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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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are accompanied with holy affections and renewed desires of the same thing formerly in the same prayer requested Psalm 80.3 Cause thy face to shine upon us and we shall be saved this saying is thrice mentioned as v. 3. v. 7. and v. 19. So Psalm 67.3 5. this saying is twice mentioned Let the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 5 When used to stir up our dulness Psalm 107.8 15.21.31 Four times the Prophet saith O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and declare his wonderfull works to the children of men Psalm 47.6 Sing praises unto our God sing praises sing praises unto our King sing praises There is twenty six times mention made of the Lords mercy enduring for ever Psalm 136.1 to the end 6 Sometimes the heart of a childe of God exceedingly runs upon some one desire and so he may vent it more than once in prayer without vain repetition So David Psalm 119. more than once Repetitions in prayer become sinfull 1 When affected as strains of eloquence and Rhetorick as he that cried Hyperbolical God thou that dwellest in the third Heaven of Hyperbolees 2 When empty frothy and impertinent wherein is no spiritual life or heat so those worshippers cryed from morning to noon O Baal hear us 1 Kin. 18.26 Not onely those that are directed to Idols but those directed to Saints as those in the Papacy Holy Paul pray for us holy Peter pray for us mentioning thirty or forty Saints in this manner yea even repetitions of this kind directed to God as in the common prayer book Lord have mercy upon us Christ have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us so in the Letany Good Lord deliver us is eight times mentioned and one and twenty times there is mentioned We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. 3 When men from want of holy notions of the word in their hearts through which the Spirit would convey it self are forced to use the same repetitions these in some measure disparage the spirit of praier and had need be humbled for their seldom reading of the word and meditation thereof from whence comes this strangeness and forcedness of repetitions 4 When men have an itch to pray as long as others that because an other hath praid an hour perhaps from a true enlargment they will pray as large as he hence some persons use vain repetitions when the spirit ceases from assistance and indisposition prevails it s our wisdom and humility to give out For they think they shall be heard for their much speaking Christ sets forth a ground why the heathens used vain repetitions because they thought they should be heard for their much speaking by gentiles he means the heathen or nations whereas the jews were called by the name of people and so they are contradistinguished twice Act. 26.17 23. These prophane nations thought that because they wearied themselves with the irksomness of a long prayer that therefore God would hear them because they would say many things they must needs say what is already spoken but when in prayer there is nothing spoken but that which is needful such an one ought not to be accounted a much speaker Quest Whether or no are long prayers and much speaking unlawful Answ 1 Long prayer may be upon extraordinary cases Moses continued a whole day in prayer Ex. 17.11 12. and Christ a whole night Luk. 6.12 nor are carnal men fit judges in this case who snuff at any small time spent in Gods service Mal. 1 13. crying When will the Sabbath be gone Amos 8.5 nor is the unregenerate part of Godly men a fit judge but before I answer hereto I must premise some things 1 The heart is not easily or suddenly gotten upon the wing yet in that doth the life of prayer consist it is a lifting up of the heart Psal 25.1 Many weights of dulness hardness heartlesness strangeness unbelief from whence arises dumbness discouragement and listlesness are upon the heart which are not easily removed now motion is a cause of heat hence to bring the soul to sensibleness there may be the longer essaying 2 If prayer have its due growth in the several parts of it con●ession petition intercession and thanksgiving it cannot be very short 〈◊〉 O● manifold wants to be supplied and benefits to be acknowledged import that our prayer usually cannot be very short But to answer 1 We are to abominate all long prayer which is performed for any carnal end or pretence whether to get an opinion to be men of parts or to seem religious and get applause or because others so pray The wicked scribes for pretence made long prayers Mat. 23.14 2 See that your length of prayer arise from a true enlargment of heart and from a gracious quickned frame which if it be your petitions will be free and not forced Powre out thy heart like water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 that is thy petitions will come freely as water powred out thy lips will drop as the hony-comb which needs no squeezing Song 4.11 they will be also pat and seasonable according to occasion wherein the heart oft will be put into an holy melting frame After this manner Christ prayed Heb. 5.7 and such a frame of spirit is promised Zach. 12.10 these enlargements the people of God have more often in closet prayer then elsewhere because they can there more freely rip up their hearts and can most insist upon those petitions that will make the soul bleed and yern 3 In long prayers see that your hearts be able to hold out as well as your tongues Our worship must be with our spirit Joh. 4.23 Rom. 1.9 Paul served God with his spirit a short prayer made with servency and devotion prevails with God Jam. 5.16 more then long prayers which are but lip labour Esa 29.13 4 Gods people have upon extraordinary occasions usually used long prayer as Solomon at the consecration of the temple 1 King 8. so when under agonies and great troubles Psal 102.1 the overwhelmed soul powres out his complaint it comes like a flood so when the spirit comes to visit the soul with enlargement the soul in this case is wont to pray long and loth to let the Lord go Gen. 32.26 when we have the breathings of the spirit upon our hearts it s not our wisdom to give out Longa hora brevis mora Bern. God's long a coming and his tarryings are not long Shall we be watchful for winde and tyde and shall we not take the gales of the spirit moreover afflictions are wont to awake the soul hence the soul being awakened prayes with more earnestness and length Jacob when he feared death and destruction from Esau he cryed to God all night long Gen. 32. when the Church is in hazard of ruine also so Hester and the Church Act. 12.5 5 In long prayer we must have respect to them that joyn with us as to our selves when the mouth of
carry on the Ordinances with such honour and comeliness as is meet in so great a work their words being weak are but in a small degree edifying and ready sometimes to flat the spirits of the hearers instead of quickening of them Quest But is prophesie an ordinary gift in the Churches Answ Yes 1 Because it was used in six of the Churches 2 Because Paul saith Ye may all prophesie one by one 1 Cor. 14.31 not all at once but now one and then one He speaks not of all Members but of Prophets c. 12.29 3 Because women are not to speak in the Church but are commanded to be silent 1 Cor. 14.34 but in extraordinary prophesie they were not to be silent as we see in Hanna Luk. 2.36 also 1 Cor. 11.5 6. Obj. Prophesying is an extraordinary gift because it is joyned with tongues Answ It follows not for it is also joyned with charity Obj. There is an injunction of silence to the speaking Prophet when any thing was revealed to another sitting by v. 30. Answ In ordinary prophesie due time and season must be observed neither is it any disgrace to the first Prophet for the second to speak the first having done part of the minde of God is revealed to one and part to another Object But I would fain have the gift of prophesie what should I do to attain it Answ I am so far from envying any mans gift herein that I can say with Moses Numb 11.29 Would to God all the Lords people did prophesie and that the Lord would put his Spirit upon them In order whereto I shall propound these rules 1 Beg of God to open thy heart to understand the Scriptures 1 Cor. 2.11 14 15. Prov. 2.4 5 6. 2 Get a guide to direct thee Acts 8.30 Understandest thou what thou readest said Philip the Eunuch answered How can I except some man guide me Quest What guide Answ Some experienced Preacher who being desired will deal faithfully with thee and show thee thy superfluities and thy defects and set thee in a way of method and prescribe what books are fittest for thee what Commentators and what other books of practical Divinity 3 Study 1 The Scriptures 2 Thine own heart 3 Fundamental Divinity whereof there are sundry Systems in English as Dr. Ames his Marrow and his Cases in English Ursins his Catechism English Peter Martyrs common places English 4 Get the best English Commentators Mr Baines on the Ephesians Mr. Elton on the Colossians Par on the Romans Dixon on Matthew Hebrews Psalms Hutchinson on the small Prophets Mayer on the Prophets There are some English Commentaries on most of the Scriptures though nothing comparable to the Latin It would be a work well beseeming some Prince or great man to employ ten Preachers or more who being painfull and studious might abridg the chief Latin Commentaries and put them in a short English Commentary oh how would it make the way of salvation plain 4 Consider four things 1 The scope of the Scripture you would speak to if you miss herein you will miserably mangle the Scriptures 2 The connection or joyning with fore-going and following words 3 A right Analyse or division of the Chapter into the parts thereof marking where the Holy Ghost ceases to speak to one subject and where it goes on to another 4 The explanation or true meaning of the words 6 Be careful a while to expound the Scriptures in thy family in the exercise whereof thou wilt be much helped on to edifie an assembly Practice is helpfull hereto but it is but one help 7 Expound so that still you may keep to the proportion of faith Rom. 12.6 8 Consider in the Scripture 1 The position the Spirit lays down 2 The arguments and reasons to prove that position 9 In reading any Commentary note the remarkable things therein at the first reading with a pen and then reade over the second or third time what you have noted passing by all the expositions not noted 10 Compare one Scripture with another and strive to expound darker places by them which are plainer 11 Strive to be a good Text man It 's absurd for a Lawyer to speak without a Text out of the Law much more for a Preacher 12 Mistake not to think that a man cannot be a Preacher without Aristotle In many sacred mysteries we must not dispute or philosophize but hear and believe God to be true though what he saith may seem absurd Many seeking after philosophical speculations have sought for an high Mountain to cast themselvs down 13 Learn to distinguish the Law from the Gospel and to teach cleerly the doctrine of faith and repentance Concerning the way and method how to preach there are sundry books in print as Bernards faithfull Shepherd c. In the name of a Prophet Because he is a Teacher of the Gospel sent from me not because he is a kinsman or a Jew As those that are able ought to do well to all men Gal. 6.10 so especially ought they to do good to the houshold of faith and to the Worshippers of Christ so ought they especially to the Prophets in honour of their Doctrine and Message of Salvation Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of good things Epistle 3. of John v. 6 7 8. This seems to be taken out of 2 Kings 4.9 10. where the Woman of Shunem speaks to her Husband thus I perceive that this is an holy man of God which passeth by us continually let us make for him a chamber and let us set him there a bed a table a stool and a candlestick and it shall be when he cometh to us he shall turn in thither So Cornelius received Peter Acts 10.33 So Obadiah hid an hundred Prophets Shall receive a Prophets reward There is at the day of Resurrection a peculiar Reward given to the Prophets distinct from the Reward given to all that fear the Name of God Revel 11.18 The time is come that thou shouldest give a reward to thy servants the Prophets and to thy Saints and to all that fear thy Name both small and great Some think this Reward of a Prophet to be the Crown of Glory but this cannot be because all righteous men receive this others carry it to be the revelation of the hidden will of God which being in the company of such Prophets they often hear this is true they that receive such Guests do also receive this Reward But the Reward of a Prophet is not onely the Prayers and Instructions of such a Guest but shall also receive an equality of glory in Heaven with that Prophet so received according to the proportion of assistance and help he hath afforded that Prophet for the divulging of the truth by which assistance he was made able to convert souls and without which he could not have done it this receiving the Prophet being with a proportionable love which the Prophet had
Luke sets down all the Apostles were called together cap. 6.13 Mar. 3.19 John sets down c. 1.40 41. first Andrew was called then Peter therefore we must remember the fore-mentioned distinction of Discipleship and Apostleship Casting their nets into the sea for they were fishers The calls of Christ usually meet persons when they are employed in their lawful callings V. 19. And he saith unto them Follow me and I will make you fishers of men Christ doth not call the learned men of the world the eloquent Orator the subtile Logician for to make his own power more manifest whiles he had such weak and simple instruments 1 Cor. 1.23 Where is the wise Where is the Scribe Where is the disputer of this world Follow me Leave not onely your lusts but your ordinary imployments that you may be instructed in the way that leads to life And I will make you fishers of men It 's a metaphor the sea is the world the fishes men the net the Gospel Math. 13.47 the fishers are the preachers Preachers are compared to fishers 1 For their painfulness fishermen must rise at all hours and undergo many hard storms so must preachers 2 For their watchfulness they must rise at all hours so preachers 3 For diligence Fishers must let down their net at all hours whether they take something or nothing so must preachers Men are like unto Fishes 1 As fish stands need of salt to keep it from putrifaction so do men stand need to be seasoned with the Gospel and with gracious discourse Col. 4.6 2 As fishes are begotten of water and live in it Rondel l. de pise c. 13. and are nourished by it and die without it so if you be taken by the Gospel You must be born of water and the spirit Joh. 3.5 of the bloud of Christ compared to water Ezek. 36.25 Rev. 7.14 and of the spirit of Christ without which you can neither live nor be nourished 3 As the greater fishes devour the less and the great Whale devours all so the great men of the world devour the smaller and the devil devours all unless rescued by Christ 4 Fishes as soon as they perceive the net swim away from it so natural men put away the Gospel from them Job 21.14 Acts 13.46 5 As fishes are not taken unless they take the bait so are not souls unless they receive the glorious things of the Gospel Rom. 1.16 6 As fishes wander in the sea confusedly until they be taken and put into fish-ponds so do natural men in the sea of this world till they be converted and brought into the Church V. 20. And they straightway left their nets and followed him The powerful work of Christ upon their hearts was so great that they leave their ship and nets to follow Christ yea every enjoyment they had as servants kindred calling There should nothing be too much for us to leave when Christ calls for it Luk. 14.33 we cannot else be Christs Disciples yea our very lives are to be left for Christ Matth. 10.39 God forbid we should rejoyce in any thing save Christ Gal. 6.14 Moreover what obedience they performed to Christ was speedy and present When God calls we must give present obedience so Abraham in sacrificing Isaac Exo. 22.29 Psal 119.60 we must not consider the issues and events of things when we have a clear command of God before us V. 21. And going from thence he saw other two brethren James the son of Zebedee and John his brother in a ship with Zebedee their father mending their nets and he called them We have here two called more from their Fisher-craft to be Christs Disciples whom he retains a good while with him about the doctrine of the Gospel For though men of mean parts and callings may teach yet not before they have learned themselves In that he calls poor Fisher-men we may admire the free grace of God and the greatness of his power who by such weak means could overcome the world 2 Cor. 4.7 The treasure of the Gospel was in such earthen Vessels That the excellency of the power might be of God 1 Cor. 1.26 27. V. 22. And they straightway left the ship and their father and followed him We may see 1 Their dependance upon the providence of Christ for they did not reason how shall we do to live if we leave our callings 2 All worldly things must be held with a disposition to part with them when Christ calls for them they presently left their nets This besides the command of God and example of Saints should move us that what we part with for Christs sake We shall have an hundred fold in this present world and life everlasting hereafter Matth. 19 27. 3 From their not going till they had 〈…〉 we should learn when we attempt any thing hazar●ious 〈◊〉 to see our call Heb. 11.8 Abraham being called 〈…〉 went not knowing whither he went The children of F●●●●aim going against their enemies without a call turned their backs in the day of battel Ps 79.9 compared with 1 Chron. 7.21 22. So Israel going up against the Canaanites when God forbad them by Moses to go were smitten by them Numb 14.41 42 43 44 45. 4 In that they leave ship and father learn that matters of affection as well as matters of profit must give way to Christ Gen. 12.1 2. V. 23. And Jesus went about all Galilee teaching in their Synagogues and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the People We have in this last part to the end of the Chapter two things 1 The diligence of Christ in preaching and working Miracles v. 23. 2 The effect hereof viz. Multitudes followed him bringing their sick unto him He went about all Galilee Persons that are not fixt to the oversight of one Church but have a Call to go into the World must not content themselves to tarry in any one place Christ went about all Galilee preaching in their Synagogues Where the seed is cast among much ground it 's probable some of it will take root and bring forth fruit And preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom That is the glad Message of the Kingdom of Heaven and the way to attain it If any man ask how Christ could be permitted to preach in the Synagogues it was partly because grave and godly and knowing men either known so to be or commanded by others were so permitted to speak so the chief Ruler of the Synagogue permitted Paul to speak unto the People Acts 13.15 After the reading of the Law and the Prophets the Rulers of the Synagogue sent unto them saying Ye men and brethren if ye have any word of exhortation to the People say on Besides Christ confirmed his Doctrine with Miracles and so all men whom malice blinded not might see that he was a Teacher come from God and therefore might easily have access into the Synagogue Now a Synagogue is the same
