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A09434 A godlie and learned exposition upon the whole epistle of Iude, containing threescore and sixe sermons preached in Cambridge by that reverend and faithfull man of God, Master William Perkins, and now at the request of his executors, published by Thomas Taylor, preacher of Gods word ; whereunto is prefixed a large analysis, containing the summe and order of the whole booke, according to the authors owne method, to which are further added, foure briefe tables to direct the reader ... Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Taylor, Thomas. 1606 (1606) STC 19724.3; ESTC S100865 274,393 200

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which being taken away there will be no difference left betweene the kingdome of God and the kingdome of the Diuell Which power of the keyes in opening and shutting heauen by the ministerie of the word seeing wee haue established by the lawes of the land we haue the state of a true Church and therefore no man can in good conscience separate from vs as no Church and people of God indeed if it had not the power to open heauen vnto men it were time to separate from it 3. The Aduersaries of this ground are first the ignorant people who popishly thinke that this power is onely giuen to Peter whose office now is to open and shut heauen But this power was giuen to all the Apostles as well as Peter and in them to al Ministers Churches and Congregations yea and it is not exercised in heauen but in earth Secondly all Atheists and Epicures that contemne and skorne the Word Sacraments and all holy things yea euen the power of the Church it selfe Thirdly all Papists and the Romish religion who abolish all binding and loosing in the publike Ministerie and haue brought al to a priuate shrift and absolution which in truth is nothing else but a racke and a gibbet to the conscience for first men must seeke for it at the hands of the Priest secondly they must confesse all their sinnes to the Priest thirdly they must make satisfaction to the iustice of God euen such as the Priest shall enioyne them But all this is directly contrary to the word for first Ministers must offer pardon of sin before it bee sought for Secondly in Christ pardon is offered freely wee neede no satisfaction of our owne Thirdly they impose a heauier yoke than euer Christ or his Apostles did vpon men when they enioyne them to an enumeration of all their sinnes before they can be pardoned the depth of which policie hath been sounded Secondly that Religion hath turned this power Ecclesiasticall to a Ciuill power whereby they take vpon them to excommunicate Kings Emperours not only out of the Church 〈◊〉 also out of their kingdomes and Empires whom they say they may set vp and depose at their pleasure as hauing power to wrest the Scepter out of the hands of whatsoeuer Monarch shall not stoope vnder their Popes authoritie These bee the maine enemies of this ground against whom we must for euer contend The 19. ground of faith is There is hath been and euer shall be a Church one of which is no saluation This is an Article of our faith and a maine ground of religion for if there be not euer a Church of God Christ is sometime no Redeemer no King because there should be no people redeemed nor subiects to the rule of his word and spirit Of which consider two things first what this Church is secondly who be the aduersaries of this ground For the first The Church is a companie of men chosen to saluation called vnited to Christ and admitted into euerlasting fellowship with him See Hebr. 12.23 and 1. Pet. 2.9 Compare these two places and this discription wil easily bee gathered The properties of this Church are these sixe which follow First being the Spouse of Christ she is one onely indeed although distinguished in regard of time as the Church of the old Testament and of the new Secondly of place as of England Scotland c. Thirdly of condition as the Militant and triumphant all these make but one bodie of Christ. Secondly it is inuisible not to bee seene but beleeued for election vocation redemption can onely be beleeued yet some parts of it are visible as in the right vse of the Word and Sacraments appeareth Thirdly to this assemblie and no other belong all the promises of this life and the life to come especially forgiuenes of sins and life euerlasting Fourthly it consisteth onely of liuing members quickened by the spirit of Christ not of any hypocrites or wicked persons Fiftly no member of it can be seuered or cut off frō Christ but abide in him and with him for euer Sixtly it is the ground pillar of truth that is the doctrine of true religion is alwaies safely kept and maintained in it Obiect The Churches in earth are true Churches and yet in these are many hypocrites and Apostata●s who fall from their profession And therefore all are not liuing members Answ. In visible Churches are two sortes of men lust men and hypocrites who although they bee within the Church yet the Church is not so called of them but in regard of them onely who are truly ioyned vnto Christ who are the better part although not the greater Euen as a heape of wheate and chaffe together is called an heape of wheate or a Corne heape of the better part Aduersaries hereof are Papists who frame not the Church by these true properties but by other deceitfull markes as succession multitude antiquitie and consent for when the Church first began there could be none of those at least not the three former and yet was there a true Church Secondly all these agree to Heretikes as among the Iewes what was more challenged than these and yet Christ saith they were blind leaders of the blinde But the true marke is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles truly taught and beleeued A note of Christs sheep is the hearing of his voice Ioh. 10.27 And Ye are in the Father and the Sonne if ye abide in the word which yee haue heard from the beginning 1. Ioh. 2.24 See Ephes. 2.20 The 20. ground is That there shall be a resurrection of the dead in the end of the world This was one of the sixe grounds of Catechisme in the daies of the Apostles Heb. 6.2 Hymeneus and Philetus destroyed the faith of certaine in teaching that the Resurrection was past alreadie Aduersaries hereof are the Familie of loue who hold that there is no Resurrection but only in this life The last ground of doctrine is There shall be a generall iudgement of all flesh It is one of the grounds Heb. 6.2 In which iudgement euery mans workes shall be tried and euery man accordingly shall receiue sentence of life or death eternall The aduersaries hereof are first the Atheist who denieth God himselfe and consequently his iudgement Secondly the drowsie Protestants who in iudgement denie not the last iudgement but yet plainly shew in their liues that they are not perswaded of it for then would they make more conscience of sin and of pleasing God in all thi●●● These are the maine grounds of beleefe vnto which all other may be reduced Now follow the grounds of obedience and practise The first ground of practise is Luke 13.3 Except ye repent ye shall perish In which two things are to bee obserued First the dutie required that is Repentance the necessitie of which appeareth in that without it men perish Secondly the aduersaries Concerning repentance two
for mercie Thirdly wee learne hence to waite by our hope in Christ for life euerlasting euen to the death that must be the white which must euer be in our eye at which wee must continually direct our aime We haue many examples of holy men who haue gone before vs in this dutie Iacob when hee was making his will inserteth and as it were interlaceth this speech O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation Gen. 49.18 Moses had his eye euer vpon the recompence of reward Heb. 11.26 Iob would trust in the Lord yea although he should kill him Iob. 13.15 Dauid was much and often in this expectation of the Lords mercie Psal. 40.1 In waiting I haue waited on the Lord that is I haue instantly waited and mine eyes haue failed me whilest I haue waited for my God Psal. 63.3 and Psal. 16.9 My flesh shall rest in hope his hope was that his flesh should rise againe vnto life euerlasting Obiect But how cā we nourish this hope will some man say seeing we are so tossed perplexed with so many miseries and grieuances in this life Ans. Paul meeteth with this obiection Rom. 1.3 We reioyce in tribulation Qu. How can we doe so Ans. When wee subiect our selues vnto God in afflictions he sheddeth abroad his loue in our hearts and this breedeth patience which bringeth foorth experience and experience hope which maketh not ashamed being the helmet of saluation and our anchor which staieth our ship in the troublesome sea of this life Fourthly if wee must by our hope waite on Christ then in all our requests and petitions vnto God we must abide the Lords leisure not limiting him or prescribing the time vnto him of hearing for herein our hope must exercise it selfe Further from the obiect of this waiting which is the mercie of God we may learne diuers points first that there is no such merit of worke as the Papists dreame of for then might we waite for iustice and of due lay claime to life eternall But here we haue another lesson read vs namely that the Saints of God iustified sanctified and so continuing for to such Iude wrote as verse 1. must waite for the mercie of God vnto life eternall Yea let a man keepe all Gods Commandements hee shall merit nothing he doth but his dutie In the second Commandement the Lord saith he shewes mercie on thousands but who are they euen to them that loue me and keepe my Commandements If Adam had stood in innocencie he could not haue merited any better estate than hee was in how much lesse can wee since the fall nay Christ as hee was man alone could not merit nor did not but in regard of the personal vnion But the Papist will here say that life eternal is promised vpon condition and if wee can keepe the Commandements wee may merit I answere if wee keepe the condition of our selues wee may merit indeed but this is impossible for euen our keeping of the condition were of mercie and mercie and merit will neuer meete and stand together Secondly if we waite for mercie in Christ then must wee altogether despaire in regard of our selues of euer attaining life euerlasting for hope sendeth a man out of himselfe and causeth him wholy to relie himselfe vpon Christ. Thirdly if we must waite for the accomplishment of mercie which tendeth to life euerlasting then much more must wee in our dangers or troubles waite for Gods mercie in our deliuerance If wee must waite for the greater wee may for the lesse Hab. 2.3 At last the vision shall speake and not lie though it tarrie waite And Isai. 28.16 He that beleeueth maketh not haste This meeteth with mans corruptiō who in present trouble will haue present help or else he wil fetch it from hell it selfe from Satan and Sorcerers but such neuer learned to waite on Gods mercie for saluation for then could they waite his leisure in lesser matters for health and ease and with more comfort make farre lesse haste Secondly from the second effect or fruite of hope namely that it deceiueth not nor disappointeth him that hopeth note first a difference betweene humane or carnall and religious or Christian hope The former often deceiueth men at least when death commeth all such hopes perish but the second neuer deceiueth a man in time of need no not in death it selfe Secondly hence a man may and must beleeue his owne perseuerance in grace for where this hope is such a man cannot fall wholie from Christ for then his hope should disappoint him neither from his owne saluation because