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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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and images the bookes of laimen and children Considering therefore the corruption of the heart which needes reformation with the soonest euen as the bodie must be framed at the first swadling and weedes plucked vp at the first peeping vp together with the commandement of God which enioyneth the parent to whet precepts vpon his children the practise of Christ calling babes vnto him and instructing his familie and lastly the benefit which hence shall redound to thy child thou leauing him the onely pearle and treasure which is likely to abide with him be not wanting in thy endeauours but giue all diligence whereby thou maist be the father not of children onely but of faithfull children Not slandered of riot As the Apostle requireth that the children of Ministers should be taught in wholesome doctrine so now by remoouing the contrarie would he haue them sutable in their manners and behauiour that euen in the Christian carriage of the children the fathers fitnes to gouerne may be approoued scandall may be avoided neither his doctrine nor life may be iustly excepted against Whence in generall may be noted that the carriage of a mans children is a great credit or disgrace to his profession which as it is true in euery professor so especially in the Minister for either the fathers glorie is seene in his gouernement or the profanenes of the children is the fathers blemish A wise sonne saith Salomon is the crowne of his father but lewd children are like Simeon and Leui which make their father otherwise a good man stinke among his inhabitants There was a lawe enacted that if any man laid slanderous things to his wife as that he found her not a virgin the woman her selfe may not followe the action in clearing her selfe against her husband least the mariage should seeme to be dissolued pendente lite but the Lord most wisely ordered that the parents should for her and why they surely because their name and honour was impeached in that their daughter was accused to be corrupted in their house and they did not their dutie in watching ouer her virginitie and accordingly as the matter was found in issue the father was dealt withall for if the defamation prooued vntrue the partie must make the father amends by giuing him an hundred shekels of siluer and yet shall he not be troubled with his daughter and if the daughter was conuicted she must be brought to her fathers doore and all Israel must stone her and the reason is added why she must be there stoned because she hath wrought follie in Israel and plaied the whore in her fathers house that is for transgressing the lawe of God violating her parents authoritie and credit and defaming her fathers house But an especiall lawe besides was made for the daughter of a Priest If a Priests daughter play the whore she polluteth her father and therefore she must be more seuerely dealt with then any other she must be burnt with fire Obiect If it be said that whosoeuer of other tribes were deprehended in the same follie were also put to death I answer yea if they were espoused or married but if virgins except a Priests daughter were not And well may the Church esteeme of a man according to the gouernment of his children seeing the Lord himselfe goeth before in this example How was Abraham honoured in his eyes in that his children were so instructed and ordered how was Ionadab graced by the Oracle of God himselfe promising that he should not want a man of his seed to stand before God for euer and all for the obedience of his sonnes testified in following their Fathers so strait iniunctions And on the contrarie how were good men blemished and dishonored for the profanes of their children as Eli is said to honour his sonnes aboue God More specially we are to consider in the precept 1. The speciall vice prohibited 2. the hatefulnes of it 3. the vse 1. Riot is a prodigall and lauish wast of a mans substance in eatings drinkings intemperance voluptuousnes vncleannes or any other filthy lust The word in the originall beeing taken from a certaine people who were wont to spend their whole daies in feeding and stuffing themselues and this was the greatest part of their care and calling whom for this cause the Grecians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is such as cannot be saued from a most desperate miserie or else such as saue nothing for themselues and their family but in the end beeing brought to extreame want and penury die most miserably 2. The hatefulnes of this sinne appeareth 1. In that it is a note of all profanes and irreligion for the text opposeth it to faithfulnesse 2. It is branded to be a course of the vnconuerted yea the verie knot of all the lusts of the Gentiles and called excesse of riot see 1. Pet. 4.4.5 3. It is not onely an enemie to religion but euen foileth all ciuill vertues as iustice temperance sobrietie peace chastitie humilitie ●●uth c. For what is the ruffling and roysting life of a number of our gallants and l●stie bloods but an intemperate an vnpeaceable course beeing men of a word and a blow breathing out nothing but bigge words loud lies fearefull othes hauing so farre forfeyted all their truth and credit as they may iustly be suspected least when they speake truth they as their father the deuill doe it to deceiue not at any time conceiuing or acting but what may stand with their brutish appetite And yet these men call themselues and one another good companions and good fellowes but if euer the Lord open their eies to see their waies their owne tongues shall confesse that all this while they were so farre from the suite of Saints and good men that they were vnfit companie for honest ciuill men 4. Such an hatefull sinne this is as where it riseth to any height in children the Lord will haue the parents themselues to become both accusers and witnesses against their children and prosecute them till they see them stoned to death whereof the Lord giueth two reasons 1. to take away the euill of sinne 2. to take away the euill of infection that all others may feare by his example 3. The vse 1. Let no man that would be counted religious vphold riotousnes in his children it beeing a note of vnfaithfulnes irreligion and a tainted heart How can such paren●s be counted faithfull that suffer their sonnes and daughters to runne into the infamie of pride prodigalitie excesse not vsing meanes to reclaime them but rather fitting them by outward means with fewell to these flames Shall God command thee to bring out thy riotous sonne to stoning and wilt thou rather strenghthen him in this sinne 2. If the sinne be so hatefull in all mens children much more in the sonnes of Ministers against which our Apostle leuelleth And let all our youth especially Ministers sonnes of whom there are
would first entertaine the true religion as by those many ceremonies enioyned might more specially appeare and by Iacob we may iudge of the other Patriarkes who would not giue Dinah to Hemors sonne vnlesse the whole family were circumcised Secondly it must be considered whether the partie be an absolute Papist or onely Popishly affected in some points as namely whether he or shee erre in maine and fundamentall points of faith or in lesse dangerous opinions If the partie prooue tractable and erre onely in smaller points as suppose some superstitious obseruations of daies meates foolish and rash vowes or such like suckt in by reason of corrupt education although I would wish a man to make a better match for himselfe yet I cannot condemne it as vtterly vnlawfull neither in this question commeth such a one vnder this commandement of the Apostle But if the partie be a limbe of the Pope drinking in with greedinesse the poysoned cuppe of his heresies and such a one as is turned off the foundation by holding iustification by workes freewill to good Popish traditions of equall authoritie with Scripture and such like here the precept holdeth A Protestant may not marrie with such a partie The reasons are these 1. The nature of marriage much more then of friendship is a communion and fellowship in diuine and humane things Now what communion can be betweene truth and falsehood Secondly Gods example who in the beginning ioyned not two of diuerse religions besides the commandement is not to be vnequally yoked and to marrie alwaies in the Lord not against him And if a Christian may not by bodily coniunction become the member of an harlot much lesse of an idolater who goeth an whoring from God after many lovers Thirdly marriage is called the couenant of God both because he maketh it in heauen and watcheth how it is entred and carried by married persons in the earth Now how can he thinke his marriage to be made by God who hath a limbe of Satan and Antichrist laid by his side or rather that himselfe hath not wilfully profaned the name and couenant of God as Iudah did by marrying the daughter of a strange God Malac. 