Selected quad for the lemma: knowledge_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
knowledge_n believe_v faith_n implicit_a 1,688 5 13.6300 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A54583 A learned, pious, and practical commentary, upon the Gospel according to St. Mark wherein the sacred text is logically analyzed; the meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened: doctrines naturally raised, strongly confirmed, vindicated from exceptions, and excellent inferences deduced from them: all seeming differences in the history between this and the other evangelists fairly reconciled: many important cases of conscience, judiciously, succinctly, and perspicuously solved. By that laborious and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. George Petter, late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex. Petter, George. 1661 (1661) Wing P1888; ESTC R220413 2,138,384 918

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

mervail if such ignorant People hold many gross Errours and absurd Opinions contrary to the Word of God no mervail if they have many superstitious and popish conceipts from which they cannot be weaned so long as they live in gross Ignorance of the Scriptures by the Knowledge where of their minds should be enlightned to see and discern such Errours that they might avoid them Use 3 Use 3. Teacheth us what to do if we would be kept and preserved from Errours and corrupt Opinions in Religion Labour for sound knowledge in the Scriptures which are the onely perfect rule and direction to lead us into all truth and to discover Errours to us and so to keep us from being seduced by them c. To this end come duly to the publick Ministry attending upon it on all occasions search the Scriptures also daily in private Joh. 5. 39. and pray unto God to open our Understandings c. See Luke 24. 45. Mark 8. 29 30. And he said unto them But whom say ye that I am c May 29. 1625. OF our Saviour's first Question moved to his Disciples touching the Opinions which others held of Him ye have heard and of their Answer thereunto Now followeth his second Demand touching their own Opinion and Perswasion But whom say ye that I am And their Answer to it Peter answered Thou art the Christ Having before examined them touching the erroneous Opinions of the People and they having told him what the People held of him He doth not here rest but further questioneth with them about their Faith and Perswasion of Him thereby implying that although it was good for them to take notice what others held of Him yet that they were not to rest therein but to look chiefly to themselves and their own Faith touching his Person In the word Ye there is an Emphasis q. d. True it is that others do hold such erroneous Opinions of me That I am either John Baptist risen or Elias c. But this is nothing to you who have had better means to know me and to be grounded in the true Faith of my Person Therefore let me know what Ye say c. ye that are my Disciples and Followers and so have been for a good time hitherto living and conversing with me hearing my Doctrine seeing my Miracles c. Observ 1 Observ 1. Here is a good ground and warrant for the use and practice of Catechising that is of instructing those of our Charge by way of examination and questioning with them in points of Christian Religion and requiring Answers of them Our Saviour here did examine his Disciples and catechise them in a main point of Religion touching his Person what they did believe concerning Him This teacheth the necessity and profitablenesse of this exercise of Catechising those of our Charge by examining or asking questions of them in matters of Religion especially in the main and fundamentall points of it See then how fit for all that have charge of others Souls diligently and constantly to use this kind of instruction and teaching of those of their charge by examining or asking Questions and requiring Answers of them in the main and most necessary points of Christian Religion For Ministers to use this kind of Catechising and Instruction of their People especially of the ignoranter sort by demanding Questions and requiring and hearing their Answers touching the Knowledge and Faith which they have in the grounds of Christian Religion and that both in publick and private as occasion is offered Touching publick Catechising by Ministers in the Congregation it is a most antient exercise used in all Ages of the Church as might be further shewed but I will not here insist upon it Touching private Examining and Catechising by Question c. it is also very profitable to be used by Ministers as occasion is offered Acts 8. 30. Philip did question with the Eunuch about the meaning of a speciall place of Scripture which he was reading privately as he rode in his Chariot Neither is this Exercise of private Examining and Catechising those of our charge to be used onely by Ministers of the Word but also by all that have charge of others Soul as by Parents and Masters of Families c. Deut. 6. 7. Thou shalt teach these words diligently to or whet them upon thy Children c. This cannot be better done than by often examining them touching the knowledge they have of the Word of God and taking occasion thereby further and further to instruct them The Houses of antient Christians in the Apostles times were called Churches because they had such Religious Exercises used in them as were used in the solemn Meetings of the Church among which Catechising was one Vse Use To commend to us the diligent and constant practice of this exercise of Catechising and examining those of our charge in the main Points of Christian Religion and to stir us hereunto Ministers to use this exercise both in publick and private as occasion is offered So Parents and Masters of Families to set apart some time to perform this Duty in their private Houses to examine and ask questions of their Children and Servants touching grounds of Religion c. This is a very profitable course both for the grounding of your Children and Servants in the knowledge of Christian Religion as also to stir them up to labour more and more for further growth therein by discovering their wants and weakness of knowledge unto them Observ 2 Observ 2. That in matters of Religion we are not to rest or rely upon the Faith or Opinions of others or to tye our selves thereunto but look to this That we our selves do believe and hold the sound Truth agreeable to the Word of God Our Saviour asketh his Disciples not onely what opinions others held of Him but what themselves did believe and were perswaded of in this matter But whom say ye that I am Hab. 2. 4. The just shall live by his Faith that is by his own Faith Every one must have a Faith of his own whereby to believe and be perswaded in himself of the Truth in all matters of Faith and Religion and whereby to rest and rely upon God and the truth of his Word and Promises in all Times and Estates Rom. 14. 5. The Apostle having mentioned the different opinions of Men touching the use of things indifferent concludeth thus Let every one be fully perswaded in his own mind Reason Reason We cannot be justified and saved by the Faith of others but every one must be justified and saved by his own Faith ut suprà Hab. 2. Ergo every one must have a true Faith of his own and in himself See Rom. 1. 12. Vse 1 Vse 1. To confute the Popish Doctrine of implicit Faith that it is sufficient to Salvation to believe as the Church believeth though a man have no particular Knowledge or distinct Faith of his own This Faith is commended and justified by
some Popish Writers as sufficient to answer the Devil's temptations and to help a man to understand the Scripture and to discern true Doctrine from false Thus Staphylus commended the implicit Faith of a certain Colliar who lying at point of Death and being tempted by the Devil touching his Faith answered that he did believe and dye in the Faith of the Church and being again asked what was the Faith of the Church That Faith said he that I believe in By this Faith saith Staphylus the Devil was put to flight See White Of the Church part 1. pag. 6. Use 2 Vse 2. To convince those amongst us who tye their Faith and Opinion in matters of religion to the Faith and Opinion of others especially of such as are in great Place and Authority in the Church or Common-wealth or in accompt for Learning The main thing they look at is what such and such great Men do hold what Faith and Religion they are of c. In the mean time never labouring nor being carefull to examine and try the Opinions of others by the touch-stone of the Scriptures nor yet to get a true and sound Faith of their own whereby to know believe and rest perswaded of the Truth in all necessary points of Faith and Religion Hence it is That they are so wavering and uncertain in their Opinions in matters of Religion so unsetled in the Faith being ready to be carryed about with every wind of Doctrine and to be seduced by false Teachers because they have no certain Faith of their own grounded upon sound knowledge of the Word of God but they rest in others Opinions not trying the Spirits as they should c. Use 3 Use 3. To admonish and teach us not to leane too much to the opinion and judgment of others in matters of Faith and Religion nor to rest in the Faith of others without warrant from the Word of God but to labour above all to have in our selves a true and sound Faith of our own grounded upon the Word of God in all necessary points of Christian Religion Though men of great Place hold such and such opinions in Religion yet we are not to tye our selves to their Opinions further than we have warrant from the Word of God but we are to look that our selves do believe and hold the sound Truth Though Herod himself were of opinion that Christ was John Baptist risen from the Dead yet our Saviour here shews That he would not have his Disciples build their Faith upon his Example but to look that themselves did hold the Truth in this point of Faith touching his person No more must we rely upon others opinion in matters of Faith but have a true and sound Faith of our own which must not be built upon Men but upon the Word of God I deny not but that we are to reverence the Opinion and Judgment of such as are of Authority and Accompt in the Church for their Learning and Piety but yet we are not to tye our selves to their Opinion in all things but to look that our Faith be grounded on the Word of God Whatsoever others hold or think in this or that point of Religion is nothing to us to build our Faith upon further than it hath warrant from the Word of God but we must look that our selves do hold the Truth and that our own Opinion and Faith be such as is agreeable to the Word of God and hath warrant from the same Use 4 Use 4. See here again how needfull it is for all Christians to be well grounded in the sound knowledge of the Word of God and to have it dwell richly in us c. For knowledge is the ground and beginning of Faith or rather a part of it and therefore if every one of us must have a true and sound Faith of our own to believe and be perswaded of all necessary points of Christian Religion taught in the Word of God then must we also have a true and sound knowledge of our own in all needfull Doctrines of Faith revealed and taught in the Word of God Hence it is That Knowledge is put for Faith sometimes in Scripture as Joh. 17. 3. This is life eternall to know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ c. Mark 8. 29. And he saith unto them But whom say ye that I am Peter answereth and saith unto him Thou June 12. 1625. art the Christ NOw followeth the Answer of Peter in the name of the rest of the Disciples Peter answereth and saith unto him Thou art the Christ That Peter made this Answer not for himself onely but for all the rest is proved Joh. 6. 69. Where we have two things set down to consider 1. The person who made this Answer for all the rest Peter 2. The Answer it self containing in it an excellent confession of the Faith of the Apostles touching the Person and Office of Christ Thou art the Christ Of the first The person answering and uttering this Confession Peter Quest Quest Why did he answer and speak for all the residue of the Apostles Answ Answ 1. This is by some imputed to his great zeal and fervency of Spirit which made him more forward than any of the rest to speak at this and other times 2. But the principal Reason as is most probable was this That he was the chief of the 12 Apostles in Authority and Accompt among them and that partly in regard of his excellent Gifts above the rest and partly in regard he was the most antient in time standing being the first that was called to the Apostleship as may be gathered from Joh. 1. 42. For although Andrew first followed Christ yet Peter was the first to whom Christ promised the Apostleship which was implyed by giving him the new Name of Cephas See Dr. Raynold's Conference Cap. 5. Divis 3. pag. 176. For which cause also he is first named Matth. 10. 2. Mark 3. 16. Now in regard of this Preheminence of Authority and Estimation which Peter had among the other Apostles It is most like That they gave unto him the primacy of order in speaking to be as it were the mouth of all the rest at this and other times Observ Observ That although the Apostles of Christ were all equall in Ministeriall Power that is in the Power and Office of preaching administring Sacraments and of binding and loosing by that Power of the Keys committed unto Peter and under his name unto them all Matth. 16. 19. Yet notwithstanding there was among them some difference of Order and Place as also of Authority and Estimation of one above another in regard of excellency of Gifts and priority of Calling to the Office of Apostles and in these Respects Peter had the Preheminence above the rest As here we see in that he was as the Mouth of the rest to speak for them all and to utter in all their names this excellent confession of Christ So Joh. 6.
But know this that as a great Fall should not keep a man from rising again and as a dangerous Disease doth not keep a man from seeking to the Physitian so thy great sins should not hinder thee from coming to God by Repentance they should rather cause thee to make more haste unto God that he may pardon them There is a multitude of mercies with him for the pardoning of great Iniquities See Isa 1. 18. Though your sins be as Crimson and Scarlet c. David's Adultery and Murder were foul sins yet they kept him not from Repentance the Jews Sin in crucifying Christ was most heinous yet even they are called to Repentance Act. 2. A second hinderance is The profit and pleasure of sin Some sins bring in profit as Usury Oppression Covetousness false Dealing c. Other sins are sweet and pleasant to Man's corrupt Nature And thus by the profit and pleasure of sin men are allured to continue in their sins For removal of this hinderance of Repentance Consider 1. What shall it profit a man to gain the whole World and to lose his own Soul Mat. 16. 20. Besides all that is gained by sin hath God's Curse following it 2. Touching the Pleasures of sin Know this that howsoever it be sweet in the committing yet afterward it will be most bitter to us Prov. 20. 17. Bread of deceit is sweet but Gravel in his mouth afterward c. The pleasure of sin is short but the pain and torment which it will cause to thee is endless Delectat in momentum cruciat in aeternum Look at the End not at the Beginning of all sin A third hinderance is The difficulty of Repentance It is painful and tedious to the Flesh to humble and afflict our selves for our sins to have the heart broken with godly sorrow c. This painfulness of Repentance so discourageth some that they are loath to set about the practise of it But for this know 1. That the great benefits that come of it as inward Joy Comfort Peace of Conscience c. these do abundantly make amends for all our pains taken The dressing and searching of a Wound or festred Sore is painful yet we endure it in hope of future ease and soundness of Body So must we in the matter of our Souls 2. Some sins are as painful or more painful to commit than Repentance is to practise 3. Heaven is worth all our pains The fourth and last Impediment of Repentance is The vain hope of longer life Men think they shal have time enough hereafter to repent If they can have but an hour on their Death-bed it is enough c. But deceive not thy self For 1. Though thou live longer yet art thou not sure thou shalt have grace to repent when death shall come God must work it in thee thou canst not turn to him of thy self without his Grace inabling thee 2. Though true Repentance is never too late yet late Repentance is but seldome true and unfeigned The Repentance which many make shew of on their death-beds comes oftentimes rather from fear of Hell and of God's Judgments than from true hatred of sin and so it is to be feared that it dyes with the party Therefore beware of putting off Repentance in hope of longer life Hebr. 3. To day if ye will hear his Voyce harden not your hearts c. God hath not promised thee To Morrow Qui promisit poenitenti veniam non promisit dilationi crastinum diem Ambros Mark 1. 15. And believe the Gospel Octob. 25. 1618. HAving spoken of the first part of our Saviour Christ's Exhortation in which he stirreth up to Repentance Now we come to the second part in which he exhorteth to the practise of Faith in these words Believe ye the Gospel In the words we have two things 1. The Act of Believing 2. The Object or matter to be believed The Gospel Touching the meaning of the words it is needful to shew briefly 1. What is meant here by the Gospel 2. What it is to believe the Gospel By The Gospel understand The glad Tidings of Reconciliation with God and of Salvation by Christ or the Doctrine of free Grace and Salvation by Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. it is called The Word of Reconciliation and Ephes 1. 13. The Gospel of Salvation Now to Believe the Gospel is not onely in general to be perswaded of the Truth of all things in the Gospel but particularly to apply to our selves the Doctrine of the Gospel and the Promises of Salvation by Christ contained in it Therefore in the Greek it is Believe in the Gospel which phrase of speech doth imply a particular applying of the Promises of the Gospel to our selves and a relying upon them This is the sense of the words In handling them I will first speak of Faith in general and then of the Object of it as it is here mentioned namely The Gospel Touching the first which is Faith it self Sundry Points are to be spoken of it 1. What Faith is 2. The Degrees of it 3. The necessity of this grace for a Christian 4. The special marks whereby to discern it 5. The means to get and encrease it 6. The lets and hinderances which keep men from it are to be removed Quest First of the first Point What is Faith Answ Answ True justifying Faith for of that we speak here and of that our Saviour Christ speaketh in this place is a Grace wrought in us by the Spirit of God whereby we apprehend and apply Christ and all his benefits to our selves Joh. 1. 12. To receive Christ and to believe in him are put for the same and Gal. 3. 14. We receive the promise of the Spirit by Faith More particularly in true Faith there are three things which are as the parts of it The first is Knowledge of Christ as he is revealed in the Gospel The second is Assent of the mind unto the truth and certainty of those things which are known of Christ The third is a particular applying of those things to our selves when we rest perswaded that the Promise of Salvation made in Christ belongs to us in particular and in this particular Application of Christ stands the very life of Faith Thus Paul did particularly apply Christ to himself Gal. 2. 20. I live by Faith in the Son of God who hath loved me and given himself for me So Thomas Joh. 20. 28. My Lord and my God Here then observe against the Papists that true Faith is not onely a general belief of the truth of God's Word but a particular applying of Christ or of the Promise of Salvation by Christ And this is proved by these Reasons Reas 1 1. In the 6. Chapter of John Verse 54. Believing in Christ is called Eating of his Flesh and Drinking of his Blood So Austin Crede manducâsti And the Rhemists are forced to confess it on the 32. ver of that Chapter Now this comparison shews the Nature of
