart and honour it by obedience in his life thus doing constantly and in sinceritie he shall be sure to be preserued from errour both finall and fundamentall and in due time shall know the truth for the promise is Aske and ye shall haue seeke and ye shall finde verse 12. and Saint Iames saith If any man lacke wisedome necessarie for his saluation let him aske of God vsing withall other lawfull meanes to come thereby and it shall bee giuen vnto him Hereto may be added this good help for satisfaction in this case of doubting namely to haue recourse to the generall confessions of reformed Churches which may be had in that notable booke The Harmonie of Confessions for although priuate men may erre as also particular Churches not onely seuerally but ioyntly in some things in this world yet the generall consent of reformed Churches may be a good direction to the knowledge of the truth and a good perswasion to constancie therein Fourthly we must keepe a good conscience if we would preserue the truth and puritie of religion for faith and good conscience goe alwaies together whereupon Saint Paul perswading Timothie to this dutie bids him haue faith and a good conscience which some haue put away as concerning faith haue made shipwracke 1. Tim. 1. 19. where a good conscience is resembled to a shippe which saileth ouer the sea of this world beeing laden with faith that is with true religion and other spirituall graces needefull to saluation Now if the shippe of our conscience be crazie and vnsound then is our faith and saluation in great danger and therefore wee must endeauour in all things to haue a cleare conscience both towards God and towards men IU Instruct. This commandement of our Sauiour Christ to beware of false Prophets doth barre the Church of God and euery member thereof from conuersing with false Prophets after they bee conuicted to be such It was Eues fault to admit conference with the deuill in the serpent and all of vs feele the smart thereof at this day It was Pauls counsell to the Romans to marke them diligently which caused diuision and offences among them contrarie to the doctrine which they had learned and to auoyde them and Saint Iohn plainely forbids this societie with them 2. Epist. verse 10. Receiue not him to thine house neither bidde him God speed that comes to teach you and brings not this doctrine yea though we saith Paul or an Angel from heauen teach you otherwise then that which we haue preached vnto you hold him accursed Galat. 1. 8. In the histories of the Church it is recorded that S. Iohn would not wash himselfe in the same bath wherein Cerinthus an heretike was washing himselfe nor abide vnder the same roofe but leaped out and perswaded others so to doe And indeede by Eues example we may see the danger of conference with false Prophets for the same euill spirit speakes in them Now this shewes first that the practise of many students is dangerous and against this commandement who take delight in popish Cōmentaries and postils ascribing to them more learning and Iudgement then can be sound in those writers that were the restorers of true religion vnto vs hence it is that they labour more in them then in the Scripture it selfe or in other sound writers thereupon But if there bee any false Prophet at this day it is the Papist and their writings are dangerous to be read of those that are not well grounded in the truth for by reading we haue a kind of familiaritie with them and indeede many sucke out of them at vnawares much venim in waighty points of doctrine and religion We ought rather to doe with them as the beleeuers of Ephesus did with their bookes of curious Arts namely bring them out and burne them then take such delight in them albeit this must be graunted it is both lawfull and necessarie for the defence of the truth that men of sound iudgement and piety doe labour in them Secondly hence also it may appeare that it cannot bee but a great hindrance to true religion that hereticall bookes may be publikely sold to any one that will buie them without due consideration whether the partie haue gifts to discerne of truth from falshood in the Popish Church they are more carefull they permit not a man to read an heretikes booke as they call vs Protestants without leaue and that vnder a great penaltie which is seuerely inflicted vpon offenders that way V. Instruct. This commandement also shewes that it is not lawfull to graunt to any man or to any people the libertie of their owne conscience in the matters of religion permitting them to professe what religion they will for how should false Prophets be auoided when euery man may freely professe what he will in religion All gouernours therfore must follow the practise of good king Iosias who assembled all Iuda and caused all his people to heare the word of the Lord and to stand to that religion which the booke of God made knowne vnto them 2. Chro. 34. 