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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

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portion which passeth all vnderstanding and afterward thou shalt dwell with Angels with Christ with God the Father where is fulnesse of ioy and pleasures for euermore thou shalt never die never whither no rust shall eate thee nor moth consume thee thou shalt see no sorrow thou shalt heare no complaint neither be afraid of the least evill successe Thou shalt iudge the quicke and the dead acquit the innocent condemne the guiltie and doe little lesse than a pettie God in one word thou shalt doe more and haue more than can be told by man or by Angell all that be good before God shall commend thee preserue thee or rather thou them for ever and ever And now in the last place let vs make application Then is not that life base that is led without it A miserable Vse 1. service is that which is begun continued and finished without a good conscience being accompanied with lying swearing dissembling and deceiving is it not they that thus liue are worse then beasts and no creature the devill excepted more wretched Be thou then assured that such a life is odious to God hatefull to his Saints and an vndoubted fore-runner of the second death He that layeth the foundation of his service with ignorance infidelitie and disobedience in the fiery tryall shall be blowne vp when the match of Gods vindicatiue iustice shall lay hold on this blacke powder how shall that man be able to stand Wee may muzzle the mouth of our conscience not suffer it to speake and deale with it as an vniust Land-lord with his poore tenant when he in some iust cause is to giue evidence against him put it to silence by an over ruling commaund but when Christ shall come to iudgement and take part with conscience then shall it speake freely boldly truely as ever did faithfull witnesse at the barre having the chiefe Iudge for his friend How will a Iudas looke at that day who was so pittifully deiected before the Pharisees whom he tooke for his friends and expected comfort from them How will the Drunkard stagger and reele not with wine but with the fume of a bad conscience What face can the hypocrite hold vp that hath dissembled all his life long where shall the vniust the fornicator adulterer lyer with all the wicked and vngodly appeare I am sure of this that though such and a thousand moe haue blind erroneous and cauterized consciences burned with an hot yron for the present yet at that generall assize being lanced with the sharpe edged knife of Gods revenging hand they shall all bleed freshly and to death eternall This kind of men may looke bigge set the best side out eat drinke and be merrie but I shall never beleeue that their hearts laugh with their faces O matchlesse miscreants of all mischiefe sonnes of blood and slaues of perdition you may sooner separate your soules from your bodies then conscience from your soules or damnation from either Goe then your wayes laugh and be fat play and dance sing to the Tabret and Harpe put death iudgement and hell farre from you tread vnder foot the blood of the new couenant crucifie againe the Lord of life make a mocke of sinne and shipwracke your owne consciences yet know that God one day will call you to account and dash out your braines with the heele of his vengeance In the next place seeing this is so let vs in the feare of Vse 2. God get knowledge and mixe our service to God and man with sinceritie walke according to the rule doe nothing without a precept haue a true patterne for all our proceedings and runne to the Law and to the Testimonie of the Gospell obey the one and beleeue the other so shall we haue good and pure consciences one whereof though the world may fume and chafe is worth more than ten thousands of gold and silver What can be of greater price what should we preferre aboue it O conscience whereunto shall I compare thee who or what is like vnto thee Is not knowledge good obedience better and art not thou of these two simples compounded There is no evill in thee thou art all good and very good There are foure things Pro. 30. ●9 30. comelie statelie in their going a Lyon the strongest among beasts and tunneth not away from any a Grey hound an hee Goa●e and a King against whom there is norising vp but he that hath a complete good conscience surmounts them all But conscience least I should ecclipse and obscure thy same when I would speake and spread it I will therefore giue thee thy charge a large commission Conscience that thou mayest execute thine office throughly Conscience his Charge speake thou in the language of Canaan be thou mighty in the Scriptures and that thou mayst not build Babel and pull downe Bethel let euery man haue thy sentence in his mothers tongue Goe to and fro through the world passe by no Citie Burrow Village Hall House nor Cottage but let them heare thy voyce sounding in their wals speake truely plainely boldly crie aloud spare no mans person of whatsoever cloth his coate be cut Be thou a good linguist make it knowne thou art a skilfull Artist and declare an exact Method in thy proceeding And Conscience first goe thou to all Christian Princes Kings and Emperours speake gently to them and intreate them to cry to God for wisedome that they may wisely goe in out before the great people committed to their charge will them yong and old to tread in the steps of Hezekiah Iosiah pull downe the high places burne the groues with fire over turne Baals Altars and cause all his Priests to fall by the sword Bid them send Levites through their Lands spread the truth of God for their subiects haue immortall soules in their mortall bodies tell them that is the way to get a good Conscience and how thou art of more worth than a golden Scepter Put them in mind how a bad one was the cause Saul his kingdome and I●roboam became the subiect of Gods vengeance Let this Poesie be stamped about the borders of their Crownes that the more religious the more royall Conscience step on to the honorable Lords and because they affect breuitie not prolixitie say to them in a few sentences that Nobilitie without pietie and a good conscience is like a painted Sepulchre or blazing comet good for nought except to gaze vpon that they feare God or else they haue no curbe to bridle them that they honour the King keepe their houses well but the Church better that they exceed others as much in goodnesse as they doe in greatnesse and that without a second birth none can enter into the kingdome of heaven Bid them blaze their Armes continue their ancient Scutchions but take this for their Motto that The more holy the more honorable Conscience See that thou meet with the intelligent Counsellors and graue Iudges of the State and Nations
couetous when he hath gotten goods the Prodigall hauing satiate his soule with the huskes of pleasures the ambitious when he hath climbed to the highest pitch of honour thinke they liue the onely Iouiall life and yet all dwell and breathe in the chambers of death and as the Apostle speakes are dead while they be aliue no better than walking ghosts in the formes of liuing men Let such buy and build plow and sow marry and beget many children yet the vntimelie birth is better than they The basest life exceedes as much the best meere being as Adam the red earth whereon his body was made but this life excels all others Gods only excepted more than men do beasts or Angels Deuils Why then let the worth of it moue thee the withering of this is worse than the death of the Gourd of Ionah And will not this consideration that all thy actions are but as so many beautifull sinnes and distastfull vnto the Lord set thee a worke to obtaine it Then call to mind how it maketh all things beautifull and well pleasing to the eye Will not our flesh tremble to see a body without a soule the teeth closed the eyes open the lips shrunke and the bloud set blacke and swart in the face and members is not such an obiect odious to man Euen so yea worse are we being dead in sinne to God and good persons Yet if all that 's said will not moue thee to this then know No life here no escape of death hereafter And immortalitie We collect hence that Life spirituallis eternall Doct. 10. It is not like the Lillies that flourish to day and wither to morrow Methushelah liued long yet died at the age of 969. but he that once hath the life of grace shall see no corruption Mortality shall put on immortalitie and though the body perish yet this life is in the soule being a more excellent subiect for as he that puts off his apparell doth not leaue his naturall life in it so he that layes downe the body loseth not the life of grace and immortalitie with it For as the naturall life is in the body not in the apparell so the spirituall life is in the soule not in the dead corpse after the separation Mat 19. 29. Mark 10. 17. Ioh. 5. 24. 1 Cor 15. 53. For Christ hath purchased eternall redemption Heb. 9. 12. Reas 1. Christ was a holy person yea God aswell as man and he obeyed freely these two made the satisfaction of Christ sufficient And there is a proportion betweene Adams sinne and Christs sufferings 1. Finite sinne offending Adam Christ Adam Christ Adam Christ 1. Finite suffering satisfying 2. Finite sinne offended the infinite God 2. Finite suffering satisfied the infinite God 3. Finite sinne infinitely offended the infinite God 3. Finite suffering infinitely satisfied the infinite God So that life must be infinite because the satisfaction was infinite in value and worth and equall to the offence in remouing eternall death God hath promised eternall life and hee is faithfull and Reas 2. cannot denie himselfe 1 Ioh 2. 25. Christ from whom this life is deriued liueth for euer and Reas 3. maketh intercession Heb 7. 25. Reu 1. 18. Else it were better with the wicked than the faithfull of all Reas 4. men they were most miserable 1 Cor. 15. 19. And the word is called eternall 1 Pet. 1. vlt. And we read of an eternall house an eternall weight an eternall kingdome an eternall crowne and an eternall inheritance This 1. Confutes those heretikes that hold the soule is Vse 1. mortall 2. the Papists also who say that a man may haue true spirituall life and lose it But we see that Christ hath brought life and immortality or immortall life and if this life should end then it were mortall This makes also for the comfort of such whose friends Vse 2. are departed in the Lord why be of good cheare they are not dead but liue for God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing This vse is of great vse were it well vsed This likewise might and ought to encourage all to goe Vse 3. on with cheerefulnes and Christian resolution and not be afraid of death seeing after it followeth eternall life death like a dore le ts the soule passe a better roome of habitation And here we haue a strong motiue to moue vs to labour Vse 4. for this life Is it immortall incorruptible why then striue for it What man would not liue long why liue this life once and liue for euer and that thou maist thou must 1. Be vnited to Christ for euery branch that abideth not in Helpes to life spirituall him is cast out and withereth All spirituall life floweth from this coniunction For as the graft hath life from the vnion with the stocke so haue we from Christ Ioh. 15. 2. Heare the Gospell preached for the word of is God spirit and life and he that beares this voyce though he were dead yet shall be liue What though we cannot quicken our selues yet we may vse the meanes And the Angell may trouble the water and Christ come and heale vs when we are at the wels mouth and vnable to helpe ourselues 3. Pray often Dauid neere about 19. times in the hundred and nineteenth Psalme prayeth Lord quicken me Lord giue me the spirit of life c. Did he thus sure then it was good for him to be practised of all such as would be quickned and enliued Finally and aboue all things resist no good motion that thou hast in the vse of Gods ordinances or at any time else for this is to driue the author of all life from vs. Entertaine them therefore and kindle those sparks by obeying of them so shall thy soule liue and not dye Through the Gospell Here is manifested the instrumentall cause by which death is abolished and life brought vnto vs whence let this be noted that Though all grace come by Christ yet it is deriued vnto man by Doct. 11. meanes of the Gospell For that declareth how it may be attained and no other Reas 1. writing God giues his spirit with the Gospell not by the Law Reas 2. Gal 3. 2. and hence it is called the ministration of the spirit 2 Cor. 3. 8. This must worke in vs a loue to the Gospell and a care Vse 1. to continue it amongst vs. Had we but one herbe in our grounds that would cure all diseases would we not hedge about it water it and by all meanes seeke to preserue it it from perishing Why the Gospell is this herbe that tree whose leaues onely cure all the nations We must make much of them that bring this Physicke Vse 2. for the wounded spirit how should such men be respected Pray we that the word may runne and be scattered to the Vse 3. foure ends of the world otherwise death will reigne life
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
censure others Vse 3. for in so doing wee may bee blame worthy Let a poore Christian cry out that hee is tempted of Sathan troubled with doubting and call his estate into question the which is vsuall in the Lords children shall we not haue some that will tell it in Gath that such are haunted of the Deuill brought to despaire and not of the number of the faithfull but these grieue the holy Ghost wound their own flesh or rather declare euidently that they are strangers from the life of God Let the Magistrate with Moses represse impiety suffer not the offender to goe with out penalty and if he be resolute to advance religion how many will be ready to tell that he takes too much vpon him If the zealous Preacher with Iohn put the axe to the roote of the tree lash the conscience and speake with power what exclamations will fly like vncoucht fire workes this man is without mercy damnes vs all and sends our soules to hell afore our bodies be cold When men pray in their families search the Scriptures sing Psalmes Catechize their children and frequent the house of God shall not such be counted Puritanes nick-named Precisians And yet doe but looke into Gods booke and tell me if all the faithfull haue not done these things and the profane as branded to destruction omitted them but these grunting Swine are neuer satisfied such Dogs will vomit vp their filth and every Kyte of that nest cast vp his stinking gorge And what wonder i st for corruption will follow his kind and like grace produce the contrary effects to her from opposite principles For Christ was counted a wine-bibber Iohn reputed to haue a Deuill the faithfull to be full of new wine the same censure must and shall accompany the members and cleaue to the successors Yet let vs take heed lest falling into the same sinne we one day partake not of the same punishment or the like In the last place let vs all proue our selues whether we be Vse 4. in the faith or not for by this point rightly applyed we may doe it Thou saiest thou hast faith but hast thou the effects that follow it Dost thou beare like fruit and bring forth good workes as did thy faithfull forefathers And for our better triall haue we an eye to such as haue beene before vs and haue exercised the same vocation with vs and then if our actions be proportionable to theirs wee haue the same faith vnfeigned Art thou a Magistrate and dost thou desire to take a Who haue faith vnfeigned true triall of thy faith then compare thy proceedings with some one of that condition who in the booke of God hath beene reputed faithfull And thou maist consider to this purpose Nehemiah and take a view whether thine actions paralell his What inquirie dost thou make to know the Churches state what care hast thou to reforme things that be out of order how dost thou pity the oppressed build vp the decayed wals of Ierusalem pull downe the high places and giue charge for the Sabboths-strict-sanctification Hath the Lord called thee to practice that great art of soule sauing and is thy care so to preach and practise as that thou maist saue thine owne soule and them that depend vpon thee and dost thou yearne for the gathering together the scattered Saints to build vp the body of Christ and wish might it stand with Gods pleasure that all other with thy selfe were in the path that leadeth to heauen Is thy estate to gouerne a family How then be thy seruants and children trained vp in the knowledge of God What care hast thou to haue a little Church in thine house and morning and euening to offer vp a daily sacrifice In a word in whatsoeuer calling thou art cast is thy choicest care to glorifie thy God to worke out thy saluation and to draw others with thee to eternall glorie then be of good courage comfort thine heart for thy faith is vnfeigned and shall assuredly saue thee But if these things be omitted and the contrarie committed what should I more say except I should dissemble but that thou art a cursed Ieroboam a wretched Alexander a profaine Esaw and sonne of perdition be not deceiued for if faith haue not its perfect worke in thee and good fruits proceed not from thee thou art no graffe in Christs stocke but a wild Oliue whose end is neere to cursing and burning Why wilt thou not try thy faith by its effects if it be sound seeing this is a sure rule will not cannot deceiue thee looke thy face in this Glasse weigh thy estate in this ballance and measure thy faith by this rule for it is the onely way and I cannot giue thee a better And from these words it may also be collected that The approbation of Gods people is not to be despised but much Doct. 10. respected It s good to be well reported of by the faithfull for Pauls speech tends much to their prayse Nehem. 