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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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to our recreations these bee no holy things sports are inferiour to our lawful Callings which are to be laid aside farr from holy things and unsutable to the Lords Holy-day The like if not more may be said against pampering a mans self and others by feeding or feasting and of drinking or any such wicked passing away the Sabbath The same also is to be spoken of a day of Feasting of publick Thanksgiving which have the reason of a Sabbath Of these and all other Gods holy Ordinances wee may say as the voyce said to Peter What God hath sanctified pollute thou not Doct. 2. A place is no longer holy than God and his Worship is present Was Jerusalem a holy City how then is the beautiful City become an Harlot how is it that this City which was the seat of Gods worship and the habitation and collection of the Saints is now an harbour of Turks and Infidels over-run with Turcisme or Idolatry Surely because the cause of this holiness ceased the worship of God was corrupted the Son of God despighted the Gospel of God rejected the Saints of God murthered the day of Visitation neglected And therefore they being infinitely departed from God and his pure worship God departs from them and God being gone the place ceaseth to be holy Bethel while the vision of the Ladder lasted there was an holy place and so long as Gods Worship continued there but when it adm●tted the pollution of Idolatry it must be called Bethel no more but Beth-aven When the Congregation of Israel brought the Ark from Gilgal and set it up in Shilo then was Shilo the standing house of God the seat of religion and justice which God had chosen Josh 18.1 but for the sins of this place the Lord rejected it as Jer. 7.12 Goe now to Shilo into my place where I set my name in the beginning and behold what I did unto it for the wickedness of Israel if we will know what look 1 Sam. 4.4 when by the villany of Elies Sons and outrage of the people the Lord was provoked hee gave Israel into the hands of the Philistims there were thirty thousand Foot-men slain the Ark was taken Hophni and Phineas slain Eli the High Priest brake his neck then did the glory depart from Israel and the Ark never came at Shilo more So the Temple at Jerusalem was holy the City holy so long as they continued in the true Worship of God but after they crucified the Lord of life both City and Temple as prophane were destroyed so as Jerusalem although the holy City of God if her filthiness be found in her skirts she shall be had in derision Lam. 1. the most beautiful rod if held out against God shall bee broken yea the Temple of God if it become a denne of Theeves God will depart from it For what is it that can tye God to any place but his own worship to which he hath tied himself by promise Vse 1. Let not the vain Romanist boast of the pretended chair of Peter from which God cannot possibly depart Can God depart from Shilo for the sins of Priest and people where first he put his Name and can he not depart from Rome Can he depart from the holy City where he promised hee would rest and can he not be driven from the great City of the Whore to which hee never made any such promise Can he depart in displeasure from her whose foundations were layed among the holy Mountains Psal 87.1 and can hee not depart from the Whore Revel 11.8 that sitteth upon seven Hills Shall Bethlehem where Christ was born be forsaken and cannot Babylon where Christ is daily Crucified Nay the Lord is long since departed from her and her final confusion is at the door Vse 2. And if Jerusalem once the holy City but now a Cage and Nest of unclean Saracens and Turks bee left of God what a superstitious error prevailed in former times wherein such bloudy Battels were fought for the recovery of the holy Land most superstitiously putting religion and holiness even in the place it self after all the holy things were prophaned and God himself departed The evil success of such Battels ever shewed how God was offended with such superstitious warres and another mischief by them oppressed the Christian world to keep it in blindness For the Pope making his advantage of this blinde devotion if any King or Prince in Christendom stood between him and his proceedings one way or other he would send him out of his own Country in expedition for the Holy Warre and there hold him till he had effected his own designs in that Princes Country and so strengthned himself in all Lands as Histories manifest Use 3. Let us not bear our selves as though we had God so sure as the Papist thinks he hath him in a Box or pretend any vain priviledge that we have to exempt us from danger True it is we have the word with peace liberty and protection but the fear is that our security and deadness of heart with dissoluteness and prophaneness in behaviour will forfeit all God sendeth Jerusalem to Shilo saying Trust not in lying words saying Jer. 7.4 12 The Temple of the Lord but amend your wayes and I will let you dwell in this place but if you will not goe to Shilo and see what I did to it and look for the like So now God sends us to Jerusalem that we may consider what he did to it being once the praise of the earth and if the same sins be found in us as were in Jerusalem the Lord will doe no other with us than he did with it even as he threatned 2 King 21.13 he will stretch over us the line of Samaria that is bring the enemy in our necks and the plummet of the house of Ahab an Idolater take away his holy things and exchange them with filthy Idolatry and wipe us as a man wipeth a dish even turn us upside down What were the sins of Jerusalem but pride idleness fulness of bread and contempt of the poor In all which England doth equal if not goe beyond Jerusalem and yet wee charge our selves as little with our sins as Jerusalem did And if wee look to the immediate causes and fore-runners of Jerusalems over-throw and compare them with our Land wee shall see it high time to look about us for I. In general Jerusalem had grievously sinned and therefore was had in derision Lam. 1.8 Her sins were great many of long continuance with treasured wrath and all this in a place of such means and light Now no place in the world hath more means than wee wee are farre beyond Jerusalem in means and therefore farre beyond her in sins II. More specially 1 They did not hear the words of Gods servants the Prophets nor obey them therefore the Lord made that house like to Shilo Jerem. 26.6 and hence Jerusalem afterward had time enough but too late to charge her self
and thou art good no longer But thou that art so impatient and thus betrayest thy meekness towards thy brother what wouldest thou do if thou hadst the Devil in hand as Christ had here Also this makes against railers and scoffers of others for Christ railed not on the Devil himself nor would overcome him otherwise than by humility Christs answer most modest Thirdly This Answer of Christ was a most modest answer Satan would have him confess himself the Son of God this hee denyeth not nor yet affirmeth but modestly acknowledgeth himself a man Man liveth not by bread onely The like wee may note elsewhere being called to his confession before the Governours If hee were the King of the Jews Matth. 27.11 If hee were the Christ Luke 22.67 If hee were the Son of God hee did not directly affirm it but either Thou sayest it or yee say that I am not denying but modestly assenting and ordinarily hee called himself the son of man not the Son of God teaching us by his example when wee speak of our selves Note to speak modestly Paul being to speak of great things of himself speaketh all in anothers person 2 Cor. 12.2 I know a man in Christ above fourteen years ago c. taken into Paradise c. and John speaking of himself saith And when Jesus saw his mother and the Disciple whom hee loved and who leaned on Jesus at supper chap. 19.26 Alas how far are wee degenerate from this our pattern who if wee bee but the sons of mean men we will stand upon it much more than Christ did upon being the Son of God we will pride it out and ruffle and brag and bear our selves upon our ancestors if they bee stept but one step above the lowest Christ when hee had good occasion would not scarce profess himself the Son of God being of another manner of spirit than that which breathed out that brag in the temptation afterward All these will I give thee II. Now to come to the second point in the answer namely the affection But Jesus answered and said The conjunction discretive sheweth our Saviours disagreement from Satan and that his Answer is negative to the temptation for although Christ both might by that miracle of turning stones into bread have shewed himself the Son of God and now needed bread being hungry yet hee would not yeeld to Satan Quest But seeing Christ who as God could have turned stones into sons of Abraham could much more turn stones into bread so easily by his word for if hee had spoken to the stones as Satan desired certainly they would have had ears to hear him why would hee not do it what hurt had it been Why Christ who could turn stones into bread would not five reasons Answ 1 Miracles must confirm faith in Beleevers unto salvation John 2.11 but Christ knew the Devil could not beleeve if hee had all the miracles in the World Besides hee had even now heard the Fathers voice testifying Jesus his beloved Son and Christ knew if hee would not beleeve the Fathers voice he would not beleeve for the Sons miracles 2 Christ would not by this miracle give the least suspition that either he distrusted his fathers seasonable providence or that he would depend for his preservation upon the means but upon his Fathers word hee was in his fathers work and lead by the Spirit into the wilderness and therefore knew he should not want necessaries 3 It was an unseasonable motion it was now a time of humiliation of temptation of affliction wherein it was fit to avoid all shew of ostentation which was the scope of the temptation for Satan would onely have him to shew what hee could do for a need for a vaunt of his power Now in a time of serious humiliation to advance himself by a miracle had been as seasonable as Snow in harvest 4 Christ would not give the least credit to Satan nor do any thing at his desire were it good and profitable which hee suggesteth for his end and issue is ever wicked and devillish yea hee would shew how he contemned the will of the Tempter for hee is not overcome unlesse hee bee contemned 5 Christ Jesus being the wisdome of his Father well knew that Satan grossy dissembled with him for hee spake as if hee wished well unto him and would have his hunger satisfied but could hee indeed respect the releef of Christ did hee desire Christs preservation and welfare knew hee not that hee was the promised seed that must break his head and destroy his works and therefore seeing Christ knew that Satan must needs seek his destruction in all his attempts hee had just cause to yeeld to none of them all though they seemed never so beneficial In that Christ here would not make his Divinity known to Satan neither by word nor miracle wee may note that Doct. Christ will not purposely make himself known to such as hee knows will make no right use of him Luke 23.8 When Herod saw Jesus Christ revealeth himself only to such as make right use of him hee was exceeding glad for hee had heard many things of him and hoped to have seen some miracle But Christ would not work any sign in his presence because hee had wrought workes enough already to prove him the Son of God neither was it fit to prostitute the power of God to the pleasure of a vain man who would have made no right use of it Matth. 12.39 This evil and wicked Generation seeketh a sign and none shall bee given them save the sign of the Prophet Jonah Why had they not infinite signes and miracles both then and afterwards Yes but they had none such as they would have for they would have some extraordinary sign as Mat. 16.1 Master shew us a sign from heaven as if they had said Either cause the Sun to stand still or go back as in Joshuahs and Hezekiahs daies or the Moon to stand as in Ajelon or call for an extraordinary tempest of thunder and rain as Samuel did which made all the people to fear the Lord and Samuel exceedingly 1 Sam. 12.18 or call for fire from heaven as Elijah did These and the like they thought beseeming men of God as for turning water into wine restoring of sight and legs c. those they saw little power in But why would not our Saviour give them such a sign as they desired Surely hee had just reason the same in this our doctrin for they did not desire it for a good end but as Luke saith expresly to tempt him not to help their infirmity but to feed their curiosity neither to increase and strengthen faith but to nourish their infidelity For had that been their end had they not beside the doctrin of the Prophets and the fulfilling of the promises the blessed Doctrin of the son of God of whom some of themselves said Never man spake like him and for the confirmation of that
was the Sanctum Sanctorum and in it the Oracle called the inner house of God into which only the High Priest went alone once a year and that in the Feast of expiation wherein all the Jews must fast and afflict themselves A most notable type of Christ for as it was called an Oracle because God thence gave answer in doubtful cases so who is the Fathers Oracle but his Son who is the word of his Father by whom he speaks to us by whom we speak to him and through whom the Father heareth us In this Holy of Holies was the Ark of the Covenant and in this holy place stayed the Ark almost four hundred and thirty years signifying Christ the author of the Covenant between God and us In which Ark or Chest were kept three things 1 The Tables of the Covenant written with the finger of God signifying Christ who is the fulfilling of the Law 2 The Rod of Aaron which had budded a type of the Priesthood of Christ who in the world seemed a dead branch and dry but after his Death and Resurrection began again to flourish and bring fruits of life to Jewes and Gentiles 3 The Pot having Manna a holy type of Christ the bread of life and that Manna that came down from heaven Joh. 6.35 In this Holy of Holies over the Ark was the holy cover called the Propitiatory prefiguring the Lord Jesus whom the Father hath made our Propitiatory by faith in his bloud Rom. 3.25 Here also were the two glorious Cherubims set like Angels on either side the Ark looking upon the Ark figuring the holy Angels ministring to Christ and earnestly desiring to look into the mystery of our salvation 1 Pet. 1.12 These were the chief holy things established in the Temple at Jerusalem but not all for there were besides these the observation of all holy Rites appointed by God the Chair of Moses and in it the Law read and expounded there were the holy persons the High Priest with all his holy garments with Urim and Thummim and on his fore-head Holiness to the Lord there were other the holy Ministers of the Lord who had the Lords holy Oyl upon them of Gods own composition with straight charge that no other should make or use it out of this use Yea here had lived the ancient Kings and Prophets David Salomon Josiah Hezekiah who were special types of Christ In which regard Ierusalem the seat of God and Gods worship is called the City of perfect beauty the joy of the whole earth 3 It is called an holy City by comparison unto other great Cities of the neighbour Countries wherein Idols and Devils were worshipped in stead of God as Babylon or whose worship was the devise of mans brain and no institution of God as Samaria Cesarea and others 2 King 17.33 4 It is called holy in type two waies 1 As it was a type of the Church militant of which the members are holy in part at least in profession For the whole Church of God was gathered together three times every year before the Lord at the feasts of Passeover Pentecost and Tabernacles Psal 122.4 Thither the Tribes of the Lord go up and appear before the Lord. 2 As it was a type of the Church triumphant even that Celestial Jerusalem which is above that new Jerusalem into which no unholy thing can enter but is the eternal habitation of the holy God the Holy Angels and Saints 5 It was called holy or the holy City because it was the fountain of Gods holy Religion which being first seated there by God must be derived thence and sent out to all other Nations Micah 4.2 The Law shall go out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem Therefore was it the Metropola and mother City the heart of the earth placed in the midst of Nations by Gods own confession Ezek. 5.5 Nay there must the pretious blood of the holy Son of God be shed which must stream and run out to the salvation of all Nations and himself Preached the King of the Jews upon the Cross as upon the theater in Hebrew Greek and Latine and that in the time of the Passeover when there was a concourse of all the people of Jews and other Nations There the Apostles must give their first witnesse of Christ and thence must carry it into Judea Samaria and all nations to the utmost parts of the earth Act. 1.8 And 8.1 the Church of the New Testament was first gathered at Jerusalem and thence by persecution scattered into all Nations In this regard it was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy City for all the holinesse of all other Cities was derived thence Doct. 1 Wee learn out of this title what it is that makes places and persons holy even the presence of God of his word and worship Thus the ground was called holy Exod. 3.5 and the place where Joshua stood when the captain of the Lords Host appeared unto him chap. 5.15 1 Whatsoever was in the Law separated to God and his service was called holy the Sabbath was holy the Priests Garments holy Exod. 28. Thou shalt make holy Garments for Aaron thy brother Holy both because they were peculiar to the holy Priesthood for none else might put them on and because they were to bee used in the holy place for when they came forth of the Tabernacle they must put them off and thirdly consecrate to holy uses and to bee an holy type of Christs righteousnesse a precious robe wherein all our Sacrifices are offered The flesh was holy which was offered to the Lord in sacrifice Hag. 2.13 For places Bethel was an holy place when Jacob saw the vision of the Ladder there and the Temple was holy For people the Jews were called an holy Nation and Christians an holy Priesthood and Saints by calling 1 Pet. 2.9 For persons some are sanctified in the wombe to some special service as Jeremy chap. 1.5 and John Baptist Yea every faithful mans heart is as it were an Ark of God in which are kept the Tables of the Law yea the Tabernacle of God and the Temple of the Holy Ghost where hee pleaseth to dwell And thus was Jerusalem an holy City so long as it continued in the true worship of God 2 This appears by the contrary seeing his holinesse was no further annexed to this place than God tyed his presence to it for when as the Jews had crucified the Lord of glory both the Temple and City as prophane were destroyed and delivered into the hand of the Romans and are now in the hands of the Turks a nest of unclean and Idolatrous beasts most savage enemies of Christ and Christian profession 3 That place must needs bee holy where the Lord dwelleth as a master in his house teaching ordering and supplying all necessaries where Christ the Holy Son of God walketh in the midst of the seven Golden Candlesticks being conversant among the flocks of Shepheards where the Holy
son honours his father Thus doe all they that are subtile to pervert the straight ways of God as Elymas therefore called by Paul the child of the Devil Acts 13.10 because he sought to hinder the word and work of God Thus doe all those tares the children of that wicked one Matth. 13.38 which grow up in Gods field to the molesting and anoyance of the Lords wheat Thus doe all they who when they should spend the Lords Sabbaths in his worship they worship and serve the world in buying and selling or the Devil in play and gaming in their own houses falling down to the worship of the Devil when true worshippers are in Gods house performing their homage and service to him Conclus 4. Satan prevails against numbers by drawing the affections of their hearts from the true God to something besides him to love trust and follow it more than God as the voluptuous person that makes his belly his god and so is a lover of pleasure more than of God and the covetous person making his wealth his god whom Paul therefore calls an Idolater All these and many more are worshippers of the Devil and fallen down to him and cannot possibly worship the true God II. How and by what means Satan doth thus prevail And the means are these 1 He hath often the Secular arm and Human authority 2 Chron. 11.15 Rehoboam ordained Priests for the high places for the Devils and for the Calves that he had made Thus Antichrist the Beast of Rome Revel 13.16 by power made all both small and great rich and poor bond and free to receive his mark in their hands and fore-heads So he did in our Country by fire and faggot in Queen Maries days 2 Sometimes he draws men to his own worship by policy for he can transform himself into an Angel of Light he can preach Christ for a need to overthrow the preaching of Christ Mark 1.34 he can be a lying spirit in the mouthes of four hundred false Prophets 1 King 21. at once and can put on the shape of Samuel being still a Satan 3 Sometimes by fair promises as in our text he will give a whole world to bring Christ to one sin Thou shalt have case pleasure wealth credit in a word thy hearts desire if thou wilt fall down and worship me 4 By perswasion that it is a vain thing to serve God Mal. 3.14 no joy for the present no recompence hereafter thus he carries with him innumerable companies with things present not considering the time to come 5 By threatning of crosses losses disfavour as Balac said to Balaam Thy God hath kept thee from preferment By violent persecutions Revel 12.13.15 the red dragon persecuted the woman which had brought forth the Man-child the Serpent cast out of his mouth waters like a floud to cause the woman to be carried away 6 By effectual delusion by means of Signs Wonders false Miracles and slights which Satan putteth forth to give credit to false worship as it is spoken of the great Antichrist 2 Thess 2.9 10. that he shall come by the working of Satan with power signs and lying wonders and in all deceiveableness of unrighteousness among them that perish and thus shall the beast deceive all those whose names are not written in the Book of life Thus many are deceived in Popery by the jugling and crafty conveyances of the Priests and often by Magick making their Images appear to sweat to nodde to roll their eyes to pass voyces through them and make bloud appear in the Host which they would have their people beleeve and thus Satan mightily draws them to the worship of himself Vse 1. Here let us learn to bewail the misery of men seduced by the Devil and thrust from their God whether more openly or more secretly as 1 Such as joyn to Popery renouncing the worship of the true God and fall down to the Devil to worship him Revel 13.4 and they worshipped the Dragon and the Beast noting that the worship of the Beast is the worship of the Dragon Now they worship the Beast that give him power over the Scripture over the Consciences of men to make laws to bind them to pardon sins to open Heaven Hell Purgatory and receive his Bulls and Canons before the Canonical Scripture A lamentable thing that Satan gets such great ones daily to fall down and worship him 2 Such as get livings by bribery symony chopping and changing and such indirect courses here the Chaplain hath fallen down to the Devil and worshipped him and he hath bestowed the benefice 3 Such as seek to Witches for help or cunning men and women a plain and open service of the Devil by vertue of a league and compact at least secret Should not a people seek to their God or can all the Devils in Hell remove the hand of God 4 Such as by flattery dissembling injustice lying swearng or breaking the Sabbath obtain wealth or profit All this the Devil hath given thee because thou hast fallen down and worshipped him Whatsoever a man doth against the Word against his Oath or Conscience is a falling down to the Devil and a worshipping of him Vse 2. Take heed of coming under the power and service of the Devil and to that end observe these rules 1 Hold thee to Gods Word and Will in all duties of piety and justice both for matter and manner For wee must not only doe our Masters will but also according to his will 2 Hear and foster the motions of Gods Spirit which are ever according to the Word It is a note of a man given up to Satan to have continual disobedience breathing in him Ephes 2.2 The foul spirit savours nothing but the flesh 3 Renounce the world daily be not a servant to any lust neither take pleasure in it For when Satan findes a man serving pleasures he halters him with them and clogs him with cares of riches and voluptuous living Luk. 8.14 4 Walk in the light love it and such as walk in it It is a sign of a man in Satans snare to despise them that are good 2 Tim. 3.3 to make a shew of godliness denying the power thereof ver 5. Satan himself pretends light but walks in darkness and leads such as he rules in the same path 5 Contend for the faith Jud. 3. and Gods pure worship stand for God be at warre with thy sin keep an inward conflict and combate for not to be tempted of Satan is to be possessed by him Luk. 11.21 When the strong man keeps the hold all is at peace Vers 10. But Jesus answered and said Avoid Satan For it is written Thou shall worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve NOw wee come by Gods assistance to the answer of our Lord to the D v●● third da●● In which consider three things 1 The deniall and resistance But Jesus answered and said 2 The manner of it Avoid Satan 3 The r●ason For it
the Church as it was in the Ark so was it like the Ark of Noah against which the waters had a time to increase and a time also of decreasing What a night of trouble was the Church in all the while it was in Aegypt a stranger for four hundred years especially when they were oppressed with burdens and had their infants drowned in the river but a change came God sent and saved a Moses by whom hee will deliver his people but so as they must be acquainted with this continual enterchange in their estate they must be no sooner delivered out of Aegyps but be chased into the bottom of the Sea but there God makes them a way and no sooner out of the Sea but into the Wilderness and from thence the good Land takes them and in that good Land they never rested in one estate but sometimes had the better of their enemies and sometime for sin their enemies had the better of them as all the History of the Judges witnesseth In the time of the Kings how was the Church troubled and wasted in the time of Ahab and Jezabel when all Gods Prophets were slain and true religion was quite troden down But what a sudden change was there even when things were at the worst did the Lord bring a strange alteration by Elijah who slew all the Prophets of Baal and restored true religion How great misery suffered the Church in the time of Manasseh and Ammon but how happily was it changed by the piety of good Josiah in whom God made his people more happy than formerly miserable But who would have thought but that the Church had been utterly wasted in the seventy years captivity wherein it sate in the shadow of death Yet it was happily restored by Cyrus But when his godly Decrees concerning the building of the Temple were hindered by Cambyses his Son God stirred up Darius who favoured the Church and commanded the continuance and perfection of the work but not without many vicissitudes of stormes and calmes even after their return as appeareth in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah What a raging storm was that wherein our Lord and Head of the Church was put to death now the whole Church lay bleeding and dead with him But what a change was there the third day by his glorious resurrection In the Apostles daies how was the Church wasted when Saul had letters from the High Priests to carry bound to Jerusalem whosoever called on the Lord but when hee that breathed out nothing but slaughter and threatning was once converted then the Church had for a whil● rest and peace Act. 9.31 After the Apostles what a continual storm aros● against Christians which lasted three hundred years under the ten monsters of men those bloody men Nero Domitian Trajan Antoninus Severus Max●minus Decius Valerianus Aurelianus and Dioclesianus whose rage was such as a man could not set his foot in Rome but tread upon the graves of Martyrs But after this night a fair Sun rose up in the East Constantine the Great who chased before him that horrible darknesse and brought a blessed calm But this lasted not long but his second Son Constantius far short of his Fathers piety with all his strength set up and maintained that Arrian heresy which his good Father had condemned in the Nicen Council by which as bloody persecution sprung up in the Church as ever was before which lasted almost eighty years until Constance the youngest Son of Constantine for up again the Nicen faith in the Western part of the World as Italy Greece Africk Illiricum and banished the former poyson After this what a black darknesse of Mahometisme possessed the Eastern part of the World under which it lies sunk at this day And as pitchy and palpable darkness of Antichrist and Popery occupied the Western part of the World But what a light did the Lord raise up in the midst of Popery his zealous servant Luther since whom the light hath mightily prevailed to the blasting of Anti-Christ and the consuming of him upon his nest Yet not this without a cloud for To speak of our own Church After the long darknesse like that of Egypt had prevailed and covered for many hundred years the face of our Countrey it pleased God that the light of the Gospel should peep into our Land in the daies of King Henry the eighth but yet much clouded and opposed almost all his daies In his Son Edward the sixt Englands Josiah it began to shine more brightly and a more thorough reformation was undertaken But this Sun-shine lasted not long but in Queen Maries daies the truth was again cast into the fire and the bodies of Gods Saints pitilesly destroyed God in mercy for his Elec●s sake shortened those daies and raised up our late Queen Elizabeth of blessed memory in all posterities who was semper cadem in the maintenance of the faith and left Christ sitting in his Kingdome and the truth triumphing over Popery and Anti-Christian falshood which by Gods mercy wee enjoy under our gracious King This hath been the changeable estate of the Church from the beginning and cadem est ratio totius ac partium the same truth discovers it self in the particular members As for example Abraham now a poor man in Egypt presently enriched and made heir of the Land of Promise now rejoycing in his Isaac and a while after stretching out his hand to kill his only Son who also herein was a notable type of the Church now bound and presently loosed and raised up after a sort from the dead Jacob was now afraid of Esau when he came in warlike manner to meet him with four hundred men at his heels but in a little season God lets him see a suddain change who had inclined his Brothers heart to do him no harm against his often former purposes to slay him Joseph is now hated of his brethren after a season honoured of them now sold as a slave to the Ismaelites afterward made a governour of Potiphar a Princes house now accused by his Mistresse and cast into Prison but after fetched out by Pharaoh and made ruler of all his Princes and the whole land of Egypt David sometimes cast down and God hath forgotten him a while after so confident in God that hee will not fear to walk in the vale of the shadow of death sometimes pursued by Saul as a traytor and rebel sometimes by Saul acknowledged his good Son and more righteous than himself and when Saul is dead and ceaseth his persecution his own son Absolons shall rise against him to depose him from his Kingdome And Jobs messengers of evil tydings still overtook one another And to spare further examples our own experience can teach us that for the most part wee have not rid our selves out of one temptation but another insueth such are our changes in this present estate And why 1 Satan goeth for a while from Christ himself Reasons his holy flesh in
be preserved so long seeing Lazarus his body and our bodies in that time enter into many degrees of it Ans Christ was indeed balmed and sweetned with Odours but all this could not have preserved him if his soul and body had not now been ●aced from sin the mother of corruption Obj. But he had sin imputed unto him Ans Yea but he had overcome all that and slain it on the Crosse for had he not destroyed it himself had been destroyed by it and subdued for ever under the corruption of it In all which regards that is verified which himself being risen affirmed Luke 24.46 Thus it is written and th●● it beh●eveth Christ to suffer and to rise again from the dead the third day Other things the Evangelists observe in this circumstance as that it was the first day of the week that is the first day wherein hee had created the Heavens and the Earth and wherein he would create now a new Heaven and a new Earth and as before he had set up a marvellous frame of the world but sin●e exceedingly shaken and defaced by sin he would now restore the world again and repair the ruines of it by abolishing sin as formerly he had filled Heaven and earth with the glory of his power in Creation so would he now fill them with the glory of his power in Redemption which is a second creation Hence is it that that day is now converted into the Christian Sabbath and called the Lords Day Revel 1.10 or if you will Sunday but not as the Heathen Christ rose early and what we learn thence in honour of the Sun but as Christians in honour of the Sun of righteousnesse Again the Gospel noteth that this our glorious Son ●●s● about Sun rising early in the morning or a little before it Matth. 28.1 To shew unto us 1 The power of his God-head who could while his body was dead perform the promise which he had made alive even in the instant of which hee had spoken 2 The impotency of his enemies who although they watched him f●●l●●● him up laid an heavie stone upon him were every way cautelous to keep him d●wn till the third day was past and he not stealing away secretly in the d●●d time of the night but ●ose with noyse and warning even in the morning ye● could they no more stay him than they could the Sun from rising and running his course 3 The benefit which the world of beleevers obtain by his rising again set down by the Evangelist Luke 1.78 Through the tender mercy of our God the day-spring from an high hath visited us 79. To give light to them that s●● in darknesse and to guide our feet into the way of peace The Chronologers further observe that this was the day wherein Moses led the Israelites through the Sea wherein all the troops of Pharaoh and his Host were drowned Even to our Lord Jesus this third day led all the Israel of God out of the spiritual Aegypt of blindnesse and filthinesse but gloriously triumphed over all the bands of Satan Sin and Death all which were sunk like a stone into the bottomless pit of Hell Other observations concerning this day might be inserted out of Authors which because I see no sound ground for them out of the Scriptures I will omit them that I may now come to the lessons which out of this circumstance we may draw for our further instruction First we learn hence All the promises of God are accomplished in their du● season that all the promises of God shall be in due season accomplished whatsoever may seeme to come between them and us For seeing Christ being dead both could and did perform his promise to his Church will not hee much more being alive and in his glory doe it The Israelites had a promise of a good Land they must in the mean time suffer much oppression in Aegypt for the space of four hundred and thirty years together but the self-same night Exod. 12.41 when the term was expired they went out against the heart and yet at the entreaty of Pharaoh and his people In like sort Joseph had a Dream that the Sun and Moon and the twelve Starrs should worship him in the mean time he must be cast into the Pit and Dungeon where hee can see neither Sun Moon nor Starre many days and years passed wherein he saw nothing but the clean contrary and yet in the due season of it this dream was accomplished And the reason is because 1 God is true of his word he cannot lye nor repent and 2 He is able to fulfill whatsoever passeth from his mouth for shall any thing be hard or impossible to God or shall any power or death or the grave it self falsifie it Lean thy self then upon this truth of God hast thou a promise of outward or inward peace health wealth or any other good thing which thy heart can wish hold this promise fast in the midst of thy heart wait for the accomplishment of it it shall not fail thee so farre as thy Father seeth good for thee if it be delayed and deferred even this also shall turn to thy best Hast thou a promise of life everlasting hold it by the faith of thy soul as the aym and end of all thy faith and religion for all the miseries of this present life shall not be able to defeat thee of it Hast thou the promise of the resurrection of the body after death stick to this Article of thy faith also nothing could hinder the rising of thy head no more can let but the members shall be where the head is not the grave not fire not water not the bellies of beasts or fishes but they shall give up their dead and further the accomplishment of the word of their Creator The second observation is The L●●● denieth n t to help his children although he delay them till his own due time be come that as the Lord of life raised not his Son as soon as he was dead but he must lye in the grave two days yea and the third also till his case seemed desperate to the Disciples themselves even so may the members of Christ lye long in the graves of their misery yea so long as their case seemeth desperate and all that while the Lord not only deferreth but seemeth to deny their help and utterly to neglect them Abraham had the promise of a Son by Sarah he looked every year for him ten twenty years together nay till the thirtieth year till it was not with Sarah as with childing-women in so much as she laught when she heard it the case in nature was desperate who would have thought but that God had forgotten his promise which Abraham himself in all that time if God had not shoared up his faith might have forgotten but though long first yet at length the Lord found out a time fit enough to bring his word to passe David in like
