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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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he prayes God to be merciful to his people for the Lords sake that is for Christs sake Act. 15.11 there is no other way to be saved they saw Christ in all sacrifices and types there is no other name under heaven to be saved but by Christ Vse 3. It may be a ground of tryall whether we have God for our Father or no we say daily Our Father c. would we know whether he be so or no if we deny the Son we have not the Father if we confesse the Son we have the Father let us enquire therefore whether we acknowledge him in our hearts if we do we will deny our selves to entertain him you will deny your owne wisdome that his wisdome may take place your own honour that so his honour may take place so if you trust in him depend on him choose him cleave to him then you have the Father also if contrarily you choose the World and prize it above all things why the Foole hath said in his heart there is no God if it be thus with you you do not acknowledge Christ and so have not the Father so if you be ashamed to confesse him in your words for fear of disgrace or if you be afraid of danger Christ will be ashamed of you or if in your works you deny him you care not whether your wayes please him or no if you walk unholily or unrighteously you have neither the Father nor the Son and so lose your own souls but contrarily if you acknowledge him in your hearts trust and depend upon him choose him prize him then in thy heart thou dost professe Christ and so the Father so art thou not ashamed to be known to be a Christian are thou bold and constant to professe his name before wicked and cruel Tyrants and if in thy life thou walkest as one that expects the comming of Christ and dost all things by a call from him if thou walkest thus soberly righteously and holily thou hast the Father Vse 4 Of consolation to every such soul as knows and professes Christ there is no poor Christian but he confesses Christ and would professe him desires to live as may please him why if thou walk thus thou hast both the Son and the Father the Son for thy Saviour thy King Priest and Prophet and thou hast God for thy Father and if so he will provide for thee thou shalt want nothing Psal 23.1 to 4. therefore here is comfort in sicknesse you have the God of health Exod. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee God is the life and length of our dayes Deut. 30.29 so that if you should bury your Children yet having the Father they shall have length of dayes God is no weak keeper none can pluck them out of his hands 1 Pet. 1.5 1 Pet. 5.10 if we have God we have life and health and peace and grace he is the God of all grace whatsoever we want therefore if we want any thing get Christ and with him we shall have all things Rom. 8.32 If a man gives himselfe to a woman he gives her the use of all things he hath so if we have God we have enough The Lord is my Shepheard I shall not want Vse 5 Reproves Christians who acknowledge Christ and so have the Son and having the Son have the Father yet they walk as if they had not received Christ walk scandalously and dully if we live thus we either never knew Christ or walk very unworthy of him Vse 1 Lastly it should stir up Christians to walk in a daily acknowledgement of Christ we have him and with him the Father and therefore have enough we shall have a supply of all our wants Now there are three graces whereby we walk in an acknowledgement of Christ all our dayes 1 Faith in Christ walk by Faith in him I live yet not I but the life I live in the flesh is by the Faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.19 20. this Faith is a grace much known more talkt of but very little practised so much as we live besides Faith so much we live besides Christ therefore live by Faith in Christ look at your selves as unable to do any thing without him depend on him walk as such as live not for your selves but for Christ do all by his strength and for his glory and so you shall acknowledge him 2 Mortification or self-denyall when a man denyes his own lusts his own honour profit and credit and is content to be all in Christ he looks at outward things as Talents he is to imploy to Gods service he looks at them in a crucified manner he is weaned from them regards not much how they go so he can get Christ Contra if every profit or pleasure withdraw us from Christ we do not deny our selves Luke 9.23 Christians should make it appear that their profit and pleasure and honour is not of this World but in Christ they should deny all these as faith makes you acknowledge Christ as your Saviour so Self-denial as your Lord 3 Zeal when a man doth not only desire to do good duties but to do them with life and power walk in power and zeal which may shew in us the power of the Resurrection of Christ God requires that we should be zealous Tit. 2.11 12 13 14. zeale is the life and strength of grace 1 Cor. 15. ult if at any time you finde your selves streightned then think you want the might of the Father and if you want him then you want the Son therefore you must seek to Christ and then you shall finde a new spring of help therefore in all your wayes acknowledge him 1 JOHN 2.24 25. Let that therefore abide in you the fame which you have heard from the beginning c. WEe see the Apostle instructs them against Antichrists coming 1 By foretelling his coming 2 By describing him 3 By the means which is double First Their Unction Secondly The grossenesse of Antichrist Lyes Now we come to his Exhortation of them to use a special help against Antichrist and his exhortation is that that Doctrin which they heard from the beginning should abide in them he presses this exhortation from a double benefit 1 Continuance both in the Son and the Father 2 Obtaining the promise of Eternall Life Doct. Perseverance in the Doctrin of the Apostles is a certain pledge of perseverance in grace and attaining of glory Both these benefits are joyned together perseverance in the Doctrin of the Apostles is an undoubted pledge of our fellowship with the Father and the Son and of Eternal Life 2 Joh. 9. he that abides in the Doctrin of Christ abideth in the Father and the Son Acts 2.42 47. It is said of the Primitive Christians that they clave to and continued in the Doctrin of the Apostles and 47. he tells us they were such as should be saved That which ye have heard from the beginning that is the Doctrin that was preached
that make us more sufficient but we above all things are to desire and strive with God for the annointment of his Spirit mentioned 1 John 2.27 And Again the Apostles being such simple men were fitted to deliver it so as might be most for Gods glory not in excellency of words but in evidence of the Spirit 1 Cor. 4.5 and therefore Paul though otherwise a learned man imitated their simplicity 1 Cor. 2.12 13. And here Chemnitius his modesty is to be commended who when he cometh to speak of some points of Divinity carved out by the School-men too curiously is wont to say Hac non sapiunt Piscatoriam sapientiam Vse 1. Behold then the great and fearfull unthankfulnesse of the World who put most of these men to death who did declare unto them Eternall Life Vse 2. If the Apostles shew unto us Eternall Life it is easie to discern how far they be from Eternall Life who doe not receive their Witnesse alas how many poor souls through the greatest part of the World Jewes Turks all the rest of the Pagans and Infidells are by this means cut off from all hope of Eternal Life how true alas is that speech of our Saviour Mat. 7.13 14. many there be who go in the broad way to destruction Vse 3. Then how much to blame are the Wolves rather than Shepheards of the Church of Rome who shut and lock up from the people in a strange Tongue the Writings of the Prophets and Apostles is not this one way to barre them from Eternall Life how truly upon them is that verified Luke 11.32 Vse 4. Then we all of us are to be exhorted diligently to be conversant in the Writings of the Apostles John 5.39 where what our Saviour spake of the Writings of the Prophets my Text speaketh the very same of the Writings of the Apostles they bear witnesse of Christ and shew unto us Eternall Life and as the Apostle spake unto our Saviour so may we to them John 6.68 Ministers most of all are to be conversant in their Writings because they succeed the Apostles in bearing witnesse unto Christ and declaring of him so little differing from that of theirs else we bring a curse upon our own heads Gal. 1.8 which if the Church of Rome had remembred they would never have thrust out the Apostles from the Chairs of their Professors and brought in the Sentences of Peter Lombard but we are to follow Timothies example 2 Tim. 3.15 16 17. and all Christians are to imitate the forwardnesse of Christians in Chrysostoms time Vse 5. Then we are to praise the Lords goodnesse unto us who hath granted unto us their Writings Consider the like example Psal 147.12 19 20. It was a great preferment to the Jewes to have the Writings of the Prophets Rom. 3.1 2. but their witnesse of Christ is much more dark and obscure than this of the Apostles without their Writings we should but have groped after God Acts 17.27 and as for Christ this Eternall Life we should never have dreamed of him the Lord make us more thankfull and more carefull to walk more worthy of them lest he take them from us 1 JOHN 1.3 4. That I say which we have seen and heard declare we unto you c. IN these two Verses we have of the Apostles Doctrine 1. The subject repeated That which we have seen and heard 2. And declared 3. The end 1 Subordinate fellowship with the Apostles 2 Supream fulnesse of joy The subject is repeated 1. For Explication or plainness sake for the Parenthesis of the second verse would otherwise by interrupting the course of speech have obscured the sentence 2. For confirmation of what he had said before he thrice repeateth that which we have seen and doubleth that which we have heard to shew that he doubted not of what he spake but was most confident and resolute therein Obs Observe hence the certainty and undoubted truth of the Doctrine of the Apostles Reas 1. The Apostles taught nothing but what was manifest to their senses See 2 Pet. 1.16 Compare with him his Successor who seeing great sums of Money brought in by Indulgences Pardons c. said to one of his Cardinalls O quantum fabula ista de Christo nobis proficit Again sense took away doubting even from unbelieving Thomas John 20.25 27 28. 