persons at difference so should we as much as in us lies be at peace with all men Rom. 12.18 The Apostle is full of exhortations herein 1 Cor. 1.10 2 Cor. 13.11 Col. 3.17 We are called to peace God calls to it who then calls to contention save Satan Means to peace 1 Mortifie your lusts James 4.1 Whence come wars come they not of your lusts The sea would be calm were it not for strong windes so would your hearts were it not for your lusts now the sins to be mortified are 1 pride Prov. 13.10 2 tale-bearing Prov. 26.20 21. 3 unrighteousness Prov. 15.27 4 provoking speeches Gal. 5.26 5 immoderate meditation of wrongs we have suffered 6 hatred Prov. 10.12 7 forcing of wrath Prov. 30.33 8 Let every one do his duty in that kinde of life to which God hath called him let him not lift up himself above others nor reprehend the works of others and praise his own as better but let one serve another by love Luth. Tom. 4.167 9 Practice Christian moderation in remitting of your right for peace sake Phil. 4.4 the word is epieikeia which signifies a yielding of our right 2 Study peace 1 Thes 4.11 The Apostle bids the Thessalonians to study to be quiet We study books arts sciences but this is an excellent study Sit down and think this man and I are at ods how should I make up the matter This is the pursuing of peace Psal 34.14 Seek peace and pursue it 3 Practice Christian kindness as giving lending c. One end why God gives us the things of this life is that we may maintain peace with them Every man is a friend to him that giveth gifts Prov. 19.6 Jacob took off a malice of twenty years standing by a gift Gifts are compared to precious stones Prov. 17.8 so that as persons that wear precious stones do oft delight to look upon them so do such persons look upon gifts Also mutual entertainments mutual visitings mutual counsellings and comfortings 4 Where you are damnified put up small wrongs Mat. 17.26 27. though Christ were free from paying tribute yet that he might not offend he bids Peter pay a piece of money for tribute Where you have damnified others give satisfaction for the least wrong Jacob Gen. 31.39 for peace sake gave satisfaction to Laban for that which was torn of beasts or stoln by day and night 5 In case of offence with any man proffer reconciliation both in your speeches and cariages Imitate the Lord who though the person offended yet sought to us 2 Cor. 5.19 As when an house is on fire every man brings water to quench it so let us meet one another in the midst to quench the fire of contention Luke 12.58 Agree with thine adversary whiles thou art in the way with him 6 Beware of stigmatizing one another with nick names take heed lest ye put off the name of Christ from those that have put on Christ Gal 3.28 by calling them Puritans Sectaries Anabaptists If every natural body no less desire its own unity then its being why should not the mystical body in like manner 7 Get the peace of Christ to rule in your hearts Col. 3.17 Creatures of a meek and peaceable nature though you use them never so harshly yet are they peaceable because they have principles of meekness and patience in them whereas creatures of fierce natures as Lions and Wolves though you use them never so gently yet will they be fierce because they have such principles so wicked men have not known the way of peace Rom. 3.17 but godly men usually are of peaceable spirits because the peace of God rules in their hearts Motives to Peace 1 Peace is a blessing that comprehends all blessings under it Psalm 29 1● The Lord will give his people the blessing of peace What is our joy but the peace of our consciences What is our health but the peace of our humours If a man were in heaven and could not have it in peace it would not be comfortable Everlasting peace is part of our joy in Heaven 2 That which is the excellentest life every one desires to live Such is a life of peace not onely in that the most flourishing Commonwealths have lived it but God and Angels that which is the worst life devils and wicked men live such is a lite of contention Hence Christ the Prince of peace lived this life called the Prince of Peace Esai 9.6 gave it for a legacy to his Disciples John 14.27 Esai 11.6 7 8. 3 The universal peace that is among all creatures The heavenly bodies Sun Moon and Stars keep their course the Sea keepeth within the girdle of the Sands and doth not invade the earth the Windes blow not together but successively the contrary qualities in the world heat and cold drought and moisture are so tempered together that like musical discords they make a perfect harmony Woods of trees fields of corn grow without molesting one another creatures not onely of the same kinde but of different kinde feed peaceably one by another If peace be among all bodies let it be much more among the mystical body of Christ Psalm 133.1 How good a thing is it for brethren to dwell together in unity 4 The common enemy should set us at peace I mean the Popish and Prelatical combinations So that the question is not so much what kinde of government we shall have in Protestant Churches but whether we shall have any Protestant Church at all At the Battle of Lepanto when there was great differences and animosities betwixt the three generals Don John and Venereus and the third general yet when the battel came to be fought they united against the Turk and got a mighty victory against his navy the like whereof hath hardly been heard of Phil. 1.20 Jude 3. contend for the common salvation 5 Herein consists the form of charity not in this that we are all of one minde for that is kept for heaven but that we are peaceably affected in our hearts and wish well one to another When Luther had vented some hard speeches against Calvin sayes he though Luther count me a dogge yea a devil yet I 'le count him a famous servant of God 6 The smalness of matters which causes a breach of peace many are as angry for rejecting their opinions as Jonah was for his gourd I know the smallest thing in Religion ought to be made conscience of yet those points without the knowledge whereof many have come to heaven though they may obstruct publick communion yet know I no cause why they should hinder peace and private communion among those that fear God Learn we of the Romish Churches if it be expedient and lawful so to call them among which there are controversies of far more moment viz. of the infallible judge in all points of the Christian faith the Spanish and Italian Churches defend the Pope to be the supreme judge affirming him so to be inspired with
Christ ver 16. 2 That no man should dare to think as if there were any contradiction in these and such like Scriptures as Faustus the Manichee did who did deny this Gospel to be penned by Matthew and denied this Sentence to be any of Christ's words because it is false that Christ did not destroy the Ceremonies seeing Christians do not observe them Consider the Law having no place in justification and nothing contrary to the Law of the New Testament in point of meats days or ceremonies we ought with Paul to think it holy just and good Ob. But if the law be thus fulfilled what shall we think of the ten Commandements Answ The Decalogue or ten Commandements is part of the Law of nature Rom. 2.15 Which shew the works of the Law written in their hearts Yea every command of them was observed before the giving of the Law upon Mount Sinai even the command of the Sabbath Exod. 16.29 now they being the Law of nature are to be observed for example it s writ in every mans heart that there is a God and that this God is one and that he is the immediate object of worship and that his name is to be sanctified c. All the question is about the Sabbath or seventh day from the creation which is put to an end Col. 2.16 yet is it written in every mans heart that if God be to be worshipped there must be a time for his worship and if it be left to the scantling of every carnal mans heart it will be little enough yea in time it will come to nothing among such it remains then that godly men as they have it writ in their hearts to give God a time so that they give him that time which the Churches at Corinth and Galatia and Troas gave unto him and as they so doubtless all the Apostolical Churches This was the day which the Spirit calls the Lords day as like phrases call the Lords table the Lords body the Lords supper whereto that speech of Psal 118.24 hath respect This is the day which the Lord hath made we will rejoyce and be glad herein For all the rest of the Commands as the obedience of inferiours to superiours and that every man shall enjoy his own wife life state and good name c. is writ in every mans heart Moreover for that of the Sabbath the distinction of divers of the Rabbins is to be observed viz. one thing is commanded in these words Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath the cause of which holy worship is a thankful remembrance of the creation of the world another thing is commanded in these words The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt do not manner of work this rest respecting their servitude in Aegypt belongs to the Hebrews onely Exod. 31.13 remembring their own servitude in Aegypt they should handle their own servants gently which also was the opinion of Irenaeus l. 4. c. 30. and Eusebius l. 1. c 4. so that to distinguish rightly we must distinguish the commands of worship and the commands of rest as by their causes so by their times The Christians observed the Sabbath and had their assemblies thereon in which assemblies the Law was read Acts 15.21 which continued to the Council of Laodicea to whom it seemed better that that day the Gospels should be read and therefore from the ancient fathers Balsamon observs that almost in all things the Sabbaths were equal'd to the Lords days which two days Nyssen calls brethren Also Justin Martyr against Tripho before Abraham there was no need of circumcision nor before Moses of the celebration of the Sabbath feasts and offerings p. 186. Asterius cals them a beautiful couple also Clement Const l. 7. c. 24. saith Keep holy the Sabbath day and the Lords day because this is dedicated to the memory of the creation the other to the memory of the resurrection also cap. 8. he saith let servants labour five days but on the Sabbath day and Lords day let them wait on the doctrine that makes to Godliness in the Church In the ancient Church they had a custome not to fast on the Sabbath because it was a day of gladness except on the Sabbath that was before the burial of Christ Ignat ad Philip Tertul. de jejun and therefore Eusebius mentions that Constantine forbade Christians to be summoned to law on the Sabbath no less then on the Lords day because those days were dedicated to holy assemblies and therefore whereas some think from that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one of the Sabbaths the Lords day is placed into the room of the Sabbath they are deceived seeing there is no mention hereof by Christ or the Apostles Now when the Christians observed these two days viz. the Sabbath and Lords day they did not do it of any command of God or of the Apostles but by voluntary consent by the power of liberty given to them unless I should add by divine example which is not of little force see Jer. 26.18 Unless we add that the spirit calls the day of worship the Lords day Rev. 1.10 on this day there was a meeting of all that dwelt in the City and Country though he call it Sunday Justin Apol. 2. Q. Whether to these ten commandements as the law of nature may not other commands of the Gospel be refer'd A. Yes to the first we may refer all those commands which forbid the least shew of worship to be given to false Gods 1 John 5.21 and that the true God alone be worshipped John 17.3 1 Cor. 8.6 To the second command we may refer all commands forbidding resemblances of God and the worshipping of God through any mean which himself hath not instituted Matth. 6.24 Ephes 5.5 Phil. 3.19 To the third command we may refer the due sanctification of the name of God Matth. 6.9 and to keep our words in the bounds of yea and nay Matth. 5. ●4 Jam. 5.12 To that of the Sabbath we may refer that certain hope concerning the rest in heaven the taste whereof we have in peace of conscience Heb. 4.9 10 11. To the fifth we may refer all honour due to Princes Rom. 13.1 2 3 6 7. to Masters Col. 3.22 to Husbands Eph. 5.22 to Pastors 1 Tim. 5.17 Heb. 13.17 To the sixth command all wrath and hatred which are the seeds of murthers Matth. 5.22 1 Joh. 3.15 To the seventh command are reckoned all impurities and all divorces without the cause of adultery Matth. 19.9 To the command against theft are refer'd not only those commands which forbid us to hurt the goods of others but that we should profit them Col. 3.25 1 Cor. 12.7 To the ninth is refer'd those commands which caution us against lying and enjoyn us a continual care of truth Eph. 4.24 25. To the tenth are refer'd the commands of quenching inordinate motions Gal. 5.24 Eph. 5.22 23. the baits of which concupiscence are wealth honour
accidentally or looks upon her by reason of occasion or company nor is it unlawfull for a Husband to look upon his Wife or a Suiter upon a Maid or Widovv he sues unto but looking upon a Woman in a lustfull vvay is condemned vvhich is contrary to the end of this Commandment vvhich is Chastity Concupiscence is the Mother of Lust and the Eys are the Windovvs to let it in and as Wrath is the Mother of Murder so is Concupiscence of Adultery James 1.14 15. Lust conceiveth and bringeth forth sin Hence pray Psalm 119.37 Turn away mine Eys from beholding vanity The Pharisees depraved this Command tvvo vvays 1 In that they did not understand it of invvard Concupiscence but of that vvhich broke out into touches kisses or bodily Adultery 2 That by this Lavv they thought vvas forbid the Concupiscence of another mans Wife but not of an unmarried Woman but Christ says that all lustfull thoughts of a Woman though she be not a Wife is unlavvfull Learn vve then Job's Lesson cap. 31.1 I have made a Covenant with mine Eys why then should I think upon a Maid Also Prov. 6.25 Lust not after her Beauty in thine heart neither let her take thee with her Ey lids What though she be beautifull yet is Beauty fading if she be honest she is none of thine if she be a Strumpet consider hovv filthy her soul is Besides remember hovv Abimelech vvas taken vvith Sarahs Beauty remember hovv Sichem vvas foil'd looking on Dinah Potiphar's Wife looking on Joseph David on Bathsheba Amnon on Thamar As our Mother Eve at first vvas foil'd by the Eye Gen. 3.6 seeing the forbidden Fruit vvas pleasant to the Eye she took it Sampson vvas also taken vvith looking upon Dalilah Therefore as the Sun on a sudden darts out Beams and the Clouds lightening so doth beauty and feature dart out the beams wherewith it shoots the arrows of love and desire into the hearts of persons therefore if at any time the Eys should go out let the minde call back the Eys as from nets and snares laid for the soul In other creatures there is a natural shiness of snares laid for them let there be so in us And what I say of wanton lookings we may apply to wanton listenings and touchings And also that wanton looking which is Adultery in Men towards Women is Adultery in Women who shall lustfully look upon Men. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also signifies sollicitations Can. 4. Syn. Neocaesariensis Hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart Though men can neither see nor punish the Adultery of the heart yet God sees it Such a speech Job 31.7 If my heart have walked after mine eys and any blot he means of uncleanness hath cleaved to my hands then let me sow and another reap yea let my Off-spring be rooted out God looks into the heart he sees the mind and purpose which distinguisheth evil deeds a Thief is a Thief before he puts forth his hand to steal Wickedness is laid open by the doing but doth not then begin the mind becomes adulterous if it set before it the image of pleasure that might be had with such a party and shall desire it Tertul de poeniten The will is the beginning of the deed which is not then freed when some difficulty hinders the Commission of the thing will'd neither can the will in this case be excused by the inability of perfecting that which it wills For application 1 Be humbled for all your wanton lookings and lustings you had in the state of nature and ignorance as the prodigal in the return to his father Other sins are confest in prayer let this also 2 Admire the grace of God to converted souls that can look upon a woman without lusting after her Tertul. de Velandis Virg. A Christian looks upon a woman with safe eyes he is blinde in his minde toward lust 3 Caution of us for the guiding of the eye not to fix it on any object that may stir up lust neither lustful books nor pictures nor mixt dancers neither to fix our eyes upon the beholding the beauty of wanton women Beauty indeed may be beheld that as in other works God may be praised so in that and therefore when one ask'd a certain Philosopher what there was in beauty that it was so desired he told him it was a blinde mans question onely let us be wary herein that we dwell not too long on such objects lest our hearts should be carried after our eys and as restraint at all times should be upon our sight so especially when we come to worship God Eccl. 5.1 Look to thy feet when thou enterest into the house of God it 's a Syneedoche for all the affections of soul and members of body 4 Exhortation to cleanse our flesh and spirit from all unchaste and unholy lusts Jam. 4.8 Cleanse your hands and purifie your hearts from what Even from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit Thy body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost do not defile it 1 Cor. 6.19 Remedies against heart-lust through the eye 1 Beware of private conversing men and women together A Christian man is commanded to confer with a Christian woman with all chastity 1 Tim. 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Call back your hearts from meditations of beauty and feature to better meditations The absence of holy thoughts causes the Lord to deliver us up to vain thoughts Psal 81.10 11. I gave them up to their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own counsel Rom. 1.24 26 28. As they liked not to retain God in their knowledge he gave them up to a reprobate minde to chuse things reprobated yea he gave them up to the lusts of their hearts 3 Be often eying Gods eye in all places Hebr. 4.13 There is not any creature which is not manifest in his sight Pro. 15.3 Psal 139.2 He knowes our thoughts far off 4 Be not greedy to hunt after beauties Remember one fit of an ague blurs it and how that beauty withers as grass Psal 39.11 Thou makest his beauty to consume away like a meth think what a change age and death puts upon it 5 Consider the eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccl. 1.8 but rather more unsatisfied whiles the more they behold the more are burning desires kindled in the soul 6 Use prayer that God would turn thy eyes from vanity Psal 119.31 and watchfulness that thou keep thy heart with diligence for out of it are the issues or goings out of life and death Prov. 4.23 V. 29. And if thy right eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish and not that thy whole body be cast into hell V. 30 And if thy right hand offend thee out it eff and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish and not that thy whole body should be
cast into hell These words belong to the former command forbidding adulterous looks They are an Objection Who can but love beautiful men and women nature inclines to love that which is beautiful Answ To this Christ answers by an argument from the greater to the less If a Gangrene had infected part of the body you would rather have that infected member cut off then have the whole body hazarded how much more should we do it when the doing thereof will prevent the eternal destruction of soul and body if we could not therefore save our souls otherwise we should be content to pull out our eys but I require no more but that thou turn thy eye from an ensnaring countenance thou oughtest to cut off thy hand but I require no more then that thou keep it off from unchaste touchings We suffer hard things for the saving of our body much more should we suffer hard things for the saving of our souls and so much more because it costs less namely the cutting off of our lusts Such phrases there are Matth 18.8 Mark 10.45 onely there they are applied to every darling sin here they are applied to that sin wherein persons have the least power of resistance Of this Job 23.11 My foot hath held his steps his way have I kept and not declined Job 31.1 I have made a covenant with mine eyes v. 7. No blot hath cleaved to my hands also v. 5. his foot hastened not to deceit the meaning of this precept is that the nourishment of lust is to be avoided lust travelling with a sinfull act Psal 7.14 Jam. 1.14 15. if it be hindered to bring it forth that sinful act becomes abortive and lust it self dies Therefore this command as all other commands that seem to command wickedness or sin ought to be taken figuratively literally this precept were a breach of the sixt command Thou shalt not kill and so it were a cruel command but it is a most gentle Command it had been hard if he had bid us keep company with women behold them and abstain from them Julian taking these sentences literally mockt at Chistian Religion as foolish cruel and vain because it commands to maim our own members He mockt at Christians because no man did it he mock at Christ because no man obeyed him but this Apostate might have seen from the scope that these words were not to be taken literally but figuratively For Christ teacheth this seeing there is so much danger of the eyes that they are as gates to let lust in and out they are to be pluckt away from vanity yea to be pluckt out rather then be offensive to the soul Some of the ancients understood by right hand kindred and friends any dear thing which draws from God but here is meant all occasions of lust taken from the eye in particular such was that curiosity of looking into the Ark of God 1 Sam. 6.19 Means to pluck out the abuse of the eye and to cut off the hand 1 Mortifie our earthly members Though corruption be in you let it be like a dead carkass 1 God works habitual or inward mortification not onely by raising up those that are dead in sin but by stirring up the affections of the soul to a desire of raising and then crucifying sinfull affections or lusts in us 2 For outward actual mortification that is our work hereby we resist temptations and keep in inordinate affections These sinful affections are call'd members as corruption is called a body Rom. 6.6 and because it puts forth its power in all the members of the body and as our natural members perform our natural actions so our corruption uses these sinfull affections as instruments to fulfil the desires thereof 2 Look upon every allowed lust as that which severs betwixt God and us Esa 59.1 we are eagerly affected against those who endeavour to sever betwixt us and our dearest friends 3 Look upon your old man as crucified with Christ Rom. 6.6 4 Get renovation in the imagination for want whereof there are so many filthy lustings in the eye and listnings in the ear 5 Look upon these as those which will destroy the soul as in the text V. 30. It hath been said Whosoever shall put away his wife let him give her a writing of Divorcement But I say unto you whosoever shall put away his wife saving for the cause of fornication eauseth her to commit adultery and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery Christ further clears the seventh Commandement asserting that this command is broken if a man shall put away his wife except for fornication the Law allowed divorce in divers cases but Christ onely in the case of fornication It hath been said 1 By Moses from divine inspiration not upon his own private fancie for the commandements and statutes which Moses taught them the Lord commanded him for to teach them Deut. 6.1 for he that would not determine in a matter of inheritance as in the case of the daughters of Zelophehad without first asking God in a matter of greater moment would not do any thing without Gods command and though Christ Matth. 19.8 ascribes divorce unto Moses yet those things which came from God are ascribed to Moses Matth. 8.4 Mark 1.44.7.10 Luke 5.14 Now this divorce was made for some kind of filthiness as for leprosie scolding c. Deut. 24. 1 For it was scarcely used in case of fornication for if the wickedness of fornication appeared the adulteress was stoned Levit. 20.10 and if she were suspected she was purged with the waters of jealousie Numb 5.27 and God dispensing with the Jews for to put away their wives for sundry causes they did not sin herein in my opinion Ob. But Mat. 19.8 Mose because of the hardness of your hearts suffered you to put away your wives therefore it was onely a permission Answ This their hardness was the cause why God granted the Jews liberty herein lest the Jews should kill their wives whom they could not put away yet this grant did make their putting away lawful because God for the hardness of the Jews did dispense with them in the law of matrimony by this putting away of wives God typified the putting away of the Jews and the betrothing of the Gentiles Whosoever shall put away his wife For onely the husband by the Jewish law might put away the wife The Pharisees corrupted this law of divorce the original law was Deut. 24.1 That if a man hated his wife for some filthiness giving her a bill of divorce he might put her away but might never take her any more after he had put her away Now the Scribes and Pharisees depraving this law the Jews for every small matter put away their wives showing the seventh Commandement was not violated if they gave them a bill of divorce hence Christ reprehends this interpretation Now the form of this putting away as the Lawyers tell was Tuas res tibi habeto tuas
