Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n aaron_n act_n send_v 51 3 5.2031 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

There are 35 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to anger abundant in goodnes and truth reseruing mercie for thousands and not making the wicked innocent the most mightie God vnto whom al power is giuen in heauen and in earth who sitteth in heauen and beholdeth the earth and seeth whatsoeuer is done among the sonnes of men our Lord by right of creation in that he made vs of nothing when we were not our Lord in the right of redemption in that when we were bondslaues vnder hell death and damnation he payed the ransome of our redemption and freed vs from the bondage of sinne and Satan and our Lord in the right of soueraignty to rule and gouerne vs by his Spirits to saue and defend vs vnder his wings he is at hand neare about our paths and about our beds pitcheth his tents round about vs and giueth his Angels charge ouer vs he is at hand neare to behold our sufferings and our wrongs Exod. 3.9 as himselfe saith I haue seene I haue seene the affliction of my people which is in Egypt where●nto the Egyptians oppresse them Neare to heare vs when we call vpon him as himselfe saith Call vpon me in the day of trouble Psal 50.15 and I will heare thee and thou shalt glorifie me Neare to deliuer vs from the wrongfull dealings of men and therefore the Prophet prayeth vnto him O deliuer me from the wrongfull dealings of men and giue me not ouer vnto mine oppressours Neare to saue vs vnder his feathers in euery needefull time of trouble for so the Psalmist saith The Lord will be a defence for the oppressed Psal 9.9 euen a refuge in due time of trouble Hereof Iacob had experience when Laban persecuted him in that the Lord curbed Laban when he said vnto him Genes 31.24 Take heede that thou speake not to Iacob ought saue good Hereof Ioseph had experience in his danger by his brethren in that the Lord first by Reuben saued him that he was not slaine and after that he was sold made him Ruler of Pharaohs house and of all his substance Genes 37.41 Hereof the children of Israel had experience when Pharao oppressed thē in that the Lord Exod 3. when their crie for their bondage came vp vnto him deliuered them out of the house of bondage by the hands of Moses and Aaron Hereof Daniel and his companions had experience when they were traduced vnto the king in that the Lord shut the mouthes of the lions that they hurt not the one Dan. 6.22.3.27 and abated the heate of the fire that it had no power ouer the bodies of the other Hereof the Disciples of Christ had experience when they were cast into prison in that the Lord sent his Angell vnto them and deliuered them out of prison Acts 5.19 And hereof the children of God haue continuall experience in that the Lord helpes them to right when they suffer wrong feedeth them when they are hungrie Psal 146. looseth them when they are in prison giueth them sight when they are blinde raiseth them when they are fallen keepeth them if they be strangers relieueth them if they be fatherlesse or widdowes and maketh all their beds in their si●kenesse And hereupon Dauid resolued and said Psal 3.6.27.3.23.4 I will not be afraid though ten thousands of people beset me round about nay though an hoste of men were laid against me yet shall not mine heart be afraid nay though I walke through the valley of the shadow of death I wil feare no euill And why for thou art with me saith the Prophet thou O Lord art with me and therefore whosoeuer be against me in what danger soeuer I be I will feare no euill This then to know that the Lord is with vs and that he is alwaies neare at hand to heare vs and to helpe vs should quiet vs as of all feare so of all perturbations of the minde so that we should patiently brooke whatsoeuer might otherwise stirre vs vnto impatiencie How is it then that vpon euery occasion we are so vnpatient and haue so little hold of our selues If any man thwart or crosse vs if any man harme or wrong vs if any man taunt or mocke vs if any man reuile or speake euill of vs if anie man offer vs any hard measure in word or in deed how do we bite vpon the bridle and stomacke the matter One abuse must be quit with another one wrong with another one mischiefe with another or else we think we haue neuer plaied the men But if we be falsly accused before the Iudge of theft murder sedition treason or the like if we be wrongfully scourged imprisoned racked or tormented if we be cruelly or deceitfully turned out of house and home lands and liuing and all that we haue O how then are our soules disquieted within vs and how do our hearts burnt within vs till we be auenged of such as haue thus dealt with vs Here must reuenge be sought by bloud death and if there be any further reuenge then this And tell me I pray what is the cause of such impatiencie in these and the like cases yea oftentimes when the Lord his hand is vpon vs in pouertie sickenes and the like Is it not euen hence because either we know not or remember not that the Lord is at hand Yes verily it is the ignorance or forgetfulnesse of the Lord and of his prouident watchfulnesse ouer vs that makes vs fret and fume and like the dogge runne vpon the bone that is cast at vs. We know not or we remember not that vengeance is the Lords and that he hath promised that he will repay and reward the wicked after their deseruing and therefore forsooth when we thinke there is cause we will be disquieted we will kill and slay and we will be auenged For if we knew or remembred that vengeance is the Lords and that he wil repay we would patiently passe by the contumelies and wrongs of men and leaue them to the Lord that iudgeth righteous iudgement We know not or we remember not that the Lord is neare vnto all that call vpon him in truth to heare and help vs in all dangers if we patiently waite vpon him that we may be safe vnder his feathers and therefore forsooth when troubles assault vs or the sorrows of death compasse vs about we thinke we do well to be as vnpatient as Ionas was angrie for his gourd For if we knew or remembred that he is at hand at euerie needfull time of trouble to helpe vs our soules would patiently wait vpon the Lord vntill he should helpe vs. Eyther we thinke not of the Lord and of his watchfull prouidence ouer vs to saue and defend vs and to auenge our sufferings and wrongs or carnally we say if the Lord be at hand I wish I might know it I wish I might heare him I wish I might see him as if otherwise we could not discerne of his being neare vnto vs or if we
thanks vnto God on their behalfe 2. in remembring them in his prayers vnto God 3. in praying for them with gladnesse The grace of God already bestowed on them for which he reioyced in their behalfe is said to be 1. their fellowship with other Churches in the gospell 2. their perseuerance therein from the first day they had receiued the gospell till now that he wrote vnto them This is the generall resolution of these words Now for the more particular opening of the meaning of them in that in the beginning of his Epistle hee thanketh God on the Philippians behalfe he obserueth his vsuall manner For so he beginneth almost all his Epistles as anon we shall heare In that he saith that hee thanketh his God he signifieth his bold and neere approch vnto God in giuing thanks and in praying vnto him Againe in that he saith that he hath them in perfect memory alwaies in all his prayers for them all he meaneth that as alwaies he thanketh God for them all so alwaies in all his prayers vnto God he remembreth them And he addeth that his prayers are alwaies powred out vnto God for them with great ioy and gladnesse of heart Why because as he addeth the reason of the fellowship which they had receiued in the Gospell 1. Because they as other Churches had receiued the gospell and thereby had fellowship with the Father and with his sonne Iesus Christ and because they had continued in the truth from the first day of their conuersion vnto Christ by his ministery vntill now that he wrote vnto them This was the cause of his thanksgiuing and his continuall prayers wherein he alwaies remembred them were that they might continue in that grace euen in that fellowship which they had receiued in the gospell It is then briefly as if the Apostle had thus said I thanke my God alwaies on your behalfe for that fellowship which you haue with the Father and the Sonne with vs and with other Churches by embracing the Gospell and for your perseuerance therein from the first day that I and Silas and Timotheus preached it vnto you vnto now and alwaies in all my praiers vnto God I remember you praying for you with gladnes for the grace already granted you that yee may continue and increase in that grace This I take to be the meaning of these words The first thing then which here I note is the Apostles beginning of his Epistle with thanksgiuing vnto God on the Philippians behalfe And so he beginneth all his Epistles with thanksgiuing vnto God on their behalfe to whom he wrote onely his Epistles to the Galatians and to Titus and the former to Timothy excepted And so Peter beginneth his former Epistle Whence I obserue that thanksgiuing vnto God is a seruice principally requisite in a Christian I exhort saith the Apostle that first of all 1 Tim. 2.1 or aboue all things supplications prayers intercessions and giuing of thanks be made for all men And in the former to the Thess●lonians he willeth in all things to ●iue thanks 1 Thess 5.18 for that this is the will of God in Christ Iesus And not any sacrifice is more exactly commanded or described in Leuiticus then the sacrifice of thanksgiuing Wherevpon Leuit. 7.12 if we looke into the practise of the saints of God we shall finde that they were neuer slacke in this seruice Melchisedech after Abrahams victory slacked not this seruice Gen. 14.20 but gaue thanks vnto the most high God which had deliuered his enemies into his hand Moses also and the Israelites after their deliuerance from the Aegyptians Exod. 15.1 and out of the red sea slacked not this seruice but sung praises vnto the Lord. So did Deborah and Barak and Iehoshaphat and many others after their victories ouer their enemies And how often doe we read that as others of his seruants so our blessed Sauiour himselfe gaue thanks vnto his father All which shew clearely how requisite this seruice of thanksgiuing vnto God is if either we will hearken to the precepts and exhortations of the Holy Ghost or doe as we haue the saints of God and our blessed Sauiour for example What then Doth the Lord neede the praises of man or is he delighted with his giuing of thanks No the Lord needeth them not neither is he delighted therwith so much for his owne sake Yet doth hee require them of vs and is delighted therewith for our sakes for 1. in giuing of thanks vnto God we acknowledge that to be from him for which we giue him thanks 2. In giuing him thanks we shew our selues well pleased and content with that spirituall grace or temporall blessing wherefore wee giue him thanks 3. In giuing him thanks we returne what wee can vnto the Lord with humble confession that we can no more nor that but by grace Lastly in giuing of thanks vnto God wee prouoke him to bestow farther mercies vpon vs. All which things he requireth of vs and liketh well in vs. And for these very reasons besides the former is thanksgiuing vnto God so requisite a seruice in a Christian Yet as requisite a seruice as it is we faile asmuch in it as in any seruice It may be that being in perill or persecution or sorrow or neede or sicknes or other like aduersitie we will make our requests knowne vnto God in prayer and supplication as the occasions are publiquely or priuately But when the Lord hath heard our prayers and gr●nted our requests when he hath done more for vs then we could desire or thinke What giuing o● thanks is there vnto God either publiquely or priuately For instance now of late when the Lord opened the clouds of heauen and threatned by raine to depriue vs of that blessing of the fruits of the earth which he had shewed vnto vs in great plenty and abundance then we powred out both publique and priuate prayers in our Churches and in our houses that it would please the Lord to send vs such weather whereby we might receiue the fruits of the earth in due season But now that the Lord hath sent vs seasonable weather and giuen vs good hope of reaping the fruits of the earth in due season in what Congregations publiquely in what house● priuately is the voice of praise and thanksgiuing heard I instance onely in this but as it is in this so is it in other things Not one of ten that sings the song of praise and thanksgiuing after benefits receiued it is too harsh a note we cannot tune it all or the most part of vs being liker vnto those nine Lepers that neuer returned backe to giue God praise then vnto the stranger that returned Luc. 17.18 Beloued by vnthankfulnesse we prouoke Gods wrath against vs asmuch as by any sinne and therefore Paul reckons it vp amongst the most heynous sinnes 2 Tim. 3.2 but the sacrifice of thanksgiuing is as pleasant and acceptable vnto God as is any sacrifice and
they might be blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus Christ Whence two doubts may be moued not vnworthy the answering The one is how one man may bee perswaded of another mans perseuerance or saluation what a kinde of perswasion it is which is of anothers perseuerance or saluation The other is whether the Lord performed this worke of the Philippians continuance in the fellowship which they had in the gospell vntill the day of Iesus Christ as the Apostle was perswaded hee would To speake first vnto this latter most lamentable it is but most true it is that in those places where sometimes the name of the Lord was called vpon and the gospell of Christ Iesus freely and sincerely preached not onely at Philippi but in many other Churches which the Apostles had planted in Macedonia and else where there now through the secret but iust iudgement of God barbarous Turcisme and abominable paganisme hath taken possession and holdeth it at his will But as we vnderstand this place of the Apostle so we are to make answer to the doubt for if wee vnderstand the Apostles perswasion to be touching the Church that then presently was at Philippi that the Lord would continue them in the fellowship of the gospell vntill the day of Iesus Christ .i. vntill their death when they should be translated into his kingdome of glory I take it that it may very well be presumed and safely auerred that the Lord performed this worke of the Philippians continuance in the fellowship which they had in the gospell vntill the day of Christ Iesus as the Apostle was perswaded he would for such was their loue and liberalitie towards the Apostle and such their constant abiding in the truth from the first day vntill then that as the Apostle thereupon was perswaded that the Lord would confirme them in that grace wherein they stood vnto their end so wee therevpon may perswade our selues that the Lord did confirme them therein vnto the end But if we vnderstand the Apostles perswasion to be touching the Church successiuely at Philippi that the Lord would continue that Church in all ages in the fellowship of the gospell vntill the day of Iesus Christ .i. vntill his second comming to iudgement then may it seeme that the Apostle failed in his perswasion because of their subiection now a long time vnto the Turke But euen here also it may be said that as when the Apostle wrote the Philippians shined as lights in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation so now also in that hellish thraldome vnto the Turke the Lord hath a Church there though not so eminent as sometimes it was yet a Church For as at the first the Apostles were sent as sheepe in the middest of wolues and as it may be hoped that Christ hath his Church euen in the middest of Romish Egypt so may it also be hoped that hee hath his Church in that heathenish tyrannie of the Turke and euen in the Citie of Philippi But I now rather approue the former answer as better agreeing with the circumstances of this scripture whereby it seemeth that the Apostle speaketh of them that then were at Philippi Now for answer vnto the second doubt which is how one man may be perswaded of another mans perseuerance or saluation wee must vnderstand that there is a threefold perswasion One grounded vpon the testimonie of the spirit vnto our spirit whereby we doe most certainely perswade our selues of whatsoeuer grace is sealed vnto vs by the earnest of the spirit And this perswasion is most certaine but this perswasion we cannot haue of any other but onely of our selues forasmuch as this ariseth of the testimonie of the spirit vnto our spirit Another perswasion there is grounded vpon the constant immutabilitie of God in his doings whereby wee certainely perswade our selues that whatsoeuer good worke God hath begun in vs he will confirme it vnto the end And a third perswasion there is grounded vpon charitie whereby wee perswade our selues of grace where we see obedience to the gospell constant abiding in the truth patience in troubles loue of the brethren and the like Now one man cannot be perswaded of an other mans perseuerance or saluation by the first kinde of perswasion grounded vpon the testimonie of the spirit because no man knoweth what the spirit witnesseth vnto anothers spirit but onely to his owne But both by the second kinde of perswasion grounded vpon the constancie of the Lord and likewise by the third grounded vpon charitie one man may be perswaded of another mans perseuerance or saluation By the first kinde of perswasion the Apostle was perswaded of his owne saluation when he said I am perswaded that neither death Rom. 10.38 nor life nor Angels and so euery one of vs vpon the like ground may perswade our selues of our owne perseuerance and saluation By the second and third kindes of perswasion the Apostle was perswaded of the Philippians perseuerance and saluation as in this place we see and so euery one of vs vpon the like grounds may be perswaded one of anothers perseuerance and saluation The first neuer faileth because the testimonie of Gods spirit whereon it is grounded is euer true The second likewise neuer faileth because Gods purposes are euer vnchangeable and with him is no variablenes neither shadowing by turning The third hath a wonderfull great probability but may faile because it leaneth on the outward fruits of the spirit in man whose heart none knoweth but he that searcheth it The first is not here mentioned the second is mentioned vers 6 and the third hath his ground vers 7. For a full answer then vnto the second doubt we say that one man may be perswaded of another mans perseuerance and saluation both by the second and third kinds of perswasion and farther that of whose perseuerance and saluation we are perswaded by the third kinde of perswasion of his perseuerance and saluation also we are to be perswaded by the second kind of perswasion .i. of whose perseuerance and saluation we may conceiue a good perswasion by the fruits of the spirit in them of them we are certainely to be perswaded that God will neuer leaue them or forsake them but confirme them vnto the end And thus I resolue vpon the reason which the Apostle setteth downe of his perswasion grounded on the constant immutabilitie of God in his doings for what saith the Apostle As it be commeth me saith he c. It becommeth mee saith the Apostle so to iudge of you euen to be perswaded that hee that hath begun this worke in you c. And why did it become him so to iudge so to be perswaded Because saith he I haue you in remembrance because I gladly remember this of you that both in my bands c. .i. that whether I were bound for the gospell or defended the gospell at Nero his barre or confirmed the gospell by my sufferings you all were partakers of my grace
respect not for Christ Iesus his sake or in Christ Iesus Nay commonly wee can satisfie our selues well enough with our loue of one another as Christian inough sincere inough and holy enough though in our loue there bee neuer a one of these qualities though neither we long after them from the very heart roote in Christ Iesus nor long after them from the verie heart roote nor long after them at all And as it is with men generally so is it with the Pastors particularly Too many that can bee long absent from their flockes and yet not long after them to see them to bestowe some spirituall gift vpon them too many that loue not their flockes from the very heart rootes too many that loue their flockes onely for their fleece but not in Christ Iesus but very few like vnto Aaron beare the names of their people before the Lord Exod. 28.12 vpō their two shoulders for a remēbrance very few that beare as Aaron the names of their people in a breast-plate vpō their hart that is 29. very few that haue their people in their hearts to deale vnto them not the gospel only but also their own soules because they are deare vnto thē whereas it should be so with all Pastors Well ye see what loue should be both in a Pastor towards his people and generally in all Christians one towards another Thinke on these things and blessed shall yee bee if yee thinke on them and doe them LECTVRE IX PHILIP 1. Verse 9. And this I pray that your loue may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement that ye may discerne things that differ c. NOw after the signification of the Apostles thankesgiuing vnto God on the Philippians behalfe for their fellowship in the Gospell and of his perswasion of their perseuerance therein vnto the end followeth for a full complement of testifying his loue vnto them and winning their attention vnto him a signification of his praying vnto God for them in these words And this c. before hee had said vers 4. that alwaies in all his prayers he had thē in remembrance and now he sheweth what his prayer for them was and that was That their loue might abound c. Which prayer as it doth abundantly testifie his loue towards the Philippians so doth it also imply a commendation of them and an exhortation vnto them for in praying that their loue may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement hee giueth them testimonie of their loue and of their knowledge and iudgement that they did abound in these things his prayer is that they may abound yet more more in these things And againe in thus praying for them he lets them in his owne example see what they are to pray for and in effect exhorteth them to giue all diligence hereunto that their loue may abound yet more and more in knowledge c. And indeed this is the very maine proposition and principall exhortation of this Epistle that their loue may abound c. But let vs a little more particularly sift the meaning of the words in this his praier His praier yee see is that their loue may abound .i. that as a fountaine which keepeth not his waters in it selfe but sends them out vnto others so their loue may not bee shut within their owne bowels but issue out vnto the good of others And hee praieth that their loue may abound yet more and more whereby he implieth that their loue was manifest and that their loue abounded for the streames thereof had flowed vnto him being in prison at Rome and he praieth that it may abound yet more and more but how in knowledge and in all iudgment that their loue being founded and grounded in sound knowledge and in sound iudgement they might discerne things that differed c. Now by knowledge hee meaneth the generall knowledge of Gods will out of his word and by iudgement he meaneth such an experience and sense in themselues of spirituall things as through which men expert in the word of righteousnesse haue their wits or spirituall senses exercised to discerne both good euill as by comparing this place with that to the Hebrewes it may appeare for that which the Apostle there hath Heb. 5.14 strong meat belongeth to them that are of age which through custome haue their wits exercised to discerne both good and euill is as if we should read after the phrase of our Apostle here thus strong meat belongeth to them that are of age which through iudgement can discerne both good and euill So that the Apostle praieth that they may abound as in loue so in knowledge of Gods will out of his word and in all iudgement .i. in sound iudgement through a feeling experience in themselues of such spirituall things as they know by the word whereon their loue may bee grounded And why doth he pray for their growth and increase in these things Euen for these ends 1. that they may discerne things that differ one from another good from bad and vncorrupt from corrupt doctrine 2. that they may be pure from staine or corruption in doctrine faith or maners 3. that they may be without offence neither slipping backe nor standing at a stay but holding on a constant course vntill the day of Christ 4. that they may be filled with the fruits of righteousnes abounding in euery good worke which are by Iesus Christ from whom they haue their beginning vnto the glory and praise of God which is their end These were the ends for which he praied that their loue might abound yet more and more in knowledge and in c. So that the things principally to bee noted in these words are three First the Apostles action of praying This I pray Secondly the things for which he praied which were three 1. their increase in loue 2. their increase in knowledge 3. their inerease in iudgement Thirdly the ends wherefore he praied for these things vnto them which were foure as euen now we heard Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction The first thing which here I note is that the Apostle praied for the Philippians that their loue might abound yet more and more c. The Philippians abounded in loue in knowledge and in iudgment yet still the Apostle praied that they might abound yet more and more in these things Whence 1. I obserue the continuall vse and necessitie of praier whatsoeuer graces the Lord haue bestowed on vs yet still we haue neede to pray euen that we may yet more and more abound in those very graces And therefore the Apostles exhortation is Pray continually 1 Thess 5.17 whether yee be in aduersitie or in prosperity whether yee want or yee haue yet pray continually If ye want that he may supply your wants and giue vnto you which giueth vnto all men liberally and reprocheth no man