2. The Apostle again and again ingeminates here that what they taught was manifest to their sense now ingeminations are for confirmations Gen. 41.32 Gal. 1.8 9. Ezek. 7.6 this therefore doth shew again how confident he was of it himselfe i. e. therefore no marvell of that speech John 21. penult We know c. For 3. The efficacy of that Doctrin or the power of it argueth the certainty of it for that Doctrine which giveth us union with God communion with the Saints of God fulnesse of joy in our selves must needs be a most certaine Doctrin of heavenly truth there is no perswasion to settle a mans own Conscience answerable to this 4. And for a fourth Reason consider another Branch of the power of this Doctrine the Apostles that declared it were for the most part poor and simple men and unlearned men the Doctrine taught was but of a Crucified Saviour harsh to carnall ears 1 Cor. 1.23 the times were such wherein it was not onely every where spoken against Acts 28.22 but also grievously persecuted throughout the Roman Empire and that with exquisite Torments and yet it did so powerfully work Plut in Apop Pris Regum that in Tertullians time which was the next Age after Christ there were more Christians every where than of all other Professions besides Cyrus indeed allured many to be his followers but he sent out great men to make another kinde of Proclamation Whosoever will come and follow after me if he be a Foot-man I will make him a Hors-man if he be a Hors-man I will make him a Rider in a Coach if a Farmer a Gentleman if he posesse a Cottage I will give him a Village if he have a Village I will give him a City and if he be Lord of a City I will make him Prince of a Region or Country and as for Gold I will pour it out to him by weight and heaps and not by number But Christs Proclamation is contrary Luke 9.23 14.26 and yet had he infinitely more followers All other Reasons as the testimony of the Church c. are but like the woman of Samaria preparing us to believe John 4.29 this convinceth us so strongly that in comparison we reject other Reasons moving us to believe as they did John 4.41 42. How true is that of Picus in his Conclusions as Faith which is but a bare credulity is in a degree of perfection inferior to science so that Faith which is wrought in us by the work of the Holy Ghost is greater and more certain than any science gotten by demonstration Vse 1 If the Apostles Doctrin were so certain that
speak well Mat. 12.34 Reas 2. Such as do walk in the light have recovered the Image of God now his Image stood in light Joh. 1.4 light of Knowledge and Holinesse Col. 3.10 Ephes 4.24 what fellowship Adam had with God in Paradise the same have all such as walk in the waies of truth and holinesse Q Do you not see many true Christians that have true grace and yet walk in much darknesse how then have they fellowship with God Isa 50.10 he that feareth the Lord and hearkens to the voyce of his Servants that walks in darknesse and seeth no light c. which shews that a man may fear the Lord and hearken to the voyce of his Servants and yet walk in darknesse Ans Such a one walks not in any grosse ignorance or error and heresie or in darnesse of uncleannesse and prophanesse but hee may walk in darknesse of discomfort and dishonour and yet have true fellowship with God no Christian walks more in light than they that walk most in darknesse those that walk most discouraged they walk more carefully and fearfully whereas many that walk in more comfort walk more loosely and scandalously Q. What need they walk in discomfort if they walk in the light doth not all discomfort arise from ignorance that they do not know their own estate and Gods nature and love towards them c Ans It is true they walk in darknesse and that is the reason why they walk so uncomfortably for if they were truly enlightned in the Nature of God and their own estate they would have more comfort but yet this is no affected ignorance but of infirmity and weaknesse and want of experience it is one thing to be in a way and another thing to walk in that way such a man doth not walk in that darknesse because it is not voluntary he doth not desire to walk in darknesse neither is it continual but he at length grows to be further enlightened Vse 1. Of refutation of the Papists that say we deny Works and maintain the Doctrin of the Solifidians Answ We disclaime all Works as any cause or merit of Justification Psalm 130.3 but we do not disclaim good Works in themselves we do not discourage any from good Works but encourage them thereunto is this no encouragement to walk in the light when we say such shall have fellowship with God and be cleansed by the blood of Christ these are strong motives to good works we maintain good works as the Apostle saith for necessary uses Tit. 3.13 What are these necessary uses 1 For our own parts that we may have fellowship with God 2 To glorifie God Matthew 5.16 Let your Works so shine before men c. 3 To stop slanders of vain men 2 Pet. 2.5 4 That by our good Works others may bee led on to a Christian course a good conversation is a good means of the conversion of others We further say That good Works justifie us in St. James his sense Jam. 2 14. There is a double Justification 1 A justification of a man from sin in the sight of God 2 Of a Christian from Hypocrisie in the sight of both God and Man the first way a man is justified onely by the blood of Christ the second way by good Works for we must know a mans Conscience hath two burthens 1 My Sins are great and liable to Damnation how shall I be acquit of that From this our own works cannot justifie us it is done onely by the blood of Christ 2 I but the blood of Christ cleanseth only true Christians that are in Christ and have true grace but you are an Hypocrite how shall I now be quit from the imputation of Hypocrisie In that I am justified by my works let it appear to my self and others that I have lived in all uprightnesse 2 Cor. 1.12 so that justification from Hypocrisie before God an Man is from the witnesse of my upright and unblameable life so that I am justified from a double accusation from the one by one way from the other by another way I am a sinner that I cannot deny my best works are sinful therefore from that I am justified only by the blood of Christ But Christs blood belongs not to you you are an Hypocrite now how shall I know the sincerity of Faith but from the fruits which is an holy and righteous life so that if I walk so I justifie my self from that imputation How doth Hezekiah help himself when God spake bitter things Remember how I have waled before thee with an upright heart 2 Joh. 3. Isa 53.11 how do I know that I know him Why if I keep his Commandments therefore we say that an holy life is an evident sign of our fellowship with God it glorifies God it stops slanders and brings on others and besides all this a godly life will justifie us from hypocrisie Vse 2 For trial whether we have fellowship with God or no why if we walk in the light we have fellowship with him Col. 3.3 Isa 50.10 if a man walk in light of truth and holinesse in knowledge of Gods Will and obedience to it if a man walk in such a way I say that is if he do willingly give up himself to the knowledge and obedience of the Will of God if he continue therein and grow in grace and go forward from step to step from strength to strength Psal 84. it is a true signe of fellowship with God there is no corrupt nature that can have such desires at least not continue and grow up in them Q. May not a Christian be carried out of his way as David into Adultery Noah into Drunkennesse Peter into Denial of Christ Ans They were indeed wayes of Darknesse but they did not turn into them voluntarily but through violence of Temptation and corruption 2 They continued not in them 3 They grew not up in them they took no pleasure in them A man is not judged by a step or two but according to his walk what is his course a man may take a step or two out of the way but yet if he recover himself we say that is his way God judgeth not of a mans Spirit by a step or two for then who could be justified No Christian but sometimes he steps a wry and it may be three or four steps as David 1 Into Idlenesse 2 Into Adultery 3 Drunkennesse 4 Murther 2 Sam. 11. he went into four wicked steps foul steps but you must not judge a man for two or three or four steps for so on the contrary a wicked man may take a step or two into a godly course he may read some good Book pray hear the Word this is to bring about some end of his he hath another way to go only he is turned out of his way for some conveniency as he thinks so that there is no judging of a man on either part by a step or two but we must judge of men by their
and fight and wrestle against our Spiritual enemies Sin Sathan and the World 3. Oyl cheareth the hearts and countenances of men so the Spirit is an oyl of gladnesse Isa 61.3 so that they are annoynted therewith are no more afraid of Hell or Sathan but walk on cheerfully before God so the graces of Gods Spirit Wisdom makes the face to shine Eccles 8.1 takes away Pride rough looks wanton looks and so smoothes and makes the countenance amiable such a soul is annoynted with the oyl of gladnesse 4. There was an use of Oyl to consecrate all Vessels no Consecration but Oyl was a part of it Exod. 33.23 whether to consecrate Vessels or Officers this use of oyl is in the Spirit of God from him it is that Gods Children are no longer for themselves or the world but consecrated to God and dedicated to him as Kings Priests and Prophets Act. 2.17 Rev. 1.6 so that that Oyntment which was poured on Christ above measure descends to every Member of his Church healing their Wounds softning and suppleing their souls chearing their hearts and countenances and consecrating them to bee Kings Priests and Prophets to God and therefore as Christ was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so every Member of Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 11.26 that is one annoynted so that every childe of God hath in some measure a Kingly Priestly and Propheticall Office 1 Samuell 8.28 Kings were chosen to bee Judges and to fight the Lords Battels why so in some measure every Christian hath a power to judge 1 Cor. 2.15 and fight the Lords Battels such an Unction he hath that whatsoever case he is cald to he hath a spirit of judging and discerning what is good what bad so that he stands not at any mans judgement if it be of matters concerning Salvation God hath given him a regal spirit so Secondly he is able to fight the Lords Battels not against flesh and bloud for they are but typicall and shadowy battels but we fight against Principalities and Powers Ephes 6.12 to 18. and so their wars are farre above Princes Rev. 12.1 these are great Battels with Sathan and the World and our own corruptions 1 Pet. 2.11 so we should all fight the good fight 2 Tim. 4.8 2 As a Priest he performs the Priestly Office which stood partly in praying partly in teaching partly in sacrifycing so God hath given to every Christian a Spirit of Prayer an Teaching Rom. 8.15 Jer. 31 32 33. so also they offer up to God a sacrifice of a broken heart Psal 51.17 a sacrifice of praise a sacrifice of righteousness Psal 4.5 6. Rom. 12.1 2. nay sometimes the Lord gives them to sacrifice whole Towns and Cities unto God as Paul and Peter offered three thousand together he takes them from sin and brings them to God so that they bring in heaps upon heaps to God so that they are not poor Kings and Priests but truly if Christians knew their worth they would not be so discouraged and cast down in respect of the World 3 For Prophets it was their office to Preach and Pray but this was principall they had a speciall revelation of Gods secrets and this is verified of poor Christians he reveals his secrets to them Psal 25.14 Matth. 