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A73031 Certain godly and learned sermons, preached by that worthy seruant of Christ M. Ed. Philips in S. Sauiors in Southwarke: vpon the whole foure first chapters of Matthew, Luc. 11. vers. 24. 25. 26. Rom. 8. the whole, 1. Thess. 5. 19. Tit. 2. 11. 12. Iames 2. from the 20. to the 26. and 1. Ioh. 3. 9. 10. And were taken by the pen of H. Yeluerton of Grayes Inne Gentleman Philips, Edward.; Yelverton, Henry, Sir, 1566-1629. 1607 (1607) STC 19854; ESTC S114640 484,245 625

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the Tower of Babell should haue beene erected to them and as easie it is to pull God out of his throne as to disgrace vs further then he permits for our saluation is as sure as his owne seate and as stedfast as if our selues had beene in heauen and seene it written with Gods owne singer Yea we shall stand like mount Sion Psal 125.1 and not a feather of a bird much more not the haire of our head nor the hem of our garment shall bee touched or fall without his appointment Wherefore Sathan sinneth against the holy Ghost in labouring to seduce the faithfull whom he knoweth he cannot stirre and when he knoweth wee cannot fall finally since the Angels haue charge ouer vs and cannot but be faithful keepers of that is committed to them And heerein may we embrace the riches of the Lords mercy who when his owne prouidence might be sufficient to secure vs of our safety yet to releeue our infirmity and to support our weaknesse hath giuen vs the gard of heauen to wait vpon vs as if one that were to passe the seas should not onely haue the letters of the Prince for his safe conduct but should be guarded with his royall Nany to assure vs that doing that we doe by the warrant of his word we shall neither be persecuted nor molested but so far as he may haue glory by it and we reape comfort For the third wherein he doth falsifie the text alleaged and this he doth two waies first by wronging the words secondly by wresting the sense for the Psalm 91.11 is He hath giuen his Angels charge to keepe thee in thy waies so as the promise is made with a limitation that hee keepe him in his waies Now from the pinnacle of the temple to fall downe is not the way but hee leaueth out the demonstration of the truth thy waies that is those waies that bee prescribed as from the Temple to come downe by the staires by this meanes dealing fraudulently leauing out the principall Secondly consider the wresting of the sense for where this was spoken that Christ should depend vpon his Fathers prouidence walking in his waies hee laboureth to secure him generally of the same prouidence though he were out of the way heereby to ouerthrow him Now as hee dealt with the head so hee doth with the members for pretending Gods protection hee laboureth to bring men to destruction For predestination hee will tell a man Esau was hated and Iacob beloued before they had done either good or euill Mal. 1.3 that it is not in the willer nor in the runner neither in the affection Phil. 2.13 nor in the action which hee doth onely to make vs rest in the prouidence of Gods predestination without hauing regard to our conuersation whereas heereby we ought the more to bee induced to get as many testimonies as wee can to prooue that this election pertaineth to vs and not to waite till grace should distill by diuine influence or to make the decree of God a meanes of our security to liue as we list as that being elected we cannot perish and being appointed to be damned we cannot auoid it So for Iustification hee will suggest Wee are saued by the bloud of Christ onely and when wee haue done all we are vnprofitable seruants the more we sinne the more grace aboundeth Rom. 6.1 and God hath most glory in pardoning most offences Whereas being elected we worke well not to recompence the goodnesse of God but to shew our thankfulnesse And there is no promise where the commandement is not kept for this is to be performed on our part else God is discharged on his part for being out of our waies the diuell may take vs as vagabonds the protection of the Lord not extending to vs in this course And thus doth Sathan almost labour to peruert all the Scripture that he may finde vs straying out of our Fathers house as to suggest that the Sabbath is made for man therefore hee will labour to make vs worke on this day Mark 2.27 But let vs not giue eare to him for this leadeth out of the way So when it is said He that laboureth not for his house 2. Tim. 5.8 is worse then an infidell if hee abuse any of vs by this to couet after riches away with it for it is said in another place Couetousnesse is the root of all euill and the desire of riches is simply vnlawfull 1. Tim. 6.9 for by this he falleth into many snares It is written againe Thou shalt not tempt c. This is the second generall part namely the repulse of the temptation wherein consider two parts first that Christ answereth againe by Scripture secondly in what sense the place is alleaged For the first we may obserue and see it is no disgrace nor disparagement to the Scripture to proceed from Sathan nor any occasion to make vs leaue our hold for Christ answereth againe and striketh with the same weapon wherewith he was stricken shewing vs that it is lawfull to vse a text well against them that doe abuse a text and if Christs example be our president then wee may alleage Scripture against depraued Scripture For the Bee may gather hony on the same stalke that the spider doth poison And though a swashbuckler kill a man with his weapon yet a souldier may lawfully knit a sword to his side and though there be many piracies committed on the sea yet may the merchants trafficke or though some surfet by gluttony yet may others vse their temperate diet And if the diuell change himselfe into an Angell of light shall therefore the Angels lose their light Or shall Paul therfore deny himselfe to be a preacher of saluation because the Pythonite Act. 16.17 spake it Or because Caiphas by the spirit of the diuell Ioh. 11.50 said one should die for the sinnes of the people must we not therfore beleeue it And though Numb 22. an inchanter wished that his soule might die the death of the righteous yet is it a praier fit to be vsed of all Christians though hee sold his soule for gold For saith hee Numb 24.17 a starre shall come out of Iuda a true speech of a false spirit And heere the diuels owne mouth protesteth that Gods prouidence reacheth ouer his children which we may beleeue with comfort though it proceed from his lying lippes For the second which is the sense of the words heerein Christ doth plainely shew that hee abused the place before alleaged because he inforced the promise contrary to the commandement mandement making it absolute where it was but conditionall that the Lord would protect him if he kept him in his waies and for him to expect the promise if he went astray were meerely to tempt God so as the diuell by concealing that part did poison and adulterate the Scripture Now wee must obserue that God is tempted by man two waies first when we doubt of his power vsing
encouraged to presse within the border of the mount when the horne of saluation shall be blowen For it is a miserie and madnesse to imagine the labour of a Christian to be mued vp within the wales of the ministerie or that men are so straitned in their vocations as that they may not looke aside to a sermon or that because the theese was saued on the gallowes Luk. 23.43 therefore heauen may bee wonne with a wet finger or that since the workers for an houre Mat. 20.9 had the penny with them that bore the paine and heate of the day therefore it shall suffice to come as Nicodemus did to Christ by night Ioh. 3.2 Nay we must know that as the promise of mercie is equall to all so the prayer and practise for mercie must be the same in all that we are no longer within the compasse of the Lords protection Psal 91 11. then wee walke in feare within the bounds of his direction that if religion be not the commander in our callings scarcitie or discontent will bee as mothes in our blessings and that if presumption misleade vs to pledge only a pang of deuotion for a sacrifice when the pleasure of our daies be past iudgement shall but requite vs if either death do strangle vs before we speake or the wrath of God rebound vpon vs when wee haue wept our fill For it standeth not with the Lords honour to be shaken off so oft when he would lodge with vs Ier. 32.33 nor with our duties to runne away so fast when wee should turne to him but that at length iustice must arise to preserue the maiestie of his mercy so much abased and so long abused which we haue sensibly felt the stripes being yet seene in our streets and may feare heereafter to bee more fierce 2. Sam. 24.14 by how much the sword of the enemie sharpened to destruction doth exceed the correcting hand of God tempered with compassion The Lord graunt this short setting of his face against vs may haste vs to haue peace