this hope laies hold on the mercie of God vnto eternall life and herein can neuer frustrate his expectation or make him ashamed Thirdly if our hope bring vs to the fulnes of happines and to the accomplishment of mercie hereafter then it bringeth vs to the beginnings of this happines euen in this life for the beginning of life eternall is in this life and standeth in the conuersion of sinners vnto God and in amendement of life and whosoeuer hath true hope hee is thereby stirred vp vnto daily repentance and reformation of life 1. Ioh. 3.3 He that hath this hope purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure Now there is none of vs but wee say wee hope for life eternall and looke to bee saued by the mercie of God in Christ it standeth vs thē in hand to trie the truth of this hope within our selues and manifest the truth of it vnto others and both these by this note namely that we finde it to purge our hearts and liues and that it conforme vs vnto Christ for if we hope to be like him after this life we must labour to resemble him euen in this life by being in some measure pure holy innocent meeke louing c. euen as hee was for otherwise if our liues be not in some reformation of our selues and conformitie to our head sutable to the profession of our hope it is but pretence of hope and will make men in the end ashamed Vers. 22.23 And haue compassion of some in putting difference and others saue with feare pulling them out of the fire and hate euen that garment which is spotted by the flesh THese words containe the two last rules tending to the preseruation of the faith both of them teaching how we may and are to recouer and restore those who are fallen or declining from faith or good conscience For the better vnderstanding whereof consider in the words two things first the way to begin this recouerie which is in the end of vers 22. By putting difference Secondly the manner how they are to be recouered expressed in both the rules the former concerneth Christian meeknes Haue compassion on some the latter concerneth Christian seueritie and other saue with feare Concerning the former the way of this recouery is to put a difference that is by Christian wisedome to distinguish betweene offenders For our direction wherein wee must know that
A GODLIE AND LEARNED EXPOSITION VPON THE WHOLE EPISTLE OF IVDE CONTAINING THREESCORE AND SIXE SERMONS PREACHED IN CAMBRIDGE BY THAT REVEREND AND FAITHFVLL MAN OF GOD Master WILLIAM PERKINS AND NOW AT THE REQVEST OF HIS EXECVTORS published by THOMAS TAYLOR Preacher of Gods Word WHERVNTO IS PREFIXED A LARGE ANALYSIS CONTAINING the summe and order of the whole booke according to the Authors owne method TO WHICH ARE FVRTHER ADDED FOVRE BRIEFE TABLES to direct the Reader in the finding of either 1. Common places of Religion 2. More generall doctrines 3. Questions determined 4. Places of Scripture either expounded or cleered from corruption REVEL 3.11 Behold I come shortly hold that which thou hast that no man take away thy crowne LONDON Printed by FELIX KYNGSTON for THOMAS MAN dwelling in Pater noster row at the signe of the Talbot 1606. TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE WILLIAM LORD RVSSEL BARON OF THORNEHAVGH Grace and all good blessings from God our Father and our Lord Iesus Christ. RIght Honorable as it cannot be but true which Truth it selfe hath vttered Him that honoureth me I will honour no more can it be but sure payment which such a creditor hath vndertaken and not by any suretie but by himselfe to be performed Bootlesly had the world been betrusted with such a charge which by suffering some to walke through dishonour and by powring out contempt vpon others vnwittingly suiteth the condition of the seruants to the case of the Sonne who said I honour the Father but ye dishonour me Well then is it with vs that he whose bare word is aboue all bonds hath said I will honour not those who by treading downe his honour honour themselues neither whom men honour nor who honour men but those who honour him by louing him as a Father and ●eaing him as a Lord. Not that any man can inlarge his honor the infinit perfection whereof is in it selfe vncapable of any accession nor ●hat any can of himselfe expresse this honour seeing himselfe worketh ●●th such willes and deeds also of his owne good pleasure neither that if any ●ould hee might merit the returne of honour for all that were but his ●utie nor that if any could and would hee should thereby profit God ●o whom mans goodnes is not extended nor lastly if any could and ●ould not God should thereby be disprofited for if one be wicked he ●●●teth not him but because the Lord who delighteth to be the portion ●f Iacob is pleased to accept the broken and homely seruice of his chil●●en as an high honour done vnto himselfe and themselues as honorers●f ●f him and such as he by crowning his owne worke in them cannot ●ut honour But what shall be done to the man whom this King will honour Ans. If Baltazer King of Babel were to promise his highest honours if Ha●an were to aduise Ahashuerosh King of 27. Prouinces in the bestowing 〈◊〉 what honours himselfe could wish or hope if Pharaoh should call ●gaine his Nobles to consultation how to enlarge Iosephs aduance●ents no more could be either promised expected or performed than ●●at such a one should be arraied with royall attyre as cloath of purple 〈◊〉 fine linnen with a golden chaine about his necke the Kings Ring 〈◊〉 his hand his princely Diadem set vpon his head and withall by pro●●●mation published the third man or Viceroy in the kingdom Which infinite in recitall and partly for that these haue most valiantly like Dauids worthies broken thorough these Philistims forces and brought vnto vs in despight of them the pure water of the well of life among whom this our Author last named was not the least nor of so small note through the Christian world that I can thinke by my penne to adde any moment vnto his whose writings so sauory and so innocent haue sufficiently proclaimed his profound knowledge in all learning his prudent zeale his mature iudgement with an admirable dexteritie and facilitie yea I may say felicitie for herein hee raigned that I may vse the phrase of the reuerend Deane of his Maiesties Chappel properly applied vnto him at his funerals which with singular approbation he performed in the direct resoluing the obscurest doubts of Diuinitie and the acute loosing and dissoluing the hardest knots of Papists so briefly and yet so perspicuously as that his most polemicall writings being first by himself in our vulgar tongue published could scarce meete euen amongst our common people with such an vncapeable reader if any whit catechised into whom they might not conuey some competent conceit and vnderstanding of the deepest and darkest differences betweene the Papists those patrons and defenders of darknes and our selues But besides these such a tongue of the learned had the Lord God giuen him that he knew to minister and ministred according to knowledge a word in due time to him that was weary the which most weighty duty of the Ministery was so familiar vnto him that he made it his holidayes exercise as his recreation to resolue cases of conscience In his ordinary Ministry how powerfull was he Which of his hearers cannot confesse that he spake as one hauing authority Adde now vnto these his labours an holy and harmelesse life for why should I disioyne them seeing they were so happily combined in him betweene which two both of them conspiring to the glory of God and his cause was such a sweete harmonie and concent that in reading his writings any man might see the manner of his life and in seeing his life he might also therein reade his writings for his life spak● what his pen writ and his person was the president of his written precepts Bu● when these vnweariable labours had quickly worne out such a candle who so free●ly spent himselfe to giue others light such a life was not shut vp but by a propor●tionall euen a religious and christian death of the which when God made wit● some others my selfe a beholder I could not but conceiue him a messenger on● of a thousand singled out by God to giue directions to others both how to liue and that well as also in the right manner of dying well who himselfe wa● so trained to a blessed death by a holy life whereby he became both in life an● death a most happie and blessed man for whose written precepts concerning both the whole Church is bound to blesse God with vs but especially we his ordinar● hearers in Cambridge who besides were also the beholders of both cannot be 〈◊〉 so much the more strengthned and confirmed our owne heedlesse ingratitude 〈◊〉 resisting or withstanding vs by how much the eye is quicker then the eare an● the sight a more certaine sense then can be the hearing But we will leaue hi● with God and omit those worthie works which himselfe whilest he liued acco●●ding as the relaxation both from the weekely labours of his calling and the day● weakenes of his body would
Apostle calles his good purpose Rom. 8.28 yea to shew the freenes of this grace it is thence denominated and called the election of grace Secondly the meanes of this calling which in the Lords hands are diuers whereof some prepare to calling othersome are instruments of it as first the reading of the Scriptures seruing to bege●● generall historicall faith Secondly afflictions in bodie goods name friends or otherwise tending to humble a man and prepare his heart as soft ground Thirdly the denouncing of Gods iudgements and threats of the law which sends to hell but giues no grace these are generall preparatiues others are instruments to effect inward calling as the preaching of the glad tidings of the Gospell which is the most principall and effectuall meanes of this speciall and effectuall vocation and to this Paul ascribes it as 2. Thess. 2.14 whereunto he called you by our Gospell that this is true consider a two fold worke of this Ministerie when it is powerfully applied to the hearts of men First it openeth the very heart of a man and laies him out to the beholding of himselfe shewing him that by his detestable sins he hath made himselfe more vgly in Gods eyes than any Toade can be in mans whereby he is prepared not to lie asleep in this estate but vnto the second worke which is to apprehend and applie the blood and merits of Christ exhibited in the Gospell for the washing and bathing of his sinfull soule that so he may be saued from wrath Thirdly the persons that are called those are mentioned Rom. 30. namely those whom hee had before predestinate those he called which seemes to be expounded in Acts 13.48 So many as were ordained to life euerlasting beleeued that is were called vnto the faith all therefore are not called It pleaseth some to teach another doctrine namely that God for his part calls all men effectually and giues them a power to beleeue if they will but the difference say they is in the will of man to prooue which they bring this comparison The Sunne shines on waxe and clay equally the waxe is softned but the clay is hardened But this is not true out of the Scriptures for it is not giuen to all to vnderstand the mysteries of the kingdome Matth. 13.11 these things are hid from most of the wise of the world and reueiled vnto babes Matth. 