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A03342 CVIII lectures vpon the fourth of Iohn Preached at Ashby-Delazouch in Leicester-shire. By that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ. Arthur Hildersam.; Lectures upon the fourth of John Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 13462; ESTC S119430 700,546 622

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Congregation according to Christs ordinance or 2. When a family is of it selfe a competent and distinct Congregation and such as vseth to ioyne together in all parts of Gods publike worship without offence to Church-gouernement For so we reade of Baptisme administred in Cornelius house Acts 10. 44. 47. and the Communion in a chamber at Tr●…as Acts 20. 8. But the most solemne and publike and best frequented assemblies of Gods people are much fitter places for Gods publike worship then any priuate Chappell 's or Chambers and to be preferred before them And for any through nicenesse or idlenesse or out of disdaine to ioyne with the base multitude to neglect the Church-assemblies and to rest in their domesticall deuotions is a great sinne See what account the godly made of the publike assembly and what an aduenture they made for it and that euen in such a duty as they might haue performed in priuate namely in prayer Acts 16. 13. Nay see what account our Sauiour himselfe made of the publike assembly Luke 4. 16. his custome was euen before he was a Preacher to frequent the Synagogue euery Sabboth day Three Reasons there be why all men should preferre the worship that is done in most publike assemblies before that that is done in more priuate places 1. The respect of our owne good for we may looke for a greater blessing from God vpon his ordinances in the publike assemblies then in more priuate meetings Euen to our Church assemblies that may be applyed that we reade Psal. 87. 2. The Lord loues the gates of Zion aboue all the habitations of Iacob Matth. 7. 7. Prayer is compared to seeking of a thing that is lost and to knocking at a gate we desire to enter into And when many seeke a thing there is more hope of finding it when many knocke at heauen gates they will be the better heard Therefore when Gods people haue shewed more then ordinary desire to preuaile with God in their prayers they haue shewed more then ordinary care that the assemblies might be as publike as might be Ioel 2. 15. Blow the trumpet in Zion sanctifie a fast call a solemne assembly verse 16. Gather the people assemble the children c. as if he should say leaue none out Iehosaphat 2. Chron. 20. 3. proclaimed a fast throughout all Iudah verse 13. All Iudah stood before the Lord with their young ones wiues and children and Iudg. 20. 20. Then all the children of Israel went vp and all the people came also into the House of God and till then they preuailed not That is the reason also why Hezechias was so carefull to gather such a solemne assembly to keepe the Passeouer 2. Chron. 30. 1 2. 2. The respect we should haue to the good of others for we may much benefit others by our good example Dauid professed he receiued much good by beholding the forwardnesse of his people in going to the House of God Psal. 122. 1 2. How much more good will the example of great men doe of the multitude when they are such diligent frequenters of Gods worship That is the reason why the Lord would haue the Prince not onely to ioyne with Gods people in his seruice but to be in the midst of them that they might all see him Ezek. 46. 10. It is said that the scaffold Salomon made for himselfe in the Temple was in the midst of the Court so as all the people might see him 2. Chron. 6. 12 13. And of King Ioash it is said that so soone as euer Athalia came into the Temple she saw the King stand by the piliar as the manner was 2. King 11. 14. So it is also said of Iosia 2. King 23. 3. By which three examples it is plaine that the Kings seate was so set in the Temple that all might see him there 3. The respect we should haue to the honour of God for the more publike the assembly is wherein we worship God the more publike is the profession which we make of the homage and duty that we owe vnto him Therefore it is required Psalme 29. 12. of great men to worship the Lord in the Sanctuary that so they might giue vnto the Lord the glory due vnto his name That is the reason why Dauid vowed he would giue thankes to the Lord in a great Congregation and praise him among much people Psalm 35. 18. And Hezekiah resolued to goe vp to the House of the Lord the third day so soone as euer he was recouered 2. Kings 20. 8. And Dauid professed that it had beene one of the chiefe comforts he had in the world that he had beene wont to goe with the multitude to leade them to the House of God Psalme 42. 4. Lecture the nine and twentieth October 17. 1609. THe third sort that offend in refusing to be present at Gods publike worship are such as make no conscience to come to the beginning of it and to stay to the end of it I condemne not all that sometimes come after the beginning nor all that sometimes goe out before the end but them that do this ordinarily them that make no conscience of this I condemne nay the Doctrine that I haue taught you out of Gods Word concerning the outward reuerence that we owe to Gods publike worship condemneth such And because I see many of them that haue most knowledge and are forwardest professours offend this way I will manifest the sin of these men in three seuerall respects and considerations 1. They sinne against themselues and they hinder themselues of the profit they might receiue by the worship of God For as he that is away from any part of the Sermon shall profit the lesse by that which he doth heare if he come after it is begun or goe away before it be ended So is there no one part of Gods seruice not the confession not the prayers not the Psalme not the blessing but it concernes euery one and euen one may receiue edification by it as I prooued to you at large not long since Besides it would be a great helpe to mens profiting by Gods seruice if they would not rush suddenly into it out of their worldly businesse or worldly and prophane talke but come so into Gods House that they may haue some time to set their hearts in tune and lay aside all worldly thoughts before Gods seruice doe begin This is that that was signified by that ceremony which God inioyned Moses Exod. 3. 5. Put off thy shooes for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground The promise that is made to our prayers runnes thus Iob 11. 13. If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands vnto him the stretching out of our hands or of our voice either is to little purpose if our heart be not prepared first If we could say before euery part of Gods seruice as Dauid did Psal. 57. 7. My heart is prepared O my God my heart is prepared I will
Atheisme hath made vs too void of care herein The dust and cobwebs where with the seates and Pulpits and walls of our Churches in most places are hung the small reparations that are made of them doe proclaime su●…iciently to God and men how small reuerence we beare vnto the Sanctuary and worship of God It is a fowle sinne and contempt done to Gods worship that Parishioners either will not be at charge to maintaine such as may keepe the Church decently or if they be willing to be at that charge yet are altogether carelesse to see it done to see that such as they maintain to this purpose doe their office Dauid thought it vnfit though he were a King that his owne house should be more handsome then the House of God 2. Sam. 7. 2. And though the Lord would not let him build him an house yet he commends his affection for it Thou didst well saith he 2. Chron. 6. 8. that thou wert so minded But with vs euery meane mans house is more handsome and better kept then the House of God yea the barnes and stables of many men are better kept then their Churches are When the Tabernacle of the Congregation was to be built the people of all sorts rich and poore men and women contributed so bountifully and readily towards it that Moses was faine to make a Proclamation that they should bring no more Exod. 36. 6. I warrant you there needs no such Proclamation now adayes Euery man grudges to giue two pence a yeare towards the repairing of the House of God The cause that mooued Dauid to be at such cost in preparing for the building of the Temple was this as himselfe telleth vs 1. Chron. 29. 3. because He had a delight in the House of his God And the true cause then why we now a daies will be at no cost with Gods House is because we haue no delight in the House of God Dauid reioyced greatly and praised God for the zeale and willingnesse that he saw in the people to contribute towards the building of the Temple because he knew God was highly pleased with it and would blesse them for it 1. Chron. 29. 9 10. And it must needs then be a iust cause of griefe to euery godly man to see the irreligiousnesse of the people now adaies and how extreamely carelesse they are of the House of God because he cannot but know that God must needs bee highly offended with the people and plague them for this sinne And so we finde that the Prophet speaking of a curse that was laid vpon the Iewes in their substance and labour Hag. 1. 6. He giues this for the chiefe reason of it that themselues dwelt in seeled houses and suffered the House of God to lye wast Hag. 1. 4. The second kind of contempt done to Gods publike worship is the refusing to be present and ioyne with the assembly in the worship of God And I finde three sorts guilty of this sinne The first are they that doe ordinarily without any iust or necessary occasion absent themselues from the assembly keepe their beds or their shops or the alse-house when they should be here I know these men will be ready to say our Preachers are proud they would haue all men to heare them they take it in great budgin if one be away when they preach and it is no maruell sure for what good shall we get by hearing of them If such or such eloquent learned famous men did preach we would giue them the hearing To these men I say first be not deceiued there is none of vs so simple as to be proud of such hearers as you be Can a Preacher thinke you be proud to see drunkards or whoremongers or blasphemers or prophane fooles that scorne all goodnesse to come and heare him Surely as much as Ezechiel was when the Lord told him Ezek. 2. 3. 5. I send thee to the house of Israel and thou shalt say vnto them thus saith the Lord. But surely they will not heare for they are a rebellious house and see what comfort he tooke in such hearers Ezek. 3. 14. he went in the bitternesse of his spirit to preach vnto such men No no we glory not at all to haue our ministry frequented by some men but there are many that we are glad to see that they keepe themselues away and sorry at the heart when we see them come into the Church as it may seeme Iohn was when he saw the Pharisees and Sadduces come to heare him a generation of Vipers saith he Matth. 3 7. who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come as if he should haue said who brought you hither what doe you here But 2. let me tell thee thou mightest receiue profit if the fault be not in thy selfe by the meanest of vs that preach at least more then thou canst do in thy bed shop or alehouse 3. If thou wert sure thou couldst not profit yet must thou come to doe thy homage to God and shew thy reuerence to his ordinance giue vnto the Lord the glory due vnto his name saith the royall Prophet 1. Chron. 16. 29. bring an offering and come before him worship the Lord in the beauty of holinesse thou denyest to giue to God the glory due vnto his name if thou neglect to come before him and to worship him in his Sanctuary We do not require you to come to do any duty or homage therein vnto vs but vnto God and if in refusing to come you did but discountenance disgrace and shew your contempt to vs then the matter were not great but thou wilt finde one day that by this wilfull absenting of thy selfe thou hast discountenanced and disgraced the ordinance and worship of God and so despised and shewed contempt to the Lord himselfe Thou shalt one day finde that Christ will make that good vpon thy soule which he hath said Luke 10. 16. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me and can that seeme vnto thee a small matter The second sort that offend in refusing to be present at Gods publike worship are they that preferre the seruice that is done to God in a Chappell or priuate chamber before that that is done in the publike assembly True it is and no man may deny but it may be lawfull to haue all the parts of Gods publike worship vsed in a priuate Chappell or for want thereof in a chamber For preaching of the Word we haue a plaine warrant in the example of the Apostles who vsed to preach in houses sometimes euen then when they had liberty to preach in the Temple Acts 5. 42. Yea the Sacraments which are the most solemne parts of Gods worship may also sometimes be lawfully administred in a familie namely when 1. Either through persecution the doores of Gods House are shut against vs and we cannot be permitted to receiue them in the
buttery or a seller or ale-house in drinking of healths they can neuer be seene to kneele in the House of God in prayer to him I know what men pretend for this if the person to whose health they drinke be such as to whom in the ciuill custome of our country the knee is due it cannot be say they vnlawfull and vnfit in drinking to their health to kneele downe But how wittie soeuer these men be to excuse their sinne it is certaine this vse was first taken vp in scorne and contempt of prayer And therefore it is not to be maruelled if they that haue thus abused their knee in doing homage to the diuell be so void of grace as neuer to bow their knee to the honour and seruice of God But let them that vse so oft to drinke healths vpon their knees consider what they will answer to the Lord for so great prophanenesse 3. The third and last sort of them that I told you are to be charged with this sinne of not shewing due reuerence to Gods worship when they are present at it are they that though they will come sometimes to the House of God specially if they haue the example of their betters to draw them vnto it yet carry themselues so as if they did study to shew that they despise our assemblies and the worship we doe to God in them As many Papists that are present when we giue thankes to God in our meales will by some outward behauiour witnesse their dislike so do these men being in heart either Papists or Atheists which is worse carry themselues in our publike assemblies By prating and laughing and playing the parts of iesters and prophane fooles they do purposely both hinder themselues and all that are neere vnto them from profiting by any thing that is taught yea indeauour all they can to make the Word and seruice of God ridiculous and contemptible vnto others Surely the sinne of these men is exceeding great before the Lord. Our Sauiour calls these despisers and scorners of holy things dogs Matth. 7. 6. When the Holy Ghost would shew that Nimrod was an oppressor in high contempt of God he calls him A mighty hunter before the Lord. Gen. 10. 9. And surely these that dare be thus prophane euen in the place of Gods speciall presence before the Lord may well be said to be prophane in the highest degree prophane in high contempt to God himselfe It were to bee wished such men would keepe themselues away from Gods Sanctuary or that we had such porters to keepe them away as they had vnder the law 2. Chron. 23. 19. For they doe enough to bring Gods vengeance on vs all by their sinne But to conclude I will say to these men though I hope there be none such here and if there were I haue small hope to doe them good as the Apostle doth 1. Cor. 10. 22. Doe you prouoke the Lord vnto anger are you greater then he Ier. 7. 19. Doe they prouoke me to anger saith the Lord doe they not prouoke themselues to the confusion of their owne faces Didst thou neuer feele the terrour of the Lord Did the feare of his glorious power and maiesty neuer strike thine heart and make it to tremble How hast thou beene affected in the thunder and lightning this last summer If thou hast let this restraine thee from this prophanenesse and teach thee to adore and doe him reuerence specially in his Sanctuary See how this reason is vrged by the Prophet Psal. 29. when he had exhorted the greatest verse 2. to giue vnto the Lord the glory due vnto his name which they could neuer do vnlesse they did worship and adore him in his glorious Sanctuary he speakes much vers 3. 9. as an effectuall reason to moue them to it of the glory and greatnesse and power of God that appeares in the thunder and lightning and vers 9. concludes his speech in it thus and in his temple doth euery one speake of his glory as if he should say in his temple his glory appeares much more then in that and the greatnesse and glory of God that appeares in that makes men giue the more glory to God in his Sanctuary and shew the more reuerence in it Lecture the thirtieth October 24. 1609. IT remaineth now that we come to the question it selfe which this woman propoundeth to our Sauiour wherein that we may the better receiue our instruction from it these three things are to bee obserued 1. That perceiuing him to be a Prophet and one that could tell secrets she sought not to know her fortune as we say how long shee should liue how many more husbands she should haue or how many children what manner of ones they would prooue or such like matters which if shee would haue yeelded to that curiosity that is in vs all by nature she would haue questioned with him about but being effectually touched in conscience by the Spirit of God with remorse for her sin and desire of saluation she seekes onely to be instructed by him in a chiefe ground of Religion and case of conscience 2. Though she were but a woman and a Samaritan and an harlot yet did she take notice of a maine controuersie that was betweene the Iewes and Samaritans about the right way to saluation and true manner of seruing God yea she was acquainted also with the chiefe reason that the Samaritans alledged for themselues 3. She satisfieth not her conscience in the long custome of all her neighbours and antiquity of their Religion neither feares the imputation of lightnesse and inconstancie amongst her neighbours but calls in question the Religion which her selfe and all her ancestors had profe●…ed and earnestly desires to be resolued by Christ whether it were the true Religion or no. And from this example thus considered we haue this Doctrine to learne for our instruction that Euery Christian euen women are bound to seeke to be resolued and setled in the knowledge of the true Religion of God Before I come to the proofe of this two things are to be premised for the right vnderstanding of the Doctrine 1. I doe not say that euery one is bound to studie the controuersies so as to be able to answer an aduersary For this is a speciall gift required of the Minister to be able to conuince the Aduersary Tit. 1. 9. And to stop his mouth verse 11. Yea it may doe hurt to a weake Christian to busie himselfe much with controuersies to reade the books of aduersaries to the truth or conferre with them Rom. 14. 1. Him that is weake in the faith receiue but not for controuersies in disputation 2. I say not that there is the like measure of knowledge required of euery Christian. For 1. Of vs that liue in these dayes in which the light is so cleerely reuealed in which besides the Ministry of the Word there are bookes of all sorts written more knowledge is required th●…n was of our
