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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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who thinke it Christianitie enough to be harmelesse ciuill or neighbourly men or if they can say with the Pharisie I am not thus and thus an oppresser an vsu●er nor as such and such precise and nice fellowes who are as much hated of them as euer were the Publicans of the Pharisies I pay my Church duties and giue euerie man his owne and this is the religion of the common Protestant But suppose thou wert thus guiltles as thou saist yet art thou not yet halfe a Christian for the Apostle Peter writing to beleeuers enioyneth them not onely to flie the corruptions that are in the world through lust but moreouer to ioyne vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and patience and godlines and brotherly kindnesse and loue and addeth two reasons 1. If these things be in you and abound c. teaching that without these positiue vertues all the knowledge of Iesus Christ and consequently his profession is idle and vnfruitfull 2. If any haue them not he is blind and cannot see a farre off and hath forgotten that he was purged that is such a one seeth but a little in heauenly things and little regardeth that couering and curing of sinne goe together nor that remission and purging of sinne goe with sanctification of life and studie of well doing and consequently can be no Christian which agreeth with Christs owne posession that if any abide in him he cannot choose but bring forth much fruit Againe it shall not be enquired in the last iudgement what thou art not nor iudgement passe according to that thou hast not but what art thou what hast thou hast thou receiued the spirit of Iesus Christ if thou hast not the spirit of Christ thou art none of his hast thou reciued the fruits of that spirit such as are loue ioy peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnesse faith meekenes temperance If any haue the spirit of Christ it is life in him vnto righteousnesse these shall shewe the faith of thy heart and that thou art a sound Christian and not in shewe as the most content themselues to be Now to come neerer the vertue it selfe the word signifieth one friendly to strangers and readie to lodge and entertaine them a dutie much commended in the Scriptures vnto all Christians as a sweete fruit of liberalitie but vnto the Minister especially as a father and president vnto the flocke In the precept consider foure points 1. The occasion of it 2. whether it bindeth euerie Minister and how farre 3. the reasons enforcing it 4. the vse First the ground of it was the distressed estate and condition of the Church which by reason of many tyrants and persecutors was driuen into many straights partly perceiued in present and partly foreseene by the propheticall spirit of the Apostle not onely in the tenne persecutions then imminent but also in the seuerall afflictions in the world in which they were to finde tribulation euen to the ende of it For as it is in this aspectible world which is subiect to so many changes and mutations because it standeth in the vicissitudes of yeares moneths daies nights so much more is it in the spirituall world of the Church which in the earth is acquainted with her winter as well as summer her nights as well as dayes somtimes the sunne of righteousnesse most comfortably shining and imparting his heate and light by his neere approach vnto her yea and sometimes there be two sunnes in this firmament for together with the sunne of the Church the sunne of the world affoardeth warme and comfortable dayes for the full beautie libertie and glorie of the Church But sometimes againe this sunne departeth in dispeasure and carrieth the sunne of the world with him then is a blacke winter of the Church nothing but stormes and tempests persecutions and trialls one in the necke of another and scarse one faire gleame betweene Now in such times the poore Church is driuen to trauell for rest and the innocent doue of Christ cannot finde in her owne land any rest for the sole of her foote well may she flie abroad to seeke her securitie In all which times euerie Christian is bound by this and such like precepts to giue her harbour and safe conduct till the dash and storme be ouer Besides suppose the Church in generall at her best estate yet the particular members of the Church are for most part poore and needie and euen then subiect to many troubles for keeping the faith and good consciences by meanes whereof they are often driuen from house and home and sometime are in banishment and exile sometime in prison and bonds all whom the Lord commendeth to the charitable and Christian deuotion of Christian men and bindeth them to the cheerefull receiuing and releeuing of them in such necessitie let them be strangers yet if they be of the houshold of faith they haue right to harbour and releefe and in the practise of this dutie the Apostle requireth that the Minister be the foreman Secondly It will be inquired whether euerie minister must be harborous and hospitable and if he must what shall become of them whose liuings are scarce able to harbour themselues and much more of the swarmes of our tenne-pound men and verie many scarse halfe that to maintaine their familie it seemeth that euerie Minister ought to be a rich man Ans. It is not for me to prescribe any thing in the Church constitutions concerning Impropriations and Nonresidencie the former whereof were they restored to the Church and the latter remooued out of the Church no doubt there were but that sufficient ministers might be sufficiently maintained furnished to hospitalitie through the land But this I say that the poorest Minister may not exempt himselfe from this dutie neither is altogether disabled from it a poore man may be mercifull and comfortable to the distressed some way or other as if with Peter and Iohn he haue not money nor gold nor meate to giue yet such as he hath he can giue he can giue counsell prayers and affoard his best affections such cups of cold water shall not be vnaccepted nor vnrewarded of him whose propertie is to accpet a man according to that he hath and not according to that he hath not where he seeth a readie minde Thus must that place 1. Tim. 5.10 be vnderstood such widowes as were to be receiued into the seruice of the Church were to be chosen of such as had beene hospitable and harberous Now in all likelihood many of them if not the most were verie poore and had no great matters to be liberall of therfore the Apostle seemeth in the next words to declare wherein this hospitalitie might be shewed euen by such as had knowne want namely if they had performed bodily labour vnto them washed the Saints feete bestowed their best affections and chearefull labour for their releefe and thus might these poore widowes
vs against the scandal which is common in the world wherein most men beleeue not most men repent not nay scorne them that doe at which we may not stumble seeing that some yea the most are refused there must be in euery corner such as are blinded vnto destruction It is the Fathers good pleasure to reueale the things of the kingdome to ● few babes but to hide them from the most of the wise and prudent of the world A few are giuen vnto the Sonne and brought in due season vnto the faith many more are deliuered vp vnto Satan to haue the eies of their minds further blinded that so they might iustly perish in their infidelitie 3. Hence we must blesse God who hath chosen vs that he might put a difference betweene vs and others whereas he found no such difference in vs who were the children of wrath as well as others he chose vs not when we were but that we might be holy and vnblameable Ephes. 1.4 that from the first to last in our saluation all the glorie might be his yea that our ioy might be more full and our glorying in God more firme and cheerefull he hath made it knowne vnto vs that beeing elected we are sure of our happinesse for nothing shall be able to plucke vs out of his hands The second conclusion is that the elect haue a faith by themselues being here called the faith of Gods elect where by faith is not meant the doctrine of faith as Iude 3. Contend for the faith once giuen and 1. Tim. 1.19 but rather the gift of faith whereby we vnderstand and imbrace that doctrine neither is euery gift of faith here meant For there is 1. an historicall faith standing in an assent and acknowledgement of the truth of things written and taught 2. There is also an hypocriticall faith which passeth the former in two degrees First in that with knowledge and assent is ioyned such a profession of the truth as shall carrie a great shew and forme of godlinesse Secondly a kinde of gladnesse and glorying in that knowledge for it is ascribed to some who in temptation shall fall away to receiue the word with ioy To both which may be ioyned sometimes a gift of prophecie sometimes of working miracles as some in the last day shall say Lord haue we not prophecied and cast out deuills in thy name and yet they shall be vnknowne of Christ. Neither of these is the faith of the elect here mentioned but a third kind called sauing faith the inheritance of which is the proprietie of the elect for the iust man only liueth by this faith which in excellencie passeth both the former in three worthy properties 1. In that here with the act of vnderstanding and assent vnto the truth there goeth such a disposition and affection of the heart as apprehendeth and applieth vnto it the promise of grace vnto saluation causing a man to reioyce in God framing him vnto the feare of God and to the wayting through hope for the accomplishment of the promise of life 2. In that whereas both the former are dead and not raysing vnto a new life in Christ what shewes soeuer be made for the time the sunne of persecution riseth and all such moysture is dried vp This is a liuely and quickning grace reaching into the heart Christ and his merits who is the life of the soule and the moouer of it to all godly actions not suffering the beleeuer to be either idle or vnfruitfull in the worke of the Lord. 3. Whereas both the former are but temporarie this is perpetuall and lasting the other rising vpon temporarie causes and reasons can last only for a time as when men for the pleasure of knowledge or the name of it by industrie attaine a great measure of vnderstanding in diuine things or when for note and glorie or commoditie true or apparent men professe the Gospell let but these grounds faile a little or persecution approch they lay the key vnder the doore giue vp house and bid farewell to all profession Thus many of Christs Disciples who thought they had truly beleeued in him and that many moneths ●hen they heard him speake of the eating of his flesh and drinking his blood went backe and walked with him no more But the matter is here farre otherwise seeing this faith of the elect hath the promise made good to it that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against it Vse This conclusion teacheth vs 1. That true faith is an infallible marke of election assuring the beleeuer as certenly of his saluation as if he were alreadie gathered vp to his fathers or as if he had a speciall reuelation For besides that here it is a grace impropriate to the elect the Sonne of God teacheth it Ioh. 6.37 All that the Father giueth mee shall come vnto mee that is all those whom the Father chuseth to saluation he giueth to the Sonne to saue for election is founded in Christ and those who are thus giuen vnto the Sonne by the Father come vnto the Sonne that is beleeue in him for so the 35. verse confoundeth them He that commeth vnto mee shall not hunger and hee that beleeueth in mee shal neuer thirst So as those that beleeue are giuen to the Sonne to saluation The same teacheth the Euangelist Act. 13.48 As many as were ordained to life beleeued and 2. Thess. 2.13 the Apostle maketh sanctification of the spirit and the faith of truth two infallible notes of election All that can be here of moment obiected is that a man cannot know certainly that he hath faith But that is false for Paul 2. Cor. 13.5 willing the Corinthians to examine and prooue themselues whether they were in the faith or no and whether Christ be in them or no taketh it for granted that a man may know that he hath faith and that Christ is in him for else were his exhortation idle Quest. But how may a man knowe that he hath this faith that so the beleeuer may rise vp to the assurance of his election Ans. There be diuerse notes and companions of it more easily discerned then it selfe is as first It purifieth the heart Act. 15.19 and will not suffer it to be taken vp with vncleane thoughts or vnlawfull lusts it ordereth the affections and cu●beth them as with bit and bridle and bendeth them with reuerence to loue desire reioyce in God and his image yea in nothing more or so much yea and by thus ordering the heart it doth also guide the words with wisedome for the good man out of the good treasure of his heart cannot but send out good speaches Secondly from the works of loue a man may conclude he hath faith Gal. 5.6 faith worketh by loue first to God then to man for Gods sake for it hath respect both to him that begate and him that is begotten Thirdly it is plentifull in prayers and
praises which vnbeleeuers are as heauie vnto as a beare to the stake because they wāt the spirit which crieth in the hearts of Gods children abba father Fourthly it hath a liuely hope accompanying it it causeth watchfulnesse and waiting for yea and reioycing in the hope of the appearing of the Lord Iesus Rom. 5.2 beeing iustified by faith we reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God Secondly we may hence gather a cause why some beleeue some beleeue not it is not because some will and some will not whatsoeuer free-will-men presumptuously auouch the Holy Ghost telleth vs it is not in the willer nor in the runner but therefore men come to the faith because they are elected Act. 13.48 And why did not the Iewes beleeue the heauenly doctrine of Christ himselfe the reason is giuen Ioh. 10.26 Ye beleeue not because ye are not my sheepe most true is it here the elect haue obtained sauing faith the rest are hardened Rom. 11.7 The third conclusion is that this peculiar faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought in them by the ministrie of the word this beeing noted here that the end of the ministrie is to bring the elect vnto the faith Iob. 33.23 If there be a messenger or interpreter one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse now this righteousnesse is no other then the righteousnesse of faith for this ende were the Apostles called furnished and sent out into the world to teach men faith on the Sonne of God as appeareth in their commission Mar. 16.16 Goe into all the world and preach the Gospel to euery creature he that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued to this purpose is it that Paul affirmeth of the great mysterie of Godlinesse that it must first be preached vnto the Gentiles and then beleeued on in the world Vse 1. If this be the principall ende of the ministerie let ministers herein employ their first and principall paines to bring men vnto the faith wherein they shall imitate our Apostle not onely here but in his other Epistles who first dealeth in the causes and meanes of saluation and then instructeth in Christian manners as one whom the wisdome of God had taught that if the inside be not first made cleane and the heart purified by faith whatsoeuer actions can proceede from men be they neuer so glorious yet indeede they are no better then glistering sinnes he hath the right way of teaching in the schoole of Christ that first layeth for his ground faith in Christ and then buildeth thereon all his precepts of Christian Philosophie 2. The Minister ought to propound before him Gods end in performance of euery ministeriall dutie and that is by enlighting conuerting confirming comforting to bring and stablish men in the faith Which iustly reprehendeth such as forgetting themselues their dutie and people out of the pride of their hearts busie themselues in finding out obscure and darke mysteries tying hard knots to vntie them againe not much vnlike the dogge which refuseth soft meate to gnaw vpon bones and all this to get the praise of nimble heads and sharpe wits whereas the true glorie of a Minister is the number of those that are begotten to the faith who are gathered by the plaine euidence of the word in the words not which mans wisdome but which Gods spirit teacheth 3. The Lord hauing set out the ministrie for this vse let euery hearer acknowledge herein Gods ordinance and yeeld themselues with all submission vnto the ministerie and the word there preached that thereby they may haue faith wrought in their hearts God will haue men taught on earth and not from heauen by man not Angels or dead men let this meanes be despised nothing in heauen or earth can do thee good fast pray afflict thy soule forget not to distribute doe all the good thou canst but yet all this while despise the word offered and thou hast forsaken thine owne mercie nay more come to the ministerie heare the word read preached ioyne in the prayers and Sacraments of the Church if thou commest without the submission of thy heart whereby thou art become as prepared ground to couer the seede vnto increase all is in vaine for what is Paul what is Apollos what is the minister be he neuer so choise and excellent except he be the Minister of thy faith and so what is the ministerie to thee if it be not the ministerie of thy faith 4. Euery man may hence examine himselfe whether in the vse of the ministerie he finde sauing faith begotten wrought in his heart and by examination some may finde their vnderstandings more enlightened their iudgements more setled their practise in some things reformed but a very fewe shall finde Christ apprehended and rested in vnto saluation seeing so fewe there are that liue by faith in the Sonne of God for of all the sinnes that the spirit may and shall rebuke the world of this is the chiefe because they beleeue not in Christ. Howsoeuer many are in some things bettered by the ministerie yet very fewe haue attained this principall ende of it which is to put men in possession of true faith and by it of saluation And the knowledge of the truth which is according to Godlinesse The Apostle beeing called to beget faith in the elect magnifieth and extolleth this his calling from the difficultie of the worke for it is not to bring forth by his trauell any blind perswasion of faith which beeing too naturall to men would rise of it selfe fast enough without any such manuring but such a faith as is peculiar to the elect as before we heard In the which least men should be deceiued as easily and willingly the most be he taketh paines to set downe the whole nature of it in particular And first here we haue the ground of faith which is knowledge and because the truth of faith cannot find footing vpon follies or fansies nay nor vpon euery profitable knowledge he teacheth what kind of knowledge he speaketh of and that is the knowledge of the truth that is of the Gospel beeing a word of truth yea truth it selfe so called by way of excellencie or eminencie as though no other truth deserued that name or because this carrieth the onely vndoubted truth with it And further because many thinke all cocksure and that they cannot faile of faith if they be able to discourse of this truth he teacheth vs that it is not euery knowledge of the truth he meaneth but such a one as is according to godlinesse that is such as frameth the heart of the possessor to true Godlinesse Whence naturally arise these three conclusions First that the doctrine of the Gospell is the truth it selfe Secondly that the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith Thirdly that where it is aright it frameth the heart to Godlinesse First the doctrine of the Gospel is truth it selfe 1. because the author of it is truth
