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A08578 An explanation of the generall Epistle of Saint Iude. Delivered in one and forty sermons, by that learned, reverend, and faithfull servant of Christ, Master Samuel Otes, parson of Sowthreps in Norfolke. Preached in the parish church of Northwalsham, in the same county, in a publike lecture. And now published for the benefit of Gods church, by Samuel Otes, his sonne, minister of the Word of God at Marsham Otes, Samuel, 1578 or 9-1658.; Otes, Samuel, d. 1683. 1633 (1633) STC 18896; ESTC S115186 606,924 589

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Lord indureth for ever and ever upon them that feare him c. This made Paul to say Who shall separate me from the Love exceeds all other vertues love of God shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or sword I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate Rom. 8. 35. 37 38. us from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Malitia nostra finem habet Our malice hath an end but Gods love hath not our malice is finite but his love infinite As a drop of water to the whole Sea so are our sinnes in regard of the love of God his love is so great as it cannot be measured so much as it cannot be numbred so precious that it cannot be valued so large and long that it cannot be ended the bredth and length the height and depth of his love all the tongues of men and of Angels cannot utter As Iude wisheth unto them the love of God so hee wisheth them also mutuall love whereby we love one another he meaneth both these loves in this place Mutuall Love is a chiefe and principall vertue Faith and Love the one with God and the other with men be as the roote and the branch as the mother and the daughter as the foundation and pillars of all Christian building the end of all is Love the end of the first table is the Love of God the end of the second table is the love of man so saith the Apostle The end of the Commandements is Love out of a pure heart out of a good conscience and 1 Tim. 1. 5. Gal. 5. 22. Exod. 16. Iudg. 6. out of a faith unfained Paul reckoning up the fruits of the Spirit nameth Loue first as the Gentleman-usher to goe before all For as Manna excelled all bread as Aarons rod did eate up all the rods of the sorcerers as Gedeons sword passed all the swords of the Madianites so love passeth all other vertues all our debts should stand in love Owe nothing to any man but this that yee love Rom. 13. 8. Num. 14. Iohn 2. one another our debtes were sooner paid and our executors but smally troubled if this were of this debt wee cannot bee discharged so long as we live The journey of the Israelites was ended in forty yeares Herods Temple was finished in six and forty 1 Iohn 4. 7 8. 16. yeares Noahs Arke was perfected in an hundred and twentie yeares but this debt is never ended Let us therefore love one another For love commeth of God and every one that loveth is borne of God and knoweth God he that loveth not knoweth not God but he that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in God and God in him S. Peter naming 2 Pet. 1. 5. 7. many vertues maketh up the measure and ends in Love Ioine saith he vertue with your faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse Love This vertue above all is as the hoope or faggot bond that keepeth all close Therefore let me exhort you with the Apostle Above all Col. 3. 14. things put on love which is the bond of perfectnesse As the Sunne giveth light to all planets as salt seasoneth all meates as the Moone ruleth over the Sea and all moist bodies as the rod of the tribe of Levi passed in honour all other tribes So love passeth Little love to be found on earth all qualities in men therefore let us follow after Love and let us not give over till we have overtaken her Love is as the apple-tree of Persia which buddeth and blossometh and beareth fruit every moneth Now abideth faith hope and Numb 17. 1 Cor. 14. 1. 1 Cor. 13. love but the chiefe of these is love It lasteth longer like a pillar of salt it reacheth further it profiteth more among men Faith flieth up to heaven Love is occupied below on earth Faith wrastleth above with the promises of God Love is busied in good workes as Faith is with God Paul prayeth for it in respect of the scantnesse and excellency of it For Charitas laudatur alget Aug. de eivitate Dei lib. 14. c. 7. yet diligi non potest Deus sine proximo nec proximus sine Deo qui proximum amare negligit Deum diligere nescit England is as the Land of Canaan wee have corne cattell flesh Psal 65. 11. Iudg. 1. 1 Sam. 13 1 Reg. 8. fish wooll cloath our vallies stand thicke with corne we have plenty of all things but of Love that is scant As in the dayes of Debora there was neither speare nor shield As in Saul his daies there was no Smith as in the dayes of Salomon there was no Manna to be found so in our dayes little or no Love When I behold the state of many townes me thinke I see Bulls Beares Lions Tig●es Wolves shut up as it were in an iron cage biting tearing renting and devouring one another view all Courts Assises Sessions Leets Law-dayes and you shall see there is no difference betwixt us and the Corinthians but they went to law under Infidels and wee under Christians 1 Cor. 6. Gal. 5. 15. We forget Pauls Caveat If yee bite and devoure one another take heed yee be not devoured one of another If there be an hundred men in a towne scarce two love together as they should We are divided into three companies like Labans sheep some white some blacke some speckled some Protestants some Papists some Neuters Nay even among Protestants there is hard agreement But God I hope will make us friends in heaven where al injuries shall be forgotten where are those noble pair of lovers David and Ionathan Who had but one soule Eusebius and Pamphilus Martyrs 1 Sam. 18. who had but one name Pilades and Orestes who had but one life Ruth 1. the one being dead the other died also Ruth and Naomi who had but one grave Basill and Nazianzen of whom it is said Anima una erat inclusa in duobus corporibus one soule was included in two bodies Mariage maketh two bodies one but love maketh two soules one yea many soules many bodies but one If an hundred love together it is but one heart as it is said of them of the primative Church That they had but one heart and one soule If a man hath an hundred friends that man is become as an hundred Act. 4. 32. men Nam amicus alter idem a friend is a second selfe Charitas Chrysost est res augmentativa There was a day when Herod and Pilate were made friends but that day I feare with many will never bee they are like the stone Asbestos found in Arcadia being once kindled is never
the heart of a Dragon that is never satisfied So that Iude might say as Ieremy said My heretage Ier. 12. 8 9. is unto me as a Lion in the forrest it cryeth out against me therefore have I hated it Shall my heretage be unto me as a bird of divers colours c. Thus much generally for the Text. And now to the particular handling of the things therein contained and first he calleth them sleepers He speaketh not of any naturall sleepe but the sleepe that he meaneth is security negligence and in affirming them to be sleepers he meaneth that they were drowsie blockish negligent As Paul said to Titus of the Cretians That they were lyers evill beasts slow bellies so Tit. 1. 12. these were secure and sleepy Sleepe in the Scripture hath three significations sometime it signifieth naturall rest so the Apostles slept So the Evangelist witnesseth that Christ Came unto his disciples and found them asleepe Secondly it signifieth death and so Lazarus slept and Mat. 26. 40. Stephen slept and the Corinthians slept Brethren we shall not all sleep The living in sinne and security like lying asleepe that is we shall not all dye Thirdly it signifieth dulnesse of spirit and the Romanes slept but Paul telleth them that Considering the season it is high time for them to awake from sleepe he meaneth sinne security carelesnesse continuance in sinne For there is a lethergie Iohn 11. Acts 7. Rom. 13. 11. of the minde as there is of the body that men dye sleeping and many are overtaken with it they are as men asleepe like the mice of the Alpes that sleep all winter like Endimion that could not be awaked like Saul and Abner that could not be stirred with Davids shouting Many labour of the lethergy of 1 Sam. 26. 14. the mind they see not the glory of God they heare not his voice they smell not the sweet promises of God in Christ Iesus they taste not how good God is unto them they handle not the Book 1 Pet. 2. 3. of life As a man asleep seeth not heareth not walketh not but is without sense or motion of life for the time for sleepe is a band and an imprisonment of all the senses so is a sinner without remorse he perceiveth not he regardeth not the things that are of God As Christ said to Peter Come behind me Satan thou Mat. 16. 23. savourest not the things that are of God Many wake to the world They rise early they goe late to bed they eate the bread of carefullnesse Psal 127. they are asleepe in all the matters of God A man may say to them as the Prophet Esay said unto the Iewes Know ye nothing Esa 40. 21. have ye not heard it hath it not been told you from the beginning have ye not understood it by the foundations of the earth he sitteth upon the circle of the earth and the inhabiters thereof are as Grashoppers he stretcheth out the Heavens as a Curtaine and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in Their soule it asleepe if not dead for the trumpet of Gods Word hath not awaked them this forty fifty yeeres Sed tempus est surgeudi it is high time for us to awake out of sleepe I will therefore say unto you as Christ said to the Church of Sardis Awake and strengthen the things that remaine Gods Minsters Rom. 13. 11. Apoc. 3. 2. they are as Trumpets to awake the drowsie Souldier and to prepare him to the battell and therefore they are willed to Crie aloud Esa 58. 1. and not to spare to lift up their voyces like trumpets that so they may awake men out of their sleepe of sinne Gods Ministers they are as Cockes to crow and to awaken all to receive the Word for as the body hath Foure powers Appetitive the First Retentive the Second Digestive the Third Expulsive the Fourth So hath the soule it must desire the word and as the Hart brayeth Psal 42. 1. for the rivers of waters so must our soules pant after God and his Word and not onely desire it but keepe it for Blessed are they Luke 11. 28. that heare the Word and keepe it and not onely desire and keepe it but also digest it into good manners that so our conversation may be such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ and not only Phil. 1. 27. desire it keepe it and disgest it but also expell whatsoever is contrary The sleepe of sinne most dangerous unto it Laying aside all maliciousnesse and all guile and dissimulation and envy and all evill speaking but this cannot bee without crying for all men bee in a slumber The Apostle saith awake thou 1 Pet. 2. 1. Ephes 5. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 14. that sleepest stand up from death And he explaineth the phrase in his Epistle to the Corinthians saying Awake to live righteously and sinne not so that to sleepe is to live sinnefully and securely to awake is to live carefully righteously Esay calleth it a Spirit of slumber The Lord saith hee hath covered you with a spirit of slumber Esai 29. 10. and shut up your eyes Salomon saith to the drunkard that hee sleepeth upon the top of a mast and this is true of all sinnes Christ Pro. 23. 34. at his farewell and Vltimum vale cried Vigilate orate watch and Mat. 26. pray he said not Iejunate virginitatem servate Fast and keepe virginity but vigilate watch Christ said to his Apostles Vigilate Mar. 13. watch Paul bad the Thessalonians watch Let us not sleepe as doe 1 Thess 5 6. 1 Pet. 5. 8. Apoc. 3. 2. other but let us watch and bee sober Saint Peter bad the Iewes watch Be sober and watch Iohn bad the Church watch be awake and strengthen the things that remaine Esay bad Ierusalem watch Awake O Esa 40. 1. Ierusalem bee bright for thy light is come As the Turtle hath but one note so the Godly have but one song Vigilate surgite à somno watch and arise from sleepe It is said of Martinus that hee never passed houre of the day without prayer or reading or meditation Semper aliquid boni agebat hee did alwayes some good and it is true that Nostra bona opera sunt flagella diaboli that our good works are whips for the Divell Daimonomastyx if wee be vigilant and diligent in them Wherefore Saint Peters exhortation Give all diligence to joyne vertue with your faith and with vertue knowledge and 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7. with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse and with brotherly kindnesse love Mariners saith Tertullian are neuer devoured of the Syrenes but when they are asleepe The Leopard is never taken Tertull. in Apologetico Cant. 5. of the Dragon but then When lost the Church her husband but when she slept when lost Saul his pot his