daunt the wicked and ungodly They shall see him whom they have peirced hee is their Judge against whom all their villanies have been committed whose servants they have villanously intreated whose kindness and peaceable conditions they have despised and refused What a fearful sentence awaiteth them when they shall come before him no marvail if they call for the mountains to cover them and the hills to hide them rather than they should appear before the presence of his glory whose wrath is as a consuming fire and no stubble can stand before it Oh consider this yee that put far from you this great day of the Lord speaking peace to your selves whilest every thing wageth war against you in that you still by living in your sins proclaim open war against the Son of God Why should you any longer abuse his patience why will you treasure up wrath for your selves against this day of wrath why will you fit your selves as fewel for the fire of that day when the Lord Jesus shall come from Heaven in flaming fire to render vengeance against all them which know not God nor obey the Gospel of our Lord Jesus 2 Thess 1.8 Well if you will not bee warned but you will go on in such impenitent courses know it that the party wronged by your sins is hee who is appointed of God to bee your Judge you will think it will go hard with Pilate seeing hee is to bee his judge who was judged by him to death and with Judas that betrayed him and with the Souldiers that put him to death but change the persons the case is your own Secondly In the execution of this Office two things must bee considered 1 The persons upon whom here said to bee the quick and the dead 2 The manner of it First By the phrase of quick and dead is meant all mankind without exception of what age condition sex or quality soever they bee even all that ever have received life from God from the first man that ever lived upon earth to the last that shall bee found living at the comming of Christ even all these shall bee juged And the dead are mentioned as well as the living because the carnal and unbeleeving heart of man maketh more question how those who have been resolved into dust many thousand years ago can bee quickened and raised to judgement than those that shall bee found alive at that day therefore is the Scripture very express in this particular Rev. 20.12 I saw the dead both great and small stand before God 2 Cor. 5.10 Wee shall all appear before the Judgement Seat of Christ In like manner those speeches admit no exception which we every where meet withall as Every eye shall see him every man shall bear his own burden every man shall give account of himself unto God Rom. 14.12 And that wee should not doubt of the certainty hereof the Scripture condescendeth so farre to our weaknesse The means whereby both quick and dead shall be g●thered to judgement as to shew us the means how this great work shall be brought about As 1 By the mighty and powerful voyce of Christ which whilest he was in his abasement could call dead Lazarus out of his grave Joh. 5.28 Those that are in the graves shall hear his voyce 2 By the ministery of the Angels who shall all not one excepted come with him and they shall gather the elect from all winds and present and force the wicked to the barre before the Judge of all the earth even then when they shall fly to the hills to cover them if it were possible from his presence 3 By the diligence of all the brute creatures who in their kinds shall hear the voyce of the Son of God The Sea shall give up her dead so shall Death and the Grave give up their dead the very fire shall give up again the bodies it hath wasted In a word all the Creatures shall help forward this work of the great day which although it transcend the shallow reach of man yet is it not above the power of God Object But how can the quick and dead be then presented to Judgement s●eing the godly shall not enter into judgement and for the wicked they are judged already for he that beleeveth not is condemned already Ans First for the godly they shall not enter into the judgement of condemnation 2 They are by their particular judgement acquitted already but they must also by the general Judgement receive in their bodies which till that day are not absolved according as they have done in the flesh 3 They must be solemnly and publikely inaugurated and invested into the glory of their head and their blessed estate manifested to all the world both men and Angels and even in the eyes of the wicked themselves therefore although they enjoy God already in part and the beginnings of the life to come and such as are dead in the grave rest with the Lord and enjoy his glory in their soul yet are they not fully happy nor can be till this day breath on them and this their morning awake them to their perfect glory As for the wicked although they are already condemned 1 In Gods Counsel before all worlds 2 By the word wherein their sentence is read Wicked already judged five waies declared and published 3 In their own consciences the judgemen● of which fore-runneth the final Judgement 4 By certain degrees of insensible plagues that are upon them as hardnesse of heart blindnesse of mind wilfulnesse in their wickednesse malice against God and good men hatred of the light and means of salvation 5 By the horrible torment of the souls of such as are in Hell with the Devil and damned ones yet doth the full vial of Gods wrath remain to be poured upon them and the final execution and manifestation of their endlesse misery is reserved till this Day of Judgement when the body shall be re-united to the soul and both delivered to the Devil as their head by him to be tormented together as they have been inseparable friends in sinning together Vse Let every man make account of this judgement high and low rich and poor learned and unlearned No man can avoyd this judgement unless his power be above the power of the judge the mightiest Monarch shall not bee able to with-draw or absent himself unlesse his power bee above the power of Christ the judge the poorest soul that ever saw the Sun shall not bee neglected the most rebellions of all Creatures men or Angels must of force appear and that not by a Proctor or Advocate but in his own person for every man must give accounts of himself unto God None can be forgotten no not through the passing of thousands of years Cain dyed many thousand years since Judas many hundreths yet both must appear the one for killing his innocent brother the other for betraying his innocent Master No excuse will serve the turn the
is framing a bill of inditement against this day of general assize 2 This consideration must move us to carefulness both of our receits and expences whether they bee gifts of mind or of body Be careful of thy receipts and expenses bec●use thou fittest in another mans to whom thou must be countable or of our outward estate Hee that spendeth and walleth his own need care the less because none can call him to reckoning why hee doth so but hee that sitteth in another mans or hath a matter of trust in his hands and cannot mis-spend but out of another mans stock had need look about him b●cause hee is to bee countable and must make good whatsoever his reckoning commeth short in Ask thy self What have I which I have not received of my Master How came I to bee so rich Is all the Wealth I have of my Masters gift or have I gotten goods into my hands by wronging or injuring some other men Again I remember I received at such and such a time a great summe of my Ma●ters mony hee betrusted mee with a great p●rtion how have I laid it out that I may give him up a just and comfortable reckoning to which I am sure to bee called Thus much I have spent upon sutes in Law Thus much upon my pleasures and sports my dogs have ravend up a part of my revenue my Hawks have flown away with another end Cards and Dice have cost mee no little and a great deal is wasted by compassing my sin uncleanness pride revenge gluttony and the like But O thou unfaithful Servant that hast thus wasted thy Masters goods how much hast thou given to the poor how much to good uses to works of mercy to a settled Ministry to help Joseph out of his affliction oh no here hee can set down little or nothing the Dogs are preferred before Lazarus by many a Dives who if they timely look not better to their reckonings must make the foot of their account to bee this no sooner to bee dead than to be buried in Hell according to the sentence Take that unprofitable servant bind him hand and foot and cast him into utter darkness there shall bee wayling and gnashing of teeth 3 This stri●t account sheweth that a man cannot bee too strict No man can bee too precise because the judgement shall be thus precise too precise or too careful of his waies Men generally cast the reproach of purity upon men that desire to approve their hearts and lives unto God and count them more nice than wise and say it were hard if every one that were not so pre●ise and curious should bee damned But what doth not the Scripture ●ay plainly that he Master is an hard man that is a most just God that will straightly stand for justice shall not every idle word every ungodly thought and motion though not attended nor assented unto come unto judgement and if it must is it more than needeth for men to look to the door of their lips yea to keep out if it were possible every vain and wandring thought out of their mindes shall not hee that breaketh the least commandement bee the least in the Kingdome of Heaven that is have no place at all there shall not all omissions and failings in duty bee set upon the heads of sinners seeing the sentence shall run In that yee did not these things depart from mee yee ●●●sed or shall wee thi●● that the least carelesnesse of men shall be justified in this judgem●nt or the ungodly be taken by the hand far bee it from the Judge of all the world not to judge with righteous judgement howsoever loose persons wrap themselves in the woe of those that call good evil and evil good Now for the general use of this Doctrine of the last judgement To what other end hath the word so expresly discovered this holy Doctrin and enjoyned us to teach it in the Church 1 Cor. 15. but that every man should lay it to heart and benefit himself by it and therefore First The godly are to comfort themselves with these words The godly may l●f● up their heads in expectation of this day of redemption seeing they hear of this day wherein they shall bee gainers receiving their sentence of absolution and therefore 1 Perfect redemption from all the danger of all spiritual enmities the first fruits whereof they have already attained hence is it called the day of their redemption 2 Perfect security and safety against a●● the mol●stations of sin death the grave the gates of Hell temptation and tribulation for all these shall be cast into the Lake 3 Perfect glory with the Saints for they shall be from henceforth ever with the Lord and enjoy the sweet ●●uit of that prayer which the Son of God in the daies of his flesh r●quested and was heard in Father I will that where I am they may be also that they may behold my glory Joh. 17.24 Why should not wee then lift up our heads in the exp●ctation and ardent desire of this day which the very dumb creature 〈◊〉 for Rom 8.19 Godly must address them selves to thi● judgement two waies Secondly Let every man labour to fit and addresse himself unto this judgem●nt that h●● may ●ee able to stand before the Son of Man And that by two thing● 1 By making full account and reckoning of it 2 By using the best 〈◊〉 af●re-hand to pass through it happily The 〈◊〉 i●●harged upon us by that precept which commandeth us to bee like the Servant that waiteth for his Masters comming and hath every thing i● a ●●adin●ss and that at all watches and by that of Peter 2 Pet 3.11 Seeing a●● these terrors of the Lord what manner of men ought wee to bee in all holy con●er●at●on Two thing● hinder this c●re An● for the furthering of this care two things must carefully be 〈…〉 which shut it quite out of the hearts of the most The fi●st i● 〈◊〉 ●●●ry and deadnesse of heart which is a slumber of spirit and sl●●p●●●ss of the s●ul which hath bound up all faculties and powers of the 〈…〉 as ●●ttle move o● stir in the actions and affairs of heavenly 〈◊〉 s●i●●tual ●se as a man when he is in a dead sleep can move or bestir himself to 〈…〉 natural a tion The minde till God awaken it never ser●ously thi●ke●h of God or of his own estate The conscience never or seldome accuseth for 〈◊〉 committed The will inclineth not to any thing tru●ly good The affe●ti●ns remain unmoved at Gods word o● works The whol● man i● s●nselesse and careless of Gods judgements either present or to come and whence is all this but from a profane delusion of the heart that the Master will not yet come they shall not yet bee called to their reckoning there is time enough behind to repent in they crave but an hour on then Death-beds and that they hope they shall have In the mean time they
AN EXPOSITION OF Christ's Temptations OR CHRISTS COMBATE AND CONQUEST BEING The LYON of the Tribe of JUDAH vanquishing the Roaring Lyon assaulting him in three most fierce and Hellish TEMPTATIONS BY Thomas Taylor D. D. Preacher of Gods VVord at Aldermanbury London HEBR. 2.18 For in that hee suffered and was tempted hee is able to succour them that are tempted Tentatus est Christus ne vincatur à Tentatore Christianus August LONDON Printed for A. K. and R. I. and are to be sold by Elisha Wallis at the Golden Horse-shooe in the Old-Bayley 1659. To the Right Worthy and Noble Knight Sir Francis Knollis and the vertuous Lady Lettice his Wife All blessings of this Life and a better SIR WHEN that great Prophet Moses was to bee confirmed in the certainty of his vocation for the delivery of Gods people out of Egypt a Act. 7.30 There appeared unto him in the wildernesse of Mount Sinai b Christ himsel● so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Matt. an Angel of the Lord in a flame of fire in the bush c Exod. 3.1 and hee looked and behold the bush burnt with fire and the bush was not consumed A sight at which Moses d Act. 7.31 wondred and so may we But if you please with Moses e Exod. 3.4 to turn aside to see this great sight that is f Act 7.31 draw a little nearer to consider it This it is I. The bush which at that time betokened the people of Israel g Exod. 3.7 9. under the oppressions of Egypt signifieth the Church of God for 1. As a bryar-bush is a base and despicable thing made for nothing but the fire or to stop a gap or some other base use so seems the Church and members to be in the eyes of men in so much as not the most eminent members the blessed Apostles themselves are h 1 Cor. 4.10 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 despised and accounted the filth of the World and the off-scowring or out-sweepings of all things but the Head of it our Lord himself was in the eies of men without form i Isa 55.2 3 or beauty despised and rejected of men who hid their eies from him and esteemed him not 2 As a bush pricketh and vexeth him that deals roughly with it so shall the Church of God bee as a stiff and prickly bramble to vex and wound at length all the proud enemies of it so as all that k Zach. 12 3 lift at it shal be torn though all the people of the earth should be gathered against it 3 As the creatures for their own safety make their nests and muses in a bush so the mighty Creator not for his but the bushes safety vouchsafeth l Deut. 33. ●● to dwell in this bush of the Church The bush was in Mount m Exod. 3.1 Famous for s●● memorable things in Mos●● done there 1 This visio● 2 Fasting the●● forty daies an● nights 3 Receiving the 〈◊〉 there 4 Scriking the rock for water 5 Lifting his hands against Am●●●ck 6 Breaking t●●●ables of 〈◊〉 Horeb and God was in the bush even so the Church is in the mountain of the Lord lifted up as a mountain above the vallies in holinesse and priviledges above all the earth besides for of this mountain the Lord hath said n Psa 68.16 there will I dwell for ever II. The bush burns with fire In this resemblance is shadowed the oppressed estate of the Israelites in the Egyptian furnace and by fire here is meant the most painful and pittiful afflictions and miseries which seiz upon the Church and Members as a raging and devouring fire upon a dry bush for 1 Fire is a diffusive and spreading element catching whatsoever combustible matter is neer it even so not a sprig of this bush of the Church shall escape the flame of affliction but whosoever will live godly in Christ Jesus o 2 Tim. 3.12 shall suffer persecution for either the fiery darts of Satan shall scorch them within or they shall be sindged with the fiery p 1 Pet. 4.12 tryals of the worlds hatred or at least they must look to bee be-smeared and blacked in their names with the colly and smoak of odious false and scandalous imputations and what are q Quid a●●● su●●s quam flemma 〈…〉 Gods people saith one but the fewel of the wicked worlds fiery indignation 2 Fire shineth and inlighteneth so the afflictions of the Church as fire inlighten the mind r Psal 119.71 teach the statutes The rod and correction saith Solomon ſ Prov. 29.15 give wisdome and the Lord t Job 33.16 36.9 openeth by correction saith Elihu the ears of man which hee had sealed in which use this fire of affliction becomes as another u Exod. 13.21 pillar of fire to inlighten and guide the Israel of God in the night of their wandring through the wilderness of this world towards their land of promise that heavenly Canaan 3 Fire giveth heat and warm'th so the heat of this fire of affliction melteth and thaweth our frozen hearts condensed and congealed by the pinching air of cold security this fire kindleth our devotion enflameth our zeal x Isa 26.16 Hos 5.15 warmeth our prayers and makes us hot suters for releef 4 Fire softneth and smodreth metals y Exod. 9.27 Pharaohs steely heart will melt and soften while it is in this hot furnace yea in the same man it separateth dross from pure metal and like that fire which burnt only the z D●n 3.27 Ig●is non perdi● sed purg●s bands of them that were cast in but not their bodies so it only consumeth the corruptions but preserveth alive the children of God who only walk at more liberty and further inlargement in the fire than they did out of it and as gold come forth more purified more glorious 5 Fire is a climbing and ascending element so the fire of affliction maketh the heart to ascend and raiseth the thoughts to heaven-ward Luk. 15.17 Misery maketh the Prodigal bethink himself of his Fathers house when he is a great way from it and this is the fire which Moses saw seizing upon the bush Stabilitatem populi ex veritate promissionum dei ad●●ravit Junius in analys III. The bush burning is not consumed signifying the preservation of the Church and Members as Israel in Egypt in the hottest furnace of their afflictions Well may wee wonder that so flaming and terrible a fire falling upon so contemptible a bush and so dry and despicable a shrub should not presently turn it into ashes for why is the fire too weak or is the bush so strong as to defend it self or is it not disposed or apt to be burnt consumed by so fierce a fire Certainly it is not from the impotency of the fire nor from the strength or constitution of the bush which is in the matter of it as combustible
as any chaff and as easily destroyed as any stubble that it is not consumed But 1 This fire is not kindled against the bush cut of the sparks of Gods wrath Heb. 12.29 Heb. 12.10 and indignation which is indeed a consuming fire but of his Fatherly affection and love not for the hurt of the bush but for the profit of it not to destroy the persons but the sin for the persons sake Wee have indeed kindled and blown up our selves a violent and devouring fire Heb. 10.27 which God might send into our bones Lam. 1.13 Psal 83.14 Lam. 3.22 to burn us up as fire burneth the forrest and as the flames set the mountains on fire But the mercy of God is as water to quench this fire for else would it burn to the bottome of Hell and instead of a Furnace of fury which melteth away his enemies Ezek. 22.22 he setteth up in Zion Isa 27.9 a furnace of favour only to melt the metal consume away the dross and refine his chosen ones to become vessels of honour 2 Because the fuel of the consuming fire of Gods wrath are slaves not sons those wicked brambles Ezek. 15.7 which if they escape one fire saith the Prophet they fall into another which shall consume them but not this bush which is only made brighter and better by the flame but not blacker not worser The chaff and stubble must feed the fire of wrath never to come forth more but the pure metal is cast into the furnace to come forth so much the purer as it hath been the longer tryed Exod. 3.2 3 Because the Angel of God is in the bush This Angel was Jesus Christ the Lord of the holy Angels and the great Angel of the Covenant For Moses saith expresly of this vision ver 4. The Lord appeared unto Moses and God called unto him out of the middest of the bush and S. Luke recording the same vision Act. 7.31 2. greeing with Exod. 3.6 after that hee had called him an Angel bringeth him in saying I am the Lord of Abraham c. This same presence of the Son of God was noted the cause why the three children in that furious furnace of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.25 being cast in bound walked loose in the midst of the flames why not they but their bands were burnt and why not an hair of their cloaths vers 27. and much lesse of their heads were touched no nor smelt of the fire Isa 43.2 Behold the bush burned but not consumed because the King saw four men walking loose having cast in but three bound and they have no hurt for the form of the fourth is like the Son of God Because God is in the midst of it saith David of the Church it shall not bee moved No● potentia urendi sublata ab ig●e sed operatio tantum ut Dan. 3 for God shall help it very early How partly 1 by restraining the natural force of the fire 2 partly by obfirming and strengthening the bush against it 3 partly by watching it that it spread not too far for himself as it were sits by the fire to tend it 4 partly by slaking and cooling it when it groweth too hot lest the heat smite the bush as the worm did Jonas his gourd By these means Jonab 4.7 the bush in the flame becometh like the Gem Amiantus Amiantus g●●●a ig●● non absumitur sed lucidi●● ac ●urior redditur Dub. Chytr●●s Isa 53.3 which is not consumed by fire but becomes brighter and purer than before This most holy and comfortable truth is fully assured unto us in the person of our Lord and Head as well as in the body who in the daies of his flesh was 1 A bush most able to peirce and wound his enemies in himself most desplicable and base in all outward appearances and in this bush God dwelt not in any visible sign of his presence but as never in any before essentially and bodily 2 A bush in the fire partly of Gods wrath Col. 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa 53.10 Matth. 26.38 Mat. 27.46 Lam. 1.14 True first in the head and then in the members in inward passion and suffering in his soul the sorrows of the second death which made him cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me into which flame had the bush of the Church been cast it had been utterly consumed Partly of mans wrath in outward passion and misery such as whereof hee complained that no sorrow was ever matchable to his And partly of Satans wrath in most fiery and furious temptation the which hellish fire was renewed and blown up against him in most violent sort three several times as in the Treatise following we shall by Gods grace discover 3 A bush in the fire not consumed but came forth of the hotest Furnace that ever was kindled more bright and glorious than the Sun in his strength For easy it was with him to convince his temporal adversaries by the mighty raising of himself from the dead through his own Divine power Rom. 1.4 when hee had overcome the wrath of God his Father and not difficult for him that had in his life overcome Satans Temptations and in the wilderness spoiled him of his power and weapons in part Col. 2.15 upon the cross by his death openly and perfectly to destroy his Forces and as on a glorious Chariot to triumph over him This bush burnt but not consumed As he is the end of all the Scriptures so also of the exposition of them in whom and for whose glory I have published this Exposition at the importunate request of some Friends Notwithstanding many discouragements that was on the one hand and sundry godly lights in our own tongue opening the same Scripture on the other Mr. Udal Mr. Perkins Mr. Dike 2 Sam. 23.13 The truth is magnified in the mouth of many witnesses and a poor man may give in as true an evidence as a rich If I may hold Benajahs place in the Church of God and stand for God among the thirties and the many of his Worthies it shall well content me although I attain not unto the first three What ever this labour is I have presumed to dedicate it unto you noble Sir as a testimony of my true and unfeigned affection and duty 1 Because God hath made you a worthy instrument in this place which as well by your authority and care as through your godly affection and countenance of good men and causes hath a long time enjoyed much comfort assistance and refreshing 2 Your sound love to the truth hath invited this truth to run under your patronage 3 As he which hath been once friendly bid welcome will boldly come again so your good entertainment of this doctrin in the delivery of it assures it you will now bid it as welcome to your eye as it was to your ears at the first offer of it
Gods book for the increase of knowledge and conscience Psal 1. ● Deut. 6 and add hereto meditation and prayer for these three saith Luther make a Divine all time thus spent is well redeemed As for lascivious and idle books shun them as rocks 2 Rejoyce in the good you know by another praise God for it pray for the increase of it But if you know any evil by any mourn for it and if you can by brotherly admonition amend it ●ob 31.1 ●sal ●59 ●7 3 Retrain your ears eyes mouth and hands from hearing seeing speaking or performing any wicked and vain thing knowing that death often entereth in at the windows S ●am 1.2 1 Stick to God as well in adversity as prosperity the one being as necessary as the other If you want necessaries humble your self for them if you have them bee humble with them and use them well lest you forfeit them ●at 5.23 ●sal 35.14 2 Seek Reconciliation with your Neighbour freely forgiving those that have offended you and earnestly desiring to be forgiven of all that have been offended by you ●at 23.25 ● 7.9 10 3 Study to approve both your heart to God and your Life to Gods Children in your particular calling and especially to such ●hes 5 ● 6. ● as to whom God hath joyned you as if a servant in obeying if a Master in ruling if an husband in loving if a wife in reverence for a good conscience a good name and good manners must go together T ●b 3.12 ● 1.11 ● 15 ● m. 1. ● 12. 1 Take heed of performing holy duties for fashions sake or without feeling and profit for this is hypocrisy or prophaneness 2 Thankfully requite at least with 1 Acknowledgement 2 Hearty affection 3 Prayer the good you get by any man for there is no member in the body but standeth in need of others mens gifts Cor. 11. ● 26 3 Think it the greatest work in the world to dye well which to do you must inure your self to dye before hand 1 by dying to your sins 2 Leaving the world in affection before it actually leave you 2 In your last leaving of it do it willingly yea Joyfully whensoever wheresoever or howsoever God shall call you V 1 Vow to God and keep it Eccl. 5.34 Psal 16.14 especially strive in performing the solemn vow of your baptism and the covenant which you renew in the Lords Supper 2 Vatiance and discord with men will not stand with your peace with God If you love God 1 Joh. 4 20 you will love men also for Gods image or else for his Commandements sake 3 Use the World as not using it and your prosperity and liberty to be bettered by them That is not gained 1 Cor. 7.31 Mat. 16.26 which is gotten with the loss of your soul and then is the soul exchanged with an handful of the world when it is not gotten and held 1 In Christ restoring it 2 With Christ the chief gain 3 For Christ the Lord of it W 2 Wait upon the Lord and he will direct your way becom his servant Psal 37.7 for this is the way to attain your truest liberty 2 Weep with them that weep Rom. 12.15 Jer. 13.17 Psal 69.9 and fellow-feel the afflictions of the brethren that are in the world Christ in Heaven accounteth the sufferings of his Saints his own and wee his members upon earth must do the same Religion and mercy are well matched by God and must not by man be divorced Ezek. 9.4 as for the miseries and sins of the age wherein you live mourn also for them and pray to God for remedy 3 Wish not a long life so much as a good life he hath lived long who hath lived well A short life in grace setteth into the everlasting life of glory The Analysis of Christs Temptations In Christs Temptations consider 1 The preparation parts three 1 Christs entring the lists here 1 Time Then 1 When he had been baptized 2 When he undertook his high office 3 When the Spirit had descended upon him The Sonne of God The Teacher of the Church 4 When hee had received testimony from heaven that hee was 2 Person Jesus 3 Guide of his way was lead of the Spirit Here 1 The Guide The Spirit 2 The manner was lead 4 Place into the wilderness 5 End To bee tempted of the Devil Here 1 Author The Devil 2 End it self To be tempted 2 His expectance of the enemy Here three things 1 How he was furnished Hee was filled with the Holy Ghost Luk. 4.1 2 His Company He was with the wilde beasts Mar. 1.13 3 His imployment 1 He was tempted within that time Luk. 4.2 with lighter on-sets 2 He fasted in his fast 1 time forty days forty nights 2 effect he was afterwards hungry 3 Entrance of the adversary where 1 The time Then when Christ had fasted and was hungry 2 The name of the adversary The Tempter 3 The manner of his entrance he came in an assumed shape externally 2 The Combate it self in three fierce on-sets First consist of an 1 Assault in it 1 The ground If thou be the Son of God 2 The inference Command these stones to bee made bread Here 1 Facility Command 2 Readiness of object these stones 3 Utility to be made bread 2 Repulse in it 1 The manner it was 1 reasonable 2 meek 3 modest 2 The affection negative But conjunction discretive 3 The matter a testimony of Scripture It is written 4 Parts of the testimony 1 Negative Man liveth not by bread only 2 Affirmative but by every word which proceedeth c. Second consists of 1 Preparation here 1 The time then 2 The place set down 1 In general the holy City Luke expresseth it to be Jerusalem 2 In special a pinacle of the Temple 3 The manner how Christ was conveyed thither in 2 things 1 Hee took him up 2 He set him on the Pinacle 2 Temptation in it 1 Assault in it 1 The ground If thou be the Son of God 2 The matter cast thy self down Here 1 The action Cast down 2 The agent thy self 3 The place whence from hence saith Luke where means of safety were 3 The argument to perswade him a testimony of Scripture in which 1 General consideration It is written 2 Special matter 1 As abused by Satan 2 In his right use here 1 Angels ministery keep thee 2 Who seals their commission Hee shall give his Angels charge 3 The limitation in all thy waies 4 The manner they shall bear thee in their hands c. 2 Repulse in it 1 Resistance Jesus said unto him 2 Reason 1 Scripture alledged for it is written to the contrary 2 in the allegation 1 who must not tempt thou 2 who must not be tempted The Lord. Thy God 3 action of tempting Third in it 1 Assault in it 1 preparation in it 1 choice of a fit place Here 1 what place
distinguish between being tempted and being led into temptation in our Saviours sense the former is a work of Gods mercy to try exercise or chastise any of his Children the latter is a work of Justice in which God leaves a man to himself so as the temptation is prevailing against him Now wee pray onely against the latter which is to bee left and so overcome in temptation neither doth God so lead us into temptation but to make us in the end more than Conquerors so as still wee may bid Temptations welcome and with cheerfulness submit our selves unto them Vse 3 In every tryal see that the Spirit lead thee for this is a sure ground of comfort and hath assured hope in it of a good end Christ was not led into temptation by private motion neither did hee thrust himself unto it no more must wee rashly run into or pull dangers upon us or through presumption object ourselves unto temptations if wee do Wee must not thrust our selves into tryals but expect the leading of the spirit wee must needs fall and cannot expect safety because wee tempt the Lord and provoke him to with-draw his Fatherly protection from us whereas there is no danger in following the leading and guidance of the Spirit Many a man is of so strong a faith that nothing can harm him hee is for all courses and all companies But how can a man bee safe where Satans throne is Peter thought himself strong enough to go into the High-Priests Hall but hee found in the end it was no fit company for him Others through vain presidence of Gods protection run in times of contagion into infected houses which upon just calling a man may but for one to run out of his calling in the way of an ordinary visitation hee shall finde that Gods Angels have commission to protect him no longer than hee is in his way Psalm 91.11 and that being out of it this arrow of the Lord shall sooner hit him than another that is not half so confident Others are bold-hardy to set upon the Devil in his own holds they dare enter into and lodge in houses given up by God to the Devils possession which is if it bee out of ones lawful Calling to cast a mans self into most probable danger for whereas wee ought to use all good and lawful means for the preventing of imminent danger this is to seek danger and hurt and commonly they that seek it justly find it The issue of such presumption wee may see in the sons of Sceva Act. 19.16 who took upon them to do as the Apostles did namely to name Christ over those that were possessed but the Devil seeing their want of calling thereunto ran upon them and overcame them so as they fled out of the house naked and wounded Others through temerity and rashness bring on themselves much woe who follow the motions of their own spirits in their courses and never or seldome consider whether they have Gods Spirit before them or no they look not for warrant out of Gods Word in the things they do or speak they begge not Gods direction and assistance they spy not in what ambush Satan lyeth what advantages hee easily taketh and so for want of Christian watchfulnesse lay themselves open to many evils and dangers wherein they can meet with no great comfort because they cannot say with a good conscience Lord thou hast led mee into this estate but rather I have cast my self into this danger If therefore thou wouldest finde comfort in troubles keep thee in thy way that thou mayest never bee without the leading of the Spirit Three notable effects from assurance of the spirits guidance in trials and then this will bee the issue 1 Being led by the Spirit thou wilt follow willingly thou wilt lay aside all reasonings excuses and delaies as Christ did hee murmures not delaies not doth not first return to Nazareth bids not his Parents and friends farewel consults not with flesh and blood but was driven out with a strong motion ot the Spirit This is the same free Spirit which dwelleth in the hearts of Christians hee leads them too and they obey and follow Abraham follows him from his own Countrey and Moses into Egypt 2 If thou see the Spirit leading thee thou shalt not faint under the Cross no not when thou lookest upon the greatest danger that can be threatned because the other eye is upon the Spirit which helpeth thy infirmities and according to the measure of affliction ministreth a sound measure of comfort 1 Pet. 4.14 therefore the Saints rejoyce in affliction because the Spirit of glory and of God resteth upon them A valiant Captain leading the way incourageth the most timorous souldier to follow with courage and resolution So this Spirit which leadeth is a spirit of strength and of power not in himself alone but supplying with new strength those that give up themselves to bee led by him 3 If thou see the Spirit leading thee into tryal it will keep thee from seeking to winde thy self out by any unlawful or unwarrantable means thou wilt follow him to bee led out by him as well as thou wast led in by him thou wilt wait his leisure for the removal of thy Tryal in whose good pleasure it lyeth most seasonably to deliver thee This is often the reason why God giveth his children to bee led by the Spirit to try whether they will abide with him in temptation or no. And those who will shift themselves out of trouble by lying swearing and the like or avoid crosses and losses by wicked means as poverty by breaking the Sabbath sickness by sorcery and witchcraft what spirit soever led them in certainly the evil spirit hath led them out the remedy is worse than their disease and their escape is made only by breaking the prison Vse 4. As Christ was led by the Spirit in all his course of life so should Christians for as many as are the Sons of God are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 So the Apostles in their Ministry went hither and thither stayed or departed preached and prophecyed by the Spirit They were forbidden by the Holy Ghost to preach the Word in Asia and Bithynia Act. 16.6 7. 21.4 certain Disciples told Paul by the Spirit that hee should not go up to Jerusalem And it is the duty of all true Beleevers to resign themselves in subjection to Gods Spirit Quest How shall I know when I am led by the Holy Ghost Answ By these rules 1 Gods Spirit works in and by the Word therefore if thou enquirest in every thing what is the good and acceptable wil of God Three rules to know a mans self led in every thing by the Holy Ghost Rom. 12.2 thou art led by the Spirit 2 Discern his guidance by the mortification of the deeds of the flesh for the life of the Spirit is opposed to the life of the flesh Rom. 8.13 Therefore