Moses speaking of Gods maruellous goodnesse to his Church expresseth it thus Deut. 4. 7. What nation is so great vnto whom the gods came so neare vnto them as the Lord our God is neare vnto vs in all things that we call vnto him for So Dauid setteth forth the plenteousnesse of Gods goodnesse and mercy by this Psal. 86. 5. Thou Lord art good and ready to forgiue and plenteous in mercy vnto all them that call vpon thee And Paul speaking of Gods bounty saith Rom. 10. 12. He that is Lord ouer all is rich vnto all that call vpon him The Reasons why none can looke for grace and mercy from God but those that aske for it why he will be sought vnto for it are three The first of them respecteth the Lord himselfe and his glory for God counteth himselfe greatly honoured when his people pray vnto him and depend vpon him as it is an honour to a man on earth to be much sought vnto and to haue men rely wholly vpon him This the faithfull knew well and haue by this consideration beene prouoked to this duty Therefore Dauid saith Psal. 63. 4. I will magnifie thee all my life and lift vp my hands in thy name when he lifted vp his hands vnto God he magnified him and Psal. 66. 17. I called vnto him with my mouth and he was exalted with my tongue He esteemed doubtlesse meanely enough of his owne prayers though he thus spake but he knew that God accounteth himselfe to be highly exalted and honoured by this when his seruants thus seeke vnto him In which respect also the Church voweth this to God as a duty whereby she knew God accounted himselfe to be much honoured Psal. 80. 18. Quicken vs and we will call vpon thy name The second respecteth the benefit we receiue by it for by praying our faith repentance loue and zeale is exercised and as the strength and vigour of our bodies is by exercise maintained and increased so is grace also increased by exercise Iude 20. But ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holy faith praying in the Holy Ghost By exercising our faith and repentance and loue in prayer we shall edifie our selues The third respects the nature of grace for he that once hath but the least measure of a true taste of it will esteeme it aboue all things in the world and therefore cannot chuse but earnestly desire more of it and he that doth not desire it contemneth it He that hath found the true treasure and ioyeth in it will sell all that he hath to purchase it Mat. 13. 44. 2. Euery blessing is the sweeter to the godly and certainer token of Gods loue if they can feele they haue obtained it by prayer Dauid giues this for the reason of his thankfulnesse and why Gods mercy in his deliuerance was so sweet vnto him why he would extoll the Lord for it Psal. 30. 2. because he obtained it by his prayer O Lord my God saith he I cryed vnto thee and thou hast healed me 3. Yea though they obtaine it not they can beare the want of it the better if they know they haue prayed for it Phil. 4. 6. 7. In euery thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiuing let your requests be made knowne vnto God and the peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding shall keepe your hearts and minds through Christ Iesus The Vse of this Doctrine is first to exhort euery man to foure duties 1. Labour for an vnfained desire of grace for till this thou canst neuer haue any assurance of thy saluation nor receiue any grace from God Luke 1. 53. He filleth the hungry with good things and the rich he sendeth empty away 2. Labour for the Spirit of prayer and supplication for without this thou canst receiue no good thing from God specially no grace Iames 4. 7. Ye haue not because ye aske not 3. In the best meanes cry and pray to God for grace else shall they not profit thee Thus did David though he enioyed excellent meanes of grace Psal. 25. 4. 5. Shew me thy wayes O Lord teach me thy paths lead me in thy truth and teach me and 119. 12. 33. Teach me thy statutes teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes 4. If thou euer hadst this desire this Spirit of supplication and feelest it decayed in thee oh stirre it vp againe and striue to recouer it and herein I may say to thee as the Apostle to them Heb. 10. 32. Call to remembrance the former dayes and as our Sauiour to the Angell of the Church of Ephesus Reu. 2. 5. Remember euen in this from whence thou art fallen and repent For as your desire of grace decayeth so doth your assurance and comfort decay Secondly this doctrine serueth to reproue the wicked and shew the fearefull estate of such as are void of all desire of saluation Psal. 119. 154. Saluation is farre from the wicked for they seeke not thy statutes Certainely thou art yet in thy sinnes in the state of a child of wrath If thou say well if God haue decreed to saue me I shall do well enough I answer thou presumptuous foole what hast thou to do with Gods secrets Deutr. 29. 29. while thou continuest with●…t all desire of grace thou hast cause to feare thou art a reprobate But we shall make the better vse of this Doctrine when we haue learned the doctrine that followeth We are therefore further to obserue that as Christ telleth her what she should haue done to obtaine this water of life she should haue asked so he telleth her also what he would haue done if she had asked he would haue giuen it her though she were a Samaritan and a most wicked woman also Whence we learne That all such as can vnfainedly desire and aske grace of God shall be sure to obtaine it See the expresse promises of God for this Mat. 〈◊〉 6. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be filled Mat. 7. 8. Euery one that asketh receiueth and he that seeketh findeth and to him that knocketh it shall be opened Rom. 10. 13. Whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued Reu. 22. 17. Let him that is a thirst come And whosoeuer will let him take the water of life freely The reasons of this are three 1. The infinite goodnesse of the Lord and the earnest desire he hath of the saluation and conuersion of men See this here in Christ he laboureth to worke this desire of the water of life in this wretched woman So Esay 65. 1. Behold me behold c. and so ver 2. I haue spread out my hands all the day vnto a disobedient people Can he then reiect them that vnfainedly desire his grace who is himselfe so earnest a suiter to vs that we would seeke and receiue it 2. The delight God taketh in and the readinesse that is in him to accept
10. 2. But he that knoweth Christ aright cannot chuse but feele in himselfe the want of grace and earnestly desire it See the proofe of this in the description our Sauiour maketh of a true Christian Mat 5. 3. 6. he is poore in spirit he mourneth for that he is meekned and humbled thereby he hungreth and thirsteth after righteousnesse and in the experience of all that haue best knowne Christ and haue been most assured of Gods fauour in him Dauid knew Christ well and see what want of grace he felt in himselfe and the desire hee had of it As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of water so panteth my soule after thee O God Psal. 42. 1. Paul knew Christ well and see the feeling he had of the want of grace in himselfe and desire he had to it To will is present with me saith he Rom. 7. 18. q d. I would faine doe better I would faine haue more grace and verse 24. ô wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death q d. how faine would I be deliuered from this corruption that cleaueth so vnto me And Phil. 3. 10. he professeth his earnest desire was to know Christ and the power of his resurrection that is to know him better and better euery day The reason why men that before felt no want of grace in themselues when once they know Christ aright fe●…le the want of nothing so much hunger and thirst after nothing so much as Gods grace is this that 1. their regeneration as well as their knowledge is vnperfect 1. Cor. 13. 9. 2. The true knowledge of God is like vnto the light yea to a maruallous light 1. Pet. 2. 9. and the nature of light is to discouer and make all things manifest Eph. 5. 13. and consequently they that haue most grace and sauing knowledge in them must needs discerne better the want of grace in themselues then they that want grace can doe The vse of the Doctrine is first to kindle in vs a desire of sauing knowledge and an earnest endeauour to obtaine it by the vse of all the good meanes God hath appointed For first as a man can haue no assurance of his Election till he feele that the Lord doth effectually call and conuert him and so execute his eternall decree of electing him within himselfe so this is one of the first works of Gods grace whereby a man shall perceiue that he is actually elected when God workes knowledge in him and an endeauour to increase in knowledge Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes he will reuine vs and in the third day he will set vs vp and we shall liue in his sight ver 3. Then shall wee haue knowledge and endeauour our selues to know the Lord Hast thou no knowledge no endeauour after knowledge surely God hath not yet begun to reuiue thee but thou remainest dead in thy sinnes Psal. 67. 1. 2. When God once begins to be mercifull vnto vs and to cause his face to shine vpon vs then shall his wayes and sauing health be made knowne vnto vs. 2 Knowledge is the foundation of all other graces if our faith zeale loue c. be grounded vpon knowledge they will last and abide as the house built vpon the rocke but if we haue neuer so good and holy affections they will be of no continuance vnlesse they be grounded vpon knowledge yea proportionable to the measure of sauing knowledge is the durablenesse and comfort of all other graces 2. Pet. 1. 2. Grace and peace be multiplyed to you by the knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ our Lord ver 3. According as his diuine power hath giuen vs all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the knowledge of him that hath called vs vnto glorie and vertue That is the reason of this feruent prayer Paul makes Col. 2. 2. That their hearts might be comforted and they knit together in loue and in all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding to know the mysterie of God the Father and of Christ. So that if thou endeauour not to increase in knowledge all thy good affections will vanish as the morning deaw when they should stand t●…ee in most stead 3. Knowledge bringeth with it all other sauing graces so that he that hath true and sanctified knowledge shall be sure to want no grace that is needfull for his saluation Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternall to know thee In which respect you shall see how singular a blessing and token of Gods fauour Dauid esteemed the knowledge of the word to be by his so frequent and feruent prayers he makes to God for it Psal. 25. 4. 5. 8. 9. 12. 14. and in sundry other places of the Psalmes What shall we say to them then that care not for knowledge vse no means to obtaine it read not heare not or if they do doe it not ordinarily or i●…●…hey do that doe it not with any care to profit in knowledge by that they heare or read surely they are far from saluation as Dauid pronounceth Psal. 119. 155. and how well soeuer they think of themselues the Holy Ghost pronounceth them to be prophane Atheists and contemners of God They that doe thus professe in their liues that they desire not the knowledge of his wayes they haue said in their hearts vnto God Depart from vs who is the Almighty that we should serue him Iob. 21. 14. 15. 2. Vse is for them that perswade themselues they haue knowledge that seeing we haue heard there is a knowledge that is common to many a reprobate and will doe a man no good but much hurt and there is a knowledge that is proper to the elect and a certaine signe of Gods fauour and vnchangeable loue that therefore we rest not in this that wee haue knowledge but seeke for sauing and sanctified knowledge and examine our selues well whether we haue yet attained to this knowledge that accompanieth saluation yea or no. I will therefore giue you out of Gods word certaine notes whereby you may discerne it and they may be referred to three heads for sauing knowledge the knowledge of the elect may be discerned from the knowledge that may be in the reprobate 1. By the efficient causes 2. By the effects 3. By the properties of it The efficient causes of it are foure 1. The Spirit of God is the onely worker of it no wit nor meanes nor studie can worke it but the Spirit of God is the onely worker of it Iohn 6. 45. it is written they shall be taught of God And in that respect no man is capable of it but he that hath the Spirit of God Psal. ●…5 4. The secret of the Lord is with them that feare him and he will shew them his Couenant 2. It is not attained but by the hearing of the word ordinarily By reading and other meanes I deny not but a man may attaine to a great measure of
Prophets though they were it may be holier men then they did not see Luke 10. 24. Many points of Gods truth are reuealed now euen to babes which the Patriarchs and Prophets though holy men and highly in Gods fauour saw not It was euer vnlawfull to haue many wiues for it was forbidden to the King himselfe Deut. 17. 17. to multiply wiues And the Lord in the first institution of wed lock when if euer there was most vse and necessity of polygamy for the propagation of mankind made but one woman for one man And why so that he might seeke a godly seed saith the Prophet Mal. 2. 15. Intimating that the seed and posterity that came by polygamy could not be holy or pleasing vnto God Yet neither Iacob nor Dauid knew how hainous that sinne was Iephthah though a rare man for faith Heb. 11. 32. yet vnderstood not the liberty God had giuen him by his Law to redeeme his daughter Leu. 27. 4. nor how lawfull it was for those that were consecrated to God euen for the Nazarite to marry Iudg. 11. 35. Iosiah is praised for destroying those monuments of idolatry that Salomon had set vp though both Salomon himselfe after his repentance and Asa Iehosaphat and Hezekiah all good Kings saw not the necessity of destroying them 2. King ●…3 12 13. 2. Many good reasons may be giuen why learned Diuines in these dayes may know more and haue better iudgement in Religion then the Fathers had 1. They are borne and bred in the knowledge and profession of the truth and haue knowne from their childhood the holy Scriptures which are able to make them wise vnto saluation as the Apostle speaketh of Timothy 2. Tim. 3. 15. whereas most of the Fathers were bred and had liued long in Gentilisme and Heresie before they came to the knowledge of the truth 2. They enioy the benefit both of all the Fathers own labors and of the writings of many other learned men also which the Fathers themselues could not do 3. They haue the helpe both of far better translations of the Scripture then the Fathers could haue and of the knowledge of the tongues also which the chiefe of the Fathers are well knowne to haue been wanting in Thus much for the first vse of this Doctrine The second Vse concerneth vs all for this Doctrine serues to admonish vs that we take heed we make not an Idoll of any man how holy or how good soeuer he be which is then done when we oppose and set the iudgement or practice of any man against the Word of God when we aduance the credit of any man to obscure the glory of God Foure rules I will giue you to direct you in this case 1. Rest not so much on the iudgement aduice or example of the best men but examine them by the Scriptures Follow me as I follow Christ saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 11. 1. and 1. Thess. 5. 21. proue all things and hold fast that that is good For good men haue oft proued Sathans instruments to deceiue others Sathan himselfe did mis-guide Dauid 2. Sam. 7. 3. and the young Prophet was dangerously deceiued euen by the old Prophet who was also a good man 1. King 13. 18. and Peter plaid Sathans part in disswading our Sauiour from suffering Mat. 16. 22. 23. 2. Esteeme not of the excellentest man in the world when his credit is aduanced to obscure Gods glory and truth see how contemptibly the Apostle speaketh of the most excellent teachers in this case 1. Cor. 3. 5 7. Who then is Paul and who is Apollos neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth 3. Count it no great signe of grace to be able to praise and speake well of some good men if thou do it to the discredit of that goodnesse that is in another to praise one Minister with an intent to disgrace and derogate from the credit of thine owne Minister or of any other 4. Count it no iust cause of comfort to be able to loue and commend some good men vnlesse thou be carefull to imitate their goodnesse for this shall increase thy condemnation rather then do thee any good The third vse concerneth them whose iudgement and practice men are in greatest danger to abuse 1. Desire not that any should giue thee the honour that is due to God as to make thy will thy iudgement or practice the rule of his conscience oh shun this by all meanes See two notable examples for thee to follow in this case the one of the Apostles Barnabas and Paul who when the men of Lystra would haue giuen diuine honour vnto them Act. 14. 13. 15. did withall expressions of sorrow and feare and indignation disclaime it and put it from them The other of the twenty foure Elders representing the whole body of the Militant Church of whom we read Reu. 4. 10. 11. that they fell downe before him that sate vpon the throne and did worship him and cast their crownes before the throne saying thou art worthy O Lord to receiue glory and honour They renounced before God their owne glory and ascribed all glory and honour vnto God alone Remember this is the way to bring fearefull ruine vpon thee when thou shalt accept of any honour such as this is as is due to God alone as we may see in the fearefull and shamefull end that came vpon Herod Acts 12. 23. Because he gaue not God the glory but accepted of or at least indured diuine honour to be giuen vnto him 2. Let such as are of note for their knowledge and profession take heed what example they giue It is the Apostles charge 1. Cor. 8. 9 10 11 12. 3. Let superiours especially take heed what example they giue for their inferiours will be ready to do as they do though it be to the manifest perill of their owne soules THE NINTH LECTVRE ON MARCH XXVIII MDCIX IOH. IIII. XIII XIIII Iesus answered and said vnto her whosoeuer drinketh of this water shall thirst againe But whosoeuer drinketh of the water that I shall giue him shall neuer thirst but the water that I shall giue him shall be in him a Well of water springing vp into euerlasting life WE haue heard in the two former verses that this poore woman of Samaria could neither vnderstand nor belieue that which Christ had said vnto her but reasoned and disputed against it yet doth not our Sauiour giue her ouer for this her blockishnesse and infidelitie but as he that came to seeke that that was lost still continueth to labour with her to bring her to an admiration and desire of grace which taking the present occasion from the Well where he now sate and the water which this woman came to fetch he calleth the water of life Now whereas she had falsly boasted that Iacob was their father and gaue them that Well and had asked him whether he were greater then Iacob he neither denyeth that which she had falsly