beginning and exhorting them by the example of the Macedonians and of our blessed Sauiour to continue and to abound more and more therein But what should farther proofe of this poynt need then this that loue and charitie towards the poore Saints is so often commanded and commended in the holy Scriptures and so greatly rewarded for the oftener that it is commaunded and commended in the holy Scriptures and the more that it is rewarded the more carefull it behooueth vs to be that wee abound therein Thou shalt not harden thine heart Deut. 15 7.11 nor shut thine hand from thy poore brother but thou shalt open thine hand vnto thy brother to thy needy and to thy poore in the land saith the Lord Thou shalt not harden thine heart but open thy bowels of compassion and bee mercifull and louing and tender-hearted towards thy poore brother The like commandement is often giuen in the holy Scripture And what a cōmendation was it generally vnto the Churches of Macedonia that out of their most extreame pouerty they were so richly liberall vnto the poore afflicted Saints and perticularly vnto these Philippians that they communicated to our Apostle in his bands Or what greater reward can be giuen vnto any then is promised vnto them that giue the Saints meate when they are hungrie that giue them drinke when they are thirstie that cloath them when they are naked that visite them when they are sicke that relieue them when they are in prison c. euen a kingdome of glorie In a poynt so cleare many proofes are not needfull For more care is not needfull that we may encrease and abound more and more in faith hope or other grace of the spirit then that wee may abound more and more in loue euen in loue both towards God and towards one another and towards the poore Saints in their affliction and miserie Which serueth to condemne the more then keicolde loue of Christians in our daies To censure any of you so sharpely beloued as if yee loued not God or at least but with a colde loue would seeme it may be hard For all of you loue God and hee that thinketh otherwise is much deceaued But tell me do all of you loue one another It may be that some of you will here yeeld a little 1 Ioh. 4 20. Rom. 12.10 Heb. 13.1 1 Pet. 4.8 And I tell you or rather the holy Ghost telleth you that hee that loueth not his brother whome he hath seene loueth not God whom he hath not seene The Apostles exhortation is Bee affectioned to loue one another with brotherly loue And againe Let brotherly loue continue And againe Aboue all things haue feruent loue amongst you But our often brawlings and diuisions and quarrels and contentions and swellings and discords shew that wee haue not hearkened nor obeyed their counsell so farre haue we been from abounding more and more in loue one towards another And if we doe not loue one another as wee should iudge yee by the former place whether wee loue God as we should Psal 133.1 Behold saith the Prophet how good ioyfull a thing it is brethren to dwell together in vnity Surely in any thing we cannot be liker vnto God then if we loue one another for God is loue and wee by loue are made Gods house 1 Ioh. 4.16 wherein he liketh to dwell For he that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him We haue beene too colde in loue one towards another and therefore too colde in loue towards our God Aboue all things let vs haue feruent loue amongst our selues and so shall we be sure that we loue God indeed And as we haue beene too colde in loue one towards another and consequently in loue towards God so can I not much commend our loue towards the poore Saints and afflicted members of Christ Iesus I cannot reprooue you for not abounding more and more in this loue because as yet you do not abound in this loue Through a good and godly statute lately made the poore Saints come not now vnto your doores but through want of reliefe they faint in their houses insomuch that as the children of Israell when their burthen was heauier and their taske greater cryed out vpon Moyses and Aaron saying The Lord looke vpon you and iudge for ye haue made our sauiour to stinke before Pharaoh and his seruants in that ye haue put a sword in their hand to slay vs So they cry out vpon them that were the meanes of this statute saying The Lord looke vpon them that haue done thus vnto vs for they haue made our sauiour to stinke before our brethren and haue put a sword in their hands to slay vs. And where is the cause of this cry Not in the statute for it is as good a statute as could be deuised both for you and them but the cause is in you Ye are well content that they come not to your doores as they were woont but there wanteth in you a willing and readie mind to contribute to their necessities as the statute requireth When some taske or burthen should be leuied vpon you for their maintenance in respect of that reliefe which they were woont to finde at your doores here ye draw back the shoulder and euerie man would giue so little that the statute cannot haue his entendment And thus it is that you haue a sword to kill the poore withall for by the statute they may not come to your doores yet you will not contribute to their maintenance according vnto the statute Beloued open the bowels of your compassion let your loue towards the poore Saints appeare communicate to their affliction miserie and pouerty and as God hath giuen to euerie man so let him giue not grudgingly or of necessitie but willingly and cheerefully They are Gods saints they are members of Christs bodie they are your brethren and many of them it may be as rich in Gods fauour as the most of you and that which yee willingly and cheerefully now giue vnto them shall further your reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus Be therefore ready to giue and glad to distribute laying vp in store for your selues a good foundation against the time to come Let your loue towards God towards one another towards the poore saints of Christ Iesus be manifest vnto all men that they which see your loue may glorifie God on your behalfe So shall yee be loued of loue it selfe and liue for euer where your loue shall haue none end LECTVRE X. PHILIP 1. Verse 9. In knowledge and in all iudgement THe next thing which here I note is that the Apostle praieth that the Philippians may abound more and more in knowledge namely in knowledge of Gods will out of his word Whence I obserue another continuall care necessarie for all Christians and that is that they may abound more and more in the knowledge of Gods will out of his holy word 1 Cor. 14.20
be more deare vnto you then the propagation of ●he Church the furtherance of the Gospell Matth. 14. If any man ●ome vnto mee saith our Sauiour Christ and hate not father ●nd mother and wife and children and brethren and sisters 26.27 ●ea and his owne life also he cannot be my Discisple And whosoeuer beareth not his crosse and commeth after mee cannot bee ●y disciple Where our blessed Sauiour teacheth vs that if a●y thing in the world euen our liues be more deare vnto vs ●hen his glory and the encrease of his kingdome then we cannot be his disciples If we do not beare our crosse whatsoeuer it be that is laid vpon vs we cannot be his disciples And withall I adde that howsoeuer they seemed to admire the word and to kisse the Gospell yet if when the winde bloweth and the storme ariseth they start aside like a broken bowe surely they were neuer borne a new by the immortall seede of the word of God for that endureth for euer as true in it selfe so grounded in him that is begotten thereby in such sort that it is dearer vnto him than his life Let them then looke vnto it that when stormes arise fall away from the hope of their profession If they faint or shrinke it is more then they should doe because the Lord may turne their sufferings to the furtherance of the Gospell But if they fall away it is as if they refused to take vp their crosse and to follow Christ And whereas their liues should not bee deare vnto them vnto the death for the furthering of the gospell their liues and liuelyhoodes are so deare vnto them that to saue them they hinder the gospell Let this be our rule the Lord turnneth the persecutions of his Saints to the furthering of the gospell therefore in persecutions and troubles we may not faint or slide backe Againe beloued this may teach you not to doubt of the truth or to dislike of the professors of the truth because they are disgraced persecuted and cruelly entreated Yee shall not want enough that will insult ouer them in their troubles that will tell you they are odious men and me● vnto whom such sufferings and troubles most iustly do befall and so cunningly will labour to discredite the truth which they professe But be not deceaued Whatsoeuer of this kinde can bee said no doubt was spoken vpon Paules bands and troubles so to discredite the gospell which hee preached And it cannot be but that the world should hate and persecute and reuile the children of the light because they loue darkenesse better then light But howsoeuer the world hate them and whatsoeuer it practiseth against them the Lord shall turne all their sufferings and their wrongs to the furthering of the gospell Let not therefore the persecutions and troubles of Gods Saints bee any argument against the truth but rather for the truth and rather let them cause vs to like then to dislike thē It is Satans arte to turne their troubles to the slaunder of them and of the truth but the Lord turneth them to the furtherance of the gospell and of their reckoning in the day of Christ And let this be spoken touching this which is the maine poynt principally to be noted in these words The next thing which I note is that the Apostle in his proofe that his bands were turned rather to the furthering of the gospell then the hindering saith that his bands in Christ .i. which he sustained for Christ his sake were famous throughout all the iudgement Hall and in all other places Whereby he meaneth that by occasion of his bands Christ and his gospell came to be knowen and to be belieued both in the Emperours Court and in the Citie of Rome and in many other countries Which as it sheweth a notable fruite and effect of the persecution of gods Saints namely the propagation of the gospell which falleth in with the former obseruation So farther hence I do obserue the power of God to raise vp a Church vnto himselfe where he will and by what meanes he will in Kings courts in great Cities Countries where the gospell is scant heard of or little regarded there hee can if hee will euen by the bands of his Saints raise vp a Church vnto himselfe No place so prophane so farre without God in the world but if ●e will haue his name there called vpon there it shall be cal●ed vpon Rome at that time it is likely was as heathenish 〈◊〉 now it is superstitious Nero his Court it is like was then ●s prophane and as far without God in the world as might ●e and the Countries thereabout it is like had not so much 〈◊〉 heard of Iesus nor knew what the gospell meant Yet ●ere the Lord would haue his Church and therefore hee ●aith vnto Paul Be of good courage Paul Act. 23.11 for as thou hast testi●ied of mee in Hierusalem so must thou beare witnesse also at Rome Here the purpose of God was reuealed and according to this purpose he brought Paul to Rome and euen by his bands there begat Children vnto himselfe in Neroes Court in the Citie of Rome and in the Countries there a●out Elisha may send his seruant with his staffe and the Shunamites Sonne not be raised but if the Lord send his seruant whither he will a Church shall be raised to the honour of his name by what meanes he will for he can do what he will and what meanes he listeth he vseth to do his will Let no man then measure the Lord by himselfe If hee send thee whom he hath called to the worke of his ministerie to the Princes Court or to the great Citie goe when he sendeth thee and feare not thy weakenesse but remember his strength that sendeth thee If thou goe thither bound with a chaine for the gospels sake euen by thy chaine thou shalt so preach vnto their hearts that thou shalt gaine children in the faith As it is all one with him to saue with many or with few so it is all one with him to gather his church by this or that meanes which pleaseth him best Whatsoeuer be thy weakenesse hee will perfect his strength in thy weakenesse Onely bee of good courage and thou shalt see the power of the Lord. Againe let no man thinke any place so prophane but that the Lord may haue his Church there Kings Courts are cōmonly not the best pride pleasure ease abundance of all things commonly choakes the word therein so that it is vnfruitfull Nay saith Amaziah to Amos Amos 7.13 prophesie no more at Bethell for it is the Kings Chappell and it is the Kings Court. In great Cities likewise sinnes most commonly rage and reigne No lewdnesse or wickednesse so grieuous and abhominable but there it is so rise that it ouerfloweth all Yet in these places the Lord hath his Church euen those that know him and belieue in his holy name Euen in Iezabels Court
the growth of the gospell of Christ ●●sus Againe in some it is very cleare that the motiues ●●awing them to preach Christ is a sincere and holy loue ●●th towards you that they may present you holy and vn●●ameable before God in that day and in the meane time ●ay reioyce ouer your faith loue and holy obedience and ●●ewise towards the truth that the truth by them may bee ●●owne in all places But in others it is greatly to be fea●●d that their comming to preach Christ is vpon spitefull ●●uie towards the faithfull seruants of Christ Iesus malig●●ng the gifts and graces of Gods holy spirit in them vpon ●ontentious humor casting vp and downe the firebrands 〈◊〉 schismes strifes and debates to set the Church on fire or ●●on euery other inordinate affection rather then vpon ●●e Againe in some it is very cleare that the end of their comming to preach Christ is to glorifie the Lord to beget children in the faith to comfort the humbled and afflicted soule to build vp the ruined walles of Sion and to turne them that belong vnto the Lord vnto righteousnesse that they may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith in Christ Iesus But in others it is greatly to bee feared that the end of their comming to preach Christ is to grieue the soule which the Lord would not haue greeued to cast dunge in the faces of their brethren to adde affliction vnto them that already are afflicted and vnder the name of the Church to wound the Church euen with a deadly wound I wish indeede euen from my very heart roote that all that preach Christ in our Church at this day were of the better sort and that our day might haue this exception from the Apostles day And I doe assure my selfe that there were neuer moe in our Church then at this day there are which preach Christ of a pure and good minde vpon a sincere and holy loue towards the Church and towards the truth to gaine men vnto the Church and to ground men in the truth Neither doe I or dare I pronounce of any but that he so preacheth Christ But as I said it may greatly be feared that in this our day there are such as doe not so preach Christ For as the Apostle reasoneth whereas there are among you enuying 1 Cor. 3.3 and strife and diuisions are yee not carnall and walke as men So doe I reason touching this point whereas there are amongst vs such as are euer obscuring the lights of our Church euer girding at them whose graces ha●● beene and are most eminent in the Church euer crossing and thwarting the things most behouefull for the Church euer snarling and catching at euery aduantage they ca● take euer casting firebrands of schismes and contentions i● the Church are there not that preach Christ vpon enu●● and strife and not purely but of purpose to greeue As I wish there were no such diuersitie among them that preach Christ so this diuersitie for me might haue beene buried i● silence if this scripture had not forced me to so much as 〈◊〉 haue spoke The vse which I make hereof is for the Minister and ●●eacher of the gospell who hence may take good notes ●hereby he may know whether he be a good minister and ●●eacher of the gospell The first note whereby hee may ●low this is if hee speake the worde for it is not the wise●●me of man or the traditions of the Church or the sophi●●ie of the Schooles but it is the word of the euer-liuing ●od that he must speake if he be a good minister and prea●●er of the gospell as it is written If any man speake 1 Pet. 4.10 let him ●●eake as the word of God Whereby is implyed that if hee ●●eake not so he speaketh not as he ought The second note whereby hee may know this is if hee ●●eake the word franckely and boldly for it is not for the ●●ord his Ambassador to be babish or bleatish or for feare 〈◊〉 keepe backe any part of the Lord his counsaile but as ●●hn vnto Herod so he must speake boldly vnto the faces of ●●e greatest and feare not the face of any man as it is writ●●n Cry aloud and spare not lift vp thy voice like a trumpet Is 58.1 ●●d shew my people their transgression and to the house of Iacob ●●eir sinne whereby he implieth that this is most requisite 〈◊〉 the Lord his Prophet and Minister that he boldly do the ●●ill of him that hath sent him whether he be to plucke vp 〈◊〉 to roote out or to destroy and throw downe or what ●●se soeuer The third note whereby he may know this is if he speake ●●e word boldly and of a good minde For it is not enough ●●at he speake the word and speake it boldly but if he will ●pproue himselfe for a good Minister and Preacher of the Gospell he must also speake out of a good minde towards God to glorifie him towards them that heare him to saue ●●em and towards the truth of Christ Iesus to make it ●●owne in all places as it is written 1 Tim. 3.9 that they should haue ●he mysterie of the faith in a pure conscience or in a sincere ●nd good minde The fourth note whereby hee may know this is if hee ●peake the word vpon a sincere and holy loue For this al●o is requisite that he preach the word not vpon strife and contention to moue brawles and stirres in the Church b●● vpon loue towards him who hath commanded to feede 〈◊〉 sheepe and his lambes vpon loue towards the sheepe 〈◊〉 Christ that they wander not as sheepe without a shepherd and vpon loue towards the word that it be not hid as vnde● a bushell if hee be a good Minister and Preacher of the word The last note whereby he may know this is if he speake the wo d to the end that God may be glorified his Church builded and his Gospell defended If I say he finde these notes in himselfe hereby hee shall know that he is a good Minister and Preacher of the word Otherwise if he speake not the word but the deuises of his owne braine or speake the word coldly and fearefully fearing mens persons or speake the word of a corrupt and naughty minde or vpon an enuious and contentious humor or to greeue the godly and hinder good things let him know that he is not a good Minister and Preacher of the word Let euery man therefore that is set apart vnto this worke examine himselfe of these things and so let him iudge of himselfe and where be hee findes a fault in himselfe let him mend that which is amisse Now if any man shall here except and say how then If the case thus stand among the Preachers of the word that some of them preach Christ euen through enuie and strife not of a pure and good minde but rather to vex the soule of the righteous
matters of ciuill conuersation he would haue vs to be like minded as in the Lord it may be warranted Let vs therefore beware how we sooth vp our selues in dissenting about matters of lesse moment when we agree in matters of greater importance The more like minded we are in the Lord the more is our conuer●ation such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ Let our care ●herefo●e be that both in matters of lesse moment and likewise in matters of greater importance we may be like minded ●n the Lord as becommeth the Gospell of Christ But how may we be like minded in the Lord This our Apostle sheweth in the next words and that is 1. If we haue the same loue i. If we loue the same things in the Lord. 2. If we be of one accord i. If we agree in our wills and desires in the Lord. And 3. if we be of one iudgement i. If we agree in one truth of Christ Iesus For these the particulars are as I take it comprised vnder and meant in that generall so that i● we thus loue and agree in the Lord then are wee like minded in the Lord and our conuersation in a great part is such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ Because I haue stood long vpon the generall I shall the lesse neede to stand vpon these particulars which in effect haue beene handled in the generall Briefly therefore of these as time will giue leaue The 1. thing then which in these particulars I note is that the Apostle would haue them to haue the same loue the same I say in respect of the obiect that they should loue the same things the same Church the same Gospell the same truth euen as we say that they haue the same faith who belieue in the same Christ Hence then I obserue that if we will be like minded and walke as becommeth the Gospell of Christ the● must we loue the same things in the Lord not one one thing and another an other thing but the same things as simply the same things For we may loue the same things and yet be f●● from that loue of the same things which becommeth vs as namely if we loue the same delights of the flesh the same sins or corruptions whatsoeuer but the same things in the Lord and in the loue whereof hee is delighted and well pleased Thus it is commaunded vs euery where in the booke of God that we all loue the same God the same truth the same meanes of our saluation in Christ and generally the same things whatsoeuer they be that belong vnto our peace And the reason of it is plaine For where one loues one thing and another another thing as for example one Christ and another Antichrist when one hateth that which another loueth where euery man loues that which himselfe liketh and scarce two loue the same things what loue can there be nay what distractions must there not needes be nay what desolation are not likely to ensue In the Church of Corinth they loued not the same things but one loued this man another that ma● and what dissentions bred it in that Church In our neighbor kingdome of France they loue not the same things but one sort loue the light of the word another sort loue darkenesse better then light and what bloud hath it shedde in that kingdome Amongst our selues we loue not the same things in the Lord but one sort loue their pleasures another sort their profits another sort their promotions the fewest sort the things that they should loue and what but a iudgement likely to ensue Nay beloued here is the miserie and like to be the ruine of our Land in our Land wee loue not the same things in the Lord but we loue too many of vs that man of sinne and the poysoned cuppes of the fornications of that whore and too few of vs the simplicitie of the truth of Christ Iesus to speake plainely we loue too many of vs the Pope and his marchandize and too few of vs Christ and his truth we speake not the ●anguage of Canaan but halfe in the speach of Ashdod and halfe in the language of Canaan Hereupon it is that Pope and his adherents conceiue courage against vs to subdue vs and our Land and to make vs a prey vnto their teeth Beloued if we will not for the loue of the Lord and because the holy Ghost hath commanded vs yet for the loue of our owne liues and that we be not made a prey vnto our enemies let vs loue the same truth of Christ Iesus and generally the same things in the Lord. Let vs no longer halt betweene God and Baal Christ and Antichrist religion and superstition but with religious hearts let vs loue the same truth the same God the same things in the Lord that some may be ●ike minded according to Christ Iesus The 2. thing which in these particulars I note is that the Apostle would haue the Philippians to be of one accord i. to ●gree in their wils and desires touching euery thing that is good belong it vnto religion or vnto ciuill life and conuersa●ion Whence I obserue another necessarie dutie for vs that we be like minded and walke as becommeth the Gospell of Christ and that is that we agree in our wills and desires in the Lord that vnitie and concord amongst vs bee preserued and maintained To agree in mischiefe we are ready enough neither neede we any to moue vs thereunto For as it is in the Prophet Psal 50. If we see a theefe we consent vnto him and we are partakers with the adulterers we runne with the wicked to doe euill and we easily ioyne hands with the wicked and vngodlie But to bee of one accord in the Lord we are not so easily drawne albeit this be the agreement that the holy Ghost requireth of vs and commendeth vnto vs. Ps 133.1 Behold saith the Prophet how good and ioyfull a thing it is brethren to dwell together in vnity i. to liue together in that concord and good agreement which is acceptable to the Lord. And the more to shew the precious worth of holy agreement amongst the sonnes of God be likeneth it vnto the oyntment prescribed for Aaron which was so sweete that when Aaron was annointed therewith Ex. 30.23 the smell of it was most pleasant vnto all that were by And euen so sweete and pleasant a thing it is to see brethren to be of one accord in the Lord. This is that which is commended in the faithfull in the Acts Act. 4.32 that they were of one heart and of one soule agreeing in their mindes wills desires and affections And where this agreement in the Lord is not there the Lord is not And yet in matters wherein wee differ one from an other how hardly are we brought to bee of one accord in the Lord If we differ in matters of religion either we will not vouchsafe one to talke with an other in them
superstition By bowing the knee ●e Apostle here meaneth that subiection and worship which ● creatures ought continually to performe and which all ●atures shall performe to Christ in that day some willingly ●d cheerefully as holy men and Angels some vnwillingly ●d to their confusion as the deuils and wicked men his instruments for so the Lord by his Prophet vseth the same phrase of speech Esa 45.23 where he saith Euery knee shall bowe vnto me that is shall be subiect to mee and worship mee Here then is a dutie prescribed necessarily to be performed of euery Christian which is to glorifie him who is exalted into the height of glory both in our bodies and in our spirit● to worship him with holy worship to subiect our selues vnto him in all obedience vnto his heauenly will for worthy is the Lambe that was killed Ap 5.12 to receiue all power and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and pr●ise The Angels in heauen they glorifie the name of Iesus in that they are alwayes ready to execute his will and to doe whatsoeuer he commandeth them H●b 1.14 Whereupon they are called ministring spirits sent forth to minister for their sakes which shall bee heires o● saluation This also is that holy worship wherewith we ough● to worship him and to glorifie his name euen to be heare and doers of his word to obey his will to walke in his lawes and to keepe his commandements Not the bare and outward capping and kneeling at the name of Iesus but principally obedience vnto his will that is named is the honor which here he accepteth of vs. For as not euery one that sai●● vnto him Lord Lord shall enter into his kingdome so no● euery one that boweth at the name of Iesus shall enter in●● his kingdome but he that doth his will and walketh in hi●wayes Saul when he was sent to slay the Amalekites though to honour God greatly by sparing the best of the sheepe are of the oxen to sacrifice vnto him But it was said vnto hi● Hath the Lord as great pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifice● as when his voice is obeyed 1 Sa. 15.22 Behold to obey is better than sacrifi●● and to hearken is better than the fat of Rammes So you happi● may thinke you honour our blessed Sauiour greatly when y● bowe your selues at euery sound of his name but behold 〈◊〉 obey his will is better than capping and kneeling or all ou●ward ceremonies whatsoeuer Yet mistake mee not I besee●● you as though I thought that the names of Iesus of Christ of the Lord of God of the Father of the Sonne or of th● holy Ghost were names of ordinary account and reckoning or to be passed ouer without reuerence as other names Nay whensoeuer wee heare or speake or thinke of them wee are ●o reuerence the maiestie of God signified thereby And feare-●ill it may be to them that thinke or speake of them pro●hanely or lightly or vpon each light and trifling occasion ●r otherwise than without great reuerence and feare that the ●ord will not hold them guiltlesse But this I say that neither ●he sound of these syllables of Iesus nor the name of Iesus ●hould affect vs more than any other names of Christ a●●hough there lay some vertue in the bare word but whenso●uer wee heare or thinke or speake of him wee are to reue●ence his maiestie and in the reuerent feare of his name to ●●biect our selues vnto his will This is a part of that dutie ●hereby wee must glorifie Christ Iesus Men and brethren let vs at length looke to it Hee that ●all come will come and will not tarry We pray daily Thy ●all be done in earth as it is in heauen but it is but lip-labour The Angels in heauen are alwayes ready to execute his will ●ut on earth wee follow our owne wils and walke in the ●ayes of our owne hearts Wee regard not to walke in the way ●f the Lord or to hearken to the words of his mouth Wee ●ill not obey wee will not incline our eare but wee will goe ●fter the counsels and stubbornnesse of our wicked hearts ●ell rebellion is as the sinne of witchcraft 1 Sa. 15.23 and transgression ● wickednesse and idolatrie Take heed and put not off from ●ay to day Come and learne to know the Lord his will and ●e not forgetfull hearers but doers of the word If wee now ●rue him and doe his will wee shall afterwards raigne with ●im But he that now will not be subiect vnto his will let him ●now that wee shall all appeare before the iudgement seat of Christ and then euery knee shall bowe vnto him Blessed are ●hey that heare the word of God and liue thereafter LECTVRE XXXI PHILIP 2. Verse 10.11 That at the name of Iesus should euery knee be● both of things in heauen and things in earth and th●●g● vnder c. NOw before we proceed vnto the next point it the words following one or two doubts arising from these words are first to be resolued and answered The Apostle saith that God hath giuen vnto Christ being raised from the dead a name aboue euery name that a the name of Iesus should euery knee bow c. that is that all creatures should be subiect vnto him and worship him Herethe● it may be doubted and demanded how it is that all creatures are not subiect vnto Christ that all creatures doe not worship him For not only the Deuils in hell but likewise many wicked men instruments of Sathan here on earth are so farre from being subiect vnto him that they are sworne enemie vnto him and to his kingdome and swell and rage again●● him some against him in his owne person and all against hi● in his members here on earth True it is indeed that Christ hath many enemies which are not subiect vnto him nor worship him 1 Cor. 15 25 For he must raigne as saith the Apostle till her 〈◊〉 put all his enemies vnder his feet Where the Apostle plainl● implieth that Christ hath and shall haue enemies which 〈◊〉 not be subiect vnto him and worship him euen till such time as he shall deliuer vp his kingdome to his Father that is e●●● till hee shall come in the last and great day to iudge both the quicke and the dead in his second comming Yea and it is for the glory of his kingdome that still there be enemies vnto hi● kingdome that so hee may be glorified both by the victor● which he giueth vnto his Saints here on earth ouer these enemies and likewise by the victorie which himselfe shall ha●● ouer them in that day when their faces shall gather blacknes and darknesse before him and when hee shall adiudge them ●nto that Tophet prepared of old Esa 30.33 the burning whereof is fire and ●uch wood and the breath of the Lord like a riuer of brimstone ●oth kindle it as the Prophet speaketh But to answer vnto ●he question how
