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

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may so do but yet that is not all nor the most we must confute them quietly by a good life and by all contrary good conversation Which they shall behold Though the wicked will do no good works yet they look we which profess Religion more zealously should and herein we are beholden to them If any be forward in profession the world looks they should be very innocent in life and it ought so to be and seeing not onely God Angels and good men look for good life but even the very wicked let 's look to it they may have that they look for and see what will come of it Good works Here 's occasion offered to speak of good works but I cannot at large consider we onely briefly 1. What good works are namely Things commanded of God done by a Regenerate man in faith to the glory of God in our Neighbors good 1. They must be things commanded Gods Word being our rule and that which makes things good what is forbidden then is vile and what 's of our own heads what shew soever it hath Popish Religion stands most in such 2. Done of a Regenerate man For who can bring a clean thing out of that which is unclean we had need look whether we be Regenerate else we did never good in our lives whether in thought word or deed 3. In faith not onely of a man that hath faith but in a particular faith that that action is lawful and warrantable by the Word of God let 's look to our selves I doubt many run to those Games and to Usury which they have no warrant and Faith for 4. The end whereat we must aym must not be our selves nor our own merit credit profit but Gods glory in our neighbors good and thus done not onely the duties of Gods Worship which indeed are principal and duties done to our neighbors bodies and Souls be good works but even our eating and drinking and following our calling are good works though Papists make no good works but such as maintain their Religion by gifts and such as fill the belly 2. How necessary they are They are of absolute necessity to Salvation the path to Heaven yet not as causes of our Salvation and Justification before God as the Papists hold but effects of our Justification to declare the soundness of our Faith and that we are persons justified Papists cry out of us That we renounce good works profess liberty and set open a flood-gate to sin because we teach that works merit not but we establish works better then they even true good works We dare not yet say they merit for 1. They are not done by our own power 2. They are but our bounden duty 3. They are imperfect 4. We are perfectly justified before we can do any good work for we are justified by the Righteousness of Christ which is absolute and perfect then follow good works to declare we be persons justified by true Faith apprehending the Righteousness of Christ to declare our Election our Faith to be living our selves justified persons and in the way to Heaven And are they so necessary to Salvation le ts examine our lives they that can witness to themselves before God that they unfeignedly hate all evil and love God and his Commandments endeavoring in all things to be obedient thereunto let them be of good comfort it s a sign of Election a mark of true Faith and one in Christ and of one in the high-way to Heaven Therefore rejoyce what pains soever you have taken to come to this state and proceed chearfully This way will bring you to Heaven may comfort you in assurance of Faith Glorifie God That is may change their mindes to think well of you and of the Truth be prepared to their Conversion and when God shall work withal break forth into his praise Hence note That If we continue in innocency of life we shall be the means that God shall be glorified not onely in our selves by well-doing but also that others shall so do and so we shall prepare them to Conversion and make them like the better of the Truth and think they will be hearers too and doers of Gods will whereas on the contrary if we do contrary to our profession we shall dishonor God doubly both in our selves and move others so to do and so set them further off from the Truth which be too far already and make them speak evil thereof O this ought to be the greatest spur to godliness that may be we shal hereby win our neighbors soul as it were and provide well for Gods glory the two greatest things that can be next our own Soul the latter far above it O who would not look to himself when the Soul of our neighbor and the glory of God lyeth upon it and the credit of the Gospel so that the life of Christians is not a little to be regarded but great things depend upon it and what joy may we have of our selves to live to win our Neighbors and bring glory to God O this rebukes the wonderful fault and negligence of many Christians that partly falling into foul things partly yielding unto their own affections are carryed by their lusts living as others as froward as proud as hard and worldly some loose of promise some idle some living in every bodies debt c. do dishonor God and beat others back from Religion O if there were no more but the single dishonor to God it were too much considering what God hath done for us but Oh! when so many lyes are upon us that shall take hurt or good what a fault is this to be careless What a fearful thing is it to live to set men further off from Religion or open their mouths against Religion for they will not think ill or speak ill of you onely but they will fly upon the Gospel and the name of God which is innocent O therefore awaken your selves welfare Abraham that knew well the Canaanites and Perizzites dwelt then in the Land therefore walk the more watchfully O beloved if ever we took good it was by the Gospel and shall we thus require it and do we profess Gods holy name and yet cause others to reproach it O grievous In the day of visitation That is when God shall in mercy look upon them and work the grace of Conversion in their hearts visitting here is taken in good part as Luke 1. 68. Isa. 24. 21 22. as elswhere in an ill part as Exod. 20. 5. when God shall in his goodness turn his eye toward him that is in the snare of the Devil and by his Word and Spirit work Conversion in his heart Whence note 1. That Conversion is the work of God All men and Angels cannot change the heart of a man it s a work surpassing all Christs miracles and as great or greater then
thus Trust perfectly on that Grace c. Where we have three things 1. What they are exhorted to namely To trust 2. How Perfectly and 3. On what Grace That is Salvation which is described by the means how they came by it It was brought them and that by the Gospel which revealeth Jesus Christ. 1. They are exhorted to trust and believe in Christ for Salvation Faith is a particular assurance that whatsoever Christ hath done he hath done it for me This is to put on Christ to eat and drink his flesh and blood It hath three parts 1. Knowledge of the mystery of Salvation 2. Consent 3. Particular Application This is the instrument of our Salvation and puts a difference between justifying and temporary Faith what else soever a man hath there 's no Salvation promised to it This the mother of all true joy and peace The mother of all obedience and good life See it in Abrahams offering up his Son Hereby we are induced to do or suffer any thing for Christ This we must labor to come to when we feel our misery and desire to come out of it and hunger after Christ we ought to believe that we shall be saved This is the will of God saith our Savior that ye believe in him c. God is willing and de●irous we should believe The commandment of the Gospel is so and its commandments are as necessary to be obeyed as those of the Law He that believeth hath put to his seal that God is true It s therefore our fault that being come to the birth as it were we stand still and do not believe when God hath made us fit to believe either raze your selves out of the number of weary loaden sinners c. or else believe you shall be refreshed and are pardoned in Christ. 2. They are willed perfectly to trust namely 1. Sincerely without faining 2. Stedfastly without wavering 3. Constantly without breaking off Sincerely nor fainedly but so believe as we have ground out of Gods Word for it many say they hope to be saved and this is all but put them to prove why and whereon their perswasion is grounded they can say nothing Can you prove it out of Gods Word What promise have you thence if you have then it s well else its Presumption not Faith Try it by the fruits of Humiliation and by the fruits of Sanctification by thy love to the Word and Saints Stedfastly without wavering we must not be off and on we hope well but we cannot tell Gods promise is not yea and nay but most certain and infallible so that we may be out of all doubt To this purpose its called assurance of Faith and as Abraham we are willed to ask in Faith and not to waver It s true no mans faith is so perfect but there may be sometimes some doubtings but they are not of the nature of Faith but being from our corrupt nature are contrary thereunto 1. This condemns the Papists that tell us we may be of a good hope but are great enemies to assurance we may be assured say they in respect of God but in respect of our selves we cannot he being faithful changeth not but we are weak and variable may be well now but by and by fall a tormenting Doctrine If we look to our selves we need not doubt but despair rather and God hath not promised