they seeme to make conscience of this commandement thou shalt not commit adultery yet there is another commandement Flye fornication auoide all appearance of euill which they make no conscience of at all and therefore they are guilty of hainous sinne Such as vse filthy talke and filthy songs It is strange to see what liberty many euen some that in many things will seeme religious will pray dayly and heare deuoutly will giue to themselues this way Though they haue no other exercise of their wit if their company serue them but in scurrulous iests and filthy communication no such musicke in their mirth as amaroas and filthy songs yet if they can say they are honest for all this they thinke they are well These men I would haue to obserue these things 1. Filthy words whatsoeuer thou sayest doe argue a filthy heart Matthew 15. 18. Those things which proceed out of the mouth come from the heart and they defile the man Matthew 12. 34. From the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Yet haue we many old fornicators whose bodies are disabled to this sinne that haue yet as bad hearts as euer they had and shew that by the delight they take in speaking filthily And yet silly fooles they slatter themselues in this that they haue left that sinne 2. Say thy heart were cleane that is not enough thou must also make conscience of thy words The froward mouth doe I hate saith the Lord Pro. 8. 13. 18. 21. Death and life are in the power of the tongue Matth. 12. 37. By thy words thou shalt bee iustified and by thy words thou shalt bee condemned Iames 1. 26. If any man among you seeme to bee religious and bridle not his tongue but deceiues his owne heart this mans Religion is vaine Ephes. 4 29. Let not corrupt rotten communication come out of your mouthes And 5. 4. Let no filthinesse nor foolish talking nor iesting be once named among you Marke how iesting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ioyned to filthy talking because men are wont to excuse it thus they speake in iest they meane no hurt we must giue them leaue to be merry Such speech though it be vsed but in iest is condemned This is one kind of that mirth that Salomon speakes of Eccl. 2. 2. I said to laughter thou art mad Pro. 26. 18. 19. Like mad men they cast about them firebrands and deadly things and say they are in sport 3. Our tongue of all the members of our body is giuen of God to be the principall instrument whereby we may glorifie God Therefore it is in the Hebrew Phrase called our glory Psal. 30. 12. Therefore shall my glory praise thee and not cease Iames 3. 9. Therewith blesse we God That is the cause why the Lord can worst endure to be dishonoured by that member Therefore Diues is said to haue felt a speciall torment in his tongue Luke 16. 24. Send Lazarus that he may dippe the tippe of his finger in water and coole my tongue for I am tormented in this flame To conclude pretend and glory neuer so much of thy honesty certaine it is if thou didst flie fornication and hate it as thou oughtest thou durst not accustome thy selfe to thy filthy talke Such as delight in or can endure filthy talke such as will prouoke filthy persons to speake filthily such as will call to the Musitians for the filthiest songs they haue For this is a shrewd signe of a filthy heart specially in women because modesty is chiefely required of that sex it argueth an vncleane heart to delight in the lewd speech of others Pro. 17. 4. A wicked do●… giueth eare to a naughty tongue 1. Certainely it will grieue and vexe an honest heart to heare such things Ephes. 4. 29 30. Let no corrupt communication come out of your mouth verse 30. grieue not the holy Spirit of God It is said of Lot his righteous soule was vexed with hearing such things as he heard in Sodome 2. Pet. 2. 8. 2. There is a speciall force in such speech to corrupt them that heare it 1. Cor. 15. 33. Be not deceiued euill communications corrupt good manners 3. The eare is giuen of God to another end that is to heare the Word and to be sensus disciplinae that sence whereby knowledge should be conueyed into the heart he that hath eares to heare Gods Word he meanes let him heare saith our Sauiour Matth. 11. 15. 4. A good man should not endure him that vseth to bring lies to him and raise slanders Psalme 101. 7. Hee that telleth lies shall not tarry in my sight much lesse should hee endure them that talke filthily 5. If any shall obiect How can I let lewd men from speaking lewdely It is to no purpose to reproue such they would be the worse for it I answer that if honest men would shew that dislike as they might they would not be much troubled with such varlets That which Salomon saith in another case Pro. 25. 23. An angry countenance driueth away a backebiting tongue would hold in this also They might euen with a countenance restraine or chase them away And that which hee speaketh Pro. 20. 8. Is not true of Kings and great men onely though in them principally but of all Christians They may scatter away euill and lewdenesse euen with their eyes and countenance Lecture the twentieth Iuly 11. 1609. IT remaineth now that we come to the second branch of the Apostles Exhortation of which we haue already heard and that is this We are bound out of a holy feare least we should at any time fall into this sinne and out of that detestation we should beare vnto it to shunne all occasions and prouocations that might draw vs to it and to vse all good meanes that may be to preserue vs from it True it is that it is God onely that preserues any of vs from this or any other sinne Psalme 18. 35. Thy right hand hath stayed me and 56. 13. Thou hast kept my feet from falling But the meanes whereby he doth it is by working in vs a feare of falling which makes vs carefully to shunne tentations See how this feare is commended to vs in Gods Word as a wise man feareth and departeth from euill Pro. 14. 16. And blessed is the man that feareth alwaies Pro. 28. 14. and worke out your owne saluation with feare and trembling Phil. 2. 12. 2. An endeauour to vse all meanes that may preserue and strengthen vs from falling I kept my selfe saith Dauid Psal. 18. 23. from mine iniquity and 1. Iohn 5. 18. Hee that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe and that wicked one toucheth him not There is none so strong or full of grace but he may fall into the most fearefull sinnes that are if he be not carefull to shunne temptation and to vse the meanes God hath appointed to preserue him from sinne Therefore Christ chargeth his Disciples both to watch and to pray against
by any fault he hath made himselfe worthy of punishment Deut. 25. 3. Matth. 18. 10. See that ye despise not one of these little ones but specially to the congregation of Gods people when they are assembled to serue him This reason the Apostle giues against certaine abuses in the congregation of Corinth 1. Cor. 11. 22. haue ye not houses to eate and drinke in he might haue said if he had liued amongst vs to sleepe in to talke and laugh in despise ye the Church of God 2. The presence of the holy Angels which as they haue a charge from God to minister and doe seruice to his people Heb. 1. 15. and to pitch their tents about them Psal. 34. 7. so specially at that time when they are assembled together to serue the Lord. This was figured to Gods people vnder the law The curtaines that the Tabernacle was made of were full of Cherubins Exod. 26. 1. So were the walls of Salomons Temple round about 1. King 6. 29. to typifie the presence and attendance of the holy Angels vpon the whole Church and body of Gods people for their protection and safety as at all other times and in all other places so specially in their Church assemblies This reason the Apostle giues why women should haue modest attire in the congregation 1. Cor. 11. 10. The woman ought to haue power on her head because of the Angels 3. The presence of the Lord himselfe who though he be euery where Ier. 23. 24. Doe not I fill heauen and earth saith the Lord Acts 7. 48. The most high dwelleth not in Temples made with hands yet is he in a speciall sort present in the congregation of his people as is euident by those two promises made by our blessed Sauiour Matth. 18. 20. and 28. 20. In which respect the publike worship of God is called the face and presence of God Psal. 105. 4. and 42. 2. And Cain being for his murder depriued of the benefit of Gods publike worship complaines he should now be hid from his face Gen. 4. 14. That is the reason of Dauids desire to dwell in the house of the Lord all the daies of his life Psal. 27. 4. That I may saith he behold the beauty of the Lord. And Psal. 48. 9. We waite for thy louing kindnesse O Lord in the midst of thy Temple The place of Gods publike worship vnder the Law is called the glorious Sanctuary Psal. 26. 2. because the glory of the Lord did sensibly appeare in the Tabernacle Exod. 40. 34. and the Temple 1. King 8. 10. And the Assemblies of Gods people now may as well be called glorious because the glory of the Lord appeares also in them though not so sensibly yet no lesse comfortably and effectually as is plaine by that comparison the Apostle makes betweene that ministry and worship of God that was vnder the Law and this that is vnder the Gospell and by his preferring this for glory and excellencie far aboue the other 2. Cor. 3. 8 9. 11. Lecture the sixe and twentieth September 19. 1609. THe Vse that is to be made of this Doctrine is 1. For Exhortation 2. For reproofe 1. To exhort all men that they would learne to carrie themselues reuerently in all the parts of Gods worship and seruice specially in his publike worship And that ye may learne this the better I will giue you certaine rules out of Gods Word for your direction in this case And these rules shall be of three sorts 1. Such as belong in common to the whole worship of God 2. Such as concerne the publike worship of God in generall 3. Such as are particular and concerne the seuerall parts of that worship we doe vnto God in the publike assemblies And of those rules that are common to the whole worship of God this is the first 1. We are not bound to vse all the same gestures in Gods worship now which we reade in Scripture were of vse among Gods people but such as by which in the Countrie where wee liue men are wont to expresse their reuerence vnto their Superiours For this we finde was the rule the faithfull haue followed in all ages We reade that Ioshuah and the Elders of Israell when they had receiued the foile at the siege of Ai and came before the Arke of the Lord to pray they rent their cloathes and put dust vpon their heads Iosh. 7. 6. And Hezekiah when he came into the house of the Lord to pray at that time when Senacharib besieged Ierusalem rent his cloathes and put on sackcloth Esay 37. 1. Now none of these ceremonies and fashions were peculiar vnto Gods worship or appropriated thereunto but such as in their common vse and custome men in those times and countries did vse to expresse their griefe by For rending the cloathes and putting dust and ashes on the head we haue an example in Tamars case 2. Sam. 13. 19. and for putting on sackcloth in Benhadads seruants 1. King 20. 31. So we reade Iosh. 7. 6. that in prayer he and the Elders fell downe to the ground on their faces So did our Sauiour Matth. 26. 39. But this gesture was not peculiar to Gods seruice but such as was taken from the ciuill vse of those times and countries to expresse their reuerence to their Superiours in that manner as we see in the example of Ruth Ruth 2. 10. So their teachers were wont to sit when they taught the Scribes Matth. 23. 2. Our Sauiour Matth. 5. 1. and 13. 2. and 26. 25. Luke 5. 3. and 4. 20. Iohn 8. 2. the Apostles Acts 8. 11. vpon the same ground doubtlesse because in ciuill vse men were wont by that posture of their body to expresse that which they did in their places they did with authority and not as priuate men as appeares by that phrase so often vsed Psal. 69. 12. Pro. 28. 1. King 29. 27. 2. The second rule that concernes our reuerent behauiour in the whole worship of God is this More liberty may be taken in priuate and secret duties of Gods worship then in publike and that both in the vse of outward gestures and in forbearing the vse of them 1. Knocking of the breast ●…s Luke 18. 13. in a priuate prayer though the place were publike lifting vp the eyes and hands to heauen sighing and groaning and shedding of teares vse of the voice yea extention of it by crying and roaring may fitly be vsed in secret prayer but not so in publike because danger and appearance of hypocrisie may be in it if we vse these before others if we goe beyond the rest of the congregation therein therefore our Sauiour Matth. 6. 16 17. chargeth vs carefully to conceale from men all shewes and appearances of our priuate deuotion Therefore Nehem. 2. 4. Nehemiah prayed but vsed no gesture 2. In secret prayer we may pray in our bed lying all along and on horse back and at our tables sitting but in the congregation to do
16. 30. And 3. there was a place which the high Priest might onely enter into and that but once a yeare and that is called the Holy of holies the holiest place of all Heb. 9. 3. Now since the death of Christ there is no place of the world holier then other No nation is holy as the Land of Canaan was no towne as Ierusalem no place where God is worshipped as the Temple was Prayer is as auaileable with God in one place as in another 1. Priuate prayer is so For 1. Cor. 1. 2. Paul describes the faithfull to be such as call vpon God in euery place 2. Publike prayer is so 1. Tim. 2. 8. I will that men pray euery where 3. Generally the whole worship of God is so Matth. 18. 2. Wheresoeuer two or three are gathered together in my name c. And this the Lord foretold to his Prophets as a singular priuiledge that should come to the Church in the daies of the Gospell Zeph. 2. 11. Euery man in all the parts of the heathen shall worship God from his owne place Mal. 1. 11. In euery place from the rising of the Sun to the going downe thereof incense shall be offered vnto my name and a pure offering incense and offering are named as the seruice that was peculiar vnto the Temple Esay 19. 19. In that day shall the Altar of the Lord be in the midst of Egypt and a pillar by the border thereof And if this priuiledge was vouchsafed to Egypt which of all nations had most of all prouoked God how much more to other nations To make this truth the more euident to the world As the vaile of the Temple did rend immediatly vpon Christs death so within forty yeares after when by the Apostles Ministry this Doctrine was sufficiently manifested to the world the Temple and Cittie was vtterly subuerted and ouerthrowne according to the Prophecie of Christ Luke 19. 44. They shall make thee euen with the ground and not leaue in thee a stone vpon a stone And as Daniel Chap. 9. 26. Long before prophecied that the Romanes should destroy both the Cittie and the Sanctuarie The Reasons of this great alteration and change why this great difference that was in places before is now quite taken away why Ierusalem and the Temple lost all that holinesse that was in them before are principally foure 1. Because by Christs comming and specially by his death all that was fulfilled that was signified by the Temple For the Temple was but a type and shaddow of Christs humanity as our Sauiour himselfe witnesseth Iohn 2. 21. And the proportion stands in two points 1. As the Lord dwelt in the Temple and his glory sensibly appeared in it 1. Kings 8. 11. So all the fulnesse of the God-head did dwell bodily and personally in Christ Col. 〈◊〉 9. 2. As no sacrifice was acceptable to God vnlesse it were offered in the Temple So none of our prayers and spirituall sacrifices are acceptable vnto God vnlesse they be offered vp to God in Christ 1. Pet. 2. 5. So that it is necessary that when the body was come the shadow should cease 2. Since Christs death all difference of persons is taken away and all nations are as acceptable to God as the Iewes were Acts 10. 34 35. Of a truth I perceiue God is no accepter of persons but in euery nation he that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him Gal. 3. 28. For there is neither Iew nor Grecian bond nor free male nor female for ye are all one in Christ. And therefore all difference of places must needs also be taken away For this difference of places was as a partition-wall betweene the Iewes and all the Gentiles Ephes. 2. 