32. V. Doctr. Wee haue from this commaundement an answer to the false charge of the Church of Rome who accuse vs of schisme and apostacie because we separate from their Church But we must know that the schisme apostacie is there where the cause of departing is which indeede is not in vs who doe no more herein but obey this commaundement of Christ the cause is in them who are become false prophets whom we must auoyd Here yet two questions may bee demaunded I. Whether a false Prophet may be put to death seeing Christ bids onely to beware of them Answ. Christ here speakes to his Apostles and to other of his auditors that were priuate men whose dutie raught no further but yet the truth is that a false Prophet beeing iudicially conuicted is to bee put to death the word of God elsewhere is plaine Leuit. 24. 14. there is both a commandement and a practise Euery blasphemer must die This wicked Iesabel knew wel who vnder pretence of blasphemie caused Naboth to be put to death and hereupon the Iewes sought to put Christ to death Yea Nabuchadnezzar an heathen king hauing but a taste of this that the God of Israel was the true God made this lawe that whosoeuer blasphemed
though wee cannot see the shaddow of the sunne mooue yet wee may perceiue that it doth moo●e Now by their fruits it is cleare they bee corrupt for they reuerse the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles both in the Commandements of the Law and in the Articles of faith First they disanull the first commaundement by making to themselues other Gods beside the true God for they pray vnto Saints and therein acknowledge a diuine propriety in them and also giue vnto them the honour due to God alone and so set vp vnto themselues the creature in the roome of the creator The second they reuerse by worshipping God himselfe and dead men in images Christ himselfe in the crucifixe yea in a peece of bread wherein they match the grossest idolatry a●ong the heathen and the best learned among them teach that the Rood the Crosse and Cruci●ixe are to bee worshipped with the same worship wherwith Christ himselfe is worshipped In the 6. Command touching murther they cōdemne the killing one of another but yet if a priest come from the Pope kill a Protestant Prince the Lords annointed King or Queene that is not onely no sinne but a ●●●t notable rare and memorable works Against the 7. commandement they maintaine the vow of single life necessarie in their religious orders whereby as also by their stues they cause all filthinesse 〈◊〉 natiō to abound among them And for the tenth commandement they say that concupiscence after baptisme is no sinne properly In the Articles of faith they ouerturne those that concerne Christ making him no Sauiour but a diuine instrument whereby we saue our selues for they ●ake mens good workes 〈◊〉 by Gods grace after th● first instification truly and properly m●ritorious and fully worthy of euerlasting life And his offices they haue parted from him his kingly and propheticall offices betweene him and the Pope and his Priesthood between him and euery popish priest as wee haue shewed before so that by these fruits we plainly see their apostacie which is enough though we know not when and by whom it came 2. Vse Here also we haue to answer such among our selues as renounce our Church as beeing no true Church of Christ because say they we want true ministers and so haue not a right ministerie among vs. But hence we answer that we haue the true Church of God and our ministers be the true ministers of God for proofe hereof our ministers haue the outward calling of the Church of England they say indeede our calling is nought because they haue power from God to call in whose hands it is But to omit that