Miracles by his help because he did confesse him and seem to honour him so much Hence as some think grew that wicked slander of the Pharisees against our Saviour that he cast out Devils by Belzebub Matth. 12. 24. So much of the sense of the Words Observ Observ There is an Historicall Faith in the very Devils whereby they know and believe in generall that Christ is the Son of God and the Messiah or Saviour of Mankind Therefore they confesse him so to be as here and else where in the Gospels as Mark 3. 11. Thou art the Son of God c. So Acts 19. 15. Jesus I know and Paul I know c. Yea further they know and believe in general the Truth of the Word of God both the Law and Gospel Therefore Jam. 2. 19. it is said The Devils Believe and Tremble Quest. Quest How come they to this Historicall Knowledge and general Faith Answ Answ Not by supernaturall enlightning of God's Spirit where of they are not partakers But 1. By help of that naturall light of understanding which they had by Creation which though it be much obstructed and lessened by their Fall and Apostacy from God yet it is not quite taken away but they still retain since their Fall a great measure of naturall understanding which no doubt helps them to conceive the things set down in the word of God 2. They attain to this generall Knowledge and Faith by experience and observation 1. Of the Ministery of the Word in the Church for when the Word is Preached they perceive what is taught and cannot but yield assent to the Truth of it 2. By seeing the Miracles of Christ living upon Earth 3. They do also perceive what is written both in the Scriptures themselves and in other good Books by which means they come to increase their Knowledge Nevertheless though they have this Historicall Faith yet they come far short of true Faith because they cannot apply those things which they know to themselves for any good or comfort to themselves nor make any use of them Vse 1. This condemneth such as come short of the Devils themselves in this Historicall Faith How many have we that are grosly ignorant in the Word of God both in the Doctrine of the Law and Gospel How many that are meer strangers to the Scriptures How many that are to seek in the plainest and easiest grounds of Christian Religion scarce knowing so much as the meaning of the Commandements or Lord's Prayer or of the Articles of the Creed The Devils go beyond these in the Knowledge of Christ and of his Word and what a shame is this for them Again others though they perhaps know something of the Word yet give not assent of mind to the Truth of it Object Object God forbid but we should belive the Word to be true Answ Answ But thy loose profane life shews the contrary If thou didst indeed believe and rest firmly perswaded that the Soul that sinneth shall dye or that covetous Persons Drunkards Raylers c. shall be shut out of God's Kingdom wouldst thou live in these or the like Sins Perhaps thou believest the promises but not the threatnings of the Word to tremble at them But the Devils believe both though they cannot apply the promises to themselves for Comfort or Salvation Use 2. Rest not in an Historicall Knowledge or Faith if thou do it will not save thee for if it would then it would save the Devils for they have this literal Knowledge and general belief of the Word Dost thou think it enough to know and believe that Christ dyed for Sinners The Devil and his Angels know and believe as much Labour then to out-strip them and to get a better Faith then is in them Labour to apply to thy own Soul the promise of Salvation through Christ and not onely to know the Word but to frame thy Heart and life to it c. The Holy One of God The Devil 〈…〉 the former words professed in generall his Knowledge of Christ now he professeth more particularly what he is The meaning of the Words see before Observ Observ 1. Hence we may learn this truth even from the mouth of the Devil that that Jesus which was born of the Virgin Mary is the true Messiah foretold by the Prophets that is that Speciall and Eminent Person which was Ordained of God to be the Saviour of Mankind Our Saviour professeth as much of himself Joh. 4. 26. And Paul testified to the Jews at Corinth Acts 18. 5. that Jesus was that Christ Reas 1 Reas Whatsoever the Prophets foretold concerning the Person or Office of the Messiah is fulfilled in this Jesus they foretold nothing touching his Conception Birth Sufferings Resurrection c. and touching the Circumstances of them but it is all verified in this Jesus as might be shewed at large But I will not here insist upon it Vse Vse See the fearful Judgment of God resting upon the Jews at this Day in that for the sin of their Ancestors in Rejecting and Crucifying the Son of God they are given over of God to such blindnesse and hardnesse of heart that they stand out in denyall of this that Jesus is the Christ which yet the Devils themselves do here acknowledge See Rom. 11. 25. Blindness or hardness is come to Israel c. and Ver. 22. Behold the severity of God towards them c. It is a wonder That they reading in the Prophets those things which are there spoken of the Messiah and finding them all fulfilled in this Jesus yet deny him to be the true Messiah notwithstanding that themselves are driven to confesse that the time appointed for his coming is expired many hundred years ago Let us be warned by their example to take heed of willful rejecting Christ or his Word lest the Lord justly give us over to blindness and hardness of heart Observ 2 Observ 2. Christ Jesus is a Person most Holy and Sanctified in extraordinary measure Revel 3. 7. Thus saith he that is Holy and True Hebr. 7. 26. Such an High Priest it became us to have who is Holy Harmlesse Vndefiled separate from Sinners Now He is thus Holy both in Himself and in respect of His Church 1. In Himself 1. As He is God so he is essentially Holy yea Holinesse it Self 2. As He is Man and that both in His Conception and Birth as also in his whole Life In His Conception and Birth He was not onely pure from all Sin but also indued with a fulnesse and perfection of Sanctifying Grace so far as his humane Nature was then capable of it Object Object He came of Adam's Posterity which is wholly tainted with sin How then can He be holy in His Conception and Birth Answ Answ He descended not of Adam in such manner as other Men do that is by ordinary Generation but he was extraordinarily conceived in the Virgin Marie's Womb by the special Vertue and Power of the Holy Ghost See
care of the Faithful to do them good and to protect and keep them from evill Great Persons think it an honour to them to prefer and enrich their poor Kindred and to protect them against such as would wrong them Much more is our Saviour Christ careful to do good to the Faithful that are his spiritual Kindred to provide all good things necessary for their souls and bodies and withall to protect and defend them against all enemies bodily and spiritual and against all evils that may hurt them Let all Believers in Christ comfort themselves with the assurance of this special love of Christ and of this special care which he taketh for their good He was kind and loving to his Natural Mother and Kindred much more loving is he to those of his spiritual kindred and much more careful to do them good and to keep them from evill As he is their eldest brother by Grace and adoption so he is a most kind and loving brother to them all c. Use 3 Use 3. See the excellency of this grace of true faith in that it doth so neerly unite a Christian unto Christ making him to be of his spiritual kindred even as near and dear to him as his natural Mother and naturall kindred yea much nearer then they were in respect of natural blood considered of it self alone without respect unto Grace This Grace of Faith doth ingraft the Believer into the stock of Christ and brings him within his Pedigree making him to be of most near kindred with him in a spiritual manner it makes Christ and the Believer as near each to other as natural Parents and Children yea as Husband and Wife for it marrieth them together whence it is that Christ is said to be the Husband of his true Church Great is the worth and excellency of Faith which thus nearly uniteth the Believer to Christ neither is there any other grace but onley faith that can do it By this alone he comes to s● dwell in their hearts Ephes 3. 17. Well therefore may it be called a pretious faith 2 Pet. 1. 1. Let this move us above all Graces to labour for true faith in Christ that so we may come to be of spiritual kindred with him If we had been born and lived about the time when he was upon Earth would we not have been glad to be in the number of his natural Brethren and Sisters as those that are mentioned Mark 6. 3 how much more desirous should we be to be his brethren and sisters by faith How much do many desire and seek to be of alliance and kindred with great persons What labouring is there for this How do some strive to marry their Children into rich Kindreds But who labours to be of Christ's Kindred by Faith This is not thought of nor cared for yet is this the main care that should be in every one Look to it therefore and labour for Faith using all means to attain to some measure of it especially frequent diligently and conscionably the publick Ministry of the Word which is the ordinary and principal means to work Faith Wait upon this Ordinance of God and never rest till thou know thy self a Believer in Christ and one of his Kindred spiritually ingraffed into him without which thou art miserable though thou hadst kinship by natural blood with all the Princes and great men in the World Use 4 Use 4. An Admonition to such as are to enter into the estate of Marriage Would they match themselves in a good Kindred Then let them be careful above all to joyn themselves with such Yoke-fellows as are of spiritual kindred with Christ by Faith This is much more to be looked after then natural kindred or wealth or beauty c. It followeth Verse 35. For who soever doth the Will of God c. Here our Saviour alledgeth a reason to prove that his Disciples who believed in him were his Mother and Brethren in spiritual manner viz. because they did the Will of God which is the property of those onely which are his Spiritual Kindred Doth the Will of God That is yieldeth obedience to his revealed Will set down in his Word Quest Quest. Seeing it is Faith and not obedience or good works that makes men to be of Christ's Spirituall Kindred Why doth not our Saviour mention the Faith of his Disciples rather then their Obedience Answ Answ 1. By mentioning obedience to the Will of God he doth not exclude but include Faith for to Believe in Christ is one part of that Will of God which is to be obeyed 1 Joh. 3. 23. This is his Commandment that we Believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and Joh. 6. 40. This is the Will of the Father that who so seeth the Son and Believeth in him should not perish c. 2. He rather mentioneth Obedience then Faith thereby to put difference between true Faith and Counterfeit because many have onley a shew and Profession of Faith without the truth and soundness of it therefore his purpose is to shew and imply that true and sound Faith doth shew it self by the fruit of good works and by Obedience to the Will of God Now for the further clearing of the sense of the words we must know there is a twofold Obedience to the Will of God mentioned in Scripture 1. Legall required in the Moral Law This is a perfect and sincere Obedience 2. Evangelicall required in the Gospell which is a sincere but not a perfect obedience when the person being in Christ endeavoureth to obey God in all his Commandments which obedience God accepteth in Christ pardoning the defects and wants of it in him And of this our Saviour here speaketh So much of the words Doct. Doctr. The main point of Instruction to be learned from them is this That it is the property of all that have union and Spirituall kindred with Christ by Faith that they do shew forth the soundness of that Faith by the fruit of good works and by obedience to the Will of God in their Lives Tit. 3. 8. I will that thou affirm constantly that those which have Believed in God be carefull to go before others in good Works c. implying that it is the property of all true Believers in Christ to shew their Faith by good works Jam. 2. 18. The Apostle brings in the true Believer promising to shew his Faith by his works And 2 Pet. 1. 5. compared with ver 8th Where Faith is it makes those that have it neither Idle nor unfruitfull in the Knowledge of God c. Hebr. 11. 33. By Faith they wrought Righteousness Reas 1 Reas 1. True Faith works in the Heart a perswasion and feeling of Gods special love in Christ and this moveth a Christian truly to love God again and to express his Love by his Conscionable obedience to the Will of God Reas 2 Reas 2. Those that have union with Christ by Faith do receive from him Spiritual
He sheweth a reason in respect of the wicked and Reprobate why he spake in Parables viz. That they seeing may see and not discern c. ver 12. First to speak of the former of these Points which is the reason of his interpreting the Parable to his Disciples because to them it was given c. i. e. because they were fit persons to understand such Doctrines To you That is To the 12. Apostles and the rest of the Disciples which believed in Christ and were in the number of Gods Elect. Therefore in the words following our Saviour opposeth against these Such as are without that is Unbelievers and Reprobates such as the obstinate Scribes and Pharisees were It is given Freely granted of God To know Rightly to conceive and understand There is a twofold Knowledg of the Word of God 1. Uneffectual which is nothing but a naked apprehension in the mind of the Doctrine of the Word without any feeling of the power and vertue of it and without any affection in the heart to believe and yield obedience to that which is known This may be in reprobates and our Saviour speaks not here of it 2. An effectual or saving knowledg of the Word when the truth of it is not only conceived or apprehended in the understanding but the heart is also affected to believe imbrace and yield obedience to the things known This may be called the knowledg of Faith and it is an experimental not a speculative knowledg only Joh. 17. 3. This is life eternal to know thee c. And this kind of knowledg our Saviour here speaketh of The mystery That is the mysticall hidden or secret Doctrine of the Word Mystery of the Kingdom of God That Doctrine which is concerning Gods Kingdom revealing and teaching things which pertain to that Kingdom especially the way and means of being partakers of it Now this is chiefly and principally the Doctrine of the Gospel which teacheth Christ his Person and Offices and the means of salvation by him God's Kingdom is twofold 1. Of Grace which he exerciseth in this life raigning in his Elect by his Word and Spirit 2. Of Glory after this life in Heaven when they shall raign with him in eternal Glory Both these may be meant here but chiefly the latter So much of the words which being thus opened we may consider in them 4. things 1. The Persons to whom this priviledg here spoken of was vouchsafed namely the Elect To you 2. The means by which they come to partake in it By free gift from God To you it is given 3. The benefit or blessing bestowed which is the knowledg of the Doctrine of the Word especially of the Gospel 4. A description of that Doctrine 1. By the quality of it called a Mystery 2. By the subject matter of it Mystery of the Kingdome of God Of these Points in order First of the Persons To you That is To you and the rest of Gods Elect. Doct. Doctr. The true and effectual knowledg of the Doctrine of the Word of God is proper and peculiar to his Elect and chosen ones whom he appointed from everlasting to save He reveals it to them onely and to no other Matth. 11. 25. I give thee thanks O Father because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them to babes God doth not reveal the saving knowledg of his Word to all but to some onely and those are such whom he hath from Eternity chosen unto life Ephes 1. 4. He hath chosen us before the foundation of the world And Verse 9. He hath made known to us the mystery of his Will c. Rom. 11. 7. All the rest of Mankind besides the Elect are said to be blinded for so the words may be read which shews That God calls none out of their natural blindness to be partakers of the light of saving knowledg but his Elect. Reas 1 Reason 1. None but the Elect come to be effectually Called Rom. 8. 30. Whom he did predestinate to life them he also called Now whosoever comes to be inlightned with saving knowledg of the Word that person must needs be effectually Called Reas 2 Reason 2. None but the Elect come to be partakers of true faith Act. 13. 48. so many as were ordained to life believed Now where there is a true and effectual knowledg of the Word there is faith which goeth alwayes with it Now all have not faith but the Elect onely called the faith of the Elect. Use 1 Vse 1. This confuteth the Errour of those who teach That God doth give unto all men sufficient grace whereby they may be saved if they will themselves and that the onely reason why all are not saved is this becau●e some do reject and refuse grace offered unto them But this Doctrine doth make the efficacy of the Grace of God to depend upon mans Will as if he could not make his grace effectual unless the power of mans will do of it self concur with it and help it by receiving grace offered But this is derogatory to the Grace of God and to the powerfull work of his Spirit Besides it is plainly confuted by this and other places of Scripture which teach us That God doth not reveal the knowledg of his Word to all and every person for here we see that it is not given to all but to some onely that is to the Elect and no other to know the mystery of the Kingdome So Matth. 20. 16. Many are called but few chosen He doth not say All are called Act. 14. 16. God in time past suffered all the Gentiles to walk in their own wayes he did not reveal to them the saving knowledg of his will but left them in their natural blindness and ignorance And there is no doubt but there are and have been many thousands that never so much as heard the outward sound of the Word as for example those ignorant and barbarous people that live at this day in the West-Indies or America much less doth God reveal unto all the effectual knowledg of his Word which seeing he doth not it is plain that he doth not give sufficient grace to all and every person to be saved if they themselves would by the power of their own free will receive it Use 2 Vse 2. This serves for the comfort of those that feel and know themselves to be enlightned in any measure with this effectual knowledg of the Word of God Hence they may gather certain assurance to themselves of their own election to eternal life Let every one therefore examine himself in this Point Wouldst thou find an evidence in thy self that thou belongest to God and art in the number of those whom he hath chosen to eternal life Thou mayst be assured of it by this if thou find that God hath revealed to thee the effectual knowledg of his Will and Word corcerning the means of thy salvation Dost thou find not onely thy mind inlightned