Salvation to us upon condition of our constancy as to Adam but of his unchangeable love he will never leave us but finish the good work he hath begun in us yea say the Papists if we hold out What a foolish repetition is this God will do great things for us if we continue what were this to us if we were left to our selves nay he will give us a minde to continue and so do all these things for us 2. This reproves even good honest humble Souls that long after Christ and hate sin with a deadly hatred and have many excellent things in them and yet stand at a stay they would not for all the world but hope that God will have mercy but cannot be assured Why Is not God faithful hath he not said that such and such shall be saved shall he say it and not do it God forbid O am I so unworthy Therefore he will have mercy on thee if thou didst not feel and bewail that he would not care for thee O my sins be so great Is his mercy onely able to take away small ones or the blood of Christ onely for lesser offences take heed O but it s not for me He names thee not but faith he not All weary and heavy loaden ones shall be eased all that take up his yoke shall finde rest to their Souls excludes he any exclude not thy self O but I have such a corrupt heart and offend him every day But how dost thou like thy sins I hare them they are as gall to my mouth I desire to be rid of them c. Why then be of good comfort no better sign of a childe of God then that thou strivest to mortifie them and to please God There is none free from corruption yet if thou fightest this Spiritual combat thou mayest believe and be thankful therefore this do strive against thy corruptions all thou canst and labor to reform more and more and then shalt not thou need to doubt of thy Salvation Lay the foundation of thy Salvation once sure and never raze it more if there be any fault in the roof be mending it but let the foundation he still Imitate thy Father Abraham God promised him a Childe What did he he neither looked on his own old age nor the deadness of Sarahs Womb but looked on the promise of God So do we look not on this or that our own unworthiness or what Satan saith but on Gods promise If the Devil do but put into your head you shall not be saved it shall prevail more then all we can say out of Gods Word fie upon it Is not he a lyar and a murtherer from the beginning Doth he not tell them that have no Faith that they have as them that have it that they have none Cleave to one testimony of Gods mouth and let all the temptations to the contrary be gone Renounce Thousands of them and stick to the promise O but I feel it not No how canst thou when thou wiltst not believe believe first and thou shalt feel after but though thou shouldst not feel of a good while yet believe the promise of God constantly without breaking off believe to morrow as to day next year as this we have good leave God is the same so shall we with Abraham Isaac and Jacob dye in the Faith Therefore use all good means to continue it and encrease it hear diligently receive the Sacrament carefully pray continually
in the way to it will he now disappoint thee No assuredly If he would not have saved thee he would have let thee alone as thy companions and many others and never have done this for thee O but the Devil is so strong and subtile and I so weak and simple He that hath pluckt thee out of his hands will never suffer him to get thee captive again It were else a disgrace to Christ Except therefore he be stronger then God and Christ thou needest not fear At the revelation of Jesus Christ. He plucks these Jews from Moses Law and the Ceremonies which were out of date but they could hardly be so perswaded and brings them to the Gospel which discovers Christ He was in that Law covered with Vails of Sacrifices and Ceremonies c. All these be done away in the Gospel where Christ is laid open without any covering Note We have the excellency of the Gospel that doth uncover and lay open Christ Jesus unto us brings us tidings of him who is the Way the Truth and the Life and the onely Savior of the world So that the Gospel is the glory of the World The Sun is not so necessary in the Firmament as the Gospel is to the world This teacheth us Christ which is life eternal and St. Paul desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified and counted all dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord O how welcome should this be It is well called glad tidings so it is indeed The Gospel is our pardon If we should finde evidences of great Lands and Inheritances to come to us or a Will wherein were bequeathed great Legacies to us how glad would we be of the same How often would we revise and read them over The Gospel brings us tidings and tells us the way to come to an everlasting inheritance and therein are bequeathed such blessed Legacies Item I give thee forgiveness of thy sins by my Sons death Item Eternal life by his obedience Item I give thee assurance that thou shalt be raised here from sin and that thy body shall be raised at the last day by my Sons Resurrection Item I give thee assurance of a place in Heaven by my Sons Ascension 1. Is it not a marvel then that the Gospel is so hardly entertained and that the World cares so little for it It s welcome to most people not as if it brought them news of a blessing but as if it would spoil them of all they have 2. How should they that want it be set on work to labor to get it as without which there 's no Salvation Its light food armor without which darkness famine spoil If the Sun should be wanting to a Town and could be procured how would all joyn to get it Or rain for a dry and barren ground who would not wonder at any that should be against it yet who joyns who labors for the Gospel 3. If the Gospel be the revelation of Jesus Christ then are the Ministers revealers of this blessed Secret therefore worthy to be acknowledged for their works sake for the greatness of their work and the excellency thereof Pharaoh reverenced and advanced Joseph for smaller matters O how beautiful are the feet of such Most people either rate them or at least set light by them not reverencing their calling but esteeming them more base then the meanest Tradesman But that grieves us not so much as that unkindeness that we meet with from them from whom we look for most comfort and encouragement Verse 14. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance TO Faith he addeth Repentance and Sanctification by the one to testifie the other as in the second Epistle he wills them to adde unto their Faith vertue as if he should say You that sometimes were the Children of wrath and are now by grace made Gods Children walk obediently as becomes such a mercy This Sanctification hath two parts and stands 1. In renouncing evil or the lusts which before grace we were wont to be led by 2. In putting on and embracing holiness of life that we may resemble the disposition of our Father who is holy and looks for holiness in his yea holiness in all maner of conversation For the order first goes Faith then Obedience and Sanctification for as the light and Sun-beams comes from the Sun a river from the Spring head fruit from the tree so doth obedience from Faith Till a man be pardoned and believe he cannot repent nor obey the will of God no more then a dead stick can bring forth fruit When by Faith we are ingrafted into Christ then we receive power not before one that hath never been humbled aright for sin cannot hate and flie from sin as he should He that seeth not the love of God to him cannot love God nor set upon a good life to deny his lusts being as dear as his life and to yield obedience is irksom to nature for this cause the Devil is such an enemy to our Faith and labors to shake it for then he knows he damps our care of a good life 1. This condemns Papists that boast of holiness of life and yet overthrow the foundation of it viz. A true justifying faith They may stir up good moods and a blinde devotion by scaring men with the pains of hell and telling them of the joys of heaven but no sound Obedience godly Life renouncing Lusts c. without the work of Faith from that will be Obedience even to suffering 2. It confutes them that think Repentance is before Faith they are indeed wrought at once and Repentance sheweth it self first but in order of nature Faith is as the root Many humble souls hold off and dare not believe O say they if I could repent so heartily as I see some and could serve God as I would then I could believe 3. It teacheth men that if ever they will set upon a good life indeed and in time they must begin at the right end and lay a foundation of true justifying faith for want of this many deceive themselves that have some purpose to do well being afflicted or somewhat stirred at the Word and fall out of a bad course to leave this and that evil or take up good duties and many that never had experience of the work of Faith that think they live well or some that upon some occasion thus promise You shall never hear me swear more I le never play more Never come in an Alehouse yet this lasts not but they fal to their old byase by and by because they took not the right course Many also purpose to repent and do great matters but this is a greater matter then the world thinks off a man must first be the childe of God ere he can obey and Faith must be wrought first ere he can
