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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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a poison to the sincere milk of the word and to be eschewed of all that follow the Truth Eph. 4.14.15 He. 13.7 Secondly a heart accustomd to deceit subtlety cannot be a plaine and honest heart and without a plaine honest and good heart men can neuer receiue with any fruitfulnesse the seede of eternall life Luke 8. Thirdly hee that is false to men will neuer be true to God he that will lie to men will lie to God Also hee that is not faithfull with men will compasse God about with deceit Hosh. 11.12 He will neuer be faithfull in the true treasure that is vniust in outward things Tuke 16. Fourthly it is a sinne that God in a speciall manner hates Psal. 5.7 Fiftly the sinnes of deceit vsually attend vpon some Idoll in the hearts of men which hath such command ouer the deceitfull person that hee cannot attend to the word of God or not haue leasure to practise it he is so mastered by this particular corruptition Ierem. 9. The vse of this may be threefold For Humiliation to all deceitfull persons that vse lying fraud subtlety and guilefull dealing in their trades and callings and course of dealing and conuersation with men they shall neuer prosper in spirituall things The Ordinances of God are blasted to them Morouer there are two cnosiderations which should wonderfully affright such as are accustomed to lying deceit First It is certaine they are wicked men and haue not the feare of God before their eyes they are the children of the Diuell and enemies of Righteousnesse as these places fearefully shew Psalme 36.1 3. 10.7 Rom. 3.13 1.29 Acts 13.10 Secondly the curse of God is vpon them God will weigh them in the balance Iob. 31.5 They are an abhomination to the Lord Prou. 11.1 20.23 The Lord will surely visit and his soule will be auenged on such persons Ierem. 8.26 27 29. They shall be destroyed Psalme 52.4 They shall not liue out halfe their daies Psal. 55. vlt. And as this is terrible to all deceiuers so especially to such as are guilty of the aggrauations of the sinne As 1. When deceit is couered with smooth words and a flattering stile Ierem. 9.8 Prou. 26.24 c. 2. When men delight in it and take a contemplatiue kinde of pleasure in their guilefull proiects as the voluptuous person doth in his lust When mens bellies prepare deceit Iob. 15. vlt. not their heads but their bellies Psalme 52.2 4. 3. When men make a trade of it giue their tongues to euill and will frame deceit Psal. 50.19 Bend their Tongues to lies and teach their tongues to speake lies and weary themselues to commit iniquitie Ierem. 9.5 4. When men thinke all time spent about Gods seruice too long they would haue the Sabbaths ouer that they might practise deceit Amos 8.5 5. When men Sweare deceitfully Psal. 24.4 6. When men boast of it Psal. 52.1 3. And as deceit is aggrauated by the manner so may it be by the persons vpon whom it is practised and so it is an aggrauation to deceiue ones neighbour and ones brother Ier. 9 5 and so it is to deceiue the harmlesse and quiet of the Land Psal. 35.20 And as by the persons so by the time It is an aggrauation when men imagine deceit as the Prophet Dauid saith all the day long Psal. 38.12 Now if the former terrors belong to deceitfull persons in the generall how much more to them that are guilty of deceit with all these or any of these aggrauations Some one might heer say We feel the sweetnes of it we growe rich by it and we see many men in the world wexed great by the same courses and if wee should not lie and deceiue wee might giue-ouer our trades c. For answer heerunto Let all such knowe that though it be true that some men are wext great and rich by such courses yea though they bee fat and shine yet the Lord will visit them and his soule will be auenged vpon them Ier. 5.28.29 For wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished Pro. 13.11 and the tabernacles of bribery and deceit shall bee desolate Mich. 6.10 to the 16. All such as conceiue with guile by that time they haue reckoned their moneths aright though they growe neuer so big shall bring forth nothing but winde and vanity Iob 15. vlt. What shall be giuen thee or what shall bee done vnto thee O thou lying and deceitfull tongue thou shalt be smitten with some strange and strong hand of God as with the arrows of the mighty so as thy stroke shall be incurable and deadly and thy destruction shall be as with the coals of Iuniper that is both fierce in respect of thy self and pleasing in respect of others For men are wonderfully well pleased when they obserue that ill-gotten goods doo not prosper This hand of God smels like the burning of Iuniper Some others might say We are seruants and we must ly and defraud others to satisfie our masters The Prophet Zephany reports that the Lord wil punish all those very seruants that fill their masters houses with violence and deceit the seruants I say as well as their masters But might some others say My courses are so secret that my deceit shall neuer be found out Let such men learn that the Lord found out this sinne in Ephraim Hosh. 11. and will punish it though Ephraim said he was grown rich and in all his labours they should finde none iniquity in him that were sinne He thought himself sure enough for being discouered and therefore he would contest vehemently and cry out vpon such dishonesty in men as to vse false words and waights besides it is worthy to bee obserued that God many times doth not onely discouer these secret fraudulent courses but discouers them openly so as their wickednes is shewed before the whole congregation Pro. 26.26 But others may say In other things I am just and besides I am forward in religion and therefore this offense is not so great Shall I account thee pure saith the Lord with wicked balances Mich. 6.12 as if hee would say All the shewes of religion in the world wil not serue the turn if sins of deceit raign in a mans dealing And therefore the consideration of all this should in the second place instruct vs and that three waies First to look to our owne carriage and as we desire to liue long and to see good daies to refrain our tongues from euill and our lips that they speak no guile in all our dealing to detest lying and deceit Psal. 34.13 and so to liue as we may be alwaies ready to put our selues vpon Iobs triall Iob 31.4.5 Secondly to lay to heart the consideration of the horrible inundations of deceit that hath ouerflowed all states and callings of men and so it should work in vs both lamentation and supplication before
that the testimonies of Scriptures concerning Christ ought to bee familiarly knowne of vs and this as an especiall one But I rather think it is vsed to note the wonder of the work heere mentioned and so the word may import diuers things vnto vs. First it was a maruelous work that God should giue vs his owne Sonne to be our Sauiour and the fountaine of life to vs. Hence it is that wee may obserue throughout the Scripture that God doth set this note of attention and respect both vpon the generall and vpon many particulars that concerne Christ as it were by the Word to pull vs by the eares to make vs attend or to giue vs a signe when we should specially listen Thus God brings out Christ to the Church and tells how he loues him and hath resolued vpon it by him to saue both Iewes and Gentiles and wils them to behold him and wonder at him Isaiah 42.1 So when hee promiseth the comming of Christ And of the ends of his comming hee makes a proclamation all the world ouer that he hath appointed a Sauiour vnto Sion Thus hee would haue vs wonder at the seruice of the Angels about the time of his birth Math. 1.20 Luke 2.9 10. and at the miracle of his conception that he should bee borne of a Virgin Mat. 1.21 and at the Wisemen led by a starre out of the East Mat. 2.1 9. and at the opening of the heauens when the voice came downe to testifie that Christ was the beloued Son of God in whom he was well pleased Math. 3.16 17. and at the seruice which the Angels did him and at his wonderfull abasement for our sakes Math. 21.5 and especially that hee should sacrifice his owne bodie for our sinnes 1. Iohn 1.29 Heb. 10.7 and that he is aliue from the dead and liueth for euer Reuel 1.18 and that he hath opened the secret book of Gods counsel and made it known to the world Re. 5.5 and that after such hard times vnder the raign of Antichrist hee should recollect such troops of Gospellers as stood with him on Mount Sion Reu. 14.1 It were too long to number vp more particulars Onely thus much wee should learn that the doctrine of Christ is to be receiued with great affection attention and admiration Secondly this word strikes vs like a dart to the heart for it imports that naturally wee are extremely carelesse and stupid in this great doctrine concerning Christ faith in vs. For when God cals for attention it implies that we are maruellous slowe of heart to vnderstand or with affection to receiue the doctrine Let the vse of all be then to striue with our owne hearts and to awake from this heauinesse and sleepinesse and with all our soules to praise God with endlesse admiration of his goodnes to vs in giuing vs his Sonne Thus of the wonder of it 2. The Author of it follows I lay or put God would haue vs to take speciall notice of it that it is he that was the Author of this glorious worke He is the work-master the chief master builder It is Gods worke and the knowledge of this may serue for diuers vses For first it should direct our thankfulnes wee should giue glory to God and praise his rich grace Hee will not lose his thanks for Christ. He holds himselfe much honoured when wee praise him for so great a gift as Christ. Secondly it should much strengthen our faith and make vs beleeue the loue of God and his willingnes to bee reconciled He is the party offended and if he were hard to be pleased he would neuer haue sought out such a proiect for reconciliation Besides what can God deny vs if he can giue vs his owne Son and who is pleased also in his Word to signify so much and commanded it by his seruants to bee told to the parties offending that he hath found out such a way of perfect peace Thirdly we should hence be comforted in all the straits of godlines when the Lord goeth about to lay the foundation of grace in our hearts and to forme Christ in vs we should remember it is the Lords work and it shall prosper if the Lord will haue it go on who can hinder it The gates of Hell shall not preuaile against it when God builds it vpon this Rock Fourthly it should teach vs in al other distresses to trust vpon God and neuer be afraid of the oppositions of men or the impediments of our deliuerance For what shall restraine Gods mercy from vs If the Lord can bring about such a worke as this to found Sion by laying Christ as the chiefe corner stone in her then we may trust him in lesse matters The Lord will accomplish all the Counsell of his will and he that hath promised that all shall worke together for the best will performe it To this end hee pleades this worke of founding Christ in the womb of a Virgin of purpose to giue them thereby a signe of deliuerance then in a temporal affliction it is easy for him to saue vs and deliuer vs from all our troubles that can giue vs a Sauiour for all our sinnes Lastly Ministers that are but vnder-Masons Carpēters must learn to take al their directions at god both to see to it that they lay no other foundation then what God hath laid which is Iesus Christ and in all things to be faithfull in good workes as such as must make their accounts to God And thus of the Author Thirdly The time followes I lay or put Hee speakes in the present time yet meaneth it of a thing to bee accomplished in the time to come For God laid Christ downe as the corner stone partly in his Incarnation when he sent him into the world in the flesh to take our nature and partly he is said to lay down this corner stone when spiritually by meanes hee formes Christ in the hearts of men in the visible Church Now the Lord speaketh in the present time I doo lay for diuers reasons First To signify that the care of that busines was then in his head he was plotting about it did continually minde it Secondly to signify that howsoeuer the maine worke of the open restoring of the world by Christ in the calling of the Gentiles was long after to be done yet God did spiritually forme Christ in the hearts of the remnant so as at all times hee did more or lesse further his building Thirdly to note the certainty of the accomplishment of it he saith he did then do it to assure them it should as certainely be done as if it were then done which should teach vs to beleeue God and neuer limit him When we haue his promise let vs reckon vpon it if God promise vs any thing it is as sure as if we had it Thus of the time Fourthly The manner followes noted in the word Laid I lay There are many things imported vnder this
godly by giuing vs a roome in their hearts causing them to loue vs and honour vs euen for Christ onely whom they discouer in vs by our loue to Christ and faith in his name and imitation of his vertues Secondly and hee graceth vs also amongst the wicked by protecting and acknowledging vs in times of greatest distresse and by washing out the blemishes which our own indiscretiōs at any time brought vpon vs by cleering our innocencies from their vniust aspersions The vse may be first for confutation of their folly and madnes that account it a course of abasement to follow Christ and leaue the vanities of the world Godly courses are honourable courses No man euer lost honor by cleauing to Christ and liuing so as might become the faith and loue of Christ. Secondly and withall wee may hence be informed that all the honour that is without Christ is but obscure basenesse no man can bee truely honourable without the faith of Iesus Christ in his heart Thirdly we should hence be resolued to make more account of the Godly because Christ is to them al honour they are the only excellent ones in the world Fourthly wee should labour also to bee an honour vnto Christ and to the faith and profession of his name and seruice wee must remember that he is our surety to God for vs and hath vndertaken for our good behauiour and therefore for that reason wee should be carefull of our duties and besides wee see that the disorders of great mens seruants leaue an imputation on their master and so it is with vs and Christ. If wee liue righteously and soberly and religiously wee honour Christ our Master but otherwise if wee bee scandalous wee dishonour Christ and therefore had need to looke to our waies And lastly we shold account Christ sufficient honour to vs and not regard the scornes and reproaches of the world but rather with Moses esteeme the reproaches of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Aegypt Thus of the consolation to the godly The terror to the vnbeleeuers is exprest first partly by charging vpon them their offence secondly and partly by describing their punishment Their offence is disobedience To them that are disobedient All vnbeleeuers stand indited of disobedience and that in three respects For first they are guilty of Adams disobedience For by the disobedience of one man many are made sinners Rom. 5.19 Secondly they are guilty of disobedience against the morall Law which they haue broken by innumerable offences and in respect thereof are liable to all the curses of God Deut. 28. Thirdly they are guilty of disobedience against the Gospell For there is an obedience of faith Rom. 1.5 and the Lord complaines that they obeyed not the Gospell Rom. 10.16 and for this disobedience God will render vengeance in flaming fire at the Day of iudgement 2. Thes. 1.8 Now men disobey the Gospel not onely when they are bewitched to receiue false opinions in religion Gal. 3.1 But also and chiefly when they beleeue not in Iesus Christ but liue in their sins without repentance Vses The vse should bee for humiliation vnto impenitent sinners they should take notice of their inditement make haste to humble themselues before the Lord lest Sentence come out against them and there be no remedy and the rather because God will aggrauate against them their disobedience Now there are many waies by which a sinner may take notice of the aggrauations of his disobedience as First by the number of his offences if he consider that he hath made his sinnes like the haires of his head To bee guilty of treason but in one particular should occasion feare but he that is guilty of many treasons hath great reason to bee extremely confounded in himself and this is thy case Secondly thy disobedience is the more grieuous because thou hast receiued abundance of blessings from God who hath by them wooed thee to repentance and this will heap much vpon thee Rom. 2.4 Esay 1.3 Thirdly thou must consider all the meanes thou hast had of amendment God hath planted thee in his garden the Church he hath commanded his vine-dressers to bestow the paines and apply the meanes of growth to thee If now thou be not fruitfull this will be pleaded against thee which art still a barren figtree Luke 13.6 Fourthly it increaseth thy disobedience that thou hast beene guilty of diuers hainous and fowle euils as if thou haue beene a drunkard a filthy person a blasphemer of the name of God a man of blood or the like Fiftly the continuance in sinne thou hast long abused the patience of God and this heapes coals of further indignation against thee Rom. 2. 4 5. and the rather because thy heart hath beene to sinne euer for there is in the heart of vnregenerate men a desire to sin for euer and it is a griefe to them to thinke that at any time they should not be able to liue in sinne still Sixtly thou hast offended against thine owne vowes and couenants and the promises thou hast made to God both in baptisme and the communion and in other passages of thy life Seuenthly it increaseth thy offence that thou hast dealt wickedly in the land of vprightnesse Esay 26.11 There thou hast offended where thou hast had the example of the godly to shew thee a better course It is ill to sinne any where though in Babel but it is worse to transgresse in Sion or Ierusalem euen in the glorious Churches of Iesus Christ. Eightly thy incorrigiblenes addes to the heap of sinne though the Lord hath afflicted thee yet thou hast not learned obedience by the things thou hast suffered but thou hast made thy heart like an adamant so as thou wouldst not returne Ierem. 5.2 3. Ninthly it is yet more that thou hast beene so farre from reforming thine owne life that thou hast scorned and reproched the good conuersation of the godly thou hast spoken euill of the good way of God Thus and many other wayes may the sinner charge his owne heart and thereby prepare himselfe to returne to the Lord while there is yet hope For if thou wouldest returne with all thy heart and take vnto thee words and confesse thy sinnes and pray for forgiuenesse and mourne before the Lord and turne away from thy owne wickednesse the Lord would shew mercy and the obedience of Christ would heale thy disobedience and God would loue thee freely and the bloud of Christ would cleanse thee from all thy sinnes Hosh. 14. Isaiah 55.7 1. Ioh. 1.7 and while it is yet to day the Lord sendeth to thee and beseecheth thee to be reconciled 2. Cor. 5.19 21. Consider that God hath been with thee all this while hauing sent many others to hell for their sinnes and there is hope of forgiueness the Lord hath receiued great offenders to mercie as the Israelites that often fell away from him Iudges 10. and Mary Magdalene and Peter and Dauid and
affections vpon riches pleasures and fauour of men Some of them haue made their belly their god and some haue giuen their bodies to harlots Thirdly in opposing Gods glory they haue likewise offended grieuously they haue spoken euill of the good way of God they haue abused his seruants and so despised him they haue set themselues against his Sabbaths c. To omit that they haue opposed Gods glory in their hearts by setting vp Idols there and by allowing and striuing to maintaine Atheisticall conceits against God The second vse should be therefore to beget in vs a care to vse all meanes to dispose of and fit our selues that we might make God glorious and so amend and redresse our wayes herein and that we may the more effectually be wrought vpon herein I will consider of two things First I will briefly shew the reasons should stirre vs to all possible care and diligence heerin Secondly I would shew how we may distinctly attain to the glorifying of God in all the three waies before mentioned For the first Diuerse considerations should moue vs to the care of magnifying or glorifying of God by all the waies we can First it is a great honour that God doth vnto vs to account himself to receiue glory any way from our endeauours Shall the creature bee admitted in any sense to that glory to make his Creator to make him I say in his excellency or glory God doth account himself to receiue a new Being as it were by those inward conceptions of his glory and by those outward honours done vnto him Shall the King of glory vouchsafe to dwell in our hearts and shall we not be exceedingly desirous to entertain him Secondly Not to glorifie God is to sinne grieuously it is not arbitrarie but most dangerous to allow our selues either in inward neglects of God or in outward vnfruitfulnesse Shall wee attribute so much euery day to the creatures we deal with and shall we knowe or acknowledge so little of the Creator It cannot be safe to slight God Thirdly it is one of the first things that breaks out in the new Conuerts so soone as any of the Gentils are visited of God in the same day they glorifie him by conceiuing gloriously of him and by magnifying God in himselfe and his seruants and seruice c. And therefore without singular danger of losing our euidence of our calling wee must attend to this Doctrine how hard soeuer it seeme Fourthly wee are bought with a price and are God's and therefore now both in soule and body wee should be wholy deuoted to his glorie 1. Cor. 6. vlt. As God hath glorified vs in our creation and the many treasures hee hath giuen vs in Iesus Christ and wee hope the accomplishment of matchlesse glorie in heauen and shall we not bee zealous for the glorie of the Lord Many glorious things bee spoken of vs through his grace and shall wee thinke or speake meanely of God Fiftly the Lord our God exceedes all things in glorie and therefore we should extoll his praise aboue the heauens and the whole earth should shewe it selfe to be full of his glorie Sixtly he is our heauenly Father and can wee thinke too well of him or doe too much to winne him praise Mat. 5.16 Lastly thinke with our selues What make wee in Gods Vineyard or Orchard If wee be trees of his planting ought wee not to bee filled with the fruits of righteousnes that the Lord may bee glorified Esay 61.3 Thus of some motiues The maine care should bee to learne what to doo that GOD might bee made glorious by vs and so wee should distinctly consider how to make him glorious in our selues or in others In our selues wee should learne how to make him glorious first in our hearts by a glorious conception of him in our minds secondly in our words and works by acknowledgement The first question then is What should we doe that we might conceiue more gloriously of God For answer hereunto we must looke to our hearts in diuers particulars for that wee may conceiue of God according to his excellency we must proceed by these degrees 1. Wee must striue to bring God into our minds for naturally wee liue without God and wee may obserue that at the best we are wonderfull prone to forget God and therefore wee must learne how to bring our hearts to the meditation of God For not to think of God or forget him is a grieuous offence aswell as to think of him after a base manner 2. It is not enough to bring God into our thoughts but we must then bee wonderfull carefull that wee bring not in an Idole of our owne forming in stead of God wee must learne how to think of God as hee is described to vs in his Word for fearefull Idolatrie may bee committed in the heart of a man as well as in his outward adoration and therefore wee must learne soundly to conceiue aright of the nature of God 3. When we haue God there in his owne likenes we must inlarge his roome in our hearts For the true knowledge of God comes in but by sparkles and God will bee magnified Wee must make him great and inlarge the thoughts of God when wee conceiue of him This is that that is so often required in Scripture vnder the terme of magnifying God 4. When wee haue attained to this to thinke of God with an abilitie to make him great in our hearts then wee must yet proceed to the establishment of this conception of GOD for else the thoughts of God will passe thorow our heads like lightning and be gone and therefore we must be carefull to establish the thoughts of God in vs. 5. We must then labour to cloath the thoughts of God with glorie and maiesty this is that which is heere intended wee must not onely make him in our hearts and nourish the sparkles of his knowledge but wee must make him glorious also 6. Yea yet farther when God is conceiued of according to his excellencie we must loue the Lord thus conceiued of our hearts must cleaue vnto him esteeme him aboue all things So that heer are six distinct things to be heeded of such as will conceiue of God aright Now how these things may bee attained to by vs followeth to bee considered of Now for the first to bring God into our minds two things are of excellent vse First the inforcing of our selues to consider of Gods works and so to striue still to read in that great booke of the Creatures Secondly the exercising our selues daily in the Word of God Without these two helps carefully vsed experience shewes that GOD neuer comes into mens thoughts And by the way heere may be framed an answer to that sorrowfull complaint of many Christians that they cannot meditate Now if they would bee taught to meditate or would at any time haue their thoght set a work let them lay before them either of these bookes
protection of God to fall to trust vpon outward things Thus it was madnes in Dauid after so many trials of Gods power for him to stand about to number the people and to rest vpon the strength multitude of his subiects 2. Sam. 24.10 9. To be slow of heart to beleeue and treasure vp the promises of God and the proofes of Scripture that should comfort vs and warrant the truth of our saluation in Christ Luke 24.25 10. To speake proudly or wickedly and with prouocation to others especially to wicked men or if they themselues be wicked men Pro. 30.32 33 11. All dotages about earthly things are in a great degree madnes For godly men that are heirs of the promises and of the Kingdom of heauen to yeeld themselues ouer to the inticements and lusts after worldly things is maruelous folly and madnes especially in them who haue tasted knowne better things to neglect their glory which is their soules for so Dauid calleth his soule Psal. 30. vlt. and to serue the sensuall desires of their flesh is miserable folly 12. All sinfull courses are foolish courses and to deale sinfully is to deale madly Psal. 69.5 The last vse of this doctrine may bee to shew the vanity and insufficiency of all humane wit and learning and morall indowments in comparison of heauenly and spirituall knowledge and vnderstanding For if all vnregenerate men be foolish men then it will follow that a man may be a great wise man in this world and indued with all the ornaments of humane learning c. and yet at the same time in Gods sight bee accounted but as a naturall foole or a mad man in respect of his want of the true wisdome from aboue to discerne things that are excellent that is spirituall things Thus of the fourth doctrine Doct. 5. It is a hard task to ouercome and cure ignorance Ignorant men especially those that are bent against godlines are wonderfully vnteachable God himselfe is faine heere to deuise a strange way to silence them Salomon obserued that these men are wiser then any man that can giue a reason And if a foole be brayed in a morter yet his folly will not depart from him and a reproofe will enter more into a wise man then 100. stripes into a foole yea it is heere to be noted that it is hard to silence them from their reproches and follies The reasons are First because it is naturall to them to bee hatefull and hating others and it is a hard task to ouercome a naturall disposition in man Titus 3.3 Secondly because the vnregenerate minde of man is full of obiections and the diuell suffers many heads of purpose he prompts them and supplies them with cauils Thirdly because many with-hold the truth in vnrighteousnes they doe willingly misprison the truth they desire not information they loue darknes and lies and therefore are loth to haue what might satisfie them and resist the power of the truth and willingly striue to neglect doctrine in publike and Apologies in priuate Fourthly because they incourage one another in an euill way they obserue that the great men of the world and many that are in reputation for wisdome and learning are scorners as well as they yea it mightily confirmes them to heare many times in the very pulpits showres of reproches which ambitious and malicious temporizers powr out to strengthen the hands of the wicked and discourage the hearts of the righteous they think they may reuile securely because they heare that way euerie-where euill spoken of that cause and language is the cause and language of the multitude Fiftly because many ignorant persons when they are confuted yet are so foolish that they will willfully persist in their obiections vpon this pretence that though they cannot reply against the answer yet they think if such and such were there that haue more experience and learning they would confirme and make good what they say Sixtly because malice hath no eares they hate the truth and godly men and therefore are vtterly vnwilling to abate any thing of the disgraces of the truth or godly persons If it be not as they say yet their malice would faine haue it so and if it may disgrace the godly they care not whether it be true or no. Seuenthly because many times God giues them ouer to such a reprobate sence that through custome and euill thoughts and euill surmizes they think verily they doe not much amisse to oppose and hate such persons This was the case of such as reuiled and persecuted the Apostles they thought they did God good seruice as Christ prophesied of them The vses of this doctrine follow Vses First therefore we should not wonder if we see this daily come to pass that men of all sorts should reproch the good way of God so vniustly so foolishly so pertinaciously Secondly it shewes that godly men had neede to be circumspect and to watch their words and works with all exactnes and that they which will confute ignorant men must striue to bee very able and throughly furnished with wisdome of words and abundance of good works Thirdly it shewes that ignorant persons are in a lamentable case that are so in wrapped in the snares and cords of their owne folly that so willingly and wilfully runne towards the gates of death ruine that are so hardly cured of this spirituall blindenes Fourthly it imports that sturdy self-will'd peruerse Christians that cannot bee diuerted or aduised are to be reckoned in the rank of these fooles what shew soeuer they make of a better estate Fiftly it doth comfortably import that when one is teachable and hates reproching and will do or say nothing against the truth and is not pleased with his ignorance but iudgeth himselfe for it and vseth the meanes to get the knowledge and loue of the truth that such a person is escaped from the congregation of these fooles and is in some measure inlightened with true wisdome from aboue Sixtly it may warne all that loue their owne soules hereafter to take heede and with care to auoide wilfulnes and selfe-conceitednes Let men take heed they be not wise in themselues but striue to frame thēselues to be true workers of wisdom and withall to take heed of a multitude of words he that cannot be silent cannot be wise or godly And thus of the first doctrine Doct. 6. Sixtly wee may heere note that well-doing is the best way to confute wicked and vnreasonable men A sound and fruitfull life is the likeliest and surest way to still them if any thing will doe it it is the best way for diuers reasons 1. Because we see heere it is a course of Gods chusing and he saith it will euen muzzle them and binde vp their mouthes and hee will giue successe to the obedience of his owne commandements 2. Because by a conuersation full of good works we doe not onely confute them our selues but we make others able to answere
