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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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lusts of it 3. After the inward disposition vse outward helpes as 1. auoide occasions as chiding contentions multiplying of words which though they be winde yet doe they mightily blow vp this fire 2. depart from the companie of the contentious as Iacob from Esau and Ionathan avoided the furie of his father by rising vp and going his way 3. driue away with an angrie countenance whisperers tale-bearers flatterers who are Satans seedesmen by whom he soweth his tares euery where and his bellowes by whom he bloweth vp these hellish sparkles desirous to bring all things into combustion and confusion 4. Pray for strength and grace against it especially for the contrarie vertues of humilitie meekenesse loue and a quiet spirit which is of God much set by and hauing obtained strength and victorie against the assaults of it forget not to be thankefull but breake out into the praises of God as Dauid when he was turned backe from his rash vowe of destroying Nabals familie could not containe himselfe but testified the gladnes of his heart in these words Blessed be the Lord which hath sent thee this day to meete me and blessed be thy counsel and blessed be thou which hast kept me this day from comming to shed blood Not giuen to wine In this precept the Apostle prohibiteth a vice which is as great a let vnto ministeriall duties as any other namely the drinking of wine and strong drinkes for vnder one kind all the sinnes of that kind are forbidden Wherein all vse of wine is not inhibited the Minister it beeing a good creature of God and pure vnto the pure and in w●●kenes of the bodie or griefe and heauines of heart permitted to his chearing and 〈◊〉 〈…〉 vnto them that haue griefe of heart and let him drinke that he may forget his miserie And Timothie himselfe may and must drinke a little wine for his health sake yea and besides this case of necessitie it is not vnlawfull for a Minister sometimes to take his more free libertie herein for his honest delight and pleasure as in Christian and religious feasting at marriages or other meetings of friends seeing Christ himselfe at a mariage feast not onely not prohibited vse of wine but by his first miracle of turning water into wine furnished the same with great plentie and abundance But here these rules must be obserued 1. this free and delightfull vse must not be ordinarie and customable 2. the heart must alwaies be watched that it be not oppressed nor made heauie to godly duties Luk. 21.34 3. Iosephs affliction must not be forgotten Amos. 6.6 The thing therefore condemned in the precept is when a minister is giuen to the wine a quaffer or a wine bibber one that sitts at it with pleasure swilling in wine or strong drinke and such a companion as the Prophet speaketh of who continueth at the wine or beere til it inflame him A vice which in common men hath many woes denounced against it in the Scriptures but most hatefull in a Minister as it is also the greatest let to the faithfulll performance of ministeriall duties both which the Lord himselfe hath prooued true in that one strange iudgement inflicted vpon Nadab and Abihu vpon occasion of which the Lord maketh a generall lawe that seeing they as some thinke in their drunkennes had offered strange fire and were burnt with fire whosoeuer therfore should come to minister before the Lord should vpon pain of death carefully avoid all lets and hinderances whereby they might be vnfitted vnto their dutie and seruice all which by Synechdoche are comprehended vnder that one kind of wine strong drink as those which most disturbe the minds and senses of men frō their duties And where our Apostle affirmeth that Gods steward may not be giuen to wine nor a striker what else doth he then second that of our Sauiour in the parable teaching that of all men the steward may not sit with drunkards nor smtie his fellow seruants Reasons 1. To be addicted to the wine or strong drinke taketh away the heart Hos. 4.11 that is troubleth the vnderstanding confoundeth the senses and equalleth a man to the bruit beast without vnderstanding and thus disableth the man of God in all the practise of his calling As the wise man therefore saith Prou. 31.4 It is not for kings to drinke wine nor Princes strong drinke least he drinke and forget the decree and change the iudgement of the children of affliction so much lesse is it for the Minister and Pastor set ouer Gods people least he forget Gods decrees change his iudgements as Aarons sonnes did And hence is it that the Lord deliuereth a double reason of that former lawe both to the same purpose 1. From the end Aarons sonnes might not drinke wine or strong drinke that they might be able to put difference betweene the holy and vnholy cleane and vncleane and so rightly discerne of the seueralls of their charge 2. that they might teach the children of Israel all the statutes of the Lord herein implying that if they did not carefully abstaine from wine they could not but be interrupted in both these To the same purpose may we obserue howe aptly the Apostle ioyneth these two precepts together vnderstand what the will of the Lord is and be not drunke with wine for commonly such as giue themselues ouer to this lust are by the Lord giuen vp to sottishnes that what gifts they haue had are withered and taken from them of which examples are too frequent Secondly this sitting at wine calleth him from the duties and meanes of his fitnesse vnto his calling he cannot attend to reading exhortation doctrine which is straitly enioyned euerie Timothie 1.4.13 Thirdly such a man is so farre from performance of any faithfull duty that he cannot but become rather an enemie to those that doe For the manner is that when the seruants of God call men to sackecloth ashes mourning these invite to the pots bankets still strengthning the hands of sinners when God by his Prophets calleth to weeping mourning baldnes sackcloth these call to ioy gladnesse s●aying oxen killing sheepe eating flesh drinking wine eating and drinking and saying to morrowe we shall die Such Priests we read of Isay 56.9.12 when the Lord calleth all the beasts of the field to deuoure and spoile what say these fellowes Come we will bring drinke and fill our selues with strong drinke and to morrowe shall be as this day Thus the loue of wine makes them faile in vision and the sitting at wine lulleth them a sleepe euen on the top of the mast as Salomon speaketh of the drunkard that in times and places of most present and desperate dangers they see none nor feare any 4. It disableth all the duties that such a one in his most sobrietie can performe suppose them neuer so commendable seeing he hath made himselfe and calling so contemptible for what authoritie can
hence see their error that conceiue of any Church in earth so well setled and ordered that it needeth no further reformation little know such the necessitie of the Church and the continuall bendings euen of her strongest towers See we not that almost euery yeare requires a new parliament for the ordering of the commonwealth that new disorders may be restrained or redressed by new lawes doe we see any man let his house but from yeare to yeare but he will surely bind the tenant to constant reparation as often as neede shall require and yet inconsiderate men can boldly and bluntly bolt out they meruaile what men meane that seeke for more and further reformation and they cannot tell what they would haue But alas are we so neare God as we cannot possibly be drawen nearer what meane then the common blasphemings drunkennes fornications riots Sabbath breakings what sinnes not committed almost without all feare what meaneth it that such dens and breaches are vnmade vp but that hogge and swine may enter into the presence chamber of the great King Let the strong man keepe these holds we shall see all the earth fit still inough But easily may we in euery particular member see the necessitie of daily strengthning the whole against such daily declining as the first and purest Primitiue Churches planted by the Apostles themselues could not free themselues from and much lesse any since The second branch of Titus his dutie is the placing of Elders in euery citie where that we may come to the meaning of the Apostle must be considered 3. things 1. who are meant by Elders 2. who must place these Elders 3. where they must be placed 1. The persons to be placed are called Elders that is Ministers Pastors Bishops for those who are here called Elders are called Bishops v. 7. true it is that sometimes the word is vsed generally for any that beare any Ecclesiasticall function in which sense the Apostles themselues are sometimes called Elders yet here I take it it must be vnderstood of those who labour in the word and doctrine for such are described thorough the Chapter The reason of the name is taken from their age not as though they alwaies were the oldest men for wisedome is not tyed to graie haires and Timothie was one of them and yet a young man but in regard of the wisedome experience and staiednesse required in such as are to be called to this office which ought to be such as ordinarily is not to be found in young yeares For how meete is it that the man of God should be furnished with grauitie and authoritie that euery way he may be worthie of double honour both in regard of his person as also of his gifts place and workes sake The Papists euery where translate this word Priests and make praesbiteri and sacerdotes all one Wherein although the word cannot be more vnfitly translated yet would we bee loath greatly to striue with them about names and titles as hauing matters of greater moment and difference moe then we wish were it not that the very name were a supporter of that horrible Idolatrie of theirs so infinitely derogatorie to the onely sacrifice of Christ. And therefore seeing the Ministers of the newe Testament are neuer so called in the newe Testament but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and neuer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it were good and safe to keepe our selues to the titles the Gospell hath giuen vs. And seeing that the Papists impiously not onely retaine the name in the proper signification but also an office of Priesthood flatly opposite vnto the Priestly office of Iesus Christ it is no lesse then our dutie to oppose our selues against both such an office and such a title Which in the proper signification is so peculiar as it is attributed to none vnder the Gospel but vnto Christ himselfe I denie not but in the cōmon acceptation of the word it is ascribed to all Christians both Ministers and people who are called an holy Priesthood and beleeuing are made Kings and Priests vnto God Neither is it denied but that some of the Greeke and Latine fathers called the ministers of the Gospel Priests but this was by improper and translated speach partly in that by their ministerie they doe daily offer and sacrifice men vnto God Rom. 15.16 and partly because they held the places in the Church which the Priests and Leuites did before the comming of Christ imitating herein the Prophets themselues as Isay 66.21 prophesiyng of the glorie of the newe Testament saith that the Lord would take of their sonnes for Priests and for Leuites not that they were to be such as were to offer typicall and figuratiue sacrifices of that onely sacrifice as the Iewish Priests nor yet commemoratiue as the Romish seeing all sacrifices but onely the spirituall oblations of Christians were ceased but he calleth them by that name then in vse noting them onely as the successors of the Priests and Leuites but not ascribing any proper worke of that office vnto them 2 The person placing these Elders is Titus who hath commission giuen him that as the chiefe gouernour and moderator of this action should establish teachers of sound doctrine in all the cities throughout the Iland and because the whole action was to be chiefely ordered by him it is wholly ascribed vnto him as the Consull is said to create Consuls when notwithstanding there was a court or assemblie of Consulls at the choise or appointment of them Which if it be not thus to be vnderstood I see not how Elders could be appointed by election as the manner of the Apostles was Act. 14.23 and Timothie must neither lay hands on any man rashly nor yet partake herein with other mens sinnes namely such as were vsed to be ioyned with him in this businesse 1. Tim. 4.14 3 The place where is in euery citie that is wheresoeuer there is a body of people for a fit congregation there must a Pastor or Elder be placed the phrase is of the same valour with that Act. 14.23 When they had ordained Elders by election in euery Church For euen in the Apostles dayes there was a certaine kinde of distinction of Churches and congregations for the Elders had their flockes ouer which the holy Ghost had made them ouerseers and which depended on them 1. Pet. 5.2 Act. 20.28 Doctr. Euen there where the Church is planted is such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie as without it it is impossible that religion can either thriue or continue and therefore as the Lord had formerly dealt in planting his politie among the Iewes so doth he here in planting Christian religion among the Gentiles no sooner was his law giuen concerning his Tabernacle but Aaron and his sonnes and the tribe of Leui must be sanctified to the office of Priesthood to attend on holy things to teach and offer and performe their seuerall
counsell is he that is able to receiue this let him receiue it But the true meaning is that the minister ought to be content with one wife at once and not defile himselfe by polygamie and this precept was not without ground for among both Iewes and Gentiles the custome of polygamie had so farre preuailed that it was become as naturall to marrie many wiues at once now the Apostle perceiuing that custome had taken away the sense of the sinne and placing Titus to redresse things amisse he beginneth at this great enormitie and prohibiteth him to choose such into office in the Church as had giuen such note of an inordinate life Quest. But was it lawfull for other men to haue more wiues then one at once seeing the precept is giuen onely to ministers Ans. No and yet the minister here onely inhibited directly as whom he dealeth with but the people herein also so farre as his example was propounded to their imitation in the obseruation of the whole law of God For here we may fitly obserue these 2. rules for our directions 1. That all the vertues which are required of common Christians must be much more in the minister as euerie thing in the sanctuarie was double to that which was common as the cubit the shekel of the sanctuarie 2. That all the morall vertues required and expressed in the life of the Minister must be imitated of common Christians who must follow him so farre as he followes Christ and in his generall dutie see their owne both of them hauing but one way to heauen So much of the meaning The doctrines are two 1. The mariage of ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God 2. Polygamie was euer a thing blame-worthie euen in the best Doct. 1. Seeing that we are cast into the last times wherein the spirits of error shall be more rise then euer and 2. that many shall depart and giue heede vnto them and 3. that it is enioyned euerie faithfull teacher to arme his people against them it is no lesse then our dutie to warrant out of this place the mariage of Ministers against all the impious decrees of Papists who that they should not want that note of Antichrist fore prophecied namely the contempt of women vnder a semblance of sanctitie and chastitie as Hierome expoundeth it and least their doctrine should not otherwise appeare to be as it is a doctrine of deuills 1. Tim. 4.1.3 haue prohibited mariage to all orders of their Clergie and admit none into their orders without a vowe of perpetuall single life from which if they euer after depart they depriue them of all dignities cut them off as apostates from the faith and adiudge them if they iustifie that opinion euen to death it selfe Quest. But why should they depriue themselues of their libertie and the comfort of that estate it seemeth to be meere conscience that should lead them to vndergoe such a burden Ans. I hope to make it appeare that it is nothing lesse then conscience enformed by the word by the answer of their chiefe allegations In the meane time among sundrie other obserue three maine beames which beare vp the this Popish roofe 1. grosse hypocrisie causing them to make a shew of greater holinesse and chastitie then all others in which regard we may as well yeeld them the title of Puritans as they challenge the thing it selfe 2. presumptuous pride for by th●ir doctrine hereby they seeke for a further perfection then that which the Law requireth of them 3. the maine of all is humane policie for hereby they keepe their wealth together which 1. maketh them able to maint●ine their royall estate 2. it maketh the world to admire them such is their ●ompe and glorie 3. by their great promotions and dignities they a●●●re and ally vnto them the greatest nobles of the earth by whom they strengthen their estate so as neuer could mans wit deuise a surer way to keepe their wealth which euery eie may see to be the proppe of their greatnesse and which by the marryage of all their orders might quickly be dissipated and dispersed 2. by this policie they haue their vassals and instruments whom they must dispatch with death and deadly things about them into all countreys more free and prompt to the vndertaking and accomplishment of any misc●iefe These I take to be their strongest foundations of their tottering building as for other which they vent out to the world they are but shewes and pre●ences and sandie grounds of foolish builders as now we are to manifest Ob. First out of the old Testament they alledge diuerse things as Leu. 11. Be ye holy for I am holy and ye that carie the holy vessels of the Lord be holy and the Priests and Leuites in ministring their turnes before the Lord must abstaine from their wiues and Abimelech would not giue Dauids young men hallowed bread vnlesse they had abstained from women and they that eate the Passeouer had their loynes girt which is the seate of lust Therefore none in orders may marrie Ans. 1. In such allegations they are long and tedious but of which I may truely say as the Stoiks of diseases if they be long they are light And to beginne with their last symbolicall argument we will lightly passe it as worthy of something else rather then an answer both because symbolicall diuinitie wil beare no argument but also in that they haue not prooued nor can that all they that eate the Passeouer were Priests neither regard they that they were presently to depart out of Egypt and therefore needed to trusse vp their long and loose garments As for that of Abimelech 1. Dauids seruants were souldiers not Priests and therefore is it impertinent 2. they were such as had wiues how can we conclude from them that other men ought to haue none 3. it was a question which the Lord would haue Abimelech aske Dauid and that by oracle as appeareth v. 11. concerning some legall defilement which euen by touching some wo●en might debarre them from touching the holy bread 4. let them ● so conclude that no Israelites might marrie because at the giuing of the law they must abstaine 3. dayes from their wiues In the three former allegations they are not vnlike an inexpert musitian who harpeth altogether vpon some one iarring string and so marres all the musicke for all of them are laid vpon this vnsound and vngodly position which they take for graunted that marriage is an vncleane and vnholy thing for this is the tenour of all their conclusions be holy therfore abstaine from marriage Which heresie of Montanus and the Manichee● Pope Syricius and his successors haue fought manfully to maintaine 〈◊〉 of that place of the Apostle Those that are in the flesh cannot please God as though they had neuer read that God was the institutor of it and not as a remedie but when there was no maladie in the
holinesse respecteth God himselfe his worship his holy things as the word sacraments prayer his sabbaths his sanctuarie in all which the Minister ought to be an example of holinesse and yet not onely in these but in his whole conuersation also The commandement is generall to all Gods people be ye holy for I am holy which requireth both the internall sanctification of the heart and the externall symbolls and profession of the same But more necessarie is it yet for the Minister to be cloathed with these robes of holinesse both that inward which standeth in getting and keeping faith and good conscience and that outward which consisteth in a religious and strict course of life And yet this must not be so taken as that holinesse is so essentiall to a minister as that he cannot be a Minister that wanteth it for Iudas may be a disciple and a deuill too but that it is a dangerous estate vnto himselfe and hurtfull to others for him to be destitute of it How necessarie it is for men to put off their shoes that is their vnsanctified lusts and affectons before they come to stand vpon such holy ground I will take a little paines out of the Scriptures to demonstrate and then make some vse of it To omit the extraordinarie ministerie and Ministers of the old Testament as the Prophets some of whom were sanctified in the wombe and others had their lippes touched with a coale from the altar to remooue their pollution the ordinarie Ministers in the sanctuarie and temple were 1. Leuites 2. Priests 3. the high Priest Many things were required in the setting apart to their service the lowest of these which were after a sort furthest remooued from God whose seat was in the Sanctuarie but many more to the sanctification of the higher and those that approached nearer or next of all As first the Leuites were inferiour to the Priests as whose office was to serue vnder them to helpe to carrie the tabernacle and vtensils of it to keepe watch for the safetie of it together with the holy vessels and instruments to helpe them in killing the beasts for sacrifice although they might not meddle in offering them vnto the Lord yea as inferiours to the superious they paid vnto the Priests the tenth of their tenths And yet what a number of rites and ceremonies did the Lord enioyne to be performed before these could be admitted to these inferiour seruices first in the tabernacle and after in the Temple As first they must be of one peculiar tribe peculiar by Gods owne election for the first borne of all Israel Numb 3.13 2. Whereas the congregation was not numbred but from 20. yeares old and aboue Num. 1.3 for till then they were not apt to goe to warre the Leuites must be numbred euerie male from a moneth old and aboue Num. 3.15 not because they were then fit for seruice but that they must then be brought before the Lord and set apart to his seruice euen from the beginning of their daies 3. They must not be presented before the Lord before the 33. day of their age for till then they were legally impure and vnsanctified Leu. 12.3 but after this time they must growe on to the thirteth yeare which was the first yeare of this seruice Numb 4.43 at which time they must be taken from among the children of Israel and set apart to the Lord Num. 8.6 And further in this separation there were two things more for 1. they must be purged and then consecrated Their purification was 1. by sprinkling purification water vpon them 2. by washing their clothes 3. by shauing the haire of their whole bodies 4. by preparing two bullocks the one for a burnt offring the other for a sinne offering for them see for these Num. 8.8 Their consecration stood likewise in foure things 1. After all this preparation in drawing them neerer to the Lord v. 9. 2. In the imposition of the Israelites hands vpon them freely giuing them from themselues to the Lord and his seruice vers 10. 3. In Aarons receiuing them of the people and shaking them before the Lord v. 11. as such as now being mancipated to his seruice were to goe and come at his becke as also such as who daily were to shake off that corruption which hindred thē in their callings 4. By laying their hands on the heads of the two bullocks prepared acknowledging the expiation of their owne sinnes and in way of thankefulnesse now wholly offring themselues vnto that seruice When all these rites were performed they were admitted to administer and not before Secondly the Priests the sonnes of Aaron whose office was to teach the people the doctrine receiued from God to pray for themselues and the people to blesse them and offer sacrifices for them had yet more state in their consecration for besides many of the former rites as imposition of hands their shaking before the Lord and the sacrifices common with the former 1. In the election of such a one more care was had no deformed man no man wanting or abounding with any member no blind or blemished person might come so neere vnto the Lord. 2. In his consecration he must not haue his garments washed as the other but must haue newe garments put vpon him Exod. 28.41 neither must he be sprinkled as the Leuites with holy water but with holy oyle and blood from the altar and thus must he be consecrated seuen dayes Exo. 29.30 3. In his office he may not lament for the dead of his people no not for the Prince but onely for those that are neerest of blood in his owne house Leuit. 21.3 he may not marrie a whore nor a woman diuorced or one polluted v. 7. the reason of all this is because he must be holy to the Lord. 4. In his failing and offending he must haue more clensing then many other men before he cā be admitted vnto his seruice for his sinne cannot be put away without a whole bullocke Leu. 4.2 and no more was required for the expiating of the sinne of the whole congregation v. 14. and the blood of the bullocke must be sprinkled seuen times before the Lord for the Priest as well as for the whole congregation implying that the Lord requireth as much sanctitie in one Priest as in all the people Thirdly as for the high Priest both in that he was a more eminent type of Christ as also came nearer the Lord then all the other euen into the holy of holies he must haue peculiar garments made by cunning men filled with the spirit of wisedome euen beautifull and glorious Exod. 28.3 in these he must be consecrated in these he must stand before the Lord in one part of which namely the frontlet which was put vpon his forehead must be written holinesse to the Lord that by the Lords appointment that might be most conspicuous Againe
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
praises which vnbeleeuers are as heauie vnto as a beare to the stake because they wāt the spirit which crieth in the hearts of Gods children abba father Fourthly it hath a liuely hope accompanying it it causeth watchfulnesse and waiting for yea and reioycing in the hope of the appearing of the Lord Iesus Rom. 5.2 beeing iustified by faith we reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God Secondly we may hence gather a cause why some beleeue some beleeue not it is not because some will and some will not whatsoeuer free-will-men presumptuously auouch the Holy Ghost telleth vs it is not in the willer nor in the runner but therefore men come to the faith because they are elected Act. 13.48 And why did not the Iewes beleeue the heauenly doctrine of Christ himselfe the reason is giuen Ioh. 10.26 Ye beleeue not because ye are not my sheepe most true is it here the elect haue obtained sauing faith the rest are hardened Rom. 11.7 The third conclusion is that this peculiar faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought in them by the ministrie of the word this beeing noted here that the end of the ministrie is to bring the elect vnto the faith Iob. 33.23 If there be a messenger or interpreter one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse now this righteousnesse is no other then the righteousnesse of faith for this ende were the Apostles called furnished and sent out into the world to teach men faith on the Sonne of God as appeareth in their commission Mar. 16.16 Goe into all the world and preach the Gospel to euery creature he that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued to this purpose is it that Paul affirmeth of the great mysterie of Godlinesse that it must first be preached vnto the Gentiles and then beleeued on in the world Vse 1. If this be the principall ende of the ministerie let ministers herein employ their first and principall paines to bring men vnto the faith wherein they shall imitate our Apostle not onely here but in his other Epistles who first dealeth in the causes and meanes of saluation and then instructeth in Christian manners as one whom the wisdome of God had taught that if the inside be not first made cleane and the heart purified by faith whatsoeuer actions can proceede from men be they neuer so glorious yet indeede they are no better then glistering sinnes he hath the right way of teaching in the schoole of Christ that first layeth for his ground faith in Christ and then buildeth thereon all his precepts of Christian Philosophie 2. The Minister ought to propound before him Gods end in performance of euery ministeriall dutie and that is by enlighting conuerting confirming comforting to bring and stablish men in the faith Which iustly reprehendeth such as forgetting themselues their dutie and people out of the pride of their hearts busie themselues in finding out obscure and darke mysteries tying hard knots to vntie them againe not much vnlike the dogge which refuseth soft meate to gnaw vpon bones and all this to get the praise of nimble heads and sharpe wits whereas the true glorie of a Minister is the number of those that are begotten to the faith who are gathered by the plaine euidence of the word in the words not which mans wisdome but which Gods spirit teacheth 3. The Lord hauing set out the ministrie for this vse let euery hearer acknowledge herein Gods ordinance and yeeld themselues with all submission vnto the ministerie and the word there preached that thereby they may haue faith wrought in their hearts God will haue men taught on earth and not from heauen by man not Angels or dead men let this meanes be despised nothing in heauen or earth can do thee good fast pray afflict thy soule forget not to distribute doe all the good thou canst but yet all this while despise the word offered and thou hast forsaken thine owne mercie nay more come to the ministerie heare the word read preached ioyne in the prayers and Sacraments of the Church if thou commest without the submission of thy heart whereby thou art become as prepared ground to couer the seede vnto increase all is in vaine for what is Paul what is Apollos what is the minister be he neuer so choise and excellent except he be the Minister of thy faith and so what is the ministerie to thee if it be not the ministerie of thy faith 4. Euery man may hence examine himselfe whether in the vse of the ministerie he finde sauing faith begotten wrought in his heart and by examination some may finde their vnderstandings more enlightened their iudgements more setled their practise in some things reformed but a very fewe shall finde Christ apprehended and rested in vnto saluation seeing so fewe there are that liue by faith in the Sonne of God for of all the sinnes that the spirit may and shall rebuke the world of this is the chiefe because they beleeue not in Christ. Howsoeuer many are in some things bettered by the ministerie yet very fewe haue attained this principall ende of it which is to put men in possession of true faith and by it of saluation And the knowledge of the truth which is according to Godlinesse The Apostle beeing called to beget faith in the elect magnifieth and extolleth this his calling from the difficultie of the worke for it is not to bring forth by his trauell any blind perswasion of faith which beeing too naturall to men would rise of it selfe fast enough without any such manuring but such a faith as is peculiar to the elect as before we heard In the which least men should be deceiued as easily and willingly the most be he taketh paines to set downe the whole nature of it in particular And first here we haue the ground of faith which is knowledge and because the truth of faith cannot find footing vpon follies or fansies nay nor vpon euery profitable knowledge he teacheth what kind of knowledge he speaketh of and that is the knowledge of the truth that is of the Gospel beeing a word of truth yea truth it selfe so called by way of excellencie or eminencie as though no other truth deserued that name or because this carrieth the onely vndoubted truth with it And further because many thinke all cocksure and that they cannot faile of faith if they be able to discourse of this truth he teacheth vs that it is not euery knowledge of the truth he meaneth but such a one as is according to godlinesse that is such as frameth the heart of the possessor to true Godlinesse Whence naturally arise these three conclusions First that the doctrine of the Gospell is the truth it selfe Secondly that the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith Thirdly that where it is aright it frameth the heart to Godlinesse First the doctrine of the Gospel is truth it selfe 1. because the author of it is truth