obeyed is called a sacrifice Now what sacrifices be these These be the sacrifices of the new Testament these bee liuely sacrifices and holy and acceptable vnto God and these together with the sacrifice of praise and of the workes of loue are the only sacrifices which now Christians are to offer vnto their God An end of all other sacrifices was then when Christ cried vpon the crosse it is finished These onely remaine and these are our reasonable seruing of God How should not this stirre vp both Pastor and people to doe that they should In the Pastor his burning zeale to giue his life for his people in the people their obedience of faith by the ministery of their Pastors are their holy and Christian sacrifices and their reasonable seruing of God And these sacrifices are now no lesse to be offered by vs in the new Testament then were those sacrifices of beasts and other like things to be offered in the old Testament and surely are farre more acceptable vnto God then were they But I promised only to speak of this in a word Now a word likewise of that that followeth For the same cause c. In these words the Apostle armeth them against sorrow if he should be offered vp vpon the sacrifice of their faith As he would be glad and reioyce with them if their faith should be confirmed by his death so hee would haue them likewise to be glad and reioyce with him if hee by his bloud should seale the testimony of their faith What then must we be glad and reioyce when our best Pastors and teachers are taken from vs Did not the Church well when Steuen was stoned to death Act. 8.2 to make great lamentation for him Yes no doubt they did well and whensoeuer the Church is depriued of any worthy member especially of any worthy Pastor and Teacher there is iust cause of great sorrow And the Apostle alloweth a moderation in lamenting for the dead so that we sorrow not as they that haue no hope 1 Thes 4.13 And it was a part of Iehoiakims plague that he should be buried like an Asse and none to make lamentation for him The meaning then is not that we should reioyce and be glad and not mourne simply at the death of our best Pastors and Teachers but that wee should bee glad and reioyce at the fruite which comes to the Church by their death if they suffer martyrdom for the confirmation of the brethrens faith For seeing their constancie and their cheerefulnesse to seale that truth with their bloud which they taught and preached this should both make vs reioice that God giueth such strength vnto his Saints and likewise confirme vs in the faith of Iesus Christ and further animate vs patiently to endure whatsoeuer tribulations for Christ his sake The Apostle himselfe would not no doubt reioyce simply in his suffering and death but in that onely thereby God should be glorified and Gods children strengthened So we are to reioyce not simply that our Pastors and Teachers are taken by the hands of Tyrants and racked and martyred but in that God vouchsafeth thus to conforme them to the image of his sonne and to make their bloud the seede of the Church so that thereby both the faith of them that are already in the Church is confirmed and others likewise are brought vnto the faith Here only wee are to looke to this caueat that we do not iudge of a martyr only by his suffering but further by the cause of his suffering For not the suffering but the cause of his suffering makes him a Martyr If he suffer death for the testimonie of Christ Iesus his death is well called a martyrdome And in his death we are so to reioyce as already ye haue heard Thus farre of the reasons enforcing obedience to those exhortations which the Apostle inferreth vpon the example of Christ his humility and obedience which the Apostle laid as a most strong and sure ground of his exhortation vnto humblenesse and lowlines of minde LECTVRE XXXIX PHILIP 2. Verse 19.20 And I trust in the Lord Iesus to send Timotheus shortly vnto you that I also may be of good comfort when I know your state c. AND I hope in the Lord Iesus In this latter part of this Chapter the Apostle his desire is to comfort the Philippians and indeed to confirme them that they should not bee troubled though they liued in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation as it appeareth they did ex vers 15. but that they should grow forward from grace vnto grace that when hee should heare of them he might heare of them to his comfort To comfort them therefore he 1. promiseth to send Timothy vnto them a man whom themselues knew to bee a faithfull minister of Christ Iesus and to loue them sincerely 2. He putteth them in hope of his owne comming shortly after vnto them 3. He telleth them that now he sendeth their faithfull minister Epaphroditus vnto them and the causes why By all which things as the Philippians were iustly to be comforted so were they so many caueats to warne them that neither Timothy nor hee nor Epaphroditus might finde any cause of griefe or discomfort amongst them when they should come vnto them In his promise to send Timothy vnto them I note 1. his promise to send him 2. the reason why he sent him rather then any other In his promise 1. I note the holy limitation thereof 2. The promise 3. The end of sending him Touching the 1. Paul doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but saith he I hope in the Lord Iesus c. It is to bee vnderstood that at this time when the Apostle wrote these things he was in prison at Rome where Timothy ministred vnto him and serued him in such things as he needed Now it seemes he was in hope shortly to bee deliuered out of prison and then his certaine resolution was first to send Timothy vnto them and then shortly after himselfe to come vnto them But how the Lord would dispose of these things he knew not Onely hee knew that the heart of Nero who had cast him in prison was in the hand of the Lord Iesus to dispose of as seemed best to his godly wisedome and so he loued them that he hoped the Lord Iesus would deliuer him out of prison and bring him vnto them Because therefore he knew not certainely how it would please the Lord to dispose of these things hee doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but inasmuch as his loue to them made him to hope the best hee saith I hope in the Lord Iesus c. The lesson which hence wee haue to learne is this in all things whatsoeuer we purpose to doe still to depend vpon the will and pleasure of the Lord Iesus not resolutely to set down this or that will I doe but with these or the like conditions and limitations I
vs. Looke particularly into our selues is it a comfort vnto vs when we know of the good state one of another and is it a griefe vnto vs when we heare of the decaied state one of another Nay commonly we repine when we see the state of others better then our owne either in wealth or in honor or in fauour or the like and commonly we are glad when we see another especially if he be of the same trade and profession with vs goe downe the winde as we say We ioy not one in the ioy of another we grieue not one in the griefe of another but contrariwise we rather ioy one in the griefe of another and grieue one in the ioy of another Well such reioycing and such grieuing are not good Let vs euen so many as feare God be otherwise affected one towards another Let vs take comfort in the good one of another in the growing vp in wealth in honor in fauour in knowledge in wisdome and in euery good grace of the spirit one of another and let vs be grieued in the misery in the penurie in the trouble in the sorrow in the ignorance in the badnes one of another And if we shall doe this so many precepts of loue and charitie shall not be needfull for vs but by the fruits of an vnfeigned loue we shall shew our selues to be Christians indeede for this is an vndoubted note of true Christianitie and of sincere loue so mutually to be carefull one for another that we reioyce one in anothers good and be sorry one at anothers griefe or miserie Now followeth the reason why he sent him For I haue no man like minded c. This is the reason why he rather sendeth Timothie then any of the rest that were with him because of all that were with him none were like minded in generall to doe their dutie in their ministerie and none which in particular would so faithfully and sincerely care for their matters and for the good of their Church as would he A great commendation of Timothie which was sent great loue in the Apostle to send such a man vnto them and very behouefull for them to receiue such a man sent in such loue with all gladnes and to make much of such all points very well worthy a large discourse but I can onely point at them The commendation of Timothie a very fit patterne of a man meete to be commended to the worke of the ministerie and to be placed ouer a Congregation to serue in the Tabernacle He should be such a one as in generall hath a prompt and ready minde to doe the worke of the Lord to labour in the Lord his vineyard to doe the worke of an Euangelist and of a Minister and such a one as in particular hath an earnest desire to procure their good vnto whom he is sent and will faithfully and diligently labour to present them ouer whom he is set pure and vnblameable before God For first his very office which is to preach the Gospell of Christ Iesus should worke in him a loue and cheerefull minde to teach the Lord his will and to preach the Gospell of Christ Iesus Otherwise he is not meete to be commended to the worke of the ministerie or at least not so meete as those that haue a prompt minde to doe the worke of the Lord. And againe his loue of that people vnto which he is sent should make him faithfully to labour to gaine them vnto Christ that they may be his crowne and his ioy in that day Otherwise he is not meete to be set ouer that people or at least not so meete as they that would faithfully labour to that purpose Againe the Apostle his care to send such a man vnto them may be a good patterne to Bishops and Patrons of Benefices what manner of men to commend vnto the worke of the ministerie and to commit the charge of soules vnto In the like care and loue of Gods people they should commend such men to this worke and this charge as we haue already spoken of men willing to doe the worke of the Lord and which will faithfully care for their matters ouer whom they are set Otherwise to say the least they shew themselues not to haue that care and loue of Gods people which the Apostle had of these Philippians whereas their care should be the greater because they commend vnto a continuall charge and Paul onely sent Timothie to continue for a season with the Philippians But the speaking of these things in this place is to litle purpose therefore I briefly passe them ouer The third thing which I obserued in these words was how behoouefull it was for the Philippians to receiue such a man sent in such loue with all gladnesse and to make of such for therefore no doubt did the Apostle the rather commend him so as hath beene said that so the rather they might receiue him and embrace his doctrine the more gladly and be the more careful that he might not mislike any thing amongst them when he should come amongst them And this may teach you in what reuerence you ought to haue such men when they are set ouer you in the Lord euen for the words sake which they preach vnto you They faithfully care for your matters not for your worldly matters either in respect of you or of themselues for they seeke not yours but you but they faithfully care for your spirituall matters euen for the saluation of your soules in Christ his stead they beseech you and exhort you vnto the things that belong vnto your peace they teach they improue they correct they instruct you and all is that your soules may be saued in the day of Christ Now they leade you forth besides the waters of comfort now they bring you to feed in greene pastures now they call you backe when yee are wandring out of the way now they leade you on along in the way now they wound and breake the hairie scalpe of him that goeth on in his wickednesse now they heale the bruised and afflicted soule groning vnder the weight and burden of his sinne These are such of your matters as they care for and these they faithfully care for if they be faithfull Ministers of Christ Iesus In what regard doe yee thinke yee ought then to haue them euen for their workes sake Obey them that haue the ouersight of you Heb. 13.17 saith the Apostle and submit your selues vnto them for they watch for your soules as they that must giue accounts that they may doe it with ioy and not with griefe And in another place Wee beseech you 1 Th. 5.12 saith the Apostle that yee know them which labour amongst you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you that yee haue them in singular loue for their workes sake By both which places yee see what reuerence is to be giuen vnto the faithfull Ministers of Christ Iesus Now as Samuel said
them saith hee that haue the ouer-sight of you and submit your selues vnto them for they watch saith he for your soules c. Againe saith the same Apostle 1 Tim 5.17 The elders that rule well are worthy of double honor especially they which labour in the word and doctrine c. Let vs therefore take heede how we do despise or not reuerence these our spirituall fathers in Christ Iesus Pro. 30.17 For if the eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother shall be a pray vnto the rauens of the valley to picke it out and vnto the young Egles to eate it How much more shall it be so vnto vs if wee despise the instruction of our fathers in Christ Iesus and if wee stop our eares at the voice of their charming charme they neuer so wisely Againe let vs take heede how we doe not obey those our spirituall fathers in Christ Iesus Deut. 21.18 For if the stubborne and disobedient sonne that will not hearken to the voice of his father or of his mother nor will obey their admonition shall bee stoned with stones vnto the death how much more shall the iudgement of God ouertake vs if we will not heare nor incline our eares to obey the voice of our fathers in Christ Iesus if wee will not hearken and obey their admonitions and exhortations which in Christ his steede do beseech vs and admonish vs and exhort vs. Heare the voice of wisedome a voice fearefull yet most true Pro. 1.24 because saith Wisedome I haue called and ye refused c Euen thus shall it be vnto all them that obey not the voyce of wisedome in the mouth of the Minister Hearken therefore and obey for obedience is better then sacrifice Yea and reuerence the person of the Minister for the words sake which he bringeth In a word from this one example of Timotheus commendation let Ministers of the younger sort learne to reuerence their auncients in their ministery let young men learne to honour the person of the aged and let all of vs learne to carie our selues towards them that haue begotte vs in the faith as sonnes vnto their father Now followeth the conclusion of his first promise which was to send Timotheus vnto them in these words him therefore I hope c. Wherein is set downe the repetition of the former promise and likewise a farther signification of the time when he would send him Him saith he I hope to send there is the repetition of the former promise as soone as I know how it will go with me here is the signification of the time when he would send him Before he had said I trust to send Timotheus shortly vnto you now he sheweth what he meant by that shortly that is as soone as he should know whether he should be deliuered from his bonds by Nero which he hoped should bee shortly And the cause why he sent him not presently with Epaphroditus was because as yet he knew not certainely how his matters would go and he was very desirous that at his Timotheus comming vnto them they might bee comforted ouer his deliuerance from his bonds I haue already pointed at such notes as I thought meete to bee gathered from this promise It followeth And I trust in the Lord In these words he putteth them in hope of his owne comming shortly vnto them Which his promise as the other dependeth vpon the hope of his deliuerance out of prison This hope also of his comming vnto them he putteth them in for their farther comfort and likewise for their farther confirmation in the faith Whence 1. we may note the Apostle his great care that they might be comforted and therein obserue the great care that the Ministers of Christ Iesus should haue of the comfort of their people in the times of their distresses of which note wee haue already spoken before 2. We may note the Apostle his great care that they might grow strong in the faith and abound in euery good worke vnto the glory of God the father And this care ought also to be in the Ministers of Christ Iesus towards their people as also I haue heretofore obserued Only here remaineth one doubt to be answered For here some happily will aske how it fell out with this hope and confidence of the Apostle was he deceiued of his hope and confidence or did he as he hoped he should send Timothy shortly after vnto them did he as he trusted he should come himselfe shortly after vnto them Whereunto 1. I answere what if he were deceiued of his hope and confidence doth this at all impaire his credit and authority If it had beene a matter of faith and doctrine it should But this was a thing casuall and contingint wherein he might be deceiued and yet his credit no whit diminished For albeit he had the spirit of truth to lead him into all truth in whatsoeuer doctrine hee deliuered vnto the Church Yet in things that concerned himselfe especially in things future and contingent might he be deceiued euen as we see in this place that albeit he had the gift of healing yet Epaphroditus whom hee dearely loued had like to haue died with him 2. I answere that whether hee were deceiued of his hope and confidence or no I cannot certainely tell because it appeareth not by the Scriptures But very well it might be ●hat both he sent Timothy vnto them and that himselfe came afterwards vnto them For this we must know that hee was twise imprisoned at Rome by Nero. First hee was cast into prison in the third yeere of N●ro and deliuered in the fift Againe hee was cast into prison in the twelfth yeere of Nero and was put to death in the thirteenth of his raigne Writing therefore this his Epistle in his first imprisonment it might very well be that in that seuen or eight yeeres betweene that and his second imprisonment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both he sent and went to Philippie And the word which the Apostle here vseth maketh it very probable that both he sent and went thither being a word which signifieth an assured confidence and is seldome or neuer vsed but when the thing followeth which thus is trusted Howsoeuer hee went or went not it is no matter of our faith or where about we neede to be troubled This is sure hee trusted in the Lord to come vnto them and to see them that so they might bee comforted one in another and that hee might confirme and strengthen them in the faith And let this be spoken touching his second promise LECTVRE XLII PHILIP 2. Verse 25.26 But I supposed it necessary to send my brother Epaphroditus vnto you my companion in labour and follow souldier c. BVt I supposed it necessarie In this last part of this Chapter which concerneth Epaphroditus the Apostle 1. signifieth his present sending of Epaphroditus backe againe vnto them 2. He setteth downe the causes why he sent
profane stories of some much renowned for most rare friendship But what else were those but as shadowes in respect of the bodie What friendship of theirs came euer neere vnto that of Ionathan and Dauid 1 Sam. 18.1 whose soules were so knit either vnto other as that either loued other as his owne soule Who more faithfull vnto any then Hushai the Archite vnto Dauid 2 Sam 15. at whose request he tooke as we say his life in his hand and vndertooke with all diligence and speed to bring to nought the counsell of Ahitophel Yea generally where religion and the feare of the Lord knits the knot there the friendship is most sure and the duties thereof best performed If therefore thou wilt haue such a friend as without delay when neede doth require will doe the dutie of a friend and not shift thee of for this that time with this and that excuse ioyne thy selfe vnto him that is religious feareth the Lord and let your loue be in the Lord and for the Lord. For what is the cause wherefore friendship is so rare and why there is such slacknes in all sorts of men to helpe one another and to comfort one another in any time of neede Surely hence euen because our loue is onely a cold loue grounded on this or that worldly respect but wee doe not loue one another in the Lord and for the Lord because our soule delighteth in them that feare the Lord. O let all of vs delight in them that feare the Lord and then will we no doubt as Pauls scholers be diligent one vnto anothers good and one vnto anothers comfort in euery time of need It followeth that when ye should see him againe yee might reioyce In these wordes the Apostle setteth downe a second cause and reason wherefore hee sent Epaphroditus vnto the Philippians with such diligence and speede The cause was as here it is signified that after such sorow and heauinesse of heart as they were filled with vpon the hearing of their Ministers dangerous sicknesse thinking they should neuer see him againe they might reioyce when they should see him againe throughly well in health able to doe the worke of his ministerie Here then we see how a faithfull friend is especially to employ his diligence and his carefulnesse namely as in matters most needfull so in them to the best purpose hee can deuise A notable patterne whereof we haue in this example of our Apostle The Philippians were at this present full of heauinesse and sorow as we haue heard for their Ministers sickenesse and they much needed to be cheered and comforted The Apostle he vsed all diligence and after hee heard and knew of it he delaied not the time to cheere them and to comfort them But how hee might haue written his letters vnto them and therein signified their Ministers recouerie of his health and so haue cheered and comforted them But because he thought neither messenger nor letters nor any thing else would so much reioyce them as his presence with them and the sight of him because they thought they should neuer haue sent him againe therefore hee sent himselfe vnto them that when they should see him againe they might reioyce so taking the best course that hee could deuise to comfort them So we see in the example of Hushai before men●ioned when Dauid was in great distresse by Absolon his sonne Hushai came vnto him with purpose to go with him 2 Sam. 15.32.34 and in life or death not to leaue him But when it was thought that his friendshippe would be to better purpose vnto Dauid if he should returne vnto the Citie and bring the counsell of Ahitophel to nought he did that which was thought would be to the best purpose Right so if wee will approue our selues faithfull friends indeed as we must employ all diligence and carefulnesse in matters most needfull for our friend so must we do it to the best purpose wee can deuise For albeit diligence and carefulnesse in euery matter of our friend be very commendable in vs yet is it then worthily most commendable when it is imployed to the best purpose 1. When our care is specially bent to that which apparantly may be to our friends greatest good and comfort A matter of too too rare practise Few carefull of others good and of those few that will seeme sometimes to be carefull very few that will care for them in things most needfull and fewest of all that will in such sort care for them in things needfull as may be most behouefull for them If the course most behouefull for our friend be somewhat hurtfull for our selues wee will rather thinke of some other course then that whereby wee may so helpe our freind as that withall wee may not hurt our selues And so that wee shew our selues friends wee thinke it is well though we doe not so much as we should Well I wish wee would thinke of this example of our holy Apostle and as he was most diligent and carefull not onely to comfort the Philippians but in such sort to comfort them as they most desired so we would be diligent and carefull both to doe good vnto others and that likewise in such sort as they thereby might receiue the greatest good though happily our selues should be somwhat endamaged thereby What then happily you will say vnto mee was it such a commendable matter in the Apostle to send their Minister backe againe vnto them or was it such a pleasure vnto the Philippians to see their Minister againe It may be that some would stand at an answer to these questions in particular who shew but too plainely by their practise what they thinke or these questions in the generall For touching the Ministers in generall who is he that if his Minister be absent from his Church greatly longeth after him who is hee that if his Minister be sicke vnto death greatly wisheth his restoring vnto health who is he that if his Minister be absent and sick feares that he shall neuer see him againe or who is he that will take such a pleasure and ioy of heart in it if he shall see him again Some such God be thanked there are and God for his mercies sake encrease the number of them and his graces in them But generally if the Minister be such a one as makes a conscience of his waies amongst them as carefully feedes them with the bread of life and painefully leades them forth besides the waters of comfort such a one as will religiously call them vnto the sanctification of the Lord his Sabboth and restraine them of their meriment and sports and pleasures and wanton dalliances such a one as will sharpely reproue their sins boldly put them in minde of their duties and carefully reclaime them from such inordinate waies as they walke in such a one as we may very well presume this Epaphroditus was if the Minister I say be such a one generally