question for this time sufficient approbation of our ministery may be had from the fruits of our ministers as they are ministers for to leaue the fruits of their liues as sufficient meanes to iudge them by our ministers teach through Gods blessing the true and wholesome doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles and are alloued and called hereto by the gouernours of the Church and accepted of their people whose obedience to the faith is the seale of their ministery and this is sufficient to confirme the calling of our ministers if it had not Christ would not haue said Ye shal know them by their fruits 3. Use. Whereas Christ saith Ye shall know them speaking to all his hearers he takes it for graunted that euery beleeuer may bee able to iudge of false Prophets and therefore euery one in the Church of God ought to labour for so much knowledge whereby hee may bee able to knowe a Teacher by his fruits and doctrine This then sheweth that euery one ought to know the summe of true religion comprised in the Articles of faith and in the commandements of the Law both for their true meaning and right and profitable vse vnto themselues which thing I note because I know many deceiue themselues herein thinking that God will excuse them for their want of knowledge because they are not booke-learned But let vs consider wee haue euery one this care to be able to iudge of meates which concerne our bodies which be wholesome and which not should wee not then haue much more care of our soules to be able to discerne of doctrines in religion which be either the poison or saluation of our soules 4. Vse Whereas wholesome doctrine out of Scripture is a note of a true Prophet it teacheth vs that we may lawfully vse the ministery of those men whose liues and conuersations be euill and offensiue if so be their doctrine bee sound and good The Disciples of our Sauiour Christ must not doe according to the waies of the Scribes and Pharisies but yet they must hear● them when they sit in Moses chaire that is when they teach Moses doctrine And Paul is glad when Christ is truly preached though it be not in sinceritie of affection but of enuie When the Disciples saw a man that was not called by any speciall calling to follow Christ as themselues were and cast out deuills in the name of Christ they thought it intolerable and therefore forbad him but Christ said Forbid him not for he that is not against vs is with vs And the like may be saide of them that preach wholesome doctrine though their liues be still offensiue for in doctrine they be with Christ and so farre-forth must be approoued Againe consider that the vertue and efficacie of the word and Sacraments administred by men is not from the minister but from God a letter is not the worse because it is brought by an vnhonest or vnfaithfull carier Neither doth the euill conscience of the minister defile the good conscience of the honest hearer and worthie receiuer This must be remembred because many take offence at the life of the minister so as they will not heare his doctrine if his conuersation be scandalous V. In that a Prophet is to be knowne by his fruits and the maine fruit of a true Prophet stands in the good handling of Gods word for the edification and saluation of his hearers hence the children of the Prophets and those that are set a part for the ministerie of the word are taught that they must make this the maine and principall ende of all their studies to be able to bring forth the fruits of a true Prophet that is to interpret ●●ight the word of God and thence to gather out wholesome doctrines and vses for the edification of Gods people And for the inforcing of this dutie let vs consider first that it is Gods commandement so to doe 1. Cor. 14. 1. Seeke for spirituall gifts but specially to prophesie Againe the greatest skill of a Prophet stands in the true expounding and right diuiding of Scripture so as it may become food for mens soules 2. Tim. 2. 15. Show thy selfe a workeman that needeth not to be ashamed in diuiding the word of truth aright And lastly this true fruit
