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

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they came before the Lord and the Lord will be sanctified in all that come neare him people must not bring oblations with hands full of blood the Lord is soone wearie of such sacrifices Isai. 1. An earthly king accepteth of no seruice tendred by a traytor and both ministers and people must learne to renew their repentance before they attempt any religious duties whether publike or priuate 2. Let this doctrine mooue vs to discerne aright betweene the estate of the beleeuer and vnbeleeuer that the wretchednesse of the one may breake our hearts for our sinnes and the happinesse of the other may hearten vs in euerie good dutie The difference is eminent For 1. whereas the thoughts of the godly are for most part tending to God to heauen and the things of heauen and their hearts are still inditing good matter wherein the greatest part of their soundest ioy and comfort is placed the thoughts of the wicked are earthly lewde and vngodly often accusing themselues and making away to the most iust sentence of the almightie True it is that the godly iudge themselues worthie to be destroyed for their iniquitie but yet they see great light in that darkenesse which the wicked neuer behold but are reserued in horror vnto the darknesse of the great day 2. The speeches of the godly tend to the praise of God for the heart enditing a good matter the tongue will be speaking of the praises of this King Psal. 45.1 their talke tendeth to edification and ministreth grace to the hearer their tongues speake of matters graue and high matters of Gods kingdome of grace here and of glorie hereafter the speeches of the wicked are either to magnifie themselues or proude or earthly or rotten and vnsauourie for the streames can be no sweeter then the fountaines whence they issue 3. Whereas the workes of the godly are wayes which God hath ordained that they should walke in vnto the ende of their faith which is their saluation the workes of vnbeleuers are crooked paths tending vnto yea the causes of their destructiō 4. Whereas all the miseries of the godly are signes and fruits of Gods loue working to their best and out of which the Lord giueth them a sure and seasonable deliuerance the calamities of the wicked are not onely euident signes of Gods wrath and malediction but the beginnings of eternall punishment the first fruits of there destruction and the downfalls to hell it selfe out of which is no redemption 5. Whereas the godly haue the promises of this life and that to come and walke in the strength of them cheerefully and their hope shall neuer confound them the vngodly mans false application of promises are but a false fire they may scramble and pull the promises vnto them but the childrens bread belongeth not to such dogges God hath promised nothing to such but threatned against them all the plagues written in his booke which shall surely ouertake them 6. Whereas the life of the godly is a meane to blessednes and an encreaser both of their grace and glorie that they may see their saluation daily nearer them then when they first beleeued all the life of the wicked on the contrarie is accursed and an heaping vp of sinne and plagues If they pray their prayer is turned to sinne If they heare or read they receiue or pronounce the sentence of death against themselues If they receiue the Sacraments the deuil entreth into them as he did into Iudas If they giue almes they giue that which is none of their owne If they enioy prosperitie they are lifted vp as the theefe on the ladder for a more fearefull breakneck If they see many daies the last of them will be more wofull because they haue contemned so great grace and saluation 7. Whereas the day of death is better to the beleeuer then the day wherein he was borne for his bodie is cast on a sweete sleepe and laid in a bed sanctified and sweetned by the blessed bodie of the Lord Iesus his soule sent vp to the glorie prepared for the iust and both of them freed from all sinne and the wofull fruits of the offence of God and passed as by a straite doore to a long life euen for euer and euer the death of the wicked is most accursed the sentence of an angrie and seuere iudge and an entrance or wicket to eternall woe and miserie And thus such workes receiue such wages such labours such rewards the stipend is proportionall vnto their paines and their death not vnsutable to such a wretched life Seeing then that faith putteth this difference and faith cleareth the eye to let it see this difference labour for faith rest not till thou canst finde it in the signes of it without this grace God hath no pleasure in thee neither will accept any offering without this spirituall eye thou shalt not see any such difference betweene the righteous and wicked betweene him that serueth God and him that serueth him not but thou shalt still account the proud blessed and perhappes be soone contented to fit and cast in thy lot among them And whosoeuer thou art that hast obteined this grace be thankefull for it make much of it vse meanes to cherish and encrease it for hence only is thy acceptation with God and hence onely thou knowest thy selfe and thy seruices to be thus accepted Vers. 16. They professe that they know God but by workes they denie him and are abhominable and disobedient and vnto euery good worke reprobate The Apostle proceeding in the proofe of that which he had said that nothing was cleane to the vnbeleeuer whose cheife faculties were polluted bringeth in this proofe by way of answer to a secret obiection for some might say But see you not that many whom you thus condemne are men professing religion both teachers and others such as speake well of God of Christ and discourse exceeding well concerning outward righteousnes and sanctimonie of life and therefore they seeme not to be so iustly or at least too rigorously taxed Notwithstanding all which the Apostle concludeth against them that they were no better then he had said For let it be granted that both the vrgers and practisers of such laws and traditions giuen by men should still pretend pietie and seruice of God and should cloke all their ceremonies and constitutions vnder pretence of deuotion yet herein Paul espieth only the fruit of their corruption and that is gro●●e hypocrisie apparant in the fight and opposition betweene their profession and their practise They professe indeed they knowe God and all their outward carriage is so composed as if they only were the sonnes of Abraham skilfull in the law strict obseruers of it in the least particles thereof that if all religion were to be measured by their outside they could not chuse now beeing conuerted from Iudaisme to Christianitie but goe for good Christians But in workes they denie him they
not to pa●●y and talke with him but presently make resistance for by such degrees iniquitie comes into his chaire delay to talke with sinne by reason of our inclination breeds a certaine delight in it delight begets desire desire worketh indeauour indeauour produceth the act the act ingendreth and is quickly iterated and multiplied multiplication is the mother to a benummed conscience a brawned conscience begets defence of sinne defence riseth to boasting or gloriation in it and thus is sinne brought into the chayre of estate and the quishon is damnation Now sinne is proclaimed crowned and accepted of and hath all loyaltie performed vnto him Doctr. 2. Secondly out of the words we learne what a wonderfull freedome we haue obtained by Christ. By nature we are wrapped in the guilt of sinne subiected to the stipend of sinne subdued vnder the curse of the law and lie right vnder the whole wrath and displeasure of God Our sinne proclaimed vs rebels to God through heauen and earth banished vs out of our owne countrie set hell gates open against vs and gaue vs into the hands of Satan as an hangman to execute Gods sentence of eternall death passed against vs yea further hopelesse we were in this wofull condition for Gods displeasure was so kindled against vs as men and Angels could not reconcile him the law was so transgressed as all men and Angels could neuer satisfie nor make vp the breach the sentence was so seuere as all men and angels could neuer haue stood vnder it the execution so certaine as the verie gibbet was euer standing in our sight in the horrors of soule and terrors of accusing consciences and we seemed to walk and be left in the midst of tenne thousand deaths Now when no meanes was left to pacifie God offended to satisfie the law transgressed to reuoke the sentence denounced the Sonne of the eternall Father must come from the bosome and glorie of his Father and become obedient both to the performing of the whole will of his Father as also to the ignominious death of the crosse that so becomming a curse for vs as that execrable kind of death betokened we might haue God well pleased with vs as he is with him we might present him his law perfectly fulfilled not in our persons but in his for vs we might plead the payment of all our debts both the principall and forfeiture by this our suretie and so might sue out our full discharge from all former claimes and sentences because the vttermost farthing is fully paid and discharged Vse 1. If Christ hath freed and redeemed vs from all iniquitie then hath he made no partiall redemption he satisfieth not for the fault and leaue vs to satisfie for the punishment neither redeemeth vs from the eternall punishment but giueth vs leaue to satisfie for the temporall But if Christ haue redeemed vs from all iniquitie if he said on the crosse It is finished that is the whole worke of mans redemption is consummate and perfect if at one time he made one perfect expiation and therby brought in an euerlasting redemption here is artillerie and gunshot against all Poperie downe goe all other satisfactions for sinne in this life downe goe all satisfactions after this life in purgatorie downe goeth their doctrine of all other merits saue this of Christ downe goeth all that supplie of the foolish virgins lamps with the oyle of good workes of superrogation out of the Churches treasurie and with these the Dagon of the masse and the whole Diana their worship and religion must downe also Did not I forgiue thee all saith the parable and we were sold for nought but redeemed without mony saith the Prophet What can the Papist say now for his mony-masses pardons indulgences and such trash obtruded vpon the world seeing the text is so expresse we are redeemed without mony Obiect But Dauid had his sinne forgiuen 2. Sam. 12.13 The Lord hath put away thy sinne And yet because he had made the enemies of God to blaspheame the child must surely die ver 14. and this was the temporall punishment and what are the suffrings of Gods people in this life and in the end of this life at their death but punishments for sinne Ans. The text sheweth plainely that both the sinne and the punishment was forgiuen for so those words shew thou shalt not die death beeing the iust wages of sinne yet the child must die not to make any satisfaction for the sinne but the text shewes another end that the enemies might cease to blaspheame when they should see the Lord no patron or fauorer of sinne but rather iustly offended with it And as for the afflictions which befall Gods children for sinne and lie often very heauily vpon them none of them satisfie or can satisfie any part of the iustice of God for sinne past but are fatherly corrections preuenting sinnes to come many waies seruing for their owne good and the warning of others least they should conceiue him a God bolstring sinne in those that are dearest vnto him but no way as a satisfaction to God for thus only the passion of Christ is a satisfactorie redemption from sinne And the like may be said of death which is left to the godly to conflict withall although they haue obtained full remission of sinnes but this is not as a punishment of sinne to them to whome Christ hath altred the nature and visage of death but now it is only an exercise of their faith hope and pietie yea a verie passage vnto eternall life 2. This consideration must stirre vs vp to a loue of our Lord Iesus who hath discharged vs of such a debt and ransomed vs from such an vnvtterable thraldome How would we affect such a one as would pay a trifling debt if it were but tenne or twentie pound if our selues for insufficiencie were cast in prison we could neuer forget such loue Consider now how great those debts of thine were how weake and small thine abilitie was to satisfie if thou hadst had the power of all men and angels how ruinous and rufull thy case was euery way thus the more loue will appeare to be due vnto Christ and the more thy sinne if thou returne not loue for loue 3. It must worke in vs a detestation and watchfulnes against all sinne which bringeth such vassaladge vpon vs for shall Christ take vpon him our debts that we like desperate prodigalls should doe nothing but augment them shall he ransome vs and giue vs perfect freedome that we with the vnthankefull Israelites should runne backe againe to our former bondage shall we with Salomons foole make but a mocke of sinne which cost Christ so deare to expiate he neuer knewe what this greatest benefit of Christ euer meant that can take his pleasure in the course of any one sinne Christ hauing restored the blind man his sight bad him goe and sinne no more and to the
into the heart of Iudas to betray him he went to his accustomed place of prayer which Iudas well knewe and whether he knewe he would bring his route 3. When the companie came to apprehend him although he let them knowe by casting them all to the ground that he could haue resisted or avoided them yet he let them rise againe he told them he was the man they sought and deliuered himselfe into their hands yea more the text saith he went out to meete them shewing the truth of that prophesie Psal. 40.6 In the roule of the booke it is written of me that I am readie to doe thy will And as he would not resist in his owne person so when Peter made a rash resistance and in his rescue smote off Malcus his eare Christ immediately healed the wound wished him to sheath his sword and asked him if he thought not that he could command a legion of angels if he would but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled 4. When he was brought before the Iudge he denied no part of that truth which he knewe they would wrest against him shewing in all his answers a presen● minde and courage with all meekenesse in suffering horrible contumelies without perturbation or confusion vttering such holy speeches as became the most innocent lambe of God as his holy Apostle noteth that he witnessed a good confession before Pontius Pilate 5. When he came to the place of execution he needed no helpe to die he refused the cup of vinegar which in likelihood was reached him to shorten the sence of his paine and that his soule willingly left his bodie besides that strong crie at his death and expiration which argued no languishing death all the Euangelists note that Christ sent out his soule or gaue vp his spirit yea in great wisedome he preuented the souldeirs violence in breaking his legges or offering him while he was yet aliue any deadly wound that he might manifest that he did not violently but voluntarily vndergoe that passion and drinke of the bitternesse of that cuppe By all which seuerals we perceiue the truth of that the Apostle speaketh Philip. 2.8 that Christ was made obedient vnto the death and this made it an acceptable sacrfice for had it not beene a free-will offring it had not beene accepted Let vs then for our comfort hold fast this point of our Christian faith that looke how willingly the father offered his Sonne in sacrifice so willingly did the sonne offer himselfe and that those who crucified him were not more willing to doe it then he was to offer himselfe and suffer himselfe to be crucified and this maketh it absolutely meritorious and effectuall for the iustification of all beleeuers whereas otherwise it had beene no ransome The third and last point to be considered in this fact of Christ is the persons for whom he gaue himselfe for vs. The which words by the latter part of the verse must be expounded only of beleeuers of which number the Apostle was and are not to be meant of all mankind as though Christ gaue himselfe for an vniuersall saluation of euery particuliar man or intended to saue all if they would beleeue as they who are tearmed the Lutheran Diuines doe contend But this place plainely restraineth it to his people his Church such as are redeemed from iniquitie such as are purged such as are a choise and peculiar people and such as are zealous of good workes for such Christ gaue himselfe and for no other For 1. if the purpose of God and Christ was not that he should die effectually for all men then he died not for all men But Gods purpose could not be so for then would it follow 1. that Gods purpose should be frustrate seeing many are alreadie in place of torment and many moe shall be 2. or else that he cannot effect his purpose but something shall resist his will and 3. that the execution of this stable purpose of God shall be grounded vpon the incertainetie and instabilitie of an euent depending vpon the mu●able will of man Neither was Christs purpose so for his purpose was to giue his life for his sheepe and purposed not so much as to pray for any other who surely if they haue no part in his prayer much lesse in his sacrifice Secondly If Christ died effectually for all it is not possible that any one man should perish and be condemned for then hath Christ satisfied for the sinnes aswell of Iudas Caine as any other and consequently their sinnes must necessarily be remitted for satisfaction for sinne and remission of sinne are inseparable so the Apostle maketh redemption nothing else but remission of sinne Ephes. 1.17 By whom we haue redemption by his blood euen remission of sinne and where remission of sinne is must need● be blessednesse so as by their doctrine none should be damned Yea further for whom Christ giueth himselfe to those he giueth his spirit to abide with them and to seale vp their saluation to their owne soules for the spirit letteth them know the things that are giuen them of God But they cannot receiue him for the world seeth him not nor knoweth him and much lesse can receiue him see Ioh. 14.16.17 Thirdly ●or whom Christ gaue himselfe those he loued Gal. 2.20 Who loued mee and gaue himselfe for mee the which is true not onely in Paul but in euery beleeuer Ephes. 5.2 and Reu. 1.5 Hee loued vs and gaue himselfe for vs. Now what is meant here by vs all mankind no surely but Gods deare children and Saints as the first place restraineth it selfe ver 1.3 and those that are washed from sinne and that are made Kings and Priests vnto God as the second but most expressely the Apostle expoundeth his owne phrase in the 25. verse of the same Chapter Hee loued his Church and gaue himselfe for it Now the wicked know not Christ and he knoweth not them they hate him and he loueth not them he is a Iesus indeed that is a Sauiour but because he saueth his people from their sinnes Fourthly To whom neither the ends nor fruits of Christs death can belong a vaine thing is it to ascribe any efficacie of his death vnto them but neither the ends nor the fruits belong to the wicked For 1. the maine ends are 1. by his death to abolish him that had the power of death that is the deuill but he still ruleth in the children of disobedience 2. to conquer death it selfe 2. Tim. 1.10 but they are still held vnder the bondage and feare of it 3. to destroie sinne that it may die in men but it liueth and ruleth in the wicked 4. that they which liue might liue to him which is dead 2. Cor. 5.15 but they rise against him and attaine not the first resurrection nor the beginnings of life eternall here nor the perfection hereafter And for the frui●s of this death which are iustification remission of sin
euer haue a Christian on the gathering and gaining hand and therefore hath appointed priuate instruction in the family priuate prayer priuate meditation priuate reading and conference things scarse vsed among Christians though they scarce can be Christians that vse them not and hath promised that where and when two or three be thus gathered in his name he will be present and he is no where emptie handed yea where one man apart shutting his doore praieth or meditateth alone the Lord seeth in secret and repaieth his paines with such store of grace as all men may see him openly rewarded yea let a man be most alone if in such duties he is in most comfortable companie and fellowship with the Lord. Doctr. 2. All the grace that is bestowed on vs is by meanes of Iesus Christ for with him is the fountaine and headspring yea he is the head which sendeth life sence motion and direction into all the members resembled in that holy oyntment which ran downe from Aarons head and beard euen to the skirts of his garment The Euangelist after he had affirmed that Christ was full of grace and truth addeth that of his fulnesse wee receiue grace for grace so the Apostle Colos. 2.9.10 In him dwelleth the fulnes of the godhead bodily and wee are compleat in him But how come wee to share with him in it The next words declare it which is the head of all principality and power as though he had said because in himselfe he hath the well-head of glory and maiesty the which becommeth ours in that he is also the head of his Church And as here our Apostle in general concludeth that all the graces of regeneration are through him so were it easy in particular to goe through the rest of the graces and obserue them in the scriptures all ascribed to this proper cause As 1. peace with God and our selues Rom. 5.1 2. entrance and accesse vnto the Father through him Eph. 2.18 3. wisedome and vnderstanding whereby God in him purposed to enrich vs Eph. 1.8 4. consolation and comfort which aboundeth through him 2. Cor. 1.5 5. eternall saluation which is the gift of God through Iesus Christ Rom. 6.23 But in such a plaine doctrine we will spend no more time Those generall places will saue vs that labour Ephes. 1.3 who hath in Christ blessed vs with all spirituall blessings and Rom. 11.36 for of him and thorough him and for him are all things and 1. Cor. 1.30 he is made of God vnto vs wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Vse 1. Want we any grace call vpon God in the name of Christ Whatsoeuer ye aske the Father in my name he will giue it vnto you get Christ to be thy owne become a true beleeuer that thou maist in him beginne thy prayer with our father this is the way to be rich in grace What a chaunge was there in Zacheus when as once Christ came vnto him whereas before there was nothing in him but iniustice oppression forging and whatsoeuer was naught now we see faith loue iustice mercie restitution reformation yea with saluation euery grace accompanying it 2. Hast thou receiued any spirituall grace sacrifice not vnto thine owne net but be thankfull vnto God in Christ. This the Apostle teacheth in his owne practise in the former place to the Romans of him and through him and for him are all things to him be glorie for euer 3. Take heede of quenching that grace neither grieue that good spirit of God by thy sinne for thou camest hardly by it for Christ must come downe from heauen humble himselfe to the dea●h rise againe ascend and now make continuall intercession before he could procure thee the least grace A thing very little thought of Vers. 7. That we beeing iustified by his grace should be made heires according to the hope of eternall life Now follow the ends why we are brought into this new condition which are two 1. our iustification before God 2. the purchase of life eternall In the former are to be considered 1. what is meant by iustification 2. what by Grace 3. the doctrines Iustification is the absolution of a sinner from his sinne and the punishment of it by the satisfaction of Christ the Redeemer apprehended by faith 1. The absolving of a sinner this the Apostle declareth when he opposeth vnto it accusation and condemnation It is God that iustifieth who shall condemne for seeing a man by nature and the cursed practise of sinne is depriued of the glorie of God and cannot but heape vp wrath against the day of wrath before euer he can come to a comfortable estate he must be acquitted necessarily of the guilt and curse of his sinne both in the high court of heauen where God is the supreame Iudge as also in the inferiour court and consistorie of his owne conscience Now if it be asked how the sinner shall be thus absolued the rest of the words of the definition declare For 2. I adde it is by the satisfaction of Christ the Redeemer wherein are contained both the matter and forme of the iustification of a sinner The matter is Christs satisfaction his obedience in his life in his death in fulfilling the law and in suffering for our not fulfilling it and the merit of all manifested in his resurrection and glorious ascension The forme is the imputing of that obedience whereby the righteousnes of Christ doth now become the beleeuers as truly and really by imputation as it was Christs owne in action So as it is no legall iustice which requireth personall obedience in the straitest tearmes of the law but Euangelicall whereby the beleeuer satisfieth by the merit of a Mediator and in the person of a suretie which satisfaction is accepted as though it were performed in his owne person And thus the cure is proportionable to the disease that looke as by the first Adam sinne went ouer all who are naturally borne of him namely by imputation and propagation euen so by the second Adam iustice and righteousnes is imputed vnto all which are supernaturally borne of him And 3. I adde that this satisfaction of Christ is apprehended by faith the proper worke of which grace is as by an hand to receiue Christ with his merits and bring him home into the owne heart whence it is that to beleeue in Christ and to receiue him are put for one and the same thing Ioh. 1.2 it is the mouth of the soule whereby we eate and drinke his flesh and blood Ioh. 6. yea such a speciall instrument to this purpose that it is said in sundrie places to iustifie vs by laying hold on the merits of Christ which properly iustifie and we by it though not for it are said to be righteous Secondly by Grace in Scripture sometime is meant the gifts of grace that is any good gift which proceedeth from the fauour and loue of God towards man whether priuatiue withholding euills
