Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n believe_v faith_n word_n 11,191 5 4.5836 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
A04220 An exposition of the second epistle of the apostle Paul to Timothy, the first chapter Wherein 1 The text is logically into it's parts resolved ... 4 The seuerall doctrines thence arising deduced. ... All which is accompanied with familiar and delightfull similitudes ... Lastly as the matter requireth: there is vsed, definitions, distributions, subdiuisions, trialls, motiues, and directions, all which be of great vse in their proper order. By Iohn Barlovv ... Barlow, John, b. 1580 or 81. 1625 (1625) STC 1434; ESTC S100861 328,113 454

There are 41 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

title great and good enough these are the servants of the most high God was no small commendation Mala. 4. 4. Acts. 16. 17. For what is God Is he not the first cause of all things Reas 1. And supreme governour of the world The King of Kings and Lord of Lords And is it no honour immediatly to attend vpon him Is it a small honor to be next to our Soveraigne What then shall it be to be so vnto God He that serveth God may better his estate in so doing Reas 2. yea were he an Angell therefore it is no base but an honorable thing His actions shall be guided by the golden Rule and silver Reas 3. Precept of his Word and such as the one is the other is to be accounted for if the Rule be excellent the thing ruled by it is so too of necessitie And it is honor in this for all the creatures shall be their Reas 4. attendants and subiect to them Sathan shall not dare in his liuery like a Serieant to arrest them and the good Angels Psal ●1 11. shall preserue them and pitch their tents about them till they take possession of heaven Away then with that to be abhorred Proverbe What Vse 1. profit in serving the Almightie What honor in an holy life Let men thinke what they will holines to God is an honor vnto man and never was man dishonoured who in sinceritie served this Master Here let the Lords servants though poore and base in other Vse 2. respects yet reioyce in this that they serue the Lord. For this is to be of the true line Princely bloud and noblest familie He that can truely say I serue God giues himselfe the greatest title of dignitie This should moue all men poore especially to become Vse 3. the Lords servants for this is the onely way to honor and all promotion O that men did thinke so then fewer words would winne them from the world to attend on this never to be praysed-enough Master And this point should moue Parents to make their sons Vse 4. the Lords servants We esteeme it a wonderfull honor and so it is indeede if wee haue a childe that attendeth on his Prince returneth to his Countrey being clothed in silke and sattin and having one of the Kings rich coates vpon his backe what should we then esteeme it to haue a sonne clothed with the righteousnesse of Christ and enriched with all the saving graces of the spirit Angels attending on him and a Kingdome prepared for him Is this nothing Then labour for it for your selues for your children I serue Out of the word serue I obserue that A Christians course is not idle but laborious Doct. 5. Service is laborious a religious course is service therefore laborious Name what you will in religion and it requireth labour diligence Are we not commanded to enquire seeke knocke worke and create It is as it were a new creation Ier. 6. 16. Mat. 6. 33. 7. 7. Phil. 2. 12. Because its a difficult thing to get faith keepe faith or to Reas 1. liue by faith faith comes not by nature it growes not in every mans heart neither is it as some iudge so easily to be had he that will haue it must haue a broken heart rent by the Law for as a man doth not plant Trees on rockie mountaines no more doth the Lord sow this seed in stony and hard hearts he that will possesse it must attend diligently Pro. 8. 34. at the postes of Gods house for it comes first and is begot by hearing of the Word Preached and then prayer Rom. 10. 17. and the Sacraments will conserue it increase it Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeliefe and Lord increase our faith But it s Mark 9. 24. Luk. 17. 5. a prettie piece of service to liue by faith when all reason failes vs then to cast our selues vpon the Lord and to depend vpon his bare promise as I may say is a worke of wonderfull difficultie haue not the best of Gods servants Psal 7● 2. staggered and almost fainted in this piece of service Some cry tush I never doubted I will never be moved Well to such I say nothing for though they bragge they beleeue every thing yet I know that if I should tell them their estates they will not beleeue that one thing And as it is a hard taske to get faith keepe faith and liue Reas 2. by faith so it is no lesse labour to get a sound knowledge of the Precepts to keepe it and practise it Paul knew the Law of God but what a stirre had he to obey it And if we must cry and call for knowledge seeke and search for her Prov. 2. 4. as for silver oare in the earth bowels will it be a matter of lesse moment to put it in practise No no. The vnderstanding like a needle will pierce thorow and into the Precept when the will like a knottie and ill-twisted threed comes churlishly after It s hard to find out a narrow and vntroden path but more difficult to walke in it and not either to be weary or wander the Vses follow And seeing a religious course is not idle but laborious Vse 1. what shall we say of such as take no paines at all in service of that nature How few know their Master or his will And then how can such serue him Who inquireth and cryeth after the vnderstanding of the rules of this great Art by which this worke of religion is to be squared Haue we not more shuffling of cards than searching the Scriptures Playing than praying Feasting than religious fasting Running after goods but fleeing from all grace and goodnesse Some will not set a foot within the Lords vineyard gather one grape of sound knowledge or an eare of vnderstanding if they doe this is their service We haue beene at service And if they kneele downe lift vp their hands and stay till the worship of God be ended though their minds wander their hearts be at home and they returne never the wiser I ween the worser yet they doubt not but God on their part is well served and for his part very well pleased Why should not these men be thus deluded who know they doe little if any thing in Gods service and yet hope to be rewarded And is to serue God laborious Wee must then be of Vse 2. good courage gather strength and quit vs like men he that hath an hard taske will proportion his power according to the toyle The longer the ground hath lien fallow the stronger must be the Teame to teare it in sunder and the farther we take a iourney the more pence must wee put in our purse so the more difficult this dutie is the more must we looke about vs arme our selues and be prepared for the well performance of it And for the better discharge thereof we must labour for What is
Word is truth both in the threatnings and promises and shall be accomplished accordingly as we keepe the conditions And by obedience I doe vnderstand a conscionable care to beleeue threat and promise aswell as to obey the precept for to beleeue is to obey and to liue by faith may be called the obedience of the Gospell 2 Thes 1. 8. Many haue some care in somethings to obey the Precept but never regard to liue by faith and if they can say they beleeue in Christ Iesus then they thinke all is sure and their dutie discharged as though a man must never vse his hand but in holding fruit in it and not in applying it to the mouth assuredly faith hath a worke in every action that we performe and that not onely in assuring vs the thing is lawfull we doe but in perswading the Lord will performe his promise to vs when wee haue kept the covenant with him And vnderstand this that if we could beleeue more wee should obey more for all life motion and spirituall action comes from faith as all naturall acts are said to proceede from the forme If then these things were looked into who dares de●ie that a Christians course is leborious painefull and requires great diligence on their parts that will serue the Lord For knowledge of God and of his will must be had and faith and obedience too in him and his word both in the threats and promises as well as in the Precepts else no good servants From mine elders It may here be demanded if Paul served God with a pure Conscience before his Conversion I thinke it may be vnderstood of both for so farre forth as the Letter of the Law directed he was obedient liuing after Acts. 26. 4. 5. the most strict sect of a Pharisee and what he did against the 2 Tim. 1. 13. Saints was through ignorance wherefore the Lord had the rather mercie on him but it is principally meant after his Conversion For the Pharisees of which number he himselfe was vnderstood the Law according to the Letter neither could he away with the Gospell till the Lord in a wonderfull manner had compassion Acts 9. on him The Doctrine that we gather hence vnderstanding by Elders the auncient Patriarches and beleeving Iewes is that The Church before Christ had the same faith which now it hath Doct. 6. after his comming Did they not all eate the same spirituall meate And all drinke of the same spirituall drinke For they dranke of that rocke which followed them and that rocke was Christ It differed nothing in truth but in degree as a childe and an aged person 1 Cor. 10. 3. 4. Else God should be changeable but there is no variablenes Reas ● nor shadow of turning with him Iam. 1. 17. And were it not thus man should be saved after a divers Reas 2. manner which may not be admitted And did not Christ and his Apostles confirme their Reas 3. doctrine by Moses and the Prophets This confuteth the Maniches who hold that an evill Vse 1. God writ the old Testament and a good the New but one God was the Author of them both and what was darkely included in the former is more clearely manifested in the latter And this may confirme the salvation of our forefathers Vse 2. who kept the faith and to doubt no more of them than of our selues The Papists bring in this place for their Parents wherevnto we reply 1. That they were not beleevers 2. They are degenerate and fallen from the ancient faith 3. There was a Prophecie of a generall Apostasie and so their Elders are by the streame of time corrupted 4. And the antiquitie of a few or 500. yeares is not sufficient From mine Elders That Abraham Isaac Iacob whence it ariseth that The name of the righteous shall be had in remembrance Doct. 7. What though the names of the wicked rot Shall not the memory of the iust be blessed Yes it shall grow vp and flourish from generation to generation Prov. 10. 7. Psal 112. 6. For God will honour them that honour him 1 Sam. 2. 30. Reas 1. Reas 2. Also one good man will perpetuate the name of another vnto their succeeding posteritie and tell it to his children Furthermore such leaue noble and worthy Monuments Reas 3. behind them either by doing or suffering which spread their fame into all quarters and future generations And the wicked may haue an hand in this action for Reas 4. some of them may thinke well of such and register their names others as Pilate by Gods over-ruling-hand may write the truth which shall stand for ever Doe they not then labour in vaine who seeke to blot out Vse 1. the memoriall of the iust with taunts scoffes and reproaches as men doe the engraving vpon Tombes with their foule shoes Let them doe their worst spet their venome weaue a deceitfull webbe yet shall they never effect their purpose for What is written shall be written maugre all their malice the names of the wicked are written in the earth each foot shall scatter them but for the righteous they are engraven in stone with a pen of yron and for ever shall flourish Here may a man take direction that will lead him to true Vse 2. honor eternall doe iustice loue mercie walke vprightly serue in truth of heart the Lord God of thy Fathers and thy same shall ever remaine build Bethel pull downe Babel and thy name shall be everlasting Who would haue his name to rot His memoriall perish Not any then serue God from thy elders with a pure Conscience Many like Nimrod seeke a name but they in not taking the right way lose both it and themselues What person so poore if religious but is had in everlasting remembrance And who so great if vngodly but are either forgot or their names continued to their everlasting shame For when men by indirect meanes seeke prayse they lose it and purchase perpetuall reproach With pure Conscience Here is laid downe the manner how Paul served God whence the collection is that The service of God is then commendable when it is accompanied Doct. 8. with a pure Conscience These two like Naomi and Ruth must run together What tast without salt in the white of an egge What praise in that service that wanteth sinceritie And who ever in merchandizing lost so much credit as Himeneus and Philetus that made shipwracke of faith and a good Conscience The Hebrewes still put heart for conscience having no particular word for it and so doth the Evangelist so that a pure heart and a pure conscience are equivalent termes Prov. 15. 15. 1 Ioh. 3. 20. Isa 38. 3. Iob. 27. 4. 5. Acts. 24. 16. Heb. 13. 18. For otherwise the life were led either in close hypocrisie Reas 1. or open profanenesse and can that deserue praise which hath no similitude with God Nay he condemnes that which hath not
their courses They will pray Iob. 27 9 10. in affliction but not call vpon God at all times be humble when God threats lifted vp like the bull-rush if the sunne doe but for a moment shinne vpon them 6. In a word they blesse at the Church curse at home drinke with the drunkard and commend precisenes with the Puritan they are like water that fits it selfe according to the Vessell wherein it is They be all things in shew nothing Mark 12. 40. in substance but thou O man of God flee these things and follow them that call vpon the name of God with a pure hart The next thing whereby this faith is described is in that it dwels it stayes not like a stranger whence it might be noted that Where true faith takes possession it remaines for euer Doct. 3. If it once be well rooted it cannot be remoued Rom. 11. 29. 1 Pet. 1. 5. For the right hand of the Lord hath planted it and put it Reas 1. into possession Christ hath prayed for it that it may not be dispossessed Reas 2. The spirit doth water it and watch and ward its habitation Reas 3. The soyle wherein it is seated is holy ground the house Reas 4. where it dwelleth is swept and made cleane euery morning Why then should it dye or wither or be cast out by any This confutes the contrarie doctrine of our aduersaries Vse 1. who hold it may decay and perish This also is of great comfort for them that haue it for it abideth Vse 2. and indureth continually And let Sathan and corruption doe their worst it shall neuer perish But before we passe this point a double question may be Quest 1. demanded The one is in what part of man faith is feated the other whether it continue in the world to come for eternity Vnto the first I answer that faiths seat is in the will that Ans 1. is the proper subiect of its habitation And the Scripture seeme to confirme this placing faith in the heart Psal 1 12. Where faith is seated 7. Acts 8. 37. Rom. 10. 10. Yet here is a trope for by hart is ment the will which is in the heart So that if the will bee in the heart and faith in the will then faith may be affirmed to be in the heart example If there be wine in the Butte and the Butte be in the Ship then its a truth that there is wine in the ship For that which comprehendeth the subiect comprehendeth what is conteined in the subiect And the reasons be these 1. Diuinitie is the rule of the will that therefore which is immediatly ruled by it must be in the will as for the body and the parts of it they are but guided by diuinitie at the second hand 2. Faith is said to be the ground of things hoped for now hope is in the heart Therefore faith else make the foundation in one place and the building in another what more absurd 3. Faith must haue a seat where it may haue the best rooting and that is in the will For an error or truth in the vnderstanding is soone remooued but if either passe to the will then they sticke fast as in their proper subiect 4. It is where it worketh And doth it not like a strong hand pull Christ into the heart purifie the heart and worke by loue as by an instrument in its fist that is seated in the heart Gal. 5. 6. They that haue placed faith in the vnderstanding are therfore deceiued We grant that the rules of faith are first in the vnderstanding as of all other arts but faith is not seated there And this may be the cause why knowledge is often put for faith because that must be first or the other can bee neuer And there is also a logicall assent in the vnderstanding of the truth of a thing but that may be found in wicked men Devils For as the externall sence conueyeth species to the internall so doth the vnderstanding put them ouer to the will where faith being resident stretcheth forth her hand and maketh that good which the vnderstanding did iudge for truth For as the eye of the body guides the hand so doth the eye of the mind the will and as we first see then worke so we first know then beleeue And to holde this for a truth seem●s to me and many more to be a truth Qu●st 2. Concerning the continuance of faith there be diuerse opinions Some thinke it ends at death others at the day of Ans iudgement but what if we hold that it dwels in the soule for eternity there can be no danger at al in that but rather on the contrarie And this position hath strong reason which may seeme sufficient to confirme it 1. For doth not the Obiect of faith continue for euer if Whether true faith remaine for euer the obiect then faith For the better vnderstanding of this I 'le stand a litle to explane my meaning We must obserue that in Christ God the Father hath made many promises some of this life others of the life to come those of the first kind cease For man being once made Spirituall hath no neede of corporall food or rayment Now for the other promises we are to consider two things in them 1. The truth of them or 2. The extent of them At the comming of our Lord they shall all be accomplished not one of them shall faile yet there is a promise of continuance in that condition which yet is to be beleeued example My Father doth promise me many kindnesses and at such a day he will giue me a good farme for euer Now in this there bee two things obseruable The one is the time of possession the other the continuance When my Father hath put me in possession a part of the promise ceaseth as it is iust but the other part is still of force and I beleeue my Fathers word and by vertue of that I doe still inioy my liuing and thus it is betwixt God and his children All the promises hee hath accomplished or will at the day of iudgement and then hee putteth his Sonnes into full possession yet haue not they a promise from him to remaine there for euer So that faith doth still continue to beleeue the continuance of that condition which they haue in fruition and no otherwise 2. And is it not comfortable to be assured that as they haue fulnesse of ioy so it shall be for euer Adam was in a good condition in the Garden but God neuer gaue him a promise For his abiding in that estate hee stood was so as he might fall and the euent proued yet the Lord hath giuen vs a sure word that we shall neuer be moued And is it not faith that must by application perswade vs thereof and fill our hearts like a neuer dying spring with vnspeakable ioy What a misery were it for
Ministeriall function was counted a great grace in the Parents honor to the person but in all contempt and bitter derision let the Minister and true Christian know that his Master thought it no shame to become a Preacher Heb. 2. 3. And Salomon higher esteemed the dignitie of a Preacher than a King Eccles 1. 1. By the will of God The Apostle in this phrase declareth the ground way and lawfulnesse of his calling as if he had sa●d I ran not before I was moued I came not of mine own mind by men or by money in at the window or the like but the prime and chiefe cause was the will and good pleasure of God whence ariseth this instruction that 〈◊〉 It is necessary for such as preach the Word to iustifie thei● lawfull Doct. 4. calling there vnto from God What Paul did as a Preacher we ought to doe also Timotheus knew from whom Paul received his calling and he add●th this for the respect he had to future times and persons Iohn the Baptist did this and Christ himselfe having Mar. 2. 19. Matth. 3 3. to deale with the Pharisees and Reason will confirme it Otherwise they can haue no assurance of protection from Reas 1. God by his Angels they must keepe their limits and but preserue vs in our wayes they dare not attend vs if we runne Psal 91. 11. Mat. 4. 6. a crooked path Sathan vnderstood this well therefore falsely alledged the Scripture leauing out in all thy waies And what became of the young Prophet that wandred Was he not destroyed 1 King 13. 22. And the certaintie of our calling from God will make Reas 2. vs bold in the execution of our function and in the hottest opposition to say with Nehemiah Shall such a man as I flee Nehem. 6 11. Luk. 13. 32. Or with our Master Goe tell that Foxe that I will heale to d●y and tomorrow and the next day I shall be perfected Absalom bids his servants sinite kill feare not but be bold and 2 Sam. 13. 28. play the men Why For he had commanded them This needs no application Againe then may we expect a blessing of our indevours Reas 3. 1 Sam. 1. 2. 15. otherwise not He that will runne before the Lord bids him goe may speede like him that brought tydings to David that his sonne was slaine and his Sermons proue to himselfe like the Letters that Vriah caried What if Israel be not 2 Sam. 11. 14. gathered yet thy reward is with the Lord. If the Master bid the servant cast seed in a barren soyle what if he haue no Isa 49. 4. good crop at harvest It s not the servants fault he did his dutie and would haue beene glad the ground had beene better the crop greater but he relyeth on the command of his Master not the successe in vsing the meanes so must Ministers also And last of all assurance that a man is sent of God will Reas 4. giue him to beleeue that he shall never want a word to comfort others in due season such a man may certainly expect a supply of gifts from the Lord. Wee haue some that like Ruth after Boos reapers gleane here and there and pull an eare from the sheaues of others yet much adoe to make one loafe in many dayes to feed the flocke of God And what 's the cause Sure God never sent them to sow for if he had they should haue beene supplyed with seed Doth not this doctrine reproue those that take vpon them Vse 1. this high calling without any assurance they be sent of God Some Preach that are neither sent of God nor man as the Anabaptists others of man but not of God these are Ieroboams Apostles a third pretend they are sent of God but not of man like some new vpstart spirits I passe to nominate which if it were true their calling were Apostolicall but who shall one day pay these their wages The Lord but in wrath Let Ministers then looke to this it stands them in hand Vse 2. so shall they haue protection by the good Angels boldnes to reproue sinne and not to be scared like boyes with the humming of Bees and Flies a supply of grace on each new occasion and their labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord. 1 Cor. 15. vlt. And men may know by these markes 1. If in some measure Trials if we be truely called to Preach the Gospell Isa 6. 8. Rom. 9. 2. 3. Eph. 4. 12. Ier. 23. 32 they be fitted with gifts 2. If they finde in themselues a readie and willing mind 3. If they be approued thrust forth by graue learned and religious persons of great note and government in the Church 4. When they ayme at the gathering of the Saints the edification of the bodie of Christ the glory of him that sent them and not at some sinister and private ends as prayse promotion or the like 5. If the Lord in some measure blesse their endevours This 1 Cor. 9. 2. last is not the least but as a Signet to seale the truth of their calling And I could note further from these words that Promotion to high places commeth from the Lord. Note Doct. 5. Preferment comes not from the East nor from the West Little did Paul thinke either of his sudden conversion or advancement to this honorable function a few houres before he was called this is the worke of God and ought to be marveilous in our eyes Psal 75. 6. Mat. 21. 42. Learne hence to envie no man that is advanced for that Vses 1. were to resist the will of God And let this direct thee to 2. prayse God if aboue many thou be promoted And it must 3. teach all men to be content with their present condition and not to repine for the will of God depends on no other and is the Rule of all truth and goodnesse To Preach according to the promise of life I adde to Preach and that I trust without wrong to the Text for the end of his Apostleship was to Preach the promise of life the glad tydings of salvation out of these words I gather this Conclusion that Eternall life is not to be had in the precepts of the Law but Doct. 6. from the promises of the Gospell The life of grace and glory is since Adams fall derived Gen. 3. 15. Gal. 2. vlt. And 3. 21. to man by another meane the old way in this respect is not the best way we must find out and walke too in the new way which is the everlasting way And thus it comes to passe Because the precepts of the Law exacts a perfect righteousnesse Reas 1. both in regard of mans entire nature and the whole conversation for cursed is every one that continueth Gal. 3. 10. not in all things of the law to doe them now if the Lord should marke what is amisse within vs
Epistle principally for thy benefit who art my beloved sonne and that not without reason haue I writ vnto thee or doe thus stile thee for thou art a man that hast beene trained vp in the holy Scripture of a childe well reported of by many of the faithfull one of great hopes in the Church being a Minister of the Word and none more than thy selfe like-minaed vnto me And why then should I for beare to direct an Epistle vnto thee or entitle thee my sonne For haue not I also confirmed thee by instruction Loved thee with entire affection Am not I thine ancient in yeares And we like father and child aime at one end make the same scope of all our proceedings And I doe further vnfeignedly wish thee whatsoever may make for thy good in this or glory in the world to come from the first fountaine of all grace and spring of all true peace God the Father and Christ Iesus our Lord. To Timothie Whereas Paul in this place writes to Doctrines deduced Timotheus a yong man well reported of and of great hopes we obserue that Such persons as are likely to proue good and excellent instruments Doct. 1. in the Church are principally to be instructed and incouraged Wee will water that plant most hedge about it and prune it which is likeliest to bring forth much and good Exod. 2. 2. 1 Chron. 28. 9 fruit the beast of best hopes shal be put in the best pasture the other turned to runne in the common field and barrenest ground And why not for such will if God giue good successe Reas 1. to a mans indevours proue instruments most profitable and are not those principally to be respected instructed Besides Sathan will labour to make them of his kingdome Reas 2. aboue all others he will picke the finest wits to doe wickedly hence it is for the most part that our Iesuits be such deepe-headed sound-witted persons not many comparable to them This reproues the carelessenesse of many in our dayes Vse 1. who altogether neglect this dutie haue we not some that rather set the best wits to the meanest basest or no calling at all certainely the Papist shall rise vp in iudgement against these for they are more carefull to practise this for Antichrist and his then we for Christ and his kingdome Let vs all chiefly parents put this point in practise and imitate Paul and David herein consider who is likeliest to Vse 2. doe good the best service one day and labour that they may be sanctified season them with instruction learne them the holy Scriptures of children that is to doe well and wisely Let it be further noted where Paul cals him sonne who was not his sonne by naturall propagation but rather in that he had begot him to or confirmed him in the doctrine of the Gospell that As there is a naturall so there is a spirituall generation and kinred in the world Doct. 2. Some be of the flesh others borne of the spirit Mat. 12. vlt. Rom. 9. 3. Io 3. 6. For be there not spirituall and carnall fathers in the world Reas 1. Ezek. 16. 20. 1. Cor. 4. 15. But Christ forbids to call any man on the earth Father Obiect Resol Christ condemnes over-ruling fathers such as were some masters Iames. 3. 1. Againe we cannot haue two contrarie fathers that command contrarie things 3. Christ would haue them principally to esteeme God to be their Father in conclusion he would haue such called Fathers as beget sonnes to God not like the Pharises and Papists who beget children in Babylon and spirituall whoredome and offer them to Molech their sonnes are the feede of Sathan murtherers and lyers from the beginning Also doe wee not reade of spirituall seede Iohn 3. 9 of Reas 2. a spirituall conception Gal 4. 19. why then there must needs be a spirituall kinred in the world This reproues the grosse ignorance of many in our Vse 1. dayes who never take knowledge of this truth yet they are well enough acquainted with their kinred in the flesh But it meeteth especially with those blacke-mouthed persons who can scoffe and fleere and say there goes a brother or sister in the Lord Is not this to make a mocke of the truth of God to kick against the prick and to incurre the iust iudgement of God doth not the holy Ghost call them holy Brethren sonnes of the most High O times O manners H●b 3. 1. Heere we are taught to discerne betwixt men that differ Vse 2. to seeke out our spirituall kindred and to make much of such every profane person will be acquainted with their lewd consorts and damnable crew But especially let vs examine and proue our selues whether wee bee borne againe otherwise it had beene good we had never beene borne at all and by these notes try thy selfe First Hast thou conceived aright in the wombe of thy vnderstanding what iudgement hast thou to see into the mysteries of salvation Secondly doest thou beare Christ in thy heart by vnfained affection canst thou say I loue the Lord aboue all things in earth or heaven Thirdly art thou troubled to bring him forth and travellest of him in thy will is this spiritual delivery thy chiefest care Fourthly and doest thou manifest to the world that thou hast brought forth this babe in thy life and conversation by doing of iustice loving of mercie humbling thy selfe and walking Mich. 6. 8. with thy God why then thou needest not to feare but that thou art of the free-womans seede and princely line of the most High But if those things be not to be found in thee and to proceede from thee thou art the childe of wrath and thy present condition is fearefull for if Christ be not conceived in the vnderstanding framed and borne in the heart travailed of in the will and brought forth in the forme of a well-mended life thou art but Sathans slaue and not the Lords adopted sonne My beloved sonne Observe also out of these words that Preachers are to affect those especially whom they haue begot Doct. 3. or confirmed in the faith They are to pittie all pray for all none excepted but such as are their spirituall children are to haue the chiefest seate in their affection hence doth Paul write so largely to the Corinthians so long a letter to the Galathians and Peter a first and second Epistle to the converted Iewes For such be the seale of their ministery 2. Such will the Reas 1. most re-affect them 3. Such haue the very image of God 2. imprinted on them and lastly doth not every cause naturally 3. cleaue vnto its proper and peculiar effect in a word 4. such are their ioy their crowne or should be Let this checke them who say they haue spirituall issue Vse 1. and cannot endure them care not for them are ashamed of them whom should they affect countenance or reioyce in