of man is taken 1. For those outward qualities that be common to good and bad that yet set out a man as Birth Wit Learning Strength Beauty Wealth c. Now God is no respecter of these things though amongst men they are much lookt after by reason of which not a few scape their deserved punishment and yet the same is prohibited of God He forbids it in others therefore will not himself have respect of persons Therefore let no man think he shall escape better by his Wealth Birth Learning Authority c. and because of them embolden himself to do that which a poor ignorant mean man may not Gods laws be not Spiders-webs Nay for these a man shall scape the worse for the greater the wages are which God gives he requires the more work the higher place he sets men in he looks for the better carriage where there 's more knowledge there must be more obedience else there must be more stripes 2. For the outward appearance of a work the shew of Holiness Costliness Painfulness Multitude c. and so it s here God respecteth not the out-side of a work and the shew that it hath to the eye of the world but looketh to the inside and respecteth with what heart it s done and from what affection it comes The Jews did abound in their outward works and service yet their hands being full of blood and abomination his own Ordinances were irksome to him and accordingly he did reject their Humiliation though it was extraordinary So he respected not the sacrifice of Cain though he were the first-born nor made choyce of Eliab for all his outward appearance God is a Spirit and will be served with a spiritual service My son saith he give me thy heart God seeth into the heatrs and reins whom therefore we are to serve with a perfect heart and willing minde To the being of a good work these things are required 1. That the person be justified in Christ and so pleasing to God 2. That it be done in Faith or a particular perswasion of the lawfulness of the thing done 3. It must proceed from a sanctified heart else the fountain being impure makes the sacrifice or work abominable to God 4. It must be done to a good and right end our own discharge and the good of our brethren as inferior ends but the main end the glory of God 1. Here are rejected all the works of natural and unregenerated men all the civil vertues in the Heathen Philosophers their Justice Temperance Liberality Fortitude contempt of the World Patience and the like which great works of theirs were but shining sins So the actions of such as are meerly civil though never so fair conditioned to the world-ward these are in no account with God nay their hearing praying Alms-giving are abominable till their persons please God and be sanctified and all such though haply of great age did never in thoughtword or deed please God trust nor then to these things Oh many will brag with the Pharisee of their just dealing but resting thereon they shall have the Pharisees reward Many a poor man will say I thank God I have lived honestly followed my work earned my living truly no man can say Thus and thus hast thou done amiss but even this not done to a right end and in a right maner is sin O but Christ loved the rich yong man though not yet converted He loved that seed or good that was in his own work but not the person 2. Here are rejected all works of Hereticks though never so costly devour painful as their early rising to Mass their painful travel on Pilgrimage their costly gifts to Religious houses So of other nations that coming into the Temples of their gods throw themselves down on the ground smite themselves on the breasts c. of all these being done without Faith God will say Who required these things at your hands The faster one runs in a wrong way the further he is out and the longer ere he come in 3. Here are rejected the works of hypocrites and carnal Gospellers which make a profession hear receive the Lords Supper joyn in outward performance of duty but look not to themselves their hearts remaining tainted with their lusts Such as yet live in some sins may go to Hell with Water of Baptism on their faces and the Bread of the Lord in their mouthes They care not how works be performed but slubber them over so they be out of their hands they care not how these will be paid according to their work They make sale ware for the Lord slight and of no substance but this the Lord cannot abide he will have it substantial If it come not inwardly from a good heart let the outside be what it will it s but like a painted Tomb or gilded Idol hollow within that cannot speak We are here met to day to hear Gods Word a good work an excellent work if all came with an upright heart God requiring it and that we should know his will and in all things be ruled thereby but few be such but when they have heard all they can yet do as they list at least in part It s true Ahabs hypocritical repentance was rewarded with a temporal benefit but not for love of the work but for example to others how well God would reward things done in truth 4. Let this teach all Gods servants not onely to have a care to do duties so can hypocrites but to do them in a right maner Herein lies the difficulty to bring our vile hearts to do them aright else the doing of the duty is an easie thing and no straight way if that were all but we have a wretched heart full of inwindings and privy corruptions that cannot be seen to others when we do our duties for even sundry of them are unknown to our selves pride hypocrisie dulness earthliness unbelief and the like look therefore when we Hear Pray give Alms follow our Callings or whatsoever that we do it well and substantially using all skill and diligence for we have a God with whom we deal that looks to the inside and hates all slightings and he will pay well cares not what he gives so the work be done well Commonly men that be good husbands will look to have their work well done so doth the Lord and he pays presently in hand Peace of Conscience Joy in the Holy Ghost with divers outward Blessings besides the inheritance reserved for us hereafter Verse 18. Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold from your vain conversation received by tradition from your Fathers Verse 19. But with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot HEre 's another main Reason of the foregoing Exhortation drawn from a wonderful benefit
in them and onely lean upon Christ Jesus for Salvation and so become happy indeed They also hold that Peter is the head of the Church and Foundation thereof who would not wonder at their wickedness when as Peter himself saith it here of Christ and attributes nothing to himself But is it not confirmed by that of our Savior Thou art Peter and upon this Rock I will build my Church The Question propounded by our Savior was moved to all the rest as well as Peter and answered of all though by the mouth of Peter Christs meaning is That on himself whom he had confessed he would build his Church Would he build it on Peter then either on his Person or on his Faith not on his Person and how weak was his Faith which was so sore shaken by the speech of a Maid that could be no meat foundation to build on 4. Those fools among our selves who though they acknowledge no other foundation yet build not upon him but on their civil life their bare hearing of the Word which yet they do because it s commanded by Law and stands most with their safety and as the Papists but for their purse so they would not come to Church but for shame or punishment their doing as others do c. foolish Builders that build on the sand their house as every other that is not built on Christ by true Faith how fair soever in their own eyes will fall on their heads if any storm of trouble arise for the Gospel they will quckly yield and change as oft as Religion changeth and if no such change be yet at death they shall drop into Hell for want of a foundation as the five foolish Virgins were shut out of Heaven for that they had no oyl for their Lamps no stock of Faith to feed or back their outward Profession They that content themselves with any thing with any gift before they have got a true justifying Faith will fall away will perish may prove Persecutors or any thing They that so hear the Word as they never give over till it hath humbled them and brought them to Christ and they have found sure foundation on him and footing and grace to be changed these build upon the rock Therefore content not your selves with hearing the Word nay hearing it with joy and reforming many things nay that you have been troubled for your sins as some have wept for their sins at a Sermon but let it go over and wear away ere they came at Christ so bearing your selves in hand that ye are converted persons for afterward by your falling away or at your death it will prove nothing so and all for want of a foundation There be even now thousands in hell that have heard as many Sermons as ever you heard or ever shall 2. That Christ is a foundation and the onely foundation of his Church is no small comfort to all that believe on him They may quiet themselves amidst the multitude of contrary Opinions in the world or temptations of Satan to make them waver they may answer If Christ be not sufficient to save me I am content to be damned I 'le never seek other foundation you may well enough Again being built on Christ there be many enemies will lay Battery against you to beat you off but be of good comfort they may shake you indeed but to overcome you or pull you off the foundation it s not possible All the gates of Hell shall not prevail against you all their power shall not quail you As in a City