2.11 Fourthly there is certen danger of seduction by such a partie and therefore it is a presumptuous tempting of God to match with ●●ch a one And can there be a stronger reason giuen then this which is the Lords owne for the strengthening of his owne prohibition Deut. 7.3 Thou shalt not make marriages with them for they will cause thy sonnes to turne away from mee and the same reason is rendred in renewing the precept Iosh. 23.11 Plentifull is the Scripture in examples to this purpose Salomon to whom the Lord appeared many times fell by meanes of his outlandish wiues to idolatrie and who thinketh himselfe wiser then he Ioram at the instigation of his wife forsooke the Lord he had the daughter of Ahab to wife and he did euill in the sight of the Lord. But most pregnant is that example of Israel who marrying with Moab was presently ioyned to Baal Peor and for this sinne were slaine in one day fowre and twentie thousand Num. 25.9 And let him that thinketh himselfe to stand on the surest ground consider whether his disposition be not such as standeth in neede of such a companion as may rather further him in pietie then any way alienate him from the wayes of God Fifthly ordinarily the Lord followeth such matches with visible plagues sometimes without the family sometimes within according to that threatning by his Prophet that he wil cut off master and seruant that shall doe this A publicke execution hereof we see in the flood which for this sinne drowned the olde world Gen. 6.2 and Ezra confesseth with weeping mourning and ren●ing his haire that for this sinne especially Master and seruant We our Kings and our Priests haue beene deliuered into the hands of the Kings of the lands vnto the sword into captiuitie into spoile and into confusion of face And within the family by Gods iustice it often commeth to passe that the wiues of Esau the daughters of Heth were not more grieuous to Iacob and Rebecca then the persons so vnequally yoked are betweene themselues Sixtly such persons as thus contract themselues bewray 1. That they more regard other vaine things as wealth beautie friends then the feare of God and practise of pietie which onely hath the promise of prosperitie 2. That they want that godly affection which delighteth in the godly and abhorreth the familiar conuerse and much more mariage societie with the wicked and proclaime to all men howsoeuer they would seeme to be what indeed they are 3. That they are destitute of godly zeale which professeth hatred to idolaters and idolatrie yea of all other most hateth that sinne and the appearance of it as the Lord himselfe doth 4. That they want wise consideration and due respect of themselues in not caring to whome they become one what a griefe and burden is it to think that the husband or wife is as yet the child of the deuill that I am a member of this person who is not a member of Christ 5. The Church of God is little beholding vnto them for bringing in an idolater among them and so polluting the bodie of Christ and blemishing the congregation of God among whom such a thing should not once be named as becommeth the holy and vndefiled spouse of Christ. 6. If that be true which our Church affirmeth that vsually spirituall and carnall fornication goe together let him blame himselfe who finding vnfaithfulnes in the couenant of marriage did not duely consider whether euer that partie would be true to him who playeth false with God or whether the faithfulnesse and loue to God should be the breeder and nurse of true loue and faithfulnesse to himselfe Obiect But all this while you compare the Papists with the heathen or Cananites betweene whom there is no comparison Answ. The Popish idolatrie is as grosse as euer was any for they worship the wodden crosse and peices of bread with religious worship and why is Rome called Egypt Sodome Babylon but because it is a source into which all heathenish idolatrie runneth and why is it called an hibitation of deuils if any thing can be spoken worse of any heathenish idolatrie it shall not be the worst 2. Our danger is more from them then any or all the heathen 3. The endes of avoiding them are the same with any other heretike namely to preuent infection and seduction Obiect But the Papist professeth the same faith with vs. Answ. In word he doth but in deed he renounceth the whole foundation of religion and this is a more reall deniall Obiect But so doe many hypocriticall Protestants and yet you dare not say but we may match with them Answ. Many there are who as we haue heard professe they knowe God but in their
way spreadeth further and further and subverteth the faith of verie many and concludeth that no otherwise then the contagion of the most mortall diseases as the plague or leprosie or such like euen so the infection of Poperie is as diligently to be shunned of all the faithfull This truth out of the mouthes of such two worthy witnesses we may the better beleeue not onely for the strength of arguments they haue vsed as yet vngainesaied by any aduersarie but also in that we haue some of her owne children confessing her the mother of all heresies I will not light a candle to the sunne in the former point but briefly shewe wherein especially they are to be avoided and that for more perspicuitie in two questions Quest. The former whether Popish religion may be tollerated in a countrie professing the truth of Christian doctrine as ours by Gods blessing doth I answer No if by any lawfull meanes it may be banished For beeing an heresie which 1. disannulleth the death of Christ. 2. abolisheth the humane nature of Christ. 3. destroyeth the substance of the Sacraments 4. taketh away the solace of the elect of God 5. the honour of the sonne of God sitting at his Fathers right hand 6. almost all religion all these beeing the expresse words of D. Reynolds and prooued in that thesis it followeth that it may not be suffered in a countrie which can abolish and cast it out For 1. Euery worship must be sutable to him that is worshipped If he be diuine so must it if he be ciuill it must also be ciuill if he be simple pure without mixture so must that worship which is or can be acceptable vnto him 2. We know out of the word that Samaritane worship when men will feare God but worship him according to the rites of the countrie 2. King 17. vlt. was euer hatefull to God who will not haue his feild of the Church sowne with diuerse seeds nor plowed with an oxe and an asse The Iewes meddle not with the Samaritans but must hate the workes of the Nicolaitans And indeed to halt between two to be neither Gods nor Baals is to be of no religion at all and the Church of Laodicea sheweth that the Lord can neuer digest two contraries neuer so well mixed or wisely tempered in matter of religion 3. The approbation and blessing of God on those Kings gouernments and Churches who went through-stitch in pulling downe all the high places as Dauid Salomon Hezekiah But memorable was the worthy act of Iosia who made a couenant before the Lord and called all the inhabitants of Ierusalem the Preists Levites and all the people from the smallest to the greatest and caused them all to stand to it See 2. Chro. 34.31 ad sin But whereas others otherwise good Kings are reprooued and blemished because either they left the high places standing and proceeded not to a through reformation as As● ● Kin. 15.14 Or if they did fully reforme their countrie yet that they did not so zealously hate Idolatrie but that they would enter into league and affinitie with Idolaters as Iehoshaphat Asas sonne Who lifted vp his heart vnto the waies of the Lord and took away the high mountains and groaues out of Iudah But yet Iehu is sent to reprooue him for his societie with wicked Ahab saying Wouldst thou helpe the wicked and loue them that hate the Lord A worthy commendation was it of the Angel of the Church of Ephesus that he could not beare them which were euill Rev. 2.2 4. Consider the danger and hurt in tolerating heresie in these particulars 1. It is a breach of Gods commandement Deut. 29.18 There shall not be among you man woman nor family nor tribe which shall turne his heart from the Lord to goe serue the gods of these nations There shall not be among you any roote that bringeth forth gall and wormwood 2. This mixture layeth open to Gods revenging hand and is called by no lesse title then Rebellion Iosh. 22.17 3. There is most apparant danger of infection for heresie is called in the Scripture leauen and a gangreene and here also consider the weaknesse of flesh which is as readie to be plucked away with euery error of the wicked as the most drie tinder is to receiue the sparkle of fire cast into it Hence also are Idolaters called stumbling blockes snares thornes whippes and destruction See Iosh. 23.13 4. This mixture in religion threatneth ruine vnto Church and Commonwealth it hindreth or corrupteth publicke iustice by partiallitie or too rough and exasperate proceeding it causeth distraction of affections and prepareth to tumults and massacres as the experience of many ages hath taught A kingdome or Church deuided against it selfe cannot stand Which Ieroboam well conceiuing that he might bring the people to vnitie in religion set vp two calues one in Dan and the other in Bethel How both Iewes and Gentiles wickedly resisted Christ and his Apostles