Though we seek to Physitians in sickness yet trust not in them as Asa did 2 Chron. 16. 11. but in the Lord who woundeth and healeth Job 5. 18. Use 3 Use 3. See how needfull to joyn Prayer to God with the use of Physick that the Lord may give a blessing to it If this were necessary when the extraordinary gift of healing was in the Church Jam. 5. 14. much more now Seek not only to Physitians as Asa but to God in the first place Mark 5. 27 28. When she had heard of Jesus she came in the press c. Nov. 26. 1620. INn this Miracle of curing the Woman which had the Bloody-Issue we considered 1. The description of the person cured 2. The Miracle it self 3. The Consequents Touching the first of these The person cured is described 1. By her present affliction being diseased with a bloudy-Issue 12 years which Disease was incurable notwithstanding she had suffered much of many Physitians and had spent all she had on them Verse 26. 2. She is described by her behaviour towards Christ set down Verse 27. She came to him behind in the press and touched his garment Touching her Disease and the continuance and incurableness of it we have spoken Now to proceed to speak of her carriage unto Christ Where consider 1. The Occasion of it She had heard of Jesus 2. The Behaviour it self Her coming to Christ behind in the press and touching his garments 3. The Cause moving her so to do For she said If I may touch but his Clothes I shall be whole When she had heard of Jesus That is of the fame of his Person and Miracles and among the rest of his miraculous curing of incurable diseases such as she now perceived hers to be therefore finding no help by all the Physitians she had sought to but being worse rather she now was out of hope to be cured by mans art or help and therefore having heard of the power of Christ manifested by his Miracles she resolves to seek to him she came in the presse For much people thronged him in the Way as he was going with Jairus as we heard before Verse 24. she came behind and touched his garment Matthew and Luke say the hemme or border of his garment Quest Quest Why did she not come directly before the face of Christ and pray him to cure her disease Answ Answ Some think the cause hereof was the weakness of her faith and that by this kind of carriage she shewed her self fearful and doubtfull whether Christ would heal her or not but if it were so it is not likely that our Saviour would so highly commend her faith as he doth afterward Verse 34. telling her That her faith had made her whole Therefore the true Reason why she came behind Christ to touch his garment and not before his face to speak to him I take to be this 1. Because her disease was such as by the Ceremonial Law was accounted unclean insomuch that such as had it upon them were for that time to be separate from the society of others lest by touching them they should be defiled therefore she came behind Christ privately and secretly lest if she had come openly the people should have reproved her and put her back from Christ as being an unclean person and not fit to come into company 2. Her Disease being unclean she was ashamed to acquaint our Saviour Christ with it openly before the people therefore she chose rather to come behind Christ and only to touch his Clothes being by faith perswaded that if she could but do this he was both able and willing to cure her For she said Matth. 9. 21. She said within her self That is she resolved and rested perswaded in her own heart by faith Quest If I may but touch his Clothes I shall be whole Quest Why did she perswade her self she should be healed by touching his garment Answ Answ Not that she thought the power and vertue of healing to be in his garments of themselves But she was perswaded that such was his Divine power that he could cure her by the touch of his garment And in this she shewed some imperfection of faith in that she thus far tyed the power of Christ to his garment that she thought he could not or would not cure her without touching it See Chap. 6. 56. This place maketh nothing for the Papists who from hence would prove That the reliques of the Saints departed as they call them as their garments bones and such like may have power and vertue to work Miracles and consequently that such reliques are to be honoured with a kind of religious worship So Bellarmine teacheth De Eccles Triumph lib. 2. c. 2 3. But this cannot be proved from hence For 1. It is clear That the garments of Christ had not any healing vertue in them or power to work a miraculous cure but this power and vertue came onely from Christ himself as is said afterward Verse 30. He knew that vertue was gone out of him not out of his clothes And if such vertue had been in his clothes it would have healed some others no doubt as well as this Woman for amongst so many people which touched and thronged Christ it is likely that there were some others which were diseased in body 2. Though there had bin such vertue in Christ's Garments to work a Miracle yet it follows not that the like is or may be in the Garments or other reliques of the Saints especially of such as are departed this life 3. The Popish reliques being all or most of them counterfeit are not likely to have any such vertue in them So much in way of clearing the sense of the words in these two Verses Now to gather some Instructions from them First of the occasion of this Womans comming to touch Christ which was the fame she had heard of him that is of his person and Miracles by which he had hitherto sufficiently manifested himself to be the Son of God and the true Messiah The hearing of this fame of him moved her to believe in him though she had never yet seen him or any Miracle of his and not onely to believe in him but to shew her Faith by comming to him thus to touch his garment that she might be healed Observ Observ In that this Woman never Believed in Christ nor shewed her Faith in him till she came to have some knowledg of him by the report which she heard Hence we learn that we must first have knowledg of Christ in some measure before we can Believe in him or shew forth any true fruits of Faith Knowledg is the ground of Faith and the beginning of it Psal 9. 10. They that know the name of God will put their trust in it Rom. 10. 14. How shall they Believe in him of whom they have not heard Therefore Act. 8. 35. first Philip preached Jesus unto the Eunuch and then the Eunuch came to
Believe in him ver 37. Use 1 Use 1. See then that ignorant people must needs be void of true Faith in Christ because they have no knowledg of him either of his person or of his office as he is Mediator Many have little or no knowledg of these things they scarce know what or who Christ is or what he hath done and suffered for them they have scarce heard or read of these things in the Scriptures How should such believe in him whom they yet know not aright Vse 2 Vse 2. Labour for the true and sound knowledg of Christ as he is revealed in the Word without which there can be no Faith in him See then the absolute necessity of this knowledg of Christ for all that would be saved by him Joh. 17. 3. This is life eternall c. Therefore let us use all good means to attain to the knowledg of Christ and to grow in it that knowing him we may believe in him and that as we grow in knowledg so we may increase in Faith Be diligent in hearing the Doctrine of Christ taught in the publick Ministery and search the Scriptures by private reading for they testify of Christ Joh. 5. 39. Paul accompted all things but loss and as dung for the excellent knowledg of Christ Phil. 3. 8. So let us So much of the occasion of this Womans comming to Christ to touch him Now to speak of her behaviour or Actions in comming behind in the Press to him and touching his Garment Observ 1 Observ 1. In that she being diseased in body and finding no help by all the Physitians she had sought to doth now come and seek to Christ using means to touch him that she might be cured Hence we may learn by her example to seek unto Christ Jesus our Lord as to the best Physitian in all our Diseases whether bodily or Spiritual 1. Touching bodily diseases In them we are not onely to use other means as good Dyet and Physick as we have before heard but we are chiefly to go to Christ by Prayer for Patience and for ease and deliverance and withall to labour by Faith to touch him yea to lay hold on him 2. Touching the Spirituall diseases of our Souls which are our sins In the feeling of these we ought much more to go and seek to Christ by Prayer that we may be healed in Conscience both of the guilt of sin by the merit of his sufferings and obedience and also of the corruption of sin by the power of his Spirit mortifying it so far that it reign not in us And as we are thus to seek to him by Prayer for the healing of these our Spiritual diseases so withall we must strive by the hand of true Faith to touch him yea to lay hold on him that so we may feel vertue to come from him for the curing of our diseased Souls and Consciences To this end we must often remember this that as Christ is the best Physitian for the body so especially for the Soul and Conscience Luke 4. 18. He came to heal the broken hearted So Mark 2. 17. The whole have no need of the Physitian c. I came not to Call the Righteous c. Esay 53. 5. With his stripes we are healed and ver 4. He bare our sicknesses Revel 3. 18. He Professeth himself a Spiritual Physitian to cure the Spiritual blindness of the Laodiceans Vse 1 Vse 1. This condemneth the practice of such who in their bodily or Spirituall sicknesses take wrong courses to find ease and deliverance instead of going to Christ Some in bodily sickness go to Satan the enemy of Christ as they which seek to Wizzards who work by the help of Satan A heathenish practise forbidden to Gods people Deut. 18. 14. Others if their sickness be painfull fall to murmuring and impatient behaviour thinking so to ease themselves whereas on the contrary this is the way to aggravate their pain Others are so wicked as to break forth into cursing and swearing in stead of seeking to Christ for help like those Revel 16. 21. who when the Angells poured out the Vial of God's Judgments upon the World they Blasphemed the name of God but repented not to give him Glory So others in the Spiritual diseases of their Souls feeling their sins to lye heavy upon their Consciences in stead of going to Christ to be healed betake themselves to merry company or sports and recreations so to put away the remembrance of their sins and to stop the mouth of their accusing Consciences But these are miserable comforters and Physitians of no value as Job said of his Friends not able to cure the Spirituall Diseases of the Soul and Conscience Vse 2 Use 2. To exhort and stir us up every one to go to Christ as the best Physitian in all bodily and Spirituall sicknesses especially in the Diseases of our Souls when we feel them distempered and dangerously infected with sin Remember who is the best Soul-Physitian even Christ Jesus Go to him by earnest Prayer and strive by Faith to touch him as this Woman did that thou mayest be healed of the guilt and corruption of sin Look not to be cured by him unless thou go and seek to him by Prayer and touch him by Faith But if thou do this in sincerity of heart know this that he is able and willing to cure thee though thy Spirituall Diseases be dangerous and of long continuance as this Womans bodily disease was Though thou have had an unclean Issue of many sins running upon thee a long time as she had an Issue of bloud for twelve years yet if thou wilt but come to Christ by Prayer to be healed and canst touch him by Faith that is lay hold upon the merit of his death and sufferings and apply the same to thy self thou shalt certainly be healed of thy sins Make haste therefore to him remembring that he calleth all such to him who feel themselves diseased in their Consciences with sin Matth. 11. 28. Go to him and lay open the diseases of thy Soul to him praying him to heal thee both of the guilt of thy sins by the merit of his bloud applyed to thy Conscience and also of the corruption of sin by the powerfull efficacy of his Spirit mortifying it that it reign not in thee c. Observ 2 Observ 2. The Holy Ghost having wrought Faith in the Heart of this Woman by the hearing of Christ's fame this Faith did not lye hid in her heart but shewed it self outwardly by some evident testimonies and effects of it as by causing her to come unto Christ in the Press and to seek to touch him Whence we may learn that where true Faith is in the Heart it will not lye hid or buried there but will shew and manifest it self by outward fruits and effects 1 Thess 1. 3. The Apostle mentioneth the works of Faith Quest Quest By what effects Answ Answ 1. By duties of obedience unto God
the good and benefit not onely of Jews but Gentiles to be a Temporall and Spirituall Saviour and Deliverer of the Gentiles as well as the Jews to deliver them from all misery especially from sin and from the power of Satan c. For this was implyed also by the deliverance of this Woman's Daughter from being possessed of the Devil Luke 2. 31. Christ is called the Salvation prepared of God before all People A Light to enlighten the Gentiles and the Glory of his People Israel For although Christ himself did not in his own person preach the Gospel to the Gentiles because the due time for calling them was not yet come neither did he as yet generally extend his saving Grace towards them yet by his mercy vouchsafed to this Woman he did before hand shew and declare That the Gentiles should afterward be more generally called and brought to believe in him and so reap the benefit of Salvation by him The like we may gather from the example of the Centurion Matth. 8. As the Sun before it arise in the Morning doth cast up some beams of his light above the face of the Earth so Christ Jesus the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4. before he was to shine forth by the full brightness of his Grace to the Gentiles did first give some hope hereof by letting some beams of that his Grace shine to some few of the Gentiles Vse Use This is for the comfort of us who are of the Gentiles to assure us that if we labour by true Faith to imbrace and believe in Christ we shall be partakers of the saving benefits of his Incarnation and death as well as the Jews He hath broken down the partition-wall Ephes 2. 14. Yea these benefits of Christ do now more peculiarly belong to us than to them in that they are and have been a long time rejected of God and cast off for their infidelity and contempt of Christ and we which are Gentiles are by the unspeakable mercy of God ingraffed into the Church in their room and stead as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 11. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that this Woman having formerly lived in profane Gentilism was by the Mercy of God called out of that blindness and profaness to believe in Christ and shewed her Faith thus by coming to Christ for her afflicted Daughter we may observe that the Lord doth sometimes effectually call and work true Faith and saving Grace in such as have formerly lived in greatest Ignorance Blindness and Profaness of life Thus Abraham was called to the true Knowledge of God and indued with Faith whereas before he and his Parents had lived in gross Blindness and Idolatry Josh 24. 2. And we have sundry Examples in Scripture of such as have been called out of heathenish Ignorance and Profaness and indued with true saving Faith as Rahab the Harlot of Jericho Naaman the Syrian Ruth the Moabitesse the Centurion mentioned Matth. 8. Cornelius Act. 10. c. To this purpose also is that Prophecy Isa 9. 2. The People that walked in Darkness have seen a great Light They that dwelt in the Land of the Shadow of Death upon them hath the Light shined Reason Reason The Lord doth this to magnify and set out the riches of his Grace in calling and shewing Mercy to such as are by Nature plunged in the deepest misery See Ephes 2. 4 5. Vse Vse To teach us not to despair of the Calling and Conversion of such as yet live in greatest blindnesse and profaness yea though they be such as live out of the visible Church as Jews Turks Pagans Hereticks Papists c. though they yet live in Aegyptian darkness of Ignorance and in grossest Profaness Superstition or Idolatry without God without Christ without the Word of God c. yet God may hereafter call them or some of them out of this their misery and shine to them by the light of his saving Grace in Christ He that at the beginning caused Light to shine out of Darkness is able to send the light of his Word and Spirit where yet there is nothing but black and thick darkness of Ignorance Sin and Profaness Therefore let us pity and pray for such People and Persons as do yet fit in spiritual Darkness and in the Region of Death desiring the Lord to shine unto them by the light of his Grace c. So much of the Description of the Person which made sute unto Christ In the next place I am to speak of the occasions or causes moving her to make her sute to Christ The first whereof was the great Affliction laid upon her Daughter being possessed with an unclean Spirit Where we have two things expressed 1. The Affliction it self Her Daughter was possessed of a Devill 2. A Description of the Devil by his Nature or Property An Unclean Spirit Whose young Daughter had an Unclean Spirit that is Was bodily possessed by a wicked Spirit or Devill which was entred into her body holding possession there and grievously afflicting and tormenting her as may appear Matth. 15. 22. Now this was a most heavy and grievous trial and affliction both to the Daughter and to the Mother for she could not but out of natural Affection be greatly touched with fellow-feeling of this misery of her Daughter and so much the more because her Daughter was young and little and so the more weak and unfit to bear so grievous an Affliction therefore her bowels of pity could not but yearn the more towards this her little Daughter And this is the more probable because naturally the Affection of Mothers to Children of their own Womb is known to be so exceeding great and vehement being greater usually than the affection of Fathers Besides this Affliction was in it self extraordinary and very heavy and grievous It had been a grievous thing if her little Daughter had been taken and visited with some dangerous Sickness or Disease in her body but for her to be possessed of a Devil yea to be grievously racked and tormented of the Devill in her body this was a far more grievous and heavy case yea this was no doubt more grievous to her than it would have been to see her Daughter taken away by death She might justly wish her rather dead and buried if it were the Will of God than to be so given up of God to the Tyranny of the Devil to be so tormented of him Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this Woman being a Believer in Christ was tried and exercised with this heavy Affliction we may learn that the Lord useth to lay very heavy and grievous afflictions and troubles upon his own Children and Servants Psal 34. 19. Many or great are the troubles of the Righteous Heb. 12. 6. The Lord scourgeth every Son whom he receiveth that Phrase implyeth a sharp and grievous Chastisement How many Examples have we of this in Scripture Time will not suffer to mention half of them therefore only to touch a few in