with him that hath the ends of the world subiect to his power and the plagues of the world restrainable at his will so shall wee bee preserued from the venime and ransomed from the violence of them that seeke our soules and either still praise him in the land of the liuing Psal 56.13 or eternally dwell with him in the habitation of his Saints which God grant may bee your portions and the inheritance of your posterity Amen Yours in all dutie H. Yeluerton TO THE READER THinke not gentle Reader that the turning backe from the world is any looking backe from the plough Luk. 9.62 but by example iudge it safer to bend thine eie toward Zoar a place of rest then to wrest thy sight toward Sodome the citie of wrath Gen. 19.22 And since the earth was cursed for thy sinne in Adam Gen. 3.17 Gal. 2.16 Rom. 3.22 Matt. 6 20. Phil. 3.20 1. Ioh. 5 6. and thy selfe art saued by thy faith in Christ let the direction of thy thoughts to him be the messenger to thy heart that thou art in heauen for thou art not placed that thou shouldest be planted here but being bought from this earth by bloud cleanse thy selfe in this earth by water that since some inferior affections must needs be foule Ioh. 13.8 the dust may onely cleaue to thy feet thy head and thy hands be lift vp to God For if in the pride of thy flesh thou dost build thy nest neere him or in the profanenes of thy heart doest striue to be rich without him Esay 14.15 Gen. 11.7 Luk. 12.20 the least breath of his mouth shal batter thy seat to be seene no more scatter thy wealth as before the wind Yea the Lord hath choked thy fields with thistles Gen. 3.18 Iam. 5.3 wrapped vp thy treasure in rust that seeing the ground whereon thou standest to be out of Paradise and the staffe whereon thou leanest to bee but wood of the woorst sort thou mightest pray to haue the sword put vp that stops thee from the tree of life Gen. 3.24 and those boughes cut off that shadow thee from beholding thy sinnes borne in Christs body 1. Pet. 2.24 Now the humour that hindreth thy sight is the Crystall shew of brittle honor that sets thine eies on fire to follow after it for if Adam may be as God Gen. 3 5. there is no commandement can hedge him Gen. 33. ●● if Esau may haue a traine of men at his heeles hee will soone digest the losse of his birth-right 2. Tim. 4.10 if Demas may but win the world he will haste to shake hands with the Saints of God But remember how with the fruite thy father swallowed wrath Ier. 31.29 which to this day hath set thy teeth on edge M● ● 3 Mat 4.10 that the ioy the reprobate hath in his flesh is ioined with the hatred of God vpon his soule and that if the sonnes of men shall take the diuell at his word as the Sonne of God did not it is but a bitter recompence for the losse of the better part Mat. 16.26 when themselues are compassed with confusion Take the counters into thine owne hand and see what reckoning thou canst make of life what is past frighteth thee with the remembrance of it because so much of thy light is spent what is present burdeneth thee with the weight of it because in sweate and sorrow thou doest waste thy time what is to come troubleth thee with the incertainty of it lest the graue do swallow thee before thou see it yea make thy account as thou ought and thou shalt find it swifter then the weauers shittle Iob 7.6 Iob 9.25 and speedier then a Post caried vpon the wings of the wind for if the Lord steppe not betweene thee and death before thou canst lay one thy breath is gone What booteth it then so vnseasonably to ripen thy cares for the tares of this life for if thou heape vp siluer as the sand and prepare raiment as the clay yet building thy house as the moth not in thine owne but in anothers garment when thou shalt make thy bed in the darke Iob ●8 13 Io● 16. ●● and the first borne of death shall consume thy strength where then be the strings of thy hope thy horne being thus abased to the dust Of thy selfe thou art but a tree turned vpward hauing no sap from the earth and if thou beest not moistened with the deaw from heauen though by the sent of water thou maiest bud yet shalt thou perish in the blade because thou hast no spirit at the roote Therefore if thou expect in thy labour blessing in thy peace continuance in affliction comfort in thy death triumph thou must respect in thy calling honesty in thy pleasures iudgement Eccles 11.9 Tit. 2.12 in thy sorrowes mercy in thy life
sonnes after for what flesh durst touch that vessell that was sanctified to entertaine the Lord Iesus MATH chap. 2. vers 1 2. c. verse 1 When Iesus then was borne at Bethlehem in Iudaea in the daies of Herod the king behold there came Wise men from the East to Ierusalem verse 2 Saying where is that King of the Iewes that is borne for we haue seene his starre in the East and are come to worship him verse 3 When king Herod heard this he was troubled and all Hierusalem with him verse 4 And gathering together all the chiefe Priests and Scribes of the people he asked of them where Christ should be borne verse 5 And they said vnto him At Bethlehem in Iudaea for so it is written by the Prophet verse 6 And thou Bethlehem in the land of Iuda art not the least amongst the Princes of Iuda for out of thee shall come the Gouernor that shall feed that my people Israel verse 7 Then Herod priuily called the Wise-men and diligently enquired of them the time of the starre that appeared verse 8 And sent them to Bethlehem saying Goe and search diligently for the babe and when yee haue found him bring me word againe that I may come also and worship him verse 9 So when they had heard the king they departed and lo the starre which they had seene in the East went before the●● till it came and stood ouer the place where the babe was verse 10 And when they saw the starre they reioyced with an exceeding great ioy verse 11 And went into the house and found the babe with Mary his mother and fell downe and worshipped him and opened their treasures and presented vnto him gifts euen gold and frankencense and mirrhe verse 12 And after they were warned of God in a dreame that they should not goe againe to Herod they returned into their countrey another way THE Euangelist in the former Chapter hauing set downe two things first the royall pedegree of our Sauiour Christ secondly the manner of his conception now he proceedeth to shew his manifestation to the world and the manner of it beginning with a certaine memorable history of certaine men renowmed among the heathen who being most learned though most superstitious did vndertake a tedious and dangerous iourney to doe homage to a poore babe lying in a cratch as if it had been to a mighty Monarch In the words there be six circumstances set downe first that these Wise-men came from a farre country by the direction of an extraordinary starre created of God for that purpose and enqured where the king of the Iewes was Secondly is remembred what effect this newes and enquiry had and wrought namely a wonderful feare in the Court of Herod and a great perplexity in the inhabitants of Ierusalem Whereupon the King called a Parliament or a Conuocation of Diuines God working withall in his conscience knowing himselfe to bee an vsurper to know of them not where this King of the Iewes should bee at that present but where hee should bee borne Thirdly is declared the resolution that was giuen to this question so propounded satisfying the matter truly out of an ancient record of the Prophet Micah chap. 5.2 set downe in the 5. and 6. verses Fourthly followeth the priuy and slie practise which Herod most maliciously but most politikely attempted his conference with the Wise men being onely to be enformed when the starre appeared that he might guesse the birth of the child to goe about his murther in the 7. 