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A08402 The sinne against the Holy Ghost discouered and other Christian doctrines deliuered: in twelue sermons vpon part of the tenth chapter of the epistle to the Hebrewes. By Sebastian Benefield ... Benefield, Sebastian, 1559-1630. 1615 (1615) STC 1872; ESTC S101615 138,488 190

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THE SINNE AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST DISCOVERED AND OTHER CHRISTIan doctrines delivered IN TWELVE SERMONS VPON PART of the tenth Chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrewes By SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD Doctor of Divinity and Professour for the Lady Margaret in the Vniversitie of OXFORD 1. COR. 10.12 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall AC OX AT OXFORD Printed by Ioseph Barnes Printer to the Vniversitie 1615. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE WILLIAM LORD PAGET BARON OF BEAVDESERT GRACE AND PEACE BE MVLTIPLIED RIGHT HONOVRABLE MANY yeares haue expired since these Sermons began first to haue their life in this Famous Vniversitie They haue hitherto lyen in obscurity Only a few copies of some of them haue beene transcribed for the vse of a few Now they all see the light They were penned with intent to worke honest good mindes in Gods people If they shall so farre prevaile with the Christian Reader they haue their happynesse Their maine Subiect is the greatest of Sinnes the SINNE against the HOLY GHOST I describe it to be not every sinne of presumption or of desperation or against knowledge and Conscience but such a kinde of presumptuous offence wherein the profession of the Christian faith is totally renounced and that of set purpose and resolved malice against the very Majestie of Almighty God himselfe and his Christ our ever blessed Saviour A sinne absolutely vnpardonable There remaineth no sacrifice for it The more neede is there that every man be armed against it For this purpose at this time is this poore mite cast into the Lords treasurie It 's the best I haue in readynesse Such as it is I dedicate it to your HONOVR vnder whose protection it may lodge in safety as vnder the covert of Minerva's shield I may not seeke to any other to Patronize it It is your Honours of due The liberall maintenance which it pleaseth your HONOVR to extend to the Reader of Divinitie for the Ladie MARGARET for his further encouragement and support challengeth MORE from me Meane time accept this my good Lord as a gratefull agnition of your so rare bounty GOD Almighty the great recompenser who rendreth to every one according to their workes keepe you giue you life make you blessed in this world and when the resurrection of the just shall be giue HE vnto you that never-fading Crowne of glory From my Study in CORPVS CHRISTI COLLEGE in OXFORD March 25. 1615. Your HONOVRS in all duty and service SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD THE FIRST SERMON VPON PART OF THE TENTH CHAPter of the Epistle to the Hebrewes HEBR. 10. VER 26.27 26 For if we sinne willingly after that wee haue receaued the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne 27 But a fearefull looking for of iudgement violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries IN this Scripture the Apostle endeavouring to perswad the Hebrewes vs in them to continue persevere constantly in the faith which they had and we haue in Christ Iesus and willing to shake of from them and vs all carelesnesse and fleshly securitie presuming so farre of our sluggish dulnesse as that possibly it may not bee healed without sharpe medicines vseth these words nothing pleasing to carnall minds for that they are very forcible sharper indeed then any two edged sword to pricke all such consciences as are well nigh seared vp Herein it may please you to consider two things 1 What it is from which in this place wee are disswaded it is from sinning willingly after that wee haue receaued the knowledge of the truth in these words for if wee sinne willingly c. 2 What inducements are brought to disswade vs from so sinning They are two 1 Because if thus we sinne wee shall never bee able by any sacrifice to make an atonement betweene vs and God revenging vs. In the latter words of the 26. verse there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne 2 Because if thus we sinne we can looke for no better then eternall destruction specified vers 27. by a fearefull looking for of iudgement violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries In the first general part we may be moued to the consideration of three circumstances 1 Who they needs must bee that may fall into this sinne from which the Apostle so effectually dehorteth vs they are such as haue receaved the knowledge of the truth 2 With what minde this sinne is committed The minde must be willing 3 What manner of sinne it is I shall at this time content my selfe to speake only of the first generall note and some of the circumstances therein If we sin willingly after wee haue receaued the knowledge of the truth My first observation here toucheth the persons who alone doe fall into this sinne Here they are said to haue receaved the knowledge of the truth They are said to haue beene once lightned and to haue tasted of the heavenly gift and to haue bin made partakers of the holy Ghost and to haue tasted of the good word of God and of the power of the world to come Heb. 6.4 5. They are said to haue escaped from the filthinesse of the world through the knowledge of the Lord of our Savior Iesus Christ Mat. 12.43 Our Saviour speaking of such saith that the vncleane spirit is gone out of them and verse 44. that they are swept and garnished and Mat. 13.20 that they heare the word and incōtinētly with ioy receaue it Other like places for the same purpose might be alleaged but these may suffice to shew that God hath many waies made himselfe knowne vnto them that he hath given them true vnderstanding that he hath quickned their spirits to receaue gladly his Gospell that they had a feeling of the kingdome of Heaven that they had knowne sinne to be ful of misery and vexation of the spirit that they had confessed all true ioy to be only in Christ Such is the state of knowledge to which they are called such are the graces wherewith they are endued Whence it necessarily followeth that nor Turkes nor Infidels nor Atheists nor Epicures haue yet sinned this sinne nor Pharaoh a vessell of Gods wrath nor Sodome and Gomorah with all their filthines nor blasphemous a Esai 36.13 Rabshakeh making the Idols of the nations equall with the God of Heaven haue yet sinned this sinne A curse I graunt hath gone out against them and all like them and truly are they accursed their sins haue beene abominable bondslaues are they of Satan and strangers from the God of Israel but yet must I say that a heavier curse is passed forth against all such as sinne this sinne The time will come and farre of it cannot bee for long since it was at hand when it shall be easier for Turke for Infidel for Atheist for Epicure for Pharaoh for Sodome for Gomorah the like then for such as sinne this sinne Much easier for Turk for Infidell and the rest then for those wicked