vpon this same ground that two diuerse religions were vnsafe in one countrie and long could not continue but the one would eate vp the other the historie of the Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles euidently shew From whom we may frame a good argument that if they were so vigilant to keepe out whatsoeuer might disturbe their errour how much more carefully should the truth be preserued in the puritie of it of all such as haue any care of the continuance of it nay more shall the mention of a toleration of our religion in Rome or Spaine be capitall and should we by connivence at their knowne Idolatrie giue them as good as a tolleration and so strengthen their hopes for an alteration These reasons if I should now in particular applie vnto the Romish Church for the further euidence of them I know better where to beginne then to make an end and should dwell too long on the question which I purposed rather to point at then fully to handle as more largely out of the Scriptures Fathers and councells I easily might But from them all as they lie in one word may be concluded that the toleration of Poperie in a reformed country where it may be cast out is vtterly vnlawfull The second Question is whether Protestants may marrie with Papists Answ. For the right resoluing of this question two things must be considered 1. Whether the person that now professeth Poperie will yeeld to be wonne to the embracing of true religion which if he do then caseth such a one to be a Papist and may be maried withall ●hus Isaac married Rebecca the daughter of Bethuel and Iacob the daughters of Laban who was an Idolater as appeareth Gen. 31.53 On the same condition Boaz married Ruth a Moabitisse woman but who was first conuerted to the Iewish religion And thus the Lord himselfe yeelded vnto the mariages with Heathnish women taken in warre but heauily after a sort and by indulgence but on no hand vnlesse they
Αρχην απαντων και τελοσ ποιει θεον A COMMENTARIE VPON THE EPISTLE of S. PAUL written to TITVS Preached in Cambridge by THOMAS TAYLOR and now published for the further vse of the Church of God With three short Tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. Doctrines 2. Obseruations 3. Questions contained in the same Eph. 4.7 Vnto euery one of vs is gi 〈…〉 ●●cording to t●● measure of the gift of Christ. Printed for L. GREENE 1612. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE ROBERT LORD RICH Baron of Leez Grace and peace from the Father Prince and Spirit of peace Amen RIght Honourable worthy is that saying of Salomon Cant. 2.2 Like as the lillie among the thornes so is my loue among the daughters By the lillie is meant the Church and the true members of it so called 1. Because they are planted by the good husbandman in the feild of the Church watred with the dewes of heauen hedged and preserued by his continuall care 2. They are beautifull for Salomon in all his royaltie is not clothed like one of the lillies of this feild who are couered with the roabe of Christs righteousnesse who is the true Salomon 3. They are fragrant for their smell The smell of their garments that is the graces of God which decke and adorne their soules as a costly and comely garment doth the bodie are like the smell of Lebanon which in the spring by reason of the Cedars and other sweet trees gaue a most sweet sent euen so these graces in Gods children smell sweete that is are in much acceptation and delightfull to God and good men By thornes are meant wicked men hypocrites heretikes tyrants open and flagitious sinners scandalous in doctrine and life so called 1. because although the earth be a naturall mother to them as a stepmother to the lillies yet Satan the malicious man busieth himselfe in the incessant sowing and setting of them 2. They would for euer choake and keepe vnder the lillie if the hand of God were not euer with it to preserue it 3. They are dangerous to meddle withall except a man be well fenced hardly can a man carrie coales in his skirt and not be scorcht and as hardly runne into wicked companie and not be hurt So is my loue the faithfull spouse of Christ is his loue So called because 1. he maketh her louely 2. accounteth her so 3. worketh a reciprocall loue in her heart towards him 4. desireth mutuall coniunction with her and effecteth it 5. his loue beeing liberall he giueth her himselfe and with himselfe all things which pertaine to life and godlinesse euen grace here and glorie hereafter Among the daughters not virgins as Cap. 1.2 who make vp this loue of Christ but all other assemblies in the world which professe themselues daughters by challenging the Catholike Church for their mother and yet indeed cleaue vnto it but in outward profession onley From this place I gather two conclusions First what is the estate of the Church in respect of it selfe it beeing as a lillie among thornes Secondly what it is in respect of God so is his loue among the daughters The former sheweth that the condition of the purest Church vpon earth is to be beset with dangerous and noysome thornes hurtfull and gracelesse men who prick and annoie the lillies in their goods names liberties and liues For when there were but two persons borne in the world one was a lillie and the other a thorne which trod downe the lillie Cain drew his brother into the feild and slue him Afterwards when one would haue thought that all the thornes had bin destroied by the flood brought vpon the world to this purpose yet was there a Cham left of whome quickely sprowted that cursed race of the Cananites who were euer pricks in the sides and thornes in the eyes of Gods people It is no newe thing for Iacob to be ouertopped by an Esau nor for Ioseph to be pricked and molested both at home and abroad neither his fathers house nor his fathers eye can safegard him Nay the fairest lillie that euer saw the sunne was most beset with thornes that euer was all his innocencie wisedome meeknesse puritie and loue could not keepe them off him but they pricked him to the heart and wounded him to the death euen the shamefull and ignominious death of the crosse How was this lillie beset with thornes in Egypt in the wildernesse in Babylon in Iudea when Christ sent his Disciples out as sheepe among wolues how in the tenne persecutions how at this day and so shall it be till the great day in which all the thornes shall be cast into the fire And no wonder thornes do but their nature which are good for nothing but to pricke and to burne It standeth therefore the lillies in hand to be so much the more carefull to fence themselues against their molestation And this shall they doe by obseruing these fowre rules 1. Because the thornes hinder the rooting of the lillies these must double their diligence in the rooting of themselues in the grounds of true religion for this yeeldeth hope of rising stablishing and continuance in the faith 2. Because thornes seeke to keepe the sunne from the lillies and hinder the comfortable heat and light of the word from them these must so much the more carefully frequent the places where the light of wholesome pure and comfortable doctrine doth more brightly displaie it selfe 3. Because thornes seeke to pricke the lillies in their names and profession these must more circumspectly fence themselues with innocencie and godly conuersation and in nothing in no part lie open vnto them 4. Because the lillie is a weake plant to defend it selfe from the stiffnesse of the thorne it must fortifie it selfe partly with comfort in the presence care and loue of God the husbandman who is euer in his feild and partly with the prayer of faith that he would be pleased still to looke vnto it to raise vp Pastors and teachers according to his owne heart to water cherish and preserue it especially in these last daies wherein the feild is ouergrowne with scandalls Apostacies trials and reproches wherewith the lillies are daily scratched torne and in great ieopardie The second conclusion is that the Lord maketh a pretious account of euerie faithfull soule and preferreth it aboue the wicked so farre as a lillie is for the beautie sweetnes of it to be esteemed aboue all the thornes with which it can be beset And indeed beleeuers are the most precious of men the most noble persons of the earth descended of the blood of Christ neere vnto God and next attendants to the king of glorie advanced aboue all the rest by the speciall grace of free election of iustification of sanctification and adoption And who can denie seeing these are Gods peculiar an hallowed thing a chosen people the Lords first fruits his remnant called out of all nations and kinreds the sonnes and daughters of God