it selfe and cannot lie it beeing a part of his word who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued 2. because the penmen of it were inspired by the holy Ghost and spake and writ as they were mooued by him who is called the spirit of truth Ioh. 14.17 3. because it is a doctrine of Christ and aymeth at him who is the the truth principally as well as the way of our saluation Whence it is that the Apostles often stile it by the word of truth as Eph. 1.13 After ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of your saluation and Coloss. 1.5 For the hopes sake whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospel True it is that the Lawe is a true word without all error but yet neuer thus called For the morall law will not now affoard such a truth as by which a sinner can be iustified in the sight of God and the ceremoniall law although it doe acknowledge such a truth yet was it a farre off and in types and not in the truth but the Gospel onely is such a truth as whereby we are raised to saluation Vse 1. Ministers must rightly devide this word of truth as such who would be approoued of Christ both the author and subiect of it for the more notable the subiect is the more care must there be in handling it Which the Apostle Peter teacheth If any man speake let him speake as the word of God The word of truth would be truely dealt with purely preached wisely applyed and so faithfully dispensed as that both God and good men and a mans owne conscience may approoue his worke 2. This word so purely handled shall euery soule finde to be truth it selfe so as beleeuers shall not faile of the saluation published in it and vnbeleeuers shall as surely meete with condemnation seeing hereby they are condemned alreadie 3. Not to haue this truth seated in our hearts is a fearefull case for it argueth a man to be giuen vp to error and delusion 2. To doubt of any part of it is to giue a lie to all the rest 3. To seeke for saluation out of it or besides it as the blinded Papist doth is to cleaue to folly and falsehood 4. To despise this truth is to contemne great saluation for if to despise Moses law bringeth death without mercie how much more sorer punishment is he worthy of which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God 5. But to fight against this truth is most wofull for it is strongest and will preuaile neuer man lifted against the truth but he found it too heauie for him neuer man spurned against it but to the bruising of himselfe Secondly the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith for so our Apostle would haue vs conceiue that the faith of the elect is raised vpon knowledge of the truth as the matter of it and in this sence we read that faith is called the faith of truth euen for this reason because it is begotten in the acknowledgement of the truth and Paul in asking that question How shall they beleeue except they heare plainly concludeth that no hearing of the truth no faith in it and how may he that runneth read in the Scriptures that to whomsoeuer faith is giuen they be such as are taught of God such as to whom the holy spirit is become a schoolemaster who openeth their vnderstandings that with much assurance they can see and acknowledge the truth for seeing faith is much more then an vncertaine opinion or wauering fancie it followeth that that knowledge which is the ground of it must be no shaking reede with euery winde but a certaine acknowledgement of the truth approouing of it and assenting vnto it Neither may we thinke that the spirit of truth traineth men in blinde and vngrounded conceits nor leaueth their hearts in vncertainties but that wheresoeuer he worketh such an eminent grace as faith is he maketh men able in some good measure to giue a reason of the hope that is in them And as little reason haue we to conceiue that the worke of the Ministerie is to build castles in the ayre or the castle of faith without a foundation but that Ministers are sent to make the misteries of saluation cleare in the euidence and demonstration of the spirit and so lay men on that foundation to become a spirituall house consisting of liuing stones fit for the honour of the Lord. And to ende the proofe notably doth the Apostle Paul prooue the effectuall faith of the Thessalonians from this ground of it for our Gospel was not vnto you in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance which place must be vnderstood so to be both in the teachers and the hearers as the context declareth Vse 1. If knowledge be the ground of faith then sleight is the faith of the most whatsoeuer men professe Numbers of most silly creatures swarme euery wheare who pretend and presume vpon as strong a faith to God ward as the best preacher of them all and yet liue no better then Atheists euen without God in the world without the knowledge of his waies without his feare in their hearts to loue God aboue all and their neighbours as themselues is but a breath with them to beleeue in Iesus Christ is so naturall as they neuer doubted of it all their liues to bring forth fruits of faith whose propertie is to worke by loue in the obedience of the Commandements of the first and second table this they do they hope as well as God wil giue them leaue or as others of their neighbours do whereas alas euen their speach bewraieth them to be destitute of vnderstanding and consequently vtterly voide of the faith of truth 2. If the ground of faith must be a certaine knowledge of heauenly truth then hereby 1. is ouerturned that fond distinction of the Papists which masketh there more then Egyptian blindnes ioyned with wilfulnes and obstinacie vnder their modest vaile of vnexpressed faith or the faith of lay-men whereby if they can professe themselues Catholikes liue and die in the beleefe of their falsely so termed Catholike Church although they know not what it beleeueth it is sufficient for their saluation And indeed be that professeth that religion which like the apples of Egypt will abide no touch had need leane vpon an implicit faith And so some of them pretending more learning thē is common among them beeing pressed by argument haue thought they haue learnedly enough answeared in saying that their Doctors can answer for them But who seeth not these Pharisies taking away the key of knowledge and incurring that we denounced against such as will neither enter themselues nor suffer others to enter into the kingdome of heauen for surely if little or no knoledge little or no faith of a mans owne were enough how vnwise was Paul so to trouble
conscience For let a man read and studie all his dayes all arts and sciences let him be exquisite in tongues languages and all commendable literature which are things excellent yet let him neglect this knowledge which beareth the bell in making men wise vnto saluation such an one can neuer haue his heart framed vnto godlines 2. Euery hearer of the truth must examine whether by it his heart be thus framed vnto godlines for else it is not rightly learned for as this grace hath appeared to this purpose to teach men to denie vngodlines and worldly lusts and to liue soberly and iustly and godly in this present world so is it not then learned when men can onely discourse of the death of Christ of his resurrection of his ascention except withall there be some experience of the vertue of his death in themselues killing their sinnes so as henceforth they serue not sinne 2. some feeling of the power of his blessed resurrection in beeing ingrafted with him into the similitude of it 3. and some ascent of our affections after him into heauen prouoking to seeke the things that are aboue a bare and vnfeeling speculation is here not onely vnprofitable but much more dangerous and damnable The Iewes could boast that they were free borne and of Abraham as many among vs take themselues to be strong beleeuers but let Christ come to the point with them If the truth hath set you free ye are free indeede the truth is that the Sonne hath not freed them for they are not free from their lusts nor are kings to rule ouer them but vassals vnder them still The spirit of God in the ministerie which is his chariot hath not freed them from seruitude of sinne and death for where the spiririt is effectuall there is libertie A dangerous thing is it that men so chained in ignorance and manifold lusts should ouerthrowe themselues by ouerweening conceits feeding for faith fansies for confidence carnall presumption for truth error bringing them into a fooles paradise for the present but the end will be the sinking and sorrowe of their soules He is a good scholler indeede and raised into the highest forme of this schoole of God not who can talke well and giue religion some good words which are good cheape but he that hath so farre profited in sound godlinesse as that he hath attained vnto faith the feare of God humilitie endeauour in obedience thankfulnes vprightnesse and hath proceeded in the true worship of God according to his word in hatred of false worship in glorifying the name of God sanctifying his Sabbaths reuerencing his sanctuarie louing the image of God in his brethren and such like such a man sheweth that the truth hath sanctified him that pure religion and the power of it possesseth his heart These things seeke and find in thy selfe thou hast profited in this truth else whatsoeuer may seeme a bodie of religion in thee is turned into a shadow without substance without truth v. 2. Vnder the hope of life eternall In these words the Apostle commendeth his ministerie partly from the ende of it in that it leadeth by the truth preached the beleeuers of it vnto the hope of eternall life as also partly from the effect of it in them which is the full furnishing of them with such graces as lead them comfortably to their happinesse adding vnto the faith of the elect such an hope as maketh them not ashamed And they affoard two instructions 1. That the ende of the ministerie is to drawe mens mindes vpward from earth towards heauen 2. That true faith neuer goeth alone but attended with other excellent vertues and namely with knowledge hope c. Doctr. Euery faithfull teacher must conceiue it to be his dutie to drawe mens hearts from things belowe to the contemplation of things of an higher straine and from seeking the things tending to a temporall vnto such as belong to life eternall Reasons 1. This was the ayme not onely of our Apostle here but of all the men of God whose faithfulnes the Scriptures hath recommended vnto our imitation All that pedagogie during the law was onely to traine men vnto Christ and to saluation by him But that rudiment beeing abolished and the truth further breaking out the chiefe doctor of his Church setting himselfe a coppy to all teachers called men to no other thing then first to seeke the kingdome of God and to labour not for the perishing food but that which abideth vnto eternall life And after him his holy Apostles made no other vse of those maine articles of our faith the truth of which they left confirmed in all their writings as if they were occasioned to speake of the death of Christ it was to the ende that beleeuers should die to the world that henceforth they should vse it as not vsing it or as men crucified vnto it if of the resurrection of Christ it was to the same purpose that men should be raised with him henceforth to seeke the things which are aboue if of his ascention it was that men might in heart and affection ascend vp after him 2. All other professions further men in their earthly estates some employed about the health of the bodie some about the maintaining of mens outward rights some about the framing of tender minds in humane disciplines and sciences all which further our fellowship and societie among men onely this of all other professions furthereth men in their heauenly estate and fitteth them yea maketh vp for them their fellowship with God Eph. 4.11 12. 3. Hereby men lay a sure ground-worke of profitting men in godlines for this expectation and desire of life eternall once wrought in the heart it easily bringeth men to the deniall of themselues both in bearing the crosse for Christ as Moses esteemed highly of the rebuke of Christ for he had respect vnto the recompence of reward as also in stripping themselues of profits pleasures advancements friends father wife children libertie yea life it selfe Set this treasure before the eyes of the wise merchant he will sell all for it Tell a man of an earthly kingdome and let him throughly digest the conceit of obtaining it it will be such a commander as he willingly both vndertaketh and deuoureth any trauell for it euen so let the beleeuing soule once conceiue of raigning with Christ it will easily suffer any hardship with him The disciples desirous to know what recompence their Lord would make them for leauing all to follow him Christ presently telleth them of twelue seats on which they shall sit and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel at the appearance of the sonne of man well knowing that if this promise were once well digested it would so feede vp their hearts as they should not after bethinke themselues as ouershot in leauing all things for his sake Yea further this course will be a sweet constraint prouoking men to the imitation
of Christ and the expressing of his vertues Whence it is that the Apostle praysing God for the faith and loue of the Colossians presently pointeth to the naturall mother of these vertues of whom they both are bred and fed for the hopes sake that is the glory hoped for which is laid vp for you in heauē And the same Apostle exhorting the Philippians not to minde earthly things but to trafficke as the citizens of heauen noteth this the most effectuall reason because from heauen they looked for a Sauiour who would change their vile bodie and make it like his owne glorious bodie Vse 1. Ministers must take heede of earthly mindednes not seeking theirs but them who are committed vnto their trust not onely hereby to auoyde offence but also that they may feelingly speake of such points as concerne the forsaking of the world in affection a point most difficult to learne from the most sanctified teacher Which course if a minister take not long may he looke for an haruest yea euen till his eyes faile but he shall neuer see his seede againe he hath sowne to the winde and what can he looke to reape but earthlinesse or atheisme amongst his people For mens minds will be working and setling themselues vpon some pleasurable and profitable obiect if not vpon that which is truely good yet at least vpon that which is apparantly good and their hearts can neuer be taken off things belowe but remaine wordlings still vnlesse we shewe them better treasures elsewhere and that in such feeling manner as they may thinke we speake in earnest And againe if they without this doctrine be suffered like the Sadduces to include all their hopes desires in this life no other fruits can be expected but open Atheisme and contempt of God Vse 2. People must conceiue that now in the ministerie they are called to the beginnings of the heauenly life For we may not thinke that the Lord meaneth onely to manifest his loue hereafter in heauen to beleeuing soules but as loue desireth present communication and vnion with the thing loued so the Lord entreth into present league with such as he striketh his euerlasting couenant withal neuer marrieth himselfe into any soule in that indissoluble wedlocke with whom he contracteth not himselfe euen here vpon earth And seeing the Gospel in the ministerie of it is the Lords loue letter euery one in the hearing of these glad tidings must say to his soule this is the suite and offer of God vnto mee calling me in this sermon to nearer fellowship with himselfe oh vnthankfull wretch if I refuse his loue if I still cleaue vnto earthly affections and earthly conuersation on whom so much labour is spent that I might bee called out of the world Vse 3. Hence may euery hearer make a triall of his profiting vnder the ministerie looke how much thou findest thy heart lifted vp towards heauen and heauenly things how much thy earthly cogitations are abated how much thou findest saluation neerer then when thou first beleeued so much hast thou profited by the word and no more The which checketh many of our hearers who are euerie whit as worldly as earthly minded as they were at their first receiuing of the Gospel and some professors that haue much earthlinesse bound vp in their bosomes the following of their owne ploughs causeth them often contentedly to pluck their hands from the plough of the Lord. And because it is common with men to thinke they haue attained inough in Christianity when they haue gotten a little knowledge and may now make holiday and go no further it is meete that all of vs should bring our hearts to some certaine triall and touch whereby we may haue assurance that the word hath framed them to this temper of which we speake and that we may doe as by many other so especially by these three notes 1. Whereas all earthly reioysings are condemned as wherein men easily loose their hearts and whereby death is made distastfull and vnwelcome examine whether thou reioysest in God in his word and graces as in thy chiefest ioy and aduantage 2. Seeing in all our earthly employments we may not while we vse the world become worldlings whether by all earthly things we be drawne to the loue of heauenly for although God hath appointed but one Sabboth in seauen daies yet to a Christian euery day is sanctified to be a rest from all the deeds of the flesh wherein he is to walke with his God and shew forth the religious keeping of his heart and good conscience in euery action of his whole life so making euery action of his particular calling a part of Christian obedience and dutie vnto God 3. Seeing a well ordered heart hath nothing in earth in comparison of God search thy soule whether it findeth more sweetnes in the seruice of thy Lord then in his outward benefits as there is great reason seeing these must leaue thee or be left of thee before or at the day of death when accounts must also be made both for the getting keeping and expending of them at which time those who with most greedie appetites haue sought them and purchased them shall find them farre from counteruailing that good which they forfeited for them By these notes gage thy heart sound the depth of it and thou shalt doubtles finde such deceit as shall occasion thee to cleaue to that ordinance which he that framed it at the first hath in his wisedome appointed for the further reformation of it Doct. 2. The second instruction out of the words is That true faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene is attended with many other graces as knowledge loue feare of God among which hope here mentioned not only adorneth and beautifieth but strengtheneth and fortifieth the beleeuer and as an helmet of saluation causeth the Christian souldier to hold out in repentance and obedience Hence it is that our Apostle speaketh not of the faith of the elect but he mentioneth as an inseparable handmaid the hope of life eternall so doth the Apostle Iohn We are now the sonnes of God here is faith making vs the the borne of God and we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him there is hope and whosoeuer hath this hope purgeth himselfe as he is pure there is the strengthening of the beleeuer in obedience Notable for this purpose is that place in Rom. 5.1 2. c. where the whole traine of graces attending and following faith are fully and excellently described Now this hope is a gift of God whereby the Saints patiently and firmely expect good things to come alreadie beleeued especially their resurrection and life eternall prouoking them in the meane time to all dutie In which description diuerse things are to be considered First the originall of it It is a gift of God and obtained by prayer as faith also is whence the Apostle praieth that