the strength is placed at the gates as the Port-cullis and the Canon to keep from entrance so if Hell should plant all its force against a Christian yea the poorest Christian it shall never be able to prevail against him he is so surely joyned to the foundation by the Spirit of God that lies so fast Will Christ suffer his Building to be defaced or one member or the least joynt to be pulled out of his body Christ that prayed that his Disciples might be kept prayed also for all that should believe Living Christ is a living foundation not onely because he hath life in himself as he is the Living Bread the Truth and the Life but because he giveth life to others even all that believe in him Hence percieve 1. That Christ differs from all other foundations he gives life to his but whoso trusteth on any other shall dye eternally 2. An encouragement for all to come to Christ He is not such a one as can do them no pleasure but as he can and will save them so he will also put life into them that whereas before they were as dead as a stock to any thing concerning the glory of God or their own good no Wit Will Memory Affection no Hand Foot Tongue but all were stiff and stark lame to any good yea dead being joyned to him he will make them alive give them Wit Will and a Heart to that which is good so a Hand Foot and Tongue yea so change them that they shall be nothing the same but new Creatures Hence it is that some that were as very wretches as could be to their lusts that loved a Sermon Sabbath or good Exercise as a Bear doth the stake have yet by the preaching of the Word been brought to Christ the case is so altered with them that now they loath what they loved love what they loathed It is not a strange thing to see a man that loved money as his life and had no savor in any good to set as light by it as his shoes and to love the word that wrought this dislike in him So for a man that loved a pair of Cards and Tables and to ramble abroad on the Lords Day and who could not abide to take a book in his hand or to be in any Religious persons company now to abandon the one and to be earnestly affected with the other yet this Christ worketh in those that be joyned to him O come to this Christ Jesus humble thy self believe in him and give over thy self to him and though thou beest as bad as the worst he will so alter thee as thou mayest prove a worthy Christian. 3. This serves to uncase a number of Hypocrites that think themselves stones of this Building and hope to be saved by Christ and to be Believers and yet have no Spiritual life in them If you can shew me that Spiritual life that you have got from Christ to dye to sin and live to righteousness then you say something but there be no dead stones in this Building but living answerable to the foundation Therefore they that remain dead in their sins and old lusts or any of them Christ and they are assuredly as yet two and not one Shew your Christianity by renouncing all ill and by your love to good Prayer good duties in your Families and
must settle 3. It teacheth us to search the Scripture laboring by all means that the Word of Christ may dwell in us plentifully that so we may be grounded If we hear God speaking in his Word we must sit down by it all mouthes must be stopt if not we must not be carried without it Again He alleageth the Old Testament as Christ and the other Apostles did for the Old was the same in substance with the New and of the same Authority Further In that he nameth not the place nor the Prophet it sheweth their skill and rebuketh our ignorance that have not the book of God clasped against us as in Popery but open if we can take our time for the place it self it s alleaged with some alteration of the words though not of the sence 1. He leaves out a word or two and takes that which fitteth his purpose 2. He turneth these words of the Prophet He that believeth shall not make haste into these He that believeth on him shall not be confounded The Prophet sets down the effect the Apostle the cause for unbelievers being ashamed it makes them run up and down in their misery for some other help seeing themselves disappointed and deceived The occasion of that promise there was to comfort the good in respect of the great threatnings against the bad and contemners namely that they should not be destroyed and cast off among the rest and that the wicked might not scorn them and think all Gods promises made to them fallen to the ground Behold This being a word to stir up attention implieth that What the Lord saith he doth He is true of his word the Almighty and who cannot be hindred He saith not Such a stone shall be laid but Behold I lay it whereby he confirms the good and puts them out of doubt who by reason of the threatnings were grown weak fearful and in doubt Here see our infidelity in Spiritual things especially if we see any things against us such was Zacharias So was not Abraham he looked not to carnal lets but rested on Gods Word had enough that God spake it so should we If we have any promise of Gods mouth we should be of good comfort and believe and not be dismaid at our sins and unworthiness Come unto me saith our Savior all ye that are weary and laden and I will refresh you c. What promise more comfortable and yet many seeing their sins and danger cannot be comforted and perswaded But we must give God the glory to believe him on his word and know that nothing can make him break promise or change his minde either any hinder him from performing what he hath promised I lay It s God that layes the Foundation of his Churches Salvation All the Men and Angels in the world cannot lay one stone in this building unto this Foundation Though God use the Ministery of his servants Men to this purpose yet its God that by his Spirit makes them fit and couples them hereto therefore much less could they lay this corner stone Paul saith he laid this Foundation By Preaching the same to the people not otherwise That Foundation which God had laid before the world and appointed to be Preached that he taught to the people and that was all he did If God gave Christ generally for his Church then for every humble soul that seeth his need of Christ and cometh with an heavy heart to him and desires him above all the world assuredly he will give him to such In Sion That hill in Jerusalem is put for the Church whereof it was a type and because the Gospel was first preached there Christ there revealed and from thence conveyed into all nations far and wide so that now by Gods mercy we have him no less preached unto us then the Jews had and have also our part in him as largely O unspeakable mercy A chief corner stone A chief stone a foundation stone This is the principal point in this first part of the Verse but of this on the fourth Verse where was shewed That he is not a stone as others be in the building but the foundation on which they are all built which sustains and holds them together there being no other foundation but he This the Papists overturn and that both in respect of his Kingly Prophetical and Priestly Office For his Kingly Office which is to rule over the consciences of his subjects by his Spirit and to have power to make Laws to binde their consciences they take it from him for with them the Pope may also make Laws of his to binde the conscience as much as any of Christs and doth and may repeal some of his at his pleasure For his Prophetical Office which is to be the onely Teacher of his Church and to reveal all his Fathers minde in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles this they take away by adding as if the Word were altogether imperfect unwritten Verities and mens Traditions which say they are of absolute necessity to be obeyed to Salvation For his Priestly they abolish both parts of it 1. His Sacrifice All sufficient and once offered on the Cross for all by their blasphemous Mass wherein they offer Christ daily as they say as a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the sins of the quick and the dead 2. His Intercession wherein they joyn many Saints with him What Salvation can there be for such le ts pray for and keep our selves far from them Elect Christ is chosen of God to the work of our Redemption and furnished for it therefore make we choyce of him for our portion wo to them that refuse him He that believeth on him shall not be confounded Hereby is meant a true particular justifying Faith Such as have this shall not be ashamed or seek at any time as confounded or deceived of sufficient help and Salvation therefore he shall never be put to make haste to seek any other The true Believer shall never be confounded but finde enough in Christ to satisfie him to the full to deliver him from all evil and make him partaker of all Happiness Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption and enough to make his minde peaceable and quiet and to stablish him against all that his own conscience or any yea the Devil himself can lay to his charge but he findes enough to answer all at large As Thou art a sinner and hast deserved Damnation and God is just R. I grant all but I have a surety able enough who hath born all Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It s God that justifieth c. His heart is fixed he believeth in the Lord In his life he hath that wherein he may quiet himself and never be to seek but may draw new life and grace from Christ to enable him to