it selfe and cannot lie it beeing a part of his word who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued 2. because the penmen of it were inspired by the holy Ghost and spake and writ as they were mooued by him who is called the spirit of truth Ioh. 14.17 3. because it is a doctrine of Christ and aymeth at him who is the the truth principally as well as the way of our saluation Whence it is that the Apostles often stile it by the word of truth as Eph. 1.13 After ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of your saluation and Coloss. 1.5 For the hopes sake whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospel True it is that the Lawe is a true word without all error but yet neuer thus called For the morall law will not now affoard such a truth as by which a sinner can be iustified in the sight of God and the ceremoniall law although it doe acknowledge such a truth yet was it a farre off and in types and not in the truth but the Gospel onely is such a truth as whereby we are raised to saluation Vse 1. Ministers must rightly devide this word of truth as such who would be approoued of Christ both the author and subiect of it for the more notable the subiect is the more care must there be in handling it Which the Apostle Peter teacheth If any man speake let him speake as the word of God The word of truth would be truely dealt with purely preached wisely applyed and so faithfully dispensed as that both God and good men and a mans owne conscience may approoue his worke 2. This word so purely handled shall euery soule finde to be truth it selfe so as beleeuers shall not faile of the saluation published in it and vnbeleeuers shall as surely meete with condemnation seeing hereby they are condemned alreadie 3. Not to haue this truth seated in our hearts is a fearefull case for it argueth a man to be giuen vp to error and delusion 2. To doubt of any part of it is to giue a lie to all the rest 3. To seeke for saluation out of it or besides it as the blinded Papist doth is to cleaue to folly and falsehood 4. To despise this truth is to contemne great saluation for if to despise Moses law bringeth death without mercie how much more sorer punishment is he worthy of which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God 5. But to fight against this truth is most wofull for it is strongest and will preuaile neuer man lifted against the truth but he found it too heauie for him neuer man spurned against it but to the bruising of himselfe Secondly the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith for so our Apostle would haue vs conceiue that the faith of the elect is raised vpon knowledge of the truth as the matter of it and in this sence we read that faith is called the faith of truth euen for this reason because it is begotten in the acknowledgement of the truth and Paul in asking that question How shall they beleeue except they heare plainly concludeth that no hearing of the truth no faith in it and how may he that runneth read in the Scriptures that to whomsoeuer faith is giuen they be such as are taught of God such as to whom the holy spirit is become a schoolemaster who openeth their vnderstandings that with much assurance they can see and acknowledge the truth for seeing faith is much more then an vncertaine opinion or wauering fancie it followeth that that knowledge which is the ground of it must be no shaking reede with euery winde but a certaine acknowledgement of the truth approouing of it and assenting vnto it Neither may we thinke that the spirit of truth traineth men in blinde and vngrounded conceits nor leaueth their hearts in vncertainties but that wheresoeuer he worketh such an eminent grace as faith is he maketh men able in some good measure to giue a reason of the hope that is in them And as little reason haue we to conceiue that the worke of the Ministerie is to build castles in the ayre or the castle of faith without a foundation but that Ministers are sent to make the misteries of saluation cleare in the euidence and demonstration of the spirit and so lay men on that foundation to become a spirituall house consisting of liuing stones fit for the honour of the Lord. And to ende the proofe notably doth the Apostle Paul prooue the effectuall faith of the Thessalonians from this ground of it for our Gospel was not vnto you in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance which place must be vnderstood so to be both in the teachers and the hearers as the context declareth Vse 1. If knowledge be the ground of faith then sleight is the faith of the most whatsoeuer men professe Numbers of most silly creatures swarme euery wheare who pretend and presume vpon as strong a faith to God ward as the best preacher of them all and yet liue no better then Atheists euen without God in the world without the knowledge of his waies without his feare in their hearts to loue God aboue all and their neighbours as themselues is but a breath with them to beleeue in Iesus Christ is so naturall as they neuer doubted of it all their liues to bring forth fruits of faith whose propertie is to worke by loue in the obedience of the Commandements of the first and second table this they do they hope as well as God wil giue them leaue or as others of their neighbours do whereas alas euen their speach bewraieth them to be destitute of vnderstanding and consequently vtterly voide of the faith of truth 2. If the ground of faith must be a certaine knowledge of heauenly truth then hereby 1. is ouerturned that fond distinction of the Papists which masketh there more then Egyptian blindnes ioyned with wilfulnes and obstinacie vnder their modest vaile of vnexpressed faith or the faith of lay-men whereby if they can professe themselues Catholikes liue and die in the beleefe of their falsely so termed Catholike Church although they know not what it beleeueth it is sufficient for their saluation And indeed be that professeth that religion which like the apples of Egypt will abide no touch had need leane vpon an implicit faith And so some of them pretending more learning thē is common among them beeing pressed by argument haue thought they haue learnedly enough answeared in saying that their Doctors can answer for them But who seeth not these Pharisies taking away the key of knowledge and incurring that we denounced against such as will neither enter themselues nor suffer others to enter into the kingdome of heauen for surely if little or no knoledge little or no faith of a mans owne were enough how vnwise was Paul so to trouble
the God of our Lord Iesus Christ would giue the Ephesians to know what the hope is of his calling Secondly the subiects in whom it is The Saints for as the practise of beleeuers before Christ to waite for his first comming in humilitie as we read of Simeon Annah many others so now beleeuers as constantly waite for his second comming and the comforts of it Reu. 22.17 And that it belongeth only to the Saints is cleare 1. In that it is ioyned with the faith of the elect in this text 2. Because it ariseth from faith is nourished by it and is proportionall vnto it 3. The thing hoped for belongeth only to the Saints they only haue right in the tree of life and only they enter in through the gates into the Cittie 4. That which meriteth the thing hoped for that is the righteousnesse and obedience of Christ belongeth only to them for them only he praied while he was on earth for them only he died he rose againe ascended into heauen and now maketh requests at the right hand of his Father Thirdly the obiect of this hope Things to come and namely after the resurrection life eternall In which regard the Apostle calleth it an hope laid vp in heauen which is all one with that in the text hope of life eternall vnto which it lifteth vp the heart and affections Where the excellencie of the grace may be conceiued from the excellencie of the obiect it is not conuersant about momentanie and sleeting matters not insisteth in things below but about durable and eternall things to come and not onely comforteth the soule here below in earth but crowneth it hereafter in heauen And this grace it is which putteth such a difference between the godly and the wicked that whereas these are well appaied and contented with things present and wish for most part there were no other heauen then that happinesse they enioy here vpon earth the other looke vpward and outward and see a farre off and are such as waite for the adoption of sonnes and the redemption of their bodies which is the full haruest of those first fruits which they haue alreadie receiued Fourthly it is added in the description that this grace of hope doth firmely and not waueringly expect this eminent obiect and this it doth both because it is grounded not as the Papists teach vpon mans merit power or promises but vpon the most firme promise of God more stable then the hills of which mention is made in the next words as also in that the holy Ghost who first worketh it doth also nourish it yea and so sealeth it vp vnto the heart as it can neuer make ashamed it may indeede be tossed and shaken with many kinds of temptations yet in the patient attending vpon the Lord it holdeth out and faileth not Fiftly the fruit or effect of it is in the last words expressed namely that it prouoketh vnto all holy duty yea and continueth the beleeuer in it Thus Abraham by faith obeyed God and held out looking for the recompence of reward whence it is that as true faith is called in the Scriptures a liuing faith so found hope is also called a liuely hope that is such an one as is effectuall in the heart of the beleeuer to stirre him vp vnto all heauenly conuersation Vse This doctrine teacheth vs what a rare thing this grace of hope is among men and that the thing it selfe is not so common in the world as the opinion of it Aske any man how he meaneth to be saued the answer will be he hopeth well and he trusteth in God that hoping well he shall haue well but if this doctrine be true it followeeh that as faith is not of all no more is hope For it is a grace peculiar to the Saints who are very fewe in comparison of the multitude And is a companion of faith which is not the portion of the most It casteth anker in heauen and striueth not to become the heire of the earth as most men do whose whole studies are to plant and build and call the houses after their owne names and raise their families and make themselues great in the earth of whom we heare the holy Ghost speaking that their hope is onely in this life and they haue no hope in their death It is also accompanied with many graces which are not the garlands of euery head not the beauties of any but the spouses of Iesus Christ. It is not found but in an heart humbled with the touch for sinne and yet possessed with true peace in God grounded on that promise which is made to the poore in spirit for of these two it is ingendred It procreateth and preserueth heauenly mindednes lifting vp the heart to wait and wish for their masters comming so as that day neuer commeth vnawares vpon them as it doth on those who are yet in the night and in darkenesse It suffereth not a man to walke in the wayes of sinne either in hope of mercie or presuming of repentance but he that hath this hope purgeth himselfe and auoydeth the corruptions that are in ●he world through lust It vpholdeth the heart in obedience and dutie both by exciting the will and the diligent hand to vndertake and performe and strengthening the whole man in temptations dangers and distractions vnto all perseuerance in the wayes of God So that although when pleasure or profit is to be cast off or when crosses and losses betide the hypocrite for his obedience all his hope perisheth and vanisheth as the dewe before the sunne yet this hope maketh not ashamed but comforteth in this life and crowneth in the life to come Let blindnesse therefore make fooles bold whose propertie it is to beleeue euery thing yet the wisedome of the wise will cause him to vnderstand his way and not suffer him to nourish for hope either a doubtful desire of somthing which with Balaam he may naturally wish or a dreame in the slumber of conscience deluding with a perswasion of life that heart which is as dead as a stone within him Which God who cannot lie hath promised before the world began The pronoune relatiue which some from whom I would not easily depart referre rather to the word truth then eternall life because of that in the 3. ver But hath made his word manifest and thence indeede might our Apostle iustly haue defended his doctrine from suspition of noueltie beeing the same which was looked for euen in the first ages of the world and now made more manifest by which occasion were offered to ouerthrowe sundrie newe broa●hed nouelties of the Popish doctrine not sauouring of ancient antiquitie But I rather encline to that other construction referring the relatiue vnto life eternall immediately going before which as we haue heard it to be expected by hope so is it here said to be promised by God for in the promise hope hath his
not in the change of the minde but know it that no time is thine but the present and it is little better then Poperie to professe free will in this matter it is too much thou hast beene deceiued in the time past deceiue not thy selfe also in time to come Well said one God hath left man time past to repent of and time present to repent in but the time to come he hath reserued in his owne hands Doct. 3. The manifestation of saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Which point is plaine in that the preaching of the word is an ordinance of God 1. to make Christ knowne in whose name alone saluation is to be had 2. to beget and confirme faith in the heart by which alone as by an hand we apprehend and applie him with his merits to our saluation The former the Apostle affirmeth Ephes. 3.8 the vnsearcheable riches of Christ was by preaching made knowen to the Gentiles and Coloss. 1.27 God would make knowne what is the riches which riches is Christ in you whome we preach For the 2. that faith is wrought by the word preached see Rom. 10.14 and 1. Cor. 1.21 By the foolishnesse of preaching it pleaseth God to saue such as beleeue in that herein he both offereth Christ vnto vs and giueth vs faith by which we receiue him 2. This truth appeareth in that wheresoeuer the Lord had a people to call to saluation there he sent his Prophets and Apostles whom he appointed so long there to stay till his worke was finished and then sent them elsewhere when Paul was resisted and blasphemed by the Iewes at Corinth he pronounced them guil●ie of their owne blood and purposed to turne to the Gentiles but the Lord suffered him not but caused him to staie there a yeare and six moneths longer because he had many people in the cittie so Paul and Timothie hauing gone through Phrygia and Galatia were forbidden by the holy Ghost to preach in Asia and by a vision were assured that the Lord called them to preach in Macedonia Which direction of them by the spirit to some places and restrayning them from other argued that they carried with them the meanes of conuerting such as whom the Lord at that time purposed to call In this ordinance is it called the word of faith 1. Tim. 4.6 deliuered by exhortation and doctrine vers 13. in this embassadge is it called the the word of reconciliation and thus preached is called the Gospel of the kingdome of God Mark 1.14 Iohn came preaching the Gospel of the kingdome of God powerfully raysing vp men thereunto and the Gospel of our saluation Ephes. 1.13 Vse 1. The preaching of the word is the greatest blessing that the Lord bestoweth vpon any people and such a one as God in his anger depriues that people of against whom he intendeth a plague the former appeareth in that great care of Christ himselfe who before and after his ascension prouiding for the good of his bodie the Church as the speciall gift and loue-token he could leaue behind him appointed Apostles Euangelists and after them Pastors and teachers to continue to his comming againe The effects also shew the power and price of the blessing which are reconciliation with God sanctification of the spirit mortification of the flesh the life of God all which are brought by the reuealing of Iesus Christ. The latter is euident in Amos 5.13 that when the Lord is about to bring euill times he maketh the prudent to keepe silence Both which shew vnto vs that the Lord hath opened vnto vs in this Church and land his chiefest treasure in that he hath put the barres into the rings of the Arke whereby his glorie is carried throughout our countrie and in that he hath lifted vp his cloud in the sight of all our people to direct vs in all our iourneies he hath not dealt so freely with euery nation neither haue they knowen his lawes Psal. 44. last Vse 2. Those people are bound to much thankfulnes and dutie among whom the Lord hath planted a preaching Ministerie by which men may be directed in the path of saluation It is a blessing we are to wish and pray for to all Gods people and bewaile their want that haue it not The former we are enioyned by the expresse precept of Christ considering the greatnesse of the haruest The latter by his example who mourned to see people as sheepe scattered without a shepheard Obiect But people may doe well inough if they haue the word read publikely and they can read it at home Ans. My purpose is not by establishing preaching to derogate from reading the manifold fruite which accreweth by reading the Scriptures hath otherwise taught mee together with the custome of the Prophets Apostles and Christ himselfe of which I haue elsewhere expressed the principall But the things which God hath ioyned together let no man separate In the old Testament the Levites must read the booke of the law giue the sence and cause the people to vnderstand the reading In the New after the reading of the law there was expounding Christ himselfe after the lecture of the law had a booke giuen him found the prophecie closed the booke sate downe expounded it so did the Apostles Paul and Barnabas Act. 13.15 Thus hath the Lord afforded his Church a further benefit and more full blessing a more ordinarie and principall meanes to beget faith and repentance and to lead men along vnto saluation by a more ful manifestation of the promise of life which is here said to be by preaching that is by explaning and applying things read to the heart and affection This is the labour in word and doctrine commended vnto vs that are the Lords builders and laborers who in raysing the spirituall walls must imitate Nehemiahs builders euery one of whom in repayring the walls of Ierusalem must hold the trowell in one hand and the weapon in the other in like manner should euery Minister exhort with whose some doctrine there is the vse of the trowell and improoue the gainsayer which is the vse of the sword to want which ordinance is to want that which the wisedome of the Lord thought most necessarie for the welfare of his Church who would not haue his people sticke in the outside but pearce into the depth of his wisdom reuealed neither content themselues with a bulk of corne but to get it troden out nor with bread in the lumpe but deuided Whether therefore their estate may be good in such a want or no we are not so much to sit as iudges vpon them as become petitioners for them that their want may be supplied seeing the word hath taught vs that where vision faileth people perish And for priuate reading would God men were better acquainted with it then they are yet although the Iewes had the law priuately at home the
2. More specially by grace of those who are adopted and renewed by grace and thus God is properly our father in heauen and no man is to be called father in earth Secondly when God is personally called father then it is to be taken for the first person and this title is giuen principally to the first person in Trinitie 1. because he is the Father of the second person the word by nature and by eternall generation 2. because he is Father to Christ in respect of his manhood not as to other men by nature or grace of adoption but by personall vnion the humane nature subsisting in the person of the word 3. because from both these followeth that by Adoption he becommeth the father of all the elect beeing members and making vp the bodie of Christ. And this is the respect wherein God is tearmed Father in this place both because it hath relation to the second person here nominated as also because in prayer we must repaire to God the Father in Christ our head and Mediator And our Lord Iesus Christ Christ is Lord in himselfe as God and Lord ouer all blessed for euer both in that he giueth essence and susteining to all things as also possesseth all things and ruleth euen the most powerfull and glorious of all creatures and is called Lord of the Angels much more ouer the Deuils themselues Againe he is our Lord 1. as Mediatour we beeing his inheritance giuen him of his Father 2. as a Redeemer purchasing vs beeing captiues and thralls to Satan 3. as a head of his Church quickning and gouerning the whole bodie of it whether militant or triumphant 4. in regard of his power and dominion for to him all power is committed in heauen and in earth who hath put all things vnder his feete in him we hold all things as in capite and to him we owe all homage and subiection in all obedience both actiue and passiue Quest. But how can Christ be a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant Ans. Christ considered in the office of Mediatourship is after a speciall manner a seruant of his Father and so his Father calleth him for my seruant Dauids sake and Behold my seruant because he faithfully serued him in the worke of redemption in that he was made man came into the world fulfilled the law prayed vnto his Father and was made obedient euen to the death yet all the while of his seruice he remained a Lord in himselfe and by his seruice became the Lord of his Church redeemed ones in a speciall manner Our Sauiour There is no other name giuen but this Obiect The Father and the holy Ghost saue also Answ. Although all outward workes of the Trinitie which make for our comfort and saluation are vndeuided as beeing one and coworking yet in performing them we must obserue an order among them the Father is the fountaine from whom the Sonne for whom as a meritorious cause the holy Ghost by whom we communicate of all blessings so all three saue but the Father by sending the Sonne the Sonne by paying the ransome the holy Ghost by applying it so all create redeeme sanctifie yet obseruing this order and manner of working when the workes are more personally attributed vnto them creation is ascribed to the Father not excluding the sonne and holy Ghost redemption to the Sonne and sanctification to the holy Ghost Which order is rather here to be obserued because our Apostle expresseth it in his prayer for these graces when he craueth them both from the Father and the Sonne not excluding the holy Ghost whereby we are taught how to direct our suits also namely that the Father by the Spirit through his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ would enrich vs with grace and the fruits of it Obiect But there are other sauiours as Ioshua and other Iudges and Kings yea Prophets and Ministers are called sauiours Ans. 1. These all were men and as men saued But of Christ it is said Behold our God he shall saue vs. 2. Some of them as Iudges were typicall sauiours sauing 1. the bodies 2. of one people the Iewes 3. from temporall death and oppression but Christ saueth the bodies and soules of all beleeuing Iewes and Gentiles from hell and condemnation 3. Others as Prophets and Ministers are onely ministeriall and instrumentall sauiours not properly onely for sundrie causes the worke of the efficient is ascribed to the instrument whom the Lord vseth in publishing this saluation but Christ alone saueth by meriting and paying the price and bringing home to the heart this redemption Obiect But we haue yet sinne in vs and therefore are not saued from it Answ. We are saued euen for the present from the wrath and poyson of it in part for euer from the damnation of it so as the strength of it is gone This is the meaning of this salutation which beeing a prayer sheweth vs both of what kinde our salutations ought to be in which we would testifie our loue to whom we write namely to wish them the best blessings as also in what manner not sending formall salutations without feeling abstracting curtesie from conscience but they must proceede from a religious and reuerent affection of the heart for euery prayer ought to come from the heart and as hauing God himselfe a witnes of the truth of the spirit in such wishes as Rom. 1.9 and Phil. 1.8.9 Now the principall lessons in this prayer are two 1. That the free and euerlasting grace of God in Christ is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall 2. Peace is the fruite of the grace and mercie of God Doctr. 1. The grace of God is the whole sufficiencie of his people the first middle and last cause of euery good thing conuaied vnto them or issuing from them not once did the Lord enforce this point vpon his owne people teaching them by things temporall their spirituall estate and condition Deut. 7.7 The Lord set his loue vpon you and chose you not because you were moe in number for you were the fewest but because he loued you cap. 9.4.6 Say not in thine heart because of my righteousnes the Lord hath giuen me this good land for thou art a stiffnecked people and were they not yet further off from meriting and procuring to themselues spirituall blessings and that heauenly Canaan and euerlasting rest prepared for the people of God and if we consider our condition before this grace be reueiled and shine vpon vs are not we in our blood when the Lord first couereth vs with his skirts and no eie but his pitieth vs he calleth vs with Adam out of our thickets when we runne from him and are hiding our selues then finding vs when we would not be found Vse 1. To confute the Popish doctrine which depresseth this grace of God and endureth not that the castle of a mans saluation should be altogether founded without
him in possession The Apostle gathereth a flocke of the wild beasts of the forrest the Pastor must staie to feed and attend vpon that flocke the Apostle must change his place vpon immediate commandement the Pastor may not for he must be readie at all assaies to feed the flocke depending vpon him 1. Pet. 5. he must alwaies present himselfe as a patterne and example vnto it 1. Tim. 4.12 except we will say that the ordinarie Ministerie of the Gospel is not as straitly bound to dutie as the ordinarie Minister of the law for the Priests must alwaies be readie in the Temple to answer all doubts as Ely 1. Sam. 1.9 to keepe in the holy fire and lights to receiue all sacrifices and oblations to renew the bread before the Lord yea and for this end was that institution that the Priests might not dwell farre from the Temple but their houses were builded close to it according to the patterne of Dauid 1. Chro. 28.13 Yet so as by the Churches call a Pastor whose gifts are found fit for such a purpose may be sent from his place if in the interim it be sufficiently prouided for either to gather a Church or reduce such as haue gone astraie See 2. Chron. 17.7.9 2. Note That Paul departing from Creta leaueth them not at sixe seauens neither neglecteth the busines and worke he had in his hands but leaueth Titus to perfect that which he had begunne Herein teaching vs that euery man whome the Lord hath called to doe good in his Church and whose conscience stirreth vp his care must finde in himselfe this holy desire that the Lords plow be euer followed his building euer reared his worke euer furthered by all but especially so farre as lyeth in his power by his owne meanes and that both in the places abroad as also where he liueth Paul careth not onely for the Churches where he becommeth but where he hath beene and this was the ground why he left Timothie at Ephesus 1. Tim. 1.3 and Titus here at Creta vpon which occasion he wrote both these Epistles So should euery man in his place whom God honoureth to be the beginning of any good thing imitate that worthy Nehemiah in his care Remēber me O God blot not out my kindnes that is suffer not thy worship restored by my meanes in Ierusalem to be defaced and much lesse abolished In like manner if a man be called from his place so as he must leaue it to another his care must be that it be furnished with a fit man Eliah when he was to be taken vp walking with Elisha whom he knew was to be his successor by prayer obtained for him an hard request namely the doubling of his owne spirit vpon him Memorable is the speach and practise of Moses who when the Lord had bid him goe vp into the Mount and see the land and then die he neglecteth himselfe and forgetteth after a sort his owne present death and breaketh out into prayer for the people O Lord God of spirits appoint a man ouer the congregation 1. that he may be instructed to go in and out 2. least this people be as sheepe without a shepheard Neither would Christ himselfe the mirrour of grace ascend vp into heauen before he had appointed furnished men for the building vp of his bodie his earnest charge to Peter and in him to all the Disciples and their successours that if euer they lou●d him they would feed his sheepe sheweth the care of this great shepheard of our soules Men need not be prouoked to prouide for their children while yet they are with them that it may be well with them after their departure and should not spirituall fathers doe the like for their children to whom they are tyed by a strayter bond Fearefully sinne they against this example who while they craple and couple liuings together that they may fill their owne bellies and haue there portion in the fleece and fat neither staie themselues to teach as they ought nor yet leaue any Titus behind them of whose sufficiencie we heard before to redresse things that remaine but offer the sheepe of Christ to the wolfe and sell soules for peeces of siluer and morsells of bread The men of God were wont to extend their care for Gods people with neglect of themselues euen to the time of their departure yea and after although they might seeme to be loosed by remoouall or at least by death but these feele no waight of such an heauie burthen which presseth them euen for the present 3. Note That the Apostle thus sending Titus he will haue him consider the end of his calling and placing both to prouoke himselfe to diligence as also to obtaine for him more libertie and authoritie in that Church where he had left him and it was no more then needed for to goe about to innouate and reforme a whole Iland hauing an hundreth cities in it and bring new offices and officers among them might both exasperate the one and altogether discourage the other to both seeme a thankles busines But now if Titus shall thinke with himselfe This is the end of my calling wherein God requireth my faithfulnes and if the Cretians shall conceiue within themselues for this end was Titus placed amongest vs both to settle things that are wanting and to reforme things that are amisse this consideration could not but mooue and perswade both of them to a mutuall and comfortable consent in the busines of Christ and a louing entertainment one of the other Which teacheth that that man who would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through any calling must euer haue the end of it in his eye The Magistrate must set before ●is eie that he is the Minister of God for mens wealth and that therefore he must not carrie the sword for naught but necessitie lyeth vpon him to execute the iudgements of God The Minister must propound before him his end which is the gathering together of the Saints hence a necessitie is imposed vpon him and wo to him that not ayming at this end preacheth not the Gospel The priuate man must set before him the publike and common good and in his whole course aime at that The efficacie of which argument is such as that the Lord himselfe most vsually vrgeth it in stirring vp men to the right receiuing and vse both of spirituall blessings as also the holy fruition of temporall mercies How doth the Lord vrge his people to the pure vse of his holy ordinance of marriage otherwise then from the three ends of it 1. in that thence they must expect an holy seed 2. for auoyding of fornication 3. from the comfort of a fit helpe and a comfortable companion Mal. 2.14 compared with 1. Cor. 7.2 and Gen. 2.18 So as looke what Mordecai said of Hesters aduancement Who can tell whether thou art come to the kingdome for this time let euery man say
vnion when Dauid and God consult together Iehoiadab and Ioash and when Iosiah standeth with Huldas the Prophetesse and for a man to oppose the ordinances of Christ with this humane ordinance is to set the bodie and soule together by the eares Not therefore the faithfull Ministers of Christ but such as stand with the beast and his ordinances and with the Antichrist of Rome are enemies vnto magistracie and weakeners of the power of Princes while they teach that all Ecclesiasticall persons are to be exempted from the ciuill power while they binde their hands in freeing their subiects from all obedience euen in ciuill commands and while they highly dishonour them in giuing the Pope a power ouer them to set them vp and depose them at his pleasure and that in thei● owne dominions where they are onely vnder God And here first may be noted that after the Apostle had taken great paines in the planting of this Church of Creta yet were many things wanting and defectiue still for Titus is left behind him to redresse things defectiue which must not be conceiued as that the Apostles either thorough ignorance forgetfulnes or carelesnesse omitted any thing but because they were cast into straights of time and could not euery where finish euery thing at least effectually and executionally but onely by way of direction Which is a ground of sundrie considerations First it noteth what was the speciall worke of an Euangelist namely that beeing the companions of the Apostles they were to bring on the work of the Lord to perfectiō both by establishing that foundation they had laid building on further by their direction where they left off The office was middle betweene the Apostle and the Pastor the calling was immediate from the Apostles as the Apostles was immediate frō Christ. Where by the name Euangelists are not meant those who in a straighter sense are so called as whose helpe the Lord vsed to write the historie of Christ and beginnings of Christian religion two of which were Apostles and other two their companions as Marke and Luke but those whom we call vice-apostles or pastors fore-runners who were in preaching the Gospel planting the ministerie and administration of holy things to be as hands and feete wholly at the Apostles appointment to call and recall whether and when they would such as Timothie Titus Marke Tychichus seruing now in one Church now in an other as the Apostles pleased to vse them whose office because their calling was from the Apostles and their worke seruing the founding and rearing of the first Christian Churches and that by the direction of the Apostles must needs also cease with the Apostles Secondly notwithstanding many defects and wants in this Church and those great ones and that in constitution for we see their cities were destitute of elders and Church gouernours yet was it neither neglected by Paul nor separated from by Titus as a cage of vncleane birds teaching vs not presently to condemne a number and societie of men much lesse of Churches for want of some lawes or gouernment for no Church is not wanting in some if they ioyne together in the profession of truth of doctrine and worship for so many of the Churches planted by the Apostles themselues might haue beene refused for wanting some officers for a time although they were after supplied How much better were it that the spirit of meekenes should lead into a patient expectation when God will further beautifie his Sion to make her become the praise of the world then that the spirit of pride should hurrie vs into a rash and peremptorie sentence against euen whole Churches Did not Paul when the Church of Galatia had reuolted from the Doctrine of free iustification by Christ yet call and account it a Church still Let them shew any of our errors of this nature Obiect But those Churches and this in Creta was in constituting but yours after a long time by publike lawes and common consent haue refused the lawes of Christ and that after you haue beene conuinced not to be the Church of Christ. Ans. But where is this sufficient conuiction If it be said in their bookes the truth is although they haue pointed vs to some wants yet none of them haue sufficiently concluded vs no Church at all and suppose our case were altogether as ill as they would make it who are they that they should giue vs a bill of diuorcement If a priuate man erre and offend must he not first be admonished and then censured and iudged but by whom by priuate men no but by the Church and shall not a whole Church or many Churches challenge the same forme of proceeding and therefore seeing this is not done by our neighbour reformed Churches which no doubt are the true Churches of God wee remaine and shall truely retaine the name of the Church and people of God and leaue them to the reforming of their error both in the matter of their plea as also in the manner of their proceeding Thirdly we learne hence that no Church is hastily brought to any perfection The Apostles themselues the master builders with much wisdome and labour and often in long time made not such proceedings but that had they not prouided labourers to follow them with a diligent hand all had beene lost Much a doe had they to lay the foundation and prepare matter for the building and yet this they did by conuerting men to the faith and baptizing them but after this to ioyne them into a publike profession of the faith and constitute visible faces of Churches among them required more helpe and labour and for most part was left to the Euangelists So as the building of Gods house is not vnlike to the finishing of other great buildings with what labour are stones digged out of the earth with what difficultie depart they from their naturall roughnes what sweate and strength is spent ere the Mason can smothe them as it is also with the timber and yet after all this they lie a long time here and there scattered a sunder and make no house till by the skill of some cunning builder they be aptly laid and fastened together in their frame So euery mans heart in the naturall roughnes of it is as hard as a stone his will and affections like the crabbed and knottie okes invincibly resisting all the paines of Gods masons and carpenters till the finger of God in the Ministerie come make plaine and smoothe way working in their conuersion And yet many conuerts although they belong to the Catholike Church make not a particular visible Church till they ioyne in some publike seruice and worship of God according to the lawes and orders appointed by himselfe 2. Besides this inward ineptitude and resistance neuer had any building except Babels towers which had Gods owne hand from heauen against them such outward opposites against it as this hath here is Satan and all