8. verses Fiftly what befell these Sages or Wisemen in the way hauing receiued resolution from the Councell and encouragement from the King namely the starre appeared againe and led them directly to the place where the babe was and how they reioyced in the 9.10 and 11. verses Sixtly is set downe an Oracle from God giuen them commanding them to goe another way in the 12. verse For the first which is the comming of these men to see our Sauiour Christ in his basenesse the Euangelist setteth downe fiue circumstances First the persons that came they were Magi or Wise men such as were reputed among the heathen most learned but yet the practisers of the Art of Balaam that is of coniuring and the very Chaplaines of the diuell So as they were not Kings as some haue taken it abusing the Psalm 72.10 The Kings of Sheba shall come offer gifts for this standeth full West and these men came from the East But thus hath the Lord infatuated them that would incline to their owne shallow braine that they should speake things repugnant in themselues Others set downe the number of them to bee three because they brought three gifts which is not so to be taken but onely that they which came presented vnto him the chiefest commodity of their country The second circumstance noteth the time set downe doubly first that it was after his birth secondly that Herod the sonne of Antipater who had got the Kingdome by force and flattery then raigned but for the day when they came wee know not some take it to be the sixth of Ianuary which is a great deale too curious howbeit of the yeere and moneth somewhat may bee gathered and it is probable it was not long after his birth and vnder two yeeres Thirdly he noteth the circumstance of the place from whence and whither they came from the East to Ierusalem Fourthly the question they demand Where is the King of the Iewes that is borne not that should bee borne Fiftly lest they might seeme to bee besotted with Astrologicall coniectures hee sets downe the direction they had to come thither namely the starre and the end wherefore they came to worship him Out of the circumstance of the persons that came obserue how it pleased God when the fulnesse of time was come to manifest the truth of his promise to the Gentiles and to salute them first with the comfortable newes of Christ his birth who had beene so long forsaken for these Wise men were as it were the first fruites of the Gentiles who before this time liued without God in the world Heereby teaching vs first not to hasten but when the Lord doth call and to wait his time and pleasure with patience for though he had suffered the Gentiles by the space of foure thousa●● yeeres to follow the greedinesse of their owne lusts and to be drenched in the whirle pit of their vile affections yet these at length in his due time doth hee visit in great mercy and sheweth them the light first that they may come out of darkenesse that though the Iewes had many priuiledges as elder brethren aboue them yet at length the Lords mercy should make them equall as was prophesied Ose 2.23 and is set downe by S. Peter 1. chap. 2.10 yea and of the Gentiles that his Church should especially be gathered that they which in times past were not vnder mercy might now be seene to haue obtained mercy
hee shall be hold his destruction Exod. 14.28 in the red sea How oft 〈◊〉 Saul thinke and how sore did he thirst for the life of Dauid 〈◊〉 he misseth of his purpose and slaieth himselfe 1. Sam. 31.4 〈◊〉 make way for Dauid to the kingdome And such shall be the ●●cesse of all that conspire against the Lord and his Christ to fall 〈◊〉 to the pit which themselues haue digged and to make the w●●ked a ransome for the godly For the maner of Herods death though it be silenced by the Euangelist yet the Ecclesiasticall stories make mention of it as Iosephus and Eusebius which though it command not the conscience to beleeue yet the more to magnifie the Lord it is not vnfit to consider it He had a great swelling in his legs woonderfull rottennesse in his whole flesh his breath did so stinke as he could not be accompanied with he had such a disease in his parts of shame as wormes did crawle about them he was greedie of meat hauing the appetite of a dogge not to be satisfied his whole race was accursed after him hauing eight children within an hundred yeeres there was not any of their loines lest Archilaus heere spoken of was banished to Vienna and there died a beggar Antypas that beheaded Iohn Baptist and whom Christ called Foxe Luke 13.32 was banished to Lions in France and there died a most miserable abiect Agrippa the son of Aristobulus the sonne of this Herod an insolent and proud man was eaten vp with lice most shamefully Act. 12.23 The sonne of this Agrippa that would haue put Peter to death liuing till the destruction of Ierusalem there had his end Thus did the wrath of God rest vpon the familie of this cruell persecutor of Gods Church who was blasted in himselfe and his posteritie And thus did the Lord 1. Kings 14.10 sweepe away the house of Ieroboam as a man sweepeth away dung till it bee all gone and 1. King 21.21 did cut off the posteritie of Ahab for their prouocations wherewith they had prouoked him to teach vs to feare and tremble before his face and if we will be blessed in our selues and in the fruit of our bodie to looke vnto our paths that we lay not our hands to wickednesse Note further that we are not to feare what Princes can doe vnto vs for they liue no longer then they haue some seruice to doe for Gods glorie as it is said Col. 1.16 All things are in Christ and for Christ And Saul could not Acts 9.1 breath out threatnings against the Church of God had not the Lord some speciall purpose in it either for the exercising of his Saints or the waiting for his owne repentance Neither could Pharaoh so long ●●ie his rodde vpon the Israelites were it not as S. Paul saith Rom. 9.17 that the Lord stirred him vp to shew his power in him For now when Herod had executed the children whereby God is glorified in their innocent death and his owne malice fully manifested then he dieth himselfe which may teach vs patience against the time of trouble knowing that the wicked are but as the weapons of the Lord to set an edge on our affection● which otherwise would creepe vpon the earth and make vs forget our maker whereas by this meanes we oft times cast our 〈◊〉 on our deliuerer which is in heauen Further learne that though tyrants appoint vs as sheepe to the slaughter and in the malice of their hearts doe purpose to fleece vs yet sometime the butcher wanteth his knife and the sheepe in the shambles do escape therefore we need not to be afraid of them that haue not so much power as to kill the bodie vnlesse the Lord giue vs vp into their hands as Dauid saith Psal 7.12 speaking of the wicked hee hath bent his bow and spread his net and hath conceiued mischiefe but shall bring foorth vanitie and the euill intended shall fall vpon his owne hairy scalpe For the diuell that is stronger then man yea that a●meth the malice of men cannot stretch foorth his hand vpon the goods of Iob Iob. 1.12 much lesse touch his body without the permission of the Almighty Herod shall die and Christ shall escape if not the worst that flesh and bloud can doe is but 〈◊〉 send vs with the children of Bethlem into heauen for the Lor● is our shield and we are as neare deare vnto him as the apple of his eie yea he is our secret place and vnder his shadow we can not but be safe For the second point containing the obedience of Iosep● by his example we learne not to runne before Gods promises but patiently to waite vpon them for as hee is alwaies a sure deliuerer of his people so then especially when his mouth ha●● spoken it and vpon this Ioseph relied not stirring till he was called Moses was sure to bring the people of Israel out of Egypt Exod. 3.10 yet hee must staie for it fortie yeeres as if the Lord had forgotten to what purpose hee had appointed him Noab 〈◊〉 the Lords commandement entreth into the Arke and comme●● not foorth till by the same commandement Gen. 8.16 he 〈◊〉 called foorth though by the not returning of the Doue he kn●● the waters were abated from the earth Dauid was sure to be king after Saul yet he waited so long as in his haste he said Psalm 116.11 All men are liers thinking that Samuel had abused him to tell him hee should be King which we must beware of for the cause why the Lord staieth many times is because his seruants crie not out vnto him nor presse him with importunity as Luk. 18.5 the widow did the Iudge or for that our curst heares will not come downe so as he is faine to vse the wicked as rods to chastise and humble vs. Heere also learne that as Christ commeth out of Egypt so the Lord draweth the Gospell out of the fire and giueth it some Sun-shine out of the darkest persecution yea and that as it is said Act. 12.24 in the time of the most ambitious and Lordly tyrants it shall grow and multiply exceedingly for so it hath pleased God that the hotest persecutors as was S. Paul haue embraced it and that kings haue submitted their scepters to the foolishnesse of preaching Which noteth vnto vs that the ignominy that lighteth vpon the crosse is not nor ought to be any occasion to disswade vs from it for the proceeding of Christs kingdome is aboue nature and the perswading to it is cleaue contrary to the custome of the world For saith Cyrus if a Lacedaemonian will serue mee if hee bee a foot-man I will make him an horseman if a horse-man I will giue him a Chariot if hee haue a Chariot I will giue him a Castle if a Castle a Citie and he shall receiue his gold not by tale but by waite But now in the groweth and age of a Christian it fareth otherwise for this is the condition of