as S. Paule sheweth when he saith comfort him lest he be swallowed vp of overmuch heavines 2. Cor. 2.7 So true is one part of our former position the childe of God may fall grievously may fal dāgerously For he may quench the spirit within him after repentance he may sinne againe he may sin presumptuously he may sinne desperatly The childe of God may fall grievously may fall dangerously yet cannot fall finally in the end nor vtterly at any time The reason hereof is this after that he is sanctified he receiveth from God an other speciall grace you may call it corroboration the strengthning power of Christ Hence is it that Paul praieth for the Ephesians that they may be strengthened in the inner man Ephes 3.16 and for the Colossians that they might be strengthened with the glorious power of Christ Coloss 1.11 and of himselfe he saith that he is able to doe al things through the power of Christ that strengtheneth him Philip. 4.13 This corroboration this strengthening power is that that raiseth vp the children of God as oft as they are fallen DAVID in the anguish of his soule may say I am cast out of thy sight O Lord Psal 31.22 Marke how this strengthning power lifteth him vp first it maketh him confesse that he spake that in hast and then it putteth into his minde a Veruntamen a particle of better grace wherewith he correcteth his hasty speech Veruntamen audisti vocem deprecationū mearum cum vociferarer ad te I said in my hast I am cast out of thy sight YET thou hardest the voice of my praier when I cryed vnto thee And in the same Psalme verse 12. he vseth those harsh words iarring very vnpleasantly in his owne eares striking out of tune I am forgotten as a dead man out of minde I am like a broken vessel And here see how this strengthning power helps him with a verò a note of better sound Ego verò in te confido IEHOVA dicens Deus meus es I am forgotten as a dead man out of minde I am like a broken vessell BVT l Psal 11.14 I trusted in thee O LORD I said thou art my God When Ionas had beene cast into the bottome m Ion. 2.3 in the middest of the Sea and the floods had compassed him about when all the surges and all the waues had past over him then looking on his former disobedience he said I am cast away out of thy sight O Lord Ion. 2.4 and here also this strengthning power revived Ionas spirits with a Veruntamen and an Attamen words of comfort Veruntamen pergā intueri in templum sanctitatis tuae Attamen eduxisti à corruptione vitam meam IEHOVA Deus mi. I said I am cast away out of thy sight O Lord n Vers 4. YET will I looke againe toward thy holy temple The o Vers 5. waters compassed me about vnto the soule the depth cloased me round about and the weedes were wrapt about mine head p Vers 6. I went downe to the bottome of the mountaines the earth with her barres was about me for ever q Vers 7. YET hast thou brought vp my life from the pit O LORD my God One hath noted vpon this place that if it were not for Attamen verò and veruntamen but yet notwithstanding and such like comforting particles our hearts might quake within vs to see such passions in the Saints of God But it is the Lords property ever to send a gracious raine vpon his inheritāce to refresh it when it is weary Psal 68.9 and true it is that Hosea saith though we looke for a day or two as if we were dead and forlorne yet r Hos 6.2 after those two daies he will reviue vs and the thirde day he will raise vs vp and we shall liue in his sight So true is the other part of our former position the childe of God cannot fall finally in the end nor vtterly at any time For God hath blessed his children with repentant hearts And ever blessed shall they be that are so blessed by the Lord. For he hath made a decree with himselfe it belongeth to the new Testament it is ratified by the death of the Testator it is witnessed by three in heavē by three in earth never shal it be altered and this is the DECREE At what time soever a sinner ſ Ezech. 18.21 whosoever he be shall repent him of his sinnes whatsoever they be and shall doe iudgement and iustice he shall surely liue he shall not die If he truely repent of his wickednes he neede not be troubled either by the vexations of this wretched life or by the horror of conscience or by the malice of many foes be they men or Devils and if Devils be they seaven in one a legiō in an other all the principalities all the powers of darknesse in the third for he shall be assured to haue forgiuenes therefore I say againe At what time soever a sinner whosoever he be shall repent him of his sinnes whatsoever they be and shall doe iudgement and iustice he shall not die Hitherto haue you seene how willingly this sinne is cōmitted and how Gods children though sinning also willingly are freed from it In the third place must I speake of the sinne it selfe THE SECOND SERMON HEB. 10. VER 26. 26 For if we sinne willingly after that we haue receaved the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne NOW are we to speake of the sinne frō which we are in this Scripture dehorted This sinne seated in such a subiect as they are who haue receaved the knowledge of the truth and proceeding from such a cause as is a willing a set an obstinate malice against God and against his Christ is the Sin against the holy Ghost The very naming whereof before I proceed to the handling of it causeth me to remēber you and my selfe of two blemishes wherewith the spirit of man in such a businesse as now we haue in hand vseth very much to be infected 1 Too much boldnesse 2 Too much feare Solomon hath said there is a generatiō which are pure in their owne conceite and yet are not washed from their filthines Prov. 30.12 Experience maketh me presume that I may as truely say there is a generation that are wise and learned in their own conceit and yet they are not washed from their folly yet they are not washed from their ignorance Many men will boast every one of his owne goodnes but who can finde a faithfull man saith the wise man Prov. 20.6 So many thinke they stand yet stand not many thinke they beleeue yet beleeue not they knowe not what faith meaneth many looke to be saved yet are ignorant who shall saue them many would be counted a Ioh. 3.10 masters in Israel teachers of others yet knowe they no more then Nicodemus what it is to be b Vers 9. borne againe So
knowledge of the truth let vs hold it fast till our Lord Iesus come he will deliver vs from that houre of tentation which shall come vpon all the world to trie thē that dwell vpon the earth Thus much of the persons who alone doe fall into this sinne Now see we with what mind this sinne is committed For that is my second circumstance If we sinne willingly How desirously with what consent of mind this sinne is committed it appeareth partly in this place by this word willingly and partly by those wordes Heb. 6.6 they crucifie againe vnto themselues the sonne of God and make a mocke of him They crucifie againe the sonne of God that notes their envy and malice they crucifie him againe vnto themselues that argues their willingnesse Their consciences their hearts filled with envy and malice doe make thē with all willingnesse commit such abomination This their willing mind to doe so ill may arise from three of their conceits One is that a man may repent when he will and this perswasion they haue because Ezech. 