7. 3. 1 Kin. 18. 3. Gal. 1. vlt. For the faithfull haue the best iudgements in spirituall Reas 1. things and the least subiect to be deceiued They shall iudge the world and is not their testimonie Reas 2. of great estimation who are so honoured 1 Cor. 6. Begining Againe a good name is a great thing especially when it Reas 3. proceeds from the best people Mat. 16. 15. And finally whom they giue good report of they will Reas 4. bee sure to pray for and what can bee better Phil. 1. 5. Such then vndergoe reproofe as neuer regard the good report Vse 1. of Gods people There be many who had rather haue the applause and prayse of the Gallants and good fellowes of these dayes But doth this make for their reputation can this yeelde them any ground of true and sound consolation will they haue it glory in it but a miserable thing is it For its true honour to be honoured of the righteous Therfore Paul litle regarded to be iudged of the world In the next place this must teach them that are well reported Vse 2. of by the faithfull to esteeme it a fauour and not slightly to respect it for of a truth it will comfort the hart encourage to good and strengthen the weake faith to bee well respected of the Saints and the contrarie cannot but wound and grieue the vpright in hart I Kin. 18. 9. And let all men learne so to shew forth the fruits of faith Vse 3. that they may haue with these people the like commendation Set vp the ordinances of God in your families cast How a good report may begot out the profaine person relieue the poore Saints and entertaine the men of God For for such things sake is the approbation of Gods people acquired and if you doe these things who will or can speake euill of you if men doe yet you are blessed in that you are euill
of it in that measure 6. Finally some men haue most excellent and acute vnderstandings now the more clearely the intellect receiueth a fearefull obiect the more will the heart be troubled If one through the dimnes of the eye take a Lyon for a tame beast he wil not be shaken with equall terrour as he wil that by the clearenes of his sight discerneth the beast in his owne kind and nature And this is a most true position that the best wits be the most wounded in heart at their effectuall calling because sin and the punishment be the more clearely apprehended and men ordinarily more then women from the acutenes of the vnderstanding But some may obiect It s from God not man that one is Obiect 1. thus humbled for God in this doth all True yet the Lord worketh according to the condition Sol. of the subiect about which he is excercised And women are often more cast downe then men be at Obiect 2. this season We grant it Yet that comes from the weaknes of the sexe Sol. And shall you not see one more terrified at the drawing of the sword then another is in beholding it sheathed into the very bowells Thus you haue heard how the Lord prepareth a sinner before effectuall vocation cutting off and fitting of him to be grafted a new at which time he is like a branch sl●pped from the body of the tree and ready to wither and dye in his owne apprehension And then the Lord speaketh vnto the poore perplexed soule by his Spirit in the promises of the Gospell and that peraduenture when he the least expecteth any such comfortable tydings secretly saying and whispering the sinner in the eare of his soule Be of good comfort for thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Now hee giueth Christ to him and him vnto Christ so that the penitent person is come home into his desired place and the liberty of Gods children Now from this that hath beene said we may deduce many Conclusions from the precedent discourse things for our further instruction and to confirme vs concerning the certainty of our effectuall vocation 1. Here we see that the law is necessary to be preached that like a schoolemaster it may whip vs to Christ for to find comfort in the time of neede 2. That the true sight of our sinnes and humiliation is a companion of effectuall vocation for the sicke haue need of the Phisition and Christ calleth none but such as are lost in their present apprehension 3. That euery sigh for sinne and compunction of spirit is not to be effectually called for Reprobates like Ahab and Iudas may for a time be much deiected yet neuer receiue Christ whereby to be truly iustified 4. We learne from hence that effectuall vocation is an action sensibly to be felt by the persons who be the proper subiects of it and a worke though on Gods part secretly effected yet on mans easily apprehended 5. And here men that haue not endured so much humiliation as others yet are not to despaire of their spirituall condition for the Lord doth not call all his a like To one hee reveileth some little sinne at the first least he should be swallowed vp of overmuch heauines yet by the punishment thereof he commeth to coniecture what is due vnto him for the rest And when the poore sinner hath got power against this then he will reveale vnto him some other of greater nature for hauing had experience of Gods former mercy he is made the more bold and able for to wrestle with greater transgressions and Sathans more fell and fierce temptations the which vsually come in the latter end of this spirituall combate For like a cunning Captaine that would raze downe the walls he first dischargeth his lesser pieces and if they will not effect it then he giueth fire to his greatest Ordinances and roaring Cannons 6. And for conclusion let him that is neuer so much deiected not be out of heart as though the Lord could not raise thee vp againe and comfort thy soule for as his mercy so his power is infinite The deeper the fo●●dation is layed the firmer will the building be and the more we be hu●●led and broken at our preparation the more shall we be ●●le to stand fast after our effectuall vocation Wherefore read pray meditate heare the word receiue the Sacraments and seeke to the Phisition of thy soule and at one time or other through one of these conducts he will seale to thy soule a certificate for the remission of all thy sinne and thou with comfort shalt say Now soule returne vnto thy rest Do● but vse the meanes tarry the Lords leisure and he shall come that will come and comfort thy heart say not that no man euer felt what thou doest for many haue and found pardon peace vnspeakeable But when thou are come home to thy long desire h●uen A Caution and the Lord hath heard the voy●● of thy weeping then see 1. thou faile not to performe the v●●es that thou madest ●● him in the daies of thy former affliction least a worse ●hing follow Neither think● it thine honour that thou h●st b●●●e 2. more te●●efied and deiected in thy preparation then thy brethren as the manner of ●o●e i● but be thou the mo●e ashamed that thy hea●t was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 th●● 〈◊〉 ●ust exhibite more power to ●●ll ●h●● ho●e then ●he rest o● his children And by how ●u●h the more 〈◊〉 Lord ●●th ●●mbled 3. thee aboue others be ●hou so 〈◊〉 the more 〈◊〉 in all good workes For the more p●ines and labour the Husbandman taketh in tilling his ground the more corne he expect●th from it at the time of harue●● and shall ●ot the Lord looke for the like from al● his manured and well ●●lled closes yes vndoub●●●ly And here I will adde some particulars that he who is of where in the that is called hath experience fectually called knoweth by experience whereof men in the estate of nature are ignorant 1. He knoweth now what a featefull thing it is to be a stranger from the life of God and to haue him for his enemie and would not for the 〈◊〉 of a world be one ●●ture in his former condition 2. How vnable he is of himselfe either ●● answre the Lords call or to beleeue in him though he would and find in himselfe a mind to both 3. What an enemy sin and Sathan is to the sonnes of men Now he perceiueth the sting of the one and the fiery darts of the other and how deepe they will strike pierce into the very ioynts and the marrow 4. He can tell you that a wounded spirit is the extreamest of all extreamities and that peace with God passeth all vnderstanding 5. That Christ was God aswell as man or els he had not beene able to haue borne the full burden of one mans sins much lesse of the whole world of the elect this is a
be marked that The best man may be forsaken These left Paul Doct. 8. Quest Ans Did these neuer returne to the truth afterward God knoweth not we and though we hope the best of some yet let vs feare the worst for the good of our selues VERS 16. The Lord giue mercy to the house of Onesiphorus for he often refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine WE may not thinke that this complaint and commendation The Coherence are here annexed without reason or relation to the percedent verse For thus I conceiue it is Paul hauing prest Timothy by many maine and forcible arguments not to be ashamed of the doctrine of the Gospell In the 13. ver giueth him a direction what to doe that he may not be ashamed which is to keepe the patterne of sound words for he that worketh by a true and streight rule shall haue no cause to be ashamed of his workmanship But in regard this might seeme hard to Timothy he tells him what he must obserue that he might be able to follow this forme of doctrine viz. Keepe the graces of God from decaying that are in him Oh but he might suggest this thing is as hard as the other Now Paul secretly grants him this and therefore tells him that he can no wayes doe that but by the assistance of the holy Ghost ver 14. And hauing giuen him this good rule least his sonne should be puffed vp with presumption and omit all subordinate helpes he tells him how many haue fallen away ver 15. for Timothy might thus conceiue Well if the Holy Ghost be and dwell in me I will feare the lesse or he might be temped to be carelesse from that ground for the preseruation of these worthy things And last of all least vpon the Mement of so many Revolters and that of Phygellus and Hermogenes he might be too much on the other side againe deiected for man on both hands is incident to fall into extremities he bringeth in a worthy example of loue boldnes stedfastnes and resolution in this Onesiphorus to hearten and imbolden him This may seeme to be the true scope of Paul and dependance of these foure last verses Or it may be thus Paul may put Timotheus in minde of these mens falling away and of this good mans resolution that he by the shame which befell the one and the prayse accompanying the other might be the more disswaded from declining and perswaded to stand fast For doubtles these instances of coutrary persons proceedings carry with them the seedes and force of an argument being by Paul thus produced But to omit that wee come to the words the which consist of a petition and a reason In the petition we may obserne 3. things 1. To whom it 's The Logicall resolution preferd the person is the Lord. 2. The thing petitioned for and that 's mercy 3. For whom this petition is put vp and that is for the house of Onesiphorus Thus much for the prayer or petition In the Reason are 3. things also or t' is threefold 1. Onesiphorus refreshed Paul 2. He did this often And 3. He was not ashamed of his chaine And though the Reason seeme but twofold why he prayed to God for this man yet we may without breach of the Reasons rule apprehend it to be threefold as we haue demonstrated out of the word Often The Lord giue That is God the Father impart conferre The Theologicall Exp●sition or grant Mercy I would here vnderstand mercy to be taken in a large extent as for outward and inward blessings with whatsoeuer is profitable or comfortable for soule and body or for all the like refreshings I was in my troubles refreshed with may be the Apostles meaning To the house of Onesiphorus House in the Hebrewe is of building in Greeke of dwelling in our English from custody or tuition And the word house may be borrowed from the Almaine huis which is of hu to defend Whereby the way we may take the description of an house the which is a building wherein man doth inhabite or dwell for safetie and tu●tion By house in this place is meant the people whereof Onesiphorus had charge whether wife children or seruants by a Metonymie For he often refreshed me That is did by his personall presence praiers conference and gifts many a time recreate and comfort me both in body and minde And was not ashamed of my chaine That is When I was vsed like a theefe or malefactor and went vp and downe with irons on my heeles or hauing a keeper was led being chained by the hand he tooke knowledge of me and did not passe by me as they of Asia did accounting it a disgrace to their reputation As I cannot but iustly complaine against and condemne The Metaphrase all Asia of which company were Phygellus and Hermogenes in that they were ashamed to visit or refresh me So I must needs highly commend Onesiphorus for many refreshings whereby he comforted me both in soule and body and tooke acqnaintance of me esteeming it no disgrace or shame although I was chained and vsed like a Malefactor For the which his kind dealings towards me I beseech the Father of all mercy to comfort and bless● all his whole familie wife children ●●d servants both in soule and body with all earthly and heauenly benefites euen as he hath comforted and refreshed me in all my miseries and great afflictions by his presence prayers conference and other fauours The Lord giue mercy c. Whereas many fell away and Doctrines deduced one mentioned that was resolute and Paul brings him in to be imitated of Timothy we may note this instruction that One good mans Example is to be preferred and followed before Doct. 1. a world of wicked persons We may not follow a multitude to doe euill Exod. 23. 2. No one Lot in Sodom one woman in the South one Michaiah is to be respected before al other vncleane Sodomites lazie Damosells and hundreds of false Prophets 2 Pet. 2. Luk. 11. 31. 1 King 22. 8. For he hath the truth on his side he followes the narrow Reas 1. way that leadeth to heauen Now the truth is to be preferred more then errour though Millions swerue to the one and a few embrace the other Againe God will excuse no man for so doing It will be Reas 2. a cold plea for a man to say I saw few of that stampe but multitudes of this I did as the most did when he shall come to the time of reckoning the great day of his account This iustly meetes with some in our dayes who hold Vse 1. neighbours fare good fare and to doe as the most the best way But haue these many the truth on their side doe they keepe the forme of sound words What a madnes would we esteeme it if a man when he is conuented before the iudge and accused for theft should say why all my