11.25 Knowledge is giuen to some not to others and consequently faith for they which haue not knowne cannot beleeue Fourthly the time of this calling The particular time of any mans calling is not reueiled but laid vp in the secret counsell of God in whose hands times and seasons are yet the extent of the time is large enough though stinted euen the time of this life some at the sixt houre some at the ninth and others at the eleuenth c. but not after because that then all means of calling men cease Now because men know not the date of their daies it behoues them out of hand to striue to enter not to deferre from day to day alleaging that some are called at the twelfth houre but accept of the Lords call while it is yet the acceptable time If the Lord now say Seeke my face let thy heart answere as an eccho which ●akes the word out of the mouth thy face O Lord I will seeke Psalm 27.8 such a pleasant harmonie God is delighted with If he say as the Prophet speaketh Behold now my people they are presently readie to answere Behold now our God and the rather because the Lord will be free and not stinted by thee that either he should call thee in thy crooked yeeres or not at all he will not be prescribed vnto extraordinarily to call thee at the twelfth houre as he did the theefe on the crosse when thou howlest vpon the bed of thy sorrow and gaspest vpon thy death-bed Therefore while it is called to day let vs heare the voyce and harden our hearts no more Fiftly wherein doth this effectuall calling stand Both in the outward and inward calling because the former is often in the meanes giuen to Nations people men at least to make them without all excuse but the second being secret and inward whereby the Lord makes a mans heart inwardly answere the outward calling possesseth him with a willing mind stedfastly to beleeue in the Lord Iesus and with an endeuour to please the Lord in all things thus is the heart pearced Psal. 40.6 the heart of stone changed into an hart of flesh that is made tractable and pliable Ezech. 11.19 and an heart which is a sacrifice accepted of God such an hart was Lydia● Act. 16.15 when God had opened it it was heedfull and attentiue to the words of Paul this hart can rellish the sweete promises of the Gospell and no other Sixtly the excellencie of this calling which wee shall perceiue by these considerations First in that it is a great work as was the creation of man at the first Rom. 4.18 so the Apostle maketh it 2. Cor. 4.6 he that at the beginning called light out of darknes the same hath shined in our hearts c. that as God cals the first time and dead creatures come foorth to life so with no lesse powerfull voyce the Lord cals the second time the heart of man dead in sinne and it is quickened with the life of God Secondly this effectuall calling goes beyond the worke of our creation for here a man is taken out of the first Adam and set into the second and at the same instant power is giuen to beleeue being in time both together though in order faith is first and then ingrafting wherein is not onely a bare priuation as in the creation when God called things that were not as though they were but here is a plaine resistance and rebellion God calling not onely things that are not but things that would not and refuse to be Thus to raise a man out of the blood of Christ is more than to raise Eue out of Adams side to raise a dead soule from the death of sinne farre more glorious and powerfull than to raise a dead bodie from bodily death to raise a man to supernaturall life farre greater than to a naturall onely Thirdly this calling ratifies all our couenants with God Men in their Baptisme enter couenant with God but often start from it and will not stand to it so as the couenant is onely made but when as a man is effectually called the couenant is not onely made but truly accomplished and that on mans part Vse Seeing we are called of God himselfe in the ministerie of the word for Paul calles it Phil. 3.14 an high calling we must labour to ioyne the inward calling with it which is higher than that by hauing first a griefe because we cannot beleeue secondly a readie mind thirdly an endeuour to beleeue fourthly a sorrow because we beleeue no more and faile so much in the seruice
groūd Heb. 6.1 Thirdly this ground being the most maine promise of the Gospell whosoeuer ouerthroweth it hee depriueth men of all comfort of religion The aduersaries of this ground are first the common people who for the most part professe that they are not certaine of the pardon of their sinnes they hope well because God is merciful but to be certaine they thinke it impossible as though there can bee hope and confidence where is no assurance but speciall hope alwaies presupposeth speciall faith Secondly the Papists for they condemne speciall faith for these reasons First where is no word there say they can be no particular faith but there is no word that saith thou Cornelius Peter Iohn c. shalt be saued Ans. It is true indeede there is no particular faith where there is no particular word or which is proportionall but the Minister truly applying the generall promise to this that particular man it is as much as if a mans name were registred in the scripture Secondly wee haue in substance a particular word in that God who hath giuen the promise hath giuen also a commandement to euery beleeuer to applie the same vnto himselfe 1. Ioh. 2.23 This is his commandement that we beleeue in the name of his sonne Iesus Christ which is equiualent to a particular word As a King giues a pardon to a thousand men but nameth neuer one of them yet euery of them trulie applying the pardon according to the Kings intention haue the benefit of it as surely as if all their names had bin set therein II. Obiect Many that applie the generall promise to themselues are deceiued and faile yea euery wicked man saith he beleeueth in the sonne of God wherein he is deceiued Ans. Many indeede faile in their speciall application but it is onely vnbeleeuers but they must proue that none truly can applie the promise speciallie which all true beleeuers doe III. Obiect They say In regard of God wee must beleeue but in regard of our selues we must doubt Ans. Yea in regard of our selues wee must not onely doubt but despaire yet beleeuers being found not in themselues but in Christ may proue themselues whether they are in the faith or no 2. Cor. 13.5 For whosoeuer repenteth knoweth that he doth repent We know we are of God 1. Ioh. 5.19 Ob. But all men in the world are full of doubting and how can doubting stand with certaintie of saluation Ans. Consider faith first as it is in it selfe so it is certaine Secondly as it is in vs so it is mingled with much doubting which is not of the nature of faith but contrary vnto it and yet these may and must stand together in the beleeuer for doubtings may disturbe but not destroy true faith for the Lord notwithstanding them accepteth our weak faith as perfect and our will to beleeue for beleefe it selfe where he seeth griefe conceiued for doubtings strife against them and endeuour to haue our faith increased Ob. But to beleeue pardon of our sinnes is to enter into Gods counsell Ans. That is false because pardon of our sinnes is reueiled Ob. But your Church say they abhorreth reuelation Answ. Neither the scripture nor our Church condemneth Reuelations contained in the scripture but those that are without beside or against scripture Ephes 1.7 The spirit is called the spirit of Reuelation see also 1. Cor. 2.12 As for this reuelation of pardon of sinne to the beleeuer it is contained in the scripture and is no more a prying into Gods counsell than it is for a Traytour to beleeue that he is pardoned when certaine newes of his pardon is brought vnto him from the King of whom none can say he entreth into the Kings counsell Hence we conclude that seeing the doctrine of the Papists ouerthrow this maine ground wee must take heede of ioyning our selues vnto them The 15. ground is That a sinner is iustified by faith without the workes of the Law Rom. 3.28 Wherein consider first the meaning secondlie the weight thirdly the aduersaries For the meaning three things must bee knowne First what it is to be iustified Secondly what it is to bee iustified by faith Thirdly what workes are to bee excluded from iustification Concerning the first In iustification there be three distinct actions of God first the freeing of a sinner from his sins for the merits of Christ Act. 13.39 From all things from which they could not be iustified by the law of Moses by him euery one that beleeueth is iustified that is acquited from them Paul opposeth it thus to condemnation Rom. 8.33 which is nothing else but a binding of a man to iust punishment The second action is the reputing and the accepting of a sinner as iust for the merit of Christ. Esay 5.23 Woe vnto him that iustifieth a wicked man that is not to make but accept him iust and in the Gospell Wisedome is iustified of her children that is approoued and acknowledged The third is the acceptation of a sinner to life euerlasting in Christ. For after that God hath absolued a sinner and reputed him as iust there must follow this acceptation to life which is therfore called the iustificatiō of life with the reason rendred in the same place for that like as Adams sinne is imputed vnto all by which death entred so Christs obedience imputed to beleeuers bringeth life and iustification Out of which three actions wee may gather a true description of iustification to wit It is an action of God the Father absoluing a sinner from all his sinnes for the merit of Christ accounting him as iust and accepting him to life euerlasting II. Point What it is to be iustified by faith For the cleer vnderstanding of this waighty point we must answere 2. questions First what is the very thing for which a sinner is iustified Ans. It is the obedience of Christ the Redeemer and Mediatour passiue and actiue the former standing in suffering the death of his bodie and the paines of the second death in his soule the latter in fulfilling the law The truth of this answer appeareth thus Since our fall we owe to God a double debt we breake the law and are bound to make satisfaction Secondly being creatures wee must fulfill the rigour of the law and performe what it requireth neither parcell of which debt seeing we being bankcrupts are able to pay wee flie to our suertie who must pay both for vs the former hee doth by his death being made a curse for vs and so redeemed vs from the curse Galath 3.13 the latter by perfect obedience vnto the law that so in him wee doing these things might liue in them vers 12. The second question is Seeing the obedience of Christ is the matter of our iustification and is out of our selues how commeth it to bee made ours Ans. To make it ours first God must giue it vs secondly wee must