13.11 so tha● many a poor Christian is able to discern more than his Minister Apollos wa● an eloquent man and mighty in the Scripture yet he found Aquilla and Priscilla Tent-makers they were able to instruct him more perfectly Matth 11.25 26 27. the great mysteries of Election Vocation Justification which are hid from the world God reveals these to poor Fisher-men and to Babes and as it was a spirit of prophecy to interpret obscure mysteries so God many times helps poor Christians to see more clearly into Scripture than many great Scholars Rev. 3.18 they have received an Unction from the holy one that is Christ he is often called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 1.95 Psal 16.10 Dan. 9.24 he is the Holy one the Holy head of the Church and from him it is that we receive this Unction Holinesse is that whereby we give God his own due Holinesse is the fulfilling of the first Table righteousnesse of the Second now Christ is called the Holy one because he was set apart not only from all unclean but common uses and dedicated to the Lord. Two things make a thing holy a setting apart from unclean and common uses and dedicating to Spiritual and Holy uses so the Sabbath and the Sacraments are said to be Holy now Christ was properly called the Holy one for no Ordinance so separate from community as Christ nor so wholly dedicate to God as Christ was therefore we see how these little Babes should help themselves against Antichrist as there is an Antichrist so there is a Christ as they have a spirit of seducing so he is an Unction a Box of Oyntment which is able to confirm you and help you against all these Vse 1 Of trial to every Christian whether he be a true Christian or no for he is a Jew that that is one outwardly Rom. 2.27.28 we would think our selves deeply wronged if any should deny us to be Christians why what is a Christian one that is annoynted to be King Priest and Prophet dost not thou know the things that belong to thy peace or heavenly knowledge Dost thou finde that thou canst not warre against thy Spirituall enemies Dost thou finde that thou canst not pray or instruct others and as for judging thou sayest God forbid that I should meddle with other mens matters the secrets of God are not with thee why if it be thus with thee thou maist pretend Christianity but thou hast none in thee but on the contrary if thou knowest how to discern things that differ if thou knowest how to fight the Lords Battels if thou knowest how to pray and instruct others and bring in others if thou beest able to discern the mysteries of God to subdue Sathan the World and thine own heart if it be thus with thee thou art a Christian and thou hast that Unction that will never forsake thee if thou hast received no more then thou hast by thy Book or thy education thou wantest these infused gifts there is never a Christian but he now knows better what Sin is and what Grace is then he did before he is now able to see what he never saw before he knows the Wrath of Christ and the excellency of Gods favour why if thy graces come from this inward annoynting thou art a Christian such a one whose praise is of God and not of man Vse 2 Would you know where the Church is every company saith It is in me the Papists say it is in me and the Separists it is in me the Protestants say it is in neither of you but in me why where you have a Company endued with this holy Oyntment why there the Church is and he that departs from it is
condemnation in them the Judge much more 1 JOHN 3.21 Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Doct. SVch as have peace with their own consciences have boldnesse with God If we have peace with our hearts we have not onely peace with God but boldnesse Eph. 3.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is liberty of speech hence comes liberty of carriage When God hath been pleased to give us fellowship with him in Christ that we have the Ministry of the Gospel revealed to us then we have boldnesse Phil. 1.20 He that hath this hope shall never be ashamed before God or men Rom. 5.1 2. This rejoycing is a companion of boldnesse Wherein stands this boldnesse Answ In three things 1 In liberty of spirit to ask those things at Gods hands that are meet for us This we may doe with some boldnesse and liberty Heb. 4.16 Let us go boldly to the throne of grace he means in prayer A Christian that hath the Lord Jesus Christ for his High Priest who hath reconciled him to God to him Gods throne is not a Judgement-seat but a Mercy-seat and he begs mercy to help him in time of need we may safely expect God will not deny what we ask Phil. 1.6 The Apostle tells us by his own example he never prays for them but his heart is warmed with joy and he was confident God would grant what he prayed for We come to a throne of grace that is we may speak as favourites to God 2 Boldnesse in dangers that may befall in this world or another He walks fearlesse and securely against the fear of danger Psal 23.4 ult Doubtlesse loving kindnesse and mercy shall follow me all my days Surely or doubtlesse This is a bold speech to assure himselfe that goodnesse and mercy shall follow him whithersoever he goes 3 In expectation of all good things whether we pray for them or not God many times will have more care of us then we of our selves Paul was in a straight he knew it would be better for him to be dissolved and to be with Christ yet better for the Church if he should in the flesh and he is confident he shall stay with them to their joyes Phil. 1.24 25. Acts 20.23 24. There was a readinesse of heart in him so to carry all things as that he might rejoyce in all 1 Cor. 1.12 Reas 1 From the justification by faith Rom. 5.1 to 5. We rejoyce in tribulation hope never makes ashamed The soul is never at peace till such time as by faith it doth receive and apply Christs righteousnesse Acts 14.5 A man that owes another man money and knows not how to pay him he is ashamed to come into his sight He that knows he hath injured his Prince and that he doth watch an occasion to be revenged of him he will be afraid and ashamed 2. The sincerity of his sanctification Though a man hath assurance that his sins are pardoned and that he is a childe of God yet if he walk crookedly and loosly in his own wayes his conscience will be so perplexed and distracted as that he will think every hand of God comes as a judgement 2 Cor. 1.12 Here is his boldnesse he hath walked in simplicity and purenesse A man is fearfull and ashamed when he hath dealt doubly either with God or man or walked in some way of impurity of heart Psal 51.8 Davids bones were broken he could not stand upright he could not look God in the face When God gives a man to walk in simplicity without guile and purenesse without uncleannesse then a man may walk boldly and with joy otherwise he walks like a criple and creeps up and down Vse 1 It reproves an old cavill that hath been in the world that Religion makes men Dastards and Cowards No rather want of Religion If men had but purity of heart and good conscience towards men they would fear no dangers 2 Cor. 1.12 2 Refutation of all Popery They cannot be bold because they cannot know God to be their Father they keep not a good conscience Where there is no good conscience there is no boldnesse Wicked men indeed may be bold through ignorance or through abundance of natural spirits mettle courage c. This may be in Papists and was found in Heathens 3 A ground of tryall of a mans peace Luke 11.21 Thou art at peace D●st thou pray boldly dost thou look that God should answer thee How dost thou look danger in the face Prov. 28.1 2. In danger thou knowest Christ hath born all many things befall thee thou art confident all shall be for thy good 4 This teacheth us the true way of boldnesse St. Austin praiseth God that he can think of his former evills without fear If thou wouldst doe thus strive with God that he would sprinkle thy soule with the blood of Christ If thou hast found peace of justification with God labour for peace of sanctification Let no rebellious lusts be in thy soule but complain of it to the Lord and fight against them 5 Much consolation to a childe of God that walks in simplicity of a good conscience If God hath given thee an heart to loath all wickednesse and abandon all occasions of sin there is a boldnesse springing in thy heart A childe of God hath boldnesse but he sees it overclouded he knows not wi●h what sin but God doth sometimes pour out himselfe more largely sometimes more straightly therefore a childe of God fears something amisse in him and he is discouraged but he needs not there is a cause of boldnesse it is our portion If our heart condemn us not we have boldnesse towards God 1 JOHN 3.22 And whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight THere is a double benefit of our assuring our selves that we are of the truth First If our hearts condemn us not God will much lesse condemn us but we have boldnesse towards God Secondly Acceptance of all our prayers in the presence of God Which he proves from an argument taken from the practise of such as have inward peace they keep his commandements 1 Here is a priviledge of such as are at peace with God they may assure themselves that their prayers are heard 2 A reason of this because they keep his commandements Doct. According to our hearing of Gods commandements so he hears our prayers As we regard Gods Word so he ours John 9.33 The question was What he thought of him that opened his eyes He thought he was a Prophet because God heard not sinners John 15.7 If my word abide in you c. Let us keep Gods Word and he will keep our prayers to fulfill them Gods Word abides in us when in our judgements we approve of it and in our hearts we cleave to it in our lives we practise it The Word of God abides not in us except it rules as becomes the