it be infused His essence Reas 2. is not destroyed but his faculties disordered so that being once turned like a wheele that goes backward he will Gods finger being once present easilie be caried the same course as at the creation This doctrine should incourage men to vse the meanes Vse 1. without wearines whereby sinners are converred Wee must instruct them who be contrarie-minded prooving if God at any time will bring them out of the snares of the Devill to 2. Tim. 2. 25. amendement of life Why should we despaire of any person iudge him finally or repute him a reprobate Was not this man with whom we haue to deale as vnlikely to haue proved an Apostle an holy liver as any thou knowest Hee who had seene Paul with the high-Priest and met him with letters trudging to Damascus would haue little thought he would another day haue sealed the Gospell with his blood Let the meanes be vsed and referre the successe to God The prodigall may come to himselfe and returne to his Father at the last Onesimus may be begot in his wandring proue profitable to and abide with his master for ever after Phile. 10. c. This Doctrine is of vse also for such as haue mispent Vse 2. their former time followed the evill fashions of the world and given their members as so many servants to worke wickednesse with greedinesse If they finde in themselues a setled resolution to leaue their former courses and with a purpose of heart to cleaue vnto the Lord it s a truth that Sathan will tempt such and tell them that now it is in vaine to returne from their wonted wayes former wickednesse and alter their crooked pathes But they must not giue credit to his false suggestions and subtillillusions for if they doe they bee vndone Bee of good comfort For thy former evill course shall not make thee miscarry if thy present resolution be to be reformed in all things For as bad lewd profane as thy selfe haue become godly persons excellent people Let this then be a meanes to comfort thee when thy spirit is wounded or thou by Sathan to vtter desperation art tempted Yet caution must heere bee had that this comfortable Cautions to be vsed that grace be not abused doctrine be not abused First take heede that thou doe not learne heereby to deferre thy repentance to extenuate thy sinne or to apply it to all times and persons For this were a sinne with an high hand and in so doing thou shouldst aggrauate thine in●quitie and turne the mercie bounty and long-suffering of the Lord into wantonnesse abuse his patience and iustly incurre greater condemnation Wee must not sinne because grace doth abound but rather in the consideration thereof bee led to repentance Secondly as thou desirest to partake of the like grace and favour which others haue done striue thou to be equally qualified as such persons haue beene The choicest rece●pts are applyed to the sickest weakest The mercie of God is physicke onely for the wounded spirit Wherefore set this example before the eye of thy soule in the greatest temptation hardest conflict and when thy faith in the remembrance of thy former crooked courses the most seemeth to faile thee for then it may stand thee in stead otherwi●e not I could also gather from these words That diverse names may for iust and lawfull vses be vndertaken That our owne names and hand is necessarie to bee annexed to our writings but I omit these and proceede further Of Iesus Christ What did the Apostle most reioyce in from what did he deduce arguments to maintaine his dignitie from his Tribe kindred Pharisaicall profession or any carnall and earthly priviledge in no wise but from that he was now the servant of Christ and put into office vnder him whence may be collected that Any vnion relation Doct. 3. or contract in and with Christ is of great importance As Paul doth magnifie his place and person in regard of his master Christ so may we in all other respects whereby we are conioyned and knit by any band vnto him What greater honor to the weaker sex than to be the mother of Luk. 1. 43. 48. our Lord What dignitie is this to fraile man that he passed by the Angels and assumed his nature What priviledge Heb. 2. 16. of more price than to be bone of his bone and flesh Ephes 5. 30. of his flesh to be a branch of such a root a member of such a head and an Ambassadour of so vnmatchable a Monarch 1 Cor. 9. 1. 1 Tim. 1. 12. Rom. 16. 1. Why Is not Christ Iesus God-man the onely Sonne of Reas 1. the Father and the beginning of all creatures Surely the neerer we approach in nature vnion or action to the creator the neerer are we to all perfection and blessednesse that Heb. 1. 14. can befall a creature Againe Are we in his service Wee shall be preserved Reas 2. assisted well rewarded Be we vnited to him We shall never be rent asunder but abide with him and in him for ever Is he our first kinsman and husband What honor to this What profit comparable For thereby God is become our Father heaven our inheritance and salvation eternall our yearely ioynture Here are reprehended many in our dayes who care not Vse 1. a whit for matters of that nature reputing it no reputation to haue relation vnion and communion with Christ Iesus these shew plainly that they be carnall and savour not the things which be of God What boasting will some vse of their pedigree and bloud Yet never dreame of affinitie with Christ or the new birth Extoll themselues that they or theirs are matched in such or such a house yet haue no care at all to be graffed into Christs stocke the Lords familie as of this sort there be millions so they be all miserable This must teach vs who haue any relation with Christ Vse 2. highly to esteeme it and greatly to reioyce in it Thinke it no small thing to be an off●cer in his house a labourer in his V●neyard and a member of his bodie for this is true nobilitie vnconceiuable dignitie and the direct path to eternall felicitie Paul a Preacher of Iesus Christ is a name of greater price and prayse than all humane titles and times ad●u●cts though in their nature good in all the world And here we are instructed from this point how to attaine Vse 3. vnto great dignitie we our children must get some office vnder Christ principally endevour to be vnited by faith and aff●ction vnto him but alas men scorne the Ministery the name Preacher is a word of derision in the Parish and Parents cry out What Make my sonne a Priest I will never doe it Well the calling is of great honor with God though despised of these beastly men And the dayes 1 Sam. 1. vlt. haue beene when to dedicate a sonne to the
most preferment and the face of man but not one of a thousand in the first place the mercy of God But beloved let vs be of another mind striue we to haue Vse 2. this liquor shed abroad in our hearts to haue a sensible feeling of his tender mercy and sacred affection so shall we eat our bread with gladnesse and drinke our drinke with a chearfull heart be mercifull as our heavenly Father is mercifull to vs vnto our kinred and acquaintance the want of this causeth deadnes of affection doubting in the promise and rebellious disobedience both to God and man for wicked men are alwayes mercilesse men because that none can exhibitie that to another the which he hath not first received himselfe for as mercie is deriued vnto vs we accordingly deriue it to our brethren and now we proceeede to speake of Peace Peace Hence we also obserue that As grace and mercie so peace is a principall thing to be sought Doct. 7. for Take peace in what sence you please it will be worth the having Peace every where is commended and commanded 1. For the peace of God it passeth all vnderstanding 2. Peace Reas 1. with man is no small favour this made the face of Esau to Iacob looke like an Angell 3. In the dayes of Peace we may goe out build houses plant vineyards thriue and prosper 4. How soundly may we sleepe awake with ioy and runne into the Sanctuary when this double garment of externall and internall peace doe cover our beds and round about beset and guard our persons None know the worth of it but such as sometime haue wanted it and beene at warre with God and the creatures Away then with the courses of some who would be counted Vse 1. Christians that thinke not of it care not for it but of far greater blame are they worthie that seeke to set enmitie betweene God and man neighbour and neighbour Doe these seeke after peace Doe they wish it Or rather doe they not shut it out of place and person and set open the gates of warre and strife at all times every where These desire to swimme and fish in troubled waters and of their father the devill are they for his worke they delight to doe But let all the sonnes of peace pray for it entertaine it and Vse 2. make it their onely companion It s of great worth every way profitable What creature covets not peace Ioyeth not in it And shall not the reasonable desire it striue for it To liue and not to haue peace with man is vncomfortable but to be at warre with thy Conscience is most miserable its better not to be than not to haue rest peace Why could not David build the Lords house Why He wanted outward peace Why was Cain so netled in soule Why He had not inward peace Why are so many millions miserable Why They are not at peace with God and doth not experience tell vs that times of trouble hinder Traffique Let vs all then cry with the Prophet for our Ierusalem Peace be within thy wals and prosperitie within thy Psal 122. 7. pallaces Seeke to the God of peace for all kindes of peace Salute we our friends as Paul did his Grace mercy and peace be with you Say we to the house wherein wee set a foote Peace be vnto thee and if it be not worthy thou shalt not lose thy labour for it shall returne to thy selfe And thus much of this Point From the order of these words somewhat may further be observed as that Men without grace haue no true or sound peace Doct. 8. They haue a sound of feare in their eares quake at the shaking of a leafe tremble at the least terrible tydings and like the raging Sea cast vp mire and mudde There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Levit. 27. 36. Isa 57. vlt. Let the cause be removed and the effect will cease where fire is wanting heat will not be had and though some seeme to be ever at peace yet they are never at peace For they are fallen from the Creator God and its vnion Reas 1. with the Creator which giues rest to the creature if the foundation be not firme the building will reele and totter 2. And haue they faith No How then should such purchase and procure peace For onely justification by faith since the fall of man bringes sound and setled peace 3. And as they want faith so they haue no hope whereon to leane that their soules may finde peace 4. Adde to all this a guiltie and naughtie Conscience and how should they partake and be possessed of true-inward peace Gen. 4. 14. Dreame not then that all is peace that seemes so for what Vse 1. peace can a prophane person haue within him that wanteth faith and grace Nay how ever he cary the matter he is at warre within himselfe The wounded Deere runs skips and leapes yet the Arrow or Bullet stinges paines torments at the very heart and before long will cause a fall a death So vnder a chearfull looke the soule may be sorrowfull and all that laugh in the face are not at peace within Who then is he that would haue true and sound peace Vse 2. Let him striue for mercie and grace for as the shadow the bodie heat the fire these follow the one the other Many imagine they haue it yet are fouly deluded deceived I deny not but the wicked may haue a peace but it s not worth the naming for it runnes not from a cleare fountaine it springs not from a sweet root and therefore one drop of this we haue in hand is worth a thousand of that as a litle rose-water a whole glasse-full of mudde 2. It is not constant neither but often interrupted every thunder clap will cause such to quake to tremble and at the last they shall certainly be consumed O that men were wise to gather grace so should they haue peace at their latter end in the meane while be like Mount Sion vnmoueable Graunt that such may haue outward troubles yet they shall haue inward peace that passeth all vnderstanding And now we proceed to another Point Where Paul in all his former Epistles nameth but grace and peace and writing to Timotheus whom he loved so dearely addeth mercie in his Salutation we note that The degree of affection cannot be covered Doct. 9. As the truth so the measure of loue will show it selfe and and not in words onely but likewise in action Doe we not see this in Iacob towards Rachel Ioseph to Beniamin Ionathan to David And the people to Ionathan Gen. 33. 2. and 43. vlt. 1 Sam. 20. 2. c. For the disposition of the heart over-ruleth the outward Reas 1. members and like a strong streame moueth all the wheeles according to its motion 2. As he that loues would declare 2. the truth of it so would he its degree
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
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
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
and not pray for him no sooner shall a man begin to petition God for himselfe but whom he most affecteth will come to his remembrance Thus was it with that good man so is it with all that are like affected Night and day The Doctrine is this that As in the day so the faithfull pray in the night season Doct. 12. Morning and evening did David call vpon God at midnight at midnight was his voyce lifted vp to the Lord Did not Christ this And was it not the practise of his Disciples And the custome of the Churches Psal 119. 62. Acts. 16. 25. For there is no time wherein their prayers may not be Reas 1. heard the promise is made as to all places so to all seasons Then is the time quiet and still freest from distractions Reas 2. so that a man shall in a speciall manner draw neere to God and speake to him more familiarly For darkenesse shutting the outward sences and no noyse annoying them the inward are more free and better fitted for this action Also they delight in prayer and that moues them What Reas 3. causeth vnchrifts to game night vpon night Fishers to angle Yonkers to runne vp and downe in that season if pleasure or profit did not allure them And many occasions may fall out to induce them as oppositions Reas 4. of adversaries terrible dreames or the apprehension of some danger yea such an habit by the frequent vse of prayer in the day may be got that in the night they cannot leaue it What a dissimilitude then is here betwixt them and some Vse 1. persons For are there not many who neither pray night nor day It s a brand of a wicked man not to call vpon God at all and of an hypocrite not to pray at all times at all seasons Iob. 27. 10. Psal 14. 4. Pray then in the day and in the night let nor thy tongue Vse 2. cease for thou knowest not whether shall prosper better this or that VERS 4. Desiring to see thee mindfull of thy teares that I may be filled with ioy IN this Verse wee may obserue three things The Logicall resolution 1. That Paul longed to see Timothie which is also another argument of his affection 2. That he remembred Timothies weeping being a token of his loue to Paul and a meanes to encrease his affection to Timotheus 3. The end is laid downe why Paul was so willing to see his sonne and that is that he might be filled with ioy Desiring The word signifies an earnest desire such as is The Theologicall exposition impatient of delay To see Seeing is either with the eye of the mind or of the bodie the latter is here meant though the word be often vsed in the former sence Mindfull of thy teares Minding or remembring some thinke Paul alludes to Acts. 20. 