troubles if it be but to stir us up to this excellent Duty Our own experience will teach us that we never are so diligent or fervent in this Exercise as when we are under the Cross never pray we with such Faith Feeling c. On the other side when all goes well with us how dull negligent and careless are we apt to grow in Prayer Vse 2 Use 2. By this learn to know whether our afflictions be sanctified unto us or no viz. if they stir up and quicken us to more earnest seeking of God by Prayer if they drive us nearer to God it is a sign that we make some good and holy use of our troubles not otherwise Quest Quest. But may not Affliction drive a wicked man●t God by Prayer Answ Answ Extremity of trouble pain or grief may force him to cry out unto God in words it may wring from him words of Prayer but it doth not make him pray unto God conscionably with true Faith or any comfortable hope or assurance to be heard See Hos 7. 14. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that it is said This Woman's Daughter was possessed with an unclean Spirit We are taught That the Devil by God's sufferance may have power over the Bodies of Men and Women or Children to enter into them and being in them to afflict and torment them as he did this young Damsell yea he may have power over the Bodies of the Saints and Faithfull and of their Children as he had over Job and his Children and over this faithfull Womans Daughter But of this see before Chap. 1. Ver. 23. An unclean Spirit Touching this attribute given to the Devil See also Chap. 1. 23. Mark 7. 25. Heard of Him and came and fell at His feet June 30. 1622. THe second Occasion moving this Woman to come to Christ and to make this sute for her Daughter was the Fame which she had heard of Christ Heard of Him That is of the excellency of his Person and of his divine Doctrine and great Miracles which he had formerly wrought in other places and parts of Judea the Fame and Report whereof as it is likely was brought unto her by such as had formerly travailed from these Coasts of Tyre and Sidon into those parts of Galilee and Judea where our Saviour had preached and wrought Miracles there to hear him and to be partakers of his Miracles as may appear Chap. 3. 8. and Luke 6. 17. Now this Fame which she heard of Him moved her to believe that he was that Messiah promised and foretold in the Writings of Moses and the Prophets in the which it is likely she had bin before instructed in some measure by the Jews which lived amongst the Gentiles in these Coasts of Tyre and Sidon as hath bin before shewed Now being thus perswaded that he was the Messiah and that he was able and willing to cast the Devil out of her Daughter she was thereupon moved to come and sue unto him for help Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this Woman first heard of Christ and by hearing report of him came to some knowledge of him before she believed in him and testified her Faith by coming to sue unto him for her Daughter Hence observe that Knowledge of Christ must go before true Faith in Christ in order of Nature as the Ground and Motive of it See before Chap. 5. 27. Observ 2 Observ 2. That the knowledge and perswasion of God's power and goodness that he is able and willing to hear and grant our sutes must be the Ground and Motive of all the prayers we make unto Him This Woman by the Fame she had heard of Christ came to know and to be perswaded that He was the Messiah and therefore able and willing to hear and grant her sute and this moves her to come and sue to Him for her afflicted Daughter Therefore also in the Preface of the Lord's Prayer we are taught to use these words Our Father which art in Heaven which words do imply both our perswasion of the goodnesse and mercy of God in that we Call him our Father and likewise our perswasion of his Power in that we acknowledge him to be in Heaven so by this preface we are taught That in praying to God we must be perswaded of his Power that He is able to hear us and of his Grace and Mercy that He is ready and willing to hear us and the perswasion of both these must move us to pray to Him Reason Reason True prayer must be made in Faith Rom. 10. 14. How shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed Now Faith perswadeth us both of God's power That He is able to do abundantly above all that we can ask or think and also of his goodness and mercy that he is willing and ready to give us those things we ask so far as stands with his Glory and our Good and Salvation Vse Vse Labour for this knowledg and perswasion of Faith touching the Power and Goodness of God that He is both able and willing to hear our prayers and to grant the Petition we ask of Him that so this may quicken and stirr us up to pray unto Him in our necessities Now of the first of these it is easie to be perswaded and every one will yield that God is able to grant our Requests but the difficulty is to be perswaded that He is also willing to grant them so far as is good for us This therefore thou must especially labour and strive by Faith to believe And to this end often meditate of the gracious promises of God which He hath in his Word made to such as call upon Him in truth of Heart and be assured that He will make them good unto thee if thou so pray unto Him See Hebr. 11. 6. So much of the Occasions moving this Woman to come and sue to Christ or her Daughter In the next place I am to speak of the manner of her coming to put up this her sute She fell at his feet This Gesture she used 1. In way of religious reverence and adoration of the Person of Christ whom she believed to be more then a Man even the Son of God c. 2. To testifie and expresse the inward Humility of her Heart and the sense of her own vilenesse and unworthinesse to receive so great a favour from Christ as she asked of Him See before Chap. 5. 22. Observ Observ Such as come to God in prayer must come in most humble and reverent manner before Him See Chap. 1. Ver. 40. Twofold humility requisite 1. Inward in Heart touched with lively feeling of our unworthiness c. 2. Outward in Carriage and Gestures of the Body It followeth She besought him that he would cast out the Devil c. By this sute she shewed her compassion of her Child being in this misery c. Observ 1 Observ 1. See here in the example of this Woman what Christians should do what
knowledge of the Word of God and of the Doctrines of Christian Religion taught therein Though they be ignorant as yet in some necessary Points of Faith yet if they have but some degree of knowledge in those Points that are fundamentall and most necessary to Salvation and do make conscience to practice those things they know already there may be true sanctifying grace in them and consequently they may be good sound Christians Nevertheless this must not make any secure or careless of getting more knowledge in the Word of God But on the contrary they must use all good means to grow therein See Perk. Tom. 1. pag. 128. And pag. 597. touching implicit Faith Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Disciples being ignorant of Christ's Resurrection did question and reason together about the same We may gather That it is a good and profitable course for Christians to confer and reason together by mutuall questioning one with another about those Points of Christian Religion whereof they are yet ignorant or doubtfull A speciall means to increase knowledge and to come to further resolution in matters of Faith Thus did the three Disciples in this place So Luke 24. the two Disciples that journyed from Jerusalem to Emmaus talked and reasoned together by the way touching the Resurrection of Christ and the thing which happened at the time of it So the Woman of Samaria conferred and questioned with her Acquaintants in the City concerning Christ whether he were not the Messiah c. Joh. 4. 29. Vse Use To move and perswade us to inure and accustom our selvs to this practise of conferring and reasoning together and mutuall questioning one with another upon all good occasions touching matters of Faith and Religion especially touching those Points which we are yet ignorant of or doubtful and unresolved in them Great is the profit and benefit of such conference especially for the increase of our knowledge and setling of our Judgment in matters of Faith and Religion For experience teacheth that as in all Arts and Trades they are usually the most expert and skilfull who use most to conferr with others and to ask questions about the mystery of their Trade So also it is in Christian Religion they are usually the most skilfull and best grounded in sound knowledge there who are most forward and frequent in conference with others about the same Besides that such holy conference is a speciall means to shut out and banish profane idle and unprofitable conference c. See then that it is a matter to be lamented now adayes that such religiou● conference is so little used among Christians and that in stead thereof the greatest part give themselves wholly either to talk of the World or else to worse communication yea even upon the Sabbath-day c. Mark 9. 11. And they asked him saying Why say the Scribes that Elias must first come Octob. 29. 1626. OF the first Consequent of Christ's Transfiguration ye have heard The charge given by Him to the three Disciples to conceal the matter till after his Resurrection together with their obedience c. Now followeth the second Consequent viz. A Question moved by the same three Disciples to Him concerning the Opinion or Doctrine of the Scribes touching the coming of Elias and our Saviour's Answer to their Question laid down ver 11 12 13. 1. To speak of his Disciples Question ver 11. 2. Of Christ's Answer ver 12 13. Of the first They asked him saying Why say the Scribes c The occasion of this their Question seems to be two-fold 1. Our Saviour having many wayes testified and proved himself to be the Son of God and true Messiah and the Apostles themselves having also before confessed him so to be hereupon they wondered how the Doctrine of the Scribes could be true that Elias should come and live again upon Earth in his own person before the coming of the Messiah and therefore they move this Question to be resolved further q. d. If thou be the true Messiah as thou hast sufficiently declared thy self and as we believe and have confessed thee to be then why is not Elias yet come again to live here on Earth according to the Doctrine of the Scribes A second occasion of their moving this Question as appeareth Matth. 17. ver 9 10. was this That our Saviour immediately before had made mention of his Resurrection from the Dead as a matter not long after to be fulfilled Now although they did not yet comprehend the mystery of his Resurrection but were ignorant thereof as we heard before ver 10. yet it is most likely that from the words of Christ they gathered that at the time of his Resurrection the Glory and Majesty of his Kingdom should begin to be more fully manifested now because the Scribes taught and held that Elias was first to come and live on Earth again in person before the coming and manifestation of the Kingdom of the Messiah therefore they demand of Christ How this Doctrine and Opinion of the Scribes could stand with those words which he had newly uttered touching the manifestation of his Kingdom and Glory at the time of his Resurrection Quest Quest But why did not the Disciples before this time move this Question to Christ seeing they did before this believe him to be the Messiah and he had also before told them of his Resurrection which was to be shortly fulfilled Answ Answ 1. Because now by the Transfiguration of Christ they were more certified then before that he was the true Messiah and therefore did the more doubt of the Doctrine of the Scribes touching the coming of Elias 2. Because they were now newly put in mind of this doubt by the sudden appearing and vanishing away again of Elias at the time of Christ's Transfiguration Note that though this Opinion be attributed to the Scribes as chief Teachers yet it was the common errour of the Jews The Scribes Touching these see before who they were c. viz. One sort of those who were Authorized and Called to the publick Office of Reading and Expounding the Law of God to the Jews in their Synagogues called sometimes Lawyers See Chap. 1. 22. and Chap. 7. 1. That Elias must first come That is return to live upon Earth again in his own person before the coming of the Messiah and not onely that he must come and live on Earth again but that he should at his coming be a means to restore the corrupt state of the Church for this also the Scribes taught as may appear by Christ's Answer to the Question of the Disciples Now this erroneous Doctrine and Opinion of the Scribes was grounded upon the mis-understanding of that place of the Prophet Malachi Chap. 4. ver 5 6. where the Lord promiseth to send Eli●ah the Prophet before the great and dreadfull Day of the Lord c. Which Prophecy the Scribes understood literally of the coming of Elias in his own person again whereas it
used to reform it in them and to work Faith In that Christ himself had so long lived and conversed with them and exercised his ministery among them implyed in these words How long shall I be with you 2. By his great patience and long-suffering towards them How long shall I suffer you Touching the three first Points ye have heard already Now followeth the fourth The sin for which our Saviour reproveth the father of the possessed son and of his own Disciples and especially the Scribes and Pharisees viz. The sin of unbelief He calls them a faithless Generation The meaning before shewed Observ 1 Observ 1. That unbelief in Christ and in his Word and Doctrine is no small sin but hainous and grievous This appeareth in that our Saviour here so sharply reproveth this sin in the father of the possessed child and in his own Disciples and especially in the Scribes and Pharisees crying out against them for the same O faithlesse Generation Rev. 21. 8. Unbelievers are reckoned amongst notorious Offenders as with the abominable and Murderers and Whoremongers Sorcerers c. Heb. 3. 12. Take heed lest there be in any an evil heart of unbelief c. This is one main sin which makes an evil heart Reas 1 Reas 1. It is a sin very dishonourable to God and unto Christ for by it men call the truth of God into question and make him a lyar 1 Joh. 5. 10. He that believeth not God hath made him a lyar because he believeth not the Record which God gave of his Son Reas 2 Reas ●2 It is a sin very hurtfull and dangerous to the persons that live in it And that two wayes 1. It hindreth and keepeth many blessings and good things both Spirituall and Temporall from them which otherwise they might enjoy It hinders them from the pardon of their sins in Christ and from God's favour from inward peace of conscience c. So also from many blessings of this Life yea God's Children It kept Moses and Aaron with many others of the People of Israel from entring into the promised Land of Canaan Heb. 2. 10. They could not enter in because of unbelief So it hindred the father of this child from the benefit of having his son dispossessed of the Devil 2. It provoketh the Lord to bring on them many and grievous Judgments yea layeth them open to all Judgments of God both Temporall and Eternall For so long as they do not believe in Christ they cannot have their sin forgiven but remain in the guilt of them and so are lyable to all Judgments of God Joh. 3. 36. He that believeth not in the Son shall not see Life but the Wrath of God abideth on him Mark 16. 16. He that believeth not shall be damned And Revel 21. 8. Vnbelievers shall have part in the Lake c. Now there are two kinds or degrees of Unbelief 1. That which is in the wicked and unregenerate who are wholly destitute of Faith and in whose hearts unbelief reigneth and beareth sway excluding all true Faith Such was the unbelief of the Scribes and Pharisees and other wicked Jews here reproved so sharply by our Saviour 2. That which is in the Saints and Children of God after their Calling and Regeneration who though they have some measure of Faith yet it is mingled with the contrary sin of unbelief which they resist and strive against and so it is no reigning sin but a sin of infirmity in them A weakness of Faith rather then a want of it Such was the unbelief of the father of this possessed child and of Christ's own Disciples at this time for which our Saviour also taxeth them in this Reproof Now although both these kinds of unbelief are in themselves great and grievous sins yet the first kind is the most grievous and dangerous and therefore of that I speak principally in this place Vse 1 Vse 1. Terrour to such as are guilty of this sin of unbelief and do live in it suffering it to reign and bear sway in their hearts being void of all true Faith in Christ and in his Word having no Faith at all whereby either to believe in Christ and to rest on him for Salvation or to believe and apply unto themselves his Word and Doctrine Many such there be As 1. Ignorant persons having no sound knowledge of Christ or of his Word and Doctrine but being grosly ignorant and to seek in the very first grounds of Christian Religion impossible it is that these should have any true Faith in Christ or in his Word for knowledge is the ground of Faith So long therefore as ignorance reigns in them Unbelieving must needs reign in them 2. All profane and wicked persons who live in gross and notorious sins unrepented of as swearing profanation of the Sabbath contempt of God's Worship and Ordinances Drunkenness Covetousness c. where such sins reign there unbelief must needs reign for Faith and wicked Life cannot stand together Therefore although such persons do profess never so much that they know God and believe in Christ and his Word yet in their works they deny him being abominable and disobedient c. Tit. 1. 16. 3. All close and formall Hypocrites who have a kind of temporary Faith whereby they do in some sort believe and perswade themselves That Christ is their Saviour that the Word of Christ is true and that the Promises of the Gospel do belong to them that they shall be partakers of eternal Life c. But this is not rue or sound Faith grounded on the Word of God or wrought in them by the Ministery of the same but a carnall presumption or vain imagination taken up of themselves with which they delude their own Souls So that these also are to be reckoned in the number of Unbelievers Now fearfull is the state and condition of all these sorts of Unbelievers for they live in a most hainous and grievous sin highly dishonourable to God and most hurtful and dangerous to themselves hindring and depriving them of those blessings both Spirituall and Temporall which the Lord hath promised to his Children and laying them open to the Wrath and Judgments of God both in this Life and after this Life Let all such think of this who have hitherto lived in this fearfull and damnable sin of Unbelief and let it move them speedily to repent of this hainous and grievous sin labouring to come out of it and using all means to have the Grace of true Faith wrought in them especially to come duly to the publike Ministery of the Word c. Vse 2 Use 2. See how much they are bound to be thankfull unto God in whose hearts he hath begun the work of Faith The more fearfull and dangerous the sin of Unblief is the more excellent and pretious is the Grace of Faith Therefore called precious Faith 2 Pet. 1. 1. yea said to be much more precious then Gold 1 Pet. 1. 7. Let this stirr up