and matters of faith necessarie to saluation is so plaine that it may be vnderstood of the simplest ●ls Christ would neuer haue sent the Iewes to the Scriptures for the certen knowledge of the M●ssias Which notably discouers the fraudulent dealing of the Romish teachers who in matters of controuersie in religion send vs for resolution to the Church calling it the stay and pillar whereto we must leane in all doubts of doctrines The church I graunt is to be reuerenced but yet we must not build our faith vpon the doctrine of men Our Sauiour Christ sent the Iewes vnto the Scriptures and hereby the Bereans tried Pauls doctrine and are commended And indeede though men be neuer so vnlearned yet if they come in humilitie to search the Scripture and in obedience vnto God praying for knowledge they may be able by Gods word to discerne of false teachers vers 21. Not euery one that saith vnto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but he that doth my fathers will which is in heauen From this verse to the 24. is conteined another portion of Christs sermon beeing the seauenth part of this chapter wherein he intreateth of the state of those that professe his holy name in his Church here on earth And his maine scope drift herein is to shew that men must not content themselues to professe religion outwardly but there-with they must ioyne true godlines and sincere obedience This point is as wayghtie and of as great importance as any of the former respecting the maine point of m●ns saluation and it conteineth two parts A maine conclusion in this verse And a proofe and explanation of one part thereof ver 22. 23. The conclusion it selfe hath two parts 1. that some men professing the name of Christ shall not be saued which part is afterward explaned and confirmed the 2. part is this that some professors of religion shal be saued which is not onely propounded but the parties also are plainely described The first part is a most fearfull sentence against many that liue in the Church that notwithstanding their profession of the name of Christ yet they shall neuer be saued And this is most true beeing spoken by him that hath the power of life and of death who is also the God of truth that cannot lie saying Not euery one that saith Lord Lord that is that professeth God to be his God shall enter into the kingdome of heauen There be two kinde of professors in the Church of God that shall neuer be saued the first are grosse hypocrites which professe Christ with their mouth and yet in heart and life they renounce him of this sort is first the common Atheist who onely for fea●e of the magistrates lawes professeth religion secondly the Epicure that is such a one who beares Christs name for fashions sake and yet his bellie and pleasure is his God thirdly the worldling who spends the strength of bodie and mind and all he hath on the world for earthly things Now none of all these if they thus liue and die can be saued The second sort are more close hypocrites which professe the name of Christ in some truth and haue in them some good gifts of God by reason whereof both before men and in their owne conceite they are reputed members of the Church and yet for all this they are indeed but hypocrites which shall neuer be saued And that we may somewhat discerne of them I will note the gifts which they may haue whereby they may come to professe Christ truly they may be reduced to fiue heads The first is the spirit of bondage to feare Rom. 8. 15. This is a certaine gift of God whereby a man doth discerne the right meaning and iudiciall vse of the law in himselfe concerning sinne and the punishment thereof for though a man by nature know something of the law yet he knowes not all nor the right vse thereof now by reason of this knowledge he sees himselfe in bondage and in regarde thereof doeth feare from whence may proceede many good things as griefe for sinne confession and humiliation for the same and praier for pardon Thus wicked Pharaoh confessed the righteousnesse of God and that he and his people had sinned Exod. 9. 27. And so did Ahab at the heauie message of God by Eliah 1. King 2. 27. he rent his clothes and put sackecloath vpon him and fasted and lay in sacke-cloath So Iudas when he sawe that Christ was condemned he repented of his fact beeing g●ieued for it and ashamed to looke any man in the face and also confessed the same before God and men Matth. 27. 3 4. A second gift which a close hypocrite may haue is faith as had Simon Magus for he beleeued and was baptized Act. 8. 