stake Secondly of the company of Christ and how he was attended Mark addeth that circumstance chap. 1. vers 13. He was also with the wilde beasts VVhich is not to be passed without use because the Spirit of God pleased to record it The Popish VVriters say that the cause hereof was that the wilde beasts should come and doe homage to him their Lord as they did to Adam But this is a devise of mans brain for although Christ deserved honour and homage from all Creatures men and Angels yet this is not the time and place to receive it yea they forget that Christ went into the Wilderness to be humbled in a special manner Besides the text mentioneth other business wherein Christ was for those forty days imployed as in the next branch wee are to hear Why Christ was with wilde beasts Four Reasons But the true and proper causes were these 1 To shew what kind of wilderness this was namely not such as that in which John preached of which there were many in Palestina which were distinguished by their special names as the Desert of Judea of Ziph of Maon c. and such as were not altogether desert and without people or incommodious for men to dwell in but were here and there inhabited But this Desert wherein Christ was tempted not noted by any addition but the Desert was remote from all company of men and full of wilde beasts by which it is plain it was unpeopled and had no inhabitants but the wilde beasts If any ask which Wilderness it was I answer it is not determined in the Scripture but it is not unlikely but it was that great VVilderness in which the Israelites wandred fourty years called by eminence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Wilderness And we know that there were some figures which might shadow the temptation in this place as Exod. 17.7 it is called the place of temptation Massah and Meribah because of contending and tempting the Lord here the Lord was contended with and tempted Again Exod. 16.4 this was the place wherein the Lord shewed them that man liveth not by bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God compare it with Deut. 8.3 This also was the VVilderness in which Moses and Elias fasted forty days and if it were not the same it must needs bee figured by it But it is no Article of Faith to be stood upon or contended about 2 This circumstance of History is added to shew how helpless Christ was without all help and comfort of man where hee could look for no succour from any earthly creature or worldly means nay all the means against him 3. To shew that his power was so much the more manifest in that when Satan had him at the greatest advantage and all the means set against him yet he goes away victor and that none could share with him in the praise of the victory but it belonged to him of all the seed of women 4 To shew the power of the Son of God who could live peaceably among the wilde beasts who if he had been a common and weak man had been certainly eaten up of them Quest How could Christ live peaceably and safely among the wilde beast● Ans VVhen Daniel was cast into the Den the Lions spared him but not through the disposition of their nature for presently their devoured his enemies but the text ascribeth it to two causes 1 To the Angel of God that stopped their mouthes 2 Because he beleeved in his God which besides the faith whereby he was justified was even a faith in the miracle by which hee was strengthened at this time But I take it another reason may bee given of Christs peaceable converse among the savage creatures namely because hee was endued with the perfect Image of God and they did acknowledge him as their Lord even as they did Adam before the fall which is a special priviledge of the state of innocency Hence observe 1 That wicked men are worse than brute beasts Christ hath more peace among wilde beasts than among wicked men they will not acknowledge Christ when the wilde beasts will Christ shall have no peace among them If he come in Judas his hands he will betray him the Jews will accuse him Pilate will condemn him the common sort will beat and buffet him the Souldiers will crucifie him A great deal more security shall he find in the VVilderness among wilde beasts than in places inhabited by wicked men And the reason seems to bee that the higher the fall the greater the wound the Devil falling from such a height of glory is most desperately wicked against Gods Image especially in his Son wicked men falling from a blessed estate of holiness and renewed reason are desperately malicious too so as the poor creatures in their proportion retain more goodness in their nature than man doth in his they still serve God in their kinds man still rebelleth they fell from subjection to man but man from subjection to God Vse This should both humble us to see the little good that is left in our nature and also urge us to seek the renewing of it And it should terrifie wicked men who resisting Christ in his word members graces yea persecuting him in his Saints shew themselves more savage than the Creatures the wilde beasts will acknowledge him that doth him good but the wicked man spurns against him Daniel was more safe among the Lions than his enemies and David was compassed with ramping Lions Psal 22.13 Note 2. This affordeth us a ground of comfort that when the state of the Church is afflicted led into the Wilderness environed with men for their dispositions as wilde and fierce as Tygres Lions Leopards Cockatrices for so natural men are described Isa 11. yet it is in no worse state than Christ himself once was and as Christ was in the midst of wilde beasts and was not hurt so shall his members be they may be molested and afraid of danger by them yea assaulted and slain but not hurt If the Spirit lead thee into the Wilderness as hee did Christ thou mayest bee secure if for good conscience and Gods religion thou beest set upon thou shalt not bee hurt as the Martyrs were not Note 3. In that our Saviour now is safe enough when all the means of safety and comfort are set against him we must learn to depend upon him if we shall come into the like case when we have no way to help our selves all means fail nay all means are against us Christ as able to defend us as himself both from wilde beasts and Devils like so many wilde beasts about us then he is able to succour us as he was to defend himself alone not only from the rage of wilde beasts but furious Devils And this is the true trial of faith when we have no means yea when means are against us It is an easie thing to trust God upon a
ground under the milstone of Gods heavie displeasure and Levit. 19.13 Thou shalt not robb thy neighbour the Work-mans hire shall not abide with thee till the morning The reason is in Deut. 24.15 Lest thy Servant cry against thee to the Lord surely it shall be sin unto thee Obj. 2. But thou mayest make the best of thine own commodities by hoysing the prices and diminishing or corrupting the quantity or quality No man can force thee to sell thy own in dear times unlesse thou wilt and much lesse to give it away to the poor and needy then shut up thy heart live to thy self let others shift for themselves as thou doest for one Ans It is written that covetousness is the root of all evil and that it is Idolatry and the Lord hath sworn by a great oath even by his own excellency Amos 8.4 that he will never forget any of their works that swallow up the poor and make the needy of the Land to fail that were weary of the Sabbath because it hindred their setting of Wheat to sale that made the Epha small and the shekel great and falsified their weights and sold corrupt corn that is took all courses for gain Besides the fearful fruits of covetousness in Achan Gehezi Ahab Judas Object 3 But thou lendest thy money too freely ten in the hundred thou maiest take by Law but if by cunning tricks and devices thou canst get twenty in the hundred thou shalt grow rich the sooner Answ It is written Luke 6.35 Lend freely looking for nothing again and Deut. 23.19 Thou shalt not give to usury to thy brother and Exod. 22.25 If thou lend mony to my people thou shalt not bee an Usurer and Levit. 25.36 Thou shalt take no usury nor advantage neither lend him money nor victuals to increase and What shall it profit a man to win the whole world and lose his own soul Object 4. But thou art a poor man and defraudest thy self of profit thou mayest by an oath or a lye or a little cunning and sleight get good gains and why needest thou be so nice Answ It is written Prov. 22.2 The rich and the poor meet together and the Lord is the maker of them both that is in their persons and in their estates and Levit. 19.11 12. Yee shall not swear by my name falsly neither defile the name of the Lord thy God and That the curse entereth into the house of the swearer and thief and Yee shall not steal nor deal falsly nor lye one to another and that all that love abomination and lyes shall bee kept without the gates of the holy City with dogs Rev. 22.15 and that I must not lye for Gods glory much less for my own profit Object 5 But thou maiest revenge thy self upon thy enemy and make him know whom hee hath in hand broach some untruth or other upon him and thou shalt at least disgrace him and if thou le●st him go with this every one will scorn thee Answ It is written Vengeance is mine and I will repay saith the Lord and Thou shalt not bear false witnesse and Matth. 7.12 Whatsoever you would that men should do to you the same do you to them and It is the glory of a man to pass by offences Object 6. But the cause is good the Catholike cause it is but a title of rebellion or treason indeed it is a meritorious work and thou shalt bee Canonized a Romish Martyr if thou shalt kill a King or Queen or Prince that is an Heretick but above all if thou canst by one terrible blow not only kill the King Queen and Prince but also the whole Council all the Lords all the Judges all the Laws all the Law-makers yea and blow up the whole Parliament-house and with that three heretical Kingdomes together Answ Here wee can hold no longer but in such a temptation as is so direct a worship of the Devil with our Lord say Avoid Satan bee packing foul Devil for It is written Rom. 13.1 Let every soul be subject to the higher powers and 1 Pet. 2.14 Submit your selves to all manner ordinance of man and the fearful judgement of Corah Dathan and Abiram with their complices betide such Catholike rebels as dare lift up their hands against the Lords annointed not to cut off his lap but his life which is the life and breath of all his people Use 2. The scripture the hammer of heresies Instance in justification by works The like use hath the Scripture in the right use of it against all errors and heresies as wee may see in these instances 1 If the Papists would teach us justification by workes Answ It is written Rom. 3.20 By the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified and the like in Gal. 3.3 4 5. And Paul had as many merits as any yet he would not bee found in his own righteousnesse Phil. 3.9 and our righteousness is but as filthinesse or filthy clouts and after our best indeavours wee are but unprofitable Servants 2 If they urge us with transubstantiation and real presence Answ It is written that after Christ had given the Sacrament In transubstantiation hee went into the garden and suffered which hee could not if hee had been eaten before and not being glorified and 2 remembrance is of things absent 3 He continues in heaven till his comming to judgement Act. 3.21 4 The Fathers are the same Sacramental bread 1 Cor. 10.3 and yet Christ was not then in the flesh 5 There is no alteration in the sign of Baptism and there is the same use of the sign of the Lords Supper In the seven Sacraments 3 If they object unto us seven Sacraments Wee reply against their five bastard ones as in that of Matrimony for the rest thus 1 It hath no sign instituted by God when he brought Eve to Adam here is matrimony but no sign the ring which they make a sign is not 2 It is not proper to the Church as Sacraments are but common to Jews Turkes and Infidels 3 Every Sacrament belongs to every Member of the Church but matrimony belongs not to their Priests and Votaries 4 All Sacraments serve to confirm faith so doth not matrimony Adam in innocency had no need of saith but hee had need of matrimony In orig nal sin after baptism 4 If they tell us that by Baptism Original sin is quite washed away Wee Answer No true Baptism takes away the guilt but not the being of sin and it is written of David Psal 51.5 that hee confessed hee was still in Original sin see also Rom. 7.7 and Jam. 1.13 In absolute necessity of Baptism 5 If they would thrust upon us the absolute necessity of Baptism Answ It is written that Circumcision being the same in signification and use with Baptism was omitted in the wildernesse forty years and that David doubted not of his uncircumcised childs salvation and that children are holy through their beleeving
alledge Scripture hee saith nothing against it but was silent he replies not and much less rails on him as a phantastical or precise person But reprove the Swearer the Drunkard the Gamester the unjust courses of men in their trades Sabbath-breaking in Masters or Servants and do it out of the Scripture as Christ did wee shall have the same measure that hee had returned from the Scribes and Pharisees who railed out-right on him He is too precise and severe wee can do nothing for him or What hath hee to do with our Government or Trades or He might finde other things to speak of Thus if Paul speak against Diana or whatsoever the craft-masters live by all the City is in an uproar against him It seems men are loath in their callings to meddle with the word of God or the directions of it else wee should have to deal with them It were too much to sit down silent and go on in sinne against the Word but to resist the word in termes or to rail upon the Preachers thereof goes one step beyond the Devil Vse 4. Take knowledge of the secret working of the Devil against the light and truth in such as spurn against it They cannot abide that truth and innocency should acquit it self but though they see nothing but meekness patience and innocency yet will side against it as though they had the greatest advantage and occasion What is the cause that men will take part with most abject and base persons and bring the curse on themselves in condemning the innocent and justifying the wicked in their horrible riots and misbehaviour but the hatred they carry against goodnesse Why did the Jews band themselves for Barrabas and seek to acquit him Was it because there was any cause of love in him knew they him not to bee a murtherer and a Rebel Yes It was hatred of Christ that made them stick to him and why hated they Christ but because he was the light Some there bee of that Jewish generation lest to whom if Christ be weighed with Barrabas he will seem too light Barrabas shall carry the credit and defence from him Not him but Barrabas Into the holy City We come to the second circumstance in the preparation to this second assault which is the place that Satan chuseth set down 1 In general the holy City 2 In special a pinacle of the Temple What holy City this was Luke expresseth chap. 4.9 He brought him to Jerusalem here called the holy City Jerusalem is called the holy City not because of any holiness in the place for no place as a place is more holy than other It is true that wee read in Scripture of holy ground as Exod. 3.5 Mount Horeb where Moses stood is called holy ground and Moses must put off his shooes But this was no inherent holiness in the place only for the present the presence of God appearing after a special manner makes a special holiness to bee ascribed unto it Neither is it called holy in respect of the people and Inhabitants for the faithful City was long before this become an Harlot Isa 1.21 and Christ not long after this Combate cryeth out against Jerusalem That shee had killed the Prophets and slain such as were sent unto her and proclaimeth a speedy desolation against her But it was so called 1 Because God had made choyce of this City to put his name there 2 Chron. 7.12 I have chosen this place for my self Hence was it called the City of God and Gods holy Mountain Dan. 9.16 and the holy Hill of Sion because God had chosen it and sanctified it for himself wherein himself kept residence and made it eminent above all the places of the earth 2 Because of the holy things which were there established even all the holy worship of God it was not lawful for the Jewes to sacrifice or eat the Passeover any where but in Jerusalem There was the Temple built on mount Moriah wherein I. There was the Sanctum seculare the utter Court of the Jews and Salomons porch which did rise up by fourteen stairs wherein Christ preached often and Peter healed the lame man Acts 3.3 and probably where Peter converted three thousand souls at one Sermon In this porch was the great brazen Altar for whole Burnt-offerings on which Altar the fire which at Aarons first offering in the Wilderness fell from Heaven Levit 9 2● 24. was to be kept perpetually before the Lord the which when Aarons sons neglected and offered with strange fire they were burnt with fire before the Lord. In this Court was the great brasen Sea wherein the Priests washed themselves and the Beasts to be offered on that Altar especially their feet because they were to minister bare-foot before the Lord. Both of them holy representations of Christ the former of his Sacrifice who gave himself for a whole Burnt-offering the latter the fruit of it he being the Laver of the Church by whose bloud we are washed from the guilt and power of sin II. There was the inner Court which was called the Sanctum or the Sanctuary or the Court of the Priests whence the Jewes were barred There was here 1 The Altar of Incense for sweet perfume wherein the Priests were evening and morning to burn the holy Incense before the Lord as a sweet-smelling savour unto God and no strange incense might be offered thereon Exod. 30.9 While Zachary stood at the right side of this Altar offering incense to God the Angel Gabriel stood and fore-told the birth of John Baptist This was an holy type of Christ who offered himself on the altar of the Cross a sacrifice of sweet smell to God his Father and through whom God savoureth a sweet smell from all our duties 2 In this Court was the golden Candlestick with seven Lamps and seven Lights which were ●ed with most pure holy oyl night and day to lighten the whole inner Court And this was an holy type of Christ the light of the world enlightening all his elect with spiritual and heavenly light 3 In this Court was that golden Table on which the holy Shew-bread was ever to stand even twelve Loaves which were to be made of the purest flower of Wheat and were to bee renewed every Sabbath the old Loaves converted to the Priests use a holy type of Christ in whom alone the Church and every member setting themselves continually before God are nourished and preserved unto eternal life 4 In this Court was that costly and precious Veil of blew silk and purple and scarlet and fine twined Linnen made of broydered work with Cherubims the use of which was to separate the Sanctum from the Holy of Holies this veil at the death of Christ was rent from the top to the bottom A notable representation of the flesh of Christ which hid his Divinity but being rent asunder by his passion on the Cross the way to Heaven was laid open unto us III. There in the Temple
evening solemnly on our knees making confessions of sins and requests to God together with thanksgiving Psalm 55.17 Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and make a noise Daniel three times a day prayed and praised God in his house as hee was wont chap. 6. v. 10. The excellent use of which is the opening of the door of Gods treasury to the family by which it is inriched with the best blessings of God Besides the Lord shall hereby have some honour that is due to his mercy upon the family 5 In edifying the family with Psalms and melody to the Lord as it is Col. 3.16 In these daily duties doth the sanctification of a family consist Whereunto wee may bee perswaded by these motives 1 In that they are the practises of men fearing God such as Joshua and his house Cornelius and his houshold 2 In that by these exercises the family shall not only be sanctified but also blessed as Obed Edom and his house for the presence of the Ark. 3 What madness is it to reject and banish Gods word and worship out of doors and yet think God is there Nay where found grace comes there is the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication in every family apart Zach. 12.14 and where the worship of God is not set up in families there is nothing but a conspiracy of Atheists and a wicked brood bringing Gods judgements on themselves and the business passing through their hands Use 3. Jerusalem is called holy being once sanctified to the Lords use which teacheth us that wee should reverently both conceive and speak of all such things as are set apart to the Lords use 1 Some persons are consecrate to the Lord as the Tribe of Levi of whom the commandement was Thou shalt not forsake the Levite all thy daies And the Prophets Touch not mine annointed and do my Prophets no harm So in the New-Testament The Minister that rules well is worthy of double honour Yea if the widows which were set apart to inferiour offices about the poor must be honoured 1 Tim. 5.3 much more the Minister that standeth in Gods place and stead Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the oversight of you Thus Cornelius reverenced Peter and the Eunuch Philip. Nay not onely the Minister but every beleever is separate to God and sanctified to carry the Covenant and hath the annointing of the Spirit which the Lord acknowledgeth on them and speaketh reverently and lovingly of them calling them his holy ones yea the apple of his eye They see not this who can persecute and revile them for hypocrites and count them as the Apostles whose doctrin they profess the scum of the world 2 Some places are for their use to bee accounted holy because God is there present in his worship as the places of our meetings not that any inherent holiness is annexed to the place or cleaveth to it out of the action of Gods worship but while God is present in his Worship wee must account it holy ground and the house of God When God appeared in Bethel to Jacob hee said How fearful is this place surely it is no other than the house of God Wee must therefore put off our shooes with Moses that is our base and vile our sinful and sensual affections yea our lawful if earthly thoughts when wee come to this holy place Look wee bring no thoughts with us unbeseeming the place where God is separated from other common places to holy uses Look that in this place wee use no gesture or behaviour unbeseeming a man that hath business with God being present To sit talking or sleeping or laughing or gazing sutes not with this place And further if God please to account the very places holy for the use and presence of God in this use what shall wee think of them that conceive so basely of them as they would love a Parish better in which is no Church Others prophane them with base practices and unconscionably suffer them to fall or decay and will bee at no charge to make or keep them handsome sweet and beautiful Styes were fit for such swine As their affection is so is their devotion 3 The holy Ordinances of God must not bee touched but with holy respect and reverence of which it is said It is not safe to play with holy things 1 The word must bee received read heard spoken as the holy word of God To make jests of Scripture is a wicked practice God looks graciously on him that trembles at his word Isa 66.2 as good Josiah whose heart melted hearing the words of the Law So the names and attributes of God are never to bee used in frivolous admirations but every knee must bow unto him Phil. 2.10 Neither ought wee to laugh at Gods judgements on others 2 An Oath is one of the holy Ordinances of God and to swear in common talk vainly is not to shew reverence to this holy Ordinance Swear not at all that is uncalled Mat. 5.34 35. neither being called but in truth justice and judgement for an Oath is appointed to decide controversies which other means cannot How few consider whether the matter bee worth an Oath or whether they bee called to it or whether it might not have been better passed by Yea or Nay or by a bare asseveration A wicked man is described by being a Swearer Eccl. 9.3 but a godly man not only not swears from which a man by education or civility may abstain but also fears an oath in what company soever hee is or what occasion soever hee hath 3 A Lot is another special Ordinance of God to decide a controversy from heaven by God himself when all means on earth fail Therefore Lots must not be used without great reverence and prayer because the disposition of them commeth immediately from the Lord Pro. 16.33 and not but in great matters not for recreation for it is said to cause contentious to cease among the mighty Prov. 18.18 neither do wee read that it was ever used but in very great things as the dividing of the land of Canaan the election of High Priests and Kings and the surrogation of Matthias into the place of Judas Hence it follows if dice and cards bee Lots as I think they bee that all play by them is unlawful 4 Some times are sanctified above other as the Sabbath day all which must bee passed holily with much reverence and respect both remembring it before it come yea rejoycing in the approach of it and when it is come to sanctify it 1 In our hearts for external observation of the Sabbath without inward holiness and affection to the duties of Gods service is hypocrisy 2 We must not meddle with any part of the duties of our ordinary calling for that is no holy thing 3 Much less travel to Markets or Fairs but every man must stay in his own place Exod. 16.29 Neb. 13.15 to 19. 4 Least of all must wee set any part of it apart
with rebellion Lament 1.18 and to acknowledge the righteous judgement of God against it Never were the Oracles of Heathens despised so amongst them as Gods holy Word is generally of our people no man almost lets it come near his heart a manifest argument that God will one day speak so as hee will bee heard A Jerusalem would not take knowledge of the day of her Visitation as appears in Luke 19.43 and Matth. 23.37 therefore her habitation was made desolate As little know we the worth of our blessed means but perhaps wee may know it better in the want of them 3 Jerusalem remembred not her latter end therefore she came down wonderfully Lam 1.9 she was careless and never considered the account she was to make of her liberties and so hardned her self in sin and grew to contemn the good means shee had through the daily custom of them This also was the immediate fore-runner of Ninivehs destruction Zeph. 2.13 This is the rejoycing City that dwelt careless and said in her heart I am and there is none beside mee How is shee made wast and the lodging of beasts Every one that passeth by her shall hiss and wag his head And the reason is shee bore her self upon her priviledges her holy things her strength wealth populous and flourishing estate specially upon the Promises of God which they perverted being all made with condition of obedience which they had long before forfeited yea so likely and constant an estate shee had as none in the world would have beleeved that the enemy should have entered the gates of Jerusalem Lam. 4.12 so as hee came unlookt for The same is our conceit wee think our staffe so strong that it can never bee broken wee remember not what is the end of security when men cry Peace Peace comes sudden war 4 Jerusalem had two sorts of Prophets in her First False Prophets which flattered them and sought out vain things false prophesies and causes of banishment Lam. 2.14 Such was Hanani who opposed Jeremy and said the Lord would within two years break the yoke of the King of Babel Jer. 28.2 and Ahabs false Prophets would bid the King go up to battle against Gods Commandement and prosper This was one cause of her ruine Lam. 4.13 for the sins of her Prophets and Priests not that the people had not sinned but when Leaders and such as should preserve purity of Religion and manners are so corrupt it argues a general corruption running down from the head to all the members which must needs bring the whole to a consumption A second sort were faithful and sincere and the entertainment of these was such in Jerusalem as God most severely revenged Jeremy was cast into the dungeon Micaiah into prison nay our Saviour challengeth Jerusalem of such cruelty against the Prophets as did bring all the righteous blood upon them from Abel unto Zachariah Mat. 23.37 But of all cruelty they filled their measure in crucifying the Lord of the holy Prophets Matth. 21.38 the Housholder sent his servants to receive fruits but they evil-intreated them and beat some and slew others at last hee sent his Son saying They will surely reverence my Son but they said This is the Heir Come let us kill him and the inheritance shall bee ours Now what will the Housholder do He will certainly destroy those wicked men and let out his vineyard to others Expressing plainly in this parable Gods dealing with Jerusalem and theirs with him and what was the immediate cause of their destruction A dangerous thing it is to wrong the faithful Ministers of God Do my Prophets no harm saith the Lord and to persecute Christ in his members shall not bee unrevenged 5 Jerusalem had many warnings before their utter overthrow It was besiedged by Pharaoh Necho by Senachetib in Hezekiahs time in Rhehoboams time by Shishac King of Egypt it was sacked and overthrown 1 King 14.26 It was subdued thrice by Nebuchadnezzar King of Babel twice under Joakim and the third time under Zedekiah the City was wasted the Temple burnt and the people captivated into Babylon 2 Kin. 24. and 25 After seventy years when by the permission of Cyrus King of Persia the Temple was builded by Zerubbabel the City by Nehemiah and the law restored by Ezra and the Lord came again to his Temple yet being again provoked some years after it was taken by Antiochus Epiphanes King of Syria the Law burned the Temple prophaned the daily sacrifice removed the sanctuary of strength polluted and the abomination of desolation set up as Daniel had foretold chap. 11. v. 31. and made a wonderful effusion of blood After this the City and Temple was re-edifyed by Judas Assomanaeus and began to flourish but it was not long before it was again taken by Cu. Pompeius a Romane Captain whom Aristobulus called to help him against his brother Hircanus for the Priesthood All these were fair warnings whence they might perceive 1 How righteous the Lord was in not forbearing their sins 2 With how little reason they could stand upon any outward priviledge if they would go on in provoking the Lord 3 How loath the Lord was to reject them utterly if by any means they could bee reclaimed But when no means would do them good the Lord gives them to utterdesolation by Titus and Vespasian who ruinated the City defaced the Temple and left not one stone upon another as Christ prophesied Matth. 24.2 And since that time it hath ever been prophaned and in the hands of the greatest enemies of God and man next Satan himself polluted with most horrible idolatries the Jews driven from thence into all Lands and in all Lands Vagabonds the blood of the Sonne of God lying upon them and their children till this day Oh the patience of God toward us the many warnings and threatnings that wee have had by many treasons conspiracies sundry open and secret practices of our enemies by Sea and by Land Remember 88. and 1605. by sundry plagues of many kinds and every day renewed renews some warning or other And yet how fall wee back more and more how strong are the Papists how bold how malicious and furious as mastives that have been long in the chain Oh that wee were so wise rather to take example by others than to bee made examples to others and to take warning by others harms to prevent our own Why should wee think our selves so safe from the touch of this doctrin or exempted from the lot of all Churches and Lands Where was there ever a more holy place a more holy City a more holy Temple than at Jerusalem yet by security departing from the Lord the Lord left them What Church in all the World whose flourishing estate hath alwaies lasted Cast wee our eyes upon the Churches planted by the Apostles themselves that of Rome Corinth Galatia Ephesus the Churches in Asia they had their times but knew it not till it was too late now all are