to our selves or the use of any lawful means If he set open the door then we may go out but not break away but be content so long here to stay as God shall see meet The world cannot abide to think of death or of the day of Judgement would buy them off yea but to be deferred with much money an ill sign nay many of Gods Servants be much to blame some so addicted to the world as not willing to part with it O ye be of little faith It s base that any thing here should take up our affections from longing to be with our true Inheritance Nay thus some Christians are held lingring indeed and that for wife and childrens sake especially namely to see them brought up and kept from evil courses seeing often the contrary through the want of Parents the wrack of many children As for the most part this argueth weakness of faith in Gods providence especially if their desire be excessive for God can provide for them without us moderately to desire life for this cause or only to do God some other service is tolerable always provided that it be the love of nothing here below that detaineth our affections but that we so esteem of the world and all that is in it as we see no cause in it why it should take up our hearts and make us linger here The causes that should make us desire to be hence should be sin and the desire to be with God sin to chase us hence and the love of God and Heaven the excellency of that place and state should allure us thither Some desire to be gone but it s most ignorantly and desperately for its onely because they be in trouble full of pain have many crosses Thus many make away with themselves others impatiently wish to be gone poor mad fools not knowing what is a coming onely looking to be eased of the present grief O our poor folly also and the earthliness of many of Gods people that are not wearied hence by sin and by their corrupt nature and continual spring of sin that they cannot be rid of but annoys them daily and continually Therefore God is pleased to send them sorrows and pains and with a week or fortnights pain they are made willing to dye that were not so before A great fault of sundry Christians that have their hands and heads so full of business as they cannot desire to be gone nay had need of a twelve-moneths warning to set their matters right This is not Pilgrim-like they may hap not have a week therefore so walk as you may ever be willing to be gone and be ever of this minde that to be gone is most happy and most to be desired 10. Pilgrims the nearer their Journeys end they are the gladder So ought Christians that have passed many years and are grown old to thank God highly that now their salvation is nearer then when they first believed it that they would not their time were to begin again and that they were yong again c. but thank God they draw nearer the shore where they shall arrive at the Haven of rest Ancient Christians near their end have this advantage that they have almost past the Pikes yong ones know not what remaineth for them yea every day a Christian at night should thank God that hath brought him safely one days journey nearer his end then in the morning Many think they grow old too soon too fast if they could make their years stand still as Joshua's Sun they would be glad Verse 12. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation VNto the former Exhortation of purging the heart he adds this of looking to our outward behavior and conversation among men namely that it be honest good godly and every way such as may not onely not be offensive but may be of good example yea to the very wicked that though for a time they speak evil of us as our nature is to do of every one that differs from us thinking our own courses still to be best yet at last they looking more narrowly and seeing our constancy in well-doing may be enforced to think well of us and whensoever God shall touch their hearts with his grace they may glorifie God and say This is the onely true way of worshiping God and thank God for it and all the means that have brought them to the sight of it The parts are two 1. The Exhortation 2. The Reasons thereof The Exhortation is to godly life and that is inlarged by the circumstance of persons or company before whom namely the Gentiles that is the Idolatrous Wicked and Unbelieving The Reasons 1. That they may be prepared to their conversion by beholding our good life which is set forth by the contrary in former time namely their speaking ill of us 2. That they may glorifie God which is set out by the time namely when God shall please particularly and in a special maner to bestow his grace upon them so that by our innocent godly life led among the wicked we shall provide for our own credit their good and Gods glory which is the thing we should chiefly aym at in all our actions Here observe we first our Apostles order He begins at the right end as a wise Builder he lays a good Foundation then builds on it as a skilful Chyrurgion he first purgeth out dead flesh then heals which else would heal and break out again Reformation if ever if be good must begin at the heart No man can have a good conversation whose heart is Unregenerate and Unsanctified for from the heart proceeds the life if sin and lusts be nourished there they will break out as fire hid in straw or dry wood for our bodies are as apt to execute as our hearts to broach evil For one to purge the Channels and leave the Fountain foul were to lose his labor for one also to pull off the tops of the weeds and leave the roots still were to no purpose The heart must be washen kept cleansed from inward lusts else no godly life 1. This confutes the Papists that talk of good conversation and yet regard not the heart either seek after true justifying faith whereby to purge the same 2. This shews and rebukes the folly of those that think to frame a good life as civil persons and yet never knew the corruptions of their hearts nor what Faith means that purifieth the heart nor make Conscience of their inward lusts Hence it is that they shamefully deceive themselves especially in the first Table and in the sight of a true Christian that can tell what belongs to good conversation Numbers think upon occasion they will never do as they have done but promise great amendment as upon
counted in the Kingdom of Heaven Some again will yield in little things the Word shall so far prevail with them but in some great beloved sin they will not as Herod Some cry out against Covetousness and be Proud and Masterful and so on the contrary Some seem very devout and forward in the first Table and make little conscience of the second Table Some in their Shops and Dealings deceitful hollow and unjust Some in the state of servants that shew some forwardness to good duties hearing good company and the like who yet fail exceedingly in the duty of subjection diligence trustiness and the like Some profess the like also and men say they be honest persons of good gifts but they follow no calling borrow here and there and never mean to pay deal hardly with poor work-folks c. A man must shew his Religion in his particular calling no man is a good man that is not a good Minister if he be a Minister so a Magistrate Father Husband Dealer Some contrarily seem very smooth in the duties of the second Table and yet have no savor of the first as 1. Papists which are profest Idolaters and make no conscience of an Oath nor of the Sanctification of the Lords-day who yet keep a good house and seem merciful and liberal which yet they do corruptly to merit by and hence they get the commendation of a company of carnal people that measure all by the belly and can look no further It s not possible for an absolute Papist to be an absolute Christian. 2. Our civil persons that give men their due but God can have no part of his in any Spiritual performance of duty either on the week days or Sabbath days Let all that know it s thus with them know themselves but hypocrites and let them halt no longer but if God be God serve him altogether and let him be whole and not either quarter or half-master yet many men be good at plots Would we like in our field to have here a taste and there and a great breadth after nothing No but to stand so as we may spread a sheet and receive the fruit when mens obedience comes by fits such aguish obedience Gods likes not But if we would approve our selves sound and have true peace let there be some proportion between our actions not some very forward some quite another way in some things hot in some as cold as ice else like Nebuchadnezzars Image Gold Silver Brass Iron Clay these things hang not together le ts not be hot and cold but the same in prosperity adversity at home abroad in all companies and the like Among the Gentiles That is the wicked Where note That It s our duty not onely to live godly among the godly but even among the wicked so to do we must not follow a multitude to do evil but shine among a naughty and crooked nation we must not be made crooked by them if we can straighten them so it is If we see any go crooked or halt we will notwithstanding go as straight as we can and not go crookedly as they This is a commendation of Lot That he continued just in that filthy City so of Noah that when it s said That all flesh had corrupted their ways yet he was found Righteous when they were in security he continued in zealous worshipping of God and sincerity of life so of Job That even in the Land of UZ he feared God and eschewed evil It had been no such matter to have lived well in Abrahams or Jacobs Family but in such places a great mastery and yet required