the Lord. For lamentation we may take vp all the ould complaints of the Prophets Our times haue reacht to the measure of iniquity then reproued or rather men now ouerpasse the deeds of those wicked men wickednes is in the middest of vs deceit and guile depart not from our streets Psal. 55.11 Treasures of wickednes are in the house of the wicked wicked balances the bagge of deceitfull waights and scant measures which are an abhomination to the Lord and for which he threatneth vengeance euery where to be found Mich. 6.10.11 Men lay wait as they that set snares they set traps to catch not beasts or fowle but men As a cage is full of birds so are mens houses full of deceit and deceiuers It is now the vsuall course for men to wex great and rich withall Ier 5.26 27 yea this sinne so spreadeth that we may truely say From the least of them to the greatest of them they are giuen to deceit and will deal falsly Ier. 6.13 Euery brother will supplant and euery neighbour will walk with lies and slanders They will deceiue one another and not speak the truth A man can dwell no where but his habitation is in the midst of deceit and therefore certainly God hath a resolution to stretch out his hand still by publike iudgements How can it be but God must visit and be auenged for these great abominations What should hee else doo but melt his people in the common fornace of great iudgements for such common sins Ier. 9.3 to 10. And as it should teach vs lamentation so it should teach vs supplication too euen to go to God and that in two respects First to implore his help and mercy for the Church that he would be pleased to spare his people and keep them from the infection of these vile sins and if it may stand with his good pleasure to work a repentance in mens hearts that are guilty of these crimes and withall to beseech him for our selues to keep vs that we fall not into the hands of deceiuers for as it is a sin to deceiue so is it a misery to be deceiued Psa. 12.1.2 c. and to giue vs wisdome to beware of men Ier. 9.4 Mat. 10.17 and to deliuer vs from the men of deceit Psal. 43.1 Thirdly it should teach vs seeing the world is so full of guile and that it is so hatefull a sin therefore to honor and esteeme such as we finde to be true hearted Plaine men with Iacob without tricks and subtletie and true Israelites with Nathaniel in whose hearts and mouths is no guile Wee should I say loue them delight in them and stick to them neuer to forsake them but to account them the very Ornaments of the World and great lights in this great and generall darkenesse and to account our selues wonderfull rich and happy in their fellowship and friendship Thirdly this prohibition of Guile may informe vs and by intimation shew vs the hatefulnesse of the doctrine of the Papists and practice in the point of aequiuocation contrary to the expresse Scripture that forbids all lying and deceiuing of others and commands vs to speake truth and that euery one Priest and people and that to his neighbour how much more to the Magistrate Ephes. 4.25 And Iob sheweth that wee ought not to talke deceitfully no not for God to speake for him what is not right Iob. 13.7 Lastly this may be implicitly a singular and secret consolation to honest and vpright harted men that hate this hatefull sinne of Guile that speake the truth in their hearts and make Conscience of their words I meane those true Nathanaels of whom Christ speakes And for the better imprinting of this vse I will shew you two things First the signes and markes of a man without Guile euen of a true Israelite Secondly the encouragement and comforts that belong to such men c. For the first A true Nathanael hath these prayses and especiall markes 1. He shunnes Guile in his Spirit as well as in his words or workes Psal. 32.2 What hee accounts vile to speake hee accounts vile to thinke 2. His prayse is of God and not of men Rom. 2.26 He more striues to doe good then to get credit and applause and if God accept him he cares not though all the world deride him 3. When he confesseth his fault to God he will not hide his sinne but confesseth all his sins that is all sorts of sinnes and his sinne without extenuation or excuse Psal. 32.2.5 4. If he offend it is of ignorance and hee will not receiue doctrine of trust and if he bee shewed the truth he quietly yeelds and giues glory to God Ioh. 1.46 47 48. 5. He is a plaine man and speakes the truth in his heart What hee saith hee saith without fraud or dissembling he saith it from his heart his heart and his words agree hee hateth lying and all deceite Psal. 15.2 Zeph. 3.13 though he might gaine neuer so much yet wil he practise no vntruth 6. He is a constant man iust of his word he will performe his promise though it be to his owne hindrance Psalm 15.4 He will not denie the truth though it be to his extreme danger Such men as these haue many encouragements to hold on their courses It was a chiefe prayse of Christ that he was without Guile 1. Pet. 2.7 and so was it in the Martyres and Saints Reuel 14.15 It is one of the signes and markes of Gods houshould seruants Psal. 15.2 Of a true Conuert Zeph. 3.13 These men are faithfull with the Saints and rule with God Hosh. 11.12 Such as these will abide the Balance to be weighed and God will acknowledge their integritie Iob. 31.5 The wealth of these men gotten by labour and iust dealing shall increase when riches gotten by vanitie shall diminish Prou. 13.11 And those lips of Truth shall be established for euer when lying tongues shall be but for a moment Prou 12.19 And thus much of Guile Only before I passe further it is worthy the noting that he saies of these two first sinnes that all Malice and all Guile must be laid aside which imports that howsoeuer some other infirmities be in the Godly yet they should be found farre from all Malice and Guile not a iot of either of them should be found in them Malice must be in them in no kinde nor in no measure neither secret nor open Malice neither grudge nor desire of reuenge neither at home nor abroad neither in ciuill things nor in matters of Religion neither in any of the aggrauations nor in the least drop of it And the like may be said of Guile It were a shamefull thing that any kinde of Guile should be found in a Christian in any of his dealings at any time with any sort of men or in any measure For if but a drop of Malice or Guile be left in vs It may breake out againe and our hearts
pouerty haue a shew of wisdome and piety in not sparing the flesh but the holy Ghost tels vs that all this is but hypocrisie 2. Tim. 4.1.2.3.4 Col. 2. vlt 2. How miserable the estate of multitudes of our owne people is by these signes wee may perceiue that the plague is wondefully spread in Israel There are whole congregations of hypocrites that is of men that say and doo not that come neer to God with their lips and their heart is far from him that seldome or neuer pray but when they be sick that regard not the inward foulnesse of their hearts so their liues bee either ciuill or euill but in secret Iob. 15.34 Isay. 9.17 Secondly for instruction and so it should teach vs all to beware of this leauen of Hypocrisie Luke 12.11 and if we would be thought to haue the true Wisedome from aboue then let vs shew it by our fruits that they may be without Hypocrisie Iam. 3.17 And for the better enforcing of this vse I will put you in minde of two things First the sorts of Hypocrisie you are most in danger of Secondly the remedies or preseruatiues against Hypocrisie The sorts are chiefly these 1. The distraction in Gods worship which is a most wofull fault and most common This was it was shewed before that so angred God Isaiah 28.13 2. Secondly the omission of priuate worship I meane to make a shew of Religion and the loue of God and yet neglect reading of the Scriptures prayers conference and secret communion with God This as was shewed will prouoke God to stop his eare at our crie because we do not pray at all times Iob. 27.8 9. 3. Neglect of mortification of inward sins and secret faults taking liberty so it be but sin in the heart or in secret This will vndoe thee for euer if thou looke not to it in time 4. Affectation of praise and credit with men to do our workes to be seene of men Now there are diuers rules to be obserued if we would not bee poysoned with the raigne of Hypocrisie 1. Keepe thy selfe in Gods presence forget not God Remember alwaies that his eyes are vpon thee Thus Dauid set the Lord alwaies before him Psalm 16.8 And this God commandeth Abraham to doe if he will bee vpright Gen. 17. ● 2. Thou must pray much and often to God to create a right Spirit in thee For by nature we haue all double and Hypocriticall harts Psal. 51.10 3. Keepe thy heart with all diligence watching daily resisting distractions wauering thoughts and forgetfulnesse And to this end mortifie the first beginnings of this sinne in thy heart mourne for it as soone as thou discernest it and iudge thy selfe seriously before God Iam. 4.8 Math. 23.26 4. In all matters of well doing bee as secret as may bee Matthew 6. both in Mercie Prayer Fasting Reading and the like 5. Be watchfull ouer thy owne waies and see to this point That thou be as carefull of all duties of Godlinesse in prosperitie as in aduersitie in health as in sicknesse Iob 27.9 10. 6. Conuerse with such as in whom thou discernest true Spirits without Guile and shun the company of open and known Hypocrites 7. Be not rash and easy to condemne other men for Hypocrites onely because they crosse thy opinions or humors or will or practice It is often obserued that rash censurers that vsually lash others as Hypocrites fall at length into some vile kinde of Hypocrisie themselues But may we not call an Hypocrite an Hypocrite Hypocrites are not all of one sort Some are close Hypocrites some are open The open Hypocrite thou maist shew thy dislike of his courses and auoide him But the close Hypocrite thou canst not discerne or not certainely and if thou follow thine owne coniectures thou maist somtimes condemne a dear childe of God and approue a detestable Hypocrite But how may the open Hypocrite be discerned By diuers signes First by an ordinary and vsuall affectation of the prayse of men in doing good duties When a man constantly sets himselfe out to the shew it is an apparant marke of a false heart Marke that I say an vsuall affectation Secondly if a man make a shew of the meanes of godlinesse or liking the meanes of godlinesse or of the persons that are godly and yet it bee manifest that he hates to be reformed liues in known grosse faults and being rebuked by the word or seruants of God will not reforme but carrieth a grudge at the parties that laboured his reformation This is an euident marke of an Hypocrite Now to judge these is no offence Thirdly It is a signe of an Hypocrite when a man will be godly and ●estrayned and zealous in some companies and in other company take liberty for grosse p●ophanenesse Lastly he that will be rid of Hypocrisie must looke to himselfe to keepe himself free from the causes of it and take heede that he be not bewitched in those things that haue bred hypocrisie in other men What is it can make a man an Hypocrite First somtimes feare will doe it as in time of trouble or persecution men to auoide dangers will play the Hypocrites Luke 12.1 2 3 4 5. Secondly sometimes desire to get credit and to bee well thought on especially when it is mixt with enuie at the respects of others driues some men headlong into Hypocriticall courses Math. 6. Thirdly sometimes men are emboldned vnto Hypocrisie by a secret perswasion that Christ will deferre his comming and they shall not of a long time be brought to account Matthew 24.48 50. Fourthly men fall into Hypocrisie for gaine to hide their wicked and deceitfull courses So the Pharises Math. 23.14 so 1. Tim. 4.2 7. Fiftly forgetfulnesse of God is a great cause of Hypocrisie and the raigne of it in many harts Iob 8 13. Sixtly Lust and some vile wickednesse driues many men and women into Hypocrisie 2. Tim. 3. These things we must take heede of and preserue our selues from them if euer we would not be wretched hypocrites before God Thirdly heer is also consolation to all the godly whom God hath kept vpright and free from this damned vice I mean from the raign of it for there is no man but hath some dregs of hypocrisie in him But how may a man knowe that hee is not an hypocrite By many signes First when a man had rather bee good than seem so Secondly when a man makes God his secret place striues desires secrecie to worship God Matthew 6. Thirdly when a man loues no sin but would fain be rid of euery sin and so hath respect to all Gods commandements Fourthly when a man confesseth his hypocrisie and mourns for it and striues against it Fiftly when a man accuseth himself for it to others whose respects he most desires Sixtly when a man keeps his heart close to the substance of godlinesse and labours
to bee built vp without distraction in the main things needfull for his saluation and is not carried to spend his time most about vnnecessary or impertinent cares or studies 1. Tim. 4.2.7.8 Seuenthly when a man is as carefull to serue God in prosperity as well as aduersity Iob 27.9 Eightly when a man delights in the Almighmighty and loues all the means by which he findeth any communion with God Iob 29.9 Ninthly when a man from the hatred of hypocrisie is stirred vp against hypocrites cannot abide them nor will conuerse with them Iob 17. verse 8. Lastly Iob comforts himselfe that hee was no hypocrite by three arguments 1. He would trust in God though hee did slay him 2. Hee would reprooue his waies in Gods sight 3. He sought Gods presence and set himself alwaies before him none of which an hypocrite could doo Iob 13.15.16 Thus much of Hypocrisie Enuy. The fourth sin to be auoided is Enuy. Enuy is nothing else but a vexation or inward displeasure conceiued at the good of another viz. either anothers credit gifts preferment profit successe or the like This sinne though in the world it bee little thought of yet in it self is a most fearfull vice and should be so accounted of by christians for many reasons First if we consider the subiect persons in whom it vsually is It is found most in naturall men Tit. 3.3 yea in silly men Iob 5.2 This was the sinne of Cain Gen. 4 yea of the diuell himself The main sin of the diuell was the enuy of mans happinesse It raigned in the diuelish Gentiles Rom. 1.29 Secondly if we con●ider the cause of it it is for the most part the daughter of pride Galat. 5.26 sometimes of couetousnes Pro. 28.22 and often of some egregious vile transgression such as in Rom. 1.29 but euer it is the filthy fruit of the flesh Gal. 5.25 Thirdly if wee consider the vile effects of it which are many for 1. It hath done many mischiefs for which it is infamous It sould Ioseph into Egypt Genes 37 and which should euer make it abhorred of vs it kild the Son of God Mat. 27.8 2. It deforms our natures it makes a man suspicious malitious contentious it makes vs to prouoke backbite and practise euill against our neighbours It is ill for our sight for the enuious man hath alwaies an euill eye and a cast-down countenance with Cain also many times 3. It begins euen death and hell while a man is aliue It kils the silly one Iob 5.2 It destroieth the contentment of his life and burns him with a kinde of fire vnquenchable It feeds vpon the enuious man like the moth or worm by degrees and it hasteneth mischief in the enuious man because it makes the person enuied more glorious and besides it is a vice that driueth a man from among men in respect of comfortable society for it was long since aduised Eat not the bread of him that hath an euill eye Pro. 23.6 and no man by his good will if he can be free wil conuerse with such as he perceiues to be enuious Fourthly this place manifestly imports that it is a notable hindrance to the profit of the word and so no doubt it is to praier and all piety as euidently it is a let of charity vnlesse it bee that men in hypocrisie to disgrace others will for enuy doo some good as they preacht Christ for enuy in the Apostles time Phil. 1.15 Vses The vse should be threefold First for instruction to teach vs to follow the aduice heer giuen in putting away Enuy and clensing our hearts of it and to this end think much of the reasons against it and withall remember by confession godly sorrow to clense thy heart carefully of it For those things help wonderfully in the putting of it away Secondly this may serue for great reproof of many that professe the fear of God who daily shame themselues by discouering this vice in themselues This was it the Apostle complained of in the Corinthians and shewed that it is a vice which not onely houlds down a Christian from growing but it makes him look like a carnall man 1. Cor. 3.3 Thirdly for consolation if we finde our selues freed from this vice And wee may knowe that we are not enuious 1. If we loue the good things in others and can rejoice in their prosperity and mourn for their miseries 2. If we be vile in our owne eies and lowly minded 3. If wee enjoy contentation in our owne estate and are well pleased to bee that which GOD will haue vs to bee 4. If in giuing honour wee can hartily go one before another Thus much of Enuy. Euill speaking This is the fift sinne to be auoided If we would profit by Gods word wee must look to our owne words c. Euill speaking generally taken comprehends all the faults of the tongue in speaking and so it is true that a man can neuer be soundly profited by the word till he makes conscience of euil words as well as euill works But I think it is taken more restrainedly heer There are many kindes of euill speaking that are to be auoided Lying is euill speaking and it is true that he who is false to man will neuer be true to God But I think Lying is not heer meant Flattering is euill speaking for he that praiseth his friend with a loud voice it shall bee counted to him as a curse It is a curse to be troubled with a flatterer and it is a kinde of cursed speaking To flatter But I think this is not meant heer neither But I think the sinnes heer meant are Backbiting judging slandering and complaining one of another and all bitternesse of speech between man and man These hinder charity and prouoke God and let the growth of piety in the harts and liues of men And therefore these kindes of euill speaking should be detested of Christians and altogether laid aside These sins as they are hatefull in themselues and in the least degree or in any kinde so Euill speaking is made more vile in the aggrauations of it It is euill to speake euill any way or of any But it is much more vile First when we speak euill of the absent that cannot defend them selues Backbiting is a hatefull degree of euill speaking 2. Cor. 12.10 Psal. 140.11 Secondly when wee speake euill of such as God hath humbled or afflicted Leuit. 19.14 Obad. 12. Prou. 26.28 Thirdly when wee shall speake euill of such as are in authoritie Eccles. 10. vlt. Iud. 8. Leuit. 19. Fourthly when we speak euill of the godly especially before the wicked or for things indifferent or without cause Iames 4.9 Rom. 14. Psal. 31.18 or for lesser failings Math. 7 1.2 but especially their good conuersation 1. Pet. 3.16 Fiftly When wee speake euill of our professed friends Psal. 5.6.13 Lament 1.2 Sixtly when wee speak euill of Gods messengers taxing their persons as their cariage especially when they labour
excellent knowledge of Christ which may bee heer had Philip. 3.9 Secondly Longing and appetite after it as true and certaine as the very appetite of a childe is to the brest This is expressed by the similitudes of panting thirsting and watching after the word in diuers scriptures and when this longing is more vehement it is set out by the passion of fainting for it and of the breaking of the soule for it Psal. 42.1 et 84.2 et 119.20.40 et 131. Thirdly Satisfaction and contentment when wee speed well in the word As the child is quieted and sleepeth in the rest and vertue of the milk it hath receiued Dauid saith his soule was satisfied as with marrow Psal. 63.1.5 and is graunted of all the godly and chosen ones Psa. 65.4 When it is sweet like hony to our tast Psal. 119.103 Fourthly Constancy the renewing of affection A childes appetite is renewed euery day though it seem to be full for the present and such is the true desire of the godly It is not a desire for a fit but is renewed daily as the appetite to our appointed food is Iob 23. Hee that hath this desire may be found daily waiting at the gates of wisdome Prou. 8.34 Vse 1. The vse of all may bee cheefly threefold For First it may serue for triall wee should euery one examine our selues whether wee haue this true desire after the word or no. For if wee find this wee are sure to prosper and if we find it not wee are nothing but staruelings in matter of godliness Question But how may wee know whether wee haue this estimation longing after and constant affection to the word Answer It may be knowne diuers waies especially if our affections bee grown to any good ripeness and tenderness in the measure of them For it may be euidently discerned First If we seek the blessing of the word of God as a cheefe happiness wee would desire of him in his specially mercy to giue it vnto vs. Psa. 119.68.132.155.144 and so by the constancy of praier we may also discerne the constancy of our appetite Secondly If wee can be diligent and content to take any paines or bee at any cost that wee may be prouided of this food that perisheth not Ioh. 6.27 Thirdly If wee can hoord and hide vp the word in our hartes as worldly men would doe their treasures Psalme 119.11 Ioying in it as much as in all riches Psalme 119.14.162 especially if wee can batten and wex fat by the contentments of it as carnall men doe when they liue at harts ease Psalme 119.70 Fourthly If it will still our crying that is If it will comfort vs and quiet our harts in all distresses Psal. 119.50.143.92 so as nothing shall offend vs. verse 165. Fiftly If we make haste and come willingly at the time of assembling Psalm 110.3 But especially if we make haste and not delay in practising what we learn thence Psal. 119.60 Sixtly If we be thankfull to God and abound in the free will offrings of our mouthes for the good we get by the word Psal. 119.7.108.164.171 Seauenthly If we can bee truly greeued and say with Dauid Sorow takes hould on vs because the wicked keep not gods lawe 119.159 Eightthly If we delight to talk of gods word and to speak of his wondrous works discouered in his word Psal. 119.27.172 c. These things and the like are in them that haue their affections tender and striuing in them Now whereas many of gods children may haue true desire to the word and yet not find euidently some of these signes therfore I will giue other signes of true affection to the word though ther be not alwaies such delight in it as they desire The lesser measure of true appetite to the word may bee discerned by some of these signes that follow First it is a signe that we doe hartily loue the word when wee can from our harts loue and blesse them that doe loue the word accounting them happy for their very loue to the word Psal. 119.1.12 Secondly T is a signe of desire after the word when we can stick to the word and the constant frequenting of it notwithstanding the scornes and shame of the world Psal. 119 31 46 141. It is a sure testimony of our loue to the gospell when we can forsake father and mother brother and sister house and land for the Gospells sake Mark 10.29 Thirdly It is a signe of loue to the word and of desire after it when we can mourn for the famine of the word as a bitter crosse Psal. 42.3.4 Fourthly Yea when men haue the word and yet finde not comfort in it it is a signe of their true affection when they long for those comforts with heauines of heart and account themselues in an vncomfortable distresse yea bitter distresse till the Lord returne to them in his person in the power of the meanes Psal. 119.82.83.123.131 Fiftly It is a signe we loue the word when such as feare god are glad of vs it is a signe that the godly doe discerne appetite in vs though we doe not when they are tenderly affected toward vs. Psal. 119.74 Sixtly We may know our affection to the word by our willingnes to be ruled by it If wee can make the word our Counseller it is sure we we doe delight in it whatsoeuer we conceiue of our selues Psal. 119.24 Lastly To striue against our dulnes constantly and to pray to be quickned is a good signe that we haue some desire to the word One may loue gods precepts and yet need to be quickned Psal. 119.159 Vse 2. Secondly this doctrine of desire and appetite after the word may much humble the most of vs some being altogether void of all desire after it more then for fashion sake and the better sort haue their appetites either dull or decayed Quest. Whence comes it that people haue no more affection to the word or that men are so clo●ed with the word Ans. The lets of appetite and affection to the word may be considered two wayes First as they are without vs. Secondly as they are within vs. Without vs the cause of want of affection is sometimes in the Minister sometimes in the Diuell sometimes in the company men sort withall and sometimes in God himselfe 1. In Ministers there are two things which maruelously hinder the admiration and desire after the word The first is the manner of their teaching when they teach vnskilfully deceitfully vaingloriously negligently or coldly When there is not a maiesty and purity and life in the Teacher it is no wonder if there be no affection in the people 2. Cor. 4.2 1. Thessal 2. 2 3 4 6 8. 1. Cor. 2.4 2. Tim. 2.15 The second is their ill liues What made the people in Elies time so loath the seruice of God but the wicked liues of Hophni and Phineas 1. Sam. 3. Ministers must teach by example as well as by doctrine if they
will not be despised 1. Tim. 4.12 2. The Diuell that god of this world doth mightily labour in this point to keepe men from affecting the Gospell If he cannot hinder men from hearing then his next worke is by all possible indeuours to blinde their minds and marre their tastes that they may not perceiue nor regard the glorious things of God in Christ 2. Cor. 4.4 3. Euill company is a wonderfull impediment it causeth perpetually hardnes of hart and carelesnes it keepes the hearts of the wicked men in a continuall habituall deadnes and the best men seldome light into prophane company but they get some degree of dulnes and deadnes of affections by it Pro. 9.6 Psa. 119.115 4. God himselfe being prouoked by mans extreame wilfulnes in sinning giues them ouer to a spirit of slumber and curseth their very blessings yea restraineth sometimes the very gifts of his seruants that so he may execute his iudgements vpon a rebellious people The Lord hideth his statutes from them and with-holding his spirit keeps back the life of the word in their harts Esay 6.10 yea many times to scourge the vnthankfulnes and vnprofitablenes of his own people he doth for a time hide his testimonies from them Psal. 119.19 Thus much of the lets without vs. The internall lets must be considered First In the wicked Secondly In the godly The cause of this hartlesnes and want of affection in the wicked is First their ignorance they know not either the word or the worth of the word or their own need of it Secondly their prophaneness irreligiousnes They liue without God or without Christ in the world they make no conscience of their waies They forget their later end they minde not the good of their soules but only earthly things they neuer tasted of the bountifulnes of the Lord but were altogether corrupt and strangers from the life of God only greedy in sinning Thirdly Atheisme There is in the harts of all wicked men in some degree abominable conceits concerning God and his word They either doubt whether the scriptures be the true word of god or els they are strongly carried to resolue ther is no profit in the knowledge of gods waies or in seruing the almighty Iob. 21.14 Malac. 3.15 Fourthly Cares of life The loue of the profits or pleasures of this life choak the word and the power of it as is apparant by these places Math. 13. Luke 14. Psal. 119 36 37 c. Fiftly In some either whoredome or wine for these two sinns together or either of them take away mens harts they are voide of all due consideration and of all affection to gods word They are senseless creatures Hosh. 4. Thus of the cheef letts in the wicked The lets of affection in the godly are diuers First Sometimes it is their worldliness their too much minding and plodding about the things of this life or their excessiue burthening of their heads about their calling They haue too much to doe or they haue too much care care I say that is distrustfull and carking care Psal. 119.36 Secondly Sometimes it is want of comfortable felowshippe in the Gospell Affection that is alone is seldome constant in the same degree There is much quickning and comfort and incitation in a constant and tender and profitable society with such as loue the word Psalm 119. verse 63. Thirdly sometimes it is some secret sinne that gets too much dominion ouer them As affection may stand with meer frailties and infirmities So on the other side if any sinne once get head and men yeeld to it and agree to obey it their affections to the word presently dy within them Psal. 119.133 yea if this sinne bee but in the thoughts and bee yeelded to and delighted in and that constantly they seek the pleasure of contemplatiue wickednes and do not resist it by praying against it euen vain thoughts may dead the affections and poison them Psal. 119.113 Fourthly sometimes it is neglect of mortification The soule will gather aboundance of humors as well the body and therefore Christians should not go too long especially if they feele a kinde of fulnesse to growe vpon them but take a purge that is seriously and secretly set time apart to humble themselues before God purging out their most secretest corruptions with all harty confession before God Fiftly sometimes it is want of practice or want of an orderly disposing of their waies in godlinesse If they rest onely in hearing their affections cannot last long sincere and besides the most Christians burden their owne harts for very want of order and that they go not distinctly about the works of godlinesse but rake together a great heap of doctrine which they knowe not what to doo withall Psal. 50. vlt. Sixtly sometimes again it is occasioned by inordinate feeding when Christians begin to affect nouelties and seek to themselues a heap of teachers they scape not long without fulnesse and the fits of loathing 2. Tim. 4.3 Seuenthly sometimes very idleness is the hindrance The want of a particular calling to imploy themselues in the six daies breeds a general kinde of wearinesse and satiety which extends the heart of it not onely to the times of priuate duties in the working daies but to the very Sabbath also They cannot work at Gods work with any great delight that had no more minde to their owne work Eightthly sometimes it is neglect of preparation and praier before we come to the word Ninthly sometimes it is a violent kinde of ignorance and vnbeleef when a Christian knowes not his right to the word and wil not be perswaded of the fatherly loue and presence of God in his ordinance If Preachers must say I haue beleeued therefore I will speak so must Hearers say I haue beleeued therefore I will hear They should knowe that they are welcome to Christ and may eat and drink Cant. 5.1 and that their heritage lieth in the word Psal. 119. Tenthly sometimes it is a very disease in the body as melancholy or some other which doth so oppresse the heart that it doth not take delight in any thing But of this more in the next Vse Lastly any of the sinnes mentioned in the former verse will hinder affection Malice Hypocrisie or Enuy or any of the rest Vse 3. The third vse may bee for instruction to teach vs to striue for affection to the word and to prouide to order our selues so as wee bee not wanting in the direction of the Apostle and so two sorts are to be taught that is such as want appetite and such as haue it that they may keep it aright Quest. What must such doo as finde either want of appetite or decay of it Ans. Such as would get sound affections to the word must doo six things First they must refrain their feet from euery euill way It is impossible to get sound affections without sound reformation of life Psalm 119. Secondly they must pray for it they
may bee in men that outwardly frequent the meanes and make a shew of godlinesse Secondly the outward declining or Apostasie is when men outwardly liue in grosse sinnes or follow scandalous courses and are at last relapsed to the violent courses of the world so as the meanes of godliness is neglected Againe declining is first either totall secondly or in part First totall when we fall off from all godliness and all the meanes of it and so only they fall that sinne against the holy Ghost Secondly in part is when men fall into some sinne or error and not lose all conscience of well-doing and such is their Apostasie also that fall off from the care of some of the ordinances of God as when men vse the priuate and neglect the publike or vse the publike and neglect the priuate c. Question But what shall a man doe to help himselfe that findes he hath declined c Answer He must take vnto himselfe words and confesse his sin to God and returne to the Lord hartily he will heale euen his back-sliding Hose 14.3.4.5 Vse 2. Secondly for instruction and so it should perswade with vs mightily to hold on and neuer faint in the way but striue to the perfection of euery good gift of God not being weary of well-doing knowing that it is ashame still to bee children and that God doth require a righteousnes of vs that should exceed the righteousnes of all the Papists and Pharises in the world and to this end we should preserue in vs this desire after the sincere milk of the word and watch against securitie and slothfulnes the dangerous moathes of godliness Vse 3. Thirdly such may bee much encouraged who haue their hearts set vpon growth and doe prosper in Gods work though otherwaies they haue many afflictions or infirmities yea such as with true hearts doe mourne for their not growing as they think may consider of many comforts to vphould themselues by as 1. Our Sauiour Christ had not all degrees of grace at once but grew in grace by degrees 2. Though thy gifts bee small and grow in thee like a graine of mustard-seed yet it may grow to a maruelous increase Math. 13. 3. Though thou haue many infirmities yet thou maist beare aboundance of fruit as the vine which is the weakest plant yet is not therefore barren Isaiah 27.2 4. Though thou haue little meanes to help thy selfe by yet thou maiest by the blessing of God grow The lilies spin not and yet are gorgeo●sly clothed Math. 6.28 5. If we sowe good seed it is certain the Lord will giue increase 1. Cor. 9.10.11 6. Though we sowe in teares we shall reap in ioy Psal. 126.5 6. yea though we be extreamely oppressed and reproached as the Israelites grew euen the more they were hated and oppressed in Aegipt Mark 4.8 7. We haue great helpes the word is more effectuall to the soule then milk to the body and we receiue influence from Christ our head Colos. 2.19 and euery member of the mysticall body makes some supply to further the growth of ●he whole body Eph. 6.16 Verse 3. Because ye haue tasted that the Lord is gracious or bountifull THese words containe the fourth reason to perswade to the desire after the word and it is taken from the experience they haue had of the goodnes of God comforting them in the word If euer they tasted the sweetnes of the word they must needes haue an appetite to it In these few wordes there are diuers poynts of Doctrine to bee obserued and explained as namely First That God is gracious Secondly that God doth graciously sweeten the word to his people as God doth shew his graciousnes in the word Thirdly that where there is a true taste of the sweetnes of the word there the soule growes in grace Fourthly It is but a taste of the sweetnes of God which can be had in this life Fiftly many liue in the church and yet neuer taste of the sweetnes of God and his word Sixtly It is a singular shame for such as haue felt the sweetnes of the word to faile in their desire after it For the first Where the Lord is praised for graciousnes by the word vsed in the originall heere it is to occasion in vs the admiration of the goodnes of Gods nature For in this one word are many distinct praises imported As First That hee is free and doth what he doth freely without respect of merit or desert in men and this is one thing which if wee finde should much incite vs to regard what he saith or requireth of vs. By this Argument are men called vpon Isaiah 55.1.2 3. Secondly that hee is kind to his very enemies For so the word is applied Luke 6.35 and questionles it should bee a great thing to perswade with a man when he comes to the word to regard it with much affection if he knowe that God thereby will doe good to his very enemies and that in that ordinance God is went to shew the mirror of his mercy in reuealing his loue communicating the blessings of his Gospell to such as come into his presence with hatred of their owne waies Thirdly that he is courteous and in a speciall manner kinde to and fond ouer his own people with incomprehensible indulgence the word is rendred Courteous Eph. 4.32 And all ages must wonder at this kindenes of God in Iesus Christ Eph. 2.7 And thus hee deliuereth his seruants from their feares Psal. 34.3 or 4. Fourthly that hee is bountifull and liberall and giueth plentifully so the word is vsed and giuen to God Rom. 1.5 Fif●ly that hee is gentle and easie to bee intreated or preuailed withall Hence that his yoke is said to bee easie Math. 11.30 where this word is translated easie and heereof comes the word rendred gentlenes Gal. 5.22 and thus hee is said to bee maruelous kinde in hearing praier Psal. 31.21 22. and 34.4 6 15. Sixtly that he stands not vpon respect of persons and thus he regards the poore Psal. 68.10 and will not disdaine to teach sinners his way Psal. 25.8 Seuenthly that he is sweet that is wonderfull comfortable pleasing and filling with delight Eightthly there is one specialty of Gods goodnes to which this word is applied and that is the accepting of the Gentiles to fauour when the Iews were cut off Rom. 11. Vse The vse of this point is various For First It should kindle in vs admiration All ages should gaze and wonder at such matchless good nature and kindnes in God Ephes. 2.7 Secondly It should break our hearts with sorrow and repentance for our sins to think of it that wee offend a God so kinde so good so bountifull Rom. 2.4 Hose 3.5 Thirdly It should perswade with men that neuer felt this to taste and see how good God is Psalme 34. Question What must we do if wee could or might taste of this sweetnes of Gods nature Answer The Prophet Dauid telles vs