lawfull meanes and yet we doe not thinke God can relieue vs as Exod. 17. and Numb 20 both the Israelites and Moses himselfe doubted there would come no water out of the rocke though it were stricken whereupon the place was called Massah and Meribah Strife and T●mptation for the Lord had told them by that meanes they should gaine water Secondly he is tempted when we neglect the meanes and yet presume vpon his power which is most proper to this place For if Christ heere would haue come downe from the pinnacle head long and not by degrees hee had neglected the meanes and so had beene out of the compasse of the promise And thus doe we trie whether God can keepe vs when we are gone out of the way which is as if wee would cut off a mans leg and send him then on our errand and clip the wings of a bird to trie whether it can flie for our presumption can tie vp Gods armes that he cannot helpe vs and make him brasse that he cannot raine mercy vpon vs. We know there is a peremptory decree of election and reprobation Phil. 2.12 what of this yet we must striue to obtaine the price set before vs and worke our saluation forth with feare and trembling for there are none predestinate to life but they are predestinate to the meanes faith and repentance and he shall beleeue and repent that shall be saued and he that doth not was neuer elect and yet we trie whether God can saue vs contrary to the meanes hee hath appointed by walking in profanenesse and in the works of darknesse But let vs know that the promise is vpon condition that we beleeue and that the meanes standeth with the decree and cannot be separate Oh but it is said Ezec. 18.32 Rom. 2.4 At what time soeuer a sinner doth repent he shall liue True but it is said againe Abuse not the bountifulnesse of the Lord vnto thine owne damnation For the doore is not alway open but thou maist knocke too late and weepe when thou canst get no blessing for if the sunne once set vpon our sinnes or the inheritance be once giuen then we come too short to expect any share Heere wee are to consider two extremities wee are fallen into first that wee distrust most where wee ought not to doubt secondly that wherein we should be most fearefull wee are too bold Care not saith Christ for food and apparell Mat. 6.25 they shall be cast vpon you and yet in these things we dare not trust the Lord without a pawne for vnlesse we haue bread we thinke straight way we shall starue but concerning heauenly things we are more carelesse as for the preaching of the word which is as necessary to keepe life in the soule as is food to maintaine life in the body Without bread a man will confidently say he 〈…〉 liue and yet despising the bread of life and neuer tasting of it he will not doubt but hee hath a sound soule and can retire to the song of mercie as that he trusteth God will spare him when as in truth wee haue no promise of mercie but through obedience to the Gospell embracing it by faith and expressing it in our conuersation And this is our miserie that wee are growen so sluggish that wee dare trust God with our soules without meanes which is the more precious part but not with our bodies vnlesse wee see the meanes present these being of no value saue in respect of the soule which maketh the whole immortall Christ heere refused to fall downe because there was another way so let vs cease to tempt the Lord by our wicked liues vpon hope of his patience or presuming that in compassion he will not fall out with vs nor take vengeance on our offences for wee cannot turst or rely vpon mercie without obedience to his commandement Example heereof wee haue Act. 27.24 where Paul had a promise of the Lord that not a haire of their head should perish that went with him in the ship yet when vpon violence of the tempest they would haue committed themselues to the sea Paul telleth them they could not be safe vnlesse they stated in the shippe for God hauing set downe the meanes of their safetie meant to haue their hearts inclined to it euen so he that doth not amend his life can no more bee secure from the ship-wracke of his soule then these from the daunger of their bodies if they had forsaken the ship or Christ to haue had his Fathers Angels to haue vpheld him if hee had cast himselfe downe Againe the Diuell tooke him vp into an exceeding high mountaine c. This is the third battery or assault was laid against our Sauiour Christ wherein are two generall parts first the temptation secondly the resistance of the temptation In the first there are three parts to be considered first what was the glorious and glittering sight he shewed Christ secondly what was the bountifull offer he made him thirdly what was the condition he required in recompence of his roiall liberality The sight he shewed him is set downe by these circumstances first hee lifteth him vp into an exceeding high mountaine that he might haue the aduantage of the place to take the better view secondly hee shewes him not some but all the kingdomes of the earth not in some but in all the glory of them all and as Saint Luke saith chap. 4.5 in the twinckling of an eye that the sudden sight might haue rauished him Out of which learne that before the diuell would propound his purpose and manifest his drift he vseth an infinuation to prepare Christ by making an impression in his minde to haue that moued by the apprehension of the sense that if it were possible his mind might be insnared But Christ though he had the naturall faculties of man yet was he not subiect to mans infirmities But it is strange to see how forcible this temptation is to the sonnes of men that are but flesh to shew them but the sight of things for not onely the minde poisoned with concupiscence corrupteth the sense but the sense likewise poisoneth the minde and oft times the Diuell begins with thoughts and fancies represented to the senses In incontinency thus he wrought with Dauid 2. Sa. 11.2 by casting his eye from the turret to lust after Vriahs wife and Gen 39.7 Putyphars wife fair the yong man Ioseph to be faire and she said Lie with me and Ioshua 7.22 Achan saw a stately garment of a Babylonian and then coueted and then tooke it For sensuality and voluptuousnesse the eye worketh much vpon men and therefore in the Prouerbs we are forbidden to looke vpon the colour of wine lest the sight inflame the appetite Prou. 13.31 and in Ahab 1. King 21.2 it is to be thought hee often saw Naboths Vine-yard whereby hee was brought so greedily to desire it yea in most of the sinnes registred in the scripture this speech They saw
the time we may faile of his promotion there being but one particular flower of that kind in the whole garden of God besides he had no such meanes of faith offered him till he was vpon the gallowes wheras we haue had and doe still enioy great store both for our present vse and for to lay vp against a dearth heereafter againe by this our deferring and shufling off the time of saluation we sinne three waies against God against the saints of God and against our owne soules against God because we dally with him and abuse his patience putting that day far off which may come at the least to thee in an instant if the Lord withdrawe thy breath but a while from thee against the Saints of God because thou depriuest them of that company comfort and profit thou mightest haue each of other for heerein standeth the communion of Saints in a fellow-feeling one of anothers miseries comforting them in their griefes strengthening them in their infirmities supplying them in their wantes and encouraging them in the faith and power of grace which they haue receiued lastly against themselues in thus hazarding their soules for it is not enough to say Lord haue mercy on thee when thou art on thy death bed when rather sense of thy paine then feeling of thy sinne doth driue thee to that extremity but thou must seeke for mercy before thou art thrust into those straites else may thy conscience then flie in thy face and the remembrance of thy former negligence stop thy mouth as a iust reuenge for thy sinne of delay which was before committed Againe heere all lithernesse and lazinesse is remoued from them that are ready to finde excuse for not walking so cheerefully boldly and constantly in the right way as they should for assure thy selfe there is no crosse can fall vpon thee of that force as to crosse the working of Gods spirit in thee if thou thy selfe be not a meanes to quench it for if thou wilt hide thy talent it is true it can turne thee to no aduantage and if thou doest not stirre vp the graces in thee and varnish them as it were with a continuall vse of them no maruell though they decay and thou too for the kingdome of heauen is taken onely by the violent that striue and sweat and labour euen as he that is famished doth for meat so that if thou entertaine the spirit with diligence in praier in hearing in meditation and such like holy duties it will awake thee from thy sleep and remoue all impediments that may either turne backe thine eies from beholding thine anointed Christ Iesus or with draw thy heart from buying that hidden treasure that is sealed vp for thee in the booke of the promises of God Lastly obserue the maner of the Apostles speech beginning with the negatiue We must not walke after the flesh as a matter of greatest weight before hee commeth to the affirmatiue to walke after the spirit for where there is the absence of good there must needs be euil but where there is the absence of euill it followeth not that