Tim 3. Mar. 10. Iohn 8. Iudg. 3. Iudg 15. words and in workes this is both to have a shew of godlinesse the power of godlines this is to have both leaves fruit this is to be a true child of Abraham We read of the strength of Shamgar who slew six hundred men with an Oxe goad of Samson who slew a whole Army of the Philistines with a jaw bone of David who smote down a Giant with a pibble stone of Hercules 1 Sam. 17. who overcame a Lion and a Beare and threw downe the birds of Stinphalida and put downe an Amazon a mighty warrior and cut off the head of Hydra but as Lactantius said Lib. 1. cap. 9. these are nothing hee is a stronger man who overcommeth his wrath than hee that overcommeth a Lion he that treadeth under his desires than hee that casteth downe Birds and ravenous fowles he that suppresseth his lust than he that suppresseth the Amazons Hercules for all his strength was a slave to Omphale and sate spinning in a womans attire at her feete with a Rocke and a Distaffe He that is slow to anger is better than a mighty man and hee that ruleth his owne minde is better than hee that winneth a Prov. 16. 32. Citie We are desirous to know the state of our Salvation our Election and Glorification Let us then beginne where God beginneth at the renouncing of our lusts For the grace of God that bringeth Salvation to all men teacheth us to deny ungodlinesse and Tit. 2. 12. worldly lusts None can looke for the blessed hope but they that have denyed ungodlinesse worldly lusts None can say There is layd up for mee a crowne of righteousnesse but such as can say I have fought a good fight except they have striven against 2 Tim. 4. 7. their lusts Election is a thing revealed by steps As therefore it is madnesse to a man that climbeth a ladder to labour to set his foot at the first step on the highest step of the Ladder but to beginne at the lowest and so goe to the highest Paul maketh these steps Vocation Iustification Sanctification Glorification Rom. 8. so that if I would come to Glorification the highest step and is in Heaven with God then must I beginne at the lowest step But to prosecute this worthy point farther If I be called of God then am I justified if justified then am I sanctified if sanctified now then shall I be glorified hereafter Paul saith There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus Yea but who Rom. 8. are those Which walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit So then if I would know whether I be in Christ Iesus or no I must looke how I walke how I tame the flesh and the lusts of it If I finde that God in mercy hath wrought in me a change a hatred of sinne a love of vertue a zeale to his Gospell a care of his Glory a quenching of my lusts and concupiscence then is the conclusion inferred I am in Christ Iesus I am elected Thus wee If no sanctification no assurance of glorification make our election sure to our selves as the Apostle counselleth us Make your election and calling sure by good works it is known to God before the foundations of the World were laid but it is knowne to us by the effect of it so that still our rule holdeth Rom. 8. 2. 2 Pet. 1. 10. If we will know whether wee bee elected to live in Heaven with God we must ever looke how we lead our lives in earth with men Wee must give all diligence joyne vertue godly manners with our Faith and with Vertue Knowledge and with Knowledge 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7 8. Temperance and with Temperance Patience and with Patience Godlinesse with Godlinesse Brotherly kindnesse and with Brotherly kindnesse Love For if these things be among us and abound they will make that wee shall not bee idle nor unfruitfull in the knewledge of our Lord Iesus Christ If these things bee then are wee happy if God hath changed us from carelesse to careful men and women from drinking riot whoredome prophanenesse to holinesse of life then are wee Gods then Heaven is ours Now live like a Christian among men and ever live like a Saint among the Angels of Heaven But now live in sinne in lusts and pleasures follow the flesh and then rot in the reward of it goe to the Divell and his angels the end of these thing is death I pray you Rom. 6. therefore as you love your life with God another day and assurance of it to your soules in this world Give your bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to God and fashion not your selves according Rom. 12. 1 2. to this World but bee yee changed by the renewing of your minde and whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whosoever things are pure whatsoever things pertaine to Phil. 4. 8. love whatsoever things are of good report if there be any vertue or if there bee any praise thinke on these things This desire is the fruit of our life and there is not in the world a better portion This we have chosen and in this we will dwell untill the fulnesse of time that we shall say in our course Nunc dimittis Lord now let thy servant depart in peace These shall assure us that we are the Lords cared Luk. 2. for heere and elected else-where to live with him for ever THE THIRTIETH SERMON VERS XIX These are makers of Sects naturall men having not the Spirit Sectaries cause division in the Church AS before in the former verse he called them Mockers walk●ng after their owne ungodly lusts so here he calleth them Sectaries not keeping the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace not remembring that there is Ephes 4. 3 4. but one body one Spirit one faith one God and Father over all which is above all and in us all But these Sectaries set Altar against Altar and cut in sunder Christs seamelesse coate they divide Christ Such were the Corinthians one said I am Pauls another I am Apollos a third I am Cephas a fourth I am Christs Is Christ divided This dividing of Christ 1 Cor. 1. 12. is a signe that men are carnall unregenerate so reasoneth the Apostle Yee are carnall for whereas there is among you envying and 1 Cor. 3. 3 5. strife and divisions are yee not carnall and walke as men Who is Paul And who is Apollos but ministers by whom yee beleeved There was a rough Altar in Ierusalem to note the imperfection of the law and there was but one Altar to note the unity of the Church Well Exod. 27. said Ierome Meum propositum est antiquos legere singula probare tenere Iorome quae bona sunt à fide Ecclesiae Catholicae non recedere My purpose is to
gods may not understand that you like roguish robbing rascals are here sayling Alas wee tumble out our prayers as a Beares whelpe they are like arrowes without heads that cannot pierce like swords without edge that cannot cut they be too blunt to obtaine any thing of God they have no wings to mount up to heaven We aske and receive not because wee aske amisse We do either postulare non postulanda we aske things that Iam. 4. 3. Bern. are not to bee asked or else when wee aske them wee pray not in the holy Ghost Oh that all men knew this that all England had learned that not all prayers but spirituall prayers are accepted of God! but wee are ignorant and will be ignorant still filthy and will bee Apoc. 22. 11. filthy still But let us amend this fault learne at last to pray for prayer is good so that it be a true reflexion of the soule from the feeling of Gods mercies and our owne wants God hath promised us all good things under his hand and seale but yet with a condition so that wee pray truly and aske them as we should The Lord is neere to all them that call upon him yea unto all such as call upon Psal 145. 18. him faithfully For many carry prayer in their mouthes as mē carry fire in a flint and perfume in a pomander the one without heate the other without smell so they carry prayer without all devotion verball vocall prayers can obtaine nothing of God When yee stretch out your hands I will hide mine eyes from you saith God and though yee make many prayers I will not heare THE THREE AND THIRTIETH SERMON VERS XXI And keep your selves in the Love of God c. Faith prayer and love have mutuall relation FRom faith he came unto prayer frō prayer he commeth now to love bie est enim aurea catena for this is a goldē chaine every linke is one within another these three goe together like the three Angels that came to Lot like the three graces that are Gen. 19. inseparable or like the three Worthies who brake thorow the host of the Philistins Faith begetteth 2 Sam. 23. prayer and prayer strengtheneth the faith and neither of these can stand without love prayer and love be as the two mighty rivers named in Genesis Pishon and Gihon and faith as the garden of Eden out of which they flow or the sea into which they runne and where all of them jointly doe end their course Love is a chiefe a principall vertue Faith and Love the one with God the other with men bee as the roote and the branch as the mother and the daughter as the foundation and pillars of all Christian buildings the end of all is Love the end of the first table the Love of God the end of the second the love of man so saith the Holy Ghost The end of the Commandement is Love out of a pure heart out 1 Tim. 1. 15. of a good conscience and out of a faith not fained Whatsoever precept or commandement is in the Scripture it hath relation to Love For be that loveth another fulfilleth the Law Christianity is where the Rom. 13. Spirit is and where the Spirit is there is Love For God is Love Love the most excellent of all vertues and he that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in God and God in him Austen saith that a man may have baptisme and yet bee wicked prophecy and yet be wicked take the Sacrament of the body and Aug. Hom. 15. bloud of the Lord and yet be wicked be named a Christian and yet bee wicked Habere Sacramenta ista omnia malus esse potest habere autem charitatem malus esse non potest He may have all these Sacraments and yet be wicked but if he have Love hee cannot be wicked Paul reckoning up the fruits of the Spirit he nameth Love first as the Gentleman-Vsher to goe before them all The fruites of the Spirit saith hee is Love joy peace c. For as Manna Gal. 5. 22. Exod. 16. Exod. 3. Iudg. excelled all bread as Aarons rod did eate up the rods of the sorcerers as Gedeons sword passed all the swords of the Madianites so Love passeth all other vertues All our bebts should stand in Love so saith the Apostle Owe nothing to any man but this Rom. 13. 8. that yee love one another Our debts were soone paid and our Executors should bee soone discharged if this were of this debt we can never be discharged so long as we live The journey of Israel was ended in forty yeeres Herods temple was built finished in six forty yeeres Noahs Arke was perfited in an 120. yeeres but this debt is never ended Beloved saith S. Iohn let us love one another for Love commeth of God every one that loveth is borne of God knowith God but hee that loveth not knoweth not God for God is Love S. Peter naming many vertues maketh up the measure and ends in love Ioyne saith he vertue with your faith with vert●e knowledge 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7. with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse and with brotherly kindnesse Love This vertue above all others is as the hoope or fagot-band that keepeth all close therefore saith the Apostle Above all things put on Love which is the bond of perfection Col. 3. 14. As the Sunne giveth light to all Planets as salt seasoneth all meates as the Moone ruleth over the Sea and all moist bodies as the rod of the Tribe of Levi passed in honour all other tribes so Love passeth all qualities among men Though I spake 1 Cor. 13. 1 2 3. with the tongues of men and Angels and have no love I am as sounding brasse or a tinckling Cymball and though I bad the gift of Prophecy and knew all secrets and all knowledge yea if I had all faith so that I could remove mountaines and had no love it profiteth me nothing and though I feed the poore with all my goods and though I give my body that I be burned and have not Love it profiteth me nothing For this cause hee willeth the Ephesians to follow the truth in Love Moses did wish that Ephes 4. 13. Numb 11. 29. all the Lords people could prophesie and That the Lord would put his Spirit upon them Saint Paul did wish that all men were like himselfe in purity and that all did speake strange languages but rather that 1 Cor. 7. 7. 1 Cor. 14. 5. Aug. they prophesied Saint Augustine wished that all would remember Love and brings this reason Sola est enim quae vincit omnia sine qua nil valent omnia and ubique fuerit trahit ad se omnia For onely Love overcommeth all things and without Love all things Love is every where very cold are nothing