14 15. He is our peace which hath made of both one and hath broken the stop of the partition-wall in abrogating through his flesh the hatred the law of commandement which standeth in ordinances 3. The grieuous sinnes whereby Ierusalem and the Temple were defiled caused God to destroy and prophane it and of the most holy and honourable place to make it the most miserable and abhominable of all the places of the world For the prophanation of the Temple our Sauiour tells them they should see Matth. 24. 15. the abhomination of desolation that is an abominable desolation stand in the holy place And for the destruction of it it was such as neuer the like happened to any place According as the Lord said Ier. 26. 9. I will make this place as Shilo and this Cittie a curse to all the inhabitants of the earth So miserable a destruction that our Sauiour saith they should cry Luke 23. 30. to the mountaines fall on vs and to the hills couer vs. And this is reckoned to be the cause of it Matth. 23. 37 38. Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets and stonest them that are sent to thee How often would I haue gathered thy children together as the Hen gathereth her chickens vnder her wings and ye would not Behold your habitation shall bee left vnto you desolate 4. The Lord hath not since the destruction of the Temple and Cittie of Ierusalem sanctified any other place in the world or consecrated it to a more holy vse then the rest and it is Gods institution and Word onely that can make any thing or any place holy euery creature and ordinance of God is sanctified by the Word of God and prayer 1. Tim. 4. 5. Nothing can be sanctified but by the Word and prayer The Sabbath is an holier day then all the rest because the Lord by his institution sanctified it Exod. 20. 11. The Water in Baptisme is holy because the Lord in his Word hath consecrated it to that holy vse God sanctifieth and cleanseth vs with the washing of water by the word Ephes. 5. 26. The Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper are holy because the Lord appointed them to bee vsed in that holy action hee tooke Bread and Wine and after hee had blessed them by his prayer and thankesgiuing vsed them in this holy action as signes of his Body and Blood and Seales of the new Couenant Matth. 26. 26 27. Luke 22. The Vse of this Doctrine is threefold 1. To reprooue sundry superstitions of the Papists and of ignorant persons that haue by tradition receiued it from the Papists 1. Their going on pilgrimage to the holy Land as they call it and to other places which by reason of some reliques of Saints that are said to be there are accounted more holy then any other places This is counted a chiefe worke of piety and deuotion among them Fiue Reasons there are against this superstition 1. Nothing can make a place or ought else holy but the ordinance and institution of God as we haue heard 2. Of all places Ierusalem doth now worst deserue the name of the holy Land For Numb 35. 33. blood defiles the Land and in it was the blood of
heart and could haue wisht that himselfe bad beene accursed from Christ for restoring of them into Gods fauour See what affection Christ did beare vnto them Luke 19. 41 42. he wept and expressed exceeding compassion towards Ierusalem 2. For their Ancestours sakes the most honourable Nation vnder heauen they haue beene Christ himselfe was a Iew. No nation is able to deriue their pedigree nor bring so Authenticall Records for it as they See how Paul euen before the Corinthians that were Gentiles glorieth in this 2. Cor. 11. 22. Are they Hebrewes so am I are they Israelites so am I are they the seede of Abraham so am I This reason the Apostle giues for the affection he bare to them Rom. 9. 5. For if such respect was had to Iezabel because she was a Kings daughter though otherwise she had beene a wicked woman 2. King 9. verse 34. How much more respect deserueth this Nation euen for this 3. The promise we haue heard God hath made vnto that Nation that he will call them and make them his people againe should prouoke vs to pray for them See the force of this reason 2 Sam. 7. 27. For thou O Lord of hostes God of Israel hast reuealed to thy seruant saying I will build thee an house therefore hath thy seruant found in his heart to pray this prayer vnto thee 4. The glory that shall redound to God by their conuersion For then shall he be more purely worshipped then he is hitherto by all his Elect throughout the world 5. The good that we our selues haue receiued from them For they before the time of our calling prayed for vs and earnestly desired our conuersion as appeares We haue a little sister and she hath no breasts what shall we do for our sister in the day when she shall be spoken for Cant. 8. 8. and by sundry Psalmes Psal. 87. And from them we receiued the Gospell and worship of God in which respect also we may be called their debters as Rom. 15. 27. To comfort such as haue at any time had good euidence of Gods loue to them in Christ. For such may by this example be assured that though they haue iustly deserued he should cast them off and though through the tokens of Gods anger that are vpon them either inwardly or outwardly their owne reason and sense may perswade them he hath cast them off indeed yet whom he hath once loued in Christ and receiued into his couenant and called effectually to be his people and giuen his Spirit vnto them he will loue to the end and can neuer cast them off Ier. 31. 3. I haue loued thee with an euerlasting loue therefore with louing kindnesse haue I drawne thee And Iohn 13. 1. whom Christ loueth he loueth to the end And Rom. 11. 29. the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Let vs therefore giue all diligence to make our calling and election sure and seeke good euidence to our selues that God loueth vs in Christ 2. Pet. 1. 10. There is no certainety in the loue of any mortall creature which yet thou so much dotest vpon but the loue of God is certaine and vnchangeable For the comfort of Christian parents Many are the priuiledges which the Lord hath vouchsafed vnto our children but this is the chiefe that if we know our selues to be the children of God we may be assured that some of our posterity shall be so likewise So that this may quiet and secure our hearts though we haue many children and little to leaue them not only in the whole course of our liues but euen in the houre of death If 1. Wee haue good assurance that ourselues are within Gods Couenant 2. That we haue done our endeauour to bring vp our children in Gods feare and to make them his children THE NINE AND THIRTIETH LECTVRE ON IANVARY XXIII MDCIX IOH. IIII. XXIII XXIIII But the houre commeth and now is when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth for the Father seeketh such to worship him God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth WE haue already heard that the answer our Sauiour maketh to the question which the woman of Samaria mooued vnto him consisteth of two parts 1. A commendation of that outward worship the Iewes vsed in comparison of that of the Samaritans 2. A discommendation of that outward worship of God which the Iewes vsed in comparison of that which God would shortly establish in his Church The former part of this answer is set downe in the 22. verse which we finished the last day The latter part of his answer is contained in these words which I haue now read vnto you The summe and effect of this part of his answer is this That though the worship which the Iewes then did to God were farre better then that of the Samaritans yet this ceremoniall worship which the Iewes vsed though it were commanded of God himselfe was not so much to be esteemed as she conceiued but should shortly be abolished and in stead thereof another forme of Gods worship should be established which should not consist in ceremonies and shadowes which suited best mans carnall and corrupt nature but should be spirituall as best agreeing to the nature of God and haue in it the truth and substance of all that which was figured and shadowed in those ceremonies The parts of this Text are two 1. A proposition or Doctrine concerning the true worship that Christians are to giue vnto God Now the true worshippers shall worship the father in spirit and in truth which is repeated with some increase they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth 2. The Reasons of this doctrine and Proposition and they are two 1. Because the Father euen seeketh or desireth to haue such worshippers 2. Because God is a Spirit and must therefore haue such worship and seruice done vnto him as is suitable to his nature The Proposition or Doctrine is inlarged or set forth by two circumstances 1. The Person to whom this spirituall worship is to be giuen the Father 2. The time when this spirituall worship shall be giuen vnto him the houre commeth and now is First then it is here to bee obserued that our Sauiour speaking of the worship that Christians should giue vnto God which should be farre better then that which the Iewes then vsed calls God to whom this worship was to be done the Father and that so oft euen three seuerall times once verse 21. and twise in this verse What should bee the reason of this Surely our Sauiour doth hereby intimate one chiefe cause why the Christians vnder the Gospell should doe God better seruice then the Iewes had done vnder the Law because they shall conceiue of God as of their Father True it is the Lord was a Father to his people vnder the Law and so they conceiued of him but the Lord hath reuealed
before their comming for they saw him talking with her but before they came so neere that they could heare any thing that they said the speech brake off Now the Disciples perceiuing him a good while it seemes before they came neere him to be in earnest talke and conference with a Woman maruailed at it as not conceiuing any reason why he should so do but thinking it vnbeseeming the grauity and dignity of his person and the holinesse of those matters which they knew he was only wont to talke of that he should conferre with a Woman Yet such was the reuerence they did beare vnto him that though they did conceiue some dislike of this in their minds they durst not vtter or expresse it So that th●…se words offer to our consideration two principall points 1. Concerning the prouidence of God in disposing of the time of the Dis●…es returning vnto Christ. 2. Concerning the Disciples themselues And of them we haue two things to ●…serue 1. Their maruelling to see him talke and conferre with a Woman 2. Their silence For the First in that God in his prouidence did so dispose that the Disciples should not onely be all away when this Woman came to the Well For else 1. Christ should not haue had any occasion to aske her water verse 7 8. Nor 2. Christ could haue had fit opportunity to tell her of her secret and f●…wle sinne she liued in Nor 3. she could haue beene bold to open her mind to him But 2. Also that they should tarry so long away till Christ had euen finished his conference with her And 3. That they should come presently so soone as he had made himselfe knowne vnto her to be the Messiah and not before We learne That God by his prouidence doth gouerne all things euen the least things that fall out in the world and orders them for the good of his Elect. Marke the confirmation of this Doctrine in these sixe particulars 1. Not such things onely as come to passe by an ordinary course that he hath set in nature and we can conceiue a reason for but those that seeme to happe by meere chance fall out by his prouidence See a case of chance-medley propounded Deut. 9. 5. for releefe of whom the City of refuge is appointed In this case it is said Exod. 21. 13. The Lord offered him into his hand and Pro. ●…6 31. The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposing thereof is from the Lord. 2. Not matters of great moment onely but the least matters of all and such as mans foolish reason would thinke it vnbeseeming the Maiesty of God to take notice of euen such fall out by his prouidence euen to the falling of a Sp●…row to the ground Matth. 10. 29. 3. Euen such things as wherein man hath free-will as in naturall and ciuill actions he hath fall out by Gods prouidence The Disciples going to Sychar to buy meat and their comming back to their master sooner or later was a matter wherein they had free-will and yet we see Gods speciall prouidence euen ordereth this matter See another example in this kind Gen. 24. 15. 20. Rebecca comes to the Well iust at that time when Abrahams seruant that was sent to seeke a wife for Isaack came thither she let him drinke of her pitcher she offers to draw water for his Camels And the Holy Ghost notes God had a speciall hand in this verse 21. 26. 4. He doth not onely see and permit whatsoeuer falls out in the world but he hath an hand in euery thing he is an agent in it Ephes. 1. 11 He worketh all things according to the good pleasure of his will Esay 45. 7. I forme the light and create darknesse I make p●…ace and create euill I the Lord doe all these things 5. He hath not only a hand in the actions of his children but he is an agent in all the actions of the wickedest man and of Sathan himselfe to order and direct them When the Sabeans and Caldeans and the tempest that Sathan raised had spoyled Io●… of his goods and seruants and children he professeth it was the Lord that did all this Iob 〈◊〉 21. and the Holy Ghost addes vers 22. that in saying so he did not charge God foolishly The worst action that euer was done in the world was the killing of the Lord of life and yet we shall find Acts 4. 28. God had a hand in that his enemies did nothing but what his hand and his counsell determined before to be done 6. In the gouerning and ordering of all things euen the least matters that fall out he hath speciall respect to the good of his Elect. The Disciples going here to the towne when they did and tarrying there so long as they did was a matter of small moment yet did God order and direct this matter by his prouidence for the good of this poore Woman If they had not gone when they did and tarryed as they did she could not haue had this blessed oportunity to conferre with Christ which was the meanes of her saluation See another example in Gen. 27. 34. Old Isaacke bids Esau goe kill him some Venison and dresse it to his liking Rebecca hearing him she teacheth Iacob to beguile and lye vnto his Father Iacob brings his Father meat and the old man blessed him immediately when Iacob was scarce gone out from his Father Esau comes in and not before God had a hand in all this if Isaak had not said so to Esau if Rebecca had not heard him if she and Iacob had not vsed this policy which in them both was wicked if Esau had not tarried so long in the field as he did Iacob had not had the blessing The Reason of this Doctrine why God by his prouidence gouernes all things euen the least things that fall out in the world is 1. The respect that he hath to his owne glory To flesh and blood it seemes to make nothing for Gods glory but for his dishonour rather to haue an hand in euery small matter especially in the actions of vngodly men but indeed it is otherwise As there is no creature so small and contemptible but God receiues glory by it or else he would neuer haue made it he hath made all things for himselfe Pro. 16. 4. Which is the cause why Dauid exhorts all his workes in all places of his Dominions to praise the Lord Psal. 103. 22. and more particular Psalm 148. 7 8. Dragons and all depths fire and hayle snow and vapours stormie winds yea and verse 10. Beasts and all cattell creeping things and feathered fowle So is there no action or accident that falls out in the world be it neuer so small be the instrument neuer so wicked but God will receiue glory by it else he would neuer permit it much lesse haue a hand in it as we haue heard he hath This is manifest in that forme of thankes-giuing which our Sauiour teacheth vs