who haue beene as faithfull to Christ as Zimri was vnto Elah in teaching doctrines and precepts tending to the advancing of their owne estate the enriching of that seate the decking of that whore of Babylon the pulling downe of the kingdome of Christ and the trampling of his testament vnder feete for when the Decrees Canons and Councels of men must iustle out the counsels of God the additions and traditions of men must be as by their doctrine beleeued and receiued as the written word of God how can Christ be acknowledged the onely Lord and husband of his Church But also pittie it is that euen of Protestant ministers not a fewe may bee charged with Demas his sinne in embracing this present world which if any doe needes must they become as faithfull vnto Christ as Hazael was to Benhadad for it goeth not alone but the forsaking of the truth is the next an inseparable companion of it Vse 2. This doctrine ministreth comfort vnto those that are faithful in their ministerie whom howsoeuer the world esteemeth of them their Lord highly respecteth admitteth them into his priuie Counsels and imployeth in a service which the angels themselues desire to prie into 2. They beeing his seruants they are sure of his protection Psal. 116. Dauid because he was the seruant of God was bold to pray for safetie hence are ministers called starres in the right hand of Christ not onely because he disposeth of them here and there according as he pleaseth but also to note their safetie and securitie for he alwaies keepeth them euen within his right hand 3. This master whom they serue will reuenge all their wrongs no otherwise then Dauid did the indignities of his seruants against Hanun 4. He becomes their paymaster and of him they receiue their wages and they performing their dutie faithfully loose no labour although Israel be not gathered but are a sweete sauour vnto God euen in those that perish 3. Vse Teacheth people how to esteeme of their Ministers namely as the seruants of God and consequently of their Ministerie as the message of God Which if it be Moses must not be murmured at when hee speakes freely and roughly and if Micha resolue of faithfulnesse saying as the Lord liueth what soeuer the Lord saith be it good or euill that will I speake why should he be hated and fed with bread and water of affliction Is it not a reasonable plea and full of pacification in Ciuill messages I pray you be not angrie with mee I am but a seruant Yet when Ieremie shall say of a truth the Lord hath sent mee his feet shall neuerthelesse be fastned in the stocks Nay this consideration should not only bind men to peace from touching and doing the Lords Prophets harme but also vrge them to haue them in exceeding honour at least for the workes sake which is the Lords who therefore acknowledgeth them co-workers with himselfe 4. Vse Let euery priuate Christian account it also his honour that the Lord vouchsafeth him to become his seruant and hereby harden thy selfe against the scornes and derisions of mocking Michals who seeke to disgrace thy sinceritie If the vngodly of the world would turne thy glorie into shame euen as thou wouldest haue the Sonne of man not to be ashamed of thee in his kingdome be not thou ashamed to professe thy selfe his seruant which is thy glorie let none take this crowne from thy head thou seruest not such a Master as thou needest be ashamed of And an Apostle of Iesus Christ Now the Apostle descendeth from the generall to this special seruice which was the highest Ministrie in the Church and sheweth that his imployment was in the most serious busines of the Church next vnder Christ who had furnished him with an embassage for the reconciling of men vnto God and that not as an ordinarie Minister but 1. as an Apostle 2. an Apostle of Iesus Christ. 1. That he was an Apostle appeareth by three properties agreeable only vnto Apostles First hee was immediatly called by Christs owne mouth Act. 9.5.6 I am Iesus arise for this was the Apostles prerogatiue to see Christs face and be called by himselfe immediatly and not as this day mediatly by the Church Thus Paul prooueth himselfe an Apostle Am not I an Apostle haue I not seene Christ namely though not while he was in the flesh and in his base estate as Peter and the other Apostles yet by reuelation and beeing now glorified which was of his farre more speciall grace once in the way to Damascus Act. 9.17 and another time in the Temple he saw Christ appearing to him wishing him to make hast out of the Cittie Secondly as he receiued his calling so likewise his doctrine immediately from Christ as the other Apostles did True it is that beeing brought vp at Tarsus he was first instructed in humane literature and knowledge that he was able vpon occasion to cite the testimonies of sundrie Heathen Poets and after that he was brought vp at the feete of Gamaliel a Doctor learned in the law in which he profited so much as he became vnreprooueable and liued according to the perfect manner of the law of the Fathers and he spake with tongues more then all the Apostles Notwithstanding all this when he commeth to learne the Gospel he had it not from man nor by man but immediatly by Christ from heauen This knowledge was too high for him to hammer out by his owne studie God himselfe shewed it him by reuelation Eph. 3.3 Thirdly he was not now tied to any one certaine place but was called to carrie the name of Christ among the Gentiles and to confirme this we read more of Pauls trauels then of all the Apostles besides put together his commission to Damascus was not halfe so large and generall as this he hath now receiued 2. He calleth himselfe an Apostle of Iesus Christ. 1. Because he was called furnished and sent by Christ. 2. Because he was now to teach Christ not the letter of the law any longer but the doctrine of the Gospel neither righteousnesse by the Pharisaicall obseruation of the law but by the faith of the Sonne of God Doctr. The Apostle by ioyning these two together a seruant and Apostle teacheth vs that the chiefest offices in the Church are for the seruice of it Was there any office aboue the Apostles in the Church and yet they preached the Lord Iesus and themselues seruants for his sake Nay our Lord Iesus himselfe although he was the head and husband of his Church yet he came not into the world to be serued but to minister and serue Vse Ministers must neuer conceiue of their calling but also of this seruice which is not accomplished but by seruice thus shall they be answerable to Peters exhortation 1. Pet. 3.3 to feed the flocke of God depending vpon them not by constraint but
willingly not as Lords ouer Gods heritage but as examples to the flocke 2. Wouldest thou know what ambition Christ hath permitted vnto his Ministers it is euen this that he that would be chiefe of all should become seruant of all not as that man of sinne the sonne of perdition who while he calls himselfe the seruant of all the seruants of God exalteth himselfe not only aboue all his brethren but aboue all that is called God also but to be indeede the seruant of the least and weakest member of the Church furthering by all his endeauour the saluations of men If any then be of the spirit of Zebedeus his sons that desire to sit at the right and left hand of Christ in this his kingdome here is the most compendious way to rise to his thoughts let him painefully serue the Church as a good steward let him dispence the food to the family in due season thus he shall get next vnto Christ the most faithfull seruant of the Church becomes the greatest ruler in it According to the faith of Gods elect Here the Apostle expresseth the ende of his calling to Apostleship namely to this purpose to bring the elect of God vnto the faith or produce faith in the elect the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which aboue other expositions I receiue because the same Apostle leadeth vnto it 2. Tim. 1.1 Paul an Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the promise of life that is to declare the life promised in Christ. It is true in this inscription if in any other which Beza obserueth of all Pauls inscriptions that in some one word or other he vseth to cōprise the whole scope of the Epistle yea the whole summe of the Gospel but in this in many words yea many verses he enlargeth that which in others he breifely contracteth and therefore as he wisheth not to passe ouer the inscriptions too lightly as which containe matter sufficient ●o oppose against all seducers so may we not without great ouersight and hindrance of our owne edification passe ouer the diligent inquisition of such multiplicitie and excellencie of matter as is infolded in this and the two verses following which containe as we may well tearme it rather a large description of the Catholike faith of all Christians then a breife inscription of a priuate letter passing betweene two freinds These words which set open the gate to passe vs into such a fai●e feild containe three conclusions to be opened 1. That God hath some 〈◊〉 are elect chosen and others are not 2. That these elect haue a speciall faith distinct by themselues 3. That this peculiar faith is wrought in them by the Ministerie of the word For the first Men may be called the elect of God three waies ● In respect of some temporall function or Ministerie to which the Lord hath designed them Iob. 6.70 Haue not I chosen you twelue and one of you is a deuill 2. In regard of that actuall election and choise of some people and nations aboue other vnto the true meanes of life and saluation so to become the people of Gods election And thus although all Israel was not chosen to life eternall yet in regard of the meanes they