God imputeth righteousnesse but yet in the righteousnesse of Christ not in an inherent righteousnesse of our owne as hee is said to have paid the money to his creditour who paid it by another though himselfe was not able And unto this end the Apostle saith that wee are justified freely by his grace through the redemption Rom. 4 5 6 7 8. that is in Christ Iesus To the place in the Romanes where Paul saith But to him that worketh not but beleeveth in him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse even as David declared the blessednesse of that man unto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without works saying Blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sinnes are covered blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not the sin Bellarmine answereth that Paul setteth not downe a full definition of justification For sinne is not remitted saith he except righteousnesse bee infused but yet inchoated onely not perfected and yet the comparison holdeth not betwixt the infusion of light into the ayre and the infusion of righteousnesse into a man similia illustrant non probant similies doe illustrate a thing but prove not Bellarmine argueth from the comparison betwixt Adam and Christ Per Adae peccatum inhaerens peccatores sumus By Rom. 5. the inhaerent sinne of Adam we are sinners therefore per infusionem inhaerentis justitiae justi sumus by infusion of inhaerent righteousnesse wee are righteous I answere that the argument followeth not the comparison holdeth not in the inherence of sinne or righteousnesse but in the adoption or getting From Adam wee have gotten sinne naturally but from Christ supernaturally by faith by which the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed unto us Bellarmine reckoneth up many things which be necessary to salvation out of the second Epistle of S. Peter the first Chapter as how we must joyne Vertue 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7. with Faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse and with brotherly kindnesse Good works the way not the cause of the Kingdome of Heaven love But hee doth detorquere writhe and bow the question another way and to another end For wee doe not exclude good works simply from the obtaining of salvation sunt enim via regni non causa regnandi they are the way to Gods Kingdome not the cause of our ruling and reigning in Gods Bern. Kingdome but from the obtaining of righteousnes For it is onely Christs righteousnesse that maketh us righteous before God for hee is our wisdome and righteousnesse and holinesse and redemption wisdome to instruct us righteousnes to justify us holines to sanctify us and redemption to free us Hee reasoneth thus Faith without Love doth not justify Therefore faith alone doth not justify for faith worketh by love Gal. 5. I deny the Confequence For though faith bee not alone without other vertues yet it justifieth alone as the hand of the writer is not alone but hath other members adjoyned unto it yet it writeth alone as the eye is not alone and yet it seeth alone and the eare is not alone and yet it heareth alone and yet to speake properly faith doth not justify it is a Metonymicall speech for to speake properly the righteousnes of Christ apprehended by faith justifieth us faith as the principall cause doth not justify us sed ut causa instrumentalis but as the instrumentall cause non per modum dispositionis sed per modum apprehensionis not by the manner of disposition but by the manner of apprehension For although it doth dispose unto good workes yet it doth not justify in respect of that but in respect of the object which is Christ For the blood of Iesus 1 Iohn 1. 7. Christ Gods Sonne clenseth us from all sinne But Iustification saith hee is motus à peccato ad justitiam a moving from sinne to righteousnesse as illumination is a moving from darkenes to light I grant sed non adjustitiam inhaerentem not unto inherent or infused righteousnesse but imputative Hee argueth that things are denominated from the internall not the externall forme as we call an Aethiopian blacke though he have a white garment on him quia nigredo est illi insita because blacknes is naturally graffed in him Ergo nos justos dici à justitia intra nos non extra nos Therefore wee are said to bee righteous of the righteousnesse that is within us not without us I answere This is true in Philosophy but false in Divinity Here we may say with Paul Beware lest there bee any man that spoile you through Col. 2. ● philosophy Philosophy may bee used so as shee be content to be a servant not a mistris but when men measure all doctrine by humane reason and philosophicall positions as Bellarmine here doth then Philosophy is to be taken heed of Howlet in the fifth part of his resolution confesseth that works are not the causes of salvation but the path that leadeth Papists at death fly to Gods mercy in Christ and not to merit to salvation the fruits and effects of faith as Christ saith Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorify your Father which is in Heaven That Paul speaking of the cause of Iustification saying wee conclude that Mat. 5. 16. Rom. 3. 18. a man is justified by faith without the workes of the Law is not contrary to Iames speaking of the notes and signes of Iustification saying Yee see then how that of workes a man is justified and not of faith onely This truth God extorted from him as also Iam. 2. 24. from Stephen Gardiner who confessed this at his death but would not have it preached to the people Open that doore quoth hee and then farewell all Hee would bee wiser than God Mounser also granted it and cried Solus Christus solus Christus Christ alone Christ alone And so Sherwin a seminary Priest executed for treason with Campian and others at Tiborne when hee was in the cart ready to dye though he held himselfe a martyr for the Catholike faith acknowledged nowithstanding ingenuously the miseries imperfections and corruptions of his owne vile nature relying wholly upon Christ cried out at his death O Iesus Iesus Iesus bee to mee a Iesus And Bellarmine cites often in his workes out of Augustine Domus Dei credendo fundatur sperando exigitur diligendo perficitur the foundation of Gods house in our soules is faith the walles hope the roofe charity If faith bee the foundation of all other vertues as himselfe affirmes and if it bee our safest Lib. 1. de Rom. Pont. cap. 10. De Iustificatione lib. 5. Cap. 7. course to repose our whole trust in the onely mercy of God Propter incertitudinem propriae justitiae periculum inanis gloriae tutissimū est fiduciam totam in
did undoe in the night so wee learne and unlearne whatsoever wee learne on the Sunday wee forget in the weeke day we may say of our comming to Church as Peter said of his fishing Master wee have Luke 5. 5. travelled all night and have taken nothing So wee have come to the Church twenty thirty forty fifty sixty yeeres some more and have gotten nothing have learned nothing got no Faith no Zeale no Knowledge But to proceed As they must edifie themselves increase and goe forward so the thing that they must increase and goe forward in is Faith for that is the foundation of all Christian Vertues it is Alpha and O mega absque ea nemo potest placere Deo Heb. 11. 6. Rom. 14. 23. Without it no man can please God for whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Omnia ergo splendida opera Paganorum Infidelium sant splendida peccata all the glistering workes of Pagans and Infidels bee glistering sinnes their prayers almes fastings the patience of Socrates the justice of Aristides the piety of Epaminondas Faith the originall of all good workes the constancie of Phocion they were but bastard-workes not right workes they are begotten of Hagar not of Sara the free-woman they spring from the waters of Marah not of Siloh from the bitter poole Exanthe not the sweet flood of Hispanis they proceed from feare or vaineglory not from faith For as unto the Tit. 1. 15. pure all things are pure so unto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but their mindes and consciences are defiled It is true in all workes that Paul said of prayer How shall they call on him in whom Rom. 10. 14. they have not beleeved Even so how can they glorifie God or love God or serve God in whom they never beleeved Paul making a Catalogue of good men beginneth with Faith and saith By faith Abel offered to God a greater sacrifice than Cain Heb. 11. 4 5 7. 8 20 21 33-34 By faith Enoch was taken away that hee should not see death c. By Faith Noah being warned of God of the things which were not yet seene moved with reverence prepared the Arke c. By Faith Abraham when hee was called obeyed God offered Isaac c. By Faith Isaac blessed Iacob and Esau By Faith Iacob when hee was a dying blessed the sonnes of Ioseph and thus hee goeth on and at the last concludeth that by faith they subdued Kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained the promises stopped the mouthes of Lions quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sword of weake were made strong waxed valiant in battell turned to flight the armies of the Aliants c. In every good worke three things are to be considered Origo Finis Vsus The beginning The end and Vse The originall or beginning of every good worke is faith faith is as the Mother and the holy Ghost the Father of all good workes Faith begetteth Love and Love blossometh forth in Vertue and Vertue buddeth foorth in good Workes whereupon Saint Peter inferreth this exhortation Ioyne moreover Vertue with your Faith and with Vertue Knowledge and with Knowledge 2 Pet. 1. 5 7 8. Temperance and with Temperance Patience and with Patience Godlinesse and with Godlinesse Brotherly-kindnesse and with Brotherly-kindnesse Love Secondly the end is the glory of God Hereupon saith the Apostle Whether yee eate or drinke or whatsoever yee doe doe all to the glory of God 1 Cor. 1 3● Thirdly the use is manifold First they are unto us signes of our election and therefore Saint Peter would have us to make our election calling sure by them Indeed our election is sure in it selfe 2 Pet. 1. 10. for God cannot change yet we must confirme it in our selves by the fruits of the Spirit Secondly they edifie others Hereupon saith our Saviour Let your light so shine before men that they may see No life of grace without Faith your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven Thirdly that they may stop the mouth of the Adversary For which cause we are willed to have honest conversation among the Gentiles that wheras they doe backbite us as evill doers they may see our good works and glorify Mat. 5. 16. 1 Pet. 2. 12. our Father which is in Heaven Here is the triall of a Christian that proveth us either sonnes or bastards this proveth us dead or alive by Faith wee live this is the spirit and soule of the inner man wee have a name to live yet are wee dead if wee want Iohn 1. 12. Faith There is a double life of grace and of nature Infidels Vnbeleevers are strangers from the life of grace As a tree liveth not without Ephes 4. 18. moysture nor a bird without aire nor the fish without water nor a body without a soule so neither the soule without faith For in that wee live now in the flesh wee live by the Faith of the Sonne of God who hath loved us and gave himselfe for us Yee see Infidels eating Gal. 2. 20. drinking sporting playing yet are they dead they are alive to the world but dead unto God but the faithfull they are dead with Christ unto the world but their life is hid with Christ with God and when Christ which is their life shall appeare then shall they Col. 2 3 4. also appeare with him in glory Pandora carried deadly poyson in a painted boxe and Lusimachus the cutter a leaden sword in a golden sheath and many men a dead soule in a living body the body is alive but the soule is dead as Paul said of the voluptuous widow But shee that liveth in pleasure is dead while shee liveth To conclude faith joyneth us to Christ For Christ dwelleth in 1 Tim. 5. 6. our hearts by Faith Christ uniteth us to God 1 Iohn 5. God assureth Ephes 3. 17. us of life For in him wee live and move and have our being So that no faith no Christ no Christ no God no God no life God Act. 17. 28. so loved the world that hee gave his only be gotten Sonne that whosoever Iohn 3. 16 18. beleeveth in him should not perish but have life everlasting hee that beleeveth in him shall not bee condemned but hee that beleeveth not is condemned already because hee beleeveth not in the name of the only begotten Sonne of God Knowledge is the fountaine of all vertue and Faith is the sea in which they all runne and where they jointly end their course But it is to bee observed that hee calleth it not simply Faith but holy Faith yea most holy Faith he riseth to the superlative degree as David extolled Bashan above all mountaines saying The mountaine of God is like the mountaine of Bashan it is a high mountaine Psal 68. 15. as the mount Bashan As Salomon extolled his huswife above all women saying Many daughters
but they that have beene mockers of God and Religion most odious most severely punished yet all condemned as being persecutors carnall lose Libertines though they thinke themselves 〈◊〉 yet they 〈◊〉 the bondslaves of sinne and Satan they are onely free that are the servants of God and subdue their lusts and they have thereby assurance of their election and salvation The Contents of the thirtieth Sermon HEre he condemneth Sectaries that make a division in the Church which is one and the true members thereof preserve unity among themselves these Sectaries are dangerous as Idolaters Three sorts of them viz. Heretikes Schismatikes and Apostates who are described and condemned Pride the root of Heresie and Schisme though the Scriptures the meanes to confute them yet they pervert them to maintaine their errors That we may avoid these wee must keepe our hearts from infidelity our minds from false opinions and our conversation from scandall they are the chiefe Engines Satans vse to overthrow the Church making Sects and divisions either for matters Ecclesiasticall or Temporall These Sectaries are by Iude called naturall men that is unregenerate having no more then they drew from Adam without grace and knowledge of heavenly things yet practised many civill vertues invented Arts and in many things exceeded many that beare the names of Christians though they had but naturall illumination not the Spirit of Sanctification and so Saint Iude addeth having not the Spirit that is the Spirit of God and being without it had no spirituall grace but were led by the spirit of pride errour c. The Contents of the one and thirtieth Sermon HAving noted the opposition betweene the wicked and the godly from the conjunction discretive But that though Sectaries pull downe yet the godly must build up themselves in their holy Faith he justifieth first in the metaphor Edifie hee inferres two things first that we must be builders using the Word of God for our rule or square and confute the Papists that tooke it away secondly that we must encrease daily in knowledge grace and goodnesse and reproove our non-proficiency and shew that it is a propertie of the wicked to decrease and taxe both such as thinke they know enough and such as will not indevour to know exhorting all to use all diligence to learne and to build so as when their earthly tabernacle bee dissolved they may have assurance of a house in the