18.21 they find that at what time soever a sinner shall returne from all his sinnes that hee hath committed and shall doe that which is lawfull and right hee shall surely liue and shall not die all his transgressions that he hath cōmitted they shall not be mentioned vnto him but in his righteousnesse that he hath done he shall liue Here they may conceaue that late repentance is seldome true repentance and iustly may they feare lest that repentance which they frame to themselues when they are dying die with them The first lesson that Iohn Baptist taught was Repent for the kingdome of Heaven is at hand Mat. 3.2 The first lesson that the Disciples taught was Repent for the kingdome of Heaven is at hand Math. 10.7 And the first lesson which Christ himselfe taught was Repent too for the kingdome of Heaven is at hand Mat. 4.17 Here is no posting over to the houre of death Repentance must be first of all learned both by young and old It is not for a young man to say I will repent for certainely could Iudas haue repented whē he had listed he would never haue g Mat. 27.5 Act. 1.18 hanged himselfe neither is it safe for an old man to say I haue repented he hath lived long enough to knowe that God is I am and therefore is best pleased with I am he little cares for I was or I will be A second conceit of theirs making their mind so willing to doe wickedly is that the best man that is hath seaven falls every day into grosse sinnes and here they alleage that place Prov. 24.16 the righteous man falleth seaven times in a day and riseth againe But we may answer that this place is to bee vnderstood of fals into afflictions and calamities rather then of falls into actuall sinnes and so makes little for their purpose Their third conceit is that their small sinnes or hidden sinnes are no sinnes and that their greatest sinnes wherein they liue lie wallowing most dangerously are but sinnes of infirmitie And here they are perfit in the reckoning vp of Peters fal Lots incest Solomons Idolatrie Noahs drunkennesse Davids murther Sarahs lie Rebeccahs perswading her sonne Iacob to beguile his owne father the theft of Onesimus the many Concubines of the Patriarchs and the like they finde that the grace of God hath abounded aboue sinne in all these and why may it not abound aboue their sinnes also In this resolution they hold on their owne and proper walke Impij in circuitu ambulant Psal 12.8 the wicked haue their waies but they are crooked they are circular endlesse waies they walke by compasse not much vnlike their father the Divell who testifieth of himselfe that he had compassed the whole earth Iob. 1.7 they walke by compasse indeed but never towards the marke never towards the price that is set before them For how can they attaine thereto as long as they goe thus wheeling about to no purpose like the turning of a mill which when it hath laboured the whole day long is foūd at night in the selfe same place where it first began So these men in circuitu ambulant they walke by compasse and when the night shall come their last night the last houre of their liues they shall bee found not to haue proceeded one step forwards except it be in wickednesse To this point I say howsoever grace aboundeth aboue sin yet accursed are they yea ever cursed shall they bee who doe sinne that grace and blessing may abound vnto them Rom. 6.1 we are forbidden to doe h Rom. 3.8 evill where we certainely know that good may come thereof much lesse may wee make the grace of God a defence for our sinnes This must bee our shield there is no i Rom. 8.1 condemnation to the righteous though hee fall many times a day but if any man shall sinne presuming of Gods mercies let such a one knowe that his damnation is iust and himselfe is like that theefe that stealeth because hee seeth one among twentie pardoned by the Prince Thus you see with what minde this sinne is committed the heart is full of envy full of malice and the minde in all willingnesse assenteth But do not Gods children having received the knowledge of the truth sinne also willingly If they do how thē is it that they are freed from this sinne for which there remaineth no more sacrifice This doubt will be cleare if we doe but consider this one position The childe of God though he cannot fall finally in the end nor vtterly at any time may notwithstanding fall grievously may fall dangerously First by his default the graces of God may be lessened in him and therefore hath S. Paule exhorted the Thessalonians not to quench the spirit 1. Thess 5.19 the Ephesians not to grieue the holy spirit of God Ephes 4.30 By his default then the graces of God may be lessened in him yea they may be so buried in him for a time as that he may be like a man in a trance who both by his owne sense and by the iudgement of the Physitian is taken for dead Hither may you referre the estate of Peter of David and of others whom I haue already mentioned vnto you Secondly he may fall againe into the same sinne after repentance and this may wee learne of Paule praying the Corinthians in Christes steed that they would be k 2. Cor. 5.20 reconciled to God who indeed were reconciled to God before Thirdly he may sin presumptuously that is he may sinne wittingly willingly wilfully Against this David praied vnto the LORD Psal 19.13 keepe thy servaunt from presumptuous sinnes that he was in danger of them appeareth by the words following let them not reigne over me Lastly he may sinne desperately and this is a fearefull sinne he may despaire of Gods mercies for a time as the incestuous mā was like to doe
seene the difference betweene despaire the Sinne against the holy Ghost as also what cōfort what ioy may from thence shine vnto feeble and weake spirits Now seeke we farther into this sinne Let vs first consider what manner of rebellion it is Secondly in what regard it is so named Thirdly what obiect it hath The manner of rebellion namely how farre they fall awaie who haue fallen into this sinne we shall perceiue if we looke vnto the beginning of the sixt chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrewes There verse 1.2 the Apostle speaketh of repentance frō dead workes of faith towards God of the doctrine of baptisme laying on of hands of the resurrection from the dead and of eternall iudgement All these he calleth the beginning the foundation of Christianity Then verse the 6. he speaketh of an apostacie of a falling away from all these points even from the foundatiō and first beginnings of Christian faith giving vs thereby to vnderstand that they who are holden in this transgressiō haue sinned this sinne haue forsaken all the principles of religiō haue lost their former light haue departed from their first vnderstāding As for repentance they cast it behinde them and the first faith they regard it not they esteeme baptisme no more then the washing of their hands neither care they to be received in to the Church of God the resurrection of the dead that feedes them with many a merry conceit they thinke pleasantly with thēselues what manner of bodies they shal haue of what age these their bodies shall be whether they shall haue haire and nailes and the like But the eternall iudgement the remembrance indeede thereof sometimes frighteth them yet are they incouraged againe when they think how farre of it is So preferre they darknesse before light ignorance before knowledge errour before hope infidelity before faith shame before glory a cursed death before eternall life They are fallen away from repentance and therefore impossible shall it be for them to repent they are fallen away from faith towards God and therefore never may they hope to beleeue againe they are fallen away from the doctrine of baptisme laying on of hands and therfore are they not likly any more by those meanes to be illuminated they are fallen away from the doctrine of resurrection and therefore though they rise againe it shall be to their owne confusion they are fallen