there is good therefore we must not onely not doe euill but we must doe good as Dauid saith Cease from euill and doe good so as the flesh must first be shaken off before we can shape our actions or affections after the spirit and to this purpose Esay saith cap. 1.16.17 Cease to doe euill learne to doe well and Paul Rom. 13.12 Cast away the workes of darkenesse and put on the armour of light and Ephe. 4.22.23 Cast off the old man which is corrupt and be renued in the spirit of your minde and as Tit. 2.12 we must not onely deny vngodlinesse but we must liue religiously and 1. Pet. 4.1 There must be in vs a signe not onely of Christs suffering but also of his resurrection to liue not after the lusts of men but after the will of God and as Rom. 7.4 Wee must not onely bee diuorced from our first husband the flesh but we must be married to our second husband which is the spirit so as for thesound cure of our corruption the rotten flesh must first be pared away that the right plaister may bee applied and when thou art healed thou must sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee but as hauing the sore running on thee the Lord dispensed with thy vntowardnesse for that time so now hauing the wound stopt and thine eies opened by a second laying of Christs hands vpon thee thou must performe such actions of life onely as are deriued from the spirit of God working in thee The vsurer therefore must not onely leaue his vsury but he must lend freely the oppressor must not onely cease from grinding the faces of the poore but hee must releeue them liberally the proud man must not onely forget to wrinkle his face by looking austerely but with meekenesse and humility he must embrace his brethren the profane man must not onely forsake his iesting and scoffing at religion but hee must set himselfe in the same ranke to be railed at for the name of Christ knowing that by this meanes as 1. Pet. 4.14 The spirit on his part is glorified And this may serue to stop their mouthes that thinke him an honest man that doth no harme whereas the not doing hurt is but as a tingling and pricking in the flesh after a great benumnednesse but it must be the action of good that must shew the life of Christ to bee in thee else maiest thou as well thinke it a causelesse curse vpon the figge-tree that hauing but leaues wherewith she did no harme was yet dried vp because she bare no fruit ROM chap. 8. vers 5.6 verse 5 For they that are after the flesh sauour the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit verse 6 For the wisedome of the flesh is death but the wisdome of the spirit is life and peace HEnce the Apostle proceedeth to proue who those bee who are ingrafted into Christ and who are not but continue in the wrath of God and this hee doth by following the opposition first made between the flesh and the spirit shewing in these verses what the seuerall natures and dispositions of them both are And secondly what are their seuerall ends they that are after the flesh thinke nothing sauoury but what comes from the flesh but their fruit and end is death that is damnation but they that are guided by the spirit taste nothing but what is spirituall and the fruit and end of them tendeth to a double comfort for their soules first bringing peace of conscience which is a continual feast in this life secondly eternal felicity in the life to come so as in summe his meaning is to shew that as many as are not in Christ shall be damned and as many as build vpon Christ shall be saued Then we must first know what is meant by flesh and what is
not neither was her importunity fruitlesse but she reaped the benefit of it namely the health of her daughter which grew by her faith which faith of hers was releeued by her hope The like may be said of Iacob who wrestled with God by faith Gen. 32.26 and in a Christian hope told him flatly to his face he would not let him go till he had blessed him Hope that is seene c. That is we hope not for that we haue already but for that we expect to haue heereafter and yet we may not thinke but by the eye of faith we haue seene him that is inuisible as the Apostle speaketh 2. Cor. 3.18 We doe behold as in a mirror the glorie of the Lordwith open face whereby is meant that though wee haue seene a great part in respect of the beginnings and although we know we are called and elect of God yet this is but in part as in a glasse for we haue but the witnesse and testimony of the spirit and doe not heere see him face to face perfectly and clearely Further vnderstand that there is a difference betweene sight and faith as it is said 2. Cor. 5.7 We walke by faith and not by sight that is though we haue not God presently in the view yet by faith we hope to see him Whereby we gather that faith and hope shall after this life be abolished as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 13.13 Now as speaking of the present time abideth faith hope and loue but the chiefest of these is loue as if he should say Among these three Christian vertues Loue in respect of the continuance is chiefest because it ceaseth not in the life to come as faith and hope do cease for since these tend to such things as are promised and are to come when they are come to what purpose should we haue faith and hope for the presence of that we hoped for excludeth hope but yet shall we alwaies perfectly loue God and loue one another Learne moreouer to beware and take heed Sathan steale not away our hearts and robbe vs of this hope of glory to thinke we may be happy enough in these visible things as in the enioying of possessions and heaping vp of goods and climing vp to earthly honor If we did consider the things hoped for to be farre more excellent and more permanent then these vanishing delights we would haue other thoughts and better affections toward our heauenly Citie But wee are so besotted in the present sweetnesse of the pleasures of this life that if the Lord would still settle and establish our mansion here that the gourd might still grow ouer our heads Ionah 4.6 as it did ouer Ionas head to keepe vs from heat and that wee might still flourish as the Bay tree we would resigne and giue vp all our interest and cease to claime any title to heauen or to make any haste to the throne of God which commeth to passe because we only walke in the admiration of these outward things as the Cardinall of Bourbon said He would not giue his part in Paris for his part in Paradise Whereas if we would weigh it truly they euer deceiued him soonest that most trusted in them Luk. 12.20 as the rich man that promised to his life ease for many yeeres because he had multitude of riches was the same night by sudden death depriued of all And if we would enter into true comparison betweene the ioyes of heauen and these prison-ioyes we haue on earth we should find farre greater difference then there was betweene the Manna in the wildernesse and the flesh pots of Egypt Num. 11.5.6 and the bread the lost sonne eat in his fathers house Luk. 15.16.23 and the huskes he eat abroad with swine Further learne that hope is not onely of that it seeth not but it hopes cleane contrary to that it seeth As Abraham hoped for fruit of Saraes body Gen. 18.13 when he knew her wombe was as a drie stocke and that it fared not with her as with other women Euen so fell it out in Dauid Samuel comes and anointeth him king heere he hopes for that he hath not nay 1. Sam. 16.13 cleane contrary to that he saw before his eies for snares were laid for him the builders refuse him as a fir stone both Prince and people hated him 1 Sam. 22.1 nay the fat Buls of Basan did rage vpon him amongst the basest he was in derision and a table talke as himselfe saith Psal 35.15.16 Doeg and other of his familiars that went into the house of God with him lift vp their heele against him yea God himselfe was against him as he crieth Psal 22.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me The very pangs of hell did compasse him so as he said in his haste All men are liers Samuel hath abused me and yet he hoped against hope and against these feares Psal 116.11 that the Lord would aduance him and so in the time appointed it came to passe Euen so must the godly doe they must ground and build vpon God and though they can espie out of the waterish and dimme humor of their hearts no light of deliuerance yet must they stil cleaue to him in hope and though we be neuer free but either Ismael persecuteth vs with his tongue or Esau hateth vs in his heart yet we must not be dismaied nor any whit repine at the prosperity of the wicked but euen this must cause vs to raise vp our hopes that because things be brought to this confusion and religion is so lightly set by therefore there must needs be a restitution and an inuersion and change of this order We doe with patience abide for it Where obserue though we must wait with patience yet we must sigh and grone for this agreeth well enough with the other that went before in respect these things we see are nothing comparable with that we shall haue And in respect of this stedfast hope of the expectation of this blessed day Moses refused to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a season Heb. 11.24 Dan. 5.11 and Daniel refused to bow downe to that beast that was set vp to dishonour God Yea by reason of this patient hope we may see how the martyrs from time to time haue submitted themselues to many torments not onely in patience but euen in triumph as one of the faithfull seruants of God who for his profession was cast to a Lion said I am the graine of Christ Iesus heere I am ready to bee ground with the teeth of this beast that I may be a fit loafe for the Lords table And whence came this Christian courage and resolution but onely because he saw God which was inuisible So may we say of all the rest of Gods children who haue refused the honour of the world as to be the sonnes of Pharaohs daughter and to sit with Princes and haue chosen rather to suffer persecution