3.9 Especially wee should rest vpon this stone when we haue any great suite to God and haue occasion to continue to hold vp our hands in praier and so wee shall prosper as it was with Moses Ex. 17.12 Lastly it should be the singular ioy of our harts when wee see the corner stone cast downe and God begin to build in any place the work of godlines and religion Wee haue more cause to reioice for that spirituall worke then the Iewes had to shout when the corner stone of the Temple was brought out to bee laid for a foundation of the building Zachar. 4.7 10. Thirdly the third thing said of Christ is that hee was disallowed of men Disallowed of men This is added of purpose to preuent scandall which might arise from the consideration of the meane intertainment the Christian Religion found in the world The point is plaine that Christ was disallowed of men and this is euident in the stone The greatest part of the world regarded him not The Gentiles knew him not and the Iewes receiued him not Though three things in Christ were admirable his doctrine his life his miracles yet the Iewes beleeued not in him He came vnto his owne and his owne receiued him not Nay they reuiled him called him Samaritane and said he had a Diuel They preferred a murtherer before him and their wise men euen the Princes of this world crucified the Lord of life glory This as it was storied by the Euangelists so it was foretold by the Prophets Isaiah 53. and 49.8 and so we see hee is still of almost the whole world The Pagans yet know him not The Iewes yet renounce him The Turk receiueth him but as a Prophet The Papists receiue him but in part and wicked men denie him by their liues Vses The first impression this should make in our hearts is admiration and astonishment This should be maruelous in our eies that men refuse the Son of God miserable men their Sauiour captiues their Redeemer and poore men such vnspeakeable riches as is offred in Christ and that almost all mankind should bee guilty of this sin so as in comparison he should be Elect onely of God Secondly since this was foreseene foretold wee should bee confirmed against scandall and like neuer a whit the worse of Christ or religion for the scornes and neglects of the world Thirdly since the world disallowes Christ we may hence gather what account we shold make of the world and the men of the world we haue reason to separate from them that are separated from Christ and not to loue them that loue not the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 16.22 Fourthly we may hence see how little reason wee haue to take the counsels and iudgements of carnall men though our friends and neuer so wise in naturall or ciuill wisdome Their counsels were against Christ they disallow Christ and all Christian courses Fiftly why are we troubled for the reproches of men and why doe wee feare their reuilings Shall we heare that Christ was disallowed and shall wee be so vexed because wee are despised Nay rather let vs resolue to despise the shame of the world and to follow the author of our faith euen in this crosse also Sixtly we may be hence informed that indiscretion or sinne is not alwaies the cause of contempt For Christ is disallowed and yet was without all spot of indiscretion or guile Seuenthly and chiefly we should look euery one to our selues that wee be not of the number of those that disallow Christ. For Christ is still disallowed of men and if any ask Question Who are they that in these daies be guilty of disallowing of Christ Answer I answer Both wicked men and godly men too Wicked men disallow him and so doe diuers sorts of them as First Hereticks that deny his diuinity or humanity or his sufficiency or authority or his comming as did those mockers mentioned 2. Pet. 3. Secondly Schismaticks that diuide him and rend his body mysticall 1. Cor. 1.10 Thirdly Pharises and merit-mongers that by going about to establish their owne righteousnes deny the righteousnes of Iesus Christ Rom. 10.4 Fourthly Apostataes that falling from the fellowship they had with Christ would crucify him againe Heb. 6.2 Pet. 2. Fiftly Epicures and prophane persons that will sell Christ for a messe of pottage with Esau and loue their pleasure more then Christ Heb. 12.16 2. Tim. 3. Sixtly Papists who therefore hold not the head because they bring in the worship of Saints and Angels Col 2.19 Seuenthly Whoremongers and fornicators who giue the members of Christ vnto a harlot 1. Cor. 6.15 16. Eightthly Reuilers that speak euill of the good way of Christ and reproach godly Christians especially such as despise the Ministers of Christ. For hee that despiseth them despiseth Christ himselfe Math. 10. Ninthly Hypocrites that professe Christ in their words but deny him in their workes Tenthly the fearfull that in time of trouble dare not confesse him before men Mat. 10. Eleuenthly All wicked men Because they neglect their reconciliation with God in Christ and will not beleeue in him nor repent of their sinnes All that will not bee reconciled when God sendes the word of reconciliation vnto them Esay 52.11 Secondly godly men sinne against Christ and are guilty of disallowing him 1. When they neglect the establishing of their hearts in the assurance of faith 2. When they faint and wax weary of praier and trusting in God in the time of distresse Luke 18.1 8. 3. When our harts wax cold within vs and are no inflamed with feruent affections after Christ We neglect him when we do not highly esteem him aboue all earthly treasures Phil. 3.9 The fourth thing affirmed of CHRIST is that hee is chosen of GOD. Chosen of God This is one thing wee must carefully knowe and effectually beleeue concerning Christ namely that he is chosen of God This was conscionably beleeued concerning him as appears Esay 42.1 and 43.10 and 49.2 Mat. 12.18 Now Christ may be said to be chosen of God in diuers respects First as hee was from all eternity appointed and ordained of God to bee the Mediator and Redeemer of all mankinde 1. Pet. 1.20 Secondly as he was called peculiarly of GOD from the womb by a speciall sanctification vnto his office Esay 49.1 Thirdly as hee was by solemn rites inaugurated vnto the immediate execution of his office as by baptism and the voice from heauen c. Mat. 3. Fourthly as hee was approued of God and declared mightily to bee the Sonne of God and the Sauiour of the world by the glory done to him of God notwithstanding the scorns and oppositions of the world Esay 49.7 The vse may be both for Information and Instruction For hence we may bee informed concerning diuers things First that Gods work shall prosper notwithstanding all the scorns or oppositions of men God's choice is not hindred but Christ is separated and sanctified and appointed to
If you consider the manner of their calling into the Church they are digged out of the quarry of mankinde as stones digged out of the earth being in themselues by nature but stones of darknesse such as might neuer haue seene the light Secondly If you consider their vnion with Christ and Christians in one body they are like the stone of the house compact in themselues and vpon the foundation Vse The vse may be briefly First for information Heere is come to passe that saying that is written God is able of stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham Secondly let all the seruants of God take pleasure in the stones of this spirituall Sion Psalm 102.15 and let vs all learne to be like stones in the former sences for the receiuing the impression of the law and for constancy and durablenes and for care to keepe our communion with Christ and Christians Lastly woe to the multitudes of wicked men whom God neglects with that heauy curse so as a stone is not taken of them to make a stone for the building Ierem. 50.26 Thus they are stones It is added they must be liuely stones to signify wherein they must not be like vnto stones they must not be dull and insensible they must be liuely and cheerefull and that for diuers reasons First Because the second Adam is a quickning spirit and they dishonor the workmanship of Christ if they be not liuely 1 Cor. 15. Secondly Because one end of the offering vp of Christ was that their consciences might bee purged from dead workes Heb 9.14 Thirdly They are therefore condemned according to men in the flesh that they might liue according to God in the Spirit 1 Pet. 4.6 Fourthly Because we haue beene aliue to sin and it is a shame to expresse lesse life in the seruice of God then wee haue done in the seruice of sinne Fiftly Because we haue liuely meanes we are fed with liuing bread Ioh. 6. and wee liue by the power of God 2 Cor. 13 4. and we haue the spirit of Christ in vs which is the fountaine of life and hath springs of ioy in him Rom. 8.9 Ioh. 6. and the Word of God is liuely and mightie in operation Heb 4.12 and Christ himselfe liues in vs Gal. 2.20 Sixtly because wee professe our selues to bee consecrate to God as liuing sacrifices Rom. 12.1 Seuenthly because we haue such excellent priuiledges we partake of the diuine Nature and God is a liuing God and we haue precious promises 2. Pet. 1.4 and we haue plentifull adoption in Christ and we haue a hope of a most glorious inheritance which should alway put life into vs 1. Pet. 1.3 4. and we haue a secure estate in the mean time For to liue is Christ and to die is gaine and whether we liue or die we are Christs Rom. 14.8 Phil. 1.21 Vse The vse should bee therefore for instruction Wee should stir vp our selues and striue after this liuelinesse and that for the two reasons imported in this text to omit the rest For without a ready hart wee shall make no riddance in matter of sanctification and holy life and besides wee shall extract but a small deale of influence from Christ. For it is heere required that wee should bee liuely when wee come vnto him Now this liuelinesse we should shew First by contentation in our estate Secondly by patience and cheerefulnes in afflictions Rom. 5.2 3. Thirdly in the performance of holy duties with power and life Thus wee should bee liuely in praier such as will bestir themselues and take no deniall as Philip. 4.5 6. Quest. Now if any ask What is good to quicken vs against the deadnes of our hearts Ans. I answer First faith and assurance makes a mans heart aliue wee liue by faith Secondly wee must goe still to Christ who is the life and by praier still draw the water of life out of his wells of saluation Thirdly the word of God is liuely Heb. 4.12 Fourthly godly society and a profitable fellowship in the Gospel puts life into men there is a great deale of prouocation to good works in it Fiftly We should often meditate of the gaine of godlines and of the priuiledges of the promises belonging to the godly Vse This doctrine implies a great deale of reproofe also First to Hypocrites that haue a name that they liue but they are dead Reuel 3.1 Secondly to declining Christians that suffer their first loue to abate in them and can be contented to lose sensibly the power of affections which formerly they had Thirdly to many drooping Christians which out of melancholy and vnbeliefe affect a kind of wilfull sadnes and hartlesnes hindring therby their own assurance and causing the easie yoak of Christ to bee ill thought of besides many other inconueniences Thus of the second thing Be yee built vp It may be read either in the Imparatiue mood or in the Indicatiue I think the Imparatiue answers more to the scope heere it being the drift to shew what wee must doe when wee come to Christ. The third thing then wee must doe that wee might extract vertue out of Christ for holiness of life is We must be built vp which imports two things First progression in faith and secondly repentance We must not begin onely and lay the foundation but wee must still labour to bee built vp further wee must still bee edified in our most holy faith Iude 20. verse Now that this may be attained vnto that wee may bee built vp the similitude imports diuers things First preparation A man that will goe about the work of godliness must think he goes about the building of a towne and therefore must cast vp his accounts for the charge of it and get his stuffe prepared before hand Secondly a constant relying vpon Christ. If wee build wee must build vpon the rock and not on the sands Mat. 7. and 16. Thirdly the warrant of all our actions out of the Word of God When Moses was to build the tabernacle he made it iust according to the patterne in all things about it c. Fourthly a respect of things necessary wee must not bee intangled with vnnecessary and doubtfull disputations The building of a Christian must be a siluer palace He must build gold siluer precious stones hee must keep his hart to choice and necessary things Cant. 8.9 1. Cor. 3. 1. Timoth. 1.4 Fiftly Counsell and Direction Men must endure the hewing and squaring 1. Kings 5.17 18. To this end are Ministers giuen Eph. 4.12 The Word is able to build vs vp Acts 20.32 and so good conference may edifie or much edifieth Ephesians 4.29 Sixtly attendance This building must haue her distractions cast out 1. Cor. 7.32 Dauid could build the Temple because of his wars and his vnrest on euery side Seuenthy Order and distinction Men must not rake together a great deal of stuffe without order confusedly This is to build Babel and not Sion Eightly
sacrifice their owne affections which resemble those sweet odors with which the Tabernacle was perfumed The outward couerings of the Tabernacle do assure safety and preseruation to the Godly and the rather because the cloud rested vpon them as is affirmed Esay 4.5 6. Besides the double couering of slain beasts may signifie that God hath two waies to prouide for the Church The red skinnes of Rammes may note Christ crucified which is that which on the inside of the Tabernacle was onely sewed The couering of Badgers skinnes may note that God will serue himself of the wicked their skins shall protect the Church If Israel want room Canaan must dy for it Now thirdly the Tabernacle was a type of euery beleeuer if we respect the end of it For the Tabernacle was erected of purpose as the place of the presence of God God's visible House such are the hearts of Christians they are prepared of purpose for the entertainment of Iesus Christ that by his Spirit he may liue and dwell therein Gal. 2.20 Col. 1.27 2. Cor. 12.9 2. Cor. 13.5 Vse The vse of all may be both for instruction and consolation For instruction and so it should teach vs diuers things First to abhor fornication seeing our bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost 1. Cor. 6.21 Secondly to keepe our selues for being vnequally yoked Because there can bee no communion betweene light and darknes the Temple of God and Idols Thirdly to looke to our harts in respect of inward sinnes and to keepe the roome cleane for the Lord to dwell in 2. Cor. 7.1 Fourthly to stir vp our selues to much praier if our hearts be the house of God let them bee a house of praier also Fiftly let vs still lift vp our harts as euerlasting dores for the Lord of Glorie to come in Psalme 24.7 For consolation Shall wee not say as Paul doth We will reioice in our infirmities that the power of Christ may dwell in vs How should wee hold vp our head against all tentations and afflictions Is not the grace of Christ sufficient for vs 2. Cor. 12.9 And shal we not be confident that through Christ we can doe all things Will he forsake the house vpon which his Name is called Will hee not perfect his owne work and repaire his owne dwelling place Was the tabernacle safe in the wildernes while the cloud was vpon it and are not our hearts safe while Christ is in them How are the abiect Gentiles honored Col. 1.27 whose hearts are so enriched by Christ that dwels in them If the outward Sanctuary were like high palaces Psal. 78.69 what is the hart of man the true tabernacle and if he established it as the earth how much more hath he established vs in his fauour and grace so that it may comfort vs in respect of honor done to our harts and against tentations and afflictions and in respect of hope of perseuerance and also in respect of increase of power and wel-doing Hee will work our works for vs. And it shewes vs also the honor cast vpon our good works they haue a noble beginning in respect of Christ and as they come from him Howsoeuer wee ought to be abased for our owne corruptions that cleaue vnto them Yea how should it wonderfully establish our hearts in all estates to think that Christ is with vs wheresoeuer we goe not only as our witnes but as our guide and our protector If God be with vs who can bee against vs. As also it is comfortable if wee consider the comparisons imported in the furniture of the outward tabernacle And thus much of the fourth thing The fift thing is Wee must bee a holy priest-hood vnto Christ which is amplified both by the labour of it To offer sacrifice and by the honor of it acceptable to God through Iesus Christ. Heere are many things to be noted The first is that Christians are priests before God and Iesus Christ This is acknowledged in other Scriptures Reuel 1.5 Exod. 19.6 The meaning is that they are like to the Leuiticall priests and that in many things First in respect of separation they are Gods portion giuen him out of all the people so are the godly all the portion God hath in the world They are said to bee the ransome of the children of Israel Numbers 8.9 Secondly in respect of consecration The oile of God is vpon the godly and as it was powred out vpon Aaron and his Sonnes The oile of grace and gladnes powred out vpon Christ our true Aaron hath run downe vpon his garments so as all his members are Christians that is anointed with him Psalme 133.2 Cor. 1.22.1 Ioh. 2. The holy Ghost is called the anointing in this respect Thirdly in respect of the substance of the ceremonies in their consecration for First as it was required in the Law that the Priests should bee without blemish Leuit. 21.17 so is it required of Christians Col. 1.22 Secondly as the Priests were washed in the great lauer of water Exod. 29.4 Leuit. 8.5.6 so must Christians be washed in the lauer of Regeneration Eph. 5.23 Titus 3.5 Thirdly as the Priests had their holy garments beautifull and goodly ones which they called their Ephods so doth the Queene the Church stand at Christs right hand in a Vesture of Ophir Psalme 45. Thus Iosuah hath change of garments mystically giuen him Zach. 3.4 Those garments are promised to such as haue had a spirit of heauinesse Isaiah 61.3 called garments of saluation verse 10. and roiall garments and like the newe wedding garments of the Bride Isaiah 62.5.7 Those garments signified either the singular glory and ioy of Christians Esaiah 61.3 or the righteousnes of Christ imputed Reuel 19. or the excellent diuine gifts and graces bestow'd vpon them Fourthly The Priest must haue blood sprinkled vpon his eare and vpon his thombe and vpon his toe to signify that our hearing practice and progresse must bee all sanctified to vs by Christ and that the maine thing Christians should expresse and attend to should be Christ crucified and that Christ by his blood hath consecrated them in all these respects so as their hearing and practice and progresse shall all bee blessed vnto them And thus of the ceremonies of their consecration Fourthly Wee should bee like the Leuiticall Priests for knowledge the Priests lips should preserue knowledge and they should seeke the Law at his mouth Malac. 2. And it is true of Christians that they are a people in whose heart is Gods law Esay 57.7 Hebr. 8. Ierem. 31. Fiftly We should be like the Priests in respect of the work they did For First It was the Priests office to carry about the Arke of the Lord when it was remoued vpon their shoulders What is the Arke to be carried but the doctrine of Christ and the Church Christians must carry about the Word of God and hold it forth in the light and life of it as lights that shine in the darke places of the
door of euery opinion and before thou let it in ask this question What shall my soule bee aduantaged by this opinion at the day of IESVS CHRIST And if it cannot answer to it directly reiect it Psal. 119.66 Dauid praies God to teach him good iudgement and knowledge Fiftly let the publique Ministery of GOD's seruants be the ordinary rule of thy interpretation so long as no sense is taught there contrary to the former rules 1. Cor. 14.36 and where thou doubtest thou must seek the law at the Priest's mouth and be very fearfull in any thing to bee wiser than thy Teacher I mean to nourish priuate opinions which are not iustified by publick doctrine Sixtly pray to God to ●each thee and to giue thee his Spirit to lead thee into all truth vnderstanding is God's gift 2. Tim. 2.7 and hee will teach thee humbly his way Psal. 25. Thus of the first rule wee must first soundly vnderstand the sense of the Scripture wee would apply Secondly thou must bring a minde apt to bee taught willing to be formed and to bee all that which God would haue thee to bee thou canst neuer profit by application without a penitent minde a minde that will part with any sin God shall discouer in thee and a minde carefull to obserue the conditions required aswell as the promise tendred Iames 1.21 This is indeed to glorifie the Word Thirdly it is an excellent help in application to follow the guiding of the holy Ghost in thy heart thou shalt finde in all doctrines a difference Some things read or heard haue a speciall taste put vpon them by Gods spirit or a special assurance of them wrought at the time of reading or hearing Now thou must be carefull to take to thee these truths which the Spirit of GOD doth cause to shine before thee Eat that which is good Esay 55.2 Try all things and keep that which is good 1. Thes. 5.20 Fourthly knowe that serious and secret meditation vpon the matter thou hearest is the principall nurse of fruitfull application it is but a flash can be had without an after deliberate meditation and about meditation remember these rules 1. Let it be secret 2. He must let it be full Giue not ouer till thou hast laid the truth vp in thy heart take heed of that common deceit Psalm 119.45 of resting in the praise or liking of the doctrine bee not a Iudge against thine owne soule For if the doctrine be worthy of such praise why darest thou let it slip and run out Let not the diuell start it out of thy heart Mat. 13.20 or the cares of life choke it Luke 11.28 3. Let it be constant Bee at the same point still from day to day till it bee soundly formed and seated in thy heart How rich might many Christians haue been if they had obserued this rule Psal. 1.2 Psalm 119.3 5. Esay 26.9 Fiftly be wise for thy self take heed of that errour of transposing thy applications say not This is a good point for such and such till thou haue tried thine owne heart whether it belong not to thee Psalm 119.59 Pro. 9.7 Sixtly by any means bee carefull of the seasons of doctrine be wise to vnderstand the season There bee many truths which if thou let passe the opportunity of informing of thy selfe thou maist perhappes neuer haue it so again and therefore take heed of losing precious things when thou hast the time and meanes to attaine them c. Thus of the first point The second thing is the speciall duty of Ministers to apply the Scriptures to the hearers that belong to their charge we see the Apostles doe it and for this purpose hath God set apart the ministery of the Word that by them it might be applied God inspired the Scriptures and the Ministers are to vrge them and whet them vpon the hearts of their hearers for their Instruction Reproofe or Consolation 2. Tim. 3.17 They are like the Priests for cutting vp or diuiding of the Sacrifices 2. Tim. 2.15 And this may serue to iustifie the course of godly and painfull ministers that most studie the sound application of their doctrine and secretly staineth the pride of these men that auoide with scorne application vainly affecting the praise of wit and learning Thirdly we may hence note that all men in the visible Church haue not a right to the comforts of the Scripture and it is the Ministers dutie to driue wicked men off from claiming anie part in the promises which are the only treasure of the Saints as here we see in these two verses the Apostle carefully doth Men must doe the workes of Iacob if they would haue the comforts of Iacob Micah 2. verse 7. A Minister must separate betimes the cleane and vncleane His word must be like a Fanne that will driue the chaffe one way and the Wheat another and though wicked men brooke not this yet God requireth this discretion at the hands of his people Gods Ministers must not dawbe with vntempered morter or giue the childrens bread to dogs or cast holy things to swine Fourthly they may hence cleerly also see that no other difference may be put between many then what faith and vnbelief obedience and disobedience make Men must not be knowne after the flesh Fiftly t is hence also apparant that all the godly haue a common right to the promises made in Christ. The godly in the Apostle Peters time had right to the former consolation as well as the godly in the Prophet Esaies time God is no respecter of persons Col. 3.11 Thus in generall Two things are to be obserued in particular The one concernes the godly who are comforted The other concernes the wicked who are terrified The Godly are comforted in these words To you therefore which beleeue he is precious In which words it is the drift of the Apostle to raise a vse for consolation out of the former Text whence consider First the persons comforted viz. you that beleeue Secondly the happinesse applied vnto them He is precious For the first It is manifest that the Apostle directs them to look for faith in their hearts if they would haue comfort in God's promises It is not enough to knowe that beleeuers shall bee saued but we must be sure that men in particular are beleeuers we must examine our selues whether we be in the faith or no 2. Cor. 13.5 Which should both reproue and direct It reprooues the great shamefull slothfulnesse of Christians that suffer the tempter to keep them without the assurance of faith some haue no faith at all and the better sort liue in too much doubtfulnes in the point of the assurance of faith And therefore we should bee warned and directed to try our faith and to make it sure that we are beleeuers Quest. What is it to be a true beleeuer Ans. It is To imbrace with our hearts the reconciliation and saluation which by Christ is purchased for vs
and by the Gospell is offred to vs. Now that this point being of such singular waight may be cleerly vnderstood I will break it open into particulars or into particular parts or steppes of iudgement and practice in the beleeuer First he must acknowledge that by nature he stands bound to obserue all the morall Law Secondly he must see that he hath broken all those holy lawes of God and is therefore guilty before God of the curses of the Law and so of eternall condemnation Thirdly he must knowe that GOD sent his owne Son in the flesh to obey the Law and satisfie the iustice of God by making an expiation for mans sins Fourthly he must learn that God hath bound himself by promise that whosoeuer imbraceth the agreements in this new couenant in Christ shall be saued Fiftly that when a man doth in his owne particular discern this gracious offer of God in the Gospell and goeth to God and with his heart relieth vpon it then he doth truely beleeue and is iustified and shall be saued Quest. But many men are perswaded that God hath giuen Christ for them and yet it is euident that they do not beleeue because there is no appearance of any repentance or reformation in them many say they haue a strong faith and yet haue none How shall the perswasion of the godly man be distinguished from this vain presumption in wicked men Ans. That perswasion of Gods grace in Christ which is true and of the nature of true faith doth prooue it self to bee right by many infallible signes First by the renouation of the heart The knowledge of God's loue in Christ doth make the heart of man new it clenseth out the old drosse and makes a man hate his secret and most secret sinnes Faith purifieth the heart Acts 15. Secondly by the ioy and comforts of the holy Ghost with which the beleeuer's hart is refreshed from the presence of God 1. Pet. 1.9 Thirdly by the victory of the world For the true beleeuer is so satisfied with God's goodnes in Christ that he can deny his profits pleasures credit friends and the like for Christ's sake and the Gospell yea faith marres the taste of earthly things and makes a man able to forsake the loue of worldly things 1. Iohn 5.5 It will endure the triall of troubles of afflictions and temptations and persecutions for the Gospels sake 1. Pet. 1.7 without making haste to vse ill means in the euill day Quest. But how may faith bee discerned in such as say they are not perswaded that they haue faith which sometimes proues to be the case of diuers deere children of God Ans. Their faith may be discerned First by repentance which cannot be separated from it the sight hatred confession and sorrow for their sinnes is an argument of true faith because without faith no man can haue true repentance Secondly by their complaining of their vnbelief and desire of faith I beleeue Lord help my vnbelief was the voice of him that had true faith Thirdly by their daily renouncing of their owne merits begging fauour of God onely for the merits of Christ. Fourthly by the loue of the Godly for faith worketh by loue Galat. 5. Fiftly by other markes and signes of Gods children which can neuer bee had but faith is had also such as are loue of God and his Word and of their enemies and vprightnes of heart and the spirit of praier and the like Precious Christ is precious to them that beleeue not onely in their account but by effect and so both because hee is great riches vnto them as also because he is an honour vnto them Hee is great riches vnto them yea vnsearchable riches Eph. 3.6 All ages ought to wonder at the riches of Gods kindnes to the beleeuers in Iesus Christ Eph. 2.7 Christ in vs is our riches Col. 1.27 and thus he inricheth vs with the fauour of God his owne merits and righteousnes the grace of the Spirit and the promises of the Word and the hope of glory The Vses are many Vses First woe to the rich men of this world that are not rich in God Christ Luke 12.16.21 Let not the rich man glory in his riches Ierem. 9. 24. Secondly let the brother of lowe degree reioyce in that God hath thus exalted him Iames 1.9 For godly Christians are the richest men in the world for their possessions are greatest because they possesse Iesus Christ and his treasures Iames 2.5 For God is rich to al that cal vpon him Hee cannot bee a poore man that can pray Rom. 10.12 Christ makes amends to the poore Christian for all his wants Thirdly hence wee may gather another signe to try our faith by If Christ bee more precious to vs then all the world besides it is certaine we are true beleeuers For Christ is precious to none but beleeuers Phil. 3.9 8. Fourthly wee should striue with all thankfulnes to admire and praise the grace of God that hath bestowed such riches vpon vs in Christ Ephes. 1.7 Fiftly wee should hence learne to make more account of our faith which is therefore precious because it applies Christ vnto vs Hence poore Christians are said to bee rich because they haue faith and assurance of faith and hee calleth it all riches of full assurance Colos. 2.2 2. Pet. 1.4 Iam. 2.5 Sixtly we should liue securelesse Men would promise to liue at all hearts ease if they were rich enough why Christians are exceeding rich and possesse more treasure then all the world besides and therefore should liue henceforth by the faith of the Sonne of God which was giuen to them Gal. 2.20 Seuenthly looke to it that thou keepe Christ whatsoeuer thou losest resolue to lose father mother wife children friends house lands yea and life too rather then lose Christ who is so precious Eightly Wee should shew it that we account him our greatest riches and that wee shall doe first by esteeming the Gospell that brings vs daily tidings aboue gold and siluer Secondly by often receiuing of the Sacraments we should account the Word and Sacraments as Gods Exchequer whither we alwaies come to receiue more treasure Thirdly by making much of them that resemble his vertues Fourthly by longing for his appearing Thus as Christ is our riches Now secondly hee is precious in that hee is an honour vnto vs and so some translate it Christ then is a singular honor to euery beleeuer and hee is so both in heauen and in earth First in heauen hee is an honour to vs because he graceth vs before God and the Angels couering our nakednes with the rich garment of his owne imputed righteousnes and making daily intercession for vs to God and couering our imperfections and presenting our workes and praiers to God and giuing the Angels a charge to looke carefully to vs. Secondly And so hee is an honour to vs on earth both amongst the godly and amongst the wicked First Hee graceth vs amongst the