13. neither was it a false and dissembling faith altogether but in some sort a true though not a sauing faith for he beleeued and yet was in the gall of bitternesse So Ioh. 2. 23. it is saide certaine beleeued in Christ but he durst not commit himselfe vnto them And that we be not deceiued herein we must know that this faith of an hypocrite hath in it three things knowledge of the truth approbation thereof with assent vnto it and a kinde of perswasion that Christ is his redeemer Of the second degree of this faith we haue example 2. Pet. 2. 18. where some are said to be beguiled with wantonnesse through fleshly lusts who had cleane escaped from them that be wrapt in ●rror that is in idolatrie And of the third degree we haue example in the same chap. vers 1. where some false prophets are said to denie Christ that bought them because for a time they professed themselues to be redeemed and were also perswaded in a generall sort that he had bought them yet herein they failed that they did not truly apprehend the merit of Christ and applie it effectually vnto themselues The third gift of a close hypocrite is a taste of Gods fauour Hebr. 6. 6. it is saide of some that fall quite away That they were inlightned by Gods spirit and had a taste of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come though they were neuer ●ed nor filled therewith The fourth gift is good affections good I say not in them but in their kinde and so farre forth as we can iudge they haue ioy in the good things of God Luk. 8. 13. They that are on the stones are they which when they haue heard receiue the word with ioy They haue zeale for Gods glorie as had Iehu 2. king 11. 15. and yet he departed not from the sinnes of his forefathers v. 32. Thirdly they haue reuerence to Gods Ministers as Herod to Iohn Baptist Mark 6. 20. Herod knowing Iohn to be a iust and holy man feared and reuerenced him The fifth gift is an outward reformation of life the stonie ground
9. can 11. c. b Rhem. on 2. Tim. 4. sect 4. c Rhem. on Matth. 26. s●ct 4. d Bellar. de Rom. 〈…〉 4. cap. 1● 6. e Rhem. on Heb. 9 sect 10. f M●ss●le Ro● a●●● 5. in ●●itan p. 30● g C●nsur Col ●●f 22● h Ibid. s. ●●7 i C●●us l. ● c. 13. k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de hi●● ●●●les c. 2. 3. The way of nature grace 〈…〉 Way of death broad Vniuersall grace con●●●ed Our dutie 〈◊〉 r gard of these two waies Luk. 13. 24. I. Charge How to walk in the way of life 1 2 3 II. Charge How to get courage against the straitnes of this way 1. Dutie How the law restraines our naturall desires 1. Commandement Restraints in the 2. Com. Restraints in the 3. Com. Restraints in the 4. Com. Restraints in the 5. Com. Restraints in the 6. Restraints in the 7. Restraints in the 8. Restraints in the 9. Restraints in the 10. Restraints of man● desires by the Gospel Math. 19. 26. Su●fer afflication patiently Our duti● in profession of the tr●d● III. 〈…〉 St●●●● to enter Ma●● 11. 12. Psal. 132. 2 3 4 5. 〈…〉 ●●demned 〈…〉 to 〈◊〉 1. The danger of ●e●ur●●i● ●●d ●6 29. 30 The assurāce of the pe●●tent Excuses of secure persons remooued 2. Excuse 3. Excus● from Gods predestination The better sort are slack i● striuing 11. part of Christs sermon What mak●● a false Prophet The meaning False Prophets di●f●r from schismatikes Iesuites and Priests are false Teachers Familists and Arrians Satans malice against the Church Act. 20. 28 29 30. The aboundance of he●etikes in the primi●iue Church Our weakenesse in the faith Gal. 4. 15. Gal. 1. 6. Our itching humo●r in matters of religion We must be constant in the faith Directions to maintaine the truth a 1. Ki. 21 20 b Cha. 22. 8. 2. Rule Restorers of religion ought to be had in account 3. Rule Howe to knowe the truth in religion Iam. 1. 5. 4. Rule Society with false Prophets is vnlawfull Rom. 16. 17. E●seb Recl hist. l. 3. c. 25. Delight in Popish writers vnlawfull Act. 19 19. Free sale of hereticall bookes is dangerous Toleration of false religion vnlawfull To separate from Rome no schisme Whether a false Prophet should be put to death 1. Kin. 21. 10. 13. Dan. 3 29. Why God suffers false Prophets 2. Th 2. 11 11 Danger of false Prophets 7. Pretences of false prophets 1. Allegation of scripture 2. Deep learning Rhem. on Heb. ● sect 8 Co●c Trid. sess 4. decr 2. 3. Goodly ti●●es 4. Fai●ed humilitie Colos 2. 