heart cleane No more can he his body neither will you say What man is free from sinne in word and deed Iames 3. 2. yet this is farre easier then the other Insomuch as many a naturall man may goe farre that way Philip 36. Concerning the righteousnesse which is in the Law I was vnrebukeable How much more easily may the man that hath grace Therefore the Apostle doth likewise say Rom. 6. 12. Let not sinne raigne in your mortall body sin reignes when once it hath gotten the command of the body When a mans corruption and sinne breakes out into speech or action it dishonoureth God much more and doth more hurt to men then the sinne of the heart can doe 1. Cor. 15. 33. Euill speeches corrupt good manners The Vse of this Doctrine is 1. To exhort euery Christian to make tryall of his estate in this one point The best man shall haue much adoe with the corrupt thoughts of his heart but doest thou striue against them and hast thou obtained that power ouer thy selfe that thou canst keepe them in of conscience to God this may giue thee exceeding comfort Prou. 21. 23. Hee that keepes his mouth and tongue keepes his soule from troubles The soundnesse of a regenerate heart is seene in nothing more then in making conscience of our speech Matth. 12. 37. By thy words thou shalt bee iustified and by thy words thou shalt bee condemned See two notable examples of this one in Iob he glorieth much in this Iob 31. 30. I haue not suffered my mouth to sinne by wishing a curse c. The other in Dauid Psal. 17. 3. Thou hast tryed mee and found nothing for I was purposed that my mouth should not offend And 39. 1. I said I will take heede to my wayes that I sinne not with my tongue I will keepe my mouth as with a bridle Yea he doth also feruently pray for this Psal. 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth keepe the doore of my lippes 2. To reprooue the madnesse of prophane men that glory in this that they are no hypocrites they meane no hurt they haue as good hearts as the best though they speake merrily for so they call all their scurrulous and bawdy talke and though they speake vainely and foolishly for so they call their swearing and blasphemie Though they be such as haue said and resolued with themselues as Psal 12. 4. with our tongues we will preuaile our lippes are our owne who is Lord ouer vs But to these men I say 1. It shall be easier for the secret Hypocrite in the day of iudgement then for thee because thou hast dishonoured God more and done more hurt to men Esay 3. 9. Yea they declare their sinnes as Sodome they hide them not woe bee to their soules c. 2. Whereas thou gloriest thou meanest no hurt thy heart is not so bad know thou there is much more filthinesse prophanenesse and wickednesse in thy heart then comes foorth at thy mouth Matth. 12. 34. For of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh The second point to be obserued is this what it was that restrained them from vttering that mislike that inwardly they had conceiued viz. the reuerence that they did beare vnto his person whom they knew to be the Sonne of God which teacheth vs That there is that reuerence and honour due to God as we may not dare to make any doubt or question of his words or workes of any thing he sayes or does though we cannot conceiue the reason of it That we mistake not this Doctrine I will tell you how far forth we may make question of Gods words and workes 1. We may enquire into Gods secrets so farre foorth as he hath reuealed them in his Word neither must men content themselues to be ignorant of any truth that God hath reuealed in his Word vnder this pretence that we may not bee inquisitiue into Gods secrets the things reuealed belong to vs and to our children Deut. 29. 29. There is nothing reuealed in the Word but it concernes vs and our children to know Romanes 15. 4. Whatsoeuer is written is written for our learning 2. We may examine and make question of any Doctrine that is taught vs by men be they neuer so good so that we examine it not by our owne reason but by the Scripture Acts 17. 11. the Beraeans are commended for this 3. If any thing we finde in Scripture and know to be Gods Word seeme to vs to be against sense and reason it is not simply vnlawfull to make a question of it so we enquire onely of God in humble desire to be taught and examine the matter by the Scripture should not a people seeke vnto their God to the Law and to the testimony Esay 8. 19 20. The Papists cry out of our infidelity and prophanesse because we will not rest in the plaine Word Matth. 26. 26. This is my body We enquire at God by the law and testimony and finde that he hath beene wont in speaking of Sacraments to giue to the signe the name of the thing signified and we doe finde also why he hath done so This kind of making question euen of that that God hath spoken did neuer offend him Luke 1. 34. the blessed Virgin did so 4. It is not vnlawfull to enquire a reason of God workes so we seeke it onely in the Scripture Dauid when he considered the manner of Gods gouernement sought to know the reasons of it but it was too painefull till he went into the Sanctuary Psal. 73. 16 17. But yet for all this this honour and obedience is due to God that we may not make question of any thing he hath said or done to doubt of it or dislike it because we cannot conceiue the reason of it We may not make our foolish reason the iudge or the examiner of Gods Word or workes we must admire and adore that we cannot vnderstand Our thoughts and reason must be brought into captiuity 2. Cor. 10. 5. For the Word of God euen such parts of it as our thoughts and affections are most apt to rise against See 2. notable examples The one in Eli It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good 1. Sam. 3. 18. The other in Hezekiah good is the Word of the Lord which thou hast spoken 2. Kings 20. 19. For the workes of God see this direction and rule giuen vs in two of the strangest and most wonderfull workes of God namely the reiection of the nation of the Iewes and the reprobating of a great part of mankinde in his eternall counsell Euen concerning these here what the Apostle saith Romanes 9. 20. Nay but O man who art thou that replyest against God Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it Why hast thou made me thus And 11. 33 35. O the depth of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God! how vnsearcheable are his iudgements and his
men after them such as the Apostles were poore Fishermen of Galilee such as were commonly esteemed ignorant and vnlearned men Acts 4. 13 3. Such a kinde of preaching as is plaine and without all ostentation and shew of humane gifts as the Apostle protesteth his was 1. Cor. 2. 4. his speech and his preaching was not with the entising words of mans wisedome 2. Yea we shall finde he hath beene wont to worke more mightily by very weake and vnlikely meanes then by such as haue beene farre more excellent and likely to doe good As he fed fiue thousand with fiue loaues and yet twelue baskets full of the fragments remained Matth. 14. 17. 21. and but foure thousand with seuen loaues and yet but seuen baskets of fragments remained Matth. 15. 36. 38. And this poore woman preuailed more with a great company of Samaritans then either Mary or the two Disciples could doe with the eleuen Apostles Marke 16. 11 13. Yea she drew more to Christ at one time then we reade either the twelue Apostles that were sent forth to preach Matth. 10. Or the seuenty Disciples that were sent forth to preach Luke 10. Or Iohn the Baptist did at any one time Ioshua though a person farre inferiour to Moses in gifts and but his seruant yet was his gouernement blessed farre aboue Moses and the people much better in his time then they had beene in the dayes of Moses Insomuch as he in his age giues that testimonie of them Iosh. 23. 8. that they had stucke fast to the Lord euen to that day And there were many more conuerted by the Ministry of the Apostles then by Christ himselfe yea many that despised him while himselfe preached by their Ministry were conuerted to him Iohn 8. 28. When yee haue lift vp the Sonne of man then shall yee know that I am he 3. Yea we shall finde that God hath beene wont to prepare such of his seruants as by whom he hath intended to do greatest good to his Church by making them see how weake and insufficient they haue beene and by bringing them to a base conceit of themselues So dealt he with Moses Exod. 4. 10. with Esay Esay 6. 5. with Ieremy Chap. 1. 6. and with Paul 1. Cor. 2. 3. and 2. Cor. 2. 16. Would you know the reason why God giues the meanes to some and denyeth them to others more worthy then they why he blesseth the meanes to some and not to others why he vseth to worke by such weake meanes and more by them oft then by stronger Surely the reason is this that his glory might the more appeare in them whom he doth saue For if all should haue the meanes of grace or if all should profit by them that haue them Gods mercy should not so much be magnified in the conuersion of the Elect or if the Lord should vse to worke by strong meanes onely the glory of the worke would be ascribed to the meanes and not vnto him whereas now the whole praise redounds to the Lord himselfe 2. Cor. 4. 7. The excellency of the power is of God and not of vs. Matth. 21. 16. Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise 1. To perswade all men if they want the meanes to seeke to God for them yea to perswade vs that haue the meanes to pray for them that want the meanes and cannot feele their owne want nor pray for themselues for 1. There is no hope God will saue men without meanes Rom. 10. 14. How can they beleeue vnlesse they heare 2. It is the Lord onely that withholdeth the meanes from them and who onely must giue them the meanes whoeuer be the instrument Matth. 9. 38. He is the Lord of the haruest and he only must send forth labourers into his haruest 3. Why doth he withhold the meanes because he hath no respect to them nor care of their saluation Act. 17. 30. The times of this ignorance God regarded not If men were perswaded of this they would not liue vnder a dumbe Ministry themselues yea they would pitty them more that doe 2. To persuade such as enioy the means yea the best meanes not to rest in this or to thinke it sufficient that they frequent the meanes but to seeke earnestly to God both before they come and after for his blessing and to carry themselues with that reuerence and deuotion while they are in the vse of the meanes as they may approoue themselues to him for 1. The best Ministry shall neuer doe thee good vnlesse the Lord worke with it as the water of Bethesda though it had vertue in it to heale all infirmities yet it cured none vntill the Lord had sent his Angell to stirre the water Iohn 5. 4. so though the Ministry of the Word haue a great vertue in it and be able to saue our soules Iam. 1. 21. yet can it conuert none vnlesse the Lord worke with it 1. Cor. 3. 7. Neither is he that planteth any thing nor hee that watereth but God that giueth the increase 2. If it doe thee no good it will doe thee hurt 2. Cor. 2. 16. It is a sauour of death where it is not a sauour of life 3. The true cause as thou hast heard why thou profitest not is because the Lord fauoureth thee not the Lord hath no respect vnto thee those whom the Lord loueth shall profit by the meanes yea by very weake meanes Thou hast enioyed great and excellent meanes a long time and canst not profit by them Consider the true cause of it Iohn 8. 47. Yee therefore heare not that is profitably for they all heard because ye are not of God If men were perswaded of this they would be troubled for their great vnprofitablenesse they would be more earnest with God for his blessing vpon his ordinance 3. To admonish Christians not to despise the Ministry of the meanest of Gods seruants but to reuerence Gods ordinance euen in the weakest Ministry I speake not this to countenance and iustifie the Ministry of euery one that taketh vpon him to preach or to tye Gods people to rest vpon them For I know well 1. There be many that runne before they bee sent Ier. 23. 2●… 2. It were as intollerable bondage and tyranny to binde Gods people to rest vpon the Ministry of such as cannot instruct them as it were to compell infants to abide with such nurses as haue neither sucke nor food to giue them I dare not condemne such Christians as hauing Pastours in the places where they liue of meaner gifts do desire so they do without open breach or contempt of the Churches order to enioy the Ministry of such as haue better gifts and sometimes do leaue their owne to heare the other so they do it without contempt of their own Pastours and without scandall and offence to th●…mand their people Because 1. That though sundry of the hearers not of the Scribes and Pharisees onely but of Iohn
the worke of the Ministry must be like vnto the housholder which hath a treasury of good prouision in himselfe and bringeth forth of it things both old and new Matth. 13. 52. This I thought needfull to stand vpon because I finde that those Ministers of all others are most vehement and bitter in complaining of their people for going from them who are either vtterly vnable to teach profitably and take vpon them to flye before they haue wings or such as are idle men and make no conscience to stirre vp that gift that God hath bestowed vpon them 3. The last direction I haue to giue to such Pastours is this That if they see cause to iudge that such as leaue them sometimes doe it without contempt of their Ministry in a dutifull manner seeking nothing in it but their profit and growth in grace and that they doe indeede profit by another more than they did by themselues that they are much bettered in knowledge zealous loue to the Word reformation of life conscience of all their waies since they went to heare such a man then take heed thou repine not at it but reioyce heartily that this worke is wrought in them though not by thy selfe Remember the doctrine that thou hast now heard Yea say they were such as left thee with some contempt yet if they profit more by another than by thee thou shouldest be willing to take knowledge of the good things that are euen in thine enemy and to reioyce in them also The Corinthians began to despise Pauls Ministry and to entertaine false Apostles that sought to disgrace him and yet doth he take knowledge of the good things were in them and praiseth God for them also 1 Cor. 1. 4 5. The like example he giueth vs also he reioyceth that Christ was preached euen by them who though they had good gifts and did both for matter and method teach profitably yet had naughty hearts and preached out of enuy and desire to add affliction vnto his bonds Phil. 1. 15 16 18. Lecture the fiftieth ninth Iune 24. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXXII XXXIV FOlloweth the fourth Property of true zeale to bee obserued in this example of our blessed Sauiour Though he had spent much time already in instructing the Woman yet as if he had done nothing hitherto he earnestly desires to do more Yea he professeth it was his meate to finish and perfect his fathers worke He that hath true zeale will not rest in any thing he hath already done but will still endeauour to goe forward and to be better than he hath beene and to finish his worke well Two branches there are you see of this property 1. He that hath any true zeale in him is carefull to grow and goe forward there is no one more essentiall property of true zeale than this desire to grow See a plaine example of this in Paul he had attained to a great measure and done much seruice to God yet heare what he saith Phil. 3. 13 14. I count not my selfe that I haue attained to perfection but one thing I doe as if he should say This is all my perfection I forget that that is behinde and endeauour my selfe to that which is before and follow hard toward the marke There is no certainer a signe that a man hath sauing grace in him than this when he earnestly desireth and endeauoureth to haue more grace They that haue had most store of grace haue euer beene most couetous and greedy to get more as none are so desirous of riches as they that haue most wealth nor any so desirous of knowledge as the best learned It is made a title of the seruants of God to hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Matth. 5. 〈◊〉 See an experiment of this in Dauid how he hungred after the sauing knowledge of Gods will Open thou mine eyes saith he that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Teach me thy statutes make mee to vnderstand the way of thy precepts Psalme 119. 18. 26 27. 2. His chiefe care is to finish his worke well This wee may see in Paul Acts 20. 24. I passe not at all I care not what I endure so I may fulfill my course with ioy And it is noted by the Holy Ghost of the best of Gods seruants that they neuer shewed such zeale and faithfulnesse in the worke of the Lord as when they were neare their end when they saw they were not to continue long Iacob Moses Ioshua Dauid Peter shewed more care of the Church and zeale of Gods glory toward their end than euer they did before Yea our Sauiour was neuer so zealous and painefull in instructing and praying for his Disciples as he was a little before his death See what he saith of this Ioh. 9. 4. I must worke the workes of him that sent me while it is day the night commeth when no man can worke And see what he did also how he doubled his diligence in preaching and praying for his Church immediately before his Passion In the day time euery day he was teaching in the Temple and at night he went out and abode in the Mount of Oliues And all the people came early in the morning to him in the Temple to heare him Luke 21. 37 38. To reprooue such as stand at a stay and thinke they haue done enough It is a certaine signe of a man that is but luke-warme in Religion when he thinketh he hath grace enough when he hath no desire nor vseth any endeauour to get more grace Thus is the luke-warme Laodicean described Apoc. 3. 16 17. he said he was rich and encreased with goods and had neede of nothing It is not possible but he that hath any soundnesse of grace in him must needs haue in him a desire to grow As in the naturall body euery member groweth till it come to full stature so is it in the mysticall body of Christ Col. 2. 19. All the body furnished and knit together by ioynts and bands increaseth with the increasing of God Iohn 15. 2. Euery branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may beare more fruit Therefore though the Thessalonians were grown so farre that the Apostle praiseth God for their effectuall faith and diligent loue and patient hope 1. Thess. 1. 3. and saith of them that their faith grew exceedingly and their loue one toward another abounded 2. Thess. 1. 3. yet he earnestly exhorteth and beseecheth them that they would increase more and more 1. Thess. 4. 1. 10. 2. For conuincing of their errour that seeke to iustifie many corruptions both in manners and religion by this Argument In such and such a mans dayes such things were vsed and I hope he was a learned man and a good man and why may they not then be vsed now To these men I answer First that it hath beene an old tricke of hypocrites to pretend great reuerence and respect to the seruants of God that are dead when their credit might