their horrible fall Which should teach vs to learn of God to doo likewise towards all our enemies and withall it may much comfort vs. If God will do thus with his enemies what will he do with his owne children and seruants how will hee honour and reward them and if the notorious oppositions of the Pharises cannot hinder God's acknowledging of that little goodnes was in them how much lesse shall the meer frailties of the Godly that will doo nothing against the truth though they cannot doo for the truth what they would hinder the glorious recompense of reward and acceptation with God! Thirdly we may hence note that Christ and Religion and the sincerity of the Gospell may bee disallowed opposed by great learned men by such as are of great mark in the Church euen by such as were Gouerners of the Church in name and title Quest. 1. Two questions do easily rise in mens mindes vpon the hearing of this doctrine The first is Whence it should bee that learned men who haue more means to vnderstand the truth than other men and by their calling more especially tied to the study of all truth yet should be drawne to oppose or reiect Christ and the truth Ans. I answer that this may come to passe diuersly First sometimes it is because of their ignorance neither may this seem strange that they should be ignorant for though they may be very learned in some parts of study yet they may be very blockish in some other Besides the naturall heart of man doth not take any great delight in the study of the Scriptures and therefore the answer of Christ was proper Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures or the power of God Secondly in some it is because of their secret Atheisme Many learned men bee very Atheists in heart and such were some of the Pharises for they neither knew the Father nor Christ as he chargeth them Thirdly some haue a spirit of slumber they haue eies and yet cannot see as in the case of some of those Pharises they could not apply the very things themselues spoke For being asked about the King of the Iewes Matth. 2. they could answer directly out of the Scriptures and giue such signes of the Messias as did euidently agree to Iesus Christ and yet these men were so infatuated that when God shewes them the man to whom their owne signes agree they cannot allow of him Fourthly in some it is enuy They are so fretted at the credit and fame of Christ or such as sincerely preach Christ that for very enuy they striue to destroy the work of God and to disparage the progresse of the Kingdome of Christ they cannot endure to see all the world as they account it to follow Christ. Fiftly in others it is ambition and desire of preeminence and the quiet vsurpation of the dignities of the Church that they alone might raign and be had in request this no doubt moued the Pharises and was the cause why Diotrephes made such a stir in the Church Sixtly in others it is couetousnes and desire of gain These are they that account gain to be godliness as the Apostle speaks and such were some of the Pharises Luke 16.14 Seuenthly in others it is a wilfull and malitious hatred of the truth and such was it in those Pharises that were guilty of the sin against the holy Ghost Quest. 2. But how shall a simple ignorant man stay his heart and bee settled in the truth when the wise and learned men of the world oppose it how can he tell it is the truth which they reiect who haue more learning and wit than hee Ans. I answer A simple and single-hearted Christian may some-what be helped against the testimony of those wise men of the world if hee mark but their liues for vsually by their fruits they may bee knowne Mat. 7. For commonly such as oppose Christ and the Gospell or the sincerity of the Gospell are men that may be apparantly detected of profanenesse as our Sauiour Christ shewes by diuerse instances in the Pharises Mat. 23. But because sometimes the messengers of Satan can transforme themselues into Angels of light therefore I answer secondly that all the Godly haue the sure Word of the Prophets and Apostles which may bee the touch-stone to try the opinions of men by which in the points absolutely necessary to saluation is euident and plain and infallible to the Law and to the Testimonies if they speak not according to these it is because there is no light in them Esay 8.20 And that they may bee sure let them pray to God to teach them for hee hath promised to teach the humble his way if a man come to God with an humble minde and with desire of reformation of his life in that hee knowes God hath bound himself to shew him his will Psal. 25.9 Iohn 7.17 Besides euery childe of God hath the Spirit of God in his heart who knoweth the things of God which indited the Scriptures and is the onely supreme Iudge of all controuersies Hee that beleeueth hath a witnes in himself the Spirit working much assurance in his heart and anointing him with ey-salue and leading him into all truth And by this help the entrance into the Scriptures giues light to the simple Vse The vse of the point then is First to informe vs concerning that great Iustice of God in hiding his truth from the wise and reuealing it to babes and children or infants which our Sauiour and Saint Paul take notice of Secondly to confirme vs against the sinister iudgement of worldly-wise and learned men and in matter of religion not to be swaied by that inducement since it is thus plainly told foretold Thirdly to confute the Papists that plead vnto the ignorant that their religiō is the right because it is hath bin maintained by such a number of Popes Cardinals which haue excelled in learning greatnes of place for heer we see the builders reiect the head stone of the corner Fourthly to shew vs that whatsoeuer wicked wise great men pretend yet their quarrell is against Christ and his Kingdome Fiftly to reach vs therefore to pray for our teachers and gouernors that God would guide them by his good Spirit and assist them in their callings c. Sixtly to bee more thankefull to God when the Lord giues vs builders not in name onely but in deed that settle about Gods work with all their hearts and labour with all faithfulnes to promote the Kingdome of Christ. Hitherto of the Persons The cause of their punishment is their refusing of Christ. Refused They refused Christ they disallowed him as vnfit for the support of the building They cast him away as rubbish they reiected him or accounted him as a reprobate Christ is refused or disallowed many waies First when the Gospel of Christ is contemned or neglected that is when men neglect or contemne the doctrine of saluation by
men or wicked men Godly Christians that are weak may be offended or hindred in Religion diuers waies as either by reason of the persecution and oppression of the godly or by the Heresies or dissensions of men in the Church or by the flourishing estate and prosperity of the wicked as also by the liberty some of the godly take in things indifferent for the aduancing of the Gospel in case of necessity As when Paul for the gaining of the Gentiles neglected Moses Law This was an offence to many beleeuing Iewes et contra c. Wicked men also take offence as heere in this text is manifest Now the offence which they call Diabolicall is that when men wilfully and peruersly will prouoke themselues to sin freely because of the examples of the vices of Godly men as when the drunkennes of Noah the incest of Lot the adultery and murther of Dauid the periury of Peter or the like is alledged to maintaine themselues in a liberty of sinning It is the scandall of wicked men which is here meant Now wicked men make themselues miserable in this case of scandal both waies By giuing offence and by taking offence By giuing offence and so Christ curseth them for offending his little ones Wicked men offend them either by the subtilty of false and corrupt Doctrine or by prouocation and inticement or by euill example or by discouraging them with reproches threats or oppositions or the like but this kind of offence is not meant here It is offence takē which is noted heer as a greeuous curse vpon them and amongst offences takē this is their misery that they gather offence from what should haue bin the cause of their holines and happines euen from Christ. Quest. Might some one say What should men bee offended at in Christ The Iews were offended 1. At the vilenesse of his person or his mean cōditiō 2. At the pouerty and simplicity of his disciples 3. At the obscurity of his Kingdome being without worldly pompe and glory 4. At his conuersation because he kept cōpany with sinners 5. At his doctrine partly because he reproued their superstition and hypocrisie and the traditions of their fathers and partly because hee taught that Iustification could not bee had by Moses Law but must bee sought by beleeuing in him as also by other particular directions as that man must eat of his flesh that he was the Sonne of God that hee was older then Abraham c. Lastly at his miracles for they thought hee did it by some Diuell Thus in our times the Papists they take offence at the newnes of our Religion as they pretend at the freeness of the people that profess it at the doctrine of Iustification by faith alone c. Thus also wicked men in the Church are offended at the smal number of such as are sincere at the plainnesse of the preaching of the Gospell or such like Quest. 2 Might some one say What if wicked men be offended is that such a great misery Ans. Yes for it is many times the occasion of their ruine for wee see many men keepe these obiections in their hearts till their death by which they are hardned from all care of saluation by Christ at the best it is a notable hindrance for the time it frustrates them of the Gospel and of the communion of Saints c. Vse The vse may bee first for information We may hence see what an infectious sorceresse vnbeleefe is It can make things exceeding good to proue exceeding euill to them it can make God the Word the Sacraments Christ himselfe all good to be occasions of extreme euill to him Wicked men are like spiders that can suck poison out of the sweetest flowers Secondly this should serue for great humiliation vnto all wicked men that find themselues stopped or hindred or cast out of the way by receiuing scandall into their hearts They should heere take notice of it that it is a singular curse of God when God leaues a man to the liberty of admitting poisonfull obiections and thereby to bee hardned against the care for his owne soule in matters of Religion Men little thinke of the fearefulnes of such mens cases which must needes be extremely euill either if they looke vpward to see that God doth expose them to this offence as a way of singular punishment or if they look to the effect whatsoeuer they can say yet their poore soules in the meane time are left destitute of mercy or the profit and power of it Might some one say How can they help it seeing Christ is a stone of stumbling vnto them It seemes they cannot auoid it Christ is a stone of stumbling not actiuely but passiuely hee doth not make them stumble but they through their ignorance walking in darknes or through their precipitation running headlong in things or through the poison of some beloued sinne which hath altogether corrupted their taste doe fall at the Doctrine of Christ or turne the precious things of Christ into poison by reason of the venome lying in themselues Thirdly such taking offence is a iudgement Weake Christians should bee warned and temper themselues so as to refraine that weaknes of being so apt to bee offended at the liberty of strong Christians and to this end they should take heed of doubtfull disputations or ensnaring themselues about the vse of indifferent things For though God pities them yet they are much plagued by their opinions and intanglements heerein For first they sinne against their brethren by rash censure and despising them and secondly they wrong their owne soules for sometimes they are hindred in the Word and sometimes lose the benefit of the Sacraments by their ignorant scruples and sometimes they draw much trouble and molestation vpon them and lastly they many times open the mouthes of wicked men to reuile them and exasperate them against the good way of God To conclude therefore this vse Since offence is the rod of the wicked let not godly men suffer it to rest on their lot Fourthly since wicked men by the iudgement of God and their owne frowardnes are so apt to receiue offence it should teach the godly to order themselues so towards them that they giue no offence vnto them I say giue no offence so as the fault should bee in the godly but rather they should striue to ouercome this frowardnes of wicked men by all possible care both to put them to silence and by keeping them silent Now because there be some things wherein regard must not be had of the offence of wicked men I will open this point distinctly and shew First in what things the offence of wicked men is not to bee regarded Secondly in what things wee must take heed wee giue them not offence or in what things wee may bee guilty of giuing offence to them Thirdly what rules may bee obserued in our cariage which may silence wicked men or compell respect and
9. Christ despised the shame Heb. 12. And the rather should wee bee formed vnto patience in all tribulations because wee are first sinfull creatures and haue deserued our crosses so did not Christ in his owne person secondly wee suffer not such extreme things as Christ did thirdly wee haue reason to be silent in the euill day because wee haue not such wisdome to speake as Christ had The seuenth vertue eminent in Christ was his compassion to his enemies which hee shewed diuers waies as First by praying for them on the crosse when hee suffered the extremest things from them Father forgiue them they know not what they doe Secondly by restraining reuiling reuenge hee rendred not euill for euill hee reuiled not againe 1. Pet. 2.24 Rom. 15.3 He would not send fire from heauen vpon them Luke 9.55 Thirdly by doing them all the good hee might Hee instructed them with patience He was the good Samaritane that healed their wound and was at cost with them Fourthly by receiuing them with gladnes when they repented as hee did the thiefe on the crosse Fiftly by mourning for the hardnes of their hearts and impenitency thus hee weepes ouer Ierusalem All this is required of vs wee should pray for them that curse vs Math. 5. We must not render reuiling for reuiling 1. Pet. 3.9 and 2.24 wee should mourne for them in their miseries so did Dauid Psal. 35.13 14. and wee should ouercome their euill with goodnes as Rom. 12.19 20. The eightth vertue in Christ was harmelesnes and inoffensiuenes and we are exhorted to vnrebukeablenes and to liue without offence because wee are the sonnes of God Phil. 2.15 and Christ requires in vs the innocency of doues and for the same reason cōpares the godly to sheep Where I say we should liue without offence I meane without giuing offence For Christ himselfe that most innocent Lambe of God was rebuked and reproched and reuiled and so may the most godly Christians It is a blessed thing to bee reuiled for following goodnes and for the Gospels sake The last vertue which I recken in Christ was his loue to the godly which wee are required to imitate Ephes. 5.7 8. 1. Ioh. 3. Now there are diuers things wee should learne of Christ in our loue to the godly First to loue them with a preuenting loue For Christ loued vs first Secondly to loue them though they bee our inferiors so did Christ loue vs. Thirdly to loue them not withstanding their infirmities Christ loued the Church though shee bee black Cantic 1. and full of spots and wrinkles Eph. 5. Fourthly to loue them feruently Nothing should be too dear to part with for them Christ shed his blood for our sakes Eph. 5.2 1. Ioh. 3. And withall wee should shew the feruency of our loue by defending them as Christ did his Disciples and by Sympathy in all distresses and temptations as Christ hath a feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4.15 so wee should bee like affectioned one to another Rom. 12.15 And thus much of the first point The second thing hence to be noted is that it is not enough to haue the vertues of Christ but wee must shew forth the vertues of Christ Now wee shewe foorth the vertues of Christ diuers waies First By obseruing certaine publike solemnities as by the vse of the Sacraments For therein we not onely remember the praises of Christ till hee come againe but also wee enter into bond with God for the imitation of the holines which was in Christ. Secondly by Martyrdome when wee can resolue to suffer the extremest things rather then forsake our innocency This makes men acknowledge the vertue of Christ in vs. Thirdly by the power of practice in our conuersation and so to shew them foorth is 1. To practise them to the life To make a cleer impression of them in our works The word heere rendred to shew foorth signifieth to preach and so it may note that we should practise those vertues so cleerely that our liues might bee as so many Sermons vpon the life of Christ. 2. To practise them so as others may obserue them and so it importes that vpon all occasions in our conuersations which are before other men wee should be sure not to bee wanting in those vertues when wee are prouoked to the contrary vices Quest. But may wee doe things for the show Is not that Hypocrisy and vainglory forbidden vnto Christians Ans. There are some vertues wee can neuer offend that waies by shewing them as wee can neuer shew too much wisdome we may be vain-glorious in too much shew of our knowledge We may offend in bringing our zeale too much to the shew but we can neuer shew to much true patience or meeknesse or moderation of mind wee may offend in making shew of diuers duties of piety in the first table as almes praier fasting Math. 6. But those vertues heere mentioned may on all occasions bee lawfully held out to the best shew But that I may expresse my selfe more distinctly outward shews are then condemned as sinfull viz. First when sinfull things are shewed as carnall passions and railing in stead of true zeale Secondly when secret duties are done openly and for shew as when priuate prayer and fasting is so performed as that others may manifestly obserue them Mat. 6. Thirdly when outward shewes are purposely affected affection and hunting after applause is condemned Fourthly when care in lesser things is shewed and the care of greater things is manifestly neglected this hath grieuous irritation in it and is Pharisaicall Math. 23. Fiftly when the things shewed are done deceitfully such was the practice of Ananias and Saphirah Acts 5. Sixtly when men multiply the vse of the meanes of holines but neglect the practice of it Esay 1. Mic. 6. Seuenthly when wee shew our gifts of purpose to the contempt and disgrace of others Rom. 12.16 Iam. 3.10 1. Cor. 8.3 The vse briefly may be First for humiliation and so first vnto vngodly men in the Church that professe the seruice of Christ and claime the priuiledges of Christians and yet in stead of shewing foorth the vertue of Christ shew foorth the wickednes of the Diuel by their lewd conuersation causing the name of God to bee blasphemed by Papists and Atheists and all sorts of Hereticks and Sectaries by their whoredomes swearing malice drunkennesse and the lusts of their father the diuell and those of all sorts These are they that carry Christ about in scorn to be derided of the enemies of the truth for when with their words they professe Christ by their works they deny him themselues and cause him to bee denied by others Were there not a remnant that bear the Image of Christ in sincerity who would euer imbrace a religion that were professed by men of such wicked conuersation Secondly it should exceedingly humble scandalous Professers that would haue the world think better of them than of the former sort
hath done as great a work vpon our hearts as he did when he commanded the light to shine out of darknes in the beginning of the world Thirdly if we consider what glorious things are reuealed vnto vs for by the gospell hee hath caused to shine in our hearts the knowledge of the glory of God c. Finally it is the more comfortable in that the Apostle cals this light maruellous light which is now in the next place to be opened Maruellous light The spirituall light which shines in the harts of the godly by the Gospel is a maruellous light either because it is such as the Godly do maruell at or because it is such as they ought to maruell and wonder at When men first enter into the truth that is when they are first conuerted Christians beeing for the most part full of affections as they that haue scaped lately singular danger and as they that neuer before saw the Kings Court they are frequently stirred vp with admiration at the glory of the Gospell they wonder at and are vehemently affected with the new discouery of the riches of Christ shewed them in the preaching of the Gospell and thus it is a maruellous light in this sense Esay 30.26 But I rather consider of it in the other sense It is a maruellous light though wee should not haue the heart to bee so affected toward it it is maruellous I say First because it is a light that needed the Mediator to procure it none but Christ can giue vs this light Other light is free wee pay nothing for it but this is carried in the hand of the Mediator to vs and for vs Esay 42. and 49. Secondly because it commeth after so long a night of ignorance and sin they must needs account the light precious that haue not seen it a long time as blind men when they receiue sight Thirdly and more because it is a light commanded to shine out of darknes 2. Cor. 4.6 That God should call light out of such darknes as was in our hearts is maruellous Fourthly in comparison with the times of the Law and the shadows of the old Testament Fiftly because it is a light comes not from any creature but from God the Creator God is our light Esay 6.19 And in this respect this light is like the light that shone about Paul Acts 22.6 Sixtly because it is a light that shines at the time of the euening of this world That the Sun should shine in the day time is no wonder but that it should shine in the night or at euening were a dreadfull wonder euen so it is in this last age of the world Zach. 14.7 Seuenthly because it is a knowledge aboue the reach of reason it is the light of faith Eightthly because it shines onely to the godly It is light in Goshen when there is no light in Aegypt that was maruellous and so is it when we see the light shining all abroad and many men sit in darknes euen in the same place in the same congregation city or family When the Godly see cleerly the Wicked discerne nothing light is with-held from the Wicked Ninthly because it hath more force than any other light for it is the light of life it quickens the soule and enlyues it Iohn 8.12 Lastly because it is an euerlasting light it is such a day as no night followeth it The consideration of all this should work diuers things in vs. For if in all these senses it bee a maruelous light then First we should be maruelously affected with it and striue to be exceeding thankful for it How haue we deserued to be cast againe into darknes for our extreme vnthankfulnes How haue wee giuen God cause to take away the Candlestick from vs Let vs therefore striue after thankfulnes and admiration and if the Lord doe work it in vs let vs take heed we lose not our first loue Secondly wee should arme our selues for the defence of the light we should preserue it as a singular treasure both in our hearts and in our Churches we should with the more resolution resist the works of darknes standing alwaies vpon our guard Rom. 13.12 Thirdly we should striue after all the degrees of the assurance of faith Fourthly we should striue to make our light shine the more excellently both for the measure of good works Malac. 5.16 and for the strict precise respect of the exact doing of good duties Now we haue the light so cleerely shining wee may doe euery thing the more exactly then if it were dark Ephes. 5.15 Our gifts must not bee hid The light must not be put vnder a bushell Math. 5.15 Phil. 2.15 We should now auoid not onely greater faul●s and falles but lesser stumblings 1 Ioh. 2.10.11 We should doe all things to the life and power of them and shew discretion aswell as knowledge This doctrine also doth imply the grieuous misery of wicked men for if it bee maruelous light into which the godly are called there is a maruelous darknes in which wicked men liue The whole creation of God had been but a confused heape if God had not set in it the light of the Sun such a confused Chaos is the world of men if the Gospell shine not into their hearts Finally this should much comfort the godly they are called into maruelous light in all the sences before named which should much inflame their hearts and they should rebuke their owne hearts for not valuing so rich treasure Wee may from hence take occasion to note how little wee should trust to the iudgement of flesh and bloud in valuing spirituall things when the very godly themselues doe not so much esteeme of them as they should Whatsoeuer we think yet in Gods account the light of the Gospel the light of faith and knowledge the light of Gods countenance c. is maruelous light But if the light of the godly bee maruelous in this world what shall it be in the world to com when God the Lamb shall be their immediate light Heere God lights vs by the meanes there God himself will be our euerlasting light Heere our light may be darkned with clouds of affliction and temptation there shall bee an eternall light without all darknes Heere we haue no light but what is infused into vs there we shall our selues shine as the Sunne i● the firmament Hitherto of the description in Tropicall tearms Now it followeth in plaine words Verse 10. Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which in times past were not vnder mercy but now haue obtained mercy THe Apostle takes the words of this verse out of the Prophet Hosea chapter 1.11 where the Lord promiseth that the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea and in the place where it was said vnto them Ye are not my people it shall bee said vnto them Ye are my people Now the Apostle
prouided for that God preserues them yea and himselfe finds them out means of singular refreshing all their dayes Eightthly He crownes them with blessings Psal. 103.4 Ninthly hee giues them assurance of an immortall inheritance 1. Pet. 1.3 4. The consideration of this maruellous mercy which the godly haue obtained may teach vs diuers things First with all thankefulnesse to acknowledge the mercy of God wee should alwaies mention the louing kindnesse of God in all the experiences we haue of the truth of his mercies toward vs Esay 63 7. We should frame our selues to an easy discourse of the glory of God's Kingdome and talke of his power Psalme 145.8 9 10. Wee should be so perswaded of this truth as freely to say that we know that the Lord is gracious and very mercifull Psalme 116.5 It is a great sinne Not to remember the multitudes of God's mercies Psal. 106.7 Oh! that men would therefore indeede prayse the Lord for his goodnesse c. Psalme 107. foure times repeated in that Psalme Christians should glory in it not in their riches strength wisedome c. but in this that they know God that exerciseth mercy Ier. 9.24 Secondly in all our waies heartily to disclaim merits of works or opinion of our worthinesse or deserts say still with the Prophet in the Psalme Not vnto vs not vnto vs Lord but to thy Name giue the glory for thy mercy and truths sake Psal. 115.1 The whole frame of our saluation depends vpon God's Grace not on works Ephes. 2. Tit. 3.5 Thirdly let vs with Dauid resolue to dwell in the house of the Lord for euer since our happinesse lieth in mercy and since we haue the tidings of mercy in God's house there the fountain of this grace is daily opened vnto vs and we may draw water still with ioy out of this well of saluation in the Gospell Psal. 5.7 23. vlt. Fourthly we should learne of God to be mercifull Let vs striue to comfort others with shewing them mercy as we haue receiued mercy from the Lord. Oh let vs bee mercifull as our heauenly Father is mercifull Luke 6. Fiftly we should hence be incouraged and resolued since we know our priuiledges to goe boldly vnto the throne of Grace vpon all occasions to seeke mercy to helpe in the time of neede We haue obtained mercy of the Lord and therefore may and ought to make vse of our priuiledge Heb. 4.16 Secondly this doctrine of God's mercy may serue for singular comfort to the godly and that both in the case of sinne and in the case of afflictions 1. Against the disquietnesse of the heart for sinne it should much refresh them to remember that they haue obtained mercy yea though innumerable euils haue compassed them about Psal. 40.11 12. and though our offences are exceeding grieuous Psal. 51.1 Exod. 34.6 7. 2. Secondly in the case of afflictions many things should hence comfort vs. 1. That howsoeuer it goe with our bodies yet God hath mercy on our soules 2. That it is mercy that our afflictions are not worse that wee are not consumed Lamentations 7.22 3. That in the worst afflictions God doth many waies shew mercy his mercies are new euery morning Lament 3.23 4. That though God cause griefe yet hee will haue compassion to regard vs according to our strength hee will deale with vs in measure Lament 3.32 Esay 27.7 5. That hee doth not afflict willingly Lament 3.33 6. That all shall worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Deut. 8.16 7. God will giue a good end Iam. 5.11 Hee will lift vp from the gates of death Psal. 9.13 God will giue thee rest from thy sorrowes and feares and hard vsage Esay 14.1 3. Psal. 57.3 He will send from heauen to saue thee 8. Hee will afflict but for a moment Esay 54.7 But in both these cases wee must remember First to seeke mercy of God Ezech. 36.32 Secondly if wee bee not presently answered our eies must looke vp to God and wee must waite for his mercies Psal. 123.3 4. Thirdly wee must check our selues for the doubtfulnes of our hearts as Dauid doth Psal. 4.7 8. and 77.10 Fourthly because we liue too much by sence we must beseech God not onely to be mercifull but to let his mercy be shewed and come to vs Psal. 85.8 and 116.77 Fiftly wee should also beseech God not onely to let vs feele his mercies but to satisfie vs also earely with his mercies Psalme 90. verse 14. Sixtly wee must looke to it that wee walk in our integritie Psalme 26.11 and liue by rule Gal. 6.16 Lastly howsoeuer wee must trust in God and looke to it that wee rest vpon the Lord Psal. 32.10 and 33.18 22. For God takes pleasure in those which hope in his mercy Psal. 147.11 Quest. But how may a man that is not yet comforted with Gods mercy take a sound course to obtaine mercie Ans. That men may obtaine mercie First they must take vnto themselues words and confess their sins to God and hartily bewaile their offences Ioel 2.13 Hosh. 14.3 Secondly they must turne from and forsake their euill waies and their vnrighteousnes inward and outward Esay 55.7 Thirdly they must bee carefull to seeke the Lord while hee may bee found Esay 55.6 Fourthly they must bee mercifull and loue mercie For then they shall obtaine mercie Math. 5.6 Fiftly they must learne the way of Gods people and learne them diligently Ierem. 12.15 16. They must haue pure hands and a cleane heart and not lift vp their soules to vanity Psal. 4.5 Sixtly they must hate the euill and loue the good Amos 5.5 Seuenthly they must cry vnto God daily Psal. 86.3 Eightthly there must nought of the cursed thing cleane vnto their hands Deuteronomie 13. verse 17. Ninthly when the Lord saith Seeke yee my face their hearts must say Thy face O Lord will wee seek Psal. 27.7 8. Verses 11.12 Dearly beloued I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule And haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which speak euill of you as of euill doers may by your good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation THese words contain the epilogue or conclusion of the whole exhortation as it concerns Christians in generall from verse 13 of the former chapter hitherto and it hath in it matter both of dehortation and of exhortation as answering in the substance to all that hee hath hitherto intreated of by way of vse The dehortation is in verse 11 the exhortation in verse 12 in the one shewing what they should auoid in the other what they should doo They should auoid fleshly lusts and that they should doo is to liue honestly In generall we may note that it is the proper effect of all sorts of doctrine in scripture to make an impression of care in our hearts about the reformation of our liues that it is in vaine heard which doth not
some way breed in vs a hatred of vice and a loue of honesty this is the vse of all Scripture 1. Tim. 3.16 17. Which may serue for triall of such as come to the Word they may knowe whether they be good or euill hearers by the impression made vpon their hearts by the Word And it may serue for information to shew vs the excellency of the Word aboue all other Writings because there is no line in Scripture but some way it tends to the redresse of our natures from sin and to plant holinesse in vs which can be true of no human Writings And withall it shewes the happy estate of the godly who though they haue many diseases in their natures yet they haue wonderfull store and variety of medicines in God's Word to heal their natures If for the diseases of our bodies there bee but one herb in the whole field that is good for cure we haue reason to think that God hath prouided well in nature for vs but how is his mercy glorious who in the spiritual Field of his Word hath made to growe as many herbs for cure of all our diseases as there be sentences in Scripture And lastly it should teach vs to vse the Scriptures to this end to redresse our waies by them And thus in generall The first part of the epilogue hath in it matter of dehortation where obserne First the parties dehorted who are described by an epithet importing their priuiledge aboue other men viz. Dearly beloued Secondly the manner of propounding the dehortation viz. by way of beseeching I beseech you Thirdly the matter from which hee dehorts viz. fleshly lusts Fourthly the manner how they are to bee auoided viz. abstain from them Fiftly the motiues First Yee are strangers and pilgrims secondly these lusts are fleshly thirdly they fight against the soule Dearly beloued This tearme is not vsed complementally or carelesly but with great affection in the Apostle and with speciall choice and fitnes for the matter intreated of which we may obserue in the most places where this louely epithet is giuen to the godly in other Scriptures GOD is exceeding choice of his words hee neuer mentioneth the tea●ms of loue but hee brings to his children the affections of loue as I may so say Men through custome vse faire complement of words when their hearts be not moued but let our loue bee without dissimulation But let that go The point heer to bee plainly obserued is that Christians are beloued of all other people they are most loued I will but briefly explicate this First GOD loues them and that with infinite and euerlasting loue and hath manifested it by sending his owne Son to be a propitiation for their sinnes 1. Iohn 4.9 10. Secondly Christ loueth them which hee shewed by giuing his life for them Thirdly the Angels of heauen loue them which they shew by ioying in their conuersion and by their carefull attendance about them Fourthly the Godly in generall loue them There is no godly man that knowes them but loues them for euery one that loues God that begot them loues euery one that is begotten of God euery one I say that he knowes 1. Iohn 5.1 Lastly the godly Teachers loue them which they shew in that they are not onely willing to impart to them the Gospell but euen their owne soules because their people are dear vnto them 1. Thes. 2.8 Now this loue of God of Christ of the Angels of the godly men Ministers should serue to support vs against the contempt and hatred of the world wee haue a loue that is much better than the loue of worldly men can be to vs. First because it is of better persons and secondly because it is of a better kinde for it is more feruent and it is more pure and more constant Worldly men can shew no loue that hath comparison to the loue of God or Christ or any of those for the feruency of it And if worldly men loue vs it is to draw vs vnto one euill or other and besides it will not last for wicked men will agree with themselues no longer than so many Curres will agree they are alwaies contending hatefull and hating one another Secondly this point should much check the vnbeliefe of Christians and their vnthankfulnesse for many times they are affected as if they were not beloued of any whereby they much dishonour the loue of God and of Christ and of Christians towards them also and thereby they flatly contradict the Text which saith They are beloued Thirdly impenitent sinners should bee moued heerby to become true Christians because till then they are monstrous hatefull creatures GOD loaths them and their works Iohn 3.36 Esay 1.11 c. And such vile persons are vile and odious in the e●es of the godly Psalm 24.4 Psalm 15. Fourthly Christians should labour to preserue this loue vnto themselues with increase of the comfort of it and so diuers things would much aduantage them in this loue as 1. Faith To liue by faith commends them wonderfully to God's loue as being the condition mentioned when he sent his Sonne into the world Iohn 3.16 For without it it is impossible to please God 2. Humility would much commend them to the loue of the Angels who reioyce more in one sinner that is penitent than in 99 iust men that need no repentance 3 The fruits of wisdome mentioned Iam. 3.17 haue a maruellous force to win loue among men To be pure in respect of sincere Religion to be gentle and peaceable free from passion and contention to be easie to be intreated to be also full of mercy good works and all this without iudging or hypocrisie to bee no censurers nor counterfets oh this is exceeding amiable if these things were carefully expressed 4. And for their Ministers two things would much increase their loue to them First obedience to their doctrine for this will preuail more than all the bounty in the world 1. Thes. 2.13 Heb. 13.18 Secondly to conuerse without back-biting or vncharitable iudging of them By these two the Philippians and Thessalonians were highly aduanced in the affection of the Apostle and through the want of these the Corinthians lost much in the loue of the Apostle Thus of the persons dehorted The manner of the dehortation followes I beseech ye In that the Apostle in the name of God doth beseech them diuers things are imported as First the maruellous gentlenesse and loue of God to men hee that may command threaten punish yea cast off yet is pleased to beseech men Secondly the dignitie and excellency of a cleane heart and honest life It is a thing which God by his seruants doth vehemently begge at our hands Thirdly the honor of a Christian he is spoken to as to a great Prince as the two former reasons shew him to be Fourthly a rule of direction how to carry our selues towards others in the case of reformation wee must learne of the