others 1 Tim. 4. vlt. 3. When though they preach often yet their Sermons as Gallio said of Religion are but a matter of names and words and a scraping together of fables and vaine Phylosophie Coll. 2. 8. 4. When the preacher maketh wrong application pressing that vpon Gods people which is the portion of the reprobate This is the old custome of false Prophets who Ezek. 13. 22. grieued the harts of the Godly and hardned the wicked in so doing by promising them life Wherefore often sound powerfull and plaine preaching is the way to worke vnfeigned faith in the people Lett es in the people be many yet few here shall be mentioned Let ts of faith in the people One is a vaine perswasion that all men haue it from their birth A second is in that the people thinke it not a thing of great worth or necessitie A third is a desperate idlenes which makes men negligent in the vse of the meanes The fourth is a setled resolution to liue in sinne for a season and so if they be cut off in the meane time yet they haue made this conclusion that then they will cast themselues vpon the hidden and vnsearchable mercie of God This is to hang a mans Saluation as Iob speakes of Iob. 26. 7. the earth iust vpon nothing But if by any meanes such men might be allured we will adde some motiues in the last place to perswade them to it 1. Consider how often the Lord doth intreat vs to get faith and beleeve in him Might not this moue an heart Motiues to get faith of stone to this duty who would not out of his priuate iudgement condemne such a man that will not obey him who doth begge and beseech that might command and kill 2. And is it not the onely way to get rest to our soules and to procure peace that passeth all vnderstanding What person is he that priseth not this peace that doth not wish for so great a fauour 3. Who euer came to Christ and went away vncured the verie diuels that sought vnto him sometimes had their desires and shall wee doubt or once despaire to speede if we approach to his presence Is it possible that he will not performe his promise to his people Mat. 11. 28. 4. Call to mind how cheap wee may haue this commoditie We may buy it without gold or siluer If wee bring empty hands yet honest harts we shall not goe home without it Let vs but aske it and we shall haue it Mat. 7. 7. 5. How many are the priuiledges that accompanie it By Ioh. 1. 12. 2 Pet. 1. 4. Eph. 6. 16. 1 Ioh. 5. 4. it we are vnited to Christ made the sonnes of God partake of the diuine nature quench the fierie darts of Sathan ouercome the world and are saued 6. And if nothing will moue thee to get faith vnfeigned Eph. 2. 8. and to beleeue in the Lord yet let the fearefull iudgements that are threatned against infidels preuaile with thee Shall not such be cast into the lake that burneth with fire and Brimstone for euer which is the second death Rev. 21. 8. And let me wind vp all in a short application and exhortation I say that to all which I doe to one get faith keepe faith and increase your faith a mite of this graine is worth a million of gold a stalke of this faith a standing tree of earthly fruites a soule fraughted and filled with this treasure all the coffers of siluer in the whole world What can I more say the least true faith is of more value than large demaines stately buildings and tenne thousand riuers of oyle If the Mountaines were Pearle the huge Rocks pretious stones and the whole Globe a shining Chrisolite yet faith as much as the least droppe of water graine of sand or smallest Mustard-seed is more worth than all This will swimme with his Master hold vp his drouping head and land him safe at the shore against all winds and weather stormes and tempests striue then for this fraught For the time and tyde thereof serueth but once and not for euer Vnfeigned faith Whence we gather that Our profession is not to be in Hypocrisie but in Sinceritie Doct. 2. Paul speakes here of faith that 's not Hypocriticall but sound vpright And though hee but mention faith yet he comprehends vnder it profession and truth in our dealings Mich. 6. 6. Isa 9. 17. Mat. 5. 8. 1 Cor. 5. 8. 2 Cor. 6. 6. For if it be not thus we are vnder the curse and subiect Reas 1. to all iudgements what euer How many woes doth Christ denounce against Hypocrites and the Prophets euery where in their Sermons crying Woe be vnto you Hypocrites Luk. 11. 44. Againe the Lord loueth Sinceritie in the inward parts such Reas 2. service is a delight vnto him And will not Sathan one day or other as he did Iudas arrest vs and carie vs into the kingdome of darknes Our adversaries reproch vs and our own courses condemne vs truely if our profession be in hypocrisie we can neither please God nor profit our selues Away then with the profession that is in many in our Vse 1. dayes What forme without power of Godlines may we finde what shewes without substance and shadowes that are not accompanied with the true bodie doe these men imagine that the words of God are vttered in vaine or that his iudgements shall not befall them What heart can they haue to looke God Sathan death or iudgement in the face when as their owne hearts are a strong and crying witnesse against them what if they doe shall it profit them no verily In the second place seeing we all professe the truth let Vse 2. vs keepe our feasts with the bread of Sinceritic and truth and and mixe all our actions with sincerity and integrity Let vs shunne the practise and properties of Hypocrites which be these Sixe properties of an Hypocrite 1. To be one in the face another in heart Hypocrites be like flales that seeme to haue life window cushions glorious without yet stuffed with straw flockes or some course Rubbish within 2. They straine at a Gnat and Swallow a Camell Make Luk. 11. 39. great conscience of a humane ceremonie yet are desperately negligent in the commandements of God Tithe Annise Mint and Cummin yet transgress● the law for a morsell of bread 3. These persons picke quarrels for moates in others and Math. 7. 3. spy not mountaines in their owne eies Censure their brethren sharply if they stumble yet iustifie themselues though they fall and tumble in the mire and ditch 4. They are wonderfull in ostentation Giue almes with the sound of a trumpet write their good workes in the 2 King 10. 16 windowes haue the least act in record and Iehu-like cry come see what zeale we haue for the glorie of God and the Lord of hostes 5. Such be inconstant in all
a man to be put into possession of an house but no assurance to enioy it had hee a good lease and could read it then hearing it he reioyceth otherwise not Now the sonnes of God may be glad For they haue a lease in their hands and by the eye of faith reade it continually So that they neuer feare dispossession 3. When is faith made perfect in earth or heauen What then becomes of it is it annihilated by whom either by vs or he that wrought it But shall we conceiue that when so excellent a worke is perfected that on the sudden it shall be turned to nothing by its owne author and if it be not so then it abides for euer 4. I would demaund from what our good actions proceede as from their proper cause is it not from faith why are we no more holy is it not want of faith let this then be granted and faith must of necessitie continue For else holinesse would cease also And if we hold as some doe that faith is the essentiall forme of a Christian and that euerie good act comes from it as naturall acts from their proper formes then who can deny the proposition But against this it will be obiected that now abideth faith Obiect 1 Cor. 13. l. hope and loue but of these the chiefest is loue 1. The scope of the Apostle is not to declare the continuance Resp of loue but the excellency of it 2. Loue is commended aboue faith and hope but wherein why they two worke inwardly and their effects are more secret according to that saying hast thou faith haue it with thy selfe Rom. 14. 22. before God Loue doth declare her selfe outwardly and manifesteth by her effects that wee are Christians indeed otherwise faith is the cause of true loue and therefore more prayse worthy For that which produceth such a thing must needes be better than that it effecteth because it cannot communicate its whole nature to its effect or what it hath not in it self This is that excellent way to demonstrate to the Church that I am a true member of it when I am louing and charitable to my brethren 3. Many boasted of faith yet wanted workes if they had workes yet they did them out of sinister respect and not in loue therefore Paul commends it 4. The word now doth not denotate alwayes an adiunct period or any part of time but a kind of asseueration or affirmation and the like and when it doth yet the Greekes vse it sometimes for time future and not for the present And so much for this obiection But it will be further obiected that wee haue no neede of Obiect 2. faith hauing all things in perfect vision It is true we haue not for the beleeuing of any further Sol. degree of glory yet it is necessary to assure vs for the continuance of what we haue And though the blessednes wee possesse be present yet eternity is not Wherefore faith runneth on holding the promise by the end to eternitie It beleeueth no more but keepeth fast what it hath A man going vp many steps when he commeth to the highest seat of his wished desire hath neede of somewhat to hold him there so faith hauing passed all the promises now onely secureth the soule of what it hath in possession Some may yet obiect that hope than abideth also but Obiect 3. that cannot be seeing we enioy the things we hoped for We haue the things yet time and eternitie is not in vision Sol. Againe God gaue man hope to sustaine faith being weake and the promises being afarre off but now faith being perfect needs no supporter But is it not said that wee receiue the end of our faith Obiect 4. 1. Pet. 19. True but by end is ment that for the which faith was Sol. giuen vs to obtaine viz. saluation Moreouer saluation hath in it two things possession and continuance If this seeme a paradox to any I would haue him know that it is not without authority and besides were there the least danger in holding this as I see not any then by me it should neuer haue beene mentioned Wherefore receiue it or reiect it so you once haue faith it skills not Which dwelt first in thy Grandmother Loïs Here is faith laid out by its subiect in whom it dwelt from the which we gather that Weakenes of sex hinders not soundnes of faith Doct. 4. Reas 1. Doe we not read that women are the weaker Vessels and are not here two mentioned who had vnfeigned faith so that the point is plaine the weaker sex may haue soundnesse of faith Iudg. 5. 21. Mat. 15. 28. Heb. 11. 35. Rom. 16. 1. c. 1. For they are capable of it hauing vnderstanding affection Reasons will memory c. 2. All the ordinances of God are as freely offred to them as to the other sex and they haue asmuch priuiledge to vse them 3. They knowing their owne weaknes and Sathans malice are moued and stirred vp thereby the more carefully to seeke it 4. And is not the spirit of God the author of it doth he respect any persons may hee not doe what and worke faith where hee pleaseth This may comfort the weaker sex and encourage them Vse 1. to vse the meanes for the enioying of this precious treasure It should also make them thankfull to God that hee doth vouchsafe so great grace vnto them Many doe reioyce that they in somethings resemble man but let this not be counted a small thing in that thou art like to him in this thing For faith is the first foundation that God layeth within vs of our felicitie This also should teach the man to haue the woman Vse 2. though the weaker vessel in honour and not too basely to esteeme of her For hath not the Lord looked on her Wee must whom it concernes indeauour to make them by calling on them sound in the faith Sowe the seede of the word in this soule for there is hope that it may prosper Where we read that faith was first in the mother then in the child it may be noted that Faithfull Parents will endeuour to make faithfull children Doct. 5. Who doubteth but that these mothers here practised this dutie and might be instruments for the begetting faith in their children Gen. 18. 19. 1 Chro. 28. 9. Psal 44. 1. For they know they haue giuen them but a miserable being Reas 1. made them by nature the sonnes of wrath and therefore they striue to make them through grace the children of Eph. 2. 3. blessing Againe this is the way for them and their seede to escape Reas 2. the reuenging hand of God and to receiue all good things from him For make thy sonne the sonne of God and hee can want no manner of thing that good is Godly Parents know by experience that children will take instruction better at their hands than from others They wil
this or that fortune or chance but cast our eye on our former dealings to others and peraduenture we shall spy out the true cause why in that particular wee are afflicted And if in so doing we find out the roote from which this branch sprou●e●h why plucke it vp and let it no longer grow in our ground Lay the fault where it is for feare a worse thing follow And is this true then let vs all learne Christs lesson Doe Vse 2. as we would be done vnto another day Would the servant haue done obedience by his when hee is a Master then let him be seruiceable when hee himselfe is in subiection And they that are children must obey their parents else they shall finde theirs to prooue but vntoward tooles Speake ill of no man for if thou doest its iust with God to let one loose that shal pay thee home in the same kind And in briefe wouldest thou be releiued in want comforted in misery haue the faithfull to pray for thee and in the houre of death to close vp thine eyes then giue to the poore pitty the weake comfort the feeble minded pray for thy brethren and visit them that are a dying And though this point by me be short in pressing yet I would haue it of thee to be long and often in practising Neither of me c. Where we note that We are not to be ashamed of such persons as by suffering beare Doct. 5. witnesses to the Gospell 1. For God is not they are precious in his eyes Reas 1. Reas 2. 2. If we be we doe not as we would haue others to deale with vs. And from this branch we note one thing more that Doct. 6. Corporall bondage doth not depriue Gods seruants of Spirituall freedome For Paul saith he is the prisoner of Christ both prisoner for his cause and also respected of him in prison as his servant This is a poynt that hath or may haue his vse and is comfortable Vse to all that shall at any time suffer for the Gospell in Turkey Rome or nearer home for though such be mans bondmen yet they be the Lords freemen From this very 1 Cor 7. ground Paul comforted the poore servants of infidells But be partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel Having finished the dehortation we come to speake of the Exhortation where we first collect that We that professe the Gospell are patiently to suffer all afflictions Doct. 7. that accompany the same So haue the faithful done in former time not counting their liues deare vnto them for the truths sake For we loose nothing by it 1. If friends forsake vs Angels Reas 1. shall pitch their tents about vs. 2. If we want liberty of body we haue freedome of spirit 3. If there be no outward peace yet we haue in ward that passeth all vnderstanding And ● though our outward man perish notwithstanding the inner man is renewed daily Herein we are the likest to Christ and what greater honour Reas 2. to man then to be made conformable to his Lord and Master And is not the Gospell and the obedience of it the best Reas 3. things that we haue or can doe what were wealth without the word one drop of this balme is to be preferr'd before all the riuers of pleasure and profits in the world And one act of beleeuing in Christ will restore a man to all more too then that he lost by one offence in Adam his Father We must once die and neuer in a better cause besides all Reas 4. this Christ he hath suffered for vs and we haue the Lord on our side And heere we might reprehend some that will suffer nothing Vse 1. for the Gospels sake they neuer respect candle or candlesticke The Preacher and the Gospel are the onely things that best may be spared in the parish A word will make them cast away their weapons and be gone And like little children they hang their heads clappe their hands on their faces set their hatt in the brow and runne away at the very humming of Bees and flies In the next place let vs all in wisedome and resolution Vse 2. confesse the Gospell and professe it and partake of the smal afflictions that be in these dayes Beloued wee haue not resisted to fire and fagot neither hath our purple bloud coloured the stones in the streetes then shall wee not suffer the tongue with patience to smite vs I cannot prescribe what kind or measure we may suffer But it is the voice of heauen that in the world we shall haue many tribulations All that Act. 14. 22. 2 Tim. 3. 12. Ioh. 16. 33. will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecutions But let vs be of good comfort for our Captaine Christ in whom we are more then conquerours hath ouercome the world Againe we obserue hence that The Gospell whether preached or professed is alwaies attended Doct. 8. with sufferings and afflictions Psal 22. 2 Chron. vlt. 15. 16. For some doe imprison the very word and would not Reas 1. haue it to run and be glorified 2 Thess 3. 1. And it must be so For 1. God hath glory by it 2. His Reas 2. children get good by it And 3. hereby the devill is proued a lyar for Iob serues not God for nought Yea and 4. The basenes of the Gospell as some esteeme it bringeth sufferings as to trust in a crucified God Those then that are Ministers must arme themselues with Vse 1. patience and resolution Private Christians must doe the same Yet here is a wonderfull mercy of God that no power or policy can prevent the liberty of the word or hinder Mat 24. 24. the salvation of one soule for its impossible that any of the elect can be deceiued condemned And this must teach vs not to thinke the worse of that Vse 2. Gospell that is accompanied with troubles or of such as doe embrace it Some cry Oh! the dayes of old were good when we had lesse Preaching we had more peace and plenty What maruell for ●ow Sathan seekes to put out the Candle that directs to heauen and wicked men labour to put out that light that doth discouer them Let Popery bring peace with it for the present yet perdition shall follow it in future time According to the power of God Taking these words in that sense we haue mentioned the doctrine to be collected is that The Lord proportioneth the sufferings of his children according Doct. 9. to their power He will not suffer them to be tempted aboue their ability 1 Cor. 10. 13. Christ would not deliuer many things for the people for the present were not able to beare them Timothy escaped prison it seemes when Paul a stronger man kist the stockes Act. 16. for God had an eye to his weakenes First he would haue vs suffer according to our power because Reas 1.
to the Lady for wee will not wrong them and Christ together he was enabled having put them vp againe to travell into Italy where this house is and there having receiued the Sacrament then dyed Many more such as this the Bookes mention And doe ye not now easily beleeue that these things are harder to be credited being related then if in grosse or implicitely they had beene vttered I may say of these as a man replied once hearing a strange tale that he gaue small credit to and the Relater demanding said Why sir doe you not beleeue this the person replied truely it s too much for one to credit it himselfe but if the persons present will take my part we will beleeue it amongst vs. And I thinke the Miracles in the three Bookes of the Lady of Loretto and their Legend are too many and too great for any one Protestant in the world after they haue knowledge of them to beleeue them Therefore we will leaue the ignorant Papists who never read or heard them to giue credit to them I speake not these things mistake me not to moue laughter but to make them if possible ashamed of their doctrine and that we thereby seeing their most palpable blindnesse and error might be the rather induced to prayse God for our light and the truth we pertake of But to omit them and their false Doctrine Let vs come Vse 2. nearer home and learne what to iudge of such as haue no knowledge of God at all Why surely they haue no faith in him neither for the Lord hath put these together like man and wife and therefore they may not be put asunder Christ propounds this Question When the sonne of man sayth he shall come shall he finde faith on the earth From the vse of this Doctrine we may make answere Surely very little For if knowledge be but amongst few as that is a truth then is faith rarely to be found This must moue vs all to get knowledge of God if wee Vse 3. would haue faith in him yea the best must grow herein for the better we know him the more confidently shall wee beleeue in him For it s so in all other things When I know the firmenes of the Land I will the better rest my foote on it the strength of my staffe the rather leane my whole body vpon it and the faithfulnesse of a friend put and repose my confidence in him And we must know God 1. In his power how that he is able to doe whatsoever he How God is to be knowne will this confirmed Abrahams faith and moved him to offer his sonne to whom it was said In Isaac shall thy seede be called For he considered that God was able even to raise him vp from the dead Heb. 11. 18. 19. 2. We must know him in his truth and iustice This made the Apostle to be of great courage in his perilous voyage and Sarah to expect a sonne after she was past the naturall course of conceiuing because shee iudged him faithfull which had promised Heb. 11. 11. Act. 27. 25. And here we Iustice either Revenging or Rewarding 2 Thes 1. 6. 7. are to vnderstand that the iustice of God is either revenging or rewarding It s a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you ther 's Revenging iustice and to you that are troubled rest with vs that is Rewarding Rom. 2. 6. 7. 8. iustice The one accompanieth the truth of his promises the other the truth of his threatnings And if we were more acquainted with this it would strengthen our faith in the performance of all his promises to vs and the many threats giuen out against the wicked 3. We are to know God in his stabilitie How that time changeth not his nature neither altereth his purpose He had no beginning therfore cannot either be yong or grow old He consisteth not of either matter or forme but is one most simple and pure act so that he is not incident to any shadow of turning What the Lord hath said it shall Iam. 1. 17. stand for euer for God is not like man that he should repent or change his purpose Did we know this it would wonderfully support our weake faith and stay our staggering mindes Did we vnderstand that the affection of our friend we most affect were constant it would make vs the more confidently to rely on him But feare of mutation weakens perswasion 4. We are to vnderstand that God is soveraigne Lord that there is none higher then he For if we should trust in an inferiour we might be deceiued But know this that he is aboue all and then thy faith cannot faile thee in beleeuing in him To put confidence in an inferiour Lord were dangerous in policie but in Divinitie desperate 5. We must know God in Christ For without him he is a severe Iudge a consuming fire But if we know him in Christ Iesus he is our Father and all his attributes that otherwise would be terrible will be most comfortable Thinke on this Finally We are also to know God in the distinction of Persons One Deitie yet three subsistences Father Sonne and Holy Ghost and we should haue some apprehension of their seuerall operations For otherwise we cannot beleeue as we should and ought for his full glory and our certaine salvation And thus briefely I haue poynted out some things in God and of God that must be knowne if we would obtaine Faith to the eternall conservation of our soules Rules to come to the knowledge of God God is knowne either 1. In his Word 1. The Law Psal 19. 2. The Gospell Rom. 1. 17. Or 2. In his Workes 1. Of Creation Rō 1. 20. 2. Of Providence Act. 14. 17. And this Doctrine with that hath beene delivered may Vse 4. serue to informe Ministers how to deale with their people Parents with their children and Masters with their servants If they would haue them faithfull to God to themselues they must make them acquainted with God and whom he hath sent Iesus Christ for to know this is ●t●●all life Ioh. 17. 8. 1. When men heare much but practise little or nothing 〈◊〉 of the soules setling 2 Pet. 3. 17. The neglect of this causeth men to be plucked away and to fall from their former stedfastnes For euery act of godlinesse is like the blow and stroke of a Mallet that stablisheth rivetteth and setleth the soule on a firme foundation like a pile or poste in the earth by often beating 2. Too much confidence in sanctification and too little in iustification We must fixe and fasten our faith in the obedience of Christ and make his life and death the sure foundation of our establishment For such shall neither stagger or be moved Rom. 8. 1. 3. Omission of private and often prayer the contrary to this like a strong Cord doth binde vs fast vnto the tree of Christ David therefore
good is alwaies to be preferred before a particular Yet thou must see that such by some trusty keeper may be respected well attended at the least May a Minister liue in a corrupted aire Quest 2. Answ Yes For 1. It s as good for him as for the people 2. And God would haue such saued He sought me c. We will collect hence that The faithfull where we trauell from home are to be sought for We haue in the Scripture both precept and example to this purpose and to confirme the point See Act. 21. 4. 8. Math. 10. 11. For they be of our kinred we are children of one father Reas 1. and will not euery one be desirous to see and be acquainted with his nearest friends We shall receiue comfort from them and they from Reas 2. vs for they will tell vs what great workes of mercy the Lord hath done in that place how the word runs what faithfull Men Magistrates Ministers c. the Lord of his good prouidence hath sent amongst them And thus when the Saints haue met they haue as we reade refreshed one another and builded vp one another in their holy faith This checketh those that neuer doe it nor can endure others Vse 1. to doe it Such a one was Diotrephes 3 Ioh. 3. 9. 10. Then when we goe into a farre country let vs enquire Vse 2. who are worthy that is honest men For its profitable many waies in buying selling borrowing lending in comforting and being comforted You shall haue the drunkards gamsters whoremasters and the like enquire out one another and shall not we such as be faithfull truly religious This point is of good vse but seldome practised and the best in the neglect of it may be a great enemy to himselfe euen in temporall affaires How shall I know such Quest Ans 1. If the best report well of them 2. If the worst say ill of them 3. By their speech and carriage for wisedome and grace will appeare in the words and face as the wiseman saith Yet beleeue not euery report faire shew good word For some mens sinnes follow afterward as others goe before 1 Tim. 5. 24. Very diligently The point is that Whom we affect truly we will seeke for diligently speedily Doct. 3. For so the word may be rendred This will hold in all things whateuer David loued the Lord and he would seeke him early at midnight and all seasons Elisha loued his Master therefore sought him The parents of Christ loued Luk. 2. 48. him and did they not seeke him with heauy hearts the Bride loued her Husband and so sought him and we Cant. 3. 1 2. may say the like of what can be named Because the affections are implacable vnlesse the obiect Reas 1. be enioyed which they most affect It is the nature of loue to delight in the present fruition of that it most affecteth And as euery graue thing is in motion vntill it come to the Center so are the affections stirring vntill they claspe about the subiect they affect Againe true affection desireth to manifest its selfe to the Reas 2. thing it loueth and to make it the better yea to bee if possible made one with it But how can this bee if they two bee separated therefore the affections will wooe and importune the will to worke for the bringing of them together What then shall we say of those who neuer sought the Vse 1. Lord saith grace or the kingdome of heauen in all their liues doe they loue the one or other Is their cafe blessed or cursed for the present It pittieth mee to thinke of the misery that many be in yet beleeue it not or know it not Where doe the most men seeke him their soules best loue when doe they seeke him how doe they seeke him Did Onesiphorus thus seeke Paul because he loued him and doe wee loue Christ and neuer enquire after him in his Word or in heauen Surely it cannot be Would we then vnderstand the soundnes of our affection Vse 2. vnto God his truth graces and children then let vs try it by the diligent search wee make after these things Doest thou seeke after God search the Scriptures and vse all other meanes for the hauing of them then thy loue is seruent not sained But if thou doe not labour the enioying of them of a truth the loue of them was neuer entertained in thy heart or saluation entred into thy soule Dau●d could say Oh how I long for God and When shall I appeare in his presence I meditate in the law day and night Paul I●couet to bee with Christ and the Saints haue vsed to cry Come let vs goe into the house of the Lord. Cold is that loue weake is that affection which neuer worketh or endeuoureth to obtaine and possesse the thing it loueth And sound me Here is laid downe the successe that Onesiphorus had in his diligent search whence collect wee that They that seeke shall finde all conuenient circumstances being Doct. 4. also obserued For some shall seeke to enter and shall not be able because they either seeke amisse and that in regard of the meanes or end or in that they take not the acceptable time For these cautions must be considered and then the point is firme sound Mat. 7. 7. Psal 50. 15. Because the Lord cannot lie deny himselfe or breake Reas 1. promise his word is gone out and it shall stand therfore those that seeke shall finde And if it were not so then who would vse the meanes Reason 2. depend on the Lords promise or could be saued This Doctrines Vse serueth first to cleere the Lord against Vse 1. all false imputations that the Atheisticall people haue or may obiect against his promise For vndoubtedly hee that seeketh shall not lose his labour in the end Say not then with the idle seruant who digged his talent in the earth that the Lord is an hard Master for he is true of his word faithfull to all that with honest hearts doe or euer shall seeke him or his This may be in the next place a ground of great comfort Vse 2. to all the faithfull and vpright hearted for in whatsoeuer they goe about they shall prosper Wee may apply it to all things as well as to this particular and that by the warrant of the Prophets and Apostles themselues Doest thou seeke after the Lord doest thou desire his fauour callest thou for grace or mercy cryest thou after wisdome and vnderstanding followest thou after faith loue and the the like gifts pursuest thou and pressest thou the God of Abraham for wife children food rayment for earth and heauen why feare not but hope still in the Lord and thy heart shall be satisfied with these things But here let these rules be obserued 1. Take the present time Seeke the Lord while he may be Rules to be obserued in seeking found