in other Churches but are daungerous enemies wheresoeuer both to the grace of God and good of man for where the Ciuill sword doth cease there can no societie stand in safetie Thirdly another kind of Libertines are the Papists and the Popish Church with the whole Romane Religion themselues being open enemies vnto the grace of God and their whole religion turning it into wantonnes and libertie of sinning and that diuers waies First God hauing of his grace giuen vnto the Church a power of the keyes to open and shut heauen that religion hath turned it into an instrument first of prophanenesse in setting vp an new Priesthood to absolue and lose men sins properly in offering a sacrifice for the quicke and the dead so abolishing the sacrifice of Christ. Secondly of iniustice for by it they depose Kings and Princes they free subiects from their alleageance they stirre them vp and encourage them to conspiracies rebellions and maintaine in other states factions ciuill warres and seditions and al by vertue of their power Thirdly of horrible couetousnes for by it they sell pardons for thousands of yeeres the which sales haue brought to the Church of Rome the third part of the reuenewes of al Europe which one practise if there were no moe prooueth plainly that that Church turneth the grace of God to the libertie of sinne Secondly their whole Religion is a corrupted Religion and maketh the receiuers of it the children of Satan more than before for first it maketh men hypocrites requiring nothing but an externall bodily and ceremoniall worship without any inward power of it as in fasting it requireth onely a shew of it as to abstaine from flesh and white meates but they may vse most delicate fishes the strongest wines and sweetest spices and in other parts of their religion is no lesse hypocriticall Secondly it maketh men proud and arrogant teaching the freedome of will vnto good if the holie Ghost doe but a little help it that a man can merit by his workes that hee can satisfie Gods iustice by suffering for sin yea that hee can performe some workes of supererrogation who can hold these points and be humble Thirdly it maketh men secure teaching that they may haue full pardon of all their sins by the power of their keyes for mony and that though they haue no merits of their owne they may buy the merits of other men yea although in their death they faile of repentance yet for some mony they may be eased in Purgatorie What shall any rich man now care how he liue or die seeing all shall be well with him for a little mony Fourthly it maketh men in their distresse desperate teaching that no man can be assured of his saluation without some reuelation Fiftly it reuiueth the old sinne of these seducers teaching that diuers men and women may not marrie that were adulterie and yet openly tolerating stues and vncleannes Which what is it else but to maintaine wantonnes whereby the chiefe teachers of that Church witnesse themselues the right successors not of the Apostles as they pretend but of these seducers and other wicked heretikes old and new The fourth sort of Libertines are carnall and formall Protestants who first turne the counsell of Gods election into wantonnes by reasoning thus If I be elected to saluation I shall be saued let me liue as I will or if not I cannot be saued doe what I will or can because Gods counsels are vnchangeable and thus conclude to spend their daies in all wantonnes Secondly they turne the mercie of God into wantonnes thus reasoning in their hearts Because God is mercifull therefore I will deferre my repentance as yet for at what time soeuer a sinner repenteth God will put away all his sins out of his remembrance what yong Saints old Diuels Thus the timely acceptance of Gods mercie offered is become a reproch besides many moe who because the Lord deferreth punishment set their hearts to doe euill Thirdly others vnder pretence of brotherly loue mispend all that they haue in wantonnes riot excesse companie keeping gaming to the beggering of themselues and vndoing of their owne families vnto which they ought to shew their loue in the first place Fourthly others vnder pretext that the Iewish Sabbath is abrogated and that Christ hath brought such libertie as hath abolished distinctions of times take libertie to keepe no Sabbath at all whence many tradesmen will do what they list on this day and dispatch those businesses which they can finde no time for in the weeke daies Fiftly some because they would humble themselues commit diuers sins and continue in others these say in themselues Let vs continue in sinne that grace may abound all these sortes of men turne the grace of God into wantonnes and practise the vice here condemned The 2. thing to be considered is the contrary vertue and y● is to make a godly holy vse of the grace of God and to applie it to the right end for which God vouchsafeth it vnto vs to wit that wee might be thankful vnto him and testifie the same in obedience to all his lawes Which appeareth first by testimonie of Scripture Luk. 1.74.75 We are deliuered 〈◊〉 of the hands of our spirituall enemies to serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse Rom. 6.16 We are vnder grace therefore let vs giue vp the members of our bodies weapons of righteousnesse Tit. 2.11 The grace of God hath appeared teaching vs to denie vngodlines Secondly the end of all Gods graces is that wee should be furthered in holinesse of life we are elected that wee might be holy the end of our calling is that we may be Saints Iustification freeth from punishment of sinne Sanctification from corruption and sinne it selfe Faith purifieth the heart Loue containeth vs in obedience he that hath hope purgeth himselfe and so of all other graces Thirdly Christ is a Mediatour two waies first by merit to procure life and worke our saluation secondly by efficacie that is whereby his death is powerfull to cause vs to die to sinne and his resurrection to raise vs from the graue of sinne to a new life and he is no Mediatour by his merit to those who are destitute of this efficacie Vse We haue in this land been many yeeres partakers of this grace of God our dutie then is to make a holie vse of it and walke thankfully before God Rom. 12.1 I beseech you by the mercies of God which he had in the former chapter mentioned that ye giue vp your selues a holie sacrifice to God no more forcible argument can be vrged to stirre vp men to thankfull obedience than this for if Gods mercie in Christ cannot mooue what will Let this then perswade vs likewise If we beleeue God to bee our Father that is a great grace Let this grace moue vs to walke as children before him let the grace of our redemption mooue vs to walke as redeemed ones rescued out of such captiuitie
wherein wee were inthralled to sin and Satan seeing it were a madnes to returne to such bondage againe If Christ be dead for vs let that grace moue vs to die to sinne if hee being risen againe sit at Gods right hand that wee might sit there with him let that grace mooue vs to walk as those that are risen with him and haue our conuersation in heauen seeking euen while wee are below the things that are aboue and so of the rest Further the Apostle to make those seducers more odious saith not simplie they turne the grace of God but of our God into wantonnes which noteth the indignitie of their fact in which consider three things first by what meanes God becomes our God and that is not by any merit of ours but by meanes of the gratious couenant propounded in the Gospell promising pardon and remission of sin in and by Christ. Iere. 31.31 This is called the new couenant which the Lord contracteth with his people where writing his law in their inward parts he becommeth their God and they his people Secondly what must wee doe to say truly and in assurance that God is our God Ans. Wee must for our parts make a couenant with him vnto which is required a consent on either partie first on Gods part that he will be our God which we shall finde not in any reuelation besides the Scriptures but generally in the word and more specially in the ministerie of the Gospell and administration of the Sacraments annexed as seales vnto the Couenant in which God doth as surely couenant with vs as if hee should from heauen speake vnto vs. Secondly on our part is required consent of which there be two degrees first when we make an outward profession of faith heare the word receiue the Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper which serue to distinguish vs from Iewes Turkes c. this is somewhat but not sufficient to make God our God seeing it is common to the very hypocrites themselues Secondly seeing hee is not a Iew which is one outwardly but which is a Iew within there is required in our consent a further degree which standeth in an inward consent of the heart whereby a man taketh God for his God which is then begun when first a man acknowledgeth and bewaileth his sinnes Secondly when he endeuoureth to bee reconciled to God Thirdly when he purposeth neuer to sin againe when this couenant is thus concluded by consent of both parties a man may safely and truly say that God is his God Now seeing wee know these things our dutie is to labour to be setled and assured in our conscience that God is our God for first in this assurance is the foundation of all true comfort all the promises of God are hereupon grounded and herein accomplished that God is our God see Isai. 41.10 Be not afraid I am thy God yea Christ being vpon the Crosse hauing the pangs of hel vpon him herein staied himselfe My God my God so Dauid Psalm 22.1 and being readie to be stoned to death comfort●d himselfe in the Lord his God 1. Sam. 30.6 And not onely is it the foundation of all our comfort in this life but of our happines after death it selfe being the ground of those two maine Articles of our faith the resurrection of the bodie and the immortalitie of the soule for by vertue of this Couenant alone shall wee rise againe after death to life glorie and immortalitie as Christ himselfe disputing against the Sadduces from hence prooueth the resurrection in that God is the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob Secondly it is the ground of al obedience Psal. 95.7 the Prophet exhorting men thereunto vseth this as a reason For he is the Lord our God and wee are the people of his hands the preface of the Morall law enforcing obedience laieth the same ground For I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt see also Psal. 50.71 and whosoeuer is truly perswaded that God is his God cannot but obey him The fift propertie of these seducers is That they deny God the onely Lord and our Lord Iesus Christ. Thus are they described by their manners The Translators of this Epistle were as it seemeth of opinion that these words are properly spoken of God the Father and of God the Sonne also but by the tenour of the words in the originall it seemeth that they are all to bee vnderstood of Christ and not of the Father and are thus to be read Which denie that onely Ruler who is God and our Lord Iesus Christ. Again the tenour of the words being borrowed from the Epistle of Peter may thence be rightly expounded now Peter speaking of the same sinne of these seducers applieth it only to be a denial of Christ 2. Pet. 2.1 They denie the Lord that bought them In the words then consider two things first the sinne here condemned namely to denie Iesus Christ. Secondly a description of Christ. For the first To denie Iesus Christ is to renounce and forsake Christ and so much as in a man lieth to make his death voyd and of none effect Now because this deniall presupposeth a redemption as Peter mentioneth they denying the Lord that bought them this question is to be cleered how these men being reprobates can be said to bee redeemed by Christ Answ. Wee must not thinke that they were in Gods decree euer redeemed for then had they been saued he doing whatsoeuer he willeth Psal. 115.3 but it is to be meant in regard of themselues and other men for both in their owne conceit iudgement they were redeemed as also in the iudgement of others who are to bee led by the rule of charitie in passing their iudgement vpon men and to account of them as redeemed leauing all secret iudgements to God Secondly the description of Christ by three things first that he is a Ruler yea an only ruler a Lord and ruler ouer all things in generall in heauen earth and hell and more specially a Lord ouer his elect onely and in that he is said to be an onely ruler it must not bee meant as excluding the Father and holie Ghost but all false gods and false Christs as Ioh. 17.3 the Father is called the onely God for all outward actions of the Trinitie are common to all the persons Secondly that hee is God which is a notable place against all Arrians to prooue the Godhead of Christ. Thirdly he is said to be our Lord Ours in two respects especially first of the free donation of his Father who gaue to him a people to be Lord and King ouer before all worlds Secondly in regard of his worke of redemption which hee wrought for them who were of the Father giuen vnto him Out of that which hath bin here said we may note these two points first how these seducers denie Christ namely not openly and plainly for then the Church should haue espied them neither in word nor