and set him on Ans It must necessarily be one of these two wayes either Satan must lead him or else must carry him The former that Satan took him as a Companion or a Leader seems not so probable 1 Because Christ of his own will would not goe for as wee have heard the Spirit led him into the Wilderness to bee tempted and hee would not of himself goe elsewhere because the Spirit of God called him thither and no whither else 2 Christ would not doe it at Satans instigation whom he knew to be the Tempter for neither must we doe any thing at Satans request be it never so lawful for whatever wee doe wee must have a word of God to doe it in faith 3 If Christ had yeelded to be lead as a Companion he might have seemed to have sought temptation and been a Co-worker with Satan against himself but it was enough to yeeld himself a Patient in it 4 The distance of the holy City from the Wilderness which was as those say that make it the least twelve miles from Jerusalem admitteth not that Christ being hungry and ready to faint should follow Satan so many miles The latter therfore seems to be the right manner of Christs conveiance namely that he was carried by Satan through the air who by Gods and Christs permission took him up and transported his blessed body to Jerusalem and set him on the battlements of the Temple For 1 The words he set him on the Temple signifies he set him down who had formerly taken him up and if he had power to set him there why should he not also have power to carry him thither And if he had not carried him thither but Christ had followed him the Evangelist would have said When they came to the pinacle of the Temple and not set him on the pinacle 2 This was the hour of the power of darkness wherein Satan was allowed to take all advantages to further his temptations and he might think this violent transportation a means either of shaking Christs faith with terror and fear what might become of him being now delivered into the hands of Satan or else to make him swell with pride and insolency that he was able to flie in the air or to be conveyed in the air from place to place without hurt which an ordinary man could not and this would well fit the scope of the temptation ensuing Quest But how could Satan carry the body of Christ being a spirit Or if he could why should hee Answ Hee is a Spirit 1 Of wonderful knowledge and experience to dive into secrets of Nature to work strange and hidden things 2 Of exceeding great power to shake the Earth move the mountains and confound the Creatures if God should not restrain him 3 Of Admirable agility and quickness proceeding from his spiritual nature whereby hee can speedily convey himself and other creatures into places far remote and distant one from another 4 Hee knows to apply himself to the creatures and to move them not onely according to their ordinary course but with much more speed and quickness 5 Hee is able to appear in the form of a creature or any person not by deluding senses but by assuming to himself a true body and move it by entring into it and to utter a voice in a known Language as hee did in the Serpent and so hee can in other creatures which have instruments of speech And thus it is not difficult to him to transport a body Witches and Wisards have been often by their own confession transported into remote places by wicked spirits which they call familiars Besides good Angels being in their nature Spirits as Satan is are able to transport men hither and thither as Christ was in the air Act. 8.39 The Spirit of the Lord caught away Philip and carried him from Gaza to Azotus which was about thirty six miles Some understand it of an Angel of the Lord as Mr. Beza noteth But if God by himself miraculously did that the additions to Daniel to which as much credit is to bee given as to any History which is not Scripture affirm that the Angel of the Lord carried Habbakkuk out of Judea into Babylon by the hair of the head Now why must Christ be thus carried by Satan Answ 1 It was not against the will of Christ but willingly hee puts himself into the hands of the Devil to pluck us out of his hands 2 It was not impotency or weaknesse of Christ but power and resolution who would not recoil nor shun any place where Satan would appoint for his assault or would carry him being as well the God of the Mountains as of the Vallies Here therefore wee must not admire the power of Satan but the patience of Christ that suffered himself to bee carried of the Devil being it tended to the greater confusion of Satan and the glory of his own victory 3 Our blessed Lord would be tempted in all things like unto us that as a careful Head hee might sympathize with his members God for the tryal of his children sometimes suffers Satan to have power even over their bodies and therefore Christ to sanctify this affliction to his members would suffer even his own blessed body for a while in the hands of Satan 4 What marvel if Christ suffred himself to bee carried by the Devil to temptation that suffered himself to bee carried by his instruments to execution How was hee haled and carried by the Devils limbs from place to place from Annas to Caiaphas from him to Pilate from him to Herod from him to Pilate again and from him to the place of execution Satan in himself might as well carry his body into Jerusalem to be tempted as his limbs carry it out of Jerusalem to bee crucified and as well might he suffer Satan to lead him into the mountain and tempt him as his instruments to lead his body unto Mount Calvary to kill him Vse 1. Consider the wonderful love of God to mankind who would give his onely Son and the Son of his love to such abasement to deliver him not onely into the hands of Satans instruments to mock to spit upon him to buffet yea to condem and kill but to deliver his blessed body into his own hands to carry and recarry at his Pleasure Adde hereunto the wonderful love of the Lord Jesus who was a willing patient in the hands of the Devil himself Hee knew it was the will of his Father and therefore submitted himself unto it Hee knew it was a part of that whole Righteousnesse which hee was to fulfil and therefore hee resisteth not Hee knew it to bee as great an indignity as never could bee the like yet for our sakes hee is well content with it Now as Christ was content because hee loved us thus to bee tossed of Satan here and of his instruments afterwards so let us shew or return our love to him If wee be tossed by Satan
dangerous and near of kin to obstinacy For till the truth of God come to his place again in the conscience it wil stiffen it self in error even to the death So as by this stratagem Satan usurps the conscience which is Gods right and so leads men at his pleasure 2 His malice sets him clean contrary to God in his proceedings God hath given his Scripture to save men by and therefore it is called a word of salvation now Satan would herein cross the Lord in perverting the word to mens condemnation The Scripture is in the Church as a Law to the Common-wealth to contain men in the compass of faith and godly life whence it is called Statutes and precepts and judgements But Satan seeks to enforce it as a Law to thrust men from faith and obedience The Scripture is a word of truth of holiness of wisdom every way resembling God the Author Satan therefore being the greatest enemy to Gods Image is the greatest enemy to the Scriptures and desireth to pervert them by establishing by them Errours Heresies false Doctrins wicked and foolish opinions and practices 3 His subtilty and policy is not inferiour to his malice for 1 He hath a special slight and trick of his own by pretending truth to impugn it and with Scripture to fight against Scripture which hee hath taught his special Factors Hereticks and Seducers for why else did Christ forbid the Devil to witness to him but that even that truth he speaks ever tends to destroy the truth And in the text why cites he the truth but to draw Christ into an error 2 He will gain to himself some credit by this practice for seeing speeches and testimonies depend much upon the credit of the speaker by his quoting of Scripture he would be taken as if the truth of Scripture depended upon or needed his witness 4 Satan must doe thus if hee will prevail against Christ or his Servants for Scripture in the true sense of it is no patron of sin nor ever stands on the Devils side Use Of all temptations beware most of them which come armed with Scripture for hardlier can wee espy the subtilty and danger of these than those which are directly against the Scripture And by temptations of this kind Satan mightily prevaileth in points both of doctrin and practice which it shall not be amiss to give some taste of and in both wee shall observe how Satan doth not so much use as abuse Scripture I. In matters of doctrin 1 For the establishing of the Head-ship of the Church in the Pope the ordinary Papists have found a Scripture in Joh. 21.16 where Christ saith Feed my sheep I answer First that place speaks not of any Head-ship or Spiritual government but of feeding by the Word and Sacraments which the Pope never doth Secondly it is a commandement not given to Peter alone but to all the Apostles who were equally Apostles with him but applied to Peter specially not to note any Primacy but secretly to check him for his three-fold denial whereby he made himself unworthy to be a Disciple Obj. But Peter saith he hath two swords and therefore the Pope hath both Spiritual and Temporal jurisdiction Sol. This is a place of Satans alleadging when that which is spoken literally is wrested into a figurative sense And where Peter is commanded Act. 10.13 to kill and eat the Pope may kill and slay and eat up whom he will or can Prince with people But this is a place literally to be taken and one part of the argument hangs with another as the dream of a sick man for the Pope if he be Peters Successor must feed the sheep nor feed on them But Bellarmine who would make the world beleeve his wit is thinner hath devised a farre more sufficient place 1 Pet. 2.6 Behold I put in Sion a chief corner stone elect and precious that is the Pope In his Preface to the Controversie De Rom. Pontif. and lib. 4. cap. 5. But what may wee think to reap from him that dares begin his Controversie with so high a blasphemy and lest wee should think it fell inconsiderately from him he takes it up again For doth not both Paul and Peter teach that this stone can be meant of none but of Christ doth not both of them adde He that beleeveth in him shall not bee ashamed must we now beleeve in the Pope And who is this living stone that gives life to all that are built upon him besides Christ himself None can arrogate it to himself or attribute it to another without high blasphemy Therefore I conclude this point boldly affirming that the Devil could not more impiously abuse this place than hath blasphemous Bellarmine 2 For the point of Justification by Works is alleadged that place of James 2.21 wherein they adde unto the text 1 A false gloss by works of the Law 2 A false distinction saying that they justify as causes whereas we grant that as effects they justify that is declare a man to bee justified So did Abrahams works declare him to be just and this is not the justification of the person which is onely by faith but of the faith of the person which is manifestly dead without them 3 In that great sacramentary controversy they alledge This is my body wherein Satan hath taught them to abuse Scripture in taking that literally which is figuratively spoken as often to writhe that into a figure which is spoken literally and whereas they exclaim against us for denying the words of Christ as Hereticks wee are far from denying Christs words but disclaim their false meaning which destroies the Scripture seeing Scripture stands not in words but in sense 4 To establish the false Doctrin of Free-will they furnish themselves with that place in Jer. 17.7 Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is But what do they else but imitate the Devil in cutting off that part of the Text which makes against them for in the next verse it followeth The heart of man is deceitful above all things who can know it shewing that man in himself is utterly destitute of all grace 5 For the Jesuitical trick of equivocation or mental reservation they have Scripture and Example Joh. 1.21 they asked John if hee were a Prophet hee said No whereas he was one for Zachary called him the Prophet of the Highest and Christ said that there was not a greater Prophet than John therefore John equivocated Answ Whatsoever was the true meaning of the Question that John answered plainly unto If they meant to ask him if hee were that singular Prophet whom they fancied to come together with their Messiah hee truely answered No. If hee were any of the ancient Prophets who were long before Christ hee truely answered in that sense No. If hee were a Prophet by his proper office hee truely answered no. For howsoever he was by grace and power a Prophet being sent of God to
made far more glorious natures than our selves our keepers To keep thee This custody of the Angels standeth 1 In observing and watching their persons souls bodies and estates and therefore are called watchmen Dan. 4.10 And I saw a watchman and an holy one come down from Heaven 2 In propulsing and averting evil so here There shall no evill come near thee for hee will give his Angels charge over thee 3 In defending them in good as Elizeus and his servant being compassed with enemies 4 In comforting them in trouble as Hagar Gen. 21.17 and Jacob Gen. 32.1 2. and Christ in this place In all thy waies Namely in such courses as God hath appointed and in all these in all times and in all places in all estates and conditions In the way into the world in birth and infancy the good Angels keep Gods little children Matth. 18.10 In the way thorow the world they keep us as the Israelites in the Wilderness Exod. 33.2 In the way out of the World their charge is to keep us as wee may see in Lazarus who when hee dyed the Angels carried his soul into Abrahams bosome In all our waies by day and by night they keep us so long as wee are in our callings They shall bear thee in their hands This is a borrowed speech for Angels have no hands nor bodies sometimes they assume bodies in their ministery to others but these bodies are not theirs neither were they naturally and hypostatically united unto them but for the time created and assumed but from what beginning they were taken or into what end after the ministery they were resolved it is idle to inquire Here hands are ascribed to them as elsewhere wings both improperly one shews the speediness of their motion the other their fitness and tenderness in our keeping For their charge is not onely to foresee danger and admonish us but they must bee actual helpers to bear us up from ground when wee are ready to fall and get knocks as a tender mother or nurse if they see the little child falling will haste and catch it before the head comes to the ground That thou dash not thy foot against a stone That is that thou hurt not thy foot against any rub or occasion Angels are nurses wee are as infants in spiritual matters on every occasion ready to fall into sin and by it into all dangers spiritual and temporal Now the Angels keep us not onely from hurt by others but from bringing hurt on our selves even the least they keep us from hurting our Head yea our Foot Object But how do the Angels perform their charge when some of Gods children not onely stumble but fall spiritually and bodily and take great harm Answ The reason is because no man keeps his way so diligently and uprightly as hee ought If wee did never fail God would never fail us no more would his holy Angels nay such is their love as they would not have us to take the least hurt in the world while wee walk faithfully in the waies and commandements of God Doct. The Angels of God are the tender keepers of Gods children in Gods waies that no hurt can beside them Gen. 32.5 When Jacob was in great fear of his brother Esau the Angel of God met him to comfort and defend him When Sodome was to bee destroyed the Angels came to Lot to forewarn and haste him out of that wicked City Psal 34.7 The Angel of the Lord pitcheth his tents round about them that fear the Lord and delivereth them 1 Because of Jesus Christ our Head Reasons to whom they are subject as to their Lord and Head who hath reconciled things in Heaven and Earth Angels and Men Col. 1.20 In our selves and our own vileness wee could not bee indured by these blessed spirits but now Christ becomes our head and for him they tend us as his members 2 Their love to us is another ground of their custody of us manifested in that they are compared to Nurses neither can they but love those whom they see God loveth now they see God loving us so dearly that hee spares not his own Son but gives him to the death for us and therefore they dearly love us and our good they desire our salvation and promote it they rejoyce that our salvation is wrought and are glad of our repentance by which wee lay hold on it 3 And specially this charge and commandement of God is the cause hereof so as now it is not out of curtesy or the goodness of their nature only that they do us good but by vertue of this charge and commandement of God whom they love as their chief good and to whom they are bound in absolute obedience by the eternal law of their nature so as although they are charged by God yet are they not forced or co-acted but out of their perfect love of God they watch over us for our good Vse 1. This doctrin affords a use of great consolation for when we consider our own weakness and impotency on one hand and the multitude power and policy of our enemies on the other when wee see a whole Army of sins besiedging us and a whole legion of dangers behinde them to oppresse and swallow us now this Doctrin touching Gods providence in the ministery of Angels will be able to support us when wee shall consider not only that Gods protection is as a wall of fire round about us but that he hath set and pirched his Angels round about us as a guard of whom we may say with Elisha for their multitude They are more that are with us Ordo gratiae praeponderat ordini naturae Th. Aqu. than they that are against us and for their power they are called the Angels of Gods power farre stronger than the wicked Angels and Powers that are against us And when wee shall consider that God hath given a charge and that not to one or two Angels but to the whole blessed company of them over every godly man how can wee but assure our selves that wee shall be defended and protected If a man were to pass by ship over a dangerous sea full of gulfs sands rocks and robbers if the King should give him letters of safe conduct it would much comfort him and help him through his voyage but if this King should send a great Navy to conduct him over yea and should not onely go in his own person but call out all his men of war to see him safely arrived this were so comfortable as hee could not wish more But thus doth the Lord with his children not onely himself going with them through the world but guarding them with his holy Angels who willingly afford their ministery because of their love to man but in respect of Gods word and charge much more willingly that of Gods Angels they become our Angels Matth. 18.10 What an unspeakeable comfort is it that when wee lose the watch over our selves many waies
through sleep of soul or body the Angels watch over our safety Matth. 2.13 Joseph was a sleep and thought not of that danger which was even upon him by means of Herods cruelty but even in that sleep the Angel watched and admonished him by a dream both of the danger and the means to escape How great a comfort is it that when wee see such difficulties between us and our desires as wee can never overcome then wee have Gods Angels present to do it to our hands Mark 16.3 when the good women that came to imbalme Christs body were very much troubled how to come to his body and asked who shall roul away the stone for it was a very great one when they looked they saw the stone rowlled away and it was done by the Angel as Matthew hath it Gods Angels rowl away all stones and impediments and make our way smooth to all good duties No less comfort is it that when Satan begins to insult and makes as if hee would trample upon us wee have a stronger guard about us any one of the Angels being as able to shut the mouth of this roaring Lyon as they were to shut the mouths of those hungry Lyons into whose den Daniel was cast And for the further strength of our faith and comfort in this Doctrin the Scripture notes three things further concerning Angels worth observing 1 Their wisdome and providence in pitching about us so as wee lye open no where Exod. 14.19 when Israel was gone out of Egypt the Angel of the Lord who went before them to lead them out now removed and went behind them because now Pharaoh and his people pursued them The power of the Angel was no lesse if hee had stayed before them as hee was being Christ himself but for the comfort of Israel and our instruction the Angel changeth his place and stoppeth between them and the danger 2 Their uniting of themselves and strength for our safety one of them readily will help another in helping us Dan. 10.13 one Angel being resisted by the Prince of the Kingdome of Persia Michael one of the chief Princes came to help him who whether hee were an Angel or as it is more likely the Prince and Lord of the Angels even the Angel of the great Covenant Christ himself it is every way full of comfort 3 Their patience towards us who if they should bee gone from us as often as wee by sin provoke them wee should perish every moment But as God is long-suffering so hath hee charged his Angels to bee and therefore they wait still for our return and rejoyce in the repentance of sinners Luke 15.10 and abide in their charge and ministery still Vse 2. Again this doctrin is a ground of manifold instruction 1 Hath God afforded us the Ministery of Angels then note the priviledge and preheminence of Gods children whose nature being assumed by the Son of God gives it dignity above the Angels who are the ministers of our humane nature in the head and members Angels are indeed called the Sons of God but that is by creation Christ never gave them this honour to call them brethren Nay there is a nearer conjunction between Christ and us than between Christ and the Angels which conjunction doth priviledge us with their attendance 1 By reason of his conception and incarnation taking on him the seed of Abraham and not of the Angels by which hee becomes flesh of our flesh 2 By reason of his Spiritual contract taking us to be one with himself by which we become flesh of his flesh and so nearly set into him as the Angels cannot be who are not members of this Head as the elect be Christ indeed may bee called their Head but as a Lord and Commander nor by such Spiritual union as is between Christ and the Christian Herein we may see the love of God in setting his Angels to be our keepers The more noble potent numerous and diligent the custody is the more is the care and love of the thing kept How great thanks therefore owe wee unto our God who notwithstanding he is daily offended with our sins yet affords us the ministry of his Angels Who and what am I that God is so mindful of me that he should give so many glorious Creatures charge over me that he should give me such a priviledge that even the holy Angels whose dwelling is in Heaven and see the face of God who are all spirit and no flesh who are free from all sin and misery should so narrowly attend me a lump of earth a peece of flesh compassed with so many sins and miseries as I can look no way either before or behind them David in the eighth Psalm burst out into the praise of God when he considered that God had afforded man the use of Birds Beasts and Fishes O Lord saith he what is man that thou art so mindful of him and hast preferred him over the works of thy hands How much more should we when we see our happiness by the ministery of the glorious Angels 2 Let us learn hence to look to our conversation because of the Angels 2 Cor. 11.10 for they are our keepers and observers they see all the good and bad we doe and we doe not speak any thing without many witnesses Sin makes God take away our hedge Isa 5.5 it grieves the Angels of God and lays a man naked to all his Judgements Shall we willingly offend them from whom under God we receive so great and daily comforts If we did beleeve or weigh this doctrine we would not but because wee see not God nor his Angels we love neither nor fear to offend either 3 Let us beware of wronging the Children of God even because they have the protection of the Angels To rise up against any of them is to rise up against the Angels their keepers Offend none of these little ones for their Angels behold the face of their heavenly Father and thou provokest the Angels against thee It the Sodomites rise up against Lot the Angels will save him and destroy them It Balaam will goe to Curse Gods people he shall have an Angel against him with a sword drawn ready to kill him 4 Learn wee to give God the honour of our salvation and safety when wee have avoyded any danger publick or private It is not by chance nor by our providence and policy but Gods charging his Angels to save and keep us Daniel did rightly ascribe his deliverance to God by the ministery of the Angel chap. 6.22 My God saith he sent his Angel and shut the Lions mouth 5 To be partaker of all this comfort these means are to bee used 1 Become a godly man Psal 34.9 The Angel of the Lord pitcheth his tent round about them that fear the Lord. Heb. 1.14 They are ministring Spirits to the heirs of salvation 2 Hold on in a godly course keep thee in thy ways in the duties of thy Calling general and
in respect of his power yet not his God in respect of the Covenant of grace which those words have special respect unto 4 Satan proceeds to tempt him still and therefore that is not the meaning 5 Christ in this humble estate would not manifest himself much less call himself Lord and God II. The person who must not be tempted The Lord if hee be a Lord hee must be feared obeyed honoured not tempted or provoked Thy God though he be my God and my Father I must not presume I must not abuse my Fathers goodness and providence where no need is A loyal subject will not presume upon the clemency of his Prince to break his Lawes or a loving childe upon his fathers goodness to offend him III. The action of tempting To tempt God is to prove and try God out of necessity what he can doe or what he will doe and whether he be so good so merciful so just as his word and promise say he is so Heb. 3.9 Your Fathers tempted me and proved me and saw my works The mother of this sin is infidelity and unbelief 1 Of Gods power as if his arm were shortned 2 Of his goodness as if he were not so careful of his chosen as he is For else what need I try that which I were assured of The issue of it or the branches that shoot from this root are put forth 1 In judgement 2 In affections 3 In counsels and actions of life I. In judgement and matter of doctrin to prefer our own conceits above the Word of God whereof the Apostle speaketh Act. 15.10 Why tempt ye God to impose a yoak upon the Disciples necks which neither our Father no● wee can bear as if hee should say Why do you of the Circumcision vainly swelling and trusting in your own strength falsly conceive and teach without warrant to anger the Lord with that by the fulfilling of the Law yee can attain salvation binding up the power of God to the Law as necessary to save men thereby what an intollerable yoak is this which no man is able to bear What shall wee think then of the Papists doctrin who lay the same yoak upon mens shoulders what is their whole Religion but a plain tempting of God and a provoking of his anger while they lay on men the yoak of the Law This is the sin of all other Hereticks who like the Pharisees let the Word of God behind their own inventions and properly and directly fight against Faith which leaneth it self wholly upon the Word of God Faith looks at Gods constitutions it suffers not judgement to arrogate above Gods judgement it beats down humane wisdome and reason and brings the thoughts and reasonings into the obedience of God It teacheth not impossibilities as they of the Circumcision and Papists do at this day II. In affection 1 By di●●idence and distrust Psal 78.18 They tempted God in their hearts in requiring me at for their lust Here were many sinnes in one 1 A murmuring and grudging at their present estate 2 A tempting of Gods power Can God prepare a Table in the wildernesse vers 19.3 A denial of his presence If God were amongst us hee would prepare us a Table 4 Making haste and appointing of time and place and the manner of helping them he must now in the wildernesse set up a Table 5 Wantonness having sufficient and necessary Mannah and water by 〈◊〉 immediate hand of God they must have meat for their lust 2 By Curiosity when men vainly desire extraordinary things and neglect ordinary and must have ●●ch signs as they list either out of meer curiosity as Herod would have a signe onely to please himself in some rare sight or in pretence of ●●●firming them in the truth as the Jews when Christ had sufficiently confirmed his heavenly Doctrin with powerful miracles they rejected this and must have a miracle from heaven Mat. 16.1 Quest Is it not lawful to aske a sign did not Gedeon Judg. 6.17 and Hezekiah ask a sign and Moses and it was granted Answ Yes it is lawful in four cases 1 When God offers a sign wee may require and ask it as hee offered one to Hezekiah and not to require it is a sin as in Ahaz who when the Lord bad him ask a sign hee saith Hee will not ask a sign nor tempt the Lord Isa 7.11 But he tempted the Lord now not in tempting him and greived him much v. 12. 2 When an extraordinary Calling and Function is laid upon a man hee considering his own weakness and the many oppositions which hee shall meet withall in the execution of it may for the confirming of his Faith demand a sign and this was Gedeons case who of a poor man of the smallest Tribe of Israel was extraordinarily called to bee a Judge and Ruler Or when such an extraordinary work or calling is to bee made manifest to the World to bee from God for the better prospering of Gods work a man may desire a sign as Moses did Exod. 4. and Elijah 3 When God gives an extraordinary promise to his Servants of effecting something above all they can see or expect hee pleaseth to condescend to their weakness and for confirming of their Faith hee bears them asking a sign as Hezekiah being extraordinarily restored seeing 1 His own extream weaknesse and 2 The Word of God passed Set thy house in order for thou shalt not live but dye required a sign and God afforded him an extraordinary one The Virgin Mary had such an extraordinary promise as never was to bee a Mother without the knowledge of man shee asked how that could bee God gave her a sign saying Thy cousin Elizabeth hath conceived and shall bear a Son and so shalt thou 4 When anextraordinary testimony to a new form of Doctrin is requisite extraordinary signs may be required As for example The Gospell at the first publishing of it was joyned with the abolishment of all the Ceremonial Law and all the Ordinances of Moses and bringing in a new Religion in respect of the manner through the world against which both Jews and Gentiles could not but bee deadly enemies Now the Apostles did desire and obtain the power of working many signes and wonders of healing killing raising the dead commanding Devils and the like But to ask a sign out of these cases is a provoking and tempting of God as 1. Out of diffidence or malice as the Jews bad Christ come down from the Cross and they would beleeve him assuring themselves hee was never able to do that 2 For curiosity and delight as Herod desired to see some marvail or for satisfying our Lust as Israel 3 For our own private ends not aiming directly at Gods glory and denial of our selves as the Jews followed Christ not for his Miracles but for their belly and the bread and the Virgin Mary herein failed requiring a Miracle of Christ rather for a prevention of scandal for the want of wine than
the manifesting of Christs glory for which Christ checked her for it was a private and light respect to which miracles must not bee commanded Joh. 2.4 4 For confirming of that Doctrin and Authority which is sufficiently confirmed already Joh. 2.18 Shew us a sign why thou doest these things why thou whippest out buyers and sellers out of the Temple Hee shews them none they tempt God herein was not the whipping of them out and the Authority hee had shewn sign enough of his divine authority did not hee solely and alone overthrow and turn out a number of them without resistance did not he by his word challenge the Temple to bee his Fathers house and himself the Son of God Having thus confirmed his authority by this sign hee would shew them no other Thus the Papists as a Pharisaical seed tempt God looking for more miracles to confirm the same Doctrin which Christ and his Apostles have sufficiently confirmed by many and powerful Miracles When they prove that wee teach another D●ctrin wee will shew them other miracles III. To tempt God in action is thus 1 To enter upon any thing without a Calling for that is to step out of our way when wee do that which wee have neither Word nor Promise for this is in the Text. 2 To walk in a course of sin and live in our wickednesse especially when the Lord by blessings moveth us to repentance Mal. 3.15 They that work wickedness bee set up who bee they in the next words the Prophet sheweth saying They that tempt God are delivered So as all wicked persons are Tempters of God 3 To presume upon extraordinary means when ordinary means may bee had Thus the three worthies of David tempted God that went for water in danger of their lives whereas they might have had it nearer in safety 2 Sam. 23.15 but when they brought it to him hee considered how they had sinned to satisfy his sinful desire and would not drink it And this is the tempting of God intended in this place to flye down refusing the stairs 4 To run into places or occasi●● of danger in soul or body is to tempt God as to run into wicked company or exercises Peter notwithstanding Christ foretold him of his w●akness yet trusted on his own strength and went into Gaiaphas his Hall and seeking the Tempter found him and himself too weak for him Our Saviour would here teach us what a dangerous sin it is to tempt the Lord it being so absolutely forbidden the people of God not only in the Old Testament but in the New 1 Cor. 10.9 Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted him Reasons For 1 It is a plain contempt of the Lord in his providence and constitutions when a man either neglecteth the means which God hath appointed to bring forward his purposes or betaketh himself to such means as God hath not appointed 2 It is a manifest argument of infidelity and hardness of heart When a friend promiseth me to doe me good at my need or to stand by me in time of danger I will feign a need or danger to try whether he will be as good as his word or no what doth this but imply a suspicion in me that my friend will not be as good as his word therefore I will try him before I need him And thus he deals that will needlesly tempt God 3 No relation between God and us may encourage us to tempt him He is our Lord a strong God doe we provoke the Lord are wee stronger than hee 1 Cor. 10.12 Let not the Princes of the Philistims dally with Sampson for he is strong and will revenge himself by pulling the house over their heads the Lord is strong and mighty Sampsons strength was but weakness to him therefore let us not tempt him lest we goe away with the worse as the Philistims did He is our God even a consuming fire Heb. 12.29 it is no safe dallying with fire He is our Father therefore we must fear him as Iacob knows Isaac is his father yet is afraid to goe to him disguised lest said he I seem to my father to dally or mock 4 The greatness of this sin will appear in the greatness of his punishment It cost good Josiah his life 2 King 23.29 He would try what he could doe against Pharaoh Necho when he was admonished of the Lord not to goe against him For this sin the Lord sware that not one of the Israelites above twenty years old should enter into Canaan It cost the lives of six hundred thousand men besides women who for tempting God were destroyed of the destroyer 1 Cor. 10.9 Good Zachary for not beleeving the Angel which came with tidings of a son was struck dumb for requiring a sign Even the best if they tempt God shall not carry it clear away Obj. Psal 34.8 Taste and see how good the Lord is and Rom. 12.2 prove what that good and acceptable will of God is Ans There is a two-fold knowledge of Gods goodness 1 Speculative by which we know God to be good in himself and to us 2 Experimental in some thing not revealed The places alleadged speak of the former only this later is a tempting of God Use 1. This serves to discover unto us our fayling against this doctrine and that every of us cannot so easily put off this sin as we think for 1 Is it not ordinary amongst us that read the Word and of Gods power therein we hear his promises we taste by experience how good and bountiful God is and yet in any straight in every danger we can be ready to tempt him as in Massah saying in our hearts Is God with me Doth God regard me Am I not clean cast out of sight Can I ever be holpen and swim out of this distress Thus the unbelief of our hearts is ready to make God a Lyar. When there was a marvellous great famine in Samaria and Elisha said To morrow at this time two measures of barly shall bee at a shekel and a measure of fine flower at a shekel a Prince answered If the Lord would make windowes in Heaven could it be so he answered Thine eyes shall see it but thou shalt not eat of it And hee was trodden in peeces in the gate for his unbelief 2 King 7. vers 19. 2 How generally are we in love with our sins which out of Malachi we have shewed to be a tempting of God God hath poured abundant mercies upon us the people of England yet we goe on to provoke and tempt him the more his mercies the more our sins how can this abusing of goodness but heap up wrath against our selves Can there bee a greater tempting of God in his justice than to goe on and trade in sin without repentance presuming that God will not punish us What a number of notorious wicked persons are resolved to adde drunkenness to thirst and sin to sin and yet at last mean to