away from the doctrine of eternal iudgement and therefore shall eternall iudgement swallow them vp It is no more but thus they haue fallen away wholy from CHRIST they haue despised the sweet graces of the HOLY SPIRIT wherewith they once were lightened and therefore shal they be fed with wormewood and be made to drinke the water of gall and not this only but let all the rivers and streames of fresh water which glad the city of God and comfort the soules of the faithfull runne also into their soules they will resist them and driue them backe they will admit no entrance for any perswasion of the graciousnes and kindnes of the Lord though it be preached a thousand times They haue sinned against the holie Ghost and condemnation is their portion You see in the manner of rebellion how farre they may fall away now for the name It is not called the Sinne against the holy Ghost as if it were against the Godhead of the holy Ghost for the same God is also father and sonne The godhead of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost is all one their glory is equal and their maiesty coeternall nor is it so called as if it were against the person of the holy Ghost for that is no greater then the person of the father and of the sonne The whole three persons are coeternall together and coequall Nunquid alia est offensa filij alia spiritûs sancti saith S. Ambrose De spiritu sancto Lib. 1. cap. 3. His answer is Sicut vna dignitas sic vna iniuria Can the holy Ghost bee grieved and the sonne well pleased No Sicut vna dignitas sic vna iniuria The Father Sonne and holy Ghost haue all one glory therefore an iniurie done to one is done to all Trium personarum non sunt divisae offensae saith the Master of the Sentences Lib. 2. Dist 43. art 4. It is impossible that a sinne committed against the holy Ghost should not also bee committed against the Father and against the Sonne yet saith he Peccatorum genera distincta sunt you may vse a distinction betweene sinnes where he sheweth that although power wisdome goodnesse be one and the same in all three persons yet sometimes in a more peculiar sort there is ascribed power to the father wisedome to the Sonne and goodnesse to the goly Ghost and hence ariseth this distinction of sinnes If a man sinne through infirmitie he may be said to sinne against the Father for in him is power he is the father of might If hee sinne through ignorance he may be said to sinne against the Sonne for in him is no want of knowledge he is the wisdome of the Father If he sin through wilfull malice hee may bee said to sinne against the holy Ghost for in him is all goodnesse his office is to sanctifie You see then why this Sinne is called the sinne against the holy Ghost not because it is against the Godhead of the holy Ghost nor yet because it is against the person of the holy Ghost but because it is against the goodnesse of the holy Ghost against the goodnesse that is against the graces of the holy spirit given vs to the setting out of the praises of the LORD For whosoever shall despise those good graces turne them to the contempt of Gods maiestie and glory and tread thē vnder foot and account them prophane and purposely and wilfully Heb. 6.6 and malitiously carry them away to all wantonnesse hee crucifieth againe vnto himselfo the sonne of God hee despites the spirit of grace he sinnes against the holy Ghost I shall not need to speake of the obiect which I proposed vnto you in the third place the two former notes haue made it sufficiently manifest that the malice of this sinne is directed against the whole TRINITIE against the very maiestie of God himselfe and against his Christ it directly respecteth the first table of the morall law it is not any particular slipping aside it is a generall defection a generall apostacie from God and that totally Here should I shew you what punishment is provided for such sinners but that discourse is better fitting the later words of my Text. Yet that wee bee not swallowed vp by secure and carelesse living as long as we heare nothing of any punishmēt due for so great a sinne let it not be troublesome to vs at once to take a view of it Certaine it is an end shall come vpon them yet never shall they end death shall take them away yet never
say what is the matter and the truth requiring our assent to Elihues words Iob. 33.14 God speaketh once and twise and man seeth it not and a greater then either Sirachs sonne or Elihu even Iesus our Saviour in the parable Mat. 13.4 teacheth vs that much seed sowen miscaryeth some by the high waies side some among thornes some vpon stony ground haue made me bold to recal to your remēbrances what before by me was delivered And if herein I shall seeme tedious to any I can say no more for excusing my selfe then what S. Austine said when he was enforced to some iteratiō lib. 2. de baptismo contra Donatist c. 2. Ignoscāt scientes ne offendantur nescientes satius est enim offerre habenti quā differre non habentem Let those that know it already pardon me lest I offend those that are ignorant for it is better to giue to him that hath then to turne him away that hath not May it please you therfore to remember how in the words containing an effectuall perswasion for our constant continuing and persevering in the faith which the Hebrewes had and we haue in Christ Iesus or which is the same containing a disswasion a dehortation from our back-slidings and fallings away from the same faith I proposed to your godly considerations two things 1 What it is from which in this place we are disswaded it is from sinning willingly after that we haue receaved the knowledge of the truth 2 What reasons are vsed by our Apostle to disswade frō so sinning and they are two 1 Because if thus we sinne we shal never be able by any sacrifice to make an atonement betweene vs and God revenging in these words There remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne 2 Because if thus we sinne we can looke for no better then for eternal destructiō specified verse 27. by two things by Iudgement and by Fire For if we sinne willingly after c. In the first generall part my endeavour was to vnfold three circumstances 1 Who they needes must be that doe fall into this sinne 2 With what minde this sinne vseth to be committed 3 What the sinne it selfe is In the First of these was manifested the subiect of this sin Second the efficient cause Third the name the nature and the obiect of it Touching the subiect of this sinne I meane the persons in whom it is possible for this sinne to haue dominion we haue heard that they are neither Turkes nor Infidels nor Atheists nor Epicures not such as Pharaoh was though a vessel of Gods wrath nor such as Sodom and Gomorah were though ful of filthinesse nor such as blasphemous Rabshakeh was though by him the Idols of the nations were accounted equall with the God of Heauen but such as haue received the knowledge of the truth so my text hath such as haue beene once lightened and haue tasted of the heavenly gift and haue beene made partakers of the Holy Ghost and haue tasted of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come so this Apostle saith Heb. 6.4 5. such as haue escaped from the filthinesse of this world through their knowledge in our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ so S. Peter telleth vs 2. Pet. 2.20 such as haue swept garnished their houses after the departure of the vncleane spirit witnesse our Saviour Christ Mat. 12.43 44. Who also Mat. 13.20 saith they are such as