God nor expect the same hand in healing them which hath smitten them He that beleeueth maketh not haste saith the Prophet which if it be true then this hastines to be disburdened of the hand of God is a token of distrustfulnes of God and want of faith Nay this practise argueth not only want of a true faith but a presence of a false and Satanicall faith for if there bee no faith in the Charme it will not worke Thirdly wee beleeue not the Lord to be the Lord of bodie and soule as one hauing soueraigne Lordship and power to saue and destroy for let any ciuill man be pressed by temptation vnto sin he will bee easily brought to make no bones of very dangerous sinnes what other is the reason hereof but that hee esteemeth not the Lord to be his Lord and accounteth of his commandements but as dreames not serious or giuen in earnest whereas if Gods Lordship were rightly acknowledged sinne would not be so ripe and rife as it is Fourthly wee beleeue not the mercie of God in the pardon of our sinne as we ought for howsoeuer in our peace wee thinke our faith strong enough for any encounter yet let a temptatiō assaile vs then we begin to doubt whether we be the children of God or no and are full of impatiencie Example hereof we haue euen in Iob himself who before his triall thought himselfe safe in his nest but when Gods hand was heauy vpon him then he brake foorth in speeches full of impatiencie as that God was his enemie and did write bitter things against him wherein he bewraied his want of faith and his crooked and cankered incredulitie and the same weakenes may the dearest strongest of Gods childrē one time or other espie in themselues Fiftly wee know not as we should the agonie and passion of Christ he suffered the first death and the paines of the second death for our sinnes they were the speares that pearced his heart but we carrie vp our heads and can take delight in them as though there were no danger in them whereas the remembrance of them should make our hearts to bleede and faith in the heart should cause vs die to sinne seeing those who are Christs are crucified with him but because men wil not depart from their sins which are not killed but liue and are strong in them and no man saith what haue I done it is a plaine euidence that the life of faith is not to be found in the liues of most men Sixthly wee beleeue not that wee did rise with Christ and ascended with him into heauen because in this our long peace our thoughts are set vpon the world and we mind earthly things still whereas if we were risen with Christ we would seeke the things that be aboue Coloss 3.1 Seuenthly we doe not beleeue as we ought the last iudgement because wee are not smitten with feare and reuerence in speaking and meditating of it Paul speaking of it calleth it the terrors of the Lord 2. Cor. 5.11 and this made him so forward in al good duties yea this same consideration of the last iudgemēt made him endeuour to keepe a good conscience before God and all men but men make no conscience of their waies Eightly wee beleeue not aright our owne death and resurrection in the last day for men commonly deferre their repentance and amendement of life till the last day of their daies and then they crie and call on the bed of their sorrowes which argues a counterfeit faith for if a man did beleeue his death it would driue him to the daily amendement of his life By these notes we may easily discerne this secret sinne of vnbeleefe within our selues Secondly when wee haue thus found out this sinne wee must bewaile it an● mourne for our vnbeleefe as being the mother of all our sinnes confesse it before God and craue increase of faith as the man in the Gospell Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeleefe and with the Disciples Lord increase our faith Thirdly we must set before our eyes and acquaint our selues with the promises of the pardon of sinne and life euerlasting by Christ as also all other dependant promises whereof some concerne our prosperous successe in our waies and Gods protection in our labours and callings and others concerne afflictions promising happie issue and deliuerance therefrom with strength in temptation to the which all promises may be referred which we must alwaies haue in our eye that our faith may ground it selfe vpon them Fourthly we must truly relie and rest our selues in these promises settle and content our hearts in them that looke as the earth hangeth without proppe or pillar in the middest of the world onely by the word of God so must our hearts be staied in the same word and promise of God yea if wee should see nothing but destruction before our eies our faith must then be our subsistence and when our vnbeleefe would vnloosen our hold and make vs giue backe let our faith in these promises make resistance as Dauid Psal. 42.5 My soule why art thou so disquieted within me trust still in God especially seeing wee haue promises which assure vs in our troubles either of their mitigation or remouall after all these followeth the subiection of faith when the heart and life are conformed to the obedience of all the Commandements of God And thus we purging our harts of vnbeleefe shall escape such fearefull iudgements as this first example hath put vs in minde of Vers. 6. The Angels also which kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation hee hath reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknes vnto the iudgement of the great day THese words comprehend the second example whereby the first part of the former reason is confirmed namely that whosoeuer giue themselues libertie to sinne shall be destroyed here prooued by this example of the Angels themselues In which consider three points first the persons that sinned The Angels Secondly the sinne or fall of the Angels which kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation Thirdly their punishment he hath reserued in euerlasting chaines In the persons sinning wee haue sundrie considerations as first that it pleaseth the spirit of God to chuse this example of the Angels to prooue his purpose and that most fitly because they are the excellencie of all creatures for so the Scriptures euery where speake of them as when the highest praise that belongeth to inferiour creatures is attributed vnto them in Scripture the speech is drawne from the glorie of Angels Gen. 3 3. Iacob commending the fauourable countenance of Esa● being reconciled vnto him saith he saw his face as the face of an Angell So Manna is called Angels foode that is a most excellent foode that if those excellent creatures should neede foode they could wish no better 1. Cor. 13.1 Though I should speake with the tongue of men and Angels Signifying that if Angels had tongues they
by God Yea so farre haue they gone on in this delusion that they are become spectacles of follie to the whole world for if Iohn Baptist had had so many heads as the Papists brag of he had been a monster of men besides though the Crosse wheron Christ was crucified was no greater than as ordinarie man might beare yet so many seuerall peeces thereof they pretend themselues to haue in seuerall places as would load a shippe Ob. They say they had all those ●●likes by reuelation 〈…〉 Ans. These 〈…〉 are but 〈…〉 illusion● to maintaine Idolatrie besides that 〈◊〉 the word being 〈…〉 perfect 〈◊〉 in all matters to bee beleeued or done vnwritten reuelations are no proofes of doctrine but are lu●●ly to be suspected The third thing in the verse is the manner of his speech in which obserue three things first what speech the Archangell would not vse He would not speake euill Secondly what speech he vsed The Lord rebuke th●● Thirdly the reason or cause of both because he durst not speake euill First of this cause as being first in nature which is s●●d to bee feare Now to know what kinde of feare it was consider that the 〈◊〉 is a three-fold feare first from entire nature secondly from the corruption of nature thirdly from grace The first is a naturall propertie whereby the creature seek● to preserue it selfe and to shunne danger which feare is not 〈◊〉 in it selfe for it was in Christ when he said his soule was heauie euen vnto the death and if 〈…〉 possible let this cup passe from me but this is not here meant The second feare proceeding from corruption of nature in men and Angels is that seruile feare when the creature feareth nothing but due and deserued punishment the conscience being guiltie vnto it selfe and accusing for sinne and the heart destitute of faith and loue of God which if it were present would cast out this slauish feare which is no other than the feare euen of the Diuels themselues who beleeue and tremble Iam. 2.19 but neither was this the feare of the Angell The third feare is from grace and it is a gift of the spirit of God who therefore is called the spirit of feare working in men and Angels a care to please and a feare of displeasing God in all things this is the feare here meant which was in the Angell In which consider three things further first the beginning of it which is faith euen in the Angels themselues whereby they beleeue the power iustice soueraigntie and Lordship of God ouer them and that they must be subiect and obedient thereunto but in man it is a faith apprehending the mercie and fauour of God reconciled by Christ this feare in Angels and men therefore is the fruite of their faith Secon●●y the propertie of 〈…〉 is to make the subiect of it to feare the offence of God 〈…〉 euill of the world to 〈…〉 properly 〈◊〉 of all because by it God is displeased and in the next 〈…〉 of iudgement consequently but 〈…〉 the first place Psal. 119.12 〈…〉 trembleth for feare of thee and I 〈…〉 stand of thy iudgements This was the religious feare of Dauid first a fearing of Gods offence and then a standing in awe of his iudgements thirdly the vse of it which is to make man and Angel make conscience of sin Exod. 