good purposes and practices Which is the rather to bee learned because wee have that within us which will make us easily daunted in good things as Peter himself after hee had been long with Christ was so daunted with the voice of a Damosel as hee easily forsware 〈◊〉 Master All Satans instance in evil it to bring us from instance in good against whom wee must every way fortify our selves First In the subdoing of any sin or corruption how will nature recoyl how stirring will Satan bee to keep his holds how many baits and objects will hee present unto thee how many fears and losses and crosses as rubs will hee cast in thy way and all to drive thee from the field against thy sin But now is a time to make use of this Doctrin Are wicked men so constant to the Devil at his instance and must not I bee constant for God at the instance of his blessed Spirit I will hold out by Gods grace and if I be foiled once and again as the Israelites in a good cause against Benjamin I will renew the battel the third time I shall at length carry away the victory this sin is one of Satans band like the captain and I will not bee driven out of the field by such a Craven that will flye if hee bee resisted Secondly The graces of God are as so many precious jewels locked up in the closet of a godly heart the Devil is instant to rob and bereave us of these wee must bee as hardly perswaded to give up these as to bee spoiled of our earthly treasure and riches 1 Our faith were a sweet morsel to Satan but wee must resist him stedfast in the faith Job will hold his faith in spight of the Devil let him lose his goods his health his friends his children hee will hold his faith and professe if the Lord kill him too hee will still trust in his mercy 2 Hee would steal away our love of the Saints and with it the life of our faith and therefore hee sets before us many infirmities of theirs and suspitions of our own and some fear from others but notwithstanding out delight must bee in the Saints that excel in vertue Jonathan will not bee beaten off the love to David though in all outward respects hee had little causes onely because hee saw God was with him 3 Hee layeth siedge to our sobriety and temperance and layeth many baits but Joseph will not yeeld to the many assaults of his Mistris 4 He would make us weary of prayer which is our strength and i● God delay he tells us he hears us not we lose our labour But wee must wrastle by prayer as Jacob till we obtain and as the woman of Canaan begge once and again till Christ hear us if he call us doggs so as wee cannot sit at table let us beg the crums as whelps that ●all under the table 5 He would make us weary of our profession is uncessant in setting the malice of the world upon us yea great ones multitudes and all But the Disciples by no whips mo●ks threats or persecutions could be daunted but rejoyced in them and went on more cheerfully 6 He would have us weary of well-doing and beginning in the Spirit to end in the flesh But as Nehemiah in building the Temple and wall said to his crafty Counsellers Should such a one as I flie so let every Christian say Should I lose all my labour and that crown of life that is promised to all them that are faithful to death No I will not doe it The Devil took him up into an exceeding high mountain In this third temptation we are to consider two things 1 The assault 2 The repulse In the assault two things 1 The preparation 2 The dart it self In the preparation 1 The place 2 The sight represented The dart consists of 1 A profer All these will I give thee 2 A condition If thou wilt fall down and worship me 3 A reason for they are mine and to whomsoever I will I give them First of the place and in it 1 what place it was 2 how Christ came thither 3 why Satan chose that place I. The place was the top of an exceeding high mountain What this mountain was we cannot define and the Scripture being silent in it wee may bee sure it is no Article of faith Some think it was mount Ararat on which the Ark of Noah stood in the floud the highest mountain in the world But without all reason for that was in Armenia another part of the world Gen. 8.4 And there were a number of great Hills round about Jerusalem fit enough for this purpose As 1 There was mount Moriah where Abraham offered to sacrifize his Son Isaac where Salomon built his Temple and wherein Christ stood in the former temptation But the text is plain hee was carried from thence into an higher mountain by farre 2 There was mount Ghi●n 1 King 1.33 34 where Zadok and Nathan at Davids appointment anoynted Salomon King But this was too low 3 There was a mountain over against Jerusalem called mons offensionis the mountain of scandal where Salomon in his age deceived by outlandish wives built an high place for Chemosh and Molec the abominations of the children of Ammon and Moab 1 King 11.7 which high places so hard it is to thrust down superstition once set up continued standing three hundred sixty three years and were destroyed by Josiah 4 There was mount Calvary where Christ suffered but that was not so high as this mount spoken of 5 There was mount Olive● a famous mountain about six furlongs from Jerusalem here David wept flying before his Son Absolom here Christ often watched and prayed and wept over Jerusalem for it was so high as that from the top of it as Josephus reports one might discern all the streets of Jerusalem and see afarre off to the dead sea 6 There was mount Sion higher than all these which was called the Mountain of the Lord for those that have written concerning this City know that the foundation of it is among the holy Mountains and among them all mount Sion was farre the highest and therefore David made a Fort there called the City of David 7 There were besides these without Jerusalem mount Nebo from the top of which Moses stood and beheld all the Land of Canaan and was commanded to dye This is generally held to be the Mount to which Christ was carried and so could I think were it not that it was quite without Palestina and not in the Land of Canaan for Moses only there did see the good Land but must not enter into it 8 There were within Palestina besides these mount Basan and mount Hermon very high Hills in comparison of which Sion is said to bee a little Hill Psalm 42.6 and 68.16 Now it is very probable that this temptation was upon one of these Hills but we must not bee curious to determine
Isa 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things This use David maketh Psal 8. When I see the heavens the earth and the works of thy hands then said I Lord what is man that thou art so mindful of him and concludes the Psalm thus How excellent is thy name through all the World And why 1 The invisible things of God his Power and Divinity and Eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall wee either not look on them or so look upon them as they to make us inexcusable shall wee onely injoy the natural use and no spiritual or Divine use from them 2 Consider that God for this purpose hath made the Countenance of man not as the Beasts groveling on the Earth but erected unto Heaven and he hath made the eye of man not as the Beasts but as Anntomists observe hath given it one muscle which they want whereby hee can turn his eye directly upwards with admirable quickness that it should not so fix it self upon any thing below as the Covetous eye doth but by occasion of things below turn it self upward to their Creator Yea hee hath compassed our eyes with brows and lids and fences from dust and earth that though wee look sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them 3 Let us labour to use our senses in beholding Gods works as they in Joh. 2.23 that saw the works of Christ of whom it is said Many beleeved in the name of Christ seeing the works that he did So let the works which wee see God hath done bee at least inducements to beleeve him so much the more Fourthly God made our senses in respect of our brethren both to benefit them and our selves by them 1 Our eyes to behold their misery to pity them to releeve them Turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh Herein the unmerciful Priest and Levite were condemned by the pitiful Samaritan Our ears to hear the cry of the poor Prov. 21.13 Hee that turns his ear from the cry of the poor himself shallery and not bee heard Numbers never make this use of their ears but God hath a deaf ear for them 2 Our eyes to see the good example of our brethren to imitate them to glorify God for them Our ears to hear their Godly Counsels Admonitions Reproofs and so bee bettered by them 3 Our eyes to see and consider their danger to pull them out of their infirmities the fire and to cast out the more of their eyes Our ears to hear what is fit to bee spoken of them to defend their good names if they bee traduced For God hath given us two ears not rashly to receive every information but to reserve one for the party lest hee be condemned unheard unconvinced Fiftly and Lastly God made our senses in respect of ourselves not only to bee faithful keepers of the body but diligent factors and agents for our own souls as 1 That our eyes should ever bee looking homewards and to the end of our way as quick and expedite travellors and not fix themselves upon everything wee see here below This is done by heavenly conversation 2 Our ears should bee bored to the perpetual service and obedience of our God as our Lord himself was Psal 40.7 Thou hast bored mine ear alluding to that Ceremony in the Law Exod. 21.6 If a servant would not part from his Master his ear must bee bored and nailed to the Post of the house and thus hee became a perpetual Servant hee was nailed and fixed to that house and service So wee must yeeld an obedient ear as Solomon calls it unto the Counsels Will and Commandement of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ 3 Our eyes were made to bee Conduits of tears for our own sin and misery and for the sin and wretchednesse of other men Psalm 139.136 Davids eyes gushed out rivers of tears because men keep not the word how wept hee then for his own sins that wept so for others Good Lot his righteous soul was vexed in hearing and seeing the unclean conversation of the Sodomites Thus should our senses bee so far from conceiving pleasure in sinful obects as these must bee the continual grief of our souls And can wee indeed look upon our selves and not see something which is a brand of our sin or can wee behold any Creature and not see some express Prints and marks of our sin and vanity upon it Surely this one meditation would be effectual to keep us from casting our eyes upon unlawful objects and so from making our selves a prey to the Devil Vse 2. This serves to reprove such as fail in this watch of the senses for who doth not yet some far more dangerously Such as have in their houses Popish Pictures and Images which are alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the door to the Devil a sign of a man willing to bee seduced Experience shews that when a man is in love with such Images hee easily falls out with Gods Image in himself and Gods Children 2 Such as delight in lascivious Pictures and filthy portraytours of naked men or women in whole or such parts as may stir the corruption of the heart which should bee beaten down by all means Wee need bring no Oyle to this flame Yet the Devil hath gotten such pictures in request in this wanton age wherein every thing is almost proportional 3 Such are far from this watch of their senses as so attire and disguise themselves or lay open their nakedness to insnare the senses of others Let them not say they think no hurt in it unless they can bee sure that no other think hurt by it 4 Such as like the Images have ears and hear not eyes and see not care not to hear the Word or read it never taste Gods goodness in it neither doth the breath of heavenly life ever pass through their noses 5 Such as frequent wicked company and delight in the ungracious actions and speeches that they hear and see or can digest them without reproof or dislike manifested The Devil hath a thorow-fare among such companies who are conspired against God and goodness Add unto these such as read or have in their houses Lascivious and wanton books teachers of lewdness Adde also Stage-Players and their beholders that cast open all gates and walls to the Devil 6 The Covetous eye whereof Solomon saith Ecc. 4.4 his eye is not satisfied with Riches neither doth hee say For whom do I thus labour In that Satan would draw Christ to the love of the World and thereby makes no doubt but to insnare and cast him down wee learn that Doctr. 2 The love of the World easily maketh a man a prey and spoil to the Devil Satan well knew that if hee could get Christ to fall down to the World hee would easily fall down to him Where by the World I
understand not the goodly Workmanship of God in the frame of the Heavens and Earth which wee must love and admire but all the Riches Honours Pleasures Profits and Allurements of it without God or before God as when men are willing Servants and Slaves to Worldly Desires and Corruptions 1 Tim. 6.10 The desire of money is the root of all evil a fruitful mother of much mischief There is no sin so impious so unnatural and barbarous that a man in love with the Profits of the World will stick at And more plainly vers 9. They that will bee rich fall into manifold Temptations and Snares and into many foolish and noysome lusts which drown men in perdition and destruction which in sense is all one with this That such a one makes himself a willing spoil and prey to the Devil Hence they are called deceitful Riches because they easily lead us out of the right way Matth. 13.22 and Job 18.8 The wicked walks upon snares and the grin shall take his heel Reasons 1 The love of the World banisheth the love of God out of the Soul Hee that is a lover of the World is an hater of God Jam. 4.4 Know yee not that the amity of the World is enmity to God Whosoever therefore will bee a friend of the World maketh himself an enemy to God now what sin will an enemy of God stick at And the Apostle John plainly divorceth these two which can never agree in one 1 Joh. 2.15 If any man love the World the love of the Father is not in him And if the love of God ●way not the heart Satan will easily incline it to any sin 2 Where there is the love of the World that heart hath already renounced God in Heaven and given it self to bee possessed ruled and commanded by the God of the World For look what a man chiefly loves hee not so much possesseth it as is possesseth by it Whence the Apostle is not afraid to call Covetousness Idolatry Eph. 5.5 and Coloss 3.5 not onely because the chief love but the chief trust hope and confidence goeth with them They say to the wedge of gold thou art my hope And further as the Heathen Idolaters worshipped and served gods of Gold and Silver so these serve and obey their golden and silver god wherein they take up their chief desires and contentment Now having denyed the God of Heaven and thrust himself out of his protection a man becomes to be in the power of the Devil and ruled at his will 3 The love of the World spoiles us of our armour and strength by which wee should bee fenced from Satans subtleties For 1 Whereas our chief fence is in Gods Word it First intercepteth the Word and estrangeth the heart from it as Ezek. 33.31 They sit before thee and hear thy words but their hearts go after their covetousnesse Secondly it choaketh the Word that it becomes as seed cast among Thorns which choak it presently Thirdly it scorns the Word as may appear Luke 16.14 These things heard the Pharisees which were Covetous and mocked Now is not such an one easily snared by the Devil who is thus dis-affected to Gods Word Is not hee easily bound that wants yea scorns his weapons 2 The love of the World whether the Pleasures Profits or Glory of it as a Theef steals and robs our graces which are another chief part of our strength Good Hezekiah a little tickled with vain-glory made himself and his Land a prey and spoil to the Enemy Wise Solomon loved too much the unlawful pleasures of the World and how did it rob him of his Wisdome The Disciples while yet Christ was with them were stirred with love and debate for superiority and greatness which did much hinder them and took up their thoughts when they might have attended to better things How many for love of the World and Preferment fall from their first love abate their zeal become cold and indifferent as the times are 4 The love of the World where it is rooted delivers a man so far into the hands of Satan as hee easily falls from all shew of goodness and dangerously revolts from all the goodness that seemed to bee in him The young man that came to Christ with many good shews and desires hearing of selling all and giving to the poor goeth away heavily and wee hear no more of him Demas once a Companion of Paul but easily forsook the truth when hee embraced the present World Judas an Example almost without example a Disciple at Christs elbow indued with excellent gifts Apostolical of Doctrin of Miracles c. having his heart glewed to the World for a trifle fell from his place from all the affection hee had sembled to his Master from the society of his fellow Disciples and stood with them that betrayed him 5 Experience shews how when Satan hath thrust the love of the World into a mans heart hee hath power enough 1 To binde that mans hands from the works of Piety and Mercy Hee is a bad Tenant the more land he holds the less homage hee doth unto God And as for works of Mercy hee will not part with his crums like the rich man in the Gospel And as hee lives altogether unprofitable to others so to himself hee hath no care of his salvation Thou fool This night shall they take away thy soul 2 As hee hath no power to do any good for God or man so he will suffer nothing A man loving the World flies affliction for Christ Matth. 13.21 when the Sun riseth hee withers when persecution comes hee is offended and falls away to the hinderance of many They that minde earthly things are enemies to the cross of Christ Phil. 3.19 Vse 1. Oh therefore Love not the World nor the things in the World 1 Joh. 2.15 A necessary exhortation to us to whom it is as natural to love the World as for water to run down a Hill And who can hardly affect it without being infected with it Hereunto lay hold on these motives 1 Consider how hard it is to love God and the World too even as hard as to look with the same eye saith Augustine up to Heaven and down to the Earth at the same time The more love a Woman bestows upon a stranger the less shee loves her Husband whence S. James is bold to call worldlings Adulterers and Adulteresses chap. 4.4 whom the Lord will not indure to dally and sport Eph. 2.3 and go a whoring after the World Yee cannot serve God and Mammon 2 Consider that a course lead in lusts is fitter for the Gentiles than those that profess the teaching of Grace Tit. 2.11 For the grace which hath appeared teacheth us to deny worldly lusts Our relation to Christ of whom wee are called Christians must draw our affections out of the World for 1 He hath chosen us out of the World so that now hee professeth of us They are not of the World Job 15.19 2
taught to bring them in by evil means both of them accursed by God and the gainer for them 3 All actions which are brought to pass by unwarrantable means are likewise to bee suspected not to bee of God who ordereth due and lawful means to good and lawful ends and hath as many pipes to convey good unto us Zach 4 2. as eyes to provide for it Saul must needs know his condition was unhappy and his business unprosperous when he must run to the Witch to help himself So their cause is worse than naught that run to the Wizard for help in diseases and losses G●d is gone from them and the remedy is farre worse than the disease Yet h●w common is not to seek to them by night as Saul did but even by day as n●t ashamed of it Herod he would not break his oath no that was not for his credit but he might well know it to be a wicked one which could not bee kept but by murther of John Baptist Obj. Why what would yee have him forsworn Ans He had brought himself into such a snare as either he must bee forsworn or a murther Now of these to have broken a cruel and wicked oath should have hindred murther which is a sin in an higher degree against God and man and to keep a wicked oath is worse than to make it This is rather to be thought of because even godly men themselves are too ready to effect good things by bad means as Jacob will get the Blessing by lying Rahab will save the Spies by a lye Lot will save his Guests by prostituting his own Daughters In which how ever the Lord sometime commends the fact and faith of the parties yet he never commends the manner which blemished both the doers and the actions The rule that wee must walk by is in Rom. 3.8 We must not doe the least evil for the greatest good Therefore let us take heed of these base tricks of the Devil to effe●t our desires by wicked means Many condemn good men because they stand nicely upon some small things which if they would yeeld unto they might doe themselves and others great good but they have learned another lesson not to doe the least thing against their Conscience to procure themselves the greatest good God need not their error to glorifie himself and doe his people good by 4 That religion which is set forward by bad and wicked means is to be suspected and condemned true religion was ever maintained by truth simplicity humility patience mercy love meekness c. But the Church of Rome must needs defend a bad cause the means are so extreamly wicked as violence and power trechery and subtilty fire and sword murthers and Massacres King-killing and Powder-plots lyes and equivocations and what not It was once said Omnia venalia Romae at Rome all things are saleable and now it may be said Romae omnia venialia at Rome all things are pardonable One demonstration for memory sake That religion which upholds it self 1 By ignorance as the Mother of devotion 2 By disgracing and reproaching the holy Scriptures abhorring them no less than a Thief doth a pair of Gallows and warning men to take heed of them 3 By upholding Images and Image-worship 4 Perjury by freeing subjects from the Oath of Allegiance 5 Disobedience yea rebellion to Princes and Parents 6 Murder and Massacres of all Princes and people Kings and Kingdoms by sword fire poyson powder ponyard openly or trecherously 7 Adulteries and fornication by their Stews and Sheet-punishments yea with large revenues by them 8 By Lies Legends lying and Straw-miracles notable tricks and collusions as once in the Images of the Heathens the Devil often spake but the Priests in stead of the Devil speak through Images and make them move sweat nod c. to deceive simple people I say such a religion cannot bee of God because the means of advancing it are from the Devil But the Romish is such a religion therefore c. Vse 2. Here is a glass for liars and boasters to see their faces in and their resemblance to their father the Devil He promiseth an whole world when all ptoves but a shadow and image He takes upon him to dispose all things in the world as though they were his whereas we must goe to our heavenly Father the Father of lights for every morsel of bread Wherefore whosoever would any way advantage himself by lying or deceiving it is manifest the spirit of the Devil ruleth in him And therefore cast off lying as a ragge and relick of natural corruption and speak every man the truth to his neighbour Ephes 4.25 It is a received opinion in these days that Qui nescit dissimulare nescit vivere No dissembler no man and plain-dealing is a jewel but he that useth it shall dye a beggar and some men are too honest to thrive in the world such common speeches argue the common breach of this Commandement But know 1. How farre are we degenerate from our fore-fathers they lived simply by their hands according to Gods Ordinance but now many live by their wits whence it is that Trades are called Crafts and Mysteries because more live by craft and the sin of their trade than the trade it self 2 The Lord is the avenger of all such wrong by secret cousnage and lying for he sees that thou deceivest him that trusteth thee and because it is hidden from men his own hand must revenge it 3 What a shame is it and slander to Christian profession that men professing salvation by Christ should so carry their trades as a man that comes to deal with them must come so suspitiously as if he were to fall into the hands of so many Theeves and having dealt with them hath just cause to say that he might find more just dealing with Turks and Infidels Whereas if this vice were put off a childe might traffique in the dark without delusion The same of Boasters who brag of things they have not As Job speaks of the Leviathan of the Sea so may we of the hellish Leviathan He is the King of all the sons of Pride As 1 Many bear themselves out in fine apparrel and bravery when indeed nothing is their own if their debts were paid And if every Bird had his own feather they might well goe naked 2 Others to raise themselves make no bones to lye and magnifie their estate as the often experience of the world shews that Widows and Widowers promise great things of themselves and much wealth whereas the greatest wealth prove debts 3 But if you will see the very natural portrayture of the father the Devil if yee will hear his very voyce look upon the Bishop and Pope of Rome For 1 He hath engrossed all the Kingdoms of the earth into his own hands saying All these are mine yet not directly but in ordine ad Deum 2 I give them to whom I will I can set up and thrust
reverently acknowledged for something wherein God hath preferred them before us as for years gifts graces authority or such as are set over us as Parents and Fathers of bodies and souls of Church and Country And this is required by the fifth Commandement and Rom. 13.1 7. neither doth the Gospel and Christianity take away but teach civility And performed by the godly both in speech as Daniel said O King and Paul to Festus O noble Festus and also in outward behaviour and gesture as Jacob bowed seven times to Esau and Joseph taking his Sons from the knees of his Father Jacob having blessed them did reverence to his Father down to the ground Gen. 48.12 David inclined his face to the earth and bowed himself to Saul who pursued his life 1 Sam. 24.9 The like of Ruth to Boaz chap. 2. and of Abigail to David 1 Sam. 25.23 she fell on her face and bowed her self to the ground and fell at his feet 2 Of courtesie which is a fruit of humility when a man to his equals and inferiours sheweth reverence and respect as Abraham to Lot Gen. 13.8 9. and to the Hittites his inferiours cap. 23.12 he bowed himself before the people of the Land Farr unlike the surliness and stiffness of proud and conceited persons who being voyd of all good nature nurture and religion know not to bow to any neither their betters in the way of duty nor equalls in way of courtesie Divine worship is two-fold 1 Inward the sum of the first Commandement standing in fear love and the like 2 Outward bowing or reverence the sum of the second Commandement The former bindes the soul and the will and affections and the whole inner man the later the outward man to give God his worship and service and to give no part of that to any other For the word only only mentioned in the latter branch must bee extended and referred to the former too The latter of these is here meant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the word properly signifieth to kiss or adore by some outward gesture to manifest a veneration 1 Because this was it which Satan required of Christ namely to fall down or bow unto him but Christ aptly refuseth it 2 This worship proceeds from an inward fear and apprehension of a Divine excellency and power not communicable to any Creature which Satan well know for even by this bowing he would have Christ to acknowledge in him a power to dispose of all earthly things which is proper to God And him only shalt thou serve By service is not meant the inward service of the heart for the words in Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord and serve him will not bear it the first thereof betokening the inward service the second the outward following the former as the effect the cause Neither would our Saviour invert the order in setting the stream before the fountain Therefore this word serve serveth to expound the former as an addition signifying nothing else but the outward service of God so that Christ here shews that it is not enough to give God outward reverence but that wee must as servants perform duties according to his will so the word signifies being taken from servants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who perform service to bodily Masters in bodily actions 3 The person to be worshipped and served is God only Him only whom we call the Lord our God according to the speech of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.3 Direct your hearts unto the Lord and serve him only for his glory will hee give to no other Quest Must we give outward worship to none but God Must we not bow our knee and uncover our heads to our King and Rulers Must we not rise up to the hoare-head Levit. 19.32 Must we not serve one another in love How then must we outwardly worship and serve God only Ans We must not deny any civil worship to any man to whom God hath made it due but external religious worship must not be given to any Creature man or Angel Quest How may we know the one from the other Ans They differ greatly 1 In the kind one is servil the other social the former due to an absolute Lord and Commander the latter due from one fellow-servant to another This distinction is grounded in Revel 19.10 where the Angel refused the worship done him by John upon this ground because he was a fellow-servant and one of the brethren for John being overcome with the greatness of the Angels glory and splendor out of humane infirmity ascribed to him more than civil honour and mixed some religious worship with it which only was due to God 2 Another difference is in the intention of the mind in worshipping Religious bowing is when a man inwardly apprehends a Divine power proper to God and incommunicable to the creature or when god-head or divine properties are conceived in the thing bowed unto As for example in falling down to an Image uncovering the head praying c. the mind now conceives a Divine power in the image of knowing ones thoughts hearing helping and the like at least that God hath tied his presence and grace to such a place where such an Image is set up But the civil bowing to the King or superiour or to the Chair of estate is a meer token of civil subjection without any conceit of deity in the mind only because we see in them excellent gifts of God or in place above in the Church Common-wealth or family For the same gesture may be civil and spiritual according to the intention of the mind of the worshipper 3 The end distinguisheth them the one is to exercise godliness the other to express civility the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one done as a man is a member of Gods Kingdom the other as he is in the rank of an earthly Kingdom As for example Kissing of the Popes feet is a worship done to a man and so seems civil but being tendred to him as to the Vicar of Christ as one that can pardon sins and cannot erre this religious end makes it a religious worship and therefore none of his being not offered to any other Prince or Emperour upon the earth 4 Some difference may be taken from the common estimation of the thing worshipped as if it be generally esteemed or reputed Divine and deity ascribed to that which in it self hath it not The Host as they call it is generally held to be Christs very self now for a man suppose a Protestant that knows it to remain very bread and that no such deity or change is in it to bow down before it to uncover his head or use gestures of adoration to it is an external religious gesture and is unlawful although his intention bee not to worship it but because in common estimation he ascribes a kind of God-head to the creature as others doe And whereas adoration is a sign
idlely or laying themselves to sleep and take a nap some part of the Sermon or sitting unmannerly in prayer-time without all reverence that should they come so and behave themselves towards their Prince they should bee taught a lesson for their rudenesse Is this to confesse a mans own basenesse and the humble conceit hee hath of himself Is this the fruit of acknowledging Gods infinite Majesty Surely that soul which feelingly sees it self to deal with God will make the body either kneel as a Petitioner or stand as a servant ready to hear and know and do the will of his Lord. And him onely shalt thou serve Doct. God must not onely bee worshipped but also served The distinction is easily observed For a man may in heart and gesture honour another to whom hee owes but little service And this word in the Hebrew is taken from Servants who besides inward reverence and outward worship owe to their Masters their strength labour and service yea frank and cheerful Obedience And suppose any man have a Servant who will bee very Complemental and give his Master cap and knee and very good words yet when his Master commands him any thing hee will not do it here is honour but no service and denying service hee plainly shews that his honour is but dissembled and hypocritical So as this service to God as to earthly Masters stands 1 in fear and reverent inward affection 2 in dutiful and ready obedience in all holy and civil actions For 1 These two God in the Scriptures hath every where joyned together Reasons and therefore no man may separate them Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were in them such an heart to fear mee and to keep my Commandements Josh 24.14 15. Now therefore fear the Lord and serve him in uprightnesse else chuse you for I and my house will serve the Lord. Eccl. 12. ult Let us hear the end of all Fear God and keep his Commandements which is all one with fear God and serve him 2 This service is a fruit of fear and a true testimony of it for fear of God is expressed in service and if a man would make true trial of his fear hee may do it by his service It is a note and branch also of our love unto God all which the holy Prophet Moses declareth Deut. 10.12 when hee expresseth that walking in all Gods waies is a consequent of fear and the service of the Lord a fruit of love And now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God and to walk in his waies and to love him and to serve the Lord thy God 3 Hee justly calleth for our service in regard of the relation that is between him and us as hee is the Lord our God and Master and hath authority over us to whom wee owe simple obedience and wee are his servants to whom wee owe of right our whole strength and service Now hee becomes our Lord and wee his servants not onely by right of Creation and prese●vation but by expresse Covenant that as the Jews servants were said to bee their Masters money so wee are not our own but bought with a price 1 Corinth 6.20 Our wages are set and our Promise passed our earnest-penny received and no other Lord can lay claim unto us 4 There is no Creature exempted from the service of God all Creatures in their kind serve him and much more ought man to whom hee hath appointed all creatures to serve him and hath exempted him from the service of them all to serve himself alone All the Saints ever gloried that they were the Servants of God The honourable mention of Moses is that hee was faithful in all the house of God as a servant And David saith often Lord I am thy ●ervant keep thy servant c. Paul Peter Jude the servants of God The Angels professe themselves our fellow-Servants and are called Ministring spirits sent forth for the heirs of Salvation Adam in innocency was not exempted from this service but must serve God in dressing the Garden as a servant his Lord and Master Nay Christ himself the second A●am was not onely stiled the beloved Son but the righte●us servant of God Isa 53.11 5 Our Talents our gifts our strength our work our wages all are his received from him and for him and therefore must be returned again unto him in his service Quest What is this service which God requires at our hands Answ The service of God is either Legal or Evangelical The former stands in a perfect conformity with the whole Law of God when the creature can present unto God a personal and total righteousness Of this kind is the service of the blessed Angels Of the same kinde was Adams in innocency Of the same was Christs service when hee was made obedient to the death that by the obedience of one many might bee made righteous This is that by which wee shall serve God in heaven when wee shall once again recover perfect sanctification and the whole Image of God which we have now lost This now wee cannot attain unto yet wee must ever carry it in our eye as our scope and aim Evangelical service is when the heart being regenerate by Gods Spirit and purified by Faith hath Christs obedience imputed unto it which is accepted as its own perfect obedience and now indeavours to obey God sincerely in all things In a word that is Evangelical service which is perfect in Christ begun and inchoat in us in him compleat in us sincere and upright which is Christian perfection And to know this service the better wee will set down the conditions of it I. It must bee willing and free a free-will offering for hereby it is distinguished from the service of Devils and wicked men who are all subject unto the power of God and do him service in executing his will whether they will or no but one thing it is to bee subjected another to subject ones self the one is f●●●an inward principle even the Spirit of Go● which reneweth the will and makes it of unwillingly willing and pliable the other is onely by some outward force The service of the godly resembles the Angels in Heaven who are said to have wings by which their will and readiness is figured in doing the bests of God David had not such wings to flye swiftly yet hee would run in the way of Gods Commondements so fast as the burden of flesh would suffer him This condition our Lord and Saviour commends unto us in his own example when hee professeth it is his meat and drink to do the will of his father 2 It must bee hearty and sincere Rom. 1.9 whom I serve in my spirit not in body and ostentation but in soul and sincerity not in hypocrisy and coldnesse but in soundnesse and fervency not co-acted or compelled but chearfully and without dispute The Apostle requires love out of a pure heart 1 Tim. 1.5