18. and 23. ● Working miracles 6 Faire speeches 1. King 22. ● 7. Boldnesse in suffering Be wise as serpents We must preserue the puritie of the truth Fruits of a true Prophet God calleth Prophets diuersly How the restorers of religion frō Poperie were called 1. Not● of a false Prophet 2 Note of a true Prophet 2. Note of a false Prophet 3 Note of a true prophet of a false Rom. 16. 18. Luk. 20. 2 3. D●r●i Confu● resp Whita● ad 10. ●at Cap. p. 70. a Miss Rom. à Pio 5. in Li●an p. 304 b Rhem. on Heb 〈◊〉 sect 9. and c on Mat. 2. sect 3. d Aquin. 3. Summ. q. 25. 〈◊〉 3. 4. Xixti 5. Po●●t orat de morte Hen● ● habi●a a● 1589. f ●●llar de ●l●r l. 1. c 19. g Rhem on Rom. 6. sect ● h Rhem. on 2. Tim. 4. sect 4. Chap. 〈◊〉 p. 5● Our church defended against the Brownists The people ought to bee able to iudge of teachers We may vse the ministrie of wicked liuers Math. 23. 2 3. Philip. 1 18. ●●k 9. 49. The maine dutie of students in diuinitie What commends a minister How some ●●ces becom euill The state of the vnregenerate The greatnes of originall sinne Sauing grace is not vniuersall Bellarm. de grat lib. arb l. a. c. 5. G●b Bi● l. 2. dist 27. d●b 4. The miserie of the vnregenerate Good works follow iustification Concil Trid. sess 6. cap. 7. can 32. ●eli●r de ●us●i● l. 4. c. 14 The punishment of sa●e prophets Io● 15. 2. 6. Comfort against false prophets Matth. 25. 42. 45. Duties of him that would discouer a false prophet Rhem. on 1. Tim. 3. sect 9. 12. Part of Christs Sermon What professor shall not be saued Three grosse hypocrites 1 2 3 Close hypocrites What gifts a close hypo crite may haue 1 2 4 5 What professors shal be saued Wherin the doing of God will standeth Sauing faith comprehēds 3. things Ho● to know ●●r f●●●h to b● 〈…〉 Isa. 28. 16. The grou●●●f repēt●ce The nature of repentance New obedience Branches of new obedience How to become cheerfull d●●●● of the will of God We must go be●ond hypocrite● in grace Of the number that shal be condemned A dangerous conceit of a mans good estate The terror of the Lord. What it is to prophesie What it is to prophesie in Christs name What a miracle is God alone can work● miracles How men worke miracles Miracles now ceased Excellent gifts wil not saue vs without faith Mat. 12. 47 48 49 50. Receiue no new doctrine though confirmed by a miracle Gods knowledge of his creature 1. Generall 2. Speciall Vniuersall redemption confuted God deales not hardly in denying redemption to some Gods election and reprobation prooued The ground of Gods predestination For ●●ecne workes are not the ground of Gods decree The effect of Gods knowledge of some to be his A motiue to know and loue God 2 3 The Reprob●te neuer had tr●e 〈◊〉 Elect neue●●all away Wherein the secōd death standeth How Christ s●ff●red the sec●d death A monue to get fellowship with God How professors of religion may be work●●● of iniquiti●● Christ marks the most secret sinnes How Christ esteeme● a godly life A strong motiue to repētance Purge the heart from a ●u●pose of sinning Conclusion of Christs sermon The dutie of euery good hearer Obedient hearing is true wisdo● Superiours dutie Students dutie The true wisdome of prof●ssors 1. part of it 2. part of it 3. Part. How we are built on Christ. Eph. 2. 20 21. and 3. 17. Coloss. 2. 7. The fruit of true obedience A motiue to obedience True faith cannot be lost True beleeuers must haue their trialls The practise of a badde hearer How all hearers are bound to obedience The follie of professors Iam. 1. 22 23. Our commō error in iudging men to be wise A motiue to obedience Who build on the sands I. Papists Concil Trid. sess 6. cap. 7. 10. 16. 2 Common Protestants 3 The more forward Protestant The fruit of bad hearing Euery professor must be tried Our dutie in regard of trialls Daunger of hypocrisie The maiesty of Christs ministerie Astonishment at the word no sure signe of conuersion Act. 16. 27. 31 Quest. Why Christ conuerted so few Act. 2. 4● ●om 15. 8. Silence in the holy assemblies of the Church Christ preached plainly Carnall preaching The authoritie of Christs ministrie Causes of it ● The matter 2. The manner of his teaching 3. things accompanying his ministery Mini●●er● must maintaine the credit of their ministry Right manner of preaching Isay 6. 6 7. We must maintaine the dignitie of our profession Separation f●●m our Church is vnlawfull