suppressed And as the charge must be iust so it must not be frailties or infirmities that hang vpon our nature commonly corrupted but grosse and open sinnes yea and enormious crimes in the sight of the sunne the iust challenge and proofe of which disable a man from this function by this Apostolicall Canon And howsoeuer he that is the cleanest and hath washed himselfe in snow water hath his owne clothes that will pollute him yet read we of diuerse in the Scriptures that haue attained to walke without reproofe as Iob Zacharie and Elizabeth and many euen priuate Christians at this day through Gods mercie liue without crime though not any saue the Sonne of God himselfe euer liued without sinne All which open to vs the meaning of the precept Doctr. How able soeuer a man be to teach yet if he be of corrupt conuersation and scandalous in life he is not fit to be chosen for a Minister Reasons 1. Our Apostle here in the first place and more largely insisteth vpon the life of him that is to be chosen and afterwards in fewer words requireth his fitnes for doctrine and so in his charge to Timothie that he should laie hands on no man rashly addeth that some mens sinnes goe before hand and some mens sinnes follow after iudgement as though he had said more largely Vse all the circumspection thou canst yet some hypocrites will creepe into the Ministerie some are inwardly profane and such close sinners thou canst not discerne till afterward they manifest themselues others are open sinners of which thou maiest iudge aright these latter thou art to hinder the former reclaime or seasonably remooue and so salue vp the sore againe for how requisite is it that such a sweete and sauorie doctrine should be matched with a sweet and sauorie Christian conuersation 2. That such an high calling is to be graced with an vnreprooueable life was typified in the law sundrie waies as after we shall more clearely see in the positiue vertues required especially in that prohibition that none of Aarons sonnes or seed that had any blemish in him might once presse to offer before the Lord neither come neere the vaile nor stand by the Altar 3. A scandalous and obnoxious person shall neuer do good in his calling For although the things of Christ as the Word Sacraments and Doctrine depend not vpon the person of the Minister but on the ordinance of Christ neither in themselues are the worse in bad mens hands no more then a true mans peece of gold in the hand of a theife yet by our weaknes in such a mans hand they are weaker to vs and although no man can answer or warrant the refusing of pure doctrine which is not to be had in respect of persons for the spotted life of the Minister who while he sitteth in Moses chaire be he Pharisie be he hypocrite must be heard yet can it not be but that the wickednes of Helies sonnes will make the people abhorre the offerings of the Lord which what a greiuous sinne it was before the Lord see 1. Sam. 2.17 Againe how can he benefit his people whose hands are bound whose mouth is shut and cannot vtter the truth without continuall galling and sentencing of himselfe and when euery scoffer shall be readie to say to him art thou become weake like one of vs and the word shall be still returned vpon himselfe how can it be expected that he should do good amongst them Christ preuented that scoffe Phisitian heale thy selfe and Paul sheweth the dutie of euery Minister namely to minister well and the fruit of it he getteth a good report and great libertie in the faith Wherein let a Minister be wanting if he were able to speake with the tongues of men and Angels yea if he had a fierie tongue sitting on his head he shall neuer be able to preuaile with ignorant persons who must be sensibly taught and that aswell by their eie as by their eare 4. It is a most dangerous condition to himselfe to be a good teacher of a bad life for such a one is in the snare of the deuill that is when he seeth his life still more and more exprobrated and himselfe more despised euery day then other for it is iust with God that with the wicked should be reproch then he beginnes to grow so bold and impudent as that he casts off all shame and care and as one desperate and hardened in sinne prostituteth himselfe remorselesly vnto all lewdnes and vngodly conuersation Vse 1. Hence may we see the reason why the Deuill so mightily laboureth to slander the most faithfull Ministers of Christ namely that by the contempt of their persons their doctrine also might be condemned And therefore he will play at small game ere he sit out If he cannot hinder the Ministerie he can disgrace it If he cannot discontinue it he can continue a deuill still that is both an aduersarie and an accuser of it for either Christs Disciples wash not or fast not or Christ himselfe is a good companion or Iohn Baptist is too austere and precise or some natural infirmitie as Elishaes bald pate shall be cast as a rub in the way to make the Doctrine lesse welcome And all this because long experience of many ages hath taught this old serpent that the most wretched miscreant euen Herod himselfe will heare gladly Iohn Baptist if he conceiue him as he is a good and godly man carying himselfe without reproofe and exception The selfe same is the ground why he setteth himselfe in all ages to shoue in and hold in the Ministerie such persons as like vnfauorie salt are too base for the dunghil euery way for the ouerthrow of this apostolicall direction vsing and vrging most impregnable arguments drawne from affinitie affection some base and seruill demerit letters and requests of great men or gifts which blind the eyes by which and many other meanes Satans Ministers for the Apostle calleth them no better keepe out the Ministers of God What mischiefe these stratagems of Satan haue wrought in the Church we may see and bewaile and prouoke thence our prayers that the Lord would so let his kingdome come euery where that such maine pillars of Satans kingdome may be shaken and broken especially in reformed Churches which professe and auow the lifting vp of the scepter of Iesus Christ. Vse 2. Note hence what conformitie is most vrged by Christ in all his Ministers namely the ●●iting to vncorrupt doctrine an vnblameable life by these two shall all men know who are the true Ministers sent of Christ this voice and these hands are infallible distinctions not onely of Ministers from other men but euen of Ministers among themselues and the maine and intolerable inconformitie of Ministers is the suiting of Iacobs voice with Esaus hands The Minister hath not done his dutie when he hath pointed to others the way to heauen and
in the mudde of some one of them But because it is a shame to speake in publike of the things they shame not to doe in secret I will forbeare further to mooue and stirre in this sinke which sufficiently stinketh in the nostrills of God and men and conclude the point with Epiphanius his speach They haue refused marriage but not lust no true● of the Originians then of all the Popish orders Doctr. Polygamie was euer a thing blameworthy and euill in it selfe notwithstanding much vsed of Iew and Gentile Reasons 1. The first matrimonie was instituted betweene two persons onely of whom the Lord said expressely they two not they three or more shall be one flesh In which first institution are two grounds ouerturning this sinne 1. Gods action of creating one man and one woman and no moe 2. His iniunction and strait charge to all posteritie that one man should cleaue to one wife who must be his wife and no stranger and not to many wiues at once so as it is against the law of nature and the first institution 2. The Lord by Moses forbiddeth it Leu. 18.18 Thou shalt not take one woman to her sister that is thou shalt not take one woman to another to make them as sisters for in the 16. verse the marriage of the wiues sister is forbidden by proportion euen in monogamie no not after the sisters death seeing consanguinitie and affinitie agree in duration alike Besides that the phrase in Hebrew is commonly so vsed as Gen. 26.31 Exod. 26.3 and the reason of the precept is that such a one must not be taken to greeue the other and seemeth properly to be meant of wiues in polygamie who in the Scriptures are called aduersaries 3. The Prophets themselues reprooue it vpon the ground of the first institution Mal. 2.15 God made but one woman at first and why but one not that he wanted spirit for he had abundance but because he sought a godly seede wherefore keepe your selues in your spirit and let no man transgresse against the wife of his youth where the Prophet proueth it to be not onely against the first institution but wisheth all posteritie carefully to avoide it 4. Christ himselfe taxeth it as a violencing of the first institution Mat. 19.4.5 Haue ye not read that God made them at the beginning male and female and for this cause shall a man leaue father and mother and cleaue to his wife not wiues and they twaine shall be one flesh 5. Christs Apostles condemned it Eph. 5.31 the same speach of our Sauiour Christ repeated 1. Cor. 7. Let euerie man haue his owne wife not wiues and here the Apostle accounteth it such a blot as hindreth the admission of any such into the ministerie And thus polygamie beeing condemned by the first institution of marriage before the Law and also in the Lawe after the Lawe by the Prophets after them by Christ himselfe and by his Apostles it followeth that it was euer an euill condemned euen from the beginning Obiect But the example of the most of the Patriarkes is alleadged for the lawfulnesse of it for else all they would not haue vsed it beeing the best men that euer liued Answ. The canon lawe saith that a common error may not preiudice the least truth true it is that after that most sauage tyrant Lamech had first depraued Gods ordinance it greatly preuailed by example and especially then when there was no King in Israel yet notwithstanding the Prophets and Christ call men not to example but to the rule of the first institution 2. We neuer reade of any of them no not the best well caried it but what fruit had it betweene Hadah and Sillah at first it still retained For what molestation brought it euen to good men what a stirre had Abraham to compose Sarah and Hagar to peace and in their children Isaac and Ismael what a number of sparkles of contention were kindled what heart-griefe was it to Iacob to see such daily emulation betweene Leah and Rahel and what other was the fruit of their enuie but an occasion further to draw him into sinne in taking first one of their maids and then anothers and all to please both to say nothing of the doe he had doubtlesse about their children When Moses speaketh of Esaus 2. wiues he added they were an heart griefe to Isaac and Rebecca Gen. 26.35 when the Scripture speaketh of Gideons 70. sonnes begotten of his owne bodie with the reason for he had many wiues Iud. 8.30 the very next chapter sheweth how Abimelech slewe all these 70. sonnes on one stone saue Iotham How was Elcanah troubled to satisfie and recompence his wife Hannah for the reproach wherewith Peninnah her aduersarie vexed her sore In the inclining of Salomons prosperitie the first exception the Lord tooke against him was that he loued many outlandish women which sinne brought him to all the wickednesse that was found in his hands 3. Whereas it is said that the Patriarks were carried hereunto not by fleshly lust but in desire of increase of that holy seede which was in that one people I answer we may so religiously and charitably conceiue of them and in that regard of the Lords more speciall indulgence and connivence yet can it not prooue lawfull it may make it in them a lesse euill but not no fault for if it had beene lawfull for the fathers in regard of multiplying the Church and filling the earth it had beene much more lawfull and fit for our first Parents for to them was said encrease and multiplie and fill the earth and yet God permitted it not to them but it crept into the world against that first institution Obiect 2. Sam. 12.8 He gaue thy Lords wiues into thy bosome therefore Dauid had many wiues both of his owne and Sauls the Lord beeing the author Ans. Those words into thy bosome indeede often signifie the neere coniunction of marriage yet here as in some other places it signifieth onely that they were giuen vnder Dauids power and hand namely into his subiection and so it signifieth sometime nothing else but to haue something with a man as elsewhere Dauid saith he bore the reproaches of the mightie in his bosome so here Dauid had with him his Master Sauls wiues 2. If the phrase should not so be here taken incest would be defended in Dauid seeing the consanguinitie of the wife is in the same degree to the husband as to the wife and therefore Dauid could no more marrie the stepmothers of his wife Mical then if they had beene his own 3. We neuer read that Dauid tooke any of them that were Sauls to become wife vnto himselfe Obiect Deut. 21.10.15 there are two laws which seeme to fauour it If a man cast his affection vpon a woman c. And if a man haue two wiues the sonne of the hated if first borne shall inherit and therefore the Lord at least permitteth polygamie Ans.
men into euill is because they can easilier giue credance vnto the persons of men then soundly iudge of the actions of them Hauing faithfull children After a mans owne person respect must be had of his priuate gouernment and cariage whom the Lord will haue called so neere him as to serue in holy things before him and because it is meete that such a one be a man of experience and gouernment the Apostle would haue him obserued in the priuate ordering of his family whence an aime may be taken how he is likely to behaue himselfe in publike that if his fitnes skil be tried in ruling the lesser and fewer he may the better be trusted with the greater For that this is the reason of all this diligent enquirie is plaine in 1. Tim. 3.5 For if he cannot gouerne his owne house how can he gouerne the house of God We know that he that is not able to guid a boate is not able to gouerne a great ship and he that being married cannot rule two or three of his own children so neare him much lesse can he gouerne a whole Church men and women who in comparison of the other are as strangers and few of them fully knowen vnto him Quest. But in ordering the familie the first care must be had of the wife why doth the Apostle vtterly omit that both in this place and that of Timothie and in both places only mention the gouernment of the children Ans. 1. That care is not excluded 2. The wife is not so absolutely put vnder gouernment as the children but are partly gouerners in the familie with the husband and beeing the wife of a Minister is presupposed to be of that grace and wisedome as that she is able to take vp her owne dutie without such enforcement and therefore the Apostle thinketh it sufficient to shew what a one the Ministers wife ought to be 1. Tim. 3.11 But 3. and especially because in the gouernment of his children there is a more liuely resemblance of such duties of gouernment which he is to dispense towards the Church And if we looke a little nearer the words we shall see that there is nothing enioyned the Minister as a Father of children which belongeth not vnto him as he is a spirituall father of the children of God For if we respect matter of instruction and doctrine he must haue faithfull children so in the Church by diligent teaching of the doctrine of faith must he bring men vnto the faith or if we looke at matter of manners he must do two things 1. displant vices and plant the contrarie vertues that they may not be accused of riotous or other vngodly courses which also he must publikely performe in the congregation by the word of exhortation and rebuke 2. correct and chastise the obstinate and rebellious that they be not disobedient and so as Minister he hath a rod of correction and the censures of the Church to inflict vpon the obstinate Now in the children of Ministers are required two things 1. for their institution that they be faithfull children 2. for their conuersation they must not be 1. riotous 2. disobedient By faithfull children are meant such as beeing instructed in the faith are at least in externall conuersation answerable to the profession of the faith they make Quest. But is it in the power of any Minister or man to haue faithfull children may not a good man and a Minister too haue most graceles children Ans. There is no man but he is to endeauour that his children may haue euen the grace of faith which is further laid out of his power then by getting himselfe within the couenant But there is no good man who hath it not in his power to instruct his children in the doctrine of faith and also for outward order to make them conformable and in some measure answerable to that prof●ssion so long as they abide vnder his roofe And if the Lord afterwards for some vnknowen and secret cause by leauing them shew he hath no delight in them such a father may herein comfort his conscience that to his power he hath vsed the best meanes for their good Doctr. 1. He that must reforme others abroad must first beginne at home For as true loue beginneth at home and then disperseth it selfe abroad so true religion reformeth at home first and conscionable reformation beginnes at a mans owne heart The tenour of the 101. Psalme sheweth that Dauid comming to his kingdome 1. reformeth his person 2. his Court and familie 3. his countrie The same course tooke Ioshua I and my house and Hester I and my maids And indeed sound reformation cannot correct in another what it selfe cherisheth neither can teach another and it selfe abide vntaught As if it be a zealous reformation proceeding from pure zeale it hateth disorder most of all in the owne bosome it lesse spares sinne in the owne heart then in the house and lesse in the house then abroad and the nearer this serpent approacheth the more is it feared and fled from Well knew the Apostle that he that cannot abide reformation in himselfe can neuer endure it in another and he that suffereth vanitie prophannes irreligion and disorder in his house he can neuer hate these in the house and Church of God and therfore maketh it a sufficient cause to debarre such a one from the Ministerie 2. How dangerous a thing it is for a man vnreformed in himselfe or family to take vpon him in publike the reformation of other we see in Moses himselfe Exod. 4.24 whom as he was going downe into Egypt to be the guide and deliuerer of the Church the Lord met in the way to haue slaine him and the reason was because his sonne Eliazer was not circumcised and so his owne house was vnreformed Whence we may gather how indignely the Lord taketh it that any man should come to gouerne his house that gouerneth not his owne If Moses himselfe be to plant circumcision among the people much more must all his owne males be circumsiced and this must be done or he shall die for it before euer he come where he must serue the Church of God Vse 1. Let euery man know the due season of this weightie dutie and that is when he hath done with himselfe For then he shall better see the mote in another he shall the better discerne the danger and discouer the shifts of sinne he shall more patiently and pitifully deale against it he shall more watchfully preuent it he shall more zealously purge it which not beeing first done many haue swet in redressing their wiues children seruants faults altogether fruitlesly because they neuer in earnest dealt against their owne Priuate men would faine see publike reformation of disorders and who can blame them but they must beginne by giuing religion a roome in their owne houses and hearts else shall they neuer see that they desire their eies may behold Who euer saw whole Churches
Be thou great in the feruencie of thine anger in forgiuing a fact that is shew thy great indignation against that sinne the correction of which for the present thou forbearest saying that is threatning that if thou shalt deliuer him thou wilt further punish him afterwards And thus trayning them in obedience at home it will become thy glorie and their beautie abroad Whereas the cause that now they swagger and are masterlesse abroad is because they were neuer well mastered at home and the reason why now in mans estate perhaps vnder a faithfull ministrie they are so incorrigible is because in their youth they bare no yoke were not inured with corrections Fathers affoarded no helpe to the Ministers by their good education and therefore now good meanes cannot preuaile with them Verse 7. For a Bishop must be vnreprooueable as Gods steward not froward not angrie not giuen to wine no striker not giuen to filthy lucre The Apostle in the former verse hauing spoken of those positiue vertues required in the priuate life of euery Minister in the former part of this verse he enforceth them by reasons and in the latter part reckneth vp many vices from all which he must be free if he will be vnblameable The reasons are two the former of which is included in the change of the name a Bishop the latter propounded in a comparison He is Gods steward In both which regards his care must be doubled that he may walke vnblameable before his people For the former of these to vnderstand it the better we must conside● two things 1. the signification of the name 2. the force of the argument By the name Bishop he meaneth those whom before he called Elders and throughout the new Testament it is indifferently giuen to all teaching elders that is Pastors and Ministers and so is here to be taken A title well knowne in the Apostles daies in the tongue then commonly vsed to betoken a painfull office and a diligent labour borrowed from such as are set in the watchtowers o● 〈◊〉 o● campes to espie and by a loud voice or sound of a trumpet or otherwise by a bell or warning peece to discouer and signifie the approaching of the enemie for such were properly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bishops or watchmen and from hence the name was by the Heathen translated to signifie such gods as they conceiued the patrons of their countries or cities yea by the spirit of God in the Scriptures to signifie Magistrats so calling them to put them in minde of that care and charge which heauily lieth vpon them And yet more frequently and fitly it is attributed to the Pastors and teachers of the Church Not onely the great Pastor and Archbishop of our soules 1. Pet. 5.4 and the Apostles Act. 1.20 but to other pastors and teachers who in so many places as so many cities of God are set as on a hill to descrie and with the voice of Christ in the word as with so many siluer trumpets at their mouthes giue warning of those most cruell and fierce enemies and spirituall wickednesses which seeke the vtter subuersion of the Church the Citie of God And that thus the word must needs generally be taken in the new Testament appeareth Phil. 1.1 where the Apostle writeth to many Bishops in one citie Philipi and Act. 20.28 speaketh to many Bishops in one citie of Ephesus and here the Apostles argument and context can admit no other acception How this generall title came after to be restrained it is not so pertinent and profitable to discourse The learned may see it in Ierome vpon the place As for my selfe as before I promised in the title of Elders I mind not to trouble the peace of the Church about names and titles Doctr. This very name fastneth vpon euery Minister this maine dutie namly to keep watch in his charge ouer the soules of his people to discouer vnto them both Gods affection vnto them and their estate with God Thus the Prophets beeing the Bishops of the old Testament are called not only watchmen Ezech. 3.17 and Seers 1. Sam. 9.9 but Gods Trumpetters Isa. 58.1 and their successors in the new Testament are called not only eyes and light of the bodie Matth. 6.22 but also voices as Iohn Baptist was the voice of the 〈◊〉 Mark 1.3 Ioh. 1.23 And yet the word considered 〈◊〉 the composition of it betokeneth a more intent watchfulnes instantly considering the wants and necessities of the Church for the seasonable supplie of the same by feeding and by ruling which we read seldome separated in the Scriptures See Act. 20.28 Heb. 13.17 1. Tim. 5.17 1. Pet. 5.1 Thus must euery Minister whom the Lord hath made an ouerseer of his people watch their soules as those who must be counteable for them for if they die for want of food and be famished or else for want of ordering of admonition reprehension correction and censures according to Christs holy institution there blood shall be required at the Pastors hand for looke what charge Ahab had concerning Benhadad the same hath euery Minister concerning euery soule committed vnto him Keepe this man if he be lost and want namely by thy default thy life shall goe for his life See also Ezech. 3.18.19 Vse 1. Whence it will follow that looke how vnfit blind or dumb men are for a watchtower so vnfit are vnlearned and vnpreaching Ministers for their places How can he be called an eye that hath no eye how can he be called a voice that is dumb how vnfaithfull is the sleepie watchman who that he may haue ease careth not to betraie an whole citie How dangerous are they both for if the eye be dark how great is this darknes if the blind lead the blind both fall into the ditch By both of them vision faileth and by both of them people perish See for this purpose a notable allusion Isa. 56.9.10 where the Lord compareth his Church to a flocke of sheepe the Priests and Prophets to shepheards and shepheards dogges the enemies of the Church to wolues and wilde beasts and beeing offended with his people he calleth all the beasts of the feild and forrest to deuoure and rauin that is the Chaldeans Assyrians Antiochus and the Romans by all whom they were diuersly oppressed and the reason is added because the watchmen were all asleepe the doggs were sleepie and greedie dumb and barked not ease tooke vp some couetousnes others and therefore no remedie if those that should driue away enemies from the Lords folds cannot be at leisure to espie the danger but a fearefull spoile and destruction most needs befall such a people Which if it be so then let euery Minister stirre vp his watchfulnes and care and though the faithfull discharge of his dutie cannot but purchase him the malice of many y●● let him be con●ent to make exchange of such freinds and freindship with the fauour of God who as he hat●
prophecie though a false one to flie into the Temple for his life from before his enemies he answered shall such a man as I flie this were neither glorious to God nor honourable to my selfe he set me about this busines and he can and will deliuer me and my selfe am the captaine and set ouer all the people and can I flie who is it that beeing as I am would goe into the Temple to liue the fact then beeing in this and other respects against the law of God and against my conscience I will not for the sauing of my life do it Vse 2. Euery professor of the Gospel beeing drawne much neerer vnto God then the common sort of men must endeauour to walke worthy of God Colos. 1.10 and worthy of the calling to which he is called Eph. 3.1 namely both the generall calling of Christianitie which must be beautified and adorned as also the speciall calling and condition of life vnto which the Lord hath disposed him for euen that must be holily and wisely managed And such force hath this reason drawne from our caller and calling to mooue beleeuing hearts to watchfulnes ouer their waies as that the Apostles most frequently vrge it vpon Christians As where we are commanded to be holy because God is holy to walke in the light as God is light to walke in loue as God is loue to walke in the truth as God is the truth by all which and many moe like precepts what else is enioyned a Christian man but that the life the nature the goodnes and holines of God reuealed in Christ be the example and direction of his life and course for this is the walking worthy of God to which we are exhorted by this argument because he hath called vs 1. Thess. 2.12 And further if we consider vnto what we are called the same place of the Apostle sheweth that we are called to be very neare vnto God walke worthy of him that hath called you to his kingdome and glorie to a kingdome we were indeed farre off alients and Gentils and very despicable without all hope but now are called to participate in another manner of kingdom then that of great King Ahashuerosh to which poore Hester was called And seeing many may be in the court of a Prince and yet some of them abide in baser offices and not many of them glorious or gracious as the Queene and children are God hath called vs to a kingdome and glorie that with the residue of the Church we might become his owne spouse and so partake of his own glorie and maiestie Now how much are such beggars as we called to such aduancements bound to walke worthy of such a condition as to which in Christ we are called 2. Let euery professor consider that the falls of such as are nearer God more dishonour God and more hurt the Church then grosser sinnes of other men and therefore the Lord can lesse beare their falls vncorrected Dauid tooke it more heauily that such as did eate bread at his table should despise him then others further off and that Absolon his owne bowells should seeke his life then that Shemei should raile on him Professors of Christ must thinke that they dip in the same dish with Christ and therefore they of all should be farre from dishonoring him Which one consideration should enforce them the rather both to sorrow for sinne past and breaking off sinnes present as also the preuenting of sinnes for time to come 3. Whereas Salomon saith that the righteous falling before the wicked are as a corrupt well and troubled spring that is they trouble offend and after a sort poyson many let the godly be more carefull to make right steps vnto their feete and the rather in these daies which so much the more call for our watchfulnes by how much the wicked are more ready maliciously to disgrace our profession that before we shall go away vnreprooued they can cast reproaches on vs for well doing yea and for our sakes euen vpon ciuill conuersation often in such as haue no grace neither shew or substance of religion in them And therefore seeing we are so sure to suffer let vs be sure we suffer not as euill doers Not froward Now followeth in the rest of this 7. verse the enumeration of the vices which must be farre remooued from that man who is to be chosen for a Minister that he may be vnblameable and they are fiue in number 1. frowardnes 2. anger 3. wine bibbing 4. contention and fighting a fruit of it 5. couetousnes The first of the fiue is frowardnes The word signifieth one wayward stiffe inflexible stubborne and carrieth with it two properties the one that such a one pleaseth himselfe yea setleth and resteth himselfe wholly in his owne inuention counsell opinion or action the other that waywardly and peeuishly he reiecteth and despiseth others in their opinions and actions an instance of which we haue in Nabal who was so froward as their was no speaking to him so hardned he was against all counsell or perswasion Doctr. Frowardnesse in whomsoeuer is a matter of euill report and such a spot as must not appeare in him who is to be chosen a Minister Reasons 1. It is the mother of errour in life and doctrine yea of strange opinions scismes and heresies themselues and it cannot be otherwise seeing the eare of a selfe conceited person is shut against all counsell without which thoughts come to nought as where many counsellers are is stedfastnes And as euery where almost the wicked man is termed a froward man and a wicked and vngodly heart a froward heart so is it generally true which the wise man obserued that such a froward heart can neuer finde good but euill and woe cleaueth vnto it and therefore Dauid when he would shut the doore of his soule against much euil said a froward heart shall depart from mee I will not know that is affect and act euill 2. Whereas men thinke it a note of learning and wisedom not to yeeld an inch in any opinion they take vp the spirit of God brandeth it with a note of folly and it is no other then the way of the foole which seemeth good in his owne eyes Indeed neither Minister nor ordinarie Christian may be as shaking reeds tossed hither and thither with euery blast of winde but yet is it a wise mans part to heare and trie and not stick to his owne counsell as a man wiser in his owne conceit then seauen men that can giue a reason for there is greater hope of a foole then of such a one 3. There are many necessitudes and occasions betweene the Minister and people he must admonish the inordinate raise with comforts the afflicted restore those that are fallen and set their bones againe tenderly by the spirit of meeknes and priuately encourage those that do well Againe they must consult with him aske him
that they may participate with me in the same grace of life but how much more then such as are not men only but good men who haue Gods image renewed vpon them Saints by calling such as excell in vertue how should not all my delight in comparison be set vpon these If I must manifest my loue to all men these may well challenge brotherly kindnesse see 2. Pet. 1.7 2. Quest. Whether this precept belongeth only to Ministers or no Ans. It is here directed vnto the Minister and commended to his practise in the first place as a speciall both helpe and ornament to his calling and person both to shew himselfe a freind and familiar companion of all them that feare God for such as a mans companion is such is himselfe as also to confirme encourage and whet vp himselfe and others in all the waies of God not only by his publike Ministerie but in his priuate course and conuersation For by this meanes Pastor and people would not liue estranged but by mutuall conuersing together and receiuing mutuall knowledge one of anothers course gifts and wants might receiue also mutuall admonition instruction strength And thus the worke of God would thriue in all their hands And what an encouragement would it be to pietie and vertue if publike persons would cherish those who are comming forward Surely if the Magistrates eie be on them that are faithfull in the land as Dauids was Psal. 101. and if the Minister be a companion of all them that feare God as euerie Timothie ought to be we should see men flie as clowds for multitude and as the doues for swiftnes vnto the windowes of the Church But yet this commandement beeing no other in the owne essence then that old generall commandement giuen to the whole Church from the beginning as also that new commandement that is renewed by Christs appearing by which although many lawes were antiquated and reuersed yet this lawe of loue of the brethren was reuiued and diuersly enforced it of necessitie belongeth to euerie one that professeth the Lord Iesus in the most inward closet of his heart and affections to carie such as are members of the bodie of Christ sonnes of God temples of the holy Ghost and heires of the kingdome of glorie Now the reasons enforcing it vpon both Ministers and people are these 1. Because the Lord hath deerely loued such as here he commendeth to our loue for these he hath giuen his onely beloued Sonne vnto these he hath giuen his spirit for these he hath prepared glorie and imortalitie he walketh with them protecteth them prouideth for them in a word will not be in heauen without them 2. There is no man so vile but he professeth he loueth God now it is certaine that whosoeuer delighteth in God he delighteth in his image wheresoeuer he see it for he that loueth him that begat cannot hate him that is begotten and he that loueth not the brethren knoweth not God is in the darkenes and not in the light and in saying he loueth God he lyeth and the truth is not in him neither can a man cleaue any otherwise to the bodie of Christ then by loue to the brethren 3. Consider how louely the societie and fellowship of the Saints is In their meetings a man may be hol●en forward in knowledge faith and obedience and depart thence wiser and better he may haue the vse of all the graces God hath bestowed vpon them his owne grace is preserued with increase his inward peace and ioy more setled here is the communion of Saints which is the beginning of heauen it selfe Vse 1. Many Ministers herein faile who beeing men of corrupt minds and affections oppose themselues against good men if there be any in their parishes more carefull of their waies more conscionable more forward in religion then other these are as beames in their eyes the obiects of most bitter invectiues in the meane time they giue their right hands of fellowship vnto loose and base fellowes who ought to be as vile in their eyes as they are in themselues whom I wish timely to consider that it was alwaies noted for an infallible propertie of a false prophet to strengthen the hands of sinners cast downe such as they ought to haue spoken peace vnto from the Lord. 2. Although the Lord hath by most straite iniunctions prouided for the welfare of his children not onely in regard of their safetie but their louing entertainement also in the world with acknowledgement of all such offices of loue done vnto himselfe and of which himselfe will become the rewarder yet notwithstanding according to the prophecie of the Lord of the holy Prophets In the world good men doe and shall sustaine affliction their good shall be returned with euill to the great affliction of their soules and the world which knoweth not but to loue her owne taketh no notice of such but to hate them and hated they are and shall be of all men almost for the name of Christ. Hence haue such in all ages were they Prophets Apostles or Christians of whom the world was vnworthie beene thought burdens vnworthie to be borne or liue in the world Here one Caine casts down his countenance vpon him whose works he seeth better then his owne he cannot giue him a good looke An other wagges his head at such a man as the Iewes did against Christ in derision of him An other is readie to burst for anger and rage as those wicked ones against Steuen Sometimes superiours breath out slaughter and threatning as Saul against the Church Sometimes equalls yea and inferiours trie them by scornings and mockings so as Ieremie himselfe shall heare the reuilings of many against him Nay the base multitude shall tell Christ himselfe that he dealt with a deuill And Satans mallice is so like it selfe in his instruments that if it be laid in their power they proceede to drawe the sword and stretch out their hand as Herod against Iames to take away their liues and euen in killing them thinke they doe God good seruice But how good were it for them to haue nothing to doe against such iust men for who deale they against or against whom doe they rise vp against simple men no surely but against God himselfe him they persecute him they blaspheame the apple of his eie they poare in Now who euer rise vp against God and prospered or who euer kicked against such prickes and bruised not himselfe Is not he eternall to outliue all his enemies Herod the Archenemie of Christ dyeth but the enemie of Christs enemies is euer liuing And is not his wrath the messenger of death cannot his power grinde his enemies to powder or shall not his right hand finde them out Againe thou art for the present a cursed man that louest not good men marke the terrible threatning I will curse them that curse thee so as what thou intendest against them shall fall vpon thine owne