testimonie of the spirit the same spirit effectually produceth such fruits as outwardly freeth our profession from falsehood and fayning which is the thing there condemned by the Apostle More plainely we may consider a twofold assurance on which our hope may be confirmed The former is the assurance of faith flowing from our iustification the latter is the assurance of sanctification The former is when the spirit witnesseth to our spirits that we are adopted which may be in weake Chrstians young conuerts scarcely yet experienced in their owne change yea such as can obiect such things against their faith as themselues cannot easily answer yet euen in this is there an assurance of faith which can onely leane vpon the promise and the truth of it and this I take to be more especially meant in this text of our Apostle The latter ariseth from the experience of our owne sanctification the vse also of which is not to make vs so but to trie our soundnes in the former yea to seale it to our selues and cleare it vnto others this is that the Apostle Iohn speaketh of in the place alleadged Yet notwithstanding that we may meete with an error on the other hand in the practise of Protestants we affirme with our Apostle that true hope relying vpon the promise goeth with faith knowledge godlines and groweth vp in these and therefore those the tenure of whose conclusions runneth thus Because grace hath abounded we may doe as we list because Christ hath blood inough God hath mercie inough we haue promises inough we may be the boulder in our sinnes these I say turne Gods grace into wantonnes to their owne destruction thus indeed to leane or bolster a mans selfe on the promises is an high presumption The reasonings of the spirit in the Scriptures are of another kinde Doth grace abound oh this must teach me to denie vngodlines worldly lusts hath God mercie mercie is with him that he may be feared hath Christ blood it is to purge me from all my sinnes both the guilt and the dominion haue I promises such precious promises are giuen me that beeing partaker of the godly nature I should flie the corruptions that are in the world through lust and seeing then I haue such promises it is meete I should clense my selfe from all filthines of flesh and spirit and grow vp to full holines in the feare of God Vse 3. We must often haue recourse to the promises and acquaint our selues with the Scriptures wherein we may peruse our priuiledges and thus euer be laying surer hold of eternall life by the applying bringing the promises home to our owne hearts otherwise faith shall be easily shaken hope quickly foyled and the rest of our graces in a continuall wane and decaie Cast anchor out of the ship if it sound no bottome the ship shall be at no stedfastnes in the storme but be in danger of shipwracke by euery surge and billow in like manner the anchor of hope if it pitch it selfe vpon promises it keepeth the soule in stabilitie and constancie in weldoing but impossible it is that in stormie temptations or afflictions the hope of the heart should strengthen and vphold that man that is not acquainted with the promises Doct. 2. The next instruction out of the former words is that God cannot lie which sheweth the promise to be stable and infallible That God cannot lie appeareth both by testimonie of Scripture and reason Balaam himselfe vttering his parable could say God is not as a man that he should lie the Apostle Heb. 6.18 saith that it is impossible that God should lie And the reason is because to lie is against the nature of God so as he shall as soone cease to be God as once to doe it truth is of his nature yea he is truth it selfe truth in all his promises which are yea and amen truth in all his threates for shall he say it and not doe it wicked Nebuchadnezar hauing good experience of both in beeing cast among the beasts and after raised vp againe aboue men could confesse that his words be all truth yea in this nature of his he is vnchangeable he cannot denie himselfe there beeing in him no shadow of change Now to ascribe a lie vnto God were to impute not onely change but contrarietie to that most simple nature of his for what is a lie but to vtter something contrarie to the knowne truth and that with an euill intention which wickednesse seeing it implyeth a contrarietie betweene his will and his word seeing he hath condēned it in his law as not induring it in his creature seeing this of all other is such an odious iniquitie as that the phrase of the holy Ghost includeth vnder this title all manner of vnrighteousnes opposeth it vnto all holines Zeph. 3.13 how can it be ascribed vnto the high maiestie of God vnles we will blasphemously say that he hath enacted laws against something which standeth with his nature and will or at least that he hath chāged his wil to loue that which once he hated Quest. But why may not God change his will which euen a creature may doe without sinne or if he cannot how can he doe all things and remaine omnipotent Ans. 1. To change the will were an argument of weaknes and impotencie for euen so is it in man whether he freely doe it or forcedly If freely it is because some second deliberation seemeth sounder then some former which argueth want of foresight and wisedome if forcedly a man change his minde it argueth want of power which suffereth the former deliberation to be letted by some crosse accident neither of which can befall that most simple and immutable will of God who neither of his owne accord nor yet by constraint can be forced or hindred because he seeth all things in their causes and consequents together in one act as soone and easily produceth the thing he willeth as he pronounceth the word as appeareth in the creation 2. The omnipotence of God is to be referred to the things which he willeth and can will for his power cannot thwarte his will nor his arme disapoint his mouth nor either of them goe against his nature That God then cannot lie denie himselfe change his purpose proceedeth not of weaknes or infirmitie but of wisedom power and maiestie to whom only that is impossible which is contrarie to his nature Obiect But God hath spoken many things in the Scriptures some of which implie change in him and some seeme altogether vntrue the former appeares in such places as where he is said to repēt him that he made man that he made Saul King that he changed his minde from the euill which he threatned to doe to his people Ans. All such speaches as these are to be vnderstood not properly but figuratiuely improperly and according to mans apprehension for in proper speach Samuel in the
the words we must necessarily open 3. points First what is meant by the word 2. what by the manifesting of it 3. what is this due time here mentioned by our Apostle which beeing explaned we shall more profitably descend to the seuerall doctrines 1. By the word is meant either Christ himselfe so called Ioh. 1.1 beeing that inbred word euen that person by whome the father reuealeth all things for none knoweth the father but the sonne and he to whom the sonne reuealeth him so as the father by this word his sonne maketh himselfe and his will knowne to men as one man reuealeth his minde to another by his words This word is the matter of the Gospel Or else by the word is rather meant the doctrine of the Gospel which is the word concerning Christ both these indeede were reuealed in due time and both may be truely meant but this rather this more properly because the words containe a reddition and haue reference to the former verse which speaketh of promises which promises by the doctrine of the Gospel preached are fully reuealed to be accomplished 2. By the manifestation of this word is meant such a cleare reuelation of it as vnto which is required a great light for the word noteth so much Before this comming of Christ there was an appearance of this word but not a manifestation some light there was but darke and obscure in types and shadowes and like to that of the dawning of the day compared to the brightnesse of the sunne in his strength But now the sunne of righteousnes beeing risen as he was newly and not long before the writing of this Epistle there is a cleare publishing of the Gospel at what time not a few Prophets were sent to one people to promise the future performance of auncient predictions but that great Prophet and Christ doctor of his Church both by his appearing his preaching his life his death in his owne person cleared vnto the Iewes as also by sending out his disciples and Apostles into all the world proclaimed vnto the Gentiles the present and perfect performance of whatsoeuer was written of him This is the doctrine here meant and elsewhere so magnified by the Apostle who comparing it with former shadowes calleth it the Gospel of glorie and a ministerie of righteousnesse which exceedeth in glorie 3. The word translated due time signifieth the proper time of this manifestation that is that verie time which the Lord in his counsell appointed for this purpose called elswhere fulnesse of time that is such a full time as whereof all the parts and periods are expired More plainely this fulnes of time is when after the scepter is departed from Iudah and after Daniels seauentie weekes the Messiah is borne is put to death and raised vnto glorie then must he be preached to all the world In fulnes of time he was borne Gal. 4.4 when fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his sonne made of a woman In fulnesse of time he died 1. Tim. 2.6 he gaue himselfe a ransome in due time and in this fulnesse of time he openeth the mysterie of his will to gather into one all things Eph. 1.9.10 Quest. But why doth the Apostle so carefully adde this circumstance not here onely but also in so many other places of Scripture Ans. To stay the curious minds of men who would be inquiring into the cause why God did no sooner manifest this word in the world but suffer 4000 yeares to passe in such obscuritie Why did not he reueale things before why did he then the reason is no time was Gods time but that who hath put all times and seasons in his owne power who is most wise to dispose to all things their fittest seasons Againe no time but that was their due time their fulnesse of time was not till then their proper time compleate in all the Articles and periods of it was not till then Whereof the Scripture affordeth vs some grounds as 1. betweene the time of promise and performance must intercede a time of expectation for sundrie causes that both the wisedome and truth of God and the faith patience of his people might shine gloriously 2. There must be a time wherein the Gentiles must be suffered to walke in their owne waies before the time of calling an holy seed from among them Act. 17.30 3. There must be a time of bondage and seruitude of the Church vnder the elements of the world and rudiments of the law before this libertie and freedome was to be procured Gal. 4.4 4. If Christ and these promises had beene exhibited and accomplished to the Father the end of the world had been before we had beene borne but because God would not haue them perfect without vs the promises were deferred These words thus explaned afford vs these 3. instructions 1. That the doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times 2. That the Lord effecteth euery thing in the due season of it 3. That the euidence of the doctrine of saluation is to be sought and found in the preaching of the word Doct. 1. That saluation is more clearely reuealed then in former ages appeareth in that all the time of the law was but the infancie and nonage of the Church which then was as a childe vnder Tutors and gouernours and as a child was initiated in rudiments and elements of Christian religion and endued with a small measure of knowledge and faith because the time was not come wherein the mysteries of Christ were vnfolded Yea euen Kings and Princes who had the greatest meanes of knowledge desired to see the things which we see and could not and to heare them but yet could not as Christ himselfe witnesseth To which purpose the Apostle Peter saith that of this saluation the Prophets haue inquired and searched and prophesied of the grace that should come vnto you not that the Prophets themselues had no comfort of that grace but in comparison it may be said to haue come vnto vs as beeing so eeuidently accomplished vnto vs as it was not vnto them the waters from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie reached but to their anckles which now is become a streame which cannot be passed the cloud at the first appearance to them was no bigger then the palme of a mans hand which now couereth the whole heauen Thus had the old beleeuers ●he like precious faith with vs and Abraham saw the daie of Christ but a farre off and more darkely But not to insist in the proofe because we shall meete with the point more fitly we come to the vse of it Vse 1. How blessed were we if we could see our blessednes to whom such meanes of blessednes are offered how is the land in many places filled with the knowledge of God but would God that euen in such places men knew the day of their visitation and that the things of their peace were
not hid from their ei●s The light is out of request with a number others thinke there is too much manna many looke backe into Egypt to the darknes of Poperie and superstition to whom I onely say let them beware least with the Israelites they haue their longing too soone Vse 2. Hauing these blessed meanes of saluation our part and dutie is to endeauour to be answerable vnto them for to whom much is giuen shall much be required and according to the encrease of meanes the Lord looketh for encrease of 1. knowledge 2. faith 3. obedience A lesse measure of knowledge was accepted in the ancient beleeuers then will or can be in vs seeing where there is a clearer light men of right sight see more distinctly here aboue all places and persons in the land we that liue in the right eye of our Realme must looke to our selues for if to any of vs the word of God be a clasped booke a parable or if the Gospel be after so long teaching hid it is so to them that perish Marke that when or wheresoeuer Prophets were sent to blind a people destruction was alwaies the next Againe vnbeleefe in these daies is farre more sinnefull then euer in any age before vs for if they beleeued not they might plead that they saw not or not distinctly but we haue euidently seene and yet haue not beleeued the Prophets complaint standeth in force against vs Who haue beleeued our report and to whom is the arme of God reuealed Finally in former ages many things might better be borne withall and were so for to stumble in the darke is no great shame but to stagger and fall at noone day argueth either blindnesse or wilfull heedlesnes yet how doe a number liue as though the light had discouered no sinne what a fearefull condemnation hangeth ouer the heads of men so ignorant so vnthankfull against the light some loue darkenes more then the light because their deedes are euill some plead against the light some fight against it whose case is most fearefull and all this while if men were inuincibly ignorant though their sinne were not none yet were it not so great but in saying they see as wel as the best their sinne remaineth Libertines who by the abundance of grace haue a straiter bond laid vpon them turne all this grace into wantonnesse but if they escaped not who sinned against the word spoken by Angels how shall they escape that neglect so great saluation and if to neglect saluation shall be so fearefully reuenged how certaine and iust shall their damnation be that despise it by refusing him that speaketh from heauen Doctr. 2. The Lord who doth not onely by his wisdome order his greatest works but euery circumstance of them effecteth all his promises and purposes in the due season of them To euery thing saith Salomon there is an appointed time that is whatsoeuer is in the world done or suffered or enioyed by man it hath his time wherin it is beautiful Nothing is so great nothing is so little whether it haue a natural proceeding or whether it be voluntarily vndertaken or involuntarily necessarily sustained but it hath an appointed time wherein it is timely and seasonable the infinite wisdome and eternall prouidence of God hath fitted and set the due season wherein it shall be done or suffered not contenting himselfe to create gouerne and dispose of all his creatures but euen all the circumstances of them as time place manner all which are determined according to his disposition who is wisdome it selfe In like manner the Prophet Habakuk pronounceth of all visions and words of God whether of promise or threatning euerie vision is for an appointed time let them seeme to lie lea and voide neuer so long yet shall they be not onely certenly fulfilled but in that period of time which the wisdome of God hath impropriated vnto them Vse 1. This doctrine condemneth that heathenish idol of Fortune or chance which some of them called by the name of God and worshipped as God especially the souldiers who tooke him for their patron and vnto him referred all the doubtfull euents of warre But if the Lord haue appointed to euery euent a due and determinate time then can there be no chance and that which we for ignorance call fortune the Scripture challengeth to be the prouidence of God for example If a man hewe a tree and the head of his hatchet flie from the helue and hit his neighbour so as he die though we call this chance-medly yet the Scripture calleth it expressely Gods giuing a man into the hand of another and opposeth it to lying in wait and wilfull intended murther Obiect Time and chance fall to all things Eccles. 9.11 Ans. Salomon speaketh out of the opinion of the Epicures and in their language who because they saw not the race alwaies to the swift nor the battell to the strong nor bread to the wise nor riches to the learned thence concluded that therefore things must needs be wheeled about by a blinde Fortune rather then by an occulate prouidence whereas indeed things in the world are thus by a speciall prouidence disposed of sometimes for sinne sometimes for triall of faith and repentance in the godly and for the hardning of the vngodly Obiect Luk. 10.31 By chance there came a certaine Priest that way Answ. 1. It is a parable and beeing vttered in the common receiued tearmes cannot be stretched so farre beyond the scope of it 2. the Greek words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie properly it fell out or came to passe namely by the prouidence of God so oueruling the matter 3. it fell out casually to the Priest who expected no such euent but determinately in regard of God who sweetly disposeth all his meanes to his and their proper ends Thus we need neuer doubt and demurre with the Philistims whether God or fortune smite vs. Vse 2. If that be the proper and fittest time of things wherein they are done or suffered because they are so by the determined counsell of God we must hence learne to make our accounts iust with Gods Which will affoard vs firme ground of 1. the patient expectance of the hand of God both in releasing vs from the teadiousnes of present euills and feare of future as also in procuring any good thing which wee stand in neede of Art thou in triall temptation persecution want sicknesse or other sorow lay hold vpon the promise of deliuerance there is a time in which be that will come shall come patiently expect his time the period of time is set to thy affliction at the ende of which and not before thou shalt finde releefe and release stay thy heart for the time exercise thy faith quicken thy hopes and affiance in his mercie waite his leisure and make not hast flesh and blood is in this case short and hastie it will be
2. This apostolicall faith is not a faith of two or three but a common faith which euery beleeuer hath but the apostaticall Popish faith falsely called Catholike is not so for it is the faith of the teachers of the Church onely which their hearers may safely rest in although they haue no speciall faith of their owne neither indeed know what their Church or teachers doe beleeue but who seeth not that this grosse faith in the lumpe cannot be either sauing or Catholike sauing can it not be for the sauing faith of the elect goeth with the knowledge of the truth v. 3. neither can it be Catholike or the common faith no more then that can be a common commoditie which is ingrossed into some few mens hands and neuer seeth the open market or rather which is a monopolie for to beleeue say they as the Pope beleeueth although they know not what he beleeueth is sufficient 3. This apostolicall common faith purifyeth the heart cleanseth the conscience from dead workes and worketh by loue but the apostaticall Romish faith is a pragmatical fancie working by rage furie violence and blood filling their hearts and hands with detestable resolutions and attempts fouling their consciences with most impure and impious workes of the flesh and such as the issues of death follow as often experience hath beene their mistrisse 4. This common faith is most ancient it is the old and the good way but so is not theirs let them terme it the old religion as long as they will it is a strange doctrine a new devised faith not sauouring of apostolicall antiquitie as will appeare plainly to him that compareth that which they now professe with that which was professed when Paul writ the Epistle to the Romans Hence will it follow that their faith not beeing the common faith I say not that they must amend their faith but change it if they will be saued by it it is not all the patching and daubing and refining of their points will helpe them nor all the baulme in Gilead can so supple their positions that we may ioyne with them vntill they beginne againe and laie the same foundation with vs which is to seeke to enter into life by the doore and not as theeues seeke to creepe in at the window till this be done the ioyning with them will be the departing from the common faith till this be done we may not giue them the right hand of fellowship Let them first shake hands with Christ which is our heartie praier to the Lord for them we wil gladly and heartily reach thē ours Vse 3. If the faith be but one we must all then studie to keepe the vnitie of faith in the bond of loue which is the Apostles collection on the same ground Ephes. 4.3.4 we ought so to compose our affections as we may go out with one heart and one minde in the profession of this one common faith which maketh communion betweene the highest and lowest rich and poore Master and seruant Preacher and people for in Iesus Christ all are one Iew and Gentile bond and free Paul was Titus his father in the faith but yet this common faith made him his fellow brother 2. Cor. 8.23 so he calleth himselfe the father of the Corinthians and yet them his brethren as Onesimus a poore seruant by vertue of this common faith became the sonne of Paul and yet his faithfull and beloued brother so as howsoeuer in earthly relation we haue our difference and inequalitie yet in regard of this common faith beleeuers may say as they in the Prophet wee haue all one father and one mother yea one meate and cloath one education and one inheritance The Ministers must therefore so acknowledge himselfe a father as that he is a sonne too so a teacher as that he be a diligent hearer and entertainer of the doctrine also The Master must not forget he hath a master in heauen and that his seruant in regard of the common faith is or may be his fellow seruant and if he be a religious seruant he must be counted more then a seruant euen an Onesimus a brother in the Lord. The Magistrate must so rule as a subiect vnder Christ and not altogether stand on authoritie but cast an eye vpon the common faith The husband must not altogether stand on his headshippe but like a man of knowledge dwell with his wife as one who is with him a ioynt heire of the life of grace so in other relations Which consideration were it obserued it would cut off much discomfort in families cities societies Church and common wealth it would keepe men from offering occasions of vnbrotherly strife and contention as we see in Abraham and Lot it would cause them to forgiue and forget old iniuries as Ioseph Gen. 50.17 if they would conceiue that they are all brethren in the faith The third point in the words is to consider of the adiunct of sinceritie by which Titus is commended my naturall sonne that is not illegitimate or base borne but my rightfull true and as we say lawfully begotten sonne one that both resembleth my selfe and is a right follower of me The same word is vsed 2. Cor. 8.8 where the Apostle perswadeth the Corinths to the chearefull releefe of the poore brethren in Iudea by this reason that he might trie the naturalnes of their loue Which commendation was of good vse 1. for Titus his encouragement whom so great an Apostle so esteemed 2. that the Cretians might with more respect and reuerence receiue him thus highly commended 3. to distinguish Titus from some other of his sonnes who a while fathered themselues vpon him but after falling from the faith prooued but bastards and counterfeit as Hymenaeus Philetus Alexander Titus was not such a one not Timothy see 1. Tim. 1.2 Doctr. 1. In that the Apostle powreth not out his commendation of Titus neither this but vpon good ground obserue how warie euery man should be both whome and to what ende and how farre they commend another and yet this more especially if their iudgment be required or esteemed Thus Paul commendeth Titus 1. one well knowne to be worthy and not out of partiallitie 2. for a good end the benefit of the Church that his person and doctrine might be more louingly embraced and that this was his ende appeareth 2. Cor. 8.23 If any enquire of Titus he is my helper and fellow or of our brethren they are messengers of the Churches wherefore shew towards them the proofe of your loue 3. he commendeth him sparingly and is not lauish beyond the truth Neither is he generall in such elogyes for scarce any else but Timothie receiued such a testimonie from him Vse In this Seedplot of the ministerie whence young Titusses are to be commended vnto the vse of the Church it standeth those in hand who are to dismisse them with letters testimoniall not hand ouer head to giue a rash