humiliation for sin tears do usually follow more or less Mark 9. 24. And straightway the Father of the Child cryed out and said c. May 20. 1627. THese words as ye have heard contain an earnest prayer or supplication of the father of the Lunatick child which he offered up to our Saviour Christ for himself In which prayer three things were propounded to consider 1. The time when or how soon he made this prayer straightway after our Saviour had in the former verse promised to grant his petition for his son upon condition of his Faith 2. The manner of his praying 1. With earnestness Crying out 2. With much humiliation Expressed by tears 3. The matter of his prayer containing two things 1. A profession of his Faith Lord I believe 2. A petition for help against his Unbelief Of the two first Points I have spoken viz. The circumstance of time and manner of his praying Now followeth the matter And first the profession of his Faith Lord I believe Our Saviour requiring in the former verse that he should believe that is by true Faith rest upon his Power and Goodness for the working of this Miracle in casting the Devil out of his son here-upon feeling some Faith in his own heart though but weak as yet he now takes occasion to profess this his Faith unto Christ And this confession no doubt he maketh out of a true feeling of the Work of Faith begun in his heart Observ 1 Observ 1. Wheresoever true Faith is in any measure wrought there it is sensibly felt and perceived by those in whom it is so as by experience they do know and are able truly to professe that they do believe yea though his Faith be but newly begun in them and as yet very weak yet upon tryall and examination of their own hearts they do find and feel it in themselves and are able truly to professe it So here the father of the Lunatick child though Faith was but newly conceived in his heart and as yet very weak yet being occasioned by the former words of Christ to examine his heart he doth there find and feel it in some measure and is able truly to profess it to be in him 2 Cor. 4. 13. The Apostle saith We believe and therefore speak which shews That himself and other true Believers do know know and feel their own Faith and are able out of true knowledge and experience to profess it to others 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed c. If he knew whom he had believed then he must needs know his own Faith by which he did believe Now this Point must be understood with some exception or limitation For although true Faith is felt and known of those in whom it is yet not at all times for sometimes it may and doth lye hid and is not perceived by those in whom it is As 1. At or about the time of a Christians first Calling or Conversion when Faith is in the seed or first conception as it were In this case sometimes it is so weak and in so small a degree That it is hardly or not at all perceived by the Believer As the faculty of reason in an Infant c. 2. In time of some great inward tryall and temptation when Faith is much assailed with contrary doubtings and unbelief which do sometimes so prevail against it for a time that it is not for the present felt or perceived by those in whom it is as in Job David c. 3. At such time as a Christian hath been or is negligent in searching and examining his own heart to find out his Faith and come to the feeling and discerning of it In this case it often lyeth hid and is not sensibly perceived for the present But at all other times ordinarily he that hath true Faith in his heart in any measure doth know and feel that he hath it and can truly affirm and profess the same Use 1 Use 1. To confute the Papist's teaching that a Christian in this Life cannot by an ordinary Faith without special Revelation know or be assured that he is in the state of saving-Grace But if it be so that every true Believer either doth or may know and feel without extraordinary Revelation his own Faith then may he know and be assured That he is in the state of Grace and Salvation Use 2 Use 2. This should teach us not to rest in a bare opinion or profession of Faith as many do but 2 Cor. 13. 5. to examine our hearts what experimental knowledg and feeling we have of that Faith which we profess or think to be in us If none at all then is there no Faith in thee for where true Faith is it is alwayes felt and sensibly perceived by the person that hath it more or less and at one time or other as all saving-Grace So Faith is of the nature of fire or light which cannot be altogether hid or smoothered so as it be not perceived A Christian cannot have Faith in his heart and not feel it more or less one time or other at least when he doth enter into a thorough search and tryall of his heart to find out and discover it See then that thou so do not thinking it enough to have Faith but labour to feel it in thy self and the work of it for it is a working Grace 1 Thess 1. 3. without this no comfort in having it Observ 2 Observ 2. True Faith ought not to lye hid or buried in the heart but to shew it self by outward profession with the mouth as occasion is offered See before chap. 8. ver 29. Vse Use See by this the truth and soundness of our Faith Look whether we be ready and forward on all good occasions to profess and testify our Faith outwardly to the Glory of God and Edification of others by our example If no care or conscience to do this at due times and when thou art called and mayst do good thereby then is there no Faith in thee Now followeth his petition for increase of his Faith Help thou my Unbelief That is Do thou by thy Divine Power confirm and strengthen my weak Faith For so by Unbelief he doth understand not a totall want of Faith for then he should contradict and confute himself by denying what he had before professed touching his Faith but a weak feeble and imperfect Faith which he yet felt in himself not such Unbelief as did prevail against Faith but such as was resisted and opposed by Faith Observ 1 Observ 1. True Faith may stand with some degree of the contrary sin of Unbelief yea it is allwayes joyned with it as it was with this party so with all other Believers Faith and Unbelief are mixed together in them Even in the Apostles themselves as appeareth by our Saviour's reproving them for their weakness of Faith Matth. 8. 26. O ye of little Faith Yea in Peter himself Matth. 14. 31. And
hard to flesh and bloud yea impossible to nature as impossible as to remove a Mountain yet this is thy comfort if thou canst but believe in God and in his power and if thou canst by the same Faith believe and rest upon Christ Jesus the Son of God thou shalt have strength to do all that is required of thee As our Saviour said before chap. 9. ver 23. to the father of the Lunatick Child If thou canst believe all things are possible c. So here though thou be weak in thy self and unable to do the least good work yet there is power enough in God and in Christ and his power is made perfect in weakness Though never so weak in thy self yet strong in the Lord and in the power of his might c. yea further though thy Faith be as yet but weak yet if it be a true Faith it shall strengthen thee and by it thou shalt receive power from God to overcome all difficulties and to do great and wonderfull things so far forth as God shall call thee to performance of them Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour here opposeth doubting and believing one against the other as contraries see that although doubting may stand with Faith in some degree yet it is not of the nature of Faith but directly opposite unto it even as contrary as fire to water as darkness to light Therefore they are in other places also opposed one against the other as Rom. 4. 20. Abraham staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief but was strong in Faith c. and Jam. 1. 6. Let him ask in Faith and waver not c. To be observed against the Papists who commend doubting and count it humility c. so to believe as to rest in doubt also touching the pardon of our sins and Gods favour c. As on the contrary they count it presumption to believe so as not to doubt of these rules we have a special revelation from God to assure us hereof But if this were so then doubting should be commendable and of the nature of Faith whereas contrariwise it is a sin and most opposite and contrary to true Faith We grant that doubting is alwayes mingled with Faith but it is not of the nature of it but contrary Observ 3 Observ 3. Here also we may see that although true Faith may stand with some kind of doubting yet there is a kind of doubting which cannot stand with true Faith in one and the same heart viz. such doubting or distrust as is yielded unto and not resisted but suffered to prevail in the heart This doubting cannot stand with Faith but true Faith where it is doth exclude all such doubting and unbelief Here that of the School-men is true Fides non exeludit omnem dubitationem sed vincentem Reason Reas True Faith being contrary to doubting cannot but resist it by Prayer and other means yea it doth not onely cause us to resist doubting and unbelief but so to resist as to prevail and overcome it though not at all times for sometimes doubting may have the upper hand in a true Believer yet usually and for the most part at least it will get victory in the end Vse Use See then that where there is no resistance and striving against unbelief but a yielding to it c. there is no true Faith which shews how fearful and dangerous it is for any to harbour doubtings or distrust and to give way to it without resistance On the contrary labour by all means to resist it c. Mark 9. 24. Observ 4 Observ 4. Lastly In that it is said shall not doubt in his heart but believe c. See what is the proper seat or subject both of unbelief and of Faith viz. the heart of man by which we are principally to understand the will and affections Some indeed do place Faith in the mind and understanding which is true in some respect namely so far forth as Faith doth comprehend in it a knowledg and assent of the mind to the truth of those things which we believe Thus it is in the understanding But if we consider Faith as it is an affiance or confidence in God and in Christ and in the Word and promise of God wherein the nature of Faith chiefly stands thus it is in the heart that is in the will and affections most properly Rom. 10. 10. With the heart man believeth unto righteousness c. See Act. 8. 37. and Ephes 3. 17. Mark 11. 24. Therefore I say unto you what things soever ye desire when ye pray believe that ye receive April 11. 1630. them and ye shall have them IN the two former Verses our Saviour exhorted his Disciples to the practice of Faith in trusting or relying upon God for the obtaining of the gift of Miracles and whatsoever else they desired and was needfull for them and withal he shewed them the power and vertue of true Faith that if they could believe they should be able to do great and wonderful things even as hard as the removing of a Mountain Now having thus shewed the power and efficacy of Faith he doth from hence take occasion in this 24th verse further to urge his former exhortation to the practice of Faith and withal takes occasion to speak of Prayer one principal work of Faith and a further means subordinate to Faith for the obtaining of the gift of Miracles and whatsoever else was needfull for them So that as before he exhorted them to the practice of Faith in general so now more particularly he stirs them up to the practice and exercise of Faith in the duty of Prayer shewing also the power and vertue of this Faith in Prayer in that it maketh prayer effectual for the obtaining of those things which Believers do pray for First open the words Therefore q. d. seeing true Faith is of such power and vertue as to do so great and wonderful things even above nature c. I say unto you Here he repeateth again one part of that serious and earnest asseveration used by him before in the former verse avouching the truth of that which he speaketh in his own name and by his own Authority What things soever ye desire when ye pray Whatsoever things ye ask of God in Prayer with desire to obtain them Believe that ye receive them Labour by Faith to be firmly and undoubtedly perswaded and assured that ye shall obtain your requests at the hands of God That ye receive them That ye shall most certainly receive them as if ye had them already The present Tense put for the future to shew certainty And ye shall have them Ye shall certainly obtain your sutes and requests and be partakers of those things which ye so ask of God in Prayer In the words consider four things 1. The ground of the exhortation implyed in the first word Therefore 2. The manner of propounding and urging the exhortation with an earnest and
entertainment to him in our hearts If we were not unapt by nature to give way and entrance unto Christ to come into our hearts and to dwell with us what need were there of any such preparation of this way of Christ Our hearts by nature are like a rough or craggy way unfit to be passed through Reas 1 By nature we have no knowledge of Christ or of those things which he hath done and suffered for us untill these things be revealed to us of God by his word and by his Spirit Eph. 2. 12. Now without the knowledge of Christ we are unfit to embrace Christ Reas 2 By nature we are destitute of Faith For it is a supernaturall gift Phil. 1. 29. To you it is given to believe on Christ c. Now without Faith there is no receiving or entertaining of Christ into the heart By Faith alone we are said to receive Christ John 1. 12. Reas 3 By nature we feel no want of Christ think ourselves well without him Vse 1 See the reason why so few do truly embrace Christ and give entertain●●nt to him in their hearts marvel not at it the reason is plain for of our selves 〈◊〉 we have no fitness or disposition or inclinableness at all to embrace Christ o● to believe in him we have no knowledge of Christ we feel no want of him and his graces and benefits Nay we are enemies to Christ and to his Cross by nature 1 Cor. 1. 23. He is a stumbling block to the Jews and unto the Greeks foolishness Vse 2 This confutes the vain conceipt of such ignorant People who think it an easie matter to believe in Christ they thank God they have ever believed in Him and yet in truth many that thus speak never truly believed in Him And whereas they think it so easie a matter to believe in him they must know it is nothing so Doest thou think that easie unto which man hath no aptness by nature If it were easie to entertain Christ into the heart by Faith what need the heart be prepared to receive Him Know then though it be easie to speak of Believing in Christ thou shalt find it hard to practise it Thou canst not do it by nature or of thy self It must be given thee to believe in Christ else never canst thou do it Thy heart hath need of much preparation before it is capable of Faith and before it is fit to receive Christ it must first be humbled in the sense of sin and of thy naturall misery without Christ else thou wilt never see what need thou hast of Christ and so thou wilt not desire him or seek to be partaker of Him by Faith Think not therefore that it is an easie matter to entertain Christ into thy heart by true Faith thou shalt find it harder then thou art aware Mark 9. 23. If thou canst believe c. shewing how hard it is It will cost thee much pains and striving before thou attain to it Oh then be not negligent in using the means to get Faith above all make conscience of hearing the Word Rom. 10. Faith cometh by Hearing Obser 2 Again in that the Prophet sayeth John Baptist should exhort the People to prepare the way of their hearts that Christ might passe and enter into them Hence we learn that So many as desire to entertain Christ into their hearts and to come and dwell in them they must first prepare and fit their hearts to embrace and receive him Revel 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock If any man hear my Voyce and open the door I will come in to him and I will supp with him and he with me Object It is not in our Power to prepare our selves and our own hearts to the entertainment of Christ Joh. 6. 44. No man can come to me except the Father draw him c. Answ Though this preparation of the heart unto Christ be the special work of God's spirit yet he requires that we also should do that which lyeth in us toward this preparing of our selves though God only can work this preparation yet he will have us use the means by which it may come to be wrought He doth not work in Us as in Stocks and Stones that have no sense or motion but he doth first move us by his Spirit and inable us to the preparation of our hearts that so we being moved of him may after a sort move our selves in using the means to prepare our hearts Quest. How are we to prepare our selves Answ We must labour to be truly humbled in the sense of our sins and of our naturall misery without Christ We are never fit to embrace him till we feel how wretched we are without him And Christ will not enter into any heart but that which is humbled and broken for sin Isa 57. 15. Now this humilia●ion is wrought by the preaching of the Law and by applying the Doctrine of it to the conscience Therefore is the Law said to be our Scholmaster unto Christ Gal. 3. 2. We must labour further to forsake all sin in heart and affection and we must purge the love of it out of our hearts our sins are they which keep Christ out of our hearts and which barr him from entring in there these make the way of Christ rough and uneeven yea they stop it up We must therefore remove our sins which are the annoyances and hinderances of Christ's way that so these being taken away he may find an eeven and plain way and a straight path into our hearts 3. We must get a hungring and thristing desire after Christ the desire of our soul must be to him We must pant after Him as the Hart after the Rivers of Water We are not fit to entertain Christ till we feel this earnest desire of Him 4. Lastly We must use all means to get Faith whereby to receive Christ into our hearts Unbelief stops up the way of Christ and keeps Him from entring into our hearts to dwell there Use 1 This reproves such as have no care to prepare a way for Christ into their hearts no care to get a true sense of their ownsins nor to remove and take them away by true Repentance no care to get Faith into their hearts that they may be fit to entertain Him and to give Him lodging there Nay some are so far from preparing a way for Christ that they rather prepare a way for Satan and the World and Sin to enter into their hearts This they do by giving themselves to the practise of sin and by following the profits and pleasures of the World so eagerly as they do Use 2 Labour we daily in preparing our hearts unto Christ strive we to make him a plain way and a straight path into our heart To this end remove the annoyances of this way of Christ Thy sins and corruptions are the annoyances and hinderances in Christ's way take away these by true Repentance that they stop
thee c Dec. 27. 1618. WEE have heard how the Devil in this party possessed doth expostulate with our Saviour Christ about the cause of his molesting him and his fellows the other wicked Spirits in going about to dispossesse them in these words What have we to do with thee c Now in the words following He doth farther expostulate with Him about the end of his coming whether it were to destroy them Art thou come to destroy us Viz. Before the due time appointed for our destruction for that is implyed as may appear by comparing Matth. 8. 29. Art thou come hither to torment us before the time By Destruction The Devil here meaneth that full finall and last destruction judgment or punishment which he knows is to be inflicted on him and his fellows by Christ at the last day or day of generall Judgment And because he did already begin to feel the Divine Power of Christ therefore by these words he seems to intimate another reason besides that before implyed to move our Saviour not to put him to farther torment by casting him out viz. because the time appointed for their full and finall punishment was not yet come So much of the meaning of the Words Art thou come to destroy us Observ 1 Observ 1. The Devils have not as yet their full and perfect Damnation or punishment inflicted upon them God's Wrath is not yet come upon them to the uttermost This is plainly implyed when they ask Christ Whether he were now come to destroy and damn them to the full Luke 8. 31. That Legion of Devils requested our Saviour not to command them to go out into the Deep that is the place of full and perfect torment which they shall be cast into hereafter which shewes that they are not in it already 2 Pet. 2. 4. They are in Chains of Darkness reserved unto Judgment So Jude 6. ver and Matth. 25. 41. Everlasting fire is prepared for the Devil and his Angels therefore they do not yet burn in it so as they shall hereafter Those wicked Spirits are already entred into some degree of Hellish torments and this torment they carry about them wheresoever they become but their full judgment is not yet inflicted upon them Vse Hence we may gather a certain Argument that there is a Day of General Judgment yet to come in which the Devils and Reprobate Men shall be adjudged to full and finall Damnation If there were not a Day of Judgment to come how should those wicked Angels receive their full Reward of Judgment and Punishment But God's Justice requireth that when their sins are come to the full Height and Measure which they shall be at the last Day that then they should be punished with full and perfect Damnation We must therefore certainly believe a Day of general Judgment to come And not only believe it but daily prepare for it knowing that at that Day not onely the Devils shall be Judged but we also every one of us must hear the finall Sentence of our Absolution or Condemnation and withall we must then receive our full reward according to the things which we have done in the body whether good or evil 2 Cor. 5. 10. Quest Quest How should we prepare our selves against that Day Answ Answ 1. Get true Faith in Christ that we may be found in Him at the Last Day Then shall we lift up heads and hearts with comfort at the appearing of Christ 2. Repent of our sins and renew our Repentance daily See Acts 17. 30 31. Observ 2 Observ 2. The Devils do stand in great fear of the Day of Judgment and of that full and finall torment which then shall be inflicted upon them This appears in that they demand here of Christ whether he were already come to destroy them before the appointed time of full Judgment shewing that they much feared that time See Luke 8. 31. and Jam. 2. 20. Where it is said That they Tremble which must be understood chiefly in respect of the Day of Judgment and of that finall accomplishment of their Damnation which then they must feel Use Use See then the stony hardnesse or 〈…〉 Mens hearts who live so securely in their sins and are so hardned in them that they are little or nothing moved with any 〈◊〉 trembling at the consideration of the Day of Judgment when Christ shall come in flaming fire to render Vengeance to suc● wicked Ones But it were much better for them now to be moved with fear of that terrible Day and speedily to turn from their sins that they might be saved in that Day of the Lord than securely to go on in their sins and so to be surprized unawares at that Day by the wrath of God which then shall be powred out on all the Reprobates Surely if the Devils themselves tremble at that Judgment to come then it is like to prove a terrible Judgment to all wicked Men and Unbelievers that shall then be found in their sins So much of the second thing considered in this Speech of the Devil unto Christ viz. His expostulating or reasoning with him Now followeth the third thing namely his profession of Christ in these words I know thee who thou Art c The meaning of the words is first to be shewed I know That is do acknowledge and believe who thou art the Devil speaks not here of a bare knowledge or understanding of Christ but of such a knowledge as was joyned with a generall assent to the truth of that he knew The Holy One of God It is likely that this title was then usually given to the Messiah by way of allusion to the Prophets as Psal 16. 10. See also Dan. 9. 24. Therefore the Devil giveth this title to Christ quasi diceret I believe thee to be that Messiah of whom the Prophets foretold Now this Title the Holy one of God is given to the Messiah because he was sanctified of God to be the Saviour of Mankind John 10. 36. And this sanctifying implyeth two things 1. The seperating of Him to this Office 2. The furnishing of Him with extraordinary holiness and grace fitting him for that Office Quest Quest Why did the Devil make this profession of his knowledge of Christ Answ Answ Not for any good end for although he sometimes speak the Truth yet it is still for some evil purpose So at this time he aimed not at the Glory of God or of Christ but he made this confession 1. To flatter our Saviour and so to perswade him if it might be to let him alone and not cast him out Therefore he commends him and makes shew of honouring him 2. No doubt he did it also to this end That he might bring the Truth it self which he professeth into suspition and disgrace because it received Testimony from him who is the Father of lies 3. To make the People suspect that our Saviour had some communion and familiarity with Satan or did work