in the deep nor at the mountain not so destitute but we find some supports But were the case with us as it was here with our Lord if we were in the world as in a wilderness our food nothing but stones our company wild beasts ready to devour us no friend near us but the Devil tossing and tumbling us with his temptations wee should assuredly see the Lord extraordinarily providing for us and working out for us unexpected comfort our extremity would be Gods opportunity God sent not Moses to deliver Israel from under Pharaoh till their burdens were at the heaviest and their oppressions intollerable God might have sent his Angel to preserve the three Children from being cast into the fire but he did not till they were in the flames this was Gods time wherein he was more glorified his children more gloriously delivered and his enemies more mightily confounded than if the Angels had come before Even so when this Land was like that fiery Furnace made seven times hotter than ever before to consume the bodies of Gods Saints in Queen Maries days in the midst of those flames God sent that happy Queen now a blessed Saint to quench those fires and deliver our whole Church from that tyrannical and Papal oppression Thus the Lord himself waits and stays for the fittest time of our deliverance and so must we Never shall the faithful soul fail of a day of refreshing And ministred unto him We have spoken of the Angels coming Now the last thing considerable in this History is their ministery unto Christ wherein are two things 1 How they minister to him 2 Why they minister I. 1 They ministred in adoring the Son of God the only conquerour of the Devil and honouring him as the victorious destroyer of the Prince and Commander of all hellish powers For the Angels rejoyced in Christs victory in the Devils overthrow and the salvation of the Church of God The goodness of their nature carries them wholly to the glory of God in all their actions and motions and the good of the Church as at the birth of Christ they sung Glory to God on high on earth peace and good will to men And there is no doubt but now upon this victory they did much more honour him and congratulate his glorious triumph 2 They ministred to him in comforting him being in his soul extreamly afflicted and molested with Satans temptations for how could the Son of God but utterly abhorr and with fiery zeal detest such blasphemous temptations as that hee should not only distrust his Fathers providence but even fall down and worship the Devil himself with which temptations a sinful man yet in his corrupt nature would be exceedingly distracted and disturbed It is no doubt therefore but as in his Agony before his Passion the Angels came to comfort him so likewise in this conflict and perturbation so soon as they might they came in to the same purpose 3 They ministred to him in releeving his body which was now broken with hunger and watchings having already fasted forty days and forty nights and brought him food to allay his hunger spreading as it were a table for him in the wilderness For if they neglected not the servant of God Elias in the wilderness being ready to starve for food but provided him a meal in strength whereof he went forty days and forty nights 1 King 19.5 much less would they neglect the Son of God who was now in the same necessity 4 They ministred to him standing about him and giving attendance waiting as it were at his table and ready to be employed in any further service hee had to command them Psal 103.20 Yee Angels ready to execute his will Whence in Ezek. 1.11 the Angels are described with wings stretched upward noting their propensity and readiness to the Commandements of Christ II. Why the Angels do thus minister to Christ Ans Not for any necessity of his for 1 He was able to have sustained himself and held out for ever against the Devil 2 He was able to have confounded the Devil 3 He was able to have created food in the wilderness without them which they could not do for although they could fetch food elsewhere provided yet could they not create any but 1 It was their duty to attend him as their Lord called the Lord of the holy Angels 2 Christ would now use their ministery and did not help himself by Miracle as he might if he had pleased But we read not that he used his power for himself or his Disciples Himself being hungry and weary at Jacobs Well he created not food but sent his Disciples into the City to buy bread And when his Disciples were faint and hungry they were fain to pluck ears of Corn and eat it But yet he used not his miraculous power For Miracles were wrought for the edification of others and commonly done in the presence of many whose faith was to be strengthned as the Disciples was in part already 3 This was so for our instruction and consolation that we also in our wants standing in the Lords battels may expect the presence and comfort of the Angels Doct. The priviledge of Christ whereby hee is exalted above all creatures hence appeareth in that the Angels minister unto him Heb. 1.6 the Apostle proves Christs divinity and eminency above all things out of that testimony of the Psalm And let all the Angels of God worship him For he must needs be greater than all who must bee honoured of all Job 1.51 Christ himself proves himself the Son of God because notwithstanding he is the Son of man which plainly notes him to be 1 A true man and 2 A weak man yet they should see the Heavens opened and the Angels ascending and descending upon him as was figured in Jacobs Ladder Gen. 28.12 For Christ is the Ladder and only way by which we ascend into Heaven It reached from earth to heaven signifying his two Natures God of his Father in Heaven man of Jacobs loyns in earth Angels ascending and descending are the ministring spirits attending him for in that phrase is meant their sending out their emission and commission to their office descending to their work and ascending to give account of it Now according to this Prophecie of Christ two of his Disciples saw the heavens open upon him in his transfiguration Matth. 17.1 2. In his resurrection those keepers of the Sepulcher saw the Angel of the Lord that descended from heaven and had rolled away the stone from the door and sate upon it so as they were afraid and as dead men Matth. 28.4 The women also saw the Angel and talked with him that had attended him in his Resurrection vers 5. And in his Ascension all his Disciples saw the Heavens opened unto him and two Angels standing by them who attended him Acts 1. Reasons 1 The more honourable the attendants and ministers the greater is the Personage so attended But our Lord hath
partly from the Prophets witness 1 For the Apostles they witnessed of such facts of Christ as argued him First a Prophet vers 37 38. Who went about doing good and healing c. for these Miracles served to confirm his heavenly doctrin Secondly a Priest vers 39. Whom they sl●w and hanged on a tree which noteth his sacrifice Thirdly a King proved by three Arguments 1 By his rising from death vers 40 41. 2 By sending out his Apostles to preach v. 42. 3 By his coming to judge all flesh ver 42. 2 The same truth is confirmed by the witness of all the Prophets ver 43. In the Preface Peter maketh way unto his Doctrin three ways 1 By removing from himself an imputation of levity and sudden change of his mind which might otherwise have been objected against him for all men knew that he being a Jew had been very respective lest at any time he should come near an Heathen or Gentile such as Cornelius and his company were for so it appeareth by his answer in the Vision ver 14. yea and after his vision he was full of doubts whether he might adventure into their company till the Lord adds to his vision a voyce bidding him go in to Cornelius doubting nothing vers 20. Peter therefore most ingenuously in the first place acknowledgeth an error that had stuck by him namely in accounting now after Christs death and Resurrection whereby hee brake down all partition walls such as were uncircumcised an unclean company and like Doggs and Swine to whom holy things might not be cast and offered 2 That the Lord had removed this error manifestly teaching him both by vision and voyce that his grace did now extend it self over all sorts of men and therefore that he came not of his own head moved by remerity or rashness but upon good ground to teach even the Gentiles the mysteries of their salvation 3 He gets not audience only and attention but authority also to his Doctrine by shewing what a good conceit he had of Cornelius and his company that he had not now to deal with prophane and lewd persons but such as the Lord had sanctified to himself according to the vision and voyce What or whom the Lord hath sanctified account not thou prophane vers 15. Whence 1 We have in this holy man a Map of Humane frailty Observ 1. A Map of humane frailty in the Apostle in which wee may see how heavie the best are to their duties for was it not long before given Peter in charge to teach the Gentiles was not his commission large enough when among other Disciples he was dismissed by Christ himself to teach not only the Nations but all Nations Had not he heard often from the mouth of Christ and read in the Writings of the Prophets that the Gentiles must bee called in that the Tents of the Church must bee enlarged her Curtains stretched out and that their own sound must go over all the world yet Peter had forgotten all this and as though Christ had not been come or as if himself had never conversed with him he would still uphold the difference of peoples which his Mr. had destroyed confine salvation to the Jews only as if Christ had not been a common Saviour of Jews and Gentiles he must have new visions and voyces to lift him up to his duty or else he cannot be brought so much as to acknowledge it Let us look upon this example to condemn our own corruption by it yea to watch over it lest following as we are too proue the stream of it we be carried away from the most essential duties which by our calling either general or particular are by God enjoyned us Let the Popish guides also look upon this example and tell us whether Peter erred not 1 In judgement 2 After Christs promise 3 In a weighty matter forgetting his commission and calling yea and the calling and salvation of the whole body of the Gentiles all which he sailed in And then whether it be a sound ar●und upon Peters person or any promise made to him to build their Popes immunity and freedome from error in matter of faith so long as he siteth in Peters pretended chair Secondly In that the Apostle Peter secretly implyeth an acknowledgement of his error A pattern of special grace in the same Apostle We have in him a worthy pattern of a special grace to be practised of us all namely upon better grounds to lay aside any error in judgement or practice although never so long held or stifly maintained of us before and not be ashamed to profess that we so doe which vertue is a sound fruit of humility and argueth a good heart which is in love with the truth for it self and esteemeth it above his own estimation the observing whereof would cut off infinite controversies which could never bee carried and continued with such burning heat in the Church of God if the contention were not many times more for victory than for truth and rather lest error should bee acknowledged than that truth should triumph over it Thirdly In this Preface every Minister is taught wisely to cut off and remove such le●s as might hinder his doctrine among his Hearers and contrarily to win by all good means such credit to his person as that he may preserve a reverent estimation of himself in the hearts of his people So did the Apostle here and not without cause seeing the acceptance of the person of a Minister is a great furtherance for the entertainment of his doctrine not that the faith of God ought to be had in respect of persons but because mans weakness carrieth him beyond his duty herein And again Satan and his instruments seek exceptions against their persons whose doctrine is without exception well knowing that where the person is not first received hardly will any doctrine from him bee embraced Matth. 10.14 He that receiveth not you nor your words Whence the Apostle Paul was constrained to be much and often in the justifying of his person calling and conversation because to hinder his doctrine the false Apostles by all these laboured to bring him into contempt Nay our Lord Jesus himself was forced often to averre his person to be Divine his calling to bee heavenly and his conversation holy and without sin because the Jewes were ever hence disgracing his doctrine because of the meanness of his appearance Now whosoever would retain reverence and authority among his people must shew forth 1 Conscience of his duty 2 Love to his peoples souls and bodies 3 A wise and unblameable carriage and conversation these things if he doe not he hath more disgraced himself than his people can Of a truth I perceive that God accepteth not of persons By person is not here meant the substance of man or the man himself but the outward quality appearance or condition which being offered to the eye may make a man more or less respected
which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord
hath so neerly conjoyned Now for the right manner of working righteousness it appeareth in these rules 1 It setteth all the rule before it and endeavoureth in all if it were possible The right manner of working righteousness in four things to fulfil all righteousness for seeing all the Commandements of God are Truth and Righteousness they are all without exception to bee observed And this although it bee necessarily implied in the Text yet is it else-where expressed Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were in them such an heart as to fear mee and keep all my Commandements 2 A second thing required is diligence which must needs attend fear How diligent a vertue fear is appeareth in Jacob who being to meet his Brother whom hee feared could not sleep all night and in Abraham who having a most difficult Commandement to slay his Son yet rose early and went three daies journey without reasoning the matter But what moved him hereto surely the Lord himself sheweth the true cause Gen. 22.12 Now I know that thou fearest God seeing thou hast not spared thine only Son 3 Delight in the works of righteousness which also attendeth the fear of the Lord Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord hee delighteth greatly in his Commandements both to think of them to speak of them and to do them Whereas the worldlings heart speech and affection is taken up with his Gain Commodity Rents and income For as the fear of God it self is not a servile and slavish fear for punishment no more is that obedience which proceedeth from it forced or wrung out but as it is such a fear as delighteth greatly in Gods Commandements so the obedience is such as is offered from a willing people like a free-will offering which they must only offer whose heart encourageth them and whose spirit maketh them willing 4 Continuance in working for this is another property of the true fear of God that it respecteth not only all the Commandements but always Deut. 5.19 and seeing Gods fear is to keep the heart continually and that man is blessed that feareth always Prov. 23.17 this inseparable fruit of it working of righteousnesse Prov. 28.24 must never wither or fail in the godly who are exhorted to passe the whole time of their dwelling here in fear 1 Pet. 1.17 to walk with God as Henoch did and to have their conversation in Heaven Philip. 3.20 that is their whole practice and course and not a part of it only Motives to the practise of righteousness Hence therefore is afforded another ground of exhortation namely that howsoever this is not such a righteousness as wherein we can stand before Gods Judgement Seat not being every way answerable to the Laws perfection yet we want not good reason to take up the practice of it in the manner prescribed Seeing 1 It is commanded by God Psal 4.6 Offer to God the sacrifice of righteousnesse 2 It pleaseth him and makes us also pleasing unto him for the former Psal 11.7 The righteous Lord loveth righteousness the latter is the latter words of the verse in hand 3 It maketh us like him 1 Joh. 3.7 Little children he that doth righteousness is righteous as he is righteous 4 It is a mark of our regeneration and a fruit of faith easier discerned than it self 1 Joh. 3.10 In this are the children of God known and the children of the Devil He that doth not righteousnesse is not of God 5 Much blessing is upon the head of the righteous saith Salomon The blessing of God comes down upon him and descends to his posterity God hath blessed him and he shall be blessed in his person in his estate in his name in his goods in this life and in the life to come The blessing of men also comes upon him the loyns of the poor blesse him the Church of God blesseth him yea turn him what way hee will the blessing of goodnesse meeteth him every way God giveth him according to the work of his hands often even here in this life and if that should fail hee being marked for a member of the Church Militant he shall be in due time removed into the holy mountain of Heaven where he shall dwell who worketh righteousnesse Psal 15.2 Thus much of the description of a religious person now of his priviledge Secondly the priviledge of a religious man is that a beleever of any Nation under Heaven of any calling sex or condition of life is accepted of God Where it may be asked Whether God whose grace is most free be bound by any thing which any man can doe to accept of him I answer a man is to be considered two ways 1 As in the state of his corrupt nature before his calling and conversion and thus he hath nothing worthy love and nothing which provoketh not further hatred here are no works which are not wicked and stained such a filthy puddle cannot send out one drop of sweet water How the person and work of a beleever can be accepted of God not any cleane thing can be brought out of such filthinesse all this while can be no acceptance of the person or of the work no sight of any present object in such a party nor any fore-sight of any future faith or work whereby the Lord can be moved to accept him for then the freedome of his grace should be hindered 2 As he is converted and now reconciled unto God called by the Word regenerated by the Spirit and having his heart purified by faith Now the Lord looking upon him sees him not as he was before all naked and lying in his bloud and filthiness but beholding him in the face of his Christ hee espieth his own image upon him yea and his own workmanship upon him and thus cometh the person to be first accepted And then in the second place the work of such a person cannot but be also pleasing unto God not for any worthiness or perfection in it self for even the best work of the best man from imperfect faith and imperfect knowledge is so farre from meriting as that it needeth pardon but 1 Because it cometh from an accepted person 2 Is a fruit of faith 3 A testimony of obedience unto Gods Commandement 4 The imperfection and stain of it is covered and wiped away with Christs most absolute obedience And thus both the person fearing God and his working of righteousnesse is accepted of God Vse 1. To comfort the godly poor Comfort the godly in that God is the God of the ●bject who find but strange entertainment in the world where they are strangers who hence learn That as the world loveth her own so God loveth and accepteth his own in what Country or condition soever they be the which comfort if they had not to sustain their hearts withall they could not but think themselves the most miserable of all men so many sins they see which God may see in them so many temptations with
necessarily followeth that the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifye the Gentiles through faith Gal. 3.8 that is a thing to come to pass almost two thousand years after must needs bee of God Again it followeth as necessarily that the Prophets in preaching and the Holy Pen-men of God spake and writ as they were moved by the Spirit of God and directed by the immediate assistance of God and therefore could not erre in any thing for they foretold directly such things which both for matter and manner came to pass many years after Jacob in his will foretold that the Scepter should not depart from Judah till Shiloh came this prophecy was not accomplished till above seventeen hundred years after the prediction for not much above twenty years afore Christs birth Herod became King of Judea killed the whole Colledge of the Jews called the sanhedrim wherein was the heir apparent of the Kings blood King Cyrus was named by the Prophet Esaiah an hundred years before hee was born Isaiah 44.28 and of him prophesied that hee should build the Temple The worthy King Josiah with his facts were declared three hundred fifty nine years before he was born 1 King 13.2 The Apostle Paul prophesyed of the destruction of the Romane Empire and thereby the rising of the Antichrist which was not accomplished till about the year four hundred seventy five after Christ For whereas the Roman Empire was divided into Eastern and Western the Western which onely hindred the revelation of Antichrist was in that year quite overthrown and Rome it self taken by the Gothes Joh. Funct in ●●no praedicto and after this never had any Romane Emperour his seat of Authority in Rome These and the like neither man nor Angel could ever of themselves foretell and therefore the Author and Director of them must needs be God Observ 2. Secondly from hence also note The Antiquity of the Gospel in that it was Preached by the Prophets to the ancient Israelites and known for the substance of it not onely to the Apostles and ancient Christians and beleevers but to the Patriarks and Prophets yea even to Adam in Paradise to all whom Christ was preached the Lord of all and that blessed seed in whom all the Nations of the earth were to bee blessed This Doctrin although it bee called a new Testament Our religion is the oldest religion and Popery but a novelty is no new Doctrin Let the Papists make a vain brag of Antiquity and charge us with a new religion the truth is whereas the body of their doctrin was not known to the Prophets nor Apostles nor Beleevers for many hundred years after Christ our doctrin is that which God sent to the children of Israel and therefore is most ancient and true And to prove this that I say we will goe no further than our text That doctrin which preacheth peace by Jesus Christ is the doctrin which was sent to Israel which we professe at this day but so is not Popish doctrin which preacheth peace not by Christ but by our selves our merits and satisfactions and peace by the Popes Pardons Bulls and Absolutions and Indulgences now these with other dependences thereon being the main points and pillars of their doctrin were never preached to the children of Israel by any Prophet nor ever by any of the Apostles to the Church of God but have crept in one after another many hundred years since Christ and his Apostles Let their own rule stand in force therefore with good will if we cannot plead antiquity we will lay no claim to the truth Observ 3. Thirdly hence we note That there is but one way to salvation But one way to salvation and this was declared to the Children of Israel for substance as well as to us who went to Heaven by the same way which wee doe-There is but one Christ one precious Faith one and the same Gospel common to all times one common Salvation preached by the same Christ who is the same yesterday to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 who is the Lamb slain from the beginning not actually but by the efficacy of his Sacrifice the vertue of which to come they laid hold on to salvation as wee do upon it past and accomplished already Thus Abel beleeved and received testimony that he was just before God Heb. 11.4 Thus Noah was made heir of the righteousnesse which is by faith Heb. 11.7 Every religion will not save thr professors there is but one way and that a strait one that leadeth to life Wee come into the world one way we depart many ways so there is but one way to find life everlasting but many ways to lose it only Christ is the way by his Doctrin by his Merit by his example even the new and living way his bloud is ever fresh ever trickling down and ever living it quickneth them that walk in it and refresheth them with new strength never any rent the veil but he never any but he made a high way into the Holy of Holies in the highest Heaven never any came to the Father but by him neither was peace ever preached in any other name but his who is Lord over all blessed for ever Which is Lord of all Christ may be said to be Lord of all two ways 1 More generally hee is with the Father and Holy Ghost Lord of all things unto whom all Creatures by right of Creation even the very Devils are subject Thus he ruleth in the very midst of his enemies disposing of the wicked and their malice to his own glory In this respect he is both owner and possessor of all things Bagnal Ado● and a sustainer and maintainer of all things and that by his word Heb. 1.3 2 More specially he is Lord of all men whether Jews of Gentiles beleeving in his name even a Lord of his Church and in this latter sence Christ Lord of his Church Christ is called Lord of all in this place 1 Now Christ is Lord of his Church consisting of Jew and Gentile Reasons 1 Because God hath given the Church unto him for his inheritance Psal 2.8 I will give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance which being a Prophecy of the calling of the Gentiles implieth that the kingdom of grace whereof Christ is appointed King in Sion consisteth of all Countries and peoples and is not bounded or bordered but with the ends of the earth and sheweth further that all these his subjects are given him of God to become his servants Joh. 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternal life to all whom thou hast given him 2 They are so given unto him as he must win them before hee can enjoy them He winneth partly by ●onquest partly by ransom hee both conquereth and casteth out the strong man that held them captive spoyleth him of his armour and weakneth his arm for ever as also he payeth a precious ransome for
your sanctification Colos 1.10 filled with the knowledge of his will and wa●k worthy of the Lord c. thou must not only speak for but live to the credit of thy Master in thy speech actions attire eating drinking and whatsoever else carry thy self like a Christian else thou discreditest thy Masters house and dishonourest himself Were not hee a notable Traytor that being sworn of the Kings guard and professing all service to the King should instead of the Kings armes and coat wear the enemies so the thing it self speaketh against him who professeth Christ his Lord and yet never appears or sheweth himself in the street or abroad but in Satans livery his swearing his covetousness his filthiness his lying his whole life lead in all intemperance bewrayeth to whom hee hath given himself to obey 3 It is his will also that wee obey as well in suffering as in doing his pleasure and the reason is plain he is my Lord I am but a servant if he please to buffet and blow mee I must with all meekness submit my self yea and more be thankful for his government 2 Sam. 15.26 If hee say I have no delight in thee let him do whatsoever seemeth good in his eyes 1 Sam. 3.18 When the Lord had threatned heavy things against Heli his whole house hee answered It is the Lord let him do whatsoever seemeth good in his eyes I was dumb and opened not my mouth saith David because thou LORD didst is Psal 39.9 Thus must wee obey Christ as a Lord giving up our bodies and souls unto him by living unto him and dying unto him and this is the Apostles ground wee are the Lords Rom. 14.7 and therefore none of us liveth unto himself and none of us dyeth unto himself but living and dying wee are the Lords otherwise what a trifling and mockery were it onely to yield him a title of Lord or Master and deny him his service Why call yee mee Master Master and do not the things I speak Luk. 6.46 All which if it bee true how few shall finde Christ a Saviour for how few make him their Lord few there are that esteem this well-beloved above other well-beloveds not a few are ashamed of him and his profession many white-livered souldiers are daunted with Peter at the speeches of silly and simple persons most men never look to the hands of this Lord to acknowledge either receit of Talents or return of accounts fewest of all obey him in faith who yet are overcarried with presumption of his favour or in true sanctification though they can pretend it or in patience if they could get out of his hands if it were by flying to the Devil for help Well if Christ have no more but a title of a Lord from thee thou shalt have but a title of salvation from him and not the thing it self and if a name that thou livest content thee when thou art but dead the time commeth that when thou commest to seek thy name among the number that are saved by him thou shalt finde thy name left out of that role and set in the number of those that shall dye in their sins Christ being our Lord no other Lord can lay 〈◊〉 unto us Secondly if Christ bee the Lord of all Then have wee obtained much freedome by him both from all spiritual bondage and all that tyranny which those hard Lords Sin Death Hell Satan exercised over us our Lord hath paved the uttermost farthing and wrought a glorious redemption for us and hee having thus set us free wee are free indeed both from the guilt the punishment and service of sin Wee are free also from all Papal bondage for wee have but one Lord in Heaven who can save and destroy to whom simple obedience belongeth and to whom the Conscience is only subject The man of sin indeed would bee Lord of all and maketh laws to bind conscience where God hath left it free but as the Scriptures acknowledge but one Lord no more do wee and say more that wee cannot serve two Masters commanding such contrary things Wee are also hence freed from the fear of all earthly Tyrants if wee belong to this Lord for if hee stand with us who can bee against us Matth. 10.28 Fear not them which can kill the body onely but him who can cast both body and soul into Hell The true fear of him will eat out all those false fears of men Observ 3 Thirdly If Christ be Lord of all Then wee and all beleevers are fellow servants All beleevers are fellow servants to this Lord. and therefore ought to live and love together making no dissention or schism in our Masters house which is the Apostles reason Eph. 4.4 perswading the Ephesians to keep the Unity of faith because there is one Lord. This shall bee done if all of us who profess Christ could learn to deny our selves to follow his will not our own or other commanders yea to follow his blessed example learning daily of him to bee humble and meek patient and tender-hearted one to another forbearing and forgiving offenders hard to exasperate and easy to bee intreated And these things should wee rather strive in that according to the Apostles precept the same minde might bee in us which was in Jesus Christ Phil. 2.5 Vers 37 Yee know the word which came through all Judea beginning in Galilee after the Baptism which John Preached THE holy Apostle here beginneth the confirmation of that which hee had formerly spoken that Christ is the Messias and Lord of all to prove which hee beginneth orderly with the History of his life and death of which even these Gentiles could not bee ignorant therefore hee saith yee know the word Where if it be asked how they should come to know the doctrin of the Gospel seeing the Apostles were not yet turned to the Gentiles and Peter was now sent extraordinarily to teach them concerning Christ which had been in vain if they knew the word before we must observe Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by the word here is not meant the word preached as in the former verse but as the word is different in the original so also is the signification and betokeneth rather a thing done than a word uttered as Matth. 18.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word or fact be confirmed Luke 2.15 Let us goo to Bethlem and see this word that is this thing which the Lord hath brought to passe The plain sence then is this Yee know the word that is the same of Christ which was quickly dispersed through all Judea in the mouthes of common men Which fame that they should not mistake him or themselves he describeth 1 By the place where it arose beginning in Galilee 2 By the time when it most prevailed after the Baptism which John preached which some expound thus After the Baptism of Christ by
John which he preached that is administred but the natural sence is after the doctrin which John preached concerning him for usually in the New Testament by Johns Baptism especially which John preached is meant all his doctrin and his whole Ministery Matth. 21.25 The baptism of John whence was it that is the doctrin as the words after imply Why did yee not beleeve him and all men held John for a Prophet Mark 1.4 He preached the baptism of repentance unto remission of sins that is the doctrin of repentance for 1 Else it were improperly said to preach baptism 2 Johns doctrin was this Repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand Acts 18.25 Apollos knew only the baptism of John that is his doctrin and therefore is it said in the next verse that Priscilla and Aquila took him home and shewed him the way of God more clearly And in Acts 19.3 4. Into what were yee baptised that is into what doctrin were yee initiated and instructed they said into Johns baptism that is into Johns doctrin the which interpretation notably freeth that hard text from the false collection of Anabaptists who thence would gather that those were by Paul rebaptised who were formerly baptized by John but the difficulty will be removed if the words of Paul be wisely distinguished from the words of the Evangelist and Writer of that History John baptised saith Paul the baptism of repentance that is taught the doctrin of repentance saying that they should beleeve which when they heard namely they which heard by Johns Ministery they were baptized into the name of the Lord Jesus namely by John not by Paul Then addeth the Evangelist ●ers 6. And Paul put his hands on them and the Holy Ghost came on them and furnished them with such gifts as they by their own confession ver 2. had not heard of before And thus according to the plain sence of other Scriptures is that difficult place made very plain also Quest But why is the ministery and preaching of John called his baptism The ministery of John called his Baptism Why. Ans Because his doctrin was first of all sealed with the seal of Baptism in which regard as his person is called the Baptist so is his doctrin by the name of baptism Quest But why is this circumstance of place noted that this fame began in Galilee Ans 1 To note the accomplishment of that Prophecy in Isa 9.1 which also was observed by the Evangelist Matthew 4.14 2 To shew that this fame was no bare or ungrounded rumour but raised upon just cause for Jesus was baptized by John not farre from the borders of Galilee about Enou Joh. 3.23 And presently after he returned by vertue of the Spirit and came into Galilee preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom Mark 1.14 and made no end till he had taught all their Cities in all their Synagogues Luke 4.14 adde to his Baptism and Doctrin that he wrought his first Miracle of turning Water into Wine at Cana a Town of Galilee and that he called his Disciples in Galilee all which beginnings must needs raise a rumour and fame of him which as Luke reporteth went through all the adjacent region round about 3 This circumstance notably befitteth this argument to prove him Lord of all both Jews and Gentiles because he begun and was so famous in Galilee of the Gentiles Quest But was not Christ sent to the last sheep of the house of Israel Did hee not come to his own how then did hee begin his ministery in Galilee of the Gentiles Ans Galilee of the Gentiles is so called not because it was not in Judea but 1 To distinguish it from another Galilee which was also in Judea and called Galilea inferior in the tribe of Zabulon where Nazaret was situate But this was called Galilea superior or Gentium in the tribe of Nephtali not farre from Capernaum 2 Because there were twenty Cities in Galilee given by Salomon to Hyram a Gentile 1 King 9.11 3 Because being in the extremity of Palestina near the Sea and not farre from Tyrus and Sidon they were ever mixt with many Gentiles that were foreiners besides that they were so seated within that Country in Salomons time as they could never after bee removed G●lilaea ge●tium vel populorum 4 M. Junius thinketh it to be so called not only because of the abundance of Gentiles there but also because it was a most populous Country full of inhabitants above the rest of Palestina Quest But why should Christ begin his Ministery here rather than at Jerusalem was it for any singular disposition or good which hee found in them above other I answer No for they were in regard of the Gentiles who were mingled among them Why Christ begun his Ministery in Galilee of all other most ignorant most superstitious most rude and indocible for so they are noted Matth. 4.15 A people sitting in darknesse and in the shadow of death saw a great light But hereby the Lord Jesus shewed himself Reasons 1 A most merciful Saviour ready to releeve those who of all other were most miserable yea in that he vouchsafed to make the first offer of his grace even to the worst who least of all deserved it 2 Hence he manifested himself a true Prophet who would rather hide himself in the furthest and most remote parts of the Country amongst a barbarous and rude people than ambitiously affect the principal City to get himself a name or applause in as false Prophets use to doe Permixtum à Judaeis Gentibus inhabitata fuit Chem Har 35 c. 3 Not obscurely hence would he be noted the Lord of all both Jews and Gentiles in that he beginneth his Ministry in this Country whose inhabitants were mixed of Jews and Gentiles Object But this seemeth to crosse sundry places of the Scripture which affirm ●hat the preaching of Christ must begin at Jerusalem not in Galilee Luk. 24.47 And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached among all Nations beginning at Jerusalem Ans 1. That place is meant of the preaching of Christs Apostles and not of his own as this is 2 That of their preaching of him after his Death and Resurrection this of his own in his life time 3 That was a Ministerial publishing of Christ this place speaketh only of a voyce fame and good report in the mouthes of the common people such as followed extraordinary Prophets and therefore such places cannot crosse this Now for the other circumstance of time when this fame went of Christ namely after the Baptism which John preached it is not without weighty cause added by the Apostle 1 To note the truth and accomplishment of those Prophecies which concerned John himself as Mal. 3.1 Behold I send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me which prophecy Christ himself applyeth to John Mat. 11.10 that by this consideration they might be one step nearer the acknowledging of the true