heare the word and incontinently with ioy receiue it This at the first sight may seeme to be that vesture of needle worke wrought with diverse colours wherewith the Queene was cloathed it may seeme to be the robe of Adam that his robe of innocencie of holynesse and of the grace of God wherwith before his fall he was invested To haue receaved the knowledge of the truth to haue beene once lightned to haue tasted of the heavenly gift to haue beene made partakers of the Holy Ghost to haue escaped from the filthynesse of this world to heare the worde incontinently with ioy receiue it are ●hey not sweet blessings descending frō the LORD of lights What could the Lord haue a Esai 5.4 done more vnto his vineyard then that he hath done to it Yet see the perversity of the nature it hath in steede of grapes it may bring forth wilde grapes briars and thornes the Queene may be stript of her iewels Adam spoiled of his robes why may not the soule of man be robbed of her ornaments and rich attire Surely she hath no great priviledge to the contrary For all these before recited graces may be lost the possessours of them may so fall away as that it shall be impossible for them to be renued by repentance The consideration of this point might haue moved our hearts to wisedome it might haue perswaded vs to beware of presumption for b 1. Cor. 10.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he that only thinkes he standeth may fall away though he that standeth indeed can never so fall it might I say haue perswaded vs to beware of presumptiō seriously c Philip. 2.12 to worke out our salvatiō with feare and trembling since we haue beene once lightned to endeavour our selues to increase this light in vs since we haue tasted of the heavēly gift to cease not to tast it stil since we haue been made partakers of the Holy Ghost to rest not but to walk frō grace to grace since we haue received the knowledge of the truth to forsake it not but to hold it fast till our Lord Iesus come For behold he commeth shortly and his d Rev. 22.12 reward is with him to giue every man according as his workes shall be Blessed are they that keepe his commandemēts for to them in that day of his comming shall he giue to eate of the tree of life and of the hidden e Rev. 2.17 Manna to enter in through the gates into the citie to receaue a white stone to be cloathed f Rev. 3.5 in white aray to bee made g Rev. 3.12 pillers in the Temple of God and to sit with God himselfe in his h Rev. 3.21 throne In the second place we heard that the efficient cause of this sinne is a set a wilfull and an obstinate malice deepely rooted in the hearts of some backsliders by reason of a threefold misconceit wherewith even wee also vse too much to please our selues 1 We are very ready to perswade our selues that wee may repent when we will Else would we continue to walke by compasse as we doe in our perverse and crooked waies 2 Finding it written that the righteous falleth seavē times a day and riseth againe are we not encouraged to thinke it no great preiudice against our selues to haue a few falles 3 We shame not to hold opinion that our small sinnes hidden sinnes are no sinnes and that our greatest sinnes wherein wee liue and lie most dangerously are but sinnes of infirmitie And
from Christ but firmly continue in that calling and profession which they haue once vndertaken If there be any which haue not a true feeling and touch of this the Apostles most louing invitation to be constant in the faith of Christ they are altogether dead in their sinnes But they which liue by the power of God with Christ are wonderfully affected when they heare such punishments denounced And no maruaile For here we be taught by plaine expresse words that God will certainely most severely be revenged of those who doe willingly sinne after they haue receaued the knowledge of the truth He that shall willingly sinne after the knowledge of the truth he that shall wilfully cast away the grace which he hath receaved he that shal depart from the death and blood of Christ not by any particular sin but by a totall renoūcing of the faith to him there remaines no more sacrifice for sinnes but a fearefull looking for of iudgment and violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries These things are plainly deliuered in the 26 and 27 verses 26 If wee sinne willingly after that wee haue receaved the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes 27 But a fearefull looking for of iudgement and violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries The proposition is in it selfe so certaine and perspicuous that the gates of Hell shall neuer prevaile against the truth therof But because we are dull and slow of heart to beleeue all things which the most holy witnesses of Christ haue spoken therfore the Apostle doth here apply himselfe for our good and doth strengthen and proue the foresaid truth with a double argument The first whereof is drawen from a comparison with smaller matters The second from Gods owne words Both the arguments are very fit and apposite one to refute the Iewes the other to excite and stirre vs all vp The first argument is expressed vers 28 29. wherein that spirit of truth which the world cannot receaue doth assure the faithfull that all they shall certainely die which despise MOSES law and so the same spirit doth as it were lead vs by the hand to a serious and earnest meditation of that most bitter punishment wherewith all those questionlesse shall bee tortured which tread vnder foot the Sonne of God What could be spokē more plainely what more forcibly Hee that despiseth Moses law dyeth without mercy vnder two or three witnesses v. 28. Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall he be worthy which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God counteth the blood of the Testament as an vnholy thing wherewith he was sanctified and doth despite the spirit of grace v. 29. We haue the second argument vers 30. and it is grounded vpon two testimonies which are recorded Deut. 32. The first vers 35. Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD The second ver 36. The LORD shall iudge his people The strength of these testimonies is nothing weakned by that which goes before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee knowe him that hath said we knowe God is not as man that he should lie wee knowe he is alwaies like himselfe wee knowe hee doth never repent of those things which he hath said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We knowe him that hath said it vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the Lord and againe the Lord shall iudge his people The proofe of this doctrine the Apostle doth elegantly conclude vers 31. It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God By which men being warned of the fearefull severitie of Gods iudgement may learne so to apply themselues that they never fall from Christ It is a fearefull thing But to whom To the faithful No. Holy David when by Gods commandement the Prophet Gad offered him the choise of three evills I am saith he 2. Sam. 24.14 in a wonderfull streight let vs fall now into the hand of the LORD for his mercies are great So then to them which liue by faith it is not a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of God On whom then falleth this feare Truely vpon all the wicked and vnbeleeuers but especially vpon Apostataes those which fall from Christ forsake the true religion and betray the Gospell But yet