wee long not for his presence if he be absent generally wee sorow not for his sicknesse if he be sicke generally wee take no such pleasure either in his presence or in his life Nay rather if he be absent we will wish him farre enough and to tarie long enough and if he be sicke vnto death wee will reioyce and be glad at his death So farre short of these Philippians that were but newly planted in the Church and had but lately embraced the truth of Christ Iesus are wee who haue long enioyed the ministerie of the word and the bright light of the holy word of truth For so they accounted that the Apostle could not haue giuen a greater token of loue of them then to send their minister backe againe vnto them and it was the greatest pleasure and ioy of heart that might be vnto them to see their minister againe thorowly well and in good health And surely if we tooke that ioy and comfort in the word that we ought we would take more ioy and comfort in the Ministers of the word then we doe But how the Ministers of the word are to be accounted of we shall see in the handling of the next verse that followeth It now followeth And I might be the lesse sorowfull In these words the Apostle setteth downe a third cause or reason why hee sent their Minister vnto them with such diligence and speede And this cause respected himselfe For it was that hee might be the lesse sorowfull 1. That howsoeuer his sorowes after this should be some for some other things yet they might bee the ●esse when their ioyes were fulfilled by their Ministers presence and when their Minister should againe bee amongst them to labour amongst them In that then that the Apostle saith not and that I might be without sorow but onely and that I might be the lesse sorowfull Hence I gather this obseruation that the children of God are not much to hope nor greatly to seeke in this life to be quit and ridde of all sorow but it is enough for them if their sorowes be abated and if they haue lesse sorow then they deserue and then they are enabled to beare Ioh. 16.33 In the world saith our Sauiour ye shall haue affliction euen many-causes of sorow and griefe and vexation of spirit For so it is ordained that through many afflictions we should enter into the kingdome of God Act. 14.22 a● the Apostle saith And therefore our Sauiour Christ saith againe if any man will come after me let him denie himselfe Luc. 9.23 and take vp his crosse daily and follow mee Daily saith he For as one day followeth an other so one crosse followeth in the necke of an other Wee looke and hope for an holy citie Apoc. 21.4 the new Ierusalem where God shall wipe all teares from our eyes and where there shall be no more death neither sorow neither crying neither any more paine But that citie is not here on earth where we be but Pilgrimes it is in our Coun●rey in heauen where we shall haue an abiding citie where we shall be euer with the Lord. Nay if it were here on earth we would not long for that in heauen Let vs not therefore looke in this life to be without all trouble or sorow or griefe Let vs rather consider how in this life our whole life is stained with many sinnes and how for our sinnes wee haue deserued not only death euerlasting after this life but troubles also and sorowes vnsupportable in this life And then when we see that we are not onely freed from that death by the death of Iesus Christ and by saith in his name but that our sorowes in this life are much lesse then we deserue let vs reioyce in the Lord and comfort our selues in his mercies that our troubles and sorowes are nothing in comparison of that wee haue deserued And againe let vs consider that howsoeuer our troubles and sorowes and griefes be many yet so onely they presse vs as that we are able to say with the Apostle 2 Cor. 4 8.9 We are affected on euerie side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie but not ouercome of pouertie we are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but wee perish not c. And then when we see that our troubles and sorowes and griefes are no more but such as the Lord hath enabled vs to beare let vs reioyce in the Lord and comfort ourselues in his mercies towards vs who doth not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that wee be able but giueth the issue together with the tentation that we may be able to beare it For surely these are great mercies of the Lord towards vs that our sorowes are so lessened and abated that they are neither such as we haue deserued neither such but that wee are able to beare them by the power of him who doth strengthen vs hereunto And therefore though in this life we be not quite free from all troubles and sorowes yet let vs account this a great mercie of the Lord vnto vs that wee are lesse sorowfull that our sorowes are lesse then the desert of our sins and lesse then he enableth vs to beare But how was it that the Apostle should be lesse sorowfull by sending their Minister Epaphroditus vnto them because by his presence they should haue occasion to reioyce For as by their heauinesse for their Minister his sorow was encreased so againe by their reioycing for their Minister his sorow would be abated Here then we may obserue another notable qualitie of Christian loue and friendshippe Rom. 12.15 which is to weepe with them that weepe and to reioyce with them that reioyce A rule which the Apostle giueth all Christians to obserue keep from which who so declineth may seem therin to crosse euen nature it selfe For naturally we see that the members of our body are so affected one towards an other as that if one member suffer all suffer with it and if one be had in honour 1 Cor. 12.26 all the members reioyce with it How much more should it be so in the mysticall body of Christ Iesus that they who are ioyned together in one faith and in one baptisme should so likewise be ioyned together in loue and affection one towards an other that the sorow of one should be the sorow of an other and the ioy of one should be the ioy of another But I haue had occasion heretofore to obserue this note vnto you and therewithall the great want of this Christian loue in vs one towards another for that we are so farre from this duty as that we weepe and are sorie one at the prosperitie of another and againe laugh and reioyce one at the calamity of another If either by that or this instruction ye be taught in this dutie then practise it and if either by that or this admonition ye see your want in the performance of
this dutie then studie to amend that which is amisse and learne so to be affected one towards another as that ye will reioyce with them that reioyce and againe weepe with them that weepe Againe it may be that the Apostle was sorie that by his occasion their Minister and Teacher was so long absent from them And therefore now when Epaphroditus was sent backe againe vnto them he was the lesse sorowfull But this being onely a coniecture my purpose is not to ground any obseruation thereupon Onely this neither may the example of the Apostle be any president for any to deteine the Minister from his charge neither may the example of Epaphroditus be to any Minister any president to absent himselfe from his charge For Epaphroditus was now absent from his people being sent by them to Minister to the necessities of the holy Apostle so that albeit he was absent from them yet was hee labouring for them euen in the worke of Christ as the Apostle speaketh in the last verse of this chapter How then can this example help them who absent themselues either for idlenesse and their owne ease or vpon other pretences which haue no lawfull warrant Againe his staying there with the Apostle was not so much by the Apostle his deteining of him as by the Philippians charge that he should stay with him and by the sickenesse wherewith God visited him How then can this example bee any warrant vnto them whom deteine Ministers from their charge either for their owne pleasures sake or in some other respect which hath no better warrant I wish that both these men would bee as sorie for deteining Ministers from their charge as it is likely the Apostle was and likewise that the Ministers as sorie for being absent from the●r charges as it is likely Epaphroditus was This were a president worthy the following the other is a president without all ground or shadow of any semblance But I purposed onely to touch this by the way Now followeth the Apostle his request for Epaphroditus Receiue him therefore in the Lord c. The Apostle hauing shewed the causes why he sent Epaphroditus vnto the Philippians now commendeth him vnto them and maketh request for him that they would entertaine him at his returne as they ought shewing withall a reason in the next verse why they should doe so In this verse 1. He sheweth how they ought to receiue and entertaine him in particular 2. How they ought to entertaine all Ministers generally being such as he was First touching the entertainment of him in particular the Apostle willeth them to receiue him first in the Lord then with all gladnesse In that he willeth and exhorteth them to receiue him in the Lord his meaning is that they should receiue him not as a priuate friend not as one sent from him whom for his sake they should vse kindly but as the seruant of the Lord and as one sent euen by God himselfe vnto them For herein the Apostle may in part seeme to allude vnto that extremitie of sicknesse whence he could not possibly haue beene deliuered but onely by Gods mercy on him And therefore now he was sent vnto them not so much by the Apostle as by the Lord who onely did saue his life from death Againe in that he exhorteth them to receiue him with all gladnesse his meaning is that as he longed after them all so they should all receiue him with all gladnesse euen with exceeding ioy for his comming vnto them For so the same words that are heere vsed are well translated Iam. 1.2 Here then we are taught how to intreat and entertaine and receiue the Ministers of the Lord first in the Lord that is as seruants of the Lord and sent by God vnto vs. So the Apostle giueth testimonie vnto the Galathians that they receiued him where he saith But yee receiued me as an Angell of God Gal. 4.14 yea as Christ Iesus And that they are so to be honored and accounted of he againe sheweth where he saith 1 Cor. 4.1 Let a man so thinke of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God And why are they so to be thought of and so to be honoured The reason is plaine they are the Embassadors of Christ Iesus in Christ his stead beseeching vs that we would be reconciled vnto God So saith the Apostle Now then saith he we are embassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you through vs 2 Cor. 5.20 we pray you in Christ his stead that yee be reconciled vnto God Now Embassadors yee know are to be receiued as the Prince from whom they are sent so that the Ministers of Christ are to be receiued euen as Christ Iesus And therefore our Sauiour saith He that receiueth you receiueth me Mat. 10.40 and he that receiueth mee receiueth him that sent mee Againe Embassadors yee know speake not in their owne name but in the Princes name that sent them so that the Ministers of Christ are to be heard as Christ whose Ministers they are And therefore our Sauiour saith He that heareth you heareth me Luk. 10.16 and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me And yet see how hardly we are brought to receiue and harken to this instruction Indeede it grieueth mee to see how the Ministers of the Lord are receiued euen in this auditorie Euery fit opportunitie hath beene taken to put you in minde of these things And what neerer are yee then at the first Are the Ministers of Christ Iesus to be receiued in the Lord and for the Lord Are they the Embassadors of Christ Iesus and therefore to be receiued and to be heard as Christ Iesus How happens it then that some will not at all almost come to heare them that some come so slackly to heare them and that some turne their backs vpon them and will not stay to heare them If the Embassador of an earthly Prince should be vsed in such like sort would not sharpe stormes and sore displeasure follow vpon it And shall the Embassadors of the King of heauen and King of Kings be so vsed and will not his anger and heauy displeasure be kindled at it If we sought our honour we might well goe without it seeing the Lord cannot haue it But we seeke not our owne honour but the honour of him that sends vs euen the honour of Christ Iesus whose word we preach vnto you We would be honored for the words sake and therefore we would haue the word much more honoured And therefore we call you vnto the hearing of the word euen of the word of life euen of the word of your saluation But how preuaile we Those that will not come what should I speake vnto them I iudge them not there is one that iudgeth them Of such as doe come some come so seldome that it may seeme they come when their leisure from other
businesse giues them best leaue Businesse belike they haue of greater importance then this and which they are more to regard then the saluation of their soules Others they turne their backs vpon the Preacher and stay they cannot or they will not I cannot but speake of it What an vnseemely thing was it when the last Lords day after the celebration of that holy sacrament of Baptisme which seeing the opportunitie was giuen might well haue beene celebrated after the Sermon but what an vnseemely thing I say was it to see so many then turne their backs and goe their waies some vpon that occasion and others therein keeping their wonted manner But take heede men and brethren how yee despise the word and turne your backs vpon it For howsoeuer now yee turne your backs vpon it Joh. 12.48 yet shall it iudge you in the last day If there be a fault in any of you studie to amend it and let the word of Christ dwell in you all plenteously and in all wisdome Rom. 1.16 For it is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth Receiue the Ministers of Christ in the Lord and harken vnto their message for the Lord. For though they be men that come vnto you yet are they men sent from the Lord and their words are to be heard not as the word of man but as it is indeede as the word of God Happy are yee if yee heare these things and meditate thereupon with fruit vnto your soules Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it LECTVRE XLVII PHILIP 2. Verse 29. Receiue him therefore in the Lord with all gladnes and make much of such 30. Because that for the worke of Christ he was c. WIth all gladnesse This is the second manner of entertainment that the Apostle would haue giuen vnto Epaphroditus their Minister at his returne vnto them He would haue them to receiue him in the Lord and to receiue him with all gladnes that is with such gladnes as that both all should reioyce at his comming and that with an exceeding great ioy so that he would haue both their ioy to be vniuersall that all should reioyce for him as he had longed for them all and againe no ordinarie ioy but an exceeding great ioy as the same words are very well translated Iam. 1.2 What such ioy so vniuersall ioy so exceeding great ioy for their Ministers returning home in health vnto them Was Epaphroditus their Minister Was their Minister thus to be receiued Indeede this would make a man to doubt as the world goes now whether Epaphroditus were their Minister Enough for a noble man a great man one of the Peeres o● the Realme thus to be receiued A Minister thus to be receiued it is a scorne a meere iest Well let it seeme vnto th● world as it will a scorne and a iest the Apostle here we see would haue them thus to receiue their Minister and the Ministers of the Gospell are thus to be receiued euen with a● gladnesse so that all their people should reioyce and tha● with exceeding great ioy for them Esay 52.7 O how beautifull vpon the mountaines are the feete of him that declareth and publisheth peace saith the Prophet that declareth good tidings and publisheth saluation saying vnto Zion thy God reigneth Now of whom speaketh the Prophet this The Apostle plainely applieth this vnto the Ministers of the Gospell of Iesus Christ Ro. 10.15 They are they that declare and publish our peace and our reconciliation with God the Father by Iesus Christ his Sonne they are they that declare the good tidings of the full and free remission of our sinnes by the death and passion of Iesus Christ they are they that publish saluation vnto euery one that calleth vpon the name of the Lord departeth from iniquitie How beautifull then should their feete be vnto vs When they come vnto vs or when the Lord rather sendeth them vnto vs with what gladnesse should wee receiue them Surely I will tell you Consider that place yet a litle further The Prophet there speaketh first and primarily of the deliuerance of the children of Israel out of the captiuitie of Babylon and of them that should bring the message and gladd tydings therof With what gladnes then may we thinke would the children of Israell when they were in the land of their captiuitie receiue them that would bring them good tydings of their deliuerance out of captiuitie and returne vnto their countrie and ancient libertie Would not all of them receiue them with great gladnesse Would not all of them receiue them with exceding and vnfained ioy and reioycing With what gladnesse then should we receiue the Ministers of the Gospell of Christ Iesus who bring vnto vs most ioyfull tidings of a most blessed deliuerance out of the most wofull thrall and captiuitie that euer was euen out of the most tyrannicall captiuitie of sinne death and the deuill Surely we should receiue them with an vniuersall ioy we should receiue them with an exceeding great ioy we should all of vs be glad euen in our very soules for them euery way that we could we should testifie this our gladnes for them A good shew of such gladnesse many of the Iewes then gaue when Christ riding into Ierusalem on an Asse they spred their garments in the way and cut downe branches from the trees and strawed them in the way and cryed through the streets of Ierusalem and said Hosanna the sonne of Dauid Mat. 21.8.9 blessed be he that commeth in the name of the Lord Hosanna thou which art in the highest heauens Here were tokens as of great honor done vnto him so of great gladnesse for him that was the high Priest of our profession And the Euangelist S. Luke storying the same thing saith that the whole multitude of the Disciples reioyced Luk. 19.37.38 and praised God with a loude voice saying blessed be the King that commeth in the name of the Lord peace in heauen and glory in the highest places The whole multitude reioyced and that with no small ioy when they lift vp their voices and said Blessed be he c. So we read that when Philip came to Samaria Act. 8.5.6.8 preached Christ vnto them the people gaue heede vnto those things which Philip spake with one accord hearing and seeing the miracles which he did and it is said that there was great ioy in that Citie They heard Philip when he preached Christ vnto them they gaue heede to the things he spake and that with one accord and vpon this there was great ioy in that Citie So we read that when the Apostles passed through Phanics and Samaria Act. 15.3 declaring the conuersion of the Gentiles and no doubt strengthning the brethren also in the faith wherein they stood it is said that they brought great ioy vnto all the brethren no ordinarie ioy but a great ioy not vnto a small
our owne as for their wealth in good sort and things necessarie to this life so for their health and therefore auoide such occasions as whereby wee might bring their health in danger Againe we haue many examples in the holy Scriptures of that great Eliah of our Sauiour Christ Iesus of the blessed Apostles and of many others that did for the time auoide such dangers as otherwise would haue ouertaken them and did not alwaies thinke it meete to hazard themselues in euery occurrent danger Which reason I doe the rather in this place bring because if they might then much more priuate men sometimes may for the time withdraw themselues from danger Now if here it be obiected and said that auoiding of sicknesse and other dangers is an argument of distrust in God and therefore we may not withdraw our selues in such times I answer that it is no sure argument The wicked indeede withdraw themselues in such times of danger because they distrust in God and thinke that God either cannot or will not helpe them and deliuer them from the danger and such auoiding of sicknesse or other danger is wicked and vngodly The children of God therefore withdraw themselues because they know that it is lawfull to vse such remedies against dangers as are lawfull and good and such auoiding is lawfull Againe if it be said that to auoid at such times is to no purpose because God hath certainly decreed whom to take and whom to leaue at such times and none but they alone shall die I answer that in like sort it may be said that it was to no purpose for Iacob to send into Egypt to buy corne Gen. because God had certainly decreed to saue him and his familie from the famine Act. 27. and likewise to no purpose that Paul should keepe the mariners from flying out of the ship by boat lest all should perish because God had decreed to saue all them that sailed with them And yet wee see that both Iacob sent into Egypt and Paul caused the souldiers to cut off the ropes of the boat both vsing such meanes as God had ordained whereby to bring his will to passe and therein leauing vs an ensample to doe the same Againe if it be said that it is a scandall so to withdraw our selues I answer that it is a scandall taken not giuen Againe if it be said that whereas wee should loue our neighbours as our selues thus wee doe forsake them and so leaue the rule of loue and charitie I answer that to leaue them for a time when there are either some of their friends or some others prouided for the nonce to looke vnto them is not to forsake them neither is against the rule of loue and charitie Nay it were very preposterous loue and charitie so to be deuoted vnto this or that priuate friend as by that occasion to bring in danger a whole familie or charge whatsoeuer committed vnto them Neither doe I know any thing which can be brought to crosse that which hath beene said touching priuate mens auoiding of dangers which may not as easily be answered Now touching publike men Magistrates and Ministers the doubt is somewhat more difficult To instance in Ministers to shew mine opinion in briefe in my iudgement the Ministers are first and principally to looke vnto the good of the whole Church and then vnto the good of euery particular member thereof If there bee many Ministers of one Church some one by lot or common consent may be deputed to regard the sicke and the rest may auoid the danger But if there be but one he is so to be carefull for the sicke as that the rest of the Church may not be depriued of his ministerie Hee may and must comfort the sicke and goe vnto them in such sort and so neere as hee well can without danger and againe he may and must auoid manifest danger for the good of the rest of the Church so much as he can without impietie Neither may too much feare withdraw him too much from danger neither through too much boldnesse may hee thrust himselfe too much into danger for by too much feare hee is more slow to the worke of Christ then he should be and by too much boldnesse he more endangereth both himselfe and the Church then hee should To conclude the whole point therefore howsoeuer it be most true that it is a very commendable thing in the seruants of Iesus Christ to hazzard their liues as Epaphroditus did for the worke of Christ yet sometimes both priuate and also publike men may withdraw themselues from danger in such sort as already hath beene shewed Another particular obseruation hence I gather which is this that releeuing them that are in bonds and in prison and ministring vnto the necessities of Gods Saints vpon earth is a worke of Christ for so the Apostle in this place as wee see calleth it It is I say a worke of Christ such a one as hee commandeth Heb. 13.3 and loueth and rewardeth Remember them that are in bonds saith the holy Ghost by the Apostle as though yee were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if yee were also afflicted in the body 1 Tim. 6.16 And to Timothy the Apostle saith Charge them that are rich in the world that they be ready to giue and glad to distribute laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation c. Againe how the holy Ghost loueth this worke may appeare by that of Paul 2 Tim. 1.16 where he saith The Lord giue mercy vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed mee and was not ashamed of my chaine c. and by that where the Apostle saith Heb. 13.16 To doe good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifices God is pleased Againe how Christ rewardeth this worke wee see in the Gospell where setting the sentence of the last iudgement he saith Mat. 25.34 Come yee blessed of my Father c. Contrariwise how the Lord hateth the neglect of this dutie of ministring vnto the necessities of his poore Saints on earth wee may see both by the example of that churlish Nabal of whose badnesse this is especially registred as most hatefull vnto the Lord 1 Sa. 25.10 that he would not releeue the necessitie of Dauid being in distresse but sent away his seruants with crooked and churlish answers and likewise by the example of the rich man in the Gospell of whom likewise this is especially registred as most hatefull vnto the Lord Luk. 16.19 that when Lazarus lay at his gate full of sores and desired to be refreshed with the crummes that fell from the rich mans table the dogges came vnto him and did more for him then the rich man would doe and likewise by the testimonie of Iohn where hee saith Whosoeuer hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue need 1 Ioh. 3.17 and shutteth vp his compassion from him how