to his person and consequently winneth authoritie to his doctrine not only of the best but euen of the basest such cariage in Iob caused the young men when they saw him to hide themselues and the aged to arise and stand vp and all sorts of men to listen vnto his words and all eares that heard him to blesse him In all which regards how carefull was the Lord himselfe that none but such qualified persons should serue before him in that walking and elementarie worship in the time of the law He will haue none but wise hearted men to worke in the building of the Tabernacle Exod. 35.10 and no doubt aymed at the selfe same thing when he made that law in Numb 4.43 that only they of 30. yeares olde and aboue euen vntill 50. should serue before him in that tabernacle after it was builded For herein he required necessarily two things first and especially gifts of minde as wisedome iudgement grauitie experience and diligence which most appeare from 30. yeares vpward secondly strength of bodie When he releaseth such as haue serued vntill 50. young men might bring strength before 30. but beeing without iudgement grauitie experience the Lord refuseth it old men aboue 50. might bring with yeares experience and iudgement but the Lord requireth the body to be answerable vnto the mind in some proportion And to this obseruation that giueth light in Numb 1.3 that howsoeuer in the tabernacle and Temple none might serue vnder 30. yet in ciuill things they might for they must count their warriers from 20. yeare old and aboue Vse 1. This doctrine bendeth it selfe against such light and childish young men who are so forward to thrust themselues into this great calling before they haue cast as we say their colts coates or coltish conditions whereas this function requireth another age and other manners May it not be said of many Ministers in England as it was of the Prophets in Ierusalem Her Prophets are light and wicked persons for these two in this calling goe together wherein euery thing is aggrauated Lightnes in some calling may beare a lower note and be tearmed weaknes but in this cannot be but wickednesse and why so because it will follow that they pollute the sanctuarie and wrest the law the former by ioyning themselues to euery light companion in euery light or lewd practise the latter because whereas the iudgement of the most controuersall matters was committed by God to the priests together with the interpretation of the law such was their leuitie and rashnes that they passed their matters inconsideratly and answeared insufficiently and often falsly in the name of the Lord and thus must it needs be with such as run and ride before the Lord hath called them 2. We must pray for the Ministers as Paul for Timothie That the Lord would giue them wisedome in all things not carnall and fleshly pollicie a thing too much studied of many of them for such wisedome the Lord neuer iustifieth in them but setteth such a cursed brand vpon it as that for most part it turneth to the ouerthrowe of the Church and the whole worke of the Ministerie but such wisedome as is grounded in the word of God the studie of which would make them wiser then the ancient euen wise to raise not only their owne estate but others also with them not vnto earthly preferments but vnto life and glorie immortall reserued in the heauens to such wise men is the promise made that they shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and in that they haue turned their wisedome to the turning of many to righteousnes they shall shine as the starres for euer and euer Righteous By righteousnesse here is not meant that euangelicall righteousnesse which is Christs fulfilling of the whole lawe for vs Neither that infused gift whereby beleeuers haue an imperfect conformitie begunne in them according to all the parts 〈◊〉 the lawe although not according to all the degrees of them but here is meant that which is called a particular iustice more externall looking out vnto other men to giue them their due obseruing equalitie both in contracts and exchanges which we call commutatiue as also a iust proportion in distributing offices rewards punishments which we call distributiue iustice So as this iustice is an equall and vpright dealing with men fearefull to offer the least wrong vnto any but readie to doe good vnto all grounded on loue which seeketh not all her owne things much lesse other mens and in a word is the summe of the second Table Now as this vertue is in the text set betweene wisedome and pietie or holines so may it not be diuorced from either of them for wisedome our Sauiour willeth all his followers to ioyne with this innocencie of doues the wisdome of serpents for wisedome without innocencie were but fleshly and from belowe and innocencie without wisedome were but reproachfull sillinesse Againe it must goe with holinesse which is euer mixt with pietie that it may be a fruit of that inward righteousnesse which is by faith for else it is grosse hypocrisie All our iustice must beginne in Christs iustice reckoned vnto such as practise pietie and are entred in some degrees of sanctification All our obedience must proceede from the inward renewing of the spirit of our minds by the finger of God that he may knowe it for his owne worke All our outward conformity must proceede from inward sinceritie for if we must approoue our actions to the consciences of good men much more to the Lord who is greater and a most occulate witnesse of all our wayes Ioyne these two louing friends which sweetely accord in a Christian heart and life then maist thou with Paul call God and man with boldnesse to witnesse that thou art vnblameable see 1. Thess. 2.10 But to speake briefly of these two vertues so farre as they concerne the Minister seeing we are to speake of both of them as prescribed vnto common Christians cap. 2.10 let euerie Minister be exhorted as Timothie was by Paul But thou O man of God followe after righteousnesse For hereby 1. He giueth testimonie of his righteousnesse before God Luk. 1.6 Zacharie and Elizabeth were iust before God and walked without reproofe Iob a iust man fearing God and abstaining from euill 2. He shall be able to set his foot against his aduersaries and the enemies of the truth and say with Samuel whose oxe or asse haue I taken c. 3. He giueth euidence that he professeth and teacheth the true religion in that he keepeth himselfe vnspotted of the world which the Apostle Iames maketh one propertie of pure religion and vndefiled by which meanes he both gaineth those that are without and confirmeth such as are within 4. It shall not boote a man to say in the day of iudgement Lord Lord haue we not preached and prophecied in thy name if Christ can make answer yea but ye were workers of iniquitie and therefore depart from me Holy This
inconueniences which necessarily follow his aduersaries false positions Now alas how farre are readers and dumb men from this one part of the dutie of a Minister how dangerous are they in their places seducers may come and doe with open mouthes into their parrishes they cannot stop their mouthes nay in truth they are as the keyes to open them and vnlocke them Well were it or much better with our Church if Theophylactus his rule were obserued that he who in some competencie could not doe these things should neither be admitted nor permitted in the Ministerie Vse 2. Hence we further see that it is rather to be wished then hoped that all Ministers should be of one minde and accord in the truth and at peace among themselues For seeing it is the constant condition of the Church to haue many daubars with vntempered morter many vaine talkars deceiuers of mindes enemies to the crosse of Christ and the libertie of it what must now in this case all the world sit still and be at rest must Christs Ministers be silent and the Pastors haue neuer a voice to driue awaie wolues from the Lords foldes must hurtfull doctrine be winked at and suffered still to creepe in to the destruction of many No no there must now be opposition and strong dissention among the Ministers themselues Ieremie must set himselfe as well against Preists as Princes and people The Ministerie of the Apostles did spend much of it selfe against the false Apostles that serued not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies Christs owne Ministerie though the Prince and author of all our peace bent it selfe most against the cheife teachers of that age who sought glorie and praise of men and thus must his faithfull Ministers tread in his holy steps If Paul had not strongly opposed himselfe against many learned teachers Act. 15.2 where had the saluation of the Church of that age laid Let men learne therefore to be wise hearted and get knowledge whereby they may rather iudge of doctrines then take offence at the diuersitie of iudgements and practises of Ministers But if any one be sunke downe so deepe that he voweth to beleeue none of them all neither will follow any religion till they be all agreed among themselues to him I will say that this rocke was laid to breake the necke of his soule vpon and a fearefull signe it is that Christ himselfe is to him a stone to stumble at For came not Christ to make debate in the earth came he not to send fire desiring nothing more then that it should be kindled came not he with his fanne in his hand to diuide betweene the chaffe and the wheate the which shall neuer be wholly seuered till the haruest And meanest thou to be a looker on till the wheate and chaffe become one or hast thou well ridde thy selfe by beeing till then iust of Gallio his religion who cared nothing for these things I assure thee who wilt looke on whilest other contend for the faith thou shalt be a looker on too whilest other goe into heauen and haue lesse to doe in that businesse then thou desirest because thou desiredst it not when thou mightest yea when thou wast gratiously invited and desired to enter Which subuert whole houses In these words is contained the second dangerous effect of these false teachers declared by two arguments 1. by the instrumentall cause namely false doctrine for they teach things which they ought not 2. by the ende of it for filthie lucres sake The danger appeareth in three things 1. in that they subuert that is quite ouerturne the saluation of men 2. they subuert houses in the plurall number 3. whole houses The first of these sheweth that these deceiuers not onely shake men in the foundation of religion but vtterly ouerthrowe them and doe as a man who not onely beates downe a windowe or a bay or the side of an house but diggeth vp the foundation or as one who not only loppeth a tree or heweth it down by the ground but diggeth it vp by the roots and quite supplanteth it so doe these deceiuers quite destroy the faith of men and turne it vpside downe that is not onely lead men away from the simplicitie of the Gospel but wholly and altogether from euerie part of the sauing truth Thus is the word vsed among the heathen whereby they expresse such a raging of the sea as casteth vp and causeth to floate that filth and mire which lay at the bottome Quest. But how did they ouerturne mens faith and saluation Ans. By teaching iustification by circumcision that is the works and rites of the lawe But will some say could this beeing but one point subuert all I answer that fundamentall truthes are such and so linked and knit together as breake one and many fall yea some are such as being denied all of them fall to the ground A man that pulleth downe an arch of the Church endangereth the whole but yet the Church may stand but he cannot digge vp the lowest stones of the foundation but all commeth to ruine Of these the Apostle mentioneth two like the two pillars which Sampson pulling downe the whole house fell the one that of the resurrection which beeing denied all preaching and all faith is in vaine the other is this of seeking righteousnes elsewhere then in Christ who is Iehovah our righteousnesse for this makes grace no more grace and Christ to haue died in vaine Whence by the way note the dangerous estate of such as liue and die essentiall members of the Church of Rome who by their doctrine of merit and iustification by works are subuerted and plucked vp by the rootes and turned of their saluation Quest. But if this be so whether may a man be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point of religion or in such a one as by consequent raseth the foundation Ans. The things which all Christians are bound to beleeue may be reduced to two heads The former are such principles as make the rule of faith so neerely touching the matter of saluation as that a man cannot be saued vnlesse he knowe and beleeue them for all will confesse that he that must be ordinarily saued must in some measure knowe the causes the matter the obiect the manner the end and meanes of it If God I say ordinarily saue him he must knowe the platforme of Christian religion As for example 1. God in vnitie of dietie and trinitie of person for vnlesse he knowe God in Iesus Christ there is no life euerlasting 2. himselfe in the guiltines and vnder the curse of sinne seeing Christ came to call none but sinners to repentance and hunger after the meanes of deliuerance for the waters of the well of life are giuen onely to such as thirst after them 3. The meanes as that without shedding of blood there is no remission of sinne and consequenly that the Sonne of God must take the nature of
man suffer in that nature pay the price and beare the curse of sinne whose powerfull victorie ouer sinne death manifested in his resurrection ascension vnto his father applied by faith to the beleeuer shall fully acquit discharge him frō wrath at his cōming againe to iudgement These things must be knowne I speake not of the measure of knowledge but so much as there must be an expresse beleefe of these things for he that beleeueth not in the Sonne of God shall not see life and consequently in some sort what neede he hath of Christ and what Christ hath done and suffered for him Secondly there are other truths which are consequents deduced from the former and these are of two sorts Some things are so clearely deduced as by the neere dependance with the former the consequent is necessarily seene For example that out of the Church is no saluation that faith is ordinarily by the word preached c. all which must necessarily be expressely beleeued on condition if God make their dependance on the former to appeare For I doubt not but that God not reuealing them many thousands are saued in the ignorance of verie many such truthes but we may not hereon build our ignorance who haue so many meanes of reuelation our vnbeleefe is not onely damnable because beeing bound to beleeue we cannot or doe not but in that we will not but refuse the meanes of knowledge and faith The other kinde of deriued truthes are further remooued and not so cleare as concerning the rest of the fathers before Christ the locall dissent of Christ into hell c. such as these a man may without danger be ignorant in yea and erre also so it be without pertinacie and obstinacie The first points mentioned must expressely be knowne and beleeued the former of the two latter may be vnknowne in particular so as in generall a man beleeue all things contained in the word and be readie according to meanes offred to trauell further into the knowledge of God And the last I take it a man may without danger neither knowe nor beleeue And so much of that question which letteth vs see how necessarie it is to see that both publikly and priuatly our selues ours be grounded in the truth of religion points of catechisme which are wofully dangerously despised Vse In that these seducers ouerturne men frō off their foundation we learne that all are not chosen that are called Many beleeuers were here called and seemed to be laid on the foundation in regard of their outward profession but are subuerted againe many of them made shew as though they had beene Temples of the Holy Ghost but prooued to haue had but sandie foundations for the waues of afflictions no sooner bea●e them nor the windie blasts of seducers sooner puffe vpon them then they totter shake like a leafe or reed at last the fall of them is great So many lanch faire forth into the sea who neuer safely happily ariue at home againe and many saylers to heauen suffer shipwracke by the way Two set out of Moab both Orpah and Ruth but one of them holdeth on to Iudah We haue too many Orpahs who forsaking her owne people for loue of Gods people trauelleth on a while towards the Lords countrie but Naomi alledging but one wordly reason she turneth back againe she must haue her husband although with bitternes of heart she returne to her gods Haue not we those who had seemed to haue forsaken the world to haue ioyned themselues in zeale and heartie affection to God and his people haue they not seemed to outgoe yea out-runne others towards the heauenly Ierusalem would they not haue been as forward in any good motion or action as the best and yet how suddenly haue they turned saile and fallen some to the world especially when the world came vpon them some to pleasure some to coldnesse some to hatred of such courses that men may see and say surely some seducer hath met with them and preuailed against them How many who haue seemed waxe-hearted Christians soft and pliable who could weepe for sinne bitterly be amazed at the iudgements of God threatened out of his word stood in awe of God and durst not sinne but are now of an other colour make no conscience of oaths dicing gaming for their neighbours money feasting on the Sabbath day and otherwise profaning it so contemning the ministerie that let all the curses of the lawe be now directed against them personally they are no more mooued then the Leuiathan who riseth not vp when the sword toucheth him but accounteth iron as strawe and brasse as rotten wood euen so with him these laugh at the shaking of the speare and the archers of God cannot make them flie Oh therefore let vs beware seeing so many thousands set out of Egypt who neuer came into Canaan that we miscarrie not and fall from our owne stedfastnes Let vs labour as much for affection now as we haue done for knowledge that with our vnderstanding we may ioyne the sincere loue of the truth And seeing it is no lesse vertue to keepe the good we haue gotten then it was praise to get it let vs fence our hearts quicken Gods graces in them and pray for perseuerance The second point whereby the danger is aggrauated is that these seducers subuerted houses not one or two but many And hence obserue what is the guise of deceiuers euē to creep into houses secretly to corrupt and depraue that doctrine which in publike is taught and acknowledged the truth of God In 2. Tim. 3.6 the● creepe into houses and imitating Satans subtiltie lead captiue simple womē assayling such as can least resist who yet beeing seduced are cunning to preuaile in the seducing of their husbands Eminent in this kinde were the Scribes and Pharisies who were the deuourers of widowes houses setting vpon such as had no heads to guide them nor knowledge to discouer them and hauing all things in their owne hands had none to controle them in their liberalitie towards them these were persons fit to be ouerreached by their hypocrisie and couetousnesse both which our Sauiour deeply chargeth them withall The Apostles also foretold of such who should in after times bring in damnable heresies but priuilie and these are not vnfitly compared to foxes and wolues in Scripture for as these beasts come stealing and slily vpon the flockes taking the winde least they should be winded clapping their tayles betweene their legges least they should be heard and softly as though they were friends to the flocke when as all this is but to beguile the silly sheepe so these deceiuers craftely creepe into houses shrowding themselues in the sheepes cloathing whereas indeed they are rauening wolues And the reason hereof is 1. because publikely and directly they dare not denie the Lord Iesus nor his holy Scriptures nor the truth plainly
bookes hath this hexameter Quest. But why doth Paul call him a Prophet Ans. Some thinke him so called onely by a generall acceptation of the word Prophet which as well signifieth a publike declarer of some truth past or present as of some to come and so he openly taught the truth perswading to vertue and dehorting from vice Others thinke the Apostle calleth him so ironically or in skorne one who was a Prophet fit inough for such a people Others because he was so in the reputation and account of the people who as the other Heathen were wont to ascribe some diuinitie vnto their Southsayers and called them diuiners yea the interpreters and sonnes of the Gods But I take it the truth that he is so called because he was indeed a Prophet and did diuine answer of euents to come some of whose answers and oracles are yet extant and recorded in authors besides that some of the Heathen confesse that he was the cheefe of those who by surie prophecied of things to come Quest. But what kinde of Prophet was he or how was he and the other heathenish prophets distinguished from the true Prophets of God Ans. The Prophets of God were of two sorts First such as were more properly so called who beeing extraordinarily raised and inspired by Gods spirit did reueale some parts of the will of God which he intended to doe in and for his Church for time to come such were Isay Ieremie and many other in the old Testament vntill Christ the cheife Prophet and accomplisher of all prophecies appeared but verie few after The second sort of true Prophets were such as onely did teach and interpret the holy Scriptures and ordinarily had not adioyned the foretelling of things to come but vpon some speciall extraordinarie occasion and of these were many both in the old and new Testament In the old such were the companie of Prophets among whom Saul prophecied and the children and sonnes of the Prophets who as it is like were such as studied expounded and more accuratly explaned the writings of Moses and kept the doctrine deliuered by Moses vncorrupt in the Church although the masters and those which were more eminent had both these gifts such as Eliah Elisha and the sonnes of the Prophets so farre as they were emploied and sent by these as we reade that the young Prophet knew not that Iehu was to be annointed King till Elisha told him In the new Testament the Apostle bringeth all ministeriall and ecclesiasticall duties of ecclesiasticall persons to 1. Prophecie 2. Ministerie Rom. 12.7 the former of which is nothing but the exercise of a gift of teaching in the Church applying sound doctrine out of the word to exhortation edification consolation 1. Cor. 14.13 Both of these are truly called diuine Prophets both of them beeing raised of God gifted by God dealt in the things of God and endeauored to lead men vnto God As for the other such as were the oracles of the Gentiles whether that of Apollo at Delphos or of other groaues caues dennes and woods very frequent amongst them or else the southsayers such as were Bacchis the Sibills and this Epimedes these consent almost in nothing with the former for they differ in all the causes 1. Whereas the former spake by instinct of the holy Ghost and consequently whatsoeuer they spake must needs come to passe in that manner and those circumstances in which it was deliuered the which the Lord maketh a note of a true Prophet These latter spake by instinct of Satan who beeing a lying spirit from the beginning was often a lying spirit in their mouthes but that he couered his errors by speaking in likelihoods and amphobologyes and the things that came to passe seldome came to passe as they were foretold 2. For the meanes whereby the Lord communicated his will it is either more generall or more speciall the former was either vision to those that were awake or dreame to them asleepe the latter was by word of mouth or face to face But the deuill vseth all manner of tooles as meanes to deceiue all elements fire ayre earth water so beasts birds starres lottes herbes windes and words that looke how many kinds of creatures there be so many kinds of diuination there are so infinite is delusion 3. Whereas the matter of the former are the great things of God and of them the maine the foretelling of Christ the Messias and Sauiour of the world the latter commonly dealt in things of men as publike or priuate euents of peace and warre c. in which also the deuill himselfe could but gesse but as for God and Christ he shut their mouthes vnwilling that Christ should euen thus be heard of among the heathen Or if as may be obiected of the Sibyls some of them did vtter some things concerning Christ which Satan had snatched and stollen from the writings of Moses these were so disguised and coloured as the naturall face of that truth could neuer be beheld nay euen themselues vnderstood not the things they vttered and therefore could not vtter them with purpose thereby to make Christ knowne to the world and much lesse to establish the true worship of God in Christ as the true Prophets did What other endes the deuill had in it it were too long here to enquire 4. Whereas the former receiued their reuelations into meeke and wise hearts beeing gratious and prudent and not madde men the latter neuer powred out their oracles but when they were rapt into a trance or madnes and knew not what they said or did Whereby it appeareth that they were meere instruments and organs of Satan by whose tongues he spake the resemblance whereof may be seene at this day in some demoniakes possessed by the deuill If any here obiect that Iohn was rauished in spirit on the Lords day and that the spirit also rushed on Ezechiel on Daniel and so this was no difference betweene them I answer that farre were these holy men from beeing meere passiue instruments or as blocks and stones as the other were they were indeede meere men and such as when Gods greatnes and glorious maiestie was more then ordinarily manifest were verie much affected and almost swallowed vp of it and almost rauished and out of themselues as Paul confessed of himselfe but neither were they madde nor sensles nor foaming nor deformed nor ignorant what befell them but with knowledge faith reuerence wisedome and affection receiued the things of God which they were to deliuer againe afterward to the vse of the Church 5. Whereas the former euer serued the vse of the Church and endeauoured to lead men to God furthering them in faith and obedience the latter onely serued the vanitie and curiositie of men and although they could not well lead men further from God then they were yet they the more detained them from seeking after the true God Thus the difference plainly
to hurt they are termed foxes Luk. 13.32 tell Herod that foxe In regard of the latter namely their poison and venome Christ calleth them serpents and generations of vipers their tongues are like stings sharpened against good men and the poison of adders and aspes is vnder their lippes Psal. 140.3 hence doth the Lord threaten most cruell and ineuitable enemies vnder such speeches as Ier. 8.17 I will send serpents and cockatrices among you which shall not be charmed but they shall sting you Whereby he would describe and signifie the implacable and virulent malice and rage of the Chaldeans Now man beeing aboue all other borne a sociable creature and to liue in societie with God and men in the familie Church and common-wealth hath by his hostilitie against God and enmitie against man after a sort put off the nature of man and by such degenerating of good right hath lost euen the name of man also Doctr. Whence we learne that such as are not ledde by reason renewed nor by iudgement rightly enformed by the word of God but followe their owne hearts lusts for their guide haue cut themselues from the account of men and as worthily lost the name as the nature of men for they are become beasts in vnderstanding beasts in sensualitie beasts in brutish practises beasts in Gods account beasts in the reputation but of reasonable and heathenish men The verie light of nature adiudgeth them vnworthie the name of men beeing rather like the pictures or images of wood or stone outwardly resembling things but inwardly wanting which aboue all could make them the things they repre●●nt And hence proceeded those poetries of metamorphoses not that either beasts or birds or trees were changed into men or men into these but in that the eie of nature in these men perceiued that men more and more degenerated from themselues and became daily neerer the beasts in properties qualities and practises although they retained still the shape and place of men Like Nebuchadnezzar who was not changed into the shape of a beast as some haue thought although God could haue done that but his vnderstanding together with his kingdome was taken from him and he driuen from men ate grasse as the beasts did till his vnderstanding he saith not his shape was restored him Hence haue some other of the heathens lighted a candle at noone day and runne into markets and throngs of men to seeke a man as though it were a rare thing euen in a number of men to finde one deseruing the name of a man whereby doubtlesse the Lord would cast the dongue of the Gentiles in their owne faces and that by themselues as here he did by Epimenides Vse Seeing the light of nature and grace conspire in the illustrating of this truth we must be more readie to embrace it and make our best vse of it as the truth not of a vaine man but of the true God Who among vs would not be mooued and disdaine to be called by any man a beast an asse an owle a dog c. and yet haue we occasioned the Lord thus to repute and account of vs and are not mooued for how few of vs can shew our selues men what a number of men and Christians in profession hearing the word and receiuing the Sacraments are as the horse and mule without vnderstanding that is not onely ignorant but incorrigible persons neither spurre nor bridle auaileth them to amendement Such as the Prophet complaineth of whom when the Lord had sundrie waies called them to amendement he hearkened and heard but no man said what haue I done euerie one turned to the race as the horse to the battell yea as horses that haue cast their rider men kicke and spurne against the Lord and his gratious admonitions as Pharaoh who is the Lord and other whilest the Lords sharpe bit is in their mouthes they bite it in with much discontentment but as vnruly afterward as euer before How many deafe adders are euerie where which refuse to heare the voice of the charmer some saying in their hearts some with their mouthes as the hardened Iewes to Ieremie The word of the Lord in thy mouth we will not heare What a number of swine are abroad rooting vp and treading vnder feete holy things contemning the word Sacraments ministerie discipline wallowing in their filthie lusts of vncleannes drunkennes fornication pride riot earthlines euerie one according to his owne appetite and not a fewe hypocrites who not sincerely vndertaking the profession of the truth returne to their owne wont as a swine after washing to the wallowing What a number of dogges without conscience and shame commit all manner of filthinesse euen in the day light and yet incessantly barking and bawling with Shemei against good men and good things let a man be a stranger to them and their courses let him be neuer so honest a man the dogge hath sufficient cause not to spare him and let any thing neuer so good be propounded or do● if not so generally receiued or vnusuall there is no stilling of the dogges against it Who can tell the number of cruell and vnmercifull lyons greedie gripes couetous cormorants woluish extortioners subtile oppressors who as foxes liue by crafty conveiances and whatsoeuer other noysome beast and vncleane that liueth by the pray to which adde those serpentine whisperers tale-bearers busie-bodies the vermine and venome of societies against whome no caution can be sufficient the number of all which kinds of cattell so amounteth as that the world at a blush may seeme rather to be made for beasts then men Now if we would avoide this sharpe censure which our nature so abhorreth let vs iudge our selues in the premises and finde out that bruitish behauiour in our selues whereby we haue forfeited euen the names of men for to this purpose are we so sharply delt withall in the Scriptures that we should be brought to be ashamed and blush at our behauiours We haue a common saying when we see our selues ouerseene or ouertaken in any temporall and outward thing Oh what a beast was I but wel were it if we would seriously thus accuse our selues when we haue failed in our godly course to say Oh what a beast was I to leaue the direction of the word and suffer my selfe to be led by my appetite or by the lust of my heart or the sight of mine eies to this or that sinne alas that I to to whome God hath giuen reason iudgement election deliberation yea his word and spirit should liue all this while as one destitute of all these I vnderstand not what the good and acceptable will of God is but am yet like the horse and mule without vnderstanding I haue stopped my eares at the word like the deafe adder and haue refused the things of my peace I haue barked against God and godlinesse I haue wallowed in my vncleanenes like a swine in his owne filth I haue beene vnmercifull and cruell