these liue Liue yea liue to bee olde are lustie and strong Peace is in their habitations neither hath God laid his scourge vpon them they toyle not themselues as others doe Psal 73.5 neither are they plagued like other men They gird thēselues with pride as with a chaine and cloath themselues with crueltie as with a garment Harken now and be learned Psal 73.8 yee that set your face against Heaven Hence yee may learne that our God is a living God that God it is who with his yron rod wil breake the stifnecked Psal 2.9 like a potters vessell that this is the God beside whom there is no other that it is he alone who both can and will destroy the wicked man both soule and body in hell fire It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Greeke Epigrammatist saith Insuave est quicquid nimium est nam dicitur olim Mel quoque si immodica est copia bilis erit Too much of any thing is vnpleasant distastfull neither is it good to eate too much hony Prov. 25.27 because it turneth into choler Therefore I will endeavour Beloued in our Saviour Iesus Christ to speake so and such things which shal not be distastfull vnto you I will not repeate those things which I haue heretofore spoken of the Proposition and of the first argument by which the proposition is confirmed I wil briefly declare the force of the second argument which is conteined in the 30. verse Wee knowe him that hath said Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD And againe The LORD shall iudge his people In which verse I thinke three things especially worthy our observation The first that God is true in all his promises and sayings Which I gather out of these words VVee knowe him that hath said The second that God will revenge himselfe not only of those iniuries which are done to himselfe but of those also which his people suffer This the words imply that immediatly follow Vengeance belongeth vnto me I wil recompense saith the LORD The third that God will most severely and sharply punish his owne people This is contained in the last words The LORD shall iudge his people From the first of these I wil beginne my intended discourse and therewith conclude It is a common saying in the Schoolmen Deum non tantùm verum esse sed ipsam esse veritatem that God is not only true but truth it selfe Truth in himselfe in his workes and in his words God is truth in himselfe both because he is most truely that which he seeth and knoweth himselfe to
any more by these meanes to bee illuminated since they are fallen away from the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead when they shall rise againe they shall rise to their own damnation and last of all since they are fallen away from the doctrine of eternal iudgement needs must it come to passe that eternall iudgement shall devoure them It is no more but this since they are fallen away wholy from Christ since they haue troden him vnder foot since they haue despised those sweet graces of the holy spirit wherewith they were once lightned they shall be fed with wormewood and be made to drinke the water of gall and somewhat happie were they were this all But this is not all for let all the rivers and streames of fresh water which glad the Citie of God and comfort the soules of the faithfull runne also into their soules they will resist them and driue them backe they will admit no entrance for any perswasion of the graciousnesse and kindnesse of the Lord though it be preached to them ten thousand times they haue sinned against the holy Ghost and condemnation is their portion There remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne No more I say For Christs blood which was once shed for mans ransome may be shed no more The price which was once paid for man may be paid no more all the riches of Solomon all the treasures of Ezechias al the silver al the gold within the bowels of the earth could never haue mounted to so high a reckoning Christ hath once spared his own most pretious blood for mans redemption but will spare it no more Wee may not now looke for more Christs for more passions They that will goe into captivitie againe let thē go but they shall not returne they that wil sel thē selues to the will of their enimie let them sell themselues but they may never hope for a second ransome they that will sinne after that they haue received the knowledge of the truth let them so sinne but there remaineth no more sacrifice for their sinne They which haue eares to heare let them heare If it bee true that they which sinne willingly after that they haue receaued the knowledge of the truth may so fall away as that no sacrifice may remaine for cleansing of their sinne what may bee hoped for of vs in whom willingnesse is no day wanting to our sinnes It is a true saying excusatio omnis tollitur vbi mandatum non ignoratur If the commandment be knowne no excuse may serue for the breach thereof I shall not make it a false saying though I doe a little invert it excusatio omnis non admittitur vbi mandatum ignoratur though the commandement bee not knowne yet every excuse may not serue for the breach thereof Peter gaue vnto the Iewes a shield of ignorance wherewith they might partly defend themselues against the weapons of Gods wrath and that not in any common cause but in the vilest and bloodiest fact that ever yet the sunne saw attempted I knowe saith he that through ignorance you did it as did also your governours Act. 3.17 speaking of their slaughtering the Lord of life I knowe saith he that through ignorance you did it as did also your governours Yet that they should not leane too much vpon this broken reed of ignorance in the 19. vers he adviseth them to repent returne that their sinnes might bee done away Here we see that Ignorance must be beaten vnlesse it be cleansed by repentance The like cloake had S. Paul gotten to cast over his blasphemies his tyrannies his mercilesse persecutions of the Church I was saith he receaved to mercy because I did it ignorantly through vnbeleefe 1. Timoth. 1.13 I was saith hee receaued to mercy because I did it ignorantly through vnbeleefe And here also we see that ignorance must be beatē vnlesse it haue mercy to cover it And surely could ignorance haue pleaded for her owne innocency never would the blood of Christ haue cryed to the Father vpon the Crosse Father forgiue them they knowe not what they doe Luke 23.34 And here againe wee see that ignorance must be beaten vnlesse it bee forgiven by the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ What Is ignorance of the Lordes will sure to bee beaten with rods and shall not our contempt of his will our carelesse and vnprofitable knowledge of his lawes bee requited with scourges Shall Tyre and Sidon and Sodome wherein was never vertue done that might haue reclaimed them shall they I say burne like stubble in Hell fire Shall the smoake of their torment ascend for evermore And shall Corazin and Bethsaida and Capernaum whose streetes haue beene sowne with the miracles of Christ and made fat with his doctrine shall they escape vntouched and not drinke downe the dregges of endlesse destruction Diverse Cities of the East and West Indies devoted to the worship of Devils shall once wring their hands for that they haue knowne so litle and I feare me I may too truely say that Oxford shall once rend her heart for that shee hath known so much to no better purpose for surely were shee so fruitfull in good works as shee ought to be there could be no such report of her as there is of ignorance in her