that which we commonly say a good tale may be twice or thrice told is most true in this worke of the Minister where that can neuer be too much taught which can neuer be too well learned And as we haue our Apostle Paul for a notable example herein to imitate so haue we Mos●s and the Prophets and other of the Apostles likewise In Moses the Passeouer the heauenly Manna the Rocke in the wildernesse the brasen serpent those manifold ceremonies and sacrifices of the law what were they else but so many repetitions as it were and ingemminations of one and the same lesson to bee learned by the Iewes touching Christ Iesus that lambe of God whom alone they did all prefigure looke likewise into all the Prophets and see what all of them say in all their prophecies and what each of them say in their seuerall prophecies Doe not all the Prophets in all their prophecies beat wonderfully much vpon these two points the cursed idolatrie of the Iewes and their vaine confidence in man and in the arme of flesh And doe not each of them in their seuerall prophecies Esay in his prophecie Ieremie in his prophecie c. very often and much beare vpon these very points vrging them and pressing them sometimes by threatnings and sometimes by promises as if they would neuer giue ouer till they should beate the consideration of these things into their braines I haue protested saith the Lord by his Prophet vnto your fathers when I brought them vp out of the land of Egipt vnto this day I●r 11.7.8 rising earely and protesting saying obey my voice neuerthelesse they would not obey nor incline their eare c. 35.15 And againe by the same Prophet hee saith I haue sent vnto you all my seruants the Prophets rising vp earely and sending them saying returne now euery man from his euill way and amend your workes and goe not after other Gods to serue them and yee shall dwell in the land which I haue giuen vnto you and to your fathers but yee would not incline your eare nor obey me Whereby it doth appeare that all the Lord his seruants euen all his Prophets were sent alwaies almost with one lesson vnto the rebellious people of the Iewes So likewise the Apostle Peter Though saith he yee haue knowledge 2 Pet. 1.12 and be stablished in the present truth he meaneth the truth which he then presently deliuered vnto them yet saith he I will not be negligent to put you alwaies in remembrance of these things he meaneth the same things whereof then he put them in minde Whereby he signifieth that men euen well grounded and well stablished in the truth cannot bee too often told and too much put in minde of such things as are good and profitable for their vse and instruction Haue we such patternes as Moses and the Prophets and the Apostles for imitation in this point Let vs then when we fall vpon a point good and profitable for them that heare vs let vs I say presse it and beate vpon it let vs come to it againe and againe and let vs not giue it ouer till we haue made if it be possible some impression of it Yea but this will be too too tedious and wearisome vnto our auditorie so often to be plodding vpon one thing so much to be pressing the same thing be it neuer so good They must be delighted with variety and great diuersitie of matter or else they will be quickly weary in hearing of vs. Here it is indeede so dainty are the eares of our auditorie that they cannot away with it to heare the same things so often They must haue nouelties they must haue varietie of matter though when they haue heard they cannot make any account of that they haue heard Yea to such daintinesse is our auditorie growne Num. 11.5 that if we feede them onely with Manna onely with the holy word of life the heauenly foode of our soules they will quickly grow to loath it Num. 11.6 and to long and greedily to lust after such fish and flesh as they were wont to haue euen in Egipt nay if they may haue but cucumbers and pepons and leekes and onyons and garlike such as they had in Egipt they had rather haue it then still to feede vpon this dry Manna So irkesome are the same things vnto our auditorie be they neuer so good and so desirous are they to heare diuers things though nothing so good and profitable vnto them In regard therefore of them we must not so often speake of the same things because they like it not as not either needfull or not profitable for them Heare then I beseech you what our holy Apostle saith for your instruction in this point For you saith he it is a sure thing a safe and good course for you that yee be often told of the same things See then the odds betweene your conceit and the Apostle his resolution To heare often of the same things is a tedious thing to you but the Apostle thinketh it a very sure and safe thing for you You must allwaies haue variety and that yee thinke best for you but the Apostle thinketh it good for you to be often put in minde of the same things The reasons why it is good for you often to heare the same things are these 1. By hearing the same things often your dull and vnexpert vnderstandings are much holpen For thus the things which happily at the first seemed hard to be vnderstood and which you were not able to comprehend and conceiue do afterwards become plaine and easie vnto you And this is the reason why sometimes we do so long stand a teaching the same lesson vnto them that are yong cholers in the doctrine of faith and inexpert in the word of righteousnesse 2 By hearing the same things often you are stirred vp both vnto greater carefullnesse and likewise vnto greater warinesse then otherwise happily yee would For if the things be such as you should learne and follow after yee ●ill quickly see that they much concerne you because they are so often beaten vpon and therefore yee will be carefull to lay them vp in your hearts and to practise them in your liues And this was the reason why the Apostle Peter was so diligent to put them vnto whom he wrote in minde of the ●●me thi●●s euen that the more diligent they saw him to put them in minde of the same things they might be the more carefull to harken to those things whereof he so often put them in minde Againe if the things be such as you should beware and auoide this often speaking of them will make you the more warie of them because yee will easily coniecture that surely the danger is great when the caueats are so often and so carefully giuen And this was the reason why our Apostle first when he was with them by word of mouth and now againe by writing ceased not to
better vpon vs that wee subdue not the flesh vnto the spirit that we serue sinne and giue not our members seruants vnto righteousnesse in holinesse it is a plaine argument of the want of faith in vs. And therefore our Sauiour made it an argument against Iudas that hee beleeued not because he would betray him Ioh. 6.64 But there are some of you saith our Sauiour that beleeue not For saith the Euangelist Iesus knew from the beginning who they were that beleeued not and who should betray him Where the argument is that Iudas had a traiterous heart therefore he beleeued not In like manner let vs make the argument against our selues Our hearts are sett on mischiefe we drinke iniquitie like water wee die not vnto sinne but wee suffer sinne to raigne in our mortall bodies wee liue not vnto God in righteousnesse but wee giue our members seruants vnto vnrighteousnesse wee feele no vertue at all of Christ his death or resurrection in our selues therefore we beleeue not The conclusion is hard but if it bee altered the premisses must be altered Let vs cease to doe euill and learne to doe well let vs die vnto sinne and liue vnto God let vs mortifie our earthly members and be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse and then shall wee haue a good testimonie vnto our selues of our righteousnesse by faith In a word iustification which is by faith and regeneration which is by the spirit killing our old man and quickening our new man are so linked the one with the other as that they are affirmed and denied both together For if we be iustified by faith then are we regenerate by the spirit and if wee be regenerate by the spirit then are we iustified by faith And againe vnlesse wee be iustified by faith wee are not regenerate by the spirit and vnlesse we be regenerated by the spirit we are not iustified by faith As therefore we desire to haue our iustification by faith sealed vnto our soules so let vs desire to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection by dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God in righteousnesse and true holines It followeth And the fellowshippe of his afflictions c. This is the next vantage which the Apostle reckons vpon by renouncing all his owne workes as losse and dung and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus the knowledge in himselfe of Christ his afflictions euen such as he did suffer in the daies of his flesh and such as he doth daily suffer in his members And the reason he addeth why he would know in himselfe the fellowship of Christ his afflictions namely so to be made conformable vnto Christ his death It is then as if the Apostle should haue said I make no reckoning of mine owne righteousnesse by workes but my desire is that being iustified by the righteousnesse of Christ through faith in such afflictions as Christ suffered in his owne person for the glory of God and the good of his Church and such as still hee suffereth in his members for his owne glory the good of his Church I may haue fellowship and bee partakers with them because I desire to be made comformable vnto Christ his death i. like vnto Christ who is dead and through many afflictions is entred into his kingdome What then did the Apostle desire outward afflictions in his body yea hee counted it a great vantage to suffer afflictions such as Christ had suffred in his own person and such as hee did suffer in his members for the glory of Christ and the good of his Church Hence then I obserue that affliction and trouble for Christ his sake and the good of his Church should not seeme grieuous vnto God his children but rather they should count it a vantage vnto them to be afflicted for his sake Thus the holy Ghost almost euery where teacheth vs. Mat. 5.12 Reioyce saith our Sauiour and be glad when men reuile you and persecute you and speake all manner of euill sayings against you for my sake falsly And the Apostle Iames Iam. 1.2 Count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into tentations i. afflictions and tribulations whereby ye are tempted And the Apostle Peter Thinke it not strange concerning the fiery triall 1 Pet. 4.13 which is among you to proue you but reioyce inasmuch as you are partakers of Christ his sufferings c. And lest the holy Ghost should seeme without all reason to will vs to reioyce in afflictions and to count them vantage vnto vs hee hath set do●ne many reasons why afflictions should not daunt vs or seeme grieuous but rather ioyous vnto vs. As 1. affliction hath been alwaies the lot of Gods children It beganne we see euen with Abell Gen. 4 8. whom his brother Caine slew Iacob and Ioseph the children of Israell Dauid Iob the Prophets the Apostles of Christ what afflictions suffered they Reioyce saith our Sauiour when they persecute you for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you yea such persecutions and affliction● both Patriarches and Prophets and Apostles and all the holy men of God haue suffered 2. Afflictions are profitable instruments which God vseth thereby to draw vs to the obedience of his will Hos 5.15 For so saith the Lord by his Prophet In their affliction they will seeke mee diligently Ier. 31.18 So saith Ieremy that before the Lord corrected and chastised him by afflictions he was a● vntamed calfe Ps 119.67 71. And Dauid before I was afflicted I went wrong but now I keepe thy word And againe it is good for mee that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes 3. Afflictions are a token of Gods loue and fauour towards vs. For as the Apostle saith Heb. 12.6 Whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne that he receiueth Sometimes we wander astray out of the right way wherein we should walke and then as a good shepheard he sends his dog after vs to pinch vs and to ranke vs in our right order againe 4. Afflictions make w● like vnto Christ as both the Apostle sheweth here and in the Epistle to the Romanes Rom. 8.29 for as Esay had prophecied of him so he was full of sorowes he wanted no sorowes but he was full of sorowes 5. The afflictions of Gods children they are Christ his afflictions whereinsoeuer they suffer hee suffereth ●th them And therefore when Saul persecuted them that ●lled vpon his name he called vnto him from heauen say●ng Saul Saul why persecutest thou me because he persecuted ●is children he counted that he persecuted him 6. It pleaseth ●he Lord through afflictions to bring his children vnto the ●ingdome For it is ordained that through many afflictions ●e should enter the kingdome No chastising Heb. 12.11 saith the Apo●tle for the present seemeth to be ioyous but grieuous but afterward 〈◊〉 bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse vnto them which are ●ereby
The 3. cause of the dissensions in the Church of God is because we doe not all minde one thing For such oftentimes ●s our waywardnesse that when in the substance of the doctrine we agree with the Church yet will we picke a quarrell either at the Professors of the truth or at some ceremonie or at some defect in the discipline of the Church whereby we will make a schisme in the Church What a stirre made Corah Dathan and Abiram in the congregation of Israell And whence was it They could not abide Moses and Aaron but tooke exceptions against them saying Num. 16.3 Yee take too much vpon you seeing al the congregation is holy euery one of them and the Lord is among them wherefore then lift ye vp your selues aboue the congregation of the Lord What contentions likewise were there in the Church of Corinth and how did they one swell against another 1 Cor. 1.12.11.4.21 And whence was it One held of Paul another of Apollos another of Cephas another of Christ one would pray and prophecie bare-headed another with his head couered and when they came vnto the Lords supper one was hungrie and another was drunken This distraction in minde and iudgement bredde among them so great dissensions as that it may seeme to haue beene one speciall cause why the Apostle wrote the former Epistle to the Corinthians euen to represse their dissensions caused by their distractions in minde and i● iudgement And this at this day is the cause why the Brownists and Baroists separate themselues from our assemblies and making a schisme and diuision will not present themselues in our congregations They doe not charge vs with corruption of doctrine but because of some things in some ceremonies and in our outward discipline they cannot they say be of one minde with vs and therefore they breake out from vs. Thus ye see what the causes of the dissensions in the Church of God are at least such as this place of Scripture seemeth vnto mee to point at The 1. because in things that are not yet reuealed vnto vs we doe not with patience expect and waite till God in his good time reueale vnto vs that truth which as yet is hidde from our eyes The 2. because in things that are reuealed vnto vs we do not proceed by that one ru●e of his word vnder whose banner we fight but fling out some of vs vnto traditions decretals constitutions legends and the like The 3. because we doe not minde one thing but are too readie to fall at oddes and through contention to make a schisme and to rent the seamlesse coate of Christ The 2. thing which hence I note is touching the remedies of the dissensions in the Church of God at least of such dissensions as spring from these causes before mentioned The ●medies according to the number of the causes are three ●●h sore requiring a salue and each cause of dissension stan●ng in neede of a remedy against it The 1. remedie against ●●●sensions caused by not waiting till God reueale things not 〈◊〉 reuealed is when any truth is not yet reuealed vnto vs ●●h patience to waite till God in his good time reueale his ●●ly truth vnto vs. For this we know that he who praied thus to his Father Sanctifie them with thy truth thy word is truth Ioh. 17.17 ●d was heard in the things which he praid for will reueale 〈◊〉 truth vnto vs so farre as shall be necessarie for vs. But in the ●●an time either we should so speak of the things that are not ●●ealed vnto vs as submiting that we speake vnto the iudge●ent of the Prophets as the Apostle willeth 1 Cor. 14.32 or else we should ●ld our peace and hearken vnto him vnto whom God hath ●ealed his truth as the same Apostle willeth in the same ●ace saying If any thing be reuealed to another that sitteth by 30. 〈◊〉 the first hold his peace A rule to the practise whereof the ●postle seemeth vnto me to exhort where he saith Rom. 12.3 Let no man ●esume to vnderstand aboue that which is meete to vnderstand but 〈◊〉 him vnderstand according to sobrietie as God hath dealt to eue● man the measure of faith For he which will seeme to vnder●and before it be reuealed vnto him how doth he vnderstand ●●cording to sobrietie how doth hee not vnderstand aboue ●●at which is meete to vnderstand But the Apostle would ●aue euery man to vnderstand according to sobrietie and no ●an to vnderstand aboue that which is meete to vnderstand ●nd consequently would haue all men with patience to waite ●ll God shall reueale that vnto them which as yet is hid from ●heir eyes In the practise of which rule if wee would bee as ●arefull as we are skilfull in the knowledge of it many of vs ●he Church should be freed from dissensions wherewith it is ●roubled As many of vs therefore as loue the peace of Sion ●n the things that are not yet reuealed vnto vs let vs with pa●ience expect till God in his good time reueale them vnto vs ●nd in the meane time let vs either submit that we speake vn●o ●he iudgement of the Prophets or else let vs hold our peace hearken vnto them vnto whom God hath reuealed his truth The second remedie against dissensions caused by not proceeding by one rule in the things reuealed is in the things that are reuealed and generally agreed vpon amongst vs to proceed by one rule euen that one rule which God hath prescribed vs in his word and not to decline from that either to the right hand or to the left Gal. 6.16 For as the Apostle saith as may as walke according to this rule peace shall be vpon them and mercy and vpon the Israel of God Whence it is cleere that so we ha●e peace both with God and amongst our selues if wee walke according to the rule set downe by the Prophets and Apostles For that is the rule which hee speakes of and whereof hee had said before 1.9 If any man preach vnto you otherwise then that ye ha●● receiued let him be accursed So that as the Lord commanded Iosua Ios 1.7 we may not depart or turne away from it to the right h●●● or to the left To this purpose also is that of our Apostle where he saith Rom. 16.17 I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences contrary to the doctrine that ye haue learned In which place the Apostle would haue the Romans constantly to hold fast that doctrine which they had learned signifying withall that they should not want those that would labour to cause diuision and offences amongst them But thus they should auoid them if they would continue in the things that they had learned Whence it appeareth that it is a notable way to auoid diuisions and dissensions to beleeue and liue after the rule of the word By which rule if our aduersaries would haue
shall most vndoubtedly be so many witnesses against vs to the encreasing of our iust condemnation Thus much of this note The 2. thing which I note is from the person of him that exhorted the Philippians which was Paul their Apostle who had taught them the truth in Christ Iesus and had wa●ked in all holy conuersation amongst them Whence I obserue that the Ministers of Christ are not onely to teach the truth of Christ Iesus with vncorrupt doctrine with grauitie integrity and with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued but withall to be such examples vnto their flockes as that they may say with the Apostle Be ye followers of me and of such 〈◊〉 walke so as ye haue me for an example This our Apostle required of Timothie 1. Tim. 4.12 where he said vnto him Let no man despise thy youth but be vnto them that beleeue an ensample in word in conuersation in loue in spirit in faith and in purenesse And likewise of Titus where he said Tit. 2.7.8 aboue all things shew thy selfe an ensample of good workes with vncorrupt doctrine with grauitie integr●●● and with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued that hee which withstandeth may be ashamed hauing nothing concerning yo● to speake euill of And that which the Apostle required of Ti●othy and Titus and in them of all the Ministers of Christ ●●at the Apostle requireth of all where he saith 1 Pet. 5.2.3 feed the flocke 〈◊〉 God which dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but ●illingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready minde not as though yee ●ere Lords ouer Gods heritage but that ye may be ensamples to the ●●●cke And this the very names giuen vnto them in the holy ●cripture requireth of them in that they are called a citie set 〈◊〉 a hill that is looked vnto farre and neere lights that must ●ine before men by good workes shepheards that must feed 〈◊〉 the word and by example guides that must direct by the ●holesome word of truth and by holinesse of life watchmen ●●at must not faile to giue warning both by doctrine and by ●fe c. Yea the diuersitie of the dispositions of their flock re●uireth this of them For though Lydia attend vnto the ●●ings which Paul speakes and hearing beleeueth though ●●me receiue instruction by hearing the holy word of life yet ●ust they generally be drawne on both by the wholesome ●ord and by example of an holy life or else they will profit ●ut little or nothing at all For so it is generally that the Mi●isters life and behauiour is regarded as much if not more as ●●is doctrine And doth not reason it selfe require that as the ●nowledge of Gods will is first reuealed vnto them and by ●heir ministerie vnto the people so they should bee the first ●nd most forward in the execution of euery Christian duty 〈◊〉 the end that it may appeare that they teach others no ●ourse of life but that which they themselues do with all care●●lnesse walke in yes surely both precept and the names ●iuen vnto them and the nature of them that are to be instru●ted and reason it selfe requireth this of Christ his Ministers ●hat they feed the flocke of God which dependeth on them ●oth by the holy word of truth and likewise by holy exam●le of life And doing thus their example of life of all o●hers that liue with vs ought to be followed The sheepe of ●ll others ought to heare their Pastors voice and they that are ●o be led in the way are to follow of all others them that are ●ppointed to be their Guides when their shepheards their Guides shine as holy lights before them and hold out the word of life vnto them Exception I know will easily be taken and I wi●h it might not iustly be taken but it will bee excepted and said that if Ministers were such as now we speake of yee would follo● them and walke as ye had them for an ensample But how few such Ministers be there How many bee there that are both wicked in life and vnable to teach How many be there of those that doe teach that though they can speake smoothly and finely as they thinke yet do more hurt by their lewd and wicked example of life in one yeare then their doctrine 〈◊〉 doe good in their whole life True it is the complaint is too iust of too many and better it had beene they had beene stifled in their cradles then thus they should haue opened men● mouthes against them to the scandall of their calling For though they shall say in that day Lord Lord haue wee not prophecied in thy name for I let the lewd and vnlearned beasts go and leaue them to their iudgement that runne before they be sent though I say they shall say in that day Lord Lord haue we not prophecied and preached in thy name y●● shall it be said vnto them Mat. 7.23 I neuer knew you depart from me ye● that worke iniquitie Whatsoeuer they preached if they wrought iniquitie they shall not be able to stand in the iudgement nor in the congregation of the righteous But beloued it standeth you vpon to looke vnto it ho● iust your exception is against his life whose doctrine is sound For oftentimes the Ministers of Christ which teach the truth purely are charged to offend in example of life when as in truth their life is no way to bee reproued But admit that his life be not answerable to his teaching this should be no reason for thee to giue lesse credit or obedience to the doctrine of truth which he deliuereth For our Sauiour hath taught thee to hearken vnto him if he sit in Moses seate Mat. 23.3 and to doe as he saith though thou may not doe as he doth if hee say well and doe not accordingly It is his doctrine not his life that thou must looke vnto O but thou wilt say why should I beleeue him or doe as he saith when he doth cleane contrarie himselfe surely that which he saith is but for fashions sake he knoweth some neerer way to heauen then he tels vs of else he would neuer doe cleane contrary and therefore th●● ●ilt venture aswell as he and doe as he doth how bad soeuer 〈◊〉 be Well dally as thou list in a matter of no dalliance If ●hen he saith well and doth ill thou care not what he say but ●o as he doth thy bloud shall be required at his hands but ●●ou shalt die in thy sinnes and see thou what thou hast gai●ed by thy dalliance I wish indeed that no such exception ●●uld iustly be taken against the doctrine or life of any in the ●inisterie For certainely such as both by the wholesome ●ord and by an holy life preach vnto the people be the holy Ministers whose labours are found fruitfull But if their life 〈◊〉 not agreeable to their teaching doe ye take heed how ye ●eglect the word of saluation
touching iustification and touching sanctification because of the false teachers which vrged the circumcision of the flesh and iustification by workes and told them that they knew Christ well enough And therfore first he exhorteth them to beware of such false teachers secondly he instructeth them in the true circumcision of the Spirit thirdly he tels them what he in his owne person thought of his owne workes and of all the priuiledges that he had without Christ what he thought of the righteousnes of Christ through faith what he thought of his knowledge of Christ and how he laboured still after further knowledge of Christ and further perfection then as yet he had attained vnto fourthly he exhorteth them to be of the same mind with him in these things and all to proceed by one rule of the word fiftly and lastly he exhorteth them to follow him and such as he is for that those other deceiuers that were amongst them were both enemies to the truth and had earthly minds onely but he and such as walked as he did had their conuersation in heauen from whence they looked for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who should change their vile bodie c. Now the Apostle in this Chapter concludeth his Epistle with certain exhortations with signification of his ioy in the Lord for their liberalitie sent vnto him in prison by their minister Epaphroditus and with diuers salutations to them and from himselfe and them that were with him His exhortations are some of them generall and some of them particular as we shall see in the handling of the former part of this chapter His first exhortation in the first verse ye see is generall wherein he exhorteth the Philippians in generall vnto perseuerance in the faith of Christ Iesus and the practise of an holy life as they haue bene taught and as hitherto they had done His second exhortation in the second verse is particular wherein he exhorteth two chiefe women amongst them as it may seeme to vnitie and concord either betwixt thēselues or betwixt them and the Church at Philippi In the first generall exhortation I note first the maner how the Apostle comes vnto his exhortation secondly the kind and louing termes wherein he speaketh vnto the Philippians before his exhortation thirdly the exhortation it selfe Touching the maner how the Apostle comes vnto his exhortation it is by way of conclusion vpon that which before he had said Therefore my brethren c. so continue c. And it is as if he had said Seeing those of the concision among you which vrge circumcision and iustification by workes are such euill workers as ye haue heard and seeing our conuersation is in heauen from whence we looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change c. therefore continue ye in the Lord so as ye haue done and as I haue now taught you to do by example in mine owne person and suffer not your selues to be seduced by them that are enemies to the crosse of Christ whose end is c. Thus the Apostle by way of conclusion from that which he had said before inferreth this generall exhortation vnto perseuerance and continuance in the Lord. Now touching the kinde and louing termes wherein hee speakes vnto the Philippians ye see he calls them his brethren beloued and longed for his ioy and his crowne In that he saith vnto them My brethren beloued and longed for he sheweth his owne kind affection towards them and in that he addeth my ioy and my crowne he signifieth their pietie wherein he was comforted To haue said vnto them onely my brethren as in the beginning of the third Chapter or only my beloued as Chap. 2. ver 12. had betokened abundantly his affection towards them but in that as not content with the one or both he addeth also a third argument of loue he thereby plainly sheweth what a large roome they had in his heart He calleth them his brethren in Christ as begotten by one Spirit vnto one God in one faith through one Gospell of Christ Iesus He calleth them his beloued in the best bond of loue the vnitie of the Spirit through the embracing of the same truth of Christ Iesus And for that he saith that he longed for them he shewed it in 1. Chap. where he saith that he longed after them all from the very heart roote in Christ Iesus Phil. 1.8 which was no doubt to strengthen them and to bestow vpon them some spirituall comfort because of those false teachers that troubled them How could he more shew a kind and louing affection towards them And as by these he shewes his affection towards them so by those titles that follow he shewes again on the other side their great pietie and godlinesse For therefore doth he call them his ioy because of their fellowship as himselfe speaketh which they had in the Gospell with other Churches 1.5 from the first day that they had receiued the Gospell vnto that present which was a sufficient matter of his reioycing and therefore doth he call them his crowne because their constancie and perseuerance was now his glorie among other Churches and should be the crowne of his reioycing in the day of Christ The speech is borrowed from them that for matters well atchieued in running wrestling or the like receiue a crowne of glorie And it argueth their great profite by his labours for which he should receiue a crowne Thus ye see what these kind termes import and in what sence the Apostle giueth them vnto the Philippians The third thing which I noted was the exhortation it self which is to continue in the Lord So continue in the Lord ye beloued The words precisely are So stand in the Lord but the sence is very truly giuen when it is said So continue in the Lord. For to stand in grace in faith in the Spirit in the Lord is vsually in the new Testament to continue in grace in faith in the Spirit Rom. 5.2 in the Lord. By Christ saith the Apostle we haue accesse through faith vnto this grace wherein we stand that is wherein we continue 1. Cor. 16.13 Phil. 1.27 Stand in the faith saith he in another place that is continue in the faith Let your conuersation be saith he in the first chapter of this Epistle as it becometh the Gospell of Christ that I may heare of your matters that ye stand in one spirit that is that ye continue in one spirit And to the Thessalonians 1. Thess 3.8 Now saith the Apostle are we aliue if ye stand in the Lord that is if ye continue in the Lord. So in this place so stand in the Lord that is so continue as they that keepe their standing without shrinking fainting sliding or starting aside For the speech is borrowed from them that stand vpon thei● guard or watch or in their ranke wherein they are set Now wherein would he haue them to stand and continue