Heavens he proceedeth with the Apostle to the thing wherein hee must be built and that is in their Faith and this not barely named but with a note of excellency above all vertues being called Most holy Faith He sets out the necessity of Faith in all our actions that they may bee pleasing to God and having shewed that Faith is the originall of all good workes he sheweth the end and manifold uses of them Finally that Faith is the life of the soule by it God lives in us and wee shall live eternally with him Hee proceeds to the note of excellency that is called most holy and first shewes the excellency of it above all other vertues and that holy first in regard of the subject purifying the heart and making our persons and 〈…〉 Secondly in respect of the object the holy Trinitie Thirdly in respect of the officient cause the holy Ghost and hence concluded that the Papists workes are not holy being not done in Faith and that the wicked have no Faith because no holinesse And lastly he sheweth that this holy Faith must be begotten by hearing the holy Word of God The Contents of the two and thirtieth Sermon HAving set out the relation betweene Faith and Prayer and the manifold and marveilous effects of Prayer and that it is not onely powerfull but pleasant to God and the Saints themselves he descends to divide Prayer into divers kinds in divers respects and sheweth how all must be uttered Hee proceedeth further to set out the excellency of Prayer by many resemblances and manifold effects and uses having spoken of Prayer in generall he comes to shew that it must bee in Spirit and sheweth what it is to pray in the Spirit and that hee de●ineth so as either the holy Ghost must be the Author of Prayer being the Author of all Graces yet so as the holy Trinity have a hand in it or secondly that our Prayers must be spirituall and zealous not carnall and with the lips hee reprove the Papists that require but an actuall intent and sheweth it is the manner not matter that God respects That wee must take heed that neither businesse nor multitude of cogitations steale away the times of prayer but that wee pray alwayes with pure zealous and faithfull hearts and then we may relye upon his promises for all good things The Contents of the three and thirtieth Sermon HAving breifly shewed the relation betwixt Faith Prayer and Love he instanceth in Love setteth out the excellency of it above all vertues bewailes the want of it and exhorts unto it yet distinguisheth and sheweth it must be the Love of God which we must keepe our selves in this he describes by foure properties that it must bee 1 Holy 2 Iust 3 True 4 Constant And condemnes the love of Atheists carnall wordly men and Papists distinguisheth the love of God into 1 His love to us 2 Our love to him His love to us though infinite yet described in divers respects 1 By comparison 2 By distinction First into his love 1 Immanent 2 Transient Secondly 1 Generall 2 Speciall Thirdly 1 Temporary 2 Sempiternall Our love to god he sheweth to be an effect of his love to us and uses foure reasons to excite us to the love of God First à mandato from the Commandement of God Secondly 〈…〉 from the Law of equity Thirdly à commodo from the manifold good that redounds to us by it Fourthly 〈…〉 from our duty he being our Father Lastly he sheweth the manner how we should performe it and taxeth our fayling in the manner The Contents of the foure and thirtieth Sermon FIrst observing how Saint Iude having give divers Precepts to the godly commforts them with the hope of eternall life he shewes this to bee the duly meanes to support the soules of the faithfull and entreth into a large learned and elegant discourse concerning eternall life and the joyes of Heaven and sets them out firtst to bee in themselves both unspeakeable and incomprehensible yet that may be guessed at by comparison with the most excellent earthly things and setteth out the glorious estate of the Saints both in body and soule and reprooves such as are so delighted with this life as they thinke not on eternall life and confutes divers erronious conceits concerning this life and againe describes it 1 By the eternity 2 Infinite extent of the place 3 The infinite kindes of pleasures Lastly having set out the glorious estate hee sheweth the meanes how wee should attaine to it and that not by our merits but Gods mercies
Saint Peter out of darkenesse into his marvellous 1 Pet. 2. 9 10. light which in times past were not a people but now the people of God which in times past were not under Mercy but now have obtained Mercy We have not loved God but hee us Venit medicus ad aegrotos via ad errantes lux ad tenebras vita ad mortuos redemptor ad Bern. captivos The Physitian came unto the sicke the way to wanderers light to darkenesse life to the dead a redeemer to the captives Wee were sicke hee healed us wee wandered hee reduced us wee were blind hee lightend us wee were slaves hee redeemed us No man commeth to the Father but by him Iohn 14. 6. This is not onely that generall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mercy and Grace of God which pertaineth to all creatures Beasts Fowle Fishes whereof I spake before but this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peculiar to man only the Scripture calleth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the riches of his bountifulnesse c. For The Lord is rich in Mercy rich in mercy because Ephes 2. 4. the treasury of his Mercy and Grace is never exhausted the fountaine never dryed up rich in Mercy because he never ceaseth to communicate the riches of his Mercy and Grace to us rich in Mercy because hee pardoneth all our sinnes upon our true repentance rich in Mercy because he not only pardoneth al our sins upon our true repentance but giveth us repentance and The abundant riches of Gods mercies faith to beleeve the remission of our sinnes rich in mercy because he giveth us privative grace to escape evils and positive enabling us to doe good finally rich in mercy because he preventeth us with mercy and grace before we seeke him and followeth us with mercy and grace when we have found him Bernard in a certaine Sermon makes mention of a seven-fold De Evang. septem panum mercy or grace which hee saith each child of God may finde in himselfe The first is a preventing mercy or grace by which the Lord preserves his Elect from falling into grosse evils Fateor fatebor saith he nisi quia Deus adiuvit me paulo minus cecidisset in omne peccatum anima mea I doe and will ingeniously confesse that unlesse the Lord had preserved mee by grace my soule had gone neere to have fallen into all sinne The second is his forbearing mercy or grace whereby the Lord waiteth for the conversion of a sinner in regard whereof the same Author writeth thus Ego peccabam tu dissimulas non continebam a sceleribus tu à verberibus abstinebas I sinned O Lord and thou seemest not to regard it I contained not my selfe from wickednesse and thou abstainest from scourging me for the same The third is an altering and changing mercy or grace which makes a man setled in the resolution of holinesse whereas before he was prophane and loose in behaviour The fourth is an imbracing mercy or grace whereby God assureth the Convert of his favour The fifth is a confirming mercy or grace which strengthneth and upholdeth the righteous in his goodnesse The sixth is a mercy or grace that sets him in hope and expectation of glory The seventh is a crowning mercy or grace which is the Livery and seisin and full possession of the Kingdome of heaven Thus the LORD hath seven mercies or graces nay seventy times seven mercies even an innumerable multitude of compassions all which Saint Iude here wisheth unto the Saints by which it appeareth how great a blessing the Apostle wisheth in wishing mercy Mercy be unto you For indeed all that wee have is of mercy not of merit of favour not of debt of grace not of nature It is his mercy that wee Lament 3. 2. be not consumed therefore when we pray let this be our petition O God be mercifull unto me a sinner and when we give thankes let Luke 18. 13. Psal 36. this be the foot of our Song For his mercy indureth for ever For his mercy indureth for ever His mercy is Communis peccantium portus the common harbor of all penitent sinners For it is not the wisdome God nor his power noriustice that preserves us from destruction but his mercy So many idle words uttered in a day so many vaine Mercy that we are not consumed thoughts conceived so many evill workes committed I speake positively and now privatively so few prayers in us so few thankesgiving so few almes so weake faith so little knowledge so cold zeale so small love It is not a mercy but a miracle that we are not all consumed that the ayre infecteth us not as it did Iuda that the heavens raine not downe fire and brimstone 2 Sam. 24. as they did upon Sodome that the clouds open not and drowne us all as they did the old world that the earth doth not open Gen. 19. and swallow us all as it did Dathan such pride in the rich such envie in the poore such peevishnesse in age such riot in youth Gen. 6. Numb 16. such robbery on the land such piracy on the Sea such impiety in the Church such iniury in the Common-wealth such wickednesse and Atheisme in all it is a rare mercy that wee be not all consumed The Angels desire an end of this evill world the Saints departed wish the accomplishment of the Elect the number full the body of Christ made perfect The Saints in earth cry Veni Esa 6. Apoc. 6. Apoc. 22. Domine Iesu veni citò Come Lord Iesu come quickly Why doe wee not desire to be loosed that as wee are partakers of his generall speciall and temporall mercies and graces here so we may be partakers of his eternall mercies in heaven The second blessing which the Apostle prayeth for is peace which is taken three waies First for externall peace between man and man Secondly for internall peace betwixt God and man peace of conscience Thirdly for prosperity and the happy event of all things And in all these significations it may be taken in this place in a godly sense if wee take it in the first sense it is a notable blessing and to be prayed for of all men as Iude doth here for peace is the ornament of all places as a Crowne of gold upon their head the Kingdome of Christ is adorned by it The Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe and the Leopard shall lye with Esa 11. 6. 7. 9. the Kid and the Calfe and the Lion and the fat beast together and a little Child shall lead them and the Cow and the Beare shall feed together their yong ones shall lye together and the Lion shall eat straw like the Bullocke and the sucking child shall play upon the hole of the Aspe and the weaned child shall put his hand upon the Cockatrice hole then shall none hurt nor destroy in all the Mountaine of my holinesse Here men by reason
Soule wee shall be glorified and when as wee shall sing the songs of triumph such as none can understand save the hundred and forty foure thousand which are Apoc. 14. 3. brought from the Earth Let us therefore pray for grace to increase in us and say with Augustine Si quando steti per Dominum steti si quando cecidi per me cecidi c. If at any time I stood I stood by the Lord if at any time I fell I fell of my selfe his Grace did prevent me saving me from evils past preserving me from evils present and defending me from evils to come But I will follow this point no further but as Iude prayed that Mercy Grace and Love might be multiplied So shall I pray Mercy Peace and Love bee unto you Mercie from God the Father the Father of Mercies Peace from God the Sonne the Prince of Peace Love from God the holy Ghost the Love of the Father and the Sonne Mercy unto you releasing your sinnes Peace unto you quieting your consciences Love unto you joyning you to God and one unto another Now the very God of Mercy Peace and Love give you Mercy Peace and Love Amen THE SIXTH SERMON VERS III. Beloved when I gave c. Faith and Gods worship must be maintained HAving spoken of the Title or Inscription of this Epistle I am now come unto the second part thereof namely the Proposition which is a stirring of them up to maintaine the Faith worship and religion of God which was now at an ebbe like the Sea and eclipsed like the Sunne with false Apostles had shaken her leaves like a tree in winter Where note two things 1 That they must labour for Faith 2 The reasons why they must so labour The Reasons be three The first taken from the person of the Apostle The second from the person of God The third from the person of the Adversaries From the person of the Apostle three wayes From 1 His love 2 His paines 3 His mildnesse The second reason is taken from the person of God in that he gave this Faith where note three things The necessitie and excellencie of Faith That it is 1 His gift 2 Once given 3 Given to the Saints The last reason is taken from the Adversarie where note two things 1 The qualities 2 The end of the Adversarie But first for Faith all men must labour for it that they may say on their death-beds with Paul I have fought a good fight I 2 Tim. 7 8. have finished my course I have kept the faith from hence-forth there is laid up for me a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge will give me at that day and not to me onely but unto them also that love his appearing None can speake of a Crowne of glorie but he that can say that he hath kept the Faith For without Faith it is impossible to please God Wilt thou please God as Enoch did and Hebr. 11. 6. not grieve God like Israel then get faith Quod enim non est a fide peccatum est whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Paul describing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christiani the armour of a Christian compareth faith unto a shield all armour is necessarie but specially a shield Therefore saith the Apostle Above all things take the shield of faith Ephes 6. 