of the great successe his Ministry had among them at his first comming vnto them Gal. 4. 13 14 15. So the Holy Ghost speaking of the first Sermons that Paul and Barnabas preached to the Gentiles at Antioch saith Acts 13. 48. that at the hearing of them as many as were ordained to eternall life among them beleeued These Cautions being premised we shall yet finde the Doctrine to be most true That euen among the Elect themselues there is great difference to be obserued in their receiuing and profiting by the meanes of their first Conuersion vnto God See the proofe and confirmation of this Doctrine in three seuerall points 1. A man may be the Elect Childe of God and be a fruitlesse hearer of some good Preachers and yet profit by some other The Ministry of Iohn the Baptist was a very holy and powerfull Ministry and the whole drift of it was to draw men to beleeue in Christ and yet many of Gods Elect that had heard him could not be conuerted by him to the Faith which yet afterward when they came to be hearers of Christ himselfe became true Beleeuers and said Iohn did no miracle but all things that Iohn spake of this man were true And many belieued on him there Iohn 10. 41 42. So it is euident that many of those fiue thousand that were conuerted by two Sermons that Peter made Acts 4. 4. had heard Christ himselfe preach sundry times as is plaine by Luk. 19. 48. and 21. 38. where it is said that at Christs preaching in the Temple immediatly before his Passion all the people resorted daily to him to heare him yet could not be conuerted by him By stronger and more excellent means they could not be conuerted and yet were conuerted by weaker means 2. A man may be a fruitlesse Hearer a long time euen of that Ministry that God hath ordained to conuert him by and yet afterward profit by it With many of his Elect the Lord hath beene faine to stand long at the doore and knocke as he speaketh Reuel 3. 20. before he could get entrance into their hearts to continue the meanes long vnto them before they haue profited by them Many of Gods children haue beene like young Samuel 1. Sam. 3. 10 the Lord hath called them oft by the Ministry of his Word before they could answer him or once discerne that it was he that spake vnto them There hath beene many a one that hath beene a hearer a long time before he hath beene wonne vnto God yea that hath heard the same Preacher many a time without all fruit by whose Ministry at the last he hath beene conuerted vnto God There were many of Gods Elect that heard that powerfull Sermon of Peter mentioned Acts 2. and profited not by it which yet hearing him at another time were conuerted by him for those two thousand that we reade were added to the Church in Ierusalem Acts 4. 4. and that by his Ministry as may appeare Acts 3. 12. 48. had certainely heard that Sermon and seene also the fruit of it as is plaine by that we reade Act. 2. 5 6. for the multitude of them that were in Ierusalem heard that Sermon 3. A man may be the Elect childe of God though he can receiue no good by the most powerfull and fruitfull Ministry till God haue prepared him by humbling him greatly through fore affliction Paul himselfe may be a notable example for this It is not to be doubted but that he liuing in Ierusalem while all the Apostles continued there for he was brought vp in that City at the feet of Gamaliel Acts 22. 3. and there he gaue consent to the death of Steuen Acts 8. 1. and there hee began to persecute the Saints Act. 26. 10 11. and the Church did so flourish there did heare the Apostles preach sometimes and heard Steuen dispute with the Libertines and Cyrenians Acts 6. 9. and yet till God by his mighty hand had humbled him all this did him no good at all The Reasons and grounds of this Doctrine are principally three 1. The Elect of God haue no better hearts by nature than the worst of all the Reprobate haue Till God be pleased to call them to open their eares and incline their hearts they are euery whit as backeward and vntoward as the worst they are by nature the children of wrath euen as others Ephes 2 3. 2. The Conuersion of Gods Elect depends wholly vpon the free pleasure and will of Almighty God and not vpon any thing that is in man himselfe The Winde bloweth saith our Sauiour Iohn 3. 8. where it listeth and when it listeth also so is euery one that is bor●…e of God Of his owne will saith the Apostle Iames 1. 18. begat he vs with the word of Truth 3. The Lord hath herein had respect vnto his owne glory Which this way is better seene and manifested than otherwise it could be for if all the Elect should profit by euery good Minister of God or if they should profit presently so soone as euer they doe enioy the meanes of grace certainely the glory of this mighty worke of God would be ascribed either to the meanes or vnto some good inclination that is in our owne hearts and not to the Lord himselfe onely This Doctrine we may make good Vse of both towards our selues and towards others also First let no man abuse this Doctrine vnto Presumption and say I may be Gods Elect child though Ineuer receiued good yet by any Sermon in my life But let euery man account it a fearefull signe and a iust cause of trembling if God haue giuen him good meanes of grace and he hath enioyed them long euen such meanes as he hath seene many others haue receiued great good by and yet he cannot profit by them he cannot beleeue and obey the truth For 1. It is no small sinne to neglect or not to receiue good by the meanes of grace If it were our Sauiour would not haue spoken of it as he did Matth. 10. 15. Uerily I say vnto you it shall be more tolerable for the Land of Sodome and Gomorrah in the day of Iudgement than for that City 2. If a man do wittingly neglect to regard and obey the meanes of grace presently so soone as God offereth them vnto him while it is called to day he is in danger to be giuen vp of God vnto hardnesse of heart Heb. 〈◊〉 13. 3. Though it be not alwaies as we haue heard in the Doctrine yet it is for the most part a signe of a man that God hath not ordained to life but determined to destroy to enioy long excellent meanes of Conuersion and Repentance and to receiue no good by them as I shewed you euen now out of Ioh. 8. 47. and 2. Chron. 25. 16. And as is also plaine by that speech the Lord vseth Pro. 1. 24. 28 29. because I haue called and yee refused I haue stretched out my hand and no man
or beare honour to the Lord himselfe but he must needs loue and honour the Prophets and Messengers of God he that despiseth you despiseth me Luk. 10. 16. And that is the cause why the Apostle is so importunate with the Thessalonians to perswade them to esteeme well of their Ministers we beseech you brethren to know them which labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you And to esteeme them very highly in loue for their workes sake 1. Thess. 5. 12 13. And indeed this was the true cause why our Sauiour in this place stood so much vpon his honour he would preach no where but where he might haue honour and be well esteemed of Why was he a man that cared much for honour No he professeth of himselfe and in his whole life made it good Ioh. 8. 48 49. I honour my Father I seeke not mine owne praise This was then the reason why he would preach no where but where he might haue honour because he knew none ●…ould receiue good by his Ministry that did not esteeme reuerently of his person They that honour not the Teacher cannot honour nor profit by his Doctrine Lecture the seuentie eight Ianuarie 22. 1610. IOHN IIII. XLIII XLIIII IT followeth now that we proceed to the Vses of this Doctrine 1. For vs that are Ministers That seeing there is an honour due vnto vs and it is not possible for vs to doe any good in our Ministry where we haue no honour and all the honour that is due to vs is due to vs onely for our gifts and for our workes sake we should therefore be humbled in our selues and iudge our selues vnworthy to be imployed in this function and both before we are entred this should keepe vs from being ouer-hasty and forward to take this calling vpon vs and when we are entred this should make vs to walke in it with feare and trembling Iohn the Baptist professed himselfe vnworthy to be imployed euen in the basest office about Christ not worthy to beare his shooes Matth. 3. 11. not worthy to stoope downe to vntie the latchet of his shooe Mar. 1. 7. And Paul said he was vnworthy to be called an Apostle 1. Cor. 15. 9. and hauing spoken of such an honour that belongeth to our Ministry which as one would haue thought would haue puffed him vp rather than haue humbled him he presently as admiring that God should euer aduance any mortall man to that dignity breaketh out into these words 〈◊〉 Cor. 〈◊〉 16. Who is sufficient for these things For as God neuer aduanced any to honour aboue others but he requireth some greater seruice from them than from others in omni honore est onus in all honour there is a burden to whom men haue committed much of them they will aske the more Luke 12. 48. In which respect Saul when he was called of God and his people vnto the place of greatest honour shunned it as much as he could and hid himselfe 1. Sam. 10. 22. so hath it fallen out in this No man that hath rightly conceiued of the burthen God hath annexed to this honourable function hath beene ouer hasty to take this calling vpon him no man taketh this honour to himselfe but he that is called of God Heb. 5. 4. till God haue euen thrust him in as it were by violence by the head and shoulders Two famous examples we haue for this the one in Moses who three seuerall times hung of and excused himselfe Exod. 3. 11. and 4. 1. 10. 13. the other in Ieremie who cryed out thus ah Lord God behold I cannot speake for I am a childe Chap. 1. 6. Euery ignorant idle couetous and scandalous Minister is apt to glory in this Doctrine and to challenge to himselfe this honour that is due to the Ministers of the Gospell but he neuer thinketh of the burthen God hath annexed to this honour The second Vse of this Doctrine is for the people that seeing it is euident by this Doctrine that you owe vs honour neither can you profit by our Doctrine vnlesse you can giue honour vnto vs and God esteemeth you as dogges and swine vnworthy of the comfort of his Gospell if you cannot esteeme of vs therefore it standeth you vpon to learne what honour is due to vs and when you know it to giue vs our due in this kinde The Apostles rule is generall Rom. 13. 7. Render to all their dues tribute to whom tribute is due feare to whom feare honour to whom honour First then you must know that the honour you owe vnto vs is not such as is due to the Magistrates and great men of the world we doe not challenge to our selues either that ciuill authority or that reuerence or those titles or that outward pompe and state or that wealth and abundance that is due vnto them Our Sauiour Christ giueth this for the reason why he had not such a retinue and company of seruants as might haue rescued him from them that apprehended him because his Kingdome was not of this world Ioh. 18. 36. The chiefe honour that is due to vs is more inward and spirituall and standeth in foure points principally The first degree of honour that you owe to vs is in your mindes and iudgements that you rightly esteeme of the neede you haue of Gods Ordinance in our Ministry and of the inestimable benefit you receiue by it This is that the Apostle teacheth vs when he saith 1. Thess. 5. 12. I besecch you Brethren that you know them that labour among you And 1. Cor. 4. 1. Let a man so account of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the mysteries of God On the other side a chiefe dishonour it is to the Ministry when men thinke it is a calling of no such necessity but that they may well enough be saued without it as they did among the Corinthians that said they cared neither for Paul nor for Apollo nor for Cephas they were Christs they did so wholly relye vpon Christ for their saluation as that they regarded not the Ministry of any of his seruants 1. Cor. 1. 12. that they can profit better by reading good Bookes c. The second degree of honour you owe to vs is in your affections that you reuerence vs in your hearts and haue vs in singular loue for our workes sake 1. Thess. 5. 13. You should count it your happinesse to haue such Teachers as you may reuerence for otherwise you shall be able to profit little or nothing by their Ministry On the other fide they are to be held contemners of the Ministry that desire none but such as may be their vnderlings such as they may rule at their pleasure euen in the matter of their Ministry and prescribe vnto them what they shall preach and what they shall not preach and say prophesie not vnto vs right things speake vnto vs smooth things Esay 30. 10. 12. or else such
Nicodemus was drawne to belieue that he was come from God because of the miracles that he had done Ioh. 3. 2. And here we see the fruit and vse of those miracles they that saw them were made willing to receiue and heare him The Doctrine then is this That the chiefe end of all true miracles hath been to gaine credit and estimation to the Doctrine and Word of God This is euident in the miracles of the Prophets when Eliah had restored the child of the widow of Sarepta she said vnto him 1. Reg. 17. 22. Now I know that thou art a man of God and that the Word of the Lord in thy mouth is true The like we see in the miracles of the Euangelists and Apostles Acts 8. 6. The people gaue beed to those things that Philip spake with one accord hearing and seeing the miracles that he did And Acts 13. 12. When the Deputy saw what was done vpon Elymas strucken blinde by Paul be belieued and was astonied at the Doctrine of the Lord. And this also was the vseof our Sauiours owne miracles Iohn 10. 41 42. Iohn did no miracle but all things that Iohn spake of this man were true and many belieued in him there What did his miracles worke sauing faith in them No this honour was euer peculiar to the Word Faith comes by hearing Rom. 10. 17. but they drew them to haue a good opinion of him to be willing to heare him that so they might be conuerted by him to begin to belieue that he was indeed a Prophet sent of God and so this their belieuing in him is expounded in the beginning of Ver. 41. And many resorted to him Three examples there be of those that receiued this good by them but none conuerted The first is here in this place compared with Matth. 11. 20. Where Christ vpbraideth these Galileans for this that though they had seene so many miracles yet they repented not The second example is Iohn 2. 23. Many belieued in him when they saw his miracles which he did but lesus did not commit himselfe to them because he knew them all he knew what was in them The last example is Nicodemus Ioh. 3. 2. he alleadgeth this to be the thing that drew him to Christ as to a Prophet sent of God No man can do the miracles that thou doest except God were with him yet was he not conuerted by these miracles but by the Doctrine of Christ. And that is the reason why our Sauiour first preached the Word and then wrought miracles that it might appeare the end why he wrought miracles was to gaine credit to his Doctrine Matth 4. 23. He went about all Galile teaching in their Synagogues and preaching the Gospell of the Kingdome and healing euery secknesse And though there be little mentioned of his preaching before this his returne into Galile yet it is euident by Nicodemus speech to him that he preached while he was at the Feast Ioh. 3. 2. Rabbi we know that thou art a Teacher come from God The Reason why our Sauiour wrought miracles to gaine credit and authority to his Doctrine though he were able to preach with such power and authority was this That his Doctrine was new his calling and function that he exercised in the Church was new And the Lords manner hath been alwayes when he erected any new worship and seruice or any new function or calling in his Church to giue testimony to it from heauen this way that it might be knowne to be of God Thus God gaue testimony to the worship vnder the Law So soone as the Tabernacle was erected Exod. 40. 34. The glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle So when the Temple was finished 1. Reg. 8. 11. The glory of the Lord filled the house of the Lord. And thus God gaue testimony to his new worship established vnder the Gospell Marke 16. 20. They went sorth and preached euery where and the Lord wrought with them and confirmed the Word with signes that followed So when God hath raised vp a new calling and function in his Church he hath been wont this way to giue testimony vnto it from Heauen Moses his calling was confirmed thus Exod. 4. 5. and Eliah's 1. Reg. 17. 24. and though Iohn wrought no miracles Ioh. 10. 41. yet was his calling confirmed by many miracles first he was borne of parents that were both old and his mother barren also Luke 1. 7. 18. Secondly his father was made dumbe for doubting of Gods promise Luke 1. 22. Thirdly he leaped in his mothers wombe for ioy assoone as his mother heard the voice of Maries salutation Luke 1. 44. Fourthly presently vpon his birth his father was made able to speake againe Luke 1. 64. Insomuch as it is said all the neighbours gathered from all these things that certainly he would proue some extraordinary man Vers. 66. All they that heard of them laid them vp in their hearts saying what manner of Child shall this be So the calling of the Apostles God did beare witnesse vnto them with signes and wonders and with diuerse miracles Heb. 2. 4. So that of the Euangelists The people gaue eare to those things that Philip spake hearing and seeing the miracles that he did Acts 8. 6. So was the calling of all the Elders whether teaching or ruling onely confirmed Is any man sicke among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray ouer him annointing him with oile in the name of the Lord and the prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp Iam. 5. 14 15. So Christ himselfe thought good to confirme his new calling by miracles and by this argument proues himselfe vnto Iohns Disciples to be the true Messias Mat. 11. 3. 5. and Iohn 6. 14. When they had seene the miracles that Iesus did they said This is of a truth the Prophet that should come into the world The Vse of this Doctrine is first for defence of our Church and Religion against the Papists who would from hence conclude our Church and Religion must needs be false because we haue no miracles and that theirs must needs be true because they haue the gift of miracles First for our selues we confesse that neither we haue this gift nor need it and themselues grant that miracles wrought there where there is no necessity are to be suspected For neither our Doctrine nor our Function being any other than such as Christ and his Apostles did teach and ordaine they are by the miracles that they wrought sufficiently ratified and confirmed For indeed to this end serued the miracles of Christ and his Apostles to be as seales to confirme the Faith of Gods people in the Doctrine they taught Many other signes truly did Iesus in the presence of his Disciples which are not written in this booke But these are written that ye might belieue that Iesus is the Christ the Sonne of God and that belieuing ye