giue his seruant wherewith to worke affoard time food and all things conuenient yet when he comes to see if his taske be finished he findes that the meate is wasted the time ended the Candle to the very socket burned and yet little or nothing of the worke furthered how would such a seruant excuse himselfe to his Master And is it not so with many of vs God hath giuen vs meate and drinke time and matter candle and fire But what haue we done Is not the lamp of our life almost consumed the Sunne of the Gospell about to set at the least from vs and yet we haue not finished the worke that was giuen vs to doe We are without our wedding garment polluted in our bloud and in regard of cloake or couer of grace starke naked How shall we then expect to avoyd that fearefull sentence Friend how camest thou hither without thy wedding garment Take him bind him hand and foote and cast him into vtter darkenes And is that day so great Then let vs all prepare for it Vse 2. before it come finish our worke be cloathed and not found idle or naked For blessed shall that seruant be whom his Master shall finde so and so doing Say not with the foole that there is no God Make not a league with hell and a couenant with death Beleeue not Hymeneus or Philetus that the Resurrection is past already neither cry with the scoffers and mockers Where is the promise of his comming Doubt not of the day and the certainty of its approaching For doth not the drowning of the old world declare it the deuouring of Sodom by fire and brimstone proue it the destruction of Ierusalem confirme it the curse vpon the Iew at this day ratifie it the hot plagues invndations of waters earthquakes extraordinary frosts the blazing starre and many petty iudgements that hourely haue and doe befall the wicked seale it Oh therefore as thou doest beleeue it so prepare for it Now time is present meanes at at hand the Lord allures thee But will it be shall he doe so euer No no Remember the foolish virgins get oyle in thy lampe grace in thy heart righteousnes on thy person and a good conscience to thy companion or else it had beene good for thee thou hadst neuer beene bred or borne For without these the iudge will frowne bend his browe and be a consuming fire The next instruction we gather is this that Christ the Lord shall iudge the world Act. 17. 31. 1 Cor. 1. Doct. 3. 7. Math. 28. 18. 2 Cor. 5. 10. 1 Thes 4. 15. If we vnderstand by Lord in the second place the sonne of God then the point is plaine But howeuer its a sound position For if we expound the word to be meant of God the Father yet he will shew mercy and iudgement by his sonne For he hath committed all things to his hands For by him at first were all things made by him since Reas 1. was Man redeemed therefore it s most meete they should be iudged by him The iudgement shall be visible so that its most conuenient Reas 2. the iudge should be so too Now the Fathers invisible but the Sonne in our nature is not And shall Christ the Lord iudge the world What then Vse 1. shall become of those that haue crucified him and persecuted him in his 〈◊〉 that haue trod vnder foote the Sonne of God 〈◊〉 a mocke of the bloud of his Couenant that 〈◊〉 ●●spighted his Spirit and disobeyed his Gospell that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were betweene their teeth his flesh by their cruell oathes and would not haue him to raigne ouer them Wo●ull and vnutterable will their condition be fearefull lamentable shall be their portion Did Moses tremble at the Mount Iohn fall downe troubled at the sight of an Angell Felix shudder before Paul and the stubborne Iewes fall at the voice of Christ backward What will the prophane men doe when he shall come to be reuenged on them and to reward them according to the number and greatnes of their sinnes Shall a man cloathed in purple or scarlet whose throne is in the dust and his breath in his nosthrills make a guilty conscience to quake and tremble shall not then the Iudge of all the world enwrapped with glory couered with iealousie and hauing the keene sword of reuenging iustice in his strong hand make the hearts of such as neuer would obey his lawes to faile them for feare shall they not wish that the Mountaines might fall on them and the hills couer and conuey them from his presence would not they be glad if they might creepe into the crannies and close caues of the earth from his reuenging and impartiall iustice And if a Lord haue mercy vpon thee a Take him away Iailor will cause such shedding of teares folding of armes and wringing of hands what will that irreuocable sentence doe Goe ye cursed into eternall fire prepared for the Devill and his Angels I could wish that those words were grauen with a pen of iron in the palmes and foreheads of euery impenitent sinner of euery dissolute and godlesse person And shall Christ iudge the world shall he that redeemed Vse 2. thee sit vpon thee then be of good comfort for it cannot but goe well with thee No man euer hated his owne flesh consumed his reall and royall members or put away a chast virgin Assure thy selfe then that thy head and husband Iesus shall neither leaue thee or forsake thee or euer be diuorced from thee This vse is worthy our best consideration and a ground to euery honest and vpright heart of vnspeakeable comfort Therefore when Sathan Death Iudgement and hell looke thee in the face thinke vpon this thing And shall Christ iudge thee Then Agree with thine aduersary Vse 3. quickly whiles thou art in the way with him least he deliuer thee to the Iudge and the Iudge deliuer thee to the Iailor and he cast thee into prison For verily thou shalt not depart thence vntill thou hast paid the vttermost farthing And when will that be Neuer neuer And might not this word breake thine heart and moue thee to doe it When Ioseph was to goe before Pharaoh he shaued his head and put vpon him another robe or change of raiment When Hester went vnto the King she cloathed her selfe with her royall apparell And shall we meete the King of Kings wrapped in the stinking weedes of drunkennes swearing and lying couered with the monstrous clouts of fornication adultery and all vncleannes Surely if we doe we shall neuer find fauour in his eyes Let him then that hath stolne steale no more but labour with his hands And that I say to one to all I say it Change your minds and turne that your sinnes may be put away when the time of refreshing shall come from the presance of the Lord and he shall send his sonne Iesus the which is now preached vnto you to
be The Iudge of all the world But in regard the most little consider this day or dreame of their latter end or if they doe vsually like Agrippa put it off vntill it be too late let these following Motiues somewhat preuaile with thee to practise it speedily 1. Remember that he may come suddenly in the dead of Motiues to prepare for the day of iudgment the night when thou little dreamest of such a matter Was it not a dreadfull summoning to the rich foole This night shall thy soule be fetched from thee Suddennes makes an evill a double curse We may die in our sleepe and what a fearefull thing would this be if we be tooke away in our sinnes for as death leaueth vs so shall iudgement find vs. 2. We cannot hide our selues or the least of our sinnes from his all-seeing eye For all things are naked and bare before him with whom we haue to deale 3. Consider his power he can send his Angells to fetch vs before him from the foure endes of the world be we neuer so strong in might or potent for number 4. Call to minde that he is strict and iust in all his proceedings not one can escape death if sinne be found vpon him 5. That there shall be no delay or bayle when he commeth iudgment shall be executed speedily 6. And last of all let it be well thought on what the iudgment is where the torments shall be with whom and how long The paine shall be in soule and body the place that darke and infernall pit the persons Sathan and all the damned from the presence of God and the spirits of iust and perfect men and the continuance for all eternity What heart so hardened conscience so seared or person so desperate reprobate weighing these things in the equall ballance of his owne minde and consideration that would goe on in a sinfull course and not amend Yet if this will moue nothing I say no more but the Lord haue mercy vpon thee for thy case is fearefull dreadfull The fourth Note we obserue is that The best man is not to rely vpon the merit of his workes but Doct. 4. the free mercy of God at the day of iudgement Math. 25. 37. 38. c. For he hath many falls into euill If we say we haue no sinne Reas 1. we deceiue our owne selues and the truth is not in vs And There is none that doth good and sinneth not no not one Even in many things we sinne all Besides our sinnes the best workes we performe be imperfect Reas 2. For as chaffe groweth vp with the corne so doth sinne cleaue to our perfectest actions Grace and corruption like fire and water mixed hinder the acts one of another from absolute perfection Away then with the Merit Mongers that plead through Vse 1. desert for saluation Had Onesiphorus neede of mercy that did so many good workes shal the Papist hold workes of supererogation We might say of Supererogation Canst thou stay the Sunne in his swiftest motion gather the wind in thy fist remoue the earth out of its center or stoppe the hot burning fornace with straw and stubble then plead afterward for merit yet these things be easier to mortall man then the other yet both impossible But they obiect Why then doth Daniel exhort the King Obiect 1. to Redeeme his sinnes by righteousnes Dan. 4. 27. 1. The Hebrew phrase is not truly turned Sol. 2. It s but an exhortation to repentance inducing him for to breake off his former cruelty he had committed the which is needfull for all persons 2 Tim. 2. 25. Christ bids the people to Make them friends of their riches Obiect 2. of iniquitie that when they want they may receiue them into everlasting habitations Luk. 16. 9. Sol. 1. They is not to be referred to the riches but to the persons as is plaine by the parable's application 2. No other thing is meant but that they would testifie of their goodnes and charitie towards them and pray for them Why then doth God command good workes Obiect 3. Sol. 1. To manifest that he approueth and alloweth them 2. That we might be prouoked to doe them 3. To comfort vs in the assurance of the truth of our faith 4. To strengthen the weaknes of our beleefe that often staggereth But God hath promised a reward to them Obiect 4. True but 1. It s of his free mercy not for our merits Sol. 2. He crownes his owne graces in vs. And we cannot Merit for 1. He workes both the will and deed of his good pleasure 2. There is no equall proportion betwixt our workes and salvation For they be finite imperfect temporall it is infinite perfect eternall 3. A worke of merit must be aboue that which is required at our hands aboue Gods due we haue none such For God hath created redeemed sanctified vs freely 4. We confesse that God might condemne the best for if he should Marke what is done amisse no meere man could abide it And he of his mercy can saue the worst Let the best therefore not presume neither the worst vtterly despaire 5. And we read of a threefold promise of reward 1. Vnder the Couenant of workes 2. Of faith 3. After we beleeue in Christ But this is all out of the Lords mercy and dignity not for our merits or desert 6. And if that be a truth that Christs merits doe not proceede from him or are procured by him without relation to the free promise of his Father the which some hold how then can man merit condignely Yet the Protestants maintaine good workes and no barren faith doe they allow as the lying Aduer●aries know well enough though they send vs all to hell with our fruitles faith Onely we say that by faith we are iustified without the workes of the law for were it otherwise Christ had died in vaine And this is our firme position that as fire cannot be without heate ayre without leuity water voyd of humidity or the earth be abstracted from all gravity No more can a true liuely faith be without some fruites worthy amendment of life Good workes are the way to heauen and a necessary condition if man haue time and meanes to be obserued yet they are not the sole cause of raigning When the Figtree saith our Lord puts foorth his leaues ye know that the spring draweth neere But is that a cause of the spring or the spring of that So when we bring foorth good workes we know we haue a true faith but faith is the cause thereof not the contrary and so consequently of mans salvation Bellarmine himselfe saith that in regard of the vncertainty of mans workes and our owne presumption the safest way is to depend on the mercy of God Thus by the ouerruling hand of God a second Caiphas hath once againe prophecied aright And let this doctrine reach vs to practise Christs lesson Vse 2.
11. with Gods Saints For there the deuil endeauoureth to dwell as the Pope at Reas 1. Rome at this day he raiseth stormes of affliction the leprosie of sin cleaueth close to their walls through his setting on Againe those places cōmonly haue many sorts of false religions Reas 2. all will cōspire against the truth in that become friends as we see in Herod Pilate in crucifying of our Lord Iesus so we read of Ephraim against Manasseh Manasseh against Ephraim yet both against Iudah Isai 9. 21. Let none thinke that the greatnes of the place can exempt Vse 1. him from pouerty or persecution Be not too forward to pitch thy Tents at Bethel except Vse 2. thou haue a full and lawfull calling Lot may liue better in little Zoar then in the great city of Sodom Christ in the small village then at Ierusalem Moses at Madian then in Aegypt Where On●siphorus relieued Paul so worthy a man and an Apostle this will follow that The best man and worthiest Christian may stand in want be Doct. 12. releiued by a meaner person that both for soule and body For the one may be in prosperitie when the other is in aduersity Reas 1. in peace when the other is in war corporal spirituall God bringeth it to passe for to encrease affection to knit Reas 2. them the nearer together in the bands of loue and amitie Doe not lightly regard thy inferiour brother for the weaker Vse 1. may doe pleasure to the stronger Timotheus may do Paul a kindnes in carrying him his bookes and parchments And the meaner man weaker Christian by this may be Vse 2. of comfort for little doth he know how the Lord will imploy him Iephthah was despised being basely borne yet in future time the people prayed him to be their Iudge and he was so and he fought and prevailed for Israel The third point we note where Onesiphorus ministred to him many things is this that A good man thinkes nothing too deare for the preachers of the Doct. 13. Gospell We are commanded to make such partakers of all our goods Rom. 15. 27. 1 Cor. 9. 4. c. For they giue spirituall things for carnall Reas 1. Reas 2. Reas 3. They watch for mens soules They suffer much paine in study reproches of the wicked and bitter pangs for others good In a word they are the Ambassadours of the great King Reas 4. Vse 1. This checketh many who would be reputed forward professors and with Simon Magus some great bodies yet thinke all too much that goeth that way These could be content that like Paul Ministers would turne tentmakers But be thou otherwise minded if he be a man sent from Vse 2. God preach the word and is faithfull holy all thou hast is too little for him Let such a man enioy a sufficient honourable and constant stipend I say if his doctrine be sound his conuersation proportionable make yee much of such But would ye know what letteth 1. Coueteousnes This holdeth all and cryeth giue giue b●t will neuer part with any thing We haue a thousand yong men in our dayes Christ met but with one in his we read ●f that would goe away sorrowfull if they should sell but an hundreth part of what they haue to giue the poore especially were he a preacher 2. Infidelity letteth For men want faith to credit God therfore they be so strait-handed Did men beleeue that they should be rewarded an hundred fold would they not be more liberall And of all men the Vsurer he hath no faith for he will take mans band before Gods for Ten where he might haue the Lords for Ten-times Ten in the Hundred and will not 3. Idlenes is another let these vsually doe nothing so they haue nothing that liue in this lethargie 4. And the last let is vnthriftines An vnthrift and prodigall alwaies be in want for they haue one way whereout more runs in a day then will returne in a yeare The two first Coueteousnes and Infidility get all but will part with nothing the two letter vnthriftines Idlenes either are vsually in want or if they haue it it runs apace but a wrong way and takes its rest but neuer on the right subiect So that let Ministers neuer expect maintenance from any of these especially if he cry out as he must against these bosom and beloued sins Christ was neuer worse vsed or Paul either then when they preached against Coueteousnes and Prodigality And lazie vnthriftie persons make sure work for amending for the one is vsuall turning himselfe on his bed like a doore on its hinges and the other in the tauerne or tipling house into a barrell or a beast when they should heare the preacher and be reformed And to end with the end this we note for a conclustion tha● In the greatest straits the Lord remembreth them that suffer Doct. 14. for his cause and Gospel Read the Acts of the Apostles Paul was releeued at Rome often at Ephesus yea the rude Barbarians did vse him kindly Act. 28. 2. For God hath the most glory by them Reas 1. 2. 3. 4. The rest of the Church most benefit by them The truth the greatest prayse by them And sin Sathan all his depthes the greatest ouer ●●row by them and shall not the Lord then remember them Let vs imitate our heauenly Father euer respecting those Vse 1. most that suffer for our good and alwayes to the vttermost of our power to make much of such Priscilla and Aquila must be greeted much respected why for they to saue Pauls life laid downe their owne neckes Surely if God deale mercifully with those that suffer for him shall we want compassion towards them that suffer for vs And is it so as we haue heard Then be resolute in the Vse 2. Lords cause take vp thy burden gird thy sword vpon thy thigh put on al the armour of a Christian souldier march on in thy ranck and order What if Sathan tempt thee the Serpent brood do bite thee the fiery triall befall thee or the King of feare pale fac'd death looke grin vpon thee Yet the word is gone out the oath is 〈◊〉 to it and the Spirit hath sealed that they that suffer for the ●ruth of God of Papist or Pope men or Deuills in Rome or is ●ll shall neuer be forgotten for saken Take a view through all 〈◊〉 holy letters cast thine eye on all the former ages looke where thou wilt or canst and thou shalt alwayes find it so that in the greatest misery God hath remembred mercy in the greatest weakenes giuen power in the most pinching pouerty sent plenty and in death conveied life Wherefore neuer feare want misery penury mortality for the Lord shal be with thee whether soeuer thou goest and in what estate soeuer thou beest But me thinkes I heare some say What needeth all this 〈◊〉 not at peace may we not sit vnder out vines sleepe safely in our beds walke the pleasant fields eate drinke and take our pleasure Mistake me not For I am not weary with these fauours I wish the Sun of that morning may neuer rise or that euill time approach wherin it might be said the Arke is gone and the glory of God from this our Israel Yet is not Sathan compassing the world hath not the Serpent much viperous spaw●● will not his great instrument that blacke crawling vgly adder the Papist be casting foorth his venome shooting out his sting and lye lurking in the sweetest herbes to bruise the heele of the seed of the woman But to let this passe death will come iudgment will come and damnation will come this thou knowest And is it then in vaine to comfort thee against those three fierce gyants that thou shalt conquer and ouercome them all that not an haire of thine head shall perish but thou shalt be landed safe at the kay of Canaan the kingdome of God I cannot tell I doe but guesse yet except thy faith exceed mine me thinkes I am not herein at all deceiued neither a whit vnprofitably exercised But I say no more Let the day declare it FINIS Laus Deo Amen
those that liue it are counted as signes and wonders in Israel Isa 58. 18. But what marvell sith Christ was not Isa 52. vlt. And 53. 7. knowne by it his image despised his person in carnall eyes deformed They then that cannot discerne the Sunne how should they perceiue a Starre a Candle Moreover Is our life from Christ Let vs then that are Vse 4. partakers of it returne him prayse for so great a blessing divide not this treasure ascribe nothing to thy owne selfe or others it s the root that beareth vs not we the root life is a Rom. 11. great blessing this life the blessing of blessings then let vs never be weary in magnifying the Lord for such a favour nay seeing it comes from Christ let vs returne it againe vnto him seeking his glory as he hath done our good If we beget children doe we not expect they should spend their liues for the profit of vs their Parents As the Sea therefore sends forth many rivers but they returne all againe into her bosome so seeing our life comes from Christ let it flow backe to the prayse of his Maiestie and th● rather wee may be induced hereto because this is the onely way to haue life and to escape death for all eternitie And here may all of vs learne instruction seeing our life Vse 5. is from Christ Iesus are we weake and feeble in our minds Runne we to to him and pray we Lord quicken me Be our children dead in sinne Bring them before Christ desire him to raise them to life imitate the poore that liued when he liued amongst them in the vse of the meanes still haue an eye to this Physitian otherwise our Patients will not be cured this is that Sunne that with his warme beames enliueth all the creatures if he be absent we are all but dead men rotten branches And to shut vp this poynt wee are to learne here to be Vse 6. carefull that we offend not this Lord of life and incurre his displeasure for if we doe we shall dye the second the eternall death Simple Polititians be they that consider not how all the keyes to convey life and death hang on his finger Will we not tremble to heare treason For its death And shall we then crucifie againe the Author of our salvation and rend his flesh in our teeth and tongues like the vaile of the Temple from the top to the bottome take heed of this for he that lighteth our Candle can easily put it out And this shall suffice to haue spoken of the Pen-man of this Epistle for the present now in the next Verse is the person mentioned to whom Paul in particular directed his Writings VERS 2. To Timotheus my beloved sonne grace mercie peace from God the Father and Christ Iesus our Lord. IN these words are two things contained a description The Logicall resolution and a salutation in the forme of a prayer the person to whom Paul sent this Epistle is described 1. By his name Timotheus 2. By a word of relation sonne 3. By an adiunct beloved In the salutation being laid downe prayer-wise obserue what he wisheth and from whom the matter what is 1. Grace 2. Mercie 3. Peace the persons from whom be 1. God 2. Iesus Christ and both are amplified by a word of relation God the Father Christ our Lord. To Timothie This word imports as much as the honor The Theologicall exposition of God or precious to God his Father was a Grecian and his Mother a Iewesse who beleeued in God Acts 16. 2. What he was in name he was in nature he honoured God was precious to God My beloved sonne Sonne is a word of relation and doth alwayes presuppose a father who gaue him his being and it is diversly taken 1. For persons Psal 79. 11. 2. for lambes branches bullets arrowes sparkes or almost any other thing the which proceedeth from a cause Genes 49. 22. Psal 79. 11. and 80. 16. and 89. 23. and 1●4 4. and 147. 8. Iob. 5. 7. Now the reasons why Paul cals him sonne may be these 1. Because he had either begot him or at the least confirmed him by the Gospell 2. Because he loued him as a sonne and he Paul like a Father 3. In that he was yong and Paul old 4. And in regard he was so like minded to the Apostle from the first reason I take it came the name of God-father because they had begotten them to God And he addeth Beloved to distinguish him from others for he was beloved of God of the good people and of Paul also in a speciall manner Grace mercie and peace To omit to speake of all the acceptations of grace let vs know that it is tooke chiefly two wayes 1. For Gods free favour 2. For the gifts flowing from the same the first though I exclude not the latter is here meant Mercie To omit how many wayes it is accepted by Mercie here is meant a loving inclination of God to his people being in misery or for an effect of his grace or the effects of that loving inclination mercie seemes to proceede from grace and all other blessings whatsoever for by the grace of God each one may truely say I am that I am Peace It also in Scripture hath a large extent but ordinarily is received for outward rest and quiet and inward tranquilitie of the mind this latter is to be received though the other not absolutely to be reiected And what if wee should vnderstand grace as it is in God Mercie as manifested to miserable man And peace as the effect which proceeds from both Yet how ever it be this is most safe to hold that Paul wished Timotheus all good spirituall corporall temporall eternall without him and within him From God the Father In these words the Apostle manifesteth to vs from whom and in what order grace mercie and peace is derived to vs. By God is meant the first person in the Trinitie and he is called the Father because as from the fountaine all things proceed from him for by an vnvtterable yet naturall generation he begate the Sonne from all eternitie He is also a Father by Creation Adoption Preservation Againe the word Father is attributed to the whole Deitie in generall and the distinct persons in particular Isa 9. 6. Ier. 23. 6. And Iesus Christ our Lord We haue once heard for all what Iesus and Christ signifies yet here is another title annexed to our Messias Lord in the Hebrew tongue is a supporter stay or base In Greeke it signifies one that hath authoritie over a thing or person being a word of relation It is a truth that I haue writ diverse times vnto Churches The Metaphrase in generall and publike and private persons in particular wished them all blessings that might make either for their comfort and peace here on earth or the perfection of glory in the kingdome of heaven But now I haue Penned this
or wherewith shall I be Mat. 6. 32. clothed For he knoweth whereof thou hast need and will relieue thee Fathers lay vp for their children not children 2 Cor. 12. 14. for their Fathers doe they not What shall I more say but as Ioab to Amnon Why art thou so sad And why is thy 2 Sam. 13. 4. c. countenance cast downe Art thou not the Kings sonne Aske what thou wilt and he shall giue it thee The profane of our times may hence learne to take heed Vse 4. how they wrong the faithfull God is wise in heart mightie in power Who ever waxed fierce against them and hath Iob. 9. 4. prospered for their sakes He hath destroyed great Kinges and mightie Sehon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Psal 136. 19. 20. Exod. 14. 25. Bas●an He can plucke off thy Charet-wheeles strike thee in the hinder parts cause thy heart to faile thee for feare and in a moment fetch thy soule from thee better were it for thee to haue a Mill-stone hanged about thy necke and thou to be cast into the bottome of the Sea than to offend the least of these faithfull ones they are deere in his sight tender to him as the apple of his eye Can a Father put vp the vniust wrongs of his loving children The husband of his chast and dutifull wife In no wise then take he●d to thy selfe for if thou fight against the faithfull thou dost iniury to Gods sonnes and his dearest Spouse who one day will in wrath take vengeance on thee and grind thee to powder From God the Father Having handled the title of God we come to speake of the second thing appropriated to him the which is that All spirituall lessings flow from God the Father Doct. 12. Every good gift and every perfect giving is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights Iam. 1. 17. Whence had the Apostles Prophets that heavenly treasure wherewith they were inriched if not from God Silver hath his Iob. 28. 2. veine Gold his mine Yron is taken out of the earth and Brasse is molt●n out of the Stone but grace mercy and peace are not to be found in the land of the living nature saith it is not to be found in me wealth and honour cryes nor in me Came it from nature then should all men partake of it Reas 1. none excepted for shee communicateth to all her off-spring the like gifts though not in degree and measure Neither is it purchased by pence or followeth the flux of Reas ● royall dignities for then should Kings Nobles rich and great men be the onely subiects of it who in truth very rarely possesse it See 1. Cor. 1. 26. I will not insist here to confute the Romanists but leaue Vse 1. them to stand or fall to their owne Master but first learne we hence whom to prayse for grace and mercy and every good gift that we enioy say not mine owne hand hath procured me this treasure least thou be found a lyar against God for what hast thou that thou hast not received One 1 Cor. 4. 7. cause why we are so proud and ingratefull is want of consideration how that what we are by the free favour of God we are that which we are Good Iacob ascribes his two bands to proceed from the mercy of God Reade his confession Gen. 33. 11. And secondly this may direct vs whither to runne for Vse 2. grace and mercie and peace goe not to man or Angell but to the Lord else maist thou returne like the foolish Virgins with thy vessels emptie Take the counsell David gaue his sonne Salomon on his death-bed Know God for 1 Chron. 29. 11. 12. greatnesse and power and riches and honour I adde and all things are in his hands And now we proceed And Christ Iesus our Lord Out of this phrase wee obserue first that Christ Iesus is a Lord. Doct. 13 〈◊〉 Iehovah said vnto my Lord Sit at my right hand and yee call me Lord and Master and yee doe well for so ●em Psal 1 10. 1. Ioh. 13. 3. And he is Lord two wayes either as he is Elohim God or Emanuel God with vs. As he is God 1. By creation for he is the beginning of every creature all things were made by him and without him was not made any thing that was made Ioh. 1. 3. And secondly by providence The Father worketh hither to and I worke Ioh. 5. 17. As God with vs he is Lord also 1. By purchase for he Word became flesh so that by a communication of properties we are said to be purchased by the bloud of God Act. 2● ●● 2. By mariage He is the bridegroome the head and husband Ioh. 3. 29. Ephes 5. 23. of his Church and therefore Lord over it 3. By dignitie he is our elder brother and in ancient time such gouerned and had a double portion Deut. 17. 15. 21. 17. 4. By donation for God the Father hath put all things into his hand and given him all power in heaven and in Mat. 28 18. Ephes 1. 22. earth And is Christ Iesus thus many wayes our Lord 1. We Vse 1. must know him for what madnesse greater than to be ignorant not acquainted with our Master Who can with any comfort serue an vnknowne Lord Certainly they that know not Christ are Sathans slaues and none of his servants Also we must learne his will and what he requireth at Vse 2. our hands for otherwise we cannot doe it such servants cannot please him Many stand on their good and honest meaning but without knowledge the minde is not good Prov. 19. 2. And when we vnderstand it and him we must indevour Vse 3. 2 Pet. 2. 20. to do his commands for it were better not to haue knowne his will the● after we haue knowne it to turne from the holy Commandement given vnto vs of our Lord such shall be beaten with many stripes God shall come in flaming fire to render vengeance on all them that know him not and obey not the Gospell of Christ 2. Thes 1. 8. Finally We are to depend on him for food for wages Vse 4. for rayment convenient in all dangers to flee vnto him for succour both in life and death and we may doe thus with hope and boldnesse when we know him and his will seeke his glory make his enemies ours obeying all his commands for we are never made strait in him but first we are made strait in our owne bowels And we nay hence gather also that All Chrisians are fellow-servants Doct. 14. Paul and Timotheus Prince and people men and women Iew and Gentile Deut. 17. 20. Acts 10. 35. Gal. 3. 28. 1. For hath not one God created them Mala. 1. 10. Reas 1. 2. Are they not purchased by the same price 1 Cor. 6. 20. 3. Haue they not all one and the