complaining by grones and cries with the eies fixed vpon the mother this doubleth the compassion maketh her verie bowels to yearne with pitie Euen so the Lord more kind then a mother lendeth his louing and tender eare to our bitter complaints but being astonished with griefe that we cannot but onely crie out in hope and expectation of some help and we lie pained not able to expresse it this doth more enlarge the bowels of his compassion and then he gathereth our reares into a bottle and wipeth our eies and putteth his hand into our side to heale vs and regardeth as preciously such maner of speechlesse vtterance as any praier vttered in feruencie and vehemencie of words Which is a most singular comfort for Gods chosen that the clouds of affliction can neuer be so thick but a heartie sigh will scatter them yea come what will no time can be so euill nor tyrant so bitter or cruell that can stay vs from groning though through weight of torment they may stop vs from speaking as Dauid saith Psal 38.9 I powre O Lord my whole desire before thee and my sighing is not hidden from thee for none can refraine the heart from sobbing Yet must wee not abuse this comfortable doctrine to our fleshlie libertie to make vs sluggish in praying to the Lord and thinke onely a mentall prayer or a desire conceiued though not vttered to be enough for this speechlesse prayer is onely permitted in the bitternes of the heart and when the venime of affliction hath seized vpon the outward man in such a case and in such a time if we cannot speake with Anna 1. Sam. 1.13 we may with her wag our lips bee wee neuer so old Otherwise wee must say with Dauid Psal 57.8 Arise my tong and then arise vp my glorie for there is no instrument so fit to set foorth our wants and it is no excuse for thee to say the Lord knowes thy heart for so doth he know thy wants also before thou aske and by that reason neither the panting of the heart nor the paines of the lips should be requisit For the third point that is for the effect and efficacie of our prayers that they comming from the spirit must needs speed haue good successe obserue when it is said The Lord knowes the meaning that there is a speciall propertie of this word to be vnderstood for knowing is taken here for approuing as Rom. 7.15 What I do I know not that is allow not nor approue that Ido so Mat. 7.23 Depart from me I know you not that is approue you not for he knew them well inough So Psal 1.6 The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous that is approueth it and in the same sense is it taken in the Prouerb 12.10 The righteous man knoweth the soule of his beast that is approueth it Why then this is the lesson that if our prayers haue an allowance and approbation with God we may be sure we shall reape the fruit of our lips and that our requests shall not returne emptie vnto vs but shall be as the doue that brought an Oliue in her mouth signifying that the flouds are ceased and that we may walke on the drie land The reason why our prayers must needs speed is because the same spirit that maketh vs pray doth make vs onely to pray for those things that stand with the Lords glorie therfore must of necessitie be granted for God cannot denie himselfe he and his glorie are inseparable 1. Ioh. 5.14 And this is witnessed by S. Iohn This is our assurance that if wee aske any thing according to his will hee heareth vs and we know that we haue the petitions we desired of him So that it is not the worthinesse of our prayers that draweth Gods bountie to vs but the bounds and compasse wherein our prayers are limited and circumscribed that is ayming at nothing else and referring all to the will and pleasure of God which wee may be sure shall come to passe Euen as Iacob said Gen. 32.11.12 Thou wilt deliuer me O Lord from my brother Esau for thou hast said thou wilt do me good and 2. Sam. 7.21 Dauid saith O Lord I know thou wilt blesse my house because of thy word for thou hast spoken it Many there bee will say I haue prayed often and cried incessantlie for the increase of faith and yet I finde it as weake and my flesh as sinfull as it was before And thus Sathan perswadeth thee thou prayest not according to Gods will for if thou hadst bene his and hadst belonged to him he would haue giuen thee faith at thy first request But thou must beate backe this temptation which is but to lull thee in securitie by this answer that thou must thinke thy lot and thy portion to be no better then Dauids who Psal 69.3.4 brake forth saying O Lord I am wearie with crying and mine eyes faile while I haue waited for my God for the Lord will haue thee to continue in prayer not to wearie thee but to trie thy patience how long thou canst wait so as if thou speakest and the Lord seemeth not to heare thee double thy prayers vpon him for he maketh himselfe deafe to make thee more quicke and feruent If he listen to thee and yet thou obtainest not perseuere and continue for at last the Lord will incline to thy petition and from his throne will he send thee a chearefull message In Saint Luke we haue an example of one that asked but three loaues Luk. 11.8 and by his importunitie got as many as he would So may the p●●ore widow bee our paterne Luk. 18.5 who by her multiplying of her sure wit● many words obtained right of the vniust Iudge and therefore much more shall we by our instancie with the Lord obtaine what in faith we shal desire for out of the very words of the Apostle here we may learne first that it is certaine we shall haue it though it be vncertaine when it shall be cast vpon vs for Christians must endeuour to striue to this to haue Iacobs spirit and resolution that though the Lord fight with vs and would faine shake vs off yet not to let him goe till we haue forced a blessing from him and haue our petitions granted And we must haue the strength of the womans faith in the Gospell Mat. 15.22 as not to feare three denials of Christ hand to hand for her constancie and perseuerance were rewarded double first with the commendation of her faith secondly with the health of her daughter which was the thing she craued And euen so at length shall our prayers bee requited with the perfect cure of all our infirmities Secondly marke and assure thy selfe that if thy prayers made now be not presently heard thou shalt be rewarded in a time thou least lookest for and when thou art vtterly out of hope of that thou didst craue as we may see Luk. 1.13 Zachary and
rage but to glorifie Christ which glorie of his is greatest in our saluation We therefore in a spirituall confidence of the Lords loue do challenge all men and all things that euer were created that what violence soeuer they offer vs or what punishment soeuer they inflict vpon vs it is so farre from presting vs downe as it maketh vs spread higher and furthereth our saluation for God is with vs and while the bridegroome is with vs wee cannot mourne The euill they can doe is but with the dragon to fight with vs and as the enemies of God to persecute vs and though they be led to do this by the malice of their harts yet they serue but as the Lords rods to chastise vs and as Apothecaries to make drugs to cure our infirmities but so as they cannot put in one dramme more then the Lord knoweth of for he hath the tempering of the cup as it is said of Salomon The Lord weigheth the enterprises of men and their actions are in his hands and the woorst they can doe vs is but this to shorten our daies by that meanes to hasten our ioyes Hereupon we are to gather and to lay vp this comfort that if the course of nature should be altered yet euen in this confusion of nature if we call vpon the Lord his eare is readie to heare and his hand to helpe vs nay if there be any speciall iudgement and vengeance determined against a citie or a people the presence of the Lords children doth euen binde his hands that he can doe nothing while they be there as Genes 19.16 till Lot was snatched out of Sodome the fire could not fall from heauen to destroy it So that if heauen and earth