discerned but also he will have heresies that so they may be ●e●●ed in judgement as well as in affections 2. That so 〈…〉 made manifest as by the wind you may ●ee the difference betwe●● 〈◊〉 and ●haffe 2. From the envious man who sowed tares while the husbandman that sowed good seed in the field slept Matth. 13.24 25. 3. From the ignorance and darknesse of the minds of professors Rev. 9.2 those Locusts were false teachers which came out of the smoake of the bottomlesse pit Vse 1. If in St. Johns time there were so many mists 〈…〉 reproves such men as when they see such variety of opinio● in Religion● do s●t down till all men be agreed but do●● St. John make this 〈…〉 Prophets are gone out into the world therefore sit down 〈…〉 true Teachers No but rather makes this use of i● to 〈…〉 of their Ministers because many false Prophets are gone out 〈…〉 2 This may teach us not to wonder although many also Prophets be gone out in these dayes in the light of the Gospel 〈◊〉 they durst look such ●lorious sight in the face as were St. J●●● and Paul 〈…〉 dayes there is not such power of godlinesse in the hearts 〈◊〉 Profe●● but Christians now are given to much worldlinesse and many rest in 〈◊〉 therefore wonder not though the ●●ce of the earth be 〈…〉 with heresies 3. This should teacheth of 〈◊〉 to take heed of opening a door to 〈◊〉 Prophets Take heed of ignorance in your judgement of ambition and sensuality this is the smoak of the bottomelesse pit 4. Try the spirits of false Prophets in these dayes and take not up every instruction at the first blush but try them there are sundry spirits o● false Prophets you shall find in Popery a spirit of presumption doubt despaire hypocrisie not one point in Popery but is carryed 〈◊〉 some of those wings 1. They teach a man cannot be assured of salvation this is doubting yet a man may merit salvation this is presumption they worship stocks and stones 2. The sp●●●ts of Arminians are a spirit of bitternesse 〈…〉 the brethren a spirit of emulation of disloyalty to ●●●ir Prince of liberty and security 3. Among the 〈…〉 shall find a spirit of unconformity and whoredome 4. There is a doctrine of faith and 〈…〉 which doth and 〈◊〉 the doctrine of Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 3. 〈◊〉 doctrin● of free grace is maintained to free a man from prayer preaching and an● Christian duty that God ●ath ordained to maintain grace 〈…〉 not David pray God 〈◊〉 create in him a 〈…〉 and to renew a ri●●●●irit within 〈…〉 therefore a man ought to 〈◊〉 that he 〈…〉 of God q●uickened in him this doctrine of faith and 〈…〉 secretly withdraw a man from the Ordinances of God Lastly There is a spirit 〈◊〉 ●om● on Prot●●●nt which fashion their Religion according to the 〈…〉 their profit and case they follow ● course of the Court and 〈…〉 1 JOHN 4. ● Hereby know ye the Spirit of God 〈◊〉 spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is ●● God IT is not rightly translated come 〈…〉 that Christ was come in the flesh as the 〈◊〉 of Balaam and the N●●laitans Hymeneus and Philetus but it should 〈…〉 translated thus Christ that hath come in the flesh Christ veiled over with ●●mane 〈◊〉 Doct. That the people of God may well 〈◊〉 the spirit of their Ministers by the confession which their spirits make of Christ come in the flesh What is it to confesse There is a threefold confession in Scripture 1. To acknowledge the truth doctrine and worship of Christ even before Rulers Matth. 22.25 to confesse is to professe to bear witnesse of the grace of Christ 2. 〈…〉 of a mans Ministry as it is said of John John 1.20 3. There is a conf●sion of a mans work Tit. 1.16 that is by our life or 〈…〉 be Saviour Matth. 1.21 the anoynted of the Lord 〈…〉 Prophet and King Jesus Christ the second Person in the Trinity 〈…〉 in the flesh which is a great mystery 1 Tim. 3.16 What is it 〈…〉 spirit of a Prophet to confesse Christ Jesus By spirit is not 〈…〉 for body 1 Thess 5.23 but the i●●mation both of soul and body 〈…〉 else it is carnal sensuall and devillish when the spirit 〈…〉 the be●t both of soul an● body the inclination of 〈◊〉 whole man doth ●old forth Christ Jesus that is the mighty saving 〈…〉 revealed in humane infirmities What is Pauls meani●● when he saith I desire to know nothing 1 Cor. ● 3 4. He means he desires to expresse nothing in his life and 〈…〉 Christ Jesus revealed in the flesh in 〈◊〉 infirmities wh●● the Corinthians 〈◊〉 a sign of Christ in 〈…〉 acknowledgeth that for his outside he was weak but yet he did ex●● 〈◊〉 the mighty ●●ving power of Christ crucified in his Ministry 2 Cor. 13.3 ● 5. and he tels the Galatians They knew that through 〈◊〉 infirmities of the flesh he preached the Gospel at the first Gal. 4 13 14 15. Was any doctrine weakly delivered he speaks of his bodily presence for in his life he shewed such a mighty power of Christ as that they looked at him as an Angel of God yea they did so affect him that if it were possible they would have pluckt out their eyes to have doth him good Reas 〈…〉 ●is cannot 〈◊〉 from mans nature for mans spirit comes short of it Phil. ● 20 every man s●●ks his own Demas hath forsaken Christ and embraced this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Some men look too high they look to their own profits and preferments in 〈…〉 and account the seeking to save souls a matter n●t pertainin● 〈…〉 if they preach they 〈◊〉 some moral discourse ●hich 〈…〉 ●hose that are looking towards the wayes of grace 〈…〉 the mighty saving power o●●●rist Jesus is not 〈…〉 their Ministry 2 It 's not from the spirit o● 〈…〉 spirit far exceeds his spirit he c●v●● own Ch●●●●●sus Ezek● ● 22. he speaks with envy against Christ therefore it must needs ●e the 〈…〉 that confesseth Christ Jesus come in the flesh Vse 1 To teach Gods people 〈…〉 acq●ainted with the Lord Jesus or else they will not be able to discern 〈…〉 their Minister in doctrin 〈◊〉 and carriage it is 〈…〉 Saints to expresse their carnall excellencie● 〈…〉 complains of the Galatians that they made a fair shew 〈◊〉 flesh●● 〈◊〉 ●●at make a fair shew i● the flesh when they come to 〈…〉 out their spirits will not bear it a Christian should sa● of those outward 〈…〉 Da●●d of Sauls armour if any man will come after Christ he must 〈…〉 wisdome life and carnal excellency God ●●ts ho●●●r upon many Christians and gives them carnal excellency but they must take heed that they doe not darken the power of the Lord Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 by 2. 〈◊〉 tryal ●●ur estates 〈◊〉 whether the bent of our carriage doth hold forth the Lord Jesus in 〈…〉 infirmities God is not
should teach us all not to comfort our selves because we are members of the Church that we live under such a Minister and are baptized we must not here rest as if we were of God for all this while we go no further then flesh and bloud and worldly respects lead us we savour all this time of the world we may live civilly and painfully in our Calling and yet have no higher plantation in the Church no higher Offices then worldly but what are we the better for this What doe noysome humors in the Church what though we be ornaments and supportants we are not the better for this we are not all this while members of the Church but labour we to be so in the Church as we may be of the Church that we be in that place in which God hath set us that we doe daily derive sap and strength from the root Christ Jesus we must thus try our hearts and the spirits of others and except this frame of spirit be in us we are not true members of the Church And have overcome They overcome therefore there is a conflict Doct. That godly hearers and worldly teachers have a conflict Jude v. 3. He shews them that when corrupt teachers should break into the Church he would not have godly hearers sit down but contend and wrestle earnestly for the faith Paul stirs up Timothy to war a good warfare to hold faith and a good conscience 1 Tim. 18 19. Which shews there are two things which good Ministers and people and worldly Ministers and people doe contend for viz. faith and a good conscience else of faith thou mayst make shipwrack and a good conscience you may turn away Quest In what manner is this conflict acted between bad Ministers and good people A. 1. When bad Ministers contend with good people to pervert their faith 2 Tim. 2.18 19. or else they labour to destroy their good conscience if they see good Christians make a conscience of keeping the Sabbath of performing family duties and abstaining from sin bad Ministers will doe as much as they can to pervert their faith to destroy their good conscience now the people of God contend for both 1 They wrestle with God for a better faith and a better judgement Rom. 15.30 31. if they did so for Paul then much more for themselves 2 They doe observe such as doe corrupt their faith and so are better armed against them Rom. 16.17 18. and so are the better able to overcome 3 Good hearers doe admonish bad teachers to look better to their doctrine Col. 4.17 and conversation 4 If none of those will prevaile they argue with them and deale seriously with them as the blind man and therefore no great Schollar did reason with the Pharisees about Christ and affirmed that he was a good man because he did open the eyes of the blind John 9.7 to 34. if all this will not prevaile then they avoid their doctrine Mat. 22.3 4. and their leaven Luke 12.1 2. They have a care either to remove altogether from their Congregations or else depart from them on the Sabbath day The Levits left their Suburbs and Possessions and came to Judah and Jerusalem 2 Chron. 11.14 and those that could not sell their possessions took horses and rid whither the Word was faithfully and sincerely taught when the Shunamitish woman asked her husband an Asse and a man to goe with her to the Prophet he said Wherefore wilt thou goe to him to day it is neither new Moon nor Sabbath day 2 Kings 4.22 23. which shews you that if it had been either new Moon or Sabbath day she should have had liberty to goe And so should men that live under bad Ministers take their horses and ride to such places where the Word of God is faithfully taught not that people must goe from their Ministers when they preach the Word of God in truth Vse 1. This shews how much people are left without excuse who are ignorant and gracelesse when their Ministers are so the worse your Ministers are the more should you contend to hold fast faith and a good conscience you must not plead that you are ignorant men are you more ignorant then the blind man he was never book-learned if you would shew your selves to be Christians you must hold forth faith and a good conscience 2. To exhort people to contend with their Ministers when they are not of God Ye are of God little children and ye have overcome them Doct. As there is a conflict between godly hearers and worldly teachers so godly hearers doe overcome Who so is born of God doth overcome the world John 5.4 the world not onely of vain glory and reproaches of covetousness injury and losses but the world of false Teachers also In what doth this victory stand A godly Hearer overcomes worldly Teachers First By trying and examining their doctrine and finding it to be false if he doe discover him he overcomes him Rev. 2.2 by this means he puts them to shame as those that have lost the field Secondly When they stand fast in the doctrine of Gods truth and liberty of Christian profession whatsoever those false teachers say James 4.7 Resist the Devill and he will fly from you so those false teachers if you yeeld not to their doctrine you overcome them Gal. 2.4 5. Thirdly When Gods servants grow so much the more fervent resolute and zealous Christians by how much the more they see themselves opposed as David when he danced before the Ark of the Lord Michal the daughter of Saul laughed at him but saith David I will yet be more vile then thus 2 Sam. 6.20 22. Fourthly A man gets ground when he is able to prevail either by avoiding them or by being content to suffer extremity under them by avoiding them as the Levits left their possessions and went to Judah and Jerusalem 2 Chron. 11.15 16. when a man cannot overcome them to hold constant to the death and so vincit qui patitur Reas 1. From the bloud of Christ whereby we are sprinkled Luke 1 74. we are delivered from the hand of our enemies verse 68. they overcome by the bloud of the Lambe Rev. 12.11 Col. 2.13 14. Christ hath triumphed over them openly so that we come to fight with wounded enemies Christ hath broke the Serpents head we come to finish the victory that Christ hath begun for us were the Devill and ungodly teachers let loose in their great strength they would be too strong for us but now their teeth are broken 2. From the mighty power of God that dwells in Gods children I write to you young men saith St. John because you have overcome the wicked one they are so balasted with promises and threatnings as that they doe not sin against God if the Devill or the world promise them earthly things they have a great many better promises 3. From the glories of him that dwells in godly hearers in respect of him