were called an elect people And thus whosoeuer giue their names to Christ and are set into him by Baptisme may be called elect in this more general acceptation of the word 3. In respect of that eternall election of God which is according to grace whereby of his good pleasure he chooseth from all eternitie out of all sorts of men some to the certaine fruition and fellowship of life eternall and saluation by Christ. These elect of God are here meant the number of which is comparatiuely small for many are called but few chosen a little flocke and a few that haue found the narrow way These few I say are chosen 1. from all eternitie for no new thing can fall into the prescience and will of God 2. they are chosen of his good pleasure euen before they haue done good or euill 3. and they are chosen to the certeine fruition of life eternall as beeing immutably elected For although many of both the former sorts might fall away and manifest their reprobation as Iudas and such as the Apostle Iohn speaketh off They went out from vs but they were not of vs yet this is the priuiledge of this election that it is the firme purpose of God to saue and haue mercie Obiect It will be here alleadged that seeing there is not acceptation of persons with God Rom. 2.11 he cannot more accept one to saluation then another or if he do how shall it not be most vnequall that those who are equall should not be equally delt withall Ans. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated person signifieth not the substance of a man or the man himselfe but some outward circumstance belonging vnto him as his outward qualitie appearance or condition which beeing obiected to our eies may make a man lesse or more respected such as are honour wealth parentage learning authoritie which when they bring men into account then is the face or outward appearance of a man accepted And thus the Lord accepteth not nor reiecteth any man for any adherent qualitie which can commend him aboue another for he accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regardeth the rich more then the poore seeing they are both the worke of his hands but freely in his Christ chooseth such as are good in his sight the rest being reiected As for such as alleadge vnequall dealing in God towards such as are equally corrupted and lie all alike in the same masse there beeing no more matter of saluation in such as are chosen then those who are reiected all this paueth no way to a dependent election or reprobation which hangeth vpon some outward thing without the most absolute will of God much lesse maketh the straight waies of God vnequall For may not he doe with his owne as he will who art thou that darest dispute with God that presumest to prescribe laws to thy Maker that he should deale with one man thus or with another otherwise or who hath spoiled him of his soueraigntie ouer his creatures If thou canst not sound this depth of the riches of this wisedome and knowledge of God acknowledge then how vnsearcheable are his iudgements and how his wayes are past finding out Cauil not at what thou canst not conceiue but admire it Vse This first conclusion teacheth vs 1. To make sure our owne election and shew our selues vnto others to be of this small number namely by holy and vnblameable walking by daily flying the corruption that is in the world through lust by the daily washing and purging our selues from our old sinnes and by the studie of righteousnesse becomming vessels of honour prepared vnto euery good worke 2. It confirmeth
conscience For let a man read and studie all his dayes all arts and sciences let him be exquisite in tongues languages and all commendable literature which are things excellent yet let him neglect this knowledge which beareth the bell in making men wise vnto saluation such an one can neuer haue his heart framed vnto godlines 2. Euery hearer of the truth must examine whether by it his heart be thus framed vnto godlines for else it is not rightly learned for as this grace hath appeared to this purpose to teach men to denie vngodlines and worldly lusts and to liue soberly and iustly and godly in this present world so is it not then learned when men can onely discourse of the death of Christ of his resurrection of his ascention except withall there be some experience of the vertue of his death in themselues killing their sinnes so as henceforth they serue not sinne 2. some feeling of the power of his blessed resurrection in beeing ingrafted with him into the similitude of it 3. and some ascent of our affections after him into heauen prouoking to seeke the things that are aboue a bare and vnfeeling speculation is here not onely vnprofitable but much more dangerous and damnable The Iewes could boast that they were free borne and of Abraham as many among vs take themselues to be strong beleeuers but let Christ come to the point with them If the truth hath set you free ye are free indeede the truth is that the Sonne hath not freed them for they are not free from their lusts nor are kings to rule ouer them but vassals vnder them still The spirit of God in the ministerie which is his chariot hath not freed them from seruitude of sinne and death for where the spiririt is effectuall there is libertie A dangerous thing is it that men so chained in ignorance and manifold lusts should ouerthrowe themselues by ouerweening conceits feeding for faith fansies for confidence carnall presumption for truth error bringing them into a fooles paradise for the present but the end will be the sinking and sorrowe of their soules He is a good scholler indeede and raised into the highest forme of this schoole of God not who can talke well and giue religion some good words which are good cheape but he that hath so farre profited in sound godlinesse as that he hath attained vnto faith the feare of God humilitie endeauour in obedience thankfulnes vprightnesse and hath proceeded in the true worship of God according to his word in hatred of false worship in glorifying the name of God sanctifying his Sabbaths reuerencing his sanctuarie louing the image of God in his brethren and such like such a man sheweth that the truth hath sanctified him that pure religion and the power of it possesseth his heart These things seeke and find in thy selfe thou hast profited in this truth else whatsoeuer may seeme a bodie of religion in thee is turned into a shadow without substance without truth v. 2. Vnder the hope of life eternall In these words the Apostle commendeth his ministerie partly from the ende of it in that it leadeth by the truth preached the beleeuers of it vnto the hope of eternall life as also partly from the effect of it in them which is the full furnishing of them with such graces as lead them comfortably to their happinesse adding vnto the faith of the elect such an hope as maketh them not ashamed And they affoard two instructions 1. That the ende of the ministerie is to drawe mens mindes vpward from earth towards heauen 2. That true faith neuer goeth alone but attended with other excellent vertues and namely with knowledge hope c. Doctr. Euery faithfull teacher must conceiue it to be his dutie to drawe mens hearts from things belowe to the contemplation of things of an higher straine and from seeking the things tending to a temporall vnto such as belong to life eternall Reasons 1. This was the ayme not onely of our Apostle here but of all the men of God whose faithfulnes the Scriptures hath recommended vnto our imitation All that pedagogie during the law was onely to traine men vnto Christ and to saluation by him But that rudiment beeing abolished and the truth further breaking out the chiefe doctor of his Church setting himselfe a coppy to all teachers called men to no other thing then first to seeke the kingdome of God and to labour not for the perishing food but that which abideth vnto eternall life And after him his holy Apostles made no other vse of those maine articles of our faith the truth of which they left confirmed in all their writings as if they were occasioned to speake of the death of Christ it was to the ende that beleeuers should die to the world that henceforth they should vse it as not vsing it or as men crucified vnto it if of the resurrection of Christ it was to the same purpose that men should be raised with him henceforth to seeke the things which are aboue if of his ascention it was that men might in heart and affection ascend vp after him 2. All other professions further men in their earthly estates some employed about the health of the bodie some about the maintaining of mens outward rights some about the framing of tender minds in humane disciplines and sciences all which further our fellowship and societie among men onely this of all other professions furthereth men in their heauenly estate and fitteth them yea maketh vp for them their fellowship with God Eph. 4.11 12. 3. Hereby men lay a sure ground-worke of profitting men in godlines for this expectation and desire of life eternall once wrought in the heart it easily bringeth men to the deniall of themselues both in bearing the crosse for Christ as Moses esteemed highly of the rebuke of Christ for he had respect vnto the recompence of reward as also in stripping themselues of profits pleasures advancements friends father wife children libertie yea life it selfe Set this treasure before the eyes of the wise merchant he will sell all for it Tell a man of an earthly kingdome and let him throughly digest the conceit of obtaining it it will be such a commander as he willingly both vndertaketh and deuoureth any trauell for it euen so let the beleeuing soule once conceiue of raigning with Christ it will easily suffer any hardship with him The disciples desirous to know what recompence their Lord would make them for leauing all to follow him Christ presently telleth them of twelue seats on which they shall sit and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel at the appearance of the sonne of man well knowing that if this promise were once well digested it would so feede vp their hearts as they should not after bethinke themselues as ouershot in leauing all things for his sake Yea further this course will be a sweet constraint prouoking men to the imitation