same command Ex. 20. 3. 4. Is not the promise made alike to them all Gala. 3. vlt. We must not then severely censure one another for who Vse 1. art thou that condemnest another mans servant he standeth or falleth to his owne Master Iames his exhortation is here to take place Be not many Masters that is many censuring and commanding Masters I●m 3. 1. Neither may we haue one another in too great estimation Vse 2. giuing that worship to the servant which is due to the Master what saith the Angell to Iohn See thou doe it not for am not I thy fellow-servant Rev. 22. 9. Care must be had that we make not vniust lawes to bind Vse 3. the Consciences of our brethren this were Pharisaicall and not to be obeyed if pressed servants must not Lord it but know that they haue a Master in heaven with whom there is no respect of persons Mat. 23. 4. Eph. 6. 9. In one word there must be no iarres and contentions amongst Vse 4. Luk. 2. 14. vs it s our Masters charge Liue in peace if an house be divided it cannot stand and if we devoure one another we shall be devoured Wherefore be of one tongue and of one heart liue in peace and the God of peace shall be with you 2 Cor. 13. 11. Out of the word Our might many points be deduced as that 1. Christ Iesus hath a pluralitie of servants Doct. 15. Doct. 16. Doct. 17. Doct. 18. 2. True faith applyeth the promise in particular 3. Christ is a Lord indifferently to all the faithfull 4. We are to acknowledge the priviledges of our fellow-servants In conclusion as this sentence depends on the former words we collect that No grace mercie or peace can be had from God the Father Doct. 19. but in and through Christ Iesus The Father is the fountaine Christ the spring and the reason is because God is iust and none but Christ can satisfie him He it is that must roll away the stone from the Wels mouth 〈◊〉 Adam dammed it vp He and none but he can open the sealed fountaine This discovereth the misery of Turke Iew and all who know not or deny the Lord Iesus we must learne hence ●o●seeke sue to God in his name and none other Acts 4. 12 And ●●therto of this second Verse Now followeth the third VERS 3. I thinke God whom I serue from mine elders with pure Conscience that without c●asing I haue remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day● THIS Verse and the two following depend The Logicall resolution one vpon another and though they be not a plaine exhortation yet they closely conteine in them the seeds of such a dutie as may easily be conceived In this we may consider a three fold Confession The first is that the Apostle gaue thankes which dutie is amplified by the Obiect of it God The second that he also served this God and that 1. For time from his elders 2. Againe for the manner with pure Conscience Thirdly he acknowledgeth that he prayed wherein 1. He remembred Timotheus 2. Without ceasing 3. And that night and day by this Paul declares to Timothie his affection and desire he hath of his welfare I thanke God Somereade I haue thankes for God but The Theologicall exposition that may not be admitted for Paul did it and deferred not this action In these words are three things 1. The action thankesgiving 2. The person I and 3. To whom thankes were 〈◊〉 The Lord. Whom I serue from m●re elders with pure Conscience The Apostle addeth these words because he was accounted by the Iewes to be an Apostata and a revolter from the truth and a dissembling person By elders is meant Abraham Isaac and Iacob Some reade progenitors ancestors fathers as though he spake of his naturall Parents With pure Conscience That is vnfeignedly sincerely and without hypocrisie That without ●●asing These words haue a double reading as if which Paul prayed he also pray sed God for Tim●thie or thus I than●● God that I doe pray for d●ee c. Without ceasing is constantly ordinarily I haue remembrance of thee in my Prayers Prayer is manifold mentall vocall conceived read in verse in prose publique private simple compound and the like It is likely these were private not publique prayers for Paul would avoyde all ostentation and iust cause of exception also at this time he was a prisoner Remembrance Remembrance hath in it foure things apprehension reposition retention and production a notion or thing is by the externall or internall sence presented to the eye of reason she perceiue● it that 's apprehension then it is committed vnto memorie as a place of conservation that 's reposition afterward kept ●here in safe●ie that 's retention and lastly when occasion●s given it s called ou● againe and that 's production A man takes a sha●t in his A Simile hand puts it in his ●●ver retaines it there for a t●●e and when he would recreate himselfe pu●s it forth againe this is a plaine Embl●me of Remembrance Night and day Lailah in Hebrew is for night and it signifieth rest quietnesse stilnesse because men were to take their ●ase and sleepe in that time which is from the Sunne-setting vnto the Sunne-rising Day In Hebrew jom of the stir tumu●● and busines that is in it the time from the Sun-rising to its-setting is called day or from Sunne-setting to its-setting in the same horizon whence a day is distributed into naturall or artificiall day is taken for hight and night for darkenesse and are applied to our spirituall estate 1 Cor. 3. 13. Ephes 5. 13. 1 Thes 5. 5. I would not haue thee my sonne Timothie once to imagin The Metaphrase but that what I write vnto thee is out of loue for I vnfeignedly giue thankes to God whom whatsoever others may report and beleeue of me I haue served in truth and integritie and not declined or done any thing of malice or set purpose since I had vnderstanding yea from my progenitors and elders Abraham Isaac and Iacob and the rest of the beleeving Iewes And be thou assured that as I pray night and day so in my requests to God I in a peculiar and speciall manner remember to make mention of thee and thine affayres alwayes in the Lord. I thanke God Note hence that Doct. 1. A good man exerciseth himselfe in thankesgiving He doth not onely craue future but returnes prayse for former favours hence it is that David Deborah Moses and many moe haue penned Psalmes of this subiect Exod. 15. Psal 106. Iudg. 5. Rev. 19. 1. 2. and Psal 96. per totum For they know themselues to be vnworthy of the least Reas 1. benefit and receiue all things without desert of their owne I am lesser than all thy mercies and all thy truth Gen. 32. 10. And it s a good thing to prayse the Lord no dutie more Reas 2. acceptable
Rachell did sonnes or else we die being still Gen. 30. 1. petitioning never repaying We are like the earth that receiues many bodies but without a miracle wrought will not yeeld vp one so must God pull thankes by violence out of our hearts if he will haue any Helpes to true thankefulnesse To consider that the Lord hath chosen thee whereas he 1. hath reiected thousands before the world was and to what to inherit a Kingdome David though no small thing to be sonne-in-law to a King 1 Sam. 18. 23. Secondly take knowledge of the Lords dealing with thee 2. in giving thee a being of nothing and that in a comely maner are all creatures men and women Haue all at their birth that be eyes to see tongues to speake c Why wast thou not borne dumbe or blind Thirdly Looke backe and see what the Lord hath done for 3. thee since thy birth how comes it to passe that thou art now aliue Why was not thy bodie long agoe turned into small dust Art thou not made of the same mould Dost thou not feed on the same food and breath in the same ayre The consideration of these things like a loadstone should moue vs to lift vp our hearts to God Fourthly Thinke of thy present condition hast thou food 4. and rayment in abundance Why doe others want it who feeds thee with this Mannah that so many of thy brethren never tasted of Who brought thee into these large pastures causeth thy cup to flow over But let me come nearer thee Psal 23. 5. yet art thou in the libertie of Gods sonnes Hast thou the saving graces peculiar to the Lords chosen Hath the spirit sealed thee a Quittance for the pardon of all thy sinnes and assured thee of salvation Why Is this the lot of all the seed of Adam Doth every man enioy the like portion And are these common favours Wast thou ever wounded in spirit Then who healed and helped thee Did sin ever presse thee to the pit of hell How or by what meanes wast thou eased Beloved I haue but given you a tast of the vnsearchable and vnvaluable gifts the Lord hath imparted vpon you wherefore take words of thankfulnesse to your Hosea 14. 2. selues and say with the Prophet My soule prayse the Lord Psal 103. 1. and all that is within me magnifie his holy name yea let this alway be thy vow I will prayse the Lord while I liue for he hath done wonderfull things for my soule but if all this will not moue vs to be more mindfull of and carefull to discharge this duty I can say no more saue this I pray God that the time may not come when want shall cause thee to promise any thing and yet the Lord in mercy will giue thee nothing Whom I serue from mine elders with pure Conscience These words are inserted by the Apostle to maintaine his dignity against the scandall of such as reputed him to be an Apostata and fallen from his profession whence ariseth this Doctrine that Carnall friends will become foes if a man embrace the Gospell Doct. 2. He that in sinceritie will set himselfe to serue God shall haue his former friends to be his greatest enemies so long as Paul was a proud Pharisee his brethren and acquaintance highly esteemed him but after he became an Apostle they reputed him a plaguy fellow one not worthy to liue thus Act● 22. 22. did the Papists deale with Luther so true is the speech of Christ That a mans enemies shall be they of his owne house Luk. 12. 53. Acts. ●3 14. and 26. 5. c. For in so doing he condemneth his former courses and Reas 1. consequently them that professe them this is to giue testimony that their estate is miserable and that cannot of wicked men be indured Ioh. 7. 7. This hath made the Papists cry out What are all our forefathers damned because wee tread not in their footsteps of errour ignorance Because then they will cast off their societie and take part Reas 2. with the pious and that stirreth and worketh strangely when men will not runne with them to the same excesse of ryot 1 Pet. 4. 4. or be in league as in times past Learne then you that haue embraced the Gospell not to Vse 1. ●●a●vaile if carnall friends be now your greatest adversaries for so it hath beene and will continue in future ages for you are not of the world therefore the world hateth you as she lulleth her owne in her lappe so she casteth out them the Lord receiveth Let such also as resolue to be truely religious and to cast Vse 2. off their former courses and companions prepare to vndergoe many taunts and iniuries he that feares the tongues of such shall never be a resolute Christian souldier whilest the bird is in the egge the Kite cares not for her but if once she be disclosed grow fledged and fly abroad beware of devouring And where Paul maintaines his owne cause from his example we may learne that The truth of our profession is to be maintained against all opposition Doct. 3. Did not Elijah this against Ahab and his foure hundred false Prophets This did the Apostles in many places and Christ himselfe when as was given iust occasion see 1 King 18. 18. Act. 5. 29. Mark 2. 10. Gal. 1. 8. 2 Pet. 3. 2. 3 4. c. Why It s the best thing we haue and what of greater Reas 1. worth in all the world It s our bread and meat life and living And so doing we approue of the truth of our profession Reas 2. and the vprightnesse of our hearts yea it may be of force either to convert or abate the rigour of our carping adversaries Acts. 16. 39. Let this condemne the timorousnesse and imbecillitie of Vse 1. the most in our dayes who haue no hearts to maintaine what they professe What would such doe if it came to fire and fagot that are dumbe in these dayes at the truths opposition Fie fie Never was this dutie lesse regarded I wonder for whom or for what men keepe their resolution Is not this worthy of it Take we then knowledge of this and let purse speech Vse 2. and person defend the truth in all contrary opposition Buy the truth and through covetousnesse or fearefulnesse sell it not for this is to set thy soule to sale to thine enemie Sathan for he that loseth the one cannot soue the other Let not the devils old scandals skare thee who more opposed than the best from the beginning was Christ free wouldst thou then These words are also a commendation to the Apostle and vttered to maintaine his reputation and dignitie whence it may be observed that It s an honour for man to be the servant of God Doct. 4. What matter of more moment Worke of greater worth or thing equall to it Moses the Lords servant is a
Calling This calling is either with the tongue or with the heart Calling distributed Whence ariseth this distinction of mentall and vocall prayer confirmed by the mouth of Christ This people honoreth me with their lips but their hearts are farre from me Mat. 15. 8. We are to call vpon God with the tongue 1. For we haue In calling on God we must vse the tongue and why this priviledge aboue all other creatures and shall wee not imploy it in the Lords service 2. We are to giue vp all our members as so many weapons of righteousnesse to glorifie him and is not this one of the principall And some-where David calls his tongue his glory Psal 30. 13. And it is good for vs so to doe 1. It will be a meanes to keepe our minds from wandring 2. The voyce stirres vp affections and raiseth them to an higher temper 3. In so doing we shall find the Lord putting phrases in our mouth guiding it now and then in a wonderfull manner farre beyond all naturall apprehension 4. And how can others ioyne with vs or know when to say Amen should we be silent When thou prayest alone imitate Hannah let thy lips moue not thy words 1 S●m 1. 13. be heard else it may seeme a sensible signe of Pharisaicall palpable hypocrisie And the heart may not be separated in this action 1. For Also the heart and why such prayers are most acceptable to God 2. They onely haue the promise to be heard 3. Otherwise they cannot be fervent let a mans breath flow from his mouth by a narrow passage were the hands hot it would coole them but if it proceed from the heart the lips being wide open were they cold it would warme them so prayer that springs from the heart is hot from the tongue onely cold as ice 4. As the Lord is the highest obiect we looke at in Prayer so the heart is the lowest center he regards in this dutie these two in all holy actions of this nature may not be disioyned 1. Vaine then are the prayers of many who call vpon God but with the tongue onely If this be not profane babling what can be Thus pray our Papists and rude ignorant Protestants so prayed the old Pharisees Christ checkes them yet their custome continues vnto this day But let vs conioyne heart and tongue else wee doe but labour in vaine What profit can wee expect in bending the knee bowing the bodie spreading the hands and smiting of the breast when our hearts are roauing from the Lord Is this to pray Is this to call aright Is this to please God Nothing lesse What is the tongue but the hearts messenger He therefore that vseth the one and not the other is like to him that runnes before he hath his errand These men may seeme to pray in the iudgement of others but before GOD they are but vaine bablers Vpon God To him is it and to no other that wee must II. pray Obserue here how God is one in essence three in subsistence the essence is not divided but distinguished When as wee say East West and North these are not parts essentiall to the world but names onely of distinction so may we say of the former in regard of GOD for the Sonne and the holy Ghost are the same individuall essence with the Father and hence it will follow that he that prayeth to one prayeth to all but as the Apostle speaketh of another thing to every one in his owne order 1 Cor. 15. 23. Vnderstand that in this definition we speake of God the Father for teachings sake And vpon God must we call First For who but He 1 King 8. 39. discerneth the spirit of man Who but He knoweth all the hearts of the sonnes of men I●● onely he that is acquainted with all our wants and vnderstandeth what is best for vs. Secondly He is also present at all times in all places to heare vs helpe vs the Lord is alwayes neare at hand so is neither Saint nor Angell Thirdly And is not God sole Lord of all things both in earth and heaven Who made vs but He Who hath wherewith to satisfie vs but He And then vpon whom should we call but He Fourthly Is not He also the obiect of our faith Shall we then beleeue in one and pray to another Will that stand with sound reason Sith then that God is omniscient omnipresent omnipotent and the principall Obiect of our Faith it followes wee are onely bound to pray to Him 1. Whence by the way wee may confute the Romanists who pray to Saints to Angels but doe they vnderstand our wants Are they present in all places What haue they they haue not received And may wee put our confidence in creatures Were not this to seeke to a blind guide Relie on a bruised Reed And when the Sunne shineth brighte●● to light a Waxe-candle It is a never-●rring Canon tha● He Exod. 22. 20. who sacrificeth to any gods saue vnto the Lord onely shall vtterly be destroyed they that will doe the first let them expect the second ther is but one to God the father namely Christ but many to the sonne comparing him to a Prince that hath seuerall petitions preferred vnto him by the common subiects that passe through the hands of his neerest fauorites And they say that he is a bad sonne meaning Christ who wil doe nothing for the entreaty of his mother vnderstanding the blessed Virgin but doth not Christ bid vs come vnto Mat. 12. 28. him that he will pray to the father for vs to whom then should we goe is he not our neerest kinsman our eldest brother our head our husband But if any lust to be contentious we haue no such custom neither the Churches of God 2. Againe here is censured and condemned too the ignorant amongst vs. How many may wee heare cry God blesse me father of heauen haue mercy on me Lord forgiue me which words be good we grant but hauing no knowledge of or relation to Christ are no better then vaine babling the truth is that in all our petitions wee should haue reference to him though not alwayes expressed in words yet conceiued and retained in our minds this may be the cause why Daniel looked out of the window when he prayed towards the Temple because it was a type of Christ and thereby would teach vs that there is no going to God without Christ Iesus And as we speake to the soule of man by way and meanes of the bodie so must we to the father of all spirits through the vaile of the humanitie of Christ our mediatour 3. And by this wee may iudge what to thinke of the prayers of the Iewes and Turke and heathen who either haue not heard of Christ or deny him are not their petitions to no purpose shall they speed and preuaile before God can they expect Cornelius his answer thy prayers are Acts. 10. 4. heard thy
demand is granted Alas alas all our cryes to God hauing no eie to Christ are but as so many drops of water spilt vpon the ground Wherefore let all good Christians blesse God for their knowledge and mourne for such mens ignorance let vs conuert Noahs petition and say Gen. 9. 27. God perswade Shem to dwell in the tents of Iaphet 4. Finally this being thus let vs first learne to know Christ secondly to put our confidence in him thirdly and neuer dare to approch before the throne of God without him no comming to Ioseph without Beniamin to God without Note Iesus Wouldest thou haue euill remoued from thee thinke on his passion which speaketh better things than the bloud Heb. 12. 24. of Abel Wouldest thou haue all good conferred vpon thee remember his actiue obedience for thereby hee hath purchased all blessings But take heed of the Romanists errour who maintaine that Christ is mediator according to his humane nature for the humanitie without the deitie profits nothing they vnderstanding not how the distinct persons in the God-head haue their proper operations and that Adam sinned immediatly against the first person though mediatly against the other haue fallen into this slough and haue defiled themselues by whose harme learne we to beware Being inabled by the spirit As no man can come vnto the IV. 1 Cor. 12. 3. father but by the sonne so can no man say that Christ is the Lord but by the holy Ghost how often are wee commanded to pray in the spirit 1 Cor. 14. 15. Eph. 6. 18. Iude 20. vnderstand by Spirit either the holy himselfe or his graces within vs for these two are put indifferently one for the other as grieue not the holy Spirit the holie Ghost fell on them and quench not the spirit he hath giuen vs his spirit neither may they be separated in any action of a Christian For as the spirit doth worke grace in vs so doth he cooperate stirring it vp and mouing it as an instrument in the hand For so good a cause will not be absent from its owne building And this ability consisteth First in direction leading vs into all truth Iohn 14. 26. And secondly in power for hee helpeth vs against all our infirmities Rom. 8. 26. First For the wisdome of the flesh is enimitie against God and is not subiect Rom. 8. 7. to the law of God neither can be Spirituall actions must proceede from spirituall principles else they are base contemptible Secondly Againe euery good act must be gin in God and end in him as the father through Christ to be desired in regard of number or perfection of degrees Now carnall things are such as are for necessitie or for delight the one makes for our being the other for our well-being and all things are to bee desired petitioned for Things euill be either sinne or the fruits of it to wit affliction And sinne is either originall or actuall we must pray that the first may be abolished cleane wasted Actuall sinne is that either we haue committed or may commit For the former we must pray it may be pardoned for the latter that it may be preuented As for afflictions they are either temporall or eternall We are to pray the Lord that they may be put from vs totally finally Thus haue you a briefe of the particulers or materials about which we are to be exercised in prayer all which for matter and method are laid downe in that exact paterne recorded in the Gospell Mat. 6. And all these must we beg for First because the Lord hath giuen vs a promise his word is gone out that whatsoeuer wee shall aske he will heare vs. Secondly againe without the fruition of good and the remotion or preuention of euill we cannot liue the life of grace ne not of nature here much lesse escape death and possesse life eternall hereafter 1. Here is an error confuted of them who hold that we may aske spirituall but not corporall or carnall things at the hand of God because Christ saith Seeke yee first the kingdome of God and these things shall be giuen you Mat. 6. 33. this was not the Lords scope in that place but to disswade his Disciples from a distracted care about foode and rayment For they vsed to cry What shall I eat and wherewith shall wee be clothed as also giue them a sure rule and sound direction to auoyd the one and procure the other For if we could exercise our selues about heauenly earthly things would be banisht out of our mindes and should wee speede in the former we might haue better hope to preuaile in the latter And doth he not in the same Sermon teach vs to craue our daily bread and haue not all the people of God vsed this in practise Gen. 28. 20. Pro. 30. 8. 2. And this serues to reproue a whole world of people some pray for corporall but not for spirituall things Others desire common but begge no speciall gifts from God or if they doe they neither regard number nor measure A third sort entreat that sinne past may be pardoned but not corruption for the present wasted nor the effects of it for future time prevented And there be millions of men and women who onely craue that affliction may be remoued in this life but make not one petition that the causes of it may be abolisht or death eternall put farre from them in the world to come May we not say of all these They aske not or Iames. 4. 2. 3● if they doe they aske amisse 3. Let vs be of a contrary practise and sue to God for all things What Shall he promise and not performe Shall we seeke good and not desire evill to be remoued from vs Begge common graces speciall gifts all that 's good at the hand of God Open thy mouth wide and he will fill it Craue Psal 81. 10. pardon for sinne past prevention for time to come Pray that originall sinne the seed of all wickednesse may be daily wasted punishments remoued all kinde of afflictions sanctified God is rich in mercie he giues liberally to them that aske him Princes giue gifts according to the dignitie of their persons not the desert of the receiver so doth the Lord therefore aske what thou wilt and he shall conferre it on thee in due time And as there be many sorts of prayers vse thou all Publike private set conceived mentall vocall Ephes 6. 18. simple compound in verse in prose and as the Apostle inioynes the Ephesians Pray all manner of prayer Imitate the Gamsters of our times who if they gaine not by one game fall to another this doe and thou shalt prosper Having finished the description of Prayer we come in the second place to giue particular directions for the better performance of it Where note that some goe before some with and some after Prayer 1. Before thou prayest meditate 1. Of God 2. Of thine What is to
be done before Prayer owne basenesse 3. Of thy present condition and 4. Of the former successe which thou thy selfe and others haue had in the done despaire to speed for it s not enough to haue faith but in every action to vse it now when the vnderstanding is misguided marke this then faith is idle not exercised The last thing that must accompany prayers is fervency Ia● 5. 26. The energeticall operatiue fervent Prayer is it which speedeth prevaileth This is the fire which must heat it concoct it else God will reiect it never regard it reward it the which may by these subsequent helpes be procured 1. Vnderstand the worth of what thou desirest crauest Helpes to pray with fervencie for that will fire our affections set an edge on our petitions He who knowes the excellency of grace mercy and peace of the remission remotion and prevention of sinne and the effects of sinne cannot but open his mouth wide send forth his petitions with sighes and groanes and strong cryes 2. Thinke how necessary these things of worth are for thee Why doe beggars cry so earnestly but from an apprehension of their present necessitie great misery Is it not Mat. 8. 28. Luk. 18. 41. evident What caused the blind man to cry O thou sonne of David haue mercie on me The Apostle Helpe Lord or else I perish but the want and worth of that they desired 3. Get loue to the thing thou askest strong affections cause fervent prayers earnest petitions Christ louing Lazarus well wept and groaned in spirit when he prayed for Iob. 11. 33. 34 him David did the like for his sonne Where affection is wanting there will be cold praying Doe we not see this in Sutors 4. Be humble in thine owne eyes conceiue thou art lesse than the least of Gods mercies Proud persons either never pray or but coldly luke warmely He that would leape highest stoopes lowest so he that would pray with fervencie must haue humilitie 2 Chron. 33. 11. 12. 5. Increase thy faith for as Powder the shot so faith sendeth out prayers furiously fervently a great faith will cause men to burne in the spirit and to cry mightily to the Lord God of heaven Mat. 15. 28. 6. In one word Cherish no sinne in thee He who steales his bread will pray coldly for a blessing on 't more might be added but these shall suffice And after Prayer somewhat is to be observed also 1. We What after must vse all lawfull meanes for the procuring of what we Prayer Ezech. 36. 37. haue prayed for He that keepeth not the condition may not expect the performance of the promise or band 2. And we must watch and waite for the things we haue asked at the hands of God these two are often coupled together Ephes 6. 18. Col. 4. 2. Pray and watch Were it not madnesse to preferre a petition to a Prince yet never attend an answer To craue an Almes and not looke and stay for the giuers pleasure 3. If thy demand be not granted at the first thou must not faint despayre but pray still hope and waite still great Luk. 18. 1. men doe not alwayes reward the Musitian at the first sound or ditty for then he would straight be gone mis-spend the gift and play at another Window so dealeth the Lord for we are apt to cease praying and things easily got are soone forgot little regarded 4. And when thy request is granted thou must be thankfull Prayer Watching and Prayses are linked together some fayle in the first many in the second but the most in the last David ●ould blesse the Lord when he had heard Psal 116. 12. his petition so must we In the third place wee are to declare why Prayer is so Prayer is a difficult dutie difficult a dutie to be performed 1. For man must deny himselfe goe in the forme of a beggar acknowledge a superiour and his heart naturally being proud he is not easily brought on his knees constreined to stoope to so meane and low a pitch Who is the Lord cryed Pharaoh that I a King should serue him 2. We exercise every facultie of the soule and member of the bodie in this action as the invention iudgement memorie will tongue hand and all The more strings on an Instrument the more difficult to well tune and strike them many pinnes to the lace makes it hard in weaving 3. It s a most holy dutie wherefore the harder What do the Saints in heaven more then praise God And as that life they liue is most excellent so most difficult for by how much it exceeds other actions in holinesse by so much its many earnest words in prayer for the Preacher as they doe in taxing and condemning of him who knoweth how the Lord might poure his spirit on him loose the root of his tongue and make him one of a thousand Wherefore pray for all men but especially for Princes for Preachers He that doth not this is an enemie to the Church no friend to his owne soule And pray thou that the spirit of prophecie may rest vpon him that hee may deliver the word with all boldnesse be freed from the hands of vnreasonable men and so speake and so doe as that he may saue his own soule and them that heare him Of thee Another may be hence collected that Whom we affect we will pray for Doct. 11. Yea the more fervently we loue another the more earnestly and often we shall pray for that person God forbid sayd Samuell that I should cease to pray for you What could 1. Sam. 12. 23. moue him to doe this but affection see this in David in Ionathan in Iesus and in all the faithfull For truth of affection will vse all meanes lawfull to doe Reas 1. that party good who is affected and is not this one if not the chiefe among many Againe the lover and the beloved are as it were but one Reas 2. subiect so that if wee can pray for our selues wee shall for them whom wee affect This shewes that true loue is rare and hard to be found Vse 1. Many boast of it who never had it to vse the wordes of Dalilab how canst thou say thou louest Father or friend brother or sister wife or children and dost not this thing for them He that affirmes he loueth and prayes not for that person shall be found a lyar and no affection is there in him Make triall of the truth of thy loue by this doctrine canst Vse 2. thou pray for him or her thou affectest without ceasing night and day Then thy loue is sound if not but carnall Many a man tels his wife she her husband Preacher people and they the Preacher one another that they loue them but where be their Prayers When call they on God for them I dare peremptorily avouch that all these are lyers It s 〈◊〉 possible for a man to loue his friend