perfect love to God and their brethren they may have boldnesse in the day of judgement This Paul confirms 2 Tim. 4 7 8. he is confident that God would give him a crown of righteousnesse who had fought the good fight of faith and had finished his course had abounded in love to God and man which is our righteousnesse to 〈◊〉 God and man his due and this crown of glory God will give not only to him but to all that love his appearing James 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth against judgement which is a fruit of love for mercy is nothing else but love compassionating our brothers distresse the judgement day is terrible to all bitter cruel and harsh spirits but mercy riseth against judgement Matth. 25.34 to 41. We see what encouragement he gives to his sheep on this ground because they shewed him kindnesse in being kind to his brethren Reas 1. From the esteem the Lord Jesus bears to such before whom they are to appear in judgement for such as love Christ and his members have found Christ dispensing himselfe to them not as a Judge but as a Saviour or else they could never have loved him nor others now they that are to meet with a Saviour have cause of boldnesse in that day or if he come as a Judge it 's but as a Judge to plead their cause and right their wrong and take vengeance on their enemies 2. A loving Christian hath a further ground of confidence in his heart that the day of Christs appearing shall be as the day of his marriage now a marriage day is a day of the gladnesse of the heart Cant. 3.10 Now they that love one another are espoused to Christ here by their effectuall vocation but the day of judgement is as the marriage day Christ here adorns and beautifies us that so at the last day we may be represented as fit Spouses for himselfe Such as are in marriage love how do they desire and long after the marriage day and so doe all true Christians that have kept their hearts chast to Christ how doe they pray for the hastening of that day Beloved be like a Dove or young Hart upon the Mountains of spices Cant. 8. ult This day is called the day of refreshing Acts 3.19 and it 's the work of the Ministers of the Gospel to drive a match between you and Christ that so at that day they may look them out and present them to Christ Loe here am I and the children that thou hast given me Isa 8.18 2 Cor. 11.1 2 3. It 's therefore the day of the comfort of Gods Ministers and all his servants therefore a day of boldnesse 3. It 's a day of much comfort and boldnesse because then they shall be freed from all discouragements from all persecutions and malignities from slanderous tongues and hard speeches from all fears and sorrows nay more from all temptations and corruptions this must needs give boldnesse to them it 's all the cause of boldnesse we have in this life because at that day all our sins and sorrows shall be put away it 's a day of universal freedome from all sin 1 John 3.2 we shall then be like him in grace and glory and freedom from all evils Vse 1. To reprove a grosse errour in Popery which is that no man can be certain of his salvation in the day of judgement but we see it 's no other doctrine but St. John here delivers is it not a word of boldnesse and confience that Paul hath 2 Tim. 4 7 8. I know from henceforth is laid up for me a crown of glory true say they Paul was an extraordinary Christian but he addes not for me only but for all them that love his appearing were not Christians confident against that day how is it that they so earnestly desire that day The Spirit and the Bride say Come and every one that is a thirst sayes Come Lord Jesus come quickly be like a young Roe which shews plainly they doe not look at it as a day of terrour but as a day of boldnesse and comfort Object Have not many of Gods servants been afraid of the face of death and troubled at it What was Hilarius his speech Egredere anima mea quid trepidas Egredere septuaginta annos Christum colui jam mortem times Answ The words of Hilarius shew that he checks this fear he thought he had no cause to be afraid therefore he bids his soul goe forth 2. I grant that a mans nature may shrink at death though he knowes that he hath been a faithfull servant and is not afraid of judgement for death is an enemy to nature though a friend to grace 2 Cor. 5.12 Paul himselfe desires to be cloathed with glory 〈…〉 unclothed of his body so Christ told Peter John 21.18 〈…〉 thee whither thou wouldst not he means to martyrdome implying if he could have shunned martyrdome with a good conscience he would have ●orded it because its an enemy to nature but yet this 〈…〉 ●●ture is after aggravated by tempt●● 〈…〉 so that as 〈…〉 so to 〈…〉 will 〈…〉 times taking away all matt●● 〈…〉 he w●● con●●●dent o● 〈…〉 all 〈◊〉 of com●●●● 〈…〉 him 〈◊〉 that day shall 〈…〉 examination and possese him 〈…〉 youth that his 〈…〉 Psal 30.7 〈…〉 his face 〈…〉 is the 〈…〉 and Joh● ●0 〈…〉 yet this 〈…〉 love may 〈…〉 in that day though 〈…〉 wh● 〈…〉 with temptati●● and 〈…〉 it may be 〈…〉 and so other Christians in his 〈…〉 ●emper 〈…〉 Christ 〈◊〉 to him Psal 3.6 I will not be af●●● 〈…〉 about 〈…〉 St. Ambrose I have not 〈…〉 am ashamed to 〈◊〉 any longer neither doth it irk me to die 〈…〉 a good Lo●● so Paul professeth Phil. 1.21 〈…〉 ●●●ved so Job 19. ●● 26. 〈…〉 but even of every one whose lo●● 〈…〉 that th●● 〈…〉 in that day Vse 2. Shews the dangerous estate of such whose love to Go● 〈…〉 brethren is not perfect for if they wh●●● love is perfect may have 〈…〉 then such as never sought 〈…〉 his favour never loved the ●ell 〈…〉 of his servants in tha● 〈◊〉 where 〈…〉 Obj. I have know●●● 〈…〉 ●●ve never troubled themselves with matters of Relig●●● 〈◊〉 yea scornfull 〈…〉 boysterous men yet as little afraid of death and hell 〈…〉 Isa 22. ●● Answ That which the Papists condemn as hereticall 〈…〉 God 's servants that may be called 〈◊〉 presumption in such men 〈…〉 who never shrink at death or judgement and indeed it proceeds from 〈◊〉 profound ignorance and deadnesse of their hearts who nenver 〈…〉 of God nor the terrours of hell D●●●e bellum in ex pertis but if one 〈…〉 ●ome to see that d●y then shall they call to the moutainns and hills to cove●●●●em from the wrath 〈◊〉 the Lamb. Vse 3. For those that would live comfortably and die peaceably take this ready way be perfect and sincere in your love to God and his Saints and that will breed 〈…〉 marvellous boldnesse against that day
looks at Gods law so as he makes it of his counsell and delight and is ruled by it And again God communicates his attributes to him which is something more then a parent doth to his childe though he love him well yet he will not communicate to him whatsoever is his nor alwayes make him of his counsell nor yet shew familiarity towards him but God looks at Christians as his friends communicates his counsells to them grows in acquaintance with them Obj. It s not for friends to be at command but servants It s a point of service and not of friendship Answ To doe it as a duty of necessity is a servants condition but to do a thing for loves sake to his friend this is an act of friendship Further a man is not said to keep the Commandements when himself onely strives to keep them but when he draws others to the same conscionable obedience Friends have all things common and they doe not love that any that belong to them should be enemies to their friends So God looks at it as a part of Abrahams friendship that he would command his children and servants after him that they should keep the way of the Lord Gen. 18.17 19. Hence in Scripture it s a spirituall style give to Abraham Abraham the friend of God James 2.23 Isa 41.8 Now what eminent service did he above others There were others as zealous as he but this he had eminent in him I know he will teach his children and houshold to keep my wayes Look at Moses David Eli Jehosaphat all godly men yet they were all failing in this in instructing and bringing on their children and servants to the fear of God but this was Abrahams friendship that he was not onely carefull himselfe but he sought to bring on his whole family to Gods worship We see his care about Isaac that God would establish his covenant with him Gen. 17.18 And about Ishamael that he might live in thy sight and he brought on his whole family to be circumcised though a painfull thing Gen. 17. ult This was a fruit of true love So David professeth in his own person and Christs Psal 40.8 O Lord I delight in thy Law Ps 19.9 10. Thy commandements are more precious then gold yea then fine gold thy precepts are sweeter then honey and the honey-comb A signe they were not grievous to him Love makes us delight in the thing beloved What is the reason that this is such an undoubted argument of our love to God Reas 1. From the strictnesse and purity of Gods law and the crosnesse of it to our nature The weapons of our warfare are mighty to bring down every high thought 1 Cor. 10.4 Here two contraries meet together the prerogative of God he will have our thoughts brought into subjection and the liberty of the Creature We will not have our thoughts and tongues bound Psal 12.4 We are free born we are servants to none Now these being so crosse one to another for a man now not onely to doe Gods commandements but to doe them willingly and out of love why this is such a yoke that were it not for the mighty power of Gods love prevailing in our hearts which constrains us to doe it most willingly which nature is most unwilling unto it would never be wrought Hence Gods people are said to be a willing people Psal 110. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 It s evident Gods Spirit is there where we doe Gods commandements with freedome and willingnesse 2. From the experience such have had of the burthen of sin to whom Gods commandements seem easie For this is certain the more welcome sin the more unwelcome Gods commandements the more we delight in sin the lesse we delight in Gods commandements but when once sin is wearisome to a soul to them Christs yoke is easie and his burthen light Mat. 11.28 29. 