17. wherewith we shall bee able to 〈◊〉 all ●he 〈…〉 of the wicked Where note that the Apostle contenteth not himselfe with a bare exhortation to stirre us up to labour for faith but with weighty reasons presseth his exhortation before and behind before comparatively preferring it before all other graces Above all behind simply declaring the vertue and efficacie of it Wherby yee shall bee able to quench c. By the first hee maketh way to his exhortation by the last he knocketh it downe fast even to the head as wee use for to say And the Apostle writing to Timothie willeth him to get faith 1 Tim. 1. 19. and a good conscience naming two fearefull examples One of Hymenaeus another of Alexander who had made shipwracke of faith and a good conscience And therefore Paul delivereth them up to Satan That they might learne not to blaspheme that is he did excommunicate them Faith is the vertue of all vertues As all rivers runne into the Sea so all vertues come of faith It giveth light to all vertues as the Sunne doth to all planets therefore the Apostle is so prolix in it Faith maketh us the sonnes of God else are we bastards illegitimate So many as received him to them gave he power to be the Hebr. 11. 4 5. Iohn 1. 12. Epist ad Adimanth Gen. 26. 2 Tim. 1 Cor. 4. 15. Gal. 4. Sonnes of God even to them that beleeve in his name Augustine distinguisheth of Sonnes that they are threefold sonnes by Nature so Esau was the sonne of Isaak sonnes by doctrine or imitation so Timothie was Pauls sonne so he begat the Corinths so hee travelled of Galatia Lastly sonnes by inspiration or faith so are we the sonnes of God Christ is the naturall wee the adopted sonnes of the Almightie The third is best for well is hee that hath God to his Father for the Sonne abideth in the house for Faith must be striven and laboured for ever Faith is the life of the soule as the soule is the life of the body Quod carni esca hoc animae fides what food is to the flesh the same is Faith to the soule quod cibus corpori hoc verbum spiritui what meat is to the body the same is the word to the Spirit Iohn 8. 35. To stirre us up to strive for this Faith the Holy Ghost adorneth it with many Epithetes he calleth it Rich faith 1 Pet. 1. Holy faith Iude vers 20. strong faith 1 pet 5. 8. a saving faith Ephes 2. 8. a pure faith Act. 15. 9. a precious faith 1 Pet. 1. 7. If their we regard riches strength holinesse salvation puritie let us maintaine Faith which hath all graces in it as Paradise had all fruites in it as Lapis Indicus hath all cures in it And note that they must contend strive for faith for all they are accursed that doe the worke of the Lord negligently and all Ier. 48. they shall be spued out of Gods mouth who are key-cold luke-warme and not fervent in the faith Most men therefore shall Apoc. 3. 15. goe unto the Divell and be vomited out of Gods mouth for they are Tepidi in Fide they care not what become of faith and religion so they may prosper in the world they say unto God Ioh 21. 14 15. Depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Who is the Almightie that we should serve him and what profit shall we have if we should pray unto him they say with Alexander Borgia Da mihi divitias caetera tolle tibi fidem spem charitatem
Naboth wold not deliver up the vineyard of his fathers he must not deliver up the vineyard of the Lord. 1 Reg. 21. Here note three things 1 That Faith is a gift 2 That it is once given 3 That it is given unto the Saints And first that faith is a gift it is evident by the Apostles owne words where he calleth Christ The author and finisher of our faith as the Athenians were called Inventrices perfectrices omnium doctrinarum the inventers and perfecters of all good learning The Hebr. 12. 2. Romanes had their learning from the Grecians the Grecians from the Aegyptians and the Aegyptians from the Chaldees and they from Adam Seth Noah the old Patriarchs but the Church 1 Cor. 2. 22. Act. 7. 222. hath all her learning religion faith from God he gave it at the first and he confirmed it at the least He gave some to be Apostles some Prophets and some Evangelists some Pastours and teachers for gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the ministerie and for the edification Faith diversly taken of the body of Christ till wee meete together in the unitie of faith and knowledge of the Sonne of God c. Luke having spoken of Stephens faith noteth the cause of it that is that Stephen was full of the Spirit Ephes 4. 11. Act. 7. 55. Gal. 5. 22. 1 Cor. 12. 9. Rom. 3. 3. For God worketh it by his Spirit All good workes are the fruits of the Spirit therefore faith The fruits of the spirit are love ioy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith c. and it is reckoned up among the gifts of the spirit To another is given faith saith the Apostle by the same spirit But faith is in the Scriptures diversly taken sometimes it is given to God and it signifieth his faithfulnesse in his promises In this sense the Apostle useth the word saying Shall their unbeleefe make the faith of God of none effect when it is given to man it is taken seven manner of wayes First it is taken for Fidelity as it is a vertue in the second Mat. 23. 23. table So Christ useth the word where speaking to the Pharisees he saith Yee tythe Mint Anise and Commin and leave the weightie matters of the Law as iudgement and mercie and faith Secondly It is taken for the doctrine of faith and Christian Religion so it is said Many were added unto the faith that is to Act. 6. 7. Christian Religion And againe God opened the doore of faith unto the Gentiles that is of Religion Act. 14. 27. Thirdly It is taken for profession of religion thus Elimas is Act. 13. 8. charged To turne the Deputie from the Faith that is to make no more profession of Religion Fourthly It is taken for Christ himselfe by a Metonymie who is both the object and cause of faith So the Apostle useth the word saying But after that faith is come wee are no longer under a Gal. 325. schoole-master Fifthly It is taken for knowledge only and thus the Divels are said to beleeve Sixthly It is taken for the gift of working miracles If I had 1 Cor. 13. 2. all faith so that I could move mountaines c. Lastly It is taken for that grace by which felicity and the chiefe good is applied and thus it is taken in my Text. And this the Apostle Paul cals the faith of Gods elect For none but the elect have it al the elect have it at one time or another and once had it can never be finally and totally lost but it continueth with them till they come to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the living then they shall have no more need of it It is therfore called Saving faith because it brings us to salvation Ephes 2. 8. And Iustifying faith because it is that meanes or instrument which Gods spirit worketh in us whereby wee apply unto our selves Christ Iesus in and by whom wee are iustified And Sanctifying faith because by it God purifieth our hearts This saving iustifying sanctifying faith is Gods gift for hee is the Authour of this faith From whom every good gift and every perfect gift commeth And that which is said of Lydia is true The meanes to beget faith of all the faithfull That the Lord opened the heart of Lydia so that shee beleeved And Christ saith This is the worke of God that yee beleeve not the worke of the Father alone or of the Sonne alone Iam. 1. 17. Iohn 6. 29. or of the Holy Ghost alone but of the whole Trinity For this is one of the workes of God which are said to bee Ad extra and therefore attributed to all the three persons To the first where Christ saith No man can come unto me that is beleeve except the Iohn 6. 44. Father draw him to the second where the Apostle calleth Iesus The author and finisher of our faith to the third where the Apostle reckoneth faith amongst the fruits of the spirit And the onely Hebr. 12. 2. thing that moved God to worke this precious gift in us is his meere good will So saith our Saviour It is so Father because thy good pleasure was such And the end at which he aymed in working Mat. 11. 26. this grace is first the setting forth of his owne glory secondly the salvation of mankinde and therefore S. Peter calleth salvation The end of our Faith 1 Pet. 1. 9. This doctrine serveth to humble us to let us see that it is not in our power that faith is not hereditary God beginneth it and increaseth it and finisheth it The Apostles prayed Lord increase Luk. 17. our faith The meanes to get this ●aith is double Outward Inward The outward meane is the word hereupon saith the Apostle How shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard Rom. 10. 14. Rom. 10. 8. and thereupon thus concludeth faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word of God and hereupon it is called The Word of faith And Paul saith of the Ephesians that they beleeved After they Ephes 1. 13. heard the Gospell And finely saith Chrysostome Accenditur fidei lampas igne divini verbi the lampe of our faith is lighted by the fire of the divine word And this faith is wrought in us both by reading and preaching of the word and both are commended and ordeined of God and first for reading God himselfe commandeth it and by reading S. Augustine was converted for he confesseth Deut. 3. 1. 9. of himselfe that being inclined to the heresie of the Manichees he heard a voyce saying Tolle lege take up and read meaning the booke of God which he presently did and so by reading was converted for surely the reading of the word is a meanes appointed of God to the begetting of faith and raising up the Kingdome of God in the hearts of men And to
said as Bernard said Caput canum cor vanum a gray head and a greene wit gray haires and greene lusts but we must goe forward and not fall from the state of grace Take heed that no man fall away from the Heb. 12. 15. state of grace saith the Apostle Christianity and progresse in religion is compared to a building in a building men must goe forward and to the foundation adde the roofe And it is compared to a race in a race men run on till they come to the goale Iude 20. and it is compared to the growth of trees Trees grow bigger and 1 Cor. 9. 24. 2 Pet. 3. 28. Ephes 4. 14. taller And it is compared to the ages of men the ages of men grow still and they bee elder to day than they were yesterday And it is compared to the morning light and to the Sunne which Prov. 4. 18. commeth forth as a Bridegroome out of his Chamber and rejoyceth as a Giant to run his course The morning light waxeth brighter and Psal 19. brighter the Sun shineth more and more unto the noone day Even so good men must wax better better The Church is Gods vineyard his people are his plants the plants must grow and the Christians increase Terra Domini est ecclesia ejus ipse rigat ipsam colit ipse agricola pater Gods ground is his Church he tills dungs Aug. in Psa 36. waters himselfe is the Husbandman and we must bring forth fruit and grow in grace and in the knowledge of the Lord Iesus Paul prayeth for the Philippians that they may abound in grace more and Phil. 1. 9. more And for the Colossians To increase in knowledge Let vs grow up therefore into full holinesse in the feare of God in grace 1 Cor. 7. 1. there is no stand but either a progresse or a regresse non oportet Chrysost Homil. 14. exordia sola habere clara sed clariorem finem A good beginning must have a better end The runner must continue to the goale and the Champion to the victory The Orator will shine most in the end Vt cum plausibus discedat that hee may depart with credit The wicked grow worse and worse He that puts his hand to the plough must not looke backe hee shall have the crowne of victory that continueth unto death and hee be saved that growes better to the end Non progredi est regredi not Luke 9. Mat. 12. Bern. to goe forward is to goe backeward We must not be like Ioshua his Sunne which stood still nor like Ezekiahs Sunne which went backeward but like Davids Sunne which alway goeth forward As well was hee punished that hid his talent as he that spent his Mat. 25. Luke 16. masters goods riotously The Divines hold two principles in divinity That good men goe forward their ditch becommeth a flood and their flood a Sea they looke forth as the morning as faire as the Moone Eccles 24. 35. Cant. 6. 9. Iohn 15. 2. pure as the Sunne terrible as an army with Banners they beare fruit and Christ purgeth them That they may bring forth more fruit they flourish like a Palme tree and grow as a Cedar of Lebanon they are planted in the house of the Lord and will flourish in the Courts of our God they shall still bring forth fruit in their age they Psal 92. 13. 14. shall be fat and flourishing Another principle in Divinity is that bad men decrease they grow from Lovers to Lechers from Liars to Swearers from Quarrellers to Killers They are ever learning as Paul said of the 2 Tim. 3. 7. Hypocrites and never come to the knowledge of the truth they are plants not planted by Christ therefore to be rooted up for they be Ier. 9. 2. 3. Adulterers and an assembly of rebels They bend their tongues like their bowes for lies but they haue no courage for the truth upon the earth for they proceede from evill to worse and they have not knowne mee saith the Lord. They have seven sinnes more and seven Devils moe enter and their plague shall bee seven times greater Mat. 12. But let us Crescere de virtute in virtutem grow from vertue to vertue and let our workes bee more at the last than at the first and let us try our selves every day whether wee goe forward or Apoc. backward in Religion A wise occupier will at the yeeres end see whether he hath gained or lost and a wise Christian will examine himselfe whether hee bee increased or decreasing in Religion in Faith in Zeale in Knowledge and Godlinesse For there bee more Bankrupts in Religion than in any Trade besides in the whole World Salomon lost his ships Laban his sheepe Esau his lands and birth-right the Prodigall sonne his patrimonie 1 Reg. 10. Gen. 30. Heb. 12. Luke 15. Iob 1 1 Tim. 1. 