sometimes of his doctrine lay open vnto him their greife as to their Phisician vnder Christ and seeke for particular direction in speciall cases from him in all which and many moe mutuall duties they may not by this inordinate humor be deterred and hindered but rather with all meeknes and lenitie be allured louingly enterteined and contentedly dismissed from him Vse This doctrine may be profitably applyed both to Mnisters and people The Minister must learne to be 1. docible 2. affable the former fitteth him to learne of others the latter to teach others for none can be apt to teach others who is not apt to learne of others and in the Minister especially a tractable and teachable disposition is a singular inviting of others by his example more easily to admit his teaching whether by reprehension admonition or howsoeuer Elihu ioyneth learning and teaching together Let a man of vnderstanding tell me let a man of vnderstanding hearken vnto me and euery one will thinke it fit that young Ioshua should minister vnto Moses young Samuel to Eli Elisha to Eliah Baruch to Ieremie Titus to Paul yea the disciples to Christ thinke it vnreasonable that the blind should offer to lead the blind But this is the fault of many Ministers that conceiuing they are now fitted to teach others they disdaine to be taught by others and thinke it too base for them to heare such as they conceiue meaner and weaker in gifts then themselues whom I wish they would remember what a dangerous thing it is to haue the faith of God in respect of persons and to receiue the word as mans word and not as Gods whose indeede it is 2. That the Apostle Peter thought it meete that euen such as had knowledge and were stablished in the present truth should be put in remembrance of such things as they knewe and stirred vp to the practise of them 3. That all haue not the same gifts nor the same gifts in the same measure that no man might say of any mans gifts I haue no neede of them Ioseph can expound a dreame when he heareth it but Daniel can declare a dreame which the King hath forgotten and expound it also which is a double knowledge yea that Iethro in some things may see more then Moses and Naamans seruant more then himselfe As for the other vertue opposed to frowardnes namely affabilitie which teacheth to entertaine the talke of others with signification of our good will vnto them in our speaches and gestures it is a great grace and a profitable ornament in a Minister that can graciously and wisely weld it 2. So hearers seeing frowardnesse is such an impediment to instruction must learne to cast it from them which in many otherwise well affected is a disposition hard to please in some making them seldome contented with the paines matter or manner of their ministerie but hauing a bed in their braine of their owne size whatsoeuer is longer they cut off whatsoeuer is shorter they stretch and racke it for their owne o●inions may not yeeld not knowing to giue place to better Others are secure and therein growne froward against the word beeing mourned vnto they weepe not beeing piped vnto they daunce not if their Minister be a companion they reiect him as he is if he be not he is too austeere and too precise yea numbers are so superstitiously froward and so setled in their superstitions and olde customes that let the Minister speake out of the mouth of the Lord they say plainely they will not heare him as the Iewes did against Ieremie oh that the tractablenes of our people were so come abroad as it might be both their owne praise and their ministers ioy whereof we should soone see fruits wel beseeming the people of God for while it attributeth vnto God his truth and men teaching it that authoritie which is due vnto them it freeth the minde from ignorance deliuereth from the bands of delusion and errors and openeth a large entrie into the treasures of wisedome Not angrie Quest. Is it not lawfull for a Minister to be angry at all Answ. We must knowe that all anger is not condemned in Scripture For 1. anger is a naturall affection which may be vsed as wel as others both calmely and in heate also of holy men in an holy manner as Moses the meekest man in the earth as appeared both by the Lords testimonie as also by bearing such reuiling speaches of his brother and sister Numb 11. yet is he said to be verie angrie yea his fierce anger caused many to be slaine Exod. 32. 2. The Prophets and Apostles were verie angrie oftentimes and therefore commended as Phineas and Paul calleth the Galatians foolish Galatians nay Christ himselfe is said to be angrie Mar. 6. and called Peter Satan Matth. 16. 3. It is an affection commanded Eph. 4.26 and Eccles. 7.5 anger is better then laughter so as it is sinne not to be angrie against sinne 4. When the Scriptures condemne anger they vse such restraint as that the sinne of it rather then it selfe as sinne should be condemned as Matth. 5.22 whosoeuer is angrie with his brother vnaduisedly shall be culpable of iudgement yea and when we are commanded to be angrie and sinne not it is plaine that not anger but the sinnefulnes of it is condemned Quest. In what respect then is it here prohibited Ans. So farre as it is not rightly grounded or not rightly bounded and moderated for in the right ordering of this affection diuerse offend diuersly Some there are who are not so soone mooued to anger but being so their anger is bitter and long abiding the passion working in them as fire doth in yron which is long in heating and longer in cooling Some are implacably angrie whose patience beeing once mooued and broken they are hardly euer reconciled the passion in these is as fire hid in some mouldring matter but neuer bewraying it selfe without the ruine and wast of the thing it hath caught neither of these two rightly bounde their anger but it resteth in the bosome of fooles There are a third sort of men who are easily ouercome of the passion not mooued hereunto vpon iust cause as when Gods glorie is impaired or the cause waightie but suddenly for euerie trifle and vpon euery dislike whose passion worketh as fire in stubble soone in and soone out these are here noted in the word vsed by the Apostle men of short spirits so hastie and ●eastie as they seldome looke to the right grounding and footing of this affection The thing then here condemned is not so much anger as hastines to anger which is a disorder not onely reprooued in the Minister for euerie where it is a vice but Salomon speaketh generally to all Bee not of an hastie spirit to be angrie Doct. Hastines or pronesse to anger is a great enemie vnto the ministerie and such a blot as may
and progresse least we be such dunces as Paul speaketh of who were euer learning and yet neuer came to the knowledge of the truth And then we profit when we like good schollers haue passed our grounds and elements and as the Apostle speaketh when leauing the rudiments and principles of religion we are ledde forward vnto perfection and then are we ledde to further perfection when wee haue taken out the two maine lessons of a Christian man which Paul in euerie thing would be sure to keepe euen faith and good conscience by which two rules till a man be moulded and cast into this forme of doctrine he is but a novice Christian and a superficiall scholler in this schoole of Christ the former of which implyeth the knowledge of the doctrine and the latter the ordering of euerie particular action of life by it Now the examination of our selues by these notes will reprooue many of vs as non proficients who would be loth to be so deemed For 1. whereas for our time and meanes especially in this famous eie of the land our profiting might haue enabled vs to teach others many of our selues had need be taught in the principles of religion we cannot be gotten out of our A B C line of letters If a master should for diuers years together painfully striue with a boy and could neuer get him out of his letters what hope were there of his reading and much lesse of any skill in higher mysteries of learning It is the case of a number of vs. Many yeares haue the masters of the assemblies plainly deliuered doctrines fitted to the capacitie of simple men yea often repeated them and often beaten vpon them yet a number that goe for Christians are extreame ignorant in the principles of Christianitie And whereas the Apostle implieth that we may measure our owne ability by our fitnesse to teach others how fewe of vs be there that finde any competent abilitie to teach euen our pettyes in our families our seruants and children that cost and paines is ill spent when after seauen yeares schooling a boy is not able to teach an other his letters but many of vs that haue beene ●earers and learners in this schoole thrice seauen yeares and aboue and yet to omit our vnwillingnes are not able in any sort to catechize our families Further whereas he that is cunning in his profession he can speake of it to good purpose because he knoweth the mysteries of it many of vs cannot speake to any purpose but when any speach of religion is offred are as mute as fishes yea are greiued to be drawne to any speach of such things because our weakenesse is thereby discouered Finally were it so that we had proceeded but a little way in our profiting here it would be with vs as with schollers or prentises who beeing entred a yeare or two neede not alwaies the presence of their Master or Tutor for euerie action but can of themselues doe something especially in smaller matters and of lower conceit but many of vs can goe no further then our Masters are present with vs we are not come so farre as to take out a lesson now then by our selues we cannot meditate pray conferre to the increase of our knowledge and therefore we may conclude against our selues that we are but verie dullards in this doctrine And what is the reason of all this but that as negligent learners we forget as fast as we learne or as idle schollers we idle ou● our time otherwise and allot the least time to this studie Which requireth so much the more time paines care and diligence by how much things more excellent be more difficult besides that our helpes by nature are none at all to this as to all other knowledge and the benefit of it farre excelleth all other Let vs therefore stirre vp our selues and be stirred vp not to a smattering in this knowledge of God but to abound in it as Peter willeth vs. And seeing we are farre from our marke let vs aime at more fruitfulnesse in our age and walke from strength to strength from faith to faith that so growing vp in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ we may in due season be lifted vp vnto our glorie Doct. 3. In that the Apostle calleth that here wholsome doctrine which in the words before he called a faithfull word and fitted for doctrine Note that the men of God when they fell into speach of the word of God they spake not ●lightly of it away but were hardly drawne from it without leauing behind thē some notable elogie or other vpon it Rom. 1.16 the Gospel the power of God to saluation Ioh. 6.68 Peter saith not Master thou hast the word of God but thou hast the words of eternall life what a number of glorious things are ascribed vnto it see Heb. 4.12 mightie in operation sharpe c. Hence according to their seuerall occasions are al those excellēt epithits ascribed vnto it through the Scrip●ures some of the penmen looking at the author some at the matter some to the qualities some to the effects and accordingly invest it with titles well beseeming it And good reason had they so to doe for 1. They considered that the word of God is the principall part of Gods name which neuer could without great sinne be taken vp in vaine but is to be taken vp into the thought much more into the lippes with all reuerence and due regard 2. They sound the power of it so forcible and comfortable in themselues as that they could not chose but speake of it as they felt within the abundance of their owne hearts 3. They saw the worke of it so effectuall vpon others and that to such ends as not all the perfection of flesh and blood nor the strength or wit of men and angels could compasse as that they could not conceiue of it without admiration 4. They saw it was such a word as was to meete in the world with most harsh entertainement and hatefull opposition that Satan sinne and all wicked ones heretikes seducers Atheists and profane persons would resolutely resist it besides numbers that would account it foolishnesse and that would take offence at it not a fewe and therefore in great wisedome they were carefull that it should carrie some maiestie with it Vse Those that find such sweetnes in the word as the Saints of old cannot but with reuerent hearts conceiue and speake of it euer with signification of some eminent goodnes in it yea if they conceiue it in the author the word euen of euill will be confessed a good word as in Hezekiah and much more will the promises be sweete in the tast And if they acknowledge it in the most proper effects of it oh how will they thinke and speake of it as of a thing more necessarie then fire and water yea then the sunne in the firmament How will
so of such Christians as turne Iews againe beware of the concision and betake vs to the circumcision which worshippeth God in the spirit and haue no confidence in the flesh no confidence in the lawe Get Christ close him by faith in the heart he is the Lord and accomplisher of the lawe vnto righteousnesse and thus hast thou enclosed thy righteousnes as a ring encloseth a Iewel Say with that Martyr onely Christ onely Christ. 2. Seeing Popish doctrine hath not saluation but carrieth men from Christ it ought not to be tolerated where it can be abolished for the scepters of Christian Princes must hold vp the scepter of Christ the Prince of peace and as it is no good religion in Princes to set vp a religion that would abolish Christ so neither is it good policie in regard both of their treacherous positions and practises For as they teach that hereticall for so they call Protestant Kings may be depriued of life much more other royalties and temporalties so is their practise proportionable in deposing kings and Emperours practizing hellish treasons and iustifying the murdering of Princes And therefore howsoeuer we should seek to pull the poore seduced ones of them out of the fire yet if they be incurable themselues haue taught vs how we should deale with them or rather neither make nor meddle with them by the tenour of the oath taken of the old leaguers in France the forme of which was this Si ad haereticorum partes de flexero si amicitiam si foedus si matrimonium cum eis faxo si opem fidemve do si ave si vale dixero illa die fulmine ferito God make vs as wisely resolute to preserue the puritie of the truth amongst vs as they are cautelously circumspect to barre it out from themselues then should they goe farre inough and stay long enough before we should entreat their returne Whose mouthes must be stopped The phrase is metaphoricall and betokeneth such an euident conuiction of errors by weight of reason and euidence of the Scripture as wherby the aduersarie of the truth is struck dumb and hath no more to say then if he had his mouth shut vp Quest. But how should we shut their mouthes for such commonly rage against the truth and ioyne mallice to error and so prostitute themselues in impudencie as that they will euer haue some shew of words at least to pretend against the truth Ans. This precept is first and properly directed to the Minister of God who by all his endeauour must take away all the defence of such errors and then confirme the contrarie truth by such sure grounds and arguments as that all men may see they haue no sound reason much lesse Scripture at least interpreted by Scripture for their defence And thus when the Church shall heare what such persons can say for themselues it will appeare to be but vaine babling and multiplying of words flowing not seldome from such as are euen damned of themselues in their owne conscience And this practise is agreeable to that of Christ himselfe who sometimes by the Scriptures Matth. 22.34 sometimes by reason Luk. 20.25.26 Giue to Caesar sometimes by a like interrogation and question Luk. 20.7 The Baptisme of Iohn sometimes by posing and parling Matth. 22.46 so set vp and silenced the Pharisies Sadduces Herodians and others as none could either answer him or durst aske him any more questions But when men are thus confuted by argument ouerthrowne with the sword of the spirit and confounded by the power of truth and yet still proceed to trouble the peace of the Church and the faith of the Saints then may the Church and must proceed by censure and admonition to enioyne them silence the which if yet they will not heare they ought by the Church to be driuen from the societie of the faithfull if they prooue gangrenes they must be cut off Doctr. The dutie of euery faithfull Minister is when occasion is offered timely to oppose himselfe against seducers and stop the mouths of false teachers wherein also the Church ought to backe and strengthen him For 1. the example of Christ must be our president who most boldly and freely vindicated the law from the corrupt glosses and expositions of the Pharisies and that in his first sermon 2. In regard of the particular members of the Church that they may be preserued in soundnesse from starting away and forsaking of the truth Hence did our Sauiour Christ not seldome vtter holy things before dogges and swine that is the Scribes and Pharisies and malicious Iewes because of those that stood by that they might be confirmed against their corruptions And this is made one ende of the precept the madnesse of the false Apostles must be made manifest that they may preuaile no longer 3. In regard of the false teachers themselues fooles saith Salomon must be answered least they be wise in their owne conceit neither shall the labour be wholly lost vpon them for it shall be a meanes either to conuert them and bring them to the knowledge of the truth or else so to conuince them as they shall be made excuseles And further the Church must strengthen euery Ministers hands in this contending for the faith and so manifest her selfe to be the ground and pillar of truth which is committed to her trust and safekeeping against all gaynesayers Vse 1. This ministeriall dutie requireth a great measure of knowledge and a man furnished with gifts of varietie of reading and soundnesse of iudgement euen a man who hath a storehouse in his brest First he must be well read and skilfull in the Scriptures that by them in the first place he may be able to shut the mouth of the aduersarie partly by the expresse texts of Scripture partly by harmonical parallel and sutable places as by the mouth of many witnesses partly by the analogie of faith arising out of the whole bodie of the Scripture partly by the proprietie of the speach in the fountaine and partly by the apt knitting of the context that there may be full concent with it selfe the antecedents and consequents yea more he must be furnished with varietie of reading euen in the workes and writings of men that he may be able in good sort not onely to apprehend the state of the questions and originall of controuersies but also that he may refute his aduersarie partly by the concent of the Church in all ages and partly by the helpe of things that are granted and confessed on both sides and partly by the contradictions which the patrons of errors cannot but vnawares flip into for it is true of a lyar or a patron of lies that he had need of a good memorie Secondly to all this knowledge is required a sound iudgement that he may be able to inferre good and necessarie consequents vpon the graunting of the truth he standeth for and on the contrarie the absurdities and