vse vnprofitable 3. But the context in the verse following pointeth vs to expound them of some other then these namely of all those doctrines of the Iewes which concerned the legall and ceremoniall obseruation of daies meates drinks garments washings persons and peoples for the Iewes taught that the same difference remained to be obserued still as Moses from the Lord commanded it so as yet some meates were common and some cleane some daies were more holy then others so garments and persons much more lay open to legal pollution by issues touchings c. whereas the appearing of Christ procured finall freedome from all such impuritie so as according to Peters vision Act. 10. no man no thing is to be called polluted or vncleane Quest. But why doth the Apostle call such doctrines fables seeing 1. they were from God 2. necessarily imposed vpon Gods owne people in paine of death and cutting off from his people in case of contempt yea or omission 3. they included in them that euangelicall truth wherby both they and we are saued Ans. Yet for all this he tearmeth them so 1. Because euen these legall institutions of God himselfe when they were at the best were but actuall Apologies or shadowes of things to come carying a shew or figure of truth but not the bodie not the truth it selfe to the same effect saith Paul Gal. 4.24 that they were Allegories that is beeing the things that they were signified the things that they were not 2. Because those constitutions although they had their times and seasons yet now were they dated and now to teach or vrge them was as vaine as void of ground out of Scripture as voide of profit as void of truth as if they had taught the most vaine fictions and vnprofitable falsehoods that men could possibly devise And hence looke as if a man should relate to vs a narration not only of suspected but of knowne vntruth as for example that such a man with whom we haue eate drunke conuersed but whom we know to be dead and haue seene buried were aliue againe and not only so but of his perfect strength and state as euer he was might not we be more diffident then Thomas was and in good forme of speach say that he told vs a fable euen so if a Iew shall affirme the life of the ceremonies of the law which we know to be dead rotten and buried so long since in the graue of Christ although they once had a truth yet now this is but false and fabulous or else if a Iew should come and vrge as they doe that prophecie Isay 7. Behold a virgin shall conceiue c. as a thing which they still expect the accomplishment of is it not euident that he leaneth vnto a Iewish lie and fable for that which was once absolutely necessarie to be beleeued vnto saluation is now become so false as that he that beleeueth it is sure to be damned Commandements of men These words if they be taken by way of exposition of the former adde something to the more full answer of the former question implying that those ordinances of which we speake the which while they stood in force and till the fulnes of time was come were the commandements of God now the truth beeing reuealed cease so to be and are become the meere commandements of men But yet I take it some difference is to be put betweene these two namely this that by commandements of men are more properly meant not those which were diuine ordinances but humane constitutions and traditions thrust by the Iewish teachers vpon the Church to be obserued with like deuotion and religious respect as if they were the very commandements of God such as those our Sauiour found and left the Church of the Iewes pestered with and opposeth them to diuine ordinances Matth. 15.9 In vaine they worship mee teaching for doctrines mens precepts Which that we may a little better conceiue it is not amisse to note that the Iewes haue and doe affirme that Moses receiued the law from God either by writing which was of things more obscure more breife and difficult or else by word of mouth and that was of things more large seruing for the interpretation of that law written and for this latter sake say they was it that he staied 40. daies in the mount Sinai for else in one houre he might haue receiued the tables in which the law was written and although they themselues were at leasure to number the lawes written by Moses and gaue in the number of the affirmatiue to be 248. so many as there are members in a mans bodie and the negatiue 365. so many as there be daies in a yeare to betoken that the Lord requireth the through obseruation of them with all the strength and that all their daies which numbers added together were burthens sufficient for many euen to read ouer yet laid they innumerable and more intollerable traditionarie precepts on the people which they say Moses receiued by word of mouth from God and left them to Ioshuah who deliuered them to the seauentie elders they to the former Prophets these to the latter from them to the great Synagogue from whom they were preserued to the wise men returning from the Babylonish captiuitie and so from generation to generation euen to this day to write these explications say they is forbidden by God abusing that text Prou. 4.21 but they are kept in the heart of some wise men at this day Of these the Apostle would haue the Cretians to beware and giue no more heede to them then to the former Which turne away from the truth By truth is meant truth diuine fetched out of the word of God so called 1. because it is absolute without error 2. it is most eminent called before truth according to godlines to be turned from which is to be turned from all godlines In the word Turne away is a metaphor the speach beeing borrowed from those who turne away their bodies from the things they dislike and here translated to the mind to signifie an inward loathing and dislike of the truth which is the dangerous effect 〈◊〉 attending to fables and commandements of men Doctr. 1. Whosoeuer would keepe themselues sound in the faith and not be turned from the truth must shut their eares and giue no hee● to fables and fancies of men which haue not footing and warrant in th● pure word of God 1. Because these are things which hurt and corrup● the soule 1. Tim. 6.20 Avoide profane and vaine bablings which whil● some professe they haue erred concerning the faith Againe they encreas● vngodlinesse 2. Tim. 2.16 and more plainly 2. Tim. 4.4 men giuen vnto fables turne their eares from the truth The Physitians reduce all the causes of health or disease soundnes or sickenes from the good or euil temperature of either the matter of which we subsist or the nourishment whereby we are preserued Now the
himselfe with sackcloath all his life fast fortie daies if he can or rather neuer eate meate neuer touch mony neuer marrie wife he shall neuer find the kingdome of God in these beeing things which God neuer required at his hands and yet these precepts of mans braine are the rules of all his religion But yet here is a goodly shew of wisedome what is it not profitable to abstaine from flesh euery fryday and all lent that by the one the flesh may be tamed and by the other our Lords sufferings remembred and must not the Minister who is to deliuer the blessed bodie of the Lord be vnlike other men yea farre more holy then they and therefore must not he liue single at home and be seene in hallowed garments abroad But where is the word of the Lord to free these from beeing fables The Lord looketh not to what we are bent or can pretend for our owne deuises but requireth that his will should be our rule Oh that we could acknowledge the truth in accounting our deliuerance from this Popish Egypt and Romish blindnes the next blessing of God to the gift of his Sonne seeing in the body of their religion there can be no soundnes of faith if any faith at all the best of it beeing a disease and rotennes if we may not more truly say it hath a name to liue but indeed is starke dead Doctr. 2. It is a grieuous sinne and iudgement to be turned away from the truth and yet this is the fearefull fruit of humane deuises For the Apostle would here note a iudgement of God vpon such persons as were addicted vnto fables and humane precepts the which iudgement is a wofull and heauie stroake of Gods wrath whether a man estrange himselfe from it before or after he haue receiued it much more For what a plague is it for a man to hate the truth and in it God the author of it who is truth it selfe the light of comfort and direction of it as also the happie fruit of it which is saluation seeing all they are damned that rereceiue not the loue of the truth whereby they might be saued What a wofull delusion were it that a condemned person for high treason going to execution should refuse a pardon offered nay be so farre from accepting it as that he abhorres to heare of it will not turne his eies to behold it yea treadeth it vnder his feete and yet such a spirituall frenzie possesseth all such as turne away from the word of truth and when God calleth them runne another away For seeing if the Sonne set vs not free Ioh. 8.32 we remaine in bondage vnder sinne and damnation and are euery day drawing to execution in the meane time as condemned persons beeing reserued in bolts and chaines till the time of execution Now in these bands of death the Prince of peace our Lord Iesus offreth a gratious pardon the partie offended seeketh to the delinquent entreateth and wooeth him to accept of a pardon procured by his own blood and sealed by his death Now wretched men cannot abide neither the message nor the messengers but in contempt tread vnder their feet that blood wherewith they should be sanctified and scorne the Princes clemency shall not the very consciences of these men in the Lords iudgement accuse themselues as worthy of ten thousand deaths yes surely and shall iustifie the Lords righteousnes when he shall bring vpon them that great condemnation of a great part of the world who the light being come and shining on their faces yet loued darknes rather then light But much more miserable is it after the embracing and knowledge of the truth to turne away from it a great witcherie it is to beginne in the spirit and end in the flesh an vnworthy man is he of Gods kingdome that setting his hand to the plow looketh backe after washing to returne to the filthines of the world and to waxe weary of weldoing is farre worse then neuer to haue known to do well this is properly called a reuolt when men depart from the gratious calling of Christ the relaps we say is farre more dangerous then the first disease and the end of the Apostate is farre worse then his beginning the deuil that hath bin once cast out and entertained againe bringeth seauen spirits worse then himselfe so as better were it for a man neuer to haue knowne the way of truth then after the knowledge of it to depart from the holy commandement Vse If men were perswaded of the greatnes of this sinne it could not be they could be so indifferent in such a maine matter so nearely concerning their finall and euerlasting estate of whom many receiue not the truth at all others turne away and fall from their first loue after they haue once receiued it Did euer the world abound as at this day with Worldlings Libertines Atheists Newters and Epicures and was yet the truth euer more glorious and shining then at this day Was there euer such coldnes loosenes deadnes heauines drowsines and earthlines in professors and if that added to the equitie of Pauls reproofe of the Galatians reuolt that Christ was described plainely and crucified before their eyes Gal. 3.1 may it not much more gall vs among whom notwithstanding the cleare euidence and brightnes of the truth it is yet refused of the most and slenderly entertained of the best The which what argueth it either in one or other but that the former would herein hold their wonte which hath beene generally to change and turne their religion with the times as though the truth to saluation were not the same but variable and alterable as the times are and that the latter haue in no small measure turned themselues from that truth in the which they haue formerly found much more sweetnes then now they do that delusion hath possessed both the one in whole the other in great part Obiect But it is not thus with vs we come to heare the truth and loue it and hope to hold it vnto the end Ans. Yet this detracteth not from that truth laid downe For 1. how many will not grant the Gospel their presence their bodies their eares no man will gainsay but that these are turned away or if any should the pitifull ignorance and the fruits of it would conuince it 2. How many be there which heare and yet in their iudgements intertaine not the truth and these are thus farre worse then the Iewes themselues who could acknowledge that Christ taught the way of God truly Men will not beleeue that the way to heauen is so straite as we out of the word of God describe it nor that God is so rigorously iust as to cast away those that meane well nor so straite laced as to exact the forfeyt of euery offence neither that can be the truth to saluation which so few embrace and so many contemne what doe none know or go the way to
hereticall seducers vnder this title seeing they tread the s●me steps of the old Puritane heretikes the memorie of whom let it be accursed for euer No no the beleeuer is ●aught daily to pray Lord forgiue vs our debts with the Publican Lord haue mercie on mee a sinner he accounteth his owne righteousnesse as a stained clout well knowing that if he should challenge righteousnesse from himselfe that his owne cloathes would defile him yea let them take much snow and nitre yet of themselue● can they neuer be cleane but that Christ becommeth as purging fire and fullers sope vnto them Now if any yet thinke it vnreasonable to ascribe both puritie and impuritie to the same soule the answer is the Scripture hath taught vs how to conceiue it 1. Ioh. 1.7.8 The blood of Iesus Christ purgeth from all sinne yet if any say he hath no sinne he deceiueth himselfe It is indeede Gods grace and fauour to account the beleeuers his doue and vndefiled and in regard of that perfect robe of righteousnesse he couereth them withall to adde that there is no spot in them but it is grace in them to acknowledge and vtter of themselues that which Christ did of his disciples ye are all cleane but you had neede haue your feete washed seeing that this purging is not wrought all at once in vs but by degrees and that in this life there remaineth alwaies some impuritie to be purged Vse 1. Let none dare to scoffe at the godly vnder this title or any other which the Lord vouchsafeth them hearest thou the Lord accounting his Church as pure as the sunne and perfect and vndefiled in their way calling them his holy ones and saints and thinkest thou this a sufficient ground to scoffe at them or doest thou shewe thy selfe one of this number or rather is it not the part of an Ismaelite and a cursed wretch to scoffe at the sonnes of blessing for the blessings sake nay rather seeing the Lord thus honoureth his seruants and testifieth his loue in passing by all their imperfections as though there were none let such as haue taken occasion to scoffe at Christians from that which is their onely approbation before God euen ioyne themselues to the people of God that as the liberties of Gods people in Persia made many of their enemies become Iewes so those that haue been enemies and readie to offer them violence seeing the fauour of God towards them may be mooued to become friendly vnto them 2. If the deuill doe raise any scoffing Micholl to scorne our sinceritie while we solace our selues before the Lord and if the sonnes of men will not cease to turne our glorie into shame Let not those that feare God be daunted nor giue ground much lesse flie backe for any tearmes of contempt but account this their priuiledge before God a badge of Christs profession and their honour before all the world and thus encourage themselues to striue on to further puritie both of heart and life 1. Of heart because the inside must first be made cleane and 2. of life for when the soule is purified it must worke in the life in obeying the truth through the spirit Thus the Christian man beeing like a cleare chrystall glasse with a light in the midst which must needes appeare through euery part of it hauing within him the light of grace holdeth it forth although in the midst of a froward and wicked generation The reasons to mooue vs hereunto are sundrie 1. In regard of Gods account and estimation of such as shall choose such cleane paths to walke in as we haue heard what neede a man care if all men condemne him so God iustifie and approoue of him and his wayes 2. Hereby onely a man becommeth capable of Gods graces who powreth not his gratious liquors into any fustie or filthie vessell but if any man purge himselfe he shall be a vessell vnto honour sanctified and meete for the Lord and prepared vnto euery good worke 3. All the promises of God are made only to such Dauid breaketh out into a resolued conclusion Psal. 73.1 Surely God is good to Israel to the pure of heart Let his trialls be what they will let his person be neuer so meane let his name be neuer so reproched the Lord respecteth him that is of an holy conuersation there is no difference between Iew and Gentile rich and poore with God so the heart be purified Such are only fit to approach God in prayer who can lift vp pure hands and so offer that cleane offering prophecied of to be lifted vp in euery place God heareth not sinners saith the blind man And the exhortation is let vs drawe neare God with true hearts in assurance of faith sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Heb. 10.22 Nay more the studie of puritie hath the promise of blessednesse of the blessed vision of God for who shall ascend into the mountaine of the Lord and who shall stand in his holy place Euen he that hath innocent hands and a pure heart Seeing then that without it no man shall see God and that all vncleane persons shall be kept without the gates of the Citie let this consideration added to the expectation of such pr●●ises mooue vs to cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God 2. Cor. 7.1 4. This course is a note of a true beleeuer who as in other things so herein is made conformable vnto Christ in purging himselfe as he is pure the scope of the place is to shew this to be a marke of our adoption when knowing our selues subiect to sinne yet we desire and endeauour by all good meanes to cleanse our selues daily propounding herein before vs Christ as a patterne of imitation 5. Lastly let vs be prouoked to a greater care of holines seeing the Lord hath not beene niggardly in affoarding vs meanes aboue many by the which we might be clensed He hath giuen vs his word plentifully wherby faith might be wrought vs to the purifying of our hearts He hath sent out his Sonne whose blood through the eternall spirit offred without spot by himselfe vnto God purgeth our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God he hath giuen vs of his spirit to renew vs by whose blessed dewes we might be besprinkled as with pure water so as we might be iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God He hath sent out his chastisements and afflictions in such greeuous manner as our Fathers neuer saw the like by which as by rubbing and beating and wringing many might be purified and made white He hath sought to purge his floore by sundrie fannes of afflictions by plague and pestilence famine and dearth violent and vnseasonable winds and weathers and by the angrie distemper of
so good it is impured not beeing vsed or done in faith and good consci●nce A good or indifferent thing vsed or done is spoiled and corrupted in the manner of vsing or doing three waies 1. when it is vsed or done in way of superstition 2. of profanenesse 3. of scandall 1. Of superstition when any creature is offred vnto Idols or vsed or not vsed with opinion of holines merit or worship of God Thus the Heathen were accustomed before they eate or drunke to offer some part thereof to their gods which was another cause why Daniel craued that he might not be defiled with that meate as is well gathered out of cap. 5.4 and from such meate the Apostle wisheth all Christians to abstaine 1. Cor. 8.10 Hither are to be referred all Popish separations of daies and meats and their consecrations of water salt crosses palmes to driue away deuils all their vowes also pilgrimages orders single life wilfull pouertie watchings fastings whippings in all which they place opinion of holines and merit adde hereunto all superstitious rellikes and monuments which wheresoeuer are filthy and polluted 2. Of profanenesse when any creature or action is vsed or done out of that due manner measure or end which the Lord hath appointed vnto it as all vse of holy things by way of charming or enchantment especially good words and those out of Scriptures to spells and sorcerie the intemperate vse of indifferent things to surfetting drunkennesse pride and excesse in a word when any thing is done or vsed the carriage and end of which is not Gods glorie and mans good 3. Of scandall either to our selues or others Our selues when we vse any creature or performe any action with a doubtfull conscience that is whereof either the word hath not or we out of it haue no warrant in which ca●e tender consciences must be tendred rather then be racked by authoritie for be the things in themselues neuer so lawfull be they neuer so generally entertained in the iudgement and practise of others they are vtterly vnlawfull to me without such information Others if they be scandalized they are either within the Church or without and they both in things either 1. euill or 2. indifferent hauing on them a shewe of euill For necessarie things enioyned by the word there can bee no scandall giuen as preaching hearing praying these and such must bee done though all the world take offence at them Thus Paul preached Christ a stumbling blocke and scandall to Iewe and Gentile and Daniel prayeth to his God although the king and all the countrie raged against him This offence is Pharisaicall taken but not giuen Now for scandall giuen ● in things euill is when a man by word deede or doctrine disagreeable to the lawe of God becommeth a stumbling blocke and cause of offence 1. To the wicked whome they make worse in their euil more obdurate and further off from repentance 2. To the good whether stronger both grieuing them and bringing reproach vpon them or weaker who are not onely discouraged from their good beginnings but forced often to participate in that sinne whereof they haue a president in an other Wo to that man by whom such offences as these shall come In this kind was Peter an offence to Christ whom therefore he calleth Satan and commandeth him to come behinde him 2. In things indifferent scandall is giuen when vnseasonably and out of the rule of charitie they are vsed in which case the Apostle acknowledgeth things lawfull inexpedient and professeth that he will neuer eate flesh before he will offend his brother that is his weake brother he that is not taught not he that will not be taught he that is ignorant not malitious and is scandalized for that he knowes not the truth and not that he hateth it must be here respected with the offence of whome if the most indifferent things be vsed it is the violating of the lawe of charitie and a reiection of the faith of Christ. Now to remooue all this impuritie we must haue a proportionall puritie purchased by Iesus Christ. By whom 1. in regard of our persons being beleeuers we partake with all his righteousnesse and puritie and so are againe entitled to our first right in the creatures 2. In regard of the things themselues our libertie is procured from the bondage and heauie yoke both of the lawe morall and ceremoniall by whose appearance death and resurrection are obtained 1. ● deliuerance from all euill of sinne and punishment within and without vs. 2. restitution to all the good yea a further good then that was from which we fell 3. freedome from all ceremoniall pollution and libertie in all those creatures which by ceremonie was vncleane 3. In regard of our right vse he hath giuen vs precepts and commandements in things necessarie and rules of direction in things indifferent Now from this second point we may note sundrie worthie lessons which I will onely propound and not stand vpon them because I will hasten to the third and principall point of all 1. Seeing all things were pure in their creation we may herein as in a glasse behold the puritie of God in all his creatures admiring that goodnesse of his which bewraied it selfe euen in the meanest of them yea prouoking our selues to loue reuerence and feare before him the image of whose goodnesse shineth out not onely in angels and men but euen in the silly worme and flie yea in the liueles creatures themselues And further hence we may gather our owne dutie towards the creatures namely 1. reuerently meditate and speake of them 2. purely to vse them 3. mercifully to deale with them all which we shall the easier doe if we can spie out some part of Gods image in them 2. Consider our miserie and the wofull fruit of our sinne which hath debarred vs from all comfort in heauen and earth from God or any of his creatures sinne hath wrapped vs vnder condemnation hath set God and his creatures as hosts and armies against vs hath made nothing ours but hell and damnation so as if we meete with any euill from any of the creatures through the venome poison or noysomnes of the particular nature of it or by any other accident we are not so much to condemne the creature but our owne sinnes for they were either not so made or had not beene hurtfull at all to man but by his owne sinne the poison of which hath poisoned their natures so that by them mans sinne is either iustly punished or himselfe righteously exercised Now then seeing our owne sinne hath subiected the creatures of God otherwise so comfortable and sweete helpes vnto our liues vnto such vanitie we haue great cause to abhorre our sinnes for euer yea and our selues for them rather then drinke in iniquitie as the fish doth water The sweetest sinnes would carrie a bitter tang if we would but remember what sweete comfort of the creatures we haue forfeited
that many who now stand not in the last ranks of professors if times should serue would play but an Hazaels part or stand at open defiance of the truth if once the chaffie profession should be blowen away no man euer saw the change and alteration of religion but he saw also this truth verified The third point in the words is the miserable condition of the hypocrite He is an abhominable person Where note that men of corrupt mindes taking vpon them the names of Christians and doing the works of Atheists are worthely abhorred of God and if they could be discerned ought to be an eyesore to men who should not with patience behold them They are abhominable to God which appeareth both 1. in their persons 2. their actions 3. their punishment For their persons they are but halfe Christians neither hote nor cold and therefore the Lord cannot digest them compared to cakes but halfe bakte Hose 7.10 and not turned on the other side below they are hote that is either in their owne superstitions or in smaller trifling matters or else in forme and outward appearance they seeme so zealous as though the zeale of Gods house would consume them but aboue in matter of spirit and truth in the inner man in the soule and heart remaine vnbaked impenitent vnturned the fire of the spirit hath not once touched them and so they remaine a mixt lump still neither hote nor cold Seeing therfore they are such as withdraw their best part from God the soule of God can take no pleasure in them Their actions although neuer so good in themselues neuer so specious vnto others neuer so behoofull to the societie where they liue yet are abhominable vnto God yea in their most deuout seruices they doe nothing but as Ephraim compasse the Lord with lyes and deceit Hose 11.12 Their punishment sheweth them to be euery way abhorred of God for as men deale with things they hate so the Lord 1. casteth them out of his sight Iob. 13.16 The hypocrite shall not come before him the workers of lies shall not enter within the walls of that holy Citie yea sometimes they are cast out of his presence as Caine was euen out of the visible Church as they are euer out of the inuisible to shew that they shall neuer be endured hereafter 2. Destroieth them for their destruction from the Lord sleepeth not but shall surprise them perhaps while they are in the bodie as Ananias and Saphirah but certenly hereafter and the damnation of such is no ordinarie damnation but a more ample and abundant iudgement is reserued for them then others and it is worthy obseruation that when the holy Ghost would rouse vp the slouthfull seruant he threatneth him his portion with hypocrites Matth. 24.51 and for both together it is said Matth. 13.41 that the Angels shall gather out of Christs kingdome all that offend and cast them into a furnace Ioh. 15.6 those that abide not in Christ though they cleaue a long time to the visible Church yet are seperated from the true inuisible Church and cast out like withered branches and men gather them and cast them into the fire how shall then such abhominable persons in Gods eyes avoid the damnation of hell it is almost an impossible thing for such a viperous brood of professed hypocrites euer to be saued And ought not such persons also to be an abhomination to good men in whose eyes euery vile person ought to be contemned yes surely could we discerne them or God discouering them we should be affected towards them as Elisha was towards Iehoram who in his straitnesse could seek to Gods Prophet and otherwise to Baal as the Lord of hostes liueth were it not that I regard the presence of Iehosaphat I would not haue looked towards thee nor seene thee Vse 1. If these be the notes and this the estate of an hypocrite then must it needs be very hard to know who is an hypocrite because it is a lurking sinne and so masked as there is litle yea often no outward difference betweene the sound and vnsound and consequently it cannot but be verie dangerous to lay this imputation vpon any man till the time least we iudge our brethren rashly and condemne the iust which is as odious a sinne as the iustifying of the wicked And this is rather to be noted because it is become so rise a practise to range euery professor vnder this title and marke him with this blacke cole of hypocrisie But as it is true that an hypocrite must be a professor so is it false that euery professor must be an hypocrite And as for all other notes here obserued or elsewhere in Scripture they are such as whereby the owne heart of a man and his owne spirit within himselfe may iudge of himselfe rather then the heart or eye of another man Many are so like vnto the deuill that they make no bones of accusing the godly as Satan did Iob of hypocrisie beeing led by that same spirit which is an accuser of the brethren but not by the spirit of God which is the spirit of loue which thinketh no euill but hopeth all things euen the best of the worst which is not iudging neither dare it enter into the counsell of God nor iudge the person of another mans seruant who standeth or falleth to his owne Lord which is so farre from carping at or misconstruing things well done in appearance as that maketh the best and giueth most fauourable construction of things and actions which are in appearance euill as well knowing that the searching of the heart belongeth to the maker of it and that no man can know with what intention vpon what grounds or causes this or that is done by another And much lesse yet doth that spirit of Christ which vseth not to quench smoaking flaxe but cherisheth euen good shewes as in the young man discourage better proceedings by deeming those who exercise themselues most diligently in the courses prescribed by the word the most worthy to be abhorred of God and man And yet where can a man goe but he shall meete with the spirit that beareth rule in the word which conceiueth not speaketh not so bitterly against whooremongers theeues drunkards c. as against many sound hearted professors of Christ and of his truth thus with the wicked Iewes preferring Barrabas before Christ himselfe Oh that men knew what they did and then would they not thus crucifie the Lord of glorie in his seruants who will fearefully reuenge such indignitie done against them When Dauid sent his seruants to Hanun to visit him and he euill entreated them vsing them as spies and not as visitors sent from a freind how hotly doth Dauid prosecute the reuenge of their wrongs he destroied seauen hundred charrets and slew fortie thousand horsemen beside the forte insomuch as he forced other Kings to make peace with him how much more will the Lord more
permit not a woman to teach Answ. The Apostle there speaketh of the order and comlines of publike ecclesiasticall assemblies wherein they were not allowed to take vpon them any power or function of teaching for the reasons propounded which are three 1. From their condition which is to be obedient vnto man and therefore in mens presence must not vsurpe the authoritie of teachers but content themselues with the place of schollers in all mixt assemblies of men and women 2. Their function which is to serue men for Adam was first created and Eue for Adam and not to exercise any function ouer them 3. From the weakenes of their sexe which lieth more open to Satans seducement for Adam was not deceiued first but Eue. It is not fit that any such function of teaching should be committed vnto them seeing Eue in innocencie taking vpon her to teach Adam was so easily preuailed against and the Apostle expresseth this his owne sense 1. Cor. 14.34 where from the same ground of the womans subiection vnto man he saith let your women keepe silence in the Churches As for the examples of Deborah and Huldas who were Prophetesses in the Church they beeing extraordinarie make nothing against this rule of Paul nor for that Pepuzian heresie for womens teaching in the Church nor that Popish heresie of midwiues baptizing of infants in case of necessitie as they call it Neither doth this place written by the same spirit and penne crosse the former seeing it speaketh of priuate teaching and instructing the family at home especially her children and maidseruants so the text it selfe seemeth to restrain them pointing them out their auditors namely young women in the next verse and the lectures they are to fit vnto them the most or all of which are priuate duties and the ende to make the younger women wise vnto all godly conuersation namely both those within the family and those that are without so farre forth as they shal be occasionally called to instruct them both by Christian speach and example Now that this dutie belongeth vnto matrons it will appeare if we consider them 1. as Christian women 2. as superiours in the family For the former it is not sufficient that a Christian woman liue vprightly and vnblameably in her selfe vnlesse she also endeauour to driue or drawe the younger women to the like godly course For 1. euerie Christian must gather with Christ and he or she that gathereth not scattereth whence are all those exhortations thou beeing conuerted strengthen thy brethren obserue one an other admonish and prouoke one another to loue and good workes 2. The rule of speach for all Christians is that for the matter it be good that is of good things and for the vse that it tend to edifie and who but elder Christian women should proceede in this duty 3. From the obseruation of this rule the godly are described to be such as whose lips feede many and they speake pleasant words which are health to the bones and sweetenes to the soule their tongues are trees of life vtter wisedome talke of iudgement of high matters c. And that women should not thinke that they are exempted from all this qualification of their speach Salomon ascribeth it in speciall to a vertuous woman that she openeth her mouth with wisedome and the law of grace is vnder her lips answerable to this text which requireth that she be a teacher of honest things As for the latter this dutie of teaching honest things belongeth vnto them as gouernours of their family wherein Salomons mother is a notable president who instructed her sonne what my sonne and what the sonne of my wombe c. and Timothies mother and grandmother Lois who acquainted him with the Scriptures from a child and what else proued these but rare men full of grace and pietie Vse 1. This reprooueth such as neither are able nor willing to call on others vnto the practise of Christian and honest duties the knowledge of God seateth not in their hearts nor the law of grace in their lips 2. Others are teachers but of dishonest things their mouthes are euer open but like the open vessells which in the Law were accounted vncleane nothing but idle and lewd speach nothing but impertinent or detracting speach proceedeth out of them all kind of language fitteth their mouthes but that which befitteth holines and honestie such as whose yeares calleth for grauitie and gracious sauorie speach euen in the presence of younger women are safe if they can chat away much time in ripping vp the loosenes of their young and wanton daies or the faults of this or that man or woman this is their table talk this is the speach wherewith they season the young and tender yeares of their children the which these new vessells easily and long after reteine who for most part by their gracelesse courses repaie their mothers barrennesse of gracious speach other speach then this if ●auouring of grace and pietie let it be offered it is as welcome as smoke to their eies Vse 2. How much more is the master of the family bound to the trayning vp of this familie in holy and honest things for the wife must herein onely helpe forward his paines The Lord wisheth the fathers to laie vp the memorie of his great workes for the instruction of their children and the master was the Prophet in the house and accordingly the children after them could say we haue heard our Fathers say thus and thus their bookes were their fathers mouthes But how carelesly is this great dutie neglected of most men that many children may say truely we haue heard our fathers sweare curse and lie backbite slander but seldome or neuer haue they declared vnto vs the great things which the Lord hath done for vs seldome or neuer haue they become teachers of holy or honest things vnto vs either in their word or conuersation Vers. 4. That they may instruct the younger women to be sober minded that they loue their husbands that they loue their children 5. That they be discreete chast keeping at home good and subiect vnto their husbands that the word of God be not euill spoken of It beeing required that the elder women should be teachers of honest things the Apostle in these two verses doth these three things 1. he sheweth who be their schollers namely the younger women as also the lecture they are to read vnto them namely sober mindednesse that is by their counsell and example frame them to become wise in the performance of all the duties of their seuerall places for the Greeke word howsoeuer it seemeth at the first sight to expresse one only vertue yet is it to be extended to the generall information of them vnto moderation prouidence modestie faithfulnes diligence and euery other vertue sutable to their age and condition of life For it is most properly and vsually ascribed vnto schoolemasters who haue youth committed