19. Iob his cattell but most men lose faith love piety and a good conscience they are poorer to God this yeere than the last For as touching Faith Religion Love Zeale c. they have made shipwracke The Wicked are like Nebuchadnezzars Image whose head was all of gold whose shoulders were all of silver whose belly was all of brasse whose legges were all of iron and feete of clay they are worst at last they live not to amend but to fulfill the measure of their iniquity The first yeere wee are Angels the second Mat. 23. 32. yeere Men the third yeere devills like the Taxus of India which the first yeelded fruit the second yeere leaves the Perseverance brings the Crowne third yeere poyson But hast thou left Sodome Looke not back againe with Lots wife lest thou bee turned into a pillar of Salt Hast thou marched toward the heavenly Canaan turne not Gen. 19. Act. 7. 1 Cor. 9. backe againe in thine heart like the Israelites Hast thou begun to runne in the wayes of God like the Corinths Sic curre ut comprehendas so runne that thou mayst obtaine hast thou begunne in the spirit make not an end in the flesh like the Galathians Gal. 3. 2 Cor. 12. pray thrice as Paul did yea pray seven times as Elias did yea pray without ceasing that thou mayst goe forward in Religion Non minor est virtus quàm quaerere parta tueri Adam 1 Reg. 18. fell from Paradise Iudas from the schoole of our Saviour the Angels from Heaven yea the whole world falleth Scarce one of a hundred of a thousand hold fast the profession of their hope Heb. 10 32. without wavering But to proceed Iude saith of these Angels That they left their habitation Where Gods justice is discharged of all blot and staine for willingly wilfully they fell from God that God might be just when he speaketh and pure when hee judgeth The Scripture therefore distinguisheth the times of their state The first time is their creation in which they were made all
increase in it Hereupon the Apostles prayed unto the Lord Increase our faith habent enim omnes virtutes suas conceptiones nativitates incunabula aetatis incrementa all vertues have Luke 17. 5. their conceptions births infancies increasings Hereupon Paul exhorteth the Iewes of Thessalonica To increase more and more Our progresse in Religion is compared to building in this Verse 1 Thess 4. 1. 1 Cor. 9. 24. and to a race 2 Pet. 3. 18. Ephes 4. 14. Pro. 4. 18. Cant. 6. 9. To the growth of trees To the ages of men To the morning light To the Moone which waxeth All which note a progresse in Christianity houses are edified from the foundation to the wals from the wals to the roofe in a race men runne on to the goale trees grow bigger and bigger men waxe taller and higher the morning light is brighter and brighter untill the noone day the Moone waxeth so must Christians we must neither stand still in Religion nor goe backward wee must not stand still in Religion like the Sunne in Gibeon nor goe backe like Ahaz his Diall but wee must goe forward it is not enough to keepe one talent but we must gaine by Mat. 25. 28. it like good land that giveth not his owne seed but much more as well was he punished that hid his talent as hee that spent his Luke 16. masters goods riotously to stand still in Religion is all one as Good men grow better dayly to goe backward Non progredi est regredi not to goe forward is to goe backward but truly the man who hid his talent is better than wee For wee cannot shew that love and that zeale that knowledge that hath beene in us in times past The Church of Ephesus lost her first love but I would that our Churches were like it they hated the evill wee hate the good they examined the Apoc. 2. 4. Luk 12. 45. false apostles wee examine none they suffered persecution we persecute others we smite our fellow servants Iulian the Christian is become Iulian the Apostata Simon Peter is become Simon Magus Ioseph is become Pharao Lambes are turned into dogges doves into serpents Wee have bene idle in the Lords vineyard Mat. 20. not one houre but eleven houres as the Master and Owner of the vineyard said unto the men whom hee found standing doing nothing in the market stead Why stand yee here idle So may God say to us Quare statis otiosi in Ecclesia Why stand yee here idle in the Church Wee have stood still with the figge-tree not three yeeres but threescore yeeres I feare me God will say to us as of the figge-tree Never fruit grow on thee hereafter so to Mat. 11. 14. us Never Faith never love never knowledge bee in thee hereafter It is a principle in Divinity a Maxime in that art that good men goe forward waxe better For such as bee planted in the house of Psal 92 13 14. the Lord shall flourish in the courts of the house of our God they shall bring forth more fruit in their age they shall bee fatte and well liking They are like the Cypres-tree that bringeth most fruit when it is an hundred yeere old like the Eagle that reneweth her age like the Hart that reneweth his strength by snuffing up a snake into his nosthrils Every branche saith our Saviour that beareth Iohn 13. 2. not fruit in me hee taketh away and every one that beareth fruit hee purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit Wee must bee as the Sunne when hee riseth in his might wee must increase and grow in goodnesse and so daily more and more in Gods favour we must Iudg. 5. 31. Cant. 6. 9. looke forth as the morning we must be faire as the Moone pure as the Sunne terrible as an army with banners For though our gifts and graces be small at the first yet we must grow up and increase more and more our ditch must become a flood and our flood a sea For as Salomon saith A wise-man will heare and increase Ecclesiast 24. 35. in learning and a man of understanding will attaine to wise counsels yea and further hee affirmeth Give admonition to the Wise and he will be the wiser teach a righteous man he will increase in learning Examples Pro. 1. 5. we have in the Church of Thiatyra of whom Christ speaketh Pro. 9. 9. thus I know thy works thy love and thy service and thy faith and thy patience and thy workes and that they are more at the last then at the Apoc. 21. 19. first Another principle is that the evill decease they are ever learning and never come unto the knowledge of the truth like the Almond-tree 2 Tim. 3. 7. that is soonest blossomed and soonest blasted they We are most of us non-proficients in plenty of meanes goe backward Yea and they proceed from evill to worse Wee grow in yeeres but doe we grow in grace and knowledge as S. Peter exhorteth saying Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ We draw neere unto our graves but doe wee Esa 1. 4. Ier. 9. 3. 2 Pet. 3. 18. draw neerer God and heaven Alas there bee more dunses and non-proficients and bankerupts in religion then in all trades and artes of the world besides wee creepe like snailes wee glide like wormes wee goe like the messenger of ill newes slowly Wee learne little wee know little wee doe little if in forty yeeres to come we learne no more then in forty yeeres past our graves will meete with us in the way and it will bee too late to learne when wee are come into the land of darkenesse and place where all things are forgotten Will God shew a miracle to the dead or shall the Psal 88. 10 11. 12. deadrise and praise God Shall his loving kindnesse bee declared in the grave or his faithfulnesse in destruction Shall his wonderous works bee knowne in the darke and his righteousnesse in the land of oblivion We may say with the Apostle that whereas concerning the time wee Hebr. 12. 5. ought to bee teachers wee our selves had need to be taught the first principles of the Word of God for we are such as have need of milke not of strong meate Alas wee are still children still at our milke still in our A. B. C. still in the Crosse-row of Divinity for what know wee now that wee knew not tenne twentie thirty forty yeeres agoe We are like the women that Paul speaketh of Alwayes learning and never comming to the knowledge 2 Tim. 3. 7. of the truth like Tantalus that perished for thirst in the middest of the waters and wee in the middest of doctrine as yet we are in the doctrine of beginnings of Christ nay wee have not begun yet for of Faith Repentance Baptisme Imposition of Hebr. 6. hands and of the Resurrection of
the dead and of eternal Iudgement we can say nothing Here I am to speake to two sorts of men the one is proud and say they have enough they eede not to learne as Laodicia said I am rich and increased with goods and have need of nothing the Apoc. 3. 17. other is dull and saith hee cannot learne The first is confuted by the Apostle If any man thinketh hee knoweth any thing he knoweth 1 Cor. 8. 2. 1 Cor. 13. 9. nothing yet as hee ought to know Wee see here in a glasse in a darke speaking Letus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let us not presume Rom. 12. 3. to understand above that which is meet for us to understand but that wee understand according to sobriety Plura nescio quàm scio I am ignorant of many moe things than I know Ignorantiam meam non ignoro Aug. Origen Cal. I am not ignorant of my ignorance Hoc unum scio quòd nihil scio this one thing I know that I know nothing as I should know The other the dull man hee belyeth God hee belyeth not man but God for God hath said wee may learne If thou callest Pro. 2 3 4 5 6. for knowledge and cryest for understanding if thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for treasures then shalt thou understand the feare We must bee diligent and constant in seeking Knowledge of the Lord and finde the knowledge of God for the Lord giveth Wisedome out of his mouth commeth Knowledge and Vnderstanding And again the Wise man saith That all the wayes of God are plaine to them that will understand meaning that the Word of God is Pro. 8. 9. easie to all that have a will and a desire unto it so bee thou willing to understand the Lords Word and Way and thou shalt understand it there is no want but Will Aske saith our Saviour and it shall be given you seeke and yee shall finde knock and Mat. 7. 7. it shall bee opened unto you so that if so bee wee would but take a little paines our knowledge would not bee at the ebbe as it is Ephorus and Theopompus were two Schollers the one needed a bridle the other a spurre the one went on too fast the other too slow it is not the bridle but the spurre that wee need Our faith I must confesse is a little stronger our knowledge a little greater our lives a little better than in the time of Popery for thē we were blind indeed not as whelps that see after nine daies not as the man in the Gospell that saw men walke like trees but blinde as Beetles blinde as the men of Sodom that groped for Lots doore but alas how weake is our Faith how small is our Knowledge how cold is our Zeale in respect of that which we might have had if wee had applied our hearts to Wisedome What know wee at fourescore yeeres old that a child knowes not at eight yeeres old If a childe should never grow in height nor Wisedome it were prodigious even so wee are children still nay monsters But bee not saith the Apostle children in 2 Cor. 14. 20. understanding but as concerning maliciousnesse bee children but in understanding be of ripe age But wee have inverted the order Let us follow the counsel of the Wise man In the morning sow thy seed and in the evening let not thy hand rest that is doe good in thy Eccles 11. 6. youth doe good in thy age yea at all times bee not weary of sowing and bee not weary of working Of well doing for in due season wee shall reape if wee faint not the seede time is nothing Gal. 6. 9. the growth is nothing the harvest is all in all to doe well in youth is nothing to doe well in age is nothing but to continue till death to the last gaspe is pietie in deede If the righteous turne away from his righteousnesse and commit iniquity and doe Ezech. 18. 24 26 according to all the abominations that the wicked man doth shall hee live All his righteousnesse that hee hath done shall not bee mentioned but in the transgresston that hee hath committed in his sinne that hee hath sinned in them hee shall dye for when a righteous man turneth away from his righteousnesse and committeth iniquity hee shall even dye for the same hee shall even dye for his iniquity that hee hath done As well may we drowne in the Havens mouth as in the middest of the boysterous sea as well fall through the peevishnesse of age as through the lusts and concupiscences of youth but of many it may be said Caput canum cor vanum a gray head and a greene wit Anni multi acta stulta dies vberes fructus steriles facies rugosa●at We must build here against the time to come lingua nugosa many yeeres but foolish acts plentifull dayes but barren fruits a wrinckled face but a trifling toyish tongue The wicked is like the Vintner in the Gospell who broached his best wine first and after that which is worse like Nebuchadnezers Iohn 2. 10. Image whose head was all of gold whose shoulders were of silver whose belly was all of brasse whose legges were all of yron and feete of clay still worse and worse O brethren wee build apace but it is with bloud as the Prophet sayd They build up Sion with bloud and Ierusalem with iniquity but Sion shall bee Mich. 3. 10 12. plowed up as a field and Ierusalem shall bee an heape c. And Woe unto Hab. 2. 12. to him that buildeth a towne with bloud and erecteth a Citty with iniquity But if wee build not in zeale faith knowledge our houses here shall fall or bee desolate even great and faire without inhabitant the foundation is not good but if wee doe good and Esa 59. be rich in good workes if we bee ready to distribute and communicate Then shall wee lay up for our selves in store a good foundation against the time to come Wee have no houses in Heaven wee 1 Tim. 6. 19. cannot say with Paul Wee know that if the Earthly house of this Tabernacle 2 Cor. 5. 1. bee destroyed wee have an house that is to say a building not made with hands but eternall in Heaven We have faire houses here but what have wee in Heaven Are wee built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe being the head corner Ephes 2. 20. stone Can a man goe a long journey with standing still Did the Istaelites goe into Canaan Or the wise men to Bethlem with never moving Heaven is a long journey wee must not stand still but runne wtih patience the race that is set before us Heb. 12. 1. And can wee goe to heaven with doing nothing With learning nothing Beleeving nothing We weave Penelopes webbe Ipsa texuit retexuit what she woave in the day shee