of us God hath appointed we should live among the wicked though some places be worse then some lets choose the best we can yea even the very bad ones God will have his people 1. That his power in gathering and keeping them may be seen 2. That their Faith and Patience might be proved and exercised and encreased 3. That they might convert the ungodly as through Gods mercy it falls out sometimes or if not condemn them as Noah condemned the old world In such places we must walk squarely as Abraham and as the fishes retain their fresh taste though they live in salt waters so must we our goodness in bad places and among them that are set on evil True it s no easie thing with the cruel to live mercifully with the hurtful to live helpfully with the prophane to live holily yet it is to be attained unto and we must labor for it 1. This rebukes such Monks and Fryers as severing themselves from all company because they would not be tainted nor troubled with mens ill maners betake themselves to a solitary Hermits life Truly if a man were onely born for himself it were a good wise and safe way though not most praise-worthy But we are not born for our selves but for our Parents Countrey Gods Church therefore we are not to m●w up our selves Besides it s no such mastery for a man to avoid all occasions as to live among occasions and not be tainted with them but let men seek no occasions but those that they must necessarily meet withal and yet not be hurt by them this is most worthy It s not so much commendation for a man to fly from his Adversary as to encounter and overcome him or come away unhurt 2. It rebukes those that be for all companies In good company they will be sober in ill as the company is drunk with their friends for company will swear with swearers lye also and dissemble when they be with such so thinking that they may hold with the Hare and run with the Hound like the Camelion they change themselves into all colours but these are none of Gods honest men they are not for his turn as if he were not the God of all places and times let such know they have rotten and unsanctified hearts Q. But how should a man do to live well among such A. As they that live where the Plague is take and use preservatives So must we daily pray to God next our heart to keep us in a continual hatred of sin considering often of the happiness of them that hold out Think of Noah Lot Abraham and their commendation observe the judgements that fall upon bad men and think what will be hereafter Again avoid private familiarity with them be kinde to all but familiar with no open bad man we cannot touch pitch and not be defiled walk on coals and not be burnt for so we shall be brought either to like their maners or at least cooled in our goodness let them not breath on us from them there 's great danger of infection Lastly mourn even for their sins as Lot 3. It rebukes such Christians as living among such walk not so holily as they should but if they do not approve of yet consent to their
any thing better becoming us then to please God with all our might Hath he not made us and chosen us to life before the world given his Son to dye for us and save us given us his Gospel and Spirit hath prepared a Kingdom for us and will we not please him yea if a thing stand with our profit though we know it will displease him can we be content to do it O that we should offend so good a God and so merciful a Father as he hath been unto us O do we endeavor to please him whosoever be thereat displeased whatsoever we lose or whatsoever trouble we bring upon us But O the monstrous course of this world that of all things cannot abide what pleaseth God! that so live as if God had nothing to do with them as if they were neither in his debt nor danger as if they were not afraid of them or he could do them no hurt Are you not woful creatures that thus abuse God Are you not in his debt Who gave you these Bodies and Souls who fashioned them whence was it that you were not Toads Monsters mad persons and fools who hath maintained your lives who hath kept you that you have not been ere this consumed or are not now in hell Art thou not in his debt who hath let thee live under the Gospel the means of saving thee denyed to most of the world Should you not then please him Art thou not in his danger Cannot he make the earth to swallow thee the worms to eat thee up Can he not smite thee with an incurable disease in thy bowels Can he not strike thee with madness cast thee upon thy bed and there forsake thee and give thee up to a desperate minde Is he not able to send thee to Hell ere night Can he not make every joynt of thy body every tooth of thy head so to torment thee that thou shalt be weary of thy life Canst thou promise thy meat shall nourish thee or that when thou lyest down thou shalt have one wink of sleep for pain of body or vexation of minde or shalt ever rise again When there is the greatest hope of fruit cannot he in one night by a Frost destroy it all Do we not stand at his courtesie for every shower of Rain for the Bread we eat and every thing else and should we not then please him If he smile on us whose frown need we regard If he frown whose smiles can do us good Who can stand before him when he is angry He rendeth the rocks and maketh the mountains to tremble O that any through fear or to procure the favor of any or for any other by-respects should displease him For this is thank-worthy or acceptable Whence note that The actions of Gods Children done as they ought and may be done are pleasing to God howsoever they are not as the Papists from this and the like places affirm Meritorious They are pleasing to God as being done by such as are justified by Faith in Christ the weaknesses of their actions being covered in his Death and Obedience 1. This is a great comfort unto all such as can prove themselves Gods Children and strive to do their duty in the best maner they can though the same be done weakly yet being done in truth is pleasing to God then which what greater joy comfort and encouragement unto any duty can be wished 2. This may be a terror to all that cannot prove themselves justified persons they never did that thing throughout their whole lives that pleased God A carnal man can no more make a good action then a Painter or Carver can make a living man The actions of unregenerate men want a soul. Till a mans person please God which is not till he be justified through Christ his actions cannot but displease him Even the sacrifice and prayer of the wicked is abomination before him What joy can a man have when being old and full of years he cannot truly approve that ever he spake thought or did that which was good Did men believe this they would endeavor with all speed to come out of their unregenerate condition If a man for conscience towards God endure grief c. Here he shews the maner how servants must do their duty to such unconscionable Masters even for conscience towards God because God so requires the same for if servants should bear quietly with such a Master and do their duty because they know no remedy know not how to help themselves or know that though he be wondrous hasty and boisterous yet to them that can bear with him and let him alone he will be good and bountiful whoso do their duties I say for such respects please not God neither shall have any reward with him what we do for conscience towards God is pleasing to him not otherwise whoso looketh asquint at profit pleasure honor credit favor of this or that man or the like is far from pleasing God whoso doth for conscience sake may with comfort look up to God in life and in death This rebuketh the common sort which do many duties and abstain from many sins but not in a right maner for carnal and sinister respects and not for conscience towards God Such hypocrites shall have their portion with the hypocrites Q. How may we know whether we do our duties for conscience sake or not A. By these Notes 1. If we make most conscience of the greatest things first and then of less in their place and so of the greatest sins for God hates greatest sins most as in D●●id of whom it s said He walked in uprightness all his days saving in the matter of Uriah He had other faults rashness towards Nabal pride in numbring the people rashness to believe Zibah yet that against Uriah was the worst of all Greatest sins rob God most of his glory do most disgrace the Gospel make greatest wounds in our souls procure most numbness and hardness of heart and greatest outward punishment we must make conscience of all but especially of the greatest Such as seem very earnest against some small things and make no account of greater are Hypocrites like the Scribes and Pharisees which strained at a g●at but swallowed a Camel Such were the high Priests they made conscience of putting the thirty pieces of silver into the treasury which Judas returned to them but made no conscience of putting Christ to death They made Conscience of going to the Common-Hall least they should be defiled and made unfit for the Passover who yet made no conscience of shedding innocent blood So the Papists stands altogether upon meats days and such trifles of their own devising making no conscience of Gods great Commandments of the 2 3 4 c. So many among our selves will speak very hardly of some small blemishes in a Professor and Oh! is this agreeable to Gods Word c. who