say Our Father which art in heauen touching whom we doubt whether God be their Father How can we communicate in the Lords Supper with them of whom we doubt whether they be ioyned with vs in the same communion of Saints How can we liue with them as with our brethren and beloued if we doubt whether they be within the same couenant of grace with vs A shallow peace and a shadow of loue and a semblance of Christianitie there may be but such as vnder a colour onely deceiueth and hath no soundnesse in it It is this perswasion of our owne minds touching our brethren that they are in one couenant of grace with vs that they are members of the same mysticall bodie of Christ Iesus with vs that they are heires of the same saluation with vs that through one God one faith one baptisme one Gospell of Christ Iesus they and we shall reigne together in one kingdome it is this I say that linkes vs in the true bond of peace loue and Christianitie and either this must be or else that cannot be If then we desire to be knit together in the true bond of peace loue and Christianitie let vs so walke that we may be thus perswaded one of another As we are called to the knowledge of the truth so let vs walke in the truth and let vs keep fast the profession of our hope vnto the end Let vs follow the truth in loue and in all things grow vp into him which is the head that is Christ rooted built in him stablished in the faith Let our loue one towards another abound yet more more in all knowledge and in all iudgement Let vs haue our conuersation such as becometh the Saints of God and let vs prouide for things honest not onely before the Lord but also before men Thus shall we haue a sure seale vnto our soules thus shall we giue a good testimonie vnto others that we are the sonnes of God and thus shall we be knit together in one mind and in one iudgement that we may walke together in the house of God as friends My next obseruation hence is for the comfort of the Minister in particular The Apostle ye see vpon the faithfull labours of those that had laboured with him in the preaching of the Gospell at Philippi pronounceth that their names were in the booke of life Whence I obserue this for the comfort of the good Minister of the Gospell of Christ Iesus If he haue faithfully and painfully laboured in the worke of the Ministerie if he haue in all good conscience instructed and admonished his people and endeuoured to increase the kingdome of Christ Iesus his reward is with God and his life is as surely sealed vp with God as if his name were written in a booke to that purpose To which purpose is that also of the Apostle where he saith 1. Cor. 3.8.14 Euery man shall receiue wages according to his labour If any mans worke that he hath built vpon abide he shall receiue wages which wages the Apostle calleth elsewhere a crowne of righteousnesse 2. Tim. 4.8 which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall giue him at that day Yea but what if he labour all night and catch nothing What if he run in vaine and spend his strength in vaine and for nothing amongst his people Esa 49.4.5 Yet is his iudgement with the Lord and his worke with his God Though Israel be not gathered yet shall he be glorious in the eyes of the Lord and his God shall be his strength So that howsoeuer his labour be in vaine vnto them yet shal it not be in vaine in the Lord though they be not taught yet shall not he lose his reward For because he hath bene faithfull Mat. 25.21 he shall enter into his maisters ioy A good comfort after he haue borne the burden and heate of the day to receiue such a penie But what part of this comfort hath he that being set in the vineyard to dresse it neither hedgeth nor ditcheth nor gathereth out stones of it nor planteth nor watereth but standeth all the day idle in it No more then the watchman that giueth no warning Ezech. 3.18 Mat. 25.30 no more then he that diggeth his talent in the earth This comfort belongeth vnto him alone that laboureth Now see then men and brethren what this should teach you Is it so that the Lord rewardeth him that faithfully laboureth in the vineyard with euerlasting life but is angrie with him that loytereth euen vnto death Behold then what care the Lord hath ouer you what dutie ye owe vnto him again For wherefore doth he send out the laborers vnto you Wherfore doth he so reward the labors of them that labor faithfully amongst you admonish you Wherefore is he so angry with them that do not labour amongst you Is it not for your sakes that ye may be prepared an holy people vnto the Lord that ye may be instructed in righteousnesse vnto saluation and that no holy dutie may be neglected towards you Consider then with your selues what it is that the Lord looketh for from you grapes or wilde grapes It is iudgement and righteousnesse mercie and truth peace and loue integritie and holinesse that he lookes for and that he requires for such his louing kindnesse towards you for such his continuall care ouer you And if these things be amongst you and abound then blessed shall ye be of the Lord and ye shall eate of the fruite of your wayes But if he looke for iudgement and behold oppression for righteousnesse and behold a crying for mercie and behold crueltie for truth and behold falshood for peace and behold discord for loue and behold hatred for integritie and behold dissimulation and hypocrisie for holinesse and behold profanenesse and all kind of iniquitie then what remaineth but a remouing of our candlestick out of his place what but a fearefull looking for of iudgement wherein shall be indignation and wrath vnto them that disobey the truth and obey vnrighteousnesse Seeing therefore the Lord in his tender care ouer vs sendeth forth labourers vnto vs and so plentifully rewardeth their holy labours amongst vs let vs againe with all care consider what he requireth of vs for such his care ouer vs and in all obedience addresse our selues vnto that dutie His will is that we should hearken vnto the voice of them that come in his Name and he hath in nothing so much delight as when his word is obeyed His care ouer vs in sending his Ministers vnto vs early and late shal be repayed by vs with a good dutie towards him if we will hearken and obey Let vs therefore hearken and obey and so shall we reape vnto our selues a good reward For he that plentifully rewardeth him that laboureth amongst vs and admonisheth vs will also in like mercie reward vs if in vs the fruites of his labours grow vp in righteousnesse and true holinesse
Lord. Yea and what cause is there why we should reioyce in any thing but in the Lord Riches honour strength beauty and whatsoeuer else the world most esteemeth of what is it else but vanitie and vexation of the spirit Amongst other things most precious in the life of man wisedome is more to be sought after then gold and siluer and not to be weighed with precious stones righteousnes most commendeth man vnto man and holinesse most commendeth man vnto God And yet what is our wisedome what is our righteousnesse what is our holinesse that we should reioyce in them Be it that we haue the wisedome of Salomon be it that we be as righteous as Noah Daniel and Iob be it that we be as holie as Dauid the holie Prophets and Apostles yet for all this if we will come vnto God we must lay all these aside and Christ Iesus he must be our wisedome and righteousnes and holinesse Whatsoeuer our wisedome be it will not leade vs vnto God whatsoeuer our righteousnesse be it will not present vs righteous before God whatsoeuer our holinesse be we cannot stand in it in the iudgement before God Nay when we come vnto God we must renounce our wisedome as foolishnesse we must count our righteousnesse losse and dung we must abandon all conceit of holinesse as also we see our Apostle did who though he were of the kindred of Israel of the tribe of Beniamin an Ebrew of the Ebrews by profession a Pharisie as zealous of the tradition of his fathers as any and as vnrebukeable touching the righteousnes of the law as any yet when once he came to the knowledge of Christ he counted all these things as no vantage at all vnto him but losse and dung for Christ his sake For herein is our reioycing that Christ is made of God vnto vs wisedome 1. Cor. 1.30 and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption as it is written Nay to go yet further what are our faith hope and loue that we should reioyce in them To be strong in faith to be perfect in loue to be stedfast in hope are things for which we should pray alwayes with all maner prayer and supplication in the spirit But if we shall reioyce and repose our confidence in the strength of our faith in the perfection of our loue in the stedfastnesse of our hope then we are abolished from Christ and our reioycing is not good It is Christ Iesus in whom we must beleeue whom we must loue in whom we must hope Our faith must be built vpon him our loue must be grounded on him our hope must be stablished in him and in him we must reioyce Thus then we see that we haue not any thing to reioyce in without vs nor yet in our wisedome righteousnesse or holinesse nor yet in our faith hope or loue We must reioyce in the Lord and in him it well becometh the Saints to be ioyfull Let me therefore in the bowels of Christ Iesus beseech you to reioyce not as the world doth in the pleasures of sinne and the vanities of this life but to reioyce in the Lord the strong God of our saluation Ye see the exhortations of the holy Ghost and the examples of godly men and ye see what great cause we haue to reioyce in the Lord and how little cause we haue to reioyce in any thing else All reioycing in the world what is it in comparison of this reioycing in the Lord It is as the morning cloud or as the morning dew it vanisheth away or as it is in the place of Iob It is short and but a moment Nay in it onely is true ioy and sound reioycing Other ioyes may for a while please the outward sense but the ioy that quickens the heart and cheeres the soule is the ioy in the holy Ghost Other reioycing the more it is the worse it is but this the more it is the better it is and the more we do reioyce in the Lord the more cause we shall finde we haue to reioyce in the Lord. Reioyce therefore in the Lord alwayes and againe I say reioyce The second thing which I note in the Apostles exhortation is that he exhorts the Philippians to reioyce in the Lord not for a day or for a season not by fits or when he makes his face to shine on them but to reioyce in the Lord alwayes as well in aduersity as in prosperity Whence I obserue the constancie which is in Christian reioycing whereby it is knowne indeed to be Christian The constancy of our Christian reioycing is to reioyce in the Lord always as wel when he seemeth to hide away his face from vs as when he maketh his face to shine vpon vs. This constancie of reioycing the Apostle exhorteth the Thessalonians vnto where he saith vnto them Reioyce euermore 1. Thess 5.16 And herein is the triall of our ioy whether it be Christian indeed for as it is said of some hearers of the word Luke 8.13 that for a while they beleeue but in time of tentation they go away so may it also be said of some that seeme to reioyce in the Lord that for a while they seeme to reioyce in the Lord euen as long so he showreth downe the early and the latter raine vpon them but in time of persecution trouble and aduersitie they hang downe their heads and murmure against the Lord. It seemeth that Sathan thought that Iob would haue beene such an one as appeareth by these words where he saith vnto God Iob 1.10 Doth he feare God for nought And the same may be said of reioycing Hast thou not made an hedge about him and about his house and about all that he hath on euery side Thou hast blessed the works of his hands and his substance is increased in the Land 11. But stretch out now thy hand and touch all that he hath to see if he will not blaspheme thee to thy face But he was deceiued in Iob. Yet therein he bewrayed a disease wherewith many sonnes of men are much tainted which are neuer knowne what they are vntill the Lord send them some aduersitie for we see many that so long as they haue all things at their desire reioyce in the Lord who so much as they specially when their dishes are full furnished O then how well doth it like them to confesse that he is good gracious and bountifull But if the Lord begin to handle them somewhat roughly so that things fall not out to their contentment then their countenance is changed and they take the matter sore to heart And if he proceed and depriuing them of his blessings afflict them in body or in goods then they fal to murmure and oftentimes to blasphemies which blasphemies albeit some of them vtter not with their mouthes yet in their hearts repine they at the Lord for such his iudgements vpon them Now these in triall proue plainly to be hypocrites and by triall it
appeareth that their ioy is not Christian because it is not constant but ebbeth and floweth according to the ebbe and floud of aduersitie and prosperitie What shall we say then when the Lord afflicteth vs with pouertie sickenesse and the like crosses must we reioyce in the Lord Yea verily 1. Sam. 2.6.7 for it is the Lord that killeth and maketh aliue that woundeth and healeth that bringeth to the graue and raiseth vp that maketh poore and maketh rich that bringeth low and exalteth Amos 3.6 There is no euill in the Citie which the Lord hath not done No euill that is no crosse or affliction no plague or punishment which he sendeth not And whatsoeuer crosse or affliction it is vnto his children it is but either a probation that the triall of their faith being much more precious then gold that perisheth may be found to their praise and honour and glorie at the appearing of Iesus Christ such as was Iobs affliction or else it is a fatherly correction that being chastened of the Lord 2. Sam. 12.14 they may not be condemned with the world such as was the death of Dauids child for Dauids sin and such as was the weakenesse and sickenesse and death of many of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11 30. for eating and drinking vnworthily at the Lords Table Are then our crosses of pouertie sickenesse or whatsoeuer they be from God Then are they good and we are to reioyce in them For all things fall out for the best for those that loue and feare him Are they for the triall of our faith My brethren saith Iames James 1.2 count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into diuerse tentations and trialls c. Are they to correct and chastice vs If we endure chastening Hebr. 12.7 God offereth himselfe vnto vs as vnto sonnes for whom he loueth he chasteneth O but sometimes he shutteth vs euen vp in despaire and infidelitie how shall we then reioyce in the Lord I demand then Dost thou know it and lothe it and long to be brought againe into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God Thou hast good cause to reioyce in the Lord for he hath onely hid his face from thee for a while that he may haue mercie on thee for euer And what if thy faith or hope be but as a graine of Mustard seed what if being as it were couered vnder the ashes they seeme not to be Christ Iesus is most plentifull to helpe them that are most weake and he is all-sufficient to supply all wants If any seede of God be there in thy weakenesse he will perfite his praise Yea but in that our Sauiour pronounceth a blessing vpon them that mourne Matt. 5.4 it appeareth that we are not alwayes to reioyce Not so neyther for euen then when we sigh and mourne for the affliction we haue in the world we are to reioyce in the Lord and to be of good comfort in Christ Iesus because he hath ouercome the world euen then when we mourne through a sence of Gods iudgements we are to reioyce in his tender mercies that he deales not with vs after our deseruings euen then when we mourne in the body because of affliction we are to reioyce in our soules because of our strong consolation in Christ Iesus and because our light affliction in the body causeth vnto vs a far most excellent and an eternall weight of glorie And therefore our Sauiour in the same place where he saith Blessed are they that mourne exhorteth also to reioyce and be glad in persecution for that great is our reward in heauen Let this then teach vs to take heed how we murmure against the Lord for pouertie sickenesse or any crosse whatsoeuer They are from the Lord whatsoeuer they be and if we be his children they are onely eyther for the triall of our faith and patience that patience hauing her perfect worke we may be perfect and entire lacking nothing or else as a louing correction of a mercifull father that we may be reclaimed from the wickednesse of our wayes And if we do not now reioyce in the Lord when he seemeth thus to hide his face from vs certainly whatsoeuer shew we made before of reioycing in the Lord we plaied but the hypocrites Howsoeuer therefore looking vnto our selues vnto our sins vnto our infirmities vnto our afflictions vnto the world we may sigh and mourne yet let vs reioyce in the Lord. We are not bid to reioyce in our selues Nay in our selues we shal be sure to haue cause enough of mourning We must therefore go out of our selues vnto the Lord and we must reioyce in him We must looke vnto him and remember that he is good and therefore whatsoeuer he doth is good that he is Almightie aod therefore can raise vs out of the dust of death and set vs with the Princes of the earth that he is mercifull and therefore will not suffer the rod of the vngodly to rest on the lot of the righteous And againe we must remember that he was poore that we might be made rich in him that he was weake that we might be made strong in him that he was tempted that he might be able to succour them which are tempted What cause therefore soeuer of mourning there be in our selues let vs looke out of our selues and let vs reioyce in him alwayes If he blesse vs then we thinke and yeeld easily that we haue cause to reioyce in the Lord and if he crosse vs with any plague or trouble then we haue also cause to reioyce in him because it is for our good and his owne glorie Reioyce therefore in the Lord alwayes LECTVRE LXXIX PHILIP 4. Verse 4. Againe I say reioyce 5. Let your patient mind be knowne to all men The Lord is at hand THese words are as we heard the last day an exhortation vnto the Philippians to reioyce not as the world doth but to reioyce in the Lord not with a momentanie and flitting ioy but alwayes both in weale and in woe not vnaduisedly made or about a light and easie matter but seriously made and about a matter very needfull and yet hard to be perswaded and therefore doubled Againe I say reioyce in the Lord alwayes Now see how it pleaseth the Lord that as the Apostle comes againe and againe vnto this holy exhortation and leaues it not with once or twice but euen the third time also exhorteth them to reioyce in the Lord so I should come vnto you againe and againe euen three seuerall times with the same exhortation to reioyce in the Lord. Againe saith the Apostle I say reioyce euen in the Lord alwayes for that is to be added and resumed to the former place From which doubling and redoubling of this exhortation I obserue both how needfull and withall how hard a matter it is to perswade this constant reioycing in the Lord to reioyce in the Lord alwayes For to this end doth the holy Ghost often in
in the Lord alwayes both because by our reioycing which we haue in the Lord we stand against whatsoeuer otherwise might quell vs and because through the want thereof it is that wee fall and are vtterly ouercome whensoeuer stormes arise and troubles assault vs. And as thus it may appeare how needfull a thing it is that we reioyce in the Lord alwayes so it may easily also be seene how hardly we are perswaded to reioyce in the Lord always Euery man complaineth where his shoo pincheth him and euery man layes his hand vpon his sore But very few in such cases when the hand of the Lord is vpon them when they are humbled and brought low through oppression through any pl●gue or trouble can be brought vnto this to reioyce in the Lord. Nay tell one wicked and vngodly man when his troubles are multiplied and when his sorrowes are increased that he is to know that the Lord his hand is in all these that he is not to murmure against the Lord but to reioyce in the Lord doth he not say of them that thus speake vnto him that they are mad doth he not with indignation aske what cause he hath to reioyce in the Lord doth he not stil crie out vpon his crosses and miseries and vexations and paines and doth he not within a while belch out most impious blasphemies And hence it is that many with Iudas in such cases fall to despaire ●nd that many with him become their owne butchers Yea ●et the children of God themselues say whether their afflictions and their sorrowes do not sometimes sinke them so far that their soule euen almost refuseth comfort in the Lord very few like vnto Iob that mirrour of patience who when they heare of the losse of all their goods and of their seruants and of the death of their children can be content to frame themselues to the will of God and say Iob 1.21 Naked came I out of my ●others wombe and naked shall I returne againe the Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord Or when they are smitten with sores and boiles from the s●l● of their foote to the crowne of their head can with the sam● Iob comfort themselues and say What shall we receiue good at the hands of God and not receiue euil And yet this most rare patterne of patience into what sharpe fits of impatiencie did he sometimes breake out crying out in the bitternesse of his soule 3.3 4. c. and saying Let the day perish wherein I was borne and the night wherein it was said There is a man child conceiued c. And thus it fareth often with the deare children of God that they sinke so farre that their soule almost refuseth comfort in the Lord. Their sense and feeling of their paine and affliction is sometimes so great that they haue almost no sense or feeling of God Which yet I do not so speak as if the children of God might not be touched with sorrow and heauinesse for the crosses of this life for no doubt they may but to shew that sometimes they are so cast downe with heauinesse that it is a hard matter to reare them vp againe For as Iobs friends disputed against him so they against themselues that they are punished of God for their sins and iniquities and that therefore now he hath shut vp his louing kindnesse in displeasure And then they stand prying and looking into their sinnes and hardly can they be drawne to lift vp their eyes vnto the Lord that in him they may find comfort vnto their soules I wil not stand vpon the further enlarging of this point By this which hath bene spoken ye see how needful it is we should reioyce in the Lord alwaies and withall how hardly we are perswaded to reioyce in the Lord alwaies and consequently vpon what cause the Apostle doubled and redoubled this his exhortation Now this may first instruct vs in the merciful goodnesse of our God towards vs who in things so needfull for vs and whereunto we are so hardly drawne ceasseth not to stirre vp our dull minds and againe and againe to call them to our remembrance Esa 28.10 Precept vpon precept precept vpon precept line vnto line line vnto line here a litle and there a litle Euen as yong schollers are dealt withall so dealeth he with vs he goeth ouer and ouer the same lesson with vs and gladly he woul● beate it into vs. Secondly this may teach vs our dulnesse to conceiue and slacknesse to embrace the things that belong vnto our peace Such things must be doubled and redoubled vnto vs and ye● we will not learne them they must be often vrged and much beaten vpō and yet we wil not receiue instruction The Lord must euen draw vs vnto himselfe by his holy Spirit and yet we will not runne after him he must send his holy Prophets and Ministers vnto vs early and late and all litle enough to stirre vp our dull minds Thirdly this may teach vs to hold fast that reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus For is it so that the holy Apostle doth so often exhort vs to reioyce in the Lord alwaies is it so that it is so needful for vs to reioyce in the Lord alwaies that only by our reioycing in him we stand fast against whatsoeuer troubles and sorrowes and without it we are quite affright and vtterly ouercome of them is it so that we are so hardly drawne to reioyce in the Lord alwaies How are we then to hold fast that reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus euen so fast that nothing take it from vs Let vs therefore reioyce but let vs reioyce in the Lord let vs reioyce in him alwaies that so no man nay that nothing take from vs our reioycing in him A ioyfull heart maketh a cheerfull countenance and if the heart be ioyful in the Lord it cheeres the heart and quickens the soule howsoeuer the countenance be appalled Other ioyes in riches in honours in friends in the vanities of this life and in the pleasures of sinne haply haue their moment of time and their appearance of good but their time is but only a moment and their good but onely an appearance and outward semblance onely the reioycing in the Lord is the true and sound reioycing and which causeth good health vnto the soule Let vs therefore reioyce in the Lord and let vs reioyce in him alwaies not onely when he feedeth vs with the floure of wheate but when he giueth vs plenteousnesse of teares to drink For whether he blesse vs or crosse vs it is for our good and his glorie and therfore he is to be blessed in both Yea whatsoeuer crosses or sorows we suffer let that remembrance of Christ his blessed death and passion which this day we celebrate be sufficient to cause vs to reioyce in the Lord. For what are all our sufferings or sorrowes vnto those