and a drop of this wine like Ionathans honie should it not open the dimme eies of our mind 4. And to omitt many things and to apply it to the purpose do we send for our friends let it be to pray to conferre of good things and to tell what God hath done for vs as well as to eat and drinke and make great mirth What a pittifull thing is it to enioy such abundance of Gods good creatures the societie one of another and yet neuer speake of Gods bountie or for the edification of our faith what salt better to season and sanctifie the creatures to vs vs to the Lord than gracious words prayer singing of Psalmes I wish this were the generall custome of our country men I may be filled with ioy Also we gather from this sentence that There is ioy to be found in the course of a Christian Doct. 6. What if few thinke so is it therefore not so know this that as there is a smell in euery flower so euerie action in Religion produceth comfort Are not all her wayes waies of pleasure Pro. 3. 17. the Prophets and Apostles haue they not published the word with ioy is it not their meate and Ioh. 4. 34. drinke to doe the will of their heauenly father haue not the people heard with ioy vnderstood with ioy search Neh. 8. 12. and see And there 's reason for 't first from their present portion 1. For are not their sinnes remitted the band of their debts Reas 1. cancelled and shall not the remembrance of this breed ioy 2. Are they not reconciled to God at one with him and may not such eat their meat with gladnes and drinke with a cheerefull heart 3. Be they not enriched with the graces of the spirit and is not one of them Ioy haue they not Gal. 5. 22. the earnest of life eternall and shall not that produce ioy 4. Is not the curse of the creature remoued and shall not bread dipped in the blood of the Lambe cause ioy doe not the blessed Angels attend them pitch their tents about them and is not that matter of great ioy Secondly From future promises 1. Shall they not haue food and raiment fit and convenient Need such to feare a deere yeare 2. Crosses shall turne to their comfort death be their advantage and the day of iudgement the time of their marriage coronation 3. Shall they not iudge Men Angels and the world 4. And is not heauen prouided for them Shall they not anon take possession of it if these things minister not ioy what can O but mee thinkes I Obiect 1. heare the worldling fume and chafe and say none more sad to see to none more heauie harted than these forward professors of the Gospell I tell him thats false such haue meat to eat thou knowest Resp not of bread thou neuer tastedst a treasure hid from thine eie May not the hart be merry vnder a sad countenance I tell thee againe they be Gods first borne and therfore partake of a double portion I but for all you can say sir their very lookes bewray Obiect 2. them their deepe silence makes against them But ô thou foole when wilt thou be wise doe not empty Resp vessels make the greatest sound shallow waters runne with most noise When full barrels ring not deepest riuers haue the stillest streame is it not one thing to bee rich another thing to say so can a man haue no coyne in his possession except thou enter into his Closet peepe into his Chest and finger into his treasure I trow yes I thinke you would make me beleeue that seeing is not beleeuing Obiect 3. haue I not heard such cry beheld thē weep bitterly Now I perceiue thou hast spet thy venome said thy Resp worst vnderstand me if thou canst Did not Ioseph weepe greatly was it for ioy or for heavinesse may not mirth and sorrow like sweet and sowre bee mixt together what if the sunne for a time be Ecclipsed shall it neuer appeare as in times past thou art to know that there is a Misterie in godlinesse the which none can read but they of the bride chamber How euer it be I am sure of this that there is ioy to be found in the course of a Christian Obiect 4. Well well but are not such euery day in ieopardie subiect to crosses death too Resp Grant it be so what of all that though the bodie be in bands may not the spirit be at libertie what if they haue outward trouble may they not haue inward peace that passeth all vnderstanding What if men forsake them shall not Angels minister vnto them grant they should dye for the Gospell can they doo 't in a better cause for a better thing Obiect 5. But I shall neuer beleeue that such crosses can stand with sound comfort Thou Didimist full of vnbeleefe they haue what thou Resp wantest to wit faith which is all in all by it they know that crosses come from a father and hee hath giuen them Davids charge handle the yong man gentlie that like haile on a tyled house they rattle more than hurt that they shall tary but for a time and at their departure as the ouerflowing riuer doth rich mudde leaue a blessing behind them I see you can set a good face on a bad matter you make Obiect 6. the best of an ill thing but for all you haue said I am not of your minde Of my mind for thine owne sake I wish thou werst Resp But alas as yet this secret is hid from thine eyes yet let me aske thee a question in sad earnest what is thy ioy whence doth it spring how long shall it continue or wherein doth it excell the ioy of a Christian hast thou health of body Why that he hath with a sound mind Hast thou goods so hath hee and grace too Hast thou friends For one hee hath a thousand Hast thou many things laid vp for many yeares I tell thee he hath all things laid vp for euer and euer This then may serue at once to stop the mouthes of such men as speake euill of the truth of God and course of a Vse 1. Christian who crie with open voice turne puritane become a precisian then farewell all mirth and welcome Melancholie These bring an ill report on the path to heauen as the people did on that to the land of Canaan they commended the countrey spake fairelie of it but complained of the passage as of walled townes fenced Cities and they saw great Giants sonnes of the Anakims so the carnall men of our times speake well of heauen thinke its worth the hauing but there be blacke stormes raging tempests and violent persecutions to passe thorow and therefore with Ruben and Gad they resolue to pitch their tents on the hether side of Iordan These muck-wormes reioyce in and feed on earthly vanities as Curres and
neuer heard of all the daies of their life Is there not a woe denounced against them that speake good of euill and is hee Isa 5. 20. not culpable of Iudgement to honour those the Lord neuer did I would haue men to iudge charitably rather then to speake too confidently yet God is wise for such praise without iust desert stirres vp men to rippe vp that whereby their names rot and so that is effected they neuer intended And may not this giue vs some glimpse what to deeme Vse 3. of them whose faith to this day was neuer heard of may not such feare their present condition and we mourne to consider their wofull estate wa st thou neuer a noted person reputed singular or entertained of the Saint surely thy faith is dead and thou art dead the Lord quicken thee Let this in the last place bee a comfort to those whose Vse 4. sound goeth through the world and whose names are famous too amongst the faithfull For it argueth some good thing to be in thee when good and bad haue some words about thee Crowes doe not flocke and houer and cry but it s about some thing nor Eagles soare and gather themselues together except there be a carkase yet take this also with thee be sure thou art such in truth as good men report of thee and contrary to what the world daily dischargeth against thee For otherwise thou maist haue a name to bee a liue and art dead and defamed but of desert And by the way take this as a note of faith vnfeigned viz. a care to Note become better when either the good commend thee or the bad condemne thee It may here be demanded how Paul came to know that these three had one and the same faith It s not to be doubted of but by the effects that flowed from these persons though he had an extraordinary gift of discerning too From the which this will arise that Faith v●feigned is to be iudged by the effects We cannot see Doct. 8. it in its selfe or in its cause But we omit this and collect another doctrine which is that Faith workes like effects in diuerse subiects Doct. 9. The Grandmother the mother and the mothers sonne had the same faith and the like fruits proceeded from them else Paul would neither haue called it vnfeigned or said that it dwelt in them or giuen them all three one and the same testimony All three had faith and vnfeigned faith For the likenes of actions were in them and proceeded from them by the which it was called vnfeigned and equally appropriated to each particular person And it is an vndoubted position that faith produceth the like effects in all Gods children in truth it must bee vnderstood not in degree For as faith increaseth the effectes are bettred Many Lanternes with seuerall Candles will all giue light but in proportion to their diuerse degrees and quantities Euery peece hath his report but according to the bignes and each instrument will sound but variously as they be in proportion and that for these reasons Because faith differs not in kind but in degree and like Reas 1. causes produce like effects Euery Bell hath its sound Each stone its weight and seuerall planets their diuerse influences yet not in the same measure though they may varie in kind Againe faith is diffused into subiect though seuerall yet Reas 2. they are the same in nature and consist of like principles Fire put into straw will either smoke or burne let the bundle be a thousand life in the bodie will haue motion though not in the same degree and measure and reason in euery man acteth but not so exquisitely The constitution may not be alike therefore a difference may be in operation naturall and also from the same ground in acts spirituall A darke horne in the Lanthorne dimmes the light somewhat Faith is begot and increased by the same originals the Reas 3. spirit and the word be both the principall and conseruing causes of it If one woman conceiue and bring forth a child and another nurse it varietie of foode might somewhat alter the nature and disposition of it but that spirit which begets faith doth also preserue it therefore it cannot be but that the like effects should proceed from it Here by the way we may see that those mothers if a forced necessity compell not who bring forth and bear● children yet haue no care to nurse them are to be blamed for so doing in that they differ from Gods manner of proceeding And in the last place if faith had not like effects in all Gods children Reas 4. then could they not attaine to one and the same ends as iustification sanctification saluation c. And so should it be in vaine the Lord failing and man too of their chiefe scope and purpose Hath not God made euery eie to see and hand to worke and shall we then iudge that faith shall not act but be idle away with that From this point we may learne how to iudge of the faith in our times which so many boast of they cry haue Vse 1. not we faith Doe not wee beleeue aswell as the best but where be the fruits of faith vnfeigned hast thou an humble and purging heart dost thou call vpon God at al times tary his leasure and rely vpon his promise art thou bold and resolute for good causes canst thou resist Sathan cleaue to God and shunne the appearances of euill will neither pouerty ouerpresse thee by despaire or prosperitie by presumption Why it s well and we beleeue that Faith is to be found in thee but if not thou hast it not rooted in thee For the tree is knowne by the fruit Will not the flower smell the candle giue light and the fire heate and shall true faith be without her effects boast not too much lest thou deceiue thy selfe taking the shadow for the body and that which is not for that which should be And this doctrine is of great comfort for them that often call the truth of faith into question But hast thou the true Vse 2. signes of it then thou hast it What if it worke not so mightily as in others will it follow that thou art without it suppose thou wert carried to the toppe of some high tower and casting thine eye vpon seuerall chimneyes of the which number thine is one and all smoking wouldst thou not conclude that fire in is thine house aswell as in thy neighbours there is the like effects therfore the same cause of certaine When men in heart and life are like the Godly let them be assured they haue the same faith It may differ in some degree yet the quantity greater or lesser alters not the kind of it Leauen is leauen though neuer so litle and if the meale bee seasoned it is to be found in the lumpe This must teach vs to take heed how we rashly
the gifts of grace from stirring growing Thus hauing remoued the quench-coale from oppressing 1 Cor. 9. vlt. the fire of the spirit like an ouer-laded beast eased of his burden we will adde some incentines to blow and stirre it vp that it may kindle flame and ascend and they be either publike or priuate 1. Goe not my friend from Ierusalem to Iericho where Helpes to stir vp grace in vs. though the situation is good the waters are nought but plant thy selfe vnder a powerfull ministerie and then diligently attend to the word When Paul had said quench not the spirit hee addes immediately despise not Prophecyings Preaching will 1 Thes 5. 19. like a mightie wind cause this spirituall fire to kindle and burne within vs. 2. The sacraments The one puts vs in minde of our promise the other of the comming of our Lord in glorie Will not the least token from a friend cause our hearts to leape within vs Did not the babe spring in his mothers wombe when the mother of Christ came neere him and shall not grace bestirred vpin consideration that he is at the verie dores 3. Good companions Saul will Prophecie among the prophets and the greenest wood burne being bound with the dry one coale will kindle many and diuerse litle brands set one another on burning when Silas came to Paul did he not burne in spirit 4. Diligence in our particular callings This will constraine vs to stirre vp the grace that is in vs for the actions thereof are like so many instruments without which wee cannot set this fire a working and through idlenesse doe not our gifts lye dead rust and canker 5. Singing of Psalmes When we ioyne with others in this action how will grace flame within vs euery word will lift vp the minde and each period leaue a sweete relish behind it that will glad the spirit Loue-songs doe noe more inflame lust than the song of songs will grace in the hart 6. Lastly admonition it will worke wonderfully if it bee performed with circumstance and in season It s like oyle that makes the face shining and glorious or the morning dew that waters the tender plants Where this fals grace wil sprout and flourish The priuate helpes are 1. Reading either the scriptures or other holy writings This being done in a corner will refresh the spirit It s like foode to the fainting Passenger 2. Meditation he that sits long by the fire shall haue his body to grow hot and his cold spirits to become actiue nimble Let this be done thorowly and it will make grace to stretch it selfe beyond its ordinary wont and the Christian to be rapt out of himselfe He that viewes the sunne will soone cast downe his head so hee that thinkes seriously of the sonne of God will cry I haue ioy enough 3. Praier who euer in his secret chamber went to God by praier but hee was rauisht in minde and in the strength of that action spent all that day without wearines God giueth the greatest gifts in secret and like man reueileth himselfe a not such a one possesse the place of one that 's lawfully sent and called of God and man and make the ground of the Church barren Let them then who assume to themselues this office of dignitie Vse 1. take heed what they doe The person ordinated must be of good report well qualified For otherwise it may and will be the very bane and pestilence of the Church when men vnfit not furnished with convenient gifts are ordinated inducted What saith our Lord If the blind lead the blinde doe not both fall into the ditch Mat. 15. 14. This also from the rule of relation must teach them who Vse 2. enterprize this high calling to be carefull to enter in an holy manner at Gods doore not the deuills window Such can neither expect the protection or blessing of God They sit like a man on the toppe of a mast the least gust makes them subiect to drowning Some assume this place as a theefe an vntamed horse backe him with much a doe ride him in a sweat and come downe with a mischiefe It may be iustly said to such friend how camest thou in hither who sent thee or requireth this at thine hands Whereas Timotheus his gifts were increased by prayer Prophecy and imposition of hands wee may conclude that The ordinances of God are not without profit if rightly practised Doct. 7. Who euer vsed any in an holy manner but preuailed for a blessing Was not the plague stayed when Aaron tooke a censer put fire thereon from the altar and incense according to Moses command and did not the blood of the Paschall Lamble stay the Angel which destroyed the Aegiptians from touching the Israelites When was preaching or praier vaine in the Lord if duly performed Numb 16. 8. Exod. 12. 23. 2 Sam. 24. 16. Acts 2. 41. and 4. 31. and 16. 14. Ia. 5. 16. 2. Chro. 30. 20. Isa 38. 5. For hath not each ordinance a special promise Aske and Reas 1. ye shall haue Seeke and ye shall finde Knocke and it shall be opened vnto you And shall wee thinke that the condition on our part performed the Lord will faile on his word Let not such a thought once creepe into our minde Mat. 7. 7. What if our best actions be imperfect is not the sinne Reas 2. remoued by the blood of Christ Iesus shall he not present them to his father without spot without rinckle When our Lord hath corrected our errours cut off the superfluitie supplied the defects of our doings then shall they appeare good before God and receiue a recompence of reward Rev. 8. 3. Away then with that old and no lesse profane complaint Vse 1. Isa 58. 3. We haue fasted and thou seest not afflicted our soules and thou regardest not and what profit is there in seruing Iob 21. 15. the almightie Was not Ahabs humiliation rewarded Iehues zeale commended and in some sort recompenced Yet were they not Hypocrites reprobates Their word was the Lord of hosts but their proper scope the praise of men the safetie of themselues not the glory of God rather their proiects were an earthly kingdome Shall wee thinke then that sinceritie in Gods service is without reward that his ordinances are not being in an holy manner performed profitable euery way to his faithfull servants What stronger motiue can be in the world to induce men Vse 2. to be frequent in good duties than this consideration Humble thy selfe the Lord shall lift thee vp Preach the Saints shal then be gathered the body of Christ edified Fast and pray and thou shalt prosper Commune with the best of Gods seruants bee a companion to them that feare him Come often to the Lords table and corruption shall wither dye the fruite of the Spirit grow flourish and waxe strong within thee For is not the promise of God true doth not his word stand for euer
and are not our imperfect actions perfected by the Lord Iesus Wee seeke and doe not finde because Iam. 4. 3. wee seeke and aske amisse Let me exhort thee to preach and pray read and heare propound and resolue profitable questions and then if thy labours be in vaine count me a false Prophet curse me at thy death Who euer did sow good feed in its season but had a rich and plentifull croppe at haruest If Peter cast in his nette at his masters command though in former time he hath laboured hard and caught nothing yet at the last he shall encompasse many great fishes hale them to land and be sufficiently recompenced satisfied It s not a trade but the well vsing of it not a farme but the well husbandry of it that will enrich the one and the other Wherfore be stedfast immoueable and abundant in the worke of 1 Cor. 15. vlt. the Lord knowing that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. What did Paul and the people fast pray and lay on hands without obseruing the effect of their actions No he and they saw how the gifts of Timotheus were augmented increased in so doing whence it will follow that In the vse of Gods ordinances we are to obserue how hee dealeth Doct. 8. with vs. Haue not the Prophets Apostles and all the Lords people done thus Should we make a collection of each particular wee should be exceeding large When they did offer sacrifice did they not obserue the successe Fast and pray what effects did follow reade and preach how people were conuerted comforted or hardened In administration of the Sacraments that Many were sicke and weake and slept others healed reioiced and receiued the holy Ghost Gen. 4. 3. and 10. 20. 21. Nehem. 9. 9. c. Psal 106. 23. and 107. 6. c. Mat. 7. 28. Acts 4. 31. and 28. 23. 24. 29. 2 Chro. 30. 20. c. 2 Kin. 22. 19. Io. 13. 27. 1 Cor. 11. 30. For in so doing we come to haue an experimentall knowledge Reas 1. of the truth and fidelity of Gods promises than the which nothing is better If any man will doe his will hee may be assured that the doctrine we deliuer is not sensuall earthly Ioh. 7. 17. Iam 3. 17. or diuellish but pure peaceable good and profitable For all the Lord speaketh shall come to passe Iosh 21. 45. And will it not yeeld matter of thankesgiuing Why are we so barren in blessing of God haue our mouths so empty Reas 2. of his praises doe not continually sing songs of gratefulnesse Is it not the neglect of this obseruation Could we with the Prophet register the many mercies wee receiue in the vse of Gods ordinances we should crie as he did What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits Psal 1 16. 12. Would it not also constraine vs to be more frequent in Reas 3. good duties prouoke and pricke vs forward to preach and pray will not men spend much time without wearinesse in that calling that affordeth great commoditie with constancie Who euer casteth off a profitable art or waxeth dull in doing that which his owne experience makes sure hath recompence of reward Suppose we found no fruit in thus doing but all our actions Reas 4. of this kind were blasted Yet would it not cause vs to looke out the cause why God with-holdeth a blessing Should we not finde some Babilonish garment in our tent some Ionah a sleepe in the shippe one sinne or other that hinders the good successe of our spirituall indeuours and were not this worthy of our paines Hence comes to be reproued many a person who though Vse 1. they performe holy duties yet neuer haue eye to the euent Are not these worse than Cain For he obserued the successe of his sacrifice Or Balaam Did not hee perceiue how the Lord answered him Doe wee not read that hypocrites marked what fruit they reaped in fasting and afflicting themselues Isay 58 3. Are not Christians then blame worthie who come short of such in this thing True it is that in nothing the best faile more than in not ioyning watchfullnesse in the vse of Gods ordinances Want of this one thing breedeth doubting staggering in the promises with-holdeth matter of thankfulnesse causeth slownesse dulnesse in good duties and keepeth sinne close from being reuealed discouered What shal we then do Why we must imitate men in other Vse 2. vocations recreatious When the husbandman hath cast good seede into his soile will hee not haue an eye to its rooting sprowting growing Who planteth or grafteth but obserueth how the tender blades budde shoot forth and spread themselues will not the fisherman hauing cast in his net or angle into the riuer expect whether any fish be catcht by the gill or intangled in the meshes What fowler spreadeth pantels setteth his ginne dischargeth his piece but will haunt the spring view the scrap and looke with a stretched out necke to see if any bird be caught fast insnarred or wounded Shall Physitians giue pils administer potions and grow carelesse how their Physicke workes Learne then by their examples what successe accompanieth the Lords ordinances Preacher people Sow the seede of the word in season out of season and marke which doth prosper 2 Tim. 4. 2. Eccles. 11. 6. this or that In thus doing peraduenture thou maist finde some person strucke with the shot of the word who like a wounded Pigeon will single himselfe from his former companions fall in some obseure corner of a field spread the wings of his armes and with a drouping conscience call and cry to God for mercie for pardon Pray and watch what the Lord will say vnto thee Reade and heare and take notice how thy heart waxeth hot corruption is cooled and grace kindled Yea in all holy actions looke to the successe and experience will let thee see that as the shadow followeth the body the blessing of God doth accōpanie his ordinances Aboue all things thinke thou on this so shall thy faith grow strong in the promises of God thou shalt find them a sure word that neuer faileth Also thou maist haue matter of prayse to God-ward and tell thy brethren what he hath done for thy soule And how will this experimental Psal 66. 16. knowledge encourage thee to preach pray read heare and neuer grow wearie in wel-doing At the least or if I may so say at the worst this benefit will accrue how that there is some sinne in vs not repented of one corruption or other not mortified or iust circumstance in Gods service omitted which causeth our indeuours not to prosper our best fruite to be blasted From the words diuersly considered might many more doctrines be collected as that 1. There may be increase of grace in the best Christian For Timotheus was an excellent man before this time and were not his gifts now augmented 2. That a Minister hath neede
and her setting on our affections as the Bee her sting but lose our labour and as Paul of the Corinthians are lesse beloued the which makes vs to cry my sighes are many and my heart is heauie But loue God and thou shalt be beloued for in this loue is no losse 4. He onely can giue vs content For as the foote is neuer stable till it be pitcht on firme Land so our affections are euer wauering vntill they be fixt on God who is the first Being the sustainer of the soule 5. Call to mind how he hath loued vs Shall he choose vs from eternity and we reiect him in time Nay rather let his loue to vs worke in vs a reciprocall loue of him and so it will in all his chosen let me but giue warmth to my clothes and shall I not receiue heat by way of reflexion 6. He is alwaies with vs in vs and neither will nor can be absent from vs What a griefe it is experience tels not to bee present with the thing beloued This diuision like Reubens causeth many thoughts of heart For personall presence when friends affect aboue all things is desired and here onely and no where else it is to be obtained Ne thinkes these thinges should like the Load stone yron draw and knit our hearts vnto the Lord were they well weighed But if all this will not let vs further consider this that if he be not the obiect of our affection we shall be the subiects of his eternall wrath and indignation This may suffice to haue beene spoken of loue as it looketh towards God now we will handle it as it hath relation to man where we obserue that The Children of God loue one another Doct. 8. Mat. 22. 39. Rom. 13 8. Psal 16. 3. 10. 15. 10. Reasons This point is but short in speech but long in practise we must owe nothing to any man but that we loue one another Loue is a debt alwaies to be payd yet euer to be owing 1. For are they not sonnes of one father 2. Members of one body 3. Temples of one spirit 4. And heires of one and the same kingdome 5. Doth not the image of God shine in them 6. And are they not beloued of him And shall the creator loue that which the creature will not What then shall we iudge of some among vs that scoffe Vse 1. deride persecute and thinke they doe God good service in putting of his Children to death are these the sonnes of the most high or rather be they not bastards haue such the spirit of loue who hate the holy despise the most sincere religious verily they are as yet strangers and aliants from the houshold of faith and common-wealth of Israel Learne how we are to loue one another that wee deceiue Vse 2. not our selues in this dutie thinking we loue when we doe nothing lesse 1. Rule is As thy selfe Mat. 19. 19. The rule whereby we loue our selues must be the same in louing one another and this may appeare either affirmatiuely in what we will doe for our selues or negatiuely in what we will not doe to our selues for the first affirmatiuely 1. A man will cloth himselfe 2. Feede himselfe 3. Lodge himselfe 4. Prayse God and pray to God for himselfe 5. grow in and gather grace for himselfe 6. And for heauen he will daily prepare and fit himselfe For the second Negatiuely 1. A good man will not quarrell with or kill himselfe 2. He will not steale from and rob himselfe 3. Nor lye and beare false witnesse against himselfe 4. Hee will not vrge and carowse to make drunke himselfe 5. He will not slander and discredit himselfe 6. And lastly he will not goe to law and sute with himselfe But may not one Christian goe to law with another Quest Resol Yes but if it may be hee must preuent it 1. And that by dealing with his aduersarie hand to hand prouing if he may prevaile 2. Then if not tell the case to two or three to see if they can ende the controuersie 3. But if these two waies faile then he must tell the elders of the Church the which as some will are the Presbyterie others all the setled congregation and if they cannot make peace then may a Christian goe to law else it seemes not for Paul checkes the Corinthians 1 Cor. 6. for going to law one brother with another But hauing vsed all the former meanes account him thy aduersarie a Publican and no brother if thou canst not winne him appease him The second Rule whereby we are to loue one another is As Christ hath loued vs. Ioh. 13. 34. 1. For order Christ loued vs before we loued him for we loue him because he loued vs first so should wee loue our brother before we be beloued of him 2. In the end he loues vs to doe vs good not that hee receiues good from vs. As Iob of righteousnesse so we say of loue Our loue may profit the sonne of man but if we loue the Lord what receiueth he at our hands Iob. 35. 7. 3. It must be in sinceritie that is not in hypocrisie or dissimulation our loue must be pure not mixed not in word but indeed and truth 4. And we must haue regard to the degree of loue Paul tels vs of the height bredth depth and length of his loue and this will thus better appeare in these things 1. He being God became man that by this his pouerty wee might bee made rich What a degree of humilitie was this 2. He died for vs and herein is the loue of Christ made manifest For greater loue than this can no man shew to lay downe his life for his friends Nay for vs who were his enemies 3. Christ loued vs without measure for who can limit his loue and say hither came it and no further this is a great bredth 4. And he loueth vs for euer in persecution of wicked men temptation of Sathan nor yet the infinite wrath of his father could either stay or interrupt it here 's the length of it without end it is from eternitie to eternitie hath hee loued vs and the quantitie of it is vnmeasurable Should we trie the loue of our dayes by the first rule wee shall finde but little if by the second much lesse for who clotheth his neighbours may not many a member complaine with the head they haue parted my rayment and on my garment haue they cast lots We haue few Iobes or Dorcasses that make coates to cloth the poore Shew me the man that if his neighbour be hungry will giue him meate if he thirst will make him to drinke so our backes be clothed and our bellies filled we forget the afflictions of Ioseph How farre might we trauaile to finde out a Centurion who hath built the poore a Synagogue a Paul who will make mention of his friend Timothie in his prayers night and day Where is he and what is his name
not vnder the act of one mans vnderstanding and in regard he is a communicable creature and all things made for him he hath appointed a post for speech is but the carriar of the truth to the person that others might partake of all his wisdome Grammar like one in a plaine Mans messengers be 1. Loquentia 2. Eloquentia sute deliuers the thing as it is plainly but Rhetorick like a braue man in purple or some cut laced or iagged sute brings it more plausiblie Thus good was God to giue man variety of vessels that he with the more delight might entertaine the truth And here you see how Logick prepares packes for Grammar Rhetoricke which be as Carriars to travell with truth Where note that Logicke may be without Grammar and they that bring speech into Logicke are in an errour greatly deceiued For Logicke hath not to deale with speech but is a distinct art and speech is but the vessell by which from man to man truth is conveied It s true that Logicke is in the words but no otherwise than meate in a vessell as a common adiunct to it not as the forme in the matter which is an essentiall part of the thing Now when Logicke Grammar and Rhetoricke haue done comes in Quantity for if Reason find it out Speech giue it nomination it will be for quantitie great or little for number one or moe here comes in the vse of quantitie discrete or continued Thus fiue of the arts are passed In the next place Philosophie steppes in and tels you the nature of the thing whether hot cold sweete or sowre c. And finallie Diuinitie like the highest steppe of a ladder hauing borrowed helpe from all the others comes in last of all and is the rule of goodnesse And as the vnderstanding doth apprehend truth and falshood so the will embraceth good or euill But euill comes in by accident and is not any part of the wills proper obiect no more than falshood of the vnderstandings obiect except the vnderstanding be first deceiued and so the will embrace it as good though euill in appearance And now from all this that Conclusions from the discourse hath beene said we might draw many excellent conclusions First That he who would be a profound divine must haue ● some knowledge of all the arts especially hee must be a logician All men haue Logicke by nature but knowledge of the arts precept doth much helpe and rectifie reason Those then are farre wide that cry out against Logicke as though a Logician were no better than a Magician And they are as farre to blame that though they approue it yet seeke not for to obtaine it for if the blinde leade the blinde Mat. 15. 14. both fall into the ditch I wish this were well thought vpon by such as take charge of Gods people his chosen For we do all know that a blind guide cannot well leade others a dumbe Dog call his companions by barking and an ignorant pilot conduct the ship safe to land and preserue it from splitting Againe we may perceiue that sound minds are not 2. easily come by Whatsoeuer the world may iudge Some thinke themselues wise With a little wit as others doe themselues rich with no great wealth Besides we gather that one Art doth not crosse or hinder 3. but helpe another no more then the steps of staires being rightly placed doe one another if we thinke otherwise it s our ignorance for God knew well how to make all things to agree and further man in his proceedings Moreouer its plaine hence that there is a concretion or 4. Composition of all Arts in one subiect and an Aphairesin or separation by the distinct acts of the vnderstanding of them As we may see in this phrase All flesh is grasse Bring this to Logicke here is Comparates in similitude and likenesse All flesh is grasse that is is as Grasse And the Axiome is true affirmed generall subiect and adjunct Heere 's also Rhetoricke and a double trope for flesh is put being a part for the whole and all flesh in generall for man in speciall so that here is a twofold Synechdoche part put for the whole and the Genus for the Speices And who seeth not the rest of the Arts vnder the words grasse and flesh For here might Philosophy be handled at large But the divinity when Rhetorike is remoued and layd bare is this 1. That man is mortall in his axiome is subiect and adiunct 2. That all men are mortall for it is appointed for all men Heb. 9. 27. Rom. 5. 12. once to dye and death went ouer all men for all men haue sinned Note further that Diuinity is the best Art for all serue as 5. handmaides to their Mistresse And here we see that the more speciall a thing is it may be the better for Diuinity is the most speciall Art yet the best so that the old Rule Bonum Bonum quò communius ●ó melius expounded quò communius c. The more common a good thing is the better it is must be warily vnderstood for the more Common a good horse is he may be the worse But this is a truth that the more subordination there be of things to a thing or of ends to an end the better that last thing or end is Hence God is the chiefe good for all things are subordinate to him he to nothing so diuinity is the best Art for all are subiect to it it not to any Wearing the suite is better then either shaping or sewing eating the meate better then killing or roasting for they are subordinate and make way for the other But I am sensible of my digression we will therefore conclude 6. with this that the sound mind the Apostle meaneth is the true vnderstanding of such principles and rules of Religion that are of absolute necessity either in the right deviding and handling of the word or for the well guiding of vs in all the duties of Christianity Whether superiors or inferiors or in what condition a man be soeuer Now the Lord giue vs true vnderstanding in all things necessary Amen There is yet a second doctrine that may be drawne from the word if we reade or interpret it as some doe which is that Moderation of affection is needfull for euery Christian 1. Doct. 9. Thes 5. 6. 1 Tim. 3. 2. Tit. 2. 2. First its needfull in regard of our selues for otherwise Reas 1. Loue is but indiscreet passion Feare despaire anger fury ioy madnes Yea euen Gods graces without this worke strangely in his children for knowledge like leauen puffeth vp and power worketh beyond his Commission Againe its needfull in respect of God 1. That wee may Reas 2. be patient in aduersity 2. Humble in prosperity for both these are well pleasing vnto him And in regard of others its necessary either in writing Reas 3. or speaking for still