brethren of Christ and heires apparant to the crowne of heauen but that they are highly aduanced as the choise of God and Gods delight aboue all the people of the earth And hence followeth it that whosoeuer would be in this price and reckoning with God must be sure he be a lillie which he shall know by these three notes 1. If he be planted in the garden of God and be a true member of the Church not tied to it as a scion to a tree by a threed of outward profession but by soundnes of faith and loue the former of which setteth into the head and the latter vniteth to the members Secondly if he haue the beautie of a lillie vpon him 1. in the sight of God by the righteousnesse of Christ iustifying and couering him 2. in his own eyes by the sanctification of the spirit daily washing the conscience from dead workes 3. in the sight of other men by an innocent life and godly conuersation Thirdly if euerie where he leaue a sweet smell behind him that the places where euer he goe sauour of the graces of God laid vp in his heart by bewraying the humilitie faith loue patience hope sobrietie and the like A lillie can leaue no stinke behind it any where as many in their meetings whose speaches are if not hurtfull yet vnsauourie and vnfruitfull These things I write not as taking vpon me to teach your H. who wanteth not choice men and meanes to bring you forward both in the vnderstanding of pure doctrine and in the institution of holy life But 1. to put your H. in mind how highly the Lord hath honoured you both in his owne eyes as also in the eyes of his children The former in that vnto outward greatnes which is as a rich legacie giuen by God both to good and bad he hath vouchsafed to adde the chiefe good and made your H. RICH indeede by disposing vnto you the inheritance of his children which is apparant in that by a sound profession of the truth he hath planted you in his own ground or garden in that he hath set the beautie of a lillie vpon you and hath graced you with a sweet smell of many precious graces which euerie where you leaue behind you The latter both in that he hath put in your heart a speciall care of fencing your selfe by religious and innocent walking whereby you haue adorned your holy profession in not laying your selfe in any part open to the enuious scratching of thornes As also hath expressely engrauen this part of his image vpon you to esteeme his children as lillies among thornes whereby a good euidence is ministred to your owne heart that you are translated from death to life 2. That I might stirre vp your H. as you haue cause to reioyce in and set your heart vpon this purchase which is the portion but of a fewe to esteeme it as it is your truest honour and nobilitie your vnperishing riches and treasure whereas all earthly glorie and greatnesse worldly wealth and abundance abstracted from this neither are your owne neither if they were can they make you happie It was an excellent speach of that noble Emperour Theodosius of whome Augustine writeth that he was wont to say that hee accounted it more honour that hee was a member of the Church then the head of the Empire 3. That I might adde one incitement and prouocation to proceed as you haue begun happily in the loue and practise of true pietie wherein whilst you profit and encrease you prouide a good stocke for the time of neede Let your H. giue me leaue to encourage you to goe on in ennobling nobilitie it selfe by beeing inferiour to fewe of your honourable ranke as in your outward estate so in the beautifull gifts and ornaments of your mind such as are humilitie humanitie a lowly and louely carriage Let Caesar and Pompey other gallants striue to be superiours in pompe and envied greatnesse it is your honour to haue learned that humilitie is the first second and third staire of Christian nobilitie Go on in the strength of the Lord to continue a singular ornament and muniment of the common wealth which is not made by any thing more outwardly happie then in Godly Magistracie and nobilitie Go on in shewing your selfe a carefull patron of the Church of God in making free and vncorrupt choise of such Pastors as whose holy doctrine and life are the counterpaine one of the other in which godly care your H. hath worthily carried the palme These were the cheife motiues which drewe on this my presumption to dedicate this labour vnto your H. although I wāted not some more priuate respects also to force me therunto namely that I might giue some publike testimonie of my loue of your vertues some appobation of my christian dutie and some signification of my thankefull mind as for other fauours so also for your Honours Christian and constant loue of that worthy and vertuous Ladie the Ladie Russell whom I could not but affoard an honourable mention in this dedication which I must needs confesse had beene her right if God had seene good to haue added vnto her daies Accept I humbly beseech your H. the mind of the offerer accept also the booke offred if not for the author of the commentarie yet for the author of the text and the argument which is worthy your H. name and respect I doubt not but your H. shall redeeme many vacant houres in reading ouer many of the treatises therein contained And thus crauing pardon for my boldnesse I commend your H. to the grace of God who protract your dayes and yeares according to the large graces bestowed vpon you and prosper and finish the good worke he hath begunne by adding that which is yet lacking to your faith and graces till he haue fitted you vnto and filled you with glorie and immortalitie Amen From my house at Watford March 16. 1612. Your H. in all dutie to be commanded THOMAS TAYLOR TO THE CHRISTIAN Reader Grace and peace with all other blessings accompanying saluation THe whole Scripture is the rich treasurie of the great King of glorie wherein not one kind of precious stone or mettall is laid vp or in one roome but in sundrie drawers as in sundrie caskets many seuerall pearles and precious things are reserued and safely laid vp for the vse of the Church of God In one place lyeth the summe of holy doctrine another holdeth the precepts of godly life In one corner is the refutation of adulterate and erronious doctrine In another the reprehension of impure and scandalous life And as all the parts of Christianitie are distinct one from another so lie they heare or there in these rich coffers distinct so as euery Christian may draw out instruction direction and consolation according to his owne necessitie This Epistle breathed from the same spirit and bearing the same superscription with all the rest herein disagreeth not
stedfastnesse And this promise is described 1. from the stabilitie of it in that the author of it is God who cannot lie 2. from the antiquitie of it gathered from the circumstance of time before the world began both which considerations most effectually commend this promise of God and also confirme this our hope which leaneth vpon it Quest. What kind of promise is this he●● mentioned Ans. The word signifieth such a promise as is meerely free and most absolute as the learned haue obserued and is opposed vnto all legall promises which are not free but conditionall and made good to the keeper for the keeping of the law for the man that doth the law shall liue by the lawe but euangelicall promises whereof this is the principall are no such compacts or bargaines but free without all antecedent inducement and all condition of doing any thing on our parts As for the condition of faith which some may here alleadge the answer is we receiue nothing for our faith nor the worthines or worke of it but by it as a hand or meanes we receiue the free promise of eternall life Quest. But how could God promise before the world began that is from euerlasting seeing there was none then to promise vnto Answ. By an vsuall figure of speach the thing decreed is put for the decree it selfe and the true sense is this God promised that is decreed to promise before the world began and in due time hath made that promise manifest in the word preached as in the next words The like phrases we finde 2. Tim. 1.9 He hath called vs with an holy calling before the world was Eph. 1.4 we were choosen before the foundation of the world that is God decreed then to choose vs. Neither will this speach seeme strange to him that considereth 1. that with God all times are present none former or latter to him 2. that hereby the Scriptures would note the certaintie and assurance of such a maine promise of such vse and expectation Out of which words we note three lessons 1. That life eternall is ours by free promise 2. That God cannot lie and therefore the promise is infallible 3. The admirable care and loue of God to man tendring his eternall good before he or the world was Doctr. 1. That eternall life is by promise appeareth by that vsuall metonimie in the Scriptures whereby it carrieth the name of the promise it selfe although indeede it be the thing promised Heb. 6.12 be followers of them who through faith and patience attaine the promise that is life promised This truth was liuely typified both in the sonnes of Abraham as also liuely shadowed in that earthly Canaan The sonnes of Abraham were Isaac and Ismael two sonnes but one heire and he the sonne of promise by which title alone he held his prerogatiue whereas Ismael was the first borne Hence was it vsuall with the Apostles to oppose the sonnes according to the flesh to the sonnes of promise And as it was then so now is there a seede of promise euen all faithfull men and women who are raised out of faithfull promises faithfully apprehended called elsewhere not sonnes onely but heires of promise that is not onely such as to whom the promises belong but such as claime their inheritance onely by adoption and promise and not otherwise In like manner the earthly Canaan was called the land of promise not onely because it was long before promised to Abraham and his posteritie many of whom for many generations onely so enioyed it but also because those that were brought to the possession of that good land had it not for their owne worthinesse they were charged to beware of such thoughts for God gaue them this power by stablishing his couenant with them figuring vnto vs no other thing but that this blessed rest prepared for the people of God the truth of that shadow is held in no other tenure but by vertue of the promise neither here nor hereafter adde hereunto that whatsoeuer grace the Lord powreth into the hearts of the elect they all beeing not onely steppes and degrees but pawnes also and pledges of eternall life looke out vnto the promise faith apprehendeth it hope expecteth it loue thankfully entertaineth it yea and all the rest are quickned and strengthened by it Nay in this regard the holy spirit of God from whom these streames of grace doe flowe is called the spirit of promise not onely in that he was promised to beleeuers as Ioel. 2. I will powre out my spirit but also because he sealeth vp vnto their hearts the certentie of this maine promise touching their saluation Obiect But life eternall is called a debt Ans. It is so of his promise not of our desert Herodias craued Iohn Baptists head as her due but not because by dauncing she had deserued it but because of the Kings promise And that these promises are free may appeare in the first and maine giuen to Adam when he was farre from deseruing it in whom was nothing to mooue to the Lord but to the cleane contrarie Vse 1. Whosoeuer pretend any other title to the inheritance besides the promise of God are of the bondwoman and Ismaelites descending of Agar The Apostle sheweth how we receiue the promise of the spirit that is freedome from the law sinne death hell and damnation namely through faith here is no merit but faith taking ●old Which condemneth that arrogant doctrine of the Church of Rome who will haue life eternall repaied to the merit of workes for their condignitie which is all one with the renouncing of the promise of mercie and to flie for releefe vnto the iustice of God Whereas the whole new Testament draweth vs from that legal righteousnesse and suffereth vs not to behold our best workes but God the promiser and Christ the mediator and our birth which brings our inheritance and our selues in the gifts of righteousnesse and remission of sinnes onely receiuers and in the matter of our iustification before God meere patients and no agents at all Vse 2. The strength of our hope standeth not vpon merits but vpon this same promise which confuteth another Popish error that to hope without merit is presumption but Abraham had another prop for his hope it was not merit that made him hope aboue hope but because he knew who had spoken he doubted not the promise through vnbeleefe Obiect 1. Ioh. 3.19 If we loue indeed and in truth we know that we are of the truth And therefore hope of saluation is to be fetched from the workes of loue Ans. The scope of the Apostle is to teach that true faith cannot stand without a good conscience not that the perswasion of it either onely thence ariseth or thereupon only dependeth or cannot be without works but that then we haue more full perswasion of our coniunction with God and soundnes in faith when together with the inward
the God of heauen For either Satan by his suggestion or his instruments or which is more to be feared we shall heare the whisperings and mutterings of our owne flesh saying Where is the God in whom ye trusted let not thy God deceiue thee any longer and with Iehoram Is not this euill from the Lord and shall I waite on him any longer to all which let vs be bold to answer with the Apostle I know whom I haue beleeued euen him whose bare word is aboue all bonds who neuer promised more then he was able to performe and neuer performed lesse then he promised faithfull is he that hath promised and no vnfaithfulnes of man can make him vnfaithfull The like truth and steadfastnesse carie all his denunciations and threats for neither when his messengers threaten wrath against the impenitent shall that be found a lying word but the sentence of the Iudge which cannot faile of execution True it is that the Lyon hath often roared but the beasts of the feild haue not trembled The Lord hath vttered his terrible voice against the vnrighteousnesse of men but his threatnings haue met with mockers who say euery vision is deferred and where is the promise of his comming with swarmes of Atheists who say there is no God but denie heauen hell and immortalitie of the soule in the meane time making leagues and couenants with hell and death with beastly Epicures who liue vnmooueably from their carnall delights and sensuall pleasures with heauie and dead hearted professours with whome they haue beene but as a blast all which sorts of men promise to themselues life although the Lord hath said of them they shall die and is not this to charge God expressely with a lie and as much as to say that he is not God But these shall know that the words the Lord hath spoken shall be done Ezek. 12.28 And as the Lord letteth his children see for the present that it is not in vaine to worship him so he letteth his enemies often feele euen before their death that all his words fall not to the ground when he meeteth them at euery corner with sundrie plagues and iudgements in their soules bodies estate name or freinds all which are the accomplishment of his word which shall not passe away when heauen and earth shall be dissolued Vse 2. Seeing God cannot lie let euery one of vs labour to expresse this vertue of God first and especially the minister in his place seeing he speaketh from God nay God speaketh by him he must therefore deliuer true sayings worthie of all men to be receiued that he may be able to say in his owne heart that which Paul spake of himselfe I speake the truth in Christ I lie not and iustifie that of his doctrine which Paul did of his writings the things which now I write vnto you behold I witnes before God that I lie not Now then is a minister a liar when he either speaketh false things as euery where the false Prophets are charged an example whereof we may see in Hananiah the sonne of Azur and Abab the sonne of Roliah and Zedekiah the sonne of Maaseiah who are said to prophesie lies in the name of the Lord in that when the Lords Prophets were commanded to carrie yokes about their neckes these would breake them and so caused the people to trust in a lie or else true things falsely misapplying that truth which they could not but vtter for this was euer the note of a false Prophet to make their hearts sad who should haue beene cheared and to speak peace to them against whom the Lord had proclaimed open warre so falsifying the word of the great God which iniurie no earthly King would suffer vnreuenged If a king should signe and send out his letters of death and execution against some archtraytor and the officer betrusted with them should serue them vpon some faithfull counseller who is neare and deare to his Prince so as the innocent and well-deseruing shal be put to death and the traytor suffered to liue in honour should not the life of this man so betrusted goe for the life of the other In like sort doth be who in Gods place whetteth his tongue against the righteous of the land and disgraceth the most forward in the wayes of God let him discourse against them in Scripture phrase and speak things in themselues neuer so true yet is he a lowde liar in the false applying of them and wresting them against them vpon whom the eyes of the Lord are for good and with liars shall be kept without the gates of the ●oly citie and that most iustly in that he hath not lied of men but of God himselfe whom so farre as his malice could extend he hath endeauoured to drawe into his sinne in making him a liar also like vnto himselfe 2. Euery priuate man must take vp that exhortation to cast off lying and speake euery man truth vnto his neighbour and that because it is a peece and sparkle of Gods image and a part of the newe man which is to be put on Which reason the Apostle vrgeth sundrie times in the epistles And indeede no man can more liuely resemble the image of his heauenly father then by the practise of truth in which one word is included that whole image of God which standeth in righteousnesse and holines as Ioh. 8.44 the angels stood not in the truth As on the contrarie no man can more liuely resemble the deuil then by lying for he is a lyar from the beginning and the father of lies True it is there be many defences made for sundrie sorts of lies which we shall haue better occasion to scan in the processe of this Epistle but let all such as would haue themselues marked with the stampe of Gods children knowe that they onely can haue assurance of the pardon of sinnes in whose spirit is no guile and those onely shall rest in the holy mountaine that speake the truth from their hearts and they alone shall stand with the lambe on mount Sion and sing the newe song before the throne who haue no guile found in their monthes Doctr. 3. The last generall obseruation out of the former words teacheth what an infinite and free loue the Lord embraceth his elect withall in that be decreeth from euerlasting whatsoeuer he doth for them in the due season of it Hence it is that not onely in this place but thorough the Scriptures we may read that all the stayres whereby we climbe to heauen were laid by God before the world began If we looke at Gods predestination and election the names are written in the book of life from euerlasting Iacob was loued not onely before he had done good but before he was to doe it If to the ende which is the kingdome that is prepared from the foundations of the world If to the meanes which is Christ he is the
of his owne gifts why hath God giuen me learning wealth aduancement surely for some good ende in the Church or common wealth and how dangerous a thing is it to peruert Gods ende in giuing his gifts And further from hence let him that would take a compendious way to entertaine the Ministerie alwaies behold with one eie the end of it for otherwise it will often seeme harsh and intolerable flesh willingly abideth not the handling of the Minister oh no meddle not with mine eies my deere and tender sinnes the bodie abideth not the pulling out of eies or cutting off of hands and feete so as let the Minister come to saw or feare a desperate member there is such reluctation and opposition as maketh a whole parish too little for the Minister and people The cause of all this is they consider not this end of the Ministerie If they could thus reason for this end is this man set here to be the watchman ouer the house of Israel to sound a trumpet against the sinnes of Iudah to redresse our disorder to plant Gods graces amongst vs to beate downe sinne superstition ignorance profanesse then should we not here such gracelesse speaches as Corah and his companie vtter against Moses the man of God Who made him a controller he is very busie to meddle with such and such things which concerne him not come let vs smite him with the tongue and much a doe is there to keepe Zidkiahs fist from Michaes face Whereas if they could thinke them the Ministers of God for their wealth as the Apostle speaketh of the Magistrate or if they could conceiue them to haue the watch of their soules committed vnto them either of these arguments by the iudgement of the spirit of God would be strong inough to enforce reuerence vnto their persons and obedience vnto their doctrine Now to the dutie and office of Titus the Apostle reduceth all his labour to two heads 1. the reforming of things that remaine 2. the appointing of elders in euery citie In the order of which precepts the Apostle sheweth that the way to plant Gods ordinances is first to redresse and remooue such disorders as make most opposition for Dagon and the Arke will not stand together but one will fall downe on his face As it is in the naturall bodie so is it in the Ecclesiasticall if there be a predominancie of some peccant humour that must necessarily be first purged out before any meanes can be to purpose vsed to breed good blood and humours Neuer did any of the kings of Iudah any great matter for the establishing of true religion till they had rooted out Idolatrie and broken downe the altars and groues of their Idols Asa tooke a right course to bring the holy vessels and things dedicated to the Lords house into the temple when he broke his fathers idols tooke away the Sodomites put downe his mother Maacha from her regencie for her idols and burnt them by the brooke Kidron See the like in Hezekiah 2. Chron. 31. who gathered all Israel to breake downe altars cut down groues cast downe the high places and then made the diuisions of the Priests and Leuites according to their ministerie in the Temple Of Iosiah see c. 34.1 ad 8. Yea Iesus Christ the wisdome of his father could not nor did establish any thing vntill in his first sermon he had reformed the grosse expositions and Pharisaicall glosses whereby they had corrupted the law teaching the same truth with our Apostle that the redressing of disorders is but a way and meanes of planting the Lords ordinances Vse We pray that Gods kingdome may come euerie where and that the Lords ordinances onely may take place in his Church now that this may be effected we must also pray that he would ouerthrowe the man of sinne and disperse the mists of darkenes in all countryes which trouble the shining brightnesse of the Gospel that the whole bondwoman may be cast out which standeth against the right of the right heire that the head and tayle of Antichrist may be cut off and that no stumpe of Dagon may remaine to keepe out the institutions of Iesus Christ. For the former of these two It will first be asked what power Titus had to controle disorders in this Iland and if he had any whether it did not derogate from the power of the ciuill Magistrates Ans. Titus had a ministeriall power which no more derogated from the soueraigne power of the Magistrate then if the Gospel were now established in it againe would it weaken the power of the Venetians in whose hands now it is nor no more then the power of the Gospel doth weaken the states and scepters of Christian Princes which indeede are stablished by Christs scepter The reason is because the power of the word and sword of the magistrate and Minister are of a diuerse nature for although both of them haue their power from God and one generall scope which is the good of men yet in them is it farre different 1. In their obiect The one hath power ouer all men and all the things of men The other hath power ouer all men but onely in the things of God The one bindeth the outward man his bodie goods life conuersation the other the inward man his soule conscience and spirit of which God onely is the Lord the one ordereth causes Ecclesiastiacall according to the w●●d the other onely may execute them 2. In their manner of commanding The ciuill power may command obedience to it selfe in it owne name as hauing vnder God the power in himselfe but the ecclesiasticall or ministeriall power is not in the person of the Minister but in Christ neither can he command obedience to himselfe but vnto Christ nor come in his owne name but in Christs as being not his Leiftenant as the Magistrate nor his vicar for as he is Mediator he hath not any but his Minister only 2. the ciuill power may absolutely compell the outward man but the ministeriall can onely perswade and exhort 3. In their meanes of enforcing The ciuill hath the vse of the sword to arrest imprison make warre execute the sentence of death vpon malefactors the ministeriall can only either by admonition cure or excommunication cast out the obstinate offenders and esteeme them as Publicans and heathens The weapons of this warfare are spirituall as doctrine exhortation admonition reproofe good life c. This latter then while Titus exercised he encroached not vpon the ciuill Magistrates power nor weakened but strengthened it Christ himselfe although the rightful King of the Iewes would not so much as devide an inheritance but subiected himselfe to all tributes and hard sentences and yet all his life and death was nothing else but the establishing of his owne scepter one of these powers is the ornament and muniment of the other and therefore let none commit Moses and Aaron together but esteeme it as a sweet