conspire against vs if sea and sand should imagine vs mischiefe if the Princes of the world should set their armies against vs and like grashoppers in multitude should lie waiting for our liues if the sorrowes of death and the pangs of hell should compasse vs yet this is our shade and comfort that we liue vnder the wings of the Almightie and that wee are to the Lord as precious as the tenderest part of his eie and he that commeth so neare him the breath of his mouth shall confume him and in the middest of all these calamities wee shall stand like mount Sion and shall feare no more then the heauens were affraid Psal 125.1 Psal 91.11 Gen. 11.4 when Nimrod and his companie would haue built vp a tower vnto them For the Lord hath giuen his Angels charge ouer vs and not a haire of our head shall fall without his prouidence but as the wicked haue many waies to hurt vs so hath the Lord farre more meanes to helpe vs. Who spared not his owne Sonne This is another consolation ministred vnto vs to stay vs from fainting in afflictions that if God hath giuen vs his Sonne when wee were his enemies then much more now being reconciled vnto him will he giue vs with his Sonne all things else In this consider two parts first what it is that is said heere God deliuered vp his Sonne to death secondly that if hee giue him hee will giue all things else In the first consider two parts first the person of him that was giuen vp it was his owne Son secondly who the persons be for whom hee is giuen vp namely for all the faithfull In the first which is the person of him was giuen vp to death doth appeare the wonderfull loue of God that would vouchsafe to bestow vpon vs rebels and runnagates no woorse thing then his owne Sonne Great was the loue of Abraham toward God Gen. 22.8 that so commaunded his naturall affections as to offer vp his sonne Isaac at the Lords commaundement vnto death hauing but one sonne and he giuen him by a speciall fauor to comfort his age and him whom he loued being vertuous and religious when he had no hope to haue any more sonnes and this being the sonne of the promise in whom both himselfe and the whole world should be saued that this child should not bee banished from him but put to death and killed not before his face but with his owne hand this was a great loue for flesh and bloud to fall into But yet farre greater is the loue of God toward vs who louing Christ a thousand times more then Abraham could loue Isaac Ioh. 3.15 because betweene heauenly and earthlie things there is no comparison that God should deliuer him vp not to the whip but to the gibber not by commandement as Abraham did but of his meere and voluntarie loue and motion not into the hands of them that sorrowed to see him afflicted but into the hands of butchers that cared not how cruelly they dealt with him and this not for his friends as Abraham did for he was called the friend of God but for traitors that would haue pulled the Lord foorth of his owne seate and not to death onely as Abraham did his sonne who by the losse of his life should presently haue gained heauen but to a most cursed death and detestable and this to bee performed not in a mountaine or secret place where there should be sew beholders as Abrahams was to haue beene done but euen before the face of all the Iewes to hang as a most odious and notorious sinner to suffer his accusation to bee no lesse then for blasphemie to haue him so debased as to haue Barrabas who for an insurrection and murther was cast into prison Lu. 23.18.19 Mat. 27.22 in the choice of the people preferred before him who not onely was condemned by Pilate prosecuted by the malice of the Iewes conuinced by false testimonies scorned at by them that bad him helpe himselfe when he was in such extremitie as hee could scarce speake but that euen God his Father should arraigne him in heauen hauing all the sins of the world cast vpon him that pressed him at one time to the highest and lowest part of hell Whereupon consider that for the sinnes in our person all the horrors of hell did compasse him and all the torments of the damned did seize vpon him Reu. 19.15 and God for the time accounted him his enemie and brought him to that exigent and extremitie as he was forced to crie Father why hast thou forsaken me for if he had not bin the Sonne of God it had bin impossible to haue sustained or endured it and yet being the Son of God he was driuen so low as an Angel was faine to be dispatched from heauen to comfort him and all this to befall him who in himselfe was not in any one particular sinfull being cleane by birth and holy by conuersation True it is the high Priest was angrie with him because he tooke him as an offender in his owne person but God was angrie with him as esteeming him a sinner in our person that he which had not deserued being smitten wee that had deserued might
it were not possible but they should be rauished with expectation after it there being at euery gate an Angell standing to let in Gods children and to keepe out the fearefull and vnbeleeuers adulterers and vngodly persons Againe heere learne that the creatures waiting with vs and hauing as it were the same affection we haue to be vnchained of corruption and at the libertie of the sonnes of God they belong only to vs that are his children and are sanctified for our vse through prayer and thanksgiuing for as through vs they fell so through vs they shall be restored and therefore wait both with vs and on vs in the meane time and the wicked are but vsurpers ouer them snatching them against their willes and abusing of them to their lusts as the voluptuous Iewes did who feeding vpon that was none of theirs while the meate Psal 78.31 was yet in their mouths the wrath of the Lord Numb 11.33 was kindled and consumed them and euen so at length shall the wicked be chased out of the world Iob. 18.18 and for his theft in rauening vpon that is none of his as God himselfe saith Iob 39.13 he shall be shaken out of the corners of the earth for that they enioy is none of theirs but belongeth as truly to vs as a man accounteth that his owne which he getteth by his honest labour and in that they abound more with them heere then Gods children to whom of right they appertaine it is certaine the glory of Gods elect shall be the greater in heauen for the want of the creatures heere on earth and the more the wicked enioy heere the greater shall their torments be in hell for that is Luk. 16.25 the obiection of Abraham to stop the course of Diues his petition who was in torment Remember saith he thou hadst thy pleasure in thy life and therefore for thy pleasure thou art tormented in thy death for God sendeth not all his plagues at once vpon the wicked but suffereth him to haue his seeking that he may be satiate with his owne way and that desiring Prouerb 12 12. the net of euils he may be heereafter tied and ensnared with the cords of his owne sinne Againe obserue hence for the conclusion of this point that all the creatures in heauen and earth do serue for the furthering of our saluation and are readie and willing to do vs good except the diuell and those that shall be damned for we know the red sea ranne backe and became dry land for the passage of the Israelites Exod. 14.21 The bitter waters Exod. 15.25 were made sweet by the casting in of a tree to stanch their thirst The riuer Iordan returned backward Psal 114.3 till the people of God were passed ouer Water came foorth of the stonie rocke Exod. 17.6 that the Israelites might drinke according as they desired The Sunne stood still in the middest of heauen and hasted not to goe downe for a whole day Iosh 10.13 at the prayer of Ioshua At the prayer of Hezekiah Esay 38.8 the Sunne went 10. degrees backward contrary to the course of nature The small quātitie of meale oyle which the widow of Zareptah had through the word spoken by Eliah 1. Kings 17.16 wasted not till the Lord sent raine vpon the earth The waters being twice smitten with the cloke of Eliah 2. Kings 2.8.14 diuided themselues twice this way and that way for the passage ouer both of Eliah and Elisha The waters of Iericho 2. Kings 2.21 by the sprinckling of a little salt at the spring head were healed of the Lord for the good of his seruants that death come no more thereof The furnace Dan. 3.23 though it was heat seuen times more then it was wont to be had no power so much as to scortch the garments of the three children that would not obey the kings commaundement in a matter of Idolatry neither had the Lions Dan. 6.12 though rauenous in themselues any mouthes to open against Daniel that made his prayers to God notwithstanding it was against the decree of Darius the king and so much sollicited by his malitious and idolatrous nobles Since then the creatures of God are thus readie to hide and smother their strength where they may hurt vs to open and enlarge their power when they may defend vs and since the Angels of God Psal 91.11 watch ouer vs in our wayes let nothing make vs so foolish since we