37. Teares be some-time tooke for the gumme or iuyce of a Tree but here is meant the water which flowed from the eyes of Timotheus by which is vnderstood his sorrow and griefe for their separation That I may be filled Filled is a Metaphor and hath in it two things 1. A subiect of capacitie 2. An adiunct of equall proportion or quantitie Paul had a spirituall emptinesse With ioy Ioy is secret in the heart gladnesse may more evidently appeare in the face or outward gesture It hath in Scripture many acceptations here may be meant comfort and spirituall mirth For his absence might weaken his reioycing especially being in prison as also Paul having not any to assist him I though absent in body yet am not forgetfull of the The Metaphrase sorrow and griefe that thou endurest and by thy mourning at our departure a-sunder manifested the which doth increase mine affection vnto thee it being a signe of thine affection vnto me and makes me very desirous to see thee and that amongst other things I might be refreshed and in this affliction haue some addition and increase of farther ioy and spirituall comfort the which at thy comming I nothing doubt but to be filled with Where Paul desires to see Timothie so earnestly and yet Doctrines deduced Doct. 1. had writ so large an Epistle to him we note that Personall presence is to be preferred aboue writing The one is good but the other is better This was the cause why the same Apostle was so desirous to see the Romanes Why he so often purposed to come to the Thessalonians and why the Author to the Hebrewes willed them the more earnestly to pray that he might be restored vnto them the more quickly Rom. 1. 11. 15. 28. Heb. 13. 19. 1 Thes 2. 18. 3. 10. For is it not more painfull to declare the truth by pen Reas 1. than by speech This is the reason why the Evangelist having many things to write would not write with Paper and inke but trusted to see his friends and to speake mouth to mouth face to face 2. Ioh. 2. 3. Ioh. 13. 14. Againe In personall presence we may propound questions Reas 2. make o●iections reueale our spirituall wants and be the better resolved relieued It s good to haue the Physitian of the soule with vs for so with speed we may be cured of all our maladies A liuely voice stirreth vp the graces of God in a speciall Reas 3. manner milke from the breast doth more nourish than that which commeth out of the vessell for part of the spirit is spilt exhaust will not the countenance of a man as lightning before thunder prepare provoke to more attention image is the onely Obiect of his loue and doth not euerie good man in part resemble that and cary it about with him doe not the sparkles of grace and wisdome appeare in their faces Is there not a kind of diuine influence in their speeches They in some measure resemble their father as deare children and from the contrarie ground the wicked are an abomination to the iust They will build vp one another in their holie faith consult Reas 4. for the good of the Church and tell one another what the Lord hath done for their soules yea the very sight of a good Psal 66. 16. man in the morning a dreame of him in the night will make one walk with more cheerfulnes all the day following The face of the faithfull is like the Loadstone it conveyeth strength to many and yet is neuer the weaker poorer and as the one is reputed a great wonder in nature so is the other as great a wonder in grace This must teach those to be gratefull to God when hee Vse 1. affordeth so great a fauour We would better know the worth of it if we were a while in the want of it Had but some of vs made such a iourney as David did to Gath or Iacob to Padan-Aram had we liued a while in Meshech and pitched our tents a part in Kedar then the sight of
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
of an husband or a wife either for the How to choose a good husband rules will hold in that respect also two things must be regarded first the person secondly the portion The person is to be respected afore the portion for diuers reasons 1. For he is of more worth 2. He being bad may soone mis-spend it 3. What comfort can that woman haue in goods her husband wanting grace and 4. Otherwise she may be said not to marrie the man but the money We must crosse the worlds custome and first say what is he then what hath he Now in the person two things are to be considered the one grace the other nature Grace must be regarded in the election and much set by For what is beauty or birth or wealth without this but very vanity And in grace wee may consider either the truth of it or the degree of it If we in the iudgement of charitie finde some beginnings and some sprouts of this tree wee may not reiect such a plant for it will grow and in time come to greater perfection but if we finde none at all this is not to marry in the Lord. 1 Cor. 7. 39. Some may demand may not one marry with one that Quest hath not so farre as she can iudge any sauing grace at all being tractable and hopefull Diuerse answer diuersly but I say the safest way is to Ans make a good things as sure as we can And it s a safe course when we haue choyce to choose the best Nay take heed that he whom thou art well perswaded of doe not deceiue thee and proue bad enough The next thing to be respected in the person is the nature or his disposition the which will be more meeke and gentle austere and froward A little grace in a crooked crabbed nature will not easily be perceiued in a good tractable nature it will and shew excellent Wherefore if the disposition constitution and complexion content thee aswell as grace there will bee the greatest strongest and durablest bond of affection It is a fault in some that are carelesse in this respect and cry giue me grace and let him be crooked or deformed or froward that will neuer trouble me Thou art deceiued my friend a little Sugar in sweete wine makes it excellent but a great quantitie in tart will not change the tast so when grace and nature doe both answere thy desires then will thy loue and content be the greater Wee haue in our selues a double man and if thou canst please both vse it rather Next the goodnes of the cloth regard the colour and when thou hast found grace haue an eye to nature The second generall thing is the portion maintenance must be had or loue will waxe cold And the Lord prouided for Adam before hee put him into this condition And portions may be in hand or in hope In hand either good domesticall or terrestriall grounds mines pondes c. The portion in hope is either the promise of Parents friends or the fruits of ones hands hauing an honest calling The latter is good but the first is better By all this wee may be directed how to know a good husband and a very good or a bad and a very bad husband If a man haue much grace an ingenuous and tractable nature accompanied with lands and possessions this is a very good husband If true grace a tractable disposition and a small promised future portion This man is not though not equall to the first to be altogether reiected Indeed naturally we desire lands For wanting much faith wee liue by sence and earth is least subiect to be remoued from vs. And on the contrarie when men are not sanctified of a froward disposition and neither haue goods in hand or in hope these must needs proue if the Lord worke not aboue mans reach euill husbands ●angerous to match withall Wherefore in thy choyce be wise as the Serpent and lay hands on no man rashlie But how shall a gracious man be knowne 1. If he take Foure signes of a gracious man delight in the societie of the Godly 2. If gracious words proceed out of his mouth 3. If he bee well reported of 4. If hee make choyce of thee for grace not goods and this may appeare if he refuse another that hath a greater portion than thy selfe When I call to remembrance the vnfeigned faith These Doct. 7. words be the first in the verse yet we haue made choyce to handle them last Out of which we note that Vnfeigned faith cannot be had but it will be heard of Paul could not remember but what he had either heard or seene For rememberance is of things past and so properly to be vnderstood here Faith will get fame and cannot be hid Fire will giue light the wind makes a noyse and so will faith vnfained be perceiued Rom. 1. 8. Coll. 1. 4. Why should this be so For it will by its effects declare it selfe to the world If Reas 1. roots be found in the earth some sprigges will be sprouting Hot riuers will smoke and a liuing heart set the pulse a working So will faith in the soule sprout smoke and worke apparently It is ordinarily conceiued in sorrow and borne with Reas 2. great gronings Before it be begot and brought forth there will be some stirre and striuings And can the trauell of a woman be hid or a Prince bee borne without rumor Great report Meanes must also be vsed to mainetaine it as hearing Reas 3. reading singing praying conferring and will not the world and good men too take notice of these things these are like so many flashes which argue fire for certaine And the Deuill too will put to his hand to declare it for then like Herod he will goe about by all meanes to murther Reas 4. it He would eate vp this seede wither this branch if neither yet hee will sow some cockle to choke it or send some pur-blinde crow to pecke about it Truely the sunne may assoone runne his full course in the equinoctiall about the whold Globe vnseene as faith passe her Pilgrimage till death and not be heard of Doe not those then incurre reproofe that would be reputed Vse 1. faithfull yet their bruit must not goe abroad they would willingly goe to heauen but like Balaam it shall be betweene two wals or in corners What hope is their that men will fight when they tremble to bee termed Souldiers resist to blood and cannot suffer to be seene in the combate doe these thinke to steale their passage and not pay their fare to heauen to be wiser than their forerunner and Grand-Captaine the Lord Iesus take heed lest now walking folded in the ragges of darkenesse thou be not one day wrapped in the robes of blacknesse This may meete with those also that will commend for Vse 2. a handfull of Barley at the day of death such whose faith was
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
spirit extraordinary effectuall calling is immediately by the spirit without the word The calling here is effectuall and in respect of Pauls manner of being called seemes extraordinary though not so in regard of Timotheus Act. 9. Vs. That is me Paul and thee my sonne yet all the elect either haue beene or shall be called with an holy calling With an holy calling Here 's another distinction of callings Holines it is either personall or by imputation So God is called holy Yea he is holines it selfe Personall holines is either inherent or actuall and both these are to bee found in the subiects of this calling though not perfectly yet in some degree Besides imputatiue holines is double also 1. When Holines imputed 1. to persons 2. things Christs holines is made ours for hee is our sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. And as our sinnes were made his sinnes and hee became a sinner by imputation so his holines is made ours and we without sinne by imputation Finally holines is ascribed to the word to the Sabbath and many other things because they are causes of holines or times wherein we are specially commanded to serue God in the duties of the first table or in that the things be not applyed to a common vse and in some one of these senses or other as wee shall heare more anone this calling is said to be holy Not according to our workes That is not for the prevision and foreknowledge of mans faith or merits But according to his purpose and grace viz. Freely and of his meere mercy and from no other ground Which was giuen to vs in Christ Iesus before the world was 1. Here Paul giueth a strong reason why their workes were not the cause of their calling in the word Giuen for a gift must be free and 2. He draweth another from the time it was giuen viz. before the world was 1. From all eternity And amongst many other arguments this is not the The Metaphrase least for to moue and instigate thee to preach the Gospel to beare witnesse to the truth to partake of the afflections which I and others suffer in as much as the Lord of his meere grace and favour before any thing had a being and without any regard at al of thy faith workes or merit hath freed thee from all dangers placed thee in a good condition and in time called thee effectually by his blessed Spirit with such an honorable and holy calling as he hath done me and will also preserue thee to his heauenly Kingdome through the Redemption of Christ his sonne our onely Saviour and Mediatour If we hold this verse as a digression from the former matter The deductiō of doctrines then this poynt will follow that A Digression is warrantable either in words or writing Doct. 1. And the Scripture else where doth confirme this proceeding Gen. 4. 23. Isay 7. 16. For it is a meanes to stirre vp better attention and to Reas 1. draw the Auditors more strictly and respectiuely for to giue heed to what followeth The Hawke sometimes goeth afarre off that shee may get the wind and bee better able at the stoope to strike and catch her prey And this Crypsis in preaching may be vsed Againe the Spirit of God may draw the tongue sometime Reas 2. to speake what we haue not purposed for the good of some particular person who is in the assembly and some present occasion may minister iust occasion to doe the same as wee see and know by our daily experience Then let not the Auditor be too forward in censuring the Vse 1. preacher for digression from the matter in hand for God may haue a secret hand therein that we for the present are not ●ware of for the comforting or conuerting of some person present And this may warrant the Minister in this kind of proceeding Vse 2. Cautions for Digressions Yet Cautions must be observed 1. See it bee not for want of study through idlenesse or thy owne neglect and carelesnes to be well provided 2. Forg●● not to returne to thy former matter and purpose for otherwise a iudicious Auditor wil feare as Sauls father did him when he had long sought his Asses that the preacher hath lost himselfe Againe where Paul in the former verse and the last word thereof hauing named God doth in this make a description of his goodnes we note that It is vsuall with good men when they name the Lord to make Doct. 2. mention of his mercies or some benefit they haue receiued from him For they would haue him to receiue all glory We vse in Reas 1. the naming of our friends to make mention of the kindnes we haue receiued from them to shew our thankfulnes and that they might be praised Againe they would not haue the Lords name tooke vp in Reas 2. vaine or be profained and the more they can speake to his praise the more inward comfort they haue Wee ioy in the commendation of those wee most affect so doe the children of God in the due prayse of their father Would to God that this were the custome of our country Vse 1. but with too many it is not We vse his name but alas how often in vaine not once making mention of the least of his mercies nay it were wel if some did not first sweare by it and next declare what villany they themselues haue committed But if we would glorifie our heauenly father haue Vse 2. others to speake to his praise shew foorth our thankfulnes and haue much inward comfort let vs couple his name and his mercies together and hee that doth this shall haue a secret and hidden ioy stirred vp in his heart Is it not vsuall that if we speake much of a friend and his fauours to vs for others to say Sure you are beholden to or you are in loue with such a one wil not such sayings make vs right glad In the third place if we consider these words as they are a motiue cause and depend on the former then this is the doctrine that will follow that He who would not faint but suffer affliction is still to haue an Doct. 3. ●ye to his Salvation Moses had respect to the recompence of reward and thereby was moved to suffer affliction with the people of God for a season The Saints looked for a better resurrection therefore endured Racking sawing asunder and resisted v●to bloud The forerunner and finisher of our faith Christ our Lord he setting before him the glory provided for him endured the crosse and despised the shame Heb. 11. 24. 35. and 12. 2. Because varying of the obiect varieth the minds motion Reas 1. Psal 40. When Dauid considered his misery hee cried out I am poore and needy but when he thought on the affection of God towards him he altered his ioy and note saying Yet the Lord thinketh on me Besides saluation is a