bellie then a man But many such bellies want eares 3. An honest calling is a schoole of Christianitie that 1. looke as little children are sent to schoole to keep them out of hurts and vnhappie turnes so diligence in the calling fenceth vs from taking harmes by Satans temptations we lie not so open vnto his assalts againe it is a bridle to restraine our own lewd desires abating wicked lusts abandoning lewd company and fitting vs for the Lords appearing whose seruice we are in 2. In this schoole of the calling a man performing duties for the Lords sake hath daily practise and encrease of graces such as faith obedience patience meeknes constancie truth invocation thanksgiuing and hence are daily enabled to take out further lessons for time to come from the daily experience of Gods goodnes for time past 3. In this schoole we learne to be teachers of others and in time come to be patternes vnto others of the right vse of the world while our selues vse it euery day as not vsing it at all and while we so play the good husbands as that we keep our selues from beeing worldlings not laying by our heauenly minds in the midst of our earthly busines whereas the idle person that entereth not into this schoole is out of Gods protection and neuer out of Satans snares his heart is like the feild of the sluggard ouergrown with thistles and weeds his lusts so farre preuaile with him that he is rather a spectacle of reproch then a patterne for imitation and if euer he had any good things in him they are perrished for want of emploiment for as the rust fretteth vnused iron and the mothes eate vnworne garments so good things ar shaken out of the heart of him that neglecteth the vsing of them 4. Consider the danger of those that stand idle all day long passing their dayes in all delights one in one voluptuous lust another in another the Apostle saith of them all that liuing in pleasure they are dead while they liue the soule of such a one is but as a carkase his bodie as a coffin he rotteth away in vnprofitablenes while he liueth and as a standing poole putrifieth the prouerb is true of such a man his soule is but as salt to keep his bodie from stinking aboue gound And thinke we they shall liue when they are dead who are dead while they liue no surely but seeing they did not subiect themselues to the law of all mankind Gen. 3.19 In the sweate of thy face shalt thou get thy bread they shall neuer escape that other sentence take the vnprofitable seruant binde him hand and foote his hands and feete were bound when I called him to walke and worke now bind him hand and foote and cast him into hell Now for the latter of these vices reprehended in the latter word it is worth marking to obserue how aptly the Poet ioyneth them together which seldome are disioyned because the one of these is the gound of the other And as it is true in all sinnes which we say of euills that one commeth not alone for they are accompained still with their supporters so these two sinnes are of such speciall acqaintance that as we say of a paire of turtles looke where one is the other lightly is within lesse then a coytes cast so where the one of these is it will not be hard to descry the other If there be idlenes there will be intemperance and if intemperance there must needs be idlenes And therefore our Sauiour hath combined them as neare as the cause and effect which cannot be sundred Luk. 21.34 Take heed least your hearts be oppressed with surfetting drunkennes and so that day come on you vnawares implying that intemperance oppresseth and maketh the heart dull and heauie and when the heart is so aggraued the whole man is vnfit either for heauenly or earthly exercise In like manner the combination of Sodoms sinnes sheweth the same truth Ezech. 16.49 Pride fulnesse of bread and abundance of idlenesse And therefore seeing a man can neuer sufficiently perswade diligence in the calling till this intemperance be disswaded it shall not be amisse in few words to speake of this sinne and perswade the contrarie vertue for the preseruation of it And because this kind of intemperance is restrained to the bellie I describe it to be an inordinate appetite or immoderate desire and vse of meate and drinke and this is when a due meane is exceeded either in the costly and excessiue preparation of them for our selues or others or in the two liberall and excessiue vse of them so prepared a vice which is a speciall enemie to all good duties towards God or man making men vnfit to the word of God either to read or heare it vnfit to pray to meditate to remember the works of God with praise and thanksgiuing so as a man giuen vp to this sinne is sunke downe in Atheisme nay in Idolatrie hauing no other God then his bellie a more base idolatrie of many Christians then euer was any of the Heathen who would worship the sunne moone starres and glistring mettals but to haue worshipped the bellie and draught they would haue abhorred And for the duties of the particular calling they must lie lea the bones of such full bodies had rather be at rest or to keepe them from sleep must rise vp to play but altogether vnweldie to any more serious busines And thus by this sinne men make themselues in stead of Gods Temples Satans kitchins filling their bodies with noysome lusts and deadly deseases their soules with a number of dangerous sinnes which shut them out of heauen framing their liues liker to the bruit beasts then reasonable men and in their deaths for most part no lesse brutish then in their liues Now for the better auoiding of this sinne I will propound some reasons and after them some rules of direction The reasons are three 1. The Lord is liberall but not prodigall of his creatures and they are his and not ours but by his leaue neither doth he euer giue leaue to vse them to our owne hurt as many riotous persons doe who with the glutton faring deliciously euerie day in their feasting and banquetting besides the wast of many excellent creatures of God 1. loose their time 2. spend their goods which ought to haue beene otherwise employed 3. neglect the duties of their generall calling of Christianitie and omit the necessarie affaires of their particular course of life 2. This is one of the practises of those that are in the night whereas we professe our selues to be of the day and is a weed or rather an olde ragge which must be put off before Christ can be put on 3. The time calleth vs rather to fasting weeping and euerie worke of repentance then to eating drinking chambring c. For if we consider the workes of the Lord we shall see his arme stretched out and his hand
be subiect to the law of God Thus euery way the wickednes of man is great all the imaginations of the thoughts of his heart are only euill continually neither can be other seeing whatsoeuer riseth of flesh is no better then flesh Vse 1. Hence we see in part the corruption of our nature and in it the reproach of our first sinne and fruit of our first transgression whereby we might learne to be ashamed of our filthines which is thus seated and resteth not onely in the inferiour parts and powers of the soule or as Papists speak in the flesh and sensual part but euen in the reasonable most excellent part of the soule which is the minde and conscience This very cōsideration should be as a hammer to beat down proud thoughts which rise vpon the gazing of outward things and respects on which so many beare themselues who doubtles would quickly strike saile if they could turne their eie a little to see themselues by nature and naturall courses the children of wrath enemies of righteousnesse haters and hated of God Many a man blesseth himselfe in that he keepeth his bodie cleane from vnlawfull filthinesse his hands pure from open iniustice his words free from iniuring men and thus content themselues with a ciuill righteousnesse which is to glorie in the flesh But could they looke vnpartially into their soules they should finde a filthie sinke and puddle steaming out noysome and graceles parts into the whole behauiour all which thrust them vnder the regiment of death Yea euen the best of men regenerate finde this lawe of euill with them which ministreth smal ioy to some parts of their liues when they see the seedes of all sinne in themselues and these seedes to rise vp into the blade and care sometime before they attend to cut them downe or weede them vp and when they finde themselues as readie to yeeld an haruest of iniquitie as others if the good husbandman should not still be pruning and dressing them 2. As man could proceede from an habite of good to the priuation of it so can he not of himselfe go backe from this priuation to the habit seeing no freedome at all is left in any facultie of his soule to spirituall good Is the mind and conscience and all things impure to the vnbeleeuer and hath his will any more priuiledge then the other how erronious then is that doctrine of the Church of Rome and the schoolemen who teach that mans free will to good is not altogether lost but much weakened in spirituall motions that it can dispose and prepare it selfe to grace and that it coworketh with the grace of God in the verie first beginnings of grace Whereas the Scripture teacheth that man is so farre from his owne helpe in his recouerie that he resisteth it and fighteth against it till the Lord mightily subdue him as he did Paul on his way to Damascus The first degree or preparation to the cure is the knowledge of the disease but the naturall man will not be brought to acknowledge and confesse his estate Psal. 14.3 there is no man that vnderstandeth his way our Apostle hath elsewhere also ruled this case 2. Cor. 3.5 we are not sufficient of our selues to thinke a thought and therefore much lesse to will Philip. 2.13 It is God that worketh in vs both to will and to doe where we are not said to will actiuely but acted that is so farre as God maketh vs to will good Let our pouertie then be hence acknowledged Gods glorie magnified Christs merit amplified in which alone we recouer all our wants and are raised out of our graues of death 3. Hence we see the necessitie of regeneration in euerie part Eph. 4.22.23 be renewed in the spirit of your minds confesse then and crie out with the leper I am vncleane I am vncleane and seeing if Christ wash thee not thou hast no part in him pray with Peter wash me Lord not my feete onely but my hands and head yea my whole bodie and my whole soule my whole man The Apostle prayed that not onely the inferiour faculties of the Thessalonians as the affections and appetite which are the feete of the soule might be washed but vseth this forme The God of peace sanctifie you wholly 4. If the wicked man be thus vncleane then hate his companie the vile person is to be contemned come not neere him touch him and thou wilt be defiled he is filthie within and without and with the leper must be thrust out of the campe for feare of infection Doctr. 3. Before this naturall vncleanenes be purged euerie thing is vncleane vnto a man the vnbeleeuer tainteth euerie thing that he toucheth nothing within him nothing without him which is not polluted although not in his owne nature yet vnto him and in his vse Let a naturall man turne him to any action word or thought all of them not excepting the best are against God because they proceede from vncleane mindes and consciences 1. His actions spirituall euen his best seruices as praying hearing reading receiuing of Sacraments almes all these beeing the sacrifices of the wicked are abhomination vnto the Lord who first looketh to the person and then the gift who if he turne his eare from hearing the lawe euen his prayer is abhominable if he choose his owne wayes let him kill a bullocke for sacrifice it is all one as if slewe a man if he be a polluted person that toucheth any of these holy things shall they not be vncleane yes surely the most diuine ordinances are turned to him to sinne for the Lord first requireth pure parts and then pure actions Ezech. 36.26 2. His ciuill actions his honest dealing in the world his buying selling giuing lending his labour care yea all the duties of his calling are in and to him no better then sinnes 3. His naturall actions as eating drinking sleeping recreation physicke all are vncleane vnto him 4. All Gods creatures and humane ordinances as meate drinke cloath goods lands buildings mariage single estate in a word the whole way of the wicked is abhomination to the Lord Prou. 15.9 All these are witnesses of his sinne and filthinesse all of them are enlargers of his woe and damnation because he wanteth faith to lay hold on the Lord Iesus whereby the iust doe liue haue their heart purified and so are made Lords ouer the creatures Vse 1. Seeing no man can with good conscience goe about any thing while he is in his sinne and vncleannes let it mooue euerie man to beware especially that he approach not neere the courts of God nor compasse the altar without washing his hands in innocencie The Ministers may not take the word into profane mouthes and hands themselues hating reformation The brasen lauer must put them in minde of their dutie which was set betweene the tabernacle and the altar that the Priests might wash their hands and feete whensoeuer
and therefore necessarily supplieth it with moysture and heate of grace And the promise is that those that waite vpon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall lift vp their wings as the Eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not waxe fainte Secondly The comfort of old age dependeth hereupon the tedious and diseased daies of which whosoeuer would comfortably passe they must prouide themselues of this supplie For who is it that can say he hath pleasure in those daies when for the darknes and miserie of them the sunne and the moone and the starres seeme to fall from heauen vnto whom Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath not risen and vnto whose heart that bright morning starre hath not discouered his brightnes the least beame and glims of whose sauing grace farre surpasseth the sunne in his strength What comfort can be to him whose strong men that keepe the house that is whose armes tremble for weaknes and whose thighs bow themselues as too weake to beare the weight of the bodie vnlesse the Lords arme and right hand become his strength and as a staffe to leane vpon as he was to Dauid 2. Sam. 22.19 What ioy remaineth vnto him whose age hath worne away most of his senses that now hath his eyes dim as Isaaks that with Barzillai he cannot discerne between good and bad he hath no tast in that he eateth and drinketh he cannot heare any more the voice of singing men and women vnlesse he hath attained the eyes of faith to see God in Christ and so with Simeon he can behold his saluation vnlesse he find rellish and tast in the bread of life vnlesse he can heare the sweet note of Gods spirit consenting with his owne that he is Gods child together with that sweet harmony of a good conscience kept before God and men in all things which is heauenly musick vpon earth In a word what solace or reioysing can be to him who hath one foote in the graue that seeth death so neere him daily threatning him and no way to escape him vnlesse herein also the spirit sustaine his infirmitie by assuring him that Christ is his life who hath bereaued that serpent of his sting poyson and venome so as he shall doe him no more harme then helpe him towards his happines Thirdly why should not we thus prouide against that rainie day and furnish our selues against the euill of it seeing the heathen were by nature taught to prouide for themselues such props of their age as they thought would most bestead them both for their vtilitie and delight there is no man that finding his eyes decaying needeth to be vrged to prouide spectacles nor he whose loynes faile him to prepare him a staffe to leane vpon and much more should grace teach euery Christian that when with Dauid through age or otherwise he findeth his flesh fayling him and his heart also then to make the Lord his hope and his portion for euer Fourthly the recompence of this dutie is beyond all our thoughts seeing the blindnes of the bodie is made vp by the vision of the Lord Iesus and God the father appeased in him bodily weakenesse supplyed by spirituall strength corporal death abated yea exchanged with heauenly life all which not onely quell the feare of death approaching but euen whet the desire of it For if Simeon seeing Christ in his armes praieth for his peaceable departure If Moses seeing the land of Canaan from the toppe of mount Nebo could willingly submit himselfe to die If the three famous Patriarchs who neuer sawe the promises accomplished to their owne persons but a farre off promised to their posterities could willingly die in faith how much more shall they be able to wish their desolation who by the eye of the faith shall behold that heauenly Canaan and that celestiall Ierusalem of which the other were but darke shadowes Vse This doctrine cries shame vpon many old men that are as weake or weaker in soule then they be in bodie farre more blind more staggering euery way more sensles more dead they perceiue their faces and eyes looke drooping to the earth and yet their spirits neuer a whit more lifted vp vnto heauen they see the world forsaking them as not able to cherish them any longer and yet cannot they be drawne to forsake the world they cannot but behold the earth casting them off it and making a way fot the next age their posteritie and yet they cast care away and neuer prouide themselues of a continued citie The eie of their bodie seeth how they are growne into yeares and striken in age but the eye of their mindes see not the gray haires here and there vpon them no more then Eprhaims did Euerie man can see and say they are come euen to the period of their dayes and yet no man can say they are come to the beginnings of any true grace Thus although multitude of yeares should teach wisedome vnderstanding faith application yet may young Elihu truely obiect to the reproach not of a fewe that olde age is not alwaies wise Further vrging of this point although carried further in the deliuerie I purposely omit The Lord graunt all of vs whome it concerneth to learne thus much as is said In loue This second vertue beseeming the elder sort not onely as olde men but auncient Christians is brotherly loue which casteth eie vnto all the duties of the second table as faith principally to the duties of the former and most fitly ioined with faith as being the inseparable companion of it and such a marke as freeth it from imputation of deadnesse or vnsoundnesse Which vertue is inioyned euerie Christian olde or young both because it is the newe commandement of Christ as also a note of a Christian and true disciple of Christ Ioh. 13.35 and is besides the bond of vpright dealing in humane societie without which men were little better then wolues or wilde beasts But it is here rather commended to elder men who in this vertue as in the former and following graces must be more at the last then at the first and in whome this grace of loue must be proportionable vnto their faith for this may not be an infant if the former be of riper age but according to the proportion and growth of faith must loue abound And it must be obserued that our Apostle requireth not the vertue simply or in remisse degree or small measure but soundnesse in loue in such a degree and measure as that age seemeth of it selfe to call for Now if we would knowe wherein the soundnesse of loue consisteth it is then sound when it hath soundnesse 1. in the ground 2. order 3. seate 4. worke 5. durance of it First the true ground of all the loue of the creature is the loue of the Creator all the loue of man must issue from the loue of God and all duties of the second table must
be performed in the first neither ought any creature to be loued so farre as it is an enemie and hatefull to God the creator Psal. 139. I hate the wicked that is so farre as wicked namly their practises not their persons Secondly it must be sound in the order which will appeare in two rules 1. it must be in the greatest measure where is most grace and shew it selfe most friendly and louing to them that loue and are the friends of God It must doe good vnto all but especially the houshold of faith The Apostle commending the loue of the Ephesians which for the soundnes of it he sawe was praise worthie he hence approoueth it that it was towards all Saints and hence the Apostle Iohn gathereth a note that we are translated from death to life if we loue the brethren And herein we haue God himselfe going before vs in example who respected the poore widowe of Sarepta aboue all Israel Now we shall descend fitly to this dutie by these staires 1. by louing God simply for himselfe 2. Christ as man the beloued of God the head of his Church 3. the Church it selfe the bodie of Christ receiuing of his fulnes grace for grace and 4. the particular members must rise vp higher in our affections as the Lord hath highlier honoured them with grace and more expressely renewed his image vpon them The second rule for the right order of sound loue is that it must beginne at home but may not there determine the rule of the loue of our neighbour Christ hath made the loue of our selues and as we are to prouide for our owne good first and that according to the wisedome which the word teacheth first seeking the kingdome the pearle the treasure for our soules and then these outward things for our outward man euen so are we to deriue this loue in this manner vnto the soules and bodies of others according as they are nearer vs or further off in the degrees of grace and nature And here respect must be had 1. to those of our own house as to whom we are tyed either by the bond of marriage who beeing one with vs haue right to the same affection wherewith we loue our selues or of neere blood as parents children or of dutie as seruants he that careth not for these is worse then an infidel and hath denied the faith 2. He that careth for none but these is little better for if loue bee sound within it will be working outwardly As 1. to such as are tyed by any bond of blood or alliance euen without the family 2. to such as are in a perpetuall contract of friendship with vs as was betweene Dauid and Ionathan 2. Sam. 18.1 and Christ had one who aboue the rest was called the disciple whom Iesus loued 3. it must proceed on to strangers as men and as those that may be heires of the same grace of life with vs yea to the poore as well as to the rich Iam. 2.8 9. nay more to our enemies Matth. 5.44 Loue your enemies these are the degrees of sound loue Thirdly this loue must be sound in the seate of it and that must be the heart Rom. 12.9 Let loue be without dissimulation it must not be hypocritall from the teeth outward or fawning but loue must come from a pure heart 1. Ioh. 3.18 Let vs not loue in word and tongue but in deede and truth Fourthly it must be sound in the worke or action of it 1. in preuenting the euill of the brethren not suffering men to sinne 2. in procuring their good The Apostle would haue experience of the naturalnesse of the loue of the Corinths in their bountie and liberalitie towards the Saints in want For if any haue this worlds good and shutteth his compassion from his brothers neede how dwelleth the loue of God in him Fiftly it must be sound in the durance and lasting of it Prou. 17.17 A friend loueth at all times and here trie the soundnesse by these notes 1. If in a milde and iust reprehension it breaketh not off 2. If it hold in aduersitie a brother is made for aduersitie see Act. 11.29 3. If it hold then when iniurie is offered and occasions of breaking off by vnkindnesse or hard measure 1. Cor. 13.5 Loue is not prouoked to anger but suffereth all things In these two latter it resembleth Gods loue which is both constant and closest to a man in the day of his trouble neither taketh it the forfeit of our daily prouocations Vse By all this triall both olde and young may see how farre they are from soundnesse in this grace contenting themselues euen with a shadowe of it for the most of mens loue is grounded either vpon receite or hope of benefit or vpon flesh and fleshly respects and is not begunne in nor for God nor knit by the spirit of God the least part of it is set vpon the Saints that are vpon earth excelling in vertue it generally determineth it selfe in selfe louing and selfe seeking not seeking the things of others as well as their owne or not seeking and louing the soules of men as well as their bodies or respecting persons and not embracing the poore as well as the rich or not blessing their enemies as well as their friends the most loue of men is a lip-loue a semblance a counterfeit and fruitlesse loue diuorsed from inward heartie affection or else a vanishing and flitting loue flinching in aduersitie when most neede is and readie vpon the least occasion to be ouercome with euill and changed into bitter hatred this crazie loue euerie where argueth a riuen and crackt faith such counterfeit loue is the daughter of counterfeit faith and vnsoundnes of loue is a sure token of vnsoundnes of faith and halting in religion In patience This third ornament of Christian old age is fitly by the spirit of God added to the two former as the preseruatiue of both most requisite vnto all Christians For seeing this vertue is nothing else but a willing and constant suffering of hard and painefull things for Christianitie and honesties sake and further that affliction followeth the faithfull who studie to testifie their loue of God in the loue of man euen as the shadow followeth the bodie necessarily must he that would hold out in Christianitie get this grace to beare off such calamities as follow vpon the keeping of faith and good conscience 2. No man can haue either of the former that wanteth this for these three vertues are like the three graces which goe hand in hand the former leading the latter and this last laying hold on both the former so as if any man would trie the soundnes of the former he cannot better do it then by the sequele of the latter the soundnes of faith discouereth it selfe in the soundnes of loue and the soundnes of loue in a sound patience for as sound faith is louing so sound loue
of Gods deliuerance 2. Sam. 16.12 It may be the Lord will looke on mine affliction and doe me good this day not making doubt for neither did Dauid in generall but constantly cleauing to the promise call vpon me in the day of trouble and I will deliuer thee Prayer for deliuerance must be ioyned with this expectation of our deliuerance not prescribing time nor meanes nor manner much lesse vsing vnlawfull meanes but reserue vnto the Lord the glory of his wisedome in ordering the whole matter and circumstances of our deliuerance The fifth fruit is a totall resignation of a mans selfe to the will of God and a voluntarie subiection vnto his good pleasure who knoweth out of his wisedome what is the best and out of his loue maketh euery present estate worke to the best to his children example hereof we haue in Dauid 2. Sam. 15.26 Behold here am I let him doe as seemeth good in his eyes yea euen if he should say I haue no delight in thee The third point wherein the soundnes of patience consisteth is in the found durance and lasting of it And indeed not euery patience and tollerance of euill is here meant but such as implieth a delaie and continuance vnder some weight or burthen nay the very word importeth so much signifying as well perseuerance as patience neither is this sound patience a suffering only but a long suffering nor a patience but a long patience such as the husbandman waiteth withall vnto the haruest such as the Prophets endured all hard measure by such as our selues must possesse our soules by and euery possession is of continuance such as maketh not hast yea such as must waite vntill the comming of the Lord. Iames in the place alleadged exhorteth to be patient till the comming of the Lord which is not meant of his last comming to iudgement but of his particular executions beforehand for the deliuerie of his chosen the reuenge of their wrongs vpon their enemies Vse All these notes let vs see the crazines of this grace in vs. It is no patience when men beare out crosses by stoutnes and stomacke neither by a nature not so subiect to impatience for here is not silence vnto God disposing the crosse vnto them So when men can buckle well enough with and swimme out of one kind of crosse which pincheth them not so much but sinke in some other when they must choose their rods and t●ialls or else they are heartles and dead in the neast here is a crannie in their patience which will sinke their soules Some againe beare out their crosses because they are yoked and coupled to them like two spaniels which must goe together because they cannot goe asunder but without all willingnes or chearefulnes but this is farre from Christian patience and is as we say patience perforce And lastly when we cannot entertaine afflictions thankefully as finding some goodnes and sweetnes in them when deliuerance is not expected from God as by such who haue title in his promise when we desire to be at our owne hands and will not stay his leisure but hastily like infidels runne vnto indirect meanes and sometime to Sathan himselfe in sorcerers witches when we are so tugged with afflictions as we hold not out but are readie to giue vp all here is all vnsound here men may not onely suspect but conclude from vnsound patience vnsoundnes of loue of faith and consequently the want of the truth in all their profession of religion Vers. 3. The elder women likewise that they be in such behauiour as becommeth holynesse not false accusers not giuen to much wine but teachers of holy things Our Apostle hauing taught how and what doctrine should be applyed to old men he proceedeth now to make olde women matchable vnto them and therefore he beginneth with the word likewise which sheweth that the same vertues as formerly haue beene mentioned are to be vrged vpon old age of both sexes and who can denie sobrietie wisdome grauitie soundnesse in faith loue and patience to be as necessarie for auncient women as men whether we consider the same inconueniences of the same olde age lying vpon them or the impotencie of their sexe in vndergoing them which yet maketh the want of these vertues farre more miserable then in the other And then he addeth some further duties fitted to their estate which he doth 1. by prescribing such vertues as are seemely for their yeares and 2. by prohibiting such vices as in all ages are wicked but in theirs most vnseemely and scandalous The duties are two 1. an holy behauiour in themselues in the first words of the verse 2. a drawing on of others vnto holinesse and honestie in the latter part of the verse and forward The vices prohibited are two 1. of slaundring or false accusing 2. of intemperate desire or drinking of wine or strong drinkes both which are contained in the middle of the verse But we will speake of the words as they lie in the verse But before we come vnto them we may learne this lesson Doctr. In that wholesome doctrine must be taught and applyed vnto women as well as men note that no woman cannot without danger of damnation despise or neglect the ministerie of the word they beeing as straightly bound vnto the meanes of saluation and the Apostle taketh double paines to teach them their duties Reas. 1. As saluation is one to all so is there but one way to all for as women must haue their names written in the booke of life as well as men that is in the booke of Gods election to life so must they be also added vnto the Church as well as men seeing none are saued who are not added vnto the Church Now this addition to the Church standeth not onely in an outward profession of the Gospel by which they are added to the visible Church for the foolish virgins made a great shewe for a time but in vnfained conuersion and sanctification whereby they are added vnto the invisible Church True it is that women must be ioyned vnto the people of God and therefore must participate 1. in the word which must be preached to euerie creature Paul preached to a company of women among whom Lydia was conuerted 2. in the Sacraments and be both admitted into the Church by baptisme as Cornelius the Iaylor and all their housholds as also strengthned in the Church by the Lords Supper in which they must remember the Lords death vntill he come But all this is not inough yea nothing at all vnlesse they be first knit vnto God himselfe the bond of which coniunction is faith wrought in the heart by meanes of the word and working in heart and life by loue to God and men If then women must beleeue to saluation aswell as men the Iaylor and all his houshold beleeued in God nay if women must continue in faith to which saluation is tyed and not