Citizens of corruption in her Colleges of idlenes loosenes of life in her seniors of wilfull impudent and contemptuous behaviour in her juniours Dictum sapienti You will not marvaile to see the wildernesse lie wast and desert but if a ground well husbanded and manured yeeld no profit that deserues cursing Our ground in all likelyhood should bee well husbanded and manured Here is much preaching much hearing but where is any profit What our Saviour said of the Scribes and Pharisees dicunt non faciunt they say do not may truely be spoken of vs we see we heare we say we know but doe not O let vs not still be sicke of Adams disease desiring rather to eate of the tree of knowledge then of the tree of life We may and must be carefull of knowledge vnto sobriety but we must haue a regard also of profiting thereby that the fruit of a good life bringing eternity of daies to come may wait vpon our knowledge For S. Peter assureth vs that it is better for vs never to know the way of righteousnes thē after we know it to turne from it 2. Pet. 2.21 The same is also taught vs by my text If we sinne willingly after that wee haue receaved the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne THE FOVRTH SERMON HEBR. 10. VER 27. 27 But a fearfull looking for of iudgement and violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries I should not trouble you with any long rehearsall of that which heretofore I delivered vnto you Yet the sonne of Sirach chap. 22.8 perswading me that many exhortations may bee spent as vpon men that are asleepe who when the Sermon is done wil
they haue beene made partakers of the Holy Ghost And chap. 10.26 that they haue received the knowledge of the truth And in the 29. verse this present parcell of my text that they are sanctified with the blood of the Testament Here might we stād amazed to see such beauty in fire brāds prepared for Hell were it not that the wisedome of God in all these places now alleaged doth plainely shew that such men for all their outward painting and whitenesse are notwithstanding within full of filthinesse For where they are said to haue the vncleane spirit departed from them and after his departure to haue swept garnished their houses Mat. 12. there it followeth verse 45 that that vncleane spirit returneth accompanied with seaven fouler spirits then himselfe and entereth dwelleth in those new swept houses And where they are said to heare the word and incontinently with ioy to receaue it Mat. 13. there it followeth verse 21. that as soone as tribulation or persecution comme●h because of the word by by they are offended And where it is said that they haue escaped from the filthinesse of the world through their knowledge in our Lord Saviour Iesus Christ 2. Pet. 2. there is it added in the same chap. ver 20. that they are yet tangled againe in filthinesse and are overcome thereof And where it is registred of them that they haue been lightened haue tasted of the heavēly gift of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come haue beene made partakers of the Holy Ghost Heb. 6. there is it also noted verse 6. that they fall away crucifie againe vnto themselues the Sonne of God and make a mocke of him And lastly where they may farther seeme to be commended as having receaved the knowledge of the truth and as being sanctified with the blood of the Testament Heb. 10. there are they certainely noted with disgrace verse 26. for sinning willingly and verse 29 for treading vnder foote the Sonne of God c. Conferre we these places one with another and each will expound the other Thus whosoever yet lodgeth the vncleane spirit within his house whosoever when tribulation and persecution commeth because of the word is by and by offended whosoever is yet tangled againe in filthinesse and overcome thereof whosoever falls away crucifies againe vnto himselfe the Sonne of God and makes a mocke of him whosoever sinnes willingly he treads vnder foot the Sonne of God And so on the contrary side whosoeuer treads vnder foot the Sonne of God he sinnes willingly he is fallen away crucifies Christ againe makes a mocke of him he is againe tangled in filthinesse and overcome thereof he when tribulation and persecution commeth because of the word is by and by offended he yet lodgeth the vncleane spirit within his house Thus we may conceaue what the holy Spirit here meaneth by this phrase to tread vnder foote the Sonne of God The word he vseth is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noting by translation extremitie of contempt as it doth more plainely Mat. 7.6 Giue not that which is holy vnto doggs neither cast your pearles before swine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lest they tread your pearles vnder foot and turning againe all to rent you And as plainely Mat. 5.13 If the salt haue lost his savour wherewith shall it be salted It is thence forth good for nothing hut to be cast out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to be troden vnder foot of men So well hath Oecumenius expounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnderstanding by treading vnder foot the Sonne of God a contemning and despising of him And such is the exposition of Theophylact of Ambrose of Primasius and others grounded vpon the consideration of such things as wee care not to tread vnder foot And what are they Truely such things as wee despise and make no account of abiect things things without profit In which number if we put the Saviour of the world if wee reckon of him no better then of vnsavorie salt iustly may wee be said like dogges and swine to vse so pretious a pearle and tread it vnder foot The good Bishop of Iustinopolis PRIMASIVS whom but now I named vpon this place maketh this question How wee may be said to tread vnder foot him who being ascended farre aboue all heavens now sitteth at the right hand of God the Father His answere is threefold First when neglecting Christs commandements wee disdaine to obey them that then we tread Christ vnder foot Secondly when discerning the body of Christ we eate and drinke vnworthily that then we tread Christ vnder foot Thirdly when liuing wickedly we remoue from out of the tabernacle of our hearts that holy one who hath promised to dwell among vs and walke here that then we tread Christ vnder foot These answers of this ancient Father albeit I must admit with reverence yet giue mee leaue to adde a fourth most fitting the nature of this place we haue in hand De perseverantiâ Sanctorum p. 176. I take it of Zanchius Miscel lib. 2. There he putteth this doctrine and it may serue for an answere to the question proposed by PRIMASIVS Reccare contra conscientiam seu peccare ex contemptu Dei hoc est conculcare pedibus filium Dei To sinne against our consciences or to sinne in contempt of God this is to tread vnder foot the Sonne of God After him thus I expound it A man sinneth against his conscience when knowing and willing when wittingly and willingly hee sinneth as if a man knowing if hee doth this or that that he shall doe against the law of God is yet notwithstanding willing even against the law of God to doe this or that But this falleth not out alike in the elect in the reprobate Both of them doe sinne against their consciences yet diversly The elect doth it impropriè imperfectè non plenè not properly not perfectly not fully He in the generall and vniversall knowing that to be evill which he is about to doe doth it notwithstanding willingly induced thereto by his corrupt affections Willingly he doth it and he doth it not willingly Willingly in part only forced by the flesh but for his soules desire guided by the Spirit simply not willingly Willingly in as much as he naturally inclineth to that hee doth but in as much as it is sinfull that he doth not willingly Willingly in that the thing presented to his will seemes to be good profitable or delightful but in that it falleth out to be against the Maiestie of God not willingly So of one and the same will in the elect there may bee two considerations one as it is partly renued by the Spirit and so it willeth not sin the other as yet it retaineth some reliques of originall corruption and so it willeth sinne S Paule by his own experience sheweth this to be true in all the faithfull whose condition he declareth Rom. 7.15 to be such as that