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
Ieremiah Iosiah Timothy and others that of children were called that Parents might be encouraged to vse the meanes of conversion and not be without all hope of a blessing And so we doe of some old men as of Abraham called at 70 yeares of age and it seemeth probable by Nichodemus his answere to Christ that he himselfe was an old man Iohn 3. This no doubt is written that we might not Aged persons rarely called despaire of any for God can call whomsoeuer and whensoeuer he will Yet men and women of great age are not often called 1. For they are most vnfit for the Lords worke what man will take an aged person to make a watch or to become a Musition for are not his fingers set which should bee nimble for such a calling how vnhandsomely will they goe about so curious an instrument or action And shall the Lord then not make choise of the fittest persons to performe his actions 2. Old men haue gotten a stronger habit of sinne then others what saith Christ of such Can a Blackamore change his skin and a Leopard his spotts then may ye doe well that are accustomed to doe evill 3. Sathan hath more possession of such people and is the harder to be cast out 4. We read in the Gospell that God calles at the third houre sixt houre ninth and eleuenth houre why not at the twelfe making an equall distribution I cannot tell I doe but guesle but it may be because at the twelfth houre either none or few are called I would not be mistaken here as though this were vnpossible with God but that men might be moued not to procrastinate and deferre their conuersion I haue added this And when trees haue beene often watered pruned and dunged yet beare not doth not the Lord of the vineyard bid them to be cut downe Luk. 13. for why make they the ground barren wicked men hinder the good of others This for the time of calling The manner how followeth and that is either violently How the Lord calleth or more gently God is wise in all his proceedings and therefore calleth as he seeth needfull Some he peirceth to the very hart woundeth the spirit causeth them to quake and tremble exceedingly at the voice of his power others he calleth with a still and quiet voice as is most conuenient The discreet Mother hauing a child stubborne vntoward shaketh the rod when as one that is more meeke and tractatable is allured by a cherry or apple and euen so dealeth the Lord by his chosen children for he calleth them according to their dispositions and seuerall qualities yet alwaies so as they come and obey his voice 2. And this may serue to haue beene spoken of their cutting off both for time and manner Next their fitting followeth the which consisteth of 2. branches the one Compunction the other desperation When the Cyon is cut off from the tree then in order it followeth that it be fitted to be set into the stocke into which it is to be grasted And so when by the knife of the law we are either violently or more leisurely lopped from the old oliue it ensueth that wee be fitted to be set into the new Christ the Lord. Now this compunction of heart hath two degrees the one rendeth asunder the very ioynts and sinewes pierceth and entreth into the very bones and the marrow But the other doth not wound so deepe but as it were skarreth the skin and ●ateth into the flesh For as some be let bloud in the finger others in the arme or head so God being a most skilfull Chirurgion doth pricke and let vs bloud as he discerneth the nature of our disease The child came to himselfe by neezing seuentimes 2 King 4. 35. And after this compunction followeth an holy desperation which consisteth in the denying of a mans owne merits and relying on the Lord for mercy for his sinnes being great and many his good workes not any at all he is therby brought to despaire in regard of himselfe and also to call the mercy of God into question Yet not doubting whether the Lord can but whether he will or not grant him a pardon for his sinne Now doth the sinner hang the head smite his hand vpon his thigh cry earnestly to God for mercy and seeke to the Minister the Phisition of the spirit for grace and comfort And this compunction and holy desperation is greater in some then other for these Reasons 1. Some man may haue had many outward calls by the Sixe reasons why all men are not called a like word and inward motions by the Spirit the which hee hauing resisted and not obeyed then hee is brought to feare that he hath sinned the sinne vnto death And if he hath any knowledge in the Scriptures peradventure will bring that to fight against himselfe especially that place in Heb. 6. or 10. 2. Other some haue had good education and haue bin trained vp in the Scriptures of children so that they haue beene restrained from many grosser sinnes then others haue committed Whence it followeth that there is degrees of compunction Trees that haue beene long vnpruned haue the more cuts when they come to be lopped and dressed 3. Peraduenture the Lord hath a purpose to send some one of his children for to dwell like Lot in Sodom or Ioseph in Egypt and there he foreseeing that they shall haue weake provocations to good strong temptations to evill letteth them drinke the more deepely of the dregs of sinne that they in future time the rather may be moued to avoyd it For a wounded spirit and troubled conscience for sinne will proue for time to come an excellent Tutor Hee that hath burnt his feete with treading on the hot stone will looke the better to his steps in all his iourney afterward 4. All men haue not constitutions of body alike some be strong others weake so that that measure which will but cure the one humble him sufficiently would kill the other and bruise him to powder And if some were so cast downe as others be they being poore men and to liue by great toyle and dayly labour would neuer be able to execute the duties of their calling and to get their bread by the workes of their hands A man in the breaking of his beast will haue an eye to that and shall not the Lord much more in the reclaiming of his children 5. God appointeth some to be sonnes of thunder to speake with power and authoritie to Preach amongst a people whose faces be as brasse and neckes like sinewes of yron therefore he bringeth them home as we say with a witnes at their conuersion For as he that hath receiued much wrong by a bad neighbour will speake worse of him then he can who hath had lesser iniuries at his hand so will such as haue felt the enmity of sinne the most preach more fervently against it then he who hath not felt the sting
secret which by experience he hath search't into 6. He is able to comfort others by the same meanes and with the same comforts he was comforted of the Lord. And from this knowledge of experience a poore vnlettered man may be a more skilfull P●●●ition to a wounded spirit then a more learned Clearke can These things and many more doth the 〈◊〉 called know by his owne experience And this is that preaching and wisedome which the world co●●●s foolishnes and not many as Paul sayth great men 1 Cor. 1. 23. 26. wise men and noblemen are called vnto But yet for all this that hath beene said least some man might deceiue himselfe and not make his calling and election sure I will further set downe some inseparable effects that accompany effectuall vocation 1. He is in a wonderfull admiration to see what an alteration Fruites or effects of effectuall calling the Lord hath wrought in him Peter neuer admired more at his strange deliuery by the Angel out of that strong prison then that man doth in being brought into the kingdome of freedome out of spirituall bondage and darknesse 2. He hath mixt affections terror and feare in looking backe on the obiect of his former condition and ioy vnspeakeable glorious in consideration of his present good condition Now he can both sigh and reioyce at one and the same instant like the men at the building of the second Temple Ezr. 3. 13. 3. Now he will eate his meate with a glad heart follow the duties of his calling with readines sing Psalmes of praise for his late and great deliuery sleepe and rest in peace for the Lord accepteth him And we are the most forward to all good duties when we are most assured of the Lords fauour and our owne salvation And this the reason why Sathan Note so strongly tempteth the faithfull to doubt and despaire 4. If he haue in former time liued in none or an vnlawfull calling now will he alter his course and take a better for note this when God calls any to mercy as hee did Adam he sets them againe in a lawfull calling He neuer called the Deuill therefore let him goe compasse the world and so doth the Rabble of Fryers disordered people as Bearewards players and idle persons liue out of a calling and goe a compassing its likely in that God hath not yet effectually called them for if he had they would haue gone to work And there is no surer signe of one effectually called by God then to liue in and worke and performe the duties of a lawfull calling and no more fearefull note of a man not called to mercy then to haue none or to abide in an vnlawfull calling 5. He now with Lydia will attend to Pauls voice depend vpon the word and in nothing reioyceth more then to heare the Lord speake to him in his ordinances Nay he will not omitt any meanes to further him in the course of Godlines 6. Finally he will often call vpon God by praier praise him for his great deliuerance shew what the Lord hath done for his soule and as much as in him lyeth seeke to call home others that God might be glorified and they with him saued I haue the longer insisted vpon this point because it is the very first entrance to all true blessednesse and the onely ground of our sound comfort and great reioycing With an holy calling Whence we gather that The calling wherwith Gods children are called is an holy calling Doct. 10. The Author of the Hebrewes stiles it a celestiall calling and elsewhere it s said to be an honourable or high calling See Heb. 3. 1. Phil. 3. 14. 2 Thes 1. 11. For the causes of it are holy God Christ the Spirit and Reas 1. the word are all said to be holy And the Ministers for the most part are holy who be instruments in this action I say for the most part for a man not called I iudge may Whether Preachers not called can call others call others For 1. I dare not tye the Spirit to the dignitie of any mans person 2. Such may be fitted for the Ministery and sent of God shall they not attaine to their end 3. Paul reioyced that Christ though by the false Apostles of enuy was preached why did he this if they could not call others at the loast build vp others 4. And lastly hee that holdes the contraly cannot be assured o● the truth of his owne conversion for we are not infallibly certified what Ministers be truly called For 1. Some mens sinnes goe before hand others follow after 2. God only knoweth the hearts of all the sonnes of men 3. No man knoweth the thoughts of man but the Spirit that is in him And he that is not certaine of this cannot be assured of the other for so long as I doubt of the Ministers conversion holding this I must needs call my owne in question because God vseth man in the conuersion of man I am not ignorant of some who hold the contrary and of their obiections and Scripture against this position But yet I hold that an vnconverted Minister may convert though few and seldome as we see by experince in former times and in our daies also And in regard of the end too the subiects from which we are called and to which we be called it s an holy calling For 1. We are called from darknes to light 2. From vncleannes Reas 2. 1 Pet. 2. 9. 1 Thes 4. 7. Heb. 3. 1. Psal 15. 1. to holines 3. From wicked men and Dinels to the communion of Saints and Angels 4. We are called from earth that is polluted vnto heauen the holy Mountaine of the Lord. This serveth first to answere an obiection of wicked men Vse 1. who demand why men will not run with them to the same excesse of ryot Why the Reason is In that they be called with an holy calling Wicked and lewd persons tumble in their sinne like the sow in the mire but what mervaile seing they be not the called of the Lord When men haue had an holy calling then will they haue an holy conversation And by this Doctrine we may try the truth of our calling Vse 2. Have we cast off the wayes of darkenesse singled our selues from the profaine multitude and left sinne and vncleannes behind 's Doe we purge our selues as Christ is pure striue to be cleansed from the filthines of the flesh and spirit and to be presented without spot and blameles●e in the day of our Lord why then we are called with an holy calling for as effectuall vocation is a true signe of salvation so is holines of our effectuall vocation This Doctrine may be of great comfort to such as doubt Vse 3. of the truth of their calling Some because they are not able precisely to say I was called such a time by such a man and in such a manner feare they were neuer called at all
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
if the remembrance of the second death cause thee to quake and tremble yet feare not for the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against thee This ought alwaies in these pangs of terrour to wipe all teares from thine eies And the reason we are so often astonished is because we doe not minde o● beleeue this thing For if we did we would cry out with ioy O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victorie This salue is good for the fourefold forenamed soare This Physicke like Moses rod will remoue all death whatsoeuer Wherefore in thy greatest feare call to mind that death by Christ is abolished And hath Christs death destroyed death then haue a Vse 3. care that ye bring it not againe into the world Giue not food to this infant reuiue not him by any meanes For as Iudas his master it will one day betray thee lift vp his heele against thee Adam could bring in death but he must be more then a meere man who can vtterly destroy him yet striue thou to tread this serpent vnder thy feet bruise his head against the stones suffer him not to crawle or creepe For in so doing thou shalt be blessed But may some say how might I destroy death Quest Ans 1. In a word diuerse wayes 1. Thou must auoyd sinne for by sinne death came into the world Sinne to death is like fuell to the fire food to the faint wine to the weake and Physicke to the distempered patients so that he who sinnes reviues death restores to him his sting and pulleth him with speed vnto the doore and into the very inward parts of the soule And for thy better direction consider what sinnes haue brought death corporall spirituall 1. Drunkennes Deut. 21. 20. 2. Gluttonie Luk. 12. 20. 3. Vnthriftinesse Pro. 6. 12. 15. 4. Idlenesse Ezek. 16. 49. 5. Pride Acts 12. vlt. 6. Lying Acts. 5. 5. 7. Scoffing of the Prophets 2 Kin. 2. 23. 8. Ignorance Hos 4. 6. 9. Infidelity Iude 5. 10. Disobedience to Parents Pro. 30. 17. 11. Want of preparation to the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11. 30. Finally all sinne whateuer brings death For the soule that sinneth shall die the Ezech. 18. 