set thee apart for the worke of The Metaphrase the Ministery hath also fitted thee with gifts for the execution thereof I therefore doe dehort thee from being ashamed and abashed in regard of the great and many troubles and trialls that doe accompany the preaching and professing the glad tidings of Salvation and doe further from the same grounds exhort thee for to endure with patience constancy and perseuerance such afflictions as thy fellow-labourers partake of and are incident vnto neither let thy youth or weak●es daunt or discourage thee for all that I desire of thee or that the Lord will inflict vpon thee is no more then that thou hast or maist receiue ability to vndergoe and beare this is all I would this is that thou oughtest to doe The deductiō of doctrines First out of the word therefore we note that Doctrine Reason and vse is a warrantable kind of preaching Doct. 1. It is not any vpstart and fantasticall but an auncient and an Apostolicall kind and way of teaching When Paul by many Reasons had proued the Resurrection and iudgement to come in conclusion hee makes vse Wherefore my beloued 1 Cor 15. vlt. be yee stedfast immoveable abundant alway in the worke of the Lord in as much as you know your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. So doth he 1 Thess 4. 14. vlt. And Peter treadeth in the same steps of method 1 Pet. 4. And you shall find it practised throughout the booke of God For saith the same Apostle Seing these things are so what manner of men ought we to be in holines of life and blamelesnes of conversation 2 Pet. 3. 11. For is it not reasonable Who can deny it wee gather Reas 1. some note that directly floweth from the Text then we confirme it First By axiomaticall propositions and Secondly By some third argument When two pieces of cloth be in controuersie we take a light and by that wee discerne whither is the better for colour substance so when two things are controuerted which of them is the truth wee produce a third argument and laying that to them as the candle to the cloth wee come to iudge the better which is false or true And Application is profitable For men naturally being Reas 2. vnwilling to receiue the seed of the word as the hard earth is the corne Application like a mallet or harrow breaketh the heart and causeth the truth to take the better and deeper impression Men therfore must not condemne this Method as though Vse 1. Obiect Sol. it were vnreasonable vnprofitable But some may say The Scripture doth not vse it I answere it doth yet not so exactly for God in wisedome and goodnes hath scattered things and often vseth an inversion of the parts that man might seeke search in the vse of his Reasons For Logickes Rules are like so many hounds beating the bush of Gods booke to find out the truth And as flowers were they layd vpon an heape would not be so delightfull to the gatherer as when in the garden they be pluckt here and there by one and one So the truth in Gods Booke being found out by seeking and searching here a little and there a little is much more acceptable and well pleasing vnto man And this I iudge is the Reason why the Scripture is writ as an history This may confirme and encourage those that vse this Vse 2. method to go on not to cast it off for the dislike of a few Notwithstanding we tye no man to our order but let euery one write and speake as he hath receiued of the Lord. Yet this I adde that it is good for memory the common people doe profit the most by that way of teaching therefore it s not amisse for their better edification to descend and stoope to the capacities of the simple vnlearned And this by experience I haue proued that the doctrine Directions in the deduction and applicatiō of doctrines and my text if rightly deduced make a Syllogisme the text it selfe alwaies being the third argument to confirme it Againe my Reason and my doctrine make a Syllogisme also my Reason being a third argument further to confirme it And last of all my vse and doctrine must be also a Syllogisme and ordinarily a connexe so that so many vses as you deduce from the doctrine if they will the doctrine being the third argument make a syllogisme you neuer misse your rule be they few or many Be not therefore ashamed Whence note that No man is to be ashamed of but resolutely to beare witnesse Doct. 2. vnto the Gospel The faithfull are called a cloud of witnesses And this is not Heb. 12. 1. without command Acts 1. 8. Matth. 10. 32. Acts 26. 16. For it is the power of God to salvation to the Iew first Reas 1. Rom. 1. 16. 17. to the Gentile both before and after the comming of Christ in the flesh this Reason Paul giues of the point Who would be ashamed of that ship that was a meanes to preserue him from drowning Because to be ashamed of it is to be ashamed of the Author Reas 2. of it Christ for he that despiseth his doctrine despiseth Heb. 10. 29. him and is neare vnto cursing and burning This reproues both Ministers and people for how many Vse 1. haue we that will not beare witnesse to it but are ashamed of it You will say who be they Quest Ans What Preachers be ashamed of the Gospel I answere for Ministers 1. Such as can Preach but doe not 2. They that giue ouer their calling and with Demas doe embrace the world 3. When men Preach without study and premeditation idlely not soundly 4. When they fill their Sermons and stuffe them with a bastard kinde of eloquence of variety of tongues Poets Authors for why should they doe this if they were not proud and had not a base conceit of the Gospell But may not a man doe this Quest Ans Yes When hee speakes to a learned intelligent and iudicious Auditory or when the point is in controuersie betwixt vs and our Aduersaries or when the end is not for ostentation but to winne dignitie to his Ministery and for edification of the people But yet cautions must bee obserued Cautions in Quotations 1. It must be done sparingly 2. Augustine Chrysostome and Ierome must not shoulder out Peter and Paul Iames and Iohn And those Ministers may be said to be ashamed of the Gospell who Preach one thing and practise another herein Peter was to be blamed Gal. 2. 12. And for People these may be said to be ashamed of the When and what people are ashamed of the Gospell Gospel 1. Who thinke that the power of godlines consists in Ceremonies beggarly and impotent rudiments as the Papists doe 2. Who if they dislike the person they will none of the doctrine these are like those
he would haue his graces in vs excercised to the vttermost He that buildes a ship fitteth the burden answerable to her bignes else in part his labour and charge were in vaine For a lesser barke would haue fitted his purpose serued his turne And if our afflictions did exceed our ability then it were Reas 2. not for probation but destruction No man will ouerburden his beast for that would bruise him breake him Christ would not haue new wine put into old vessells for the vessels would burst and the wine be spilt his Disciples Math. 10. 14. had too much of the old man in them they were not renewed so much as to be able to vndergoe for the present extraordinary duties of Religion therefore for a time hee would spare and exempt them This reproues such as accuse the Lord of iniustice crying Vse 1. out like Caine My punishment is greater than I can beare for God is iust and equall in all his proceedings And heere we see the goodnes of God that in iudgement Vse 2. remembreth mercy he looketh at the ability of his children and maketh their power the rule of his proceedings his will is not but their weakenesse the ground and sole cause of their greater or lesser afflictions Yea he fits them for sufferings before he try them and then makes the burden proportionable to the measure of strength receiued By this poynt we may also be informed why one Christian Vse 3. suffereth much another lesse because of their inequal●ty of strength exhibited He that hath much grace shall ●eare much little suffer the lesse And it● plaine from this ground that to suffer many and great afflictions argueth ●●e ●ore grace the greater ability This is for the comfort of the weake Christian for he hauing Vse 4. receiued a little strength shall endure the les●e ●●i●ll for God is merciful to the beasts much more to his de●re children What man will s●●ke his ves●●ll with overbu●dening of it breake his beast with overlading o● him or p●●tle his servant or sonne to death by casting too great a load on their shoulders And then shall God burst his golden vessels with filling them too full of this liquor Moreouer we must learne hence that as wee grow in Vse 5. grace so to prepare for greater sufferings Christ will haue his chiefest Champions to fight the greatest combates weake souldiers shall come in the Rereward and not in the forefront or in the heate of the battell And be sure of this that if thy strength be encreased thy troubles shall be also augmented Note for all our graces in truth and in degree too shall be employed If Christ be infinite in power hee must vndergoe the infinite wrath of his father being made a sinner by imputation Furthermore if God dealeth thus with vs let vs haue the Vse 6. like hand one towards another A minister must hauean eye to discerne the state of his flocke and put a difference in his commands he must not tyre the Lambes with driving them too fast or too farre with the elder Sheepe Choyse must be made to fast and pray and to performe extraordinary duties at extraordinary times lawfully cōmanded lawfully to be executed Parents too and Masters must not like the taske-masters of Egypt enioyne their children and seruants a greater worke then they are able to discharge And would to God that all men would remember this in all things for its iust and equall Finally we must take knowledge of our owne power and Vse 7. neuer presse our selues beyond our might Christ would not haue some to speake of him and to tell of his workes why for they were not for the present either able to defend the truth suffer for it or those with whom they were to deale fitted to receiue it We haue many but too forward in these times except their ability were better yong Christians will be now a dayes in the heate of the skirmish without a calling casting Cannons off their carriages that neuer gaue fire to a double Muskert controll the Captaines when as they themselues neuer fought on foote Yet beare fight quarell but know thy standing thy strength and presume not like Peter aboue thy power For our direction we must know that ability is either Power distributed inward or outward Inward 1. Spirituall 2. Corporall Outward is in our head Christ or our riches And according to all this power we must beare and suffer Some Christians like great bony beggars are able to beare much but in the time of trouble they either run away or shrinke when the burden is to be put vnder their shoulders others as wee haue heard thinke nothing too heauy for them so that these are extremities on both hands and to be as dangerous avoyded The last thing we note is this that It is the power of God receiued which will support a Christian Doct. 10. in affliction This is as wine to the spirit the spirit to the soule as wind to the sayles and the sayles to the ship But in regard we haue touched it before we omit it here and proceed to the verse which followeth VERS 9. Who hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen vs through Christ Iesus before the world was IN this verse the Apostle declareth what the Lord The Logicall resolution hath done for him and his sonne Timotheus 1. He hath saued them 2. Called them 3. Wherwith with an holy calling 4. Why hee hath done this First Paul remoues a false ground in these words Not according to our workes and Secondly hee layeth downe the true cause in these words But according to his purpose and grace c. Who. That is God for this word hath relation vnto the The Theologicall exposition last word in the foregoing verse Hath saued 1. Saluation is either corporall or spirituall 2. It is either partiall or totall Spirituall and totall is here meant and it containes 3. things 1. A freedome from some evill wee are fallen into or subiect to fall into 2. A position setting of vs in a good condition And 3. A perpetuall preservation of vs from all dangers for future time This is totally and perfectly to be saued And called Calling may be distinguished 1. By the meanes and 2. By the subiects of it The instruments are either principall or secondary God is the chiefe efficient of our calling and the Minister word and creatures are but as instruments in the workemans hand The subiect is man onely and that either generall or particular Generall as whole Nations Gentiles Iewes Particular as persons Paul Timotheus the latter here meant Moreouer calling is either effectuall or not effectuall for we may distinguish of it according to the successe And finally it s either ordinary or extraordinary ordinary effectuall calling is by the wor● and
of the world or with the Iew in Babilon haue thy parents reiected thee thy friends cast thee off and all thy familiars waite for thy halting Yet grace shall neuer leaue thee or the Lord forsake thee but preserue thee to eternall glory Let Rachel die in trauell Abel be slaine of his brother Iames be beheaded Christ crucified and Eli breake his necke yet they shall be saued And if thou be faithfull God shall deliuer thee from every evill worke and preserue thee to his heauenly kingdome Then be of good comfort for if earthly priviledges breed such ioy what should these heauenly doe Why where bee our hearts and what doe we thinke vpon And this should teach vs thankfulnes to God who hath Vse 3. now made our spirituall estate more certaine in Christ our surety then it was at the first in Adam our father The Pope gets large summes for long pardons the Landlord great fines for a lease for many yeares But we haue a pardon and lease that are of force for euer and euer ours be signed sealed and deliuered by the finger of the Spirit through the bloud of Christ Iesus and with the full and free consent and presence of God the father Then say with the Apostle vpon the same ground To whom be praise for euer and euer Amen And is our salvation certaine How then should wee be Vse 4. pricked forward to goe on in the constant and cheerefull vse of all meanes that may effect it for doth not expectation and assurance of the end set all a worke who would plow if he had no hope of a haruest crosse the dangerous seas if he were out of all heart for his returne in safety or take Physicke should hee not thereby expect recouery of some present sicknes or the remouall of some future disease feared And had we no hope then we might be out of heart But seeing not one of our haires shall perish as Paul said Acts 27. concerning corporall safetie let vs eate and drinke with gladnes be of good courage and vse all helpes prescribed for as the wicked haue no minde to vse the meanes because they haue no hope to inherite heauen so wee by the contrary ground should be stirred and enliued to cast off sinne grow in grace suffer affliction and if need be to resist vnto blood in as much that we be assured and know that our labour is not in vaine in the Lord. And with what willingnes will man and beast bauke and hunt being in hope to finde and catch the prey shall we then hauing such a prize in our hands haue no hearts surely it should not nor it must not be so Saved Hence let it be noted that The Salvation of man is a rare and great blessing Doct. 6. No doubt but Paul doth mention it as a speciall fauour from the Lord. And seeing in these words he seemeth to vse a Reason to moue Timotheus to be resolute in al good duties if he had knowne a better or more forcible argument hee would haue produced it for his purpose See Gen. 49. 18. Which place the two Caldee Paraphrasts expound not of Gedeon or Sampsons deliuery that were temporall and transitory but the salvation by Christ which is eternall and permanent 1 Pet. 4. 18. Io. 4. 5. Phil. 2. 12. Isai 45. 17. and this will further appeare by many reasons Let vs consider it in the causes 1. We were not redeemed Reas 1. with gold and siluer but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled 1 Pet. 1. 18. 19. 2. Doth not the word the good word of God and the Spirit effect and apply it and was not the best message that euer Angels brought Saluation to mankind And are not all times meanes and things subordinate to Reas 2. the same this is the end of all ends Gods glory being excepted and yet his glory is procured by the same The more generall a thing is the better it is for begetting conceiuing bearing baptizing calling and iustifying yea Sanctification preceede it And is it not then the best thing And is it not directly opposed to damnation the worst Reas 3. thing that can be named the wicked shall be in hell amongst the damned Divells and suffer the vengeance of eternall fire on the contrary the Godly shall inherite heauen enioy the communion of the blessed Angells for ever and ever Finally consider what it is to be saued 1. Shall not the Reas 4. image of God in such be perfectly renewed Psal 17. vlt 2. Their ioy shall it not be full Psal 16. vlt Their habitation of pure gold and the fruition of all eternall and now lay all these together and will not the point be a trueth that mans chiefest blessednes consisteth in his saluation Come we to the vse Where we reprehend many that esteeme it a matter of no Vse 1. moment or estimation Is it a thing of weight to preserue a yong plant from withering a beast from drowning the body from dying and nothing of importance to saue the whole man from damning The ignorant man as hee vnderstands not the worth of it so hee neuer seeketh after it The Couetous cryeth its good to bee here gaine is great godlines The Epicure hee goeth in purple and fine linnen euery day fareth delicately drinketh wine in bowles spendeth his time in pleasure and altogether forgetteth his latter end The voluptuous man maketh merry saying The next day shall be as this we will haue our fill of loue and neuer once mindeth his salvation As for the drunkard biting vsurer and the swearer they long agone haue made a league with hell and a couenant with death boasting Tush God will doe neither good nor euil Zeph. 1. 12. and is there wisedome in the most high This poynt may iustifie the courses of such as take paines Vse 2. to worke out their saluation and to make their calling and election sure Goe yee on and the good Lord shall be with you Let it neuer be said of any of you ye began well but who did let you It s a fearefull thing to begin in the spirit and to end in the flesh This might move Parents to make their children the Vse 3. subiects of salvation for would you not haue them to bee heires of great things Say then with Abraham Oh that Ismael might live with Noah God perswade Iapheth to dwel in the tents of She● All call with David Come hearken vnto me ye little children and I will teach you the feare of the Lord. For those be the best parents that can vse the meanes to bring their sonnes and daughters to be coheires with Christ of the kingdome of God and to participate of endlesse salvation Whereas our Lord said Weepe for your selues and for your children So say I Get salvation for your selues and for your children And from this ground wee are all to be intreated and instructed Vse 4. to
perswaded Iapheth to dwell in Shems tent God was both the God of Iewes and Gentiles at this season Secondly The Apostles had diuers tongues to preach to them Paul was their Apostle many of them converted the Wise men were Math. 2. 9. the first fruits And the Gospell was writ in their Dialect So that the barren wombe brought forth more children then the married wife Reas 3. Ioh. 4. 1 Tim. 2. 8. The Kingdome of God came then to mens doores they might serve the Lord in all places which was no small benefit Reas 4. And finally greater grace was giuen after Christs comming then before him Therefore the Temple Prophecied 2 Cor. 3. of in Ezekiel was bigger then in the dayes of Moses It s true that some particular persons were rare and excellent vnder Isai 6. 8. c. the law but if we looke at whole Churches they then exceeded them vnder the Gospell This serueth to confute those that of late are sprung vp Vse 1. who hold the contrary doctrine and surely they are deceiued I would know of them Why Abraham desired to see our dayes why the second Temple was more glorious then the first wanting many things that the other had why Iohn the Baptist was the greatest of all the Prophets yet the least vnder the Gospell greater then he Why Paul called Gods ordinances for so they were in former time beggarly rudiments why Genealogies were to be reputed as fables why the Patriarches without vs are not said to be perfect why Simeon desired for a time he might not see death And then cryed when Christ was exhibited in the flesh Now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace c. If it were as they would haue it They will say that Christ was truly and as plainly seene Obiect vnder the Law in the sacrifices as now vnder the Gospel 1. I answere No for the word was made flesh he walked Sol. 1. amongst his brethren they saw him handled him heard him beheld his wounders and miracles saw him condemned crucified raised and carried into heauen and what more lyable to sense then all these things 2. We haue the same sacrifices in the letter and may make 2. vse of them and in stead thereof we haue the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords supper which represent Christ as clearely except we should hold that our eye sight is more darke and dimme then their was For what more lyably to sense then breaking of bread powring out of wine the which represent the crucifying of Christs body and shedding of his bloud But if any lust to be contentious wee haue no such custome neither the Churches of God And in the next place I am constreyned to reproue two Vse 2. sorts of persons the prophane and professors For the first kind notwithstanding all the great meanes which they enioy yet to see to they are very beasts Spots they be in our Markets blots in our feasts like the Dog and Sow vomiting and lapping vp the filthines of euery sinne wallowing in the mire of all vncleannes and neither fearing God or reuerencing man they speake euill of all in authority and contemne and condemne too the things and persons highly in fauour with God It s fearefull to liue in ignorance but how farre greater damnation are these worthy of seeing light is come into the world and they loue darknesse more then light Shall it not be easier for Sodom and Capernaum in the day of iudgement then for these Haue we not some that deny the Lord that bought them tread vnder foote the bloud of the new couenant and crucifie againe the Lord of Life Witnesse our swearing drunkennes and drinkings our whoredomes fornications and all manner of wickednesses Doe not some count it their grace to appeare gracelesse glory in their faithlesnes accent their words with vaine phrase make the beginning Conclusion of their sentences to be nothing else but an oath It were tolerable for men if at any time to stumble in the night but to drinke stagger and fall in the day is damnable And how shall such persons escape condemnation if they neglect so great salvation Wherefore seeing you haue the light become children of the day hence forward abandon the workes of darknesse reprouing them rather And I may not omit those of the better sort who take not as they ought notice of Gods providence over vs in these latter daies We cry out of many things amisse but see and say nothing of what is amended How many haue desired to see the dayes that we haue yet it was not affoarded them Are we awake or sleeping why then doe we not behold how the Sunne these 60. yeares hath continually shined in our Horizon What if the Papists haue sought to eclipse it haue they prevaild How many haue warmed their cold spirits at this flame whose parents neuer put finger to a sparkle of this fire Hath not this Sunne expelld many mists and clouds of darknes Doth hee not run his circular motion still and haue not many a poore soule passed through the darke night of this wildernes to the fruitfull and cleare shining day in the land of Canaan Wherefore prayse God for that you haue and pray often and earnestly that the Sunne of the Gospell may neuer set or the Candle of the word be put out so long as the Sunne and Moone endure Be not like Rahel crying for your wills as she did for children or else ye dy And be not offended to heare me speake a word more Repine not murmur not and fret not at that Manna you haue for many haue fed well of as course and little food looked fat faire and well liking and rested contented with lesse then an Homer full For Gods power is alwaies the more seene in weake meanes then stronger Yet I wish we might be sensible of what we find amisse and recommend it to God by prayer putting to also our helping hand yet wisely oportunely and euery one in his owne rancke and order And seeing that the dayes wherein we liue are better then Vse 3. the dayes of old wee must striue and be better also The more choyse dyet we feede on the fatter and fairer should we be the clearer light the cleaner must we keepe our selues from pollution contamination When trees are remoued to a more fertile soyle doe we not expect that they should spread further and be more fruitfull then before when cattell are put into a better pasture will we not looke for greater growth more labour at their hands Shall not we then grow strong worke mightily in the Lords vineyard and resolutely run the wayes of his commands Is not our light brighter our spirituall food better and our iourney shorter then why is there not some equall proportion Brethen these things must be thought vpon made vse of or else our account one day will be the greater the heauier for vnto whom much is giuen
shall much be required They who haue greater meanes for grace then others must striue to be more gracious then others or looke for the more heauier reckoning Our fathers were led in the night the Moone was their conducter we are now in the day when as the Sunne guideth vs shal we not then goe faster farther with lesse feare and more resolution greater boldnes But alas who taketh knowledge of these things maketh the true vse thereof we haue the Sun shining yet sleepe or if awake we cry want we not light I say no more but wish that our idlenes cause not the Lord to remoue our Candlesticke By the appearing c. This word signifieth a bright cleare From which word we take our Epiphany Doct. 4. or glorious appearing whence note that The appearing or comming of Christ was glorious whether vnder the law or in the time of the Gospell For vnder the Law was not the Temple the furniture Reas 1. the attire of Aaron the brestplate the Vrim and Thummim and all the rest glorious And did not all these point out Christ typify him if these things were not glorious which were made of pure and beaten gold fine silke and twisted linnen and of the choysest colours as crymson purple and skarlet then what may be said to be glorious And in the time of the Gospell his appearing was glorious Reas 2. for was he not borne of a Virgin turned he not water into wine healed all diseases wrought miracles spake so as neuer man did and on the Crosse by Christ was not a theife conuerted and were not these things glorious Yea his death buriall resurrection and ascension were all glorious And the more we thinke of these things the more glorious they will appeare What saith the Apostle Great is the 1 Tim. 3. 16. mystery of Godlines without controuersie for God is manifested in the flesh iustified in the Spirit seene of Angels preached vnto the Gentiles beleeued on in the world and receiued vp into glory The more we view the workes of man or nature the lesse will we admire for we come to see the Reason of them and the manner how they be done But the longer we study on these mysteries the more wonderfull and past finding out we shall see them to be because they so farre exceed our apprehension And after his ascension as we in part haue heard the appearing of Christ was glorious How did his image shine and his spirit appeare in his Disciples what soules were converted by them and wounders wrought daily Was Act. 9. not Sauls conuersion glorious and all his life after led in glory Did not Stephen end his daies in glorie and many Act. 7. Heb. 11. a poore person And his glory appeareth vnto this day For hath not he ascended on high and giuen gifts vnto men When was the word of God more soundly preached except in the dayes of the Apostles then now How are the mysteries of Religion cleared and the depthes discouered poynts controuerted brought to the issue and errour layd open without ragge to couer her what learned tractates haue we in our mother tongue So that I may boldly say two things that the like hath not beene before and that an Englishman that can but read his owne language may be a great scholler But its Meditation that must cleare this better then my pen and the particular coales that giue light to this truth are infinite Therefore come we to application Where first we reproue not the people vnder the law Vse 1. neither the Pharisees in the time of the Gospell but the men of this age who see no glory in Christs appearing We see glory in gold and grasse but none in the Gospell of grace in purple and white linnen yet discerne nothing worth admiration in the robes of Christs righteousnes There is a glory in the herbes and flowers beasts and birds foules and fish and in the Starres Moone and Sunne But the glory in the Sonne of God and his Gospell farre exceedeth all Are not such men like moles blind as the wants that see no matter of admiration in these things into which the very Angels desired to peepe into the Gospell is called glorious the conuersion of a sinner glorious grace is stiled glory yea somewhere the Saints rhemselues are sayd to be the glory of God Some glory in their apparell others in a ring or bracelet many in the wealth power and wisedome millions in the workes of art and nature but yet neuer glory in the most glorious obiects I wish that these mens glory be not some time turned into shame who can glory in many things but not in the thing which is in glory beyond all And was Christs appearing glorious vnder the law in Vse 2. the dayes of his flesh and continueth so to this day what then shall his second comming be when he shall ride vpon the wings of the winde passe through the clouds with thousands of thousands of Angells attending vpon him when the Trumpet shall sound the dead shall rise and hee appeare with his scepter in his hand to iudge all the world If the day was glorious in the giuing of the Law the time when the Temple and the walls of Ierusalem were finished When Salomon was crowned King and Christ rode into the City on an Asses foale what will the time of the perfection of all things be No maruell if the Saints haue prepared for this great day and longed and looked for it continually And that which they did let vs doe also Prepare for this time pray that it may come and often meditate of it deeply in our hearts and be ye assured it s well worth your labour Our Saviour Iesus Christ Here is layd downe the second principall thing in the Text which is a description of that person through whom grace and saluation is given and he is described 1. By his office viz. A Sauiour 2. His Names 1. Iesus 2. Christ 3. By the execution of his office and in two things it consists one in the remotion of Death the other in the production of life The poynt we first collect is this that Christ Iesus is our onely Saviour Doct. 5. Act. 4. 12. Iob. 19. 26. Isai 18. 20. 62. 11. Zach. 9. 9. Ioh. 4. 42. There is none other name given vnder heaven whereby we can be saued but this This is he that Iob desired to see Isaiah foretold and at whose comming the people were to shout for ioy and hee is called the Saviour of all the world viz. Of the Elect world For there is a world for the which Christ would not pray I pray not for the world Ioh. 17. 9. That is for the world of the Reprobate Now many reasons may further confirme the doctrine First for God the father being the party offended set Reas 1. Gal. 4. 4. 1 Pet 1. 20. him apart and appointed him for this end And then shall