integritie and with the wholesome word that cannot be reproued so that he would haue him both to teach the truth soundly and sincerely and in his life to carry himselfe with all grauitie and integritie to be a patterne of good works holinesse of life And so the Apostle Peter exhorteth all Ministers to feede the flocke of God which dependeth on them 1. Pet. 5.2.3 and to be examples to the flocke to feede them with the bread of God the wholesome word of truth and to be examples vnto them in all holinesse of life Otherwise whatsoeuer they build with the one hand they pull downe with the other and like vnto the naughtie cow turne downe with their foote all the milk that they haue yeelded For preach they neuer so well labour they neuer so painfully be they neuer so eloquent and mightie in the Scriptures if their life be offensiue their teaching will be vnprofitable Nay if their people can once say vnto them Physition heale thy self Thou that teachest another teachest thou not thy selfe Thou that preachest A man should not steale Luc. 4.23 Rom. 2.21.22 doest thou steale Thou that sayest A man should not commit adulterie doest thou commit adulterie Let them neuer looke to preuaile with them for any thing that is good O but the people should regard what their teachers say not what they do True indeed for so our Sauiour hath said But the teachers should be carefull as of that they say so of that they do to leade their people in and out both in soundnesse of doctrine and in holinesse of life For as a woe is vnto them if any perish for want of feeding so likewise if any perish by their ill and naughtie example of liuing Let thē then look vnto this that neither attend vnto doctrine nor giue good exāple of life vnto others they also that attend vnto doctrine but do more harme by their example of life thē they do good by their teaching and they also that hauing care that their life be not offensiue either do not or cannot teach their people the things that belong vnto their peace The good Minister of Christ shold be able at all times to presse his people vnto the things which they had learned and receiued and heard and seene in him He that faileth in either doctrine or life hath his wo how much more he that faileth in both Secondly hence I obserue this lesson for you that are hearers of the word that whatsoeuer good things ye haue learned receiued heard and seene in your Ministers and teachers those things ye should thinke on and do For is there a necessitie laid vpon vs to preach the Gospell vnto you and is there not a necessitie laid vpon you to heare the word of your saluation from our mouthes Is there a wo vnto vs if we preach not the Gospell vnto you and is there not a wo vnto you if ye heare not the Gospell of vs Lieth there a charge vpon vs to be examples vnto you of holinesse of life and integritie of conuersation and lieth there not a charge vpon you to be followers of vs in all holinesse of life and integritie of conuersation Yes beloued if we be to bring the Gospell of your saluation vnto you ye are to receiue it of vs if we be to shew you all the counsell of God ye are to heare it of vs if we be to go before you in a sanctified life ye are to follow vs and so to walke as ye haue vs for an example Heb. 13.8 And therefore saith the Apostle vnto the Hebrewes Remember them which haue the ouersight of you which haue declared vnto you the word of God whose faith follow considering what hath bene the end of their conuersation And our Apostle in the Chapter before Be ye followers saith he of me and looke on them which walke so as ye haue vs for an example Which of vs would not condemne that child that should not hearken to the good counsell of his father or the subiect that shold contemn his Princes Embassador Beloued we are your fathers in Christ Iesus to beget you by the immortal seed of the word vnto a liuely faith hope in Christ Iesus How ought ye then as deare childrē to hearkē vnto your fathers instructiō to walk as ye haue vs for an exāple We are the Embassadours of the King of kings and Lord of Lords euen of Christ Iesus sent vnto you in his stead to declare vnto you the will of our heauenly Father and to beseech you to be reconciled vnto God How ought we then to be receiued of you and how ought our message to be entertained But do ye hearken vnto vs as vnto your fathers in Christ Iesus Do ye receiue vs as the Ambassadours of Christ Iesus Is our message entertained as sent from Christ Iesus I beare you record some of you that ye receiue our message and hearken vnto vs gladly But if all of you shall say that ye do so then must I say vnto you as Samuel said vnto Saul when Saul told him that he had fulfilled the commandement 1. Sam. 15.14 What then said he meaneth the bleating of the sheepe in mine eares and the lowing of the oxen which I heare So say I vnto you what meaneth then the gunning and drumming in mine eares what meaneth the Lording and Ladying which I heare If we come vnto you and speake vnto you in our owne name heare vs not but if we come vnto you and speake vnto you in the name of the Lord will ye not heare vs If ye will not it is not vs but it is the Lord that ye refuse to hearken to and obey as it is written He that heareth you heareth me Luke 10 16. and he that despiseth you despiseth me saith the Lord. We onely as the Lord his watchmen warne you of the wickednesse of your wayes we onely as the Ambassadours of Christ Iesus pray ye that ye be reconciled vnto God If ye hearken not sin lyeth at the doore indignation and wrath is vnto them that disobey the truth Beloued it is not yours but you that we seeke It is not out of the humour of one that can abide no pastime that we speake vnto you but out of the desire of one that would haue you blamelesse and pure and the sonnes of God without rebuke In Christs stead therefore I beseech you to leaue off these disordered sportings and meetings The custome of them is heathenish the abuses of them great and the inconueniences which follow them many Thus ye haue learned and receiued and heard and therefore thinke not on them nor do them LECTVRE LXXXVII PHILIP 4. Verse 9. And the God of peace shall be with you 10. Now I reioyce also in the Lord greatly that now at the last ye are reuiued againe to care c. THE latter reason which the Apostle vseth to enforce his exhortation remaineth now to be spoken of
Tim. 3.2.3 as selfe-louers couetous boasters proud cursed speakers men disobedient to parents vnholy without naturall affection truce breakers c. And yet how many are there that would be loth to be reckoned among the worst which are as vnthankfull as the most Whose fault soeuer it be it is a foule fault and one that includes all Let vs beware of it and let our thankful mind be knowne to all that any way deserue well of vs. Secondly in that the Apostle saith that he reioyced in the Lord greatly for their care for him I note that the Apostles reioycing was not so much for the bountifulnes of their gift but especially for that the Lord by his Spirit had enlarged their hearts to a Christian care ouer him Whence I obserue this lesson for vs that when any do relieue vs being in prison pouertie need sicknesse or any other aduersitie we are not so much to reioyce in the gift by which we are relieued but especially we ought to reioyce in the Lord for that he hath vouchsafed to touch their hearts with a godly feeling of our wants and a Christian care to supply our wants Thankfulnes vnto them is beseeming and requisite as before we heard but our speciall care should be to lift vp our eyes vnto the Lord and to reioyce in him For he it is that openeth the bowels of compassion toucheth with a tender commiseration of their poore and needie distressed brethren the hearts of them that are enriched with greater sufficiencie And therefore our Apostle in many of his Epistles vsually thanketh God as for their faith in Christ Iesus so for their loue towards all Saints Col. 1.3.4 We giue thankes to God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ saith the Apostle in the next Epistle since we heard of your faith in Christ Iesus and of your loue towards all Saints And he tels the Corinthians that their liberalitie causeth thanksgiuing vnto God 2. Cor. 9.11 God being therefore to be blessed because he openeth the Saints hearts to relieue the necessities of the poore Saints First therefore let me beseech you beloued euen in the bowels of Christ Iesus to giue your poore and distressed brethren cause to reioyce in the Lord greatly for your care ouer them A godly and Christian care of late hath bene taken by the whole States of the land assembled in Parliament for the prouision of the poore and we are all of vs to reioyce in the Lord greatly for it that he put into their mind such an holy care Put ye now on tender mercie and compassion and let your care likewise be shewed this way by a chearfull giuing towards the reliefe of your poore brethren so much as shal be thought meete for you that the backes and bellies of your poore brethren may blesse you and reioyce in the Lord for you If ye shall find in your selues a willing chearfulnesse this way know that it is the Lord that hath opened your hearts stirred vp the bowels of compassion within you and looke whatsoeuer he giues the Lord shal recompence it into his bosome Prou. 19.17 For so it is written He that hath mercie on the poore lendeth to the Lord and he will recompence him that which he hath giuen But if ye shall grudge to set forward so good a worke and think euery litle too much that is required of you to that purpose know that the Lord hath yet hardened your hearts and shut vp all bowels of compassion within you and as now the poore crie and ye heare not so the day shall come wherein ye shall crie 21.13 and not be heard For so it is written He that stoppeth his eares at the crying of the poore he shall also crie and not be heard As euery man therfore hath receiued so let him giue and that chearfully 2. Cor. 9.7 For God loueth a chearfull giuer So shall the loines of the poore blesse you so shall they reioyce in the Lord greatly for you and so shall the Lord make all his graces to abound towards you Secondly let me exhort them of the poorer sort to learne to reioyce in the Lord for the care which he stirreth vp in their brethren for them It is too too commonly seene in many of you that as ye want the wealth of the world so ye want also the grace of God Ye sit and beg almes and reliefe If ye haue it not ye murmure and grudge oftentimes ye banne and curse if ye haue it some of you take it and go your wayes and there is an end others of you say some formal words from the teeth forward but who is he or where is he that hauing receiued reliefe lifteth vp his eyes vnto the Lord and reioyceth in him for that it hath pleased him to worke in their brethren such a Christian care ouer them Who is he or where is he that being sent away without reliefe lifteth vp his eyes vnto the Lord and prayeth vnto him that it will please him to increase their brethrens care ouer them and to giue them bowels of compassion towards them without murmuring or grudging at them Thus should ye do and then surely the hearts of many that are yet hardened would be opened towards you Learne therefore as to be thankfull towards your brethren for their care ouer you so principally to thanke the Lord and to reioyce in him for the care which he stirreth vp in them for you Learne to thinke on him to blesse him to reioyce in him more then any great many of you do Looke not onely to the reliefe which ye receiue but looke vnto the Lord whose worke it is to incline mens hearts to relieue you Thus shall he be well pleased and thus shall he incline men more and more to relieue you LECTVRE LXXXVIII PHILIP 4. Verse 10. Now I reioyce in the Lord greatly that now at the last ye are reuiued againe to care for me wherein notwithstanding ye were carefull but ye lacked oportunitie THe next thing which I noted in these words was the Philippians slacknesse to care for some time for the Apostle For in that he saith I reioyce c. that now at last ye are reuiued c. he implieth that their care had for some time slacked towards him the word here vsed being borrowed from trees which seeming in Winter to be dead flourish againe in the Spring and hauing in it this similitude that as trees which in Winter seeme to be dead and withered flourish and grow greene againe in the Spring so their care which for a time languished and decayed now againe reuiued and quickened in them Whence I obserue this lesson for our learning that euen in the faithfull and dearest children of God loue and charitie and other good graces of Gods Spirit are not alwayes alike orient and eminent not alwayes alike manifest and apparent but sometimes they languish and decay and are as if they were not Gen
faults let vs not condemne where the Lord hath not condemned and againe let vs not acquite where the Lord hath not acquited Thirdly here are to be reproued and condemned such as to excuse the faults and offences of others say and do more then in a good conscience they may For as I am not alwaies to condemne those men that do such things as wicked and vngodly men nor yet to acquit all those that do such things as good and godly men so neither am I to excuse one sort or other further then in a good conscience I may Charitie must rule me to excuse as I may affection may not ouer-rule me to excuse more then I should Albeit therefore to excuse the faults of men may seeme a very charitable fault yet if in any respect we do therein more then in a good conscience we may our fault is inexcusable and our iudgement sleepeth not Let vs therefore go so far in the excuse of our brethrens faults as in a good conscience we may but no further Let vs be ready to make the best of things we may but let vs euer remember to hold faith and a good conscience And let this suffice to be noted from the seuerall points in these words I speake not c. The Apostle hauing signified in the former verse his great reioycing in the Lord for the Philippians care ouer him now signifieth his reioycing to be not so much for the present gift they sent him because therewith his want was supplied as for their sakes euen for the fruite which should redound thence vnto them which he doth from the eleuenth to the eighteenth verse First therefore to meete with the suspicion of a couetous or an abiect mind he denieth that he reioyced so greatly for the gift because by it his want was supplied and yeeldeth a reason thereof euen because he had learned to be content with whatsoeuer state which contentment of minde he professeth he hath of Christ vers 11.12.13 Secondly he telleth them that notwithstanding he reioyce not in their gift yet he commendeth their liberality shewed both now and at other times towards him vers 14.15.16 Thirdly he telleth them that the thing wherein he reioyceth is the fruite of their gift for that it shall further their reckoning verse 17. These be generally the points I speake not c. In these words as I said the Apostle to meete with the suspicion of a couetous or at least an abiect minde denyeth that he reioyced for their gift as if before he had receiued it he had bin cast downe through want or were not able to endure his want For thus it might be obiected and said Yea indeede doth this care for you so greatly reioyce you Like enough your heart was downe before this helpe came vnto you No no saith the Apostle I speake not this because of want because my want is supplied as if before this supply came I had bene cast downe through want or were not able to endure want For I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am c. which is a proofe that it was not for the gift that he reioyced because his want was supplied by it but for some other thing Where I note that the Apostle was neither deiected and cast downe through want nor his affection much altered by the supply of his wants Whēce I obserue who they are whom want doth not pinch to cast them downe through heauines namely the children of God who walke so as they haue the Apostle for an example What are not the children of God pinched with want Was not Abraham driuen by famine out out of Canaan into Egypt Was not Isaac driuen by famine from one place vnto another And was not the same lot vnto al the Patriarchs Had our blessed Sauiour himselfe a house to put his head in Were not the holy Apostles tried as by many other wayes so by want Yes surely amongst other afflictions want and penurie is one wherewith they that liue godly in Christ Iesus are sometimes pressed and pinched But this is it though they be in want yet they are not ouercome of want euen as the Apostle saith We are in pouertie 2. Cor. 4.8 but not ouercome of pouertie They looke vnto the Lord and they rest in him they know that pouertie and riches euen both these are from the Lord who maketh poore and maketh rich and that all things worke together for the best vnto those that loue and feare the Lord. And therefore they hang not downe their heads nor are casten downe through heauines they murmure not at the Lord nor breake out into impatience but patiētly depend vpon that God that commanded the rauens to feede his Prophet Elias and that feedeth the yong rauens that crie for want of food They know that the Lord careth for them though the world seeth it not and that he will supply their wants so farre as he seeth it good for them and therefore they comfort and cheare themselues in him Let this then teach vs not to looke at mens wants but how men are affected through their wants Pouertie or riches are no certaine arguments of the loue or of the hatred of God towards any Both are mercies and blessings of the Lord vnto the godly and both are plagues and snares vnto the wicked By pouertie and want the godly are oftentimes tryed to see whether they will blaspheme God to his face whether they will murmure against the Lord whether they can be content as to receiue good at the hand of God so to receiue euill whether in time of aduersitie they will go away from the Lord. By riches likewise the godly are often tryed to see whether they will thereby grow proud and forget the Lord whether they will as good Stewards vse them to the glorie of his Name and the good of their brethren whether they will beare themselues as enriched by him and make him their chiefest treasure Both these I say are trialls vnto the godly that the triall of their faith may be found to their praise and honour and glorie at the appearing of Christ Iesus Againe pouertie is often laied vpon the wicked for a plague as Salomon sheweth where he telleth the Sluggard Prou. 6.11 that his pouertie cometh as one that trauelleth by the way and his necessitie as an armed man and riches are often giuen them as snares as the Apostle sheweth where he saith that they that will be rich 1. Tim. 6.9 fall into tentation and snares and into many foolish and noysome lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction Pouertie then or riches plenty or want are not the things that we are to looke vnto for that these are common to the wicked with the godly but how they worke vppon mens affections what effects they haue among the children of men Doth thy pouertie and want make thee hang downe thy head breake thy heart through heauinesse cause thee to murmure and grudge
Paul I note that it was Paules necessitie which the Philippians sent once againe to relieue Whence I obserue that euen the best Ministers of the Gospel of Christ Iesus are sometimes vrged and pressed with necessitie In Paul indeed it was lesse maruell both because that was the infancie of the church and for that he alwaies went about either planting or stablishing the Churches and setled himselfe in no certaine place But now that the Church is stablished and the Ministerie settled that now sometimes the very best should be pressed with necessitie I know not well what to say to it It is certainely one of the shames and discredites of our Clergie that in many places the worthiest labourers want and the veriest loyterers abound Some lights of the church haue either nothing or as litle as litle may be againe some others that either cannot or will not do any good in the Church at all haue liuing vpon liuing dignitie vpon dignitie heaped vpon them Ye see the note which I should prosecute but time will not giue me leaue LECTVRE XCII PHILIP 4. Verse 17. Not that I desire a gift but I desire the fruite which may further your reckoning 18. Now I haue receiued all c. NOt that I desire a gift c. In these words the Apostle signifieth the very true cause of that his ioy in the Lord whereof he spake before verse 10. and the very true cause of this his commendation of their liberality in the two verses next before For as before he signified in verse 11. that the principall cause of his reioycing was not because of his want because his want was supplied by their liberalitie so now he signifieth that the principall commendation of their liberalitie was not for that he desired a new gift of them as some thereby might haply imagine but the principall thing which he regarded both in the one and in the other the principall cause both of his reioycing in the Lord for their care for him and of his commendation of their liberalitie both first and last towards him was the fruite which followed thereupon to further their reckoning in that day of the great account But I desire c. The phrase of speech here vsed is borrowed from the Merchants counting-bookes for as in case of the debt of a great summe of money to a Merchant the more mony that is noted in his booke as payed the more his reckoning is furthered that payed it so the Apostle hereby signifieth that the more of their charitable workes towards him were noted as it were in Gods booke the more their reckoning was furthered with God who in the great account should reckon that to their fruite aduantage which they had done to him What was then the things which the Apostle principally desired euen more then their gifts though he needed them It was the fruite of their liberalitie that they might reape the fruite thereof with God And what was the fruite of their liberality Namely the furthering of their reckoning with God in that day when they should giue accounts of that they had done in their flesh whether it were good or euill for the Apostle knew that this fruite should follow their liberalitie towards him that thereby their reckoning should be furthered with God who would reckon that vpon their head to their vantage that they had done to him And this was it which principally caused the Apostle to ioy in their gifts and liberality Thus much for the opening of the meaning of these words Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence whereof to make some farther vse for our selues Not that I desire a gift The first thing which here I note is the Apostles diligent care to cleare things as he goes In verse 10. of this Chapter the Apostle signified his great reioycing in the Lord for the Philippians great care for him shewed by the things which they sent him by their minister Epaphroditus Whereupon lest it should be thought that before he receiued their gift he had bene cast downe through heauinesse or were not able to endure his want he cleares himselfe of all suspicion of any such abiect mind and tells them in the next verse that he spake not because of want that is that he reioyced not so much because his want was supplied by their liberality but there was another matter in it Againe in ver 11.12 he signified that he could be content with whatsoeuer state he were in that he knew how to be abased and how to abound that he was instructed both to be full and to be hungrie to abound and to haue want Whereupon lest he should seeme to haue boasted himselfe too much of himselfe as if by his owne power and strength he had bene able to do all those things he cleares himselfe of all such arrogant presuming of his owne strength and tells them verse 13. that he is able to do all those things but how by his owne power and strength No but through Christ which strengthened him Againe the Apostle hauing said that through Christ which strengthened him he could endure want and he could be content whether he were full or hungrie hereupon it might be thought that he made small account of their benefit and could as well haue bene without it as with it He therefore cleares this point also and tels them that notwithstanding he could do all things through Christ yet they had well done to communicate to his affliction Againe in verses 15.16 he highly commended the Philippians for their great liberality towards him euen from the first vnto the last and preferreth them before all other Churches of Macedonia Whereupon lest he should seeme to affect a new benefit to desire a new gift he cleares himselfe of any such desire and tels them plainly that he doth not so commend them for that he desireth a gift of them Thus sometimes to cleare the truth of doctrine sometimes to free himselfe from vniust suspitions alwaies to rectifie them that they do not misconceiue of things euermore he cleares matters as he goes Whence I obserue a good lesson for the Minister of the Gospel of Christ Iesus which is that he giue all diligence in his teaching so to cleare things as he goes as that his people may not misconceiue any thing either touching the truth or touching himselfe He is to be iealous of both euen with a godly iealousie of the truth that no speech of his may cause them to erre touching the truth that he speake not any thing against the truth but for the truth that in all simplicitie and plainnesse he deliuer the truth or if at any time he speake something which may be mistaken yet he so cleare it before he leaue it as that there neede to be no doubt of it Of himselfe that no speech slip him nor any action passe him whereby he may be noted of impatience or pride or contempt or couetousnesse or
For when we haue done all that we can Christ hath taught vs to say that we are vnprofitable seruants Luc. 17.10 yea when we haue done all things that are commanded vs. And whatsoeuer afflictions we suffer in this present life Rom. 8.18 Paul hath taught vs that they are not worthy of the glory that shall be shewed vnto vs. The merit that we can talke of for our workes Dan. 9.9 Iob. 9.20 is to say with Daniel To vs belongeth open shame and with Iob If I would iustifie my selfe by standing vpon the merit of my workes my owne mouth shall condemne me Iam. 3.2 Esa 64.6 for in many things we sinne all and all our righteousnes euen the very best of it is as filthy clouts How is saluation then a reward due vnto our workes Euen for the promise sake made vnto vs in Christ Iesus For therefore do we claime saluation as due vnto our workes euen because God hath made that promise in Christ Iesus vnto our workes But what was the cause of his promise was it our workes seene or foreseene that they would be of such desert No but of his owne free grace and mercie towards vs according to the good purpose of his will he promised it vnto vs. And therefore the Apostle saith Eph. 2 8. Tit. 3.5 By grace are ye saued through faith not of works lest any man should boast himselfe And againe Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his mercie he saued vs. Thus we teach and euery where we exhort all men vnto good works and holinesse of life without which no man shall see the Lord. First then here beloued learne you to skill what manner of men they be that charge vs that we preach onely faith but either mention not or else condemne good works Ye see we tell you out of our Apostle here that they shall further your reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus And therefore we beseech you to abound in euery good worke vntill the day of Christ Iesus and know them to be of their father the diuell that say that either we mention not or condemne good works vnto our people Secondly hence learne to acknowledge and to magnifie the great mercy of our God who accepteth that for a furtherance of our reckoning which if he should deale with vs in iustice could stand for no payment for how I pray you stands it We should bring gold for payment into the Lords treasurie But we bring lead and he accepteth it for gold Our best righteousnesse is full of vnrighteousnesse yet doth he accept it What for our righteousnesse sake No for his mercies sake and imputeth vnto vs the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus Let our mouthes therefore alwaies be filled with his praises for such his louing mercies towards vs. Thirdly let this be a sufficient motiue vnto you to stirre you vp vnto charitablenesse and vnto euery good worke for seeing such is their acceptance with God that in that great account they shall further your reckoning what should stay you but that ye should labour to be fulfilled with the fruits of righteousnesse Time cuts me off that I cannot speake of these things and I shall the next time be farther occasioned to speake of them by occasion of the text LECTVRE XCIII PHILIP 4. Verse 18. Now I haue receiued all and am well filled I was euen filled after that I had receiued of Epaphroditus c. NOw I haue receiued all Hitherto we haue heard the Apostles thankfulnesse vnto the Philippians for their care for him and his commendation of them for their liberalitie towards him Now he commendeth their liberality and withall addeth a promise of recompence of reward for their liberality and so concludeth the Epistle with praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. In verse 18 first he signifieth the faithfulnesse of Epaphroditus when he saith Now I haue receiued all all what to wit all that you sent by Epaphroditus For herein he giueth him this testimony that he had receiued the whole summe of him which came from them which it is like they had specified Secondly he commendeth their liberality of the quantitie of it when he saith I haue plentie and am filled For hereby he signifieth that their liberality towards him was not scanted but was such as plentifully supplied his wants such as filled his desires not that the gift which they sent him was so great and magnificent for the Churches of Macedonia were but poore 2 Cor. 8.2 but though it were but small yet such was his contentment as that he was as well satisfied and as fully as the greatest man with his greatest riches Thirdly he commendeth their liberalitie of the acceptablenesse of it vnto God when he saith An odour that smelleth sweete c. For herein by a speech borrowed from sacrifices made by fire for a sweete sauour vnto the Lord he signifieth that their liberality was as acceptable and pleasant vnto God as the sacrifice that smelleth sweete in the nostrils of the Lord. These are the principall points contained in these words and this I take to be the meaning of them Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our further vse and instruction The first thing which here I note is the faithfulnesse of Epaphroditus who kept nothing backe of all that the Philippians sent vnto the Apostle but faithfully deliuered whatsoeuer they sent vnto him Whence I obserue a notable patterne of that faithfulnesse which ought to be in al Christians to discharge that trust whatsoeuer it is that is reposed in them euen such should be their faithfulnesse as that they whom it doth concerne may safely giue them this testimonie that they haue discharged the trust that was reposed in them Such was the faithfulnesse of Samuel who when he had asked of the people of Israel Whose Oxe haue I taken 1 Sam. 12.3.4 or whose Asse haue I taken or whom haue I done wrong to or whom haue I hurt or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it you They said vnto him Thou hast done vs no wrong nor hast hurt vs neither hast taken ought of any mans hand So faithfully he had walked amongst them in all things that they gaue him testimonie of his faithfulnesse before the Lord and before his Annoynted Such faithfulnesse also our blessed Sauiour figureth out vnto vs in the Parable of the seruants vnto one of whom he gaue fiue talents and vnto another two to occupie withall vntill he should returne whence he went and in the end gaue them this testimonie It is well done good seruants and faithfull Mat. 25.15.20 1 Cor. 4.2 ye haue bene faithfull in little I will make you rulers ouer much enter into your Masters ioy And the Apostle telleth vs generally that it is required of the disposers that euery man be found faithfull Be it publique or priuate things for