the LORD The third that God will severely punish his owne people also which is plaine by the second testimonie these wordes The LORD shall iudge his people Of the first of these three notes I spake in my last exercise I proceed Vengeance belongeth vnto mee I will recompense saith the LORD THese words in so many syllables are cited by St Paule Rom. 12.19 in a sense somewhat different from that they beare in this place There the Apostle following the naturall meaning of the words as they are vsed in the song of Moses by way of exhortation vnto patience adviseth vs to giue place vnto God in all matters of revenge it being a thing onely and properly belonging vnto him If it be possible saith hee as much as in you lyeth haue peace with all men Avenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath for it is written vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD It is writtē Deut. 32. where Moses after that he had gathered together the elders and officers of Israel to speake in their audience had foretold them that after his death they would vtterly be corrupt and turne from the way of the LORD and that therfore evill should come vpon them at the length he sets downe that his most excellent and spirituall songe wherin his doctrine drops as the raine and his speech stills like the sweetest shewers vpō the hearbs In which his song he first makes rehersal of the inestimable benefits powred downe in great abundāce vpon that people then he speaks of their ingratitude Laden with fatnes they spurned with their heeles and regarded not the stronge God of their salvation After which he brings in God himselfe moued to ielousie and angrie with their provocatiō breathing forth threatning vpon threatning of plague vpon plague to light vpon so froward a generation The fire was kindled in his wrath he threatned that hee would make his arrowes drunke with the blood and his sword to eate the flesh of rebellious ISRAEL Were it not for the furie of his enimies who seeing the desolatiō destructiō of his people would say our high hand not the LORD hath done all this Wherevpon the LORD protesteth that he reserueth revengement vnto himselfe and that assuredly in due time he wil break in peeces every vessell of dishonour will be a tower of defence vnto al that trust in him This his protestation we read vers 35 36. of that song Vengeance and recompence are mine their feete shall slide in due time for the day of their destruction is at hand the things that shall come vpon them make hast For the LORD shall iudge his people and repent towards his servantes Wordes of a double vse they yeeld matter of comfort to all the faithfull God will revenge all wrongs done vnto them for the LORD shall iudge his people repent towards his servants They yeeld also matter of fearefulnesse and horrour to al the wicked who must know that God is a revengefull iudge the day of their destruction is at hand the thing that shall come vpon them make hast their feet shall slide in due time For the LORD hath said and his sayings are immutable Vengeance and recompense are mine Now wee see the naturall meaning of these wordes as they are vsed Deut 32. and alleaged Rom. 12. They confirme that constant and eternall rule of right and wrong well knowne to the wiser of the Heathen by the light of nature Homer in the fourth of his Iliads Theocritus in his tenth Idyllium Pindarus in his Pythia and generally the residue of prophane writers all doe giue their assent to this that God finds out the wicked man wheresoever to be avenged on him I will not hold you with any recitall of their sayings for it is not the deliverie of a Latine or Greeke sentence out of such authors that will much edifie The word of God I knowe is liuely and mightie in operation in it is this eternall rule of right and wrong stablished mention whereof is made by Iunius Paral. 24. lib. 2. to this sence There is no cause why men should be carefull to procure revenge against or to take revenge vpon such as haue wronged them it 's their part rather to rest in God and to commit all their iniuries vnto him that hee to whom alone vengeance belongeth may at length shew himselfe It is an axiome among Schoole-divines Nihil obstat quo minùs speciales sententias transferamus ad doctrinam vniversalem A particular and speciall sentence may bee a good ground to an vniversall doctrine Albeit therefore it was MOSES his purpose in vsing these words and Pauls in citing them to disswade the godly from all private revenge by assuring thē that God will be the avenger of all their iniuries and wrongs yet may they well suting the analogie of faith afforde this doctrine more vniversall that it is proper vnto God to take vengeance vpon all the wicked Wherevpon wil follow that which the Apostle driues at in this place namely that the impietie of such as doe despite and make a mocke of God shall not for ever escape vnpunished Whosoever hauing receaued the knowledge of the truth shall sinne willingly only because he will sinne wilfully spitefully malitiously and so shall crucifie againe the sonne of God shall count his blood prophane shall tread him vnder foot shall make a mocke of him and shall despite the spirit of grace that is whosoever hauing receaued the knowledge of God and his Christ shall fall away from God and godlinesse from Christ Christianitie his root shall be rottennesse and his bud shall rise vp like the dust for the mightie one of Israel having put on the garment of vengeance for clothing and being clad with zeale as with a cloake will come neere to them in iudgement and will bee a swift witnesse against them For as the Prophet Ieremie chap. 51.56 speaketh to the confusion of idolatrous Babel The LORD God that recompenseth shall surely recompense so speaketh our Apostle to the astonishment of all back-sliders VVee knowe him that hath said vengeance belongeth vnto mee I will recompense saith the LORD Vengeance belongeth vnto me In speaking of the vengeance of God our first care must bee not to derogate any thing from his proclivitie and propensnesse vnto mercy Wee must breake out into the mention of his great goodnesse and sing aloud of his mercies saith DAVID Psal 145.7 For the LORD is loving good to all and his mercies are over all his workes The LORD strong and mightie blessed aboue all yea being blessednesse it selfe and therefore hauing no need of any man is loving and good vnto every man Our sinnes haue provoked his vengeance against vs yet he slow to anger and of great goodnesse reserueth mercy for thousands for all the elect and forgiueth all their iniquities transgressions and sinnes His goodnesse here resteth not it reacheth also vnto the reprobate though they