and preseruatiue of many graces a bond of her owne and others peace a setler of the comfort of her life an ornament of her head and of her house which once let her be disrobed of she may bid farwell to her families welfare for let any vile affection beare sway but for a little while as of anger impatience excessiue griefe intemperance or any such how is the whole house in a kind of tumult which as a Common wealth in the commotion and rising of some one rebel cannot be composed and setled till the rebel be subdued which they finde too true who in their match were left vnto thēselues to make choise of such as wanted then and yet haue not attained with the feare of God the practise of this vertue Now then seeing this vertue is so necessarie for all parts of life that it ought neuer to be wanting many womē who want not many good parts of nature and grace may yet see hence their error who conceiue that if they be generally well reputed of both for their religious and honest course and can in good manner please their husbands in the administring of the family that then they may be dispensed with in some predominant indiscreete and intemperate affecton especially if it be more priuate as now and then in extraordinarie vnquietnesse and bitternes not seldome in some bitter roote of couetousnesse drawing on iniustice towards their husbands perhaps to breake out into some prodigall and idle expense another way in lashing out libertie of speech against some that cannot answer for themselues in becomming for some dayes the greatest strangers at home c. all this while thinking that these things if seldom will stand well enough with religion but they are to knowe that all Salomons wisedom could not reconcile two things so abhorring together the giuing of the heart vnto wine or any one lust and the leading of it in wisedome and it will prooue starke vanitie to make triall of it after him neither can it be other then the shuffling out of a religious course for man or woman to giue way to any one inordinate lust More of this vertue see in the places forenoted Chast or pure The Apostle by permitting the three former vertues hath made way vnto this fourth which is a fruit of them issuing from the loue of their husband and children and from tending and watching against inordinate affections And this puritie or chastitie is not that of the virgin or single estate but it is a marriage vertue the keeper of the mariage faith and may thus be described It is a puritie both of soule and bodie in regard of vnchast lusts abandoning all vnlawfull and strange pleasures which description is wholly couched and abridged in 1. Cor. 7.34 where the Apostle calleth it the holynesse of bodie and spirit of spirit when it is either not tempted to vncleannes or beeing tempted yeeldeth not or yeelding is recouered by repentance of body also when it neither exciteth nor beeing incited executeth not vncleannes Now how equall and reasonable is it that women especially such as haue the remedie of marriage against impuritie in whome the want of it is more sinnefull and dangerous should be prouoked to the preseruing of such a sweet grace as this is First if we consider how the Lord approoueth and vrgeth it 1. By his commandement 1. Thess. 4.3 this is the will of God that ye should abstaine from fornication and euerie one possesse his vessell that is his body which is the instrument of the soule and containing it as in a vessell in holynesse and honour 2. In that the Lord here interposeth himselfe and though many husbands and wiues thinke of nothing but a mutuall stipulation betweene themselues yet the Lord challengeth the couenant to be made to himselfe as it proceeded first from himselfe so as she that forsaketh the guide of her youth forgetteth the couenant of her God that is of marriage of which God is the author and whose name was or ought to haue beene invocated in the match making 3. In that the Lord professeth that he narrowly watcheth and clearely seeth when this couenant is broken that although the fact be done in the darke and neuer so charily and cautelously yet day and darkenesse are alike vnto him If the husband see it not nor any eie of flesh yet the Lords eie findeth it out and will set it in the cleare light before men and angels This is made a reason of the precept Prou. 5.15.17.20.21 for the wayes of man are before the eies of the Lord. Ioseph might haue sinned secretly enough but that his eie was happily lifted vp toward this pure eie of God which cannot abide to behold such iniquitie 4. In that he declareth that he watcheth the sinner of this kinde to bring destruction vpon his bodie and soule to shut him out of heauen and to roote him as a loathsome weede out of the earth The former appeareth Prou. 5.22 the sinner of this suite destroyeth his owne soule 1. Cor. 6. no fornicator shall inherit the kingdome of heauen Reuel 21. no vncleane thing shall enter within the gates of the citie but shall bee kept without with dogges enchanters and lyers The latter seeing the law of God is that the adulterer and adultresse should die both because he would not haue the land defiled nor the guiltie person to liue as an eyesore vnto the innocent nay more if a man were deceiued in the qualitie of the person he hath taken to wife thinking to find her a maid but he findeth her virginitie bruised and another man hath humbled her it is lawfull for him to put her away and the Magistrate to put her to death as an adultresse Further how strictly the Lord watched ouer this sinne appeareth by that law Numb 5.21 If the husband were but ielous whether iustly or iniustly himselfe was accounted guiltie if he did not bring her to triall and this triall was not to be made by man but was Gods owne triall by the bitter cursed water by which himselfe from heauen would reuenge so greiuous a sinne against so holy an institution as marriage is And in comparison the word of God accounteth this sinne farre more wicked then some of those which mens lawes punish with death we thinke theft a great sinne because it bringeth malefactors to the gallowes and so it is but not comparable to this for Salomon himselfe by comparing these two sinnes putteth them almost out of comparison a theefe steales for hunger to saue his life but he that committeth adulterie sinneth against his owne life the former is not alwaies to be despised but this is neuer to be spared the former may make satisfaction by restitution of the thing and fowre fold for the sinne the latter can make no restitution at all the satisfaction of the theefe may be accepted of the owner or if he cannot satisfie with all the substance of his
sort were diligent hearers and when the elder saw this yet repented they not to beleeue it verily the younger shall be gathered into heauen before the elder who without timely repentance shall neuer come there Fourthly young men had need call their waies to remembrance that their consciences may haue peace in the testimonie thereof when they are older for the vanities of youth vexe the heart many yeares after Dauid praied against the sinnes of his youth not without a bitter sence and sting of them It was the voice of Ephraim Ier. 31.19 I was ashamed yea confounded because I did beare the reproach of my youth God may now in thy youth suffer thee for want of knowledge and conscience to be senceles of thy most grosse sinnes as Iosephs brethren were but afterwards if thou belongest vnto him he will waken thy conscience and make the thought of them as bitter as euer the practise of them was pleasant when they shall fill thee with trouble of conscience and make thee call great things into question yea bring thee not onely to doubt of thy effectuall calling to grace but almost to despaire of thy saluation especially if thy sinnes of youth by long continuance be grown into customes and can hardly therefore be subdued euen then when thou art conuerted Wouldest thou be fenced now against all these afterclappes Now is the time wherein thou maist preuent such afflictions Nay more thou maist by drawing neere vnto the Lord and bearing his yoke in thy youth laie the foundations of thy comfort in any future affliction during the daies of thy pilgrimage as Iob did the one thirtieth Chapter of whose booke containeth nothing but a gathering vp of himselfe vnto his comforts and hopes through the recalling vnto minde the innocencie and vprightnesse of the former part of his life As Hezekiah also did who when sentence of death had passed from the mouth of God and his Prophet against him had no such hold of comfort elsewhere then in calling to mind the innocencie of his life a testimony that he was in couenant with God and might looke to see the goodnes of the Lord in the land of the liuing Remember Lord how I haue walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Now for the helpes furthering this dutie 1. Young men must take notice of that great bundle of follie which is naturally bound vp in their hearts the corruption of that age beeing such as needeth not any occasion without it selfe to cast it downe 2. That the meanes to redresse it is the studie of the Scriptures vnto the rules whereof they must haue regard and not to the examples of men 3. That if they will needs be giuen to imitation then must they imitate not the most but the best of that age such as was young Daniel who in tender yeares was able to vtter knowledge Dan. 1.4 young Samuel who so soone as he is weaned must stand before the Lord 1. Sam. 1. young Iosiah who at eight yeare old walked vprightly 2. King 21. young Timothy who knew the Scriptures of a child yea of Christ himselfe who increased in wisedome as in stature so as at twelue yeares olde he was able to confound the Doctors and great Rabbies of the Iewes 4. That against all the discouragements they shall meete withall from men as that they are too forward soone ripe and young Saints c. they must oppose the Lords good pleasure who requireth firstlings first fruites first borne of man and beast the first moneth yea and first day of that moneth for the celebrating of the passeouer and delighteth in whole and fat offerings not in the lame leane and blind sacrifices which his soule abhorreth for of all the sonnes of men the Lord neuer tooke such pleasure as in such who were sanctified euen from the wombe Some of the learned call men to the timely seruice of God from the allusion of Moses rodde Exod. 3. and Isaies vision cap. 9. both of the almond tree because of all trees that soonest putteth forth her blossomes how sound that collection is I will not stand to enquire onely this is true that such as would be trees of righteousnesse and knowne to be of the Lords planting laden especially in their age with the fruites of the spirit must with the almond tree timely budde and blossome and beare that their whole liues may be a fruitfull course whereby God may be glorified and themselues receiue in the ende a more full consolation The second point in the verse is The manner of teaching young men Exhort young men so 1. Tim. 5.1 Exhort old men as fathers and young men as brethren The scope of the Ministerie is to draw all men to dutie and beeing ordained of God out of his singular loue for the winning of men all the duties of it must be performed in such louing manner as that men may be rather wonne and drawne then forced thervnto yea euen young men who for most part are headlesse and furthest from dutie must by the spirit of meeknesse be restored and reclaimed Doctr. The Pastor is not alwaies to vrge and vse his authoritie but sometimes he must lay it downe and in some cases where he may by the word command he must rather choose to entreate Paul in all his epistles seldome commandeth out of his authoritie although Apostolicall aboue the authoritie of ordinarie ministers but euer almost perswaded entreated out of his loue Thus he dealeth with Philemon for the receiuing of Onesimus Though I haue much libertie to command yet I rather beseech thee ver 8. For might not he haue commanded a Christian to remit an iniurie and receiue a Christian seruant vpon his repentance and yet he besought him so to doe And thus although we want not power to command men vpon their owne perill and so fasten Christian duties vpon them yet we rather entreate men to be reconciled vnto God yea we are to beseech and exhort men in the Lord Iesus that they encrease more and more c. 1. Thess. 4.1 And the Scriptures are so delighted with this manner of teaching by exhortation that the speciall worke of the ministerie is called by this name Act. 13.15 the men of Antioch came to Paul and Barnabas and said If ye haue any word of exhortation say on and yet this word of exhortation was a sermon which they desired to heare preached againe the next Sabbath We heard cap. 1.9 that the Minister must therefore hold fast wholesome doctrine that he may be able to exhort as though this were all he had to doe But here must be great wisedome and circumspection vsed for although the Minister is often to turne his power into prayers and threats into entreaties yet must be beware that he so lay not downe his authoritie as that the word loose any but abide still a word of power to command obseruing wisely to this purpose these two
them for good men and goe no further whereas they ought to be transformed into the pattern not only of our doctrine but euen of our liues so farre as we follow Christ. Doctr. 2. We hence obserue further in that the Minister must so order himselfe in regard of publike and priuate courses actions and speaches as he may not be reprooued that it is possible for a man by grace so to liue as he cannot iustly be blamed Zacharie and Elizabeth liued without reproofe 1. Thess. 2.10 Ye are witnesses and God also how holily iustly and vnblameably we liued among you And because it may be alledged yea indeed Apostles and some choise extraordinarie men and Ministers one of a thousand may attaine hereunto but we ordinarie men may not looke for it the Apostle Iames answereth and affirmeth that the endeauour vnto it belongeth vnto euery Christian professing religion in that he calleth the religion it selfe pure and vndefiled and if he be said truely to liue without reproofe who after his effectuall calling cannot be iustly charged with any grosse or open sinn no doubt the Lord hath many ordinary Christians abroad who by his grace haue attained to liue without reproofe Vse This reprehendeth many who not hauing learned thus much in Christs schoole can beare out all their grosse vices and misdemeanours hereupon What we are but flesh and blood and men are but men and not Angels and all men are sinners we cannot be Saints and thus swallow deadly things vnder the colour of humane frailtie as though euen in humane frailtie such an vnreprooueable life could not be attained 2. Euery man must aime at this white to liue without reproofe and the meanes are these 1. To beware of sinne in regard of God and of conscience and not onely in regard of men the conscience must hate sinne because God hateth it and not because men will crie out against some sinnes And this will bring a man to obey God in all things euen in one commandement as well as another which he must doe that must liue without reproofe for he must hate all the waies of falsehood Notable is that place to this purpose Psal. 119.6 Then shall not I be confounded when I haue respect to all thy commandements 2. Stop occasions of sinne auoid appearances of euill preuent greater falls by lesser 3. After slips bewaile them couer them from Gods eies by repentance and this will be a good meanes to hide them from men That he which withstandeth In this inforcement nothing is hard but to know how he that withstandeth the Gospel may be made ashamed And this is done by the conuiction of his owne conscience beeing euen oppressed with the vprightnesse of such a one as gladly he would condemne his owne wicked heart can witnes to the righteousnesse of the other and iustifie his person as Saul Dauids saying Thou art more innocent then I Thus while innocencie it selfe pleadeth in their thoughts their conscience is stricken with shame and feare putteth them to silence shame of that they haue falsely surmised and spoken and feare to proceed further in such false accusation Whence we may note three points First that no Minister be he neuer so iust and faithfull in his Ministerie of neuer such sanctitie and holinesse of life but he shall meete with opposites and withstanders 2. That their qualitie is to seek nothing more then how to open their mouths against them 3. That euery godly mans practise must be so much the more carefully to shut their mouthes Doctr. 1. For the first It is the lot of faithfull Ministers as here of Titus to haue opposites and aduersaries yea such as are iust contrarie and directly opposite for so the word is vsed Mark 15.39 The case is clearer then needeth proofe How the Prophets were entertained our Sauiour sheweth by that speach to the Iewes which of the Prophets haue not your Fathers persecuted and slaine Moses was often resisted by all the people and before he shall goe scot-free his owne brother and sister shall withstand him and as he was resisted by Iannes and Iambres so in all ages to the end men of corrupt mindes shall start vp to resist the truth That the Disciples and Apostles notwithstanding their Apostolicall rod and power were resisted appeareth by Alexander the coppersmith who was a sore enemie to Pauls preaching and Elimas who was full of subtiltie to peruert the truth and strongly withstood the Apostles How was Christ himselfe the cheife Doctor withstood by the Scribes Pharisies Sadduces Rulers and people that he had neuer come into the world if he had not made his reckoning to giue his backe to the smiters his cheekes to the nippers his face to shame and spitting yea himselfe to the shamefull and accursed death of the crosse If it was thus to the greene tree we shall need seeke no further what was done to the drie but rather to enquire into the reason hereof and that is this so long as there is a Deuil darknes and death in mens soules so long will there be resistance vnto God his light and life in whomsoeuer it is the Deuil not only suggesting but working effectually in the hearts of reprobates and naturall men to withstand Gods worke as Sanballat and Tobiah vsed all meanes to hinder the building of Ierusalem and so do his instruments the spirits of Deuils goe about the world to prouoke men vnto warre against Christ and his little flock Those spirits of Deuils are gracelesse and wicked men carried by deuillish motion and violence against Christ and his kingdome and the battaile betweene Michael and his Angels and the Deuil and his angels shall not cease till time be no more Vse 1. Euery faithfull Minister must resolue to fight the good fight of faith and suffer affliction as a good souldier of Iesus Christ. Soldiers we see are in continuall danger and euer in the face of their enemie and therefore their liues should not be deare vnto them but especially these Captains ouer the Lords battels must make light account of their liues which they must rather forsake then cowardly either forsake the feild or yeeld the bucklers but hold out vnto victorie striuing lawfully Quest. How shall a Minister be able to hold out in such a conflict or skirmish so dangerous so doubtfull against so many so great so learned so malicious so skornfull aduersaries Answ. He must encourage himselfe by meditating vpon the promise of God who hath put him in his seruice put a powerfull word in his mouth goeth with him to see that none touch him or doe him any harme Ieremie was sent against Princes Priests people who all he knew must fight against him how now should one poore Ieremie hold out against them all the Lord furnisheth him with a gracious promise to leane vpon I will be with thee to deliuer thee and when he was in his Ministerie found he
hadst in thy purest innocencie A happie merchant he is that sells all to buy this treasure Vse 3. Call others to partake of it be speaking of it tell men what God hath done for thy soule thou canst not but wish all men conuerted if thy selfe beest A righteous man here cannot eate his morsells alone Christian loue is like fire which warmeth whosoeuer stand about it one brand will kindle another and iron saith Salomon sharpneth iron so one conuerted man will strengthen the brethren Andrew wil call Simon and Philip will call Nathaniel and the beleeuer wisheth all Gods people to be like himselfe except his sinnes Vse 4. Pittie those who are destitue of this grace and are without the meanes of it in the preaching and publishing of it for such a people haue not yet obtained mercie If Christ were liuing againe vpon earth his bowels would earne in compassion to see so many people as sheepe scattered without a shepheard If we should see a goodly feild of corne stand faire and white to the haruest but know that there were neuer a reaper in all the countrie to gather it into the barne but for want of reapers it should all rot and spoile on the ground it would greatly pittie our hearts and yet no other is the condition of such people as want able and faithfull Ministers pray therfore the Lord of the haruest to thrust out laborers into his haruest Vse 5. Detest the vnmercifulnesse of men who beeing called neglect to teach the people for these doe nothing else but damme vp all the streames of grace from them and so it appeareth in the people committed to such vnconscionabla men who for most part are so gracelesse and so wicked as though the old Sodomites were reuived againe Bringing saluation This doctrine is a sauing doctrine and word of saluation to those that were wandring in the pathes of death Act. 11.14 the Angel wishing Cornelius to send for Peter affirmeth that he shall speake to him words whereby he and all his house should be saued Whence it is called the word of life Act. 5.20 Goe preach to the people all the words of this life and the word of eternall life Ioh. 6.68 because God hath ordained it to this purpose that whosoeuer is brought to the faith by it shall eternally liue thereby And here is another difference between the doctrine of the law and Gospel the which two the Apostle comparing together he calleth the law a killing letter and the ministrie of it a ministrie of condemnation and the ministration of death but the Gospel he calleth a quickning spirit and the ministrie of the spirit and the ministration of righteousnesse Obiect Psal. 19.7 The law of God conuerteth the soule Answ. But there the law in a more generall acceptation of the word comprehendeth the whole doctrine of the couenant of life and saluation as it is also Psal. 1.1 Blessed is the man that meditateth in the law that is the word of God day and night But in this straiter sence the law is no instrumentall cause of faith repentance or any grace it only woundeth a man and prepareth him to conuersion but conuerteth none it gendereth to bondage and bindeth him that looketh for iustification by it in the conuiction of sinne and deserued damnation and there leaueth him in death only this doctrine of grace is the conuerting and quickning word reuealing that God through his Christ is become either pleased or placable with vs till which time we cannot but either lie in a slauish feare and the smarting twitches of our consciences or else desperately giue ouer all but when by the Gospel we perceiue the readinesse of our heauenly Father to receiue them that returne then we resolue to seek vnto his grace to become his and to loue him who loued vs first So as the beleeuer can readie answer the Apostles interrogatorie Tell mee receiued yee the spirit by the workes of the law or by the hearing of faith by workes is meant the doctrine of iustification by the workes of the law and by the hearing of faith is meant the doctrine of the Gospel hearing beeing put for the thing heard and faith for the doctrine beleeued they can now answer that it is the Gospel that gendreth vnto life which is the instrument of the spirit both for the beginning and confirming of regeneration and salvation and that the lawe is no cause though an occasion of Gods grace shewing onely the necessitie of some other righteousnesse then that in a mans selfe but not putting a man so prepared into the possession of it which the Gospel onely can doe Vse 1. If only the doctrine of grace bring saluation then doth no doctrine of workes bring it or vnto it neither in whole or in part But the whole chaine of our saluation sheweth that we are saued by grace onely 1. Our election Rom. 11.5 At this time there is a remnant according to the election of grace But it may be of grace and foreseene workes too but the Apostle setteth himselfe to preuent this obiection in the next words If it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more of grace or else were workes no more workes 2. Our calling 2. Tim. 1.9 We are called with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his purpose and grace 3. Our faith Philip. 1.29 It is giuen you to beleeue and faith is the gift of God 4. Our iustification Rom. 3.24 We are iustified freely by his grace 5. Our sanctification Eph. 2.10 We are his workemanship created vnto good workes which he ordained that we should walke in them 6. Our perseuerance in grace is by grace Ier. 32.40 I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall neuer depart from me 7. Eternall life is the free gift of God Rom. 6.23 Againe if our saluation were either depending vpon our hand or held in our owne hands more easily might we loose it then when we were in our innocencie gold were no sooner taken out of little childrens hands who minde to play with it rather then to lay it vp then our comfort out of our owne but our securitie is that our cheife treasure is not laid vp in such a weake cottage but our life is hid in heauen in the free grace and vnchangeable loue of God that now 1. false Prophets cannot possibly seduce the elect Matth. 24.24 2. though many apostates fall backe yet Gods foundation abides sure 2. Tim. 2.19 where Gods election is compared to a great building laid vpon a firme foundation which may be shaken but neuer ouerthrowne 3. though our sinnes like so many billows would growe ouer our heads and drowne vs yet this grace is sufficient for vs and vpholds vs that we sleepe not in death 4. though tribulations may threaten to separate vs yet this grace by them driues