res tibi agito that is look to thy own affairs conditione tua non utar in severing the betrothings placuit renunciationem interv enire Let him give her a writing of divorcement This was a writing whereby the husband commanded his wife to depart from him The form whereof was as Grotius mentions this Of my own accord and no mans compulsion I have decreed to leave refuse and put away from me thee hitherto my wife and even now do send thee away forsake and refuse thee and cast thee away from me that thou mayest be in thy own power and mayest depart whither thou listest at thy own will and pleasure neither let any man at any time forbid it and so be thou let go that it may be lawful for thee to mary to what man thou wilt Now that it was lawfull for a man to put away his wife without bringing the cause to the judge appears by Christs words for Christ saith It was spoken of them he that putteth away his wife let him give her a writing of divorcement Besides else how could Joseph have put away Mary privily The ancient Gaules and other nations granted the husbands power of life and death over their wives Grotius Quest Whether did Moses grant divorce onely in case of fornication Answ No for Christ saith that grant was made for the hardness of their hearts Mat. 19.8 Mark 10.5 But I say unto you Whosoever shall put away his wife except for the cause of fornication Qu. What if a wife be a witch or one that endeavours to murther her husband c. what then may she not be put away Ans yes but Christ names fornication because it is the proper cause of divorce and directly repugnant to mariage whereas other causes are general excluding from all civil society Quest But what if the adulterous wife repent may not the husband take her again to bed and board Answ He may pardon it because the offence is principally committed against himself but he is not bound because Christ here gives him liberty to put her away 1 Sam. 25.44 compared with 2 Sam. 3.14 15 16. Quest Whether divorced persons may marry again to one another after divorce Answ No Jer. 3.1 If a man put away his wife and she become another mans shall he return unto her again shall not the land be polluted The reason was least under pretence of divorce they should lend one another their wives as the Lacedemonians and Cato did Quest Whether divorced persons may mary at all without committing adultery Answ The innocent person doubtless may for why should a chaste person suffer for the Adultery of his yoke-fellow 2 God hath provided Mariage a Remedy against Incontinency for all sort of persons 1 Cor. 7.2 but if parties lawfully divorced might not mary again then they should want this Remedy and be exposed to a necessity of sinning Quest Whether putting away in any case be lawfull seeing Mal. 2.15 16. The Lord hates putting away Answ The Prophet speaks not of any putting away but of that which was done to innocent Women onely for Barrenness upon which cause Divorce first began at Rome and yet the Romans were an hundred and twenty years without an Example of putting away Abraham though Sarah was barren till ninety nine years of age never put her away Causeth her to commit Adultery How could this be A. She that was put away being branded with the Reproach of Divorce could not get another Husband and so being hopeless of marying as being counted defiled as Moses phrases it turn'd Strumpet now Christ casts the fault hereof upon him who for a slight cause would put away his Wife This is to expose the frail age of a young Woman to temptation Hence M.T. Cicero was blamed because for light causes he put away his Wife Terentia And whosoever marieth her that is divorced committeth Adultery Christ means it as Grotius thinks of one that is of the same Faith and Profession so that we may understand it of them who received those that were put away before there were Endeavours of Reconciliation used of one of them to the other 1 Cor. 7.11 But if she depart let her remain unmaried or be reconciled to her Husband Also it 's meant of those who being greedy of other mens Wives by Divorce made way to mary them Hence Matth. 19 9. the former Husband is said to commit Adultery if he shall mary another so that the Crime of Adultery falls on him he hath taken away all hope of agreement betwixt the former yoke-fellows so that hereby Christ would establish hope of Reconciliation Otherwise Moses Law standing in force as it did then it had been hard that they that had maried a Woman put away should be counted for Adulterers Quest What do you think of this case when a Husband remains a certain time from a Wife whether another man may mary with her Answ The absent party is either beyond seas or in his own countrey If beyond seas there must be a greater time granted to hear of him By the Law of Constantine if the Wife did not hear of the safety of the Husband in four years she was permitted to mary to another To give my opinion there must be a precise time set down wherein if the Wife do not hear of the Husband it may be lawfull to mary as if being in the same Nation he do not send to her in two years or if being in a foreign Nation he do not send to her in four years for in such a space of time it may be supposed a man may write from any part of the Earth unless he be in captivity such a Man not sending to his Wife in such a space of time may be supposed to put her away howbeit I think in these cases to consider seriously what the Laws of the Nation are is most expedient and so far as they concur with lawfulness and expediency to follow them For Application 1 Caution Not to put away Wife or Husband there are four Mischiefs in it 1 Such an one is a Murderer because he hates his Wife If Christians are comma●ded to love their Enemies how much more then their yoke-fellows who may have vitia but not flagitia per●●ps faults but not heinous offences 2 Such an one is guilty because he hath put away one who hath not committed Adultery For this cause onely putting away ought to be for though there be other failings yet ought there to be reconciliation Lactantius saith He is an Adulterer who hath maried her that is put away and he is an Adulterer who hath put away his Wife except for Fornication that he may mary another 3 He is guilty because he makes her commit Adultery 4 Because he that takes her that is put away becomes an Adulterer 2 Exhort To keep the Bond of Matrimony inviolate in no wise to break it as being the Covenant of God Prov. 2.17 3 Learn not to put away a Wife or
Luke 9.53 yet he brought grace to their doors Joh. 4.10 Also from the example of Saints How kinde was Joseph to his brethren that sold him into Egypt Gen. 50.20 Stephen prayed for his persecutors Acts 7.59 Jeremy did not desire the wofull day against those that went about to take away his life Jeremy 17.16 How oft had David Saul in his power yet would he not hurt him It 's related of Bishop Cranmer that he so loved his enemies that it became a Proverb That the readiest way to get a good turn from him was to do him an injury 2 There may be some good in an enemy His created nature is good as being from God he hath or may have many good parts in him which if malice did not blinde us we might see now goodness wherever it is ought to be an object of love Thy love to thy enemy may be a mean to overcome his enmity Rom. 12.19 As coals of fire melt hard mettals so will thy kindness melt him 4 Though at present he may be an enemy yet he may in time become both thy friend and Gods friend Though now for the present he do thee wrong he may come to relent Prov. 16.7 When a mans ways please the Lord he makes even his enemies to be at peace with him He that turned the hearts of the Egyptians to lend his people their jewels can turn thine enemies hearts Paul once an enemy to God and his people after conversion a true friend to both The Jews though at present enemies for your sakes yet are they beloved for the fathers sake and shall be friends to Christianity Rom. 11.28 Esau's heart was turn'd to Jacob Gen. 33.10 5 The mischiefs which come from hatred of our enemies 1 Hereby we do more hart to our own souls then our enemies can do filling our souls with malicious distempers 2 We multiply contentions farther and farther There 's no way to overcome the evil of an enemy but by doing good to him Rom. 12.21 We should be glad when God puts an opportunity in our hand to overcome the malice of our enemies that we may see the uprightness of our heart herein Miriam had spoken against Moses in a way of detraction Numb 12.1 God smites her for so doing with leprosie Moses prayes for her healing with much earnestness v. 13. So doth Samuel pray for the people when they had cast off him and his government 1 Sam. 12.18 Obj. Papists say it 's matter of counsel to love enemies but no command A. It 's well if it be so yet no sin if it be omitted do it thou hast more reward omit it thou hast no punishment Counsels are onely given to some few that can receive them Matth. 19.11 12. but this command is given to all as the other duties commanded in this Chapter are precepts as Let your light shine forth v. 16. also v. 24.28 29 c. are all precepts and not counsels so is this Besides the reasons in the Text and v. 45. show that it is not left as an arbitrary thing Yea we finde it conjoyn'd with the most precise precepts Rom. 12.18 Col. 3.13 1 Thes 5.15 Obj. But David oft prayes against his enemies Answ 1 It may be conceived he means the enemies of the Church not his own personal enemies 2 He did this rather by a Prophetical spirit as rather denouncing what will come then desiring what may come 3 It was not out of any revengefull desire as if he took pleasure in the destruction of wicked men as out of a desire that the truth and justice of God may be made glorious in the destruction of wicked men 4 The Prophets pray for the destruction of wicked men not of their persons but of their Kingdome which being destroyed the Kingdome of Christ is inlarged 5 The Prophets wish for temporal evils upon wicked men that they may be corrected and amended Ps 83.16 Fill their faces with shame that they may seek thy name O Lord. But if this cannot by prayer be obtained then that the Church may be freed from them and the justice of God glorified 6 If none of these take place which we may in most Scriptures suppose then we must think that either David and others sinned herein or that the Law of the new Testament tends more to charity then the old and is a more perfect law Obj. But it 's a rule in justice to give like for like he hates me why should not I hate him Answ Like for like is not a rule alwayes to go by for it takes place onely in just things The contrary is commanded 1 Pet. 2.23 1 Pet. 3.9 Render to no man evil for evil or rayling for rayling 2 Revenge is an act of Gods Psal 94.1 Vengeance is mine not thine Deut. 32.15 Also it 's an act of the Magistrate who is a revenger to execute wrath on them that do evil Rom. 13.4 Obj. But he is my enemy and hates me causelesly Answ 1 Lay aside thy hatred towards him that he may love thee 2 Thou wilt have great comfort in thy conscience when thou canst love a causeless enemy Psal 7.4 Yea I have delivered him that without cause was mine enemy Obj. But he is a wicked man and the Prophet David saith Psal 139.21 Do not I hate them that hate thee Answ It 's one thing to hate a wicked man another thing to hate the wickedness in a man If you hate his wickedness you will hate the same wickedness in others even in your friends which you do not therefore your hatred against the person makes you hate the sin When David hated his enemies it was with a perfect hatred now perfect hatred is that which hates not the person for the sin nor loves the sin for the person Object But if we must pray for our enemies we must pray for the Devil and his Angels Answ Christ means onely such enemies for whom there is revealed a possibility of hearing for if a man sin against the holy Ghost we are not to pray for him 1 Joh. 5.16 God hath revealed the irrevocable damnation of the devils Jude 6. in that they are reserved in everlasting chains Object But we read of particular men that curst Noah curst Canaan Gen. 9.25 Cursed be Canaan a servant of servants Joshua curst them that built Jericho Jos 6.10 compared with 1 Kin. 16. ●4 Peter curst Magus thy mony perish with thee Act 18.20 Paul wisht They were cut off that troubled the Galatians Gal. 5.12 Elisha cursed the forty and two children 2 King 2.24 Paul cursed Alexander 2 Tim. 4.14 Answ When the Saints desired these things it was made evident to them from God that they should come to pass they did not do it out of any spirit of enmity Object But is this commandement of loving our enemies possible Answ It s possible according to the tenour of the Gospel though not according to the law when we consent to the law of God herein and have
a will a desire and endeavour to love our enemies Rom. 7.18 God looks upon it as done when also we are troubled for the uncharitableness of our hearts v. 14. and cry to God against these risings 2 When God inables us in some good measure to do them good to feed them in their hunger Rom. 12.19 to humble our selves for them in their sickness Psal 35.11 12 13 14. David sought God by fasting and prayer for them that scoft at him Use to apply this it serves for reprehension of those who hate their enemies You say how do you know it Answ by thy unpeaceable speeches Josephs brethren hated him and could not speak peaceably unto him Gen. 37.4 2 By thy afflicting thine enemies with secret whisperings open slanders and false reports Prov. 26.28 A lying tongue hateth those that are afflicted by it 3 By thy unkind carriage when thou shalt passe by them in such offices of courtesie as they show to other neighbours 1 King 1.26 2 Exhortation to love your enemies naturally we hate them Tit. 3.3 Show your love to them 1 by not purposing to revenge your selves and by purposing not to revenge your selves Prov. 24.29 Say not I will do to him as he hath done to me 2 Desire not God to avenge your cause so Stephen Acts 7.59 3 By being sorrowful when any evill befalls thine enemy Psal 35.12 13. When Davids enemies were sick he humbled himself with fasting David was really sorrowful for Sauls death and declared it by putting to death him that slew him Prov. 24.17 18. Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth nor let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth why so 1 Least the Lord see it and it displease him 2 It will cause the Lord to turn away his wrath from him 4 By striving to forget the wrongs done by your enemies If we strive not to forget them we shall hardly forgive them 5 By striving to be at peace with him that is thy utterest enemy Rom. 12.18 If it be possible live peaceably with all Let him see that thou art not of an implacable spirit but ready to meet him on any reasonable terms 6 By looking on it as a cross when any man is so implacable that he will not be at peace with thee Ps 120.5 6 7. I am for peace but when I speak thereof they are for war woe is me that I am constrained to dwell with such persons 7 By thy willingness to do thy enemie good when it lies in thy power Exod. 23.4 5. If thou see the Ox or the Asse of thy enemie going a stray thou art to bring him home again or if he lye under his burthen thou shalt surely help him As God also spares his enemies in his long suffering and does them good in his providence not to strengthen them in wickedness but to lead them to repentance so ought we and as he puts his hook in their noses to bridle their malice so may we Motives to this duty 1 Vengeance belongs to God Gen. 50.15 19. who will revenge thy wrongs far more sharply then thou wouldest have him Psal 94.1 Into whose hands its a fearful thing to fall Heb. 10.31 He that doth wrong shall receive for the wrong that he hath done Col. 3.25 2 Consider what an enemy thou wast to God when he cast his love upon thee for all he was the party offended and stood no need of thee yet he sought unto thee Col. 1.21 1 Joh. 4.10 11 12. thou reasonest thou canst live without thy enemy so could God without thee thou saiest he hath done thee many wrongs so hast thou done to God 3 Either thy Enemie repents of the wrong done to thee or not if he do not repent of it God will punish him more sore then thou wouldest have him punished if he do repent of it what Christian spirit is there that will not pardon it This kept Christ from rendring reviling for reviling 1 Pet. 2.23 why he committed his cause to God who judgeth righteously It was the praise of Solomon that he desired not to have the life of his enemies 1 Chron. 1.11 4 Thou never suffers any wrong but God is first offended and more offended then thou art and takes thy wrong more heinously then thou thy self therefore revenge not thy self hear not that suggestion that it argues good mettal to be quick of touch 5 This is the way to overcome him Rom. 12.18 as contraries do overcome one another when they draw them into their own similitude when we are drawn by provocations to rage as wicked men do then they overcome us but when we refrain from revenge we overcome them as David did Saul 2 Sam. 24. Daven in Col. 3.13 Bless them that curse you Christ comes in three particulars to show our love to enemies which is 1 by blessing them that curse us so Paul 1 Cor. 4.12 being reviled we bless By blessing he means a speaking to him with kind words when he speaks cursed words to thee do thou speak kind words to him We pray for you and for all other men that are enemies to us that repenting with us you may not blaspheme and reproach him who for his works and miracles done in his name was without blame even Jesus Christ and believing on him may be saved at his glorious coming and may not be condemned of him to fire Just Mar. cont Triph. p. 196. Do good to them that hate you Second particular wherein to show our love to enemies viz. in doing them good Rom. 12.20 Elisha 2 King 6. ver 20. when his enemies were smit with blindness he prayes God would give them sight also ver 22. when the king of Israel would have smote them Elisha would not consent thereto but bids that bread and water be set before them and yet they were such as came to take away his life Do good then to their souls by endeavouring to bring them to repentance also to their bodies if you give alms to a company of poor people not to exclude two or three because they have hurt thee so lend to them also do good to their posterity Pray for them that despitefully use you The third particular is to pray for enemies when they are cursing thee pray God to forgive them when they are pained in their bodies pray God to ease them when decayed in their Estates pray God to supply them when they are damning their souls pray God to save them thus David to his enemies Psalm 35.13 and Stephen Acts 7.59 and Christ Luke 23.34 When thy Enemy by tale-carryings underminings disgracefull speeches uncharitable censures and slanderous accusations strives to work thee out of the affections of the godly or of those who may do thee good do thou pray for them not that they may have success in their wickedness but that they may acknowledg their evils and be pardoned This is the excellency of a Christian to do things above nature to pardon spitefull persons such prayers are not