4. death Wouldst thou then crucifie this Barrabas that too often escapeth when Christ is executed see good dayes on earth haue grace to flourish in thee the first death to bee advantage to thee and escape the second why auoyd sinne and all the occasi●ns thereof abandon and flee Behold I haue told thee before 2. Thou must mortifie th● earthly members crucifie thy 2. inward corruptions and str●ue to be clensed from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit For as a disease in the body may cause death as well as some outward accident so may some secret corruption cherished in the heart as soone as some externall and grosse transgression 3. Cherish the life of grace within thee For if it flourish 3. death shall perish When corne and cockle grow together that which is the more watered will be the further from withering then feed the spirit and the flesh shall pine away 4. Often meditate of the efficacie of Christs death For as 4. the great flame will draw the lesse sparke of heate out of the finger if held to it so bring the eye of our mindes close to this obiect and death will pine away The lesser shall bee deuoured of the stronger We haue some who hold Christs death to worke this How Christs death kils death in vs. death in vs not onely as meritorious or by way of meditation but operatiuely as an efficient cause produceth its effect Yet to me it seemes to be otherwise For though it be certainly true in the two former respects yet the last is doubtfull and that for these reasons 1. Death is a meere priuation and therefore being nothing cannot produce by way of causation any perfect effect 1. Death is a meere priuation and therefoer being nothing cannot produce by way of causation any perfect effect 2. The death of Christ was a curse therefore causeth good by accident not of its owne nature Whereby the way we see an other errour to be in those who hold that Christs death without his actiue obedience is absolutely sufficient for our iustification But the succeeding arguments may serue to confirme the contrarie 1. That obedience which the law requireth is necessarie for our iustification But the law requireth actiue obedience therefore actiue obedience is necessarie for our iustification The former proposition I suppose will be granted neither can the latter vpon any good ground be denied Because the iustice of the Law is still inforce time not changing the nature of it 2. That obedience which was to haue iustified man before his fall is requisite to iustifie him being fallen But actiue obedience was to haue iustified man before his fall Therefore actiue obedience is requisite to iustifie him being fallen What can be obiected against this argument for the present I perceiue not 3. That obedience which Paul opposeth to his owne righteousnes which was of the law concurreth to our iustification But the actiue obedience of Christ Paul opposeth to his owne righteousnesse which was of the Law Phil. 3. 9. Therefore the actiue obedience of Christ concurreth to our iustification For who euer commenting on that text excludeth Christs actiue obedience And to say the truth passiue obedience is rather a satisfying of the threat than a fulfilling of the lawes precept 4. If the actuall breach of the Law made man vniust then the actuall obseruation of it must make him righteous But the actuall breach made him vniust therefore the actuall obseruation of the law must make him righteous Except we should maintaine that our surety Christ was bound onely to pay the forfeiture and not the principall which may not be admitted For man after his fall incurred a doubled debt both which Christ was to discharge else hee had not satisfied the full payment to God our creditor And doth not actiue obedience the one as passiue the other It s death that must remoue death life that must procure life For contrary effects must haue contrary causes such as life and death be A sharp powder or water may eate off the thicke filme that couereth the eye and hindereth sight but there is another internall principle is the cause of seeing In like manner the death of Christ may remoue what hindereth life Yet there must be another primarie cause for the procuring and conseruing of it For conclusion Christ in suffering obeyed and in obeying suffered Wherefore what God hath ioyned together let no man renta sunder And if death through Christ be abolished and by no Vse 4. other then deaths destruction was no easie action For who but he could haue done it If it had bin to haue bin abolished by another shall wee thinke then that the father would not haue spared his onely sonne But you may
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
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
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
cryed Lord establish me Psal 51. 12. 119. 116. 4. When men are carried about with euery winde of doctrine For what one man maketh firme another in teaching Ephes 4. 14. the contrary dissolveth weakeneth He that runs to euery Physician to know the state of his body shall proue a weake and infirme Patient 5. Vnmortified lusts if they be let loose and cherished 2 Tim. 3. 7. in the heart the soule like him that standeth on a slippery place will be reeling sliding 6. Finally when men will cast their eyes on their owne infirmities and not looke to him that accepteth the minde and honest intent of the heart for the deed they shall still Rom. 7. vlt. be wauering doubting And now to come to another Collection which is that The best way to saue and secure the soule is to commit it into Doct. 10. the hands of God For that which was the best to Paul and others will be the safest way for vs also Psal 32. 7. 71. 1. Iudg. 12. 3. Dan. 5. 17. Esth 4. 16. For we are weake and our enemies be many powerfull Reas 1. subtill and malicious Sathan could fetch a prey out of Paradise one from amongst the Apostles God hath all the properties of a good keeper 1. he is wise Reas 2. Iob. 9. 4. Psal 121. 3. 4. 2. powerfull 3. watchfull 4. faithfull He hath giuen lawes to be faithfull and then shall not hee This discouereth the indiscretion of many For some put their confidence in Chariots and Horses others in the arme of flesh Millions as the Papists in the Creatures but passe by the Creator But can those stay the swelling flouds from drowning the earth from deuouring the plague and pestilence from destroying and Sathan with all his huge hoast from tempting and condemning These men stand Iob. 26. 7. on the Ice leane on a broken staffe and as the Lord is said to doe the earth hang the security and safetie of their soules vpon nothing But ye that would be wise and preserued from all dangers Vse 2. cast your care vpon God● make him your secret place and haue your eye alwaies towards him For it s he and there is not another that can keepe you safe and secure at all times in all dangers And in regard whatsoeuer we weene its no easie matter practise these two Rules following to further thee Helps to commit the to god 1. Learne to commit lesse matters of this life to him and to trust him with smaller things for he that cannot doe the lesser it 's impossible for him to doe the greater Hee that will not trust God with his earthly substance can neuer credit him with his soule and salvation This Rule is worthy the consideration and practise 2. Striue to keepe thy soule holy and vnspotted from all sinne We will blush to commit into the custody of our friend any thing that is polluted and vncleane and can we haue the hearts to commend into the hands of God who is Holines it selfe a corrupted impure and a soule defiled with sinne What if we could doe it will he receiue it thinke we No verily And there be certaine times when we are to commit our Speciall times when to commit the soule to God Psal 4. vlt. soules especially into the hands of God And that ordinary or extraordinary The ordinary is the Morning and Euening David in the euening would commend his soule into the Lords hand for he knew that his sleepe might be his death and his bed his graue but in so doing he should sleepe soundly and securely It were an excellent thing if we could giue God our last thoughts before we close vp our eyes then would we when we awake finde our mindes fixed on him And what if death should come Yet our soules would be with him and preserved in safetie And in the Morning we must ordinarily doe this Prou. 27. 1. for who knoweth what a day may bring foorth The wise King compares a day to a woman with child who often laboureth at an vnlooked for houre And haue wee not seene our Mother the day bring to light strange and vnexpected birthes The extraordinary times of committing our selues to God are in troubles or at death This did that good Prophet in time of persecution Into thy hand I comm●nd my spirit for thou hast redeemed me O Lord God of truth Psal 31. 5. Iudg. 12. 3. And when Stephen was stoned to death hee Act 7. 59. cryed Lord Iesus receiue my spirit and Christ when his houre was come Father into thy hands I commend my Soule Luk. 23. 46. Let vs then trust the Lord with smaller matters keepe our soules vnspotted Morning and Euening commend them constantly vnto him so in afflication persecution and death we shall haue ability and boldnes to doe the same Vse makes perfect a good habit is hardly got So not easily lost For he that hath vsed to commit his soule to God in the times of peace shall with ease doe it in time of danger Yea let such a man but dreame of death or drowning in his broken sleepe his mind will reflect it selfe on the Lord and he run vnto him for perservation Grounded Christians know the truth of this by experience And in Conclusion know that the oftener we commit our soules vnto God and draw the neerer him in this duty why let death come how and when and where it can or shall come we shall feare it the lesser or any euill but embrace it entertaine it shutting vp the eyes of our bodies with the which our minds now see God as through a paire of spectacles and more clearely and comfortably behold him with the naked eye of our spirits Now whereas Paul maketh mention of the Lords ability we note thence that God is a God of Power Doct. 11. He is called the strong and mighty God all-sufficient that can doe whatsoeuer h●e will Gen. 17. 1. Exod. 34. 6. 1 Cor. 6. 18 Apoc. 1. 8. Math. 19. 26. The Reasons follow For he is the first Ens or being and altogether perfect and Reas 1. independant he hath his beginning of himselfe and doth not participate of any borrowed power or exhibited ability Therefore no impotency or imperfection can be found in him hee being of himselfe and the sole cause of all created power Againe he is one most simple and pure act immutable Reas 2. eternall and euery way blessed Therefore hee cannot be hindered or resisted Neither is he subiect to any passion for he is not compounded of any simples Passion proceeds from matter and presupposeth an imperfection Before we come to apply this poynt we will speake somewhat of his power for our better vnderstanding and information The power of God is that whereby he is able to doe all things The Power of God defined possible I say possible for there be that contradict his essence and the nature
vs the earth to swallow vs Tyrants to murther vs Death to terrifie vs or hel it selfe to include vs ceize on vs Yet looke vp to Gods Omnipotency and we shall be bold as the Lyon quenching Sathans darts walking vpon the waters as vpon dry land deride death make a mocke of Hell it selfe David no doubt thought on this Psal 23. 27 46. Rom. 8. 31. Io. 10. 29. therfore he would not feare the wicked but walke in the valley of death and neuer tremble at the most terrible tidings For if God be with vs what matters it who be against vs None can plucke vs out of his hands And in respect of others this may moue vs to hope aboue hope for he can bring home the Rom. 11. 23. Iewes graffe them againe into the true Olive and make the withered branch to beare why should the Eunuch say I am and shall be a dead tree Isa 56. 3. And finally this should teach vs all to tremble before Vse 4. him and to stand in awe of his Maiestie for he can arme the least creature with power to destroy vs yea the caterpillars frogs and crawling lice to vexe and consume vs Oh that this were well considered and seriously thought vpon Would not fraile man tremble if this thing were well weighed We feare the water and fire as dangerous the Beare and Lyon least they deuoure vs And shall we not feare him that after death hath power to cast soule and body into hell Pilate thought to cause Christ to speake and answere him from this ground I am sure we should be moued to leaue sinne and to pray from the same It 's not our houses that can helpe vs our beds that will secure vs our great barnes purple and fine linnen that can protect vs For at midnight euen at midnight he can send his Angell to slay thousands and pale death who is no respecter of persons to haunt the court wither the greene branches and kill the strongest stoutest What a cry was sometimes in Egypt What fearefull newes to the rich man This night Luk. 12. 20. shall thy soule be tooke from thee Cannot he cause Achitophel for all his wit to hang himselfe and play the foole Iudas to be his owne executioner And Saul to fall on his owne sword Wherefore consider him that bindeth Kings in fetters and aduanceth the poore to great degree And the more thou shalt thinke on Gods power the stronger shall be thy faith the more firme thy hope the greater awe wilt thou stand in and be the more fearefull to sinne and forward to all good duties Then let this point take deepe impression and neuer depart out of thy mind And if thou wouldest haue experience of Gods power Psal 92. 5. 6. Rom 1. 20. 2 Cor. 12. 9. 1. Meditate on his workes of creation 2. Consider how he hath destroyed and dissolued the strong and cursed worke will is goodnes yet we adde evill for as the vnderstanding is exercised about truth and error though error be but a swerving from the truth and by accident part of the intellects obiect so is the Will conversant about good and euill in the same manner The Will may seeme to haue two contrary motions to will and nill the first embraceth good the second refuseth evill yet I haue sometimes thought that to nill is rather a cessation then an action For as the hand doth extend it selfe to apprehend what the eye iudgeth for good but moveth not at what is evill except by violence it were imposed vpon it so likewise it may seeme to be with the Will viz. acting about good resting in respect of evill And a man may be said to nill what he doth not will But we leaue this to the most learned to iudge of Goodnes may be considered either first or from a first The former is in God and indeed very good so that he willeth himselfe necessarily and primarily because he is the chiefest good and this may be said to be an internall not an externall action for so the acts of Gods will are distributed The latter is whatsoever proceedeth from God and this good is of two kindes either of nature or grace and his Will is conversant about them both as its proper though secondary obiect Finally Evill is likewise double the one the evill of sinne the other of punishment And in both the Will of GOD worketh though not directly and altogether with approbation For in no wise may we thinke that the Lord affecteth alloweth commandeth or allureth directly to sinne But forbiddeth disswadeth and punisheth it according to that These things haue I hated and the soule that sinneth shall Zach. 8. 17. Psal 5. 5. Ephes 5. 6. dye Notwithstanding the Lord though not by coaction or a forced necessitie permitteth and suffereth these things to be and doth dispose of them for good and profitable ends therefore he the rather doth suffer them then altogether prevent and hinder them For although evill as it is evill is not good yet that not onely good but also evill should be is good for the evill of sinne and affliction can the Lord turne to his glory and his childrens good and by direct opposites we the better perceiue which is the best But obserue that sinne and punishment of their owne nature are naught and become good by accident onely As we haue described the Will of God according to our power so we may in the next place vse a distinction But this must be well considered that Gods Will is but one it admitteth no diuision into Species yet as his wisedome is simple notwithstanding the Apostle calls it by reason its refracted in the creatures the manifold wisedome of God so in like fort for the same reason Gods Will may diversly be considered and distinguished Ephes 3. 10. And in the first place it may be said to be internall and The first Distinction of the Will of God externall And it s called internall because it worketh in him and hath God himselfe for his adequate and proper obiect for God willeth himselfe before he can will any other thing The externall is that whose obiect is said to be without God that is to say all created things or whatsoeuer is not himselfe The first is necessary and essentiall to God the second seemeth to be after a sort accidentall yet free and is the foundation and roote of all Contingents in the whole frame of Nature Againe Gods will is either secret or revealed We call it The second distinction of Gods Will. secret not in regard that he knoweth not before hand what he will will but in respect he keepeth it at the least for a time hid from vs As the day of a mans particular departure and the last iudgement Act. 1. 7. And this is but one and the same Will in God for the time of its manifestation and the manifestation it selfe are but adiuncts or accidentall