to execution Examine thy soule then are the statutes of the Lord thy delight thy solace thy songs in this time of thy pilgrimage for as the child of God knowes his freedome from all powers of darkenesse so can he not if he be out of beginnings of conuersion and act of temptation but haue sweete comforts in his soule from the sense and feeling of the same Thirdly thou must not onely take direction and comfort but goe on to one thing yet wanting required 2. Cor. 3.18 namely that seeing we behold the glorie of the Lord with open face we must be changed into the same image from glorie to glorie that is seeing by the appearing of grace the vaile is remooued that we may see the face of God clearely now must we by meanes of this knowledge be transformed into his image that image in which we were created must be daily renewed and by degrees further restoared in vs which is the meaning of the Apostle when he saith from glorie to glorie for wheresoeuer this shining light is receiued it not onely illuminateth the mind with knowledge of the truth but by little and little it transformeth the whole man into it selfe Whence the Apostle saith Coloss. 3.10 that the newe man is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him and no light else can change the thing enlightened into it selfe Examine then whether thou art not onely inlightened with knowledge and vnderstanding but whether thou art changed by it from an vnbeleeuer and vnrighteous person to a beleeuer fruitfull in the workes of faith whereby thy selfe shinest as a light in the world Now the motiues to prouoke vs thus to entertaine the light are sundrie 1. Consider our businesse is such as requireth light the course of Christianitie is an husbandrie a race a iourney a battel 2. The difficulties dangers and obstacles in these businesses are many and we haue need of light to avoide them 3. The day lasteth not alwaies Ioh. 12.35 yet a little while and the light is with you and let the day once slippe whosoeuer walketh walketh in darkenesse he that worketh worketh the works of darkenes the former knoweth not whether he goeth the latter knoweth not what or how he worketh and let this worke be neuer so ciuill and seemely yea let it be neuer so good in the matter yet is it euill in respect of the worker 4. Those that regard not the light while it abideth iustly either forfeit it and make themselues vnworthie the kingdome or by Gods iust iudgement are hardened by it vnto further euill the God of heauen in his iustice giuing them vp to the god of the world to be blinded to destruction and ruled at his will wherein we might be plentifull in examples 5. What light soeuer can befall a Christian is by meanes of this Art thou in the darkenesse of ignorance and blindnesse this is a meanes of the spirit to enlighten the darke dungeon of thy heart and no other Art thou in the blacke darkenesse of thy sinnes here is a light discouering the remission of thy sinne the imputation of Christs righteousnesse Art thou compassed with the darkenesse of Gods displeasure for sinne this by offring conditions of grace and reconciliation maketh the face of God to shine vpon thee Art thou plunged in the darke deeps of afflictions and miseries hence shineth out the light of comfort mitigation and deliuerance Art thou by temptation laid in the darke graue of vtter darkenes death and damnation in thy owne sense and apprehension here onely seest thou Christ abolishing death by his appearing bringing life and immortalitie vnto light by the Gospel and making thee partaker of the inheritance of the Saints in light Lastly the freedome of this gift to such wretched and vngodly persons strongly perswadeth that we should as freely offer our selues to the light as it freely offereth it selfe vnto vs. The which reason is expresse in the text which saith that this grace offered it selfe and appeared when men sought it not desired it not obtained it not by entreatie or otherwise So Ioh. 3.19 the light is come into the world namely the world not expecting it nor wishing it nay when it shone gloriously vpon them they not acknowledging it and this is not the least motiue to the willing and thankefull entertainement of it Notwithstanding all which reasons what a iust damnation hangeth ouer many mens heads who still loue darknesse rather then light For 1. a number please themselues in their naturall estate find sufficient ●ontent in it and are neuer so merrie as when this light is furthest off the Israelites neuer dance so merrily as before the calfe which themselues set vp So will they spare no cost and paines to compasse their lusts they will part with their goods as the Israelites with their earings they will breake their sleepe to deui●e workes of darknesse on their be●●es yea they will powre out their strength and blood as Baals preists did and part with their liues so soone as let their sweete morsells goe Iudas will not leaue his couetousnesse for all our Sauiours faire warnings neither can all the plagues of God mooue Pharaoh to let the people goe Thus numbers turne from the light who by it should be allured to amēdment of life 2. Others turne against it and hate it and the candlestickes too which hold it forth vnto them they complaine of the brightnesse of the sunne and of too much preaching they scoffe at it and disgrace it and the bringers of it and these are monsters in nature for all creatures naturally loue light and follow it except hatefull battes and owles and such like all true men loue the light and the day but the theife robbeth in the night the adulterer watcheth the twilight he that is drunk is drunk in the night and Christ concluded against him that hateth the light that he is an euill doer 3. Others are not so malicious against the light but would faine ioyne light and darknesse together they would be professors and goe for good Christians but would not forsake some profits and pleasures of sinne The first thing that euer God did in the creation was the separation of light from darknesse which is the first thing also in regeneration The law condemned all mixtures and halting betweene two and the Gospel teacheth that we are either children of the night or of the day and cannot be both at one time no more then it can be night when the sunne is in the midst of heauen Let professours therefore knowing that the Arke and Dagon will not stand together and that they are either in Goshen or Egypt beware of thrusting this earth betweene this sunne and themselues for such an ecclipse portendeth great ensuing euills 4. Another sort would faine walke in this light but would be loth to be seene in it would haue the vse of it and yet hide it vnder a bushell too and therefore keepe
delight to consecrate it as glorious vnto the Lord neither your selfe nor yours obserue it They say they doe as much as they need and they know inough for they loue God aboue all and their neighbour as themselues and for the sabboath what need such strictnesse it was made for man and not man for the sabbath and as for this singing of Psalmes and reading and prayers in priuate houses they must needs say it is too much precisenesse and they cannot away with it and they could neuer see hurt in giuing their seruants and children libertie to goe on the saboath and doe what they list and themselues may with good companie play and passe the time so it be not seruice time on the sunday as well as other daies But take all these pleas out of their mouths and shew particularly that good treasuries would send out better things they draw all to this one conclusion What we cannot be Saints here that is in plaine words they cannot frame themselues to this life of pietie and so are still without all the teaching of grace and pitifull it is to see how many persons that thinke themselues no meane Protestants debarre themselues from the practise of pietie by such ignorant conclusions as these which I would not here haue reckoned but that I know diuerse perhapps of our daily hearers whom grace hath offered to teach otherwise thus tainted Well a fearefull delusion it is to hope for saluation in such a dangerous estate A second sort farre differing from the former are such as haue attained much more knowledge but neuer yet attained this high point of practise to liue godly they can make a shew of godly life and Pharisaicall righteousnesse but all is vnsound within they can with Herod doe many things at Iohns preaching but it is but for a brunt of newfanglednesse they can seeke God but either in affliction or for corne and oyle but after freedome from the one or fruition of the latter let him alone till they need him againe nay more they can be zealous for good and quickly enflamed but it is as fire in straw a blase and away they can reprooue others for sinne but can abide no reproofe themselues they can reioyce in the word and be rauished but as a man with sweete odours in the Apothecaries shoppe but he carrieth none out with him or as one is delighted with the sweet smell of hearbs so long as he is in the garden but hath no vnderstanding or diligence to gather of euery kind some to carie with him that so he might haue the benefit of the garden when he is a great way from it They can further attaine to many good things as to delight in good mens fellowship so did Iudas in Christs communion gather from them many common graces of vnderstanding speach abilitie to pray teach comfort exhort but all to their owne hurt for either they hide these talents in napkins not vsing them at all or in vsing them without humilitie abuse them yea not seldome making them bolder to offend God and more careles of duties vnto men by meanes of such gifts then if they had them not but here is yet no teaching of grace and better had it bin such had neuer knowne the way of truth then thus to depart from the way of righteousnesse A third sort there are who many of them I doubt not are the Lords and haue a desire in truth and for the most part to walke before him as beseemeth them and yet whose liues are not so acquainted with such a course of Christianitie but that oftentimes by corruptions not well watched against they breake out to scandalls and reproaches of the Gospell and in these some of them lie longer as when professors can liue inordinately not attending vpon their lawefull calling but let themselues loose where God hath tyed them becomming either busie bodies or companions or perhaps worse which falls may for a time befall those which are the Lords but yet grace hath not taught them so much as they make account of and time will trie whether any thing at all in truth or no. And other Christians who in their worshippe of God are often cold and dead hearted and in their dealings can be inferiour to some ciuill men can nourish contentions and heart burnings misdeeme and misreport others now then idle in their talke or worse vnprofitable in their liues can bolster vp their friends children and seruants in things worthie punishment as Eli did are not so frequent in watching the wayes of God with him nor the wayes of his own heart such I say may be schollers in this schoole and Christians but they haue forgotten their rules and had neede hasten their repentance that grace may nor order a great part but their whole liues to a godly conuersation Let all of vs therefore learne that precept 1. Tim. 4.7 to exercise our selues to godlinesse Reasons 1. Godlinesse hath the promise of this life and that to come a godly man hath title to all good blessings which heauen and earth can affoard 2. Godlines is the greatest gaine the best gaine whosoeuer would gaine more then ordinarie men let him become godly many men are crossed and miscarrie in their outward estate because they are vngodly persons without the promise and the blessing 3. Seeing all these things shall be dissolued what manner of men ought ●e to be in all godly conuersation 2. Pet. 3.3 when we shall appeare before the great iudge of all the world nothing but godlynes shall be able to bestead vs. In this present world 1. Note that godlinesse must not so lie hid in the heart but it must appeare in the eyes of the world neither must it be neglected till death but exercised in this present world a point the more needefull to be propounded in that euerie man naturally wisheth with Balaam to die well and godly but forget the practise of pietie in their life time we see the most men would be put in minde of God at their death and send for the minister when the Physitian hath left them hopeles of life yea albeit they haue forgotten the almightie and neglected acquaintance with him all their dayes yet at the finishing of them they would seeme to seeke vnto him But it is most righteous with God that an vngodly life be finished with a proportionall death whatsoeuer it seemeth to be and therefore it is a safe rule worthie our remembrance that whatsoeuer wee would be found doing on our dying day to be doing it euerie day while we liue 2. Note hence that it is a most deceitfull and desperate argument thus to conclude If I be ordained to saluation let me neuer pray neuer serue God and doe what I will I shall be saued and on the contrarie and hence to cast off all the care of godlinesse for this openly proclaimeth want of grace which directeth men to the meanes and leadeth them the way of
saluation in this present world God in his wisedome hath combined to euerie ende his meanes in all his ordinarie courses as to naturall life bread sleepe Physicke so to the spirituall the word Sacraments prayer sobrietie righteousnesse pietie and therefore the argument will be sound in the contrarie thus If God haue appointed me to die the death of the righteous he hath ordained me to the meanes namely to liue the life of the righteous if to glorie then to grace if to the full reuelation of glorie hereafter then to the first fruits of it here in grace if to the great citie of the great king hereafter then to the suburbs here there is no iumping to heauen no more then a man can leape from one citie to an other vpon earth Naturall reason teacheth that there is no skipping from one extreame to an other without a meane and much more doth diuine wisedome tell vs that no man can climbe from earth to heauen without Christs the ladder and faith with the fruits of hope loue obedience c. which are as it were the staues of the same 3. Note hence what is the proper ende of euerie mans life in this present world namely that in the way of a sober righteous and religious life he may attaine euerlasting happinesse hereafter there is no other time to get heauen but here vpon earth after death commeth nothing but iudgement no other purgatorie is to be expected then that in this life by the blood of Christ whatsoeuer Poets and Papists fable to the contrarie nor is there any other sactifaction but by faith here to lay hold vpon Christ onely oblation Alas how doe many peruert the ende of their liues some to get wealth honour and great estates others to sit downe to eate and drinke and rise vp to play others to trade in some one or other speciall sinne and lust but let vs that will be wise to saluation seeing it is called to day and our acceptable time and day of saluation is come vpon vs beware of hardening our hearts let vs not dare to striue against the holy Ghost in the ministerie for contemners of grace in this present world shall neuer partake of the glorie of the iust hereafter this is the gate of heauen and the iust enter into it or else this ministerie bindeth ouer to death from which it is impossible euer to bee loosed Vers. 13. Looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the glorie of the mightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ. In this verse is set downe the second effect of this grace which hath appeared namely when it hath reuealed and published the good things which are reserued for vs hereafter and put them in our hands by faith and hope to lift vp the heart to the patient and vigilant waiting for and expectance of them And in the second place teacheth when the full reuelation of these things shall be namely in the second which is the glorious appearing of Christ who is described 1. from his maiestie and power that mightie God and 2. from his mercie and loue as he is our Mediator our Sauiour Iesus Christ. Wherein our Apostle includeth a verie strong argument to enforce all the former duties of which we haue spoken in the verse going before as also an effectuall meanes to containe beleeuers in those dutyes as though the Apostle had in more full and plaine forme of speach thus said I haue told of great things brought to light by the Gospel the which if you would haue part in you must take the way which I haue directed you into leauing the by-paths of vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and walking in the path of sobrietie righteousnesse and pietie for those that wait for the wedding must prepare that they be not found without the wedding garment and if at any time any discouragements or wearines 〈◊〉 you in this Christian course you cannot better sustain the one or establish your selues against the other thē by casting vp an eie in to the things within the vaile the expectatiō of which will be able to hold your hearts in your vprightnesse and cause you to forget that which is behind and striue to that which is before and presse hard to the marke and the price of the high calling of God In the verse we will first giue the meaning of the words and then raise the points of instruction First by hope is meant the thing hoped by an vsuall forme of speach that is both Christ himselfe principally as the words next following expound as also with him life saluation freedome from sinne and miserie perfection of glorie and immortalitie the branches of this exposition are prooued by two places of Scripture the former 1. Tim. 1.1 where Iesus Christ is called our hope the latter Eph. 1.18 that yee may knowe what the hope is of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance is in the Saints Blessed hope 1. because Christ our hope is for euer blessed in himselfe and bestower of all blessing to his Church 2. the fruition of our hope putteth vs in possession of absolute blessedn●sse for it shall both put an ende to all the hinderances of the blessednes of the godly and conferre perfect blessednesse in greatest measure and endlesse continuance seeing it bringeth vs to the perfect knowledge and sight of God who is blessednesse it selfe to the sight and fellowship of his blessed Sonne to the societie of the blessed angels and Saints and restoreth vs to the integritie of our owne nature with immortalitie that there may be no ende of our blessednesse 3. all our present blessednesse dependeth vpon the happie accomplishment of it for were we without this hope we were of all men most miserable And appearing of the glorie By a metominie of the adiunct for the glorious appearing a forme of speach verie vsuall among the Hebrues not that Christ is not now euery way glorious in himselfe but in that he shall then manifest his glorie for then his glorie shall breake out as the sunne when he shall sit in the throne of his maiestie And here we must note how the Apostle opposeth this second comming of Christ vnto his former that was the appearing of grace this of glorie that was i● humilitie for he came meekely riding on the colt of an asse but this shall be in power when he shall ride vpon the wings of the windes and make the clouds his charriot that was to teach righteousnesse but this to remnuerate it that to be like a seruant to be iudged and condemned for sinne this to declare himselfe the Sonne to whom all iudgement is committed by the Father Now indeed his maiestie and greatnes is troden downe and contemned and the glory of the world exalteth it selfe aboue his but then shall all vanishing glorie melt before him when he shall appeare in such brightnesse as shall obscure the brightnesse of the sunne yea make it fall
by the name of confidence and hope to shew that one maine scope of it is to raise the heart hereunto Heb. 3.6 If we hold fast the confidence and reioysing of the hope that is the doctrine of the Gospel whereby these are dispensed and confirmed then are we the house of God Thirdly the Apostle sometime speaketh as if the whole worke of euery dispenser of the Gospel were no other or greater then to quiet the heart in this expectation and that in his owne example and the rest of the Apostles 1. Thess. 1.10 Yee know what entring we had and how we turned you from idols vnto God and to looke for his Sonne from heauen no sooner were they turned to God but they waited for his sonne and that all the gifts of Ministrie are bestowed to worke in beleeuers this expectation we haue an expresse place 1. Cor. 1.7 Ye are not destitute of any gift wayting c. And lastly it addeth to the euidence of this truth that the faithfull are hereby marked as by their propertie euen such as with good seruants expect their Masters comming Matth. 24.45 such as looke for him Heb. 9.28 such as loue his appearing 2. Tim. 4.8 such as beeing wise virgins and louing spouses prepare themselues euery needfull thing for the bridgromes comming and such as beeing strangers and pilgrims vpon the earth haue their eyes still towards their country who while they liue in earth yet trafficke and haue their conuersation in heauen from whence they looke for a Sauiour Vse 1. Here is another triall to see whether we haue receiued this grace of the Gospell in truth or in appearance only If in truth then is the tast of the loue of Christ so sweet vnto vs as that we cannot but long after our fill of him in his appearing the sonnes of the Church begotten by the Gospel cannot but waite for the adoption of sonnes the Church is sicke of loue after him whom her soule loueth the common voice of the spouse is Amen vnto the promise of Christs comming Rev. 22.21 the bride saith Come and doubleth her desire and ardencie saying Amen Amen so as they are none of Christs spouses that say not come Neuer thinke then that thy heart is right affected vntill thou find in it this desire and breathing after Christ thy life for this is a speciall note of discerning betweene the godly and the wicked the one hath the spirit which saith come the other shake at the mention of this comming the one longeth till these shadowes flie away and that day breake on them the other can no more desire his comming then the guiltie fellon can the comming and presence of the iudge But that no man may be deceiued in this triall examination must be more particularly made whether this wayting be such as the Scripture prescribeth lest by mistaking it men faile of that comfort they leane vnto in their most need Be sure then that thy wayting be sound and true 1. in the ground of it 2. in the qualities 3. in the sound fruits and effects of it The ground of this expectation must be the free promise of God for all our future welfare applied by faith vnto our owne hearts the which promise of God being most certaine and our faith also as certenly laying hold thereon giueth such a certaintie to our hope as the Scripture boldly speaketh it can neuer make vs ashamed yea and ascribeth a full assurance vnto it Heb. 6.11 and calleth it the sure and stedfast aucre of the soule vers 19. This ground distinguisheth our Christian hope from those iogling perswasions of the Papists which they call hope for aske them concerning their hope what it is they tell vs that it is a perswasion arising partly from the grace of God and partly from our owne preceding merits But vrge them and say mee thinke there should be no great comfort nor setlednesse to leane vpon a vertue founded vpon merit they will tell you that indeede no man can be sure of his saluation for that were too much presumption but doe well and hope well hope well and haue well But against them we affirme that Christian hope buildeth certaintie vpon speciall faith neither of which they can abide to heare of without speciall reuelation and that by this reason Looke what was the ground of Abrahams hope the same must be the ground of the hope of all beleeuers but the free promise of God applied by faith in speciall was the ground of Abrahams hope and wayting Rom. 4.20.21 Hee doubted not but was strengthened in faith beeing fully assured that he which had promised was able to doe it There is no difficultie here but that Abraham had a speciall word for speciall faith to be grounded which say they we want But I answer that in the Scripture we haue in substance a particular word in that God who hath giuen the promise hath also giuen a commandement to euery beleeuer to apply it in speciall to himselfe 1. Ioh. 3.23 and this is equiualent to a particular word Obiect But it is presumption to hope without merits Ans. It is indeed presumption to hope for them they beeing so farre inferiour to the thing hoped for Againe it is faith and not presumption to hope for saluation in and for the merits of Christ though not for our own So much of the ground the qualities follow Secondly the qualities whereby the soundnesse of this Christian expectation is discerned are fowre 1. It must climbe aboue all humane sence and reason for it is no wayting with carnall eyes but with the eies of faith which the Apostle defineth to be the existence of things not seene and sight extinguisheth hope which is of future good things nay more it must hope often the cleane contrarie to that which it seeth as Abraham was said to hope aboue hope when he saw nothing in himselfe in Sarah in the whole course of nature but things which would haue dashed his hopes euen so here while within our selues we can behold little besides our sinnes and infirmities while without our selues we haue Esau hating vs in his heart and Ismael persecuting vs with the tongue while in this life we are compassed with miseries in the ende of this life with death after this life with the graue and corruption of it all which seeme to ecclipse our hopes and cut them short yet now is the time that our hope must be working and looking at things within the vaile that as a strong staffe it may vphold vs in a godly course 2. The second sound qualitie of this hopefull expectation is that it must be patient for what we hope we expect with patience Rom. 8.25 and so necessarie is patience vnto hope that the Apostle calleth this waiting by the name of patience it selfe 2. Thess. 3.5 The Lord guide your hearts to the wayting for of Christ that is to endure in waiting for Christ.