might haue life through his name Iohn 20. 30 31. And seales they were not such as are set in waxe the stamp whereof might be worne out in time and had need to be renewed but such as were ingrauen in brasse the stamp whereof may be as well seene now as when it was first done All the miracles of Christ and of the Prophets and Apostles are ours as being done for the confirmation of that Doctrine which we teach and professe And touching the miracles they brag of we answer First the most of the miracles they glory in we haue iust cause to suspect that they were neuer done The reports that are made of their miracles in the golden Legend all the world may discerne to be notorious lies many of them also were but tricks of Legerdemaine as the nodding and weeping and sweating of their Images whereas the miracles that Christ and his Apostles did were done before witnesses not in the darke and vnderboard without all suspition of fraud such as were euident to the senses of men see what store of witnesses he had of those miracles that are mentioned Mat. 4. 24 25. Marke 33. Yea where he did most affect secrecy yet would he haue some witnesses of vnsuspected credit as in the raising of Iairus daughter though he put forth the most that were in the house and commanded that this miracle might not be spoken of yet would he haue three of his Apostles and Iairus himselfe and his wife to be eye-witnesses of the miracle Luke 8. 51 56. So as his miracles had testimony not onely from all the people Iohn 6. 14. but euen from his most mortall enemies This man doth many miracles say they Iohn 11. 47. Secondly those things that can be proued to haue beene done indeed are no greater than such as false teachers haue been able to doe that is such things as haue been so wonderfull and strange as they haue seemed miracles vnto men and which few or none haue been able to distinguish from true miracles so our Sauiour saith of false Prophets They shall shew great signes and wonders insomuch that if it were possible they shall deceiue the very elect Matth. ●…4 ●…4 Yea such as is expresly foretold should be done by Antichrist and his Church His comming is after the working of Satan with all power and signes and lying wonders 2. Thes. 2. 9. And he doth great wonders so that he maketh fire come downe from heauen in the sight of men And deceiueth them that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do Ren. 13. 13 14. Thirdly we are sure they can be no true miracles that they worke when the Doctrine they would confirme by them is false and contrary to the Word For seeing that things which may seeme to be miracles in the iudgement of the wisest man on earth may be wrought by false teachers we must iudge not by the miracles what Doctrine is true but by the Doctrine what miracles are true and diuine If there arise among you a Prophet and giueth thee a signe or a wonder and the signe or the wonder come to passe whereof he spake vnto thee saying Let vs go after other gods and serue them thou shalt not hearken to the words of that Prophet Deut. 13. 1 3. 2 Seeing all Christs wonderfull workes were done to gaine credit and estimation to his Doctrine and Worship let vs make the same Vse also of all Gods wonderfull works that are done in our eyes for they also are done to that end to draw vs to a greater reuerence and better regard of his Word and Worship All his wonderfull and strange iudgements and corrections wherein we are constrained to acknowledge his finger these things are done to open the eares of men to make them able to heare with more reuerence and fruit and to seale their instruction to confirme vnto them and make them better able to belieue that which they are taught by the Word as Elibu speaketh Ioh 33. 16. all the strange thunders and lightenings c. that we haue seene and heard are done to that end as is plaine Psal. 29. 2 3 9. When the Prophet to perswade the greatest men on earth to giue vnto the Lord the glory due vnto his Name by frequenting with all reuerence his publique worship and attending vpon his ordinances mentioneth in many verses together the glorious power of God which appeareth in the thunder which he calls there the voice of the Lord and concludes all that he said of it thus Vers. 9. And in his temple doth euery one speake of his glory euen this mighty and dreadfull worke of God makes euery man giue glory to God in his Temple and performe all duties of his worship more diligently and reuerently Lecture the eighty two February 26. 1610. IOHN IIII. XLV WE heard the last day that this Verse doth offer to our consideration three principall points First the readines of the Galileans to entertaine Christ and his Ministry in these words Then when he came into Galile the Galileans receiued him Secondly the reason that moued them with so great readinesse to receiue and entertaine him in these words Which had seene all things that he did at Ierusalem at the Feast Thirdly the occasion whereby they came to see all those things that he did at Ierusalem at the Feast in these words For they went also vnto the Feast The two first points we finished the last day and now it remaineth that we proceed vnto the last where for the raising of the Doctrine that we are to receiue from hence three things are to be obserued First what this Feast was that the Galileans went vnto and that is euident Iohn 2. 23. that it was the Passeouer And the Passeouer is called a Feast because beside the Paschall Lambe which was then to be eaten by euery family the people of God were wont then for seuen dayes to eat and drink together with ioy This you shall see in the Passeouer kept in Hezekiahs time 2 Chron. 30. 21. Two thousand bullocks and seuenteene thousand sheep were spent at that Feast Verse 24. And in that Iosiah celebrated 2 Chron. 35. 7 8 9. seuen and thirty thousand sheep lambs and kids and three thousand eight hundred bullocks were spent Secondly the vse and end of this Feast for it was no ciuill or common Feast but holy and religious Leuit. 23. 6. it was called the Feast of vnleauened bread vnto the Lord that is it was kept to his honour and seruice They went not thither to make merry in a carnall manner but to reioyce before the Lord Deut. 12. 12. that is with an heauenly and spirituall ioy They did not seeke in that Feast the feeding of their bodies so much as the nourishment and comfort of their soules therefore these sheep and bullocks that were giuen by Hezekiah and the Princes are said to haue been giuen for peace-offerings 2 Chron. 30. 22. which
which seemes to be the cause of the meeting together vnto prayer of those good women we read of Acts 16. 13. As a little spark will keep heat while it is on the hearth with the rest of the fire but pluck it from the rest and it will die straight so hath experience proued it to be in this case Secondly because they know that the more of Gods people meet and ioyne together the more publike and solemne the assembly is the more acceptable will their seruice be vnto God and the more auaileable to their comfort And that is the reason why when Gods people haue shewed more than ordinary desire to preuaile with God in prayer they haue shewed more than ordinary care to assemble as many of them together as possibly they could Ioel 2. 15 16. Blow a trumpet in Zion sanctifie a fast call a solemne assembly gather the Elders assemble the children let the Bridegroome go sorth of his chamber and the Bride out of her Bride-chamber as if he should say Leaue none out That was the reason why Hezekiah was so carefull to gather together such a solemne assembly to the Passeouer 2 Chron. 30. 1. 5. 3 The third reason is the promise that God hath made of his speciall first Presence secondly Protection and thirdly Blessing to the publike assemblies more than to any other people vpon the earth First in respect of this speciall presence of God the Prophet calleth Sion the habitation of Gods house and the place where his honour dwelleth Psalme 26. 8. In this respect also the place of Gods publike Worshippe is called the face of God Psalme 105. 4. Seeke the Lord and his strength seeke his face continually And Cain could complaine when hee was banished from his fathers house the onely place where Gods publike Worshippe was to be had then that hee should bee hid from Gods face Genes 4. 14. and Verse 16. Hee ●…t out from the presence of the Lord. And least we should thinke this w●… peculiar to the Temple or Tabernacle or place of Gods ceremonial or ship which had indeed some priuiledges aboue our Temples you shall find that this is spoken also of the Synagogues Psalme 83. 12. They also are called the Habitations of God Yea to our assemblies also is this promise made as well as to theirs Matthew 18. 20. Where two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the midst of them Reuelation 2. 1. Christ walkes in the midst of the seuen golden Candlestickes Secondly Now for the promise of speciall protection it is certaine that the Church-assemblies where God is purely worshipped according to his Word are meanes to preserue such as doe frequent them and the places where they are kept from many iudgements that would otherwise fall vpon them This was figured by that Ceremony The wals of the Temple were carued round about with figures of Cherubins 1 Kings 6. 29. And this we haue partly found in our owne experience both in the preseruation of our Land in generall from forraigne inuasion and domestique treasons and in the safety sundry Congregations haue enioyed And we should certainly find it more than we do if our infidelity and other our grieuous sinnes hindered it not See the promise for this Esay 33. 20 21. Looke vpon Sion the City of our solemne Feasts thine eyes shall see Ierusalem a quiet habitation a Tabernacle that cannot be remoued and the stakes thereof can neuer be taken away neither shall any of the cords thereof be broken for surely the mighty Lord will be vnto vs a place of floods and broad riuers whereby shall passe no ship with oares neither shall great ship passe thereby This is alledged for one reason why Dauid did so esteeme of Gods Tabernacles Psalme 84. 11. For the Lord God is the sunne and shield vnto vs. and 27. 5. For in time of trouble he shall hide vs in his pauilion In this respect they that are separated from the Church-assemblies are said to be deliuered vp to Sathan vnto his power and will as men that are vnder Gods protection no longer 1 Corinth 5. 5. Thirdly and lastly in speaking of the Promise of a speciall blessing that God hath made vnto the Church-assemblies I will not stand vpon the temporall blessings that God hath promised to such as do loue and frequent them which yet Dauid maketh one reason of his loue to Gods Tabernacles Psalme 84. 11. No good thing will he with-hold from them that walke vprightly And certainly if men with vpright hearts do frequent them they shall be sure of Gods blessing in outward things euen the rather for this But this is the speciall blessing I will desire you to obserue That God hath promised to giue a greater blessing to that seruice that is done to him at Church than to that that is done in any other place The same Prayers you may vse at home that are vsed there the same Psalmes you may sing the same Word you may read and meditate of and haue it also expounded to you yea the same Sacraments you may haue vpon necessity administred to you in your chambers and parlours that are administred there but you may not expect that blessing vpon any of these Ordinances of God in any place as you may finde in the Church assemblies This Dauid alleadgeth for another chiefe reason why he so esteemed Gods Tabernacles Psalme 84. 11. The Lord will giue grace and glory And 133. 3. For there in Sion orin the place where Brethren dwell euen together ioyne together in Gods worship The Lord appointed the blessing and life for euer The fourth and last Reason that should mooue vs to esteeme the Church-assemblies and frequent them diligently is for profession sake Say that neither the exercises of Religion that are vsed there nor the fellowshippe of Gods people which we may enioy there nor the speciall presence protection and blessing of God that may be found there could mooue vs to esteeme of them yet this should mooue vs. The best way we haue to professe our Religion our Homage and Obedience to God our loue and thankfulnesse to him for his mercies is to frequent diligently the publike and most solemne Assemblies of his Church So the Lord hauing in the former Verse forbidden his People the profession of a false religion Leuit. 26. 2. prescribeth them two things whereby they should professe themselues to be of the true Religion Ye shall keep●…●…y Sabbaths and reuerence my Sanctuary And Psal. 29. 1 〈◊〉 exhorting great men to professe their homage and subiection vnto the Lord he telleth them this is the best way to do it And speaking how he himselfe will professe his thankfulnesse to God for all his mercies he saith Psal. 35. 18. I will giue thankes to thee in a great Congregation I will praise thee among much people The vse of this Doctrine is first for exhortation secondly for reproofe And the exhortation concerneth first our selues secondly a
viz. It was so much against his reuealed will that it was impossible euen for him And what was that that disinabled so the Almighty Sonne of God and so bound as it were his hands behind him Surely the Vnbeliefe of the men of Nazaret as it followes in the next words Mar. 6. 6. And he maruelled at their Vnbelief And more plainly Mat. 13. 58. He did not many great works there for their Vnbeliefs sake The other example is of the Nation and Church of the Iewes though their priuiledges and prerogatiues were great euery way yet we know that when some forty eight yeares after Christ or thereabouts the wrath of God came on them to the vtmost so as it did neuer vpon any Nation vnder heauen though they were the naturall branches of the Lords Oliue yet did he breake them off and cast them away And what was the cause of it Surely they were guilty of many hainous sinnes but the Apostle plainly saith the chiefe cause why God reiected them was their Vnbeliefe because they did not giue credit to his Word Rom. 11. 20. Through Unbeliefe they were broken off saith he So that in these foure examples God hath giuen euident demonstration how much he abhorreth this sinne and how it barreth him from shewing mercy on men But yet this will appeare more plainly if we shall looke into some examples of Gods deare children I will onely name two of them one in the Old Testament and the other in the New The first is Moses a man highly in Gods fauour aboue all the men in the world when God had bidden him speake to the rocke before all the people and promised that it should giue forth water in that abundance that the whole congregation and all their cattell should haue enough to drinke Numbers 20. 8. Moses did not absolutely refuse to giue credit to the Word of the Lord but onely doubted and made a question of it and that not so much out of any distrust he had of Gods power and truth as out of the conceit he had of the great vnworthinesse of that wicked people Numb 20. 10. Heare now ye rebels saith he shall we bring you water out of the rocke But see how seuerely God punished his seruant Moses for this For this sinne he shut him out of the Land of Canaan Numb 20. 12. Yea though Moses earnestly sought to him for it as we shall find Deut. 3. 25. I pray thee let me go ouer and see the good Land that is beyond Iordan that goodly mountaine of Lebanon But the Lord was angry with me saith he for your sakes and would not heare me And the Lord said vnto me Let it suffice thee speake no more to me of this matter The last example is Zachary a man iust before God when the Lord had promised him by his Angell that his wife Elizabeth should beare him a sonne Luke 1. 13. Zachary did but doubt and make a question of the matter and said vnto the Angell whereby shall I know this for I am an old man and my wife is of great age Luke 1. 18. But see how sharply God punished his seruant Zachary for this Though he were a Priest and such a one as whose tongue God might haue had more vse of than of many others yet was he smitten dumbe for this and so remained full forty weeks Luke 1. 20. Behold saith the Angell thou shalt be dumbe till the day that these things be done because thou belieuedst not my words The Reasons of this Doctrine are two As there is nothing wherein we so much giue glory to God as when we belieue and giue credit to his Word so there is nothing wherein we do so much derogate from Gods honour and rob him of his glory as when we refuse to giue credit to his Word When we belieue whatsoeuer the Lord hath spoken we do thereby giue him the glory of his truth his power his iustice his goodnesse Iohn 3. 33. He that hath receiued his testimony hath sealed that God is true So the Apostle saith of Abraham that when he doubted not of the promise of God through vnbeliefe but was strengthened in the faith he gaue glory to God Rom. 4. 20. On the other side he that cannot giue credit to Gods Word dishonoureth him in the highest degree 1 Iohn 5. 10. He that belieueth not God hath made him a lyar and what greater disgrace can ye put vpon any man of worth than to giue him the lye The second Reason of the Doctrine is this Because Infidelity as it was the first sinne whereby Sathan got entrance into the heart of man and drew him from God Gen. 3. 4. so is it still the root and mother of all other sinnes Heb. 3. 12. The euill heart is called the heart of Vnbeliefe there it begins that is the first thing that corrupteth the heart As faith is the root and fountaine of all other graces that is it that purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. If we belieue his Word we cannot choose but loue him feare him obey him and put our trust in him So on the other side Infidelity is the fountaine of all vngraciousnesse and when once men begin to entertaine a doubting of the truth of any thing God hath reuealed in his Word then begins their heart to be poysoned and corrupted then begin they to depart from the liuing God and fall from his feare and loue and obedience Let vs now come to the Vse of this Doctrine and we shall find it serueth first for exhortation secondly for reproofe thirdly for comfort First seeing no sinne offends God so much as infidelity no sinne is such a barre to all Gods mercies no sinne hath that force to poyson and corrupt the heart we are therefore all of vs to hearken to the exhortation Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe Heb. 3. 12. Take heed of entertaining the least doubt of any truth that God hath clearely reuealed to thee out of the Word And because first we are all by nature full of infidelity as appeares by this that Christ so often checks his elect Disciples for this Matth. 6. 30. O ye of little Faith And secondly proportionable to the measure of faith will our feare and loue and obedience and comfort be Striue therefore by all good meanes to obtaine an vndoubted certainty of the truth of Gods Word and to confirme thy heart against all doubts and infidelity And foure principall means I find that we are directed to in this case 1 The consideration of the testimony which the Lord himselfe hath giuen of the vndoubted certaintie of his holy Word Matth. 5. 18. Truly I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iot or one title of the Law shall not scape till all things be fulfilled Yea it is a notable thing to obserue how precise God hath been in this point that as it is said of Samuel 1 Sam. 3.