to it so that the secret will of God may be the revealed For before the Creation of the world Gods whole will was hidden in himselfe that afterward became manifest It was in Davids heart to build the Lord an house when he did declare it to the people it was then but one and the same will In the secret will of God two things are to be obserued And from all that hath beene said will many profitable lessons follow 1. We must take heede that we doe not conclude as if the Lord did worke all outward things of necessitie For his Will is free in respect of the outward obiect Gen. 45. 5. Act. 2. 23. Isai 10. 6. 7. 2. Because it is the first mover that therefore we conclude not He is the Author of sinne For God can doe the same which man doth yet free from iniquitie And 3. we must avoyde the error of those who imagine that because Gods Will worketh in all things that therefore God willeth sinne and punishment absolutely without any condition on mans part And 4. of them and their opinion wee must beware who thinke that Gods Will can make any thing lawfull be it neuer so vniust 5. Of those also who because Gods Will is vnchangeable therefore will vse no meanes at all for what they would pertake of 6. And finally Let vs all take heed that we maintaine not the heresie of the Monothelites who held because Christ was God therefore his Will was but one when as our Lord himselfe witnesseth the contrary Ioh. 6. 38. Math. 26. 39. And seeing that Gods Will is free and the first moving Vse 2. cause of all goodnesse Let vs. 1. prayse him for the good he hath bestowed on vs or at any time done by vs. 2. Depend vpon him for direction and abilitie in all our proceedings 3. Reverence the extraordinary acts of his Providence 4. Yeeld our selues and all our wayes with willingnes to be ruled and disposed as shall seeme best in his eyes 5. And as he willeth good and nilleth evill so let vs doe the same 6. In conclusion let vs alwayes pray Lord thy will be done and not ours If we doe these things we shall never fall but with our Apostle be confident in the assurance of the conservation of our soules which wee commit to him at the last day Let thy faith be fixed on Gods power and Will and then thou shalt haue the desires of thy heart and Will We might now come to speake of Pauls perswasion and assurance he had in God for his preservation Some of our Divines make fiue degrees of faith 1. A credence 2. an assurance 3. an affiance 4. a confidence and 5. a perswasion Perswasion seemes to be the greatest so that wee may collect that Of Faith there be distinct degrees Mat. 6. 30. 15. 28. Doct. 13. Mat. 8. 10. 13. 32. We reade of a faith no bigger then a graine of Mustard-seed and of a Plerophorie or full perswasion And in the Gospell mention is made of a little faith and of a great faith So that this point is manifest that there is two at the least distinct degrees of faith And not without Reason For some haue had greater meanes and liued longer vnder Reas 1. the powerfull Preaching of the Word then others who thereby are become strong in faith For as we see that trees which be planted in a good soyle neare the pleasant rivers and haue stood long doe flourish and spread more then they that haue growne in barren ground wanted watering and a shorter season so is it with the flower of faith Great meanes great faith little meanes the lesse faith except the Lord as sometimes he doth worke extraordinarily Some after their effectuall call haue beene more frequent Reas 2. and diligent in the vse of Gods ordinances then others more forward to doe good carefull to absteine from the least appearance of evill so that their faith is growne mightie Twinnes of equall age will outstrip one another by carefull attendance And this is to comfort the feeble minded and to support Vse 1. the weake in faith Be not deiected though thy faith carry thee not with a full gale to the kingdome of God for as all ships haue not alike sailes and winde all birds equally winged and all women infants of like proportion in every part so haue not all Christians the same degree of saving faith yet the weakest minde and lowest saile will carry the ship to shore as securely though not so speedily as if they were greater and the least true faith and hope will bring the sanctified soule to the haven of heaven as certainely though not so comfortably as the greatest But yet wee must not content our selues with this weake deg●●e we are to endevour for the strongest faith and the greatest measure goeth to the sea for water will not feare that he shall returne with his vessell emptie For what heate can dry vp the same And shall we doubt of grace when we goe to the fountaine it selfe whose depth is vnsearchable past sounding When we cast vp our heads the Sunne shineth in our faces and doth refresh and heate vs so by the act of Meditation we come vnder the beames of Gods mercy that shall confirme our feeble faith 2. Consider that Christ hath satisfied the Fathers iustice payd the full debt cancelled the bond and is making intercession for all repentant sinners Therefore in his Name Heb. 4. 16. goe boldly to the throne of grace What if it be called a Throne for greatnes Is it not a throne of Grace that resembles goodnes When Esau had killed Venison in his hand he went boldly for his blessing though he mist it But take thou Christ the Lambe of God and come with and in him vnto the Father and none can steale away thy blessing for God cannot be deceiued neither wanteth he mercy in store for such 3. Call to minde that the promises belong to such as are Mat. 11. 28. in doubt Come vnto me all that are weary and heavy laden and I will ease you Whom came Christ to saue Such as in their owne feeling not in Gods purpose were lost Whom will the Physician heale They that be sicke Vnto whom hath the Lord promised comfort to the mourners in Sion And who ever in godly sorrow sought the Lord but he returned Mat. 9. 2. with this encouragement My sonne be of good comfort for thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Salvation is entred into thy house 4. Finally Pray often in private for as the slender and still dew that falleth in the night doth more refresh the yong sprouting and tender buddes then more wet that falleth or a greater shower in the day So oftentimes the prayer made in secret prevaileth with God more then the publike for the encrease of faith Paul at his conversion prayed three dayes and three nights Yet vse all the ordinances of God for it sometimes
meanes to furnish our selues But will this winde blow this tyde returne this fire descend and this treasure be got when we expect it desire it No such matter Then take the oportunitie leost the time come and the evill dayes approach wherein we shall say that are haue no pleasure in them And let the rarenesse too of this thing worke in vs some desire to endeuour for it For all men haue not grace and faith it s sowne but in few Countries and where it is it s not found growing in each mans grounds Wee say that things farre fetcht and deare bought are the greatest dainties Why doth not this treasure come from farre and what Ship could bring it to vs except Christ the Lord What could purchase and ransome it but the precious bloud of the Sonne of God Will not these things allure thee Why then beware least the Lord haue a purpose to kill thee Keepe The thing we note from hence is this that Grace once gotten is to be preserved Doct. 2. We must hold fast the good gifts we haue and neither suffer sinne or Sathan to plucke them out of our hands And every where we are bid to grow therein Revel 2. 25. Heb. 6. 6. 2 Pet. 3. vlt. Lude 21. Because if grace grow weake the patterne will not be Reas 1. practised When all the parts of the naturall body be in a consumption can we walke and worke in the duties of our particular callings And if the New man waxe pale and pine away the pathes of Gods commands will not be run or trodden For as all naturall actions proceed from the bodies strength and the purest spirit so doe all spirituall from the vigour of grace and the Newman Againe if grace decay then corruption will grow for as Reas 2. it was in another sense said of Christ and Iohn the Baptist so may it of these two When the one encreaseth the other decreaseth This checketh the carelesnes of some Christians who Vse 1. play the Prodigall with their spirituall portions in mis-spending or permit their graces to fall into a consumption It was a reproofe made by the Spirit I haue somewhat against Rev. 2. thee for thou hast left thy first loue and the same hath befallen many persons When men haue got some competency of wealth they lye long in bed and will not vp to worke and and so their riches waste In like manner it falleth out with Gods children for when they haue attained to some competency of gifts they are highly conceited grow idle neglect the meanes and so are ouertaken with spiritual pouerty then the which what greater damage losse We must then learne here not onely to get grace but to Vse 2. keepe it We will mourne if we loose our money grieue if we be depriued of our corne naturall strength and earthly commodities And shall the losse of grace neuer pinch vs pierce vs Shall Ionah be so dejected for his Gorud and we neuer be moued when grace is withered ready to persh Shall the earth-worme sigh at the losse of goods and we neuer shrinke at the shipwracke of heauenly gifts No greater damage then this none lesse regarded more insensible Let our plants begin to prin our haire waxe gray or fall it will make some impression But grace may decay the spirit faint and few be wounded in heart Yet to such a time shall come of great mourning Then get grace keepe grace so shall corruption be expelled extenuated and the patterne of sound words obserued practised A second instruction we gather out of the word Keepe which is that Spirituall gifts are in danger of loosing Doct. 3. Grace got may be lost Else wherefore should Paul bid his sonne keepe the worthy things in his custody We giue the greatest charge when things are most subiect to perill damage or destruction This poynt hath its proofe in holy writ For did not Sampson loose his spirituall aswell as or rather then his corporall strength and sight the shearing of his head was the cutting and killing of grace in the heart for by that another thing is meant The Church of Ephesus left though not totally lost her first love David desired to gather strength See Iudg. 16. Rev. 2. 4. Psal 39. vlt. 51. And this cometh to passe through our own negligence Reas 1. for when we doe not employ these talents to their proper ends or watch ouer our selues or neglect the meanes to preserue them or dig them in the earth not vsing them at all we shall either haue them remoued from vs or at the least weakened in vs. Fire must haue fewell or it will cease to flame infants are to be fed or they will be feeble And so must the babe of grace the new borne child of faith or fall into a fit of languishing Againe it may come to passe in respect of the Preachers Reas 2. and that of the bad or better sort False Teachers did creepe into the Church of Galatia and they fell from their former stedfastnes And when such as be truly sent preach rarely coldly negligently and watch not ouer their flocke much grace may be lost by their default Let the sheepe fast or feed barely they will grow lanke and leane of body Besides the Diuell cannot endure that grace should grow Reas 3. and corruption decay for then he shall lose his croppe and his hope shall perish therefore he is nipping this fruite in the bud and would teare it if he could vp by the roote and though he cannot yet hee will venter at all Finally the Lord may suffer it to be lost at the least for Reas 4. a time in our owne feeling and that for these causes 1. When we begin to swell waxe big and are puffed vp with his graces which should humble vs. 2. When we are too seuere in censuring of our weake brethren And 3. When we grow ingratefull to him for the gifts he hath freely conferred vpon vs. For God cannot endure pride security or ingratitude therefore he permits oftentimes a winter whereby for a season these flowers looke dead and withered Wonder not then if we see some backsliders in our Vse 1. times as hath beene in former ages For it s no vnusuall matter to finde declinings in this kind And it 's a disputable question whether any Christian what euer except hee depart soone after his conuersion doth grow and goe from strength to strength without some losse of the inward power of the graces wherewith he is endued For Churches in generall persons in particular haue had their symptomes and distempers And this is to warne all men to watch the more diligently Vse 2. ouer themselues that this languishing doe not befall them As also to try themselues if they haue not fallen already from their former perfection and left their first faith And here two things may seeme needfull to bee proposed 1. How farre a man
men vnsetled in the truth Fearfully haue some fallen by this stumbling-block These be some of the maine causes both inward and outward that haue moued many to become back●●ders So that he that will goe on constantly and with resolution must haue an eye to all these things Wee may further note from these two named and the rest omitted that God proportioneth mans shame according to the offence Doct. 4. These were very likely greater then the rest either in place or forwardnes of profession and therefore they ●urning aside God hath caused their names to be registred in his booke to their greater and perpetuall infamy as Iudas Iscariot c and these may be the reasons First for God is iust and measureth all his affaires by Reas 1. iudgement rewardeth all men according to their works Againe he doth it to declare his hatred and detestation Reas 2. to sin for God is not a God that loueth iniquity Psal 5. Moreouer to take away the lying cauils of false censurers Reas 3. who bee prone to say that his wayes are vnequall partiall Ezec. 18. 29. Finally that great offenders may feare his reuenging hand Reas 4. the more and thereby be mooued to cease from sin 1 Cor. 10. 11. Luk. 13. 3. Then let the greatest sinners expect the greatest torments and shame either in this or another world for he is iust in Vse 1. all his proceedings the mighty shal be mightily tormented He that hath beene a ring leader to drunkennes if he doe not turne shall drinke the viols of Gods greatest wrath in the cellar of darknes and blacknes where he shall be drunken but not with wine stagger reele fall and neuer rise again The man that hath fallen from cōtinency to the foule sinne of fornication and vncleanesse polluted the young and tender virgin with the spreading infection of his hot-breathing lust and hath corrupted so many hope full subiects must know that Whoremungers and Adulterers shall bee deeply ad●udged by the Lord For these be the sinnes that will eate vp all a mans encrease burne to the center of hell and deuour to destruction And it shall so be to all peccant persons for the higher they fall the more fearfull shall be the bruising the breaking And doth the Lord proportion mans shame according to Vse 2. his sinne Then let all of vs abstaine from the least appearance of iniquity This is a point of high wisedome to bee practised of prophane persons What if wee cannot abstaine from all sinne yet let vs flye it as much as wee can Is it wisedome for a man to tumble in the myre because hee cannot walke but his feete will bee fouled spotted to runne still on the scoore without all care being somewhat already indebted to swallow poyson in consideration that hee hath tasted of some vnhealthful and noysome thing Then learne to bee wise shunne all the euill thou canst so at the worst thy torment one day shall bee the lesser the lighter Nay bee thou sure of this that though thou be God's yet thy shame shal abound with an heauy and tart correction set on by the sharpe correcting hand of a father if willingly and wilfully thou swallow vp sinne and deuoure with great greedinesse the full cups of iniquity For the more power the Lord hath conferred vpon thee whereby to enable thee to stand if such a man as thy selfe then fall thy rising againe shall bee the more fearfull painefull This is a truth that cannot be denyed And from Gods proceedings Let them that are Gods Vse 3. on earth learne to follow his example Therefore if an Absalom entice the subiects from the Father and Prince of the land to rebell rise vp in armes and seeke to depose him aboue all the rest let such a man die the death and haue his name writ in the earth Thus did other Magistrates in the dayes of old soe doe thou in these latter times One too many that Phygellus and Hermogenes by their example or perswasion being of some greater note drew many of these all to fall away for which cause our Apostle guided by Gods Spirit left their names recorded to haue them rot the more and that others might tread in his steps If thou then that are advanced by God meete with one of those breathing deuills the Papists that like the auncient Pharisees compasse sea and land to make a Protestant fall away and become like themselues to insult against his Soueraigne and to bath his hands in the bloud of the Lords annoynted whether they be plodders in the night or for more close effecting of their damnable enterprises walke in the day and with the Moone are beheld full in the Congregation with borrowed light once in the Moneth Let them be rewarded according to their sinne and the evill they haue or if they had not beene preuented would haue effeced For blessed shall that man be who dasheth such heads against the stones I might here further note from these two that Great wicked men fall by couples 1 Tim. 1. 