the duties of it are called not onely angels but co-workers with Christ in the saluation of men Doctr. 2. Whosoeuer would finde comfort in themselues or cleare and iustifie their callings to others or doe good in that place of the body wherein they are set must be able to prooue that they are not intruders but pressed by this calling and commandement of God that as Paul performed euery dutie in the Church by vertue of his extraordinarie calling so they by vertue of their ordinarie For can any man thinke that a small aduantage to himselfe which our Apostle doth so dwell vpon in his owne person and that in euerie Epistle making his calling knowne to be committed vnto him not of men nor by men but by Iesus Christ See Gal. 1.1 and cap. 2.7 Eph. 3.2 1. Thess. 2.4 The necessitie of this commandement appeareth 1. because it implyeth a fitnesse in the persons so commanded for the Lord sendeth not a message by the hand of a foole for this is as he that cutteth off the feete A Prince would not send an ambassador who is onely able to reade his message out of a paper euerie poste might doe that but one of parts and gifts by whom the message might carrie all the grace it possibly could Euen so the Lord sendeth the tongue of the learned some Ezra some Apollos men mightie in the Scriptures and full of authoritie in regard both of life and doctrine In the consecration of Aaron and his sonnes we read that they must be sitted two waies 1. they must be washed with water that is purged from the euills which might corrupt and blemish their callings 2. instructed and furnished with gifts and they two sorts 1. of graces as wisdome vnderstanding c. signified by the garments with which they were to be arrayed 2. of sweete smell the which both by holy doctrine and life they were to diffuse in the Church signified by the sweete oyle powred on their heads v. 12. These onely are sanctified and set apart by the Lord to serue before him Exod. 29.4 2. This commandement imposeth a necessitie to performe the duties of the calling the acknowledgement of which breedeth conscience and willingnesse therein not for the profit and commodities but because the dispensation is committed vnto him Paul seeing that necessitie was laid vpon him denounced a woe against himselfe if he should not preach the Gospel not for the vaine applause of men but to please God which tryeth the hearts 1. Thess. 2.4 3. This commandement maketh the function and works of it powerfull fruitful in the hearts of all men euen the greatest and whereas such as haue not their commission sealed from the Lord finde not their sacrifices burnt by God but often labour all day and all night and catch nothing yea themselues with their worke perish together the tongues which the Lord armeth from aboue are cheines vnto authorities linkes of iron to binde Nobles and Princes and bridles euen to the deuils themselues yea not seldome by vertue hereof Princes and people may stand vp in apologie and iust defence of a poore man whom the Lord reporteth as Ier. 26.15 He is not worthie to die for he hath spoken to vs in the name of the Lord. 4. This commandement bringeth much comfort in all troubles raised vp against men whilst they endeauour in the faithfull execution of this most thankles office amongst men which otherwise might well be taken for so many plagues wherewith God followeth him who runneth vnsent for such is Gods grace as he neuer commādeth but includeth also a promise of blessing to the obseruer and namely of speciall protection which is so necessarie for such as are dispatched to encounter against Satan and the wickednes of the world so as hereby the heart is fenced and strenghthened against the malice of Satan and men which while the sonnes of Seeva wanted we see how mightily Satan who easily espied their want of commission preuailed against them Vse 1. Let no man presume to take vpon him any office in the Church vncalled no man taketh this honour to himselfe Christ himselfe must be appointed of his Father Vse 2. Let none content himselfe with the calling of man separated from Gods calling for this was the guise of the false Apostles against whom our Apostle opposeth himselfe and calling almost euery where who were called of men but not of God Vse 3. In all other callings let men be assured they haue Gods warrant both in the lawfulnesse of the callings themselues and in their holy exercise of them passing through them daily in the exercise of faith and repentance not forgetting daily to sanctifie them by the word prayer Doctr. 3. Ministers may and ought to be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the nature and necessitie of the people to whom they write or speake do require As the Apostle here magnifieth his authority in that he is a seruant of God 2. an Apostle of Iesus Christ 3. that he receiued his Apostleship by commission and commandement of Christ himselfe and 4. all this while hath by sundrie other arguments amplified the excellencie of his calling the reason of all which is not so much to perswade Titus who was before sufficiently perswaded of it but partly for the Cretians sake that they might the rather entertaine this Doctrine so commended in the person of the bringer and partly because many in this I le lifted vp themselues against him and Titus as men thrusting in their sickles into other mens fields too busily or else if they had a calling yet taking too much vpon them both in correcting disorders and establishing such nouelties among them as best liked thē so as here beeing to deale against false Apostles peruerse people and erronious doctrines as in the Epistle we shall further see he is more prolixe and loftie in his title otherwise where he met not with such strong opposition he is more sparing in his titles as in the epistles to the Coloss. Thessal c. So was it the pride of the false Apostles that made him say By the grace of God I am that I am and that grace of his which is in me was not in vaine and they are Ministers I am more in labours more abundant c. Vse In our daies when the basest of men account so basely of the Ministerie as the most abiect and despised calling will it not be thought very seasonable to insist vpon the iust excellencie and dignitie of this calling can it be thought vnequall if we take more care then vsuall of freeing it from contempt which is more then euer The faithfull Ministers of Christ can and doe thinke as basely of themselues as any man can thinke or speake of them and if they aduance their calling it is not pride nor pleasure vnto them but they are compelled vnto it as Paul I was a foole to boast of my selfe but
yee euen compelled me Others doe it because their loue to the ordinance of God doth constraine them others considering how the world was drowned for despising Noah and his Ministerie and how God departed from his owne Cittie and house at Ierusalem because they despised his Prophets and mocked his messengers and fearing least the like befall our Church and land for the same sinne most profitably and iustly both by word and writing magnifie this function If men were like the Galatians who would haue plucked out their eies for Paul and receiued him like an angel yea and Christ himselfe if men would know them that labour in word and doctrine among them to haue them in singular loue for their workes sake then where we labour to magnifie we would and might endeauour to abase our selues and become weake to the weake and all things to all men but to free Gods ordinance from contempt we may and must challenge such titles as the Lord hath honoured vs withall who hath for our incouragement stiled vs by the stewards of his house disposers of his secrets disbursers of his treasures keepers of his keyes and seale secretaries embassadors angels v. 4. To Titus my naturall sonne according to the common faith Hauing spoken of the person saluting whose high calling hath hitherto detained vs Now are we come to the person saluted and so afterward are to proceede to the forme of the salutation it selfe both of them beeing contained in this 4. ver The person saluted to whom the