reverend boldness and confidence but when we are doubting timorous and fearfull it 's a sign we come in our own names Christ hath a golden Censer wherein is much Incense which he offers with the prayers of all Saints Revel 8 3. as the high Priest of old did who put Incense on his Censer when he made an atonement for the people Numb 16.46 2 Pray with the Spirit We have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba father Rom. 8.15 Also v. 26. The spirit makes request for us with groanings that cannot be uttered The grones of the spirit are strong cries which so fills heaven and earth that besides it God hears nothing saith Luther If in tentation or trouble we shall onely sigh to God and say Jesus Christ come and help me or else I am undone for ever we shall finde often ease hereupon All the sons of God have the spirit of his Son in their hearts crying Abba Father God grants not that often which is in the top of the heart and in the froth of words but according to the depth of the sigh to which often words answer very barely or not at all How many worldly wise men are there that might they have a world to continue one quarter of an hour in ripping up their hearts in conceived prayer they were not able to do it Some short wishes they have as God be thanked for his blessings God send us rain Others there are who have learnt the art of prayer or the gift but they have not the grace of prayer they pray artificial prayers and give artificial life to them as if the spirit accompanied them but in the mean time their hearts are neither warmed nor melted But those prayers wherein God delights are stir'd up by the holy Ghost Jude 20. Eph. 6.18 Praying with all supplication in the spirit Without this spirit we may speak of God but not unto God indeed the best of our prayers are but as the stammering voices of infants begging bread or meat at the Table yet these chatterings or stammerings coming from the spirit he that searcheth the heart must needs know what they mean because he maketh intercession for the Saints now he intercedes not by way of merit as Christ doth nor by way of supplication but by stirring us up to cry to God Rom. 8.27 Do the bowels of a father yern towards an infant groaning and panting and unable to tell where his pain is and will not God be moved with the sighs and groans of his children When Moses spake never a word yet he is said to cry to God Exo. 14.15 Hanna's voice was not heard 1 Sam. 1.13 yet she is said to powr out her heart v. 15. the sighs of the godly are as so many beams of the spirit which tyrants cannot hinder from ascending heaven though they should cut out their tongues Asaph groaned when he could not speak Psal 77.4 Now that this praying with sighs and groans comes from the spirit appears because when the spirit ceases from working upon our hearts we become dull and heavie and weary of the dutie that it becomes a very penance to us the soul then is like a becalmed ship All Saints that pray aright even Paul himself pray by this spirit Rom. 8.15 By this spirit we present such sighs as cannot be expressed and utter such words as are not able to be repeated The sighings of the needy God hears Psal 12.5 Now though carnal men sometimes groan and that to God yet are these groans a fruit of nature as the bruits do under feeling of a pressing weight the groans of saints come not onely from feeling of pain but from sorrow for sin 2 The groans in Saints lifts up their hearts to heaven and brings back chearing and sence of Gods love 3 There 's usually a sweet satisfaction comes in those groans which doth not in the groans of wicked men Those that have this spirit of prayer they have many ejaculations amidst their callings Nehemiah when he was speaking to the King prayed to the God of heaven Neh. 2.4 they frequently dart out many broken sighs to quench the sprowtings of lust as pride unclean desires revenge c. and have many invisible springings of heart upon the receipt of blessings on themselves or others Many zealous wrastlings for removal of corruptions and supply of grace To powr out the soul out of sense of spiritual wants in that form or phrase which groanings and meltings of the spirit doth indite and frame is beyond the ordinary reach of unregeneration Yea thus to pray is the hardest of all works because it cannot be effected without the spirit This spirit of prayer is of more worth then the world especially when a Christian hath by any scandalous sin or relapse or sin against conscience turn'd away Gods favour for hereby he hath restitution into Gods favour and the return of Gods countenance Jon. 2.4 7. Infinite more fruits the spirit of prayer works as many secret exultations and rejoycings spiritual ravishments strong though silent cries passionate meltings unutterable groans zealous longings which are riddles to prophane men but known to the children of God 3 Thirdly the person must be righteous Hear my prayer for I am holy Psal 86.2 The prayer of the wicked is abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 A holy man may make a carnal prayer as when the flesh gets the upper hand but a carnal man cannot make a spiritual prayer I mean a prayer prevailing for spiritual things Jon. 9.31 God heareth not sinners but if any man be a doer of his will him he hears The righteous cry and the Lord heareth and delivereth him out of all his troubles Psal 34.15 The prayer of a righteous man avails much Jam. 5.16 If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what you will and it shall be done unto you Joh. 15.7 8. Whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his Commandements and do those things which are pleasing in his sight 1 Joh. 3.22 The spirit of prayer is called the spirit of grace if thou hast not the spirit of grace thou canst not pray Zach. 12.10 yet know the righteousness of a person may consist with variety of passions as he instances in Eliah Jam. 5.17 In all begging it's a great matter who it is that begs if it be a sturdy beggar we have nothing for such so in prayer if a wicked man pray for any spiritual blessing saith God I have nothing for you but if it be a believer Christ saith be of good chear to such Luke 8.48 if thou prepare thy heart and stretch out thy hands towards him if iniquity be in thine hand put it far away Job 11.13 14. He will fullfil the desire of them that fear him Psal 145.19 Contrary when a man inclines to wickedness in his heart the Lord will not hear him Psal 66.18 The Pagans had so much divinity as to say the gods
if there be any long absence of these accustomed meltings 8 Earnest longings after the Lord are wont to accompany saving meltings Mine eye mine eye runneth down with water because the comforter that should relieve my soul is far from me Lam. 1.16 9 Saving meltings flow from love to God How came Mary to weep in such abundance that she washed Christ's feet why at the same time she loved much Luke 7.38 compared with v. 47. 10 When saving meltings come there is an holy chearfulness wrought in the heart and sadness removed from the countenance as in Hanna her countenance was no more sad why she prayed and wept sore v. 10. compared with v. 18. As God did sometimes accept sacrifices without sending fire from Heaven to burn them up so sometimes he shewed his acceptation by sending fire to consume them 1 Kings 18.38 2 Chron. 7.1 Fire came from Heaven and consumed Solomon's burnt offering and so David's Prayer for the ceasing the Pestilence 1 Chron. 21.26 was answered by fire So though God do sometimes answer his people without meltings yet in holy persons these meltings usually are crowning answers and tokens of acceptation 11 We may know our meltings flow from a saving principle by comparing the meltings we had when we forsook some great enjoyment for God and got victory over some strong lust with those meltings at present when we forsook some great enjoyment as country liberty estate friends and relations how did God come in at those times so that we found an hundred fold with persecutions Mar. 10.29 30. mightily softning the heart and filling the soul with joy and with the holy Ghost Act. 13.51 as Paul was when persecuted so when we overcome some strong lust God gave us hidden Manna white stone new name Rev. 2.17 which were the incomes of God into the soul by softning of it and powring in joy in prayer after the conquest now we finding the meltings and softnings of our hearts at other times sutable to those we found then know them to come from the Spirit or from a saving principle and not from natural passion and softness 12 The meltings that come from God may be something discerned by the time when given as 1 When afflictions are sanctified then the soul powres out it self amain Esther 4.3 when the kings decree came to put the Jews to death there were great weepings and wailings ordinarily wicked men cry not when God binds them their spirits are bound up Job 36.13 2 Upon the remove of some sad desertion and after some foregoing straitnings or some very close walking with God or the bringing home of some word of promise to the heart these meltings use to be given Psal 51.8 12. Make me to hear the voice of joy and gladness restore unto me the joy of thy salvation 3 By the putting forth the strength of the soul in duty Hos 12.3 Jacob wept and made supplication and found the Lord in Bethel how came that why by his strength he prevailed with God that is he put forth all his strength in the duty 4 Fom the time it s oft given even after an holy preparation of heart by meditation Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou wilt prepare their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear Psal 10.17 8 Pray with perseverance not to give over Eph. 6.18 Many use prayer as a medicine which after two or three usings finding no success they leave off God puts off his children with delayes 1 Because souls are not fit for such a mercy as the Physician puts off the patient from such a thing as he desires The ten tribes Judg. ●0 26 cryed for victory against Benjamin but God saw them not fit for it they yet trusted in their multitude being four hundred thousand and their enemies about seven and twenty thousand also they were not humbled enough 2 For trial of our faith whether we will yet depend on God so Christ put off the Woman of Cana Matth. 15.28 and Paul 2 Cor. 12.8 3 That his mercies may be more sweet when we get them things hardly got are prized 4 That we may see our sin in delaying God he called and thou wouldest not hear therefore it 's just that thou shouldest call and he delay thee 5 To inflame our desires the more God purposed not to destroy Israel Exod. 32. yet when Moses prayed he seemed not to regard his Prayers but this was onely to make Moses more earnest for the people 6 For the trial of our Patience David was in an horrible pit in great danger and God let him lye for the tryal of his patience and in the end brought him out Ps 40.1 2. Many are like that king 2 King 6.33 who said Saul 1 Sam. ● 28.15 because he had not present help why should I wait on the Lord any longer Yea Saints have been impatient because their prayers have not been answered at first Lam. 3.8 44. We must not onely have a dependance on God for his promise but for the time when he will fulfill it As the husbandman wa●s long after seed time for a harvest the corn hath many a sharp blast and nipping frost before he reaps so ought we to wait for our prayers though things seem worse afrer then before Long did the Church wait for Peter before they got him out of prison Act. 12.5 in the end he was given to them neither must we limit God to such means Psal 78.41 7 That we may seek him more importunately so did Christ with-hold himself from the Church for this end Song 3.1 4. As a Beggar when a passenger comes by begs of him the passenger goes on as if he took no notice but the Beggar goes on and followes him till at last he gets his desire 8 For to humble the soul suppose thy servant wrong thee thou sayest thou wilt pardon him but first thou wilt make him humble himself to thee he shall and must know that he hath wrong'd a good master so God is willing to pardon thee and to heal thee but he will make thee know thou hast sin'd against a good God Obj. But God calls me to other duties of my calling how am I then to continue in prayer till God hear me Ans We may give over the words of prayer but we may not give over the suit of prayer A poor Beggar comes to a house-keepers door but none hears him he falls to other employments as mending his clothes c. then anon he begs again though he do not always continue begging yet he always continues his sute Oh that some within would give me an alms so should the soul at the throne of grace Persevering prayer is the building of the soul towards heaven Holy men should pray as builders build first they lay the foundation next day make the walls the next day he sets up timber-work and so goes on till the house be finished so a godly soul reaches higher and higher till at
of a sinner that feels not his sins because he doth not understand nor will the thing that he prays for Luth. Tom. 4.380 9 Fear repulse for thy careless cold and slothfull calling upon God and this will quicken up thy attention in the duty Fear is a very wakefull affection as being conversant about danger hence in our service we are bid to bring fear Psalm 2.11 Psalm 5.7 10 Get love to God this makes the soul follow hard after God Psalm 63.8 Quest Whether do distractions in Prayer nullifie the acceptation of it Answ There are two sorts of distracted Petitioners 1 Unregenerate men who voluntarily usually and contentedly admit roving thoughts in duty Prov 5.14 I was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and assembly Ezek. 33.31 These despise their ways and shall die Prov. 19.16 2 Regenerate men who groan under these distractions Rom. 7.15 16. these do not nullifie the fruit of Prayer to them regenerate men herein make usually resistance it matters not whence they come whether from Satan or corruption as it is a thing very difficult if possible to distinguish them provided we resist them and mourn under them they are not imputed to us Yet may even Saints sometimes pray so carelesly drowsily and distractedly that they may lose the comfort of this or that particular Prayer as when the distraction arises from sloth and carelesness But if the distraction arise from Satan bodily distemper or pain God is very pitifull in this case as a father to his childe Psalm 103.14 Quest Whether may not the Devil and corruption distract the soul in Prayer sometimes with unseasonable good motions I mean such motions as are for the matter good but not good at that time Answ Yes we see it in that Pithonesse Act. 16.16 17 when Paul and his company were going to prayer she cries out these men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation this was a good motion but injected by Satan that his lyes might be believed and the Saints disturbed in prayer Zach. 3.1 Satan by these motions intends diversion or turning away the soul from what the soul is upon but motions that tend to further intention in the duty attentness and further inlargement are of God The spirit moves not to draw us out of the way but to put us into it and being in it to move us to keep on Rom. 8.14 15. Esa 30.21 These motions of Satan are like misplaced words and letters in a Printers press which spoil the sence 10 Let thy prayer be full prayer is a powring forth of the heart before God Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 yea we are to powr them out as water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 It may be thou powrest out thy prayer like tarre out of a tarre box half sticking by the sides but when thou prayes thou must powr out all before God provided there be time and no hindrance powr out all thy wants be humbled for all thy evils when thou givest thanks remember all Gods benefits Psal 10● 2 Many men make quick dispatch because they are eager to be about their business hence they gallop over their prayers but thy prayer must have its full growth that is when convenient time affords we must powr out supplications confessing our sins petitions desiring pardon healing and new dispositions of heart intercessions to turn away judgements from others and thanksgiving for benefits on our selves and others 1 Tim. 2.1 11 Pray with frequency It s bad when the soul contents it self with seldome approaches to God If David Psal 55.17 and Daniel cap 6.10 could finde time to pray three times a day what shame for us who come so seldom before the Lord sometimes David praised God seven times a day Psal 119.164 Anna continued in prayer night and day Luk. 2.37 12 With assurance of obtaining whatsoever things ye desire when you pray believe that you receive them and ye shall have them Mark 11.24 Matth. 7.7 ask and ye shall have Matth. 21.22 Doubt not of your prayer but know when the word is gone out of your mouth your prayer is writ in the eyes of God so that that shall be done which is desired or its expedient not to be done The Lord is like a most bountiful king that signes all petitions with a fiat quod petitur Oratio sinelaude dei est thuribulum sine prunis Luth. Tom. 4.124 let that be done which is desired 13 Joyn praise with prayer Phil. 4.6 In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known unto God Prayers are the seeds of prayses when we have sown we may look to reap what we receive as a a fruit of our prayer is more sweet then what we receive of common providence Praise is that imployment we shall have in heaven when prayer shall be no more mean time joyn we them together whiles we are here on earth and so much more in that we have but a drop of affliction and a sea of benefits 14 Break through all hindrances and use all furtherances as 1 hindrance is multitudes of business what business so great almost but should give way to this 2 Brokenness in expressions why God hears sighs 3 Dumbness and barrenness if this come from unacquaintance with God be humbled for thy coldness and by stirring thou mayest get warmth if dumbness come from overwhelming temptations it 's no otherwise with thee then it was with Asaph Psal 77.3 4. Green wood with long blowing will be made dry and take fire so motion in prayer fits for the duty 4 Our own unworthiness Who acknowledged his own unworthiness more then Daniel Dan. 9.7 8. However thou art unworthy yet must thou pray for God hears thee not for thy own worth but of his meer mercy 5 Prayer will take up much of our time to this I say remember the comfort that will redound to the conscience in time so spent We think not long of the time spent in the refreshment of our bodies why should we think long in the time spent in refreshing of our souls of four and twenty hours can we not afford God one or two who took more time in prayer then David and Daniel and who did prosper better Time spent in this brings a blessing on our affairs 6 That many do well enough that never pray as those do that use to pray to this know they onely receive temporal things as the shining of the sun and the falling of rain Matth. 5.44 45. But the Saints receive the Spirit in prayer Luk. 11.13 Neither can prayerless men be sure to have earthly things when they want them nor to hold them when they have them Job 21.15 16. What profit is there that we should pray unto him seeing we have earthly things ver 16. Lo their good is not in their hand 7 Because the soul hath lately been in passion of anger