3. From the unsufficiency of any estate but an estate of love to reach to the obedience of Gods commandements much lesse to the easinesse thereof A man by nature is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8.7 8. And though by common gifts we may be brought to doe much as Jehu and Herod did yet unlesse there be soundnesse of love within you shall never prevail with Jehu to cast out the golden calves or with Herod to put away Herodias It must be the love of God within that must bring us to keep his commandements or at least to doe them willingly and heartily Vse 1. A ground of tryall of our estates whether we love God or no. If we would be assured of this as we all had need to be consider of this Dost thou keep Gods commandments as thy way thy jewels the apple of thy eye thy life And dost thou desire to bring all thy children and family to the like conscionable obedience that all thy family may be Gods friends This is an argument of thy unfained love to God And if withall this seem easie to thee thou delight in it and thinkest it thy happines that every thought in thee may be subject to Christ this is a sufficient testimony of the sincerity of thy love But è contra if we shake off Gods yoke and we will have our thoughts and tongues at liberty if it be a grief to us to see any of our friends conscionable of Gods worship or of religion why thou art none of Gods friend For if thou wert thou wouldst desire that both thy selfe and all thy friends were Christs friends If a man loved his Master and liked his service well and desired to stay with him he would have his ear bored that so all his Masters commandements might sink the better into him why this must needs argue great love to his Master This David alludes to Psal 40.6 Mine ears hast thou bored or as it is in the Originall digged He digged through all obstructions and made him willing to listen to Gods will a loving Servant becomes a friend So if we might have liberty to get loose from God yet if we had rather abide in his service let us give our ears to God to be bored and give up not onely our selves but our whole family to be Gods bond-servants Vse 2. To teach all such as love God to take heed that they be not drawn to break any of Gods commandements for love to others This is plain If love to man makes us break any of Gods commandements then we love him better then God Vse 3. Of encouragement to naturall men to give up their hearts to Gods commandements and not to think them burdensome and intolerable For if thou hadst but the love of God in thy heart Gods commandements would be sweeter then the honey or the honey-combe They are deceived much that look at Gods commandements as heavy and burdensome No his commandements are not grievous and if his commandements be pleasant what are his
promises and rewards Vse 4. For them that would have Gods commandements seem easie to them and not burthensome why grow up in the love of God meditate on his goodnesse and promises and mercies and so thou shalt grow up to love him and the more love the more willing and obedient A man never loseth his first works but he loseth his first love Let him renew his first love and he shall renew his first works Rev. 2.4 5. 1 JOHN 5.4 5. For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith Who is he that overcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God VEers 1. the Apostle had made an evidence of the love of God to keep his commandements and to do them with ease This he proves vers 4. by an argument taken from the removall of the impediments of Gods love in such an heart and that is the overcoming of the world And the argument stands thus To them that overcome thy world Gods commandement● an easie yoke But they that are born of God have overcome the world Ergo It s the love of the world that hinders our obedience to Gods commandements This kept off the young man so every one that is kept off it 's for the love of some pleasure or profit which they wil not deny so Gods commandements seem burdensome Doct. 1. Every regenerate Christian is a victorious Christian a conquerour of the world Every Christian be he never so poor that hath but the least pittance or shred of true grace hath a mighty power in him to overcome the world It was a famous thing of old to be but conquerors of the world as the Babilonian and Romane Monarchies were But St. John testifies here that every Christian is Lord of the whole world 1 Cor. 3.22 23. He hath it there by gifts but here by conquest he overcomes the world viz. so far as it is an enemy to grace Indeed in themselves the comforts of the world are good and usefull but as far as they have a snare in them he overcomes them 1 John 4.4 The honours of the world have a snare in them to puffe up our hearts 2 Chron. 26.16 Profit of the world choak the good seed of the Word Mat. 13.22 23. So the pleasures of the world they make the Word unfruitfull Luk. 8.19 Now how doth a regenerate Christian overcome this 1 He abideth constant in his Christian course notwithstanding the flattering or threatning of the world so that he will not be seduced by any of these snares Eph. 6.11 13. Paul would not give place to such seducements no not for an hour Now that is a part of a mans victory to hold his owne and to keep his standing and not to flit such a man is never said to be overcome that keeps his standing 2 He not onely holds his own but he resists his enemies he musters up all the forces he hath to resist the temptations of the world Jam. 4.7 Resist the devill and he will fly from you Stand out against a temptation and you overcome it Joseph being tempted by his Mistris he takes into his hands for his weapons Gods commandements and his Masters kindnesse Gen. 39.7 8 9. That that would be a dishonour to God and an injury to his Master and so he overcame the temptation 3. To overcome a temptation is to make a good use of every temptation and to get ground by it that the more he is invited by a temptation the more earnest he is against it and the more forward in his Christian course When Michael reproved David for his unseemly dancing as she thought Why saith he I will be yet more vile Whereas her temptation was fetcht from his disgrace why he would bear more such disgrace So when Johns Disciples stirred him up to emulation against Christ that he carryed away all the applause of the people after him What saith John He must increase and I must decrease He is the Bridegroome and I but his friend And it is my joy and glory to see him glorious so that he made an advantage by that temptation and drew them on the more to honour Christ by how much the more they sought to debase him the more we are tempted to covetousnesse wantonnesse or emulation the more liberall chaste and ●umble let us grow This is to overcome a temptation to take a spoyl to enrich our selves by the spoyl of our enemies that is such a conquest as the Apostle calls more then a conquest Rom. 8.37 In all this we do more then conquer For a conqueror gets a victory sometimes but with much wounds and losse we sometimes with no losse 2 After victories they grow Inxurious As it was said of the Romans after their great conquests Luxuria incubuit victumque ulciscitur urbem But a godly man so overcomes and divides the spoyl that he spoyls not himself Worldly conquerors fall to ryot and excesse after their victories but a Christian conqueror grows more wary and humble and sober then before As it was said of John Baptist by Christ A Prophet yea more then a Prophet So a regenerate man is a conqueror yea more then a conqueror Reas From Christs victory over the world Rom. 8.37 It is through him that loved us Christ hath overcome the world John 16. ult Therefore I am to wrestle but with a wounded pimoned enemy Christ having led captivity captive I come but to contend with a captive world and so I overcome through Christ that hath loved me It 's the death of Christ that hath crucified the world to me Gal. 6.14 And therefore I am to fight but with a crucified enemy 2 From the mighty power of Gods Word abiding in a Christians heart 1 John 2.14 The commandements of God and his promises do so rule in his heart that no flatterings of the world no commandements of men can oversway him 3 From the Spirit of God dwelling in them which is greater then the spirit of the world 1 John 4.4 This Spirit doth so mortifie him to the world and so quicken him to grace that he overcomes the world Obj. Did not Demas a great professor forsake Paul and embrace this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Have not many for the live of the world erred from the faith 1 Tim. 6.9 10. Was it not so with Ananias and Saphira and Judas The love of this world overcame them Hath not the love of the world overcome many of the Germane Christians to apostatize to Idolatry and yeeld themselves to the temptations thereof How is it true then that every poor Christian overcomes the world Answ 'T is true the world prevails with many professors but many of them were never truly born of God as Demas and Judas Ananias and Saphira Obj. Do you think that every one that is led away with the world hath no shred of true grace in him Answ No for
question is a sacrilegious violation of his Testament 6 That he might keep in us everlasting nourishment to feed on in our hearts John 6.56 So that his blood may be his wine to chear us that by the comfort of his blood and mediation applyed to our souls we might have wherewith to sustain our selves in the worst times This is meat indeed and drink indeed no nourishment our souls can feed on but this our souls cannot feed on pleasures and profits spirits must feed upon spiritual things Those are beggerly naked souls that have nothing but lands and riches to feed on the souls food is holy spirituall things and if the ordinances yeeld you any good or comfort whence comes this but only from the blood of Christ that hath besprinkled all these ordinances and made them effectuall Heb. 9.19 It 's the blood of sprinkling that makes every ordinance effectuall to us 7 He came by blood to us that so he might open a way to us into the most holy place Vse 1. Teacheth us that a poor Christian that believes in Christ may thereby overcome the world because he believes on such a one as came both by water and blood by the water of sanctification to purifie and cleanse us and by the blood of his redemption whereby he hath procured for us pardon and happinesse therefore whosoever believes on Christ is so sprinkled with the blood of Christ that he is redeemed from the world to become the servant of God he hath all the promises of God which make him overcome all the promises of the world and encourageth him against all difficulties and so assureth him of heavenly glory so that he looks at the world as a thing little to be regarded Vse 2. To stir up all those that desire to get victory over the world to labour to get faith in Christ Jesus who is so abundantly furnished with helps and means for our redemption fit to sanctifie us by the water of sanctification fit to sprinkle us with the blood of redemption whereas if we do not believe on Christ we shall be continually slaves to the world Hence it is that worldlings take such content and comfort in the things of this life and are so discouraged at the losse of them a plain signe they want faith to overcome the world Vse 3. Of tryall what portion we have in Christ Why what feedest thou on If thou hast a part in Christ thou hast a Spirit of God within thee to comfort thee thou findest the ordinances sprinkled with the bloud of Christ to feed on thou canst say to the flattering world I have better meat and better comforts to feed on then the world can yeeld Psal 4.6 It 's poor nourishment for spirits to feed on the husks of this world but a Christian findes the blood of Christ the only food of his soul and the world to be his Servant and not his Master But if we have no higher matters to feed on then the profits and contents of the world the Spirit of God and grace we relish not why then truly Christians we are not 4 If thou wouldst use the priviledges which come by Christ why this is the way Believe on the Lord Jesus and then he is come for thee by water and blood Distrust therefore thy owne righteousnesse rest upon Christ live in such places where Christ is