number but vnto all the brethren Thus yee see with what gladnes the Ministers of the Gospell ought to be receiued yee see how our Sauiour Christ the high Priest of our profession was thus receiued when towards his passion he came downe from the mount of Oliues vnto Ierusalem yee see how the Disciples and Apostles of our Sauiour Christ were thus receiued euen with great ioy of all the brethren And thus at this day the Ministers of the Gospell are receiued euen with all gladnesse of all the brethren But as then it was so now it is the multitude of the brethren no great multitude as may easily appeare euen by this one note that the multitude of them that receiue the Ministers of the Gospell with all gladnes is no great multitude Well beloued to stand no longer vpon this point I cannot better exhort you touching this point then out of these words of the Apostle Receiue the ministers of Christ his Gospell in the Lord receiue them with all gladnes and make much of them for so it followeth And make much of such In which words the Apostle brings it to the generall which before he had spoken in the particular tels them how he would haue them to receiue not only Epaphroditus in particular but the Ministers of the gospel in generall Make much of such make much account of them haue them in high honor estimation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for so the word here vsed in the originall signifieth But whom must we haue in such honour Make much of such such as Epaphroditus such as faithfully and painefully worke in the Lord his haruest such as carefully watch for our soules as they that must giue accounts such as labour in the word and doctrine make much of them and account them worthy of double honor Here then we are taught in what account we are to haue such Ministers of the Gospell as faithfully and painefully labour in the word and doctrine We are to make much of them we are to haue them in high honor and estimation we are to account them worthy of double honor For so the Apostle else where also telleth vs saying 1 Tim. 5.17 The Elders which rule well are worthy of double honour especially they which labour in the word and doctrine Where whatsouer be meant by double honour in particular in generall it is meant that all honour is due vnto them that labour in the word and doctrine Yea indeede honour such make much of such such finde-faults such troublers of the state such hot-headed fellowes such discoueries of their fathers shame such publishers of whatsoeuer they know euen in Gath and Ashkelon For thus commonly they are accounted of especially if according to the necessitie of the times they lift vp their voices like trumpets and shew the people their transgressions and the house of Iacob their sinnes If they tell Herod of his incest they may doe it without that danger that Iohn did but let them looke for no lesse then to be counted troublers of all Israel 1 Reg. 18.17 Act. 19.25 as Elias was accounted by Ahab If Demetrius and the craftsmen men with him be like to sustaine any losse by their preaching if the godles Atheist or the superstitious Papist thinke themselues galled by their preaching then they traduce them by such and such names and then they raise vp whatsoeuer troubles possibly they can against them Thus are they rewarded with euill for good and with hatred for their good will thus doe they become enemies because they tell the truth thus are they honoured and accounted of the world thus commonly are they made of in the world that are carefull not to doe the worke of the Lord negligently Yea and see the strangenesse of it The cause why we should make much of the Ministers of the Gospell is for the message sake which they bring vnto vs because they bring vnto vs the holy word of life the Manna and foode of our soules and because out of it they both teach vs that truth which we are to beleeue and imbrace and improue those errors which we are to beware and auoide and correct those faults in our life which we are to flie and detest and instruct vs in that way of righteousnesse wherein we are to walke all the daies of our life Thi● I say is the cause why we should make much of them and this is the very cause why we cannot away with them It would best of all please a great many of vs that they should hold their peace and so 〈◊〉 and suffer vs to sleepe in our sinnes Other o● 〈◊〉 ●●ppily can away with it that they should reach and instruct and exhort and speake to the eare But that there should be amongst the Disciples of Christ sonne of thunder that the Ministers of the Gospell should powre into the wound both oyle and vineger that they should improue and rebuke that a great many of vs cannot away with and therefore when they doe so we breake our into termes at our pleasure against them Well he that will be soundly healed he must suffer both oyle and vineger to be powred into his wounds and he that will liue must suffer himselfe to be awaked out of his dead sleepe of sinne and he that will shew himselfe to haue profited in the schoole of Christ must make much of such as both teach and improue and correct and instruct as the glory of God and the good of hi● people doth require As for those that are not such I say now no more but I wish they were such and that they would studie to be such Beloued I haue vrged this point touching the Ministers of the Gospell of receiuing them in the Lord of receiuing them with all gladnesse of making much of them partly the last day and partly this day For your sakes that yee might know how to vse the Ministers of the word that so yee may giue testimonie how yee honor the word For as men like or mislike the Ministers of the word so commonly they are affected towards the word Let the word of Christ therefore dwell in you plenteously let your delight be in the law of the Lord and loue the word of life as your life and for a proofe thereof such as faithfully and painefully labour in the word and doctrine receiue them in the Lord receiue them with all gladnes and make much of such It followeth Because that for the worke of Christ c. This is the reason which the Apostle bringeth why the Philippians should receiue their Minister in the Lord and with all gladnes The reason then briefly is this Epaphroditus was neere vnto death for the worke of Christ and regarded not his life to fulfill that seruice c. therefore yee ought to receiue him in the Lord and with all gladnes By the worke of Christ the Apostle meaneth in this place that whole paines and labour which Epaphroditus tooke
in comming to him to Rome in bringing with him that releefe which the Philippians sent vnto him and in ministring vnto him in prison such things as he wanted A seruice well called the worke of Christ because commanded by Christ and performed to the seruant of Christ for Christ his sake Againe in that the Apostle in the end of the verse saith to fulfill that seruice c. the Apostle his meaning is not thereby to note any fault in the Philippians as if they had beene any way wanting vnto him but therein he commendeth Epaphroditus his faithfull and painefull performance of that seruice which they if they had beene present with him would haue done but now could not because of their farre distance from him The whole reason is indeed drawne from the commendation of Epaphroditus His commendation is that he took such paines with him and for him that it had been like to haue cost him his life and that hee made not so much reckoning of his life as he did of discharging that trust that was reposed in him and performing that seruice which the Philippians themselues would haue done if they had beene present This I say is the commendation which the Apostle here giueth him and for this cause he willeth them to receiue him in the Lord with gladnesse Whence I gather this generall obseruation that it is a very commendable thing in the seruants of Christ not to regard their liues vnto the death but to hazard their liues for the worke of Christ which either Christ hath commanded them to doe in their place whatsoeuer or which for Christ his sake they are to performe vnto any seruant of Christ What thing more commendable or memorable in Esther Ester 3.13 then that when the Kings decree was past against the Iewes to roote out to kill and to destroy all the Iewes 5.1 both yong and old children and women in one day she put her life in present danger to deliuer her people For it was a matter of death by the law for one not called to come into the inner court vnto the King 4.11 Yet for this worke of God the deliuerance of his Church from the deuouring sword shee put her life in most eminent danger and went in into the King 16 which was not according to the law We see it likewise registred vnto the view of all posteritie touching the Apostles that their liues were not deare vnto them so that they might fulfill their course with ioy that they were ready not to be bound onely but also to die for the name of the Lord Iesus that howsoeuer they were threatned yet they would not cease to preach in the name of Christ Iesus And whiles this Epistle shall be read Epaphroditus his praise shall not die for hazarding his life for the worke of Christ in releeuing Paul his necessitie when he was in prison and ministring vnto him such things as he wanted Yea and what if we should not onely hazard our liues but giue vp our liues for any worke of Christ Haue we not a sure promise He that loseth his life for my sake saith our Sauiour shall saue it Matth. 10 39. 1 Reg. 17. If therefore Eliah or any of the poore children of God be an hungred want to satisfie their hunger though we haue but an handfull of meale in a barrell and a litle oyle in a cruse for our selues and for our familie and though we haue no more hope of sustenance but euen to die when that is spent and eaten yet let vs with that good widow of Sarepta straine and hazard our selues that they may be somewhat releeued If Paul or any godly brother in Christ bee in prison though our watchings and care and paines and trauaile with them and for them bee not without manifest danger of our health and happily of our life yet let vs with godly Epaphroditus by all these hazard our selues and our liues for their good and such things as may be needfull for them If any brother be sicke though it be with some danger let vs visit him and comfort him If for the worke of our ministerie we be so pressed that in our selues we receiue the sentence of death as our holy Apostle was often pressed yet let vs not shrinke but let vs declare vnto the people all the words of the Lord and speake of all the iudgements of his mouth In a word in whatsoeuer worke of Christ for I doe not now speake of this worke alone here mentioned but in whatsoeuer worke of Christ which he hath commanded vs in our places to doe or which being done for his sake hee accounteth as done for himselfe let vs be bold in the Lord let not our liues bee dearer vnto vs then the performance of his will but let vs hazard our liues for the worke of Christ But here the doubt may be made and the question demanded whether we are alwaies to hazard our liues for the worke of Christ whether in some worke of Christ we may not sometimes withdraw our selues from danger and prouide for our health for our liues As for example whether we may not forbeare the visiting of the sick when the sicknes is pestilentiall and contagious whether in such times we may not prouide for our health for our liues The question I know is hard and the doubt not easily answered neither will I take vpon me the decision of the doubt only I shew my opinion and willingly submit it to the iudgement of others Touching priuate men therefore I meane such as whose place and office doth not necessarily require a more publike care then of themselues of their own family they may in my iudgment spare themselues and not hazard their health or their liues but for the time withdraw themselues from the danger especially if such reasonable order be taken for the sicke as that by comming vnto them they may more endanger themselues others then doe them good My reasons are these 1. By the law of Moses we see that those that were troubled with any contagious disease as with the leprosie Leu. 13 46. they were commanded to dwell apart and to haue their habitation without the campe and in places where they came to cry I am vncleane I am vncleane Which doth plainely shew that all were not to come vnto them but both they were to giue warning vnto others and others were to take warning by them lest happily they should be infected by them if they should come vnto them Againe howsoeuer in such cases we could be content to hazard our selues and our owne liues yet may we and we ought to haue care ouer our owne houshold and ouer that charge that is committed to vs. 1 Tim. 5.8 For if there be any saith the Apostle that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold be denieth the faith and is worse then an infidell We must then prouide for
of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Where by the naturall man hee meaneth the man whose heart and vnderstanding the Lord hath not yet lightened by his holy spirit who as yet is not brought vnto the true knowledge of Christ and of him he saith that he neither doth nor can perceiue the things of the spirit of God nay more then that that the things of Gods spirit are meere foolishnesse vnto him Yea so it fareth ordinarily with the naturall man that he putteth darknesse for light and light for darkenesse bitter for sweete and sweete for sowre And if any be more carefull of his waies then the rest so that he can say with the Pharisie I am not as other men extortioners vniust adulterers I fast twi●● in the weeke I giue tythes of all that euer I possesse if he be ciuilly honest mercifull and liberall if hee be iust towards others sober in himselfe and so precisely carefull of his waies as that he be vnrebukable before men hereon hee sets his rest and stands vpon it that these things are such an aduantage vnto him as that God should doe him great wrong ●f hee should not saue him for these things But tell him that all these and all the like things are but as a staffe of reede on which if hee leane it will breake into shiuers and hurt him tell him that Christ Iesus is the onely rocke of saluation vnto all them that put their trust in him that there is no other name giuen vnder heauen whereby we can be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus and that if he wil be saued he must repose all confidence in him and renounce all confidence in his workes or in any thing without Christ whatsoeuer hereat he will stand amased and with Festus he will say to him that shall tell him thus thou art besides thy selfe much learning doth make thee madde Thus it fareth with vs all before such time as we be renued in the spirit of our mindes either wee take pleasure in vnrighteousnesse or else we repose too much confidence in our supposed righteousnesse and for the wisedome of God we all count it meere foolishnesse and madnesse But so soone as the Lord vouchsafeth by his spirit to circumcise vs with the true circumcision of Christ so soone as the Lord giues vs a new heart and puts a new spirit within vs then we beginne to abandon the delights in the flesh and to sauour the things of the spirit then the case beginnes to be altered and wee to bee quite of another iudgement For then our eyes which were before dimme and shut vp being opened and cleared and the foggie mists of blindnesse darknesse and ignorance which couered our vnderstandings being expelled then wee begin to condemne our former waies then wee beginne to count the things losse which before seemed a vantage vnto vs and then we beginne to hearken vnto the things that belong vnto our peace So that whereas before we had confidence in the flesh now we renounce all confidence in the flesh and reioice only in Christ Iesus whereas before wee pleased our selues much in things which we willed and did now we see that in vs i. in our flesh dwelleth no good thing but that God onely worketh in vs both the will and the deed euen of his good pleasure whereas before wee counted the wisedome of God foolishnesse now we see that our owne wisedome is foolishnesse and that onely the wisedome of God is true wisedome For when the Lord hath put his spirit within vs then we walk in his statutes and keepe his iudgements and doe them Eze. 36.27 but before we doe not Deut. 30.6 3. when he hath circumcised our hearts thee we loue the Lord our God with all our heart and with all our soule before wee doe not and as our Apostle here saith when we are circumcised with the true circumcision that is when we are regenerated by God his holy spirit then we reioyce in Christ Iesus and haue no confidence in the flesh but before we haue confidence in the flesh and reioyce not in Christ Iesus A great change and a good change because from the worse vnto the better Let this then teach vs to bend the knees of our soules vnto the Lord our God for the grace of his holy spirit that the bright beames of his spirit shining into our hearts all mists of blindnesse darknesse and ignorance may be expelled thence and wee brought both vnto the perfect knowledge and obedience of Christ Iesus For if he guide vs wee wander not if he instruct vs wee erre not if he command the light of the glorious Gospell to shine vnto vs then is our darknesse turned into light But otherwise our foolish hearts are full of darknesse otherwise wee erre and wander out of the right way wherein wee should walke and lay hold on errour in stead of truth and embrace follie in stead of wisdome for it is the spirit alone that leadeth vs into all truth Ioh. 16.13 1 Cor. 12.3 and directeth vs vnto all wisdome and but by the spirit no man can say that Iesus is the Lord. Let vs therefore alwayes pray for the light of Gods spirit that it shining in our hearts our darknesse may be turned into light our feet may be guided into the way of peace and our eies may be opened to see the mysteries of Gods will and the wondrous things of his Law Secondly in that the Apostle after that he began to know Christ counted those things no vantage but losse which before he knew Christ seemed vantage vnto him I obserue that such workes as wee doe before wee be iustified by faith in Christ Iesus seeme they neuer so good yet they are no vantage vnto vs either vnto iustification or vnto saluation For what were the things that seemed vantage vnto the Apostle before he knew Christ Was not one of them and whereof he made speciall account his vnrebukeable walking in all the commandements and ordinances of the Law his workes done according to the Law The verse immediately before sheweth that hee counted that one of his chiefe prerogatiues And yet he counted these workes done according to the Law before he beleeued no vantage at all vnto him for his iustification or saluation by Christ Iesus Now if the Apostle so iudged of his workes done according to the Law before hee beleeued this may be a sure proofe vnto vs that such workes as are done before grace and faith in Christ Iesus seeme they neuer so good yet they are no vantage vnto vs either vnto our iustification or vnto our saluation Well they may haue a shew and semblance of vantage vnto vs but indeed they are no vantage vnto vs either to prepare vs to the grace of iustification or to moue the Lord to shew mercy on vs and saue vs for without faith it
is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Joh. 17.3 and without the knowledge of Christ there is no saluation for this is eternall life to know God and him whom he hath sent Iesus Christ So that our works done before we beleeue and before we be brought to the knowledge of Christ Iesus cannot be any way any merit why we should be iustified or why we should be saued Let this then teach vs to beware of such deceiuers as tell vs that such workes though they suffice not to saluation yet are acceptable preparatiues to the grace of iustification and such as moue God to mercy For if they were such preparatiues or if they did moue God to mercy how should they not be some aduantage vnto vs which the Apostle here plainly denieth They talke I know of Cornelius his praiers and almesdeeds Act. 10.4 as if they had beene workes done before faith and yet acceptable with God But the text it selfe in that place is sufficient to confute them for there it is said that hee was a deuout man 2. and one that feared God with all his houshold and gaue much almes to the people and praied vnto God continually All euident arguments that as a true proselyte he beleeued in the Messias howsoeuer he was not yet baptized nor perfectly instructed So that his praiers and his almesdeeds were not preparations and dispositions vnto faith and iustification but they were the fruits of his faith and iustification already begunne Of the like validitie are whatsoeuer arguments they bring to this purpose Howsoeuer therefore they tell you that workes done before faith or iustification are acceptable vnto God or dispositions vnto grace or motiues vnto mercy or merits in congruitie or whatsoeuer other aduantage yet yee see that the Apostle is cleare in the point that all the prerogatiues that any man hath and all the good workes that any man doth before he know Christ they are no vantage to him at all to iustification or saluation Yea further know that they who make other account of such workes thereby shew that indeed as yet they doe not truly know Christ for this is a plaine testimonie that as yet they are not come vnto the true knowledge of Iesus Christ if as yet they count such workes to be a vantage vnto grace or life Hearken therefore not vnto them neither giue ye any place unto their errour It followeth that hence also I should obserue that such workes are not only no vantage but losse for Christ his sake But the generall in the verse following comprehending this particular I haue thought good only to speake of it in the generall and so to conclude the point touching workes Thirdly therefore in that the Apostle saith in the next verse Yea doubtlesse I thinke all things but losse c. and doe iudge them to be dung c. I obserue that generally all our workes done according to the Law whether before or after faith and iustification seeme they neuer so good by reposing any confidence of saluation in them are not only no vantage but losse yea but dung such as were farre more meet that we should be purged of them then that wee should repose any confidence in them For that generally all workes are here to be vnderstood it is plaine by the Apostle in this place first because hauing spoken in the former verse of workes done before faith and iustification here he vseth a more generall word comprising both those and what workes else soeuer as if he had said yea doubtlesse now that I am growne vp in further knowledge of Christ Iesus I now thinke not onely things which either I had or did before I knew Christ but euen all things generally euen all my workes whatsoeuer and whensoeuer done to be but losse for the excellent knowledge c. to be but dung that I might winne Christ Secondly because the Apostle saith that hee doth iudge all things to bee dung that he might now winne Christ He had already won Christ but his meaning is that to the end hee might more and more winne him to the end that hee might more and more neerely be ioyned vnto him hee counted all his owne righteousnesse euen which now he had by any present workes of his to be but losse to be but dung So that all workes done either before or after that wee be iustified by faith are here meant What then are all our workes whatsoeuer and whensoeuer done simply to be iudged losse and dung No surely not in respect of the substance of the workes that are done for fasting praiers almesdeeds righteousnesse iudgement mercy and the like fruits of faith are good workes and pleasing vnto God both commanded and rewarded by him But both these and whatsoeuer our best workes are to bee iudged losse and euen dung that is in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus and of that righteousnesse which wee haue by faith in him for what are all things in the world in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus or what is mans righteousnesse that it should be compared vnto the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus Christ is our life Col. 3.4 Ioh. 17.3 and to know him as hee is reuealed by the light of his glorious Gospell is euerlasting life What shall wee then compare vnto this excellent knowledge Nay let vs not esteeme to know any thing ●●ue Iesus Christ and him crucified in comparison of this knowledge let all things in the world seeme losse and euen dung vnto vs. Likewise what is mans righteousnesse in comparison of his righteousnesse Surely as darknesse in respect of the Sunne in his brightnesse for it is as himselfe white and ruddie and wholly delectable without blemish without spot or wrinkle or any such thing and what else is our ●est righteousnesse but as the menstruous cloathes of a woman full of filthinesse and slurried with much vncleannesse So that in comparison of Christ his righteousnesse it may well be counted losse and compared vnto dung fit for nothing bu● the dunghill Secondly in respect of any confidence to be● reposed in them all our very best workes generally whatsoeuer are but losse but dung The reason is because confidence in them staies vs from that confidence which we ought to haue in Christ Iesus for the more that we reioyce and secure our selues in our owne righteousnesse which is by works the lesse we care for comming vnto Christ to be clad with his righteousnesse Witnesse the Apostle where shewing the cause of the ruine of the Iewes Rom. 10 3. he saith that they being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God and going about to stablish their owne righteousnesse submitted not themselues vnto the righteousnesse of God Whence it is plaine that to sooth vp our selues in a conceit of our owne righteousnesse is the very way to stay vs from seeking the righteousnesse of God in Christ Iesus And what else meaneth that of our Sauiour vnto