Epistle was written is described 1. by his name Titus 2. by a title of relation My sonne according to the common faith 3. by the adiunct of his sinceritie my naturall sonne First for the name It sheweth him to be an heathen or Gentile born by nation a Grecian Gal. 2.3 of heathen parents and education for at this time he was vncircumcised and it is probable that he remained so vnto his death yet such a one as was without God in the world without Christ without hope is begotten by the Gospell not onely to be a beleeuer but to sinceritie in the faith and thus he becommeth a true Titus that is truely honourable yea so farre honoured as that he was a chiefe pillar and instrument in the Church and much employed in the Churches affaires by the Apostles themselues What an vndeuided companion of Pauls he was in his peregrinations and trauells appeareth Gal. 2.1 what great delight Paul had in him 2. Cor. 7.6 how he vsed him as a Legate vnto diuerse Churches and betrusted him with the gathering of the almes for the poore Christians in Iudea 2. Cor. 8.6.16 how he graceth him with the title of a companion and a fellow-helper in the Lords businesse v. 23. yea he vouchsafeth him the title of a brother 2. Cor. 2.13 nay more of that which is much nearer euen of a sonne in this place Doctr. Note hence the freedome and power of Gods calling to grace For what merit or dignitie what workes of preparation appeared in Titus beeing of heathen parents countrie and education whereby hee should be raised to such seruices so neere vnto God or what worthines was in Paul himselfe he was indeede an Hebrew of the Hebrewes circumcised the eight day of the tribe of Beniamin brought vp at Gamaliels feete and a great scholler but by all this he was armed to wast the Church and he acknowledged himselfe such a tyrant and persecutor of the Church of God as that he was vnworthy to be an Apostle and beeing one he was in that regard the least of them all 1. Cor. 15.9 and for the latter the power of Gods grace breaketh through the strongest opposition euen Gentilisme and Paganisme it selfe yea he whose honour it is to produce light out of darkenesse and quicken the dead doth often where sinne hath abounded make grace abound much more and of the greatest and notorious sinners raise vp such speciall instruments of his glorie as shall strippe and goe beyond a number that haue alwaies liued more ciuilly then they before their calling Vse 1. Hence is confuted all that Popish doctrine concerning workes of preparation and disposition before grace and of merit and supererrogation after Gods grace is free not mans will his mercie is mans merit 2. Consider thy owne basenesse and indignitie before thy conuersion to be humbled by it yet let not Satan goe beyond thee in it He will be alleadging against thy faith after this manner Would God shew mercie on thee who wert so desperately drowned in thy sinne or can thy calling be sound who so long a time didst fight against the truth here thou hast answer for thy selfe I was neuer worse though I was as ill as an heathen and Publican I was not worse then a blasphemer or a persecutor yet God had mercie for such and soundly called such and why not for me But he will obiect further Indeede if thou hadst liued a ciuill life and not haue beene so outragious and desperate in thy sinfull course there had beene more hope of thee as of one who wert not farre frō the kingdome of heauen but the case was not so with thee To which thou maist truely answer That there is no more disposition to grace in a meere ciuill man then in the most profane person although there be some more restraint of corruption in the one then in the other nay for most part there is lesse hope of such then of greater sinners for they are often hindred from seeing the truth of their estate by reason of their ciuill vertues and by comparing themselues with men notoriously wicked conclude with the Pharisie themselues to be in good case for they are not thus or as that man who is an open inordinate person whereas the other are more easily convinced in their owne consciences and are sooner brought to say with the Publican Lord be mercifull and so goe away more iustified yea and much more may be added hereunto namely that there is much more hope of great sinners then of many who haue not onely ciuilitie but a shew of religion and want the power and life of it of whom the speach of Christ is true that Publicans and harlots shall goe into life before them The seauen deuills in Marie Magdalen resisted not her conuersion so much as their conceit doth theirs who thinke that all deuils are cast out if Belzebub the prince of the deuils do not discouer himselfe greater hope there is of the cold Laodicean then of the luke-warme and experience and good reason from the Scriptures teacheth that such as haue beene before their conuersion either more outragious in their sinne or zealous against the truth when as once their change came haue prooued farre more eminent instruments of Gods glorie then such as before their change neuer so highly dishonoured him both because those affections which were so violent in sinne are turned in their vehemencie against sinne as also because the
hence see their error that conceiue of any Church in earth so well setled and ordered that it needeth no further reformation little know such the necessitie of the Church and the continuall bendings euen of her strongest towers See we not that almost euery yeare requires a new parliament for the ordering of the commonwealth that new disorders may be restrained or redressed by new lawes doe we see any man let his house but from yeare to yeare but he will surely bind the tenant to constant reparation as often as neede shall require and yet inconsiderate men can boldly and bluntly bolt out they meruaile what men meane that seeke for more and further reformation and they cannot tell what they would haue But alas are we so neare God as we cannot possibly be drawen nearer what meane then the common blasphemings drunkennes fornications riots Sabbath breakings what sinnes not committed almost without all feare what meaneth it that such dens and breaches are vnmade vp but that hogge and swine may enter into the presence chamber of the great King Let the strong man keepe these holds we shall see all the earth fit still inough But easily may we in euery particular member see the necessitie of daily strengthning the whole against such daily declining as the first and purest Primitiue Churches planted by the Apostles themselues could not free themselues from and much lesse any since The second branch of Titus his dutie is the placing of Elders in euery citie where that we may come to the meaning of the Apostle must be considered 3. things 1. who are meant by Elders 2. who must place these Elders 3. where they must be placed 1. The persons to be placed are called Elders that is Ministers Pastors Bishops for those who are here called Elders are called Bishops v. 7. true it is that sometimes the word is vsed generally for any that beare any Ecclesiasticall function in which sense the Apostles themselues are sometimes called Elders yet here I take it it must be vnderstood of those who labour in the word and doctrine for such are described thorough the Chapter The reason of the name is taken from their age not as though they alwaies were the oldest men for wisedome is not tyed to graie haires and Timothie was one of them and yet a young man but in regard of the wisedome experience and staiednesse required in such as are to be called to this office which ought to be such as ordinarily is not to be found in young yeares For how meete is it that the man of God should be furnished with grauitie and authoritie that euery way he may be worthie of double honour both in regard of his person as also of his gifts place and workes sake The Papists euery where translate this word Priests and make praesbiteri and sacerdotes all one Wherein although the word cannot be more vnfitly translated yet would we bee loath greatly to striue with them about names and titles as hauing matters of greater moment and difference moe then we wish were it not that the very name were a supporter of that horrible Idolatrie of theirs so infinitely derogatorie to the onely sacrifice of Christ. And therefore seeing the Ministers of the newe Testament are neuer so called in the newe Testament but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and neuer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it were good and safe to keepe our selues to the titles the Gospell hath giuen vs. And seeing that the Papists impiously not onely retaine the name in the proper signification but also an office of Priesthood flatly opposite vnto the Priestly office of Iesus Christ it is no lesse then our dutie to oppose our selues against both such an office and such a title Which in the proper signification is so peculiar as it is attributed to none vnder the Gospel but vnto Christ himselfe I denie not but in the cōmon acceptation of the word it is ascribed to all Christians both Ministers and people who are called an holy Priesthood and beleeuing are made Kings and Priests