with the understanding of the Word but thy heart also affected to believe and yield obedience to it This is an evidence that thou dost belong to God and art chosen of him to salvation for this true effectual knowledg is given to none but Gods Elect. If it be in thee it argues thee to be one of that number Labour then to find some measure of this knowledg in thee But remember it must not be a naked speculative knowledg but an effectual feeling knowledg not swimming onely in the head but going down to the heart and inclining it to love and imbrace the doctrine of the Word as also to believe and yield obedience to it So much of the Persons Now followes the means by which they come to be partakers of this true knowledg in the Doctrine of the Word namely by the gift of God To you it is given Doctr. None come to be enlightned with the true and effectual knowledg of the Word of God but those to whom this is freely given of God He must give them spiritual eyes to see into the truth of his Word else they can never see into it He must open their understandings as our Saviour did unto his Disciples Luke 24. 45. else they can never understand the Scriptures Ephes 1. 17. Paul prayeth that God would give unto them the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledg of him That the eyes of their understanding might be inlightned c. Job 32. 8. The inspiration of the Almighty giveth understanding Matth. 16. 17. Blessed art thou Simon for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven Reas Reason By Nature of our selves we are uncapable of all true knowledg of heavenly things 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man perceiveth not the things of God c. contrà Vers 10. God revealeth them to us by his Spirit Vse 1 Vse 1. To teach those that have received any measure of knowledg and understanding in the doctrine of the Word and in the Heavenly mysteries taught in it to be thankful to God for it who hath revealed this unto them which of themselves they could never have known If our Saviour were so thankfull to his Father Matth. 11. 25. for revealing the knowledg of his Will unto his Elect how much more thankful ought we to be for our selves Especially seeing this knowledg is not only given us but freely given us of God without any desert on our part There is nothing in the best of us by Nature to move God to reveal to us the saving knowledg of his Will but his own good pleasure moved him unto it So Matth. 11. 26. Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Rom. 10. 20. Consider this seriously and it will stirr up to thankfulness Consider also the Excellency of this knowledg revealed to us Use 2 Use 2. See what they must do that want this true knowledg in the Word they must go unto God by prayer desiring him to give it unto them and to make them able to conceive and understand the heavenly Mysteries of his Will revealed in the Scriptures Matth. 7. 7. Ask and it shall be given you c. And Jam. 1. 5. If any want wisdome let him ask of God This is true wisdome to know and understand the Word of God aright for this Word maketh us wise to salvation If therefore thou want this Wisdome ask it of God in prayer and he will give it thee if thou ask in faith and with fervency and earnestness out of a true sense of thy want of this knowledg Such also as have attained some measure of it they must go to God to crave a further increase of it Jam. 1. 17. Every good gift cometh from the Father of lights c. So much of the second thing viz. the means by which they did come to partake in the priviledg here mentioned in that it was given them Now it followes to speak of the benefit or priviledg it self which was bestowed on them which is the Doctrine of the Word especially of the Gospel Doctr. Doctr. Hence gather That it is a great priviledg and blessing of God upon any to have the true knowledg of the Word revealed unto them and to be made acquainted with the heavenly mysteries of it Our Saviour doth here mention it as a special favour and prerogative bestowed on his Apostles and Disciples that they were inabled to know the mystery of the Kingdom of God Matth. 13. 16. Blessed are your eyes for they see and your ears for they hear Matth. 16. 17. Blessed art thou Simon Bar-jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee c. Reason Reason This is the onely saving knowledg in which our happiness consisteth 2 Tim. 3. 15. The Scriptures are able to make wise to salvation Job 17. 3. This is life eternal to know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ c. Therefore Luke 19. 42. Our Saviour weeping over Jerusalem wisheth That they had known the things which did belong to their peace that is to their true happiness Without this all other knowledg is vain Use 1 Use 1. Comfort to all whom God hath enlightned by his Spirit with this true and effectual knowledg of his Word This is that wherein their happiness standeth though they be simple and ignorant in other things as in matters of the World yet if they have eyes to see and know the heavenly mystery of the Word concerning their own salvation by Christ they are happy Blessed are thy eyes if thou see these things c. Use 2 Use 2. Labour above all knowledg to get this true saving knowledg of the Word of God and to grow and increase in it daily Prov. 4. 7. Wisdome is the principal thing get wisdome and with all thy getting get understanding Be diligent in the use of all good means to this end as Prayer unto God hearing the Word reading it in private Conference c. This knowledg will not be had without pains Prov. 2. Digg for it as for silver and treasure hid in the bowels of the Earth It is well worth our pains What pains do some take to get other knowledg as knowledg in humane arts and tongues or knowledge in some trade c. How much more pains should we take to get heavenly knowledg Mark 4. 11. Unto you it is given to know the mystery of the Kingdome of God but unto them that are without March 12 1619. all these things are done in Parables NOw followes the Description of the Doctrine of the Gospel called the mystery of the Kingdome c. Doctr. 1. The Doctrine of the Gospel is a secret and hidden doctrine 1 Cor. 2. 7. We speak the Wisdome of God in a mystery even the hidden wisdome which God ordained before the world c. 1 Tim. 3. ult Great is the mystery of godliness c. There are many mysteries and hidden Points of Doctrine
with the love of sin and with corrupt and sinfull lusts and Affections as Pride self-love malice wrath bitterness uncleanness covetousness c. they come to hear before they have ridded their Hearts from these by true Repentance and Mortification and so the ground of their Hearts being pestered with such weeds and briars is not fit to receive the seed of the Word Again they never yet Ploughed up their hearts by Godly sorrow and contrition for sin and therefore their Hearts being not truly humbled and softned are not fit to receive this seed of the Word No marvail if such profit not by the Word when they prepare not their Hearts to the receiving of it Use 2 Vse 2. If we would profit truly by hearing the Word look to this preparation of our hearts that they may be fit to have the seed of the Word sowen in them Plow them up by Godly sorrow for sin and labour to purge them from all sinfull lusts and Affections Pray unto God by the power and efficacy of his Spirit to mortify them in us and to pluck up and rid these weeds out of our hearts lest they hinder the fruit of the Word in us The more carefull thou art thus to have thy heart prepared as good ground to receive the seed of the Word the more fruit shall the Word bring forth in thee The second thing in which the resemblance between Corn-ground and hearers of the Word standeth is this The ground where seed is sown must receive the seed into it self and so the seed must be hid and covered in the Earth or else it will not take root or spring up to fruit So the hearers of the Word must give the Word entrance into their Hearts by Believing and applying it to themselves else it will not be fruitfull in them Psal 119. 11. David hid the Word of God in his heart c. And this was the reason that the Word was profitable to Lydia Act. 16. because the Lord opened her heart to receive it Use Use See then that it is not enough to let the Word enter into our outward ears nor yet to let it swim or flote aloft in our understandings but if we would have it effectual and fruitfull in us we must receive and hide it in the Furrows of our Hearts as good seed in good ground that it may take root and fructify in us c. So much in general touching the resemblance between Corn-ground and Hearers of the Word Now to speak particularly of the several sorts of Hearers signified by those four sorts of ground mentioned in the Parable 1. Of the first sort signified by the way side And these are they by the way side c. In these words is laid down a description of those hearers which were resembled by the way side described by two things 1. By their property they are outward Hearers of the Word having the seed of it sown upon them 2. By the Issue or consequent of their outward hearing Satan commeth immediately after they have heard and taketh away c. These are they by the way side That is these are those kind of Hearers of the Word which are signified and resembled by the way side Where the Word is sowen To whom the Word is Preached and they are outwardly hearers of it as the words following shew When they have heard c. Now that we may the better conceive what kind of hearers our Saviour here speaketh of and wherein they fail and the cause of their not profiting by the Word it is needfull to compare this place of St. Mark with Matth. 13. 19. where it is said of this first sort That they hear the Word but understand it not which is not so to be taken as if they understood it not at all for then Satan could not be said properly to take it from them as it followeth in the latter part of this verse But they are said not to understand the Word because though they have some slight and shallow apprehension of it in their minds yet they have no through or effectuall Knowledg of it no such Knowledg as doth affect and move their hearts to Believe I ove and imbrace the Doctrine of the Word which is taught for in Scripture every man is said to have so much knowledg and understanding in the Word as he hath Affection of heart to love and imbrace that which he knoweth and without this Affection to the Word all knowledg and apprehension of it in the mind is accompted ignorance So then by this that hath bin said we may see plainly what kind of hearers they are whom our Saviour here likeneth to the way-side namely such as hear the Word and by hearing do attain also to some kind of sleight knowledg or understanding of the doctrine yet so as this knowledg is not effectuall in their hearts to incline them to believe or imbrace or to love and delight in that which is taught and these are fitly resembled to the way-side for as that is beaten and hardened with the feet of passengers so as the seed cast upon it can have no entrance into the ground to take root in it so the hearts of these kind of hearers are so hardened and beaten as it were partly by reason of original corruption of nature and partly through custome and continuance in actual sins and partly also by Satans continual suggestions and temptations that the seed of the Word cannot find any entrance into them nor take root in them Doctr. Doctr. Here then we learn That though men be outward hearers of the Word and do also in some sort understand what is taught yet if their hearts be so hardened in sin and through Satans temptations that they are not affected and moved with the doctrine of it it can never profit them As seed sowen upon a beaten path or high-way cannot sink into the Earth by reason of the hardness of it nor take root or fructifie So the Doctrine of the Word being preached to such whose hearts are hardened in sin cannot enter into them therefore it cannot profit them If the seed of the Word be only sowen in their outward ears and in their minds if it lye above ground that is if it swimm and float aloft in their brain and understanding only and do not enter and sink into their hearts if their hearts be not affected to love and imbrace it as well as their understandings inlightned by it it will never take root or bear fruit in them The seed that is cast on the High-way is utterly lost because it cannot enter into the Earth to take root in it even so the Doctrine of the Word delivered to such hearers whose hearts are so hardened that the seed of the Word enters not into them it is utterly cast away and lost in regard of any fruit or profit that such hearers reap by it Ezek. 33. 31. The people of the Jews did not profit by hearing
needs be the cause of all cowardly fearfulness in times of distress Vse 1 Use 1. See the reason why the wicked and unbelievers are so cowardly and timorous in times of trouble and danger befalling them as we see in Cain Gen. 4. 14. and in Belshazzar Dan. 5. 6. Yea sometimes when there is no danger they are fearful Prov. 28. 1. The wicked fleeth when none pursueth And Levit. 26. 36. The sound of a shaken leaf chaseth them c. The reason of this their timorousness is their want of faith They have no assurance of Gods mercy to them in Christ nor of his special protection in times of danger therefore are their hearts thus overcome of fear and terrour They are sometime at their wits end This shall make the hearts of the wicked to fail them for fear at the day of Judgment because they shall want faith c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See also the cause of much timorousness even in good Christians in times of trouble The weakness of their saith is the cause of it as it was here in Christs Disciples And we are not to marvail that the best Christians are subject to this infirmity of timorousness more or less seeing there is some weakness and imperfection of faith in the best Vse 3 Use 3. Hence gather That excessive fearfulness in time of danger is a sin because it is a fruit of infidelity But of this before Use 4 Use 4. This sheweth us further what to do that we may be kept from this immoderate fear and timorousness Labour for true faith and for a further growth of it in us Such as never had faith must use all good means to attain some measure of it And such as have it in some measure already must labour for a further increase of it The more faith the less fear as on the contrary the less faith the more fear Pray unto God to give thee faith and to increase it in thee This will expell fear out of thy heart and make thee couragious in times of greatest distress and danger as Job 13. 15. Though he slay me yet I will trust in him And Paul Rom. 8. 38. I am perswaded that neither death nor life c. shall separate c. So Hebr. 11. 34. it is said of Gedeon Barack Sampson c. that by faith they stopped the mouths of Lyons quenched violence of fire c. out of weakness were made strong waxed valiant in fight c. So the Martyrs were couragious at the Stake and in the fire because they had special strength of faith given them Especially let such labour for faith who are called to go through great dangers as Souldiers Mariners Women that bear Children c. 1 Tim. 2. ult Verse 41. And they feared exceedingly c. The Evangelist layeth down a second consequent of this Miracle namely the effect which it wrought in the Disciples and others Which effect is twofold 1. Inward They feared exceedingly 2. Outward In that they do by their words one to another acknowledg the power of Christ and profess their admiration of it They feared c. This is to be understood not onely of the Disciples of Christ but of others also of the people who were present in other ships and saw the Miracle as may be gathered from Matth. 8. 27. where it is said The men marvailed c. Now if none but the Disciples had wondred and feared it is likely the Evangelist would not have spoken so generally saying The men marvailed but rather The Disciples marvailed Quest Quest Why did they so exceedingly fear seeing the storm being now laid the danger was past Answ Answ The Evangelist doth not here speak of their fearing of the danger in which they had been and from which they were now escaped but of that fear and reverence of the Power and Majesty of Christ with which they were stricken and moved in heart at the sight of this great Miracle And this fear was the greater in the Disciples because they now saw and considered their own weakness and infidelity for which Christ had reproved them Thus then the consideration of Christ's wonderfull power and their own weakness moved them thus exceedingly to fear and reverence the Divine Majesty of Christ And this was a good kind of fear in them whereby they so feared the power and Majesty of Christ that they were carefull not to offend him as they had done before by their timorousness and infidelity Observ Observ Hence gather That we ought to be affected in heart with great fear and reverence of the Majesty of God when we see or take notice of his great and powerful works the consideration of his wonderfull works should move us greatly to fear him Thus the Disciples and others at this time by seeing this great Miracle of Christ were moved to fear him exceedingly So Peter and others Luke 5. 8. So the Centution and they that were with him at the time of Christ's death when they saw the Earth-quake and other great Miracles wrought they feared greatly c. Matth. 27. 54. So should we be moved greatly to fear and reverence the Majesty of God when we consider his mighty works Jerem. 5. 22. Fear ye not me saith the Lord Will ye not tremble at my presence which have placed the sand for the bound of the Sea c. Hab. 3. 16. when the Prophet heard of the great Judgments of God threatned his belly trembled c. Now this fear must not be servile but a fi●iall fear joyned with love of God which must make us afraid and loth to offend him Psal 4. 4. Vse Vse This condemneth the blockish security of many who when they see or hear of Gods great and miraculous works of Justice or mercy shewed upon themselves or others yet are little or nothing at all moved in heart to fear and reverence the power and Majesty of God This argueth great and fearfull hardness of heart Such are worse then Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3. 24. and Felix Act. 24. 25. This want of fear and reverence of Gods great works is an effect and sign of Atheism in such And said one to another Who is this c. By these words the Disciples and the rest do profess their admiration of the Divine power of Christ and withall do imply a confession and acknowledgment that he was more than a meer man even the Son of God himself Quest Quest Did not the Disciples know and believe before that Christ was the Son of God Answ Answ Yes they knew it in part by his former Miracles but their knowledg and faith in this Point was further confirmed by this Miracle Observ 1 1. Observ In that the Disciples and others with them are not only affected with fear and reverence at the sight of this Miracle but do also take occasion to acknowledg and magnifie the Divine power of Christ who was able to command the Wind and Sea hence we learn That we should not onely be