Fall Hence the Devil prevail'd against Eve Gen. 3.5 When David grew proud of his Multitude of Subjects he was left to fall to numbring them 2 Sam. 24. When we fall to admire our selves whether parts or graces we are near a Fall 14 Set against the motions that come from corruptions and the suggestion that comes from Satan severally and apart before they joyn their forces together and that you may do this take the temptation in the beginning United Enemies become more hard to resist 15 Be well informed in the methods and devices of sin and Satan 2 Cor. 2.11 The Devil methodizes his temptations when he came to the first Adam Gen. 3. first he comes to the Woman not to the Man next he tells her by eating the forbidden Fruit she should be as God next breeds a jealousie that God meant not so well to her as he and next by the desirableness to the eye and taste he tempts her to eat thereof And as he hath methods so hath he devices he is like a crafty man that with a Plum or a Counter will cozen a childe of all he hath And so hath corruption devices this is a little sin thou must do this or else thou canst not live in the World First corruption drew Peter into a place of temptation into the high Priests Hall then to deny Christ corruption drew David to sloth then to wanton gazings then to carnal lustings then to Adultery and then to Murder Had corruption tempted David to Murder at first he would have trembled at it Besides our corruptions are like Touch-wood and Tinder that presently takes fire 16 Strive to get a distaste of temptations they seldom or never prevail against a soul that distastes them so long as the soul distastes them the will is averse unto them and where the will is averse they can do us no hurt As Christ said to Satan Get thee behind me Satan Matth. 16. so let us Distasted Meats and Drinks are seldom received no more will temptations when distasted 17 Put on Christian Armour even the whole Armour of God why we wrastle not onely against flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers Ephes 6.11 as 1 The Girdle of Truth that is a sincere purpose of heart in opposition to hypocrisie which as a girdle bindes our cloaths to us which else the winde would blow about so sincerity holds together our graces which else would be carried away in time of temptation Luke 8. ●3 Unsound men in time of temptation fall away 2 The breast plate of righteousness that is of a holy conversation this hath three branches 1 For time past a testimony of conscience excusing us that our conversation hath not been in fleshly wisdom but godly sincerity 2 Cor. 1 12. 2 For time to come a purpose to avoid all evil and do that which is good Psal 119.106 Act. 11.23 3 For time present an humiliation in respect of daily wants when Satan tempts us to sin we being covered with this breast plate his temptations fall down Though there be armour for the breast yet is there none for the back run-aways that fly from the cause of Christ and duty are cut down by Satan and wicked men 3 Get your feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel that is get an intention to confess Gods truth notwith standing sufferings this is called a preparation of the Gospel because by it a Christian is prepared to repell all temptations to the denial of Christ Now because sufferings are to our souls as stones thorns and gravel are to our naked feet let the affections of our souls be shod with this preparation as leg-harness is useful in war where the enemy sticks stubs of iron or iron harrows in the way so is this intention of confession of Christ needful as part of our armour where Satan in our way to heaven sets so many pricks and crosses as reproaches persecutions loss of goods liberty and life 4 The shield of faith that is a lively faith trusting on God for justification sanctification and earthly things Psal 84.11 Also faith eying threatnings promises and commandments this is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a door or gate It 's a long broad shield like a door which was to cover the whole body from pushes darts and arrows such must our faith be against all temptations this raised up to Jesus Christ and acted aright against the tempter is like a cordial to a fainting soul 5 The helmet of salvation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it covers the head all about now when the head is well fenced we fear not arrows nor darts Such is Christian hope to the soul when Satan shall tempt thee to discouragement and tells thee thy sins are unpardonable because so great and many and tells thee it will never be otherwise then at present it is and tempts thee to wish thy self dead and tells thee thou art cast out of Gods sight and that thou shalt never overcome this lust nor get out of this desertion nor be delivered from this temptation all that I do will but further my damnation I have no mind any longer to use the means against all these hopeless hartless voyces raise up thy hope in God hope for day though at present it be midnight 6 Get the sword of the Spirit the Word of God which as an armory hath all sorts of weapons in it Were we to go where enemies were we would not go without our sword onely think not to out-brave Satan by saying a piece of Scripture in an hartless manner but produce it believingly 18 If temptations be violent conferre with some Christian friend wise and faithful and able to retain a secret both from their wives and others and discover to them that which perplexes your conscience and such a person will be ready to discover to you the same or like temptations and this is meant by confessing our faults one to another Jam 5.16 Onely if we can have ease from God we need not confess our temptations to men God sometimes speaks by a poor brother 19 Make good your ground against the tempter you must be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil and having done all to stand Eph. 6.11 13. As soldiers stand orderly in the fight and neither run forth to danger nor retire cowardly so do ye Cowards in battle are most commonly cut off and there will be no mercy in Satan if he overcome nothing less then the blood of your souls will serve him in order to this resistance beg help of the spirit who infuses good motions and excites the soul therewith as Satan doth to evil But deliver us from evil That is from the evil of the temptations which the Devil World or flesh worketh against us Hence observe 1 That deliverance from evil ariseth not from our own power or might but from the Lord 2 Cor. 1.10 2 Our own weakness we are not able to
want bodily sight no more can we go in the way of salvation unless our understandings be enlightened Obs An enlightened understanding and a sanctified judgment are of absolute necessity to guide us in an holy practise without these we cannot discern the excellency of heavenly treasure above earthly treasure without these we shall make Martha's choice and not Maries Luke 10.41 Mary hath chosen that good part Reas The Reason is 1 Because without these we can neither see sin nor grace in their right colours we shall be ready to call evil good and good evil we shall put darkness for light and light for darkness bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter Isai 5.20 we shall be ready to call sanctification singularity zeal preciseness holiness hypocrisie sincerity scrupulousness 2 Because an enlightened understanding and a sanctified judgment do not onely propose unto us duty but also direct us to the practise thereof hence it 's compared to the guidance of the eye to the body and without these we know not whither we go John 12.35 Use 1 Pitty those who want both an inlightened understanding and a sanctified judgement so Christ was moved herein Matth. 9.37 2 Beware you follow not in your practice false guides the light that leads most men is meer darkness in their religion they are led by the examples of others Joh. 7.48 Have any of the Rulers or Pharisees believed on him Or by the laws of the land and command of the Prince Dan. 3.7 As soon as the King commanded they all fell down to worship in their eating and drinking they are led by their cheer in buying and selling led by their gain others are led by their good meanings Joh. 16.2 They meant to do good service when they killed his Saints sometimes by opinion 1 King 18.21 Paul meant well when he compelled persons to blaspheme Christ Act 26.9 Oh then get an inlightened understanding and in order to it study the Word which when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou awakest it shall talk with thee Prov. 6.22 23. It s resembled to a lantern which shows us the way Psal 119.105 and to a counsellor Psal 119.24 3 Follow after an inlightened understanding and a sanctified judgement without these we can no more guide our course towards heaven then the sea travailer can guide his course without his compass or the land travailer without sun or moon For want of these many men are like a Mill-horse that goes round round thinking he is in the rode way when he is but where he was without this illumination we are ready to think all things alike lawful as in the King of Moab who sacrificed his Son and in Manasses who built altars to all the host of heaven 2 King 3.26 2 Chron. 33.5 6. It s the wisdom of the prudent to understand his way Prov. 14.8 4 Cease to wonder why so few wise and learned men seek after heavenly things 1 Cor. 1.26 27. They want an inlightened understanding and a sanctified judgement As the bruit beasts knowing no higher then things sutable to their own nature and so savour onely such so do Carnal men they savour onely the things of the flesh because they know no higher Rom. 8.5 5 Learn a rule how to lay up your treasure aright both here and hereafter get an inlightened understanding and a sanctified judgement Psal 4.6 7. without this we shall be ready upon pretence of lawful cares to be swallowed up of the world 6 Joyn to an inlightened minde a discerning judgement in order to a regular government of your conversations Job 6.30 Cannot my taste discerne perverse things that is godly men have an ability to discern holy actions from perverse and crooked actions A wise mans heart discerneth both time and judgement Eccles 8.5 without this sanctified judgement notwithstanding all brain knowledge we shall never be able to discerne spiritual things 1 Cor. 2.14 for want of these both Christ and his wayes are condemned of the world Job 21.13 14. and by these chosen of Christians Phil. 3.7 8. Motives 1 This inlightened understanding and sanctified judgement will be as useful to thy practice as a bright shining light whether torch or candle will be to thy foot-steps which keeps thee from stumbling Luk. 11.36 If thy whole body be full of light having no part darke the whole shall be full of light as when the bright shining of a candle doth give thee light for want of light we are apt to stumble Joh. 11.9 but where we have this light there 's none occasion of stumbling because we abide in the light 1 Joh. 2.10 Wisdom is rightly to understand the knowledge of faith and doctrine of Christ understanding is to take heed of the snares of the devil hereticks c. and all deceits proposed under the name of the word Luth. Tom. 4.324 2 The woful falls we are exposed unto being without this light we stand at the devils mercy Judge what the great world would be were it deprived of the light of the sun so forlorne are our souls deprived of this spiritual light Original sin hath done with us as the Philistins with Sampson who put out his eyes and then led him to the basest drudgery and this is the case of all till a new light be set up in their hearts 3 The gradual proceedings both of light in the mind and discerning in the judgement alas they are at first very small we see the things of God as the blind man Mar. 8.24 who saw men like trees hence the Apostle prayes for the Ephesians who had these in some measure that they might have more of them Eph. 1.17 18. so doth he for the Philippians cap. 1.9 10. the sight of an infant is not so strong as the sight of a grown man so the light in weak Christians is not so strong as in grown Christians Means to inlightning 1 Remove the hindrances the devil and world casts dust in our eyes that we cannot see 2 Cor. 4.4 The God of this World blindes many the glory of the World dazles our sight clouding mists distilling humours and skins growing over hinder sight so do mists of ignorance and hardness of heart hinder sight 2 Cry mightily to God for light Psalm 119.18 Prov. 2.4 5 6. and be wail thy ignorance as Hagur I am more brutish than any man Prov. 30 2. 3 Be often asking questions A good Scholar must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a questionist The woman of Samaria perceiving Christs abilities asks him diverse questions Joh. 4.19 People should be like the Queen of Sheba who posed Solomon with hard questions 1 Kin. 10.1 4 Cast up thy gains thou hast made when ever thou hears or reads the Word look as you do when you have been at a market you consider what you have got Good hearers should be like sieves that lets chaff go but retains the wheat Many are a like a sieve in the water at hearing or reading when in the
these cares that they can take little comfort in any thing they have and these carkings are so much worse when they are in them who have either a competency or abundance This doth not directly prove the reign of worldliness but is a ground for the heart to suspect it self Against these carkings oppose the care God hath for beasts and fowls and much more for men he that cares for his enemies will much more care for his friends and children if for his children when they sought him not much more when they seek him and find him Carke not for future times this day may conclude thy life On the contrary I 'le give you some signs this sin reigns not 1 When we hunger and thirst after an heavenly frame of heart and groan under the frequency of earthly thoughts and fewness of heavenly here worldliness reigns not but the soul may be blessed though it be too worldly Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness Mat. 5.6 2 When though we have too much worldliness in us yet upon serious examination we find an habit to part with all lands and goods for the Lord if they come in competition Thus the disciples Matth. 19.27 But the Young man could not do this ver 22. 3 When we can come cheerfully and willingly to a work of mercy to the ability God gives us 2 Cor. 8.2 3. The Macedonians were ready to and beyond their power praying Paul with much intreaty to take the care hereof 4 When our soveraign affection and conversation is in heaven Phil. 3.20 Col. 3.1 In all our conversings let Saints look to heaven as the city whereto they belong All earthly things are desired by such in reference to Heaven and a good conscience 5 When we disaffect Worldly affections The flesh sometimes puts a godly man upon too eager pursuement of earthly things and sometimes upon some unworthy covetous prank or penurious scraping now when we can go to God and pray against these affections with a real hatred of them as David did Psalm 119.36 Incline not my heart to covetousness here worldliness reigns not 6 When we desire to be convinced of the Quantum or measure that God would have us to forgo for such a godly use or good cause for example in such cause of Religion as to the late Distresses of the poor Protestants in Piedmont I part with so much as my proportion comes to and the generality of godly people give yet could I be convinced that God required a greater proportion of me I would chearfully let it go even to the last Groat and what though my children have so much less yet Gods blessing is enough for them and I will not damn my soul in the omission of any known duty to make them rich Moreover the same command that bindes me to my children ties me to other relations to succour them though not in such a measure Matth. 6.25 Therefore I say unto you Take no thought for your life what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink nor yet for your body what ye shall put on Is not the Life more than Meat and the Body than Raiment Here is a second argument against worldliness and carking cares taken from the greater to the less he that hath given the greater will give the less now your Father hath given you the greater he hath given you your life and body therefore will he give you the less which is meat and raiment He gave the greater without thy care therefore without thy carking he will give the latter Withall Christ puts us in minde of the Authour of our Life and Body we are to look beyond our Parents We are not to think as if Christ forbad here a provident diligence and labour to procure things needfull for us and ours as the ancient Euchites who would always pray but never work but he forbids a fearfull distrustfull heart-dividing care Psalm 34.9 10. Fear the Lord ye his Saints for there is no want to them that fear him Psalm 84.11 1 Tim. 4.8 Hence Christ useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the desire of gathering riches divides the minde and as it were distracts it and cuts it into divers thoughts This is that Luke calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to hang like a Meteor in the Air to hang betwixt Heaven and Earth In the words also there is a silent Objection thus Though I must not labour for superfluities yet must I labour for things which nature desires and which must serve me for my life and then when I have got that I will be no more desirous of outward things To this Christ answers You think too meanly of Gods goodness he both can and will provide us of things needfull though we should onely by the by look at those things we want and should give our mindes wholly or for the greater part to godliness John 6.27 Obs Christians ought to lay aside all distrustfull heart-dividing carking and sollicitude for the things of this life Reas 1 Because we have God that cares for us 1 Peter 5.7 Casting all your care upon him for he careth for you Children cast their care upon their fathers who lay up for their children 2 Cor. 12.14 So let us Phil. 2.20 21. Thus is it done with us in all our life we sleeping and being quiet and secure all things are given us we caring and being sollicitous nothing is given Luth. Tom. 3.383 2 From our experience we have had of Gods goodness he that hath given us the greater will also give us the less he hath given us a body therefore he will give us meat to sustain it and raiment to cover it from the cold The allegement of maintenance for life is but too oft a specious pretence for our covetousness Object But there are lawfull cares we must have Answ True there are 1 For spirituals such a care had Mary Luke 10.41 Paul had the care of all the Churches upon him 2 Cor. 11.28 The Philippians had care to minister to Paul Phil. 4.10 A godly Bishop is to take care of the Church 1 Tim. 3.5 yea every Christian must be full of care to maintain good works Titus 3.8 yea this care is a fruit of repentance 2 Cor. 7.12 None so full of these cares as a Christian 1 Cor. 7.32 Who cares for the things of the Lord. 2 There are cares for temporals 1 Cor. 7.33 He that is maried careth for the World how he may please his Wise Joseph took care to provide Corn for Egypt If we have not a lawfull care we are worse than Infidels 1 Tim. 5.8 God teaches us this care from the silly Pismire Prov. 6.6 Who provides her Meat in the Summer and Harvest Quest But what cares are they which are unlawfull Answ Distracting heart-dividing cares Paul would have us attend upon the Lord without distraction 1 Cor. 7.35 These distracting cares consist in three things 1 In a
In a patient bearing of crosses which in themselves are very contrary to our stubborn wills 1 Sam. 3.18 Levit 10.3 3 Obs He that in sincerity doth the will of God in the purpose of his heart and actions of life shall enter into heaven I put in both these because many hypocrites may have an outward seeming reformation as Joas Herod the Scribes Luke 11.39 Therefore we must look to inward reformation in the purposes of the heart Use As we look for blessedness so let us endeavour to do Gods will Jam. 1.25 He that is not a forgetfull hearer but a doer of the work which God requires this man shall be blessed in his doing a bare pretence to do Gods will is not enough to say as he in the Gospel I go Sir into the Vineyard but went not Matth. 21.29 30. First do Gods will then receive the promise Heb. 10.36 Means to do Gods will 1 Labour to know it Ephes 5.17 Be ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Col. 1.9 2 Beg instruction of God herein Psal 143.10 Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God 3 Desire that your will may be brought over to Gods will Matth. 26.39 42. Father not my will but thine be done Acts 21.14 Phil. 2.13 4 Get the Law of God within your heart Psal 40.8 I delight to do thy will O God yea thy Law is in my heart Hence it was as meat to Christ to do the will of the Father John 4.34 My meat is to do the will of him that sent me Eph. 6.6 Heb. 10.7 2 Cor. 8.3 5 Have an eye to every part of Gods will Psal 119.6 I shall not be ashamed when I have respect to all thy Commandements Acts 13.22 I have found David a man after mine own heart which shall fulfill all my will Epaphras prayed that the Colossians might be compleat in all the will of God Col. 4.12 6 Consider the equity perfectness and holiness of Gods will Rom. 12.2 Proving what is that perfect holy and good will of God 7 Consider how dear thou art to Christ if thou dost his will more then mother sister or brother Mark 3.26 8 Persevere in doing Gods will all that is past is nothing without perseverance Matth. 24.13 V. 22 Many will say unto me in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out devils and in thy name done many wonderfull things V. 23. And then will I profess to them I never knew you Depart from me ye that work iniquity Christ comes to amplifie the rejection of carnal Professors in the day of judgement from the vanity of their pretences and allegations they alledge for themselves Their pretences are three 1 That they prophesied in the name of Christ 2 Cast out devils in Christs name 3 Did wonderfull things in Christs name as healings tongues and hereby witnessed thy power They reason thus It 's unjust to cast out of heaven those that have prophesied in thy name and cast out devils in thy name but we have done so therefore c. See the horrible pride of formalists who will dare to reply against the Judge see Matth. 20.12 These last have wrought but one hour and thou hast made them equal with us There are some gifts formal hypocrites may have Balaam prophesied the Magicians of Egypt did miracies miracles are no note of a Church as Papists would make us believe but were done by professors of Christianity for the conviction of unbelievers see Mark 16.17 1 Cor. 14.22 Tongues are a signe to them that believe not Caiphas prophesied John 11.49 True miracles are the alone work of God given for the confirmation of Teachers come from God and were in the primitive times seals unto them John 3.2 We know thou art a Teacher come from God for no man can do these miracles thou dost except God be with him See Heb. 2.4 Yet all were not thus confirmed John Baptist did no miracle John 10.41 Yet sometimes not onely wicked men have done miracles Matth. 24.24 2 Thes 2.9 but even wicked Teachers Deut. 13.1 2. And in the primitive times all Christians could not do miracles 1 Cor. 12.29 Are all workers of miracles When miracles were done they were done by the will of God not when the instrument that did the miracle would Heb. 2.4 for then would not Paul have left Trophimus sick at Miletum 2 Tim. 4.20 but would have wrought a miracle to have raised him up And sometimes uncharitable men have wrought miracles 1 Cor. 13.2 Though I have all faith so that I could remove mountains and have not charity I am nothing And then will I profess unto them I never knew you Depart from me ye workers of iniquity Here is the sentence against these formal professors they are sent to hell as well as other gross sinners I never knew you that is I never approved you So to know is taken Psal 1.6 I never knew you i. e. I reject you 1 Cor. 8.3 2 Tim. 2.19 I never knew you I knew you as Prophets and Teachers but never knew you as children and friends though I know all things and consequently know you with a knowledge of speculation yet I never knew you with a knowledge of love and affection You have professed me to be your Lord but you were never yet my servants I must acknowledge you to be my creatures but must profess you are none of the members of my body Rom. 8.9 I know you with a general knowledge as I know all things Psal 139.2 3. but I know you not with a special knowledge as I know mine Elect and Sheep John 10.14 your lusts are your lords and not I. Depart from me ye that work iniquity The words are taken out of Psal 6.8 they are the sentence of Christs sending formal hypocrites to hell as Matth. 25.41 Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire Oh terrible sentence thou formalist shalt not onely be severed from thy estate relations and all earthly comforts but also from the presence of the Lord. See 2 Thess 1.9 never to behold him any more By workers of iniquity he means such as live in sin Rom. 16.21 which in John's phrase is called the commitment of sin John 8.34 Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin called walking in darkness 1 John 1.6 See also 1 John 3.8 9. He that committeth sin is of the devil whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin v. 9. called also walking after the flesh and living after the flesh Rom. 8.1.12.13 Learn therefore either to depart from thine iniquity or else be assured thou shalt depart from Christ Ezek. 18.30 Repent and turn from your iniquity so iniquity shall not be your ruine Also v. 31. It 's called also the reign of sin Rom. 6.12 and dominion of sin v. 14. the service of sin v. 17. Obs The number not onely of profane multitudes but even of professing people that shall