had an example before in the Galileans Verse 45. So that is to be vnderstood Iohn 2. 23. Many belieued in his Name when they saw the miracles which he did viz. they had receiued some preparations vnto Faith they began to conceiue reuerently of his Doctrine and were willing to heare him and this was all as appeares Verse 24. But Iesus did not commit himselfe to them because he knew them all So the good life that they haue seene Gods seruants to lead hath beene a meanes to draw many a one to the Faith The Apostle vseth this as a reason to perswade Christians to an honest life That the Gentiles by their good works which they should behold might haue cause to glorifie God in the day of their visitation 1 Pet. 2. 12. That they that obeyed not the Word might without the word be wonne by the conuersation of their wiues 1 Pet. 3. 1. So the corrections of God which they haue seene and felt vpon themselues haue been the meane to open many a mans eare and to make him willing to heare Iob 33. 16. So the wonderfull deliuerances that men haue seene God giue to his Church and ouerthrowes to the aduersaries thereof haue wonne many a man to the liking of Religion Hest. 8. 17. Many of the people of the land became Iewes As I nothing doubt but the wonderfull deliuerance God gaue vs from the Powder-Treason hath drawn many a one from Popery to the loue of the Gospell 3 It is certaine also that the Faith of the best Christians may be much confirmed by the workes of God which they see So the Faith of Gods children was greatly confirmed by the miracles of Christ and of his Apostles Iohn 2. 11. This beginning of miracles did Iesus and shewed forth his glory and his Disciples belieued in him So are the faithfull greatly confirmed by Gods corrections on themselues when they are soundly humbled thereby Iob 42. 5. I haue heard of thee by the hearing of the eare but no●…ine eye seeth thee So by the sensible experiments they haue had of Gods mercy in themselues they are greatly confirmed in the Faith of Gods promises 2 Corinth 1. 10. Who hath deliuered vs from so great a death and doth deliuer vs in whom we trust that yet hereafter he will deliuer vs yea the beholding of Gods iudgements on wicked men and his mercies towards his faithfull seruants hath greatly confirmed their Faith in the Word of God when they can say As we haue heard so haue we seene Psalme 48. 8. and 58. 10. The righteous shall reioyce when they see the vengeance and why so Verse 11. And men shall say Verily there is a reward for the righteous doubtlesse there is a God that iudgeth the earth And in this respect men ought carefully to marke and obserue the workes of God how God makes good his Word by his workes A principall point this is of Christian wisdome and piety and great good might euery man receiue by it Psal. 107. 43. Who is wise that he may obserue these things for they shall vnderstand the louing kindnesse of the Lord. Yea say a man be neuer so diligent in the reading and hearing of Gods Word yet if he do not likewise obserue the works of God he is guilty of a great sinne Psal. 28. 5. They regard not the works of the Lord nor the operation of his hands therefore breake them downe and build them not vp 4 It is not simply vnlawfull or a signe of infidelity for a man euen to desire these sensible helps to confirme his Faith Hezekiah was a true Belieuer yet desired a signe 2 Kings 20. 8. Gedeon was a true Belieuer yet he asked a signe of God Iudges 6. 17. And when God had giuen him one he asked another Verse 38 And when God had giuen him that he asked yet another Verse 39. and God was neuer a whit offended with him When a man that doth in any measure truly belieue and giue credit to the Word shall desire that God would sensibly confirme to him the truth of his promises by deliuering him from any affliction he is in by blessing him in his body in his estate in his children especially by giuing him the inward feeling of his fauour he doth no more than he may well do Psal. 86. 17. Shew a token of thy goodnesse towards me that they which hate me may be ashamed because thou O Lord hast helped me and comforted me And Psal. 90. 16. Let thy works be seene towards thy seruants and thy glory vpon their children Now though all this be so as you haue heard in all these foure points yet remaines the Doctrine firme That true faith is not grounded vpon any thing we see vpon sense and experience but onely vpon the Word of God Whatsoeuer the faithfull man belieues he belieues it because God hath said it in his Word This the Apostle makes the ground of Abrahams faith Rom 4. 18. He belieued that he should be the Father of many Nations according to that that was spoken vnto him This was the ground of the Apostles faith not all the miracles they had seene Iohn 〈◊〉 22. They belieued the Scriptures and the Word which Iesus had said This was the ground of the Ephesians faith Ephes. 1. 1●… 2 Insomuch as though there be sundry truths in Gods Word as I shewed you which the Lord doth vse to giue vs sensible proofes and demonstrations of in the world yet he that hath true faith belieues those very things not so much for any thing that he seeth as for that he knoweth God in his Word hath said so So that he is able to say I belieue that Goods vniustly gotten will certainly come to nought that Whore-mongers and Adulterers God will iudge that God will smite through the loynes of them that rise against Leui and of them that hate him and that not so much because I see this confirmed in such and such examples indeed I belieue it the more for this but not so much for this as because God in his Word hath said it Rom. 10. 17. Faith comes not by sight but by hearing 2 Cor. 5. 7. We walk by faith and not by sight He that walks by sight walks not by faith 3 The true belieuer giues credit to the Word though he see nothing to confirme it The bare Word of God is of sufficient credit with him and he belieues as verily those truths which his sense nor reason can discerne any proofe of such as are all the Articles of our Faith onely for the Words sake as he doth those truths that are most confirmed vnto his sense or reason Heb. 11. 1. It is the euidence of things not seene Ioh. 20. 29. Thomas because thou hast seene me thou belieuest blessed are they that haue not seene and haue belieued 1 Pet. 1. 8. Whom ye haue not seene and yet ye loue him in whom now though you see him not yet do you belieue and reioyce with
better discerne if we looke into foure sorts which the Lord hath had most respect vnto this way and wherat the world hath taken great offence He hath oft had more respect 1. To men of meane condition for wealth wisedome and authority then to men of better degree and account 2. To young men then to the antient 3. To persons that haue beene infamous then to men that haue liued ciuilly and vnblameably 4. To women more then to men For the first For one man of degree and note in the world for birth wealth wisedome and authority the Lord hath beene wont to call many of the meaner and baser and simple sort This is plaine 1 Cor. 1. 26. And Mat. 11. 2●… Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes And Iam. 2. 5. Hearken my beloued Brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith and heires c. And how naturall men haue stumbled at this you shall perceiue by that speech of the Pharisees haue any of the Rulers or of the Pharisees belieued on him but this people which knoweth not the Law are cursed Ioh. 7. 48 49. and by that speech of our Sauiour who when He had told Iohn's Disciples the poore receiue the Gospell adds presently blessed is he that shall not be offended in me Matth. 11. 5 6. 2. The like may be said of the second sort The Lord hath oft giuen more grace more zeale and faithfulnesse more piety and conscience of their waies to many young men then he hath to them of riper yeares For zeale where shall we finde among all the Kings such a one as young Iosiah 2. Chron. 34. 3. Or for faithfulnesse among all the Prophets such a one as young Samuel 1. Sam. 3. 20. Yea for wisedome and true discretion among all Iob's friends such a one as young Elihu was Iob 42. 7. And this also the world hath euer repined and stumbled at See an example of this corruption Matth. 21. 15 16. When they heard the children cry Hosanna they disdained and said hearest thou c. so that Christ was faine to make an Apology for them 3. For the third sort that I propounded The Lord hath oft had more respect this way vnto some that haue been formerly infamous in the world for their lewd life and hath vouchsafed more grace and zeale to such then he hath done to sundry that to the iudgement of men haue liued a ciuill and vnblameable life Christ bids himselfe to Zacheus house which we neuer reade he did to any other Luke 19. 5. After his Resurrection he appeareth first to Mary Magdalen out of whom he had cast seuen diuels Marke 16. 9. He honoured Paul that had beene a notorious persecuter and blasphemer with more abundance of gifts and successe in his labours then any of the Apostles beside 2. Co. 11. 23. And 1. Cor. 15. 10. Now this hath also euer beene a matter of great scandall to the naturall man when the Pharisees saw what respect our Sauiour shewed vnto Publicans they murmured saying this man receiueth sinners and eateth with them Luke 15. 2. And of the elder brother who was a type of the wicked and hypocriticall Iewes it is said Luke 15. 28. that when he heard that his father had receiued with such ioy his Prodigall sonne he was angry and would not goe in 4. For the fourth sort God hath oft reuealed himselfe further and giuen more grace more tendernesse of conscience more zeale more loue to him and his truth yea which is stranger more knowledge more resolution and courage more constancie in good duties vnto many women then vnto men Examples are infinite in this case I must make choice but of a few Exod. 38. 8. See the zeale of many women in the first establishing of Gods Religion vnder the Law 1. They vsed to flocke together vnto the Tabernacle 2. They were wont to come betimes and giue attendance at the doore of the Tabernacle 3. They were content to bestow the best things they had euen their looking glasses vpon Gods Sanctuary And of Samsons mother we reade that though her husband Manoah were a holy and good man yet Christ appeares to her rather then to her husband Iudges 13. 9. gaue her more knowledge faith and resolution then her husband yea makes her his instrument to confirme and comfort him verse 22 23. It is recorded that there was much more zeale in that noble woman the Shunamite mentioned 2. Kings 4. 8 9. then was in her husband and yet he a good man too It was she that tooke that care for the Prophets entertainement it was she that would needs go to the Prophet vpon a day that was neither Sabbath nor holy day which her husband thought much of verse 23. And in the New Testament it is worthy to be obserued 1. That Christ after his Resurrection shewed himselfe first to sundry women and made them his messengers to the Apostles Luke 24. 10. 2. That zeale and diligence that woman shewed in hearing the Word and all other parts of Gods seruice more then men They were women that are noted to haue beene the speciall followers of our Sauiour to heare him preach Luk. 8. 2. It was a woman that shewed such zeale to heare him that neglecting all other businesse sate at his feet to heare him and to whom our Sauiour gaue that testimony that she had chosen the good part which should not be taken away from her Luk. 10. 39. 42. They were women that were wont in Philippi euery Sabbath day to meet and pray together Acts 16. 13. 3. The kindnesse they shewed in Ministring to Christs necessities which is not reported of any man Luke 8. 3. 4. The constancie and courage that they shewed in following him and shewing their loue to him euen to his Crosse when the Apostles themselues fled for feare Luke 23. 27. and in their care to embalme his body after he was dead Luk. 23. 55 56. 24. 1. 5. The faith which was stronger in them then in any men we read of Mat. 15. 28. Luk. 24. 8 9 11. Now this respect that the Lord hath beene pleased to haue vnto women in this kinde how offensiue it is to the naturall man you may perceiue here by the disposition of the Disciples themselues which were more then naturall men and by common experience also For if women shall flocke to the Tabernacle of God and shew any zeale and diligence in frequenting his house if any Shunamite shall shew her selfe kinde in entertaining Gods Prophets or Susanna in ministring to their necessities what naturall man is there almost that will not be ready to slander and misconstrue this Yea to account it a most ridiculous thing and argument of the weakenesse and foolishnesse of our Religion The Reasons of this Doctrine are three whereof The first concerneth the Lord. The Reason why he vseth to passe by the more
worthy persons and to shew such grace to the more vnworthy is the respect that he hath to his owne glory For whereas wee are apt to thinke thus O if Nobles and men of degree and credit were religious and zealous what good might they doe What honour might they gaine to God In very deed it is nothing so God receiues more honour by calling these meane persons then he should doe if he called the other That is the cause why our Sauiour giues thankes for this I thanke thee ô father Lord of heauen and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes Matth. 11. 25. And reioyced in Spirit at this Luke 10. 21. Gods power and mighty hand is best discerned therein my strength is made perfect in weakenesse saith he 2. Cor. 12. 9. And the freenesse of his grace and the glory of mans saluation is by this meanes wholly ascribed vnto God which otherwise it would not be and this reason the Apostle giues of the Lords dealing thus in this case that no flesh should glory in his presence 1. Cor. 1. 29. The second concerneth the persons that take this offence For all naturall men are proud and thinke best of themselues and do enuie that any other should be in better state then themselues specially such as they iudge to be their inferiours Doe you thinke that the Scripture saith in vaine the spirit that dwells in vs lusteth vnto enuie Iames 4. 5. And aboue all that any should be thought to serue God better or to be more in Gods fauour then themselues This is the chiefe cause of the hatred that the wicked haue borne to the godly in all ages Wherefore did Caine hate and slay Abel because his owne workes were euill and his brothers righteous saith the Apostle 1. Iohn 3. 12. Because Abel offered vnto God a more excellent sacrifice and more acceptable to God then Cain did Heb. 11. 4. The third concerneth the persons themselues against whom this offence is taken For there is neuer a one of these foure sorts whom the Lord is wont to haue most respect to in this case but they haue for the most part such infirmities and faults in them as cannot choose but giue some occasion to the naturall man to thinke that it is no credit at all to Gods truth to be professed by such 1. The multitude and common sort of people are for the most part voide of iudgement carried by affection rather then by good reason easily lead this way or that vnconstant and vnstable this is plaine in the example of that people that flocked after Christ A little before his apprehension they honoured him exceedingly a very great multitude spread their garments in his way as he was riding towards Ierusalem and cryed Hosanna vnto him Matth. 21 8 9. And when he was come thither all the people were wont to come into the Temple early in the morning to heare him and that daily also Luk. 21. 37 38. yea they were wont all of them at that time to heare him with that attention and affection that they are said euen to haue hanged on him Luke 19. 48. But so soone as they saw how he was apprehended and vilifyed by the chiefe Priests and Rulers the same men that had honoured him so much a little before and seemed to take so much delight and comfort in his doctrine did all with one consent cry let him be crucified let him be crucified yea they preferred Barabbas a murtherer before him and said His bloud be vpon vs and vpon our children Matth. 27. 22 23 25. 2. Young men for the most part are 1. Proud and highly conceited of themselues that made the Apostle to say 1. Tim. 3. 6. A Minister must not be a nouice least being lifted vp with pride he fall into the condemnation of the diuell 2. Rash and void of iudgement as appeares by the example of Rehoboam himselfe and his young Counsellors 1. King 12. 8. 10. I discerned among the youth a young man void of vnderstanding Pro. 7. 7. 3. Inconstant which made the Apostle to exhort Timothy 1. Tim. 4. 16. To take heed to himselfe and to the Doctrine and to continue in them And the experience the World hath of many that in their youth were zealous and afterwards haue growen cold and worldly makes them to thinke all will do so 3. Such as hauing beene of scandalous and lewd life grow to be professors seldome prooue sound and constant Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spot●… then may yee also doe good that are accustomed to doe euill Ier. 13. 23. This is the reason of that speech 1. Tim. 3. 7. He must haue a good report of them that are without For Sathan will be busier with such then with any other Matth. 12. 44. he saith I will returne vnto my house frow whence I came out 4. Women are 1. Weaker in iudgement then men and more subiect to passion 1. Pet. 3. 7. The weaker vessell That is the cause why Sathan assaulted Eue rather then Adam Gen. 3. 1. they are more easily deceiued and corrupted then men 2. The Scripture to the disgrace and humbling of them ascribeth the sin and corruption of mankind to that sex rather then to the other Adam was not deceiued but the Woman being deceiued was in the transgression 1. Tim. 2. 14. What is he which is borne of a woman that he should be righteous Iob 15. 14. How can he be cleane that was borne of a woman Iob 25. 4. In sin did my mother conceiue me Psal. 51. 4 5. In which respect vnder the Law she was accounted vncleane and inioyned a time of separation from the Sanctuary after she had brought forth a child and that time also was to be double as much when she had borne a female as when a male Leuit. 12. 4 5. And that curse of God threatned I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception In sorrow shalt thou bring forth children Gen. 3. 16. remaineth vpon that sex as a reall demonstration of this 3. Experience sheweth that where they are wicked they are farre worse then men for cunning and hypocrisie for vncleannesse and beastlinesse for cruelty and hard-heartednesse for prophanesse and impiety Iesabel was worse then Ahab Herodias then Herod And Salomon speakes this from experience Eccles. 7. 28. One man among a thousand haue I found but a woman among all those haue I not found For to exhort all men to take heed they stumble not nor take offence at the basenesse or vnworthinesse of any person whom the Lord hath called Take heed that yee despise not one of these little ones Matth. 18. 10. Despise not any Professor for their sex pouerty age or former lewdnesse but labour to be of the same mind that was in Christ himselfe reioyce in that wisedome and goodnesse of God that appeareth in this as he did Matth. 11. 25.