when the sheepe are wandring or ready to be devoured by the wolfe Will ye not ring the Bells awke when the Citie is on fire Discharge the greatest Canon when the ship is in distresse and in danger to be lost in the hauen And shall not the Preacher cry roare and like Iohn bellow like an Oxe for so the word is read when men sleepe and sinke in sinne and be in hazard to be drowned and deuoured by Sathan that cruell wolfe and Pyrate of the soule And is not God said to cry Christ to cry the Spirit to cry and shall the sonnes of thunder then be silent or not heard Surely if these should not cry the very stones in the streete would take vp a complaint and cry aloud Say not then Here 's a Rut indeed for the word seemes to bee borrowed from that we haue in hand but be swift to heare slow to speake remisse to wrath And here let the Preachers learne and take warrant to cry Vse 3. aloude and spare not O yee that be sonnes of thunder let your voices be heard aboue sound your tongues like trumpets and shout on high Feare not the frownes of the vulgar care not for their Cauills but imitate the great Cryer Christ the Lord who cryed in the great day of the feast and Cautions for Criers when he was checked cried the lowder Yet take these cautions with thee Cry not before thou be sent least thou loose thy labour 1. and spend thy voice in vaine Againe Cry nothing but what the Lord puts in thy 2. mouth and then thou needest not to be ashamed for such commodity is saleable warrantable Besides Cry where God would haue thee keepe a compasse 3. for all persons are not willing to buy neither is the Lord well pleased in so doing Finally put a difference in Crying Cry to the wicked 4. Ier 22 29. O earth earth earth heare the word of the Lord and to the poore in spirit Come buy milke and hony without money Cry Psal 101. 1. iustice to the wicked mercy to such as hunger and thirst after righteousnes And are the Preachers Cryers why then let the people Vse 4. giue attention to them Is it not a shame to sleepe in the market place to be napping when the faire is in proclaiming and to haue the eares closed when the cryer cryeth his commodities at our very doores And take these Rules Rules for auditors for thy direction 1. Heare not euery Cryer for many false cryers are gone out into the world Sathan sends foorth false Prophets daily As Papists c. 2. Learne to iudge of the commodity or things that be cryed The Iesuite hath much couuterfeite stuffe and many a false message that he cryeth If he come from the Pope neuer feare his proclamations or buy his Bulles for they shall assoone hurt thee as Nimrod endanger heauen by the building of Babel 3. When thou vnderstandest what is cryed then be sure that thou buy it put it in practise Whatsoeuer pertaineth to thee heare and obey 4. And in Conclusion goe home and tell thy Neighbours what was cryed in the Market Thus did the poore woman and it may be profitable for them and thee Wee Ioh. 4 29. will doe so in earthly things that others may know how to avoyd a danger or buy a good commodity and shall we not doe the same in spirituall matters which concerne the conservation of the soule surely it stands both with Reason and brotherly affection therefore doe it also And a Teacher of the Gentiles The doctrine is that The word preached is the principall meanes whereby Sinners Doct. 5. are converted Eph. 4. 12 Isai 61. 1. 2. We may say of it as David did of Goliahs sword that of all other ordinances which God hath appointed There is 1 Sam. 21. 9. none to that Peter did conuert thousands at one Sermon Acts. 2. 41. Reas 1. Because by Preaching sinne is more clearely discouered and the iudgements of God more manifestly and with power set before the eye then by reading or any other means It doth vnfold the things that are closely wrapped couched together And the more that sin the iudgement of God against it is declared to the eye of the minde the more apt is that person to turne vnto his God Ezek. 13. 22. And Faith commeth by the word preached which is the onely ground of true Conuersion from sinne and euill For Reas 2. so saith our Apostle Rom. 10. 17. This confuteth the opinion of those that preferre Reading Vse 1. before Preaching for the Conuersion of sinners We doe not deny but the word reade is the rule of holines may conuert the Spirit accompanying his ordinance and therefore is to haue his place and due respect in the Congregation but we will not equall it to preaching for therein wee should not doe well and wisely And if Reading were more excellent and of greater force to convert then Preaching why are not the people conuerted that haue a Reader To what end then serue the Schooles of the Prophets Wherefore should men study the knowledge of tongues and Arts to divide the word aright and to distribute to euery mans present necessities And why should Sathan rage more against Preachers then readers except the word powerfully deliuered did not the more batter and beate downe his Kingdome Besides why did not Christ send out his Apostles with this charge Goe read but Goe preach to all nations wherefore doth Paul pronounce a woe to them that preach not the Gospell And why did he not charge his son Timotheus before God to Read in season and out of season What should we more say but as Paul doth of another thing He that giueth his virgin to mary doth well and he that doth not doth better So he that readeth may doe well but he that coueteth to prophecy doth better and I thinke that in this I haue the Spirit of God But it will be objected that Reading is preaching Obiect Sol. 1. 2. Reading by a Trope is put for preaching et ● contra But I answere that euery ordinance of God hath its proper rule by which it is performed Now Reading and Preaching haue not one and the same Rule to guide them therefore are not the same action For two contrary rules produce contrary effects when effects or things effected are proportionable to the Rules by which they were framed But I omit this seeing so many learned haue handled it at large yet I thought it not amisle to say somewhat And here I might fall into another poynt that is at this Quest day amongst some controuerted viz Whither Preaching is to be preferd aboue praying or praying before preaching Some say Praying others Preaching Ans I answere that as every member in the naturall body hath its proper vse and end for the which it was framed and therefore the most weake member may
excell the principall in some one thing as the foote by fleeing may saue the body when the head cannot moue without it So the least of Gods ordinances in one thing or other may be more profitable then the highest For ●xample For the plantation of a Church the conuersion of the sinner the begetting of faith the information of the iudgement and the directing of man in the pathes of righteousnes Preaching doubtlesse hath the preheminence But in easing of the troubled heart by confession in recounting the great and many things the Lord hath done for vs in praysing him for his benefits and obtaining of comfort and helpe in the time of need and to a sinner converted prayer I thinke is the more profitable Obiect Sol. It will be said We cannot pray without preaching True not well neither can wee preach well without praying Againe faith comes by preaching and without faith no Obiect prayer We grant it yet prayer doth preserue it increase it Preaching Sol. is the procreant but Prayer the conservant cause of faith the one is as the Mother the other as the Nurse We in preaching heare God speake to vs in praying we Obiect 3. speake to him True it is that the Lord in the word truly preached speaketh Sol. to man yet not immediately And so in praying doth God speake also For the Spirit of God doth direct and assist all the faithfull to pray And in this following respect Prayer seemes to haue the prayse For in Preaching God by man speaketh vnto man But in Praying Man by the Holy Ghost doth speake vnto God the Father And on the other part Obiections are brought as this Obiect That which is for another thing is of lesse value then that thing for which it is But preaching is for prayer therefore not to be preferd aboue it This rule seemes to me not alwaies to hold true Example Sol. The father and the Mother are for the sonne therefore the sonne is better then they God was in Christ and redeemed the world by him therefore the world is more worth then the sonne of God This were a doubtfull if not a blasphemous consequence Yet obserue this that one thing may be for diuers ends as the Redemption of man by Christ was not solely for the good of man but for his owne and the glory of his father and Christ as he was God was both the end and the meanes so that sometimes things be not as they seeme to be I will to and fro dispute the question no longer for my first generall answere shall stand for all And none needs to doubt of the truth of it Onely thus let vs conclude that as Christ said Giue that to Caesar which is Caesars and to God that which is is Gods So giue we to preaching that which is its due and to prayer its priviledge also And in the second place this should teach vs thankfulnes Vse 2. to God for the word preached Alas what were all other fauours worth if we had not the Gospell to conuert vs and to sanctifie vs to God all things to vs We esteeme not of this fauour as we ought and as it deserveth Haue wee a guide to direct vs being out of the way a Phisitian to remoue some dangerous disease or but a remedy to turne our cloth into a better colour We esteeme highly of such things But haue too little respect vnto the word taught the onely meanes to heale our spirituall maladies and to conuert vs vnto the Lord. And if this be not thanksworthy then all we haue is of no worth Praise wee the Lord therefore that our visions faile not Againe would we and our children be converted and Vse 3. healed then let vs depend on the word taught Moses Rod in Moses hand did worke miracles and so the word in the mouth of the men of God will destroy the cursed worke of Sathan in vs and make vs in mind and life like vnto Christ Iesus We must wash in this poole attend at this porch and suffer this water to fall vpon vs so shall the Leprosie of our sinne be washt away and we be transformed into the image of the Lord wherin we were at the first created But how few mind or practise these things Yet it s a truth that there is no way to bring vs ordinarily vnto heauen but the diligent hearing of the word preached Last of all Let vs all strive to continue the word taught Vse 4. amongst vs for if it faile the people perish Nay we should to the vttermost of our power with the Thessalonians cause the Gospell to run and abound in all places this is a worke of worth and great necessity You often and it s good speake in the praise of that in his Art matchlesse Peere Sir Francis Drake for deriving the water into your Corporation and you are at daily expence to repaire the breaches of its passage And shall we then neuer be at any charge to cause the water of life to slow through the Townes and places about vs by the Conduits of faithfull preachers Nay would to God some did not stop this wells mouth or rather hinder the passage But woe to them whosoeuer they be Of the Gentiles We might gather diuers things from these few words being diuersly considered but the cheife I take is this that When the Lord will call and saue a people hee rayseth vp the Doct. 6. fittest instruments for that purpose Who fitter then Paul to be a Preacher to the Gentiles or to deliuer Israel then Moses being skilfull in all their learning Peter was a man resolute and fiery therefore the more meete to deale with the stiffnecked Iewes And the Lord sent Papists to Pp ' for their conuersion for they knew their iuglings and were able to beate them with their owne weapons Because the Lord is wise in all his wayes and skilfull in Reas 1. all his enterprises A man of vnderstanding will doe his best to haue his matters effected and shall not the fountaine of all wisedome worke wisely Againe the Lord doth this in respect of the people for Reas 2. they naturally are subiect to quarrell to make objections and to deny the meanes of their conuersion Now a man well qualified will remoue their doubts conuince them in iudgment discouer their folly and so the sooner draw them to repentance For though God can worke and sometimes doth with weake or no meanes at all yet this is his Method in his ordinary course of proceeding By this poynt we may partly tell what to iudge of many Vse 1. places and people in the world Doth the Lord send them fit Pastors then hope the best but if not feare the worst This must teach vs to reuerence the Lord in his workes Vse 2. and not to passe by without casting our eye on his wise prouidence For its worthy of our obseruation and imitation I feare
few doe this and the fewer that doe this the worse the more the better Another poynt we collect is this that Doct. 7. Paul was sent to preach principally to the Gentiles Act. 22. 21 Gal. 2. 8. From which it will necessarily follow that Peter was not B. at Rome for then he should haue to deale in Pauls Diocesse And Peter was appointed to the Iewes therefore dedicates his Epistle to the dispersed Iewes Besides an Apostle could not be strictly tyed to any one Diocesse as they write Peter was to Rome And if he was there shame was it for him not to assist Paul but to forsake him This we but touch by the way for many worthy Clerkes haue scanned this at large Besides we know when Noah prayed for these people it was many a hundred yeeres agone yet now it came to passe according to his desire whence we note that Doct. 8. Prayers made in faith are not alwayes granted at the first Ionah was not cast on the shore so soone as he showted neither Paul at the first request had an answer return'd him David waited long Ieremiah fainted in expecting and Christ himselfe stayed some time before the Angells came to comfort him We sometime meet the poore with a penny in our hand and at another time we suffer them to cry run and weary themselues before we heare them so dealeth the Lord with his children Reas 1. Because that as God hath appointed all things to be done so hath he set downe the very precise time wherein they shall be effected and not before This is the principallest Reason of the poynt Gal. 4. 4. Reas 2. And the Lord doth so sometimes that we may cry the more earnestly and feruently vnto him Let the Infant fast it will know the dug the better and seeke it the faster stop the Lure and the Hawke will mend her pitch and fly the higher and if the Lord deny the faithfull their requests for a season their prayers will pierce the deeper be heard the better Dauid in one Psalme vseth one petition thrise and marke how he did grow in feruency First saith he Turne vs Psal 80. 3. ver 7. againe O Lord c. the second time he addeth saying O Lord of hostes c. and the third time he proceedeth further and ver 19. praieth Turne vs againe O Lord God of hosts cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved Thus by iteration he gathereth the more heate fervency like a stone by often tumbling Mervaile not then if the vnfaithful be not heard at all shal Vse 1. the Lord deny his children long and will he giue bread instantly vnto Bastards shall the good man of the house sleepe at the discharge of the greatest Cannon and will he awake and cry Who is at the window at the report of the narrow-mouthed peice or pistoll No neuer respect it If Noahs prayer be put off 2000. of yeares Let the drunkard Fornicator Blasphemer and such as regard iniquitie in layd downe the obiect of Pauls faith which is God secondly his knowledge of him and that is not a bare vnderstanding of him but a knowledge of experience or practise and thirdly an act that accompanied this experimentall knowledge which was his beleeuing or faith This is the first ground why Paul suffered afflictions without being ashamed And I am perswaded That is I am confident and certaine and fully assured That he to wit God Is able to keepe Gods power is twofold 1. Absolute 2. Actiue that is a power ioyned with his will and is here meant for else Pauls reason had not beene good for his will must accompany his ability in the preserving of what was committed to him That which I haue committed to him Some interpret the thing he committed to God to be his person others his grace faith salvation the difference is nice or none at all the Originall word signifieth both that which is committed to vs of God and that we commit to him The Pp ' on the Rhem. expound it of good deedes sufferings but absurd for that how euer a truth yet not from this place Against that day Either the day of trouble or of the last iudgement I rather vnderstand it of the great day of the Lord. For Paul was put to death and it s vsuall with faithfull men in great tryalls and tribulations to cast their eye on the day of iudgement It may seeme strange but it is a truth that I am afflicted The Metaphrase for preaching the Gospell vnto the Gentiles yet for all that I goe on resolutely in the execution of my function and am not ashamed Neither is it without reason for I haue had experience of him in whom I put my confidence and besides that I doe verily beleeue that the Lord is not onely able but also willing to preserue my soule in safety against the great and last day of iudgement For the which cause I suffer these things Out of the ground Doctrines deduced Doct. 1. of Pauls sufferings we may gather this conclusion that The goodnes of an action doth not alwaies free the deer from affliction Abel was slaine because his workes were good Ioseph 1 Ioh. 3 12. Gen. ●7 20. Amos 5 10. Ioh. 7. 7. 20. sold for the discouery of his Brethrens sinnes Amos hated for speaking vprightly David in danger for weldoing Christ did many good workes none evill yet they went about to kill him and they so went about that at last they kill'd him indeed Ignorance may be the cause and that of the person or of Reas 1. the thing 1. of the person For many of the Saints I shut vp in prison but I did it ignorantly The Princes of this world put to 1 Tim. 1. 13. ● Cor. 2. 8. Act. 3. 17. death the Lord of life but had they knowne him they would not haue crucified him I know that through ignorance ye did is as also your governours And Father for giue them for they know not what they doe And 2. of the action What new and strange Act. 17. 19. Mark 2. 24. doctrine is this He doth and teacheth things vnlawfull They thinke they doe God good seruice they erred in that they haue not knowne my wayes O that ye had knowne these things A second Reason may be drawne from the rage and malice Reas 2. of the wicked Ahab hated Micaiah therefore he must to prison if God prevent not Christ was sold of envy Away with such a fellow for he is not worthy to liue And Had he not beene an evill doer we would not haue deliuered him into your hands Not Iesus but Barrabbas All this smells of malice and sents of envy For which of them was ignorant that the one was a theefe and who could accuse the other of sinne And pride in the prophane causeth goodmen suffer for Reas 3. weldoing Master in thus saying thou rebukest vs also The Pharisees were
answered No Lord. When a poore man hath beene alwayes in his want relieued by his rich friend will it not make him the more boldly to rely on him for helpe in time to come 2. Consider how he hath giuen thee knowledge when thou wast ignorant infused faith into thine heart being before an infidell and preserued his graces in thee from perishing For the calling to minde the dayes of old is a notable helpe for this thing Is it possible that he who hath begun to doe well will now waxe weary in so doing What man planteth a tree and will not labour to preserue the same from withering And shall the Lord suffer his pleasant plants after he hath so often pruned watered and dunged them to dye and perish for want of dressing II. Call to minde the many dangers from the which he hath deliuered thee Why mightest not thou haue beene buried in thy Mothers wombe beene drowned in the waters or deuoured on the land the theefe might haue slaine thee some crumbe choaked thee or a thousand diseases beene thy death And shall not the fresh remembrance of these things worke powerfully in thee When our Apostle had beene deliuered out of the mouth of the Lyon he gathered strength thence that the Lord would deliuer him from euery evill worke and preserue him vnto his heavenly Kingdome 2 Tim. 4. 17. 18. III. Take a view how in times past he hath dealt with his children run to and fro through the stories and acts of holy Writ and as he hath done to his servants of olde so will he doe to thee assuredly I wish that this were well thought on for its a notable remedie Psal 37. 25. IV. Conferre with grounded Christians Demand of them how the Lord hath dealt with them in some particulars for they can teach thee by experience their comforts will comfort thee also A timerous patient will be encouraged to swallow the bitterest pill when another standeth by that hath beene cured of the like disease that he now is annoyed with telleth him the experiment V. Take a view of the vanitie of all other things Our Ioh. 6. fathers ate Manna in the wildernesse and are dead For in so doing thou shalt get experience of Gods constancy the Creature is changeable sometimes killing another whiles curing But the Lord is one and the same for euer VI. Finally and aboue all Consider how the Lord dealeth with thee in the vse of all his ordinances Marke what power the Word hath in working in thy soule how it weakeneth corruption strengtheneth the new man Obserue how the Lord hath heard thy prayer in time past and now how he enableth thee to call vpon him being in the like condition Dauid from this ground cryeth out The Psal 6. 9. Lord hath heard my petition for grace the Lord will receiu● my prayer and therefore as one refreshed biddeth the workers of iniquitie be gone Canst thou pray at this present as in times past when he heard the voyce of thy weeping then doubt not but he will deale fauourably with thee For when the Lord intendeth to conferre a fauour vpon his children he will alwayes giue them hearts for to vse the meanes whereby he doth ordinarily convey the same vnto them and wherevnto he hath annexed his promise If Hannah prevaile for a sonne or Abraham either they shall first be enabled a long season to powre out their soules by prayer vnto the Lord. And so it is in all other things whatsoeuer I wish that every one had but the experience of this engrauen in their mindes for it would be profitable for them every manner of way And true it is that this experimentall knowledge of God is the very food and spirit and life of a Christian from which all faith patience and resolution in the times of trouble spring and flow as from their proper fountaine and roote Then striue for it in the vse of the forenamed meanes and when thou hast obtained it wonderfull and vnspeakeable are the effects that it will produce and thou shalt taste of Againe in these words wee see Paul placeth knowledge before beliefe whence we may collect this doctrine that The knowledge of God precedeth faith in him Doct. 8. How can they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard And for this cause Knowledge in Scripture is many times put for faith Rom. 10. 14. Ioh. 17. 3. Io. 4. 10. Reas 1. Because the act of faith in beleeuing followeth the act of the vnderstanding rightly guided Knowledge is like the needle which maketh the way faith the threed that tyeth and vniteth things together And as whatsoeuer by ordinary working is in the inward senses was first in the outward so whatsoever comes to the will the proper seate of faith must first be in the vnderstanding And if this were not so then might an ignorant man be Reas 2. saued and haue faith the which the whole current of Scripture runs against As My people are cut off for want of knowledge and God shall come in flaming fire to render vengeance on them that know him not Hos 4. 6. 2 Thes 1. 8. and many more to that purpose This confuteth Bellarmine and his adherents who say Vse 1. A man may better beleeue things whereof he is ignorant then those which he knoweth If he had spoken it of the things recorded in their leaden Legend I should easily haue consented with him for I thinke that when men haue heard them they more doubt of them then when they were ignorant of them To name some of th●ir ridiculous fables we read of one that was sicke his stomacke would vomit vp whatsoeuer he receiued so that he being willing to receiue the Sacrament yet doubting he should not retaine it if he receiued it by ordinary course it was put the consecrated Hoste I meane to his side the which opened and after the receipt thereof closed as before And there is mention made of a woman whose Bees were sicke of the Murraine who tooke also an Hoste put it into the hiue and marke this they within a few dayes were not onely cured of the danger of the disease but there was a miraculous encrease of them in number and they had built a Chappell and steeple and bells and an Altar and layd the Hoste thereon and the Bees sung their Canonicall houres about it iust as the Monkes vse to doe in their Cloysters I could relate the like of the Lady of Loretto for ther 's bookes of her too in Folio It s reported that shee sometime vnderstand the house too being discontented displaced her selfe and passing by a wood all the trees in reuerence bended and stooped with their heads to the very earth vnto her wonder it was they had not rent themselues vp by the rootes and proffered her their standings Also the Booke sayth that one being prisoner in Turkey and there having his bowells ript out by the ayde of a prayer that he made
who make Pictures Lay-mens Vse 1. bookes and they defend that it giues no occasion of Idolatry I say no more then cutting of throates doth of murther or running into the fire of burning This must teach all of vs to haue regard to what is written Vse 2. To the Law we must and to the Testimony This is the surest way to keepe our selues from all idolatry and superstition for what is superstition but that which is aboue the Supra statutum stitute The next poynt is this that The words of the patterne are to be sound words Doct. 5. Sometimes the Word is called Pure holy precious wholesome tried sweete good and the like all which presuppose soundnes sincerity Psal 12. 7. Prov. 30. 5. Rom. 7. 12. For if the words be not sound the patterne cannot but Reas 1. be vnsound When poyson is mixed with good meates and wines it spoiles all so when the words be not wholesome the 〈◊〉 and forme of doctrine is defectiue one rotten post maketh a weake building We must be transformed into the doctrine and as the Reas 2. spirit in the meate we eate is turned into ours so must the Word we reade or heare be converted into vs. Rom. 6. 17. And if our spirituall food be not wholesome our soules will grow sicke and dye This taxeth the Familists who haue words neuer heard Vse 1. of but from themselues As Manified Godified fulcom throw-breakings and the like So the Papists they fetch the milke of the Word out of the breasts of the Whore as Masse Pope our Lady Cardinall Iesuite transubstantiation and many more We read of Canaanites Iebusites c. Of which number these may well be reputed They cry out against vs for strange words as Companation impanation circumpanation But we all abandon them with transubstantiation But may we not vse words that be not in Scripture Quest Answ Yes But the sense must be there as if we say faith onely iustifieth c. But here the Papist with an open mouth calleth vs Heretikes and say wee neuer reade faith onely in Scripture Well this onely would I aske them is Christs exposition true Is it imitable Then we may say faith onely it being a truth though onely be not added For it s written Deut. 10. 20. Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serue him which latter phrase Christ turnes him onely shalt thou serue Math. 4. 10. Luk. 4. 8. Sure they had best now they know it to correct Christs words and say Onely is not in the Hebrew Text. But these exalt themselues aboue all that is called God And therefore the very Antichrist And as here we be taught to avoyd vnsound words so Vse 2. we must truely vnderstand the words els though words be good the sense will be bad The Papists vnderstanding Grace which is the free favour of God to be that which is habituall in vs and righteousnesse imputed for inherent holinesse or created righteousnesse for iustification haue by that meanes made such a patterne as we may boldly speake is not onely dangerous but damnable A patterne of their prescription in stead of saving poy soneth Which thou hast heard of me Whence it followeth that Apostles are to prescribe Patternes Doct. 6. A No man vnder the degree of a Prophet or an Apostle may prescribe Gods Church and Children patternes See Ephes 2. 20. Math. 28. vlt. For they know like skilfull Physicians all the diseases Reas 1. of our soules and like cunning Painters they vnderstand the very height breadth length bayre complexion and age of our spirituall man and so doe no other therefore the fittest to prescribe patternes to giue vs receipts They onely had the hand of Gods spirit to guide their Reas 2. Pensill for they spake and gaue their patternes as they were carried by him otherwise they might haue erred now they could not therefore they onely can prescribe true patternes 2. Pet. 1. vlt. And here againe I might meete with Pope and Papist Vse 1. who haue made more false patternes by the vsurpation of authoritie then there be lies in their leaden Legend or false stories of theirs in the three Bookes of the Lady of Loretto But blessed be God they shall prevaile no longer with many for their madnesse is evident to all wise men I will not stand to name them for they be like so many leprous persons wrapped in menstruous rags stinking reliques Pittie such Painters abandon their patternes And here we learne a double Vse First that we take not Vse 2. vpon vs to prescribe patternes wee are neither Prophets nor Apostles Secondly Learne the knowledge of the true patterne and draw the picture of thy life by that for they were directed by the Holy Ghost they could not misse their draught and there is no word or thing that can truely settle thy soule and quiet thy heart but the words of Prophets and Apostles Keepe then this patterne which thou hast heard In faith and loue According to our former exposition of these words we collect this Doctrine that By faith and loue the patterne of sound words is kept and observed Doct. 7. These two are often coupled together and pressed by all Psal 27. vlt. An● 186 1. the Prophets and Apostles Cotoss 1. 4. 23. 1 Thes 1. 3. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Phil. 5. 6. Rev. 2. 10. 1 Cor. 13. 1 Ioh. 1. 2. 3. Iohn the loving Disciple treats still of loue For by faith we beleeue that God is and a rewarder of them Reas 1. that serue him Faith beleeueth the Law Gospell the threats promises And therefore it s said Without faith its impossible Heb. 11. 6. to please God And by faith we liue quench the fiery darts of the Deuill are iustified overcome the world and be saved And whatsoever is not of faith performed is said to be sinne Rom. 14. 23. So that Faith is necessary to keepe the patterne For it purifieth the heart inwardly and is the true ground of all outward and acceptable obedience And for Loue that 's needfull also For Loue helpeth attention strengtheneth the memory Reas 2. setteth the Will aworke vniteth to God and Man and therefore t is rightly said that By loue we fulfill the Law For Rom 13. 10. without this affection our best actions neither please the Creator nor be profitable to the creature Loue hath foure principall properties Properties of loue 1. It will make vs goe speedily about good duties how did the women run to the graue Sichem make haste to be circumcised And Christ raise vp Lazarus quickly and Loue constrained them 2. Loue will endure sorrow Christ through loue layd downe his life for vs the Apostles for their brethren it suffereth all things 1 Cor. 13. 4. c. 3. Loue seeketh revenge Shall he make our Sister a Whore Gen. 34. 31. And it will breake a good heart by taking revenge