the iust causes of heauines and griefe Vse 1. Now this triall will discouer to many men their estates who lay hold on the doctrine of grace to saluation but not to instructiō Some beleeue not nor hope for any such estate herafter as the faithful are in Christ partakers of but for all our preaching of the fatnes of that land deale as the Israelites did with Caleb and Iosuah concerning the promised land who when they told the people that it was a good and a fat land and that if the Lord loued them he would giue it them and seate them in it they rebelliously bad stone them with stones but presently the sentence passed vpon them from the mouth of the Lord that they should neuer see that land Which were it not the conceit of men it could not be that they could liue so like the Sadduces who say there is no resurrection nor angel nor spirit Such as was that Cardinall of Burbon who professed that he would not giue his part in Paris for his part in Paradise of whose mind some who perhaps wil crie out on him are while they were wel appaid if there were no other heauē nor no changing of their estate were that Pope aliue againe it is to be feared he should not want Protestants taking part of his heresie who all his life time could not be perswaded whether there was an heauen or hell and therefore at his death blasphemously vttered these words Now shall I knowe whether there be a God an hel or any immortality of the soule and shortly after knew it to his cost Others are fallen asleepe with the euill seruant while their master maketh stay of his comming and in one dead sleepe of sinne or other out of which they will not be wakened wast out their dayes as though their soules should for euer sleepe after death such sleepers are ill watchmen Others call on the Lord Iesus to come but neuer till they be cast on their death bed their hearts nor mouthes neuer harbour such requests in their life time and therefore in all likelyhood they are vnsound And many others there are who nourish a false hope or rather a fancy in stead of hope for it is like the Popish perswasion of which we spake vnsound in the ground they haue nothing to shewe for the euidence of their faith as also in the qualities for it must be fedde by things they can see it must haue good hold and pawnes of God and then it can trust him it is most impatient in any of Gods delayes it wisheth not but feareth rather this comming of Christ and so cannot reioyce in the certentie that he will come to their full redemption it is vnsound also in the effects it purgeth not the heart many nastie corners lie there vnswept and vntrimd vp it frameth not to the obedience of Gods word and will it lifteth not vp the soule from the world to heauenly mindednesse and conuersation it vseth no meanes of conscience to hasten this comming of Christ it reioyceth not where they are it sorroweth not where they are not let the state of the Church sinke or swimme so they enioy their owne but let no man that would not be confounded leane vpon such an expectation in which there is nothing but deceit Vse 2. Seeing it is a propertie of the Gospel to lift vp the heart to waite for Christs comming let so many as professe to giue entertainement to the Gospel prouoke themselues vnto this expectation which beeing a dutie so necessarie and of so fruitfull vse through all the Christian life and yet so generally neglected amongest men because naturally mens hearts are drawne downe vnto the profits and pleasures here below therefore are the Scriptures plentifull here and elsewhere in most vehement and forcible perswasions to vrge vs hereunto For I. in the text euery word is a motiue vnto it as 1. in that it is called a blessed hope the person that hopeth is a blessed man and the end of this expectation is blessednesse Blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments And Blessed shall the seruant bee whom the Master findeth so doing 2. the appearing is called a glorious appearing of a mightie God the iust iudge of all the world and 3. that he who shall appeare the iudge is the same who is our Sauiour in all which regards it is the part of all such as would attaine blessednes participate of his glorie and be saued by him to waite for his comming II. Elsewhere in the Scripture 1. we haue the commandement of God Luk. 12.36 Be yee like vnto men that waite for their Master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may immediatly open vnto him 2. Herein is put a difference betweene the godly and the wicked it was euer a marke of good men to waite for Christs appearance the auncient beleeuers of the old Testament for his first comming in the flesh in humilitie so Simeon Ioseph of Arimathea Anna were described by this that they wayted for the consolation of Israel and how much more should we for this glorious appearance which bringeth not grace only with it but fulnes of glorie On the contrarie the vngodly person is described to be such a one as whose master commeth in an houre he looketh not and in a day he thinketh not so the foolish virgins had prepared nothing 3. The danger of those whom this day shall oppresse vnawares such a seruant saith that text shall be cut in two and haue his portion with vnbeleeuers such foolish virgins shall haue the gate of the marriage chamber shut against them and as the Apostle Heb. 9.28 Christ appeareth not the second time to the saluation of any but of such as waite for him 4. From the time of this appearing 1. in regard of the vncertaintie of it Rev. 16.15 Behold I come as a theefe in the night blessed is he that watcheth for if the house keeper knew what houre the theife would come would he not watch but we know no houre that we might watch euery houre 2. In regard of the nearnesse of it the Apostles time was the last houre and ours then cannot but be the last minute a fearefull thing and full of danger it is to conceiue that the Master will deferre his comming or that the Lord is slow as men count slacknesse or that the law is but a scar-crow because fellons are put in prison and bound ouer to the assises and not presently executed This day may be nearer in it selfe at least to thy selfe then thou thinkest for and yet a verie little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarrie Let vs applie our hearts hereunto a little Euery man when he seeth euery thing grow worse and worse can say surely the world draweth neare an end and much more may we who haue our senses exercised in the word
nor concealed thy mercie and truth And surely whosoeuer hath his heart filled with God and sence of his goodnesse cannot not onely himselfe but reuerently speake of him but also bring others to a feeling and loue of him such a one I say cannot but bring men to confesse the Lord and make his workes known vnto the sonnes of men Vse 1. Which condemneth all the trifling vse of the name of God and Christ the which no man shall guiltlessely lift vp in vaine whether in a vaine matter or in a vaine manner for it is not said that he that taketh it vp malitiously or falsely or blasphemously but vainely shall not be guiltlesse and much lesse these other 2. Euen many of our selues are iustly reprooued who seldome or neuer haue broken out into the prayses of Gods power loue iustice c. or Christs greatnesse grace or saluation by him the law of grace is not vnder our lippes and therefore our hearts ●ndite not such good matters as these dumb spirits seeme to possesse men and hold their tongues from speaking of God and good things and when they speake it is without sence or feeling without reuerence and grace in their hearts or for fashion least they shou●d seeme to be that which often they are indeed meere Atheists without any true tast and feeling of God 3. This doctrine occasioneth vs to resolue neuer hereafter to take the name of God or Christ vp into our mouthes but when either our owne hearts glorifie and reuerence him or else to stirre vp our selues or others to take benefit by the same 4. In the reading of these titles in the Scriptures labour to obserue and draw out the speciall vse either concerning God or our selues which the place aymeth at and so in the conscionable reading of them we shall come to a conscionable speaking of them as this Apostolicall example enioyneth vs. Vers. 14. Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie and purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes In this verse our Apostle vseth another forceable argument to vrge the deniall of vnrighteousnesse and practise of the former vertues of sobrietie iustice and pietie for the Gospel not onely teacheth these things which while we professe it we must adorne but also if we looke for any benefit by the death of Christ we may not like ●iuen vessells let this doctrine slip for to what other end did Christ so willingly giue himselfe to death for beleeuers in his name but that they should reape the double fruit of it mentioned in the verse First redemption from sinne and secondly sanctification the which 1. inwardly purgeth beleeuers to become the Lords owne peculiar 2. causeth them outwardly to shine out in the zealous practise of good workes Well knew our Apostle how close sinne sitteth vnto vs and how heauie our frailtie is vnto that which is good in Gods eyes and therefore whereas if we were wise to doe well one word were inough he forceth and presseth vs with diuerse arguments and those so waightie as euen in mans iudgement and much more in Gods he is iudged vnworthy of life that shall despise them For suppose there be such gracelesse men as by the appearing of grace cannot be mooued or will not he be taught when he heareth that the Sonne of God himselfe came downe from heauen to deliuer the blessed doctrine of saluation vnto his Church let such see rather then heare an argument more weightie let them cast their eye vpon the death of Christ who willingly suffered such torments as are vnconceiueable and all to abolish sinne and raise sinners out of their graues of sinne and death vnto the life of grace and glorie And though some may be found so gracelesse as they will haue nothing to doe with this reaching of grace yet seeing none is so desperately gone as to refuse his part in the death of Christ let this be a motiue vnto such as with whome any thing in the world can preuaile to the timely taking vp the practise of the former precepts of which we haue spoken at large In speaking of this argument seeing the Apostle hath cast it into so excellent an order to our hands we will accordingly followe the branches laid downe and they are two First the fact of Christ who gaue himselfe for vs secondly the fruits of it which are two 1. redemption that he might redeeme vs 2. sanctification and purge vs to be a peculiar people c. The meaning of the particulars we will giue as we come vnto them In the former part of the verse containing the fact of Christ are three points to be noted 1. the giuer who 2. the gift gaue himselfe including all that passion to which he gaue himselfe 3. the persons for whom for vs. First the giuer is noted in the words immediately going before to be Iesus Christ our Sauiour Obiect But God the Father gaue Christ for vs and therefore he gaue not himselfe Ans. God the Father gaue his Sonne and Christ the Sonne gaue himselfe by one and the selfe same will and one ioynt and inseparable operation of them both together with the holy Ghost Ioh. 5.19 whatsoeuer the Father doth that same doth the Sonne Obiect But Iudas the Iewes and Pilate gaue Christ for vs to passion and therefore not himselfe Answ. They did indeede concurre in the same action with the Father and the Sonne but in a farre diuerse manner and ende they in malice but these in admirable loue they not for vs but Pilate for feare Iudas for couetousnesse the Iewes to please their Priests and rulers but these gaue him for vs and for our saluation neither had any of them any power to haue giuen Christ to the least part of passion if it had not beene giuen them of the Father and of himselfe who had power to lay downe his life and none could take it from him Secondly but the gift will better manifest the giuer he gaue himselfe the which that we may the better vnderstand we must withall consider vnto what Christ gaue himselfe for so the consequent fruits shall be better discouered and that I say in one word was vnto passion The which passion must not be restrained to the time of his death but extended vnto the whole course of his life as namely the laying downe of his maiestie and glorie wherein he was equall vnto his father to become man and beeing man whereas he might haue vsed heauenly qualities of soule and bodie his mind free from sorrowe feare greife his bodie from hunger thirst wearines c. and at least haue beene like Adam before his fall yet he tooke our nature subiect to all infirmities since the fall only sinne excepted hence was it that he was borne in a stable laid in a manger of poore parents that had but a paire of turtles to bring for his redemption brought vp by the labour of his
their owne sinnes and then for the peoples as the legall Priests did and the Papall doe Nay more it ouerthroweth it selfe for whereas the Papists say that the sacrifice of the masse is the verie same sacrifice which was offered by Christ himselfe vpon the crosse and that verie Christ is offered by them this is against all reason seeing the sacrifice vpon the crosse was offered by himselfe alone without the helpe of any ministers except they meane such as Pilate Caiphas Iudas and the souldiers and such ministers we will easily graunt their secondarie ministers to be 3. The nature of this sacrifice will not admit of that foolish distinction seeing it cannot be offred by any but the high Priest euen he that was the high Priest of things to come who was not euerie yeare to enter once into the holy of holies with the blood of beasts but once for all hath he entred into the holy place and obtained eternall redemption for vs and if eternall redemption be obtained where there is no remission of sinne there is no more neede of oblation for sinne 4. Whereas they say that Christ indeede is the onely Priest to offer a bloody sacrifice and that is but once done and cannot be repeated but yet ought daily to be offred in an vnbloodly manner by their Priests for the sinnes of the quicke and the dead The Apostle taketh away that euasion affirming that without blood there is no remission and that if Christ be offered any more he must of necessitie suffer againe Heb. 9.22.26 The second thing of any moment obiected is that although Christ by his one oblation once offered merited redemption and remission of sinne yet is it necessarie for our saluation that this oblation of his be applyed vnto vs and this cannot be done but by a secondarie daily offring of him in the masse by the masse-priest and hence is their second distinction of the offering as the former of the offerer into primarie and commemoratiue or significatiue Answ. Where by the way note how they wound themselues and thrust their swords into their fellowes sides The councel of Trent saith that the Masse is the verie selfe same oblation which was offered on the crosse the difference is onely in the maner and some small respect now other Papists teach vs that in the masse is not the verie same true and reall oblation but onely a commemoration and signification of it Now who seeth not that the remembrance of a thing is a farre diuerse thing from the thing remembred yea necessarily argueth the absence of the thing remembred Now which of these must we beleeue truely both alike tha● is neither seeing the word one oblation destroyeth both 2. We graunt that there must be an application of this oblation but not by such wicked meanes as they haue deuised namely by the multiplication of it selfe as if a man should in stead of applying one plaister doe nothing else but make infinite plaisters whereas one truely applyed to the sore were better then they all but he who was the sacrifice beeing the wisedome of his Father hath deuised a wiser meanes to apply vnto beleeuers his oblation namely by the outward and ordinarie meanes of the word and Sacraments as also inwardly by his spirit working by those meanes effectuall faith in our hearts whereby we lay hold vpon all our good vnto saluation And if there were no meanes to apply Christs merit vnto beleeuers then by daily offring himselfe with it then were there no meanes to apply vnto vs the fruit and benefit of his incarnation death resurrection or ascension vnlesse he should be borne die rise and ascend euerie day for the reason is the selfe same Vse 2. In that it is said that Christ gaue himselfe we may note that Christ gaue himselfe wholly both his bodie and soule in sacrifice and spared neither for we had deserued a double death which it was meete that Christ by a double death should destroy by his bodily death pull out the sting of the death of our bodies and vtterly abolish the death of our soules by the death of his soule and to this purpose that our consolation might be full the Scripture sheweth how that his soule was heauie vnto the death and that a little before his suffering his soule was sore troubled And Isai expressely affirmeth that his soule trauelled in his death and that he made his soule an offering for sinne and powred out his soule vnto death and that he made his graue with the rich in his deaths where note that he speaketh in the plurall number to note this double death of Christ and what other thing did himselfe proclaime with such a loud voice vpon the crosse when he cryed My God my God why hast thou forsaken me for what other is the death of the soule but to be separated from God the fountaine of life which point helpeth vs to vnderstand such places of the Scripture as affirme that Christ suffered and died according to the flesh Ioh. 6.51 and that Christ offered his bodie Heb. 10.10 and all those which ascribe all our saluation to the blood of Christ. All which must be synechdochically vnderstood vnder one kind comprehending all his suffering and neuer excluding any part of it euerie of them beeing equiualent to this speach of the Apostle who gaue himselfe that is both his bodie and soule or wholly vnto the death neither can the death of the crosse be other which is ioyned with the malediction of God from which we by it were wholly deliuered Vse 3. Where it is said that Christ gaue himselfe it may be further noted that his whole passion and death was voluntarie for what is more free then gift and this appeareth in that he was wont to say before hand that he must goe away vnto his father that he must leaue the world and his disciples that he had power to lay downe his life and take it vp againe and that no man could take it from him for who could take that life from him whose sinneles nature of it selfe was not obnoxious to death it beeing the stipend of sinne And further it is briefly to be obserued how the holy Ghost thorough the whole historie hath noted speciall circumstances which confirme the same truth As 1. when the time drewe neere that he should leaue the world he foretelleth to his disciples that he must goe to Ierusalem and suffer many things and be crucified and yet he went yea when Peter tooke him aside and entreated him to fauour himselfe he checked him more sharpely then we reade that euer he did any of the rest Get thee behind me Satan he would not patiently heare any thing which might worke the least vnwillingnes in him 2. When he came to Ierusalem did he withdrawe himselfe when he knewe the Iewes sought to apprehend him as he at some other times had done no verily but knowing that Satan had put
imputation of righteousnesse reconciliation with God regeneration sanctification and life eternall none of these belong but to the members of Christ so as we may conclude with the Apostle he gaue himselfe for his bodie which if the wicked be not hee gaue not himselfe for them The maine things obiected and much stood vpon by the aduersaries of this truth are these two First such places as affirme that Christ redeemed the world God so loued the world as he gaue God was in Christ reconciling the world I giue my flesh for the life of the world c. Ans. By the world is not meant euery particular man in it but the elect both of Iewes and Gentiles for Christ and his Apostles often crosse the the Iewes who conceited that they alone were loued of God and not so the Gentiles and therefore to abate their pride were often and much in proouing that howsoeuer in times past the Gentiles were passed by yet now they were called to the participation of grace and saluation as well as they and hence sometimes the Gentiles alone are called by the name of the world as that opposition sheweth betweene Iewes and Gentiles Rom. 11.12 If the falling of them the Iewes be the riches of the world that is the Gentiles and sometimes againe onely the elect of both Iewes and Gentiles for there is a world of the elect onely as Augustine well prooueth out of the place in Iohn alleadged and this world is onely reconciled vnto God Secondly they obiect such places as affirme that Christ died for all Rom. 8.32 Who spared not his sonne but gaue him to death for vs all 1. Tim. 2.6 who gaue himselfe a ransome for all Hebr. 2.9 tasted of death for all c. Answ. The word all signifieth not alwaies all the posteritie of Adam which if it alwaies doe not the force of the argument is broken but sometime 1. onely those of the last age of the world Act. 17.30 But now would haue all men to repent 2. sometimes not euery particular but euery kind as Christ is said to haue healed all diseases that is all kinds of diseases and the Pharisies tythed all hearbs that is not euery parti●ular but all kinds and thus is it according to the truth of Scripture and consent of the auncient Church to be taken in those places which affirme that Christ died for all namely for all kinds of men but not for euery seuerall of euery kind 3. The places of Scripture restraine themselues to beleeuers as 1. Tim. 2.7 God would haue all men saued but that is 1. all kinds of men for whom we must pray 2. all such as come to the knowledge of the truth so Rom. 8.32 gaue him for vs all but all such as haue all things giuen with him all such as are chosen iustified and shall neuer be condemned for so it followeth in the next verse Heb. 2.9 Christ tasted of death for all but who these all be the context sheweth 1. sonnes that must be lead vnto glorie ver 10.2 Christs brethren 11.3 such children as are giuen of God vnto Christ ver 13. Lastly with these formes of speach compare these places which say that the sonne of man came to giue his life a ransome for many Matth. 26.28 and that he died to make many iust Rom. 5.19 and that he was offred to take away the sinnes of many Heb. 9.28 and this will iustifie that truth who obserueth that with Paul all and many are all one Vse If Christ gaue himselfe for vs then suffered he not for his owne sinnes for he knew no sinne beeing most holy in his conception without originall sinne according to the word of the Angel Luk. 1.35 That holy thing that shall be borne of thee as also most innocent in all his life for no guile was found in his mouth and who could accuse him of sinne of which innocencie not only his freinds the Prophets and Apostles but his greatest foes also by Gods prouidence became witnesses Pilates wife wished her husband to haue nothing to doe with that iust man Pilate himselfe confessed he found no fault in him The Centurion said surely this man was the Sonne of God Caiphas said that one man must die not for himselfe but for the people the theefe on the crosse this man hath done nothing amisse nay Iudas himselfe cryed out that he had betrayed innocent blood not to speake any thing of the many confessions of the deuils themselues that he was the Sonne of the most high The Papists draw neere vnto that Iewish opinion which the Prophet mentioneth Isay 53.4 We iudged him plagued and smitten of God namely for his owne sinnes but he was wounded for our transgressions and broken for our iniquities for they hold that Christ by his suffering merited something for himselfe Which if it had beene so then was the Apostle mistaken in saying that the Iust suffered for the vniust whereas he should haue said the iust suffered both for the iust and vniust Besides this guing of himselfe withstandeth any meriting for himselfe for if it was necessarie that he should merit for himselfe his obedience could not be voluntarie And what an absurd thing is it to thinke that it was necessarie for Christ beeing God to descend from heauen become man and condescend to most bitter death the graue and sorrowes of hell for his owne sake For what could he merit which he had not from his first conception or which was not due to his manhood from that conception by reason of the vnion of it with the word the second person what could it want which had such inseparable fellowship with the deitie it selfe who in the midst of his abasement his flesh beeing the flesh of the word could not want any glorie although he was pleased to hide it for the time of his passion Lastly the humane nature of Christ is a creature and can therefore merit nothing of the creator to whom all obedience is debt 2. it was guided and mooued wholly by the diuine and in that regard could not merit any thing for it selfe for a meritorious worke must be in the owne power of the worker by himselfe meerely performed nay his merit for vs dependeth not vpon his nature but vpon his person in which both his natures concurre to the work and efficacie of the same Secondly if Christ haue giuen himselfe for vs we must receiue this gift and the benefit of it seeing a gift not receiued is to no purpose or profit And the meanes to receiue Christ and applie him with all his benefits is 1. to know him for darknesse comprehendeth him not and he came to his owne but they not knowing him receiued him not but crucified him whom had they knowne they would neuer haue crucified the Lord of glorie 2. By prizing the gift aboue gold siluer pearles esteeming the precious blood of the immaculate Lambe aboue euery corruptible thing vnder the sunne