〈…〉 the Midwiues spare the Hebrew 〈◊〉 it will not suffer the Angell hereto reuile the Diuell The feare of God saith Salomon causeth to 〈◊〉 euery 〈◊〉 way yea it frameth to obedience and i● 〈◊〉 because it keepeth the heart from defiling it selfe Our dutie hence is to pray that the Lord would put into our heart● this religious feare which they containe vs in awe of his Maiestie and so keepe vs from offences wherein wee may resemble this Angell as also to be a welspring of life vnto vs not onely 〈◊〉 escape the snares of death but to quicken and prouoke vs in the w●●es of life euerlasting Secondly wee must auoide the sinne which the Angell was 〈◊〉 of namely the boldnes of sinning especially in these daies wherein then aduenture and rush vpon sinne without feare or shame The second point herein is what speech the Archangell would not vse that is cursed speaking or railing iudgement Which to know what it is obserue the differences of iudgement which is two-fold either publique or priuate Publique iudgement i● when a man is called by God to iudge the creature and this is two-fold first of the Magistrate secondly of the Minister The Magistrate is called by God to seeke out the misdemeanours of men and according to the offence is to pronounce a righteous sentence 〈◊〉 to the taking away if the cause 〈◊〉 of the temporall life it selfe The Minister is also in the name of God to pronounce the curse of the law vpon vnrepentant sinners and the promise of the Gospell vnto the penit●nt Secondly priuate iudgement is when the creature passeth iudgement against ●●other without calling from God but vpon priuate grudge anger stomacke and reuenge this is here called railing iudgement and it is practised three waies first in speaking falsehoods and vntruths against others Secondly in speaking truths but with intent of slandering and detracting from the good name of others Thirdly in misconstruing mens sayings and doings to the worst part when they may be taken in the better this railing speech the Angell durst not vse Hence we learne to make conscience of this sinne of slandering reproching and reuiling others from which the Archangell abstained dealing euen with the Diuell himselfe but many of vs who can vtter the prouerbe That it is a shame to belie the Diuell are contented yea and readie to belie and detract from the children of God our brethren by this railing iudgement Some will say what may we neuer vse this kind of iudgement Ans. Neuer no not against the Diuell but if wee would take vp iudgement against any creature let it bee against our owne selues for our sinnes here we may passe sentence freely and so escape the iudgement of God as for others wee are to iudge by the iudgement of loue which hopeth speaketh thinketh and suspecteth the best and couereth the worst euen a multitude of sinnes The third point is the speech which the Archangell vsed in these words The Lord rebuke thee Which words are a forme of prayer in which he commendeth and remitteth reuenge vnto God desiring that the Lord to whom iudgement belongeth would restraine correct and repay the Diuell for his malice Here it may bee asked what shall we doe when wee are wronged Ans. Learne of the Angell not to requite and repay euill for euill neither in action speech or affection but leaue all reuenge vnto the Lord. Zachariah being stoned to death vniustly desired no reuenge but said The Lord see and require it Christ himselfe being accused before Pilate answered nothing and when he died he prayed for those who crucified him
they which take libertie to sinne and vnto them addeth this fourth That they haue followed the way of Caine. In which first we will shew the meaning of the words and then obserue the doctrines In the former consider two things first what is the way of Caine secondly why they are said to walke in this way of Caine. The way of Caine is that course of life which Caine took vp to himself in following the lusts of his owne heart against the will of God It is described in Gen. 4. of which way there be seuen steps or degrees but euery one out of the right way The first step was his hypocrisie he worshipped God by offring sacrifice as Abel did but his heart was not a beleeuing heart as Abel● was his worship was outward ceremonious but not in spirit and truth for his heart was an euill heart of vnbeleefe The second his hatred of his owne onely and naturall brother prosecuting him with wrath and indignation testified by the casting downe of his countenance vpon him the reason of all which was because his own works were euill and his brothers good 1. Ioh. 3.12 so as his brothers offering being accepted and his reiected he feared that Abel might get the birthright and become the Priest Prophet and King in the familie and euery way as he deserued be preferred before him for thus much is signified in these words Genes 4.7 that if he did well Abels affection should bee subiect vnto him and he should hold his rule ouer him The third his murther whereby hee slew his righteous brother The fourth his lying vnto God saying he knew not where his brother was hauing slaine him and extenuating his sinne denied himselfe to be his brothers keeper The fifth his desperation after that God had conuicted him and pronounced sentence against him for being cursed for his sinne he cutteth himselfe off from the mercie of God in saying My punishment is greater than I am able to beare The sixth his securitie and carelesnes hee regardeth not his sinne nor the conscience of it but busieth himselfe in building a Citie and calleth it after the name of his child that seeing his name was not written in heauen he might yet preserue his name and memorie in the earth The seuenth and last which was the highest step of his way was his prophanenes for from thencefoorth he cast off and contemned all the care and practise of Gods worship which appeareth Gen. 4.26 Then men began to call vpon the name of the Lord. Which wordes haue relation to the whole chapter going before concerning Caine and his posteritie who had vtterly reiected the seruice of God and betaken themselues to other affaires Caine himselfe to his building Lamech to his lust being the first founder of Polygamie for hee tooke vnto him two wiues Iabal to the framing and pitching of Tents Iubal to Musicke Tubal Caine to other curious works But when Enoch was borne then men began to affect better things to call vpon the name of the Lord then the true worship of God formerly neglected began to bee restored This is the path wherein Caine walked The second point is in what regard these seducers are said to follow Cain● way and that is in regard of all these seuen sinnes but especially in the hatred and crueltie which he practised against his brother for as he was bloodily and maliciously minded towards his brother though he gaue him good words till he saw his time conuenient to execute his conceiued malice so is it with these seducers they may seeme for the season otherwise affected yet indeed they carrie a hatefull affection to the Church of God and against those also that endeuour in the building vp of the same Doct. Hence first note that the way of Caine is the high and broad way of the world The Turks and Iews follow Caines footsteps in the profession and practise of all prophanenes in that they denie and despise the Messias the Sonne of God yea and persecute with a deadly hatred all Christians and are neuer satisfied with the spilling of their blood The way of the Papists also is the way of Caine carrying within them the same heart towards Protestants which Caine did towards Abel without any conuiction of them either of heresie or of wickednes and no otherwise than Caine they now carrie themselues quietly and silently till opportunitie may serue them which if it were offered we should feele and haue fearefull experience of the fruits of a Cainish heart in them as Abel did Besides the doctrine of the Romish Church teacheth the way of Caine for it stādeth wholy in outward Ceremonies borrowed partly from the Iewes partly from the Heathen yea it traineth vp men to bee hypocrites because it is onely a dumbe and dead shew without any power or life of godlines Againe it teacheth desperation in that by it no man ought to be assured of his saluation for that were presumption as also that a man must satisfie the iustice of God for his sinnes and can neuer obtaine pardon without confession of all his sinnes in the eare of the Priest And to come neerer home euen among our selues this way of Cain is not vnbeaten our hypocrisie lying malice but aboue all our prophanenes will conuince vs hereof Doe not men goe backward in religion as those that shake off the waies of God Is not the Gospell of farre lesse reckoning among vs than it hath been heretofore Is that wholsome doctrine not lesse respected now than it was twentie yeeres agoe and much lesse therfore obeyed which is a manifest argument that Caines way is generally the beaten way of this age 2. Doct. Secondly wee must be warned to turne out of the way of Caine into the waies of God Qu. Which is the way of God that wee may walke in it Ans. It is altogether contrarie to the way of Caine for first in Gods way is sinceritie God is worshipped in the spirit and not in hypocrisie Secondly loue of God and men testified in word and deede opposed to Cains hatred Thirdly in Gods way is faith which resteth vpon Gods mercie and prouidence euen against feeling both in life and death opposed to Caines desperation Fourthly wisedome whereby the heart is stirred vp to seeke Gods kingdome peace of conscience inward ioy and in the second place for the things of this life Fifthly in Gods way is faithfulnes and constancie men that begin in the spirit end not in the flesh but are faithfull to the death whereas the way of Caine is to begin with sacrifice but end in profanenes This is the way of God in which we must walke vsing all good meanes whereby wee may be both set and contained therein especially the word preached and the Sacraments which meanes the very Pharisie himselfe could acknowledge when he said to Christ Master thou teachest the way of God truly So the Prophet Esay saith Ye shall heare a voyce behind you
off him he was neuer at it he neuer saw it and yet is truly the Lord of it and may say of it it is his owne by vertue of the donation Euen so God in his word giueth Christ and his merits to the beleeuer who as he hath receiued him by faith so he retaineth him by grace by vertue of which donation and acceptation a man may as truly say Christ is his as though he were now in heauen alreadie with him yea so firme and certaine is this ingrafting that it once being made can neuer be dissolued but is euerlasting for the root liuing and abiding for euer so also doe the branches being set into the same and that by the hand of the good husbandman God himselfe The second thing required in a tree of righteousnes is life which is not the naturall life of other plants but spirituall and eternall for eternall life beginneth euen in this life Galath 2.20 Now I liue yet not I now but Christ liueth in me and this life is by the faith in the Son of God and then wrought in vs when the same minde which was in Christ whilest hee was vpon earth is also in vs Philip. 2.5 for hee conueyeth his owne disposition into his members in part who are daily made conformable vnto him of which conformitie the Apostle maketh two parts Rom. 5.6 First a conformitie vnto him in his death that looke as he died for sinne so ought his members vnto sin and as he by his death subdued sinne and obtained victorie ouer it so ought they daily to be nibling in the abolishing and mortifying of that sinne which presseth them downe and hangeth so fast vpon them vntill the day of their full conquest and finall deliuerance Secondly a conformitie vnto him in his Resurrection that as he rose againe from the graue so should they from the graue of their sinnes and as hee rose to liue for euer so ought they by vertue of his resurrection to liue to God in newnes of life as those that looke to liue foreuer with him Thirdly the tree of righteousnesse must bring foorth fruites to testifie the life of it called Galath 5.22 fruites of the spirit and there reckoned vp Loue peace ioy long suffering gentlenes goodnes faith meekenes temperance Phil. 1.11 Paul prayeth that the Philippians might be filled with the fruites of righteousnes that is the duties of the Morall law contained in the first and second Table Fourthly a tree of righteousnes must bring foorth good fruites such as are pleasing vnto God Quest. How shall a Christian bring forth good fruits Ans. First good fruit must come from a good heart an heart penitent and truly turned to God Mat. 3. Bring foorth fruites worthie amendement of life 1. Timot. 1.5 Loue out of a pure heart Secondly it must be brought forth with intention will purpose and endeuour to obey God in his commandements which the heart must respect Thirdly the end of this fruite must be the glorie of God not seeking our selues but Gods honour In Leuit. 