Now all these things happened to them for our examples and are written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the World are come See Hos 8. 12. As the antient Satutes of the Land which are yet in force did not onely bind those in whose time they were inacted but us c. Use 1 Vse 1. To confute the Anabaptists who reject the Books of the Old Testament as if they concerned not us in these Times contrary to the expresse testimonies of Scriptures before alledged and contrary to that 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture c. Use 2 Vse 2. See how needfull for Christians in all Ages and for Us in these Times to be well acquainted with the Doctrine of the Word of God and to have it dwell in us richly in all Wisdom c. Col. 3. 16. Seeing it doth as neerly concern us to know believe and practise this Doctrine as it did those which lived at the very time when it was first Preached and Written Here then we must be stirred up to the diligent use of all good mean● whereby we may come to be grounded in sound knowledge of the Scriptures especially to attend diligently on the publick Ministery and to joyn therewith private searching of the Scriptures c. Hearing and reading of the Word is as necessary for us now in these Times as ever it was for any that have lived before us since the Scriptures were first written and the Doctrine of it now as neerly concerns us to know believe and practise as it did them Let none be so ignorant or profane as to think that the Precepts Examples Reproofs c. recorded in Scripture do not concern them because written so long ago By these thou must one Day be Judged as well as they Use 3 Use 3. This must teach us in hearing the Word Preached to apply all that is taught unto our selves every Instruction Exhortation Precept Reproof Threatning Promise c. labouring to make some use of all to our own Souls for the beating down of sin in us and the building up of us in Grace towards God's heavenly Kingdom remembring that every Text and Portion of Scripture handled doth neerly concern us as well as those in whose time it was written So also in reading or hearing the Word read we are to apply and make use of all that is read to further us in sound knowledge and Christian practises remembring that all Scripture is profitable and necessary as well for us now as in former times and that whatsoever is written aforetime is written for our Learning c. So much of the manner of alledging this testimony of the Prophet Esay against the Scribes and Pharisees Now follows the matter or substance of the Testimony which contains a sharp censure or reproof of the Jewes in the Prophet's time and of these Scribes and Pharisees in our Saviour's time for two speciall sinnes 1. Hypocrisie in that they made great shew of outward worship but no conscience of inward They honoured God with their Lips when their Heart was far from Him 2. Superstition and Will-worship in that they taught for Doctrines the Commandements of Men where also this their Superstitious Will-worship is further set out by the adjunct or property of it in that they are said To worship God in vain This People This is literally to be understood of those antient Jews which lived in the Prophet Esay's time but prophetically and by way of application it is to be referred also unto these Hypocriticall Pharisees and Scribes which our Saviour here taxeth Honoureth me That is serveth and worshippeth me The effect put for the cause because such as serve God aright do thereby honour Him he accepting that service as an honour done unto Him Yet here we must not understand any true and upright serving or honouring of God but such as was in shew and appearance onely q. d. This People seemeth to honour me or maketh great shew c. With Lips That is with the body and outward Man It is spoken by the figure Synechdoche whereby a part is put for the whole the Lips named for all parts of the Body with which Service is outwardly performed unto God the reason is because the principall parts of outward worship are performed with the Mouth and Lips Quest Quest Doth the Prophet here condemn the outward serving of God with the Body Answ Answ Not simply or absolutely for God requireth that as well as inward worship but so far forth only as this externall worship was severed from the internall of the heart as the words following shew But their Heart is far c. Isa 29. 13. The words are these They have removed their Hearts far from me But there is no difference in the sense onely St. Mark alledgeth them somewhat more briefly than they are found in the Prophet Now by Heart understand the Inner-man which is sometime called the Soul and Spirit comprehending all the faculties and powers thereof as the Understanding Will Affections c. 1 Pet. 3. 4. called the hidden man of the heart Is far from me That is from yielding any true honour service or obedience unto me So much of the sense of the words Doctr. Doctr. Hence we may learn this Point of Instruction That it is the property of Hypocrites to make great shew of honouring God by outward service of the Body when in the mean time they are not carefull to give him the inward worship of their Hearts and Souls They draw near to God with the outward man but their inner-man is far estranged from Him Thus it was with the Hypocriticall Jews in the Prophet Esay's time as he justly complained So Ezek. 33. 31. they were forward to come and sit before the Prophet and to hear him with outward ears but their hearts went after covetousness So the Scribes and Pharisees in our Saviour's time were forward in outward Duties of Religion and of God's worship as Prayer Fasting outward sanctification of the Sabbath c. but their hearts were far estranged from God and were not upright before him in performance of those Duties therefore our Saviour here reproveth this their Hypocriticall serving of God by this testimony of the Prophet Esay Matth. 23. 27. Woe to you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye are like unto whited Sepulchers which indeed appear beautifull outward but are within full of dead mens bones and all uncleanness Even so ye also c. Luke 18. That proud Pharisee which went up to the Temple to pray was forward in the outward worship of God honouring God with his Lips by Prayer and Thanksgiving but his Heart was far from God being carryed away with pride and self-conceipt of his own Righteousnesse and therefore he was not justified before God Cain offered Sacrifice but not his Heart to God Judas drew neer to God in outward Duties of his worship as in Preaching Prayer hearing Christ and joyning with him at the eating of the Passover but his
Providence Justice Mercy c. This will keep us from tempting him c. Mark 8. 12 13. And he sighed deeply in his Spirit c. Octob. 13. 1622. VVEE have before heard of the Pharisees practise in coming to Christ and questioning with him about his Person and Calling and seeking of him a Sign from Heaven that is some new and extraordinary Miracle to be wrought by him in which the divine Power of God might be manifested as it were immediately from Heaven Now followeth our Saviour's Answer made to their Request or Petition Ver. 12. together with the Consequents of it Ver. 13. Touching the Answer made by our Saviour the Evangelist setteth down two things 1. The preparation unto it in the speciall Gesture used by our Saviour He sighed deeply in his Spirit 2. The matter of the Answer consisting of two parts 1. A reproof of them for seeking a Sign in these words Why doth this Generation seek a Sign 2. An absolute denyall of their Sute refusing to work such a Miracle as they requested in these words Verily I say unto you There shall no sign be given c. First of the preparation to his Answer Where consider three things 1. The Gesture or Action He sighed 2. The manner of his Sighing 1. In Spirit 2. Deeply Sighed deeply Or groaned from within being moved with a great and extraordinary measure of grief and sorrow conceived in his Heart and Mind In Spirit That is from his inner man from his humane So●l and Mind So Joh. 11. 33. He groaned in Spirit Quest Quest What was the Cause of so great Grief in Him Answ Answ The consideration of the grosse Hypocrisy and fearfull obstinacy and hardness of Heart which he discerned in the Pharisees and which they discovered by coming to tempt him thus by seeking a new Sign or Miracle from Heaven Especially he was grieved and he thus deeply sighed for their obstinacy and willful persisting in Unbelief and standing out against Christ and his Doctrine contrary to the light of their own Conscience for although he had formerly wrought many and great Miracles which were sufficient to convince their Consciences that He was either the Son of God and the Messiah or at least a Person sent from God yet for all this they did not receive his Person nor believe or embrace His Doctrine but maliciously and wilfully rejected both Therefore they sinned not of Ignorance or Infirmity but against Knowledge and maliciously c. which may appear by his very sharp Reproof of them Matth. 16. calling them Hypocrites and a wicked and adulterous Generation which He would not have done if they had offended through weakness c. Therefore that sharp Reproof argues that they were obstinately wicked and malicious against Christ contrary to Knowledge and consequently incurable so long as they remained so which was the main cause that our Saviour did so inwardly grieve in Spirit and deeply sigh for them Observ 1 Observ 1. That our Saviour Christ living on Earth was subject to like humane and natural Passions as we are onely without Sin Hebr. 4. 15. He was subject in his Humane Soul to Passions of Grief Sorrow Joy Fear Anger c. Here he is said to have sighed in his Spirit that is out of the inward grief of his Soul So Joh. 11. 33. He groaned in Spirit Matth. 26. 38. My Soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death Therefore also he wept for Lazarus Joh. 11. and over Jerusalem Luke 19 41. Contra Luke 10. 21. He rejoyced in Spirit c. Hebr. 5. 7. mention is made of his fearing of death Vse 1 Use 1. Hence gather the truth of his humane Nature Use 2 Vse 2. Seeing Christ was subject to humane natural passions of Grief Fear c. Hence gather That these Affections are not in themselves evil or sinful but onely so far forth as they are immoderate or are set upon evil and unfit Objects Otherwise they are lawful and good and we may and ought to be moved with such naturall Affections when just cause is offered so it be moderately God doth not require that we should be as sensless Stoicks void of humane Affections but that we moderate and rectify them Observ 2 Observ 2. The sins of others should be matter and cause of great sorrow unto us causing us to mourn and sigh for them when we see or take notice of them So did our Saviour here and Chap. 3. He mourned for their hardness of heart So Luke 19. 41. he wept over Jerusalem for the sins of the Inhabitants Psal 119. 136. David saith Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law 2 Pet. 2. 8. Righteous Lot dwelling among the Sodomites in seeing and hearing vexed his Soul c. See Ezek. 9. 4. Jerem. 9. 1. the Prophet wisheth that his Head were waters and his Eyes a Fountain of tears that he might weep day and night for the sins of the Jews and for the Judgment of God coming upon them for the same Elijah so grieved for the sins of his time that he was weary of his life 1 King 19. 4. Reas 1 Reas 1. The sins of others are offensive to God and dishonourable to his Name therefore they should be matter of grief to us otherwise we shew no true Love to God or Zeal for his Glory if we can see or hear him offended and not be grieved Reas 2 Reas 2. The sins of others are most hurtful and dangerous to those Persons which are guilty and do live in them bringing destruction of Soul and body upon them if they repent not in time therefore we should by grieving for them shew our true Love to the Persons and our desire and care of their good Use 1 Use 1. For reproof of such as are not moved with grief for others sins though they see hear and take notice of them they take them not to heart to mourn or sigh for them but pass them over leightly and can speak of them without any testimony or sign of grief yea with delight and in way of merriment to make sport for themselves and others yea though they be foul and heinous sins as Drunkenness Uncleanness or the like sins committed by others they can talk pleasantly and merrily of them Is this to be grieved and to sigh for others sins Is this their love to God and zeal for his Glory How dwelleth the love of God in thee if thou canst see or hear him offended and not be grieved Again How dwells the Love of thy Brother's Soul in thee if thou canst see or hear that he lives in a known Sin and not mourn and grieve for him This therefore shews want of true love to God and to thy Brother Some can grieve and be sorry for the outward miseries crosses and afflictions of others that are their friends but do not grieve for their sins which yet are the causes of all other miseries and hurt them much more than any outward
trial and proof of his Elect 1 Cor. 11. 19. There must be Heresies that they which are approved may be made manifest among you 2. The Devil laboureth in all Ages to sow the Seeds of manifold Errours and corrupt Opinions in the minds of men that he may hinder them from believing and embracing the sound truth of God He labours to blind their eyes that they may not see the Truth 2 Cor. 4. 4. Therefore such corrupt Opinions and Heresies are called Doctrines of Devils to shew that the Devil is the Author of them 1 Tim. 4. 2. Use 1 Use 1. To teach us not to think strange or be offended at it though we see it be thus at this day that there are so many different Sects in the Church and so many Heresies and corrupt Opinions holden by men in matters of Religion contrary to the Truth For thus it hath ever been And God hath appointed for just causes to suffer it so to be and so it will be so long as the Devil by God's permission hath Power to blind the eyes of men and to lead them into Errours and Heresies contrary to the true and sound Doctrine or the Word of God Vse 2 Use 2. See the folly and ignorance of such as look that there should be in these times a general unity and consent in Opinion among all sorts in the matter of Religion and because there is not so but there are so many different Sects and Opinions of men opposite one to the other and most of them opposite to the true Christian Religion which we profess therefore some hence take occasion to call into Question the truth and soundness of our Religion and are doubtful what to profess yea some stick not to say they will profess no Religion till there be fewer Sects and Opinions and till they see all agree better In the mean time they think it best to follow their own business and to let matters of Religion alone But let such know that if they expect that all should be of one Opinion in matters of Religion they expect that which never was nor will be while the World standeth And so if they will profess no Religion till all agree in one they will never make any Profession at all and then let them never look to be saved at all For as with the Heart man believeth unto Righteousness so with the mouth Confession must be made unto Salvation Rom. 10. 10. Use 3 Use 3. See what need there is for us to be well and thoroughly grounded in the Knowledge and Belief of the sound truth and Doctrine of God taught in his Word and to have our hearts and minds stablished and settled therein lest otherwise we be seduced and drawn away from the truth and plucked away with some of those manifold Errours which are holden in these times against the truth 2 Pet. 3. 17. Beware lest ye being led away with the Errour of the Wicked fall from your own stedfastness But grow in Grace and in the Knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ c. If we be not well grounded and stablished in the present Truth and Religion which we profess How shall we be able to hold and maintain it constantly both in Judgment and Practice amidst so many Errours and corrupt Opinions now a-dayes holden against the Truth We had not need to be as Children tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men c. as the Apostle speaketh Eph. 4. 4. but we had need to be men of Age and ripe years in Understanding and Judgment able to discern the truth in matters of Religion that are questionable and firmly to hold and maintain the same in the midst of all Errours Heresies and corrupt Opinions of men by which it is opposed Observ 2 Observ 2. That Ignorance of the Scriptures is a main cause of the Errours and absurd Opinions which are holden by men in matters of Religion The ignorance and misunderstanding of that one place of Scripture Mal. 4. touching the coming of John Baptist in the Spirit and Power of Elias was the cause of the Errour which the Jews in our Saviour's time held touching the coming of the Prophet Elias to live again upon Earth in Person as we have before heard And so no doubt but their Ignorance in the Scriptures was the main cause of all those other gross Errours which diverse of them held touching the Person of Christ that He was John Baptist or Elias or one of the other old Prophets So also of that heathenish Errour touching the Souls of men that in death they pass into other bodyes and so come to live again upon Earth The like may be said of all other Errours and absurd Opinions of men which have been or which are at this day holden in matters of Religion Ignorance of the Holy Scriptures is a main cause of them Matth. 22. 29. Ye err not knowing the Scriptures c. Thus Chrysostom in his time complaineth Praefat. in Epist. ad Rom. that hence have come innumerable evils even from the Ignorance of the Scriptures Hence have sprung a multitude of pernicious Heresies c. So in our times whence come so many gross and absurd Errours holden by Papists Anabaptists Brownists c. but from Ignorance of the Scriptures So whence come those many foolish and erroneous Opinions of ignorant People in our own Church but from Ignorance of the Scriptures Use 1 Use 1. To condemn the wicked practice of the Church of Rome in barring the common People from the free Use and Reading of the Scriptures and so nuzzling them up in gross Ignorance of the Word of God whereby they are led into all manner of erroneous and absurd Opinions Yea some of them have not been ashamed to commend this Ignorance in the common People affirming it t● be the Mother of Devotion Contra here we learn that it is the Mother of all gross and absurd Errours Heresies and corrupt Opinions of men in matters of Religion Use 2 Vse 2. See how dangerous for Christians to be ignorant in the Scriptures Such do lye open to all manner of Errours Heresies and corrupt Opinions being in danger to be infected with the Poyson of them and to be seduced by them easily plucked away from the Truth ready to imbrace any Errour or Heresy though never so gross absurd or foolish as Popery Anabaptism Brownism c. They are like clean Paper upon which one may write any thing So upon such persons being ignorant in the Scriptures any gross or absurd Errour or Hereticall opinion may be fastened or imprinted like Wax which may be Printed with any Seal c. How many such are there even amongst us who are ignorant in the book of God having little or no sound Knowledg of the Scriptures no not of the main and principal points of Christian Religion there taught and set down The Scriptures are as a sealed Book unto them No