man suffer in that nature pay the price and beare the curse of sinne whose powerfull victorie ouer sinne death manifested in his resurrection ascension vnto his father applied by faith to the beleeuer shall fully acquit discharge him frō wrath at his cōming againe to iudgement These things must be knowne I speake not of the measure of knowledge but so much as there must be an expresse beleefe of these things for he that beleeueth not in the Sonne of God shall not see life and consequently in some sort what neede he hath of Christ and what Christ hath done and suffered for him Secondly there are other truths which are consequents deduced from the former and these are of two sorts Some things are so clearely deduced as by the neere dependance with the former the consequent is necessarily seene For example that out of the Church is no saluation that faith is ordinarily by the word preached c. all which must necessarily be expressely beleeued on condition if God make their dependance on the former to appeare For I doubt not but that God not reuealing them many thousands are saued in the ignorance of verie many such truthes but we may not hereon build our ignorance who haue so many meanes of reuelation our vnbeleefe is not onely damnable because beeing bound to beleeue we cannot or doe not but in that we will not but refuse the meanes of knowledge and faith The other kinde of deriued truthes are further remooued and not so cleare as concerning the rest of the fathers before Christ the locall dissent of Christ into hell c. such as these a man may without danger be ignorant in yea and erre also so it be without pertinacie and obstinacie The first points mentioned must expressely be knowne and beleeued the former of the two latter may be vnknowne in particular so as in generall a man beleeue all things contained in the word and be readie according to meanes offred to trauell further into the knowledge of God And the last I take it a man may without danger neither knowe nor beleeue And so much of that question which letteth vs see how necessarie it is to see that both publikly and priuatly our selues ours be grounded in the truth of religion points of catechisme which are wofully dangerously despised Vse In that these seducers ouerturne men frō off their foundation we learne that all are not chosen that are called Many beleeuers were here called and seemed to be laid on the foundation in regard of their outward profession but are subuerted againe many of them made shew as though they had beene Temples of the Holy Ghost but prooued to haue had but sandie foundations for the waues of afflictions no sooner bea●e them nor the windie blasts of seducers sooner puffe vpon them then they totter shake like a leafe or reed at last the fall of them is great So many lanch faire forth into the sea who neuer safely happily ariue at home againe and many saylers to heauen suffer shipwracke by the way Two set out of Moab both Orpah and Ruth but one of them holdeth on to Iudah We haue too many Orpahs who forsaking her owne people for loue of Gods people trauelleth on a while towards the Lords countrie but Naomi alledging but one wordly reason she turneth back againe she must haue her husband although with bitternes of heart she returne to her gods Haue not we those who had seemed to haue forsaken the world to haue ioyned themselues in zeale and heartie affection to God and his people haue they not seemed to outgoe yea out-runne others towards the heauenly Ierusalem would they not haue been as forward in any good motion or action as the best and yet how suddenly haue they turned saile and fallen some to the world especially when the world came vpon them some to pleasure some to coldnesse some to hatred of such courses that men may see and say surely some seducer hath met with them and preuailed against them How many who haue seemed waxe-hearted Christians soft and pliable who could weepe for sinne bitterly be amazed at the iudgements of God threatened out of his word stood in awe of God and durst not sinne but are now of an other colour make no conscience of oaths dicing gaming for their neighbours money feasting on the Sabbath day and otherwise profaning it so contemning the ministerie that let all the curses of the lawe be now directed against them personally they are no more mooued then the Leuiathan who riseth not vp when the sword toucheth him but accounteth iron as strawe and brasse as rotten wood euen so with him these laugh at the shaking of the speare and the archers of God cannot make them flie Oh therefore let vs beware seeing so many thousands set out of Egypt who neuer came into Canaan that we miscarrie not and fall from our owne stedfastnes Let vs labour as much for affection now as we haue done for knowledge that with our vnderstanding we may ioyne the sincere loue of the truth And seeing it is no lesse vertue to keepe the good we haue gotten then it was praise to get it let vs fence our hearts quicken Gods graces in them and pray for perseuerance The second point whereby the danger is aggrauated is that these seducers subuerted houses not one or two but many And hence obserue what is the guise of deceiuers euē to creep into houses secretly to corrupt and depraue that doctrine which in publike is taught and acknowledged the truth of God In 2. Tim. 3.6 the● creepe into houses and imitating Satans subtiltie lead captiue simple womē assayling such as can least resist who yet beeing seduced are cunning to preuaile in the seducing of their husbands Eminent in this kinde were the Scribes and Pharisies who were the deuourers of widowes houses setting vpon such as had no heads to guide them nor knowledge to discouer them and hauing all things in their owne hands had none to controle them in their liberalitie towards them these were persons fit to be ouerreached by their hypocrisie and couetousnesse both which our Sauiour deeply chargeth them withall The Apostles also foretold of such who should in after times bring in damnable heresies but priuilie and these are not vnfitly compared to foxes and wolues in Scripture for as these beasts come stealing and slily vpon the flockes taking the winde least they should be winded clapping their tayles betweene their legges least they should be heard and softly as though they were friends to the flocke when as all this is but to beguile the silly sheepe so these deceiuers craftely creepe into houses shrowding themselues in the sheepes cloathing whereas indeed they are rauening wolues And the reason hereof is 1. because publikely and directly they dare not denie the Lord Iesus nor his holy Scriptures nor the truth plainly
it and the sunne rising it presently vanisheth away If they cleaue to the Church for a while they do not with full purpose of heart cleaue vnto the Lord. If they abstaine from euill it is more in regard of man then of God or their care is but to cut off the wash boughs of sin but they leaue the bole stumpe standing to stoppe the courses of more shamefull and grosse sinnes but not to damme vp the fountaine If they doe any good they are drawne to it not for the loue of God directly but for some wordly respect and the ende is rather feare fauour praise of men then the glorie of God as Ananias If they humble themselues before God it is for corne and oyle If they howle vpon the beds of their sorrowes it is for their sickenes and not for their sinne affecting deliuerance but not repentance If they worship yet wish they there were no God to worshippe as Herod pretended to worship Christ but intended to kill him If they thrust themselues into the companie of good men it is not to better themselues but to credit their actions they can desire them to pray for them as Pharaoh Simon Magus but cannot pray for themselues If they professe religion it is not for religions sake but some other thing accompanying it Ephraim is as an heifer that delighteth to thresh because treading out the corne the oxe must not be musled but eate at his pleasure but could not away with plowing the yoke was too heauie and the commoditie too light so some outward commoditie prouoketh the hypocrite to professe religion but he cannot abide to plowe vp his heart Iudas will carrie Christs bagge till he can gaine more by him Thus turne the hypocrite any way he will be found swan-like which of all foules hath the whitest feathers but the blackest flesh vnder them except wee shall fitlier compare them with Christ to the foxe who hath this qualitie that his skinne is better then his flesh a shewe he hath of godlines but wanteth the power he hath a name that he liueth but is indeede dead seeing the whole life of religion consisteth in inward renouation of heart and sanctimonie of life both which is wanting vnto him whose sinne lyeth vnder a cloake and liueth in his soule as in a closet from which the hypocrite will not be parted 3. The third note or character is in a further degree of the sinne in that they are said rebellious to Gods commandement and disobedient to the doctrine of God The word giueth vs to discouer two vices in these titular Christians 1. infidelitie 2. rebellion or in one word the want of the obedience of faith True it is they make a great shew of faith but the Apostle distinguisheth of faith one kind is fained another is vnfained the former may be ioyned with much knowledge much talke of pietie but neuer with a pure heart and good conscience as the latter Now this vnfained faith beeing the mother and mistresse of vnfained obedience and the onely roote whence this fruit can budde and blossome whosoeuer are destitute of the former cannot but be barren of the latter what are the fruits of vnbeleefe see Act. 17.5 2. Thess. 3.2 Heb. 3.12 And although hypocrites which taking on them the names of Christians make a great shew of holinesse in externall seruice in some ceremonies or wilworship that a man would meruaile that the Scripture should ascribe rebellion vnto them yet looking nearer vnto their seruice it will appeare no better For in all that obedience of theirs which they make such account of they depart from the word if not in whole yet in some part yea in such a part as maketh it rebellion which cannot properly be said of the imperfect obedience of Gods children whose best actions cannot abide the triall of the law for besides that the best of their obedience is wanting in that which the word requireth not beeing fruits of faith whereby only they become acceptable euen in doing that which God commandeth they become rebellious and that either by adding something of their owne as Iehu whose fact though commanded and much commended yet was such a rebellion as caused the Lord not many yeares after to visit all the blood of Iizreel vpon his house yea made the whole kingdome of Israel to cease Or else by detracting something from the word to which yet they seeme to giue absolute obedience as Saul who although he obeyed the word and made his boast of doing the commandement yet because he did not all the word is charged of rebellion 1. Sam. 15.13 This consideration meeteth with the excuses of such whited toomes who scorne to be called rebells because they heare the word and yeeld something vnto it they belong to God and will serue him so neere as he giueth them leaue but yet some lusts may not be left some sweet morsell shall be held vnder the tongue and they cannot endure such a continuall martyrdome as mortification is But those we see are not onely rebellious who stand out and openly belch out blasphemies against God and his word such as say we will not haue this man to rule ouer vs come let vs cast away his cords from vs the word of the Lord spoken by thee Ieremie we will not doe but those also who secretly in their course depart from the word with pretence of obedience such as take the word into their mouthes but hate to be reformed The fourth character of an hypocrite is yet in a further degree of the sinne and goeth neere the detection of him when after long custome in sinne and cracking his conscience checking him he becomes as a crazie pitcher which is vnfit to hold water so is he reprobate to euery good dutie now can he doe nothing but rush into sinne thick and threefold and dowse himselfe ouer head and eares in impietie And how can he be other for faith he neuer had any and if any zeale remaine it putteth him forward to sinne at least that which cannot please God his corrupt conscience hath so long accused him and borne him harmelesse in the outward ceremonie and formall worship that it is either brawnie and fencelesse and so workeles or if it set it selfe on worke it is still to make him more reprobate to good duties as wearie to heare the word ashamed to pray confounded and sometimes condemned in himselfe for his present waies and iustly for although he seemed sometimes to shine among the starres yet his present courses suite not with such practises as he had better neuer to haue bin acquainted with then euer to haue growen weary of Which alas we know to be the case not of a few who seeme to haue receiued the sentence which passed against the figge tree presenting Christ with leaues but not with fruite neuer more fruite growe on thee for how soone are they withered Nay more it is to be feared
Christianitie 2. Let this mooue our elder sort to lay aside the worldly wisedome and experience and take out that point of wisedome to sit downe at Christs feete and be readie to be taught in the waies of God By which meanes how might the younger be prouoked to take vp into their affection and practise the loue of the truth and the feare of God how exceedingly might they helpe forward the ministerie in all sorts whereas it is the greatest stoppe it findeth and the greatest toyle we meete with to bring old men to leaue their old courses who are like drawn vessels in whom is nothing left but lees and dregges of ignorance loosenesse securitie in which with other old courses they are determined euen to rot away What a number of olde men be there who are but children not in yeares but in vnderstanding in knowledge in experience of the things of God in respect of which we cannot say they are twise children for in truth they were neuer other they neuer came out of this their infancie and childishnes The exhortation is more necessarie then it is commonly taken for when as we may meete with some old men and women towards 60. yeares if not aboue of whom one cannot tell that euer he heard of Christ an other cannot tell whether Christ be in heauen or in earth a third cannot be perswaded that he is a sinner all which I speake of my owne experience and triall and yet these liue in our Christian commonwealth and perhaps vnder preaching Ministers in whome is farre lesse sence of God and religion then in the verie heathen themselues Oh but these you wil say are outcast people and the vilest of men and they are but fewe But what a great sinne and shame is it that any should be so suffered to liue out of all ranke of Christianitie in dayes of such grace and knowledge But there are an other sort to which multitudes and millions cleaue that are scarse one good steppe before the former and these are such as make a shewe of knowledge and often frequent the meanes and by often sitting in this sunne are a little outwardly coloured but yet cannot giue a reason of the faith that is in them to their owne or others comfort no more then the former Vrge them they can tell you they meane well and haue good hearts but indeede they know not what they meane and without knowledge saith Salomon the minde is not good the which ignorance is so much the more damable by how much it is wilfull and affected Ioh. 15.22 If I had not come and spoken they had had no sinne but now haue they no cloake for their sinne Sober Now the things which the elder sort must learne are not so much handled as named and they are of two sorts the former which beseeme them as they are old men and these are three the first of which is sobrietie or watchfulnes which properly respecteth things without them as meate drinke c. the two latter respect their own persons the former of which is grauitie or honestie which requireth seemlines in the outward habit speach gesture manners and behauiour the latter is wisedome or discretion which restraineth the more inward concupiscences lusts and desires of the heart The second sort of vertues are such as are commended vnto them as they are ancient Christians and these be three also 1. soundnes in faith whereby duties are acceptably performed towards God 2. soundnes in loue which looketh to all the duties of the second table 3. soundnes in patience which is as salt to season and preserue both without which they could not but quickly waxe weary of well doing Thus ought old men to be qualified not only as those who haue attained to ripenes in yeares but as such who also haue striuen to some ripenes in Christianitie expressed in the practise of these three vertues In the first precept of sobrietie older persons are enioyned to watch against the immoderate vse of meate and drinke especially and in the vse of these wine and strong drinke especially to moderate themselues within the confines and precincts of sobrietie And there is great reason of this precept for this age beeing full of infirmitie a cold and drie age is more desirous to strengthen warme and moysten it selfe with wine and strong drinke and without great watchfulnes easily ouershooteth it selfe insomuch as the word teacheth how some of the holiest of their age haue beene foyled and mocked hereby the infirmitie of that age not onely beeing weake to resist but pro●e to betray and deliuer them vp vnto the temptation as Lot Noah and this seemeth to be one reason why in the next verse also the older women are forbidden to be giuen to wine And the more cautelous ought the elder men to be herein 1. Because it were a great shame for them that haue liued so long and all this while haue not learned to vse the creatures aright hardly can they be reputed Christians who for Christ will not forgoe their lusts 2. They ought by their example and counsell prouoke and direct others vnto all sobrietie and how absurd and wicked were it in them by their improuidence and loosenesse to embolden and encourage others vnto sinne and besides expose vncouer and laie open themselues to be derided by others farre their inferiours with which reproach this sinne was punished euen in Noah himselfe 3. They haue but a little time to watch in and their master is euen at their doore their sunne is a setting and they must therefore beware the more least hereby they bring their soules vpon a slumber for as sobrietie and watchfulnes are ioyned together as mutuall supporters each of other 1. Pet. 5.8 so are drunkennes and sleeping 1. Thess. 6.7 making the day of generall or particular iudgement come vnawares as it doth to such as are in the night 4. They haue but a little time to doe good in and ought to preserue themselues in a fitnesse to doe good both to gouerne their owne liues their owne families and other men if they be called thereto whereas the loosing of themselues to this sinne brings forgetfulnes of all dutie abuse of his place and woe vpon all that are committed to his gouernment besides it openeth a doore and is as a fruitfull soyle and season to many other sinnes it is an euill which goeth not alone it was accompained with incest euen in Lot himselfe 5. They haue but a while to striue against temptation which because the Deuil knoweth he more mightily assaileth them both which things seeing the Lord hath discouered vnto them they ought so much the more to watch vnto sobrietie according to the counsell of the Apostle 1. Pet. 5.8 Oh that our old men would be perswaded thus to number their daies that their hearts might be applied vnto wisedome and mooued to beware of shipwracke in their hauen and prouoked to watch but one howre longer with Christ