dispensed in his ordinances that so being brought on to believe thou mayst finde Christ to thy salvation 5 Of consolation to such as renounce the world and esteem Christ to be better worth then all the world why thy hope is not frustrate thou believest on such a one as came by water and blood so that though thou be unclean and thy works defiled yet he came by water to purge and cleanse thee Exod. 28.37 38. And what though thy heart be full of many sinful lusts yet thou trustest on one that can by blood make attonement for thee to procure his Spirit and when thou dyest to give thee an open entrance into the most holy place 1 JOHN 5.6 This is he that came by water and bloud even Jesus Christ not by water onely but by water and bloud and it is the Spirit that beareth witnesse because the Spirit is truth IN these verses as we heard Christ is set out 1. By the manner of his coming he came by water and bloud 2. By the witnesse born to him which are First in generall the Spirit v. 6. Secondly more particularly the witnesses are distinguished into two parts three in heaven and three on earth v. 7 8. It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse here Christs coming is confirmed by the witnesse of the Spirit and that Spirit amplyfied by the certainty that Spirit is truth By the Spirit is meant the Spirit of God breathing in the Word and in the conscience of Gods people both are here included For 1. the Spirit breathing in the Scripture is one of the chiefest testimonies that is born to Christ John 5.39 and therefore this witnesse may not be omitted 2. By the Spirit is meant the Spirit as it breaths in the consciences of Gods people for though the Spirit be strong in the Scripture yet how shall I be ascertained of that truth of the Scripture but by the consent of the same Spirit in my heart It s the Spirit in our hearts that witnesseth to the truth in the Scripture John 3.33 and therefore it s called a Seal 2 Cor. 1.20 All the promises in Christ are yea and amen how appears that by the Spirit breathing in our hearts Quest What is that the Spirit witnesseth Some understand it thus The Spirit bears witnesse that the Spirit is truth if there were no other testimony of the Spirit but the Spirit it selfe it would shew it selfe as the Sun shews its selfe But first the Apostle hath not occasion to speak of the witnesse it bears to its own truth but the scope of his speech is to speak of the witnesse that is born to this truth that Jesus Christ came by water and bloud and therefore the witnesse here spoken of is of the Sonship of Christ and of his powerfull coming and to this the Spirit bears witnesse and that Spirit is truth Doct. The Spirit of God breathing in the Scripture and in the conscience of Gods people bears witnesse to our souls that Jesus Christ came to save us by the water of Sanctification and the bloud of Redemption The Spirit breathing in the Scripture John 5.39 It s not the saying of the Prophets nor Apostles that bears such authentick testimony we look at the testimony of them as of Isaiah and Paul Christ speaks of them I receive not the testimony of men John 1.33 Therefore some that have read them have lookd at them as fables 1 Cor. 2.6 7. What is it then that captivates the world to the beliefe of this testimony but the testimony of the Spirit breathing in them What is that Spirit that breaths
Christ but not Christ himself and such gifts as might tend to profit but Peter tell him Thy money perish with thee Act. 8.18 19. So Balaam wished O that I might dye the death of the righteous Numb 23.10 but he desired not Christ but own happinesse and freedom from hell and misery and therefore what ever gift he had besides as indeed he had a goodly gift of prophesie he never sought Christ in any of them Nay further a true christian that affects Christ himself seeks him not only without respect to profit or gain or happinesse hereafter but even here in this life in the Ordinances of God wherein he seeks for help against his lusts for increase of grace for supply of comfort he doth not so affect them as to find Christ in them When David fled from Absalon and the Priests carryed the Ark after him as knowing they should never meet with a Prince that more favoured and upheld Gods worship then he David bad the Priests carry back the Ark again If I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me back again and shew me both it and his habitation but if he say I have no delight in thee here I am let him doe what seemeth him good as if he had said the Church shall not be so much prejudiced as to be deprived of the Ark of God for my sake without which they cannot offer their solemn Sacrifices nor find the presence of God therefore he considers that thereby Gods Name should be dishonoured and the Church wronged and rather then he would doe that he would part with the very Ark the presence of God and his Ordinances which yet was his greatest care and desire Psal 27.4 Now this is an argument of grace in sincerity to be willing to part with the Ordinances rather then have God dishonoured and the Church prejudiced This was Moses care rather then God should be dishonoured by the Heathen he would have God blot his name out of the book of life Exod. 32.32 33. A true christian perfers Gods honour above the pardon of sin above the best graces yea above salvation it self if a christian desire the Ordinances it is that he may find the beauty and loving kindnesse of the Lord in them Psal 63.1 2 3. if he desire the subduing of his lusts it 's not so much for his own comfort as that the power of Christ might he magnified in him he desired salvation if he desires gifts and graces it is not that he might be made excellent but that the grace of Christ might be magnified in him if he desire salvation it not so much for his own joy and happinesse as that he may be with Christ Phil. 1.28 having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better Cant. 5.10 My beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand not only of persons but the chiefest of ten thousand benefits and priviledges which God gives pardon of sin and grace and comfort and salvation it self Christ is better then all these and he that thus affects Christ hath the Son and so hath life Grounds of this 1 Christ must be so received as God gives him but God gives us Christ first in every Ordinance when Philip preached to the Eunuch it 's said he preached Jesus to him Act. 8.35 So in the Sacrament you must first take and eat his flesh and drink his blood and then you have remission of sins Mat. 26.26 No gift of grace but is given through Christ if it be lively and true Herod received joy Jehu zeal Ahab humiliation but none of these received life because they received the shell and not the kernel the casket and not the Pearl the gift but not Christ and therefore their graces were not lively Simon Magus believed yet had no lively faith because Christ wanting except we find Christ we find no true grace Hos 4.8 in me is thy fruit found without me you can doe nothing Joh. 15.5 Hence let us gather an estimate of our selves whether we have life or not If you have the Son you have life try therefore whether you labour not more for the loaves for the benefits of Christ then for Christ himself if thou findest thou comest to the Ordinances rather to find Christ then the pardon of sin and comfort and happinesse and salvation if with the Church in the Canticles thou seekest Christ and not the loaves if thou with her inquirest of the watchmen where thou mayst find him whom thy soul loveth if we thus affect Christ we have the Son we could never have sought him thus if he had not first sought us but è contra if we have longing desires after pardon of sin and after grace and salvation those desires indeed are ordinarily sincere but there may be an Harlots affection in them as an Harlot seeks her an husband not for his persons sake but for his goods sake that her debts may be paid and that she may be a sharer in his wealth now she seeks him not for his ends but for her own so if a man shall desire Christ that he may have his sins pardoned and his conscience pacified and seek not Christ himself why this is but an whorish affection whereas one that loves her husband she will have him though she have but the bare man though she begge with him so one that truly loves Christ he would be glad and think himselfe happy to have him though he should never see good day after never find peace or quiet after Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is nothing on earth that I desire in comparison of thee This will exclude from having of Christ 1. All such as are so far from seeking Christ himselfe that they doe not seek the benefits of Christ they look at grace and christian duties as melancholly wearisome things for pardon of sins they never look after it and for heaven they hope they shall doe as well as others why these men they will neither have Christ nor any thing of his 2. This excludes such from having Christ as have more desire of his benefits then Christ himself pardon of sin and grace and peace of conscience and comfort that they look after but Christ they forget why as yet our seeking is not sincere if a woman perceive that her love seeks more for wealth and dowry then her person no wonder if she hold off so if Christ find we come to him and seek for pardon of sin and grace and peace more then for himself no wonder if he keep off and hide himselfe from us because this may come from self-love from respect to our own good and yet nature teacheth us not to seek such things and those desires are ordinarily good beginnings for indeed christians at first are full of self-love but yet Christ will never fully reveale himselfe till we seek his person rather then his gifts therefore first labour to get Christ