house yet his necessitie may plead for him and he obtaine pittie but here as no satisfaction can be made so if it could it could neuer be accepted the owner that is the husband is enraged he will not spare he will not beare the sight of any ransome although the gifts be augmented Secondly if we consider how vile and odious the sinne is 1. in regard of humane societie 2. of the parties offending 3. of Gods curse vpon the offence 1. For the first this is a sinne directly corrupting the fountaine of honest ciuill and godly life which is the inuiolable preseruation of Gods ordinance of marriage whereby alone he intended to raise vp to himselfe an holy seed and for the three societies what an infamie is it to the Church to be thought an assembly of harlots which ought to be the Lords holy ones the vndefiled doues of Iesus Christ what a confusion bringeth it in the Cōmonwealth to haue bastard broods inheriting whereas the Lord would not haue them come within his congregation to the tenth generation what an iniurie to the familie to bring in vnlawfull and vsurping heires Secondly for the parties offending 1. Whereas all other sinnes are without the bodie this is against the bodie the bodie is not onely an instrument as in other sinnes but the obiect against which the sinne is done and not any one part of it but the whole is violenced 2. Whereas all other sinnes may be perpetrated and done by one partie this windeth two into the sinne and therefore be it that one of them heartily repent of it yet cannot that partie be assured of the true repentance of the other whom he drew with him into the same so it cannot but lie for euer as a heauie load vpon the conscience both in that respect as also that he hath beene so exceeding seruiceable to the deuill not comming alone but bringing companie with him to hell out of the case of vnfained repentance 3. There is an high sinne against the price of Christs blood wherewith these bodies were bought to be members of Christ which now are become the members of an harlot and horrible sacriledge by which Christs owne is taken out of his hands and giuen vp to the seruice of the deuil and that bodie which was made to glorifie God vpon earth and after death shall rise out of the graue and be presented before Christ to iudgement hath dishonoured God dishonoured it selfe and prepared it selfe to receiue according to the vncleane workes of it the sentence which shall be pronounced against the vessels prepared vnto destruction Thirdly the curse of God followeth this sinne 1. in the soule of the sinner Heb. 13. Whooremongers and adulterers God will iudge him that destroieth the Temple of God will God destroie 2. In his bodie Prov. 5.11 he shall mourne hauing consumed his flesh and bodie 3. In his name which precious thing is irrecouerably lost ver 9. 4. In his estate it bringeth him to a bit of bread Prov. 6.26 it is a fire which consumeth all his substance Iob. 31.12 The prodigall sonne spent all he had on harlots 5. In their bastard brood we neuer read that euer any of them came to good saue onely Iephthe and yet what a number of men be there that care not to make their first borne bastards By these two considerations the sinne of impurity is sufficiently descried to be most hatefull Vse 1. Marriage is no abolisher of chastitie for then the Scripture would not haue enioyned the same person both to loue her husband and children and also to be chast against all Popish doctrine to the contrarie 2. Let euery woman preserue this puritie of bodie and spirit euery way expressing it in a modest countenance as Rebecca was abashed at the presence of Isaack in a shamefast eye in a chaste eare not intertaining impure communication in a pure tongue by graue and holy speach exempt from lightnes and rottennes Quest. How may we preserue it Answ. The best meanes of preseruing chastitie are these following First because from the heart issue adulteries get a pure heart to be the ground of it make the inside cleane first actions will not be cut off first but first become a beleeuer let the soule become a pure spouse of Christ loue him and cleaue to him this is a good beginning Secondly preserue in thy soule the feare of God Eccles. 7.28 He that is good before God shall be preserued this is no goodnes of nature of education no learning but Gods learning can preserue a man or woman Prov. 2.8.16 If knowledge enter into the soule thou shalt auoid her snares turne thy eye vpon Gods presence who seeth thee and wouldst thou then commit that from which in the presence of a child of fiue yeare old thou would abstaine Thirdly loue thy husband as formerly thou wast enioyned it is not so much the hauing as the louing of an husband that is a fence of chastitie Fourthly auoid occasions of wantonnes As 1. Idlenesse one of Sodoms sinnes standing puddles purrifie walke diligently in the duties of thy calling least Satan find thee as Dauid on his gallerie 2. Intemperance and delicacie in meate and drinke the more fewell the greater flame especially beware of accustoming thy selfe to wine and strong drinke for they are mockers Auoid intemperance in sleepe in apparell let thy dyet be sober and thy sleepe seasonable so as thy bodie may rather be beaten downe and kept vnder by fasting and watching which are fit medicines to tame the bodie 3. Auoid much companie and the sight of persons which may become snares as Ioseph went and kept out of his Mistris presence death often entreth by the windowes of the bodie and if thou makest not couenants with thine eyes adulterie is easily committed in the heart beware of amorous readings pictures speaches all which suddenly corrupt good manners Fifthly vse all good meanes appointed by God for this purpose As 1. resist lustfull thoughts at the first by occupying the minde with holy thoughts 2. Consider thy calling of a Christian and profession of Christianitie by both which thou art called vnto holines and not to liue in bruitish lusts as the Heathen did Rom. 1. 3. That the pleasure of the sinne is short but the gnawing of the guiltie conscience and the poyson of it will worke in thy bowells all thy dayes 4. Applie the word the sword of the spirit a speciall part of Christian armour and such places of it as directly encounter against it 5. Flie to God by prayer and if thou beest strongly assaulted make the matter knowne to God for the best way for a woman thus sollicited to be rid of the tempter is to tell her husband Keeping at home As chastitie is the maine marriage dutie and the vndefiled bedde the honour of it in like manner doth our Apostle bring it in like some honourable Ladie who is not seene abroad without her attendance some making
stand longer vpon this question leauing it to be considered further of crauing that wiues would be carefull in subiection to God and their husbands not to stretch these grounds beyond the rules and ends propounded Quest. And here commeth another question to be resolued whether the husband may beate his wife to force her vnto this subiection Ans. It seemeth no although some of reckoning be of the other opinion For 1. there is no word or example for it in Scripture 2. No man euer hated much lesse except he were mad beat his owne flesh 3. Her subiection must not be seruill but as of a member to the head Obiect But a man may let himselfe blood Sol. It is safe in his arme or foote in children or seruants but he must beware of letting the heart blood Obiect But Christ correcteth his spouse which is deare vnto him and yet reteineth his loue entire and so may the husband Ans. Christ is not the husband onely but an absolute King 2. An husband may checke and correct by admonition and reprehension but to proceed to blowes is vnwarrantable beeing such entire companions and of the same flesh yea condemned by the Fathers the ciuill lawes and the Heathen writers themselues But what if the wiues mallice be desperate and incurable Ans. Take vp thy crosse make good vse of it beare as much as possibly thou canst waite and applie God for her returne 2. Where thou canst not beare prouiding that offence by all possible good meanes be auoided and publike peace not interrupted the next remedie is the Magistrate but between husband and wife both tyrannicall rule and compulsiue obedience ought to be banished Contrarie to this free subiection is the common vice of wiues which is to be proud as Vashti not enduring the gouernment of husbands but by vncomely gestures and vnshamefast lookes and sometime by hote and bitter answers bewray the vnquietnes of their spirits when once their owne wills are crossed farre are they from that meeknes and quietnesse of spirit which Peter prescribed as the most comely attire for women who ought scarce to giue thēselues leaue to be out of quiet with others in the family in the husbands presence least he be vnquieted or any way offended That the word of God be not euill spoken of These words containe a generall reason inforcing the necessarie practise of all the former duties By the word of God is meant the doctrine of the Gospel taught receiued and professed by beleeuers in all ages which holy Gospel as it is glorious in it selfe so ought the glory honor of it to be preserued yea and aduanced in all that looke for saluation from it and therefore no Christian may become so much as an occasion of reproach vnto it And whereas the word is blasphemed either by the words or deeds of professors the second is here aimed at our Apostle concluding that then the doctrine of the Gospel is blasphemed when the life of the professor is not tuned vnto that doctrine And yet fu●ther whereas the life of a professor is vntuned vnto the doctrine two waies either by doing that which is prohibited or else by not doing that which is prescribed the latter is here especially condemned namely a life idly ledde in regard of Christian practises for the Apostle hath not so directly reprooued vices as required in women the practise of all the forenamed vertues vpon this ground least the word be euill spoken of noting vnto vs hereby th●● a Christian should be so farre freed from the power of sinne as that to be idle or negligent in the work of the Lord is too sinnefull in such a one Doctr. Profession without practise striketh not onely the person professing but the word of God it selfe which he doth professe by occasioning the prophane to blaspheme and scoffe at Gods holy religion Rom. 2.24 The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles thorough you Reas. 1. Such is the malice of the deuill and his instruments that hating God himselfe they turne whatsoeuer they can against God and his truth which is a light discouering their darkenes Hence doe they not so much maligne the person of a poore professor who perhaps neuer made nor medled with them as the light and truth shining in him yea let God touch one of their familiars and call him out of such a poisoned companie that person is presently hated and despised for the truth which if he did not now hold out they would loue and embrace as formerly they did and consequently a professor by his error calleth not so much disgrace and malice against his owne person as against the truth for let any but a professor sinne the more would the sinners of the world loue them as their owne but if any such offend or steppe awry easily shall a man perceiue where the bile is oh say they this is a goodly profession indeede which giueth them leaue to doe this or that and exclaime as though the profession were not of God because the professors shewe themselues to be but men Secondly the Lord imputeth this sinne not so much to them who doe blaspheme the truth who are the actors of this sinne as they who are the moouers and occasioners of the same Ezech. 36.20 when they entred among the heathen they polluted my name that is the heathen diligently watched the words and behauiours of my people because they beare my name and came as it were out of my schoole but my people beeing not so carefull of my name which was called vpon thē blasphemed it iustly causing others so to do Although therfore men may conceiue that by their bare profession they endanger themselues yet indeede the dishonour returneth vpon God and his Gospel euen as Dauid might thinke that he onely sinned against Vriah Bathshebe and his owne soule yet the Lord telleth him that his sinne was yet more infectious in that he had made Gods enemies to blaspheme Thirdly what a iust disgrace is it for the profession of Christ to haue such hangbyes as whose liues speake that either they knowe not or remember not or affect not or neglect yea despise that doctrine by which they expect saluation Vse 1. Let euery professor examine his life whether it bring honour or discredit to the Gospel whether his light shine among men or whether in any thing he giue offence vnto any for there is neuer a sinne in a professor but it is hereby doubled in that he woundeth not his owne soule alone but many other Christians with himselfe yea and the Gospel of saluation No meruaile then is it that the Lord is so ielous in the sinnes of such men who come neere him and in whome he looketh to be sanctified that although he forgiue their sinne wherein they dishonour his name yet for the maintenance of his glorie he will visit it in the eyes of men with the rods of men whereof we haue a pregnant example euen
be not onely the brother and sister of Christ but after a sort his mother both in conceiuing him in the wombe of his faith as also by bearing him daily into the world by a spirituall and holy life But how many that professe Christ and say they expect saluation by and in this name onely yet can blaspheme him rent him in their passion into small peeces they spare not his bodie his heart his blood his wounds his life that should but a Iewe heare them they would more crie out against them then against their owne rulers that put him to death But this was euer the lot of the sonne of God to be smitten and wounded in the house of his friends Vse 2. This doctrine reprehendeth soundrie sorts of men As 1. such as can willingly or without sorrow of heart see and heare indignities against Christ against his profession and professors of his Gospel and doe not rescue the honour due vnto them in their seuerall places and may it not seeme wonderfull in our eyes and eares that the verie Turkes who account of Christ but as a great Prophet and powerfull in word and deed should make it such a capitall transgression so as they inflict death vpon that man that speaketh blasphemie against Iesus Christ and yet we that are Christians who professe Christ not a great Prophet but the Lord of the holy Prophets the Sauiour of the world and our Sauiour also fill and suffer without rebuke or check the whole ayre to be filled with horrible blasphemies oathes imprecations reuilings and whatsoeuer most wretched speaches against God his Christ his Saints and dearest seruants What is this other then a treading vnder foote that blood which should haue washed vs 2. other professors there be that make sure account of their iustification and saluation by Christ and yet looke to their sanctification which inseparably follows the former as the shadow the bodie there the want sheweth that they haue not that hope they made account of in that they purge not themselues but as foule as they were as blacke are they still the spirit hath not powred out that cleane water vpon them which hath washed them from their filthinesse but wretched couetousnesse hangs vpon one enuie and malice clingeth to another filthie speaches proceed from a third and the fourth is no changling And doth not this make the name of God blasphemed 3. A third sort there are who take themselues farre afore either of the former and perhappes haue some sound grace in their hearts and yet not watching ouer themselues nor giuing their hearts vnto this doctrine remit of their care and diligence and stand not so fast but that by some fearefull fall or other they dishonour at once God his word themselues and their profession who although they can truely say my course is not that of the swearer curser drunkard adulterer nor of such as are altogether profane yet be becomming slauish to some one lust or by slyding into some one vnchristian action they more dishonour God especially if they be of more note then some other men by a thousand othes or periuries Quest. But how shall we so carrie our selues in our profession as the word of God be not euill spoken of Answ. Laie vp these rules of direction 1. Get a good and reuerent heart which may thinke and conceiue highly of the word which offreth thee and putteth thee in possession of so great things and worketh out such things in thee and for thee For that which we loue and admire we will be carefull least by our default it ●eare euill get knowledge conscience and affection to hide it in thy heart which if it magnifie it so will thy speaches and actions also Secondly neuer professe that in word the power of which thou meanest to denie but gird thy loines with the girdle of veritie for then wilt thou hold out an ornament of that thou first professedst Dissimulation is spunne with a fine thread vpon the loome of an hypocriticall heart but the web of it is like the Gentlewomans cobweb lawne which is rather for shew then vse Colours cannot continue nor a grape which onely cutcheth or hangeth on a briar can growe without vnion vnto the naturall vine so will it be with men who make shew of beeing gouerned by Christ and yet meane not to forsake their swearing lying gaming worldlinesse and other their lusts Such as these who are no better then bryars I would aduise to keepe them in the wast and come not within Gods garden which is no place for them nor within the pale of Christian profession for the Lord will not hold them guiltlesse who thus take his name in vaine and the axe and the fire will meete them if they stand in the grounds of this good husbandman Thirdly in euery thing more regard Gods name then thine owne as one that art taught to praie for the hallowing of Gods name before forgiuenesse of thy sinne or thine owne saluation a man carefully auoideth the branding of his name he will redeeme and rescue his name if it be hazzarded with all that he is worth and much more should we doe Gods Fourthly tender thine owne credit not for selfeloue but for the loue of God a good thing it is to keepe the heart cleane but so to stand vpon the cleanesse of the heart as not regarding the fame that goeth vpon him is a great sinne for a good name especially in a professor is a very precious oyntment Fiftly take not all the libertie thou maist but sometimes depart from thy right before thou wilt dishonour the Gospel Christ in this case departed from his right and paid custome so did his Disciples whose blessed example they imitate not who take all their libertie and ●ake in all that carrieth a shew of right and neuer regard what euill will follow of it whereas the heart must make answer here to two questions What is this my right and then will it doe my profession no wrong then may I take all my right and vse my libertie or else I may not Sixtly praie with Dauid Lord let no man be ashamed because of mee What a greefe and cut would it be for thee who hast not laid aside forehead with conscience to heare the Papists triumph because of thee and the Atheists and scoffers because of thee to say oh these be the stamp of professors of gospellers of holy men and brethren Bible-bearers and Church gadders they are all of a straine I will beleeue neuer a one of them all what shall thy pride couetousnesse crueltie loosenesse cast dung in the faces of all Gods children doth not the offence of one of Christs little ones bring woe inough but thou must offend euery one of them oh then very great is the necessitie of that request that none of them be offended because of thee So much of the duties of the younger women Vers. 6. Exhort young men likewise that they
an honest and peaceable man he cannot preach indeede but he liues as well and doth as much good as if he preached we would not change him for the best preacher of them all But where is this harmonie of doctrine and life in such a one know we not that the best liues of the best men are but seruants and attendants to their doctrine and like the miracles of Christ which serued to prepare confirme prouoke and condemne but conuerted not the beholders this is the worke of the Gospel in the ministerie of it which is the power of God to the saluation of euerie beleeuer Was it euer heard that a dumbe Minister by his life conuerted a soule to God and what is his life but a liuing out of a lawfull calling an iniurious robbing men of their goods which he before God hath no right vnto and a cruell murthering of their soules for want of knowledge And if the question were made to me whether good doctrine or good life might better be spared in a minister I should answer readily that to preach well and liue ill were farre better and more eligible then to liue honestly and not to preach seeing the former bringeth ruine vpon himselfe alone this latter both vpon himselfe and his people Secondly as there must be good doctrine so there must be good life too for a Minister may not thinke he hath done enough when he hath taught others if himselfe yet remaine vntaught like some statue which pointeth the way to passengers but it selfe standeth a stocke still and mooues not but he must first be a good man and then teach others so to be In the old Testament the Priest must first be cleansed himselfe and then cleanse others first wash himselfe and then sprinkle others first sanctifie himselfe and then others so in the new we must first become lights our selues and then enlighten others first approach neere God our selues and then bring others before him for this is the propertie of a good sheepheard to goe before his sheepe that they may followe him But all this while we may not thinke that the authoritie of the word standeth vpon the good or bad life of men which hath a better bottome of his owne to stand vpon but yet it is a further seale of the truth of it vpon the simple and that sundrie wayes which I will not stand vpon These two make a sweete harmonie especially within a mans owne conscience when he can appeale vnto his fellow-ministers as Paul to Timothie and say you haue fully knowne my doctrine my manner of liliuing c. and vnto the consciences of Gods people calling them to witnesse both of his painfull preaching 1. Thess. 2.9 as also of his holy and vnblameable behauiour vers 10. yea euen vnto Gods tribunall with much comfort at the ende of his dayes as Paul did Act. 20.19.20.26 Which two as they must conspire so the minister is to be an example in both 1. Tim. 4.12 be an example in word conuersation c. The Apostles were as lights vpon hills as starres in the heauens Pastors are called to be patternes to their flockes the great Pastor of the sheepe our Lord Iesus set himselfe a coppie vnto all Christians both in holy doctrine and in blessed example of life Great is the force of godly example especially in the Pastor both to the beleeuer to prouoke him and to the vnbeleeuer either to bring him to a liking of the religion of God or to condemne him who hath both seen heard yet hath not beleeued euen as Noah condemned the old world by making of the Arke which are the reasons why the Lord hath euer scattered some of his children here and there a saint or two euen in Neroes house a Lot in Sodome and as a lilly riseth vp sometimes among thornes so doe the sonnes of God in the midst of a froward generation that they might shine as purer lights in the darkenes of the world round about them Vse 1. These are true notes to discerne a true Minister by pure doctrine and holy life If you consult with a Papist he will decypher you one of his Priests by his mitre crosyer staffe copes and other garments by his oyntings shauings c. which indeede are markes of the beast but not a word of life and doctrine whence we know them to be theeues not entring in by the doore but by the window to robbe and steale 2. This requireth the presence and residence of the minister with his flocke for if hee be ordinarily absent how can he be an example vnto them Thirdly it proclaimeth woe vpon them who by contrarie practise to their preaching giue occasion of stumbling to the people as Elies sonnes did better it were that such had neuer beene borne then so to strengthen the hands of sinners besides that by his owne mouth he shall be iudged Fourthly it stirreth vp the men of God to care of their liues to which we in this calling might be mooued by sundrie other strong reasons 1. We stand before God and therefore we must put off our shooes wash and cleanse our selues Ier. 15.19 If thou turne thou shalt stand before mee 2. We shall be better enabled to our duties both because God teacheth his secrets to his seruants the Prophets as also the doctrine shal be more acceptable and lesse excepted against Herod heard Iohn because he was a good man 3. We else pull the sinnes of many vpon vs and harden a number in the same sinnes the wicked Iewes could alleadge the Priests examples for their Idolatrie Ier. 44.17 and Ioh. 7.48 Doe any of the Rulers and Pharisies beleeue in him 4. He that diuorceth godly life from pure doctrine shall be the least that is haue no place in the kingdome of heauen Fifthly it teacheth all hearers to take benefite by the examples of their teachers who labour faithfully in the Gospel among them for must we studie to shew our selues examples in vaine Philip. 3.17 Brethren be followers of me and 4.9 The things which yee haue heard and seene in me those things doe Heb. 13.7 Remember them that haue the ouersight of you whose faith follow considering what hath beene the end of their conuersation The examples of the godly are called a cloud of witnesses to put vs in minde that as the Israelites were mooued as the cloud mooued so should it be with vs cast our eyes vpon the cloud of the faithful pastors especially to follow thē so far as they follow Christ which who so refuse to doe they haue three feareful witnesses against them the word of God their owne consciences the Ministers liues And here we must be put in mind to go one step beyond ordinarie for many cast their eyes vpon the examples of their Ministers to spie if they can obtaine some libertie to the flesh through their frailtie but if they cannot the most thinke it sufficient that they can commend
adultresse goe and sinne no more so the vse that we should make of his redemption is to cease from euill and depart from iniquitie least a worse thing befall and our ende be worse then our beginning And here is it not to be omitted how the Popish doctrine is in this point an vtter enemie to this redemption purchased by Christ not onely in magnifying their owne merits but in extenuating sinne so as men cannot come to a serious sense and hatred of the same for many sinnes are small and scarce sinnes many are veniall and there is no danger in them originall sinne which is the mother sinne of all is no sinne at all in the regenerate They turne many of the commandements into counsels which men may giue eare vnto for conuenience sake but not of necessitie and in doing these they doe more then the lawe bindeth them vnto By all which dreames of their owne braines as by thicke clouds of darkenes they obscure the brightnesse of this our sunne of righteousnesse and lessen the merit of his sufferings For if so many sinnes are in their owne nature so veniall Christ might haue spared much of his paines and if they were so slight as they make many the Christian might forbeare much of that watchfulnesse against them vnto which we are so often exhorted by the Apostle 4. Hence also is ministred no small consolation to the faithfull for if Christ haue redemed vs from all iniquitie who can lay any thing to our charge seeing Christ hath iustified who can condemne Let Satan now obiect the greatnesse of our debt our owne insufficiencie and weake estate to discharge we may plead that we neede not greatly distract our thoughts to procure any satisfaction besids that which is made on Christs part and accepted on Gods part for vs but all that euer we can make in way of thankefulnesse we acknowledge our selues bound vnto Let the blinded Papist who teacheth that he can satisfie the whole law of God and yet reuerseth it with the same breath when he saith pro hui●● vitae statu worke to satisfie we will to testifie our thankefulnes in that we are freed from so great bondage And purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe Christ by his death purgeth vs two wayes 1. By obtaining our reremission of sinnes and absoluing vs both from the guilt and punishment of them and this is the iustification of a sinner before God which he effected once and absolutely vpon the crosse of which we haue spoken in the words immediately foregoing the latter way is by freeing vs from the filth and contagion of sinne and this is the sanctification of a sinner and is not done at once but is daily while we liue in this world arising to further perfection and of this purging our Apostle now speaketh the which he affirmeth to be a fruit of the death of Christ as well as the former From the right conceiuing of which those places may not hinder vs where our sanctification may seeme to take an other rise as where the Holy Ghost is called that cleane water whereby we are washed Ezech. 36.25 I will powre cleane water vpon you and yee shall be washed from your filthinesse and from your idols for it is the Lord Iesus who by the power of his eternall spirit offereth his blood as the materiall and meriting cause of our cleansing without which diuine and effectuall power of the holy spirit the flesh had profited nothing 2. Where we meet with such places which ascribe it some●ime to the word as Christ to his disciples ye are all cleane by the word which I haue spoken vnto you sometimes to the Sacraments Act. 22.16 Be baptised and wash away thy sins and sometime to faith Act. 15.9 he purified their hearts by faith all these speaches conspi●e together in this same truth rightly apprehended For Christ is the onely agent in our sanctification in and by all these he giueth faith and sanctifieth by it as by an internall meane and instrument whereby we receiue our cleansing he sendeth Ministers with his word and sanctifieth by it as by an externall meane wherein sanctification is offered and with his Sacraments that by them as an other outward meanes that inward sanctification might be represented and sealed Thus Dauid prayeth Purge me with byssope that is wash away my sinne with the blood of thy Sonne which is shadowed in these legall sprinklings made with byssope and thus are diuerse other Sacramentall speeches to be vnderstood Doctr. Redemption and sanctification are inseparable companions none is redeemed who is not purged the blood of Christ hath this double effect in whomsoeuer it is effectuall to saluation for hee is made to such of God righteousnesse and sanctification In the lawe we reade of lauers as well as of altars yea and of the brasen sea In the Gospel we reade not onely of blood but of water streaming out of the side of Christ and that his sweate in his agonie was water and blood The blood signifiyng the perfect expiation of the sinnes of his Church and the water the daily washing and purging of it from the remainders of her corruption So the Apostle ioyneth these two together Ephe. 5.26 he gaue himselfe for his Church that is his life and blood and purged it with water through the word and it is cleare that the Apostle Iohn expresseth both these benefits obtained by Christ namely perfect satisfaction for sinne and sanctification from sinne when he saith that this is he that came both by water and by blood and as here it is said that Christ gaue himselfe to redeeme and purge so elsewhere in expresse tearmes to sanctifie his Church Eph. 5.27 Vse 1. In that the death of Christ serueth for our continuall cleansing while we liue in this world we are to take notice and acknowledgement of much filthinesse and vncleannes euen in the best it is no slight soyle or staine that hath fouled our natures which will easily be blowne or brusht off for it sticketh neerer vs then our skinnes that the verie power of Christs death it selfe doth not wholly destroy it while we liue but we haue cause to crie ou● with the leper in the lawe I am vncleane I am vncleane nay the godly see what blackamoores they are and how hardly they change their skins and what leopards they are hardly parting with their spots And this made the Apostle take such paines that he might attaine this fruit of Christs death and resurrection after he had beene long able to maintaine his iustification against all challenges and say who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect and what shal separate vs from the loue of God well knewe he how fast this vncleannes cleaueth vnto our natures Heb. 12.1 And this challengeth a number of monsters of men whose hearts beeing gulfes and seas of iniquitie yea the common draines and sinks of all filthinesse
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