19.23 God requireth that the trees should bee circumcised which was thus performed The three first yeeres the fruite was to be cast or fall away the fourth it was to bee dedicated to the Lord and the fifth yeere the Israelites might eate of the fruite euen so wee must first cast away in respect of our selues our fruites and dedicate them vnto the Lord so he shall taste of them with delight and not before Fourthly it must bee brought foorth to the good of others as trees beare fruites not for themselues but for men so our fruites must bee intended not so much for our priuate good as the common good of the Church and Common-wealth Doct. 2. Seeing the faithfull are not such corrupt trees but of Gods owne planting they haue here first a ground of comfort in the middest of sorrow sicknes yea and death it selfe for being ingrafted into Christ the whole man is preserued safe found in him yea the dying bodie nay the dead bodie and that which is rotting in the graue is planted into him and is to liue againe in him who alwaies liueth and will raise it to life eternall at the last day Trees in winter are dead to mans sense yet because the rootes of them liue and haue in them sappe and moysture in the spring they shall bud blossome and beare fruite againe euen so the rotten body at the time of refreshing shall reuiue againe and become a glorious plant putting off mortalitie and corruption no more to be subiected thereunto againe than the roote into which they are set who hath for his members chased them away Secondly seeing we must be planted and cannot attaine this growth by nature we must detest and abhorre our selues in dust and ashes renounce and bewaile our naturall condition and be at no rest till wee feele our selues set into Christ by liuing the life of the Sonne of God For know we not that Christ liueth in vs except we be reprobates Thirdly our Church hath herein resembled Iudah hauing been for many yeres a plant of Gods delight who hath hedged and fenced it by his fauourable protection but many yea the most branches are barren bearing no fruite others beare lesse fruite than they haue done being withered and fallen back what will be thinke we the end hereof Surely the axe being alreadie laid to the roote of the tree shall cut downe whatsoeuer branches beare not foorth good fruite and they shall be cast into the fire It standeth vs then in hand to become more fruitfull before we be cut downe Fourthly hence let euery man learne subiection vnto God in all his crosses and afflictions wee are trees or branches at least of the Vine the Father is the husbandman and looke a● the husbandman loppeth cutteth 〈◊〉 pruneth yea and almost cutteth downe his trees to make them more fruitfull so dealeth the Lord with his children who therein are to rest well contented for he chasteneth them for their good that although no chastisement seemeth ioyous for the present yet it bringeth afterward the pleasant fruite of righteousnes to those that are exercised thereby Twice dead and plucked vp Some hence gather this that wee are once dead in Adam by originall sinne and secondly after regeneration or ingrafting into Christ by some grieuous sinne wounding the conscience to death and hence conclude that a man regenerate may die againe and fall from grace vrging for their purpose that in Rom. 11.20 Through vnbeleefe they were broken off and thou standest by faith be not high minded but feare But this cannot be so vnderstood for by twice dead is meant dead certainly or dead twice once in Adam by originall sinne and the second time dead by their owne actuall sinne As for that place in Rom. 11. I answere there are two kindes of planting first outward secondly inward The outward is when God giueth the word vnto a people with other his ordinances and
The faithfull could with ioy suffer the spoyling of their goods Thirdly wee must endeuour to shew all meekenes to all men vpon all occasions putting off all morositie waiwardnes and difficultie to bee satisfied and appeased Christs voyce was not life vp in the streetes he endured all wrongs forgaue all iniuries and all the members of his bodie put off likewise their wooluish dispositions they cease to be Tigers Lions Cockatrises and become Kids Lambes little children easie to be handled hardly offended and quicklie pleased which disposition we must put vpon vs. The third sinne walking after their owne lusts is fitly expounded in Eccles. 11.9 where the young man is ironically willed to walke in the waies of his owne heart and in the sight of his own eyes c. euen so these men liue in their sinnes according to the leading and lusting of their owne corrupted hearts which sin is before in the fourth verse touched and somewhat also is further to bee spoken of it in the rest of the Epistle Our contrarie dutie is two-fold first if at any time by frailtie we fall into any sin neuer to goe on in the same but break it off and returne vnto God for to walke after his owne hearts lusts is a note of a wicked person and an enemie of God Psal. 68.21 Surely God wil wound the head of his enemies and the hairie pa●● of him that walketh on in sinne Secondly wee are to frame our liues cleane against the lusts and inclinations of our owne hearts waging battell continually against them euer crossing and thwarting them Rom. 13.14 Take no thought to fulfill the lusts of the flesh Galath 3. They that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the lusts therof for whosoeuer beleeueth truly the pardon of his sinnes by Christs death cannot but mortifie the lusts of his wicked heart besides that the whole course of Christianitie is nothing else but a continuall conuersion and turning vnto God The fourth sin Whose mouthes speake proude or swelling things That is they boast themselues of knowledge holines and things not to be found in thē The same with the Diuels sinne Luk. 4. All this will I giue thee for they are mine and I giue them to whom I will wherein he sheweth himselfe the father of lying and boasting It is noted also to bee the property of Antichrist as to whom was giuen a mouth which spake great things and blasphemies Reu. 13.5 which was meant of the Emperour indeed but so as the second beast which is that Antichrist should doe all things which the first beast could doe before him ver 12. It is also the noted vice of all heretikes and seducers 2. Cor. 10.12 to exalt and praise themselues The contrarie duties are first In common speech neither to praise nor dispraise our selues for vanitie lurketh in both besides that modestie will not suffer the former and the latter is to occasion others to praise vs which is but vanitie Secondly when in speech wee compare our selues with others our equals wee must euer thinke and speake better of them than our selues Phil. 2.3 Let euery man esteeme other better than himselfe Paul comparing himselfe with the Apostles said he was the least of them all because he had been a persecutor 1. Cor. 15.9 Thirdly if any speake of his owne wants when iust occasion is offered hee must speake euen the most against himself As Paul that he was the head and chiefe of all sinners Fourthly if a man vpon iust occasion bee moued to commend himselfe first he must doe it in all humilitie and modestie so Paul speaketh of himself in another person 1. Cor. 12.1 I knew a man in Christ which was taken vp into Paradise c. And in nothing was I inferiour vnto the very chiefe Apostles though I be nothing vers 11. The fifth sinne Hauing mens persons in admiration The word person in scripture signifieth the face and outward apparance of a man and consequently the things belonging vnto the person as riches honours dignities for the which these false teachers haue men in admiration Qu. Is it not lawfull to admire a Prince or other Potentates at all Ans. Yes but when men admire them only for their person riches honours nobilitie without respect of the feare of God or true vertue this is vnlawfull and the sinne of these men wherein is also included the contempt of the religious poore yea and also of the rich themselues if they trulie feare God Iam. 2.1 My brethren haue not the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons teaching vs that it will not stand with true Religion nor with the faith of Christ to honour men only because they are rich or noble First note here that no man carrieth so base a minde and such slauish affections as the proud ambitious person he magnifieth the great man and is seruilly addicted vnto him euen for outward respects not esteeming him for that which is indeede worthie to be respected Secondly the condition of great men for the most part is miserable who haue many to admire them but few to amonish them rich men are admired for wisedome whereas the same men if they were poore would carrie away no praise thereof Ahab had foure hundred false prophets who thus admired his person but onely one Micha who faithfullie admonished him Thirdly our dutie is to honour them that feare God rich or poore high or low it being a note of a childe of God to contemne a vile person that is a wretched sinner but to honour them that feare the Lord bee they neuer so base and yet the honourable much more if they bee found in the waies of religion The sixth sin Because of aduantage That is for profits sake where their couetousnes which before was touched is here againe taxed the effect of which affection is to blind the minde that it cannot iudge aright of persons or things it maketh a man account an enemie of God rightly honourable and to deeme the things below of highest regard Let vs weede out of our hearts this bitter roote of couetousnes which otherwise will so blind vs as we cannot truly discerne the people and things of God but take Egyptians for Israelites and accept of the red pottage in stead of the blessing Vers. 17. But ye beloued remember the words which were spoken before of the Apostles of our Lord Iesus Christ. IN these words the Apostle goeth about to answere an obiection that might be made by the Church after this manner We cannot bee resolued that these men against whom yee write are so vngodly as you would make them The answere whereto is framed in the 17.18 19. verses The effect of which is that in the last times there shall bee mockers and these be no other than the men of whom he writeth and lest they should yet doubt of the truth of that he spake he bringeth in the testimonie of the Apostles in the confirmation