putting Joab to death who had murthered two or three persons he could not well do it being Joab was General of Davids Army hence he gives Salomon command concerning him 2 Buckle on all thy Christian armour Eph. 6.10 especially uprightness of heart and so shalt not thou be afraid of evil tydings Psal 112.4 6 7. 3 Be clear in the assurance of remission of sins Psal 32.6 4 Go to God to hide thee Psal 27.5.32.7 He hath chambers to hide in Esai 26.20 Come my people enter into thy chambers 5 Build upon the rock even on Christ resolving in Gods strength that no storms and tempests shall separate betwixt Christ and thee neither sin nor suffering Rom. 8.33 to the end of the Chapter 6 Get looseness of affection to earthly enjoyments so those worthies Heb. 10.34 that took joyfully the spoiling of their goods in a storm of persecution 7 Get patience hereby Job's heart was quieted when storms took away his children stock and servants Job 1.21 8 Store up the witness of a good conscience against such a time See Paul Acts 16.25 27.23.24 3 Obs That man that means to stand amidst the storms and tempests of inward and outward temptations must be sure to lay a good foundation Sooner or later God will discover the hypocrisie of unsound men 1 Tim. 5.24 25. They that are otherwise cannot be hid Q. But what foundation must we lay A. There 's a threefold foundation 1 The foundation of satisfaction Esai 28.16 1 Cor. 3.12 Acts 4.12 Secondly the foundation of revelation or publication or manifestation so the doctrine of the Apostles is called a foundation Eph. 2.20 Rev. 1.14 Heb. 6.1 1 Cor. 3.10 3 The foundation of evidence 1 Cor. 2.12 1 Tim. 6.19 Use 1 Comfort for thee against Storms when thou hast laid a good Foundation and built upon a Rock Storms and Temptations do not make those that are good to become bad but onely tries what every one is Fire doth not make Gold leave the purity but onely tries it When David built upon a Rock see how comfortable Psalm 23.4 27.1 46.1 2 3. 61.2 so will it be with thee What if a Nation be ready to go together by the ears What if Invasions come What if thy Family be afflicted with infectious Diseases What if the Pilots of the Common-wealth be at their wits end What if Exilement for Religion what if sudden fears come yet to those that build upon a Rock it shall be well with them Isai 3.10 What if Devils rage they cannot pluck such out of Christs arms John 10.28 29 30. 2 Trial whether thou builds upon the Rock 1 Some time or other God will try thee with Storms 2 Tim. 3.12 but in what kinde thou knowest not 2 In such times of trouble the conscience is apt to be awakened so Josephs brethren when in Egypt Gen. 42.21 3 How wofull will thy condition then be to be without Christ Isai 10.3 Hos 9.5 6 7. Being without Christ and being without hope are put together Ephes 2.12 Properties or if you will Trials of a man that builds upon a Rock 1 The Gates of Hell or Death or Courts of men which were kept in the Gates cannot prevail against such a man habitually to make a false confession of Christs truth Matth. 16.18 Upon this Rock I will build my Church and the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it 2 He that builds on a Rock cannot be undermined nor blown up so a Christian that builds on Christ will not be blown up with preferments and proffers that shall be made to him in secret Act. 8.20 Thy money perish with thee said Peter to Magus 3 A Rock is a sure foundation to build upon so is Christ Esa 28.16 1 Pet. 2.6 For trials of a Christians estate to Godward see at large in my Catechism 4 When no weight or pressure of the fabrick will make the foundation to give way Let Christians have never so many pressures lying upon them yet doth the Rock Christ uphold them Eph. 3.16 Phil. 4.13 Where the foundation is a Rock the building in every part is held up V. 26. And every one that heareth these sayings of mine and doth them not shall be likened unto a foolish man which built his house upon the sand Here are the second sort of hearers such which hear and do not which is the formalist who builds upon the sandy foundation of an outward profession An outward powerless profession is like unto sand 1 As sand is moveable so such a profession 2 Tim. 1.15 4.16 2 As sand is scattered with the wind so such a profession both by the wind of Hereticks Eph. 4.14 Carried about with every wind of doctrine and the wind of persecution Matth. 13.21 In general also is meant all confidence in creatures whether Princes Honour Riches which are not props to uphold the soul in trouble Psal 146.3 Psal 62.8 Obs There are some hearers that hear the Word unprofitably they hear but they do not Causes hereof are 1 Carelesness of what is spoken Mark 4.24 Take heed what you hear 2 Forgetfulness of the word Jam. 1.24 25. in hearing full as a sieve in the water but after all is forgot 3 Unbelief Heb. 4.2 The Word profited not because not mixed with faith 4 Want of meditations Meditation doth as it were cover the seed that the fowls pick it not up Prov. 6.21 Bind them continually upon thy heart Deut. 32.46 5 The badness of the ground Where the ground is not good let the best seed be sown it comes not to any good where the ground was good there the seed grew up and brought forth fruit Luk. 8.15 6 Want of preparation of heart there must be preparation of the ground before seed be sown Jer. 4.3 Break up your fallow grounds and sow not among thorns 7 Want of rain from heaven and want of the Lords blessing Esa 53.1 Lord who hath believed our report to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed One profits not another because God manifests himself to him Joh. 14.22 and not to the other 1 Cor. 3.5 6 7. Act. 11.21 When the unbeliever was convinced God was in the Prophets 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 8 Misapplication We apply that to others which belongs to our selves This is as if we should apply the food and Physick which is given to us to another Johns hearers did otherwise who cryed What shall we do Luk. 3.13 13. 9 The not heeding God in the preacher but looking onely on the weak instrument Act. 10.33 Cornelius tells Peter We are all here before God to hear all things that are commanded us from God Cornelius to breed awful reverence in himself and other his fellow hearers looks upon all the commands as coming from God and so must we do not onely with the commands but with the promises and threatnings The Thessalonians received the Word of God not as the word of men but as the Word of God 1 Thess 2.13 10 The not
shall onely shew his opinion 3 Let it be with modesty and humility not in a proud magisterial way that it may appear the desired satisfaction arises meerly from conscience and not from humour 4 With a care to preserve the authority and reputation of the Teacher Titus 2.15 5 Upon due satisfaction given to sit down and hold your peace and not for the defence of your own opinion and credit to violate peace and holiness See Acts 11.18 6 To avoid all words that may force strife that the hearer may go away and report that God is among this people whiles they can peaceably debate of the things of God 1 Cor. 14.25 See 2 Tim. 2.23 7 Be sure that what you have to reply against any thing delivered be of moment and strength else your selves who shall reply will suffer reproach and scorn herein and come under the name of a gain-sayer Titus 1.9 8 In case words tending to no profit but to the subverting of hearers shall be brought the Preacher is to charge them before the Lord That they strive not about words to no profit 2 Tim. 2.16 Also v. 14. Shun profane and vain bablings for they will increase unto more ungodliness and their word will cat as a Canker as Hymenaeus and Philetus who denied the Resurrection so Quakers Antiscripturists are thus to be charged For the time will come when men will not endure sound doctrine but will turn away their ears from the truth and shall be turned into fables 9 Sometimes apostate Professours stirred up by the Devil this way as well as others may make great resistance against the words of a faithfull Preacher 2 Tim. 2.14 Alexander the Copper-smith greatly withstood the Apostles preaching and it may be suspected that some will be apt to abuse this Liberty proudly opposing sound Doctrine for meer trifles 10 Herewith rejoycing Jer. 15.16 Thy words were found and I did eat them and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoycing of my heart Psalm 119.162 David rejoyced in the Word as one that findeth great spoil Acts 2.41 Object But the stony ground received the Word with joy Matth. 13.20 Answ So they did and it was well that they did but 1 Hypocrites joy in some part onely but right hearers joy in every part hypocrites joy in the promises not in the precepts 2 Hypocrites joy in the notion onely but the right hearer joys in those truths as having an interest in them We rejoyce in the sight of a Diamond but joy more in the property The joy of one is like the joy of a man that is glad to see a fine field of Corn the joy of the other is like the joy of him that is the owner of this field of Corn. 3 Hypocrites joy in the Word after the outward man as apprehending most of the duties equitable and reasonable and many of them advantageous to a mans Estate credit and relations but a right hearer delights in the Law of God after the inner man Rom. 7.22 4 True joy is accompanied with fear Psalm 2.11 Rejoyce in him with trembling and also righteousness Rom. 14.17 The Kingdom of God consisteth in righteousness peace and joy of the Holy Ghost It 's otherwise in hypocrites their joy is accompanied with love of some Lust 11 Practise Christian conference Mal. 3.16 The godly when they met together spake often one to another of the providence of God The two Disciples going to Emaus communed together and reasoned of what they heard from Christ Luk. 24.15 Exhort one another daily while it is called to day Heb. 3.13 In speaking of the good things we have heard we do not onely warm others but our own hearts also 12 Retain and hold fast the Word 1 John 3 9. The seed of God abideth in him Cares pleasures will be apt to steal away the Word Else the fowls of the air will devour it Luke 8.5 For as many fowls follow the Seeds-man to pick up what is sown so do many Devils follow Sermons to pick up the seed Devils are called Fowls of the Air both for the nimbleness of their motion in a little time they will compass the whole earth Job 1.7 and from the place of their habitation which is the Air Ephes 2.2 13 Avoid all cavilling objections against the Word 1 Tim. 6.3 4. we ought to consent to the Doctrine according to godliness without any cavilling It 's one thing to make an objection in order to Christian satisfaction and another thing to cavil from pride and conceitedness Cavillers in Pauls time were out of Churches 1 Cor. 1.23 Where is the disputer of this world Take we heed they be not now in the Church It was the wickedness of the Jews that they were gain-sayers not onely their ears but their hearts Rom. 10.21 against Gods truth I have stretched out my hand to a gain-saying people 14 Practice meditation Deut. 32.46 set your hearts to all the words I testifie among you this day As a plaister works not unless it be bound on to the sore no more doth the Word unless meditation bind it on the affections Unclean beasts contrarily chew not the cud As the ground cannot be quickned with fruit unless it receive the seed no more can our hearts be quickned with the Spirit and fruits of it till by the use of hearing and meditation we have taken in this seed Many are so far from meditating that they are like children when schooling time is ended glad who can first get out and think not of what they have learned 15 Consider the benefits you shall have in the preaching of the Gospel when rightly received As 1 The graces and comforts of the Spirit conveyed in the beginnings and increases thereof even as Conduit-pipes carry water hither and thither Luke 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us whiles he talked with us by the way Gal. 3.2 5. 2 Therein glad tydings are conveyed Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that bring good news Upon the hearing of it we feel as it were new spirits to return to us how much more when we hear tydings of reconciliation from God how should our hearts abound in comfort shall other news revive us not this 3 The excellency of the ministry we are under it is the ministry of the Gospel far more excellent then that of the Law 1 In the Law they saw darkly we with open face 2 Cor. 3.18 2 The one is the ministration of death but the Gospel is the ministration of righteousness and life v. 7 8 9. Obj. But may not the Gospel also be called a ministration of death Answ Yes by accident not directly when souls will not obey the Gospel it turns to their condemnation As a Princes pardon cannot kill any one of it self but being despised it doubles the guilt and brings to a more hasty destruction so the pardon of God in the Gospel killeth not any but being despised causeth more heavy destruction But the Law
will trust in thee Fervent prayer we see is wont to excite the Lord to help us in our distress Jesu Christe fer opem aut actum est de salute meâ was a saying of Luther which I have often used to the Lord saying Jesus Christ come and help me or else I am undone for ever This is according to the promise Psalm 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will deliver thee Psalm 12.5 We perish They lay open their misery before Christ Psalm 142.1 2. I poured my complaint before him I shewed before him my trouble Isai 26.17 2 Chron. 20.12 13. They cry not to the heathen Neptune nor Aeolus which Heathens thought gods of Windes and Seas but to Christ Psal 89.9 nor cry they to Nicholas Mary Barbara and Christopher to whom Papists think government of waters is committed Chem. in loc The grounds why in trouble we lay open our misery to the Lord is 1 Because of our own helplesness Hosea 14.3 Ashur shall not save us Psalm 108.12 Give us help from trouble for vain is the help of man 2 Because of the fulness of salvation in God Psalm 3.8 Salvation is of the Lord Psalm 44.1 2 3 4 5 6 7. 3 Because of the insufficiency of all outward helps in time of danger Psalm 142.4 5. I looked on my right hand and behold refuge failed me then cried I unto thee O Lord. 4 Gods peoples extremities are Gods opportunities for deliverance and salvation Psalm 102.18 19. From Heaven did the Lord behold the Earth to loose those that are appointed to death Judges 20.26 27 28. V. 26. And he said unto them Why are ye fearfull O ye of little faith then he arose and rebuked the Windes and Seas and there was a great Calm Here is a third circumstance in the journey Christ reproves them Why are ye fearfull O ye of little faith Much fear argues little faith Faith foresees evils before they come and opposes Christ against all Prov. 22.3 The prudent man foresees the evil and hides himself so that he is not affraid of evil tidings Psalm 112.7 Not as if Christ condemns little faith but reprehends it in them who had great means of a strong faith and had seen many of Christs miracles and heard many of his Sermons Little faith brings to Heaven but not without doubts and fears Their faith was little 1 In that they did not so fully believe his divine nature Joh. 14.1 Also 2 In that they did not believe in his providence as they ought from the experiences they had of him 3 That they thought Christ being asleep in his humane nature could not help them in his divine nature 4 In that they doubted of Christ his care of them 1 Peter 5.7 Casting all your care on him Quest Whether is all fear contrary to faith Answ No true filial fear is duty Blessed is the man that feareth always Prov. 28.14 It springs from faith Heb. 11.7 By faith Noah was moved with fear but perplexing and solicitous fear when in times of danger we cannot rest on God with quiet and confidence which is so much more because God will keep him in perfect peace whose heart is staid on him Isai 26.4 5. This perplexing fear doth not declare we have no faith but that we have a weak faith Obs Persons may be Believers and yet be fearfull Psal 119.120 My flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am affraid of thy judgments Psalm 55 4. My heart is sore pained within me and the terrours of death are fallen upon me Heb. 12.21 Moses exceedingly feared and quaked 2 Cor. 7.5 Without were fightings within were fears These terrours are compared to Souldiers set in battel array Job 6.4 The arrows of the Almighty stick in me the terrours of God do set themselves in array against me Yea Christ was not exempted from these sears Mark 14.33 He began to be sore amazed and to be very heavy There 's a twofold fear 1 Natural with this was Christ affected This was in Moses Heb. 12.21 2 Sinfull this is 1 Perplexing 2 Discouraging 1 Perplexing Job 9.34 Let not his fear terrifie me 2 Cor. 4.8 Perplexed but not in despair Esai 7.2 The people of Judah by reason of Israel and Syria's coming against them were moved as the trees of the Wood are moved with the winde This is a sore judgement Deut. 28.65 The Lord shall give thee a trembling heart and sorrow of minde and thy life shall hang in doubt before thee and thou shalt fear day and night in the morning thou shalt say would God it were evening and at even thou shalt say would God it were morning for the fear of thy heart wherewith thou shalt fear 2 Discouraging Heb. 12.13 14. Lift up the hands which hang down and the feeble knees Now this discouraging fear is when a soul looks upon the approaching evil above it's strength not looking on the strength of God as when a man meets with a Lion or a subject contests with his Prince both tremble in their spirits because the strength of a man is not comparable to a Lion nor the strength of a subject to a Prince Thus the Spies were discouraged looking on the sons of Anak and comparing themselves with them Num. 13.28 The mischief of discouraging fear is this that a man hath no heart to put forth his strength in time of danger The Israelites being dismaid with Goliath durst not make head against him but fled before him 1 Sam. 17.11.24 hence when God gave Joshua his command he bade him not be afraid nor dismayed Jos 1.9 Use 1. Raise up your hearts if not above perplexing fears yet above discouraging Luke 21.9 Christ bids the Disciples when they should hear of wars and commotions not to be terrified These discouraging fears are a great judgment Levit. 26.36 I le send a faintness into their hearts and the sound of a shaken leaf shall chase them These Disciples were affected with perplexing fear and a little spice they had of discouraging fear 3 Grounds against discouraging fear 1 The promise of Gods assistance in all troubles Esai 41.10 Fear not for I am with thee be not dismayed for I am thy God Heb. 13.6 We may boldly say The Lord is our helper and not fear what flesh can do unto us 2 From the respect God hath to the strength of his people 1 Cor. 10.13 He will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able Jer. 46.28 Yea the cup what ever it be comes from a fathers hand Joh. 18.11 3 Because there 's no troubles can make a Christian truly miserable because no troubles can sever him from the love of God Rom. 8.35 38. We are troubled on every side yet not distressed or straitned but that a door of deliverance is opened we are perplexed or void of counsel and troubled with fear yet do we not despair as Judas and Achitophel did cast down like a man by his adversary but not destroyed