●estinesse hastinesse and vnaduised frowardnes their conuersation blotted with base couetousnesse as if they were to liue ouer their yeares againe their minds no lesse bending towards the earth then their bodies and though they can scarse goe vp and down in the world yet for most part are they more drowned in wordly affaires then when they were in their most constant estate In a word blackeamoores were they young and now their skins are not changed the crimson tincture of their sinne cannot yet be washed nor they in their age breake through the snares wherewith Satan held them in their youth but the sinner of an hundreth yeare olde goeth on to punishment And here let none thinke that any dotage or passionate affections may be excused by reason of the age nay rather euery such breaking out is here doubled for an olde man especially should be discreete and the discretion of a man moderateth all passions Let Barzillai be an example to all olde men who beeing sollicited to embrace courtly delights he refuseth all such profers and setteth his minde vpon his owne death in his owne citie Sound in faith Now followe those three vertues which are requisite in olde men as they are auncient Christians The first of which is soundnesse of faith in which three things are to be considered 1. What soundnes of faith is 2. Why it is commended in speciall to olde men seeing euerie Christian must haue it 3. The dutie which hence is to be learned For the first Soundnesse of faith standeth in two things 1. when faith is sound in the qualitie that is sincere not deceitfull not hypocriticall 2. when it is sound in the degree of it not a shaking reede but growne vp from the infancie vnto some strength and stature Now vnto both these is required that faith be sound 1. in the ground of it 2. in the obiect 3. in the worke of it 4. in the fruits issuing from it in any of which if it faile it is vnsound vnlasting First the ground of sound faith is a sufficient measure of knowledge of the things of God reuealed in the word in a sound and incorrupted iudgement for so the Apostle affirmeth Rom. 10.14 that for the working of faith there must be the interpreting and deliuering of doctrine out of the word and an attentiue hearing and vnderstanding of it whereby after a sort the sonne of man is lifted vp that we may beleeue Ioh. 3.14 Now euerie degree of knowledge and measure of vnderstanding is not a sufficient ground of sound faith but such a measure as is able to discerne betweene things that differ for how can children in knowledge be grown men in the faith or how can any come to that ripe age of faith here meant but such as through long custome haue their senses exercised to discerne both good and euill This must be then such a knowledge as enableth a man both to maintaine the truth and convince the gainsayers and so hold his owne comfort by distinct and particular yea some depth of knowledge without which so farre he shall be from soundnes as that he shall be dangerously carried with euerie winde of doctrine There is a fulnesse of knowledge which the Apostle commendeth in the Romanes and this is a notable fit ground for this soundnesse of faith Hence it followeth that all that implicite faith of the laie Papists folded vp in an idle fancie without knowledge is vnsound and vngrounded for can any but a Papist beleeue he knowes not what Secondly the obiect of a sound faith more generall is the whole word of God from which faith can no more be seuered then the beames from the sunne but more specially the porper obiect is the couenant of grace in Christ yea Christ himselfe together with all his merits and all the promises of mercie freely propounded in the Gospel which is therefore called the word of faith Hence all Popish faith is here prooued againe vnsound because it is corrupt in the obiect leaning it selfe in stead of the word vpon canons councells traditions vnwritten decrees as also expecting saluation without the free couenant of grace by the merit of workes whereas in iustification before God all workes all boasting are excluded Rom. 3.27 and 4.24 Thirdly the worke of a sound faith is twofold 1. assent 2. application The former is a certeine and firme assent whereby we set a seale vnto all the promises of the Gospel as most sure and certaine holding euen an Angel accursed that should bring any other doctrine and keeping sure the profession of our hope without wauering in full assurance of vnderstanding For faith is no opinion or fancie but hath in it a certaintie arising from the stedfastnes of the promise and word of God Hence are all such exhortations as that 1. Cor. 16.13 Stand fast in the faith The latter worke of faith is application whereby a man not onely assenteth that all the couenant of grace is true in it selfe but also that it is true vnto him who therefore resteth and leaneth vpon it for his owne saluation beeing assured so vndoubtedly at one time or other of his saluation as if he were alreadie gathered vp among the Saints And this hand thus laying on Christ vnto righteousnes and applying Christ with his merits vnto ones selfe in particular to saluation is the forme of faith or rather faith it selfe formed and not any workes or charitie as Papists fondly dreame And that this certaintie is of the nature of sound faith appeareth because that modest but graceles vncertaintie and doubting of the Popish doctrine is opposed vnto faith and made a fruit of vnbeleefe Matth. 14.31 Oh thou of little faith why doubtedst thou of Abraham is said Rom. 4. that he doubted not nor reasoned with himselfe but was strengthned in faith beeing fully assured And what other reason is giuen why the inheritance was not giuen by the law which was impossible to be kept but by the promises of grace but that the promise might be sure to all the seede Rom. 4.16 Or how could our peace with God continue our comfort or last with vs if we had no assurance of it but still doubted of his loue Let vs therefore alwaies take notice of this especiall worke of sound faith which maketh the heart able to say with Iob I know my Redeemer liueth and with Paul who died for me and gaue himselfe for mee Neither must the godly refuse to subscribe to the truth of this doctrine because they neuer finde such constant and full assurance which is not mooued with some doubting and sometime exceedingly ouercast with grudgings of vnbeleefe for by this reason they might aswell conclude that they neuer had faith and it is no meruaile if faith and doubting be in one man seeing they rise from two diuerse yea contrarie principles which cannot but be found in the best euen spirit and flesh If thou lookest by the
eye of flesh thou canst not but doubt of the truth of the promises at least to thy selfe in whom so little good appeareth but open the eye of thy faith which at length seeth clearely the saluation of God chaseth away clouds of doubts and distrust and giueth glorie vnto God As he therefore that would deeme the orbe of the sunne to be greater then the earth must deny his sence and yeeld to reason so must the beleeuer renounce both sence and reason and liue by his faith Fourthly the fruits of a sound faith are 1. Inward and these are all the parts of renewed holines in the soule which cannot but accompany it 2. Pet. 1.5.6 Ioyne with faith vertue c. for it worketh a through change in the whole man by purifying the heart inspiring a new spirituall life raysing from dead workes and causing to grow vp in holines and in the feare of God It is as the heat in the bodie the fountaine of life and heate and as the roote of a tree affording life sappe and quickning of grace to all the the parts of obedience without which it is impossible to please God in any thing 2. Outward such as are the true loue of God and man For as it maketh vs the sonnes of God so it causeth vs to carie our selues as children desirous to please our Father in all things to performe vnto him all the parts of his worship publike and priuate to loue his word to confesse his truth though with the losse of our liues to thinke of him to speake of him to delight in his presence and fellowship and giue vp our selues wholly to obey him in his commandements and corrections Againe it maketh vs to loue Gods image in our brethren and out of this loue issueth a desire and endeauour to helpe them heauenward and care to performe all other offices of loue towards their outward man their persons their liues their goods their names c. These are the blessed fruits of that faith which is vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 which worketh by loue Gal. 5.6 And thus haue we shewed the first point wherein the nature of sound faith standeth The second point is why soundnes of faith is required rather of old men beeing a grace which euery one young aswell as old must striue vnto Answ. 1. Because they haue had the vse of the word longer and therefore their profit should be answerable to their meanes neither is this assurance and soundnes of faith attained at the first but ariseth vpon a grounded knowledge which for most part is not to be found in the younger sort Secondly old men which ought to be auncients in profession and so haue more experience of Gods waies and working should shew forth the power of faith vnto others and therein become as cleare patternes and presidents vnto them and therefore whereas a lesser measure may be accepted in the younger yet for these to yeeld to doubting to wauer in the truth to be corrupt in iudgement to sticke in extremitie or faint in affliction is a greater sinne and more hatefull vnto God who more seuerely correcteth it in old men who should be leaders vnto others yea although they be deare otherwise vnto him Moses himselfe if by doubting he shall dishonour God shall be barred the good land for it Thirdly their age and experience in all meetings must haue the honour and place of speach when the younger sort must either sit silent or with Elihu speake in their turne when they haue done of them the younger expect solution of doubts and difficulties counsell in cases of conscience and wise aduise out of their experience Now if they should be tainted with false opinions and dotages or shake as ●eeds in the doctrine of faith and truth they cannot but become hurtfull and vnprofitable vnto such whose eyes are vpon them when they see them as inconstant in the faith and as subiect to wauer and reele as thēselues who in comparison are but newly planted 4. Their bodies outward man waxeth weak and beginneth to faile and therefore they had more need labour for strength and soundnes in the inner man which is a reason not to be neglected as presently we shall see Vse All these reasons are direct against such as plead that their years comming on them they cannot conceiue nor learne nor remember nor profit in religion as they are vrged in the ministerie their sences inward and outward serue them not their vigour and quicknes is gone but it is good for them to consider the hand of God vpon Zacharie Luk. 1. 18. for making his age a meanes to weaken his faith though in a farre more difficult case Doth not our Apostle here vrge it as a cheife argument that because they are old therefore they must the rather be furnished with grace of knowledge memorie zeale faith loue and patience and shall it goe for a good plea that because they are old therefore they shall be excused if they cannot attaine vnto these nor greatly force after them what a shame was it for Nicodemus beeing an auncient and Ruler in Israel to be ignorant in the point of regeneration and therefore Christ reprooued him Ioh. 3. And that was the sinne of the Hebrews when as for their time they ought to haue bin teachers they were to seek in the principles of religion and were babes needing milke such is the sinne of babish old men olde in yeares children in vnderstanding The third point is the lesson which hence we are to learne namely that euerie man must labour to recompence the decaie of nature with increase of grace the weakenes of the bodie with soundnesse of minde the failing of the outward man with the fortifying of the inward The wiseman wisheth timly to prepare against the inconueniences of old age with the remembrance of God in the youth how much more should olde men in the midst of their ruines and decaies by this meanes repaire and fortifie themselues And the counsell is generall that if the outward man perish care must be had that the inward be daily renewed Reas. 1. It is made a note of a true member of the Church to be more fresh flourishing and fruitfull in his age when other men languish decay and are daily enfeebled these trees of righteousnesse receiue new vigour and strength not to flourish onely but to be more fruitfull then euer And whereas amongst men those that see olde and decrepite age for want of naturall heate and moisture shriule and die away yet euen these same beeing true members of the Church hauing once the life of the Sonne of God breathed into their soules are neuer afterwards destitute of radicall heate and moysture but renew their age as the eagle and with their daies their strength For Christ is that Sunne of righteousnesse who once rising vpon a soule is so farre from setting againe that he is still rising euen vnto the perfect day of it
be sober minded These words containe three points in their order to be considered 1. The persons to whom the precept is directed or whom the precept concerneth namely young men who must be taught and dealt with as well as any others 2. The manner how they must be dealt withall Exhort 3. What they must be exhorted vnto that they must be sober minded From each of which we learne a profitable instruction Doctr. Out of the first point we are taught that young men must looke to their waies and conteine themselues in their duties as well as others of whose courses the Lord taketh as good notice as of others For 1. here the Minister is giuen in charge to teach them as well as others Peter must feed lambs as well as sheepe and they beeing a great part of the Church must honour God in their places as well as the auncient in theirs 2. If the Pastors and teachers haue the ouersight of them and must as well watch ouer their soules as others then must they also for this cause obey them and be submitted vnto them 3. If the word be directed vnto them as well as others they as well as others must be directed by it But Iohn writeth as well to young men as the older and to children aswell as fathers Salomon aduiseth the young man to remember his creator in the daies of his youth Dauid to redresse his waies according to the word Vse 1. This doctrine reprehendeth a common error in the world for generally men thinke that religion and attendance vnto the word is for old age but as for youth it must sow the wild oates it must haue his course young men must settle themselues in the world and ground their estate first for other matters they haue day inough before them to mind them in and from this first error proceeds a worse that the religion of this age for most part is but promises without practise and those promises but hypocrisies without any soundnesse But all this is but the wisedome of the flesh euen sensuall and deuillish cleane contrarie to Gods wisedome which vrgeth the young man if euer he would be setled in a good estate to found it in the remembrance of God and asking the question how a mans life should be rightly ordered propoundeth it in the person of the young man because that is indeed the age of right reformation For settle the soule vpon his lees of sinnefull lusts custome in sinning prooueth another nature and in continuance becommeth vnchangeable and incorrigible Let a man through his youth set his face against heauen and blaspheme the religion of God it shall be as hard for a blackmoore to chang his skin or the leopard his spottes as for such a one who hath beene accustomed to euill to learne to do well for the curse is commonly passed against them who haue beene so long fruitles neuer more fruit grow vpon thee and what other can the ground that bringeth nothing but thornes and bryers expect but that the end of it should be to be burned Vse 2. Let this be a motiue vnto all young men to looke betime to the ordering of their waies and if God call timely as he did young Samuel earely in the morning beware of running another way but with him answer speake Lord thy seruant heareth and the better either to perswade them to the obedience of this precept or else to leaue them the more excuseles in the departure from their dutie I will 1. by some reasons inforce the dutie and 2. prescribe some meanes for the more happy practise of the same For the former First that age is the haruest and summer in which whosoeuer sleepeth is the sonne of confusion but he that gathereth is the child of wisedome It is with grace as it is with grafts there must be a time of insetting and a time of outgrowing and both these must be seasonable before fruit can be expected the seed must be sowne in youth that must come vp in age nip a blossome in the spring and where is the hope of autumne We can conclude that a man borne to nothing if he idle out his youth and applie his hands to nothing is so farre from likelihood of proouing a rich man that he cannot escape ragged clothing as Salomon speaketh but needs must hee beare a wallet and die a beggar and how is it that we want wisedome accordingly to conclude that where Sathan can make youth vnprofitable little good nay much spirituall beggarie may be expected in all other ages through the life Secondly another reason the Apostle Iohn vseth I write vnto you young men because yee are strong young men are called out to beare the heat of the day because they are in their strength and are chiefe champions either for good or euill If then their strength be spent in the practises of pietie and religion such workes are so much the more excellent because they are performed with more courage zeale strength and resolution But if vnto any vice they powre out their strength or stand the patronage of any sinne their actions are so much more sinnefull and outragious by how much they are more violent wherein although for the time they may reioyce yet let them know that they shall come vnto iudgement at what time they must be counteable for all their strength and the imployment also of it Againe in regard of this strength they are most fit for the spirituall combate strength is for warre saith Rabsachie and therefore if they could not heretofore be Preists vnto this seruice yet let them now serue as voluntaries vnder the Captaine Iesus Christ then any longer abide vnder the colours of his enemies Thirdly for young men to be early graced is a beutifull sight in the eyes of God and his children it filled Paul with ioy to remember Tymothies timely faith When Christ saw but some ciuill vertues in a young man otherwise bewraying many great corruptions so louely were they vnto him that it is said he loued him When children crie Hosanna what a great prouocation of the elder sort is it of which the Lord will make great vse to their shame and conuincement that as it was a shamfull rebuke to the Israelites when Christ said of the Cananite surely I haue not found so great faith in Israel so shall the elder sort be confounded when he shall say surely I haue not found so great faith zeale knowledge obedience in rulers fathers masters as in prentizes seruants children Or as he prouoked the Pharisies Iohn came in the way of righteousnesse and yee beleeued not the Publicans and harlots beleeued him and yet when you saw that you neither beleeued nor repented of your vnbeleefe verely I say vnto you that Publicans and harlots shall enter into heauen before you so shall it be said The elder sort receiued not the word but many of the younger