Apostle to expresse a Spirit of meekenesse and loue and humilitie Passion and pride worke vnspeakeable preiudice and hurt in the care of other mens faults Fiftly with what reuerentnesse and earnestnesse should we speake to God when he speakes thus to vs Thus of the manner of propounding the dehortation The matter to be auoided is lusts Abstaine from fleshly lusts By lusts are sometimes meant grosse sins and disorders which are the fruits of lust and so the sinnes mentioned chapter 4.4 of this Epistle are called lusts of the Gentiles By lust is sometimes meant corruption of nature But I thinke it is taken neither of these waies heer By lust is sometimes meant the filthy desire of the heart after bodily vncleannesse and so called the lusts of vncleannesse Col. 3.5 Rom. 1.24 But by lusts heere I take it is meant all sorts of euill desires in the heart of man and so called worldly lusts Titus 2.12 And in speciall these sorts of lusts are named in Scripture which Christians should especially auoid First the lusts of vncleannesse filthy desires Secondly the lusts of couetousnesse and worldly cares Thirdly the lusts of vainglory whether of enuie conceitednes or desire of applause Fourthly the lusts of Epicurisme Those desires after delicious or excessiue fare or vaine apparell Fiftly the lusts of malice and reuenge These and such like are the lusts which Christians must forsake The vse is diuers Vses First for information and so it may shew vs 1. That outward honesty will not serue the turne It is not inough to be free from grosse sinnes what case then are ciuill honest men in 2. That in reformation it is not inough to forsake the euils wee haue no desire after but wee must leaue our owne lusts Secondly for consolation Heere is imported an excellent comfort to the godly in the case of inward and hatefull temptations When vile things come into the mind of the godly if they dislike them and doe not lust after them nor intertaine them with spirituall dalliance they may be assured that those euils shall not bee charged vpon them For before a temptation can bee a sinne it must haue somewhat of coueting in it Christ was tempted as wee are and yet he sinned not because hee liked them not but reiected them Abstaine from them The manner how they are to bee auoided is contained in this word abstaine which doth import diuers things First that without departing from iniquitie wee cannot haue comfort of our repentance To come into the company of the godly to make shew of Religion to come to Church or vse priuate meanes or barely to confesse sin or to feele terrors for sinne is not inough vnlesse wee leaue sinne Iudas Demas Cain and the wicked Israelites could doe the former yet neuer repented Secondly that the occasions of lusts will bee daily offered to vs from the world or the Diuel or our owne corrupted nature Now it is not an argument of our misery to haue them but to entertaine them Vses The vse may bee 1. For Information The true abstinence is to abstaine from sinne The other abstinence from meat or the like is but circumstantiall and not in it selfe acceptable to God Esay 58. 2. For triall Those are sound Christians indeed that abstaine from fleshly lusts Quest. But are there not lusts in godly men as well as in wicked men Ans. There may bee but with great difference for 1. The godly man may bee intangled with euill desires but the wicked man is more For he burnes in lust yeelds himself ouer to his harts lusts Hee is giuen vp to his lusts hee takes care for the lusts of the flesh to fulfill them He serues his lusts c. Rom. 13.13 and 1.24 Tit. 3.3 Eph. 2.3 2. The godly man if hee bee ouercome of his lusts for a time yet hee humbleth himselfe and iudgeth himselfe for them and grieues for them whereas the wicked boasteth himselfe of of his hearts lusts and placeth his contentment in them Psal. 10.3 3. The godly man if hee bee yet ouercome hee will break off his iniquity by repentance whereas the wicked in his lusts is like the Diuel Hee is incorrigible no ill successe or Iudgement or reproof can breake off his desire of transgression yea his lusts are called The lusts of his father the Diuel Ioh. 8.44 Thirdly all godly Christians should learne from hence to bee seriously bent to preserue themselues in the purity of Christian Religion and to keepe their hearts from these foule annoiances Quest. But what should wee doe to bee preserued from lusts Ans. First thou must auoid the occasions of lusts such as are 1. Euill company and therein euill example and euill counsell Psal. 1.1 2. Idlenes and solitarines 3. Excessiue desire after and delight in riches 1. Tim. 6.9 4. Ignorance 1. Pet. 1.14 5. Intemperance drunkennes and fulnes of bread and deliciousnes of fare and apparel 6. Hardnes of heart Ephes. 4.17 18. Secondly wee must walk in the Spirit cherishing all good motions and pure imaginations yeelding our hearts ouer to the gouernment of Gods Spirit doing all duties with the powers of our soule Gal. 1.16 Thirdly wee must crucifie them if they arise among our selues with the same mind was in Christ and resolue to suffer in the flesh by the sound practice of mortification Fourthly wee must striue after contentation 1. Tim. 6. Fiftly wee must get knowledge For as ignorance brings them in so knowledge fils the hart and dares them out Thus of the manner of auoiding them The motiues follow and the first of them is Ye are strangers and pilgrims A stranger is he that liues in a place that is not his owne Countrey or Kingdome or Nation whither by right hee belongs so Abraham was a stranger Gen. 21.23 and the Israelites in Aegypt Exod. 2.12 Now a pilgrim is he that resteth not in a place but trauelleth onward from place to place Godly men are said to bee strangers and not strangers in diuers respects It is said they are not strangers in respect of freedome to the City of God and the Common-wealth of Israel Eph. 2.29 They are strangers in respect of their absence from the heauenly Canaan which is their owne home to which they were born by regeneration In this world then all the godly are but strangers and pilgrims which may serue First for reproof euen of diuers godly men and that in diuers respects 1. For their too much minding of earthly things Why doo our hearts carry vs away after the world considering it is but an Inne to bee in for a little time 2. For their meddling with other folks businesse A stranger onely thinks of his owne affairs and doth not interpose himself in the affairs of others so should wee study to bee quiet and meddle with our owne businesses 3. For discouragement of heart vnder the sense of our owne weaknesses and wearinesse in spirituall things we must expect in such trauell
estranged from their lusts and therefore the wrath of God came vpon them Psalm 78.29 30 31. 2. Because they make vs resemble the diuell Iohn 8.44 3. Because they hinder the power of the Word from them they will neuer come to the knowledge of the truth 2. Tim. 3.6 4. Because it brings the soule in bondage so as all the conuersation of the soule is in a manner about those lusts of the flesh Eph. 2.2 5. Because they make all their praiers abominable Iam. 4. 6. Because sometimes they are scourged with a reprobate minde being giuen vp to their lusts Rom. 1. 7. Because they may drown the soule in perdition 1. Tim. 6.9 If godly men entertain these inward euils in their thoghts affections many euils wil follow 1. They hinder the Word 2. They grieue the good Spirit by which they are sealed to the day of redemption 3. They harden the heart and blinde the vnderstanding 4. They hinder good duties Gal. 5.17 5. They wound the soule 6. They make the mind foule and loathsome they defile 7. They may bring outward iudgements vpon thee or inward terrours of conscience Vse The vse may bee partly to declare the misery of such Christians as are falne away from the acknowledgement of the truth by intertaining these loathsome lusts of whose fearfull estate at large 2. Pet. 2.18 to the end Partly it should work in all the godly obedience to the Counsell of the Apostle heer in abstaining from these lusts as greeuous hurts to the soule or their soules They should put on the Lord Iesus in sincerity and neuer more take care to fulfill these lusts of the flesh Rom. 13.13 Thus of these words in the coherence The sence will bee more full if wee consider more at large two things in the words First what the soule is Secondly what this warre in the soule is Two things haue made the inquiry about the soule exceding difficult The first is the nature of the soule For it is a spirituall essence and therefore wonderfull hard to bee conceited of There bee three things cannot fully bee conceiued of or defined by man first God secondly an Angel and thirdly the soule of man Now besides this transcendency as I may call it of the soule the fall of man and custome in sinne and the remainders of corruption in the best haue made this doctrine so hard that wicked men scarce discerne that they haue a soule and godly men are very ignorant and impotent in conceiuing the condition of the soule This word soule is diuersely accepted in Scripture for it signifies sometimes The life of man as Math. 6.25 Bee not carefull for your soules what yee shall eat c. Christ because looke what the soule is to the body that is Christ to the whole man so Psalme 16.10 Thou wilt not leaue my soule in Hell that is Christ Acts 2.25 29. c. and 13.35 36. The dead bodies Leuit. 19.28 The whole man so Gene. 46.26 by a Synechdoche But heere it signifies that part of man which is called his spirit By the soule then wee vnderstand that part of man which is inuisible inuisibly placed within the body of man Now the things which are fit for vs to inquire into and know concerning the nature and excellency of the soule may be comprised briefly in this description of the soule The soule of man is a substance incorporeall inuisible and immortall created of God and vnited to the body and indued with the admirable faculties of vegetation sence and reason to this end principally that God might be of man truely acknowledged and duly worshipped Euery branch of this description containes an excellent commendation of the soule and should much affect vs with admiration of Gods workmanship and his loue to vs in making vs such excellent creatures and withall it should breede in vs the care which the Apostle heere calles for of auoyding all things that might defile our precious soules The soule is the abridgement of the inuisible world as the body is the abridgement of the visible world Man is rightly said to be a litle world God made man last and in man made an Epitome of all the former works For all things meet in man who consists of a substance partly corporeall and partly spirituall For all things which God created besides man are either such creatures as are discerned by sence being bodily or such creatures as are remoued from sence being spirituall as the Angels Now I say man may resemble both sorts of creatures the visible in his body and the inuisible in his soule Now the former description of the soule of man doth commend the soule for seuen things First that it is a substance Secondly that it is incorporeall Thirdly that it is immortall and cannot die Fourthly that it is created of God immediately Fiftly That it is ioyned to the body after a wonderfull manner Sixtly that it hath these excellent faculties Seuenthly that heereby man hath honour to know God and his works which all other creatures in this visible world want The first thing then to bee inquired after is what the soule is in respect of the being of it and this I must answer first by remoouing from the consideration of it what it is not First the soule is not the harmony or right temper of the harmonies of the body as Galen that great Physician is said to affirme which appeares euidently by these reasons 1. That then euery body in which the harmonies or foure elements are tempered should haue a soule in it and so stones should haue soules yea such as mā hath indued with reason c. And therefore simply the soule cannot be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or temperature of the elements or humours 2. It is apparant that the soule gouerns the excesses which arise from the humours of the body as a man that by temper is apt to bee angry or heated yet hath somthing within him which bridles this anger notwithstanding the heat of his body 3. If the soule were nothing else but the temperament of the humours then it were but a meer accident in that it can bee present or absent as the corruption of the body but wee see that cannot bee For remoue the soule from the body and it ceaseth to bee a liuing body 4. By Scripture it is euident that when the body was formed the soule as a thing distinct from it was infused into it by God himselfe Genesis 2.7 Secōdly the soul is not a power force or faculty infused into the body by which is is able to liue or moue or work For then remoouing the body from it it cannot subsist whereas we shall proue afterwards that the soule will subsist without the body and therefore cannot bee an accident in the body or a power onely of the body Besides the soule is the subiect of vertues and vices of sciences and arts Now no accident can be so Thirdly the soule
of the soule that ouercomes the former resolutions and wil obey and that it doth by making euil present when she should do good or by hindring and dulling of the affections of the heart or by casting in of other proiects of purpose to breed distractions in the time of dooing good duties Rom 7. 5. By lusting that is by bringing-in of contrary desires euill concupiscences longings after forbidden things and in these lusts vsually the flesh combines with the outward aduersaries of the soule the world and the diuell and kindles the fire of those inordinate desires by dalliance with the world or the diuel 's temptations And thus of the second point The third thing is a question Why GOD should suffer the soule to be thus annoyed by the flesh saying He could haue made man again in Christ as he made Adam in Paradise and so haue vtterly abolished the flesh For answer heerunto three things may be said First that we are bound with all thankfulness to praise God for that grace he hath giuen vs in Christ though it bee not full perfect and so ought not to reason with GOD why he gaue vs not more grace and the rather because wee look for a time when wee shall bee more happy in that respect than euer Adam was and besides though grace giuen vs bee imperfect in respect of degree and so lesse than Adam's was yet it is perfect in respect of continuance and so it is better than Adam's Thirdly there may be diuers reasons assigned why GOD did suffer the flesh to remain in vs after calling for a time that is while wee warre in this world for 1. It shewes the greatnes of God's power that can keep vs notwithstanding such continual danger we are in 2. By this conflict diuers graces of the Spirit are raised vp and exercised which else were of little vse as godly sorrow pouerty of spirit desire of death and faith also hath much imployment about this combate 3. By this combate all the graces of God's Spirit are proued to be right and not counterfet in the true Christians for no man can constantly beare armes against the flesh but hee is a new creature This combate then serues for the triall of the gifts and graces of Christians 4. By this combate wee are cured of the horrible disease of self-loue pride in our selues and made more to loue God and trust in him as knowing that we deserue no fauour at his hand nor can be strong in our owne might 5. It is equall we should war before we triumph that wee should fight in the battels on earth before we raign in heauen Lastly it makes heauen and grace more precious in our sight and breeds in vs a desire to bee dissolued and so warns from the loue of this present euill world In the fourth place we must consider by what means the soule may preserue it self against the treacheries and assaults of the flesh and so the means is to be vsed either before the conflict or in the conflict or after the conflict Before the conflict if wee would take a sound course to bee preserued against the danger of the flesh we must look to these things 1. We must stand vpon our guard and keep a daily watch ouer our hearts and waies and not be retchlesse to despise our owne waies or neuer take notice of our hearts hee liues dangerously that liues securely we must take a diligent view of our owne naturall dispositions to bee able to discerne distinctly what it is the flesh vsually is prone to or imployed in 2. We must bee sure to commit our selues to God and by faith lay hold vpon Iesus Christ and settle our selues in our assurance for that cuts off many of the maine aduantages of the flesh especially it quencheth all those hellish darts that arise from doubtings and despaire which is to discerne the flesh 3. Wee must quicken in vs our hope of a better life for that will shew vs so much glory to bee had in the seruice of Christ as all the motions of the flesh will seeme vaine in comparison wee are neuer allured by the lusts of the flesh but when wee haue forgotten heauen or are destitute of the liuely hope of it 4. We must bee sober in the vse of outward things 1. Pet. 1.13 and remoue from the flesh those things wee obserue the flesh to bee apt to dally withall if the flesh could be diuorced from the world there were little or no danger 5. Wee must with all readines vpon all occasions entertaine all good motions any way cast into vs by Gods Spirit for as those are set vp and nourished the flesh is subdued and kept vnder 6. Wee must daily commit our selues and our soules to God by prayer and beseech him to keepe vs and accordingly to begge strength to auoid those euils which by nature wee find our selues most prone to 2. Tim. 1.12 Now if the flesh notwithstanding doe on the sudden either prouoked by the world or entised by the deuill make assault and lust after euill things then in the conflict our armour must be 1. Contrary lustings Gal. 1.17 The Spirit must lust against the flesh by raising vp holy desires and loathing of those base affections of the flesh 2. Prayer we must crucifie them drag them before the Crosse of Christ and there accuse them shame them iudge them condemne them and begge vertue from the death of Christ to kill them 3. The Word of God For as Christ beat away the deuill by alleaging what was written so should wee get store of places of Scripture which wee might alleage to our owne hearts when wee are entised to any sinne and so the promises of the Gospell would bee as shooes to our feete that neither thorny care prick nor vaine pleasures defile vs and so those promises are because they both shew vs greater things then fleshly pleasures can bee and withall shew vs such treasure in Christ as may free vs from liuing in care Two rules are of excellent vse for this purpose 1. To silence the flesh When it assaults not to suffer it to plead much but presently resist it 2. To looke to the beginnings of any corruption not to dallie with it and giue it way vpon pretence of safety for it may strangely prouoke and beyond expectation if it bee not looked to at first After the conflict wee must remember two things 1. To giue thanks to God for the help of his presence as accounting it a singular fauour to be protected against so vile an enemy 2. To take heed of security so to consider of our present deliuerance as to looke for more conflicts In the fift place it is profitable considering what reasons Christians haue to bee carefull of themselues and attend their soules in respect of the flesh for 1. This combate is a dayly combate the warre is neuer at an end it is an aduersary that neuer takes so much as a day
of truce 2. There is no safety or help by running away for thy aduersary is seated within thee and thou canst not runne from thy selfe 3. The flesh hath might and continuall aid from the diuell and the world which almost with infinite variety of occasions ministers obstinacy to the flesh 4. For want of care many worthy Champions haue beene for the time foiled shamefully as were Noah Lot Dauid Peter and others 5. No Christian can auoyd it but hath this combate within him Gal. 5.17 And as these or the like reasons may breed care and watchfulnes so hath the true Christian no cause of despaire but rather many arguments of hope of good successe and daily victories and triumphs ouer the flesh if he be watchfull for 1. God hath prouided him of armour against those kindes of assaults and it is mighty to preserue and subdue 2. Cor. 10.3 4. 2. Christ in his power doth rest in vs for this end to assist vs in the combate as we cry for help 2. Cor. 12.10 3. We fight against an aduersary hath beene often foiled by all sorts of Godly Christians and by our selues in diuers particular combates yea against an aduersary that hath receiued a deadly wound that cannot bee cured for so the flesh the first day of our conuersion was mortified All that are Christs haue mortified the flesh with the lusts thereof 4. Wee haue assurance of victory if wee resist Rom. 8.38 5. An incorruptible Crowne is laid vp for all that ouercome 2. Tim. 4.7 8. Reu. 2. Now for the seuenth point wee obtaine victory against the flesh diuers waies as 1. In our iustification when wee by faith obtaine the pardon of our sinnes committed and a righteousnes able to couer vs notwithstanding all the spite the flesh doth vs. This is our victory in Christ Rom. 7. 2. In our sanctification and so wee get victory 1. When we conquer some sins wholly so that we neuer commit them againe 2. When we turn and subdue the power of the sin that remains so as they cannot raigne though they rebell 3. We shall haue our finall and full victory in our glorification in the day of CHRIST when the flesh shall be vtterly abolished for euer Now for the eightth point wee may knowe that wee are not at any time ouercomne by these signes if we finde them in vs. 1. If wee iudge our selues for all knowne sinnes so as there be no sin arising from the flesh but wee condemn it and keep our selues as men condemned in the flesh being grieued at the rebellion of the flesh in vs Rom. 7.1 Pet. 4.7 2. If we hold fast our assurance of faith we are safe so long as we keep the faith 2. Tim. 4.7 3. If wee goe on in our Christian way or course and doo not giue-ouer the practice of knowne duties against the light of our consciences if we finish our course 2. Tim. 4.7 Vse 1. The vse of all should be First for information and so two waies for 1. It shewes the miseries of such persons as neuer feel this combate that haue all quiet in them it is a signe the flesh and the diuell rule all and there is no sanctified Spirit to resist 2. It shewes the folly of some godly persons that are troubled as if their states were not right because they finde such a combat in themselues whereas they should rather conclude the contrary that therefore there is some workmanship of Christ in them which is so opposed by the flesh and the diuell and that it is the case of all the godly to bee assaulted with rebellious thoughts and desires and other practices of the flesh reckoned vp before Secondly for instruction and so it should teach Christians and warn them to take heed of three things viz. of security despair and fainting for all these are mischieuous We may not be secure sith we haue such an enimy within vs nor must we be too much out of hope or despair of successe for the reasons before alleaged nor yet must wee giue way so much as to fainting of spirit but pluck vp our owne hearts and with trust in God's grace resist still the risings of corruption till we get a finall victory Verse 12. And haue your conuersation honest amongst the Gentiles that they which speak euill of you as euill doers may by your good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation HItherto of the dehortation The words of this verse are an exhortation wherein consider both what hee exhorts to and by what reasons The matter hee exhorts to concernes their outward conuersation which he would haue to be honest and amiable The reasons are First because the Christians liued among Gentiles that imbraced not the true Religion Secondly because diuers of these Gentils were so spiteful against the Christians that they would take all occasions to speake euill of them Thirdly because some of them that now did speake euill of them might hereafter be conuerted to the true Religion Fourthly because if they now obserue their good works when they shall be visited of God they will much magnifie them to the great glory of God That which he then exhorts them to is the care of their conuersation which he amplifies by shewing what kinde of conuersation hee would haue it to be viz. A fayre or honest conuersation And haue your conuersation honest Diuers things may be hence obserued First that a sound Christian must shew himselfe to bee so by his conuersation a Christian must shew the power of his Religion by his works and by sound practice and that too amongst men abroad he must be knowne by his fruits Col. 1.9 10. Tit. 2.12 and therefore the Apostle beseecheth them to proue before the Gentiles that they were true Christians by their works and conuersation This reproues their discontentment that are vexed because they are not reputed for sound Christians and yet shew no care of a conscionable behauiour in their dealings and carriage among men and withall this may warne all sorts of Christians to looke to themselues that they be not deceiued with vaine shadowes in pretences for 't is not talking and discoursing of Religion will serue turne nor the frequenting of the exercises of Religion nor is it enough to doe secret duties but they are bound to the good behauiour generally in their carriage amongst men This is the first point Secondly from the coherence wee may note also that a man must first reforme his heart and then his life hee must first get a cleane heart freed from lusts and then looke to his conuersation Holinesse must bee both within and without hee is an hypocrite that hath a fayre conuersation and a foule heart neither may hee pleade the goodnesse of his heart that leades a foule conuersation both must bee ioyned together Thirdly we may hence note that euery Christian must be carefull and looke to it in particular that his conuersation be honest
senselesse creatures as the Sunne Moon and Starres others of them but dead men and others of them such as of whom there was not the least colour or appearance of Diuinity Secondly the most notorious wickednes of life which did euery where abound in all the nations that were Pagans Rom. 1. Thirdly that they followed a religion that gaue them no hope of a better life after death nor could describe any estate worth the desiring Fourthly there was no agreement among them what should be the chief Good while they liued but men were carried according to the sensuall desires of their owne hearts On the other side for the Christian Religion they saw that the doctrine of it was euery where prooued by miracles and that their owne Oracles in euery place where the Gospel came were put to silence Besides they might obserue that the Christian Religion did teach the most absolute way for holinesse of life and that the Christians did liue the most vnrebukeably of all others yea did with gladnes dye in the defence of their Religion and further the Christian Religion did shew them the glory of heauen and discouered that certain estate of most blessed Immortality Quest. But may some one say What might be the motiues to the Gentiles to make them continue so obstinate Ans. There were chiefly fiue things which caused this obstinacy in the Gentiles The first was the tradition of their fathers forefathers they would not forsake that religion which for so many hundred yeers their Ancestors had professed 1. Pet. 1.18 Secondly the god of this world did mightily labour to blinde their eyes that they might not vnderstand the Gospell 2. Cor. 4.4 Thirdly they saw that the Christian Religion was persecuted in all places both by reproaches and martyrdome Fourthly they would not receiue the Christian Religion because there were but few that professed it and that their wise men and great men of the world for the most part did reiect it 1. Cor. 1. The last and chief reason was the loue of their sins which they saw they must forgoe if they embraced the Christian Religion It was true also that the wickednesse of some hypocrites that crept in among Christians did make the way of God euill spoken of and many Gentiles to blaspheme Rom. 2. I might adde that the doctrine of Christs Passion was a scandall vnto many Gentiles who accounted it as a foolish thing to beleeue him as a Sauiour that could not saue himselfe from so ignominious a death being willingly ignorant of the necessity of that oblation of Christ as the Surety and Sacrifice for our sinnes It is profitable to consider of the obstinacy of these Gentiles together with their motiues for first we may see that they stood vpon the same grounds in effect vpon which the Papists do rest at this day for the Papists maine allegations are the traditions of Fathers and Fore-fathers together with the multitudes of people that follow their Religion but especially the consideration of the wofull estate of forlorne men should teach vs with the more thankfulnesse to celebrate the prayse of Gods mercy to vs that did subdue our natures and draw vs out of blindnesse and wickednesse into the true Religion and into the kingdome of Iesus Christ And Ministers should hence learne with patience to doe their worke and not to be discouraged though multitudes of people bee not brought to the obedience of Christ they must not looke to speed better then the Apostles who in all places left thousands of people that would not regard them nor their Ministeries 2. Tim. 2.25 26. Lastly we should learne euen of wicked men how wee should entertaine the truth for if it bee so hard a matter to get men to change their minds when they hold grosse errors and falshoood how ought we to stick to the truth when wee haue receiued it and not receiue any other doctrine though an Angell from heauen should teach vs otherwise then is written in the Word of God Gal. 1.7 Doct. 2. Wee may hence also note that God is pleased to suffer his children in this life to liue amongst wicked men A godly man can liue no where but there are some wicked liuing there the tares will growe vp with the Wheate There may be diuers reasons assigned of this why God doth not gather his people altogether from the places where wicked men dwell as First God doth hereby try his people whether they will forsake the inticements of the wicked and cleaue to him and his truth the more by-waies there are the more prayse to him that keepes the right way Secondly God doth by the wicked many times refine and purifie his seruants by reason of the wicked he both keeps them cleane and if they gather any filth by them he washeth them wicked men are many times God's Laundresses to godly men for if God appoint them to chasten his seruants they will doe it throughly both by reproches and other waies Thirdly the Kingdome of Christ must bee set vp among wicked men because amongst them are many of God's Elect which are in due time to bee conuerted from their wickednesse Fourthly hereby the power of Christ is magnified that can set vp and maintaine his Scepter in the middest of his enemies Fiftly by this course God's patience is prolonged for God is pleased for the godlie's sakes to forbeare those destroying Iudgements which else would fall vpon the wicked The vse should be to teach vs to beare with patience the inconueniences which befall vs in our places and callings by reason of the neighbourhood of wicked men as knowing that it is the condition of all the Godly and hath alwaies beene so and is so in all places and therefore to resolue with our selues rather to learne how to carry our selues fairely and honestly among them then through impatience without calling to shift our places or without charity to make any schisme or rent in the Church Secondly since on Earth it will be no better with vs in respect of our habitation we should therefore learne the more to desire to be in heauen where all the people shall be righteous since there is so much vnrighteousnesse in this World we should long for these new heauens and new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse We should be the more thankful if God ease vs in any degree of the molestations of wicked men either ridding out manifest Idolaters Pagans or Papists or restrayning those that are with vs from vnquietnesse and tumult and daily sl●nder or comforting vs with a large fellowship of the Godly Fourthly It should teach vs circumspection seeing the dayes are euill both to hold forth our owne light in the midst of their darkenes to take heed that we trust not euery man nor beleeue euery thing a holy reseruednesse will become this Doctrine Fiftly the zeale of Gods House should the more ouercome vs to striue to winne men to God and prouoke them as wee haue