two things first who is a naturall man secondly that it is a sinne to be a naturall man for it is noted as a maine sinne in these seducers Touching the former a naturall man is he who liuing a naturall life is endued with a reasonable soule and is gouerned by nature reason and sense onely without grace or the spirit of God which may appeare first by the word naturall which signifieth such a man as in whom the best thing is nature and in whom there is nothing more excellent than his reasonable soule though corrupted Secondly by the exposition or rather opposition in the words wherein it is opposed vnto the spirit who is wanting vnto such a one to leade him in the way of a heauenly life Further that yet wee may know this matter the better there be three things to be found in a naturall man 1. He hath a bodie and soule vnited together in one person 2. In his soule he hath excellent powers and faculties as will vnderstanding affections 3. Hee hath all the ornaments of man yet so as without grace such as are strength of bodie and minde memorie knowledge of Arts and Sciences ciuill policie and vertues as Iustice Prudence Temperance discretion to discerne what is meete to bee done what not these are ornaments incident to corrupt nature seruing not to abolish but to restraine and bridle corruption and containe men in order for the preseruation of humane societie Now he that hath these three and nothing else is but a meere naturall man The second point is that it is a sin to be a naturall man Here it may bee asked how it commeth to passe that a naturall man because he is a naturall man offendeth God Ans. There bee two things in euery naturall man to bee distinguished first there is nature secondly the corruption of nature the former is from God the latter from mans fall which two may be indeede distinguished but cannot now be separated the one is not the other but the one is not without the other this corruption is that sinne which presseth vs down and hangeth so fast on Heb. 12.1 which hath corrupted the whole mā so as the whole frame of man that is his whole disposition and inclination is corrupted and euill from his youth Genes 8.21 his wisedome is enmitie to God that is euen the best thing that is or can be in the flesh is hateful to God Rom. 8.5 himselfe is dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes. 2.1 hauing no more abilitie to mooue to any thing truly good than hath a dead man to bestirre himself in and about the actions of life For the cleerer beholding of this corruption of mans nature marke that there bee two degrees of it the former whereof is a want of that goodnes and righteousnes which at first was and now ought to be found in our nature The latter is a pronenesse and disposition vnto all euill which carrieth the heart on euery occasion thereunto this corruption must bee conceiued as an ocean sea sending out into euery channell and veine of the soule and whole man streames and floods of wickednes for looke into the principall powers of the soule ye shall neede to goe no further for the finding of this truth For first in the minde is such an impotencie as whereby it is vnable to thinke or approoue of any thing that is truly good 2. Corin. 3.5 Wee are not sufficient of our selues to thinke of any good but all our sufficiencie is of God 1. Cor. 2.15 The naturall mā perceiueth not the things of God which is most manifest thus first hee knoweth not God himselfe aright for although hee may know God as an infinite and eternall being or in some other attribute yet he cannot know him as a father to himselfe Secondly hee knoweth not neither conceiueth the corruption of his owne nature nor his sinnes originall and actuall in the staine and danger of them Thirdly he conceiueth not of the remedie of sinne the death of Christ but accounteth it foolishnes that life should be brought out of death Secondly as his mind is blind so a naturall mans will is rebellious and is not subiect vnto the will of God neither indeed can be Ioh. 6.44 No man can come to Christ vnlesse the Father draw him insinuating our withdrawing of our selues and resistance of his call vntill he turne vs make our wils of vnwilling willing wils to will that which is truly good whēce the Apostle saith that to will namely that which is truly good is not of our selues it is the gift of God Now hence wee may resolue that question why it is a sinne to bee a naturall man not because a man hath nature in him but because his whole nature is tainted with originall sinne Ob. The naturall man may pleade that he cannot helpe it hee was borne sinfull why then should he be blamed Ans. Rom. 5.12 In Adam we all sinned for when he eat the forbidden fruit we euen eat it in him are no lesse blame-worthie than he was Ob. But it will be said it is no reason that we should bee said to sin in him seeing then we were not Ans. Adam was a publike person representing all mankinde and euery particular person descēding from him and therefore what he did all and euery man did in him Euen as a Burgesse in the Parliament giuing his voyce and assent all the countrie or shire is said to giue their voices though they be absent and not present otherwise than in his person God then giuing a prohibition vnto Adam hee gaue it vnto all vs in him and threatning him he threatned vs and all mankinde this onely is the difference that hee being the roote or flocke and wee the branches arising from him hee sinned actually and we by relation and imputation If then the naturall man still pleade hee was no cause but was borne so the answere is cleere that himselfe is a cause although not in himselfe yet in Adam before he was borne he procured that he should be borne a naturall man Secondly it may be pleaded againe If I be a naturall man I am Gods creature as I am why then should I be blamed Ans. The former distinction betweene nature and corruption of nature must be here retained for by the former the naturall man is Gods creature and not in respect of the corruption of nature for this he created not as the other but suffred it to passe by generation from man to man for the execution of the punishment of the first sinne Quest. Why did not God stay this corruption in Adams person Ans. God could haue done it why he did it not the reason is neither knowne nor to be enquired a secret it is but yet a iust iudgement of God silently to bee with reuerence rested in and not with curiositie to be searched out Vse First some may hence gather if a man be iustly blamed for being only a naturall man and
former words and cannot be meant of euery kinde of fall seeing the children of God fall daily but of such as Dauid prayed against Psal. 19. last Keepe thy seruant from presumptuous sins let them not raigne ouer me The second effect is to present you faultlesse that is first to iustifie beleeuers secondly to sanctifie them here in part while they liue and in death to finish and perfect that inchoate sanctification The third effect in the day of iudgment to present them before the presence of his glorie The fourth effect with ioy that is to possesse them with ioy euerlasting Vse 1. In that Christ is able to keepe them that beleeue wee may note that this his power doth order the wils of beleeuers both in and after their conuersion In their conuersion it frameth and turneth their wils Ioh. 6. No man commeth to the Sonne except the Father draw him that is except he incline and turne mans will vnto his owne and make it of an vnwilling will a willing will Againe after conuersion it is not an idle power in them 1. Ioh. 3.9 He that is borne of God sinneth not that is addicteth not himselfe nor setteth himselfe to the practise of sinne and the reason is giuen because the seed● of God remaineth in him which is all one with this power which is able and accordingly keepeth him Whereby that Popish error is detected namely that in the conuersion of a sinner it is in mans power and will either to receiue or resist the grace of God and that mans will can either applie it selfe to grace offered if it will or else refuse it but if this were true the power of God should not order mans will but mans will should order Gods grace yea and ouercome this omnipotent power of God Againe this ouerthroweth the distinction of grace into sufficient and effectuall for sufficient grace is effectuall seeing that this power of Christ waiteth vpon it to make it effectuall Secondly hence wee see that this power of Christ in his members is a continued power neuer wholy interrupted for it keepeth them in this life that they fall not into presumptuous sinnes Secondly it iustifieth them and sanctifieth them imperfectly in life and perfectly in death Thirdly after death it presenteth them vnto their glorie Fourthly after the last iudgement it possesseth them with vnspeakable ioy Thus the righteous man by vertue of this power becomes like a tree whose leafe neuer faileth nor fadeth Psal. 1.3 And hence is it that hope is said to be a sure anchor Hebr. 6. vers 19. for this propertie hath it not from it selfe as also loue and faith in themselues are changeable and nothing indeede is in it selfe vnchangeable but God but the power of Christ is it that maketh it an anchor sure and stedfast By which consideration those two vncomfortable errors are confuted first that the childe of God being regenerate may fall maliciously and euen wholy away Secondly that hee may fall finally seeing God putteth his hand vnder and this power of Christ is able to keep them that they fall not though fearefully they may yet neither wholy nor finally Thirdly we must labour to haue experience of this power of Christ in our selues working in our heart● the death of our sins and quickning them againe vnto the life of grace and of God for this power of Christ consisteth not in any fancie but in ●n effectuall feeling in the heart of euery true beleeuer Paul prayed that the Ephesians might feele in themselues this proportionall power to Christ his power in his death and resurrection Ephes. 1.19 himselfe counted all things ●●ng in comparison of the knowledge of this power Phil. 3. ●0 and that he might haue experience hereof hee will reioyce in his owne weakenes ● Cor. 12.9 And what will this power be profitable vnto vs be it neuer so powerfull in it selfe vnlesse we finde our selues thus strengthened in grace and godlines by it Fourthly wee may not content our selues with a forme and shew of godlines but stri●● to attaine the power of it or else let vs neuer professe Christ and please our selues only in such a profession for whosoeuer is truly Christs in him this power worketh mightely in subduing 〈◊〉 in striuing against temptations in stirring vp zeale of Gods glorie and in a word in making men fruitfull and abundant in all well doing● yea it can no more hide it selfe where it is than can the Sunne at noone day but it will cause men to shine as lights in the middest of a froward generation which 〈◊〉 and effects if a man cannot finde in himself let him suspect himselfe that he is not as yet knit vnto Christ for then hee would bee by vertue of this power in some proportion conformable vnto him Fifthly th● doctrine ministreth a stay and prop to our faith and hope seeing that Christ ●●th such a working power as this is whereby hee is able to make good and accomplish whatsoeuer hee hath promised concerning our salua●ion● thus he strēgthened his Disciples Ioh. 17. But be of good comfort I haue 〈◊〉 the world and thus Abraham beleeued aboue hope because he kn●w that God was able to performe what hee had promised Rom 4 21. teaching all the sonne● of ●a●thfull Abraham vp●● what prop they are to 〈◊〉 and stay vp themselues 〈◊〉 the promises are delaied Here the Papist ●eacheth that in regard of God indeed and his promise we may beleeue our owne saluation but in respect of our selues and in regard of our owne indisposition we must still doubt and it is presumption saith he to beleeue it Answ. But this is false for wee must not doubt in regard of our own indisposition but must certainly by faith lay hold on our own saluation seeing that Christ by his power correcteth yea and abolisheth in his members this indisposition fitting them notwithstanding it and keeping them vnto life eternall Sixthly and lastly we must striue to become like vnto Christ seeing the same power that was in him is conueied and deriued from him into euery one of his members that as hee liued in obedience vnto his Father both doing and suffering whatsoeuer his Father enioyned and willed euen so ought we look what was his disposition and conuersation whilest hee conuersed here vpon earth so ought wee to be disposed and conuerse resembling him in meekenes humilitie patience loue towards our Father and brethren yea and towards our enemies and as hee was minded the same minde ought also to be in vs Phil. 2.6 So much for the first reason moouing vs to the praise of Christ drawne from his power The second motiue is in the verse 25. To God onely wise drawne from his wisedome wherein three things are to bee obserued first that Christ is God secondly that he is wise thirdly that he is only wise For the first this is a notable testimonie and to bee obserued against the Arrians Atheists to confirme the Diuinitie of Christ