20. 2 Tim. 2. 17. Doct. 5. Reas 1. For the Deuill in all things seekes to imitate the Lord. If God haue a Moses and an Aaron he will haue a Iannes and a Iambres If Christ set out his true disciples by two and Exod. 7. 11. 12 by two Antichrist will doe the like We read of Iosua and Caleb and of Sanballat and Tobiah of Paul and Timothy and of Philetus and Alexander Because one will toll on and tempt another for sinne Reas 2. vniteth sinners as grace doth the godly and by couples they seeme to be the lesse faulty the more able to defend their false cause Learne we hence to rise by couples turne we and allure Vse others to returne For woe to him that is alone when two strong men oppose him or a true cause And it may be noted that Many may fall away together Ioh. 6. 66. Luk. 2. 35. Doct. 6. Reas 1. Because one temptation may haue the same power in the weake or false hearted Christian were they thousands as in a singular person For by one Rule many may fall as by the truth millions may stand Examples in any thing prevaile mightily and multitude Reas 2. draweth wonderfully forward backward Say not then in thine heart that such a Religion is not the Vse 1. truth because many fall from it for in so doing thou maist condemne the Gospell of Christ In such a time as this especially beware lest thou be also Vse 2. drawne from thy stedfastnes and the truth of Religion For where one leadeth another is prone to follow Men in this are fitly compared to sheepe for let one run out of the fold not one will stay behind Further it may be obserued that Vsually when men forsake the truth they fall from the professors Doct. 7. of it also For no doubt but these fell from both And finally let it
he sought him out found him And here it may seeme to appeare that these people were at Rome when they forsooke Paul and also probably that they met with him with his chaine and would not take knowledge of him but turned themselues from him and that by the opposing of these seuerall persons actions directly one against another Now in this Verse we haue a description of Onesiphorus The Logicall resolution 1. It s said that he was at Rome that was the subiect place where for a time he abode 2. He is described by an effect For he sought 3. By the manner how very diligently And 4. By the successe of his seeking he found whom he sought Againe here be two things layd downe in these words concerning Paul the one that he was at Rome the other that he was prisoner and in distresse there But when he was at Rome This word But is diuersly vsed The Theologicall exposition in Scripture Sometime exclusiuely I haue lost none that thou gauest me But the sonne of perdition 2. Inclusiuely Now is layd vp for me a crowne of righteouses and not for me only But for al them that loue his appearing 3. Discretiuely He gaue them all none excepted change of rayment But vnto Beniamin three hundred pieces of siluer 4. Oppositiuely Not Iesus But Barrabbas And in the last sense it seemes to be taken here They of Asia sought me not or He was not ashamed But c. opposing it to shame and then the arguments are diu●rs I haue thought it might be read For making it the third argument of a Syllogisme or Reason to proue that Onesiphorus was not ashamed of Pauls chaine He sought me out very diligently To seeke in Scripture is sometimes taken in the worst sense also for prayer c. Here it signifies searching and going from place to place very studiously and inquisitiuely And found me That is came where I was and did meete with me The Difference betwixt Inuenire and Reperire is this When we goe on a thing we doe inuenire when a thing comes on vs we doe reperire The one seemes to be an act per se the other per accidens Let no man once doubt that Onesiphorus was ashamed The Metaphrase of me being poore in bonds for he being at Rome where I was prisoner in chaines very diligently and studiously inquired for me and trudged from place to place vntill he had met me found me out And would hee ever haue done this if he had beene ashamed of me or scorned me No verily be thou assured of that my sonne For hee being at Rome c or when he was at Rome When Doctrines deduced he was there and heard or knew of Pauls troubles he then sought him and refreshed him whence note that When the faithfull are afflicted then they are to be refreshed Doct. 1. Say not vnto thy neighbour Goe and come againe to morrow will giue thee if thou now haue it Prou. 3. 28. I am 2. 15. c. For that 's the fittest time Now a morsell of bread or cup Reas 1. of cold water to a dry and hungry stomacke will be right welcome comfortable A word now spoken to the weary and wounded soule is in its sittest season and how gladly will it be receiued Againe we know not what a day or hower may bring Reason 2. forth our brother may be dead or swallowed vp of ouermuch heauines in the meane time And will not that be pitifull fearefull Now sleepe hence forward the houre is come c. could not but pierce the sluggish hearts of Peter and Iohn Besides we may haue our goods taken from vs or in Reason 3. future time want all oportunity to doe good when we be willing the which though the world neuer dreame of such a thing is an heauy curse Would it not greeue the husband to much haue good seed and yet want ground and time to sowe it In so doing we make God our debtor and the sooner Reas 4. the better is it not And here the best may be taxed for omitting of the Vse 1. present occasion or poore mans necessity We are prone to commit sin instantly and to put off good and charitable duties from time to time and to doe them lingringly But beloued this should not be so we gather fruit when it is the ripest cut downe corne when it is hardest let bloud when it groweth ranckest and shall we not refresh our brethren being poorest Let vs be otherwise minded Is thy brother hungry now Vse 2. feed him thirstly now giue him drinke burdened with sinne now comfort him sicke or in bonds now visit him And doe but obserue the Lords proceeding and thou shalt see that alwayes in the greatest straites then he hath declared his arme of mercy In the middest of the sorrowes sayth the Prophet of my heart the Lord comforted my soule In my daies marke the best haue their dayes of affliction he heard me Then goe thou and doe likewise Canst thou tell how it may fall out with thee in future time Death will come and it s a righteous thing with the Lord to depriue those of meanes of comfort then when as they would not comfort others in great sorrow at that houre Wee may runne from the poore and his homely bed and cottage but God and his swift curse will one day overtake vs. Wherefore I in the name and mercy of God beseech you to minde this thing Say not Pharisaically see to it thy selfe Little doest thou know how the very presence of thy friend in time to come may comfort thee And I wish that the experience of the want of it may sometime teach thee the worth of it I may truly say that if men knew the sting of death burden of sin or extremitie of hunger by experience they would runne to and fro to comfort and refresh the afflicted but men haue not felt the one therefore they neglect the other A morsell of bread or cup of small beere nay a word spoken in due season may not saue the body but a soule from death Then seriously assiduously minde this one thing Thou wilt reply we shall endanger our selues in so doing Obiect 1. Sol. 1. Onesiphorus might haue said so being at Rome but would that haue serued his turne 2. Thou therefore must do it and leaue the euent to God Epaphroditus was neare vnto death and regarded not his life in this case for the service of his brethren Phil. 2. 30. But they are visited with strange and noysome diseases Obiect 2. Sol. Why such haue most need of all others the greater miserie the more need of mercy I am a Minister and my people haue the plague may I Quest 1. visit such It s generally held no thou maist not being a publike Answ person for thy death may be the death in mans iudgement of many a soule And a generall
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
others to returne that you may escape the dreadfull and importable wrath to come But alas wicked men for all that man or God can say or threaten they are like Iobs horse Iob 39. 21. c. they walke in the valley of sinne and reioyce in their strength of iniquity they goe out to meet the harnessed man Christ with the reuenging Scepter of iustice in his hand they swallow and breake the ground of Gods precepts with their fiercenesse they account brasse as straw iron as rotten wood they thinke that they can drinke vp as the Leviathan doth Iordan the Riuers of Gods wrath with their mouthes they smell this great battell afarre off and cry Ha ha at the sound of the last trumpet and say Tush wee shall neuer bee mooued the Lord neither thinketh good or euill But for all this God who sits on high hath girded himselfe with the garment of vengeance his sword is whetted his bow bent he will therefore make his shafts drunke with their purple blood and will for euer haue them in derision And seeing these things are so What manner of men ought we to be in holinesse of life and blamelesse conuersation Oh now consider this yee that forget this day lest thee strong God teare you in peeces and there be none that can deliuer you And is there a day wherein the Lord shall iudge the Vse 6. world why then on the contrary heere is a world of comfort to the iust and perfect man In all thy crosses wrongs iniuries troubles persecutions sicknesses and in the houre of death look vp to this hill soare to this height and haue this continually in thy remembrance For now shall thy wounds bee cured thy infirmities healed thy enemies reuenged and all thy honest workes rewarded Now shall Sathan bee trod vnder thy foot his instruments bound in euerlasting chaines of darkenesse and thou with thy Lord and Master Christ bee carried into the holy of holies filled with ioy and bathe thy soule in the riuers of pleasure for all eternity All the men of God in their greatest anguish here below haue fetched comfort by the eye of faith at this Mountaine Iob reioyced being cast on the dunghill that his Redeemer liued and that hee should see him stand the last on earth Dauids heart was glad and his flesh did rest in hope because his soule should not bee left in deadlihead nor his body see corruption Iohn longed and cryed Come Lord Iesus come quickly and had wee the same precious faith wee haue the same precious promises why then are wee not rauished with the remembrance of these things Let the minde of the righteous wander whither it will or can this will bee the spring where to coole its thirst the poole to wash away its filthinesse the stay whereon to rest like the Arke on Mount Ararat after all its stormes and tempests This is the acceptable day of the Lord the yeere of Iubilee and the very time when all things in an vnchangeable eternall and neuer-fading condition shall be setled established Wherefore be stedfast immoueable resolute in good patient in suffering euil for this is the day that will pay for all And thus we come to handle a second doctrine Where Paul saith that day adding the Article That wee note as others from the like grounds doe that The day of iudgement shall be great and wonderfull Doct. 2. It is elsew here called the great day of the Lord. Iudè 6. Reu. 6. 17. and 16. 14. And it may bee so stiled for diuerse Reasons First if wee consider the Iudge for that addeth to the Reas 1. dayes excellency and greatnesse and that 1. for his person is hee not God and Man Wonderfull Councellor the almighty God the euerlasting Father the Prince of peace Isa 9. 6 This is hee who made all things of nothing the first and the last who though hee was deade yet now liueth for euermore Reu. 1. 18. 2. Where is his habitation and from whence doth hee come hee dwelleth in that light which no man can attaine vnto and whither can wee flee from his presence 3. How shall hee bee attended What will he come like Nehemiah with one or two poore attendants or as Naomi with Ruth or like Dauid to the King of Gath all alone No he will be accompanied with two bands like Iacob hauing a thousand thousands of Angels with him his scepter shall be in his hand to breake his enemies in pieces like a potters vessell 4. And where shall he come from Ierusalem to Iericho from Aegypt to Canaan from the East to Bethlehem No he descendeth from the highest throne riding on the wings of the wind passeth through the thicke clouds and his way shall be in the aire Then shall his signes appeare by which I vnderstand not the Crosse with the cursed Papist but that splendour which shall flow from his glorious person that like the Sun with his beames when he riseth shall enlighten all the world And it may be called great if we minde who shall be Reas 2. iudged not Paul before Festus Iohn of Herod or the Prince of the Pope But all creatures men and Angells The sea the earth death and hell shall giue vp their dead so that all euill spirits Men women and children that haue beene are or shall be must appeare before him Kings Nobles Iudges Bishops without their crownes rochets scarlet robes and worthy ensignes of honour And what acts and enditements shall be preferr'd All Reas 3. and euery one that hath beene done good or euill from the very beginning of the world vntill that day all shall be examined cleered not one omitted The booke of each mans Conscience shall be opened and Gods eternall Register so that the most secret sinne or hidden act shall come to light And doth not this adde to the daies greatnes Finally if we consider the words or matter of the sentence Reas 4. it will aggrauate the merueilousnes of the iudgment day For the Reprobate shall be rewarded with eternall torment and the elect with immortall glory the one shall haue as much misery and the other as great felicity as created natures are capable of And will this day be such and so great Are not those Vse 1. then to be checked who neuer haue it in their mindes neither make the least preparation All times seasons moneths and dayes be thought on longed and prouided for yet this that surmounteth all is forgot not regarded What prouision shall we see for the Sessions or Assizes of one little County or Citty and yet none for this generall vniuersall gaole-deliuery of the whole world where be mens wits or what doe they thinke on For to what end doth God place them here below and affoard them time and meanes but to stand spotles blamelesse at that day Yet men be vnwise and neuer consider their latter end Deut. 32. 29. If a Master should set a light vpon a Candlesticke