and he will bring all these priviledges with him Rom. 6.32 seek him chiefly and not his gifts you must first know Christ will be more loved for his own sake then his gifts before he say to you as to the church Cant. 2.14 O my Dove let me see thy Countenance let me hear thy voyce for sweet is thy voyce and thy countenance lovely before he thus manifest himself to thee he will make thee willing to seek thee as thy head and husband as the most wise the most beautifull the chiefest among ten thousand and let but thy desire be towards him and his desire will be towards thee Hos 3.3 Stand not upon dowries take him without Feoffments for better for worse and if you thus take Christ and choose his person in the first place then all his benefits and priviledges become yours 2 Cor. 3.22 23. 2. A child of God is said to have the Son when he hath the Spirit of the Son 2 Cor. 3.17 Having spoken before of a Spirit of ministration and grace why saith he the Lord is that Spirit not only because he is the giver of it but there is a secret union betwixt Christ and his Spirit so that if you have the one you have the other Rom. 8.9 If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Gal. 4.6 he that hath the Son hath the Spirit of the Son and is made conformable to his Image There is a twofold Spirit whereby we are knit to Christ and Christ to us 1. A Spirit of union 2. A Spirit of liberty 1. He that hath fellowship with Christ hath a Spirit of union whereby he is made one with him Joh. 17.21 It 's the prayer of our Saviour for all believers that they al may be one As thou father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us thou in me by thy Spirit and I in them by the same Spirit hence it is that of his fulnesse we shall receive grace for grace Joh. 1.16 Rom. 8.29 We are predestinate to be made like to the Image of Christ There is a threefold conformity and likenesse betwixt Christ and us that is wrought by the Spirit 1. We are like him in his nature 2 Pet. 1.4 by the precious promises we are made partakers of the divine Nature so that we are meek as he was lowly as he was innocent and harmlesse as he was the Spirit of God stamp● the same Image on us that was in Christ Joh. 1.16 Hence it is that the e that have Christ they reason from Christs nature to theirs and from their nature to Christs 2 Cor. 1.17 18 19. Paul had sometimes sent to them that he would come to them as he passed by into Macedonia but neither in his going not his return did he come to them therefore they accuse him of levity and inconstancy Paul excuseth this and he pleads from the nature of Christ for the Son of God Jesus Christ that was preached among you by us was not yea and nay but in him was yea Why what 's that to him Yes look as Christ is yea and amen the faithfull witnesse that what he speaks he will performe ●o make account that Christ hath poured the same Spirit on us that our words likewise are yea and amen had not Gods providence hindred it there is such a participation of the divine nature that the nature of Christ the nature of the Gospel and the nature of a Christian all of them answer one another the same Spirit that made Christ yea and amen faithfull and true hath made the Gospel and so the same Spirit in Gods people makes them true and faithfull so that look what they say their hearts goe with it and if Gods providence hinders not they will performe their word 2. There is a conformity in his offices he hath made us Priests Kings and Prophets to his Father Rev. 1.6 Kings to over-rule our lusts to overcome the world anoynted with a royal Spirit although not yet invested with full glory Priests to offer sacrifices of prayer of a broken spirit Psal 51.12 Sacrifices of righteousnesse Psal 4.5 and to sacrifice our lives for Christ Phil. 2.17 so he hath made us Prophets of God Act. 2.17 he hath poured on us the Spirit of prophesie poured not dropped sparingly but poured on us aboundantly hence it is that a christian understands many secrets of Gods will Psal 25. 14. many hidden mysteries of the Scripture so that he is bound to see a secret providence of God guiding him in his way 3. There is a conformity in their estate our Saviour in this world went through a double estate 1. Of Humiliation 2. Exaltation and in the most deep passions he went through when he was excommunicated by the Church hated crucified yet even then he mightily shewed forth his divine power hence he is said to triumph openly on the crosse Col. 2.17 and such is a Christians estate Psal 34.19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous there is his humiliation but the Lord delivers him out of all there is his exaltation for by those deliverances he makes them glorious Psal 149.4 He will beautifie the meek with salvation nay a christian in the midst of all his worldly comforts he gets loose from them so that you may see those are not the things he chiefly looks after if he have great parts and gifts yet they are clad with a Spirit of Christ crucified Gal. 6.14 their outward deportment is but mean and homely yet in their outward meanesse and basenesse you may discern the power of Christ crucified 2 Cor. 13 4. Since ye seek a proofe of Christ speaking in me as he was crucified through weaknesse and yet live●h in me by the power of God even so we are weak with him that is in outward shew why yet as Christ when he was most deb●sed shewed forth most power so a christian in his greatest debasements and weaknesses Gods power is most magnified in him never more glorious then when most debased Hence those strange phrases we are dead with Christ Col. 2.20 and risen with Christ Col. 3.1 crucified with Christ Rom. 6.6 that is by the same Spirit of Christ that is in us we are so knit with him that we are made of the same state with him that as he was weak and base and yet glorious so are we 2 There is a Spirit of liberty nothing better expresseth the temper of the Son Christ the Fathers Image then a Spirit of liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty If the Son shall make you free then you are free indeed Joh. 8.36 His liberty is a reall liberty And this is 1. Liberty from the fear of sin of hell of the grave and of all his enemies he is not afraid like a sla●e that is not is a 〈◊〉 of liberty Rom. 8.15 H●b 2.15 A Spirit of liberty is a Spirit of freedome from all
thought Christ would then have come suddenly and therefore began to lay aside all care in their outward callings which Paul informs them in 2 Thess 2. The Galatians are wanting in believing justification by faith and therefore Paul writes that Epistle to them 2. There is something wanting in the habit or in the grace of faith therefore the Apostle prays for the Colossians that they might be rooted and established in the faith Col. 2.7 even as a young plant may be so weak that the least rub may root it up so a Christian may have some rooting in Christ and yet want sound rootednesse and firmnesse of faith there may be a want of that confidence and full assurance that is required 3 Faith may be wanting in the sense of it for a Christian may have attained to a great measure of lively faith and yet be in doubt whether he have any true faith or not now that we may be assured of it he had need to be built up in faith as the poor man said to Christ Lord I believe help mine unbelief he believed and yet knew not well whether he should call it faith or unbelief therefore Phil. 1.25 Paul trusted that he should continue with them for the furtherance and joy of their faith now so long as a Christian is doubtful of his faith he hath little joy or comfort in it therefore they had need to be brought on further that their faith may be a joyful faith 4 Faith had need to be increased in regard of the acts of it which are perswasion and trust on Christ those had need to be increased Peter when he walked on the water he was perswaded Christ would save him but when the winds began to be boysterous he was afraid and began to sink but Christ reacheth forth his hand to help him and reproves him O thou of little faith Matth. 14.30 31. The two Disciples that went to Emaus and were talking of Christs death they said one to another We trusted it had been he that should have delivered Israel we so trusted but now are afraid we are deceived for they looked that the Messias should abide for ever but what saith Christ to them O fools and slow of heart to believe so that faith had need to increase in the acts of it 5 Faith had need to grow in the fruits of it though faith may be of some strength and comfort yet it may be much wanting in the fruits of it one fruit of faith is love Gal. 5.6 Now a Christian may leave his first love and so far that withall he may lose his first works Revel 2.2 3. therefore a Christian had need to grow in the increase of the fruit of faith in their love and fruitfulnesse that their love may abound and that their last works may be more then the first Reas 2. From the marv●llous power that is in the Scripture to supply all those defects of faith in the Scripture whether read preached conferred examined or meditated on 1. The Scriptures preached they are the mighty power of God 〈◊〉 to Salvation Rom. 1.16 17. All their writings are good helps this way but yet their personal presence their preaching much more effectuall Therefore Paul prayes that he might come to the Thessalonians that he might perfect what was lacking in their faith 1 Thess 3.10 11. 2. The word conferred about is very effectuall to the increase of faith Luke 24.27 When the two Disciples were conferring together and their hearts were sad Christ he comes in with them and warmed their hearts so that their faith who confirmed that when they returned to Jerusalem they told the Disciple● The Lord is 〈◊〉 indeed Now they made no more doubt of it And you know how effectual Philips conscience was with the 〈◊〉 ●e was brought 〈◊〉 thereby to believed with all his 〈◊〉 Act. 8 37. 3 The word read 〈◊〉 of that force that by reading you may believe John 20 3● By reading th● Scriptures believers are established in the Faith 4 The word examined that is when h●●rers bring things to the ●●llance of the Sanctuary when they 〈◊〉 the Masters doctrine by the Scriptures whether it be sound or not This 〈…〉 use to father our faith nay to ●●get faith sometimes in those that 〈…〉 not before as it did in the ●●reans Acts 17.11 12. Th●●●●king this c●●efe many of them believed Many times when a Christian 〈◊〉 the Word of God his hear● fails him he is not well perswaded of what 〈…〉 his 〈…〉 examines it why oft-times the Word 〈◊〉 works and 〈◊〉 faith when the Word preached did not 5 The Word meditated on 〈◊〉 of special use to increase our faith to make 〈◊〉 more comfortable and 〈◊〉 and rooted old his faith Psal 1.3 ●● When a man so delights in the Word that he meditates there●● on day and night such a one shall be as a tree planted by the river side well rooted well watered and so he becomes to be very fruitfull in every season his leaf fades not but in every condition of life he brings forth seasonable fruit Vse 1. Hence we may take a good tryal of a faithful Minister and a faithful Christian We see St. John when he had begun faith in them he would not leave them so as thinking that what he had begun God would perfect and therefore he would leave them and turn to others This was far from St Johns practise and 〈◊〉 it should be far from every faithful Minister 〈◊〉 leave believers that they have began faith in them but their care ought to 〈◊〉 to be desirous first to grow themselves in faith Lord increase our faith Luke 17. ●9 so to confirm and establish others in the faith So for Christians it 's a signe of a good heart not only to labour for truth of faith but also for growth of faith that ●s the Apostle prayed so ought every Christian to pray 〈◊〉 increase our faith or as the poor man cryed to Christ Lord I belive help my unbelief● ● 〈◊〉 need of a great deal of faith to be so plentiful in 〈◊〉 and to heal offences as Christ requires for on this ground the Apostle pray●● 〈…〉 faith Luke 17.3 4 5. So we have many temptations to mee● with therefore a Christian had need of strong faith Above al things take the shield of faith Eph. 6.6 the shield that covers the whole body No man would willingly go into the field with a weak 〈◊〉 but that had need to be metal of proofe to supply a man at every turn and every occasion it 's a signe of a lively faith if it be a growing faith 2 It reproves the sacrilegious ungodly and uncharitable practise of the Church of Rome that take away the Scripture from the people St. John writes those things that they might believe why then take away the Scripture you make them no better then Infidels under the faith of Gods elect And as they are injurious to the souls of the