great price Here 's the main Reason of the Exhortation A meek and quiet spirit is of greater value then all the gold of Ophir its precious in the sight of God and therefore must women endeavor for it None makes or gives it but God onely no Preacher Prophet nor Angel can give grace can bestow a meek Spirit it comes from above whence all other graces come it s bestowed on none but the Elect people of God Gold and Pearls are bestowed on Heathens and prophane people enemies of God but grace on none but Kings sons and daughters and such as shall be heirs of Heaven As for other outward apparel it s of no worth trash dung to this such is of no account in the countrey we go to no such base stuff enters in at Heavens gate But with whom is it of great price even with God and before him in his account who can rightly value things Costly apparel indeed is of value with men vain and carnal men but grace is in account with God Angels and all good and wise men God seeth not as man seeth God beholds all our actions we must therefore so carry our selves in our places as that what we do may be pleasing in Gods sight and accepted of him Verse 5. For after this maner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves being in subjection unto their own husbands Verse 6. Even as Sarah obeyed Abraham calling him Lord whose daughters ye are as long as ye do well and are not afraid with any amazement HEre are Reasons to enforce the former Exhortations unto subjection sobriety in apparel and attiring themselves with grace 1. From the examples of godly women of former ages and times who were thus qualified 2. From the example of Sarah who thus behaved her self toward her husband whose daughters all such women shall be accounted as do imitate her and that for conscience doing their duties in a right maner as she did such shall be counted among the Saints of God in this life and in the life to come shall have the reward of such The former is amplified and strengthened by sundry circumstances 1. Of the number that so did not one but many women 2. Such as are worthy to be imitated as not being of the common sort but holy women 3. Their antiquity not of yesterday as though it were new but ancient in times past In the latter is set forth the maner how this duty is to be performed namely Not for fear of displeasure but for conscience towards God and love to their husbands For after this maner c. From the force of the Reason holy women have done so therefore so must you Note that The examples of Gods servants are to be followed in all their vertues The way of Gods Precepts is like an uncouth and bushy way the way of examples a beaten way and herein by setting up his servants as lights to direct us God hath condescended to our weakness Were it not thus we would say of precepts It s true we should do thus but who ever did so God shews us every where who they were All examples are written for our good the examples of the godly as Abels offering in Faith Enochs walking with God Noahs obedience Moses his mildeness Jobs patience c. for our imitation the examples of the ungodly and their punishment for our evitation yea even in our own times God presenteth divers unto us that they which belong unto him may be drawn on by the light of precepts and examples together as others left without excuse who do not such and such duties which are to their knowledge by others performed This rebuketh those that follow the evil but do not imitate good examples neither are any whit moved by them Those can make use of the frailties of Gods children mentioned in Scripture to encourage themselves in evil Did nor David commit adultery was not Noah drunk and did not Rebekah cause Jacob to lye c. will they say Such wrest the Scriptures to their own destruction So among our selves if any be bad and licentious they shall have enough to follow them but as for the examples of the godly they little prevail nay people are so far from following them that they mock and disdain them yea term them Hypocrites Precise fools and the like Well let such make as light of them as they will God will not lose his labor and his light set up They that make them not now their patern for imitation shall finde them one day their Judges to condemn them as Noah did the old world As the Ninivites against the Israelites so many a husband shall rise up against his wife on the day of Judgement and many wife against her husband as many a man against his neighbor and justly for its clear that those love darkness and to wander which will neither be guided by precept nor example whereas God might onely give us precepts and yet require obedience It s true all shine not alike some have their light dimmed for a time through some unbeseeming act howsoever there 's not the example of any whereby we may not receive some profit In the old time The Antiquity of the examples are an enforcement or inducement to follow them but how simply because they be ancient No but holy men did thus and well they did and that long ago He doth urge them to follow examples onely upon Antiquity but because they were good also Note then That Antiquity joyned with verity is reverend and to be followed If a truth in judgement or practice of life be ancient and gray-headed it s the more honorable and to be followed but if an opinion or practice be wicked though never so ancient its vile and to be detested and is not the better but much the worse for the antiquity of it The older the more time it were quite banisht out of the Land Town House and Heart This condemneth the Church of Rome and all such as plead bare antiquity onely it hath been thus and thus long will they say ours is the old Religion and yours is the new No ours is ancientest from the beginning whereof were the Patriarchs Prophets Christ and his Apostles Their stories mention when and how theirs began encreased and grew out of an heap of Ceremonies of the Jews and Gentiles mingled together one Pope devising one thing another adding another Though error and wickedness may be very ancient yet truth and goodness hath the start of it the truth was before sin entred into the world this therefore is no good rule this is ancient therefore it s to be followed nay is it also good It s else nothing Many Papists have nothing to say but thus did our Fathers and Grandfathers c. but they never enquire by the Word whether they did well or not whereas our
Apostles Paul and John joyn both together Great is the force hereof as both being within us and so more able either to comfort or terrifie us then any other thing as the wind that gets within the earth shakes it most terribly and likewise so inseparable that a man cannot get from it 1. This sheweth plainly that there is a God who hath set Conscience on work thus to admonish warn comfort accuse terrifie c. Having done evil why should a mans Conscience accuse or terrifie him but that God hath ordained it should so do and accordingly it doth cite him before God and judge him before hand for not man or Angel can take the accusation of Conscience it bears record in the sight of God Why have the most unbridled despisers of God when any token of Gods wrath hath appeared run into holes and cellars under the ground yea and such wicked monsters after some foul offence though so secretly done as that they needed not to have been afraid of men yet been so much vexed and disquieted but that their Consciences informed them of God against whom they did sin and that his wisdom and knowledge did far surpass that of men or Angels as knowing not onely what is done and spoken in the world but what is in every mans heart 2. This confuteth those which affirm That we cannot be assured of our Salvation and why because we cannot know whether we believe or not c. But as we may know a Tree by the fruits so may we our Faith God gives us not grace that we should not know whether we have it or not wherefore serves Conscience but to witness what is in us Thus what Conscience is For the second The Offices of Conscience they are to bear witness and to give judgement First I say To bear witness and that 1. Of our thoughts whether they have been proud distrustful unclean wandering at the hearing of the Word or in Prayer worldly on the Lords day c. for the understanding hath two faculties one whereby it conceives or thinks this or that the other whereby it doubles upon it self and knows that it did think it The minde thinks a thought the Conscience goes beyond the minde and knows what the minde thinks so that if a man would hide his thoughts from God his Conscience can bear witness of them Thus it discovers the very bent and sway of our hearts 2. Of our will and affections whether the same be set on good or that which is evil 3. Of our speeches whether they be agreeable to Gods Word or not 4. Of our actions though never so secret Thus Davids Conscience told him that he had sinned in numbring the people but that he had not conspired against Saul howsoever he was by him persecuted so Jobs Conscience witnessed against him that he had spoken somewhat impatiently but for him that he had not eat his morsels alone c. 1. This setteth out the great mercy of God to man God hath not here left us alone but besides his Word and Ministers every man hath a keeper still going along with him who is to pry into our actions and to bear witness of them all and when we have done amiss to tell us secretly thereof that so we may ask pardon and amend and may not complain that we had none to tell us of our faults c. and that is our conscience Hereby such as belong unto God are stirred up to have recourse unto God for mercy and