the Apostle Peter who combineth all these duties in one short verse but a little inverting the order Feare God honour the King loue brotherly fellowship This precept in hand chargeth vpon euerie Christian these two maine duties First that he must make account with himselfe that everie Christian dutie belongeth vnto him euen euerie good worke to which the Lord giueth him calling and abilitie Secondly that he must keepe himselfe in a fitnesse and readinesse thereunto Doctr. 1. The former is cleared by the testimonie and other obseruations out of the Scripture The lawe curseth him that continueth not in all things the Gospel also in generall requireth the obseruation of all things Teach them to obserue all things which I haue commanded you which precept was giuen when Christ had on the crosse fulfilled all righteousnesse in the persons of his members As for the speciall precepts of the Gospel they are many Philip. 4.8 Whatsoeuer things are true honest iust pure pertaining to loue of good report if there be any vertue or any praise thinke on these things The Apostle was not content that the Corinths should abound in euery grace else and be wanting in one but exhorteth that as they abounded in euerie thing in faith in word in knowledge in diligence in loue so they would striue to abound in this grace also namely of mercifulnesse to the distressed Saints The same Apostle to the Thessalonians knewe what he prayed when he wished that they were stablished to euerie good word and worke 2. This standeth with those special commendations which the Apostles haue giuen of sundry of the Saints to stirre vp others vnto their imitation When Paul would be large in commending the Church of the Romanes he affirmeth they were full of goodnesse so of Dorcas we read that she was full of good workes and almes and mention is made of the coats and garments which shee had made for the Saints 3. As the holy Ghost in Scripture approoueth and commendeth the presence of any true grace for the encouragement of it so also taketh he notice of that which is yet wanting to prouoke to the purchase of it Many of the good kings of Iudah were highly commended yet something or other they fayled in either the high places were not wholly taken downe or some league or othe● was made with the enemies against Gods commandement or some heauines or forgetfulnesse ouertooke them that of fewe of them it could be said they went through-stitch with euerie good worke The spirit likewise in the new Testament speaking to the Churches taketh knowledge of many good things in the Angels of them I knowe thy loue thy faith thy patience thy zeale and thy workes c. but fewe of them escaped without that exception neuerthelesse I haue somewhat or a fewe things against thee either the first loue was fallen from or Balaams doctrine maintained or Iesabels fornications suffered c. but according to the truth of their condition the spirit is plaine with them this thou hast and this thou hast no● implying it to be matter of iust reproofe before God to be wanting in any good worke which hee hath giuen calling and meanes vnto 4. The nature of grace giueth light and euidence vnto this truth the which disposeth the will and powers of the soule equally vnto one good thing as well as vnto an other for regeneration includeth in it the seeds of all vertues and reneweth and changeth the whole nature which hath in it the seede of all sinne and vice and when the Scripture would note the soundnesse of grace hence it doth it that it both hath respect to all the commandements and hateth all the wayes of falshood Vse 1. This doctrine first teacheth vs to learne the rule of euery good worke legall or euangelicall The former are not only such as are commonly knowne and expressed in the words of the decalogue but such also as therein are included and implied these must be sought out for else ignorance of the law excuseth not from fault Content not thy selfe that thou canst say the commandements nor if thou canst say that thou hast kept the whole letter of the law from thy youth but studie the whole Scripture which is an exposition and large commentarie of those tenne words heare it read it diligently meditate vpon it apply it to thy heart and life else knowest thou not how to beginne any good work Learne further the speciall good workes required by the Gospel such as are faith in Christ repentance of sin past amendment of life for time to come And cursed be all that Popish doctrine which would hide this light vnder a bushell whereby alone the Christian can discerne what is a good worke and how himselfe may do it well Vse 2. If euery good worke belong to euery Christian then may not men post ouer the matter to the Minister the common conceit is that the clergie should be holy hospitable and so qualified as we haue heard in the first Chapter but for common men and vnlearned it will be acceptable inough if they be almost Christians that is as good as neuer a whit whereas the Lord bindeth vpon euery Christian of what condition soeuer the practise of euery good worke which is offered him within the compasse of his calling either generall or particular For example If a Christian be called into publike place as of Magistracie he may not conceiue that the building of the Church the discountenancing of sinne the encouragement of the godly belongeth only to the Minister but he must set hand to these workes he must establish and countenance the Ministrie he must be the foreman in all good exercises he must be rich in workes of mercie and of iustice the patron of the poore the sheild of the oppressed but especially a patterne of pietie he must be a man fearing God yea he and his house must serue the Lord. If thou remainest a priuate man the same care lyeth vpon thee in thy proportion thou must procure the wealth of Ierusalem at least by thy prayers for the peace of the Church for able Ministers for the free passage of the Gosspel and if God further enable thee thou must releeue such as stand for the truth of God and puritie of his worship Thou must doe all the good thou canst to others in preseruing life feeding the hungrie clothing the naked visiting the prisoners and so become rich in the works of mercie Thou must also be diligent in duties at home in reforming thy family teaching them praying with them examining how they profit and thriue in grace and walking religiously and conscionably in euery good worke of thy personall calling Here is a course which goeth farre beyond harmelesnsse and good meanings and good words which Iames saw to be the religion of many in his time this is soundnes in christianity when a man can thus turne himselfe as well to one good action
point if we looke seriously and vnpartially into many of our sacrifices and oblations to God and men may we not accuse our selues as the Lord once did his people Yee haue snuffed to offer the thing which was good and haue offered the torne and lame and sicke nay many of vs snuffe at these last and worst If the best and most religious action would charge many a one but with a matter of tweluepence such is their readines to any good worke that it shall lie in the dust and although God hath giuen them abundance of outward things to the end that they might be meanes of performing many a good worke yet still they plead want of abilitie whereas if they were as willing as able they would become rare patternes of welldoing But herein they shew themselues what euer they professe forgetfull of this precept and destitute of this grace which quickly and vpon euery iust occasion findeth it selfe called into practise and finding it selfe so called standeth not so much vpon abilities but worketh the will to the abilitie yea and beyond in iust occasion not that we call any man to the cracking of his estate or to the exhausting of the fountaine of his liberallitie for we need not but we would haue them to know that God maketh them able to giue before they be able to cast away as much as they giue and hurt them not and calleth them to distribute before their owne pleasures and lusts be serued seeing this precept requireth the departure with and forgoing of that which is often sweete pretious yea and necessarie for our selues Let vnconscionable men think well herof who can contentedly throw away at one cast or game at cards or dice more then willingly they would sow in pence to the poore all the yeare long Hauing now seene the necessitie and notes we will shortly set down some rules of practise for the better setting vs forward in this dutie First get into thy soule the conscience of this commandement accounting it worthie of all thine obedience beeing so often vrged in the Scriptures and made in the end of the former Chapter the end of Christs purchasing of vs. This reason drawne from the feare of God preuailed so farre with Iob that thence he was mooued to vse mercifulnesse to all sorts of men for Gods punishment was fearefull vnto me and I could not escape his highnesse Secondly Take euery opportunitie of welldoing while it is offered for else the opportunitie may be cut off from thee or thou from it This is the Apostles rule Gal. 6.10 While we haue time doe good vnto all That is take the present occasion of doing all the good thou canst 1. in regard of thy selfe performe the principall and maine dutie know the day of thy visitation slacke not this thy tearme-time but get the oyle of faith knowledge of God and obedience to his word that thy lampe may euer be shining to the glorifying of thy Father which is in heauen in one word forget not while thou hast time to giue all diligence to make thine election sure 2. In regard of others if now thou canst doe them good in soule or bodie delaie it not Prov. 3.28 Say not to thy neighbour goe and come againe to morrow and I will giue thee if now thou hast it and what knoweth any man whether this may be the last day wherein he can doe good to himselfe or others Thirdly Goe yet one step further to seeke and watch occasions of doing good and be glad when thou hast obteined them that so thou maist euer be furthering thy reckoning We read of the Patriarchs Abraham and Lot how they sate at their doores watching to entertaine strangers that they espied them a farre off runne out to meete them and most earnestly entreated them to abide and refresh themselues shew thy selfe herein the sonne of Abraham And would to God Christians were a little quicker not only in taking but seeking occasions of exercising the duties of mercie and loue for there is more in it then the seruing of euery begger at doore who the most of them liue in the breach of Gods commandement and in a course against all good order they might bethinke them of many poore and carefull Christians some labouring vnder pouertie some vnder debt some vnder sicknesse some vnder temptation some vnder one burden some vnder another whose necessities ought to be inquired into and so occasions sought of releeuing Christ himselfe in his members the want of this inquirie is the cause of much vnfruitfulnes Here I might free our doctrine from that Popish imputation challenging it as an enemy to good works but of that we shall more fully speak in the 14. verse Vers. 2. That they speake euill of no man The speciall precepts which are to be performed to all Christians are propounded 1. negatiuely 2. positiuely The negatiue requireth the good abearing 1. of the tongue That they speake euill of no man 2. of the hands no fighters The affirmatiue layeth bridle vpon the affections but soft shewing all meeknes to all men For the first The word is a rule not only of doing well but of speaking well also and condemneth aswell vnbridled speaches as disordered actions and frameth aswell the tongue to euery good speach as the hand to euery good worke and therefore fitly is this precept induced vpon the former instructing beleeuers that as they must be readie to euery good worke so also must they as readily exercise their tongues in sutable speaches abandoning all hurtfull language tending to the disgrace or iniurie of any man seeing these two may not be diuorced in him that would dwell in the Lords Tabernacle who must be both a worker of righteousnesse and a speaker of the truth in his heart and no slaunderer of his neighbour Psal. 15. Quest. The Apostle seeming to prohibit all euill speaking whether is it not lawfull to speake the euill we know by another so we speake nothing but truth Answ. It is neuer lawfull in any vncalled to speake it But if question be when a man is called I answer that God giueth a man calling in diuerse cases 1. When any man is publikely called before a magistrate to testifie of a fact for the clearing of some truth and execution of iustice and now to speake the truth is to strengthen sinews of humane societie 2. Priuately when a truth is called into question betweene man and man and cannot otherwise be cleared then by rubbing some old sore especially if in such a case a mans owne credit be hazarded and cannot otherwise be saued 3. When a man counselleth and aduiseth with another how such a man may be recouered out of such an euill or else admonisheth the partie himselfe both which are so far from intending his hurt that they tend to his amendment 4. For the preuention of such hurt as may arise to some other by a scandalous and wicked person in which
we see the glorie of Christ with open face all vailes are rent and the earth is filled with the knowledge of God euen as the waters couer the sea And to this our Apostle hath reference doubtlesse casting his eye vpon that plentifull grace of regeneration which euen in baptisme was and is conferred vnto beleeuers The fourth thing in the meaning is the person procuring this abundant grace for vs and that is Iesus Christ our Sauiour for what good thing soeuer can be deriued from God vnto vs it must be by a Mediator and such a one as must be humbled for sinne and raised from sinne the former in his death and passion for sinne the latter in resurrection and ascension from sinne and in both these regards the Lord Christ obtaineth for his Church these graces 1. as a redeeme● by the merit of his passion 2. as an intercessor by the efficacie of his requests which now after his ascension he m●keth for the Saints therefore is it said that the Father sendeth the Spirit in the name of his Sonne Ioh. 14.26 whom the Father will send in my name that is the Father sendeth the Spirit through the Sonne both as a Mediator and as an Intercessor both which workes so soone as he had accomplished it was no meruaile if the Spirit through such merit of passion and efficacie of intercession was so plentifully powred out vpon his bodie the Church as wee reade accomplished Act. 2.2 Doctr. 1. The graces of the spirit are plentifully powred out vpon vs as out of a full and rich mercie For 1. we haue the accomplishment of many prophesies and promises as Isai. 11.9 Dan. 12.4 many prophesies were then sealed and the booke shut vntil the tearme of time but then many should run to and fro and knowledge should be encreased 2. We haue the truth of many types and resemblances as of the waters running from vnder the threshold of the sanctuarie still rising to encrease and of the proceedings of the new Testament typified in the cloud which at the first appearance was no bigger then a mans hand but after rise to that greatnesse as to couer the whole heauens 3. If we compare our Church with that of the Iewes we shall obserue that the Lord did but droppe and sprinkle these graces here and there vpon a few persons where he pleased but now hath powred out his Spirit and opened a fountaine of grace to the house of Iudah and Ierusalem euen for all true beleeuers And here that speach of Iohn 7.39 is verified the spirit was not giuen yet because the Sonne was not yet glorified that is in comparison he was not giuen before but so sparingly as in respect of this powring out he might seeme not to be giuen at all so also is that place of Peter to be vnderstood of which saluation the Prophets haue inquired searching and prophesying of that grace that should come vnto you not that themselues had no consolation of that grace which by the eie of prophesie they foresawe to light in abundance vpon the Church of the newe Testament but because in comparison it came to vs and was not accomplished vnto them To this purpose Christ himselfe pronounceth blessednesse vpon his hearers whose eares and eyes heard and saw things which many Kings and Prophets desired to heare and see but could not And Paul saith that our ministerie farre passeth theirs in glorie who were but vnder rudiments and in principles and elements if compared with vs. Obiect But the best of vs are but children in knowledge faith obedience to Abraham and the rest of the Prophets and sundrie beleeuers among them Answ. If we compare person with person it is true in many of them but compare Church with Church they were but children vnto vs. Obiect But a number of men haue no grace at all and others a verie small measure and the best not so much but they finde themselues still to stand in neede of more Answ. This preiudiceth not the generall truth for 1. God powreth out his grace abundantly though most men let it fall to the ground to their deeper damnation 2. The Church of the new Testament hath abundance to which while men will not ioyne themselues in soundnes and sinceritie but hang themselues to it by outward profession alone as a sient tyed to a t●eee by a threed rather then grafted into it what meruell if they be emptie of grace 3. He that receiueth the least droppe of true grace hath abundance not perhaps in regard of his meanes but the smallest measure is in it selfe abundance for the least droppe of these waters shall be as a well springing vp to life eternall which if it kindly sinke into the soule out of such a mans bellie shall flowe riuers of the water of life which things saith Iohn spake Christ of the spirit which they that beleeued in him should receiue so that although some haue more some haue lesse yet he that hath any he that hath the least true grace hath abundance Vse 1. If such plentie of grace be powred out vpon vs our care must be to be found answerable thereunto that according to our proportion our encrease may be for we may not thinke the returne of one talent sufficient if we haue receiued fiue or ten seeing where much is giuen much will be required Hath the Lord so richly shed out his spirit that whereas the most excellent Patriarchs saw Christ only a farre off the most simple of our age may see him in the word and Sacraments euen crucified before his eyes and will it not be expected that in all things we should be made rich in him And thus haue we ministred vnto vs a ground of examination whether we finde the fruits and worke of these waters vpon vs. When Ioel prophecied of the powring out of this spirit marke what wonderfull effects he foretold should follow That sons and daughters seruants and maids old and young should prophesie should see visions should dreame dreames and accordingly at the first accomplishment of this prediction what vnderstanding what illumination what tongues what miracles what conuersion to God followed sometimes many hundreds sometimes many thousands wonne at one sermon and how violently was the kingdome taken We now haue the powring out of the same spirit and more plentifully then they or any age or countrie euer since but where be these fruits and effects where or to whome in comparison is the arme of God made bare or shineth that excellent reuelation of the mysteries of saluation where is that faith and acknowledgement of Iesus Christ which passeth all prophesie tongues and miracles yea are but dongue to that excellent knowledge of Christ which passeth all knowledge We behold indeed the glorie of the Lord with open face but how fewe are transformed into the same image Looke any way vpon the liues of most men and we cannot but demurre of the truth of the doctrine
First in regard of God good workes haue their necessarie vses As 1. that his name may be glorified by the professors of it for it tends greatly to his praise when in such workes as himselfe hath commanded his children testifie their obedience and thankefulnesse 2. that his Gospel may be beautified and adorned of which see cap. 2.10 3. that himselfe may be pleased and delighted as men with sweete smels with such sweete smelling sacrifices as these be Heb. 13.16 Philip. 4.18 these are the myrrhe and the spice which Christ gathereth when he commeth into his garden Cant. 5.1 Secondly in respect of our neighbour these good workes of mercie and beneficence haue their excellent and necessarie vses for euerie Christian is a fruitfull branch of that vine whereby both God and man is cheared And whereas our neighbour is either vnconuerted or converted they want not their speciall vse in regard of them both First for the vnconuerted they are either elect or reprobate If they be elect they may hence be prepared to their conuersion and woone euen without the word to the liking of the word and profession which they see so holy so charitable and so plentifull in good works Thus saith the Apostle that vnbeleeuing husbands may without the word be wonne by the godly conversation of their wiues and the same Apostle exhorteth the scattered and conuerted Iewes to haue their conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which now did speake euill of them as euill doers might by their good workes be prouoked to glorifie God in the day of their visitation But if they be wicked and belong not to God yet by the godly liues of professors they shall be 1. restrained that they cannot so boldly rush into and tumble in their sinnes as they would no more then Herodias could quietly enioy her sinne so long as Iohn Baptist was aliue Mark 6.19 2. they shall haue their mouthes stopt and put to silence when they would gladly open them wide against the truth and the professors of it And this is the will of God that by weldoing we put to silence the ignorance of foolish men 3. they shall be convinced and condemned in their consciences and so prepared for the iudgement of God and thus the Queene of the South condemned the Iewes and Noah by building the Arke condemned the old world Heb. 11.7 Secondly If the neighbour be conuerted he is either weake and then he is hereby confirmed strengthed and brought on or else he is strong and then he is further prouoked yea his heart is gladded and further knit to such a one as in whom he seeth such sparkles of Gods image to shine And thus was Titus his inward affection more aboundant toward the Corinths when he remembred the obedience of them all so was Pauls also by the faith and grace of the Philippians 1.5 Thirdly in regard of our selues they haue many necessarie and profitable vses As 1. to make our election sure to our selues 2. Pet. 1.10 2. we may by them discerne the soundnesse of our owne graces as sauing knowledge will be operatiue liuely faith will be working effectuall loue will be an hand giuing out sound hope will be purging Christian thankfulnesse wil appeare in good works which are called sacrifices of thanksgiuing true charitie and mercifulnesse will go beyond that mouth-mercie of which Iames speaketh for else all is vnsound whosoeuer saith he loueth God and keepeth not his commandements is a lyar 1. Ioh. 2.3 for that loue of God or men is vnsound which is in tongue word but not indeed and truth as witnesseth the Apostle 1. Ioh. 3.18 3. by these fruits other men also may discerne the soundnes of our faith and graces for although good workes cannot iustifie the person before God yet they must iustifie the faith of the person before men and therefore Iames saith shewe me thy faith by thy workes and of Abel is said that he obtained witnes that he was righteous in that he offred a better sacrifice then Cain Heb. 11.4 4. They doe our selues good both in this life and in the life to come 1. In this life they profit vs in our outward estate and inward They bring blessing to our outward estate for God hath promised that he that watereth shal haue raine and that the mercifull man shall not want yea they drawe vpon vs not onely the blessing of God but of men also who blesse the mercifull man by many prayers which Iob made no small account of when in the depth of his distresse hereby he comforted him selfe that the blessing of the poore came vpon him Thus Onesiphorus his mercie towards Paul beeing at Rome in trouble brought the feruent prayers of so great an Apostle vpon himselfe and his house 2. Tim. 1.18 Besides this they doe our names good and helpe to purchase a good report which is better then a pretious oyntment Abraham by his workes was commended that he was iust Iam. 2.21 and of the good and mercifull man it is said that his name shall not be put out As for our inward estate they make that farre more thriuing for euerie grace is strengthened by the execrcise of it as no talent was vsed but to encrease for as prayer is increased by praying and knowledge by instructing so is loue by almes and mercie by distributing without which exercise all would rust and become as a sword kept in the scabbard till the heart become like the sluggards field ouergrowne with thornes and briars but most vnreadie to any good worke 2. In the life to come they are profitable for they procure a mercifull reward and beeing a sowing to the spirit we shall reape of them in the haruest life euerlasting yea and more they procure a proportionable measure of glorie for according to the measure of faith and grace in the worke the recompence may well be thought to be a cuppe of cold water shall not loose the reward but yet he that soweth more liberally shall more liberally reape And as in hell are degrees of torments for some shall be beaten with more stripes some with fewer and it shall be easier with some then other and yet both condemned so is it probably held that in heauen shall be degrees of glorie for some shall shine as the firmament some as the starres in which is greater light yea one starre differeth from another in glorie and this according to the gayning of talents for he that gaineth fiue talents shall rule ouer fiue cities and he shall rule ouer tenne cities that hath gayned tenne talents Not that the gayning of the talents meriteth any such recompence no more then a cup of cold water giuen to a disciple in the name of a disciple or a mite cast into the treasurie neither of which shall loose their reward but because faithfull is he which hath promised Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that slanderous