they should thereby bee made carefull to order themselues aright in bearing reproaches in a right manner as resolued to prepare for the triall of this affliction if they be not scourged with it for as the diuell when he gaue-ouer to tempt Christ is said to cease but for a season so if wicked men hold their tongues we must not think they will be quiet alwaies for till God turn their hearts they are apt to speak euill Now that a godly man may be rightly ordered in respect of reproaches hee must look to three things First he must be sure he bee free from this euill himself that hee help not the wicked against the righteous and by his owne intemperance raise euill fames by reason of which Religion is euill-spoken of for railing cursing slandering censuring and the like will make the very godly look like wicked ones yea like the diuell himself Shall it bee accounted a Paganish offense and shall a godly Christian bee guilty of it Especially such Christians should be extremely abased for their euill natures that raise euill reports of other Christians in cases where wicked men themselues are silent Secondly that hee carry himself in a holy manner when he is reproached and so he must remember two things 1. That hee render not reuiling for reuiling but if he finde himself stirred with Dauid to go to God and betake himself to praier Psalm 109.4 1. Pet. 3.9 2. That he striue to confute them by reall apologies and so he doth if hee endeauour to put them to silence by his good works and a carefull course of conuersation Thirdly because the godliest men may haue their passions and may bee stirred vp with such indignations as appears Ier. 8.18 21. hee must labour to fense his owne heart with store of arguments that may make him patient and comfortable vnder this crosse and thus it should comfort him to consider 1. That no reproaches can make him vile in God's sight how vile soeuer he seem to bee vnto men yet in God's eies he is honourable Esay 43.4 2. That thou art but as an euill doer not an euill doer It is not miserable To be as an euill doer but it is miserable To be an euill doer 2. Cor. 6.8 9. 3. This is not to resist vnto bloud Heb. 12.3 This is a farre lesse crosse than hath been laid vpon many of the best seruants of God they haue lost their liues in the defense of pure Religion 4. That howsoeuer it go with thee in this life yet in the Day of Iesus Christ thy innocencie shall bee cleared and thy faith and sincerity shall bee found vnto praise and honour and glorie thou shalt haue aboundant praise in that Day 1. Pet. 1.7 Thus of the vse that concernes either wicked men or godly men There is yet a vse that concerns all men and that is To take heed of receiuing euill reports against the godly for seeing it is so vsuall for ill-minded men to deuise divulge euill reports of them all men should be wary and take heed of receiuing the euill speeches that are bruited or spoken of any in the businesse of godlinesse The receiuing of false reports is forbidden in Scripture as well as the deuising or divulging of them Exod. 23.1 And it is made a signe of a wicked disposition To giue heed to false lippes and that man is himself a lyar that harkneth to a naughty tongue Pro. 17.4 And therefore GOD will plague in hell not onely lyars but such as loue lies Reu. 22.8 And a good man is said to haue this property that he will not receiue an ill report against his neighbour Psal. 15. And by receiuing euill reports a man becomes accessary to the slander and guilty of it for as it is true that the receiuer of euill-gotten goods is accessary to the theft so is it in the case of slander and somewhat worse for there may be theeues though there bee no receiuers but there can be no slanderers without some to receiue the slander Neither is there any great difference between the tale-bearer and the tale-hearer for the tale-bearer hath the diuell in his tongue and the tale-hearer hath the diuell in his eare Quest. But what should wee doo to auoid tale-bearers or if we do hear reproaches or slanders of other men Ans. As the North-winde driues away the rain so must thy angry countenance doo the slandering tongue thou must not any way shew any liking of his discourse but the contrary yea and further thou must as farre as thou art able make apology to the godly man that is euill-spoken of And the tongue of a godly wise-man should be in this sense healthfull because it should be ready to heal that wound which the tale-bearer hath made in the name of his neighbour Pro. 12.18 25.23 Thus of the second reason The third and fourth reasons are contayned in these last words viz. That they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation The reasons are because God may visit them and if he doo they will glorifie God vpon the remembrance of your good works But heer I purpose to handle the words as they lie in the order of reading them and so I haue foure things to consider of First of good works secondly of the beholding of good works thirdly of the glorifying of God fourthly of the day of visitation Good works Diuerse obseruations are implied heer First that Religion sets men to work there is labour in godlinesse He must work that will bee truely godly or religious God entertains no seruants but he sets them to work they are called to labour all the daies of their life Wee must work out our saluation without working we cannot be saued though our works be not the cause of saluation This point proues that the Gospell is not a doctrine of liberty religion doth call men to working not to liue as they list but as he lists that died for them and requires their seruice And secondly this doctrine shewes who is a true Christian. For as the Scripture is wont to describe a profane man by saying that hee is a worker of iniquity so doth it auouch that he is a godly man that worketh truth and righteousnes Psal. 5. Pro. 14.23 Iohn 3.21 Psal. 106.2 To be a worker of iniquity imports three things First grosse knowne sin secondly a daily custome in the practice of it and thirdly an estimation of sinne as the means of our happy life The wicked man liues by sin as the labourer doth by his trade So heer that man that will labour and that constantly about the works of a holy life making it his euery-daies care to doo God's will and accounts it the happinesse of his life to doo good duties that man is a godly man It is not talking of Religion will serue the turn nor the shewes of it but hee must work and endure the labour of godlinesse Iames 1.25
of God either the great Book of the creatures or little booke of the Scriptures and so praying God to direct them take those things that easily offer them selues from thence The other way of meditating without booke as I knowe not whether it bee absolutely required so can it not bee so fruitfully performed nor so comfortably But to returne the viewing of GODs workman-ship in his creatures and of his wisedome rule in his Word will help vs in the first point which is to bring God into our minds For the second that wee may not mistake but conceiue of God aright wee must looke to diuers things carefully First wee must resist and subdue and no way harbour or fauour any atheisticall conceits against the doctrine of Gods nature or prouidence If wee find our minds intangled with any such wee must labour to get them cured for till our hearts bee whole of such diseases wee are disabled from any true conception of God Secondly wee must in thinking of God then cast out all likenesses wee must not conceiue of him in the likenes of any man or other creature but get aboue all similitudes and there rest in the adoration of him that is not like any of those things wee must haue no Images of God neither in our Churches nor in our heads Command 2. Esay 40. Thirdly we must learn distinctly the attributes of God's praises in the Scripture and conceiue of him as he is there commended to vs I mean wee should as wee are able when wee think of God thinke of him as he is omnipotent most wise most iust most mercifull c. It is an excellent prayse of the diligence of a Christian to accustome himselfe to conceiue of God according to descriptions made of him in his attributes in his Word Fourthly it may much helpe vs if we conceiue of God as dwelling in the humane nature of Christ for thereby it may somewhat arise in our mindes if we be prone to conceiue of likenesses Marke it carefully wee may not set before our mindes Christ-man and so worship without any more adoe but if we conceiue of the man-Christ and then worship that God-head that dwells in him we do right and besides attaine vnto a point farther which is to conceiue of God in Christ. Thus of the right conceiuing of God's nature The third thing which we must labour for is to magnifie God in our hearts to make him great to conceiue largely with full thoughts of God and to this I adde also to conceiue gloriously of him to clothe our thoughts of God with a shining excellency aboue any thing else wee thinke of Now that God may bee magnified and thought on after a glorious manner these things must bee done Wee must with all attendance and reuerence waite vpon the presence of God in his house for that is the place where his glory dwelleth Psalme 27.8 And God hath magnified his Word aboue all his name Psalme 138.2 And the vse of the Gospell is said to be the Gospel of the glory of the blessed God because it doth with the liuelyest impressions make a mans heart to discerne Gods excellency Mic. 5.4 1. Tim. 1.11 Secondly the meditation of the wonderfull works of God recorded in Scripture or obserued by experience is good to breed great and glorious thoughts of God for as the sight of the miracles of Christ wrought this in the hearts of the people Math. 15.31 Luke 7.16 so the contemplation of such great works may work the same effect in vs and the same effect also may the thought of the workes of God's speciall Iustice or Mercy haue Ezek. 38.23 Esay 13.13 especially the consideration of those works of fauour or deliuerance by which God hath declared his speciall goodnesse vnto vs Gen. 19.19 1. Chron. 17.24 Dauid also clotheth the thoughts of God with glory and greatnesse in his heart by thinking of the monuments of God's wonderfull Power and Wisedome in the heauens and earth seas c. Psalme 104.1 c. yea by thinking of his owne forming and making in the wombe Psalme 139.15 Thirdly we must pray earnestly to God with Moses and begge this of God that he would shew vs his glory Thus also of the third thing The next thing is to learne how to establish the thoughts of God's glory in vs and that is done especially two wayes First by striuing to set God alwayes before vs as Dauid did Psalme 16.8 Secondly by remembring God in all our wayes doing all our workes vnto the glorie of GOD 1. Cor. 10.31 Lastly to make vs in loue with God thus conceiued of according to his glory the thorow meditation of his mercies to vs are of singular vse to thinke eyther of the variety of them or of the speciall respect God hath had of vs aboue many others and the frequencie of his mercies that hee sheweth vs mercie daily but aboue all to consider that his mercies are free to think how vile we are vpon whom God looks with such grace and goodnes Thus the blessed Virgin taught her selfe to magnifie God and to loue his name Luke 1.46 48. Thus of making God glorious in our hearts by knowledge Now for the second which is to make him glorious by acknowledgement the particular wayes how that may be done haue been reckoned before in the explication of the doctrine onely wee must labor by praier to fashion our selues to that work that God in any of those particulars doth require of vs and that is the most speciall help which I knowe thereunto But by the way let mee warn thee to look to two things First that in any course of glorifying GOD which is to be done by thy words thou bee carefull to auoid hypocrisie and be sure that thy heart be lifted vp and affected according to the glory of God for the Lord abhorres to be glorified with thy lip if thy heart bee farre from him Esay 29.13 And the next is that thou presume not in any case to make the pretense of God's glory a couering for any wickednes as the Pharises that would hide their deuouring of widows houses vnder the praise of long prayer or those in the Prophet Esay's time that would persecute godly men and molest them with Church-censures and say Let the Lord bee glorified Esay 66.5 Thus of making God glorious in our selues Lastly that wee may make God glorious in the hearts of other men and cause them to speak of his praises we must carefully look to foure things 1. That when wee speak of God or his truth we doo it with all possible reuerence and fear that wee bee carefull in all our discourses of Religion instructions admonitions reproofs confutations or the like to treat of these things with all meeknes and reuerence God hath giuen vs a Commandement of purpose to restrain the taking-vp of his Name in vain 2. That wee striue by all means to liue vnspotted and in offensiue in
that end and therefore may comfort himselfe in the Lord how ill soeuer his execution of iustice bee spoken of among men Thus of the punishment of euill doers The second end of the sending of Magistrates is for the praise of them that doe well For the praise of them that doe well By such as do well he means such as in publick societies liue without offense and cary themselues honestly in their places especially such as are profitable and doo good to others whether it bee to the mindes of men by instructing or reproouing or to the bodies or estates of men by works of mercy or righteousnes and among these he meaneth especially such as 1. Are Inuenters of good the first Authors of the publick good 2. That doo good daily and frequently 3. That study how they may do all the good they can and doo imploy all the helps and furtherances of good they can Heer may many things be noted from hence First that all that are members of publick societies are bound to bee carefull to doo good to others and to liue so that the Church and Common-wealth may be the better for them Which should much humble such Christians as liue and doo little or no good and should quicken in all sorts of good Christians a desire to serue the publick we are not set heer to doo good to our selues onely but also to others Secondly that in this world it is not to bee expected from men that all that doo well or deserue well should bee rewarded by them hee saith For the praise not For the reward as importing that many a man may deserue well that shall neuer haue recompence from men And this ariseth partly from the corruption of Magistrates that are not carefull to dispose preferments or recompense to such as are worthy and partly from the insufficiency of any earthly greatnes to doo it For great men can reward all their seruants or friends but no King can giue the honour or preferment that is due to all his Subiects that deserue well Which should teach vs partly to doo good without hope of reward from men and partly to quicken our harts to the admiration of the reward that God giues in heauen wee should prouide to be his Subiects and then we are sure to haue a full reward of well-dooing in heauen Thirdly that to be praised or to haue a good report among men is a great blessing of GOD and therefore in the old Testament blessing praise is expressed by one word Pro. 28.20 And this may appeare to be so 1. Because God himself seeks praise from his creatures and accounts himself honoured by it Psalm 50.23 Eph. 1.6 12 14. 2. Because praise is a part of the glory of God shining vpon a man 3. Because it is in Scripture preferred before things of great price as great riches Pro. 22.1 and pretious ointment Eccles. 7 c. 4. Because it so much refresheth a mans hart it makes his bones full Pro. 15.35 5. Because an ill name is noted as an extreme curse Iob 18.17 and in many other places Vses The vse is first to comfort godly men and to make them thankfull if God giue them a good report heer but especially it should comfort them to think of the praise they shall haue at the last Day For if it bee a blessing to bee praised of men what is it to be praised of God If it be such a comfort to be praised by a Magistrate before the Country what is it to be praised of Christ before all the world at the greatest and last Assises If praises be good in this world where there is mutable vaunting and they may be blemished what is it to haue praise in that Day that shall last for euer vnstained If it be such a comfort to be praised of a Magistrate for some one good deed what shall it bee to bee praised of Christ for all that euer was good in thoughts words or works Secondly it should teach men to seek a good report and to doo all things that might haue a good report Phil. 4.9 As a man may seek riches so he may seek and desire a good name Pro. 22.1 But the praise of men is then vnlawfull and vnlawfully sought First when men doe their things onely to bee seene of men and haue no better respects then applause Mat. 6. 1. Thes. 2.6 Secondly when a man praiseth himself with his owne mouth Pro. 27.2 Thirdly when it is challenged of others and men will not stay till God giue them a good report Iohn 8.49 50. Fourthly when men seek praise onely for the shew of goodnes and are not good in deed Fiftly when men seek praise of men but seek not the praise of God or the praise that comes from God onely which is tried in this that they will not doo duties that God onely cares for or that are disgraced in the world Rom. 2.28 Iohn 5.44 and 12.42 43. Otherwise it is lawfull to seek praise and there is an infallible signe to knowe whether praise bee not ill for vs and that is if praise make vs more humble and more carefull of sound holinesse and do refine vs then praise is lawfull and a great blessing when it is like the refining pot it melts vs and makes vs better Pro. 27.21 Further if praise bee so great a blessing then an euill name must needs bee a great curse when it is for euill-doing and if it be so euill to be dispraised of men what shall it be to be dispraised of GOD not for one but many sinnes not before a few but before all the world when it shall be not to mend a man as the Magistrate's reproof may bee but to his eternall confusion Thus of the third doctrine Doct. 4. It may hence bee noted that the best men need praise and therfore God prouides that they shall be praised euen such as doo well need to be commended And this may appear both by the comfort they take if they be commended Pro. 15.30 and by their earnest desires to cleer themselues if they be dispraised as we may see in Dauid Christ himself and the Apostles especially the Apostle Paul Vse And therefore the vse should bee to teach men to acknowledge the good things done by others and to giue them praises especially if they be godly and humble men it may do them much good and greatly both comfort them and incourage them This made the Apostle Paul so reioice in the Philippians Phil. 3. vlt. It was no flattery It is flattery in some other men if they doe commend others for their owne ends or with selfe praises or without daring to reproue their faults or to get praise to themselues or for any other corrupt end especially when our praises are to such as are publick instruments of good in Church or Common-wealth And it is a course of singular vse to be held in priuate families if such as do wel might haue
to liue such a discreet and profitable life that they may see that wee differ from all other sorts of men in the goodnes of our conuersation If wee would doe what might bee specially pleasing to God we must bee carefull of these two things Doct. 8. Lastly wee may heere note that the will of God may bee knowne effectually though it bee not knowne distinctly The Apostle is sure this is the will of God and yet there is no Book Chapter nor Verse quoted nor can any particular place be alleaged that these precise words doo expresse God's will but inasmuch as the meaning is to bee found in the scope of many places of Scripture therefore it may bee well so called The will of God Thus of the authority of this rule The matter of it follows which is well-dooing With well-dooing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is not the same with that in the former verse for heer it is a Participle of the present time and notes the continuall custome of well-dooing and giues vs to vnderstand that if euer we would effectually silence wicked men we must be continually exercised in well-dooing Our good works though of great excellency yet work but a sudden blaze the effect of them will be quickly ended or soon put out and then will wicked men return to their old course of reproaching if they bee not daily confuted by the still fresh and new fruits of a Christian wee must bee full of new and good fruits Iames 3.17 and neuer weary of well-dooing The sense of the word then is this as if it were rendred thus This is the will of God that they that are daily exercised in doing good should put to silence foolish men for the originall word doth note the person as well as the good done which affoords another doctrine Doct. 2. God would haue good men that are full of good fruits to enter into the lists against wicked men to vanquish and silence them which implies that God would not haue formal Christians or hypocrites to meddle with the quarrell of Religion for they will spoil all in the end when their hollownesse and hypocrisie is discouered they will make foolish men rail and blaspheme worse than before Such are fit to plead for and defend Religion as be manfull and full of good works And therefore the weak Christians should not be ouer-busie and fiery in meddling with wicked men or putting themselues forward to defend sincerity til their works could plead for them before we set-on to be great talkers for Religion we should prouide good store of good works by which wee might demonstrate the truth and power of godlinesse in vs. Of well-doing in it self I haue intreated before onely before I passe from it me thinks it is lamentable that our hearts can bee no more fired to the care of it Oh that wee were once brought but to consent from the heart with confirmed purpose to set vp a course by our liues to win glory to our Religion We see how fain God would haue vs do so and it would plague wicked men that would fain rail at vs nothing would more confute them And besides other Scriptures shew no life aboundeth more with stedfastnes and contentment than a life fruitfully spent especially how can wee bee still thus careless if we remember the great recompense of reward in another world Oh this formality and outward shew and seruing God for fashion how deeply is it seated in mens manners It is likely the most of you that hear this doctrine will say it is good and perhaps some one or two of you wil be a little toucht with a kind of consultation in your selues which way you might doe well But alas alas out and alas Oh that I could get words to gore your very Soules with smarting paine that this Doctrine might be written in your very flesh for a thousand to one you will goe the most of you away and not redresse your waies Religion shall not be honored by you more then before cursed be that worldly drosse or spirituall security that will thus robbe and spoyle your Soules and keepe Religion without her true glosse and beautie and shining glory I might here also note that submission to the ordinances of men is one part of a Christian man's well doing and a speciall ornament of the sincere profession of R●ligion because it is the discharge of the duty enioyned vs by God and so is a part of the obedience due to God himselfe to keepe their ordinances is to obey God's commandement Secondly because such a conscionable submission to mans Lawes makes the religious workes of Christians to be the more vnrebukeable in the eyes of wicked men and therefore they are to bee warned of their rashnesse that say that conformity to mens lawes is euill dooing when God sayes it is well doing they say it is a sinne God sayes it is a good worke It is neerer to the truth and safer to say that not conforming is a sinne because it is a breach of God's expresse commandement in the former verse and therefore also godly Christians whether Ministers or priuate persons that obey the lawes of men simply out of Conscience of God's Commandements and not for corrupt ends may comfort themselues that the good God doth like of what they doe because it is his will that so they should doe and he sayes they do well though som good men are cōtrary-minded out of weaknes censure them as euill doers Then it is implyed heer that the conscionable conformity of godly Christians shall be rewarded in Heauen For all well-doing shall bee rewarded in Heauen but submission to humane Ordinances is well-doing and therefore shall be rewarded in Heauen Paul is crowned in Heauen for his holding to the Iewish Ceremonies to win the Iews and further the liberty of his Ministery Thus of the matter required The end follows That you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men The word heer rendred To put to silence is diuersly accepted or the force of it is shewed by diuerse tearmes in seuerall Scriptures Sometimes it is translated to still a thing that is tumultuous and raging and so the Sea was silenced or made still Mark 4.39 Sometimes it is translated To make speechlesse or dumb so Math. 22.12 Sometimes To confute so as they haue not a word to answer so Mat. 22.34 Sometimes To muzzle or tie vp the mouth so 1. Cor. 9.9 1. Tim. 5.18 and so it signifies properly and so well-doing is intended heer as a means to muzzle the mouthes of wicked men The word heer rendred Foolish-men signifies properly men without a minde or men that haue not vse of their vnderstanding and so are either naturall fooles or mad men The Doctrines that may bee gathered from hence are many For it may bee euidently collected from hence Doct. 1. That wicked men do vsually in all places speake euill of godly men they are prone to it
for vs in all places 3. Because if a man vndertake to answere them by words he is in danger to be prouoked to speak vnaduisedly and so may prooue like those fools whom he reproues Pro. 26.5 4. Because the naturall conscience of the wicked is as it were feared to take notice of a good conuersation and will struggle and resist within the wicked man so as hee cannot so securely vent his reproaches 5. Because it is a way that brings most peace and comfort to ones owne heart If he deale with them by words his heart may afterwards smite him for some absurdity or other he hath committed whereas he is safe that fights against them by his good works 6. Because it is the surest way of reuenge to ouercome their euill with goodnes especially if thou canst get but the aduantages to doo good to them that reproach thee Rom. 12.18 19. Vse The sound consideration of this truth should subdue in vs that ouer-eager desire of answering such as wrong vs by bitter words or works of reuenge yea it should compell vpon vs a consultation whether it bee best to deale with them at all by words God's way is by works and thou must get a great deal of temperance and wisdome if thou think thy self able to confute them throughly by words It is true also that in some cases wee may resort to the Magistrate to punish them that abuse vs but yet still this counsell of God that bids vs silence them by well-dooing should intimate that other courses must bee vsed with much caution and without rashnes or confidence in them Secondly this may reprooue that vnquietnes and impatience which is found in some Christians when they are reproached and wronged they are much vexed at the indignities offred to them and think it strange that wicked men should not cease traducing of their names whereas perhaps if they examine themselues they may finde that they haue not vsed the meanes to still them they haue not muzzled these dogs and therefore no wonder if they bark and bite too and muzzled we see heer they will not bee but by their good workes And therefore if they bee barren and vnfruitfull they must take notice of the fault in themselues There are other things that may be noted out of these words but I will onely touch them as Doct. 7. That onely foolish men doo reproach godly men Such as reuile and censure many are vsually either openly carnall men as they were drunkeards that reproached Dauid and Abiects Psalm 35.15 and 69.13 They were either fools or the children of fools but viler they were than the earth that had Iob in derision Iob 30.1 8. men that ranne into excesse of riot as the Apostle writeth 1. Pet. 4.5 or else hypocrites that haue nothing in them but words and empty shewes Or if at any time there bee a sinne found in godly men it is in such as are but babes and look like carnall men and haue a great deal of their naturall folly and madnes vnsubdued in them 1. Cor. 3.1 2 3. But for the most part it is a fault found onely in wicked men Doct. 8. That it is a great pain to a wicked man to bee restrained from reproaches hee is as much vexed when hee cannot or dare not speak euill of godly men as a dogge or an oxe is when hee is muzzled Doct. 9. That the good life of godly men may silence wicked men and yet not make them leaue their wickednes hee doth not say that by well-doing they may winne ignorant and foolish men It is true that sometimes a good conuersation may winne them as 1. Pet. 3.1 2. and before verse 12. Yet ordinarily they will doo wickedly euen in the Land of vprightnes Esay 26.10 Verse 16. As free and not vsing your liberty for a cloke of malitiousnes but as the seruants of God IN the two former verses he confirms the exhortation by reasons in this he answers an obiection The obiection seems to be that Christians are made free by Christ and therefore are not to bee tied with the bonds of humane ordinances or subiection to men The Apostle answereth that it is true that Christians are made free-men but so as they must not vse their freedome as a cloak of malitiousnes and the liberty of sinning either against God or men for they are still God's seruants and bound to doo what he would haue them to do and so consequently to obey Magistrates since GOD requires them so to doo So that in this verse hee intreats of Christian liberty And so first hee grants the vse of it or the right of it in these words As free Secondly he remoues the abuse of it in these words Not vsing your liberty as a cloke of malitiousnes And thirdly he giues a reason of his remoueall Because they are the seruants of God still In the first part you must consider what he granteth viz that they are free Secondly how far he grants it viz. that they are as free Free Freedome is either ciuill or spirituall Ciuill freedom is when a seruant is manumitted or made free that was an apprentise or bond-slaue before and so when a stranger is admitted to the right of a City or a Common-wealth or the like The spirituall freedome is that estate which Christians do enioy by God's fauour in Christ after their calling It is a spirituall manumission or freedom that is heer meant and this is called Christian liberty partly because it is a freedome that we haue onely by Christ and partly because it is a freedome now onely enioyed by Christians and no other men in the world Christian liberty is one of the great gifts or endowments bestowed vpon the Church by Christ. It is not amisse to reckon vp all the gifts in order that the relation which this gift hath to the rest may appear The gifts then that Christ hath bestowed vpon Christians are these First their ransome paid vnto God for their redemption Secondly their vocation by the Gospell calling them out of the world into the Church Thirdly the holy Ghost which hee sends into their hearts Fourthly their iustification imputing his owne righteousnes and procuring forgiuenesse of all their sins Fiftly their sanctification by which hee giues them new natures Sixtly their adoption by which they are made the sons of God Seuenthly their Christian liberty by which they are freed from all former bondage and enioy great priuiledges this is a fruit of their adoption Eightthly consolation refreshing their hearts in all estates especially by the comforts of his Word Ninthly the gift of perseuerance by which tey are kept from falling away Lastly an immortall and vndefiled inheritance in heauen after they are dead Christian liberty is either the liberty of grace in this life or the liberty of glory after this life The liberty of glory concerns either the soule or the body The glory or liberty of the soule is the freeing of it from all