all which cannot redeeme one soule 3. By opening the doore of the heart purified by faith to entertaine him while he offereth himselfe with all his merits in the word and sacraments and this not as a stranger by giuing a nights lodging but as our husband and head neuer to be departed Consider that now Christ standeth at the doore of thy heart and knocketh and vseth reasons as once he did Cant. 5. from the great paines and sorrowes which he vnderwent to come to thee he wayted when it will once be that for thine owne good thou wilt open vnto him that he may bring his father with him to suppe with thee and impart vnto thee knowledge sanctification and the rest of the graces which accompanie saluation Oh therefore neuer aduenture to trie what a fearefull thing it is that he should depart in displeasure or that thou shouldest not know the day of thy visitation but receiue him whilest he is neare that thou neuer know what an heauy thing it is to seeke repentance with teares perhappes too late or how vncomfortable a thing it is to seeke him when he is greeued at thy vnkind delaies and will not so easily be found Thirdly if Christ haue giuen himselfe so willingly to such a cursed death for vs we must also in way of thankefulnesse giue our selues vnto him He gaue his bodie his soule his glorie and all for vs we must not thinke much to part with bodie goods name libertie or life it selfe for his sake when he calleth vs vnto it the lawe of thankefulnesse requireth that we should part with such things as in comparison are but trifles for him who thinketh not his dearest things too good for vs and the rather because when we haue done all we can we can neuer be sufficiently thākfull for this greatest gift that euer was giuen to the sonnes of men wee can neuer speake sufficiently of it nor euer wade deepe inough into the ocean of that loue that presenteth vs with such a gift as this is Howsoeuer therefore the sight of the blood of bulls and goates would more affect many then this most pretious blood which they tread vnder their feete yet let those that looke for part in it vnto saluation account this pretious yea and their glorie and reioyce that the wisedome of God hath left them meanes by the word and Sacraments wherein Christ is daily crucified before their eyes to reuoke it into their memories let them conscionably vse these meanes to this ende that this gift running euer in their mindes and memories they may bethinke them what they may acceptably returne for so great receits and when they heare their hearts called for they may giue heart and hand head and feete will and affections vp to the perpetuall seruice of so good a benefactor Fourthly If Christ haue giuen himselfe for vs then there is no other satisfaction for sinne If angels or men liuing or dead masses or merits could haue satisfied the iustice of God Christ might haue spared himselfe but nothing can be giuen to God nothing accepted of God in way of satisfaction of mans sinne but the person and merits of Christ himselfe for if any thing belonging to our persons could goe for paiment then might he haue retained his glorie in heauen and neuer haue left it for our sakes If any Papist stand out here and say that Christ taketh our workes and dieth them in his blood and then offereth them to his Father who accepteth them as meritorious not for our sakes nor their owne but onely for Christ. I answer that Christ indeede dieth the workes of the godly in his blood and so presenteth them vnto his Father and his Father accepteth them at his hands but no way in respect of any satisfaction of sinne or merit of saluation but onely as testimonies of our thankefulnesse and dutie and not otherwise That he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie In these words is contained the former fruit or ende of Christs giuing himselfe namely to redeeme his Chu●ch from all the bondage and slauerie of sinne For by sinne we became bound 1. to the seruice of it 2. to damnation the stipend of it both which the Apostle includeth in that he saith that sinne raigned vnto death where is both the raigne and command of sinne and the wages of it which is death Now the Lord Iesus redeemed his Church out of this captiuitie two wayes 1. By paying the price of redemption vnto his father euen the most pretious blood of the sonne of God for so by communication of properties it is here said that the mightie God gaue himselfe to redeeme vs that is the life of that person who was God went for our ransome whereby our debt is freely in regard of vs discharged the bill cancelled and the hand writing against vs fastened vnto his crosse 2. By conquest for he bound the strong man that had vs in his power spoyled principalities and powers ouer whome he gloriously triumphed and thus partly by price and partly by power redeemed and rescued his people Quest. But how could Christ by giuing himselfe for so small a time redeeme all his Church from such infinite euills Answ. We must here consider three things 1. The dignitie and excellencie of the person who performed this work who was not a bare man but 1. the Sonne of God by eternall generation 2. his onely Sonne 3. his beloued Sonne And to shewe vs that these be the respects which make the worke so meritorious in it selfe and so acceptable vnto his father the Scriptures euery where giue him such titles as declare him to be most deare vnto God his Father so Ioh. 1.14 the onely begotten sonne of the Father full of grace and truth and 18. the onely begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of his Father and Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne and Rom. 8.32 who spared not his owne Sonne now if the person be so gratious the worke cannot but be acceptable Secondly consider the sufficiencie of the worke beeing so admirable as neuer was the like for it was no simple action neither of God alone nor of man alone and so neither meerely diuine nor meerely humane but as Diuines speake th●andrike the operations of both these natures which concurre to one person concurring to the effecting of the same worke Wonderfull then is this worke which could neuer be performed by a me●●e creature man or angel but by a person that must be both God and man Thirdly the largenes and extent of the price most absolutely satisfying whatsoeuer was required and that in all voluntarie obedience both actiue and passiue Actiue for he fulfilled all righteousnesse and perfectly performed and fulfilled the whole lawe in our stead Passiue for he suffered a most shamefull and cursed death both visible standing in the separation of soule and bodie and invisible suffering for a time euen the verie
doe streame out nothing but such as Christ speaketh of adulteries murthers thefts couetousnesse deceit vncleannes pride the wicked eye and cursed speaches and yet charge them with such filthinesse they iustifie themselues with the Pharisie they thanke God they serue God as well as the best haue as good hearts as the best they doe as well and liue as well as the best of them all you cannot fasten on them any sence of their foule sinnes they neede no purging nor washing whereas the godly daily groane and grieue in the sence of the presence of that with them which they hate worse then death it selfe Vse 2. Hence may be noted that wheresoeuer sinne is pardoned it is also purged Rom. 8.2 There is no condemnation to them that are in Iesus Christ for the law of the spirit of life freeth them from the law of sinne and of death that is not only from the curse of the law but euen that law and power of sinne it selfe which would still hold vs in the seruice of it He shall die in his sinne that dieth not vnto his sinne not that sinne can be so dead as not remaine but if it lie not bleeding by vertue of that stroake which Christ in his death hath giuen it if the force of it be not abated and thou escaped from the rule of it Christs blood doth thee no good How excellently doth the Lord Iesus himselfe in his speach to Peter approoue this truth If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee and no part in Christ no pardon of sinne Dare any man then dreame of his reconciliation with God that finds not holinesse daily preuayling against corruption and the endeauour of puritie in heart and life against that foule impuritie that stickes fast and cleaueth vnto both or dare any vnsanctified heart which in that it hath set it selfe vpon a resolued course in sinne is a rebell vnto God laie claime vnto any part of the death and merit of Christ when Christ hath said that vnlesse he wash the soule that partie hath no part in him No no the wedding garment and this our elder brothers garment is wouen of holines as well as righteousnes and there is no admittance to the supper of the Lambe no blessing without either Vse 3. Let both these considerations mooue vs to be euer washing and clensing our selues from our vncleannesse and neuer to be at rest till we finde our selues although not free from blacknesse yet comely as the Church confesseth of her selfe And because this is the cheife vse of this doctrine I will stand a little longer to propound in it two points 1. the meanes and notes which we must vse and by which we must discerne our selues to be washed and purged 2. the reasons or motiues to vse carefully those meanes For the former A man that meaneth to be neate and cleanly 1. hee willingly looketh himselfe in a glasse he is not angrie with the partie that setteth the glasse before him but he calleth for it that he may see what spots are about him and looketh neere that he may discerne them euen so a man that would be purged must often set the glasse of the law before him will not be angrie with him that preacheth and propoundeth the law vnto him whereby he may see his foule spotts and disorders And here is one difference betweene the cleane and vncleane one cannot endure to take notice of his filthinesse his heart will abide no gaging nor sounding the other hath a purpose to be cleanly and would haue the least filth about him discouered that it may be remooued Secondly A man that is in this way to be purged beginneth with the foulest spots first and those which are most conspicuous and commonly first remooueth those in his face Now the foulest and most noted defilement which is most conspicuous and consequently odious vnto God is an vngodly and wicked heart which as the Lord beginneth his washing withall for the first thing he doth in the conuersion of a sinner is to take away the heart of stone so he that would haue euidence of his cleannesse must beginne here and first wash the inside so the holy man Dauid although his sinnes were in the eyes of the world yet to be soundly purged of them he craueth a cleane heart and a renewed spirit And thus as he that meaneth to be cleane beginneth at his head and so washeth all downeward so the pure of heart beginne at the heart and this carrieth all other parts and members they know that of the filthinesse of the flesh and spirit the latter is more filthy and therefore they seeke first to be renewed in the spirit of their mindes and to wash their consciences from dead workes whereas those that meane neuer to be cleane beginne as it were at their feete if they can abstaine from murther adulte●ie drunkennesse and such open sinnes in the act which is apparant to euery eye they thinke all to be cleane and well because they neuer see the hardnes the pride and foulenes of their hearts but euen this conceit that they haue washed their hands in innocencie neglecting their hearts is a brand and marke of their vncleannes and impuritie Thirdly hee that will be cleane proceedeth on to the other parts of his bodie and will see that they be sutable so this grace of sanctification as it beginneth in the minde so it proceedeth to worke in all the members it is carefull that all the vessels be preserued in holinesse and honour A pure heart will not be without pure hands chast eyes an ordered tongue c. Where is to be obserued another maine difference betweene the cleane and vncleane the former endeauour to cleanse themselues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and to grow vp vnto full holinesse but the latter can content themselues with a supposed goodnes of their hearts and yet let loose their tongues to all obsene and lewd speaches and open their eyps to all wandring and lustfull spectacles and their hearts thinke no ill but are good inough for all that but halfe an eye can discerne what impure wretches they are both within and without Fourthly such a person will proceed on to his garments and will not endure filth or spots on them euen so that soule whom Christ purgeth hateth euen the garment spotted by the flesh euen all occasions inducements and appearances of euill yea such as he cannot auoid yet he can hate Whereas the carelesse and slouenly Christian runnes into all companies into all courses and thrusts himselfe into all occasions of sinne because he is filthy he careth not to be filthy still yea and to foule and besmeare all that come in his companie Fifthly The sanctified person vseth all good meanes whereby he may become cleane and beeing so he is carefull to preserue himselfe cleane so long as he can For 1. he desireth to be euer sprinkling himselfe with the
vnwillingly or which I had rather not doe and if it be a sinne which I do it is the Princes sinne and not mine nay whatsoeuer action of thine wanteth faith is thy sinne besides although all thy externall condition is in the power of the Magistrate yet internall things as the keeping of faith and obedience and good conscience are not in his power but placed by God in the will and consent of the beleeuer to keepe or to loose Secondly but if the Princes commandement call vs to suffer any vniust thing as if he should laie tyrannicall burdens vpon bodie goods and outward estate these we must acknowledge subiected vnto him by God and therefore the ordinarie defence is prayer and patience by which the passion of vniust vexation will become iust and comfortable vnlesse for the time of the brunt of persecution we can conuey our selues from the furie according to that of Christ if they persecute you in one citie flie to another and Act. 8.1 the Saints were scattered by the persecution for by this meanes of preseruing our selues we preserue also the Church which otherwise would be destroied in vs but els we must meekly beare all vniust vexations and in such times take heed of medling with the seditious These two former grounds will become clearer by the explaning of some instances which we meet with in the Scripture and therefore it will be worth our labour breifly to inquire into some few of them And first whether Mordecay did with good conscience deny subiection yea reuerence to Haman seeing hereby he not only made light of a great man sent by the King but also of the Kings commandement who commanded Haman thus to be honoured as the reprehension of the Kings seruants noted in the text prooueth why transgressest thou the Kings commandement Answ. Mordecay was bound in conscience to obey neither of them in any thing contrarie to the word of God as this required honour was 1. Because it was more then ciuill for such the Persian Kings required as was at least mixed with that which was due to God else it is lawfull inough to fall downe on ones face before Princes 2. If it had beene but ciuill honour yet it had not beene due from Mordecay to Haman because Haman was descended from a nation which God had cursed and willed his people to hate and abhorre and neuer to seeke their peace all their daies but especially they were charged neuer to forget the inhumanitie of the Amalekites but vtterly to destroie them because they were the first that came out to warre against them after their comming out of Egypt If the honour had beene but ciuill and Mordecay of any other people then the Iewes to whom that commandement was directed and Haman of any other offspring then an Agagite that is of the offspring of the Kings of the Amalekites who were all of Agag surnamed Agags as it were the Pharaohs of Egypt and Caesars of Rome he would not haue denied this honour or if he had he had sinned The second instance is in Naboth of whom it may be enquired whether he could iustly denie Ahab his vinyard seeing the Kings hath power to take feilds and vinyards and giue them to his seruants 1. Sam. 8.14 and in outward things we must obey although to our detriment and losse Answ. Naboth iustly refused because God had forbid him so to do In Leuit. 25. the law is expresse that no Israelite might sell his feild but vpon condition of redeeming it and returning vnto it in the Iubely but Ahab did not so require it but either to purchase it out because it lay so fit for him or else to exchange it Now that this was the iust ground of his deniall appeareth in his answer God forbid that I should giue the inheritance of my Fathers vnto thee he knew well that if coppie-holders and tenants vnto men may not set let or alienate without their landlords consent much lesse might he against the expresse will and couenant of his Lord. Againe if it had bin only a losse and dammage vnto himselfe alone he would doubtles haue yeelded but no euill of sin must be chosen at all The third instance whether the people might warrantably resist Saul when he would haue put Ionathan to death seeing Saul had sworne his death and the Lord seemed by lot to designe him thereto Answ. This was a meane wherby it pleased the Lord to deliuer Ionathan at that time The deliuering of an innocent was good the question is of the meanes To which I adde that if it were by meanes of intercession and due respect and reuerence to the Kings person and place as the text seemeth to implie by their pleading for Ionathan the meanes also were good but if it were by mutinie or opposition or sedition yet this manner of the fact shall be condemned but not the fact it selfe As for the lot the Lord indeed noted thereby Ionathans fact but thereby conuicted him not of a fault for Ionathan heard not when his father charged the people with the othe the whole falt therefore rested in Sauls inconsiderate and rash othe The fourth instance is in Ioab both in not obeying one commandement of Dauid and in obeying another First whether he did well in slaying Absolon hauing such an expresse charge to spare him yea to vse him kindly Answ. Absolon iustly deserued death by the law Deut. 21.18 and iustly fell in his sinne but Ioab sinned in slaying him for although he was the generall of the warre and had power yet he forgate that he was a subiect and that in this one point his power was limited by him that gaue him his whole command Meete it was that Absolon should be punished but by Dauids consent and though Ioab thought it in policie the safest way to put him out of the way yet his father conceiued how fearefull his death would be if he should be cut off in his sinne and no doubt purposed otherwise by banishment or imprisonment to haue repressed him if he could no way haue reclaimed him But Ioab had no power ouer his life wilfully to slaie him when Dauid had excepted it and put case it was a falt to spare him it was Dauids and not his Quest. But whether did he well to obey Dauid in numbring the people beeing a thing which Moses and Ioshuah did without sinne and wherein the King was so peremptorie Ans. He sinfully obeyed Dauid euen as he did also in betraying Vri●h vpon Dauids letter he was a courtyer that conceiued himselfe to be at euery command although against his conscience as this was he knew that God had forbidden to number the poople without a speciall commandement or necessarie cause or without paying the halfe shekel appointed for euery ones redemption at euery time of numbring his speach in 1. Chro. 21.3 sheweth that it was not only against the law of God but the light of his owne
raysing and returne out of Babylon but as a dreame for whose hearts leap within them at the ioyfull message of the pardon of their sinne who leane vnto the promises walking worthy of them for their life very few assent vnto the truth we teach it hardly sinketh with men that God should become man that by the death of one life should be procured to so many that the way to heauen should lie by hell that by afflictions they should be passed to glorie these things be riddles to many professed Christians So when we call people as God did his to walke in the old way that they may find rest to their soules they answer vs with them we will not walke in that way the sound of the thing if not of the voice speaketh for we call men from swearing lying couetousnes which is idolatrie from Saboath breaking intemperance drinkings and vncleannes but mens hearts speake by their liues we will sweare we will drinke to drunkennesse we will by gaming or idlenesse breake the sabboath the waies of God are too straite and vnequall a man had as good be in prison as in these bonds Lastly whereas by the knowledge and comfort of the Scriptures we should come to haue hope which whosoeuer hath hee purgeth himselfe how doe most professed Christians peruert the Scriptures to their own destruction God is mercifull and therefore I may do what I list at what time soeuer a sinner repenteth God will blot out all his sinnes and therefore I will not repent yet The whole law is comprehended in these two thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart or aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe and therefore I know as much as any Preacher can tell me what need all these sermons The Sabboath was made for man and not man for the Sabboath and therefore what need men be so strait laced and precise in the duties of it Hee that prouideth not for his wife and children is worse then an Infidell therefore I must and will diligently seek the world and set my heart vpon couetousnes By all which instances we may see our selues as in a glasse tainted with this fearefull sin of rising vp and reasoning against that light which shineth out in the word Vse 1. Let all men learne hence to be humbled vnder that vile estate of our nature by which we are not onely laden with simple ignorance but euen oppressed with affected contumacie against it such as our Sauiour chargeth vpon the Iewes Ioh. 8. and such as breaketh out in many of our people who not seldome in hearing vs teach them the truth of God say as the Iewes of Christ who can heare him Alas how farre better were it with vs to haue beene heathen or infidels and neuer haue heard of Iesus Christ that our ignorance had beene simple and inuincible then such Christians as abound not onely with ignorance but such as the Apostle speaketh of Rom. 1.24 Which is caused of the hardnesse of heart which is in them 2. Hence may we cease to wonder why so fewe obey the Gospel why after so much teaching there is so little fruit so little knowledge so little turning to God because the degree of corruption of mind is beyond bare ignorance as to assent to the word is a further degree of grace then bare knowledge The Minister may hale and pull but vnlesse the Father drawe none come to the Sonne such is the contumacie and stubbornenes of mens hearts naturally that no curse can terrifie nor promise affect it and this was it which made Christs own ministerie vnprofitable to the Iewes as we reade Ioh. 8. Let hearers and students of the Scripture labour and pray for the sanctification of mind and the spirit renewing their inner man without which they may heare and study and reade but as the Eunuch without vnderstanding for want of a guide Without this teacher our report shall not be beleeued nor without this finger of God shall the arme of God be reuealed A sound of words may be heard and the report of truth may be so strong as to winne acknowledgment of it selfe but faith shall not be founded nor loue quickned nor hope confirmed nor that change wrought without which thou shalt continue a cauiller still yea froward and an enemie to God and his truth 3. If we be such as are called out of this estate to whom God hath giuen hearts to beleeue assent and obey the truth let vs not depriue God of his glorie but acknowledging his gift giue him the honour due vnto him for here is an exceeding great power of God put forth if it be giuen thee to beleeue the worke of faith is a worke of great power see 2. Thess. 1.11 Deceiued Out of this third degree of corruption of mind we learne That before men be brought vnto Christ they infinitely erre and their whole life is but a wandring from God and his wayes For 1. Christ is the way the truth and the life and therefore to be out of Christ is to be out of the way that tendeth to life 2. Our selues by our sinne are cast into the darke night and haue not the least glimpse of Sun Moone or starre but walking in darkenesse knowe not whether we tende 3. We haue a wandring and vagrant vaine euen after our calling and therefore much more before how haue the Saints of God complained in their owne and in the name of the Church Isa. 53.6 we haue all wandred like lost sheepe The like Dauid confesseth of himselfe and euen after conuersion the Lord must still be seeking vs vp Psal. 119.176 oh seek thy seruant for els we haue no list to returne to the sheepheard of our soules Iesus Christ. Now the reason of all this error is a filthy flatterie of the heart and a guilfull securitie of spirit which holdeth men from seeking happinesse where it is to be had while they mistaking their condition make faire weather with their soules when in the meane time all is amisse and they for truth embrace nothing but dangerous and damnable error We shall not neede trauell farre to seeke instances of such vagrants out of the wayes of God and yet aske any of them what way they trauell all of them hast to heauen and will be there as soone as the best if we may beleeue them I might here saue some labour but that the world swarmeth with such wanderers and that I take it much materiall to our point and purpose to shew how farre many are out of the right way how little acquaintance many Christians haue with Christ of whom some neuer saw his face neuer saluted him others haue thought it their best securitie to stand a loose and follow him a farre off and others after a little acquaintance with him doe as many disciples did fall off from him and walke with him no more But a little further to prosecute the point in particular
better by it we must be led to loue him more for his goodnesse and a shame it were that this bountifulnesse of God should not lead vs vnto repentance Besides none are partakers of it but such as being borrowers become seruants vnto the lender for although the Lord be boundlesse in all bountifulnes yet is he not so regardles in conferring it as that he looketh not for answer of loue for loue and if he be kinde to the vnkind what is it else but the heaping of coales on the heads of those who are in fitting to destruction for any man then thus to reason God is full of goodnesse and abundant in mercie and therefore I will doe as I list it is the abusing of his patience and the treasuring of wrath against the day of wrath Let such knowe that as with the vpright he will be vpright to bring on them all his promised goodnes so with the froward he wil deale as frowardly and that there is not a more seuere plague abiding the reprobate then to haue all the goodnesse of God turned to his euill and hurt by his owne sinne to whome let mercie be shewed yet in the land of vprightnesse hee will do wickedly let the Gospel be preached it is the sauour of death yea let Christ himselfe be offered the greatest gift of loue that euer was giuen hee will be but a rocke of offence and a stone to stumble at 5. In regard of others we must learne to communicate our goodnes euen to the helping and winning of them that as yet are not called so also must this bountifulnesse of our Master withhold vs from taking our fellow seruants by the throate for hauing beene forgiuen ten thousand talents we may well forgiue an hundred pence Thus shall we manifest our selues to be the children of our heauenly father by resembling that goodnes of his which worketh in the winning and sauing of sinners and in shewing mercie and remitting of manifold debts The second point in the efficient of our saluation noteth the time when God saued vs namely when his bountifulnesse and loue appeared and shined out in the Gospel then came this blessed saluation vnto vs when God the inexhaust fountaine of all goodnesse by the tidings of the Gospell shewed that he was become our friend in Iesus Christ when this cleare sunneshine and dayspring began to shine in our hearts then beganne our saluation Doctr. 1. Then are we saued when we are sanctified and changed by the word and spirit for as no sooner are we in the first Adam but we are in the state of damnation so no sooner are we in the second Adam but we are in the state of saluation The Scriptures are plaine to this purpose Rom. 1.17 The righteousnes of faith is revealed by the Gospel and by this faith the iust man liueth which place hath relation as well vnto the life eternall at this temporarie 1. Cor. 2.9 10. The great things which eye hath not seene c. the spirit reuealeth vnto vs yea more the spirit maketh vs knowe the things that are giuen vs of God Now what be these things that are giuen vs but grace iustification and saluation reached out vnto vs in the ministerie of the Gospel and receiued of vs by faith and hope the which also are wrought and confirmed by the same meanes But more expresse is the Apostle Iohn wee are now the sonnes of God and Eph. 2.7 by grace ye are saued through faith and Ioh. 10. I giue to them life eternall he saith not I will giue but noteth a continued act begun in the present The euidence of this truth appeareth also in the contrarie for if the wicked be condemned alreadie as the Scriptures affirme namely both in the counsel of God and 2. the word of God which pronounceth the sentence 3. their owne consciences which speake bitter things against them 4. present execution of inward and outward plagues which are the beginnings of hell then it will not be hard to conceiue that on the contrary the beleeuers are saued alreadie and passed from death vnto life both in the counsell of God and in the Gospel which pronounceth the sentence of absolution in their owne consciences which haue peace with God through Iesus Christ and in respect of the beginning● of life eternall which make them happy men while they are yet euen absent from the Lord. Obiect If it be here said that we cannot be said to be saued so long as we carrie this flesh about with vs subiected and tending to death and corruption yea subiect to become an instrument of sinne and besides those phrases of the Apostle that we are now saued by faith and by hope seeme to denie our present saluation seeing neither of them are of things present but both of things not seene and both in the fruition of saluation must cease Answ. We must consider our saluation two waies First in Christ our head in whom we haue not attained one or moe parts but full saluation Secondly as it is in our selues his members and this in two degrees The former as it is only inchoate and begun which is when beeing regenerate and adopted into the number of the sonnes of God we haue attained in Christ remission of sinne freedom from the seruitude of sinne and Satan and deliuerance from the curse and condemnation of it so as although sinne as a poyson will be in our flesh so long as we are in the flesh yet is there no condemnation for it to those that are in Christ neither is there a raigne of it vnto death but a ●alking after the spirit and as for the reliques of sinne which are left in their mortall bodies they are not deadly no nor the last enemie that shall be destroied their death it selfe Now in this first regard we are not as we were before the sonnes of wrath but truely and properly may be said to be iust reconciled heyres of grace and saued from wrath The latter degree is the perfect consummation and finall accomplishment of our saluation which is nothing else but a putting off of death and corruption and the putting on of full glorie of bodie and soule Now we may not conceiue this another saluation in kind then the former but another degree of the same which as certainely shall follow the former as the former is certainely begunne And thus are we saued by hope not that by our hope we expect another saluation then that which now in Christ we haue in our hands but for that we certainly waite for a further and more full degree of that we haue A man that lyeth sicke of a desperate disease is restored and recouered by two degrees the former when the force of his disease is by the skilfull application of physicke broken the humors purged a temperature in part procured now the disease is not deadly hee beginneth to eate to drinke to sleepe to walke here if we say