of Nazaret and such a Nazarite as the Prophets foretold The Jews took offence hereat as too base a place for the Messias whom they expected to rise out of even Nathaniel himself could ask if ●ny good could come out of Nazaret Joh. 1.47 and this was in scorn added as a part of his stile and title written in three tongues upon the Cross Jesus of N●zaret King of the Jews and as they dealt with the Head so also with the me●bers for presently after the death of Christ the Christians were in scorn al● called Nazarites that is silly fools that did beleeve in such a Messiah as came from Nazaret But we must know that the wisdome of God would have him hereby generally proclaimed the Messias and Saviour of the world both to Jews and Gentiles as also confirm our faith and affiance in him made known to us to be such a one as in whom we also become Nazarites that is sanctified and consecrated unto God 3 Note hence that the Messias must needs be come already because hee must needs be a Nazarite by education as of Bethlem by birth which places have been long since destroyed and hopelesse of ever being builded up again or that in them the Jews should ever recover any authority And is it not a wonderful blindnesse that the Jews should still look for their Messias out of a Town which hath been destroyed a thousand and five hundred years agoe the very place of which cannot be assigned Our request to God must bee for them that he would remove that thick veil which to this day is drawn over the hearts of his own ancient people Secondly by whom was Christ called to this Office By God who anoynted him for that which is said of one part of it namely his Priesthood is true of the whole No man taketh this honour to himself but hee that is called of God Heb. 5.5 so neither Christ took this honour to himself but expected that voyce Thou art my Son How often did Christ witnesse of himself that he came not of himself but was sent by his Father Joh. 5.37 My Father that sent me witnesseth of me and in that chapter because the Jews objected that he came of himself he telleth them six times that his Father sent him yea hath sealed him his commission as he saith Joh. 6.27 Him hath God the Father sealed that is made his commission authentical as men doe their deeds by their seal and set upon him an impression or character anoynting him with oyl of grace above all his fellows yea himself being an expresse Image of his Fathers substance in him he hath laid up all treasures of wisdome and knowledge that from his fulnesse we might receive grace for grace Whence 1 We learn Christ expected his Fathers calling and therefore must his Ministers much more That no man ought to thrust himself into any Office or Function nor run before he be sent but wait till God give him a calling thereunto For shall Christ who had the Spirit of God without all measure wait his Fathers leisure and expect his Fathers voyce and shall we who have received the Spirit scarce in any measure run and ride and shoove and thrust in before we have any commission drawn or sealed by God who even carried such post-hast happily How miserably perished proud Absolon who thought it not enough to bee the Kings Son unlesse he thrust his Father out of his Kingdom Corah and his complices would have been Rulers but that the earth would not suffer th●● above it What shall I speak of Vzzah Uzziah and the rest who found 〈◊〉 Lord as good as his word against such which goe on any errand and he send them not they found the Lord coming many ways against them as he often threatneth in Jer. 23.30 31. c. 2 If God have called Christ to this office we must carry our selves dutifully and reverently unto him whom as the Father hath called so he will defend and establish in his place and revenge such as rebell against him This is that the Prophet teacheth in Psal 2.2 that if the greatest Kings band themselves together against the Lord and against his Christ the Lord out of Heaven will laugh them to scorn he will speak to them in his anger and vexe them in sore displeasure and the ground of all this is laid down ver 6. Even I have set my King upon Sion as if he had said Shall I set up a King and dare yee rebelliously resist him or seek to displace him Let us take heed it befall not us as 〈◊〉 did the Jews taxed in the Parable of the King letting out his Vineyard which sent his servants for his rent to the Husbandmen and afterwards his son but they beat the one slew the other acknowledged neither surely no more grace remaineth for such but the Lord of the Vineyard must needs destroy such Husbandmen and lay waste their City In like manner is he as ready to defend and doe good unto such as subject themselves unto his Son depend upon him or suffer any thing for his sake they shall not repent them of their service seeing they serve so good a Lord. The third thing in this calling of Christ to his Office is the manifestation of it to himself and others in that hee was annointed with the Holy Ghost and power There were three sorts of men that used to bee anoynted in the entrance unto their Office in the Old Testament 1 Kings 2 Priests Anointing what it signified 3 Prophets And this outward Ceremony signified two things First their ordination or calling unto that Office secondly the promise of proportionable gifts for the performance so as they were hereby confirmed God never calleth any men to any place but he furnisheth him with gifts fit for it both that God hath chosen them to their office as also that he would furnish them unto it and protect them in the same Christ is here said to be also anointed but not by man as they but by God not with external oyl but with the Holy Ghost and with power not ceremonially and typically but really and spiritually not to any one of those Offices but to them all three not receiving the sign but the thing signified because he was a real and true King Priest and Prophet of his Church or whom all they were but types and shadows In this anointing of Christ therefore both these things are signified and proved 1 That he was ordained of God to the performance of this Office of Mediatorship and consecrated by God to be the Messiah that is a spiritual King Priest and Prophet 2. That he had poured out upon him the gifts of the Holy Ghost which gave him power and furnished him for this Office signified here by the Holy Ghost and power he receiving of the Holy Ghost power whereby he performed the greatest work that ever was undertaken Difference between Christs anointing and
God having in Justice put them under his power Now although Christ did most powerfully spoyl Satan of his dominion which he had in the souls of men this being the of his power but possessed and disposed by him and ruled at his will and pleasure For First who would think him possessed that can fall down on his knees make a solemn profession and confession of Jesus Christ that he is the Son of God and the most high Mark 5.7 and make loud prayers unto him as acknowledging him to be the Lord of glory and yet all these are the speeches and behaviours of a man possessed not with one or two but with a Legion of Devils Luke 8.28 What doe the Devils honour Christ who fear nothing more than that he should be honoured and hate nothing so much as he No but all this confession and worship was by constraint partly because they knew him a Prince and a Judge whose power they could not resist and partly they flatter him to obtain more gentle entreaty at his hands than they deserved so many a man professeth Christ but you shall observe at least he may himself that many foul spirits breath in him for although hee know Christ as the Devils did yet he obeyeth him not he would fain resist him if he were strong enough to make his part good against him which because he cannot doe he will give him fair words and call him Lord and Master he will pray to him in sickness or distress but it is but to get out of his hands and keep his wonted hold still If the power of Christs word come near him he can begin to accuse Christ and Christian profession of unpeaceableness and tormenting him before the time for what time would please these that Christ should come unto them he can ask Christ and his Ministers what they have to doe with him and Christ shall be blamed because he cannot be at peace for him if he would let him alone all should be well and quiet but the Ministery and Discipline are intollerable let Christ preach and he will preach him too so it be such a Gospel as bringeth no repentance or amendment of life to himself but he may remain where he was even in the Graves already lodged with death When hee cannot doe the greater mischief that he would he would doe the lesser if hee can if he cannot hinder the Ministery he can deprave it wherein as in all the rest he shews himself at the command of that wicked spirit who when he could no longer torment the man would drown the swine Secondly although the Devil might be forced through the power of Christ to acknowledge him the holy one of God so as themselves might continue Devils still yet who would think him guided by any other than a good Spirit of God that should extol the servants of Christ their persons their Ministery their doctrin for would any conceive that the Father of Lyes would praise the truth and yet mark what a large testimony the Devil himself in the Maid gave of Paul and Silas These men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation and this she did many days A t s 16.17 Why did not the Devil know that they were the greatest enemies he had upon earth Yes he did but he must sometimes transform himself into an Angel of Light he must colour all his Lyes with some truth which is undeniable hee can lay all his falshoods upon appearance of truth as his eldest Son Mahomet enlarged the praises of Christ and his Disciples to overthrow Christian religion withall he hath his fetch to make men beleeve there is an agreement between Christ and his Apostles and himself or that they needed his testimony who therefore put him to silence and would receive no commendation from him but for praises returned sharp rebukes Even so many men can praise good men and Ministers before their faces whom they know to bee deadly enemies to their vices not for love of their vertues but lest they should use them and can call them honest men to try if by that they can hinder them from doing the duty of honest men as the Devils called Paul and Silas the Servants of God lest they should shew themselves so by dispossessing them Besides they would seem herein to bee better than they are and therefore will honour the Gospel and bringers with their mouths whereas in their hearts they cannot abide that the doctrin of it should bee in sincerity either published or practised the name of Christianity and of the Gospel pleaseth them well enough so as the power and fruit of it come not neer them But as the Devil had no sooner praised the Servants of God but presently hee changed his coppy and never left persecuting them till hee had cast them into prison got them soundly beaten set fast in the stocks and after sent out of the City even so many who now commend the person and doctrin of the Servants of God presently shewing what spirit guideth them can accuse them to bee mutinous and seditious troublers of their City and State and raise up the whole City and stir up the wrath of the Magistrates against them that so under pretence of the W●rd or Law or Peace or Order the true Ministers of God shall bee wrongfully condemned and cast out Thirdly Who would think that hee could be haunted with a wicked spirit that can see his sin 1 Sam. 24.17 18. confess it with tears and indignation against himself openly justify the righteousness of Gods children and yet in the example of Saul wee see that a soul possessed of Satan may do all this For as it is in bodily possession though the Devils desire is incessantly to hurt and vex the poor creatures yet by Gods over-ruling power hee is forced to give them some respite and though hardly yet sometimes departeth from them and not alwaies but sometimes casts them into the fire and sometimes into the water Luk. 9. So is it in spiritual possession the Lord for the common good bridleth often the rage of the Devil in his instruments that they cannot alwaies exercise it as they would but they have their fits sometimes that is some strong lusts which Satan watcheth and putteth himself into as Judas his Covetousness invited the Devil to enter into him and also sometimes again they have their good moods and seem to bee come to themselves but long stay they not here but in a moment are changed and cast into their fits again Thus in a good mood Saul could confess his wickedness and Davids innocency and lift up his voice and weep and David was now his good Son and who but hee but presently the good spirit went and the evil spirit came upon him and hee became more tyrannous and furious than ever before even so some there are who seem to have remorse of conscience for sin they will confess their
1 Seeing a man cannot safely and comfortably pass through any part of the day without the light strength and comfort of the Scriptures it pleased the Lord to set up this publike ministery in his Church that even beleevers themselves by hearing the Scriptures daily explained obscure places opened by those which are clearer and figurative speeches cleared by the proper might attain not onely to a clearer understanding of the Scriptures but also to have them printed in their minds and memories so as they might bee able to draw them into continual use 2 Even the best have nature in them and their daily failings and without daily repair grow weak in faith weary of well-doing and unfruitful in the work of the Lord. And therefore though they should not need to come to increase their knowledge yet have they need to hear their faults controlled to bee provoked unto duty to bee confirmed in their obedience to bee strengthened in their faith reformed in their lives comforted in their troubles and spurred to bring every thing to use and practice and therefore the best may be still Disciples and Learners in the School of Christ 3 The agreement and fellowship of the members of the Church is excellently hereby maintained and preserved not onely by communication of gift● and graces while some teach and some learn but also while it is a mean to hold them all of a mind whereas without this publike Ministery if every one were left to hi● private sense and reading it could not but br●●d corrupt and private opinion● to the dissolving of minds and affections And this special benefit of thi● publike ordinance the Apostle aimed at Eph. 4.13 Till wee all meet together in the unity of the Faith and knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man implying that the scope of the Ministry is to bring and preserve all the members of the Church in this unity of faith and knowledge wh ch in this world it cannot do but so soon as it hath done this it self shall ce●se nam●ly in the life to come Hee must needs bee wilfully blind that espieth n●t very gr at necessity of the word preached for the strengthening of th●se joy●●s and bands whereby beleevers are knit both unto the head as also unto the me● 〈◊〉 From the oppo●ition of the Devil and wic●ed on●● Thirdly The necessity of this Ordinance appeareth in that the Devil and wicked 〈◊〉 W●●●● have ever resisted it above all other as being the greatest enemy unto his Kingdome which maketh him fall down like lightening in the heart of men Hence is it that hee stirreth up Jannes and Jambres and all the ●able of Egypts Inchanters against Moses and setteth all his power against him to prove him a counterfeit Hence is it that hee will not want a Pashur to sinne Jeremy nor an Amaziah to do as much to Amos. Hence raised hee up many Armies against Paul Elimas and Alexander Hymeneus and Philetus D●otrephes and Demas and from his mouth hee casts out floods of r●pro●chful and virulent slanders against him that hee is a pestilent and 〈◊〉 ou● fellow that hee speaketh against the Law and against the Temple away with such a fellow it is not fit that hee should live A d hath the Devil grown any whit more calm or can hee digest Pauls preach●● better since Pauls time no sure hee is no changling except because his time is shorter his malice bee stronger and more raging I wish Gods faithful Ministers every where found it otherwise But to omit other proofs 〈◊〉 serve generally the voice of the multitude Where there is no Preacher but some poor creature to serve as they say or starve them rather it is wonderful how well people think themselves with him he shall be commended and defended for a very honest peaceable man or for a very good fellow that will bear his Neighbors company they could not have a better and for all hee cannot preach a worse they f ar will come when hee is gone But whose voice is this and is not the hand of the Devil in all this Well on the contrary where there is by Gods mercy a painful and faithful Minister that Preacheth constantly and conscionably how goeth the cry and common voice of people upon him wee have one that Preacheth indeed often and perhaps is a good Scholar but hee is very unpeaceable a reprover of every man a spy-fault hee hath made such contention in our Parish since hee came that wee wish hee had never come amongst us we were quiet enough and held peace and neighbourhood before he came And thus he is cou●ted as Jeremy a man that striveth with the whole earth The same prove● by experience Fourthly The necessity appeareth by common experience if we compare the people who have had the Ministry planted amongst them with those who have it not In the one what shall a man sooner meet with than woful ignorance Popish opinions superstitious practices heathenish conversation they live as men without God in the world or as if the old Sodomites were alive again But in the other by Gods mercy some seal of the Ministry you shall meet withall some men of knowledge of conscience and out of conscience performing duties in publike and in private in the house of God and in their own houses you shall hear godly and gracious speech in their mouths see good example in their lives holy desires and endeavours to grow in grace and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ And whence is this difference but from the presence or absence of this ordinance and Gods blessing attending or departing from it Vse 1. Ministers must urge themselves to diligence by this necessity The Ministers of Christ must urge upon themselves this self same Commandement to provoke themselves to diligence in p●eaching for it layeth necessity upon them and woe unto that Minister that pre●●heth not the Gospel A lamentable thing is it to see how little either this commandement● or the denunciation of this fearful woe prevaileth with many but some are given up with Demas to imbrace this present world some give up themselves to idleness and voluptuousness of life some to ambition and further preferments some to policy and state matters and very few onely to faithful and painful Preaching Thus this commandement of Christ is generally forgotten the sheep and Lambs of Christ unfed and forsaken the Kingdome of Christ unbuilded and unrepaired and the Kingdome and power of sin generally standeth in the state of it unshaken in the hearts of men 2 Wee see hence what little need wee have of a dumb or blind Ministery unless there hee need of breaking so express a Commandement of Jesus Christ who sealeth no mans Commission but to Preach to his people No need of a du●b o● blind Ministe●y What need is there of wells without water of mouths that speak not of candlesticks without light of stars without shine of salt without
by good means comm●tteth it Bee now thine own Judge whether thou hast well looked to one when thou hast neglected to reform the disorders of such as God hath put under thy power Thou hast not a person in thine house but if it any way perish under thy hands thou must give account of the life of it to the Parents of it or to the Magistrate the Parent of the Country in like manner there is not the meanest soul in thy Family but if it perish by thy default for want of instruction correction or wise government of it thou shalt bee called before the God of the Spirits of all flesh and shalt bee arraigned and condemned for the blood of that soul And this is not to bear the burden of that soul which beareth the weight of it own sin but to bear thine own sin in not preventing that evil from him which by thy negligence came upon him Secondly it shall bee strict in regard of the things either received of us 2 In regard of things 1 done 2 received or done by us Account must bee made what goods of our Masters wee have received both for the kinds and measure What number of Talents were committed to our trust If one or more how wee have laid them out what wee have gained whether wee have faithfully returned this gain to our Master as having sought his advantage and not our own how wee have Husbanded our opportunities and redeemed our times how wee have imployed the gifts of our Minds Understanding Judgement Wisdome Learning Memory how wee have used or abused to sin the strength health and beauty of our bodies how wee have justly and charitably received in and retailed out the matter of our maintenance and revenew And in all these lesser things if our unfaithfulness bee found out let us never look to have greater matters committed unto us for the things that are done by us they shall all bee straightly judged whether they are conformable to the Law the rule of Righteousnesse or acceptable by the Gospel the restorer of our Righteousness Eccl. 12.14 God will bring every work into judgement good or evil open or secret for all things are naked before him with whom wee are to deal hee planted the ear and must needs hear and formed the eye and therefore must needs see things secret and covered with darkness Hence is hee said to have books and to open them because all things are as certainly recorded and registred by him as if hee had registers in Heaven to keep roles and records of all that ever were or shall bee to the end Yea hee hath not onely his own books of judgement in Heaven but for more surenesse that nothing escape him hee hath millions of books of record in earth that shall all help forward his judgement and give testimony to the righteousnesse of it so as every mouth shall bee stopped at that day and these are the bo●ks of every mans particular conscience which howsoever they bee now shut or as roles folded up yet shall they also then bee opened and unfolded to give witness of whatsoever any man hath spoken or done in the flesh be it good or evil 3 In regard of words 3 This judgement shall bee strict in regard of every mans words Jude 15. In this judgement hee shall rebuke all the ungodly of all the cruel speakings which wicked sinners have spoken against him For if of every idle word wee must give account to God Matth. 12.36 much more of every wicked word Every man thinketh words are but wind and hee may speak his minde and hee hath done but in this judgement by thy words thou shalt bee justified or by thy words thou shalt bee condemned and though thou when thou hast spoken thy mind against thy brother hast done the Judge hath not done with thee 4 In regard of thoughts to be jud●ed 4 It shall bee strict in regard of every mans thoughts for even these are not so free as men say they are nor shall go scot-free for even they are bound to the conformity of the Law as well as our words and actions The commandement is very express Thou shalt worship the Lord with all thy hears and all thy thoughts and all thy strength and when the Apostle Paul would note the damnable estate of the Ephesians before they were called to the Faith Eph. 2.3 hee setteth it forth in this that they then followed the will and counsel of their own thoughts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adde hereunto that the Lord Jesus is the se●● the s●archer and judge of the heart and therefore hereby shall the Throne of his judgement bee advanced above all the tribunals in the World in that the most secret thoughts and reasonings of mens hearts cannot escape him which the highest seats of justice amongst men can take no notice of at all Sin carried never so secretly shall come into a clear light Vse 1. Let this Doctrin abate somewhat the pleasure of sin which most men swallow up so delightfully yea and glory in their iniquity when they can carry it so close and clear away that men see it not and can stopp the cry of their scared conscience for the present but remember that God hath written it up and the time hasteneth when that conscience of thine now in a dead sleep and scared up shall bee awakened and become as a thousand witnesses against thee that if all other accusers should fail thy self should not fail to do that office against thy self but shalt bee both a servant to Gods justice as also the subject of it Be admonished then in time whosoever thou art to beware of all secret sins as close cousenage lying uncleanness whisperings and all other cunningly-contrived wickedness seeing there is a clear light into which they shall bee brought and by which they shall be reproved True it is that open shame of the World restraineth many one from committing open and gross sins but where conscience is wanting the same sins if they can cleanly convey them are made no bones of Hence is it that the Adulterer watcheth for the twi-light before hee go into his Neighbours house hee careth not for his chastity so bee hee may charily and cauteously compass his uncleannesse If a child of four or five years old stood by hee would forbear his sin but the presence of the mighty God that standeth at his elbow who seeth and recordeth his soul sin to bring it into judgement moveth him never a whit Would a felon commit burglary if he thought the Judge himself looked upon him would Gehezi have run after Naaman if hee had thought his Masters eye and spirit had run after him would Ananias have lyed to the Apostles if hee had thought they had known hee did so Even so is it a shame to speak what is done of many Christians in secret because their eye is not upon the judge whose eye is upon them and who
that this was a convincing argument if he could perswade his hearers that hee did deliver nothing but prophetical Doctrine for all men Jews and Gentiles were easily perswaded that Moses and the Prophets spake directly from God yea and the most blinded and wilful Jews at this day profess that if wee can prove Christ the Messiah from Moses and the Prophets they will beleeve in him so as in great wisdome did the Apostle adde this testimony to all the former knowing that that is the onely sound ground of teaching when men can bee perswaded that what they hear is uttered from the mouth of God as by this testimony his hearers were Now in the verse we have three thing to consider of 1 The generality of this testimony That all the Prophets bear witnesse unto him 2 The scope and end of their witness that men might beleeve in his Name 3 The fruit of this beleef that beleevers might receive remission of sin A proof that all the Prophets witness unto Christ For the first wee will by a brief induction make it appear that all the Prophets bare witness unto Christ and then gather some observations from it To begin with Moses who by Christ his own confession writ of him Joh. 5.46 In Genesis the first thing after the creation and fall is the main promise that the seed of the woman should break the Serpents head Exodus setteth out Christ our Passeover Leviticus in all those sacrifices pointeth out Christ our Sacrifice Numbers setteth before our eyes Christ our brasen Serpent lifted up upon the Cross Deuteronomy describeth Christ our chief Prophet whom whosoever will not hear he must dye the death Deut. 8.18 19. Act. 3.21 Joshuah beareth his name and most lively resembleth him in slaying the enemies of Gods people and bringing them into the promised land The Judges were all Saviours and types of him The book of Ruth sheweth he family whence hee sprung Samuel Kings and Chronicles his Genealogy and the very persons of whom hee descended especially David and Solomon both eminent types of him Ezrah and Nehemiah built the second Temple into which hee was to enter and so to become the glory of it as both Haggai and Malachy foretold Job knew that his Redeemer lived and that he should see him at last on the earth David in the Psalms acknowledged that the stone which the builders refused was become the chief stone of the corner and expresseth the peircing of his hands and feet Solomon in the Proverbs describeth his wisdome and eternity In the Canticles his contract and espousals with the Church Isay is called the Evangelical Prophet than whom no Evangelist could more lively express his Person his Doctrin his Life Death Burial Resurrection and Ascension that hee rather seemed to write an History of something past than a Prophecy of things to come Jeremy plainly stileth him the Lord of Righteousnesse Jer. 23. Ezekiel in all his dark shadows figureth out the government of Christ from point to point Daniel reckoneth the very year and time when the Messiah shall be slain at the end of whose seventy weeks Christ was put to death The small Prophets testify of him also with as joint consent 1 Malachy mentioneth with him his forerunner John Baptist 2 Micha describeth the place of his birth Micah 5.2 And thou Bethlem of Ephrata art little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall hee come forth that shall be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from the beginning and from everlasting 3 Zachary nameth the place of his education which was Nazaret Zach. 6.12 There must hee grow that must build the Temple of the Lord. 4 Haggai prophecyeth of his comming into his Temple and purging it 5 Nahum wisheth Judah to behold on the mountains the feet of him that declareth and publisheth peace Nahum 1.15 which tydings none can bring but through Jesus Christ the prince of peace 6 Obadiah promiseth to Judah and Jerusalem such Saviours as should advance and set up the Kingdome of the Messiah Obad. v. 21. and so the Kingdome shall bee the Lords that is Christs who shall reign in his Church for ever and of whose Kingdome there shall bee no end 7 Jonas in his own person preached his Death Burial and Resurrection in that hee was swallowed of the Whale and lay three daies in the belly of it and in the third day was cast alive on dry Land 8 Hosea recordeth his triumph and victory over death Hos 13.14 O death I will bee thy death O Grave I will bee thy destruction 9 Habakkuk the sending out of his blessed Gospel into all the World by his Apostles so as all the earth should bee filled with the knowledge of God as the Waters cover the Sea 10 Joel foretelleth of his ascension and the pouring out of his Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 11 Amos of the calling of the Gentiles a fruit of that ascension which hee calleth the ●●sing of the Tabernacle of David Amos 9.11 as James notably applyeth it Act. 15.16 12 Zephany shadoweth his second coming to judgement and sheweth what a fearful and terrible day it shall bee to all the wicked of the earth Thus have wee shortly seen all the Prophets witnessing unto the doctrine taught in this Sermon by our holy Apostle And that the chief aim and drift of all these Master builders was to lay this the main foundation of all our Religion that Jesus Christ the Son of Mary was the Son of God the true Messias the Lord of all and the onely Saviour and Redeemer of the World First note hence Consent of the Church to any doctrin to be received with these cautions what is the true consent which all Teachers must aim at in the delivery of any Doctrin unto the people of God namely the consent of the Prophets and Apostles it forceth not a Doctrin to bee Orthodox or Ancient for a man to say all the Fathers are of this mind which is the Popish cry for all their Heresies but to this Doctrin give all the Prophets and all the Apostles witnesse and therefore it is sound and perswasive Yet wee refuse not but challenge to the Doctrin which wee teach the consent of the ancient Church but with these cautions 1 With the Primitive and Apostolical Churches which as they were most ancient so were they the purest 2 With the Churches which were after them five or six hundred years so far forth as they consented in doctrin and discipline with the former for many Popish errors are ancient and the Apostle telleth us that Antichrist begun to work in a mystery even in their daies And some of the Fathers were carried into some superstitions and errors and so not espying the mystery helped up Antichrist whom they intended to hold down 3 The Holy Ghost hath revealed every Doctrin necessary to salvation more holily more clearly and more eloquently than all the Fathers put together who if they had