by our prayers Psal 93.3 4. And there was a great calm See the obedience of the mightiest creatures to God how will this condemn our disobedience See how windes yield obedience Psal 107.26 compared with 29. See the seas obedience Jer. 5.22 Let not the winde and sea overcome you in overcoming the storms of the minde V. 27. But the men marvelled saying What manner of man is this that even the wind and sea obey him Here 's a fifth circumstance they reason thus He whom winds and seas obey must be greater then all mortalls but they obey this man therefore he is greater then all men This should stir us up to confidence in the Son Joh. 14.1 Let not your hearts be troubled ye believe in God believe also in me q. d. I am God as well as my Father therefore believe on me So that as it is said of the Lord Psal 89.9 Thou rulest the raging of the sea when the waves thereof arise thou stillest them so also doth Christ at this time The creatures are Gods executioners to punish man for sin when they exceed herein the Lord reproves them as a father doth a schoolmaster when he sees him unmeasurably to chastise his son The greatness of which miracle which made it more admirable was that whereas usually in storms when the wind ceases the sea is not calm till a good while after but here both wind ceases and the sea is calm together in an instant showing it came from a miracle not from nature For the calm was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to laugh to note that the weather and sea smiled on them with a clear countenance All expositors make the Church an arbitrary Antitype of this tossed ship as this ship was poor a mean fisher boat not to be compared to the great Merchant ships and men of war so the poor Church is not to be compared for outward glory with the kingdoms of the world And as when the proud Scribe leaves Christ the poor disciples accompany Christ through the sea so when rich and great men leave Christ the poor disciples accompany Christ through the troublesome sea of this world Again as this ship was in danger so hath the Church been oft in Egypt Babylon in the ten persecutions and Popish Tyranny ready to be swallowed up of waves but the Lord seasonably appears either by cutting off Tyrants as he did Pharaoh Exod. 14.25 and Herod Act. 12.23 Or by putting a hook in their nostrils as he did to Sennacherib 2 King 19.28 or by turning the hearts of persecutors whereby the Churches have rest as he did Paul Act. 9.31 This Church so tossed is not the Roman Church as the Papists paint the Pope to be the steers-man sitting at the helm and the Cardinals Bishops and Priests to be the Mariners but it s a company of Saints who because they will live godly suffer persecution 2 Tim. 3.12 With these it is that Christ is present in the signes of the covenant and in the word of promise and with his supporting presence in time of storms they pretend they have no schismes nor contentions but perfect unity but this proves them not to be the true Church because the ship wherein Christ was was exposed to storms and Christ came not to bring peace but a sword Matth. 10.34 And if unity among them might prove them a Church then might it prove the Turks and Jews to be Churches who have more of unity then they V. 28. And when he was come to the other side into the country of the Gergesenes there met him two possessed with devils coming out of the tombes exceeding fierce so that no man might pass by that way In these words to the end of the Chapter is set down what befell Christ when he was gone from Capernaum over the lake of Genezareth into the country of the Gerasens 1 He is met with two men possessed with devils The devils are described 1 That they came out of the tombes 2 By their exceeding fierceness that no man might pass that way 2 The complaint they make which is twofold 1 Disclaiming their interest in Christ What have we to do with thee Jesus thou son of God ver 29. Thou art the saviour of men not our Saviour 2 Their fear of a present torment Art thou come to torment us before the time ver 29. 3 Their petition If thou cast us out suffer us to go into the herd of swine v. 31. 4 Here 's Christ permission of them to enter the hogs he said unto them Go v. 32. 5 Here 's the devils execution of their mischief having once obtained a permission the devils entering into the swine the whole herd went down a steep place and perished in the waters v. 32. 6 The report hereof that was brought to the city v. 33. 7 The issue and effect the Gadarens being offended for the loss of their hogs desired him to depart out of their coasts And when he had come to the other side into the country of the Gergasens Matthew calls them Gergafens Mark and Luke Gadarens but there 's no difficulty for Gergessa or Gerasa and Gedara were towns near thereto Joseph lib. 2. de bello cap. 2. mentions both Gerasens and Gadarens These were the remainders of the Canaanites as Grotius writes and as it appears Gen. 10.16 The remainders of the people whose Land was given to Israel Deut. 7.1 supposed to be the Geshurites and Maacathites Jos 13.13 There met him two possessed with devils Mark and Luke mention onely one but the answer is easie the one was more famous then the other being possessed of a whole legion of devils Mar. 5.9 Luk. 8.30 and so was more cruel Mark and Luke prosecuting the history of the man possessed with a legion of devils do omit the mentioning the other Demoniak Coming out of the tombes They came out thence and abode there to affright men with fear of death their abode and dwelling was among the tombs Mark 5.3 Luk. 8.27 Now they might easily dwell in the tombs because they were hollow places digged out of a rock as Christs Sepulchre was Matth. 27.60 whereinto John and Peter entered Joh. 20.6 and those three women that brought spices Luk. 24.3 or else they were made of stone or brick and covered over Now if it be askt why they dwelt there it was because one of the Demoniaks being possest with a cruel devil or rather a legion of them no man would receive them to their house they being excluded from humane society resided in old Sepulchres One of these Demoniocks ware no clothes and was bound with chains and sometimes broke them Luk. 8.27 29. Matthew addes they were exceeding fierce and that they were so troublesome to passengers that no man might pass by that way Mark addes that no man could tame him and that he was day and night in the mountains and tombs crying and cutting himself with stones
Mar. 5.5 which shows that they were mad else would they not have thus cut themselves now they being so troublesome no man would receive them into their houses And in that Satan met Christ it appears he is not omniscient for he would not have suffered the possessed to have come that way had he known Christ to have been so near nor did Satan know whither Christ would send him vvhether into the wilderness or into the hogs or whither else So that no man might pass that way We have no call to go where Satan is not upon pretence of any strength of faith in us Doubtless there were some believers living but none would go that way and note Christ makes the devils to meet him whether they will or not see the greatness of Christ his love and mercy who out of compassion to these two poor men crosses the sea to cast the devil out of them V. 29. And behold they cried out saying What have we to do with thee Jesus thou Son of God art thou come hither to torment us before the time What have we to do with thee Here 's the devils complaint what have I to do with you That is why do you trouble me 2 Sam. 16.10 what have I to do with you ye sons of Zerviah See Judg. 11.12 Pharaoh Necho saith to Josiah 2 Chron. 35.21 What have I to do with thee thou King of Judah Now this speech of the devils or of the legion in the man was after Christ had bid him or them come out of the man Mark 5.7 8. Luke 8.29 Besides What have we to do with thee may signifie what evil have we done thee that thou castest us out though we have hurt others we have not hurt thee Quest Whether did the devils know Christ to be the Christ Answ Not before his temptation for had they known him so to be they would not have tempted him but afterwards they knew him to be the son of God Mark 1.34 Christ suffered not the devils to speak because they knew him Luke 4.41 Devils came out of many crying Thou art Christ the Son of God and he rebuking them suffered them not to speak for they knew that he was Christ But for the mystery of the death of Christ it 's like Satan knew it not for had he known it he would not have put it into the heart of Judas to betray him he was hindered by God from knowing that which of his own nature he might have known Art thou come hither to torment us before the time The devils do not alledge for themselves nor refuse to be cast into bell at the day of judgement Jude 6. so that they may have liberty in the mean time to vex and torment The 〈◊〉 think it a torment when they cannot do that mischief they would also they were afraid of being sent back to the prison of hell for the devils are glad to be in the ayr because then they have liberty to wander up and down into divers Provinces and someth●●● they have power to stir up storms and pestilences Hence Luke faith The devils besought him that he would not command them 〈…〉 the deep abyssum Luke 8.31 Yet are not the 〈…〉 out torment at present for besides that it was a 〈…〉 for them to come out of them they possessed they 〈◊〉 the torment of a guilty conscience and a fearfull expe●●●tion of indignation and wrath hence they desire they 〈◊〉 not be cast into abyssum into hell so taken Rev. 20.3 Abyssus is the same with Tartarus hell not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the unseen world of good and bad Us He means the Legion of devils in the two possessed persons Mark 5.7 A Legion was a Roman Brigade consisting of 6666 men as Hesychius according to Suidas they were six thousand Varro counts 12500 souldiers to a Legion as in Brigades now adayes they are sometimes more sometimes less so then the devils acknowledge they were many which appears because when they went out of the man they possessed two thousand hogs These devils cruelly tormented the possessed persons that they cried out day and night and cut themselves with stones An Emblem of natural men who are Satans slaves to do what he will have them 2 Tim. 2.26 Joh. 8.44 and gave their members to the devil to fight against themselves and tears off their clothes from them to expose them to scorn and laughter and what he doth to these he would do to others yet he thinks Christ an unjust Judge to torment him before the time They complain of torment when them selves do so much mischief Before the time Not as if the devils knew the time of the judgement for the good Angels know it not nor the humane nature of Christ onely they knew the judgement was not yet come and therefore they complain they were tormented before the time V. 30. And there was a good way off from them an herd of many Swine feeding About two thousand Swine If they were Jews they brought them up to sell them to the Gentiles but if they were the remainders of the Canaanites as before is proved then might they keep them and eat them V. 31. So the devils besought him saying If thou cast us out suffer us to go away into the Herd of Swine We see the power of Christ is greater then the power of a Legion of devils he is stronger then that strong one and bindes him Luke 11.21 22. about this power of Christ we may observe sundry circumstances 1 That Christ silences Satan and would not suffer him to speak Mark 1.25 2 That against the devils will he makes them meet him and to adore him not with religions veneration but with extorted humiliation 3 That they could not go into the Swine unless Christ permitted them The power of the devil is not so great as it seems to be he is compel'd to leave the fishes in the Rivers the fowls in the ayr men and cattel in Cities Luth. in Gen. 32. To cast the devil out of the man was the work of Christ but for the going of the devils into the Swine was the bare permission of Christ The devils by their own power could do that if they were not hindered by a greater power Christ therefore did not act in the devils entering into the hogs but onely withheld his power which was able to have hindered 4 In that he tames these devils which no body else could tame they brake all chains no man durst go that way for fear of being wounded or kill'd for the devil had a great wrath knowing he had but a short time Rev. 12.12 but Christ here bindes these strong devils 1 Learn we then to acknowledge the power of Christ to be greater then the power of the devils All power in heaven and earth is given to him Matth. 28.19 Also in Hell Revel 20.1 2. Christ makes the Devils come creeping to him Luke 8.28 When he saw Jesus he cried out
countrey he was willing to go with Christ Luke 8.38 3 His obedience when Christ sent him back again to his own countrey and kindred he was willing to go trying whether that effect of Doctrine which could not be by Christ might by him being one of their own countrey become effectual withall in sending him thus Christ shews that an active life is to be preferred before a contemplative first the body must be exercised in labour and then be refreshed by contemplation CHAP. IX V. 1. And he entred into a Ship and passed over and came into his own City V. 2. And behold they brought unto him a man sick of the Palsey lying on a Bed Jesus seeing their faith saith to the sick of the Palsey Son be of good chear thy sins be forgiven thee WE have in this story 1 The return of Christ from the countrey of the Gergesenes into his own City Capernaum whence lately he came v. 1. 2 His miraculous power in not onely healing a man sick of the Palsey but also forgiving his sins v. 2. 3 The cavil of the Scribes against him charging him with blasphemy for his forgiving the Palsey-man v. 3. 4 Christ his vindication of himself together with his asserting his power to forgive sins 1 By his knowing their thoughts Why think ye evil in your hearts v. 4. 2 Because he was able to do the thing which was more hard therefore he was able to do that which was more easie v. 5 6. Whether is it easier to say Thy sins be forgiven thee or to say Arise and walk q. d. You think it harder to heal a Palsey man than to forgive sins now you have seen me do that which you think harder therefore can I without blasphemy do that which is easier 5 The effect this Miracle had among the Multitude they 1 Marvelled 2 Glorified God who had given such power to men v. 8. He came into his own City That is of Capernaum called his own because usually he dwelt there and preached more Sermons and did more Miracles there than elsewhere That Capernaum is meant here appears Mark 2.1 Matthew saith cap. 4.13 Leaving Nazareth he came and dwelt in Capernaum They brought him a man sick of the Palsey lying on a bed A palsey is the dissolution of the sinews of the body which are the instruments of motion without which a man cannot move or walk Hence this Palsey man was born of four Mar. 2.3 For charity requires that the well and healthy succour the sick Luke sets down there was so great a multitude came to the house where Christ was that no man could come in Hence those that bore the Palsey-man uncovered the roof and let down the Palsey-man to Christ though doubtless the rubbish did fall down yet was not Christ offended Herewith learn we to take all opportunities to come to Christ and to bring others to him Jesus seeing their faith saith to the sick of the Palsey Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee Christ seeing both the faith of the Palsey-man and of those that brought him speaks thus not as if another mans faith can profit to the forgiveness of our sins but hereby Christ applies pardon to the Palsey-man and to so many as believed who helped to bring him to Christ Thy sins be forgiven thee Nothing will cheer the soul unless forgiveness of sins go along with it not to have a disease removed Christ is not onely the Physician of diseases but of sins first he forgives the sins and then heals the Palsey to show that sin is the root and fountain of diseases Whereas the conscience of former evils might perplex the Palsey-man that he should not obtain healing Christ tells him that sin the cause of sickness was pardoned and therefore he might comfortably expect healing This was not faith of miracles which is a confidence of a future miracle but faith of justification which if the Palsey-man had not before by Christ his speaking it was wrought in him but it seems he had it before in that Christ calls him Son Quest Why did Christ first forgive his sins before healing of him Answ 1 Because sin was the cause of sickness and to remove the effect there must be first a removing of the cause Palsey and other diseases arise rather from sin then from natural causes 2 That forseeing the calumny of the Pharisees against Christ his miracle Christ might prove his Godhead first by this that he knew the thoughts secondly by this that he had power on earth to forgive sins We may see Christs bounty that he heals the whole man Joh. 7.23 Learn we from our afflictions to reflect upon our sins as the cause of them V. 3. And behold certain of the Scribes said within themselves This man blasphemeth Here 's the calumny of the Scribes and Pharisees against Christ which was this he that is not God but takes upon him power to forgive sins he blasphemes but Jesus the Son of man is not God and yet takes upon him power to forgive sins therefore he blasphemes The proposition was most true 1 Because none can forgive offences against God but against whom they are committed 2 Because to forgive sins in God is not onely to forgive the guilt but the punishment and curse but the Pharisees err'd in the assumption Hence Christproved himself by two reasons that he was God Within themselves Not among themselves as if they had been murmuring one among another of Christs doings hence Matthew saith not v. 4. Jesus knowing their words but saith Jesus knowing their thoughts Now that they said within themselves was as Mark tells us cap. 2.7 Who can forgive sins but God alone Isa 43.25 I am he that blot out thine iniquities Mic. 6.18 Who is a God like unto thee forgiving iniquity transgression and sin Jer. 31.34 I will forgive their iniquity and remember their sins no more It s like the Scribes remembring these and such like places and not considering what was spoken out of the Old Testament concerning the Messiah conceived these murmurings in their hearts This man blasphemeth Omitting the acceptions of this word as else where it is taken here it signifies to arrogate that which belongs unto God unto a mans self The Lawyers or Scribes thought this power mentioned 2 Sam. 12.7 Nathan to David saith The Lord hath put away thine iniquity was incommunicable now Christ in token that he had this power 1 Works a miracle 2 Searches their hearts which is onely peculiar to God 1 King 8.39 Thou onely knows the hearts of the children of men Jer. 17.10 11. I the Lord search the heart 1 Sam. 16.7 The Lord looks upon the heart Rom. 8.27 Yet was the arguing of these Scribes of no weight to reason thus God never gave the power of forgiveness of sins to any man hitherto therefore he cannot grant it none of the Prophets could do it therefore the Messias shall not be able to do it V. 4. And
times Besides it 's like Johns Disciples might propound this Question out of zeal to their Master and out of envy to Christ as in another case John 3.26 Now the Pharisees did question in this manner to hinder Christs Ministry and therefore where ever he went they usually followed him to hinder his Ministry and they being silenced in their Objection in the former story they knowing John to be much in repute among the Jews they get his Disciples to propound this Question We may observe 1 The restlesness of Enemies of Truth though conquered and beaten once and again vet they give not over 2 See how cunning men the Enemies of Christ endeavour to winde others into their party so the Pharisees winde in Johns Disciples Young Converts are ready to be misled through the craft of those who ly in wait to deceive See Ephes 4.14 3 See that persons are apt to please themselves with their own customary service Zach. 7.3 5. they had taken up two Fastes in the fifth and seventh moneth for seventy years and though they had nothing but Custome for it yet they send from Babylon to Jerusalem to make the continuance of it a case of Conscience Besides when people have set up a golden Calf they would fain have others to worship it and so Johns Disciples urge to have their fasting days observed But thy Disciples faste not That is they eat and drink secretly accusing them of excess and intemperance probably that place Matth. 11.18 alludes to this The Son of Man came eating and drinking and behold a Man gluttonous and a Wine-bibber q. d. We are holy and of God thou art a sinner whiles we are fasting thou art feasting V. 15. And Jesus said unto them Can the Children of the Bride-chamber mourn so long as the Bridegroom is with them but the days will come when the Bridegroom shall be taken from them and then shall they faste Here is Christs meek Answer to them as being weak and seduced putting difference betwixt Seducers and such Seducing Teachers are to be handled more roughly seduced more meekly Can the Children of the Bride-chamber mourn That is those that were admitted into the Bride-chamber with the Bridegroom as Virgins were with the Bride Psalm 45.14 15. The sum of Christs Answer is Christ leaving the Pharisees he answers onely Johns Disciples shewing that the cause why they fasted was not competent or agreeing to his Disciples but the time should come when even his Disciples losing their Master should mourn mean time they had a little respite of joy and comfort so long as he was with them As mariages call for feasting and gladness not for fasting and sorrow so did the presence of Christ with his Disciples so that Christ his answer consists of two branches 1 That at present his Disciples had not cause of mourning because he the Bridegroom was with them Observe that Christ is the Bridegroom of his Church John 3.29 Matth. 22.2 Rev. 22.17 who did not onely espouse our nature and not the nature of Angels Heb. 2.16 but also maries himself to every believing soul Rom. 7.4 we are maried to him that was raised from the dead John 6.37 2 Cor. 11.3 This mariage is made up here on earth in the state of grace whereto there is a feast of grace and comfort as the begun solemnities thereof Matth. 2 2.2 and perfected in heaven in the feast of eternal glory Revel 19.7 8 9. 2 Christ answers they should have time of fasting and mourning in time to come Christ taking away their superstitious fasting doth neither cry up riot or excess nor decry fasting but that Christians must apply themselves to that condition the Lord sends When he gives glad times let us rejoyce in them when he brings sad times let us be humbled and seek his face Christ doth not decry fasting as I said but he would not have it tied to certain times as the Jews fondly did Zach. 7.3 5. sith such a day of the Moneth this year may be fit for fasting but the next year the same day may call for feasting Jejuniorum dissonantia non rumpat fidei consonantiam For as there were due cases for fasting under the Old Testament as when some stroke of God was on a people Judg. 20.26 when some judgement hang'd over a people as Nineveh Jon. 3.5 or to obtain some singular mercy Dan. 9.31 Now these and such like causes of fasting Christ doth not take away but doth establish them yea and the Apostle practised them 2 Cor. 11.25 There 's a tropological sense that when Christ our husband departs from us for our sins we should then fast and mourn till we get his return but the literal sense is to be taken as that which is meant V. 16. No man putteth a new piece of cloth into an old garment for that which is put in to fill it up taketh from the garment and the rent is made worse V. 17. Neither do men put new Wine into old bottles else the bottles break and the Wine runneth out and the bottles perish but they put new Wine into new bottles and both are preserved Here 's a third reason why Christ doth not require his Disciples to faste which is their present weakness which cannot well bear a more strict discipline the painfull duty of fasting doth not well suit with my Disciples being but babes no more then a new piece doth with an old garment or new Wine that is hot and working to be put into old bottles this would be a means to make them fall off from me and go back to the Pharisees and therefore I refrain as yet from it to avoid offence Tertul. l. de orat c. 1. By the old garment and old bottles understands the Old Testament by the new piece the New Testament for the new reformed the old and made it as it were new but I lean to the former Another is this As a new piece doth not agree to an old garment so your traditions of Fathers and Elders about your fastings doth not agree to my Gospel-doctrine these will not warm our hearts not quiet our consciences as the garment of my righteousness doth Moreover the mixture of humane institutions and godliness or religion will hazard the loss of godliness and religion The ancients kept their Wine in bottles made of leather and Skins as we keep it in Casks now when this is put in old bottles the Wine is apt to spill so the doctrine of the Gospel when it falls into superstitious mindes is apt to be lost The Gospel is compared to Wine both as Wine glads the heart Judg. 9. Psal 104.15 so doth the Gospel it 's compared to new Wine not because it 's new being of old preached to Adam Gen. 3.15 but in opposition to the old Adam or corrupt nature in us q. d. Gospel truths do not agree to a man remaining in his old nature but Gospel truths are well agreeing to a regenerate nature as new