Temple When a man shall trespasse against his neighbour and he lay upon him an oath to cause him to sweare and the swearer shall come before 1 Reg. 8. 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38. thy Altar in this house then heare thou in Heaven and doe and iudge thy servants that thou condemne the wicked to bring his way upon his head and justify the righteous and give him according to his righteousnesse When thy people Israel shall bee overthrowne before the enemy because they have sinned against thee and turne againe unto thee confesse thy name and pray and make supplication unto thee in this House Then heare thou in Heaven and bee mercifull unto the sinne of thy people Israel And when Heaven shall be shut and there shall bee no raine because they have sinned against thee and shall pray c. Then heare thou in Heaven and pardon the sinne of thy servants When there shall bee famine in the land when there shall bee pestilence when there shall be blasting mildew grashopper or caterpiller when their enemy shall besiege them in the Citties of their land or any plague or any sicknesse and they make their prayers before thee heare them and bee mercifull unto them c. Thus prayer is a remedy against all mischiefe Physicians for divers diseases have divers remedies but a Christian for all and every disease hath but one only remedy and that is prayer For Whosoever calleth upon the name of the Lord shall be saved fides est janua ad misericordiam Ioel. 2. 32. oratio est clavis quae januam reserat Faith is the gate to mercy and Prayer is the key to unlocke this gate Hereupon saith Saint Iames Is any man among you sicke Let him pray and the prayer Jam. 5. 13 15. of faith shall save the sicke Prayer is profitable powerfull and pleasant it is every way profitable first to obtaine every good thing Verily verily saith Christ I say unto you whatsoever yee aske Prayer prevalent with not only the creature but Creator the Father in my name hee will give it you Secondly to prevent judgements present or future Note for this purpose the prayer of Salomon before mentioned Thirdly to confirme and strengthen us in all spirituall graces By Christs prayer was Peters faith kept Iohn 16. 23. 1 Reg. 8. 33. Luk. 22. 32. Col. 1. 9. Act. 8. 22. from sayling and the Apostle prayed for the Colossians That they might bee filled with knowledge c. increasing therein and strengthened Fourthly to obtaine remission of sinnes For which cause Saint Peter said to Simon Magus Pray God that if it be possible the thought of thy heart may bee forgiven thee Whereby hee giveth us to understand that if remission of sinnes may bee obtained by any meanes prayer is the meanes And this also Christ hath taught us when hee willed us to pray thus Forgive us our trespasses as wee Mat. 6. forgive them that trespasse against us Fifthly prayer sanctifieth all Gods creatures unto us so saith the Apostle The creature is sanctified by the Word of God and prayer To conclude prayer is profitable 1 Tim. 4. 5. unto all things it is like unto Iacobs ladder by which Gods blessings descended downe upon us or as Catena aurea a golden Isidor de f●uctu Orandi chaine by which we ascend up to God And as prayer is profitable so is it powerfull For it prevaileth over all creatures whether reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as man and invisible as Angels whether evill or good yea it prevaileth with the Creator himselfe Daniel by prayer stopped the Dan. 6. 12. mouthes of Lions among whom hee was cast by Davids prayer 2 Sam. 15. 31. Gen. 32. was Achitophels wisdome turned into foolishnes by Iacobs prayer was Esaus wrath alayed by Mardochaeus and Esters prayer was Hamans malice like Sauls sword turned into his owne bowels by Est 4. 6. cap. 7. 10. 2 Reg. 19. 15. Ezechias prayer was the whole host of Senacherib overthrowne one faithfull mans prayer is more forcible than the power of an whole army Witnes the example of Moses who lift up his hands Exod. 17. 11. while Israel fought against Amalech and prevailed When Marcus Aurelius had almost lost his army in Germany for want of water the Christians in his campe prayed and God sent raine in great Eusib abundance And Theodoret affirmeth that Theodosius in a battell Theodo that hee fought being in danger to be overthrowne and his men ready to fly prayeth and God giveth him the victory For as Origen saith One man prevaileth more in prayer then innumerable sinners do with fighting Orig. By prayer the Divels are cast out for there is a kinde of Divels that go not out but by fasting and prayer Mat. 17. 11. If Christ would have prayed hee might have had more then Mat. 26. 53. twelve legions of Angels to guard him and defend him At Elishaes prayer the mountaines were full of charrets and horses of 2 Reg. 6. 17. fire round about Many admirable and extraordinary things have Gods children in all ages effected by prayer By prayer Abraham obtained favour for Ismael by prayer Moses divided the red sea by prayer Ioshua made the Sunne to stand still in the middest of heaven by Prayer pleasant to God and man prayer Anna became fertile by prayer Ezechias procured a longer life by prayer Iudith destroyed Holofernes and Ester saveth the Iewes by prayer Susanna is saved from the unjust Iudges Daniel from the Lions and Peter from Herod by prayer the Leper is cured the Publican justified the Divels scared Heaven gates opened the fetters loosed and iniquity vanquished by prayer wee have accesse unto the throne of grace It is a great blessing that God in his Word vouchsafeth to speake to man but not comparable to this that man should talke with God Yee see the power of prayer Thirdly prayer is a pleasant thing to God and man To God and therefore resembled to the incense Let my prayer come forth as the incense and let the lifting up of my hands bee an evening Psal 141. sacrifice For as the sent of incense is pleasant to the nosthrils of man so are the prayers of the Saints unto God for when they Chrysost ascend to heaven God seemeth to smell a sweet savour like the incense Prayer also is pleasant and delightfull unto man For if it were a pleasure to Iacob for to speake to Rachel and to Ionathan with David what a pleasure is it for a devour soule to speake unto God Oratio locutio est ad Deum quando legis Deus tibi loquitur quando oras cum Deo loqueris Prayer is a speaking to God when Aug. thou readest God speakes to thee when thou prayest thou talkest with God The child is never better then when it is in the fathers or mothers lappe so
and his waters shall bee sure I will expound all these blessednesses by this one Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne In this sense Zacharias and Elizabeth are Rom. 4. 6. Luke 1. 6. called just non quia non potuit sed quia noluit Deus illis imputare peccata not because God could not but because hee would not impute unto them their sinne for otherwise if God should bee extreme To marke what is done amisse who can abide it For Psal 130. 3. wee cannot bee just before God but by forgivenesse of sinnes in which respect the Prophet prayeth thus Enter not into judgement Psal 143. 2. with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man that liveth be justified Let us then learne to expound the Scripture by the Scripture for that which the holy Ghost saith obscurely in one place that hee saith more plainely in another place and surely if the Papists had conferred Scriptures and weighed things by the Word of God as they have done in the lying Schooles of their owne reason and traditions they might easily have reconciled these two that no man is righteous and yet that men are righteous and faultlesse when God imputeth not their faults unto them For this cause Paul judged all things as dung that hee might winne Christ and might bee found in him that is saith Paul Phil. 3. 8 9. not having mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ even the righteousnesse which is of God through Faith Hee maketh two kinds of righteousnesse The one of the Law The other of Faith Contenting himselfe with the latter thus August said Iustitiam nostram magis constare remissione peccatorum A●g quàm perfectione virtutum Our righteousnes to consist more in remission of our sinnes then in the perfection of our vertues and thus Ambrose said Non gloriabor quia justus sum sed quia redemptus Ambr. sum non quod vacuus sum peccati sed quod remissa sunt mihi peccata I will not glory because I am just but because I am redeemed not because I am void of sinne but because my sinnes are pardoned mee and forgiven mee Wee must all say with Daniel O Lord righteousnesse belongeth unto thee and unto us shame And againe O Lord unto us appertaineth open shame to our Kings to our De● 9. 7 8 9. Princes to our Fathers because wee have sinned against thee yet compassion and forgivenesse is in thee ô Lord our God although wee have rebelled against thee For though a man seeme never so pure in his owne eyes yet all is corruption before God and therefore faith holy Iob Though I wash my selfe in snow water and purge my selfe Iob 9. 30 31. most cleane yet shalt thou plunge mee in the pit and mine owne clothes All knowledge and vertue in us imperfect in this life shall make mee filthy Paul said that wee are perfect and yet eodem oris halitu dixit nos imperfectos esse and with the same breath he said that wee are unperfect If any man should urge the former words to prove that our knowledge our will our righteousnesse is perfect Paul confuteth it in the twelfth verse of the same Chapter so hee said I know to be full and to be hungry hee can doe Phil. 4. 13. this and hee can doe that but how of himselfe No Sed per Iesum Christum I am able to doe all things thorough the helpe of Christ which strengtheneth mee not of his owne power or free will This answereth the common slander of the world that wee are Puritans Precisians c. But surely if there bee any Puritans among us either they be Papists or Familists for the one say that they are saved by their workes and the other that they have payd a price for their sinnes as well as Christ saving that he hath payde his money before them hee died first As for us wee know no purity but the purity of Christ Iesus wee know that wee are washed in his bloud and that his bloud doth cleanse us 1 Iohn 1. 7. from all sinne But they object the words of our Saviour to the yong man If thou wilt bee perfect goe sell that thou hast and give it to the poore c. And againe Yee shall bee perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect Mat. 19. 21. Mat. 5. 48. And againe they alledge the saying of Paul how that Christ gave himselfe that hee might make it to himselfe a glorious Ephes 5. 27. Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should bee holy and without blame The two former places deceived the Monkes and the third deceived Augustine for it is not meant of this life but of the life to come the Church shall bee without blot not here but elsewhere in Heaven For when Christ which is our life shall appeare then shall wee appeare with him in glory Augustine Col. 3. 4. Aug. reasoneth thus Amor sequitur notitiam at notitia nostra est imperfecta ergo amor justicia obedientia nostra imperfecta sunt Love followeth knowledge but our knowledge is imperfect therefore our Love righteousnesse and obedience are imperfect Sumus 1 Cor. 13. 9 10. Luke 17. 10. servi inutiles wee are unprofitable servants yea even when we have done all that wee can To answere therefore that which they alledge out of Mathew Yee shall bee perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect And againe Mat. 5. 48. cap 19. 21. If thou wilt be perfect goe sell all that thou hast Christ sheweth rather what wee should strive for than what we have attained to Pij vocantur perfecti imputativè inchoativè The godly are called perfect imputatively and inchoatively for who can say quoth Chemnisius My heart is cleane Et tamen omnia munda mundis yet Chemnisius versus Andra. to the cleane all things are cleane because wee are accounted cleane and esteemed as worthy Marke what Christ saith Watch Pro. 20. Tit. 1. 15. and pray continually that yee may bee counted worthy to escape all these things The phrase therefore warranted of Christ our cleanenesse Luke 21. 36. our worthinesse our perfection is by imputation the Catharists the Donatists the Pelagians the Celestines the Anabaptists the No Saint without sinne Familists the Papists abuse this doctrine of perfection to derogate from God and to arrogate unto themselves and for Canisius in his Catechisme hee setteth downe in his Chapter of satisfactions that I never read in any Papist before he maketh three sorts of men One that never sinned A second sort indifferent A third extremely evill For the first he quoteth the place in the prayer of Manasses that Abraham sinned not which is spoken comparatively by way of comparison such a phrase is used by the elect and chosen vessell of God Saint Paul where hee saith thus Adam