it for this being as Queen among the vertues goeth not alone but with all the train of vertues as hand-maids attending upon her The chief of them are these four 1 A true knowledge of the Word of God acknowledging it in part and in wh●le to bee the truth of God and that himself is straightly bound to believe and embrace the same and that hee hath a special part in the promise of grace and life by Christ in which grace he resteth himself daily growing up in the certainty and assurance of his salvation 2 A sound ●oy of the heart which the Apostle Peter calleth unspeakable and glorious breaking out into thankful praises in that the Lord hath begun 〈◊〉 ●iness by making Christ his Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and 〈◊〉 ●tion The Poor Blind and Lame persons of whom wee read in the 〈◊〉 never leaped more joyfully when they had met with Christ and had 〈◊〉 ●s opened and their limbs restored by him than hee that hath met with him and received him into his heart to enlighten him to quicken him and to heal him of all his infirmities How gladly did Zacheus receive Christ with what joy of heart findeth any man the hidden pearl Mat. 13.44 how did the Eunuch converted go away rejoycing Act. 8. And all this is because they can value such a commodity as this is which they see God hath made their own for if they either knew it not or not to bee theirs they could not thus joy in it 3 Christian Hope is another hand-maid of Faith for so the Apostle teacheth Rom 5.2 Being justified by Faith wee have peace c. wee rejoyce under the hope of the glory of God For this is the special work of hope to wait for and rejoyce in the expectation of the glorious appearing of the Lord Jesu And hence is it that whereas unbeleevers are glewed to the earth and cannot think of Heaven but either with sorrow of a formal and false joy and what marveil is it that those who have no better should set their hearts upon the worse beleevers have preserved in them a willingness to leave this World and to bee with Christ which is best of all yea so sweet is their present tast of Christ through Faith and Hope that they are unquiet till they bee filled with the fruition of his fulness being often in his absence sick of love and pine away till they bee with him whom their soul loveth 4 An assured trust relying upon God beleeving hi● word of promise to raise and feed the heart of threatning to shake it and cast it down and submitting it se●f to the counsel and good pleasure of God because his faith hath let him see the truth the wisdome the equity and righteousnesse of all these Such a mans heart setteth nothing above God in prosperity it distrusteth not but hath God for his God in adversity it indeavoureth in all things to walk with God it is a sweet usher and disposer of the whole life so as it is most obedient to the word and most full of comfort and sweetness to it self The fourth mark or note or true Faith is taken from the infallible fruits IV. The infallible fruits of it four and effects of it which are many I will onely note four of the principal First it frameth and fitteth the own habitation it purifieth the heart Act. 15. it suffereth not unclean thoughts unlawful lusts or wandring motions to harbour there it guideth the affections of Love Hatred Joy Sorrow and the rest that a man love nothing more or so much as God and his Image hee hateth not mens persons but their sins and no mans sin so much as his own hee rejoyceth in nothing so much as in doing the will of God this is as his meat and drink hee sorroweth for nothing in the world so much as for offending so good and patient a God This pure heart also guideth the words with wisdome and maketh it his chief study how to preserve with faith good conscience in every thing Act. 24.16 Secondly Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 bo●h towards God and towards man towards him that begat and him that is begotten yea and him that is ye● not begotten This love of God expresseth it self 1 In much thankfulness unto him who hath loved us first Our love of God express●d in three things who hath given so much even his Son and all things with him pertaining to life and godliness who hath forgiven us so much and to whom many sins are forgiven they must love much who hath done so great things for us by becomming our portion our treasure and our chief good 2 In shame for our unkindness unto him both before and even since we knew this his love in Christ and have been acquainted with his waies taking up with shame in our faces sorrow into our hearts for the sins of our youth and of our age against the law the rule of righteousness but especially against the glorious Gospel which of all other are least of served 3 In desire of that blessed fellowship of his when and where wee may never sin against him any more accounting one day within his holy of holies better than a thousand besides and much more to bee ever with the Lord and to injoy the p●easures at his right hand for evermore to bee at home with him and sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob yea with Jesus Christ himself should make us groan in our souls and say with David Oh when shall I appear in this thy presence The Spirit saith Come and the Spouse saith Come Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly The love of men by which Faith worketh discovereth it self not onely in just dealing with them as wee would bee dealt by which many civil men indued onely with civil righteousnesse have excelled in nor onely in merciful distribution of outward comforts for the releeving of the bodies of our brethren yea and of our enemies which hardlier goeth down with the unconverted than the former but also in shewing most love unto their souls in helping forward their conversion and salvation For so soon as any man is converted hee will strengthen the brethren Faith wheresoever it liveth it loveth and love being an hand giving out moveth men converted to counsel exhort rebuke admonish comfort pray and wait when God will give unto others the grace of Repentance As soon as Andrew was called hee bringeth his brother Simon to Christ No sooner had Christ found Philip but Philip finding Nathaniel hee bringeth him to ●hrist The woman at the well no sooner heareth that Christ was the Messiah but shee bringeth all the City In finding this treasure the Christian cannot hide his joy neither can any mans joy bee so full unlesse hee with others rejoyce together For it is not here as in earthly things which the more they are communicated the more are they diminished and every mans share is the less but heavenly
Hope Patience Repentance Mortification Examine thy self by these notes for if God love thee as his Child thou lovest him and keepest his Commandements thou lovest not sin but hatest it even thy dearest sins and preservest a care to please him in all things Joh. 14.23 If any man love mee hee will keep my word and my Father will love him and we will come unto him 2 Whereas they say that others which nourish this care are as much crossed as any other and therefore they see no reason that they should make their Life so uncomfortable to no purpose let them know that all the crosses Gods Children whose care is to make up their peace with God Godly life not to be feared for the crosses attending it Reasons are exercised with 1 Proceed from the Love of God and not from hatred 2 They are tryals of Graces not punishments of sins 3 Their end is not rejection from God but through their purging and amendment to draw them nearer unto God 4 By this Reason Christ and his Apostles might have been refused and all the Saints of God who through many afflictions are passed into Heaven 5 The way to avoid Crosses and Punishments is to intend this one care of getting sin remitted And 6 If the way to Heaven bee so strawed with Crosses what is the way to Hell If the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the wicked and sinner appear 3 Whereas they object further against this care that men of good note and perhaps Preachers too account it but fantastical and more than needs and onely a few and those despised ones in the World do thus disquiet themselves who make their lives more uncomfortable than they need I Answer this is indeed one of Satans greatest holds Better going to heaven alone then to Hell with company but such a snare as God leadeth his Children out of in safety whom hee teacheth that it is their happinesse to go to Heaven though alone rather than to Hell with company Mary will sit her down though alone at Christs feet if shee cannot get her sisters company shee knoweth it is the good part that shall never bee taken from her And for those especially if they bee Ministers who should most advance this care but disgrace it as a needlesse vexation of the Spirit let them know that the Lord Jesus was of another minde who pronounced blessednesse on those that mourn now and promised that they should be comforted and far are they from the guidance of that spirit who hath taught us that of all Sacrifices none is comparable to that of a broken spirit and contrite heart which the Lord never dispiseth IV. Now follow the helps to the obtaining of remission of sins As Helps to attain this grace of remission 1 Thou must become a member of the Church Isa 33.24 The people that dwell there shall have their sins forgiven And Chap. 62.12 They shall call them the holy people the redeemed of the Lord. Now to know a mans self a true member of the Church the Prophet David giveth two infallible notes Psal 15.2 The former in regard of God to walk uprightly and sincerely as in Gods presence and under his eye and the latter in regard of men to exercise righteousnesse both in word and deed 2 Consider seriously of the nature of sin how odious it is in it self how vile it maketh thy self in the sight of God how it keepeth away all good things how it procureth all evil how proan thy self art unto it yea even after grace received this will bring thee to the judging and accusing of thy self to the confession and forsaking of thy sin which is the high-way to finde mercy Prov. 28.13 for the former Psal 32. I said I will confesse my sin and thou forgavest mee the iniquity of my sin And for the latter it is plainly implyed in Christs reason Joh. 5.14 Go thy waies ●ow thou art whole but sin no more lest a worse thing follow The fellon that hath been in prison endured the misery of his Irons hath been condemned and with the ●ope about his neck in fear of present death if he have escaped hee will take heed of coming into the like misery again and hee that hath found this grace in truth cannot by turning again to his sin turn it unto wantonnesse 3 Carefully use the means which the wisdome of God hath left to beleevers for the attaining and assuring of this grace of Remission As namely 1 The Ministery of the word which in the right use of it is the Ministry of Reconciliation in which the Lord offereth conditions of peace remission of sins and life everlasting 2 As also of the holy Sacram nts which are the seals of rem ssion of sins to all beleevers worthily receiving the same Matth. 26.28 and 3 another special means is fervent prayer for pardon of sin above all things in the World Drowsy Protestants esteemeth slightly of pardon of sin even as they do of sin it self which they think easily blown off with a Lord of mercy But the tender and distressed Conscience that seeeth and combateth with the danger sueth for pardon as one that would speed A poor fellon on the gallows ready to bee turned off would think a pardon the welcomest thing in all the World but the hardness and drowsiness of mens hearts every where argue that they bee a very few that find this rare grace unlesse wee will say that the greatest blessedness that living man is capable of can be given to him that sleepeth on both sides that never thinketh of it and never maketh means after it Companions of remission of sins V. The companions of remission of sins whereby it may easily bee discerned are five 1 The daily exercise of true repentance in all the parts of it as First In judging ones self for sin past and present and this was apparent in Paul himself who looking back to his former estate reckoned himself a Captain sinner and the chief of all sinners hee saw in himself many sinn●s and great sins which needed great mercy and much forgivenesse the which one consideration kept him under continually and fostered in him the grace of Humility when as otherwise through his abundance of gifts and revelations he might have exalted himself out of measure Secondly in watchfulnesse and fear of sin in time to come according to our Saviours holy Counsel Thou art now made whole go thy way and sin no more Thirdly In daily purging and cleansing from known and secret corruptions many are the places wherein the pardoning and purging of sins are joyned as inseparable Jer. 33.8 I will cleanse all their iniquity yea I will pardon all their iniquities whereby they have sinned against mee 1 Joh. 1.9 If wee confess our sins faithful is hee to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all our unrighteousnesse This was the summe of the Baptisme that is the doctrin which John preached even
their conscience can dispense with covetousness unbridled anger wantonness filthy speeches c. But if Gods word bee the same so must the conscience and hee that serves God as Paul did in Pure Conscience 2 Tim. 1.3 will do so at all times in all places and things and will avoid sin in his Closet as much as in most publike meetings yea small sins as well as great 5 Keep diligently the goodness and purity of conscience by two things 5 It is great wisdome to keep things well as to purchase th●●● therefore wee must if wee would walk wisely bee as careful to keep good consciences as to obtain them and thereunto observe two things 1 Daily take away matter of accusation which is sin by repentance 2 Rather displease all men than thine own conscience thy friends thy family thy rulers nay thy own self before thy conscience So did Daniel and his fellowes So did Cyprian as Augustine relates it when the Emperor in the way to his execution said Now I give thee space to consider whether thou wilt obey mee in casting a grain into the fire or bee thus miserably slain Nay saith hee In retam sancta deliberatio non habet locum there needs no deliberation in this case The like wee read in the History of France in the year 1572. presently after that tragical and perfidious slaughter massacre of so many thousands of Gods Saints by treacherous Papists Charls the ninth King of France called the Prince of Condo and proposed to him this choice Either to go to Mass or to die presently or to suffer perpetual imprisonment His noble answer was that by Gods help hee would never chuse the first and for either of the two latter her left to the Kings pleasure and Gods providence Thus a good conscience makes a good choice for it self chusing any thing rather than to offend God CHAP. X. Rules of Wisdome concerning the Affections THe fifth sort of rules for the inner man concerneth the Affections Rules concerning the affections 1 Give God the chief affections and hath these particulars 1 Delight thy self in the Lord and make him thy chief joy Psalm 37.4 For the object of our joy must not bee carnal but the Lord himself apprehending him as Gen. 17.1 El shaddi All-mighty to save All-sufficient to supply and a large portion our Sun our Shield Grace and Glory Psalm 84. Solomon having tried his heart with all other delights came at last to a recantation and so do all Gods children and say Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Psalm 4. 2 Labour to affect all other things in God and for God nothing like him 2 Affect all other things in God and for God much less above him or against him Psalm 34.8 Taste and see how good God is that is in all things labour to finde the sweetness of God in all his creatures and all his actions A wise man will not insist in the gift but look to the giver whose love hee prizeth more than the token of it If any affection make us unfit to pray or any way thrust us from God it is carnal 3 Let us labour to get our affections more to Heaven than earth 3 Fix them more upon Heavenly things than earthly Matth. 6.24 Col. 3.2 Set your affections on things which are above and not on things which are on earth where wee see plainly that these two cannot both have the affections set on them no more than two Masters served at once as also that it is not enough to affect heavenly things but also with chief affection and care in the first place Hence is that ordinary rule Verse 33. That spiritual things must bee affected and asked simply being simply good but temporal with limitation as being but conditionally good 4 Fear the evil of sin more than the evil of punishment 4 Fear evil of sin more than of suffering because the evil of sin is more evil Sin is simply evil and so is nothing else no not the punishment of it A wise man should rather chuse Hell than Gods offence for there is nothing but sin which God hateth and wee ought to hate nothing so much sin directly resisteth Gods glory but punishment makes for it in the manifestation of his justice 5 Bee affectionate one in the case and condition of another 5 Commiserate the afflicted estate of our brethren In case of spiritual misery sin weakness humane frailty Bee tender hearted one to another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Eph. 4.32 So Col. 3.12 Now Beloved as the Elect of God put on tender mercy kindness c one to another And in the temporal miseries of our brethren put on bowels of compassion bee not without natural affection forget not Josephs affliction Amos 6.6 but lend give cloath feed protect from violence and turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh The phrase Bowels of mercy shews that all our mercy must bee from within even from the tender compassions of the estate of our brother And the same in Isa 58.10 That wee pour out our souls to the needy that is our souls must first bee merciful and then our mercies will bee plentiful which is noted in the word Pouring CHAP. XI Rules of Wisdome for the outward man and first concerning his Calling NOw wee come to such rules of Wisdome as whereby the outward man is to bee ordered that wee may walk both toward our selves and others not as unwise but as wise and that by the Wisdome which is from above And these rules concern 1 His Calling 2 His Estate 3 His words 4 His actions Rules for the special calling 1 Live in a lawfull Calling Directions to walk wisely in his course and calling are these 1 Seeing the Calling is a part of Christian obedience and duty to God a Christian may neither live out a Calling nor in any Calling not warranted by Gods word For if God set us in our Callings hee promiseth both to bee with us in them and to give us good success and to help us against the tediousness of them Jos 1.8 Therefore sanctifie thy Calling and every part thereof 1 Tim. 4.5 1 Shew all good faithfulness in it by the Word and Prayer 2 In the whole exercise of our Calling wee must shew all good faithfulness 1 To God Hab. 1.16 Deut. 8.18 2 To our selves 1 To God by depending on him who hath made our Calling a chief means of our maintenance and not sacrificing to our own Nets For it is the Lord that gives power to get substance 2 To our selves by walking diligently and abiding in our Calling that wee may eat our own bread and provide for our selves and ours and give to him that needeth Eph. 4.28 For by idle and inordinate living through the neglect of the Vocation by Gods just judgement men fall into the depth of sin Drunkenness Gaming Whoredome Theeving and nothing
call for necessary duties which both cannot bee done at the same time the second Table must give place to the first as Act. 5.25 It is meet to obey God rather than man Magistrates must bee obeyed but the first Table derogates from the second when both cannot bee observed So in the New Testament Parents and friends are to bee loved but if they bee not hated for Christ when both cannot bee loved together one cannot bee Christs Disciple But here bee three Caveats Three caveats 1 That a special commandement is more necessary and dispenseth with all the Ten And it is a principle that all commandements of both tables run with one exception If God command not otherwise Thou shall not kill nor steal unless God command Abraham to kill his son and the Israelites to rob the A●gyptians Thou shalt make no graven image unless God command Moses to make a Brazen Serpent Thus observations of immediate commandements give all Sovereignty to God who is to bee simply obeyed and acknowledged above his Law 2 Moral duties must take place of all ceremonies The rule of Divines is that charity dispenseth with ceremony according to that Matth. 12.7 I will have mercy and not sacrifice because mercy is moral and sacrifice ceremonial So Abimelech gave David the Shew-bread which was not lawful but in the case of necessary mercy And it was superstition in the Jewes that they would rather suffer their City to bee taken Matth. 12.11 than fight upon the Sabbath day in their own defence God allows an Oxe to bee pulled out of a ditch Exod 12.16 and led to water and allows a necessary provision for the body unto which even Sabbath duties must give place 3 Necessity wee say hath no law but that is to bee understood in mans laws when some sudden case falleth out so as the inferiour cannot have recourse to the Law-maker that then hee may interpret the law himself and break the letter of it to follow the reason and intent of it as in case of the murder of a thief But in the Law of God one onely case doth dispense with it and that is when necessity so altereth a fact as it taketh away from it all reason of sinning As for example it is not lawful to marry ones sister but in the beginning of the world extreme necessity altered this fact and gave dispensation So it is not lawful to take away that which is anothers but extreme necessity makes it lawful because it is not anothers any longer seeing the Law of nature it self maketh some things common in such extream necessity On the Sabbath wee must hold our selves strictly to Gods worship but if an house bee on fire wee may leave it without sin Note the equity of that Law Deut. 23.24 25. CHAP. XXII Rules of Wisdome for necessary actions in respect of the scope and binding of them ALL necessary actions as they must begin with Gods will 1 Scope God must be the end of all our actions so they must end with his glory The end and scope of all our actions must bee God 1 Because hee made all things for himself 2 He is the Alpha and Omega the beginning from whom all is and the end for whom and unto whom all must bee referred 3 If in all indifferent things Gods glory must bee aimed at mu●h more in necessary But so it is in indifferent things as eating drinking c. 1 Cor. 10.31 and Rom. 14.6 Hee that eateth eateth to the Lord or ought so to do 4 The very Heathens had a glimmering hereof professing that they were not born for themselves but partly their friends partly their Country and partly God But the Scripture speaks more plainly that wee owe all our selves to God Something indeed wee owe to our neighbour but that is in 2 Binding necessity duti s must be d ne whatever follow and for God In the necessary duties of Religion or our calling wee must hold our selves bound to do them whatsoever follow Two things commonly hinder us herein which wee must arm our selves against The first is fear of mens Judgements faces offence and censures but wee must tread this underfoot if wee have a comman●●m●●t and calling to do any thing as Paul did 1 Cor. 4.3 I pass little to bee judged of any man Neither feared hee any persecution or trouble so hee might finish his course with joy Jeremy must make his brow of brass to speak the word of the Lord Chap. 1. vers 17. A Christian must prepare to pass through good report and bad report and to count neither liberty nor life dear unto him Daniel would open his window Daniel 6.10 and pray as hee was wont even when his life was sought after Secondly events of a●tions do often and much trouble us For remedy whereof ob●●ve two rules 1 That of the Wise man Eccles 11.4 Hee that observes the wind shall not s●w It is a fo●lish Husbandman who for sight of a cloud forbears either his seed time or harvest So for sowing works of mercy hee that sticks in doubts and saith I may bee poor or old long diseased full of children or persecuted for the Gospel and must provide for one neglects his seed-time by looking at winds and clouds So many a carnal Gospeller saith If I should go so often to Church as some and bee so forward in Religion I should lose much profit and incur much rebukes and reproaches Therefore secondly wee must learn to leave events and successes to God for it is not in man to direct his steps God disposeth as hee pleaseth The Saints of God are often frustrate of their godly p●rposes as David in purposing and preparing to build an house for the Lord. But first they lose nothing if they do their du●y Secondly Gods over-ruling hand will dispose all to the best therefore there let them rest CHAP. XXIII Rules for actions indifferent first In general A Great part of mans life is spent in the doing of natural and indifferent actions which in themselves are neither good nor evil but as they are used And being so common and ordinary many sins creep into them because wee take our selves free and loose to do as wee list in them which conceit grows out of ignorance of Gods wisdome who by his word hath tied u● as straight in the use of them as in things most necessarily injoyned For there is no action in which wee must depart from God Obje●t They are therefore indifferent because they are neither commanded nor forbidden and therefore as they bee free so bee wee also in them Answ Alth●ugh there bee no word commanding or forbidding yet there is a w●rd directing and ordering in them as wee shall see in some general rules concerning them all General Rules concerning all indifferents 1 The most in different must be by God 1 W●rca●● 2 Leave and in special rules applied to some particulars The general rules concerning them
Affection Wee must eat and drink with moderation of affection not to sit at it as though wee had nothing else to do as many who bring themselves under the power of the creature such as cannot bee without the Pot at their mouth or without the Pipe at their nose men of whom the Apostle speaks that corrupt themselves with the creatures losing sobriety modesty chastity health and reason it self Here is an utter perverting of God Ordinance who hath given us his creatures to refresh and help our selves by them but men instead thereof hurt and destroy themselves by them 5 Time Fifthly For the time Wee must not so eat and drink as wee eat up also too much time for so wee hinder our selves in our Callings which wee ought specially to further Redeeming the time Eph. 5.16 Numbers set down to eat and drink and in feasting and feeding their bodies never feel the passage of three or four hours whereas to sit out a Sermon one hour long is very tedious so little care have most men of feeding their souls 6 Sweetness Sixthly In eating desire to taste the goodness and sweetness of God himself in his creatures else have wee no better use of them than the brute creatures Say to thy self O Lord how sweet and good art thou in thy self who canst put such sweetness in thy creature 7 Communication Seventhly Wee should use good and savoury speech as salt to our meat to acknowledge Gods bounty and goodness to praise him and to edifie others Our empty and barren hearts cannot tell how to wear out the time of feasting but either in trifles or inviting of others to eat and drink who need rather bridles than spurs Quest What no other speech but of Scripture How then should wee bee merry Answ It is true That commonly all other speech but carnal is unsavoury But a Christian must consider 1 That hee eats and drinks before the Lord and his speeches must become the presence of God who heareth and expecteth that all the speech of Christians bee better than silence 2 All the speeches of Christians ought to savour of sobriety and wisdome and the grace of the heart for whom call wee to our tables but Gods children by profession who must be like themselves every where 3 God hath given us leave to bee merry but with this only restraint Bee merry in the Lord not against him nor setting him out of sight as those who never think themselves merry but in rude and ungodly behaviours and speeches unbeseeming Christians Plato and Zenephon thought it fit and profitable that mens speeches at Meals should bee written And if Christians should so do what kinde of books would they bee Eightly ● Meditation of four things In our eating and drinking wee must bee careful to season our hearts with these and the like Meditations 1 How prone wee are to know immoderate joy and provoke God in our feasts Job was suspicious of his sons sent to them to sanctifie themselves and afterward himself sacrificed for them 2 That wee shall not want incitements or provocations of such as are invited with us or otherwise to forget our selves which incitements wee must watch against and arm our selves aforehand I remember the story of Antigonus who being invited to a place where a notable Harlot was to bee present asked counsel of Menedemus what hee should do Hee bad him onely remember that hee was a Kings Son Good men may bee invited where none of the best may meet them the best counsel is to keep in minde that they bee Kings Sons Gods Children and a base thing it were to bee allured from their profession by the ungodly 3 To consider in our eating and drinking our own end and mingle our feasting with a meditation of death As Joseph had his Tomb in his Garden to season his delight with meditation of his end Alas this feeding and feasting is but a little repair of a ruinous house which must go down The Egyptians had a Skeleton or carkass brought into their feasts to the same purpose So do thou set thine own carkass before the eye of thy minde and it will moderate thee in the pampering of it 4 Consider how many poor ones want some of thy superfluity It is a great sin of great men to drink wine in bowls and eat the fat and to forget the affliction of Joseph Amos 6.6 Therefore Neh. 8.10 Eat the fas and drink the sweet and send part to them for whom nothing is prepared Say with thy self Who am I to bee so full when many are hungry That I should abound when so many want How am I indebted unto God to be thankful and shall I requite his love with such unkindness as to grow wanton idle and forgetful of him when hee is most mindeful of mee Must I eat and drink to rise up to play No I must bestir mee in such duties wherein I may express much love for much love CHAP. XXV Rules for the right ordering of our selves in our sports THese concern 1 The matter and kinde of our sports and playes 2 The manner of using them aright 3 The right ends First Rules for sports 1 Matter of them not 1 Holy things 2 Nor unholy The matter of our sports must bee in things which our consciences tell us are lawful or indifferent Therefore 1 Holy things as phrases of Scripture must not bee played with Thou shalt fear the holy Name of God not delight thy self in swearing 2 Sinful things are not to bee matter of our sport As 1 To make a man drunk or swear or to laugh at such persons for this is a matter of sorrow to see Gods Image so defaced And Davids eyes gushed out with Rivers of tears to see such spectacles 2 Unlawful sports as Playes and Interludes which are the representations of vices not to bee named among Christians besides mens wearing of womens apparel the incentives of lust and fewellers of fleshly flames Heathen Law-givers have banished such out of their Countries 3 Mixed dancing of men and women together never read of in Scripture with approbation and here in our Text noted to bee the fruit of Idolatry Riot Drinking and all other dissolute behaviour Would God the root and tree and all branches laden with such fruit were quite stubbed up The Heathens themselves condemned it Nemo nisi aut ebrius aut infanus tripudlat It was an ordinary speech among the Romans None but either a Drunkard or a mad man danceth It were too long to infer the sentences of the Heathen The general consent of Fathers and the determinations of Councils made against this wicked and lascivious practice Basil in a Sermon of his concerning Drunkenness saith God made our knees not to caper like Goats but to bow to the worship of God and our Lord Jesus Christ And Viret on the seventh Commandement Chorca in circulo centrum diabolus circumferentia ejus Angels Therefore let the
have end with the world yet can it be called no new doctrin because the summe and substance of it was though more obscurely delivered to Adam and the Fathers of the Old Testament But if we consider the vertue and efficacy of it it is an eternal Gospel Rev. 14.6 during from the beginning of the world to all eternity Now therefore will it not follow that because it was before his Incarnation it was not his but rather therefore it was his who was before Abraham was the chief Prophet of his Church that raised according to the several ages of his Church such men as were fit either more obscurely as before his coming when rather some Evangelical promises of things to come were preached than the Gospel it self or else more manifestly to preach and open the mysteries of the Kingdom of God And this latter kind of preaching was not before his incarnation neither was it fully setled before he ascended into Heaven and from thence gave gifts to men that thereby hee might shew himself a careful Head and Governour of his Church even then when hee was set down at the right hand of his Father It is true indeed that before Christs suffering he called his Apostles instructed and furnished them with many gifts of the Spirit yea and these gifts were increased very much after his resurrection whereby they were more confirmed in their Apostleship and although they did before Christs death exercise the office of Apostleship in Judea amongst the lost sheep of the house of Israel yet had they not received that fulnesse of the Spirit and power from above which was necessary to Apostles before they had received in the visible form of fiery Tongues the Spirit in abundant measure whereby they were before all the people of the world after a sort solemnly inaugurated and confirmed to bee the Apostles of Jesus Christ neither had they till after Christs resurrection received this Commandement of which our Apostle speaketh To preach to all Nations and to every creature under heaven the practice of which Commadement they took up after that they having stayed at Jerusalem for the promise the Spirit came upon them and they were endued with power from on high Luke 24.49 As for the second branch of the objection that because ordinary Pastors and Teachers are not immediately called by Christ being now in Heaven therefore they are not ordained by him it is false for of the Pastors and Elders of Ephesus it is said that the Holy Ghost made them over-seers and Paul accounteth Apollos ordained by Christ as well as himself 1 Cor. 3.5 What is Paul and who is Apollos but the Ministers by whom yee beleeve and as the Lord gave to every man only the difference must be observed in their calling both are called of Christ but the Apostle by himself immediately not by men the ordinary Pastor called of him by the Ministery of man I call it a Ministry because the whole power and authority of the Church in calling Ministers is but a service unto Christ approving declaring and testifying to the Church those whom Christ hath called And therefore both before his incarnation a long time and after his ascension also the exhortation which was enforced upon beleevers run in this tenor to day if yee hear his voyce harden not your hearts Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.7 Whence we conclude that his voyce hath ever sounded in the Church and so shall doe in the ministry of his servants until his coming again to Judgement Luke 10.16 hee that heareth them heareth him he that receiveth them receiveth him hee that refuseth them refuseth him he by his servants entreateth men to be reconciled by them hee bindeth and looseth saveth and destroyeth Necessity of p●eaching ●vinced by four reasons Secondly for the necessity of this ordinance can any deny it who seeth the Son of God so careful before his death after his resurrection and ascension also into Heaven to furnish and fit with an extraordinary measure of the Spirit Apostles and Apostolick men for the founding of the Church of the New Testament and not only so but now sitting in his glory at the right hand of his Father is mindful of his promise and is with his Church to raise up successively faithful Pastors and Teachers gracing them with variety of excellent gifts and blessing those gifts for the building up and repairing of his body and the gathering of the Saints of whom as of living stones is reared a spiritual house or temple fit for his own use But because most men are willingly ignorant of this necessity of preaching I will a little inlarge it by some reasons 1 Consider the condition of those that are unconverted In regard of the unconverted and it will appear necessary for them No man was ever saved while hee was in his natural blindnesse no unbeleever could ever get within the gates of the holy City no hard-hearted or impenitent person could ever so remaining see the life of God Neither was ever any man ordinarily drawn out of this fearful estate of Damnation but by the Word of God preached which is the light to the blind eyes the ground of faith for how can they beleeve except they hear and the hammer of the Lord to break asunder the hardest stones in mens hearts Jer. 23.29 Who were ever begotten to God without this immortal see● 〈◊〉 ●here spiritual Fathers Who ever became living stones in the building wit● 〈◊〉 ●e hewing and polishing of Gods builders What harvest was ever ●●ought in to God without these labourers What soul was ever pulled out of the kingdome of darknesse and brought to bee a member of Gods Kingdome but by this means The word in this ordinance is called the Gospel of the Kingdome of God Mark 1.14 that is whereby men attain both the parts of Gods Kingdome both that of grace here in this life and that of glory in the life to come from which effect it is called 1 The word of grace Acts 20.32 2 The Gospel of glory 1 Tim. 1.11 also the word of reconciliation because hereby sinners are reconciled to God Ephes 1.13 the word of life because it quickneth the dead in sin the Gospel of peace chap. 6.15 because it alone pacifieth the conscience and setleth it in the peace of God to conclude The good word Heb. 6.5 because it only revealeth Christ who procureth all good unto beleevers Who seeth not then the necessity of preaching seeing none are added to the Church without it Act. 2.41 no spiritual life can bee preserved without this feeding Act. 20. No Saints are gathered nor no body of Christ built up without Pastors and Teachers Ephes 4.11 12. And it pleased not God by any other means but by the foolishness of Preaching to save such as beleeve S●condly If wee consider those that are called to knowledge and faith In regard of the converted it will appear also a most necessary ordinance in regard of them For