blood of Christ by often meditating and applying vnto himselfe his death and merits which are the onely purging ●ire and fullers sope without which although he take much sope and nitre yet can he not be purged this is the onely fountaine opened to the house of Dauid for sinne and vncleannesse this is the onely lauer of the Church 2. He laboureth in the encrease and strengthning of his faith which as an hand apprehending the former purifieth the heart 3. He diligently and reuerently frequenteth the word and Sacraments as the outward meanes appointed by God for the effecting and encreasing of sanctification 4. When he heareth Christ say If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee he reuerently falleth downe at his feete in feruent prayer Lord not my feete only but my hands and my head wash mee throughly euen from toppe to toe Thus he knowes he can onely become cleane and by these same meanes he seeth he can only be kept cleane he dare not neglect these meanes as the foule monsters of the world that had rather be wallowing in the dung of the earth and bathing themselues in their dirtie and sinnefull sports and delights then frequent the places where these pure waters streame in most pleasant abundance but their cards dice bowles boules vnprofitable companie idle solitarines which as so many draynes carie with them all vncleannes the which they powre on the heads of wicked men with full buckets chaine them with chaines of darknes that they cannot so much as desire these cleane waters which the spirit powreth on those which thirst after them The second point is the motiues to become purged and to labour in sanctification 1. Because hereby wee resemble the Lord himselfe by which reason we are often in the Scripture mooued to the study of holines Leu. 19.2 and hence we become deare vnto God when he spieth his owne image vpon vs for euen naturall fathers loue their children best who are likest vnto them 2. Hereby we are not only conformable to his image but to his will for this is the will of God that euery man know to possesse his vessell in holinesse and in honour 1. Thess. 4.3 3. Hereby we distinguish our selues from the profane Esaus of the world whereas by nature we are as foule as they 4. We attaine to the end of our redemption and haue an argument that Christs death is effectuall to vs because we see the power of the deuil and sinne destroied in vs. 5. All legall purifications are resolued into nothing but euangelicall sanctimonie which may not be neglected vnlesse we will come behind those who were directed by shadows types whereas we haue the truth substance 6. Without puritie of heart and life no man shall see God Blessed and holy are they that haue part in the first resurrection the second death shall not hurt such for only those that are slaine by the first death are hurt by the second and the second resurrection only profiteth those that haue part in the first Without shall be dogges and whatsoeuer is filthy and vncleane and know we not that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6.9 What meane men then to feare least they should be too pure and too holy and to reproach others as beeing so What a fearefull delusion is it for men to flatter themselues as most doe that there need no such strictnes or precisenes but to come to Church and receiue Sacraments according to law and do as other men do and sometimes as their leysure suffers to read or pray alone and heare a sermon extraordinarie But alas what will it profit a man to be a sundaies Saint and a work-daies Deuil Or what great good can good moods do are we not exhorted to the following of holines to cleanse our selues from all filthines of soule and bodie to an heauenly conuersation to haue no fellowship nor touch any vncleane thing On the other side are we not vrged to continuall prayer In all things to be thankfull to meditate day and night in the law of the Lord to make the word our marke to aime at and in all things with full purpose of heart to cleaue fast vnto the Lord And now dare any flesh except and say but if I shall doe thus it is more then need and I should become too precise and too pure and so are they that do so we serue a God of pure eyes that will not be thus dallied withall To be a peculiar people vnto himselfe In these words is set down one end why Christ vnderwent such paines not only to iustifie but also to sanctifie his Church namely that it might become impropriate vnto himselfe and applied vnto his owne best purposes For as vncleane vessels can neuer be vsed vnto any good purpose vntill they be washed and sweetned no more can sinnefull men euer become vessells of honour reserued vnto the Lords owne vse before they be washed by the blood of Christ and those pure waters of the spirit before mentioned The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifieth something on which a man for some excellencie in it setteth his affection more then other and therefore layeth it vp and reserueth for some speciall vse and purpose and will not at any hand part with it as if a man should laie vp some bright and bewtifull peeces of gold which he will not suffer to see the sunne as we say or be brought out scarce in extreame necessitie Thus although all the earth be the Lords who beeing the God of nature and grace hath all power and libertie to conferre where he pleaseth grace aboue nature yet his good pleasure was to choose Israel to be his cheefe treasure aboue all people and an holy nation that vnto them he might shew his wisedome and glorie and his loue and mercie vpon them But that was but a type the thing it selfe is specially apparant in the Church of the new Testament euen the true Church of God in all ages since vnto which all those titles iustly belong which Peter giueth to the beleeuing dispersed Iewes A royall pr●●sthood a chosen generation an holy nation and a peculiar people Now the Church may be said to be a peculiar people by the Church vnderstanding the true and essentiall members of the Church 1. Because beleeuers are the most precious of men euen the most noble persons of the earth descended of the blood of Christ in which regard they are the dearest of men and nearer vnto God because more noble then the rest Thus Salomon describeth the Church as though it were a stately court where are none but of the blood royall Kings Queenes Lords and Ladies and hence are beleeuers called sonnes of God brethren of Christ and heyers vnto the crowne of heauen Secondly In regard of God they are a peculiar people distinct from others by his grace of election by which they are chosen
out of the world and set highly in his fauour aboue all others For they lie before him in the righteousnesse of Christ in whom the Father is well pleased they are bought from the earth and stand before him in the worke of his owne fingers namely their new birth and second creation in which he also delighteth to behold Hence are they called an holy nation the spouse of Christ the daughter of God the choise of God and Gods delight Thirdly they are a peculiar people in regard of their whole maner condition of life which made Balaam say of Israel that it was a people dwelling alone and numbred not himself among other nations that is altogether different in lawes customes manner and condition of life But let vs see this truth in some instances 1. Their originall are not some few families comming out of some corner of the earth but they sprung of Christ of whom all the families in heauen and earth are called 2. Their countrie is no part of earth for they are here but strangers and pligrimes but heauen to which they tend and from whence they looke for a Sauiour 3. Their King is neither borne nor created but the euerlasting King of glorie who ruleth not some one countrie but from sea to sea yea to the worlds end and not for an age but as he is a King for euer and his kingdome an euerlasting kingdome so he ruleth for euer and euer and of his kingdome there is no ende 4. Their lawes are spirituall to gouerne the conscience as well as the outward man most perfect neuer changed neuer abrogated as mens bee 5. Their warre and weapons are not carnall but spirituall as their cheifest enemies be their captaine was neuer foyled nor can bee and therefore before they strike a blowe they are sure of victorie and for their externall enemies they conquer them not by smiting as others but by suffering 6. Their language is the language of Canaan their speach bewrayeth them to be citizens of heauen hence are they called people of a pure language no filthie vnsa●ourie or corrupt communication commeth out of their mouthes but such as is holy tending to edification and ministring grace to the hearers 7. Their apparell is deuised and put on by God himselfe euen garments of innocencie long white robes died red in the blood of the lambe 8. Their diet not rising out of the earth but descending from heauen Iesus Christ is the bread of life and that Manna that came downe from heauen and that water which gusheth out of the rocke of whom whosoeuer feedeth and drinketh he hath tasted of the tree of life and of the water of life he cannot but liue euerlastingly Thus we see how the mēbers of the Church are called a peculiar people Vse 1. Hence we may note a liuely description of the Church of God namely that it is a peculiar people selected and called out of all nations peoples tongues and kinreds of the earth for the Lords owne possession and vse That which the Lord once spake of Israel is true of all the true Israel of God Israel is a thing hallowed vnto the Lord and as his first fruits for as the first fruits were of all the fruits of the earth separated and sanctified vnto the Lord so out of all the people of the earth are a remnant set apart and separated to become his and belong vnto him see Hos. 1.10 2.23 Vse 2. Hence is affoarded no small consolation to the members of the Church and that sundrie wayes for God will not forsake his people whom he hath chosen whom he hath made his peculiar But 1. his protection watcheth ouer them Zach. 2.5 I will be a wall of fire round about her he will suffer none to doe them wrong let them be kings who will not be reprooued by any other yet he will reprooue them for their sakes this was the ground of the Iewes safetie Deut. 32.9 The Lords portion is his people Iacob is the lot of his inheritance he found him he taught him he lead him and kept him as the apple of his eye Be thou then a child of the Church and although thou maist finde thy selfe in thy selfe lost blind ignorant and in a thousand perils feare not the Lord will finde thee lead thee teach thee and keepe thee as safe in the chambers of his prouidence as thou wouldest keepe safe the apple of thine owne eie Secondly his prouidence is euer with them his eies vpon them his eares his hand his treasurie open vnto them yea himselfe becommeth the portion of those that are his portion and no good thing can be wanting to such who haue the Lord their portion in whom is no lacke Art thou poore despised base and abiect in the world let thy care be to become Gods peculiar he was neuer contemptible whom God honoureth as he cannot be honourable whom God despiseth Vse 3. For instruction to teach vs who professe our selues the Lords peculiar to liue vnto him to whose vse we are set apart And this is the Apostles reason Ye are not your owne therefore glorifie God in your soules and bodies for they are his and that we may this doe we must propound two rules before vs. 1. We must see that the whole course of our liues be carried according to his pleasure for looke whose we are to him we must giue vp our selues to obey If we be the Lords peculiar then no creature in earth can lay claime vnto vs not the Pope not the deuill not sinne no nor our owne lusts must command vs for thus the Apostle reasoneth ye are a chosen generation a peculiar people dearely beloued I beseech you abstaine from fleshly lusts this inference sheweth what a dishonourable and disgracefull thing it were for Christians so farre to forget their nobilitie and dignitie to stoope to such base seruices they should rather call to mind that beeing set apart to the Lords vse and like so many nobles beeing to attend the nearest seruices of their King they are to heare and fashion themselues according to his good pleasure Deut. 26.18 The Lord hath set thee to be a pretious people vnto him that thou shouldst keepe all his commandements Neither may beleeuers frame themselues according to the guise of the world seeing they are called out of the world to be the Lords peculiar Those that are the next seruants in a princes court liue not according to the fashions of other courts but according to the manner of their owne so the Lord from this reason chargeth his people that they should not conforme vnto the heathen in their fashions for ye are an holy people and the Lord hath chosen you for a pretious people in like manner we must not conforme to Romish or Italian fashions nor the courses of loose and profane men amongst our selues but as we professe our selues the Lords so must we square and
speake let him speake as the word of God and the embassadors of Christ must speake his message euen as himselfe would vtter it 2. The soule of the word is the presence of the spirit which euerie Minister must striue to make demonstration of for else it is but a dead letter or sound it is the spirit that quickeneth it and maketh it liuely and mightie in operation it is not the demonstration of the person nor manifestation of the man that getteth authoritie to the word but when out of good conscience a man faithfully striueth to make it appeare to the consciences of others that not he but the spirit of God speaketh in him that when simple men shall perceiue the secrets of their hearts made manifest they may fall on their faces and worship God saying God is in this man indeede 3. The Prophets and Apostles haue gone before vs as presidents in this behalfe Micha 3.8 I am full of power by the spirit of the Lord and of iudgment and of strength to declare Iacob his sinne and Israel his transgression Before Isai was sent on his message his lippes were touched with an hote coale from the altar The Apostles accordingly were not sent to witnes of Christ vntill the spirit had descended vpon them and that in the forme of fierie tongues to signifie that themselues beeing kindled with zeale and feruencie in the Lords businesse they should also by their doctrine enflame others and that their speech should not light any where but it should kindle and enflame the hearts of the hearets But the most perfect patterne of imitation herein we haue in the cheife doctor of his Church who not onely after his resurrection could and did make the hearts of the disciples burne within them euen in his ordinarie talke but all the time of his humilitie it is truely verified of his whole doctrine that he taught with authoritie and not as the Scribes Indeed neuer man spake so nor can speake by the confession of his verie enemies for neuer man spake so in his owne name verily I say vnto you neuer man confirmed his speaches with such powerfull and proper miracles neuer man spake with such peculiar grace zeale libertie and command of the spirit in the conscience but yet all his Ministers are to imitate him in zeale in power in libertie of speach and spirit for the glorie of God and come as neere this copie as they can Vse Ministers must take heede of coldnes in their ministerie of liueles and spiritles preaching of powerlesse and a frozen manner of deliuering the word alwaies preseruing a fire of zeale and conscience in themselues mettals we knowe will not worke without fire no more will the steely and stonie heart of man melt or soften without the spirituall fire taken from the altar And yet here I must not be vnderstood as condemning all coolenesse or moderation of speach for doctrine may be ponderous and weightie where the speach is calme and treatable still waters often runne the deepest and Salomon saith that a man of knowledge spareth his words but yet it followeth that he must be of an excellent spirit so there must of necessitie be at the least a soft fire in these distillatiōs But the thing iustly condemned is when men by their owne default beeing giuen ouer either to pride sensualitie or worldlynesse haue benummed their spirits and are become frozen without power or life in their ministerie and so bring forth their doctrine as many women doe their children stil-borne teaching as the Scribes onely of forme without zeale or conscience or experience of that they speake And before I leaue this point it must be knowne that whereas I require heate and authoritie in the deliuerie of the word that therefore euerie heate should be warrantable for some is iustly condemned as 1. all heate of humane affection proceeding from perturbation and passion 2. all inconsiderate heate of youth 3. all heate not well guided although in good men full of godly affections but suffered to boyle ouer so farre as a man looseth his memorie and interrupteth his doctrine and whole discourse 2. A flattring Ministrie is an enemie to this authoritie for when a Minister must sing placebo and such sweet songs it is impossible for him not to betraie the truth 3. To withstand this authoritie or to weaken it is a fearefull sin whether in high or low and the Lord will not suffer his messengers feet to be cut off 4. Hearers must 1. pray for their Teachers that they may deliuer the word with authoritie with boldnesse and with open mouth Ephes. 6.19 Coloss. 4.4 2. Not deeme this authoritie in Ministers humor or anger or bitternes and much lesse madnesse with Festus and least of all to cast them in prison as men rauing as Ieremie was cap. 29.26 3. Not to refuse to yeeld subiection vnder this authoritie nor be angrie when it beateth down some practise which they are loth to part with seeing it is iust with God to reprobate put out the light of such as refuse the conuiction of the light offred The third and last precept of this Chapter and verse Let no man despise thee teacheth two things First how people and hearers should entertaine the Ministers sent them of God seeing they cannot without great sinne despise them for seeing the Lord who could by himselfe worke the saluation of men yet is pleased to vse as his helpers herein weake and base men whom he assumeth into fellowship with himselfe to become coworkers with him although not in the act of conuersion yet in the Ministrie of it who dare despise such whom the Lord so farre honoureth and therefore calleth them his white horses horses in that he vseth them in his battailes against sinne Satan the world and wicked ones and white for the puritie of their doctrine and integritie of their liues yea his Angels namely such as by whom he reuealeth his good pleasure vnto vs and his owne voyce by whom he beseecheth men to be reconciled Secondly how carefull is the Lord to preserue his Ministers from contempt when he affirmeth that such as despise them despise himselfe that sent them In which sence we read that the posteritie of Caine contemning the preaching of Noah dispised and contended against Gods spirit so Israel murmuring against Moses and Aaron Moses saith he hath heard your murmurings against the Lord for what are we that yee haue murmured against vs. Thirdly how vnnaturall a part were it for children to despise their Fathers and what seueritie hath the Lord shewed against it in his law but godly Ministers are the Fathers of their people I am your Father saith Paul and Onesimus yea and Titus here begotten by him vnto the faith he calleth his sonnes Let no cursed Cham presume to scorne them which is not so hurtfull to them as dangerous to themselues beeing the next way to bring themselues vnder
the curse On the contrarie let the naturall children of the Church 1. know them 1. Thess. 5.12 that is both in heart accknowledge them the Ministers of Christ and in affection loue them as his Ministers accounting their feete bewtifull 2. render them double honour 1. Tim. 5.17 in which precept the holy Ghost hath made 1. reuerence 2. obedience 3. thankfulnes 4. comfortable maintenance their due from their people Secondly Ministers are hence taught so to order their liues and doctrine as they lay not their pers●ns open to reproach nor prostitute their authoritie vnto contempt and so loose it both from themselues and others For this is the way for Ministers to winne authoritie and reuerence in the hearts of men by their liues and doctrine to become examples vnto the flocke And thus shining in the puritie of doctrine and conuersation they shew themselues starres in the right hand of Christ. The point beeing formerly prooued we will only note a threefold vse of it First to confute the Popish teachers who haue deuised another way to free themselues from the contempt of the laytie namely by inuesting their Bishops and clergie into ciuill authoritie and Magistracie by furnishing them with wealth and abundance yea superfluitie of state and pompe by distinguishing them from other men by strange fashions of apparell miters crosyer staues rings and bables that if Titus had bin such a Bishop this had beene a needlesse precept for who durst haue despised him but he should soone haue heard of him But the word teacheth that it is no politicke deuise that maintaineth the estimation of a Minister or Ministrie but the holy carriage both of the doctrine and liues of the Ministers euen as the Apostle also speaketh of Deacons that by ministring well they get themselues a good degree and great libertie in the faith Secondly this ground laieth heauie things to the charge of the idol-ministerie who for any gifts for teaching are many of them inferiour to boyes and girles of seauen yeares old and wofull it is to thinke how many places are serued or starued rather with Ieroboams priests who were raked out of the basest of men the iust subiects of reproach and contempt And others the sonnes of Eli who by the wickednesse and dissolutnes of their courses not only stinke themselues but make the seruice and worship and word of God to be abhorred men mistake their marke when they say that it is often preaching which maketh it dispised but because it is so often preached by such leud men it looseth the grace and power of it in the hearts of men Thirdly when men thus teach and thus liue purely and innocently and yet are despised let them not thing it strange nor be discouraged for they haue done their dutie and taken the right course to get reuerence and authoritie Let men at their perill now despise them the Lord will not refuse to honour them and if they cannot in earth yet are they sure to shine in heauen And thus by the assistance of God haue we absolued this second Chapter to him be therefore praise for ouer Amen CHAP. III. PVt them in remembrance that they be subiect to the principalities and powers and that they be obedient and readie to euerie good worke IN the former Chapters the Apostle hath beene carefull that Titus should in his ministerie propound the seuerall offices and duties of Christianitie vnto seuerall estates and conditions of men Now in this Chapter he will haue him teach more generall and more publike duties which concerne no estate more then other but all Christians of what estate and condition soeuer they be wherein he taketh vp the greatest part of the Chapter vnto the 9. verse II. The second part of the Chapter warneth Titus how to carrie himselfe more respectiuely 1. in contentious questions 2. in dealing with heretikes both which abounded in those dayes in the 9 10. and 11. verses The third part containing the third part namely the conclusion of the whole Epistle remembreth some priuate and personall matters which is ended with the accustomed apostolicall salutation Concerning the first of them These generall duties are 1. propounded in 1. and 2. verses and 2. confirmed and vrged in the sixe following They are propounded in this method and order First Titus must instruct all Christians in their duties towards Magistrates Secondly in the mutuall duties one towards an other The former taketh vp the first verse wherein two things are to be considered 1. the manner of propounding the precept 2. the substance of the doctrine it selfe wherein wee must speake 1. of the duties required which are two 1. subiection 2. obedience Secondly of the persons 1. to whome 2. from whome they are due But first we must returne to the manner of propounding this lesson in these words Put them in remembrance The Apostle saith not teach them or exhort them as before but put them in remembrance wherein Titus is inioyned two things 1. To call backe into their mindes this lesson euen the old doctrine concerning authoritie and subiection vnto magistracie which is not abolished vnto beleeuers implying that it is no newe doctrine but renewed 2. Often to inculcate and beate vpon this point for great and waightie reasons For 1. by nature all men desire libertie and to cast off the yoke of God corrupt reason wil be readie to conceiue all men one mans children and why should not one be as good as an other we came all out of one Arke and perhaps among Christians some Chore or other will be readie to say what is not all the congregation of the Lord holy 2. The Iewes in these times wherein the Apostle writ stood much vpon many temporall priuiledges as vpon Abraham the Temple the lawe c. and were stiffe and loath to stoope to the authoritie of the Gentiles 3. The Christians of Iewes and Gentiles stood as much vpon spirituall priuiledges not thinking it inough to be set free from the thraldome of Sathan and bands of sinne and so be made spirituall kings vnto God and the lambe vnles also by a boundles Christian libertie they might be at their owne hands to do as they listed without the knowing of any subiection 4. This also confirmed their error that they more respected mens persons then Gods ordinance for because in these dayes they sawe the most of the Magistrates heathen men and enemies to Christ and his gospel they thought it a most vnworthie thing that they beeing beleeuers should still be commanded and remaine subiect vnto them the weakenesse of which ground we haue discouered in cap. 2.9 for on the same commandement seruants presumed on more libertie then was mee● euen to the casting off of their subiection at least to vnbeleeuing masters The instructions which I will note out of this manner of deliuering the precept are two Doctr. 1. The scope of the ministerie is to put men in minde and keepe in them the
regard meete to be done by the whole 2. Euery one ought to tarrie to helpe the congregation in prayer for the infant and to ioyne in the praise of God for the ingrafting in of another member into the bodie of Christ. 3. Euery one ought to helpe himselfe both in calling to minde his owne baptisme his promise and ingrafting into Christ as also to examine what fruit he reapeth of the death and resurrection of Christ into which he is set and so to be either humbled or thankfull as he findeth his estate 4. Lastly how much so euer vsed yet is it a most vnreuerent part towards this ordinance what an vngodly contempt were it to runne out from hearing the word and why is it not also in running from the Sacrament which is the seale of that couenant as if men were loath to be present where the blessed Trinitie presenteth it selfe to such a gratious purpose as this is namely to seale such benefits to one of that congregation And more it is a disordered thing for the good of the Church requireth that the Congregation should come in together and goe out together wherein the Lord is so strait that the King might not depart till all was ended Ezek. 46.10 He shall goe in when they goe in and when they goe forth they shall goe forth together Let euery man make more conscience of this dutie hereafter and seeing Christ himselfe disdaineth not to come to Iohns baptisme let vs take heede of running from Christs And the renewing of the holy Ghost Now we come to speake of the inward means of our saluation wherby the Lord setteth vs into this new condition here called the renewing of the holy Ghost wherein to vnderstand it better we will consider two points 1. what this renewing is 2. why it is called the renewing of the holy Ghost and so come to the instructions For the former It is a grace of God whereby the corruption of nature in beleeuers is by the power of the holy Ghost daily renewed vnto the image of God I say 1. it is a grace of God 1. Pet. 1.3 Who according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs to a liuely hope 2. by which the corruption of nature which is the proper obiect of it called in Scripture the flesh the old man not the substance of bodie or soule which were not decaied or perished but the corrupt qualities which by the fall tooke place in them 3. is renewed this is a word of relation and opposed to that olde corruption drawne from the old Adam for so is the new birth by the spirit opposed to that old natiuitie which is of the flesh Ioh. 3. Againe the word importeth a compleat worke vpon the whole subiect for as in the birth of a child not one or moe parts and members but the whole child is borne so in the new birth the whole man must be borne againe the whole man must be a new creature in which is not the framing of something out of something but of something out of nothing For if the Popish doctrine were true that there were some power in nature whereby the holy Ghost a little freeing it it could of it selfe will and performe that which is truly good then were man but in part new and so could not be called a new man a new creature or be said to be borne againe neither raised vp from the death of trespasses sinnes but reuiued and recouered as out of a swoone or some desperate disease nor renewed but a little repaired and mended But because the corruption of nature is gone ouer the whole man as we haue a little before heard so this renewing must be in the whole man and in the same order 1. It must begin in the spirit of the minde Rom. 12.2 the first worke in this new creation also must be to make the light to banish the darknes and blindnes of minde vnder which are comprehended the vnderstanding will and affections 2. It must proceede to the outward man and conuersation that euen the members of the bodie may become the members of Christ and obedient vnto the law of the mind renewed and so the whole may become a liuely reasonable and acceptable sacrifice vnto God In these two standeth the renewing of the whole man required 1. Thess. 5. The God of peace sanctifie you throughout and I pray God your whole soule bodie and spirit be kept blameablesse where is mention of the spirit as the very soule and life of a renewed person and is no other then the grace of sanctification opposed to the corruption of nature which is seated both in soule and bodie 4. I adde In beleeuers because regeneration is the vndeuided and inseparable companion of faith which is called the faith of the elect as we haue heard 2. Thess. 2.13 Chosen you to saluation through the sanctification of the spirit and the faith of truth whence it followeth that as faith is not of all no more is regeneration neither is this grace further tied to the Sacrament then where it meeteth with a faithfull receiuer 5. I say daily for although the beleeuer be renewed in euery part yet all is but in part it is so compleat in the subiect as that it is yet a continued worke and not consummate vntill we all meete in the vnitie of the Sonne of God when that perfect is come for so long as we are here below this righteousnes of God is revealed from faith to faith and we are changed from glorie to glorie and we walke from strength to strength In all things growing vp in him which is the head he that is iust must be iust still and he that is holy must be daily more holy and thus encrease vntill the perfect day 6. I adde vnto the image of God Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which after God that is after Gods image is created in righteousnes and holines see also 2. Cor. 3.18 We are changed into the same image of God for as Adam was created in the image of God so must euery beleeuer be renewed vnto that blessed condition In a word looke what the image of God was which was giuen vs by our creation vnto the same must we be wrought now by the grace of the second couenant but that stood not in the substance of the soule and naturall faculties of it so much such as vnderstanding free will memorie c. but 1. in the knowledge and illumination of it Colos. 4.10 Put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge 2. in the righteousnes and integritie of the whole man Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnes and true holines The second point in the meaning is why this is called the renewing of the holy Ghost Answ. Not that it is not wrought as well by the other persons beeing a worke without themselues for the Father reneweth as beeing the foundation and
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
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
Apostles vntill Christs comming againe and especially the proceedings pride and fall of Babylon the great whore with all the kingdomes of Antichrist the holy Ghost could not but foresee what labours and trauailes Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impaire the credit and authoritie of this aboue all other books wherein he preuailed so farre as euen some true Churches called the truth and authoritie of it into question and therefore it is worth the marking with what a number of confirmations this booke aboue all other in the Scriptures is backed First the author of it is set in the forefront or face of it The Reuelation of Iesus Christ who professeth himselfe to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first and the last the beginning and ending which is which was and which is to come euen the Almightie so in the seuerall Epistles to the Churches in seuerall stiles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. that holdeth the seauen starres in his right hand 2. he that is first and last which was dead and is aliue 3. which hath the sharpe two edged sword 4. which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feete like fine brasse 5. which hath the seauen spirits of God and the seuen starres 6. he who is holy and true who hath the key of Dauid who openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth 7. he who is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly the instrument or penman his seruant Iohn the Euangelist the Apostle the Diuine who for the further and more full authority of it repeateth his name at least fowre times saying I Iohn Thirdly to omit many in the last chapter are fiue testimonies heaped together that if it were possible no man might be found so obstinately wicked as euer to doubt of it but that he that shold stād against the truth of it might euen gainsay the shining of the sunne it selfe 1. of the Angel 2. of God himselfe the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. of Iesus Christ Behold I come shortly c. 4. of Iohn I Iohn heard and saw all these things 5. the protestation of Iesus Christ vers 18. I protest if any man shal adde or diminish from these things of this booke God shall adde all the plagues of it against him and take away his part out of the booke of life Now had this booke neuer to haue bin oppugned there had not needed such strong and frequent confirmations neither would the holy Ghost haue bin so earnest in a needles matter The like we might teach out of particular examples How earnest is the Apostle in the poynt we haue in hand beeing the very foundation of Christianity not here only but elswhere in his writings when he saw that men would ioyne the law and gospel circumcision and baptisme Gal. 5.2 Behold I Paul say vnto you if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing and vers 3. I testifie againe vnto you and 4. ye are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace he could not satisfie himselfe in his vehemencie against such a doctrine as this was Nay the sonne of God himselfe hath left vs his owne example in this point of wisdome who was wont in his teaching vnto diuerse more necessarie truths to prefix his Amen Amen I say vnto you which is in sence all one with this of our Apostle if we consider the speach though in the speaker and manner of speaking was wonderful difference himselfe beeing the author and Amen it selfe euen the faithfull and true witnesse and all other so farre only true as they testified from him And so he often shutteth vp his speach with he that hath eares to heare let him heare and then let him that heareth or readeth consider such sayings carrie salt with them and for such the Lord planted the eare more especially Vse 1. To teach Ministers in matters of weight to deale so soundly as the conscience of the hearer may be as firmely stablished in the truth taught and perswaded as if an angel from heauen should come and teach an other doctrine he may be held accursed so as the verie hearts of the hearers may say this is a faithfull doctrine and saying for thus as the Gospel is the word of truth so shall it be held in much certenty by the professors of it And it is a fault blame worthie in many Ministers who when they are occasioned by the place in hand to speake of some controuerted or most necessarie truth either for idlenes because they will not so much trouble themselues or for vnfaithfullnesse avoide by declining and shunning such truths the displeasure of the times which godly Ministers must swallowe that the truth opposed may be setled in the hearts of men not to speake of such as are infamously guiltie of some vices vnrepented of and vnreformed which maketh them balke and betray necessarie truths which in that regard they dare not mention 2. It is a great fault of hearers and worthie amendement who cannot well indure to heare of points in controversie especially betweene the Papists and our selues whereas their vnderstandings and iudgements are so farre from beeing stablished in the certaine truth of such things as euery winde or blast of the skulking Iesuite or Papist is able to vnsettle them in great matters and turne them off their grounds Now if it bee the teachers part to insist especially in such needefull points as are most opposed and hardlyest yeelded vnto it must needes be the hearers to provoke themselues to the right discerning of such differences for neither doe the contentions of the teachers so much concerne themselues as their hearers neither ende they in themselues but in the hearer See we not how if neuer so grosse or slender a point of carnall libertie be contended about it will carrie the applause almost of all men with i● Is it meete then that any Saint of God be a looker on and not rather according to the commandement that euerie one should contend for the faith once giuen and can they contend vnlesse they be taught how and here instructed with weapons This admonition is the more needfull in these dayes so full of danger by the seduction of Papists separators libertines which swarme euerie where the daily encrease of all which is not more incredible then lamentable 3. We learne hence how to conceiue of the point and doctrine in hand seeing the wisedome of Gods spirit vseth to speake to the worth of the thing and by such prefaces and markes of speciall worthinesse pointeth to some weightie and needfull point vsing here another stile then if he should speake of mint and cummin and some smaller points of religion We meet not in euery precept with an oyes or warnword but where we do we must conceiue such not the motes but the beames of our religion