thereupon are pardoned after their conversion they are also hereby kept from many evils and through the checks of Conscience we are driven to repentance Happy are they that have tender Consciences and turn not the deaf ear thereto Doth our conscience tell us of any thing amiss if we do thereupon amend we make good use thereof but if we do not whereas it now speaks softly between it and us in our ear it will roar out one day when it will be heard whether we will or not namely Both at the hour of our death and on the day of Judgement Most men count their conscience a common Barretor one that troubles them as Ahab said Elias did Israel therefore is it just with God to give them benumb'd consciences that they go snorting to Hell 2. It setteth out the Equity and Justice of God that condemns no man till he hath given him both a law to guide him and a conscience to admonish him yea to accuse and condemn him When God judgeth every mans conscience shall justifie God for so doing when God shall awake the conscience then it will speak true give a righteous verdict and condemn the civilest for want of Faith in Christ and not performance of the duties of the first Table 3. It teacheth us to beware we sin not whether in thought word or deed either out of hope that none shall know it or that we shall scape for lack of witnesses or that we may alledge that we knew not that so and so to do were sins Thus we should but deceive our selves for there be witnesses enough thine own conscience is as a thousand and God as ten thousand Le ts do no other thing but that whereof we would hear again for conscience will bear witness do not we bless our selves for our sins done in secret as if none saw them or could witness any thing against us The bird in the breast knows and God knows hang down thine head then and ask mercy of God and confess thy self to him if not even thine own conscience may break it out in this world as Judas's in accusing himself whereas he was not taxed by others and many have confessed Murther Adultery Theft c. some with repentance others in hellish horror Do not any thing in hope of secrecy unless you can keep God and your consciences from being present neither be we careful for eye-witnesses of our well doing in the performance of duties It s enough if our conscience tells us we have done well yea if we be taxed for Hypocrites or otherwise be slandered its sufficient that God and our own conscience can bear witness of our sincerity and uprightness it s more then if every one should speak well of us excepting our own conscience Thus was Job thus Hezekiah comforted 2. To give judgement and that whether things be good or bad whether they be well done or ill done and this judgement is given either before our actions or after them before Conscience gives judgement thus it tells us what is good and what bad and not so barely but with some furtherance This is good therefore do it This is ill therefore do it not so Pilate knowing Christ to be innocent his conscience moved him to seek to loose him so Reuben when his brethren would have killed Joseph apprehending that to be ill and that from
we be aware as David Judah 2. Seeing this is a part of Gods Counsel and he that bids we should not steal should keep the Sabbath c. bids us watch let us know it s not safe for us to neglect it when God hath made known the same to us Is it not pity that such a blessed mean to further us so sweetly to heaven through this world should be so little known and so few have help by it O if we would once enter upon it it would save us from many dangers it would make our life fruitful it would bring us so much unwonted peace as we would be so far from being weary of it that we would be grieved that we have been strangers from it so long and came to the acquaintance and use of it no sooner O let us grieve and crave pardon for neglecting such a necessary and profitable duty so long and for the time to come be careful to redeem the season Unto prayer We must adde prayer to watchfulness else what if we spy temptations coming and setting upon us of our selves we have no power to resist the least of them We must therefore upon every occasion have recourse unto God by prayer as Watchmen if there come enemies in the time of War that be too strong for them they raise the City for help and in our ordinary watches if naughty wretches come and set upon the watch and be like to beat them down they cry out for help and so subdue them so must we Temptations at some times come so strong as that we cannot deal with them and therefore must cry to God for help O that we could be much exercised in this duty of prayer It keeps us in sobriety helps our watchfulness turns away evils furthers us in good is the onely mean to supply our wants whether for soul or body O what a priviledge is this O the force and fruit of prayer They that be much in Prayer obtain much grace and peace here and shall finde a large entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven hereafter Vers. 8. And above all things have fervent charity among your selves for charity shall cover the multitude of sins THe Apostle proceedeth to other duties for Christianity is a Tree that hath many branches and a true godly man must have respect to all As a Tradesman must have a care of every part of his Trade and every point thereof though haply he may be more expert in some particulars then in others Above all things Not above the duties of the first Table for that is the first and great Commandment but above all duties of the second Table have a care of love which is a main and most necessary duty without which there 's no society or living have a care of it as of a mother-duty from whence others will arise as upon the wanting thereof they also will be wanting or thus Above all things that is Of all the loves that we owe have a care of the main namely Love to the Saints for though we must love Strangers Wicked men our Enemies c. yet must we must love the Saints above all Here we have 1. An Exhortation to love 2. The maner of it 3. A Reason to enforce the same The Exhortation affords us this note that Love is a most excellent and necessary duty Hereof I have spoken at large on the 22 Verse of the first Chapter where was shewed both what love is the high commendation thereof by its several properties with the means whereby to attain the same c. Fervent The maner or kinde of love required a large continued stretched-out constant love As a cloth folded up is in a little room but when it comes to be cut is stretched out into many mens uses so our love must be stretched out to many persons to many duties as in giving and doing good to body soul goods good-name and that not sparingly but liberally so in forgiving both much and often neither must this be onely when we can well do it or when we have nothing else to do but when it s against our profit pleasure ease c. so as we neglect not our selves too much and thereby more pleasure may be done our neighbors then hinderance come to us Reasons hereof may be these 1. Gods love towards us is fervent and reacheth out into innumerable favors for our bodies souls goods good-name c. and that continually forgiving also our daily offences and bestowing his own Son on us 2. A little love will be easily quenched and hindred by the Devil and his instruments whereunto our brittle nature most readily yieldeth This is not such a love as that whereby the fornicator loves his harlot one enemy to goodness loves another This is not grounded upon any transitory thing or common gifts but is for grace We love thus not for any by-respects but because God requireth of us so to love this is agreeable to the Word of God and therein we must principally aym at the good of our neighbors souls to perswade ones friend to that for preferment which he cannot do with a good conscience or being sick to perswade him to send for a Cunning-man or woman or to disswade him from suffering for a good conscience c. is rather hatred then love Had our Savior followed Peters advice and not gone up to Jerusalem for to suffer we had all perished eternally But of this before For charity shall cover the multitude of sins The Reason There will be through our corruption and frailty of nature many offences one against another therefore must we labor for love to cover them The Papists interpret the words thus That our love to our neighbors will merit at Gods hand forgiveness of our sins but we are justified before God by Faith in Christ Jesus before we can do any good work neither can we love God or our neighbor for his sake till we be assured of his love to us in pardoning our sins True the more we love our brethren the more we may be assured of Gods mercy to us and that we be pardoned and that he will still shew us mercy but not by desert That opposition Prov. 10. 12. Hatred stirreth up strifes but love covereth all sins sheweth plainly that this is not the meaning Faults that love covers be of two sorts namely sins against God and wrongs against our selves Against God whether they be natural infirmities or others so they be not notorious acts or continued wicked courses of bad men as love will not be suspitious but hope the best till it know an evil committed and interpret things charitably so those that be faults yet love will not blaze them abroad but keeps them in and admonisheth the party it utters them not where they be not known to his disgrace and so uncovers his shame and rejoyceth therein as Cham. Against our selves for