of seruants is subiection seruants must bee subiect It is not enough to weare their master's Cloth and to hire themselues to their masters they must make conscience of it to perform constant humble subiection to their masters And so they must bee subiect to their masters three waies First to their commandements and so they must obey them and yeeld themselues to them to be ruled and directed by them in all things Eph. 6.5 Col. 3.22 Secondly to their rebukes and corrections for if children need rebukes and corrections then doo seruants also Pro. 13.1 and 15.5 Seruants will not alwaies be corrected by words and therefore need blowes Pro. 29.19 Gen. 16.6 yea they must patiently suffer correction though it be inflicted vniustly as appears in the verses following this Text. Thirdly to their restraints Seruants must bee subiect to the appointment of their masters euen in the things wherein they restrain them as for instance in their diet It is a sinfull humour in them Not to be content with such diet as their masters appoint them though it be worse than the diet of their masters or the diet of the children of the family So likewise in their company they must auoid all company that may bee any way offensiue to their masters and so likewise in their apparell in such cases where seruants are to bee apparelled by their masters as also in respect of their going out of the house in the day-time when they haue not leaue but much more abominable it is To be out of their masters houses in the night without their leaue And as their subiection must bee performed in all these cases so the indefinite maner of propounding it shewes both that they must bee subiect in all things and in all the waies of shewing subiection for the manner of it they must be subiect in all things so as to beare with their masters for it is a sinnefull rebellion to crosse or disobey or leaue vndone any thing that is required of them to doo And besides it shewes that they must bee subiect in their very hearts and in their words and in their countenance and gesture as well as in the work to be done by them Vse The vse may concern both seruants and the parents of such seruants and the masters that rule them Seruants should hence from their hearts learn to yeeld themselues ouer to their masters with all good conscience to perform the subiection required yea such seruants as heare this doctrine may try their hearts whether they be indeed good seruants or no for a good seruant that makes conscience of his duty when hee heares the doctrine doth from his heart consent to it and will striue to fashion himself according to it Now the seruants that desire to bee such as is required may attain to it if they obserue these rules First they must carefully study the doctrine of seruants duties Seruants oftentimes fail through meer ignorance because they doo not lay before their mindes what God requires of them Secondly they must often iudge themselues for their faults wherin they haue displeased their masters or neglected their duties therefore many seruants mend not because either they will not see their faults or doo not humble themselues in secret for it Thirdly they must often meditate on the motiues that may perswade them to subiection And so there are fiue things that might bow their harts and breed in them a conscience of their duties First the Commandement of God it is GOD's will they should beare themselues thus humbly and obediently toward their masters Secondly the promise annexed to God's Commandement should moue them God will reward their work Eph 6.8 Col. 3.24 And in particular inasmuch as their seruice is required in the fift Commandement therefore if they be good seruants God will blesse them with long life Thirdly the threatning if they be not good seruants but bear themselues naughtily and stubbornly they shall not only receiue shame and punishment from men but God will plague them for the wrongs they doo to their masters euen for all the grief wherwith they haue vexed them and for all the losses they haue brought to their masters Col. 3. vlt. Fourthly the examples of such as haue born themselues full wel in Scripture should much moue them the piety of Abraham's seruant Gen. 24. and the painfulnesse and faithfulnesse of Iacob Gen. 31.38 c. and the readinesse of the Centurion's seruant Mat. 8. Yea it should much moue them that Christ Iesus himself was in the form of a seruant Phil. 2. Fiftly the care of the Religion they professe should much moue them if they bee carelesse and proud and stubborn the Name of God and the doctrine of Religion may be blasphemed 1. Tim. 6.1 And if they bee humble and carefull and faithfull they may adorn the doctrine of the Gospell as the Apostle shewes Tit. 2.9 10. Vse 2. Such parents as put their children foorth to seruice must take heed that they spoil them not by giuing care to the complaints of their masters or by allowing them any way in stubborn and disobedient courses Thirdly if masters would haue their seruants to please them by their subiection they then must learn how to rule and gouern them not onely by teaching and charging them what to doo but also by ouer-seeing them whereby many faults may bee preuented and accordingly by seasonable reprouing them and correcting of them betimes for the more wilfull offenses so studying to carry themselues gently towards them or that they lose not their authority by too much loue of their own ease and quietnes else it is iust that their seruants should prooue a continuall vexation to them Pro. 30.22 and 29.19 To your masters The parties to whom they owe subiection are their masters where three things may bee obserued First that though seruants are vnder subiection yet it is not to all men or to other men but onely to their masters which may warne men to take heed that they abuse not other mens seruants or speak basely of them for though in respect of their masters they are seruants yet in respect of them they are as free as themselues And in particular it should teach diuers to meddle lesse with other mens seruants by way of complaint to their masters It was Salomon's Rule Accuse not a seruant to his master lest he curse thee and thou bee found guilty Pro. 3.10 Hee giues two reasons of his aduice The one is that his complaining may so vex the seruants ouer whom he hath no iurisdiction that it may cause them in their impatience to vex him with their reproaches of him which an ingenuous minde should striue to auoid The other is that in such complaints most an end there is much mis-taking when men meddle with such things as belong to other mens families and then it is a foule shame to be found faulty To conclude this point wee should remember that of the Apostle
good Conscience and the other is that a man runnes onely blindefolded so long till death and hell may seaze vpon him Thus of the effects of an euill Conscience The meanes how Conscience may bee made good follow That an euill Conscience may bee made good two things must bee looked into First that wee get a right medicine to heale it Secondly that we take a right course in application of the medicine First the medicine for the curing of an ill Conscience is onely the blood of Christ the disease of Conscience is of so high a nature as all the medicines in the world are insufficient nothing but sprinkling it with blood will serue the turne and it must bee no other blood then the blood of the immaculate Lambe of God as the Apostle shews Heb. 9.14 The reason of this is because Conscience will neuer bee quiet till it see a way how GODs anger may bee pacified and sinne abolished which cannot be done any way but by the blood of Christ which was powred out as a sacrifice for sinne Now vnto the right application of this medicine foure things are requisite First the light of knowledge Secondly the washing of regeneration Thirdly the assurance of Faith Fourthly the warmth of loue First knowledge a man must haue both Legall and Euangelicall For they must knowe by the Law what sinnes lie vpon the Conscience and trouble it and they must knowe by the Gospel what a propitiation is made by Christ for sinnes And for the second an euill Conscience will neuer bee gotten off vnlesse our harts bee sprinkled and washed from the filth and power of the sinnes which did lie vpon the Conscience Heb. 10.22 1. Tim. 1.5 Now vnto such remouing of such sinnes from the hart two things are requisite First that by particular confession wee doe as it were scratch off the filth of those sinnes that foule the heart and trouble the Conscience Secondly and then that wee wash our harts and dayly rinse them with the teares of true repentance and humiliation before God for those sinnes Thirdly assurance of faith is necessary to the cure of an ill Conscience because faith is the hand that laies on the medicine A man must apply the sufferings of Christ to himselfe and beleeue that Christ did satisfy for those sinnes that lie vpon the conscience and must accordingly all to besprinkle the conscience with that blood of Christ and then of an euill Conscience it will presently become good but men must looke to one thing and that is that their faith be vnfayned For Conscience will not be satisfied with the profession of faith they must beleeue indeed and with their harts and with sound application of the promises of the Gospell concerning the bloud of Christ or else Conscience will not bee answered Heb. 10.22 1. Tim. 1.5 Fourthly the heate of loue must bee added a man must so apply the blood of Christ as that his owne blood bee heated in him with affection both towards God and Christ and Christians Christian loue doth put as it were naturall heat into the Conscience and makes it now receiuing life by faith to bestir it selfe in all the works either of seruice to God or duty to men 1. Tim. 1.5 Heb. 9.24 Knowledge bringing it light Mortification making it cleane Faith curing it and putting life into it by sprinkling it with the blood of Christ and loue infusing or rather inflaming it with the heate of life All these things are requisite though I stand not vpon the precise order of the working of euery one of these Thus how conscience may bee made good Now I might adde a direction or two how Conscience may doe her worke aright that is a good Conscience and not doe ill offices in the soule Two things I say are of great vse for the guiding of a good Conscience First that in all her proceedings shee must follow the warrant of Gods word Secondly that shee doe not mistake in iudging of particular actions she must bee sufficiently informed about our Christian liberty For vnlesse the conscience discern that we are freed from the malediction of the Law and from the rigorous perfection of obedience and haue restored vnto vs a free vse of all things indifferent and the like shee may bee ouer-busy and troublesome disquieting the hart and restrayning the ioyes should refresh and support a man Thus of the meanes how Conscience may bee made good the signes of a good cōscience follow First by the opposition it makes against the remainders of sinne in the godly It maintains a constant combating against the law of the members hauing at command the law of the minde It doth not onely resist grosse euils but euen the most secret corruptions in the heart of man This Paul discerned in himself Rom. 7. of doing God seruice Secondly by the manner of exacting of obedience for a good Conscience First doth incline a man to doo good duties not by compulsion but a man shall finde that he doth them by force of an internall principle in himself Secondly it cannot abide dead works a good Conscience abhorres all cold and careless or luke-warm or counterfet seruing of God it puts life into all good duties it exacteth attendance vpon God in doing them Heb. 9.14 Thirdly it more respecteth GOD than all the world or the man himself and therefore wil compell a man to obey against profit and pleasure and liking of the world 2. Cor. 1.12 Fourthly it requires an vniuersall obedience it would haue all God's commandements respected and therefore Paul saith I desired in all things to liue honestly Heb. 13.18 The allowing of one sinne shewes the deprauation of the Conscience if it be a knowne sinne and still tolerated As one dead flie will spoyle a boxe of pretious oyntment I say one dead flie tho many liuing flies may light vpon a boxe of oyntment and doe it no great hurt So a godly man may haue many infirmities and yet his Conscience bee sound but if ther be one corruption that liues and dies there that is such a corruption as is known and allowed and doth by custome continue there it will destroy the soundnesse of the best Conscience of the World and doth vsually argue a Conscience that is not good Fiftly a good Conscience doth require obedience alwayes Thus Paul pleades I haue serued God till this day It doth not command for God by fits but constantly Act. 23.1 A third signe is that a good Conscience is alwaies toward God it still desires to bee before God it seekes God's presence it reckons that day to be lost and that it did not liue as it were when it found not the Lord or had no fellowship or conuersation with God A good Conscience is like a good Angell it is alwaies looking into the face of God Act. 23.1 Thus of the signes The benefits of a good Conscience are many and great for First it is the best
such an order in his worldly estate or outward estate that he may prouide to serue the Lord without distraction abstayning from all things that may entangle him or interrupt him Eph. 5.16 1. Cor. 7.29 35. and 9.28 2. Tim. 2.4 Hee must prouide to him time for God's seruice and for commerce and fellowship with the godly and for works of mercy Thirdly hee must bee wise for himselfe that is hee must in all the meanes he vseth for or in religion especially apply what hee can for his owne vse and study himself and to vnderstand his own way and prouide whatsoeuer he doe for his iustification and sanctification and finall saluation Pro. 9.12 and 14.8 And to this end he must meddle with his owne busines and take heed of being a busie-body in other mens matters so much as in his thoughts 1. Thes. 4.11 12. And hee must also auoid vaine ianglings and doubtfull disputations in religion and quarrels that tend not to his edification but to shew wit or science Tit. 3.9 1. Tim. 6.20 2. Tim. 2.23 And he must keepe his eye straight vpon the mark to proceed directly and distinctly in building himselfe vp in knowledge and grace not losing his time or going about but keeping a straight path to supply what he wants and growe in what hee hath Prou. 4.25 Ierem. 31.32 Hee must take heed of vncertaine running but bee sure to take accounts of himselfe for all his courses to see that hee goe very straight towards the mark and finally he must not respect company to goe the pase of other men but runne as if hee alone were to obtaine striuing to excell 1. Cor. 9.24 and 14.12 Fourthly he must esteeme the Word aboue all treasures Psal. 119.72 Math. 13. and take hold of the instruction thereof as that must bee the very life of his life Pr. 4.13 For by the word doth God sanctify vs and make vs righteous Iohn 17. And he must order his whole course of life so as that he may see the meanes of all his actions from the Word he must liue by the rules of Scripture that will liue righteously Gal. 6.16 Now that hee may doe thus he must looke to diuers things First that hee place no confidence in the flesh neither trusting vpon his own wit nor carnal reason nor gifts nor yet yeelding himselfe to bee a seruant to any mans humour or opinions or example or commandement Secondly hee must prouide to liue so as hee suffer not a famine of the powerfull preaching of the Word hee must labour for the meat that perisheth not Iohn 6.27 and so exercise himself in the Word morning and euening that the Word may dwell plenteously in him Psal. 1.2 Col. 3.16 Thirdly hee must take heed of adding any more sinnes or duties then are discouered in the Word and of detracting from any thing that is forbidden or required there Psal. 30.6 detesting conceitednes and singularity hauing his conuersation in all meeknes of wisdome Iam. 3.13 Fiftly hee must dayly lift vp his heart to God to seek a way of him whose glory it is to teach to profit and who giueth his Spirit to lead men in the paths of Righteousnes Psal. 23. Esay 48.17 Sixtly hee must remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it For this will bee both the meanes and the signes of his Sanctification and true righteousnes It is the market-day for the soule Esay 58.13 14. Exod. 31.13 c. Seuenthly he must haste to the comming of Christ hee must dispatch his work as fast as hee can and to this end hee must cast about to find out waies of well-doing and when hee hath any proiects or opportunities of well-doing hee must not delay but with heart and readines finish his work This is to seeke righteousnes and to haste to it Esay 16.5 Amos 5.14 Thus he must obserue to doe as the phrase was Deut. 5.22 Eightthly it will bee a great help vnto him if hee get into the way of good men and walk with the wise sorting himselfe with discreet and sincere Christians Pro. 2.20 Ninthly hee must keepe his heart with all diligence For thereout commeth life Hee must carefully resist the beginnings of sinne within and auoid those secret and spirituall dalliances of the soule with inward corruptions and temptations and withall take heed of secret hypocrisy in suffering his heart to bee absent when God is to bee serued Pro. 4.23 For thereby he may lose what he worketh if his spirit bee not without that guile Tenthly all that knowe the happines of a righteous life should striue to amend those defects which are found euen in the better sort of people that so their life at length may answer to the end of Christs death and therefore wee should examine our selues throughly The defects and faylings found in the liues of righteous men may be referred to two heads First for either they faile in the parts of righteousnes Secondly or in the manner of well-doing In the parts of righteousnes there are great failings whether we respect the first or second table I will briefely touch the principall defects which are obserued and complayned of in Christians in both tables In the first table men faile either in the knowledge of God or in the affections to God or in the seruice to God First for knowledge how little doe many men know of Gods praises and glory that might bee knowne and how far are many from a right conceit of God when they come to think of him or to worship him Secondly in the most there is a great want in the exercise both of the feare of God and trust in God men haue not such awfull thoughts of God as they should haue nor doe they tremble so as they shold at his iudgemēts that are in the world Psal. 4.4 Heb. 2. vlt. Dan. 6.26 And for the trust in God men are specially faulty that they doe not commit their waies daily to GOD for assistance and successe in all estates resting vpon him alone as they ought to doe Thirdly ioying and delighting our selues in GOD is hardly found in any and yet no wife should take such continual delight in her husband to solace her selfe with him as a Christian ought to doe with God Psal. 37.4 and 68.3 4. Phil. 4.4 Fourthly in the seruice of God there are diuers defects as 1. Some neglect the priuate reading of the Scriptures who ought to excercise themselues therein day and night Psal. 1.2 1. In prayer some haue not the gift of prayer nor seeke it and prayer for others is extremely neglected contrary to Gods expresse commandement that enioynes vs to pray one for another in many Scriptures 3. Praysing of God in our discourses as becommeth his great glory in his works where is this found and yet required at our hands and at the hands of all people and that which we should doe with an whole heart and while we liue Psal. 96.6 7 8. and 63.4 and
9.1 and 67.2 5. Where is that walking with God required in Scripture Who doeth alwaies set the Lord before him Where are those soliloquies betweene the soule and God Are not many content to goe weekly and monthly without speaking to God And thus of the defects concerning the first table In the second table diuers things may be noted as were defectiue in the parts of righteousnes as First there is a generall defect of mercy men doe exceedingly faile in that liberality to the distressed and poore seruants The bowels of mercy are euery-where shut vp either altogether or in the neglect of many degrees and duties of mercy Secondly in many Christians there is a fearefull want of meeknes they being guilty of daily sinnes of passions and worldly vexations and that many times with a kinde of wilfulnes against knowledge and conscience Thirdly The cares of life and worldlines doe striue and blemish the conuersation of many and discouer a strange defect of that contempt of the world should bee in them Fourthly domesticall disorders doe euen cry to heauen against many husbāds for want of loue and of most wiues for want of obedience and of seruants for want of diligence and faithfulnes in their places And thus men faile in the parts of righteousnes In the manner of weldoing many things are wanting first both in the generall weldoing of good duties secondly and in speciall affection to God thirdly and in the manner of Gods seruice In Generall First zeale of good workes is exceeding defectiue in the most Tit. 3.14 Men shewe not that willingnes and feruency of affection should bee shewed in all parts of righteousnes men doe not lift vp their hearts in Gods waies Gods commandements are vsually grieuous and tedious Secondly there ought to bee a holy feare in the practice of their good duties 1. Pet. 3.2 which is vsually wanting men do so much trust vpon themselues and doe duties with such boldnes neglect of their waies whereas they should feare alwaies Pro. 28.14 Oh that meeknes of wisdome required Iames 3.9 where is it to bee found Thirdly men are not circumspect to make conscience euen of the least duties as they ought and to obserue to doo them euen to watch for the opportunity of well-doing and to look to the means of the performance of euery duty and to abstaine from the very appearance of euill and to bee discreet in looking to the circumstances of time place persons c. Eph. 5.15 Deut. 5.32 Fourthly there is great want of moderation in Christians for either they are iust ouer-much in conceiuing too highly of themselues for what they doo or else they are wicked ouer-much in thinking too vilely of their works Eccles. 7. Fiftly men are strangely negligent in the growth of grace and knowledge men stand still and doo not prosper and striue to increase in euery good gift as they ought 2. Peter 3.18 Many graces are not strengthned and many works are not finished Secondly in mens affections to God how are men defectiue Where is hee that loues the Lord with all his hart and all his might and all his soule Deut. 30.6 and 6.3 Thirdly in God's worship these things are in many wanting 1. Reuerence and that holy feare which should bee shewed when wee appeare before the Lord Heb. 12.28 2. Men vsually forget to doo all worship in the Name of Christ Col. 3.17 3. The care of praising of God that is of looking to God's acceptation in all seruice is much forgotten Heb. 12.28 4. The desire of vnity and consent in iudgement among our selues when wee worship God is miserably neglected and reiected by diuers wilfull Christians Zeph. 3.9 Phil. 2.2 3. 5. Men miserably neglect thankfulnesse to GOD for the good they receiue daily from his mercies Col. 3.17 6. Many faile publiquely and shamefully in want of care to come time enough to God's seruice Zach. 8.21 Esay 60.8 In these things Christians should bee admonished to minde their waies and their works and to striue to walk as becommeth the Gospell and the death of Christ that they may hold fast the light of the truth and shew out better the glory of a Christian life And thus of liuing to righteousnes Now follows the third form of speech By whose stripes we are healed The healing of our sicknesses is reckoned as another fruit of the Passion of Christ or else it is the same with the former exprest in other words These words then are borrow'd from the Prophet Esay chap. 53.5 who doth chiefly vnderstand the spirituall healing of our soules of our sinnes as the coherence shewes in the Prophet but yet the Euangelist saith Mat. 8.17 and vnderstands of the healing of our bodies also And therefore I consider of the death of Christ both in respect of soule and body And first as this healing is referred to the soule diuers doctrines may be obserued Doct. 1. The soules of all men are diseased by nature euen the very soules of the Elect are so till they be healed by Christ. The soule is diseased diuers waies especially by sorrows and sins it is the disease by sin is heer meant Quest. It would bee inquired how the soule comes to be sick of these diseases and why sinne is called sicknes in the soule Ans. This spiritual sicknes comes into the soule by propagation Adam hath inflicted all his posterity and euery man hath increased the diseases of his nature by his owne wilfull transgressions Now sinne is called sicknes because it doth work that vpon the soule which sicknes doth vpon the body for sinne hath weakned the strength of the soule in all the faculties of it which all men may discern and obserue in themselues by nature Besides it causeth spottednes and deformity in the soule as sicknes doth in the body and therefore sinne was likened to the leprosie in the Law Further it often causeth pain and torment in the soule as wounds diseases do in the body for there is no peace to the wicked especially when God fighteth against them with his terrors Besides it will cause the death of the soule as sicknes will of the body if it be not helped and so men are said to be dead in sins Vse The vse may bee to shew the fearfull negligence of worlds of people that are exceeding carefull to help their bodies to health but neuer think of the poor soule that lieth lamentably full of diseases And withall it shewes that all wicked men are men of ill natures because their dispositions are all diseased though there be degrees of ill nature or of this euill in mens natures as there is difference of sicknesses in mens bodies And godly men should be compassionat when they see the grieuous diseases in the natures and liues of other men remembring that they also were by nature subiect to the same diseases as well as they Doct. 2. The diseases in the soules of men by nature are very
euill Pro. 14.12 yea the Prophet Esay expounds it of euery turning after our owne waies for which we haue no warrant in the Word of God and in which men persist without repentance Esay 53.6 It is implied Psal. 119.110 For the second The misery of men liuing in their sinnes without repentance is very great I am tied to the consideration of it only so far forth as the similitude of a sheep going astray will import Euery wicked man then is like a lost sheep and that in diuers respects 1. Because hee is not within the compasse of God's speciall prouidence GOD doth not tend him nor look to him he is no part of his flock he is without God in the world and without Christ as the lost sheep is without the protection and keeping of the shepheard Wicked men haue no keeper they are left to the way of their owne harts which is a fearefull curse Esay 53.6 The wicked shall be as a sheep that no man takes vp Esay 13.14 2. Because hee hath no certain pasture The prouision for his life for soule and body is altogether vncertain Hee is like Cain a vagabond vpon the earth He is heer to day he knowes not where he shall be tomorrow God hath not giuen him any assurance of the keeping or getting of any thing he hath or desires He is like the stray sheep that hath all the world before him but knows not where to settle Mat. 9.36 3. Because in the midst of all the best possessions of this life they haue no peace Esay 57. vlt. The sound of feare is alwaies in their eares If a stray sheep get into a good pasture yet he is still in feare apt to bee frighted with euery sound ready to runne away vpon euery occasion so is it with them that are rich in the world and not rich with God 1. Tim. 6.10 4. Because hee is shut out from all comfortable society with the godly hee enioyes not the sound fruit of communion with Saints The stray sheep may sort with hogges or wilde beasts but from the sheep it is gone away Euill company is a miserable plague of a mans life to sort with such all a mans daies from whom he may haue a world of vanity and filthinesse but not any thing scarce worthy of the nature of men in an age Euery wicked man is an alien a stranger forainer from the Common-wealth of Israel Eph. 2.12 5. A sheep going astray is easily taken by a strange Lord it is driuen any whither by any body it is so silly And such is the fearfull estate of a man liuing in sinne strange Lords may easily surprize him false teachers may easily seduce him euill company may carry him to any wickednes a Prince may turn him to any religion a very Atheist or diuell incarnate may easily lead him captiue 6. A sheep is apt to be worried with dogs or deuoured with wolues or wilde beasts when there is no shepheard to tend him So is it with wicked men their soules their bodies their estates are all in danger to bee seized vpon by diuels by vniust and vnreasonable men especially as any of them are more simple so they are more liable to become a prey to the mighty Ones of the earth 7. Men that wander out of the way of vnderstanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead Psalm 49.15 Pro. 21.16 And therefore he that conuerts a man from the error of his way is said to saue a soule from death Iames 5. vlt. And this going astray of vnregenerate men is the more grieuous because they are liable to many aggrauations for First they go astray from the womb they were neuer yet in the right way Psalm 58.3 Secondly because they wander in euery work they doo as was said of Egypt Esay 19.14 All their works are abominable Psalm 14. All things are impure Thirdly because this is the curse of all vnregenerate men we are turned euery one to his owne way Esay 53.6 Fourthly because they delight to wander place their felicity in their sinnes and will not be reclaimed or aduised Fiftly because they may prouoke God so long that hee may sweare they shall neuer enter into his rest Psal. 95.10 11. The third point is the cause of their going astray and that is noted in the originall word They were deceiued Now then it is to bee considered distinctly who are the great deceiuers of the world that cause millions of soules to goe astray First the diuell is the Arch-deceiuer hee hath beene a lier and a murtherer from the beginning hee deceiued our first Parents and made them and all their posterity goe astray Iohn 8.44 1. Tim. 2.14 and by him are all wicked men drawne out of the way and led captiue at his will 2. Tim. 2.26 Secondly Antichrist is the next great deceiuer who by his sorceries made all nations in the time of the Gospel goe astray Eccles. 18.23 with his diuellish doctrine and by wicked sorceries hee deceiued the Christian world Thirdly a swarme of wicked ministers haue deceiued whole townes and countries and made the sheepe goe astray euen their whole flocks in many places some of them because they take the fleece and neuer feed the flock Ezech. 34.2 c. Iohn 10.12 Some of them by preaching lies and flattering the people with deuices of men and say Peace when there is no peace Ierem. 23.17 19 20 32. Fourthly the world is a mischieuous deceiuer and it deceiueth by euill example and euill company and euill report raysed against the godly and the good way and the inticements of profits and pleasures and vanities of all sorts and honours and the like Fiftly mans owne heart deceiueth him yea the heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things Ierem. 17.9 It will vse such carnall reasons pretend such vaine excuses intertaine such deceiuable hopes and ioyne it selfe to such swarmes of temptations and lusts as it cannot auoid wandring if there were no other deceiuers to goe withall The way of our owne hearts is alwaies to goe out of the way Sixtly ignorance of the Scripture is a chiefe cause of erring and going astray both in opinion and life Math. 22.29 Seuenthly the loue of some particular sinne doth vtterly vndoe many a man that will not bee warned of the deceitfulnes of sinne Heb. 3.12 Thus couetousnes made many a man to erre from the faith 1. Tim. 6.20 Eightthly God himselfe in a fearefull kind of Iustice many times not only consents but permits a very spirit of peruersnes and errour to seaze vp on some men that refused to bee guided or kept by God so as they are giuen ouer to eternall perdition and destruction by reason of it Fourthly the signes of a lost sheep follow and they are First he that refuseth reproofe is out of the way Men that cannot abide to bee told of their faults are not healed Prou. 10.17 as hee is in the way of life
teachers Sixtly forgetfulnes of their latter end Therefore is their iniquity in their skirts still because they remember not their last end for both the terror of that day and the shortnes of their life and the iudgements they would meet with of those things if they were to dye would fright them out of those courses But they will not apply their hearts to wisdome because they cannot remember their daies Lament 1.9 Psal. 90.12 Seuenthly euill teachers are a great hindrance For they strengthen the hands of the wicked and by preaching peace perswade them they are in no danger Ierem. 23.14 Ezech. 13.22 Eightthly in some there is a very spirit of fornication in the midst of them they are so excessiuely delighted with an influence after the courses they take that no arguments can enter into their hearts though they haue neuer so good meanes vsed Hosh. 5.4 Ninthly there is in some men a senslesse spirit a fat heart a reprobate minde so as the things they doe see yet they cannot lay them to their hearts nor bee stirred by them and so for the most part they see little or nothing at all but are vtterly vnteacheable There are of these sorts of men almost in all assemblies and conditions of Christians where they haue had the meanes with much power Esay 6.10 Acts 28.27 Tenthly there is in some a peruerse spirit wilfully to reiect the Word of GOD and all good counsell though they know they are not right and so follow vanity and become vaine 2. King 17.14 15. and by following foolish vanities forsake their owne mercies Eleuenthly the custome of the world hath ouercome many and that makes their hearts dead and senslesse and carelesse of returning the examples of the most and of the wise men and great ones of the world hath confirmed them in their wandrings Ephes. 2.1 2. Twelfthly despaire is the cause in some they say there is no hope Ierem. 18.12 Vse The vse of all should bee especially to awaken the carelesse and to perswade men all shifts and excuses laid apart to set their hearts vpon this work of repentance and returning men should not be like horses or mules but receiue instruction and turne vnto the Lord else iniquity will be their ruine If they repent not they must perish and they doe nothing by their delaies but heape vp wrath against the day of wrath They liue foolishly for while they reiect God's Word what wisdom can be in them and they must die miserably Are they not as the clay in the hands of the potter and will they still prouoke God to his face Yea if they frustrate the power of all the meanes they enioy so as it may not bee of effect to turne them it shall bee easier for Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of iudgement then for them yea the very dust of their feete whose ministery they haue despised will rise vp in iudgement against them Vnto the Shepheard The happines of the penitent consisteth in this that they liue euer after vnder a Shepheard and Bishop for their soules First then they haue a shepheard to tend them Heer diuers things are to be inquired First who this Shepheard is seeing the Text mentions him not expresly The Prophet Ezechiel saith It is God's seruant Dauid Ezech. 34.23 and in Heb. 13.20 the Lord Iesus raised from the dead is said to bee the great Shepheard of the sheep who is therefore called Dauid because hee came out of the loins of Dauid Secondly who the sheep are and they are not cattell but men Ezech. 34. vlt. yet not all men but God's Elect euen those his Father gaue him Iohn 10.29 and those chiefly when they are returned as the coherence shewes Thirdly the attributes giuen to this Shepheard in other Scriptures Heer he is named barely The Shepheard but it is profitable for vs to knowe what kind of Shepheard he is and so foure things are said of him 1. That he is one Shepheard that is that it is he only to whom immediately the charge of these men is giuen Ezech. 34.23 2. That he is the true Shepheard and that in diuers respects First in respect of his calling he came not in by the window as the thief and robber doth but was called of God to this work euen from the womb Esay 49.1 Iohn 10.2 Secondly he is a true Shepheard because he hath all the imploiments that belong to a shepheard hee goeth out to his flocks with a rod and a staffe and his shepheards crook hee hath a rod to driue-on his sheep both a rod of instruction and correction and hee hath a crook to catch them and pull them back and he hath a staffe to driue away euil beasts Psalm 23. Thirdly he is the true Shepheard because neuer shepheard did his work or discharged the trust and care laid vpon him so faithfully The best Pastors and their actions done by those that be men and after their owne hearts yet haue many frailties and fail many waies both in the skill attendance and power 3. That he is the good Shepheard by an excellency Iohn 10.11 and so he is in diuers respects First because other shepheards haue their flocks deliuered to their hands but hee seeks his sheep and hath none but such as he was fain to finde out in the woods and deserts and solitary places of the world yea he left as it were his owne glory to come downe from heauen to look these lost sheep Ezech. 34 11 12. Secondly because he laid down his owne life to redeem his sheep and to get power to bring them back Iohn 10.15 yea put his neck vnder the sword of his Fellow his Father he was contented that his owne Father should kill him Zach. 13.7 Thirdly because hee keeps such sheep as haue no fleeces on them but what hee giues them all his were naked sheep that no other shepheard would haue taken vp hee cloathes them all with the fleeces of his owne righteousnesse and so becomes the Lord their righteousnes Ier. 23.4 6. Fourthly because he is compassionately mooued with the wants and distresses of his sheep not for himself but for their sake and this hee shewes not onely by pitying them when they haue no subordinate shepherds to tend them but by loathing those euill shepheards that leade them to euill pastures or any way hurt them Zachary 11.8 4. That he is the great Shepherd Heb. 13.20 and so hee is in diuers respects First because his sheep are his owne Other shepherds for the most part tend the sheep of other men but all his sheep are his owne Iohn 10.12 Secondly because hee marks all his sheep hee did not onely seek them when they were lost but made them when they were not Psalm 100.3 They are not onely the people of his pasture but the sheep of his hands Thirdly because hee hath more flocks than any shepheard euer had for he hath flocks in all parts of the world