in hand teacheth that there is an assurance a seale an earnest of saluation on which a man may assuredly settle his inward peace and his hopes shall neuer make him ashamed Yea further that this assurance is no blind perswasion nor bold presumption grounded vpon any thing of our owne but founded vpon the worke of God in vs changing vs daily renewing the image of God vpon vs the which good worke wheresoeuer it is begunne shall be perfected vnto the day of Christ. Cold is the comfort which this doctrine can minister to a number of men Christians by profession who neuer knewe this change in themselues the word hath beene too light to lift them vp to a newe life but they rotte away in the same sinnes and corruptions wherein they were borne and haue since confirmed vpon themselues and cannot say truely I am changed or yet am in the state of saluation Vse 3. See hence the blessed condition of men conuerted and begotten to God that we may neuer rest or be in quiet vntill we haue attained this grace of conuersion for they are alreadie possessed of their blessednesse and saluation which standeth in pardon of sinne couering of iniquitie freedome from the curse libertie from the raigne of sinne as also in the purchase of victorie ouer sinne and death of peace of good conscience of ioy in the holy Ghost in the certaine fruition of God himself and all those pleasures which are at his right hand for euermore The worldling seeth no part of this present happinesse and saluation of the Saints and therefore knowing no better he neuer accounteth himselfe so blessed as when he is drowned in carnall delights when his corne and wine and oyle is encreased vpon him when his cup runneth ouer when all men flatter him when his mouth is filled with laughter and yet in the mean time his bones are filled with the sinnes of his youth and age are likely to be laid downe together with him in the dust as Iob speaketh Nay more euen our selues who haue our blessednesse in our hands often see but a smal part of it that it is no meruaile if others can determine against our present happines when our selues are at such demurres in the matter especially when we see the world hating vs the earth expelling vs bonds prisons receiuing vs our countrie scarce acknowledging vs our kinsfolkes not knowing vs our friends forsaking vs our enemies killing vs dangers so assayling vs as we can scarce be safe in any corner nay sometimes our owne holds are taken that we cannot feare more warre abroad then we finde at home not meete with lesse peace without then within But now would it be an high wisedome to espie and know our blessednesse which with this change we firmely hold whatsoeuer our outward condition be or can be If now we suffer for righteousnesse it withstandeth not but maketh to our happinesse If all men speake all manner of euill against vs for Christs sake it hindereth not but furthereth our saluation If earth refuse vs heauen approoueth vs if men condemne God will iustifie if our friends denie vs Christ our husband will confesse vs In any miserie we shall haue assured felicitie in sorrowe and heauinesse matter of true ioy in outward trouble inward peace in temptation assurance of euasion In nothing all things in death and coruption life and immortalitie Thus our happinesse must not be mistaken which is inward spirituall and heauenly not depending on man but God by whose assured word and pledges it is bestowed nourished and perfected in vs. Now if any would trie whether he hath this happinesse in his hands or no let him come to this touchstone 1. Canst thou finde in thy soule a godly sorrow for sin which proceedeth on to repentance causing thee to loath thy sinne and loue righteousnesse constantly and canst thou loue him that dealeth sharpely against thy dearest sinnes 2. Dost thou finde thy heart which was a mansion of the deuill to be nowe a Bethel a temple of the holy Ghost in which thou worshippest God daily in spirit and truth presenting him with thy morning and euening sacrifices as the sweete incense of thy soule 3. Findest thou thy whole conuersation to be now a constant practise of righteousnes and holynes perceiuest thou thy selfe more heauenly minded then euer thou wast earthly and couetous more vpright in dealing with men then before vniust more pure and sober in word deede thoughts lookes then euer thou wast vncleane or intemperate Take all these together with thee and go on as cheerefully as happily thou art a blessed man alreadie and not all the gates of hell can hinder thee of thy saluation A second point to be learned in that it is said that then God saued vs when his bountifulnesse appeared is That before this reuealing of our saluation by Christ this loue and bountifulnesse of God was hid with himselfe and could not be reached vnto by the most peircing vnderstandings or industrie of man or Angel only God could inuent our cure onely God could manifest the same and make it appeare vnto vs. True it is that it was giuen in the wise counsell of God before the world was and shall be consummate and perfected when heauen and earth time shall be no more But if we enquire the proper time and manner of the happie appearing of it to the sonnes of men then we must answer that it was at the reuealing and appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ namely partly more darkly by the preaching of the Prophets vnto the auncient fathers and beleeuers as Abel Noah Abraham Moses Dauid who with the remnant of Israel enioyed the same promises and precious faith with vs and partly more clearely by the incarnation of the sonne of God which was the glorious rising of this Sonne of righteousnesse who both by his owne doctrine and miracles life and death and the doctrine of his Apostles and Pastors hath brightly shined vpon all vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come according to that prophesie of Malac. 4.2 The sunne of righteousnesse shall rise adding also that he bringeth health vnder his wings For before we sought not our health we our selues could make ou● wound wider and grow more desperately ouergrowne in our deadly diseases but could not dreame of a Phisician but now the father putteth forth his loue sendeth forth his beloued Sonne in him setteth liking vpon vs couereth vs with his skirts adorneth vs with his graces fitteth vs to our glorie and so daily by degrees draweth vs nerer him in fellowship then euer we were in the state of our innocencie To this purposeth is it said that Christ brought life to light whereas else Adam and all his posteritie had for euer laid vnder death and darknesse for when Adam little thought of saluation yea when he was running from God and hiding himselfe in his thickets then Christ brought life to light in
a word the very scope of this washing in Iordan directly concludeth against that Popish collection of his for why doth the Lord command him to goe and wash in Iordan rather then as he expected that the Prophet should lay his hand vpon him or by a word heale him Surely no stronger reason can be giuen then this that he should not attribute any power or vertue of the cure to the Prophets hand bodie or person but seeing he must doe that in which there is no such power at all but is so vnlikely a meanes of cure as Naaman almost scornefully reiected the whole glorie of the worke might returne to the God of Israel As vnlikely yea more that water should wash the leprosie of sinne from the conscience as the outward leprosie from the bodie of Naaman and indeede the worke in both is from the spirit of the Lord. The like may be said of the poole of Siloam wherein the blind man must wash and for that place in the 5. of Iohn concerning the poole of Bethesda which healed all manner of diseases the text saith plainly that it was the Angels stirring of the water and without it nothing was done and if the power had beene proper and naturall or inseparably tyed to it it would haue healed the second and third that had stepped in as well as the first So we say when the spirit of God mooueth these waters of baptisme there followeth a cure without which if a man were euery day baptized it would be vnavaileable to regeneration and sanctification Thus not to followe the rest and wast time in them we may see that when men willingly blind themselues it is iust with God to giue them vp to all delusions that in seeing they might not see nor vnderstand Vse 2. As to magnifie and reuerence these sanctified waters as the outward meanes in the right vse of which the spirit worketh and exhibiteth that which they represent so also to beware least wanting this inward worke of the spirit which giueth all efficacie and comfortable fruit of baptisme it become not a barren and a naked signe the rather in that the Lord himselfe obserued this corruption among his owne people that they stood too much vpon outward institutions as the Temple the law circ●mcision the fathers c. and therefore in many places charged them not to trust in such lying words but to get the foreskinne of their hearts circumcised as well as the foreskinne of their flesh and not to rest in the title of a Iewe which was to be one but outwardly and in the letter nor that they were descended of Abraham according to the flesh except they were Iewes within and descended of Abraham according to the faith also so as by doing his workes they might resemble him So when we see Christians stand so much vpon outward baptisme and are well contented without the inward vertue of it when we see them glorie in the bare title without the power of Christianitie it is our part to imitate the Lord and his Prophets and call our people to get the circumcision not made with hands but by the finger and spirit of God which is more then to wash the foulenesse of the bodie for it is to put off the sinfull bodie euen the wicked corruption of the heart for so it is expounded to be the resemblance of Christ in his death and buriall first and then in the life of grace and glorie to which he rose againe Boast not then of thy baptisme without this change of thy heart and life for then thou boastest of a broken vowe call it not thy Christendome vnlesse by it thou beest set into Christ and transplanted by it into the similitude of his death thou art no better before God then an heathen o● Turke notwithstanding thy bodie hath beene washed in this lauer if thy heart still remaine foule and filthy and as good neuer a whit as neuer the better And this I speake of good ground and in the language of Scripture Do we not see the Iewes charged as not circumcised although they had the skinne of their flesh cut Isai. ●4 57.3 and Steuen goeth not as we say behind the doore to call them st●ff●necked and vncircumcised so why may not we speake the truth retaining in our hearts and stile the reuerence of that holy ordinance that the water in baptisme further then ioyned to the word and applyed to this holy ende authentically to seale that which God hath engrauen vpon it is no better vnto the vnbeleeuer then ordinarie pumpe water It is too Iewish and yet too common that the religion and profession of Christiās standeth for most part in outward shewe and glorie and such things as are made by the hands of men wanting that spirit and truth which is indeede the crowne of Christianitie and yet alas what will the representation of Christs death and resurection doe good if the vertue and power of it be wanting in the soule Vnto thy outward baptisme get the heauens opened as in the baptisme of Christ and see that the spirit hath descended vpon thee to the conuerting of thy soule and begetting thee to a newe life for this is the soule of baptisme without which it is a dead letter and a fruitlesse ceremonie Vse 3. As it is with baptisme so is it with all other ordinances of God no outward meanes of saluation can be effectuall vnlesse the inward worke of the spirit be added We haue power to come and heare the word but vnlesse the anoynting teach vs we shall remaine vntaught yea let the Apostles themselues preach the Lord must worke with them also or nothing will be done These two the spirit of the Lord vpon vs and his word in our mouthes make vp a sweete harmonie And how is it else that men after so long powerfull preaching and frequent hearing remaine ignorant hard hearted rebellious surely the reason is because the Lord giueth not an heart to perceiue and because the spirit bloweth not there to giue the seeing eye and hearing eare which where it is wanting a man may sit out as many summons as Pharaoh did and neuer the better yea the more hardned So in afflictions and corrections which are durable and lingring on many why do men profit so little why doe they not open the doore of discipline why are not the roddes of correction the tree of life to a number surely because the spirit boareth not the eare he teacheth not the right vse of them Obiect But what can I doe withall if the spirit teach me not Answ. The spirit would not be wanting if men would come preparedly to be taught But 1. men come without beleefe and mingle not the word with faith and so it becommeth vnprofitable or 2. without repentance whereas the humble shall be taught in the way onely or 3. without praier and the spirit powreth not out these waters of grace but vpon thirstie
iustification of the person himselfe before God but of the faith of the person before men for if any worke iustifie before God of necessitie it must bee a perfect worke and proceede from a person perfectly iustified and sanct●fied as Abraham himselfe when he offered his sonne was not the true meaning of that place is this Abraham was iustified by workes that is he restified by his workes that he was by faith iustified in the sight of God Vse 2. We learne hence further where our righteousnesse is laid vp for vs Isai. 45.24 In the Lord I haue righteousnesse and strength the whole seede of Israel shall be iustified and glorie in the Lord. Of ou● selues we are desperate bankrupts and haue not one farthing to make straight withall which the Lord seeing he dealeth with vs as with those two debters who had nothing to pay he forgiueth vs all Behold then the Sonne of God set out thy propitiatorie Rom. 3.25 get the lintels of thy soule sprinkled with the blood of this immaculate lambe and thou shalt escape the stroake of the reuenging angel cast away thine owne ragges and if euer thou wouldst get the blessing wrap thy selfe in this garment of thy elder brother and when thy father shall sauour the smell of thy garments he shall bless● thee and say Behold th● smell of my sonne is 〈◊〉 the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed feare not to be compleat in him this long white to be needeth no eeking ne●deth no pa●ching say with that holy Martyr and liue and die with it in thy mouth onely Christ onely Christ. Vse 3. Seeing here falleth to the ground whatsoeuer can be ioyned in the worke of iustification with the merit and obedience of Christ as any matter or meanes demeriting the sauour of God we must beware of euer ioyning with the Popish religion who by their doctrine of merits and humane satisfactions abrogate the death of Christ and are abolished from him see Gal. 5.2.4.11 If we can any way iustifie our selues or satisfie for our selues the death of Christ was vaine It is therefore as safe ioyning with the Turkish religion as theirs If it be said the difference is not so great as you make it I answer that we differ not in circumstances but in such a fundamentall point as if the Apostle may be iudge one of vs must needes be fallen from Christ and haue no part in him what then will it availe to professe the articles of faith and to be the Church of God vnl●sse that can be a true Church which is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Should be made heires according to the hope of life eternall In these words is laid downe the second ende of that newe condition into which beleeuers are brought In which for the meaning two parts must be considered 1. The right and priuiledge of beleeuers who beeing once iustified by faith are made heires of life eternall 2. their present tenure of this their inheritance by hope For the former The word heire in the first and proper signification betokeneth a lot and is vsed sometimes in the new Testament with allusion vnto the twelue tribes whose portions were deuided and distributed vnto them by lot as Eph. 1.11 whence that people was more peculiarly called the lines and heritage of the Lord as whom himselfe made partakers of all the good things of that land and by proportion those also who by faith laid or shall lay hold vpon his couenant for all those spirituall and eternall good things shadowed out thereby But commonly it signifieth those who after a mans death succeed him in his goods and possessions especially children whose right it is to inherit their fathers lands and possessions and thus must we become heires by becomming the sonnes and children of God Now whereas children are either naturall or adopted our title to this inheritance commeth in by the grace of adoption seeing Christ is the onely naturall sonne as we confesse in our Creed and the phrase of the text is obseruable which saith we are made heires but not so borne so as this inheritance belongeth properly vnto Christ the naturall sonne the heire and first borne of many brethren and consequently through him communicated vnto vs who are sonnes by adoption Ioh. 1.12 whosoeuer receiued him to them he gaue power that is right title prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God Now if we would distinctly knowe the manner and meanes of our title in a word this it is All the right of our sonneship is by Christ for the foundation of it is Gods loue embracing men in his beloued who beeing the naturall sonne of God must become our brother by taking our flesh that therein we beeing vnited vnto him might also after a sort be vnited vnto the Father and the blessed spirit the which vnion because it could neuer be knit so long as our sinnes were in sight necessarily in our flesh must the Sonne of God giue himselfe vp vnto the death to satisfie the iustice of his Father to remooue all the guilt and curse of our sinne and to giue vs beleeuing in him perfect righteousnesse that thus beeing iustified we might become heires no otherwise then if we had beene borne of God himself and that thus by Iesus Christ beeing set againe into the liberty of sonnes the inheritance might as certainely belong vnto vs as it doth to himselfe beeing the naturall Sonne Thus we see how we come to be heires now if we would knowe of what we are heires the text telleth vs of life eternall which what it is because it standeth in immediate fellowship and coniunction with God we are not able to conceiue for it neuer entred into the heart of man This we know of it that beeing the state of the elect with God hereafter that beleeuers haue a right vnto it yea and by faith haue entred into some part and degree of it alreadie hauing receiued as it were a turfe to assure them of the possession of the whole It is called life which is the most pretious thing a man can desire farre aboue goods and lands or any other comfort Satan said that skinne for skinne and all that euer a man hath will he giue for his euen naturall life And eternall Heb. 9.15 of the eternall inheritance 1. Pet. 1.4 an inheritance which is immortall vndefiled it hath indeede in regard of the godly a beginning but it hath no ende for it fadeth not away but is reserued in the heauens neuer was there such an inheritance vpon earth for as it falleth not by the death of our father as others doe so it faileth not vs by our owne death but wee are thereby rather put into more full state of it And because if it were an vncomfortable life the continuance of it were the greatest miserie of it therefore elsewhere the Scripture calleth it Paradise a place of all delight and pleasure yea where the Saints
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
to be soone remooued to another Gospell nor so fickle as children to be carried about with euery winde of doctrine but hold fast such a stable truth so full of direction in all the life and so full of comfort at the time of death for it is as a fast and faithfull freind tried in time of aduersitie standing closest to a man in his greatest necessitie Obiect There is no feare but we shall hold out whatsoeuer should betide we are grounded and setled Answ. But how many did in the fierie triall in Queene Maries time scarce one in Cambridge both the Vniversitie and Towne or if one poore Townsman held it out in the flames that was all Lastly both Teachers hearers must trie their doctrin by this touchstone if it abide this touch it is gold it is a pure and faithfull word if it be not according to this word there is no light in it Which is according to doctrine Here our Apostle both deliuereth another note and setteth another marke vpon the word as also vseth another argument why the Minister should hold and hold himselfe vnto the word of God deliuered in the Scriptures because it is not onely a faithfull word vnto which the faithfull may cleaue and rest as vpon a sure anchor but also such a word as beareth the bell for the ●itnesse of it to institute instruct and edifie the Church and members thereof as if he had said That word which is most fitted to edification and instruction is to be maintained and held fast that it may be held forth before Gods people but this is such a word and therefore Ministers must hold it fast Doctr. Whence we learne that the word of God is his owne ordinance fitted to instruct the elect in all necessarie truth and doctrine which is the very scope of our Apostle and will otherwise also appeare if we consider 1. The wisedome of God who hath in the bookes of Scripture comprised and deliuered a most perfect rule of doctrine concerning faith and manners to teach as both concerning God our selues and others whatsoeuer is necessarie or profitable to be knowne to saluation To the proofe of which serue all those places where we read that it is able to make a man wise vnto saluation to instruct him to all righteousnesse to furnish him to euery good worke to make him blessed by inchoation here in this life and consummation in the life to come for here through patience and comfort of the Scriptures we haue hope Rom. 15.4 and hereafter life eternall Ioh. 5.39 2. The mercie of God who hath written mysteries aboue the apprehension of the Angels themselues euen to the capacitie of the simplest in things of absolute necessitie whereas if he had but spoken the word it had beene more then he ought vs but he hath written it that we might ponder and meditate of it yea he hath translated it into euery mans language and so fitted it to edifie the more so as fiue words now are better then ten thousand if it were shut vp in it owne fountaine or any other strange tongue besides he hath brought it to vs by an easie price in one portable volume that we might conueniently exercise our selues in it day and night And that we might vnderstand those hard places which for our exercise we shall meete withall in reading and that we might be lead beyond the letter of the Scripture to shew the life of it in the keeping of faith and good conscience he hath appointed a Ministrie in the Church and in all ages hath raised vp men of God whome he hath furnished with the gifts of prophecie and enabled with sundrie gifts of the spirit to see and reueale the truth therein contained For euery manifestation of the spirit is giuen to profit withall and he gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets c. for the edifying of the Church and the gathering of the bodie of Christ. 3. The power of God who conuaieth such a power into this his ordinance as whereby it becōmeth so mightie in operation so able to cast downe strong holds and euery high thing exalted against God yea so strong at the weakest as that by it alone the kingdome of darknes and of the deuill is bartered and subdued and Iesus Christ the Prince of peace set vp in his throne within the hearts of men Vse Would any Minister edifie his people let him hold fast this word would he teach them Christ this word testifieth of him would he beget faith in them this word must doe it Rom. 10. would he destroie sinne in them as Dauid said of Goliahs sword there is none to that so there is no sword of the spirit but this would he raise the afflicted hence may he speake a seasonable and sauorie word to him that is weary in a word if a man will take the most compendious way to bring soules to heauen let him obserue this rule of holding him to this word which is ordained for doctrine But if a man either for idlenes or ease neglect the reading and study of the Scriptures or according to the vanitie of his heart lay by this booke and fall to the studie of Friars or Fathers and seeke to preach matters of more applause or to get a name of learning is in his profundities curiosities and such quainte deuises as he meeteth withall in mens writings this man leaueth the right way of edifying men in the waies of God and is in his conceit wiser then his maker who hath fitted this word for doctrine and no other 2. Hence note that it is Gods will that euery man should be expert in the Scripture seeing he hath so fitted it for the teaching of the simplest Which must force euery man to examine himselfe whether he hath found it such a fit word for doctrine for he whose heart cannot iustifie the word in this propertie is no child of wisedome Many haue heard this word a long time and yet vnderstand it not haue learned little or nothing are ignorant of Christ and what he hath done but in grosse and generall tearmes haue attained no lasting comfort from the same Where now lieth the fault the word is fit to ●each thee the Ministerie stablished and sanctified to the edifying of thee all the gifts of the ●eachers are giuen to profit thee Why then ha●t thou not profited Oh the sinne lyeth at thine own doore in that thy selfe hast refused or resisted instruction It is not the obscuritie of the Scripture but the darknes of thy blind mind that hath hindred thy profiting The word is as fit to teach thee as the choysest seed is to take and grow with encrease but thy soule is vnprepared thy heart is as the stonie or thorny or high way ground no seed can thriue in it all the labour of Gods husbandmen is lost vpon thee Thy sinne hath suffered the word to loose the vertue and power of it in raising