runne well but to hold on for the tyrants rage can not last but the wrath of God is a soft consuming fire and let vs venter our bodies which are but dust for the saluation of our soules which are the Lords 1. THESS chap. 5. vers 19.20 verse 19 Quench not the spirit verse 20 Despise not prophesying THe words themselues yeeld two points to be considered first a commandement or an exhortation equall to a commaundement secondly the meanes how this commandement may be best obeyed and the exhortation most fruitfully receiued The commaundement is Quench not the spirit the meanes to performe this is Despise not prophesying that is the wise and found interpretation of the Scriptures by them whose lippes preserue knowledge and whose feet are shod with the Gospell of peace for so prophesying is to be taken for an application of the word and a teaching to edification In the first obserue forasmuch as nothing can be quenched but fire why this Metaphor or borrowed speech is vsed of the Apostle to expresse the Spirit by fire The like phrase and speech is vsed Mat. 3.11 when the seruant baptizing his master lest it should seeme a disparagement and debasing of him doth protest in great humilitie that he did it but with water but there came one after him that should baptize them with the holy Ghost and with fire that is with the supernaturall power of the holy Ghost as it were fire And in Iohn 7.38 the spirit is resembled to water meaning thereby that who so is not cleansed of the holy Ghost as with water cannot be saued Now the spirit is compared to fire in respect of the foure properties that bee in fire first the nature of ●●re is to consume any matter that is combustible or may be burned euen so the holy Ghost is sent into vs to wast and consume all the lusts of our flesh as selfe-loue pride of life and whatsoeuer else exalteth it selfe aboue the purity and simplicity of the Gospell Secondly fire doth refine euery thing that can be purified euen so the holy Ghost doth change and refine our affections and purgeth vs from that drosse and filth of the earth that cleaueth so neare to vs and hangeth so fast vpon vs and keepeth vs still in the fornace of affliction till we come to that perfection of eternall blessednesse that the flesh dying the spirit may liue in the day of the Lord. Thirdly fire doth relieue by warmth all those subiects that be capable of life and those that be benummed it comforteth and reuiueth
words Rom. 4.2 Abraham was not iustified by workes and therefore they must be so reconciled as both places may bee true lest contrariety and variance appeare in the spirit of God which cannot be This is like those speeches vttered by Christ My Father is greater then I Ioh. 5.17 19. Iohn 10.30 and in another place I and my Father are all one and I count it no robbery to be equall with my Father which is spoken in a different respect the first in the person of a mediator the second in the person of the Godhead So Saint Paul taking the word iustifying for iustification before God said true and Saint Iames taking the word iustifying for iustification or approuing of his faith before men saieth true also but the word being taken in one and the same sense it were impossible for an Angell from heauen or for Christ himself to reconcile them And the reconciliation which the Papists make of these two places fighteth directly with Paul for they say faith and workes doe iustifie Paul saith faith onely iustifieth So as when Paul speaketh of iustifying by faith hee meaneth that whereby wee are acquitted by Christ and doe appeare perfect before God in him and Saint Iames taketh it for being iustified in the sight of men that is declared and approued to bee iustified when our holy life answereth to our holy profession And that the word Iustified is thus vsed and taken in this sense as Saint Iames doth appeareth Psalme 51.4 That thou maiest be iustified when thou art iudged that is declared to bee iust So Luke 7.29 the Publicans iustified God that is declared him to bee iust and in the same place it is said Wisedome is iustified of her children And Luk. 10.29 it is said the Lawyer was willing to iustifie himselfe that is to shew that hee was iust and it is likewise prooued out of the text it selfe Shew mee saith Saint Iames thy faith shew it to mee not to God Againe Saint Iames had falsified and abused the Scripture if he had taken the word iustifying in the sense to be made iust for the sentence that Abraham was iustified had passed the Lords mouth many yeeres before the sacrificing of his sonne for this that hee was iust was pronounced long before Ismael was conceiued as appeareth Genes 15.6 and therefore taking the word iustified to bee made iust hee could in no sort bee iustified by offering vp his sonne because he was iustified before but the meaning of Saint Iames is that it was approoued by this act and worke of Abraham that God had not saied before in vaine that hee was iustified and Rom. 4.10 it appeareth Abraham was iustified in his vncircumcision and this worke Iames speaketh of was done long after his circumcision To this the Papists reply thus Though Abraham was iustified before hee did this worke before God yet there is a degree to bee more iustified and so this place of Saint Iames may bee taken to bee a further iustification and an increase of faith before God as well as not To this wee answer that one pardon from God sufficeth for all sinnes and one droppe of blood serueth for all offences but because our faith is weake that we are not able to apply this bloud all at once therefore it is said that we must grow from faith to faith and he that is washed in the bloud of Christ is all cleane but our sanctification in this life leaueth some grudge and tang of corruption and maketh our feete impure as Christ speaketh Iohn 13.10 so as with God wee are iustified all at once and there is no proceeding by degrees in respect of him for blood pardons all but water that is our renewing groweth by degrees Now for the speeches of Saint Paul Rom. 4.4.5 and Rom. 8.30 that none are iustified by workes the Papists say It is to be taken of the workes of the law ceremoniall but not of the law m●●ll But we must note that Paul speaketh there of the law written in the tables of stone of that law that manifesteth sinne to bee sinne Thou shalt not lust c. which is the law morall and so their distinction false and friuolous Besides they were both the lawes of God and therefore a man may bee iustified as soone by the one as by the other for as Paul saith 2. Corinth 3.5 All our sufficiency is of God and of our selues we can doe nothing and but that the vaile is taken away in Christ the same couering remaineth which was in the old Testament vnder Moses And where Saint Paul saith Abraham was iustified without workes and no man shall bee iustified by the workes of the law True say the Papists by none of the workes of the law that he doth in the time of his infidelity but by them that hee doth after his conuersion he may be iustified And they say that forasmuch as the Apostle saith The workes of Abraham were done in beliefe therefore by this hee excludeth onely those workes done before faith to helpe his iustification So as by this wee see the aduersaries make two iustifications the first when of an infidell a man is made a professor which they say is by congruity when there is a certaine inclination in the heart of man to performe some good workes and yet for want of grace cannot the Lord seeing his heart thus prepared to be iustified doth call him and meerely of his grace doth iustifie him The second when a man is freely iustified by the grace of God then by this grace of God and his owne free-will say they hee may increase his iustification before God For the first we answer that none can be iustified by workes before faith for this is as if a tree should bring foorth fruite without a roote or a body should liue without a soule so in vaine is it to make a question of that cannot be for before wee haue faith it is impossible to worke or to thinke of a good work Secondly where they say that speech concerning Abraham is taken and to be vnderstood of his workes done before faith and that he was iustified by his good workes in faith this doth wholly eneruate and take away the strength of the Apostle his reason for Paul saith If hee were iustified by workes then had he whereof to glory with God Rom. 4.6 which speech extendeth as well to workes after faith as before faith for hee that deserueth any way may glory Secondly the Apostle saith Not to him that worketh but to him that beleeueth is righteousnesse due for if hee worketh hee hath his wages by desert that is say they he that standeth vpon his owne workes before faith without the assistance of Gods grace this man challengeth it by desert because hee did them without faith and grace which euasion and shift is most vaine for a man is not therefore made euill because he doth euill but he doth euill because he is borne euill so a man is