indeed his bowells were not straitned toward Titus and the Church committed vnto him seeing he wisheth the verie fountaine of grace to be opened vnto them for this word as we shewed in the beginning signifieth both the free loue and fauour of God towards vs in Christ as also all other spirituall blessings flowing from that fountaine such as are remission of sinnes reconciliation with God iustification sanctification life eternall and all the meanes tending thereunto 3. That beeing an Apostolicall prayer it might also be a meanes of obtaining and conuaying vpon them the grace requested and although he had made the same request for them before yet it is no vaine repetition for partly he prayeth for the encrease and further feeling of this grace for them and partly teacheth vs thereby that it is the only blessing to be prayed for the cheife if not only grace which our selues are to labour for and which we must by all meanes endeauour that others may haue their portion in with vs. 4. To shew that all our greeting must beginne and end in grace and that our formes of salutation should fauour of grace and not be profane gracelesse or formall as the most are 5. Beeing a Minister of grace he beginneth and endeth with it and teacheth Ministers that their first and last action of the day and of their Ministeriall dutie should be the commending of their people vnto the grace of God in their praiers and besides if ordinarie letters much more other more weightie actions of men must be vndertaken and performed with praier and praise Secondly in that he saith Grace be with you he sheweth that howsoeuer this Epistle was inscribed to Titus alone yet was it intended to be of common vse to the whole Church and therefore we haue not vnfitly applied the most of the doctrines to the vse not of Ministers only but of all sorts of men so farre as they concerned them Last of all in that he saith grace be with you all he meaneth all the elect and only they for only they are effectuall partakers of this sauing grace called often elsewhere the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the treasurie and fountaine of it The wicked are indeede endued with excellent gifts of Gods spirit but they want this grace of God in Christ which is the only foundation of our election to the grace of life of our effectuall vocation to the grace of God wherein we stand and of that assured hope of that heauenly inheritance which he hath purchased of his grace By this grace we are happily reconciled vnto God and adopted to be heyres of grace hereby also we haue receiued the word of grace which is made fruitfull to the planting and watering of all other sauing graces in vs and so to the furthering and finishing of the whole worke of our saluation in glorie This grace be euer with vs and all them that loue the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ to their immortalitie Amen So shall it be And so be it To God the Father of lights and to Iesus Christ that eternall word together with that annoynting euen the blessed spirit the only one true and wise God who hath happily led vs through these labours be all praise and glorie in all the Churches for euermore Amen A SHORT VIEWE OF SVCH Doctrines as are enlarged with their reasons and vses A Man may sometimes lawfully change his name Pag. 4. Such names are to be giuen to children as may put them in minde of some good dutie Pag. 4 The name of a seruant of God is full of honour Pag. 6 The chiefe offices in the Church are for the service of it Pag. 10 God hath some who are elect and other are not Pag. 11 The elect haue a faith by themselues Pag. 13 The faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought by the ministerie of the word Pag. 16 The doctrine of the Gospell is truth it selfe Pag. 18 The knowledge of the truth is the ground of faith Pag. 19 The truth intertained in truth frameth the heart vnto godlinesse Pag. 21 The ende of the ministerie is to drawe vp mens mindes from earth to heauen Pag. 24 True faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene attended with many other graces especially with hope Pag. 27 Life eternall is the beleeuers by free promise Pag. 30 God is truth itselfe and cannot lie Pag. 33 The free loue of God appeareth in that whatsoeuer he doth for his elect in time the same he decreeth before all time Pag. 39 The doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times Pag. 43 The Lord effecteth all his purposes and promises in due season Pag. 44 Saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Pag. 48 The office of preaching is an office of trust Pag. 52 Whosoeuer entreth into the ministerie must finde himselfe pressed by the calling and commandement of God Pag. 53 Ministers may be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the disposition and necessitie of their people require Pag. 55 Gods calling to grace is free and powerfull Pag. 56 Ministers ought to be spirituall fathers in begetting children to God Pag. 58 Faith is one and the same in all Gods elect Pag. 62 Euerie man must be carefull 1. whome 2. to what 3. how farre he commendeth an other Pag. 65 All are not naturall sonnes that are so accounted 66 The free and euerlasting grace of God is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall Pag. 69 True peace is the fruit of Gods grace and mercie Pag. 71 Whosoeuer is called to labour in the Church must by all his care further the worke of the Lord. Pag. 75 He that would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through his calling must euer haue the ende of it in his eie Pag. 76 Churches must not be condemned as no Churches for want of some lawes or gouerment if they ioyne in the profession of the truth Pag. 80 No Church is hastely brought to perfection Pag. 81 There is continuall bending of good ordinances euen in the best estate of the Church Pag. 83 Such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie there is where a Church is planted that without it religion cannot possibly thriue or continue Pag. 86 The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Evangelist but Apostolicall direction must guide him Pag. 89 How able soeuer a man is to teach if he be of a scandalous life he is vnfit to be chosen a Minister Pag. 92 Marriage of Ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God Pag. 97 Polygamie was euer blameworthy euen in the best Pag. 103 He that would reforme others abroad must begin at home Pag. 110 To haue the blessing of gracious children thou must beginne at religion Pag. 111 The carriage of a mans children is a great credit or disgrace to his profession especially of the Minister Pag. 113 Riot is an hatefull vice to be
Rom. 13 14. 2. Pet. 2.13 1. Pet. 1.13 Miserrimus est qui misero servit Eph. 4. ●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iam. 4 5· The spirit in man lusteth after enuie prooued 1. Sam. 18.9 Prou. 29.17 Gal. 5. Rom. 1. Professors must be carefull to banish all the sinnes of this suit Gen. 6.5 Rom. 5 1● Men are naturally possessed with this point of Poperie that this corruption is seated in the bodie sences and inferiour faculties of the minde onely Timely take in hand thy crooked nature Morbus languor naturae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He calleth himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How God can be so good to man seeing so many vessells are prepared to destruction Rom. 11.22 Psal. 73.1 Mich. 7. ●● 2. Cor. 2.15 Then are we saued when we are sanctified 1. Ioh. 3.2 Ioh. 3.18 Saluation considered two waies Alia est depositio pecca●i quae donatur ex parte Alia mortalitatis quae speratur None saued hereafter who are not saued here For assurance of saluation haue recourse to thy sanctification Philip. 1.6 Men conuerted are happie men though the world see it not Trie thy present happines by this touchstone Before the Lord put forth his loue in his Christ it could not be reached of man or angel 2. Tim. 1.10 Hebr. 1.3 Let the Papist goe to the nobles of the court of heauen we must goe to the Prince himself Let it be well noted against the Papists that euen works of iustice and grace are opposed vnto mercy grace and not works of nature as they would haue it Our saluation beginneth in election and not after we come to faith knowledge or good desires and works Both Augustine and Thomas vrge this place to prooue this conclusion Voluntas dei occulta esse potest non potest esse iniusta August ad Paul epist. 59. Ezek. 16.63 Dilexit non existentes imo resistentes Bern. Qui fecit te sine te non salvat te sine te August Essentiall parts of a sacrament three The Lord in baptisme not onely offereth but exhibiteth grace Concil Triden sess 7. can 8. si quis dixerit per ipsa novae legis sacramenta ex opere operato non conferri gratiam c. Grace not tied ●o the sacrament Rom. 4.10 Baptisme how the laver of regeneration Non quod dicitur sed quod creditur Aug. in Iohan. Ruccella Iudae venenum fuit non quod mala sed quia malus male accepit August Faith of Infants what 1. Cor. 7.14 Recte dicuntur ●ideles licèt nondum imbuti sunt fide Musc. in Matth. 18. Spiritum fidei Zanch. ad Eph. Semen fidei In infan●ibus qui adhuc per aetatem credere non possunt spiritus sanctus in eorum cordibus fidei vices agit Pet. Mart. in Rom. 6. Baptismus fluminis ●laminis sangui●is What baptisme serueth for in them that beleeue alreadie Limbus puerorum Durus ill● Papista lib 8. de Paradoxis Abluitur pe●catum in baptismo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No woman a fit minister of baptisme It is against the dignitie of this ordinance to be brought into priuate houses Ambrosius de obitu Valentiniani Imperatoris ait illū gratia baptismi nō caruisse licèt non esset baptizatus quum eius desiderio flagrasset Necessitate premente adulti voto saepe voluntate solū fuere baptizat● Falling from the grace of baptis● a gro●●● error Hose 2.19 The congregation ought not to depart from baptisme Reas. Regeneration what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1. 2. Cor. 3.18 Rev. 22. Opus ad extra All inward grace in baptisme is from the holy Ghost Hebr. 10.4 Bellarmins instances to the contrarie refuted De Sacram. lib. 2. c. 4. 2. king 5. Ioh. 9. Coloss. 2. ●● 12. Act. 7. Vis regenerandi non aquae si●plici sed Sacramentali id est gratiae ●ei qu●● mediante verbo per aquā operaturad●●ribenda est Pola in Analys Catech Basil. 1. Ioh. 2.27 Mark 16.20 Isa. 59 21· Deut. 29.2 God in sauing reneweth men to his owne image 2. Cor. 5.17 Eph. 4.23 2. Pet. 1.4 Luk. 1.75 This necessitie is not to be cōceiued of the signe but of the thing signified Ioh. ●3 1● Notes to trie this secret worke of God in thy selfe Ioh. 3.10 2. Cor. 4.4 Rom. 9.18 Gal. 5. Syn●●doche Ioh. 15.26 Graces of gods spirit compared to waters Ier. 17.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spirit ●aid to be powred out in three respects Isa 11.9 Christ was PROMISED to the Israelites but GIVEN vnto vs. Ezek. 47. 1. Pet. 1.10 Ioh. 7.39 Our increase must be proportionable to the grace so plentifully poured out Phil. 3.8 Eph. 3.18 2. Cor. 3.18 Isa. 32.15 We haue great cause to bewaile our barrennes whereof are 3. maine causes Tantalus Isa. 55.1 ●zek 47. Ioel 3 18. Isa. 12.4 Christ our Lord the fountain of all our welfare Psal. 133.2 Ioh. 1.16 In thy want beg grace at his hands In thy supplie be thankefull vnto him Iustification what Rom. 8.33 What is meant by Grace 1. Pet. 5.10 A Romish shift auoided The righteousnes of a sinner before God is no qualitie in the beleeuer Gratia iustificās in solo deo subiective in nobis obiectivè tantum in est Exod 32.33 Rom. 5.19 Pides iustificat non absolute s●d relative scil cum obiecto non efficiendo sed afficiendo applicando Luk 7. ●● Gen. 27. ●7 Christ and saving graces are no circumstances but the substance of all religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Haereditas est successio in vniversum ius desancti The ciuill law accounteth the heire and him that so maketh him but one the same person Eph. 1.18 Matth. 25.34 Eternal life being an inheritance must needs be most free Gal. 3.29 Voluir deus istā connexionem vt ad bona opera sequatur beatitudo non tamen vt effectus causam sed vt aliquid coniunctum cum illis ex de● constitutione Martyr in Rom. 2. Whosoeuer would haue right to life must become a sonne Set thine heart vpon this purchase Hebr. 11.8.9 Keepe well the deedes of it 1. king 21.3 Comfort to those that are heyres All truths of God must be deliuered but some more dwelt vpon Rev. 1.1.11 vers 6 7.8 Contra solem obloqui Greenam cap. 1.1 Points of contro●ersie must b● diligently heard taught Iude 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A good worke cannot come from any but a good man Opus quod qui fecerit vivet in eo non fit nisi à iustificato Aug. de spi● lit c. 29. Mark 11.24 Hebr. 4.2 Professors of the Gospel must be the first and forwardest in euery good worke Matth. 5.24 2. Pet. 1.8 1. Pet. 2.15 1. Pet. 3.2 2. Pet. 1.10 Rom. 2.9 Meanes to help forward the former dutie Philip.
himselfe and the people of his daies whome he would not suffer to rest in farre more knowledge and proper faith then this we haue in hand how vrgeth he the Colossians that hauing receiued a tast of the true knhwledge of God nay euen a kind of stedfastnesse in the faith of the Lord Iesus yet here they should not make any staie but proceed on to the full assurance of vnderstanding in all the riches of it to know the mysterie of God yea to be further rooted and built and stablished in the faith of Christ and neuer to giue ouer till they come to be compleate in him which how they can stand with that Popish position a weake eie may see The like of Peter 2. Pet. 1.12 And 2. wauerers in religion and vnsetled persons in their profession may hence be informed to iudge of themselues and their present estate We heare more then a few vttering such voices as these There is such difference of opinions among teachers that I know not what to hold or whom to beleeue but is not this openly to proclaime the want of faith which is not only assuredly perswaded of but certainely knoweth the truth of that it apprehendeth The iust man we know liueth by his faith but this is to withdraw himselfe to perdition Let not therefore such wauering minded men looke for portion in Christ whose followers and disciples can professe vnto him Master thou hast the words of eternall life and whether shall we goe And though all men forsake thee yet we will die with thee before we denie thee Our precept is that if an Angel from heauen should come and bring another doctrine so setled and stablished our mindes ought to be in the present truth we should hold him accursed But lamentable it is that Angels from heauen need not come to preuaile against the truth for let but a blinded Papist come from Rome broach his vessell and in effect affirme that all the Apostles were deceiued in their doctrine a number of Protestants may soone be turned to another Gospel the experience whereof hath brought swarmes of Iesuits and Seminaries among vs to the poysning not of a few 3. If the elect are brought to the faith by the acknowledging of the truth then after long teaching and much meanes to be still blinde and not to see the things of our peace is a most heauie iudgement of God for here is a forfeit of faith and saluation Here indeede is the voice of Christ but here are not sheepe of Christ that heare it here is the glorious light of the Gospel shining but here are none but Infidels the eyes of whose minds the God of this world hath blinded that they cannot behold it here is the annointing offering to teach all things but here are not they that haue receiued him here is spirituall meate but here are not spirituall men to feed vpon it for if any thinke himselfe spirituall let him acknowledge the things deliuered to be the commandements of the Lord which who so doth not he is stil in the snare of the deuil farre from repentance prisoner to doe his will Whence are all our plagues in the Church in the land but for want of not acknowledging the truths which haue bin clearer then the sun to our eyes and how iust is it that such as will not know the voice should know the hand of God and that whome the vocall word cannot reclaime the reall word of the Lord should ouertake Thirdly whosoeuer in truth entertaine the Doctrine of the Gospel the hearts of such are framed vnto godlines For herein this truth taketh place and preheminence aboue all other truths and writings in that it doth not only inlighten the vnderstanding but also in that it fashioneth the heart vnto that which it teacheth nay herein this doctrine farre excelleth that of the law of God which is indeed a lanterne to direct and teacheth what to doe by enforming the minde in the seuerall duties of it but giueth no power to the performance of any of them but this truth besides the shewing of the dutie conferreth strength acceptably to do it for it conuerteth the soule More plainely we reade of a twofold law but in substance the same 1. the law of God 2. the law of Christ. The former is an old commandement prescribing loue the latter a new commandement prescribing loue also The newnes of this commandement then standeth not in any new matter and substance of Doctrine but in this new manner of deliuerie and propounding in that the law commanded loue but gaue no strength to performe it it writeth it selfe onely in the fleshly tables of the heart and so in the flesh it cannot be fulfilled but in the Gospel with this commandement of loue goeth in beleeuers the giuing of Christ and the gift of faith whereby they are enabled in the performance of it whence also the Apostle Iohn calleth it both an olde doctrine namely in regard of the substance of it and a new doctrine not as latter in time but in respect of that effectuall power of renewing the soule which accompanieth it and maketh the doctrine effectuall to the beleeuer it beeing the quickning spirit which reformeth the minde informed In like manner doth our Apostle elsewhere oppose the euidence of this doctrine to the vailed knowledge of the law and ascribeth vnto it two things aboue that which the law affoardeth 1. a clearer illumination We behold as in a mirror the glorie of the Lord with open face 2. reformation of heart and life and are changed into the same image from glorie to glorie which is the end of the former enlightning vnto which the law could not lead vs which letteth vs see indeed some part of the glorie of the Lord but cannot change vs as this into that we see And as the propertie of this truth is to renew men by the knowledge of it to his image that did create vs so whosoeuer haue learned Christ as the the truth is in Christ he hath cast off the old man and is renewed in the spirit of the minde This knowledge leaueth not men in vaine speculation but leadeth forward euery Christian towards his perfection 2. Tim. 3.16 Vse 1. If this be the preheminence of the word to frame the soule to true godlinesse then is it a matter aboue the reach of all humane learning and therefore the folly of those men is hence discouered who devote and bury themselues in profane studies of what kind soeuer they be thinking therein to obtaine more wisedome then in the studie of the Scriptures But in forsaking the word of the Lord what wisedome is there and what is their gaine more then that by the iust wrath of God vpon them they are commonly turned into that they reade liuing in open profanes or else at the best are but ciuill men without religion or good