pricks or keene kniues they they pierce and strike it through the heart if God shew not greater mercy with deadly wounds temporall eternall Why then weepe for your selues and doe good for your selues and for your children Yet for all our preaching and pressing of parents to piety some houses are like little hells and diuers gouernours worse then Achitophel who though he hanged himselfe had a care first to set his house in order Furthermore this doctrine should instruct vs to pray for good gouernours godly parents For woe to that society Vse 4. where the Ruler of it is ignorant profane or a child in vnderstanding Such good men are little regarded respected men esteeme of them at too small a valuation Corke is light yet it keepeth the net from sinking to the bottome of the sea so good gouernours are too little esteemed of Notwithstanding were they remoued fire and brimstone should fall downe from heauen and heapes be tumbled into the nethermost hell When good Iosiah was taken away the people as men sensible of their owne misery mourned so that it became a proverb like Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddo for his death did presage future and fearefull evilles to follow When Lot was gone to Zoar what befell the inhabitants and if Paul had not beene in the ship who had come safe to shore Wherefore make much of such pray often and earnestly for such mourne and spare not for the departure of such and let all the men of God in their preaching ayme especially at the conuersion of such For one good King godly gouernour holy father is worth ten thousand of the inferiour people for all the world will be tapt to imitate the Rulers and great men being good will doe the more good by their speech example and authoritie Why did King Dauid a little before his death giue his sonne Salomon a charge to serue the Lord God of Israel in such a particular and speciall manner Why for hee was to succeed him in the kingdome to build the Temple therefore he was so vrgent to presse him to piety Let vs in the like case do the same In a word if they that gouerne houses Colledges or Kingdomes be godly pray for them praise God for them but if not mourne and entreat the Lord to amend them And the higher place thy sonne is to haue in the Church or commonwealth striue thou the more to teach him the knowledge and seruice of God And may a good governour bring a blessing to he Vse 5. whole house then depart not out of such a family from vnder such a mans protection for if thou doest thou maist draw iudgements vpon thine owne pate Some cannot endure such Masters as well curbe them of vnlawfull pleasures presse them to the performance of holy duties but will like the prodigall vp and be gone These out-runne the shower of Gods grace and thinke they doe well when alas as much as they can they drowne themselues in perdition and endlesse destruction They had rather eate and drinke and deuoure beefe and garlike in Aegypt then the water of life and Manna from heauen vnder the conduct of Moses Are thou one of this minde then alter thy manners for feare a worse thing follow Finally this must teach those that liue in bad houses to Vse 6. be vp and gone Is the gouernour a Papist or Athiest a swearer or filthy person carry not with him except a forced necessity compell thee For as the Lepers said in another case if thou abide in such a● place some mischi of evill light vpon thee 2 King 7. 9. Thou wilt say vnto me how shall I know a godly Quest family Well enough and that by these markes Answ 1. Is there in it more good bookes and Bibles then payres of cards and tables 2. Is there more praying then playing searching of Scriptures then shufling of cards turning ouer of the holy papers then tossing of tables singing of Psalmes then obscene songs and sonnets desire and endeauour to grow in grace more then to gather goods 3. Is there constant prayer morning and euening sanctifying of the creatures before they be receiued casting out of the bad receiuing in the good And last of all Is the Sabbath strictly obserued of all strangers that rest there as of the daily inhabitants then conclude that the feare of God is in that place and if thou maist lodge and cate thy bread there That house that hath neither Bible or good booke reading praying or singing of Psalmes instruction catechising nor care to keepe holy the Lords day is that place where Sathans throne is and the Deuill dwelleth And not to belye them such filthy and infectious habitations be the families of Papists yea all that I haue beene acquainted with of which sort the Norherne parts are but too fully replenished Rome hath two much roome there amongst them Abraham did teach his family Ieremiah imprecates the Lord to poure downe his fury vpon the families that cal not on his name David did the like See Ier. 10. vlt. But passing this poynt we come to handle another which is that True affection is of a spreading nature Act. 26. 29. Rom. 2. 3. Paul loued Oresiphorus well and from the head we see it enlarged it selfe to the whole house all the members Hence it is that in the Scriptures it 's compared to water for loue is said to be shed in the heart or to oile that being Rom. 5. 5. Psal 133. 1. c. powred on the head runneth downe all the garments Certainely he that in truth loueth the parents cannot but affect the children For at the first it was so created As the vnderstanding Reas 1. was to see all truth in all things so was the affection framed to effect all things the which reason approued Those two were to be proportionable like the patterne and the thing made by it Now at our Regeneration Loue in some degree is restored to that perfection it had at the Creation therefore spreadeth Because that Loue is nimble subtile actiue therefore likened Reas 2. to fire that would conuert all contrary elements and subiects into its selfe It s hotter then the coales of Iuniper it compasseth the creatures as a garment it will dilate it selfe farre and neere For of all simple elements fire is the most actiue and spreadeth as we may see by a candle the furthest and so will true and feruent affection Againe Loue shouldreth out enuy the which a pinching Reason 3. and cold frost freezeth and holdeth things together from spreading Enuy would draw all good from others to it selfe but loue doth breake those bonds and sets the heart at liberty And is not Loue true loue one of the most sacred attributes Reason 4. in God yea God is called Loue. And did not the Lord before sin brake the condition extend his affection to all creatures Why then a sparke of that true fire in the
creature cannot but haue a large extent a spreading operation This may informe vs what to judge of many in these Vse 1. dayes surely they haue little or none of this oyle or fire abroad and kindled in their hearts for if they had we should fee it's spreading We may truly say with Christ that Loue is waxen cold Many boast much of it but where shall we finde a faithfull louing man for all seeke their owne and not the good of their brethren We haue a prouerbe Loue me and loue my dog I wish some did not more loue their dogs then the Lords children And by this doctrine in the impartiall examination of Vse 2. our selues we may try the trueth of our Loue. Canst thou that art a Magistrate say with Moses Oh! that there were such an heart in my people to serue God being a preacher canst thou breake out with Paul I would to God that all that heare me this day were such as I am the children of the Lord Hath the Lord made thee a father and canst thou pray with Abraham and Noah Oh that Ismael might liue and Iapheth dwell in the tents of Shem that is that my disobedient seed might know the Lord God of their father serue him and be saued you that are Gouernours of families is it in your hearts and hands for you and your people to follow God doe you labour like Cornelius that all your family might feare the Lord And you that are single persons doe you helpe one another to get grace and to grow vp in godlines then this fire of true affection is from Gods owne altar descended on you this loue is shed abroad in your hearts the oyle of amity hath annointed your garments and you are of that number which with ioy vnspeakeable shall one day behold the face of God But if this desired spreading be absent your hearts are stuffed with hatred cold envy hath benummed your subtile and actiue affections and therefore take heed of this that you be not found haters of God and louers of pleasure aboue him or his If you be heare your doome Depart from me into euerlasting fire for I know you not you did neuer visit me in my members cloath me feede me or build vp my decaied body by prayer instruction example nor in affection therefore you haue no loue in you neither shall ye receiue any fauour at my hands for the head and members make but one obiect Thou wilt say vnto me How farre will loue spread it Quest Answ selfe Why from God the Father to all his children Christ the head to all his members from the beginning of Gods booke to the last letter in breife from one end of the world from one part of the large heauens vnto the other true loue would haue al sexes persons countries and kingdomes so farre forth as it may stand with the will of God the Father to be sanctified and for euer blessed for there is no bounds in loue Affection vnlesse God chaine it the which he may and doth for mans vnworthines is without limits spreading it selfe from the externall conuexe of the highest throne round about and thence descendeth to the earth's lowest center yea Loue embraceth the Lord who is infinite incomprehensible so farre forth as sound reason doth rightly guide it direct it It is a garment that doth cloth all creatures and to the vttermost of its power wrap within its louely armes the eternall Creatour He that findeth this in himselfe findeth a good thing and but that very character which is imprinted in the heart of euery true beleeuer and faithfull person I might deduct another doctrine out of the matter of this petition which is that The mercy of God is principally to be desired for our friends Doct. 5. For what Paul prayed for for his friends we should request also for ours Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 1. 3. Gal. 1. 3. For if we receiue mercy from God we shall want no Reas 1. manner of thing For to whom the Lord shewes mercy to that man he will giue all gifts spirituall and corporall whateuer so farre as they be good for him Againe had we all other fauours the world can affoard Reas 2. yet without the mercy of God they would but proue curses to vs in the end for without mercy we are no members of Christ so no sonnes and consequently no heires of heauen This checkes the preposterous course of many in these Vse 1. times The Papist he entreates God that his friend may haue his Purgatory here or in another world but omits the mercy of God in the beginning The common Christian or earth-worme wisheth his kinred and companions strong bodies large possessions heapes of siluer and long life but no mention of Gods mercy all this while that is least thought on seldome prayed for He that obserueth but the custome of many in their best wishes shall heare them ordinarily crosse this Canon and method of our Apostle Let this then be a derection to thee what chiefly and Vse 2. first of all to beg of God for thy friends Aske not that thy sonnes may sit at the right hand of Christ in his earthly kingdome for it is not of this world Cry not for Quailes in the wildernesse for they may choake thee and thine nor for riches for the theefe may breake through thy wall carry them away seeke not long life or like Saul the honour of the people But cry to the Lord for grace and mercy this this is that one thing necessary for thy selfe for all thy friends And though few doe thinke so yet it is so for if the Lord doe not deny thee this then hee will deny thee nothing and hee that hath this shall haue all things This will wash away thy sinnes cloath thee with the righteousnesse of Christ enrich thee with the sauing graces of the Spirit procure thee food and rayment sanctifie all things to thee affliction and sinne it selfe giue thee comfort in trouble hope in death and carry thee to the throne of God where in his presence thou and thy friends shall haue fulnesse of ioy for euermore Then when thou prayest say The Lord giue mercy to me and my friends to them and their families For hee oft refreshed me In these words wee will briefly point out the Doctrines and handle some of them From the person refreshed Paul we gather that Want may befall Gods dearest children Doct. 6. Iacob sometime went ouer Iordan with his staffe Ioseph was once no rich man the widow of Sarepta was in a great Gen 32. 10. 1 King 17. 6. Luk. 16. 20. strait Lazarus was poore and it is said the women did minister to Christ Luke 8. 3. of their substance The Lord doth it for many Reasons First to correct his for the abuse of his creatures for Reas 1. when wee haue like the Prodigall mis-spent abused or surfetted on them the Lord in
The yong man must Remember his Creator in the daies of youth least the houres come wherein hee shall haue no pleasure in them Iezabel had a time so had Ierusalem Agrippa and many others but when they foreslowed the oportunitie they found not in future time any mercy When God calleth and we will not come we shall cry but we shall not be heard Wofull experience hath taught this truth to many thousands for there is an appointed time for all things vnder the sunne 2. Seeke for what thou wouldst haue at the Lords hands let him be the principall Asa was sicke in his feete Ezekiah at the heart the one seeking to the Phisician first died the other going to God had his life many yeares prolonged Goe not with Saul to a witch at Endor with Iudas to the Pharisees with Ephraim and Iudah to Ashur and Hos 5. 13. king Iareb with the Papist to the Pope or Angell But goe to the Lord for these are miserable comforters and the best of them if the God of all the world the first mouer of all things and chiefe Phisician be absent cannot heale thee or cure thee of thy wound But seek vnto God and he will heare thee helpe thee 3. Goe to him but not like the proud Pharisee with I thanke God I am not so nor so neither with the boasting Papist in the robes of thing owne righteousnes but come vnto him in the name of Christ Iesus the sonne of his loue send him or set him before thee For whatsoeuer thou shalt seeke in his name that is in his worthines it shall be giuen thee For without Christ he is a consuming fire 4. Let the word and that neuer-erring spirit be thy guide If these two lead thee to the Father in the new and euerliuing way of Christ the Sauiour of all that are saued thou shalt find according to thy hearts desire Practise this Rule 5. Haue respect to the manner of thy seeking let it be vpon the feete of faith and affection with the wings of pure zeale and feruency and then thou shalt find assuredly 6. And finally let the end of thy seeking be for the glory of thy God the good and comfort of thy brethren and reformation of all thy wayes the curing and curbing of thy strong corruptions the encrease of all grace and for food friends favour and rayment so farre and no farther as the Lord seeth them to be needfull for thee Obserue these directions and then stay the Lords leysure and be sure of it that as Onesiphorus found Paul so shalt thou the thing thou hast sought after be it what it can in earth or heauen Now whereas Onesiphorus sought Paul at Rome and was permitted to refresh him we may note that Rome heathen was not sobad then as Rome Christian is now Doct. 5. Act. 28. 30. For Paul might be suffered to liue to haue his keeper Reas 1. to leade him in a chaine to dwell in a house all that would were permitted to come vnto him and without let he might preach the kingdome of God the Gospell of Christ But now if a Paul were there he would not be thought worthy to liue no not for an houre Againe wicked men grow worse and worse Reas 2. Vse Let this for euer be as a sure brand for that Beast who is drunkk with the bloud of the Saints that it is he and no other who exalteth himselfe aboue all that is called God and the very Antichrist whom the Lord will consume with the sword of his mouth They boast of piety and pitty when as Cain was no more cruell to Abel then they be to the faithfull Well Let them thinke that they doe God good seruice in putting vs to death yet they are deceiued it that In this we are not that for so doing they shall tast of the very dregs of Gods hottest vengeance spue and fall and dye the second death For Pope and Papists are men according to the Divells owne heart VERS 18. The Lord grant vnto him that he may find mercy with the Lord at that day and in how many things he hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus thou knowest very well WE are now come through the good prouidence The Logicall resolution of God to the last verse of this Chapter In the which two things are comprehended 1. A prayer 2. An Appellation In the Prayer we may obserue 4. things 1. To whom Paul prayed the Lord. 2. For whom he prayed him That is Onesiphorus 3. For what he prayed mercy 4. At what time he would haue his friend to receiue the thing he prayed for at that day In the Appellation we haue these particulars 1. That Onesiphorus relieued Paul 2. The place where it was at Ephesus 3. Wherewith that is many things And 4. The probation of this in the last words These or this thou knowest very well He drawes an argument from Timotheus knowledge to confirme his Testimony The Lord. In Hebrew Adonai is Lord being a word of The Theologicall exposition the plurall number yet often vsed in the forme singular it is deriued of Aeden a base or pillar which sustaineth a thing and our English word Lord hath much like signification being contracted of the old Saxon word Laford which commeth of Laef to support sustaine or cherish so that Lord is a Sustainer refresher supporter cherisher For if God withdraw his power all things come to nothing In the Greeke it properly signifieth one that hath authoritie or on whose authoritie something dependeth or consisteth and so indeed doe all things depend on God and hee is cheife gouernour and owner of all things created Mercy The word in the Hebrew put for mercy doth import a sacred affection of piety fauour benignitie and bountifull good pleasure or will of God towards a man without respect of desert or merit It is also applied to man and then it is meant a pious louing and benigne affection whereby he is moued and inclined to doe good to shew pittie compassion c. or that grace of God the which he hath receiued from the father through Christ which is inherent in him or conferred externally vpon him and then its glory Isai 40. 6. 1 Pet. 1. 24. And it is frequent for the Greeks to vse that word which our Apostle doth here for it the which Christ himselfe alloweth did practise See Hos 6. 6. Math. 9. 13. And the Hebrewes of Chesed which is Mercy call a godly man chasid that is gracious mercifull Psal 4. 4. some read a gracious Saint With the Lord. The like phrase we read Gen. 19. 24. The Lord rained fire and brimstone from the Lord. Paul vseth the like manner of speaking for as iudgement came from the Lord vpon Sodom so he prayes for mercy to befall Onesiphorus from the Lord Yet I haue thought that Lord in the first place is to be vnderstood of the Father and in the second is meant the Sonne
who thinke the ground of all sufferings come from mens indiscretion It s better to suffer for well doing then for evill donig yet it will follow hence that good men great men may suffer for weldoing Surely if Christ had liued in our dayes some would haue taxed him for indiscretion questioning with him why hee would denounce so many woes to the Scribes and Pharisees men of great place and learning calling them painted Sepulchres whited Tombes Hypocrites c Iohn would haue beene reputed a rash fellow for telling Herod of his incest and Micaiah that the King and his fathers house troubled Israel Wisedome we would say should haue past by these things But the foolishnes of God is wiser then the wisedome of man Yet we say still that Circumspection is good and that some through indiscretion pierce their soules through with needlesse sorrowes This must teach men of great place and rare parts patience Vse 2. for even the best Princes haue had their portion of persecution Let our Soueraigne put his pen against the Pope call Rome that great Whore discouer her skirts and lay her naked hee must expect neither pardon nor Purgatory from his Holines but Excommunication and if it were in his greatnes hands condemnation What should we more say the Dragon and his Angels fought and Michael and his Angels fought and this quarrell shall not be ended vntill the number of the elect be accomplished and then peace shall come These things Paul sayth not this thing but these things whence obserue that Good men suffer many things 〈◊〉 10. vlt. Psal 22. 12. c. Doct. 3. In the world shall ye haue many persecutions many are the troubles of the righteous one depth calleth another and thou breakest me with one sorrow after another And how commeth this to passe First from the diuers ill disposi●●ns of wicked men For Reas 1. some like Rabshakeh delight in ray●●ing's others like Do●g in informing a third sort like Pilate would please the people a fourth with Iudas haue their minds on Coveting and at a word some are such as neuer can be appeased mercilesse Now we must know that as euery Creature of diuers constitutions desire the contrary things that might content them so various mindes in evill persons produce seuerall euill effects And as euery kind of weed hath a stinking smell though distinct one from another so all vngodly men haue variety of persecutions against the Saints of God All weeds stinke but not alike so all wicked persons persecute but not in the same kind and degree Besides the children of God bring forth variety of good Reas 2. fruite doe many good actions now wicked men hate all good though not in a like degree so that for variety of actions they prepare various corrections A skilfull Physician prepareth pills potions and prescribeth receipts according to the kinds and nature of the diseases and the men of Beliall Atheist and Papist are wise in their generation therefore they haue a seuerall salue for sundry soares They had whips in 88. fire brimstone and gunpowder within a few yeares after Anno Domini 1605. Let the Pope then and his poll-shorne Brethren boast Vse 1. and brag of their long peace and plenty make such sure signes of the trueth of their Church and the Lords fauour yet they build on a wrong foundation and their hopes 1 Pet 4. 17. shall one day make them ashamed Babylon must sit as a Queene be no widow see no mourning yet in a day as Rev. 18. 8. it were in a trice shall famine sorrow and death befall her for strong is the Lord God which will condemne her Againe art thou afflicted and sufferest but a few things Vse 2. then murmur not neither repine at all for sure the Lord is good vnto thee in chayning vp Sathan and in putting an hooke into the nose of his instruments that they torment thee no further Truly God is good to this our English Israel for though we suffer yet the Lord moderateth his corrections he restra●●eth the rage of our Aduersaries and hath confounded them that sought all our confusion Many complaine perhaps not without some cause of our daies but I wish a worse age may not follow And tell me What sufferest thou Doest thou liue in Mesheck amongst them that hate peace so did David Is thy righteous soule vexed in seeing and hearing of vncleannesse so was Lots Haue thy friends proued vnfaithfull so did the Apostles My good friend thou hast escaped the whip the stone the fire the Racke the Crosse that many of thy forefathers haue suffered tasted Thou wast neuer constreyned through famine to feed on the fruite of thy owne wombe to say this I must eate and then dye And hast thou wanted food for thy soule then blame not God for thou maist haue it either at home or with thy Neighbour and that in such a manner too as many a poore good soule neuer enioyed But I am not ashamed In these words is layd downe Pauls carriage of himselfe in sufferings and he addeth this as an Argument from his example to encourage Timothy in his course and not for any sinister end of vaine boasting But we omit that for the present and gather this other instruction that A Resolute Christian is not nor should not be ashamed of the Doct. 4. Gospel Rom. 1. 16. Heb. 12. 1. 2. For there be many great and excellent mysteries contained Reas 1. in it Why then should any man be ashamed to preach or professe it Sinne should breed shame not the meanes that can and no other remoue it We haue a warrantable calling to it and shall wee then Reas 2. cast it off and be gone No we are to abide in that calling whereunto we are called Nehemiah will not flee if the Lord haue sent him Againe we haue all good by it and all things that wee Reas 3. enioy without it are but curses This salt must sweeten all our naughtie waters and remoue all heauy plagues both temporall and eternall And why should we be ashamed of it For God preached Reason 4. it Christ the Holi-ghost and the Angels haue preached it It s a priviledge to suffer for it God is not ashamed of vs and shall we be ashamed of his cause Why then let vs goe on in wisedome and Christian resolution Vse 1. Helps to endure shame and neuer be ashamed of our profession And take those breife helpes 1. Consider what vow and promise thou madest at thy Baptisme and be ashamed to breake Couenant with thy God 2 Call to minde that the professors of Antichrist are bold and resolute for their false Gospell and are marked in their hand and forehead if they much more we 3. What greater honour to man then to be chosen to be the Lords Champion in so great an action Finally let a forced necessity vrge thee to resolution for they that will not
suffer now shall be denyed of Christ hereafter at his appearing Such as are found halting must be turned out of the way And as the words stand in way of argument we may gather that The sufferings of others should moue vs to suffer also Doct. 5. What a cloud of witnesses haue we Christ example is propounded to this purpose and many more in the booke of God that we with patience might endure the crosse and despise the shame Heb. 12. 1. 2. For its a good thing to follow a multitude in the way of Reas 1. righteousnes as it is evill to tread in the lewd steppes of vngodly persons Againe if their example moue nothing then they shall Reas 2. rise vp in iudgement against vs For are not they recorded to this purpose Let vs in time of trouble then cast our eyes on those that Vse 1. haue gone before vs for like a liuely picture they will giue vigour to our faint spirits when we are ready to faile Examples are of great force in all things and shall so many worthy patternes prevaile nothing No I ade so dull but will follow a free and forward leader And here we are instructed to giue good examples to others Vse 2. Let vs learne some incouragement by our practise to future posterities that they may be pricked forward to tread in our footesteps For vndoubtedly the best way of teaching others as we see is not by precept onely but by example also For I know whom I haue beleeued We haue heard of two causes why Paul suffered the one in that he preached the Gospell the other that he preached it vnto the Gentiles and now followeth a double reason why he was not ashamed of so doing but resolutely did goe on in the fulfilling of his Ministery Whence this poynt will truly arise that As the wicked haue pretended causes to afflict the faithfull so Doct. 6. haue they good grounds not to be ashamed of their sufferings Heb. 11. 24. 35. 2 Cor. 4. 16. Acts 5. 29. Aske Moses why he would not be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season but chuse rather to suffer affliction his reason is at hand he hath respect to the recompence of reward Why would not Heb. 11. the Saints in their greatest tortures by vnlawfull meanes be comforted they looked for a better resurrection Wherefore did not the faithfull faint in their suffering they did account that the momentany afflictions of this life were not w●rthy 2 Cor. 4. 17. of that eternall weight of glory that should be revealed What reason had Christ that he would not come downe from the Crosse and saue himselfe that saued others Hee must doe the will of him that sent him finish his worke and performe his promise And he knew that his death and resurrection would be a greater miracle then to haue deliuered himselfe another way For the Children of God goe by a sure rule they ground Reas 1. their proceedings and sufferings vpon Gods precepts and promises when as the prophane haue false rules fained causes And if it were not thus they could haue no comfort in Reas 2. their suffering for blessed are those that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake Therefore they ground the cause of their affliction vpon Reason Vse 1. Wonder not then ye men of this world why the Saints in all ages haue resisted unto bloud and not counted their liues deare vnto themselues but haue carried them in their hands For they know that though man frowne the Lord will fauour though Antichrist bind with a curse Christ will lose with a blessing though Sathan tempt and terrifie the Spirit will strengthen and comfort if the flesh be weakened the spirit shall be renewed if death goe before that life shall follow after and if the world loose them heaven shall find them For so it s said that if their earthly house of 2 Cor. 5. 1. this Tabernacle be destroyed they haue a building giuen of God an house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens of the possession whereof they be assured after their dissolutions A wonderment riseth from the ignorance of the cause or the rarenes of the event and these be the proper grounds why many men admire and are astonied at others sufferings for the Gospell But surely the seruants of God haue had great reason for their courses whatsoeuer blinded men doe deeme of them For I know c. The next Instruction wee obserue from these words is this that It is an experimentall knowledge of God that will cause a Doct. 7. man to bee resolute in good courses and to suffer afflictions See this in David and in the wife of Manoah for notable are these two places for this purpose 1 Sam. 17. 34. 35. c. Iudg. 13. 23. Rom. 1. 16. 17. Because it is a great meanes to strengthen our weake faith Reas 1. Now as our faith encreaseth so is our resolution and patience bettered Christ would call his Disciples Men of little faith when they were troubled and dejected in small matters so that weakenes of faith must be remoued to beget resolution and that is done by the experience we haue had of the Lords proceedings Againe the former performance of Gods promise doth Reas 2. not take away the efficacie force of it for future time but rather confirmes it For when God loues once hee loues euer so to whom he performes his promise once hee will performe it for euer The often setting and rising of the Sun doth assure vs the more both of the one and of the other for we haue had long experience of the stability of it in its course and motion In the first place here we may see why men are faint impatient Vse 1. vnder the Crosse and vnsetled irresolute to any good word or worke they haue no experience of God and his proceedings For experience will cause tribulation to bring foorth patience as many little acts doe make a great habit Rom. 5 3. And in the next place this poynt serueth for our direction Vse 2. and teacheth vs what to doe that wee may patiently beare the Crosse and manfully fight the battels of the Lord namely to get experience of Gods manner of proceedings And for our direction the better to gaine this obserue Rules to procute experimental knowledge these Rules following I. Obserue Gods dealing with vs. 1. In temporall 2. In spirituall things 1. Hath he not fed thee clothed thee lodged thee since he gaue thee a being and is his hand shortened and not stretched out still When the Disciples of Christ were troubled in minde about these matters What sayth he haue ye not remembrance how I fed you with a little bread and a few fishes When I sent you forth without money in your purse meate in your scrippes and all other prouision wanted you any thing they