to the very ends of the earth Micah 5.4 For he was not onely to raise vp the Tribes of Israel but to be a light to the Gentiles and giueth saluation to the ends of the earth Esay 49.6 Fourthly because he is great in skill and power in skill because though he haue such great flocks yet he knowes all his sheep particularly and calls them all by their names Iohn 10.3 And so hee knowes all their wants and diseases too and all the waies to help and cure them In power because hee hath a mighty Arme Esay 40.10 11. And hee stands and friends them in the strength of Iehoua and in the Maiesty of the Name of the Lord his God Micah 5.4 And besides hee shewes it in his ability to driue away from his flocks euen those hurtfull beasts that other shepheards cannot resist If a Lion or the hungry Lion roar after his prey hee will not care for the voice of a multitude of shepheards called out against him saith the Prophet Esay 31.4 yet this Shepheard alone with his voice can make the fiercest Lion leaue his prey and runne away He can make the Diuels flee and restrain the rage of cruell Tyrants Fiftly because he is a Prince aswell as a Shepheard Other shepheards are vsually no more than ordinary men but he is a great Prince and therefore must needs be a great Shepheard Ezech. 34.23 Sixtly because he is the Arch-Shepheard the Prince of shepheards He vnder whose authority all other shepheards are and to whom they must giue accounts 1. Pet. 5.4 Thus of the attributes giuen to this Shepheard The happinesse of those that liue vnder the gouernment of such a Shepheard followes First he will feed them as a shepheard doth his flock they that wait vpon the Lord shall bee fed Psalm 37.3 And thus chiefly hee will feed their soules they shall grow and eat and finde pasture Iohn 10.9 He will feed them with knowledge and vnderstanding Ier. 3.15 and with such food as will breed life and life in more abundance Iohn 10.10 They shall neither hunger nor thirst He that hath mercy on them shall lead them by the Springs of water he shall guide them those Springs of water are his Ordinances Esay 49.10 and their pasture is fat pasture Ezech. 34.14 The chief feeding-place is his holy Hill the Temple and Sanctuary and ●hat shall bee a blessing to his flo●● there shall bee showres of blessings in their seasons Ezech. 34.26 He doth not feede in the fields and Desarts but with a more excellent feeding he feeds them in his garden in the very beds of spices euery doctrine being as a seuerall spice and the whole summe together as a bed of spices Cant. 6.2 3. The Prophet Dauid seems to resemble powerfull and florishing doctrine to greene pastures and the secret and sweet comforts of the Sacraments to still waters Psalme 23.2 Secondly he will tend and keepe them so as 1. The wilde beasts shall not teare them Tyrants Hereticks di●●ls shall not make a pray of them Ezec● 34.25 so as they should dwell safe though they were in the wildernes and sleepe in the woods Ezech. 34.25 28. Though they walke thorow the valley of death they neede not feare Psalme 23.4 2. Hee will iudge the Ramms and the Goats that push at them that is hee will reuenge the wrongs are done vnto them by such as liue in the same churches with them that reproch or oppose them Ezech. 34.17 c. 3. The Sun shall not smite them Esay 49.10 that is the wrath and anger of God shall not afflict their spirits but they shall lie downe in great rest and tranquillity of conscience Ezech. 34.13 4. If they fall into diseases he will giue them such medicines as shall refresh their soules Psal. 23.3 5. They shall want nothing Psal. 23.1 6. None of them shall bee lacking hee will keepe all that are giuen to him no man shall take them out of his hands Iohn 10.29 Ierem. ●3 4 7. Hee will order them not by force and cruelty but by iudgements Ezech. 34.16 shewing a due respect of the seuerall ages and condition● of his sheepe Esay 40.11 8. Hee will goe in and out before them himselfe and they shall follow him and he will leade them in the paths of righteousnes Iohn 10.4 Psal. 23.3 9. Hee will doe more for them then any Shepheard did for his flock hee will make them liue euer he will giue them eternall life Ioh. 10.29 10. Lastly all this is the more comfortable because hee hath tied himselfe by couenant for his sheepe to doe all this for them Ezech. 34.25 Vse The vse should be for instruction and so both to Ministers and to the people First to Ministers They should heer learn to be wonderfull carefull of the finding feeding of the flocks committed to their charge seeing Christ ordinarily and externally doth administer this work by their seruice If they bee not carefull they dishonour as much as lieth in them the office of Christ The feeding which vnder Christ on Gods holy hil they should prouide for the people is the chiefe blessing of the life of a penitent sinner Iohn 21. 1. Pet. 5.2 Secondly to the people The people that are good should hence learne 1. To pray to CHRIST to shewe them where hee feedes that they may bee directed to the fertill pastures of some powerfull Ministery 2. To trust vpon Christ for all things necessary for their soules Since God hath appointed him as the Shepheard of our soules wee should glorify his office by beleeuing in him and relying vpon him neuer sheepe had a better shepheard and therefore wee neede not feare any more nor bee dismaied Psalme 37.3 Ierem. 23.4 3. Our hearts should bee set vpon the house of Christ and vpon his Word as the food of our soules wee should run to Church with great willingnes and appetite as the sheepe doe to their foddering places 4. When wee finde good pasture and safe feeding wee should be wonderfull thankfull and seeke all his praise with ioyfull hearts Psal. 79. vlt. and 100. 5. Wee should submit our selues to the Ministers of the assemblies whose words are like goades and like nailes fastened because they are giuen by this our Shepherd Eccles. 12.11 6. If the spirituall Assyrian break into the Church of Christ we should remember that if seuen Shepheards and eight principall men bee raysed vp against him he shal be driuen away Mich. 5.5 But withall wee must take heede and looke to it that wee be right sheepe of his pasture For there are multitudes in the flocks of Christ that hee will not feede hee takes no care of them but saith of them That that will die let it dye And as a shepheard separateth the goates from the sheepe so will Christ separate a world of wicked vngodly men from the good though they now be often folded together in one assembly It is the poore of the flock onely that
all the godly All that haue committed their soules to him may rest vpon it that He is able to keep them till the Day of his comming 1. Tim. 1.2 They shall neuer bee lost none can take them out of his hand Iohn 10.29 It is the will of God that none of them should be lacking Iohn 6. And therefore they may comfort themselues with those words of the Apostle Nothing shall euer be able to separate vs from the loue of God Rom. 8. vlt. Thirdly for instruction and so it should teach vs to take chiefe care of our soules For from his office wee may learne that hee accounts our soules to bee the chiefe thing hee would haue kept safe Secondly seeing hee is the Bishop of our soules we should learn not to giue to any man aboue what is writtē seeing they are but stewards of his graces and seruants vnder him Thirdly wee should especially striue to bee such as Christ may take the charge of vs and may proue that we belong to his charge If wee bee of Christs charge then First wee must heare his voice all our daies with great attention and affection His sheepe heare his voice and the voice of a stranger they will not heare Iohn 16. Secondly wee must bee sure wee haue returned and repented vs of our former wandrings else hee is not the Bishop of our soules Thirdly wee must resolue all our daies to obey him that is thus declared to haue the ouersight of vs and bee ruled by such messengers as he sends vnto vs in his name Bishops also and Ministers should heere learne to knowe what a good work it is to haue the charge of soules vnder Christ and accordingly carry themselues with al faithfulnes and diligence and iustice and humlity not Lording it ouer Gods heritage but as such as giue account vnto the chiefe Bishop at his comming 1. Pet. 5.2 3.1 Tim. 4.1 2 3. and 3.1 They are but Christs Curates Lastly woe to such as are complayned of to this Bishop there will be no escaping he will not be corrupted they may escape the punishment of earthly Bishops but they shall neuer escape the punishment of this heauenly Bishop Math. 3.5 FINIS An Alphabeticall Index of the most principall things handled throughout the whole booke A Acceptablenes with God page 170 How works made acceptable 171 Apostasy inward and outward 89 Application of word 217 Astray of going astray 889 B Babes how taken 65 Why most Babes in religion 67 Duties of new-borne Babes 69 Wherein Babes to be imitated 70 Behold how this word is vsed 180 Beliefe see faith 201 Brethren all godly 699 Building spirituall see Edifie 146 God the chiefe builder 182 Wicked men builders 238 C Calling the sorts thereof pa. 336 4. Things in the order of working it 338 8. Signes of effectuall calling 340 Walke worthy of calling 340 Misery of them that refuse their calling 343 Calling of Gentiles 363 Ceremonies how to be yeelded to 595 Children see Babes 65 Christ a Bishop Shepheard 9●0 Christ described 115 How Christ excelleth al lords 118 Christ a stone and how 120 Christ disallowed and how 123 Christ how chosen of God 127 Christ precious many waies 132 How to come to Christ 136 Why we should com to Christ. 139 Christ a fiue-fold tabernacle 149 Christ a foundation what it imports 185 An esteeme of Christ how gotten 199 Christ many waies refused 242 Christs exaltation 246 Christs sufferings 796 Christs example 807 Christ had no sinne 812 How Christ bore our sinnes 831 Why Christ suffred on a tree 836 How Christs suffrings heal vs. 880 Christ how like Sion 187 Markes of the members of it 189 Their prerogatiues 193 Ciuil honesty 308 Compassion to enemies 328 Conscience why to bee instructed in it 750 What conscience is 751 Consciences proper work 753 How conscience is imployed 755 Prerogatiues of conscience 759 Kindes of conscience 760 Confusion spirituall 209 How kept from it ibid. How far Saints may bee confounded 211 Conuersation honest 472 Six things appertaining thereto 474 Why Saints conuerse with wicked 481 In what cases Saints may conuerse with the wicked 483 D Day diuersly taken 546 Day of grace 547 Darknes acceptation thereof 346 Degrees of darknes 347 Signes of spirituall darknes 351 Difference of darknes 353 Deceit see Guile 12 c. Diseases of soule 873 Why diseases of soule not felt 875 How diseases of soule healed 876 Desire of the Word of God see Word 50 Despaire of wicked 264 Preseruatiues against despaire 268 Difference of despaire 271 Men die diuers waies 838 Disobedience 232 Doers well 62● Euill doers 618 Doing well puts the wicked to silence 665 E Ecclesiasticall men and matters subiect to Magistrates see Magistrates 562 Edifie meanes to edifie 146 Why many little edifie 147 Election to life 280 Signes of election 283 To liue as assured of election 287 Enuie hatefulnes of it 33 Signes of one free from enuie 35 Euill doers 618 Equiuocation 820 Example of Christ. 807 Example how it binds 807 Exaltation of Christ. 246 F Father diuers acceptation 732 Faith in Christ. 201 Signes of true faith and of weake faith 223 A family what it is 712 Family-duties 714 Feare of God 703 What causeth vs to feare God 704 Motiues to feare God 705 Who feare not God 707 Signes of Gods feare 708 Flesh see lust Euill properties of flesh 413 Flesh wars against the Soule fiue waies 463 Folly spirituall 651 Folly in godly men 660 Free frō what Christiās freed 671 To what they are made free 674 How but as free 677 Frowardnes 738 Helpes against it 741 G Gifts bestowed on the godly 669 Glory vaine and good 784 God a terrible Iudge 826 God first to bee serued 562 God the chiefe Master builder 182 God how glorified in himself 515 God how glorified in vs. 519 Much failing in glorifying God 521 Motiues to glorify God 525 Helps to glorify God 527 How God glorified in heart 530 How others made to glorify God 533 Grace temporary 344 Graciousnes or goodnes of God 93 How to taste of it 95 It is felt especially in the Word 96 Growth spirituall kinds of it 78 In what christians ought to grow 79 Rules for growth 84 Impediments of growth 85 Signes of growth 86 Guile why to be auoided 12 13 Misery of guilefull persons 14 16 Sundry waies of guile 15 Secret guile guilefull seruants 17 Signes of a man without guile 20 Guile in words many waies 815 H Healing soule See diseases 876 Rules for healing the soule 886 Hearing one of the best senses 451 Heart made new 542 Holines of Christians 303 Holy conuersation 307 Honesty what it is 473 Honesty conuinceth the wicked 484 Honouring men 695 Humility 324 Hypocrisy How many waies committed 2 Motiues against it Effects of it 24 Preseruatiues against it 29 How it is discerned 30 32 What makes an hypocrite 31 Hypocrites holy cōuersation 309 I Ignorance 647 Ignorance hardly cured 662 Imitation of
induction of particulars in their seuerall ranks Which again should both serue to take down carelesnesse seeing neuer man could please GOD without faith and withall it should much perswade vs to get and preserue faith seeing wee haue such a cloud of witnesses and that euery godly man in euery Age of the world did prouide himself of faith whatsoeuer he wanted Fiftly obserue heer the nature of true faith To beleeue God in any thing hee saith will not saue vs if we beleeue not in Christ. The obiect of faith is Christ for though we beleeue other things yet either they are not things that directly concern saluation or else they are founded vpon Christ nor is it enough to beleeue Christ or to beleeue that he is sent of God but we must beleeue in him that is out of sound iudgement wee must with all our hearts imbrace the happy newes of saluation by Christ and relie vpon him and his merits onely for our owne particular saluation The very comparison heer imported shewes vs the nature of faith Christ is like the foundation of a house now to beleeue in Christ is to fasten our selues in our confidence vpon Christ as the stone lieth vpon the foundation To beleeue in Christ is to lie vpon Christ vnmoueably and not flee out of the Building And it is to be noted heer that the apostle addes these words in him to the Text in Esay of purpose to explain the Prophets meaning and to shew what kinde of beleeuing the Prophet intended Therfore it is apparant that Pagans cannot bee saued because they beleeue neither God nor Christ no Iewes and Turks because they beleeue God but not Christ nor the common Protestant because he onely saith he beleeueth but doth not beleeue indeed nor the Papist because hee beleeues not in Christ nor placeth his confidence in him alone but in his owne works or in Saints or Angels or in Popes pardons and indulgences Sixtly note heere the circumstance of time by which he describeth a true faith He doth not say He that shall beleeue or He that hath beleeued but He that doth beleeue which is to shew vs both what wee should doe with our faith and what in some measure is done by euery beleeuer for we should not beleeue at one time onely but at al times we should euery day liue by our faith Gal. 2.21 Christ liueth in vs by faith and so long as we goe about without faith we make Christ to be in vs as it were without life To spend one day without faith is to bury Christ as it were for so long Now the life of Christ must be considered of vs two waies namely as it is in it selfe and as it is in our sence For this latter it is true when we imploy not our faith we let Christ dye in vs in respect of sence But for the first way it is certaine a Christian doth alwaies beleeue after the life of faith is once conceiued in him There is no time in which it can be truly said Now he beleeueth not Therefore doth the Apostle heere say He that beleeueth It is true that in some particular points or promises a Christian may faile through vnbeliefe but not in the maine point or promise of saluation by Christ. It is true also that a Christian may oftentimes and vsually want the feeling of his faith and goe without the ioies of the Holy Ghost but yet he wanteth not faith yea a Christian may violently obiect against beleeuing and thinke hee hath not faith by the temptation of Sathan and the rebellion of that part of him that is vnregenerate and yet God can dispell al these cloudes and in the very dunghill of his vnbeleefe and sinfulnes can finde out his owne part of faith In plaine tearms there is no time after conuersion but if a Christian were throughly sifted and put to it he would be found resolued in that point to rest vpon the couenant of grace for all happines by Christ alone I say at all times in that part of him that is regenerate Christ can dye in no man and if faith could dye then should Christ also die in vs seeing he liueth in vs by faith A man may be without faith in the iudgement of the world in his owne iudgement but neuer is without faith in the iudgement of God A man may want this or that faith but not faith simply as that faith Luke 18. to rely vpon God without failing and to call vpon him with continuall perseuerance as resolued that God will helpe vs in that particular It is true If the Sonne of man come to search amongst men he shall scarcely finde that faith vpon earth but yet a true faith in the generall hee will finde in the breast of euery godly man and woman Peters faith did not faile when hee denyed his master For Chist had prayed that his faith should not faile and was heard in that he prayed Shall not be confounded The Prophet Isaiah hath it thus He that beleeueth shall not make haste it may be vnderstood either as a precept Let him not make hast or as a promise He shal not make haste Men make haste two waies either in their behauiour when they runne headlong vpon the duties they are to doe or when through impatience they will not tarrie Gods leasure for their helpe and deliuerance but fall to vse vnlawfull meanes and take that which comes next them without consideration of the lawfulnesse of it Now the beleeuer must auoide both these and God wil in some measure sanctifie and guide the beleeuer thereunto The Apostle Paul Rom. 9.33 10.11 And the Apostle Peter in this place following the Greeke translation read it He that beleeueth shall not be ashamed as in the Romans or confounded as heere They swarue not from the meaning of the Prophet For by this tearme is auouched That the Godly that beleeue shall neuer haue cause to repent themselues or to fly from God to vse ill meanes The holy Ghost then in this place is pleased to assure the beleeuer that he shall not be confounded To be confounded signifies sometimes to be reproached so Psal. 14.6 The wicked are said to confound the counsell of the godly that is they reproached it Sometimes it signifies to be daunted or dismayed Sometimes to bee disappointed or broken in their purposes as Esay 19.9 10. Sometimes to bee extremely shamed and so it is rendred Rom. 10.11 Sometimes to bee put to a Non plus as Acts. 9.22 Sometimes to be driuen into amazement or wonder Acts 2.6 Sometimes to bee brought into such a straite as one hath neither hope nor help 2. Cor. 4.8 9. Lastly it signifieth to perish vtterly or to bee vndon or damned for euer and so con●usion shall come to all that hate Sion or serue grauen Images It is true that sometimes to be confounded is taken in the good sence and signifies either the affection of wonder as before
Acts 2.6 or else a spirituall grace in the heart of a Christian by which his soule mournes and is abashed and ashamed with him And so there may bee three reasons or rather causes assigned wherein the godly ought to bee confounded As first in repentance for their sins of which these places intreat Ezech. 36.32 Ierem. 31.19 Ezech. 16.61 and for this cause rebellious offenders must be noted and their companie shunned that they may bee confounded in themselues for their sinnes 2. Thes. 3.14 and the Lord complains that the people were not ashamed for their sinnes Ierem. 6.15 Secondly when God or Religion or the godly are reproached and disgraced thus Psalm 44.15 16. Ierem. 51.51 Thirdly the people that profess the truth do erre through indiscretion or giue offence or liue in any grieuous euill Isaiah 29.22 23. Ezra 9.6 7. Now because the confusion here mentioned is a miserie God will turne away from the beleeuer therefore I will explaine that point and shew how many waies God keepes the beleeuer from being confounded They shall not be confounded This God will make good vnto them both in this life and in the day of Iudgement In this life they shall not bee confounded neither in respect of their outward estate nor in respect of their spirituall estate For their outward estate whether we respect their condition and credit or the meanes of their preseruation For their credit God will doe one of these two things For either God will make them exceeding glorious and make them high in praises as Esay 49.2 3. or at the least though they may passe through euill reports yet they shall not be vtterly shamed God will giue them good report amongst the godly and will greatly esteem them himselfe 2. Cor. 6.8 Heb. 11.2 Faith shall obtaine a good report And for the meanes of their preseruation Either first God will saue them from the temptations that fell on the world so as in the euill time they shall be prouided for and preserued from distresse as Psal. 37.19 or else secondly God will not disappoint their trust but come to their succour and deliuer them as Psal. 22.6 and 25.3 and Rom. 5.3 or else thirdly if God doe deferre for a time hee will in the meane time refresh their hearts and lighten their faces with the comfort of his fauor and presence as Psal. 34.6 Or else fourthly if the Lord let the affliction yet continue hee will giue them strength to beare it and patience and magnanimity so as it shall bee no great burthen to them as it is shewd of Christ Isaiah 50.6 7. so of Paul Philip. 1.20 2. Tim. 1.12 Or else fiftly though they may be many waies distressed yet they shall neuer bee forsaken or perplexed so as to haue cause to despaire They shall not bee destroied 2. Cor. 4.9 In all these sences they shall not bee confounded in respect of their outward estate And for their spirituall estate they shall not be confounded and this may bee shewed in diuers things First in respect of illumination they shall not abide in darknes Ioh. 12.46 Secondly in respect of iustification their sinnes are not imputed to them and the Lord so surely forgiues the beleeuer that the conscience shall be satisfied with that propitiation is made in the bloud of Christ for it is not ashamed of the former euill waies because it beleeueth that they enioy Gods pardon as if they had neuer been Zeph. 3.11 Thirdly in respect of Adoption because by beleeuing they are made the sonnes of God and so need not bee ashamed at any time of their condition Ioh. 1.12 Fourthly in respect of accesse vnto the presence of God For by faith he is priuiledged he may go with boldnes and confidence into the presence of the King of Kings and therefore what should confound them Eph. 3.12 Fiftly in respect of the promises of God For by faith he obtaineth many rich and precious promises each of them like a Well of ioy and a verie spring of contentment 2. Pet. 1.4 Heb. 11.13 33 34 Sixtly in respect of the hope of glory For by faith we haue accesse to this grace whence we stand and reioice in the hope of the glorie to come Rom. 4.2 And for the Day of Iudgement it is certaine they shall not bee confounded in two respects First they shall haue boldnes at that Day and hower and praise before all the world They that are not a shamed of Christ in this world hee will not then be ashamed of them And secondly they shall bee deliuered from eternall confusion and damnation They shall enioy euerlasting saluation and shall not bee confounded world without end Isaiah 45.17 Quest. So that by this which hath bin sayd we may in part know how to answer that obiection which may be made For some one may say The Scripture in diuers places seemes to graunt that Gods seruants haue bin ashamed confounded Ans. Now for answer heereunto diuers things must be distinctly considered of First the godly shall not bee ashamed or shamed with euerlasting shame or they shall not be asham'd at the day of Iudgement though it were graunted they might bee ashamed in this life Esay 45.17 in that World which is without end they shall not bee ashamed Secondly wee may answer with the Prophet Daniel that shame and confusion belongs vnto the godly if wee respect their deserts but they are freed from it by the couenant of grace in Christ Dan. 9.7 Thirdly if wee consider of the state of the Church in the publike condition of it as both good and bad are mingled together so God may powre out terrible shame and confusion vpon visible Churches for their great prouocations as Ierem. 9.19 and 17.13 Fourthly this promise shewes what God will make good to the beleeuer if the fault bee not in himselfe he shall bee set in such a condition as he shall haue no reason to bee ashamed but in all distresses two things shall bee certaine first that God will come quickly to his succor Heb. 10.35 36. Secondly that till his deliuerance hee shall haue a faire assurance and euidence for his hope in God by his promises so as if hee doe not withdraw himselfe through vnbelief in rest and quietnes hee shall be fortified Esay 30.19 Fiftly if wee restraine the sence to the coherence and particular drift of this place wee may answer three things First that he shall not be so confounded as to bee driuen to run headlong vpon the vse of any vnlawfull meanes Secondly that hee shall not fall downe from the foundation which is Christ though he should endure many a sore storme And thirdly he shall not bee ashamed in the point of Iustification hee shall neuer repent that hee relied vpon Christ and his merits and righteousnesse Sixtly It is true that in some temporall crosses they may bee foiled in the iudgement of the world and in their owne sence as the Prophet confesseth
praise as well as such as do euill dispraise Vse 2. Secondly it may much condemne the corruption of heart which appeares in many men in this point in sinning against the iust praises of others either by speaking euill of them and blemishing their good names which is to steale their riches from them or by withhoulding due praise which is to withhold the good from the owner thereof It should much affright such as are guilty of this fault that our Sauiour Christ measures our loue to God by our readines to praise for the Works of God done by another Iohn 5.41 42. It is a signe that men loue not God when they loue not goodnes in others which sure they doe not if they commend it not Doct. 5. Weldoing ought to be esteemed whersoeuer it is found in a subiect as well as a Prince in a seruant as well as a Master in all estates and conditions of men For God doth so as may appear Ephes. 6.7 8. and grace and goodnes is alike precious wheresoeuer it is in the like degree which serues to rebuke that secret corruption in the natures of men that are apt to obserue and praise good things in greater persons but withhold the incouragement is due to other men onely because they are poore and because they are worser Iames 2.1 2 3. You may now by this doctrine try whether they be good themselues For it is a signe of goodnes to obserue and loue goodnes wheresoeuer he seeth it in a seruant as well as in a frend and in a poore Christian as well as a rich Doct. 6. It may bee yet further obserued that if men would bee praysed they must doe well praise is onely due to weldoing Rom. 2.10 2. Tim. 2.20 21 1. Thes. 4.4 Rom. 13.5 And therefore it is a poore praise that men raise to thēselues for other things all that fame which is raised for any thing but weldoing is externall vain and therefore they are greatly deceiued that rest in the report that is raysed from their wit or beauty or birth or preferment or sumptuous buildings or the like Those may cause a great fame but onely well-doing can cause a good fame Secondly it shewes that hypocrites that haue gotten reputation onely because they are thought to bee good haue but built in the sands For when in time it shall appear that their owne works doe not praise them they shall find that the praise of men will not last It is not saying well that works a durable good name but doing wel It is but complementing at the best to professe and promise great care of practice and praising and yet bee barren and vnfruitfull Vse 3. Thirdly this shewes the great corruption of their nature that so vnquietly seek after praise and complain how much they be neglected and yet their own consciences know how idle and vnprofitable they are and which is worse that they not onely doe not well but manifestly doe euill and sin daily in pride and enuy in passion and wilfulnes or other open transgressions This thirst after respect aboue others is a signe of a great strength of hypocrisy when they are more desirous to be thought good then indeed to be so and more carefull of the praise of men then of God Fourthly they sinne shamefully that praise the wicked and iustify him that God condemneth but Salomon hath set a note vpon those persons that they are naught themselues For hee saith that they that break the law praise the wicked Prou. 28.4 and 24 25. Psal. 10.3 Fiftly they are yet worse that glory in their shame that seek praise for the excesse of wickednes committed by them either against God or men as they doe that would bee commended for their cost bestowed on Idols or for their worshipping of Saints or Angels or for their reuenges and wrongs done to men or for their mightinesse to hold out in drinking wine or for their filthy acts of any kinde or for their excesses in strange apparell or for the raysing of themselues by vnlawfull meanes or for their deliciousnes in their fare or the like As those glory in their shame so their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 Lastly this doctrine should beget in men a great desire to liue profitably and to doe good and in a speciall manner to apply themselues to such works as are most praise-worthy Quest. Heere then ariseth a question What things in particular doe most aduantage a mans iust praises Ans. The answer is that there are diuers things will make a man to bee much praised as First to honour God hee hath promised to honour those that honour him Prou. 8.17 Now to honour God is to seek his Kingdom first and to confesse his name before men though it bee in euill times Secondly humility and a lowely carriage with meekenes For the humble shall bee exalted and the proud brought low Luke 1.14 20. Thirdly mercy to the poore This made the Macedonians famous in the Churches especially to shew it liberally and readily 2. Cor. 8. Fourthly diligence and exact carefulnes to discharge the labours of our particular calling with all faithfulnes this made the good woman famous mentioned Prou. 31.27 28 29 30 31. especially if wisdome and prouidence bee ioyned with diligence Fiftly to liue in peace and stand to bee quiet and meddle with our owne busines and to be a peace-maker winnes a great deal of praise 1. Thes. 4.11 Math. 5.9 Sixtly to bee exactly iust in mens dealings and true in his words and contracts this wil make men abound with blessings The word is praises as it is in other places translated Prou. 28.20 Seuenthly to bee courteous is to bee amiable so as it bee done without affectation and not directed for thy owne ends and not done with dissimulation Eightthly to doe good to our enemies to bee not onely ready to forgiue but to pray for them forbeare to wrong when it might be executed and to shew all willingnes to ouercome their euill with goodnes Rom. 12.20 21. Ninthly a care in all things strictly to submit our selues to the iust Laws of men auoiding transgression for conscience sake as the coherence in this place shewes And thus of the sixt doctrine Doct. 7. It may yet further bee obserued from hence that God doth require Magistrates in a speciall manner to looke vnto it that they doe all they can to praise and incourage Godly men and such as do good in the countries where they liue Rom. 13.5 This is the end of their calling Iob 29.25 This wil proue heauy one day for those prophane Magistrates that in the places of their abode disgrace men more then such as are godly and countenance none more then such as are most dissolute and lewd of life The iudgements of the Lord wil be terrible against these vnrighteous men Lastly the Antithesis is heere to be noted For when hee saith that such as doe well should be praised he doth not say