understanding What blindnesse hath possessed our braine And how hath a covering of brawne covered our hearts that wee give no Majestie to God That which Paul said of the Gospel If our Gospell bee hid it is hid to them that 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. are lost in whom the God of this World hath blinded their mindes So say I of Gods wonders This sinne of England is written with an Iron penne and with a point of a Diamond God revealeth himselfe Ier. 17. 1. to the World six wayes 1 By his Word 2 By Visions Act. 26. 18. Esa 1. 1. 3 By Dreames 4 By Wonders or Miracles Numb 12. Iohn 5. Mat. 28. 19. 5 By Sacraments 6 By Types and figures By foure or five of these meanes God hath made himselfe knowne to us especially by wonders yet wee know him not wee are greater fooles than Nabal and verier beasts than ever was Nabuchadnezzar 1 Sam. 25. Dan. 4. Ier. 8. 5 6 7. God must end us before hee mend us wee are turned backe to a perpetuall rebellion Wee give our selves to deceit and will not returne no man repents him of his wickednesse saying What have I done Every one turneth to his race as the horse to the battell Even the Storke in the ayre saith God knoweth her appointed times and the Turtle and the Crane and the Swallow observe the time of their comming but my people knoweth not the judgement of the Lord. This is a nation that heareth not the voice of the Lord nor receiveth Discipline shall not these two great earth-quakes this yeere the one in the day the other in the night worke in us a feare of Gods majestie It is a token Am●● 1602. that God is angry and so applied by the Prophet The earth trembled and shoke the very foundations of the Earth were seene at thy chyding at the blasting of the breath of thy displeasure Psal 18. When God would take revenge of the people in the dayes of Tiberius hee overthrew with an earth-quake twelve Cities of Asia and in Constantines dayes ten or eleuen townes in Campania Lipisius when the Iewes under Iulian had tooles of silver to reedify Gods dominion is in all creatures especially in man Ierusalem the earthquake in the night destroyed their worke in the day fire from heaven burnt up their tooles The righteous will see this and rejoyce and all iniquity shall stop her mouth and who is wise that hee may observe these things that God is a God of Majesty and magnificence for it is he alone that doth wondrous things The fifth thing here attributed to God is Dominion which is the authority of commanding and making Lawes unto all men in the world by which meanes God ruleth and hath a dominion or Kingdome in every one of us whereof the Lord Iesus speaketh in the knitting up of his prayer to God For thine is the Kingdome c. Of this David speaketh The Lord hath prepared his Mat 6. 13. Psal ●03 19 22. Throne in Heaven and his Kingdome ruleth over all And againe Praise the Lord all works of his in all places of his dominion And againe Thy Kingdome is an everlasting Kingdome and thy dominion endureth Psal 145. 13. throughout all ages And here learne a profitable lesson that when wee obey the Word of the Lord and suffer it to rule and overrule our passions then hath God a Kingdome and wee ascribe Dominion to him hereof the Lord Iesus spake For when Luk. 17. 20 21. hee was demanded of the Pharises when the Kingdome of God should come He answered them and said The Kingdome of God commeth not with observation neither shall men say Loe here or loe there for behold the Kingdome of Heaven is within you he meant not the Kingdome of glory but of grace For this dominion or Kingdome is threefold of Power Grace Glory The Kingdome of Power is whereby God subdueth his enemies and Tyrants of his Church and crusheth them in pieces like a potters vessell and of this Kingdome the Prophet thus Psal 2. 9. Psal 93. 1. Psal 97. 1 2. speaketh The Lord reigneth and is cloathed with Majesty the Lord is clothed and girded with power c. And againe the Lord reigneth let the people tremble hee sitteth betweene the Cherubins let the earth bee moved the Lord is great in Zion and high above all people His Kingdom of Grace is that wherby God ruleth in his elect through his Spirit inwardly as his Word outwardly whereof the Prophet speaketh thus With righteousnes shall he judge the poore Esa 11. 4 5 6. and with equity shall hee reprove c. Iustice shall bee the girdle of his loynes and faithfulnesse the girdle of his reines the Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe and the Leopard shall lye with the kidde and the calfe and the Lion and the fatte beast together and a little Child shall lead them When the corruption of our nature beginneth to bee like the house of Saul weaker and weaker and faith repentance zeale knowledge and other graces of the Spirit stronger and stronger in us and wee now beginne to love feare trust and serve and obey God then is the Kingdome of grace in us The Kingdome of Glory is that wherein the Angels and Saints We count our selves subjects of Christs Kingdome of grace but are rebellious departed now are and wee shall bee hereafter when mortality shall be swallowed up of life when wee shall sing the songs of our triumph O death where is thy sting O Hell where is thy victory The songs of our joy such as none can understand save the hundred forty and foure thousand which are received up from 1 Cor. 15. the earth But here hee meaneth chiefely the Kingdome of grace for God is a King everlasting immortall invisible and onely wise Wee 1 Tim. 1. 17. are then his subjects The Lawes are the Word Psal 2. 8. Psal 119. 105. Ephes 6. 12. The enemies of this Kingdome are Satan sinne death Hell domination the flesh and the wicked The time of it is to the worlds end Mat. 28. 20. The place is this world and the world to come Apot. 5. 10. But ô foolish men how doe wee pray for this dominion and Kingdome of the Lord when in our works wee destroy it When wee rebell against the Word like a rebellious nation Ezech. 2. 3 4. and like impudent children and stiffe-hearted As the horse rusheth into the battell so we rush into our sinnes we sinne Ier. 8. 6. Ephes 4. 19. with greedines wee draw it with cordes of vanity wee love the wicked we loath the godly we freeze in love we boile in malice Esa 5. we sell vertue we buy vice we refuse Christ we chuse Barrabas wee lay away life and embrace death wee overthwart the will of God in all things wee follow our owne wills and desires wee are traytors to God in
substance remaine ever 81 The Scriptures immutable tradition uncertaine 82 Divers acceptions of Saints ibid. The Saints onely the subjects of true Faith 83 The wicked usurpers of Gods gifts ibid. Whatsoever they have is for the Saints sake 84 Sermon 8. THe Church and Religion hath many adversaries 85 Every thing hath its contrary ibid. Religion cause of division 86 Religion must bee maintained to death ibid. Secret enemies most dangerous especially such as in a shew of Religion seeke to undermine Religion ibid. The Divell opposeth the Church sometime as a Lion by cruelty sometime as a Serpent by subtilty but he hurts most by subtilty 87 Poperie prevailes most by policy and fraud 88 All Atheists without God before regeneration and conversion 89 There is a two-fold life the one of Nature the other of Grace 90 Most men live as Naturalists ibid. Atheists worse than Divels ibid. Nature teacheth that there is a divine Power 91 Gods power ruleth in all things and doth often change the course of Nature ibid. Reasons to prove the divine Power 92 Religion is more in profession than practice 94 Many by their lives seeme Atheists ibid. Vngodlinesse hath two branches iniquity in life and manners and impurity in Religion ibid. Many turne the grace of God into wantonnesse ibid. Gods grace and bounty ought to leade to Repentance not to make men presumptuous 95 Afflictions make us seeke God 96 Prosperitie makes us forget him and grow rebellious 97 Wee may not despise or renounce the creatures or blessings of God as the Stoicks Anachorites Hermites c. have done ibid. Epicures their practice described and their end 98 vnde 99 Popish Doctrine tends to licenciousnesse ibid. Sermon 9. GOd is denied many wayes 101 They that professe God and live ungodly denie him ibid. Six degrees in sinne ibid. Gods creatures declare him foure wayes 103 God is present foure wayes ibid. The wicked that deny God here shall hereafter feele and acknowledge him ibid. God is one in substance three in person ibid. The Heathen worshipped many gods and the Papists invocate many as Gods yet there is but one onely true God ibid. The unity and trinity in the God-head illustrated by divers resemblances 104 Christ is denied many wayes 105 Faith is most eminent and confident in persecution ibid. Christ is denied when either the sufficiency or efficacy of his death is denyed 106 Knowledge and profession of Christ without practice nothing worth ibid. The Papists deny the offices of Christ consequently 107 Christ onely paid the full ransome for our Redemption 108 Christ our Lord jure Creationis Redemptionis ibid. Divers effusions of Christs bloud especially five 109 Christs passions for us require that wee should consecrate our whole selves and all the service of our soules and bodies him 110 Sermon 10. DEstruction the end of the ungodly 112 Looke not on the present estate but the end of the wicked 113 God is said to write in a booke for the certenty of his decree 114 Gods decree hath two parts Election Reprobation ibid. The causes of either not to bee inquired after 115 Gods judgements often secret alwayes just ibid. Wee must not pry into Gods secrets ibid. Gods will the cause of our election not faith or works 116 Five signes of election 117 Our election perfected by many degrees 118 Reprobation a second part of Gods decree 119 And as he electeth some so hee reprobates others ibid. As all things els have their contraries so the elect theirs namely the reprobate 120 God ordereth sinne but urgeth not to it ibid. Mans sinne and destruction come from himselfe 121 Three opinions concerning Gods dealing in sinne 122 How God is said to cause evill ibid. How God dealeth in reprobation 122 More then Gods bare permission in sinne ibid. How God is said to harden and to blind 124 God worketh by evill men not in them ibid. God Satan and Men concurre in the same action yet have different ends 125 Sermon 11. THough we know much yet we had neede be put in remembrance 527 Continuall instruction like the continuall dropping of raine ibid. Itching eares listen after novelties rather then wholesome doctrine 129 Preaching alwayes necessary otherwise the soule decayes in grace 130 If instruction faile Satan prevailes ibid. Meditation recordation chiefe meanes to enrich the soule 131 God first offereth mercy before hee inflict judgement 132 Gods abundant mercies and miraculous deliverances of the Israelites 133 Gods wrath upon the Aegyptians ibid. Gods abundant mercies to England 135 God allures by mercyes before hee punisheth 136 Contemners of Gods mercies severely punished ibid. Sinne pleasant in the committing in the end damnable 137 God suffereth the wicked till their sinne be at the full 139 God punishes some sooner some later ibid. Looke not on their present estate but their end 140 Sermon 12. INfidelity the cause of Israels destruction 140 And of their sinne the roote 141 Faith the gift of God 143 And the originall of all vertues ibid. True faith is in few 144 Most men led by the flesh rather than by the Spirit ibid. Faith hath a triple foundation ibid. Faith threefold justifying of miracles hystoricall 145 The causes of Salvation ibid. The just live by Faith if no Faith no accesse to God no interest in him 146 Degrees of Faith ibid. God giveth grace according to the measure of Faith 147 Faith all in all in applying and assuring Salvation ibid. The Angels that fell committed many sinnes in one ibid. Wee must bee wise according to sobriety 148 Angels though Spirits in essence yet appeared in divers formes ibid. The sinne of Angels in generall was Apostacy 149 Some Apostacy is unpardonable ibid. Why the Angels that fell were not restored 150 Three reasons of Dorbell why the wicked shall bee punished in Hell more than the Divels recited rejected ibid. All apostacy dangerous though some not damnable ibid. It is the end that crownes all our actions 151 The Christian must be alwayes increasing ibid. The wicked grow worse and worse 152 There is a decay in most ibid. The estate of Angels considered in regard of three severall times namely of Creation Confirmation last Iudgement 153 Divers names of Angels 154 Whence the Angels fell ibid. God the head but not the Redeemer of the good Angels 155 The time of the fall of Angels uncertaine as also the places whither ibid. The Divels though many in number yet there is one chiefe 156 How the Divell is said to worke and to be in the wicked ibid. The Divels though malicious Spirits yet agree in mischiefe 157 Division the cause of confusion 158 Sermon 13. THe case of the Angels most fearefull to be cast out of Heaven 159 Their abode is not certaine but some in the Ayre some in the Earth some in the Sea 160 The Divels malice infinite but his power by God limited ibid. Satan is said to be loosed Apoc. 20. 7. not simply but comparatively 161 The Divels and wicked