he hath an implicite liking to the sin If inclining to pride in apparel wear plain cloaths if to vain-glory speak not any thing that may redound to your praise if to lying tell no doubtfull stories if to whispering speak sparingly of other mens actions especially of your Enemies 10 When we are affraid of sinning in secret Lev. 19.14 Thou shalt not curse the deaf nor put a stumbling block before the blinde but shalt fear the Lord thy God The deaf man could not hear the curse the blinde man cannot see the block thou layest Oh! but God sees and his fear must keep thee and me from secret iniquities See Job 31.22 23 26 27 29 30. 11 A reverend carriage both outward and inward in the worship of God Psalm 5.7 In thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple Eccles 5.2 God is in Heaven and thou on Earth therefore let thy words be few and as in prayer so in hearing Eccles 5.1 Look to thy foot when thou goest into the house of God Gods fear in Cornelius made him reverend in hearing Peter Acts 10.2 compared with v. 33. We are all here present before God to hear all things commanded us from God Jacob saith Gen. 28.16 17. The Lord is in this place and I was not aware of it how dreadfull is this place Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him as if he should say The fear of the Lord is the best spur to holy service Heb. 12.27 28. Psalm 5.7 3 Exhortation to labour after Gods fear Where wicked men are most fearless Saints are most fearfull to wit in sin and where Saints are most fearless as in calamitous times wicked men are most fearfull Most men are like little children that fear and cry at things not to be feared as at Bull-beggars c. but do not fear things that are to be feared to wit Water Fire Knives c. so most men fear those things which are shadows of grief as Poverty Disgrace but do not fear that which will bring astonishment and endless misery if not repented of Means to Gods fear 1 God must put it into our hearts Jer. 32.40 and man must teach it Psalm 34.11 Come ye children hearken unto me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. We are ready to scatter our fear as well as other affections where it ought not to be as on great persons Prov. 29.25 on worldly troubles hence it's Gods work to place our fear on a right object hence David prays Psalm 86.10 Unite my heart to fear thy Name 2 Apprehend Gods love to thy soul and thou wilt be affraid to offend him Hosea 3.5 They shall fear the Lord and his goodness Psal 130.3 4. There is mercy with thee that thou mayst be feared 1 Pet. 1.17 If you call upon the Father that is look upon him as your Father see that you spend the time of your sojourning here in fear 2 Cor. 6.17 18. Touch not the unclean thing and I will be a Father unto you 3 Be perswaded of Gods Omniscience and Omnipresence We would fear to do evil if the eye of a man were upon us much more when Gods eye beholds us Psalm 44.17 18. Though God smote his people into the place of Dragons and covered them with the shadow of death yet they apprehending and believing God to search into the secrets of the heart they durst not lift up their hands to a strange God v. 20 21. What made Job fear to sin See cap. 31.4 Doth not he see all my ways and count all my steps 4 Look upon and believe the greatness of his power Isai 40.12 Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted out Heaven with the span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountains in scales and the hills in a ballance All Nations compared with him are as a drop of a Bucket compared with the Ocean or as the small dust in a ballance compared with the greatest weights put therein all Nations are before him as nothing v. 11 17. Hence the Lord saith Jer. 5.22 Fear ye not me will ye not tremble at my presence who have placed the sand for the bound of the sea c. Psalm 76. v. 5. to v. 10. Thou even thou art to be feared thou didst cause judgment to be heard from Heaven the earth feared and was still Especially behold Gods power in casting the soul into Hell Job 41.10 Leviathan or the Whale is set down to be a terrible creature Job saith Shall not even one be cast down at the sight of him v. 9. also v. 10. None is so fierce that dares stir him up who then can stand before me If thou art notable to stand against one of Gods creatures in thy sins how wilt thou be able to stand before God himself Besides all other he hath one power to convey an invisible Horrour into thy Conscience to make thee a terrour to thy self and others Jer. 20.4 See it in Judas Matth. 27.4 5. if thou wilt venture to go on in sin 5 Believe Gods threatnings against sin Who would venture upon such a sin did he believe the threatnings against it Heb. 11.7 Noah by faith being moved with fear to wit of Gods drowning the World prepared an Ark c. Eve contrarily mincing the threatning Gen. 3.3 when God had said In the day that thou eatest of it thou shalt surely dy Gen. 2.16 17. she changed it thus God hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye dy The threatning being thus lessened she was drawn away to ruine her self and posterity There are terrible threats against sinners See Deut. 29.18 19 20 21. Psalm 11.6 Col. 3.6 1 Thes 4.6 2 Thes 1.8 9. 1 Pet. 4.17 These and many more unless they be believed they will not preserve us from sin Quest But seeing there is a filial and son-like fear and a servile or slavish fear of God how shall we know what our fear is Answ 1 Slavish fear drives from God Gen. 3.8 Adam and Eve when they heard the voice of the Lord hid themselves from the presence of the Lord. The reason is rendered v. 10. because they were affraid Is 33.14 The sinners in Sion are affraid they look upon God as devouring fire and as everlasting burnings So the Devils believe and tremble James 2.19 Contrarily filial fear brings us nearer to God Psalm 86.11 2 Slavish fear leaves the nature filthy as in the Devils James 2.19 and wicked men Heb. 2.15 through fear of death they are all their life subject to bondage Contrarily filial fear cleanseth Psalm 19.4 The fear of the Lord is clean 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God Holy persons serve without slavish fear in holiness and righteousness all their life Luke 1.74 75. 3 Slavish fear hath torment of heart 1 John 4.17
the Lord. Besides what ever evils befall us God can turn them for our good as in Josephs case he saith to his Brethren Ye meant it for evil but God meant it for good Loss of goods hath proved a gain of grace Heb. 10.34 Restraint of outward liberty a means to set the conscience free Acts 16.25 Disgrace a motive for God to manifest his approbation torment an occasion of easing the minde Heb. 11.35 3 Look on God not onely as the cause of the being of things but the cause of their not being That the fire did not burn the three men Dan. 3. nor the hungry Lions devour Daniel why men favour us not and why their hearts are turned against us Psalm 105.25 God hath a work in men hearts as in Absalom who refused the best counsel Nothing is so high that is above his providence nothing so low that is beneath it nothing so large but is bounded by it nothing so little that he overlooks it nothing so confused but he can order it nothing so bad but he can draw good out of it nothing so wisely plotted but he can supplant it nothing so unpolitickly carried but he can give a prevailing power to it both is to be taken heed of Be not proud of thy wisdom and counsels if they succeed not do not despair because God governs and prospers the errours of the godly I have often committed the greatest rashness and follies but I did it not with a desire to hurt but unwisely desiring to counsel faithfully hence I prayed that God would amend my errour Luth. in Gen. 27. 4 Exhort to resign up all our actions to God in times of suffering 1 Peter 4.19 Let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls unto him in well-doing as into the hands of a faithfull Creatour When we have a Jewel in times of danger we trust it in the hand of a father let us in suffering times leave our souls with God Let us also in the disposal of our conditions submit to poverty disgrace imprisonment banishment death even as the Lord in his providence shall please to dispose of us Even as the Patient doth to his Physician who hath seen his Water or felt his Pulse All the afflictions wherewith Saints are afflicted are no other thing than a pleasant and sweet play wherewith God plays with us as a father with his little ones whom he bids do something above their strength which when they endeavour diligently to do the father also puts to his hand Luth. in Gen. 43. V. 32. Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men him will I confess before my Father in Heaven Here 's a third Reason not to fear death because he that confesses Christ even to loss of Life Christ will confess him before his Father See Rev. 2.13 Quest What Confession is here meant Answ Habitual in the purpose of the heart for it 's not enough to confess Christ in one act onely 2 Seasonable Confession with the mouth When men shall oppose or deny Christ and his Truth or when Tyrants shall examine us of our Faith we shall unmoveably and constantly profess our belief in Christ and our cleaving to his Truth even to death and tortures Be we exhorted to confess Christ before men 3 Properties in Confession 1 Let it be with boldness Mark 15.33 1 Tim. 4.16 2 Plain without any equivocation So Peter and John answered the Council Acts 4 7. 3 With meekness and fear 1 Peter 3.15 See this fully in my Treatise of Denial of Christ p. 27. V. 33. But whosoever shall deny me before men him will I deny before my Father which is in Heaven Christ doth not here mean actual denial for Peter denied Christ yet is in Heaven And so Bilney the Martyr and many others under temptation so denied Christ yet stuck to him in the habit and purpose of their hearts but Christ means habitual denial of Christ in the purpose of the heart when a man for the saving of his Lands Liberty or Life will deny Christ or any part of his Truth Actual denial of Christ is dangerous though but in one act especially when the soul hath time to deliberate and for such a treachery God is wont to fill the soul with horrour that a man would give all the world to be eased of it as in Spira c. how much more dangerous is habitual denial Christ is denied 1 Silently when persons can hear the Truth spoken against his Servants railed on Idolatry cried up and they sit still as if the thing nothing concerned them against this see these places Psalm 119.46 1 Kings 22.8 Matth. 11.19 2 Christ is denied expresly and that 1 In a vicious Life Titus 1.16 2 Tim. 3.5 Jude 4. 2 Christ is denied in word this is 1 Publickly when being asked by the Magistrate concerning our Faith for fear of Prisons or Death we shall not acknowledg it Acts 4.8 9 10. This also is committed when we present our selves at worship which our own Conscience judges false for the substance thereof 2 In private when we conferring with men shall for fear of loss or hope of gain deny that Truth we inwardly acknowledg 3 Christ is denied in writing when we shall subscribe to any thing as truth which we are perswaded in our consciences is an errour or subscribe to the recantation of any truth Satan may tell you such a thing is soon done but know that is done in a moment which may be lamented for ever 4 Christ is denied in worship when we shall present our selves at such worship as we loath in our hearts Hosea 13.2 Let the men that sacrifice kiss the Calves 5 There is a denial of Christ in asserting Principles when for fear of loss we shall withhold the asserting of our Principles being thereunto called this was Peters sin Gal. 2.12 6 Christ is denied implicitely when though we do not deny Christ in life word or writing because we are not put to it yet we would deny him were we put thereto We must to mend this have the purposes of our hearts right to forsake all we have for Christ take we heed we deny not Christ for Church-communion John 9. John 12.42 This denial of Christ as to the acts of it is twofold 1 Sudden when a man is surprized on a sudden and denies Christ so Peter 2 Deliberate when a man notwithstanding reluctations checks and deliberations about confessing some truth yet for fear he shall hang back and deny it See my Treatise of Denial of Christ p. 12. V. 34. Think not that I am come to send peace on earth I came not to send peace but a sword Christ comes to propose another hardship his Disciples should encounter with to wit the contentions and oppositions not onely of strangers but also of near relations Think not that I am come to send peace on earth Many thought from the misunderstanding of that Scripture Isai 11.6 The
sundry doubts of other mens actings and yet these not hinder our own acting nor do they come under Paul's kinde of doubting who speaks onely of a mans own actings our conscience or perswasion hath nothing to do to judge an other mans liberty 1 Cor. 10.29 For example Augustus laid a tax upon all the world some Christians doubted that part of this tax would be bestowed on Idols and their Priests and therefore doubted whether they might pay Augustus tribute their doubts were not to be regarded they might pay tribute notwithstanding these doubts for they had nothing to do to doubt or judge what Augustus would do with it being secret in his own breast An Officer doubts the Magistrate hath given an unjust sentence yet may he execute it because his own duty is clear to him but the Magistrates injustice is not I am a Church member I doubt my fellow member is an hypocrite yet may I communicate with him because his hypocrisie doth not appear and the manifestation of his evil and the censure of the Church thereupon is the ground for my not communicating not my doubting of his unsoundness A souldier doubts his Captain sends him upon an unjust service this souldier if he know not the injustice may not refrain 5 In your own proper actings do not that you doubt of Rom. 14.5 23. As it 's against the Law of friendship willingly to do that which we doubt whether it will be acceptable to our friend so is it against the Law of the love of God to do such things as we doubt whether or no do please him Reas 1 Because satisfaction in scruples tends much to the quieting of the soul The Jews doubted whether any of their members might eat with the Gentiles Acts 11.2 and some of them dealt with Peter herein When Peter gave them satisfaction concerning the lawfulness thereof They were glad and glorified God v. 18. Then is it that a man can act comfortably and chearfully 2 Clearing up of scruples tends to make Church-communion comfortable The Jews did earnestly endeavour to keep the ceremonial commands of the Law and to impose them upon others and would not have communion with the Gentile brethren that would not keep them Acts 15.1 On the other side the Gentile believers knowing their liberty by Christ would exclude the Jews living Jewishly from their communion whereupon a Schism was like to arise therefore Paul to heal the scruples on all sides warns the Jewish believers so to follow their opinion that they did not condemn the Gentile believers of wickedness and warns the Gentile believers that they should not refrain the Communion of the Jewish believers because they lived Jewishly nor despise them for it but that they should receive one another to Church-fellowship Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive you but not to doubtfull disputations The words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie the judging of thoughts q.d. Do not you Gentile believers judge whether they use these ceremonial commands as necessary or as profitable or how they hold them in their conscience what have you to do to rifle there what have you to do to judge their thoughts 3 The great anguish that is in the soul for want of satisfaction herein Many have scruples as to vows oaths restitution assurance obedience to mens commands c. and go on in a pining condition for many years together when one word of a faithfull Teacher or Brother would quiet all How much better did those poor Jews who were pricked in their hearts for guilt Who in their anguish of conscience asked of Peter and the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do Peter with a few words speaking heals all the scruple Acts 2.37 38 39. saying Repent and be baptized but they had another scruple that in their violence against Christ they had wished his blood be on their children this scruple Peter answers The promise is to you and to your children when the Lord shall call them For to satisfie afflicted souls the Lord hath given the tongue of the learned to speak a word in season to him that is weary Isai 50.4 How painfull have the doubts and scruples about assurance been to sundry of Gods children Psal 77.7 8 9. Isai 49.14 15. Especially when an evil day comes as sickness death c. How will these scruples afflict you how will they make you unwilling to dye It 's like David had a scruple on his death bed for not putting Joab to death who had kild two innocent men hence he gives Solomon order to put him to death for we cannot think that now when he expected mercy from God he did it out of revenge 1 Kings 2.5 6. Use Exhort to clear up all thy scruples Now scruples are of two sorts 1 Rational and material so the woman of Samaria having a scruple where the place of worship and where the true Church was whether in Mount Gerizim where was a Temple built by Manasses the High Priests son as Josephus mentions or whether at Jerusalem was the place of worship Christ answers her scruple 1 Condemns her worship and the worship of the Samaritans because not grounded upon knowledge saying Ye worship ye know not what Joh. 4.22 2 Commends the worship at Jerusalem by two reasons v. 22. 1 Because grounded upon knowledge We know what we worship 2 Because the Jews had the means of salvation there which the Samaritans had not saying Salvation is of the Jews Such was that of Joseph Matth. 1.19 20. who was perplexed about the putting away of Mary 2 Irrational and circumstantial Satan pussles many with these as some persons when they have paid money because they could not remember the time or place have scrupled whether they have paid it though their hearts tell them they pay every man presently after it is due Sometimes when a soul hath cleared up a scruple to full satisfaction the devil comes a year or more after and endeavours to trouble him again to re-act a discussion of the same question in both which cases Satan endeavours to rob us of our time carrying us to impertinencies and if possible to make us walk heavily I much question whether it were not a needless scruple in David when his heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Sauls garment 2 Sam. 24.4 5. seeing he did it not for to affright him nor to impoverish him but to make his own innocency appear that he was not an enemy to him Others scruple whether it be lawfull to eat flesh upon a Friday whether they may teach their children a Catechism or patern of sound words the slighting of these and such like is not a way to weaken but to strengthen the conscience All scruples that bring not a word are frivolous and vain and not to be discussed Means to be used in case of scruples 1 Suffer not men to impose upon us and subject us to their ordinances beyond the bounds of the word Col.