unlikely But it is more probable as others think That this astonishment of the People was caused by the suddenness and unexpectednesse of Christ's coming unto his Disciples and to the Multitude assembled at this time that they were stricken with great admiration astonishment to see him come and to appear to them so suddenly and unexpectedly whereas it is likely they knew not before where he was nor from whence he now came It is also likely That they were the more astonished because he came so fitly and in such due season to help his Disciples in working the Miracle upon the possessed Child and to defend them against the Cavils of the Scribes as if he knew before-hand in what trouble and distresse his Disciples were as indeed he did Observ 1 Observ 1. The Lord doth many times afford very sudden and unexpected help comfort and deliverance to his faithfull Servants being in trouble insomuch that themselves and others taking notice thereof are even astonished with admiration and wonder at it So here Christ came and appeared to help and comfort his Disciples being in trouble He came I say to help and deliver them so suddenly and unexpectedly that the Multitude then present were amazed with wonder at the sight of it So also were the Disciples themselves as is likely So before Chap. 6. ver 51. when they were in great trouble and danger upon the Water in a Storm and in the night-time he came so suddenly to help them and to lay the Storm That themselves were amazed beyond measure and wondered thereat So Joh. 21. 4. So Acts 12. 16. Peter being imprisoned and in danger of being put to Death the Lord did deliver him so suddenly and unexpectedly that the Disciples were astonished at the sight of him being come out of the Prison Use Use To comfort and stay the minds of the godly in the midst of greatest Troubles and Distresses when they see no hope or likelihood in humane reason that they shall be helped or delivered when they see no means of deliverance but all things seem to make against them For even then when they least expect deliverance or comfort then may the Lord suddenly vouchsafe it to them when they least expect or think of his coming to help and deliver them then may he come to them by deliverance Thus hath he often done and useth to do unto his Saints and Children in midst of their greatest Troubles suddenly and unexpectedly to reveal comfort to them Psal 112. 4. To the upright ariseth light in darkenss As a little before break of Day when the darknesse is greatest then suddenly the dawning begins to break up So here c. Or as it cometh sometimes to passe that in the midst of a very dark and gloomy Day the light of the Sun breaketh forth through the Clouds suddenly Observ 2 Observ 2. It is good for us to be affected with admiration at those sudden and strange Accidents which fall out by God's speciall providence and whereof we take notice As when any unexpected mercy or deliverance happeneth to any or when any sudden or strange Judgment befalleth another These and the like strange and unwonted Accidents we are not to pass over leightly but to be affected with admiration of them yet so as we rest not in them but withall make a holy use of them c. See Chap. 6. ver 51. Now followeth the second part of their behaviour They ran unto him and saluted him Luke 9. 37. It is said Great Multitudes met him whence it may be gathered That they did not stay till he came unto them but that so soon as they espyed him coming they ran to meet with him by the way and so meeting with him saluted him thereby shewing their gladness for his coming Now by this carriage and behaviour toward Christ this common People testified both their love and good will and also their reverent respect towards him their love in being so forward to salute him which shewed them to be glad of his coming and their reverent respect in running to meet him by the way Quest Quest What moved the People to shew such love and respect unto Christ Answ Answ There might be sundry causes to move them especially two 1. The excellent Gifts and Graces which appear to be in him as his singular Knowledge and Wisdom his zeal for God's Glory his excellent Gift in teaching them and working Miracles c. These and the like Graces which were in our Saviour Christ this People having formerly discerned and taking notice of either by their own experience or by report from others were hereby moved to love and reverence him 2. The holiness and uprightness which appeared in the Life and Conversation of our Saviour This also moved the People so much to love and reverence him And although they did not yet know or believe him to be the Son of God but conceived him to be a meer man as in outward appearance he seemed yet they could not but think him to be some great and excellent Prophet sent of God to instruct and teach them in heavenly knowledge and to confirm his Doctrine by Miracles Observ 1 Observ 1. From the example and practice of this common People here shewing so much love and reverence unto Christ whom they conceived to be a speciall Prophet of God sent unto them we may hence learn a two-fold Duty which the People of God owe to the faithfull Messengers and Ministers of God especially to their own Pastors 1. The duty of Love to imbrace them with the affection of true and unfained Love yea with a speciall and singular Love in regard of the great and extraordinary good which they reap by their Ministery 1 Thess 5. 12. We beseech you Brethren to know them which labour among you and are over you c. And to esteem them very highly in love for their works sake c. This love they are to shew by the true Fruits and Testimonies of it as by speaking well of them and doing them all the good they can by defending their good Name against the slanders of others c. by loving and delighting in their society and company and not shuning them as strangers as the manner of some is This People were glad at the very sight of Christ c. 2. The duty of reverence and due respect to their Pastors and Ministers esteeming well of them in their heart and shewing it by outward testimonies required by the Apostle 1 Tim. 5. 17. The Elders that Rule well are worthy of double honour especially such as labour in the Word and Doctrine Gal. 4. 14. They received Paul as an Angel yea as Christ himself The People here shewed their reverent respect to Christ by going to meet him as he was coming Use Use To reprove such as fail and come short in these Duties toward the faithfull Ministers of God especially toward their own Pastors Touching the duty of Love how great failing
of God to such as perform works of charity or mercy to the Saints of God in this life It is a sure and certain reward which shall be most certainly given to them of God neither can they lose or be deprived of it God having promised it unto them he is most true and faithful in keeping promise and withal of absolute power able to perform what he hath promised Use Use To strengthen our faith and hope in this excellent reward promised to such as shew love and mercy to the Saints of God and so to perswade and encourage us the more to forwardnesse in the works of charity and mercy to the Saints of God and to good Christians being assured of this both upon the promise of God and restimony of Christ himself sealed with an asseveration and with his own immediate authority that we shall not lose our reward Therefore let us build upon this Word and Promise of Christ and make sure account to be richly rewarded of God himself both in this life so far as shall be good for us and especially in Heaven with the crown of everlasting life for all the love and mercy which we have shewed here to good Christians Though as yet the reward be deferred and in the judgment of carnal reason we see nothing less than any sign of recompence but all the liberality and kindness we have shewed to the Saints of God seemeth to be utterly lost and cast away yet labour by the eyes of faith to see the reward promised and by assured hope to wait for the obtaining of it in due time In the mean time remember that of the Apostle before mentioned Let us not be weary of well-doing For in due season we shall reap c. Mark 9. 42. And whosoever shall offend one of these little ones c. Octob. 7. 1627. VVE heard in the former Verse how our Saviour commended the practice of love and mercy toward his true Disciples by rpomising an excellent and most sure reward to all those who perform but the least work of charity to such Now in this 42. Verse he doth on the contrary threaten a grievous Judgment or Punishment against such as shall offend any that are good Christians or his true Disciples Where consider 1. The persons against whom this punishment is threatned described by their sinne which they commit and for which they are threatned Whosoever shall offend c. 2. A description of the persons offended which are good Christians or Christ's true Disciples 1. By the name or title given them called little ones 2. By one special property such as believe in Christ 3. The Judgment or punishment threatned against those that shall offend such Which punishment is set forth by a comparison from the less to the greater Compared with the puinshment of such a one as is cast into the Sea to be drowned and that with a milstone about his neck and affirmed to be more grievous It is better for him c. First to clear the meaning of the words Whosoever shall offend The word in the Original Text doth properly signifie to lay a stumbling block before another to cause him to stumble or fall and so to hinder him from going on in his way Now from hence it is borrowed and applyed oftentimes in Scripture to such as do use any means whereby to hinder or discourage others in their Christian course Which is done two wayes 1. By evil example of life giving occasion to others of stumbling or falling into sin and so hindring them in their Christian course and in the way unto eternal life and salvation either by doing things unlawfull or by abuse of liberty in things indifferent Rom. 14. 13. Judg this rather that no man put a stumbling block or an occasion to fall in his brothers way So 1 Cor. 8. ult If meat do make my brother to offend or scandalize him c. 2. By any external wrongs injuries or abuses offered to others in word or deed whereby they are offended hindred or discouraged in their Christian course And in this latter sense we are to take the word offend in this place Sic Maldonat Musculus Winkelman Chrysost Enthym c. That this is the meaning may appear by the opposition which is between these words of our Saviour and those which went before in the former Verse For having promised reward to such as shew love to good Christians now on the contrary he threatneth Judgment against such as offer wrong or injury to such But more plainly this opposition is expressed Matth. 18. 5 6. One of these little ones This is not to be understood of children in age but of such good Christians or true Disciples of Christ as do resemble little children in the grace of true humility or lowliness of mind So before Verse 37. And this to be the meaning appears by the words following in that they are said to be such as believe in Christ which cannot be said properly of little children in age who wanting knowledg and discretion are not capable of actual faith though they may have a seed of faith wrought in them secretly by the Holy Ghost Quest Quest Why doth our Saviour here mention this property of humility c. Answ Answ 1. To commend it the more 2. Because he knew that the humility of his disciples would expose them to contempt and injuries That believe in me That is do not onely believe me to be the true Messiah and Saviour of Mankind but also do by true faith rest and rely upon me for eternal life and salvation This is added to set forth the dignity and excellency of Christ's true Disciples and so to aggravate the sin of such as should contemn or abuse them It is better for him that a milstone were hanged c. For the better understanding of these words we must know That St. Hierome writing upon that place Matth. 18. 6. doth observe That it was a custome among the ancient Jews to put some Malefactors to this kind of death viz. to ●ye a great stone about them and so to drown them in the water And the like punishment was in use also among the Grecians as Casaubon observeth out of Diodorus Siculus and Athanasius for they used to put some Malefactors into a Vessell of Lead and so to cast them into the water and drown them Casaub Annot. in Matth. 18. 6. This being so it is very probable that our Saviour here alludeth to this kind of punishment used for great offenders either among the Jews or other Nations and his purpose and meaning is by this bodily punishment inflicted upon malefactors in those times to set forth the grievousnesse of the sin and of that eternal Judgment and punishment in Hell which shall be inflicted of God upon such as do offer wrong or injury to good Christians It is better for him c. That is if he should have a milstone hanged about his neck and so be
will not abase themselves that they may honour Christ c. Where is the zeal of such which they should shew in doing honour to Christ Where is their love to Christ How far short do these come of the zeal that was here in the Disciples and in the multitude c. Such as have hitherto been faulty this way are here to take notice of their sin that is of their coldness negligence and slackness in seeking the honour of Christ and in doing honour to him and for time to come labour and pray for true zeal for the honour of Christ Think it not enough to do some good duties in way of honouring him but to be truly zealous earnest and forward in doing the same This zeal doth exceedingly commend all good works and Christian duties and without it they are not praise-worthy nor accepted of God Observ 6 Observ 6. From the persons who did all this honour to Christ viz. the Disciples who were poor and mean men in outward estate and the common people who were of low degree not the Scribes Pharisees or Rulers c. for these were enemies and hinderers of this honour done to Christ as appeareth Matth. 21. 15. Hence we learn that usually and for most part the poorer and meaner sort are more zealous and forward in honouring Christ than the great men of the world Thus it was here and at other times Joh. 7. 48. Have any of the Rulers or of the Pharisees believed on him But this people who knoweth not the Law c. Reason Reason It pleaseth God usually to call the meaner sort to the knowledg of Christ and of the Gospel and to give them faith rather than to the great ones of the World Luke 10. 21. Thou hast hid these things from the wise and revealed them to babes c. 1 Cor. 1. 26. Ye see your calling how that not many wise after the flesh not many mighty c. and Jam. 2. 5. Hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith c. Use 1 Vse 1. To answer such as object against the true professours of Christ and of the Gospel the outward poverty meanness or baseness of such as make this profession Thus do the Papists and others now adayes as if this were any good argument or any prejudice to the truth of Religion or to the professours of it that many or most of them are men of mean estate and degree in the World On the contrary this maketh rather for the truth and for the zealous professours of it inasmuch as it hath been so usually and for the most part in all Ages and times of the Gospel In our Saviour's time the poor received the Gospel So in the Apostles times c. Vse 2 Use 2. See how unfit it is to tye our selves to the example of great men in matters of Religion yea how dangerous seeing they are usually less zealous and forward to honour Christ than the poorer sort yea they are often the greatest enemies and hinderers of the Honour and Glory of Christ c. Mark 11. 9 10. And they that went before and they that followed cryed saying Hosanna c. Octob. 11. 1629. THe Evangelist having shewed how the common people honoured Christ by their Deeds some in casting their garments in the way and others in cutting down branches of Trees and strawing them Now he shews further how they honoured him in their words viz. by a joyful and triumphant Acclamation or crying out which they used before and after him as he rode on the way They that went before and they that followed cryed saying Hosanna c. Where consider 1. The persons that made this solemn Acclamation Those that went before and those that followed That is to say the common people who now accompanied Christ in the way some of which went before him and some followed after him so as he rode in the midst between them in a kind of Royal or Kingly state 2. The Acclamation or crying it self which the people used 3. The matter of their cry or words uttered c. Hosanna Blessed be he c. Of the first The persons who thus honoured Christ I have spoken of these before Therefore I proceed to the Acclamation it self They cryed With a loud voyce as may be gathered from Luke 19. 37. The multitude of Disciples rejoyced and praised God with a loud voyce Which shews their zeal and earnestness in this duty of honouring Christ The same also appeareth by their repetition of the word Hosanna But of this before Now followeth the words which they uttered in this Acclamation or crying out before and after Christ First to open the meaning Hosanna This is an Hebrew word signifying as much as Save I pray thee or Save I beseech thee It is compounded of two other words viz. Hoshiah which signifies Save and Na or Anna which signifies I pray thee So it includes a prayer or Petition of the people wherein they desire and pray to God to save preserve and keep the person of Christ their King and Messiah for so they did now conceive and acknowledg him to be Further note That this word Hosanna together with the words immediately following is all edged and taken out of Psal 118. 25. where the people upon the day of the installing of David into the Kingdom use this solemn Prayer Save now I beseech thee O Lord c. Where in the Hebrew Text the words are these Anna Jehovah Hoshiah Na. Now because as the Learned do observe this word Hosanna being taken out of that place of the Psalm was a word which was afterward taken up and commonly used by the people of God in their publick and solemn prayers or thanksgivings which they used upon the day of their Feast of Tabernacles when they were by the Law of God to carry branches of Palm-Trees Willows c. Levit. 23. 40. in token of their publick joy therefore the Evangelists do not translate the word into the language wherein they wrote but set it down in Hebrew as it was commonly known and used by the people Hence also it is that the Jews at this day when they keep their Feast of Tabernacles do still use this word Hosanna in their publick and solemn forms of prayer of thanksgiving Buxtorf Synagog Jud. pag. 361. Here note further that this word Hosanna as it was ●ramonly used at this and other times by the Jews is not only a word of Prayer or Petition but also of ●ublick joy and thanksgiving for some great benefit c. So here it seems to be used Luke 19. 30. The multitude of Disciples rejoyced and praised God c. Vide Jansen Harm Blessed is he that cometh c. Or Blessed be he that cometh c. as it is translated out of the Hebrew Psal 118. 26. It seems to be a form of Prayer or Petition as the former word Hosanna in which they pray and desire that Christ their King and