requiring our best attentions and diligence in the entertayment And therefore we must yeeld more then ordinarie audience to this Apostolicall doctrine not passing by it as a thing which long since we haue learned out of Catechisme and so are past it but seeing the Lord doth so solemnly recall it into our eares and vnderstandings we must call together and summon our best sences and affections to heare and receiue it And the rather because two things are implied 1. That it is a most true and necessarie doctrine because the holy Ghost is so earnest in it 2. That it is not so soone learned as men may thinke for although it be not much contradicted in the mouthes and by the words of men yet is it exceedingly in their practise and conuersation And these things I will thou shouldest affirme In this Apostrophe vnto Titus and the words following the Apostle after a sort dwelleth in the commendation of his doctrine for not contenting himselfe to call it a faithfull doctrine he turneth himselfe presently to Titus and wisheth him in this verse to be instant in teaching i● as in the next to be diligent and vigilant against the contrarie And here 1. he commandeth not exhorteth Titus I will that thou teach these things that is both which I haue formerly deliuered and now presently follow 2. Hee prescribeth the manner how Titus shall teach them That thou affirme that is as it is a most true and faithfull doctrine so do thou by all meanes most constantly and vndoubtedly perswade and maintaine it The originall word is a borrowed speach from those that giue or sell a thing to an other who are bound to defend the title gift or sale of it against all claimes suits and entanglements wherein is insinuated that although it be a faithfull word yet it shall not saile to be called into question and meet with strong opposition and therefore Titus must the rather bend himselfe to make it good against all cauill● and questions that can be mooued about it or against it 3. Hee enterla●●th againe the summe of the doctrine which he dwelleth in the commendation of That beleeuers be carefull to shew forth good workes The Greeke word is a militarie word taken from such as set themselues in the foreward or front of the battaile and manfully march before the rest so encouraging the whole band following to the like valour and diligence as they see in them their leaders This word would our Apostle translate to Christians and conuerts to the faith whom he would not only haue fruitfull in good workes but ardent forward and the first in them going before others as leaders captaines patrons and examples 4. Hee affixeth a reason why he doth so vrge him to the teaching of these things These things are good and profitable vnto men The streame of expositors conceiue these words as the iust praise and commendation of good workes by our Apostle immediatly before mentioned including a reason why beleeuers should be fruitfull in them But I rather conceiue them as an enforcement of the dutie vpon Titus for these reasons 1. had the Apostle applied them to good workes it is not likely he would haue seuered them from the former words by a full point hee might sooner and aptlier in that sence haue said which are good and profitable or as in the end of the next verse for they are thus and thus rather then after so full a stoppe so suddenly haue returned to that matter which seemed absolued and finished 2. These words in the other sence giuen seeme to make an easie entrance and beat an high way to the next branch of Titus his dutie namely to set himselfe against the contrarie doctrine 3. The opposition in the end of the next verse clearly leadeth me to this exposition which is as this kind of doctrine is good and profitable so that other forme of doctrine which standeth vpon idle questions and genealogies is vaine and vnprofitable Thus then let vs take the entire sence This doctrine which I haue and doe deliuer vnto thee for the vse of the Church is a faithful word do thou therefore affirme it boldly and confirme it vnto beleeuers the which if thou dost thou shalt propound things which are good and profitable good that is wholesome and sound in their owne nature and profitable that is of exceeding good and necessarie vse thorough the whole life of man Doctr. 1. In that such as beleeue in God must be carefull to shew forth good workes we may obserue from whom a good worke can onely proceed namely from beleeuers For in vaine had it beene to haue vrged the doctrine of good workes vpon wicked ones and vnbeleeuers there i● an other doctrine more proper to them namely that doctrine which may strike them with sorrow for sinne sence of damnation prickings of heart and terrors of conscience so as they might be prepared vnto faith and these workes of repentance the fruits of amendment of life Therefore that we might know this doctrine of good workes proper to beleeuers our Apostle calleth for them of none other well he knew that no other could do them he knew that men cannot gather grapes of thornes and that till the fountaine were pure the issues and streames must needs be troubled and corrupt he knew that first the tree must be good and then the fruit and that the inside must first be made cleane In a word that whosoeuer hath not his heart purified by faith is an vncapeable hearer of this doctrine Obiect But are not vnbeleeuers as well bound to good workes as beleeuers i● not the law vniuersall and the commandement to doe good and abstaine from euill generall Answ. Yes they are bound to bring forth such good workes as are the fruits of faith which before regeneration is an impossible commandement for euery tree which bringeth not forth good fruite shall be hewen downe Quest. But what if an vnbeleeuer doe that which God commandeth as giue almes build Churches colledges heare the word pray maintaine the ministry c. Answ. We cannot here fitlier speake then with the Apostle whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne without faith it is impossible to please God Obiect But then if I be not assured that I am a beleeuer it is al one to doe good or euill to sit at home or come to church to pray or not to pray c. Ans. It is not all one seeing the action commanded is good in the matter and may doe good vnto others and may bring some temporall blessing or remooue some temporall euill from the partie himselfe as appeareth in that semblance of repentance in Ahab without faith and truth although in the doer in the forme and in the ende it faileth But the action forbidden is euerie way and out of measure sinnefull and damnable Obiect But it is not all one to be condemned for doing an action forbidden and to be condemned for doing an action
child the seruant to the master and the master to the seruant the kinsman to the kinsman nay in these nearer societies euen that entire familiaritie which the auncient ascribed to the identity of three things namely the house the bedde and the table must not be denied of those from whom it was due before this censure for he that was a brother before remaineth a naturall although not a Christian brother 4. This censure looseth not the bands of all spirituall societie but that notwithstanding it we may and must 1. loue the excommunicate in the Lord. 2. admonish and rebuke him 3. pray for him though not with him 4. vpon his repentance receiue him like a brother as before Quest. 1. Wherein then standeth this separation Answ. 1. From all those spirituall good things which the Lord communicateth in the Church as the word sacraments prayer for these are holy things and the priuiledges of the faithfull out of whose societie the other beeing cast out they are as swine to whom such holy things may not be cast and as dogges to whom the childrens bread belongeth not Obiect But if you shut them from the word you barre them from the meanes of their repentance Answ. Both the word and the nature of the censure shutteth them out of the congregation of Gods people and the practise of the auncient Church which suffered them not to enter within the doors of the Church The Iews permitted not the Publicans in their sinagogues but accounted them as Heathen neither would Ambrose suffer Theodosius the Emperour while he was excommunicate to enter into the Church of Milleyne But that now such persons are admitted to heare the word it is by an indulgence of the Church which I will not now stand to examine 2. From familiar conuerse in the outward life so farre as necessarily we are not bound vnto them as in the examples of the Primitiue Church I could be plentifull both in teachers and in beleeuing Christians Famous is the practise of Iohn the Evangelist towards Cerinthus when he found him in the bath and of Polycarp towards the heretike Marcion who as Irenaeus testifieth would flie from the place where the heretike stood or sate as fast as he could least he should here any heretical speaches Now the reasons why we are thus to auoid the excommunicate are these 1. That the offender may be brought to soundnesse of repentance for whatsoeuer power is giuen to the Pastors and Churches is giuen to edification and not for destruction 2. Cor. 10.8 And therefore such an offender must 1. haue his conscience terrified by beeing deliuered vnto Satan that is cast out of the Church out of which Satan ruleth and setteth vp his throne 2. Another end in regard of the partie is to shame him both by the publike rebuke of the Church in proceeding against him as also the auoiding of him as one of another societie 2. Thess. 3.14 Withdraw your selues that he may be ashamed 3. To worke sorrow in him for his sinne for the destruction of his flesh and fleshly corruption which is the ground of true repentance see 1. Cor. 5.5 4. To effect a desire to be reconciled first vnto God and then vnto the church against which he hath offended And thus 5. his spirit shall be saued in the day of the Lord. 2. There are other reasons in regard of the church First in generall that it heare not ill as a maintayner of vile persons and much lesse as if it selfe were a sinke or stie of filthy swine who professe themselues washed by the iustification of Christ and the sanctification of the spirit The Apostle Paul aymeth at this 1. Cor. 5.1 It is certainely heard that there is fornication among you and maketh this bad report the first ground of their proceeding against the incestuous person as though he had said these things ought not to be heard amongst you no not once named among Christians Secondly in respect of the speciall members 1. That they may be safe from the infection of such open and obstinate wicked ones which is also the Apostles reason 1. Cor. 5.6 A little leaven sowreth the whole lumpe a little sparkle kindleth an vnquencheable flame a little pitch defileth the whole man yea their verie word and much more their conuersation creepeth and corrupteth as a gangreene Worthy is it here worth our remembring how when the Emperour Theodosius senior was desirous to conferre with Eunomius the Arrian Bishop his wife Placilla the Empresse very earnestly disswaded him least he beeing peruerted by his speaches should beginne to like of his heresie 2. Least partaking with his sinne he should also partake of his punishment as all Israel did for Achan one rotten membe● not cut off endangereth the whole bodie and threatneth perill to the whole The iniunction of Moses hath here place Depart from the tents of these wicked men and touch nothing of theirs least yee perrish in all their sinnes 3. For examples sake least any of the rest grow to the like boldnesse and obstinacie in sinne but rather by such separation be terrified therefrom 1. Tim. 5.20 Them that sinne openly rebuke openly that the rest also may feare All which ends beeing so necessarie as by the Scriptures they appeare to be we see what a maime it is in any Church when this rod is either not vsed or not aright Quest. But whether may priuate Christians auoid an open notorious sinner before the Church haue reiected him or what must we doe while the Church winketh and will not doe her dutie in casting them out Answ. We may and ought to auoid the familiar societie of scorners and open wicked men for the former reasons euen before the Church haue cast them out but not as excommunicate persons or members cut off that we abstaine from the word and sacraments because of such vntill the Church haue cast them out for else a way is easily beaten and paued to Scisme and rash separation And if the Church do not as she ought cut off such rotten members yet is no doore opened to personall excommunication seeing this censure is the common action of the whole Church and not of any priuate person or persons We must then beare them as we doe festered members with paine and sorrow yea and complaints to such as can helpe vs but not breake our patience for that which our selues cannot and others will not cure for vs. And thus as one very well answereth the like case shall we be blessed euen in hungring and thirsting after righteousnesse and the sinne shall not lie at our doores but where it is committed and abetted Quest. But it seemeth if heretikes must onely be avoided that it is not lawfull to put them to death Answ. This beeing a matter of fact is most properly belonging to the Ciuil Magistrate who wisely considering both of the qualitie of the person offending
godly Ministers lade them with reproaches Pag. 419 Euery Christians care must be to stoppe the mouthes of the wicked Pag. 421 Seruants ought to be subiect to their masters 423 Theft of seruants neuer so coloured is condemned Pag. 429 Seruants are bound to shewe all good faithfulnesse Pag. 431 The meanest Christian may and must bring glorie to the Gospel Pag. 433 The Gospel is the doctrine of Gods grace Pag. 437 The doctrine of the Gospel is a sauing doctrine Pag. 440 The Gospel is a bright shining light Pag. 446 The Gospel is a schoolemaster as well as the Lawe Pag. 453 The doctrine of grace truely receiued teacheth to denie all vngodlinesse Pag. 458 A Christian must denie all lusts whatsoeuer may seeme to plead for them Pag. 463 The doctrine of grace teacheth both to eschewe euill and doe good Pag. 465 The Gospel looketh for some answearable return for the saluation it bringeth Pag. 467 The doctrine of the Gospel teacheth sobrietie of life wherein it standeth and rules of practise Pag. 468 The Gospel calleth for iust and righteous dealing at professors hands Pag. 471 The Gospel inioyneth a godly life the proper work of piety rules of practise Pag. 473 Godlinesse must be exercised in this present world Pag. 478 The Gospel receiued in truth lifteth vp the heart to wait for Christ his second appearing Pag. 482 The expectation of Christ his second comming is a notable meanes to prouoke to Christian duties Pag. 491 Christ his glorie shal shine out in ful brightnesse at his second appearing Pag. 494 Wee ought neuer to speake of God but in a weighie matter and reuerent manner Pag. 496 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church but not for euery particular man Pag. 505 Before Christ redeemed vs we were miserable slaues vnder sinne and death Pag. 511 The Sonne of God hauing once set vs free great is our freedome Pag. 514 Redemption and sanctification are inseperable companions Pag. 517 The members of the Church are Gods peculiar people Pag. 523 The worker must be good before any worke can be so Pag. 527 Iustified persons must needes bring forth good workes Pag. 527 The thing that God requireth in euery professour is zeale in weldoing Pag. 529 All proofes and reproofes must be fetched from the Scriptures Pag. 534 The word of God must be so handled as that the authoritie of it be preserued Pag. 535 To despise Gods Ministers is a grieuous sin Pag. 537 The doctrine of subiection to Magistracie must be often enforced and why Pag. 539 The scope of the Ministerie is to put men and keepe them in remembrance of Christian duties Pag. 540 The memorie ought to be taken vp with godly instructions learned in the Ministrie Pag. 541 Christianitie consumeth not Magistracie but confirmeth it Pag. 544 Euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers Pag. 548 Euery Christian must make account that euery Christian dutie belongeth vnto him Pag. 559 Euery man ought to preserue in himselfe a readinesse to euery good worke Pag. 563 The word condemneth as well vnbridled speaches as disordered actions Pag. 566 Euill speaking is a most hatefull sinne in Christians Pag. 568 A Christian may not be a common barrater Pag. 574 Christian equitie is a beautifull grace in Christians Pag. 579 Christian meekenes beseemeth euery Christian Pag. 584 The consideration of our common condition is a notable ground of meekenes Pag. 588 Whosoeuer is called vnto the faith hath experience of a change in himselfe Pag. 591 The whole course of an vnconuerted man is an vnwise walking Pag. 596 A marke of a man out of Christ is to resist and reason against the word Pag. 599 Before men bee brought to Christ their whole life is but a wandring from God Pag. 601 The spirit that is in man lusteth after envie Pag. 617 Then are wee saued when wee are sanctified Pag. 627 Before the Lord put forth his loue in Christ it could not bee reached of man nor angel Pag. 632 Workes of righteousnesse are excluded from iustifying vs before God Pag. 635 The Lord in baptisme not onely offereth or signifieth but truely exhibiteth grace Pag. 639 All the inward grace of baptisme is from the Holy Ghost Pag. 650 God in sauing men reneweth them to his owne image Pag. 655 The graces of the spirit are plentifully powred out vpon vs in the new Testament as not of a full mercie Pag. 660 Christ our Lord the onely fountaine of all our welfare Pag. 664 The righteousnesse of a sinner before God is not any qualitie in the beleeuer Pag. 669 The honour of the Saints is that they are heires of life eternall Pag. 674 All truthes must bee deliuered but some more stood vpon and vrged then other Pag. 680 A good worke cannot come but from a good man Pag. 684 Professors of the Gospel must be the first and forwardest in euerie good work Pag. 686 Doctrine must bee true and truely dealt withall Pag. 689 Sathan seeketh to corrupt the purest Churches by bringing in needelesse questions Pag. 696 There haue beene alwaies are and shall be heretikes in the Church of God Pag. 703 Euen heretikes and enemies of the Church must bee louingly dealt with by the Church Pag. 706 It is dangerous for the Churches to be left destitute of their teachers though for a short time Pag. 726 The Lord maketh good vse of the most wicked consciences Pag. 723 Christianitie enioyneth all kind of ciuill curtesie Pag. 731 Such as are in the Lords work must be carfully prouided for that they lacke nothing Pag. 732 Christianitie is no barren or fruit lesse prof●ssion Pag. 739 Religion is the strongest binder of man to man Pag. 748 OTHER PROFITABLE NOTES which besides illustration of Doctrines lie either in the explication of the sence or in application of the vses RVles to be obserued in changing of mens names in number three 4 Cases in which a man may forbeare to set his name to his writings 3. 5 Reasons to stirre vp ministers to diligence 5. 7 Reasons to stirre them vp to faithfulnesse 4. 7 Comforts for ministers in their seruice 4. 8 Priviledges of the Apostle aboue the ordinarie Pastor 3. 9 Men may be called elect of God 3. waies 11 Difference of sauing faith from all other 3. 14 Truth of faith discerned by 4. notes 15 Gospel called Truth for three reasons 18 Notes shewing the heart drawn vpward towards heauen 3. 26 Infallible properties of Christian hope 8. 28 Reasons why we must freely loue our brethren 4. 41 The doctrine of the Gospel called the common faith for 5. reasons 58 Duties to spirituall fathers 5. 61 Differences of the Apostolicall faith from the Romish Apostaticall 4. 63 Letters testimoniall not rashly to be giuen for foure reasons 65 The first person called father for 3 reasons 68 Christ called Lord for 4 causes 68 Men are called Sauiours 3. waies 69 The wickeds peace crazy in 3. respects 73 The power of the Magistrate and Minister doe differ in
566 Euill speaking ranged into the sundry ranks of it 567 Meanes to avoide euill speaking in 5. rules 571 Cases wherein a man may contend and strike 5. 573 Rules to avoide the sinne of Quarelling 5. 577 The fruits of Christian equitie 4. 579 Necessi●ie of Christian equitie in sundrie points 581 Three things in the description of Christian meekensse 584 The vse of Christian meekenesse in three points 586 Motiues to meeknesse 3. 587 Notes to discerne the change of a mans selfe by 592 The corruption of the minde standeth in 3 degrees 594 Foure main properties of folly most natural to the naturall man 597 The deceit of the heart putteth forth it selfe in sundry vngodly practises 602 Fiue seueral sorts of men in seuerall paths and neuer one of them in the right 605 Grounds out of Scripture against the Popish doctrine of freewill 5. 613 Notes to trie a mans present happinesse by 632 Essentiall parts of a Sacrament three 639 Baptsme the lauer of regeneration fowre wayes 641 Baptisme hath 4. vses in them that beleeue alreadie 644 The congregation must stay the Baptisme for fowre reasons 647 Sixe things considered in the description of regeneration 648 Notes to tr●e the truth of our regeneration 5. 656 Graces of the spirit compared to waters in three things 658 The spirit is said to be powred out in three respects 658 Of barrennes of heart three maine causes 663 Sundrie consolations to those that are heires of life 677 Rules to helpe vs to forwardnesse in good works 5. 687 People that come to heare the word must pray for 4. things 691 Vses of Genealogies in the Scriptures 694 Reason to auoide curiositie in Gods matters 4. 699 To make an heretike 3. things required 701 Meanes to avoide heresie 5. 705 Two degrees of Excommunication 707 Excommunication how far it stretcheth in 4. points 709 Reasons why we are to avoide excommunicate persons 710 Excommunication must not be inflicted for trifles 4. reasons 713 Gods children must imitate their heauenly Father in vsing great patience euen to the worst for 4. reas 721 Open and obstinate sinners must be avoided for fowre reas 722 The benefit of a good conscience in 5. particulars 725 Non residencie condemned by many reasons 727 Faith doth fiue things to the producing of a good worke 734 Many necessarie vses of good workes referred to their seuerall heads 736 Conditions of Christian fruitfulnes 5. 740 Reasons to prouoke Christians to fruitfulnesse 4. 741 Lets and hinderances of fruitfulnes 743 The ordinarie salutation added to euerie Epistle for 5. reasons 750 An other briefe Table of the most of the Questions resolued in this Commentarie HOw and why Pauls name was changed 3 Why Pauls name is prefixed before his Epistles 5 How farre a man is bound to set his name to his writings 5 How a man may knowe that he hath faith 15 How could God promise any thing before the world began 30 Whether God can change his will 33 Whether there he chance or fortune 45 How Christ is a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant 68 How Christ is called a Sauiour seeing the Father and holy Ghost saue also and we reade of sundrie other Sauiours 69 Whether the wicked haue more peace then the godly 73 What power Titus had to redresse disorders in Creta 78 What and wherein consists the difference betweene Ciuil and Ecclesiasticall power 79 How it is in the power of ministers to haue fait●full children 109 Why in the care of the family the first precept concerneth the children and not the wife ibid. How far anger is forbidden in a Minister 134 How farre it is lawfull or vnlawfull for a Minister to vse wine 140 Whether good men onely must be loued and not euill 168 Whether the Scriptures be perfect without tradition 190 Whether the Scriptures be obscure 192 How false teachers vse to deceiue mens minds 209 How may the mouths of heretikes bee stopped 220 Whether a man can be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point 225 Why God suffereth seducers among his people 228 Why Paul calleth Epimenides a Prophet 235 How the Prophets of God were distinguished from those of the Gentiles 236 How the knowledge of God is ascribed vnto the natural man 239 How farre we may alleadge humane testimonies in sermons 242 Whether any kind of lie be lawfull 246 What are meant by Iewish fables 271 Who are meant in the scriptures by pure persons 281 How any thing may be said to be pure or impure 287 How all things are pure to the pure 291 Whether recusant Papists may be compelled to Church seeing it doth offend thē 293 Whether a man with safe conscience may eat flesh at times prohibited by the Magistrate 294 Whether can any Magistrate make lawes to bind conscience ibid. How we can stand to our Christian libertie if we suffer the Magistrate 〈◊〉 restraine vs in it ibid. Whether a man may pray for more wealth then necessaries 303 How any Minister may attaine the ende of his calling 334 Why it is no needeesse precept to exhort younger women to loue their husbaands and children 376 Whether the wife may dispose of her husbands goods without his consent 399 How may a man carrie himselfe that the word of God be not euill spoken of 402 How seruants must please their masters yet not be man pleasers 426 How farre Christ is said to die and giue himselfe for all men 507 How the short death of Christ could free from infinite and eternall euills 510 Whether Magistracy be now lawful against Anabaptists 545 Whether Mordecai did wel in denying Haman reuerence 553 Whether Naboth did lawfully denie king Ahab his vineyard ibid. Whether the people might warrantably resist Saul in rescuing Ionathā his sonne from death 554 Whether Ioab did well in numbring the people at Dauids commandement ibid. Whether hee did well in slaying Absolon against his commandement ibid. How God can be said to be so good and a louer of man seeing so many vessells are prepared to destruction 624 How we can be said to be saued already seeing we carry about vs the body of sinne and death 628 Whether grace 〈◊〉 tied to the sacrament 640 What is the ●aith of infants 643 Whether the water in baptisme carrieh in it a 〈◊〉 and efficacy of washing the 〈◊〉 where Bellarmines instances are examined 650 What is meant by iustification and what by grace in the controuersie betweene the Papists and vs. 665.666 c. How faith is said to iustifie vs. 671 Whether there be any teachers among vs that teach any thing saue the truth 690 How the Apostle condemneth genealogies of which is such necessarie vse in the Scriptures 694 Whether priuate Christians may avoide an open notorious sinner before the Church hath cast him out or what t●ey must do in this case whilest the church winketh at such a one 712 Whether heretikes may be put to death seeing the Apostle onely commandeth to auoide them ibid.
duties according to the Lords direction else had the former labour beene lost in like sort in vaine had the publishing of the Gospel beene although by the Apostles thēselues had they not established such ordinances euerie where as serued for the strengthening and proceeding of it of which the setling of the ministerie and appointing Pastors ouer people is the principall Reas. 1. How necessarie was it for the whole administration of God among his people to haue a set place of abode that they might aske counsell at his mouth offer sacrifices Ilasticall and Eucharisticall put vp their prayers vnto him and receiue from him instruction and speciall direction and hence was it that the Lord sometimes setled himselfe at Siloh and sometimes his dwelling was in Sion and no lesse nay far more full comfort may we receiue in our assemblies and Bethels where the Lord as the sunne by his Ministers as by so many cleare lights not onely dispelleth darkenesse and errors in mind and manners but directeth vs in all our waies we haue to walk answereth vs in all our doubts in all our petitions raiseth vs in our falls supporteth vs in our weakenesse and prouoketh vs to cheerefulnesse in all the pathes that are good in his sight 2. Our weakenesse is such that notwithstanding all the benefit of standing ministeries we are euer recoyling and falling backeward more and more our bodies are not more prone to pine away for defect of daily foode then our soules if by the meanes of the heauenly Manna they be not daily repaired no eie seeth not the neede of daily directions to guide vs to daily duties and those which must be often done we must often be put in mind of 3. Experience sheweth that in such places where such ministeries be not setled we neede not seeke for adulterers swearers drunkards theeues and lyars such soyles are fruitfull of such imps that a man would thinke the old Sodomites were returned from hell yea the malitious man slacketh not to sowe these too thicke in such fields as good seede is cast into continually 4. The ordinance it selfe speaketh for it owne necessitie beeing the meanes wherby those who by it are brought to the faith are also preserued in it the milke whereby babes begotten grow to strong meate and are led from their infancie to their full age in Christ. For we may not alwaies be babes and weaklings but there is a perfection of Christianity which hereby we must be led vnto Heb. 6.1 not that any perfection of knowledge or holines can be attained of vs as Anabaptists foolishly dreame but partly in respect of that further degree which we ought euer to contend vnto for in the schoole of Christ we may waxe olde daily learning and the greatest scholler shall yet be farre from perfection and partly comparatiuely men of grace and knowledge may be called perfect and haue attained a further degree of perfection then such as are rude and ignorant subiect to be carried about with euery winde and are not yet gotten out of the elements of religion a man is said to be of perfect wisedome strength and other gifts of bodie and minde in comparison of a child or one not come to mans estate a Master of Arts may be called a perfect scholler in respect of a schooleboy and to this perfection of Christianitie are we led by meanes of this ordinance Vse To reprehend such as conceit themselues that when they haue gotten a smattring of knowledge they must needs haue faith also and afterward need no Ministerie nor sermons but marke where the life of God is it will make the soule craue the daily bread as the naturall life doth the bodie neither seeth that man any thing of God and the mysteries of his kingdome as he ought that presumeth of his knowledge so farre as that when he hath begunne to build and laid a foundation like the foole giueth ouer and neuer commeth to laie the roofe Perfection of true knowledge is the sight and sence of imperfection and religion in the heart espieth daily wants and decaies in the soule and repaireth to the ordinarie Ministeries for the daily repairing of them Which ordinances whosoeuer cōtemptuously forsake great schollers they may be but they were neuer good men Vse 2. Let vs reioyce that the Lord hath so liberally supplyed vs in this necessitie and testifie our thankefulnesse in diligence and subiection vnder the setled ministerie that our iudgements wills and affections may be setled in the truth for to the obseruer it will appeare that such for most part are wauering and variable who content themselues with a variable ministerie now hearing one now another now here now there without fixing themselues to some one As for such as vnder a setled ministerie come and goe at their pleasure now they heare one Sermon then another slipping in and out as they list to them I say litle is their conscience great is their sinne and manifest is their ficklenesse and inconstancie in their religion 3. Hence is a ground of petition that God would place Pastors in euerie congregation that his kingdome might come euerie where that euerie candlesticke might carie a burning and a shining light seeing we see here that it is Gods ordinance that so it should be And the greater the haruest is the more ought we to apply the Lord of it that he would thrust forth labourers into his haruest remoouing whatsoeuer impediments he seeth to hinder such a blessed and glorious worke As I appointed thee After that the Apostle had declared Titus his place and dutie he commeth to the second point namely his direction therein not giuing him leaue to adde any thing of his owne invention or alter any thing which Paul himselfe had done but bindeth his hands from doing or vndoing any thing in his whole administration but as Paul had commanded and appointed him the tenour of his commission reacheth no further Whence we may learne that Doctr. The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Euangelist but Apostolicall direction must goe before and guid him The Church is the house of God and must not be ruled by mans inventions but by the direction of the great housekeeper and seeing the father hath committed all the gouernement of it to his Sonne who hath purchased it with his blood the charge and burden of it now lieth vpon his shoulders and his prerogatiue it is to giue laws and orders and by his voice to rule the house of Iacob The whole Tabernacle to the verie pinnes must be framed according to the patterne and yet that was a mooueable in comparison of our most stable administration which shall continue to the ende of he world and the Lord in describing the parts thereof seuerally still remitteth them to the commandement to the patterne and forme shewed in the mount See Exod. 25.9.26.30 cap. 27.8 c. twise repeated in so