vnto God Neither is it denied but that some of the Greeke and Latine fathers called the ministers of the Gospel Priests but this was by improper and translated speach partly in that by their ministerie they doe daily offer and sacrifice men vnto God Rom. 15.16 and partly because they held the places in the Church which the Priests and Leuites did before the comming of Christ imitating herein the Prophets themselues as Isay 66.21 prophesiyng of the glorie of the newe Testament saith that the Lord would take of their sonnes for Priests and for Leuites not that they were to be such as were to offer typicall and figuratiue sacrifices of that onely sacrifice as the Iewish Priests nor yet commemoratiue as the Romish seeing all sacrifices but onely the spirituall oblations of Christians were ceased but he calleth them by that name then in vse noting them onely as the successors of the Priests and Leuites but not ascribing any proper worke of that office vnto them 2 The person placing these Elders is Titus who hath commission giuen him that as the chiefe gouernour and moderator of this action should establish teachers of sound doctrine in all the cities throughout the Iland and because the whole action was to be chiefely ordered by him it is wholly ascribed vnto him as the Consull is said to create Consuls when notwithstanding there was a court or assemblie of Consulls at the choise or appointment of them Which if it be not thus to be vnderstood I see not how Elders could be appointed by election as the manner of the Apostles was Act. 14.23 and Timothie must neither lay hands on any man rashly nor yet partake herein with other mens sinnes namely such as were vsed to be ioyned with him in this businesse 1. Tim. 4.14 3 The place where is in euery citie that is wheresoeuer there is a body of people for a fit congregation there must a Pastor or Elder be placed the phrase is of the same valour with that Act. 14.23 When they had ordained Elders by election in euery Church For euen in the Apostles dayes there was a certaine kinde of distinction of Churches and congregations for the Elders had their flockes ouer which the holy Ghost had made them ouerseers and which depended on them 1. Pet. 5.2 Act. 20.28 Doctr. Euen there where the Church is planted is such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie as without it it is impossible that religion can either thriue or continue and therefore as the Lord had formerly dealt in planting his politie among the Iewes so doth he here in planting Christian religion among the Gentiles no sooner was his law giuen concerning his Tabernacle but Aaron and his sonnes and the tribe of Leui must be sanctified to the office of Priesthood to attend on holy things to teach and offer and performe their seuerall
men into euill is because they can easilier giue credance vnto the persons of men then soundly iudge of the actions of them Hauing faithfull children After a mans owne person respect must be had of his priuate gouernment and cariage whom the Lord will haue called so neere him as to serue in holy things before him and because it is meete that such a one be a man of experience and gouernment the Apostle would haue him obserued in the priuate ordering of his family whence an aime may be taken how he is likely to behaue himselfe in publike that if his fitnes skil be tried in ruling the lesser and fewer he may the better be trusted with the greater For that this is the reason of all this diligent enquirie is plaine in 1. Tim. 3.5 For if he cannot gouerne his owne house how can he gouerne the house of God We know that he that is not able to guid a boate is not able to gouerne a great ship and he that being married cannot rule two or three of his own children so neare him much lesse can he gouerne a whole Church men and women who in comparison of the other are as strangers and few of them fully knowen vnto him Quest. But in ordering the familie the first care must be had of the wife why doth the Apostle vtterly omit that both in this place and that of Timothie and in both places only mention the gouernment of the children Ans. 1. That care is not excluded 2. The wife is not so absolutely put vnder gouernment as the children but are partly gouerners in the familie with the husband and beeing the wife of a Minister is presupposed to be of that grace and wisedome as that she is able to take vp her owne dutie without such enforcement and therefore the Apostle thinketh it sufficient to shew what a one the Ministers wife ought to be 1. Tim. 3.11 But 3. and especially because in the gouernment of his children there is a more liuely resemblance of such duties of gouernment which he is to dispense towards the Church And if we looke a little nearer the words we shall see that there is nothing enioyned the Minister as a Father of children which belongeth not vnto him as he is a spirituall father of the children of God For if we respect matter of instruction and doctrine he must haue faithfull children so in the Church by diligent teaching of the doctrine of faith must he bring men vnto the faith or if we looke at matter of manners he must do two things 1. displant vices and plant the contrarie vertues that they may not be accused of riotous or other vngodly courses which also he must publikely performe in the congregation by the word of exhortation and rebuke 2. correct and chastise the obstinate and rebellious that they be not disobedient and so as Minister he hath a rod of correction and the censures of the Church to inflict vpon the obstinate Now in the children of Ministers are required two things 1. for their institution that they be faithfull children 2. for their conuersation they must not be 1. riotous 2. disobedient By faithfull children are meant such as beeing instructed in the faith are at least in externall conuersation answerable to the profession of the faith they make Quest. But is it in the power of any Minister or man to haue faithfull children may not a good man and a Minister too haue most graceles children Ans. There is no man but he is to endeauour that his children may haue euen the grace of faith which is further laid out of his power then by getting himselfe within the couenant But there is no good man who hath it not in his power to instruct his children in the doctrine of faith and also for outward order to make them conformable and in some measure answerable to that prof●ssion so long as they abide vnder his roofe And if the Lord afterwards for some vnknowen and secret cause by leauing them shew he hath no delight in them such a father may herein comfort his conscience that to his power he hath vsed the best meanes for their good Doctr. 1. He that must reforme others abroad must first beginne at home For as true loue beginneth at home and then disperseth it selfe abroad so true religion reformeth at home first and conscionable reformation beginnes at a mans owne heart The tenour of the 101. Psalme sheweth that Dauid comming to his kingdome 1. reformeth his person 2. his Court and familie 3. his countrie The same course tooke Ioshua I and my house and Hester I and my maids And indeed sound reformation cannot correct in another what it selfe cherisheth neither can teach another and it selfe abide vntaught As if it be a zealous reformation proceeding from pure zeale it hateth disorder most of all in the owne bosome it lesse spares sinne in the owne heart then in the house and lesse in the house then abroad and the nearer this serpent approacheth the more is it feared and fled from Well knew the Apostle that he that cannot abide reformation in himselfe can neuer endure it in another and he that suffereth vanitie prophannes irreligion and disorder in his house he can neuer hate these in the house and Church of God and therfore maketh it a sufficient cause to debarre such a one from the Ministerie 2. How dangerous a thing it is for a man vnreformed in himselfe or family to take vpon him in publike the reformation of other we see in Moses himselfe Exod. 4.24 whom as he was going downe into Egypt to be the guide and deliuerer of the Church the Lord met in the way to haue slaine him and the reason was because his sonne Eliazer was not circumcised and so his owne house was vnreformed Whence we may gather how indignely the Lord taketh it that any man should come to gouerne his house that gouerneth not his owne If Moses himselfe be to plant circumcision among the people much more must all his owne males be circumsiced and this must be done or he shall die for it before euer he come where he must serue the Church of God Vse 1. Let euery man know the due season of this weightie dutie and that is when he hath done with himselfe For then he shall better see the mote in another he shall the better discerne the danger and discouer the shifts of sinne he shall more patiently and pitifully deale against it he shall more watchfully preuent it he shall more zealously purge it which not beeing first done many haue swet in redressing their wiues children seruants faults altogether fruitlesly because they neuer in earnest dealt against their owne Priuate men would faine see publike reformation of disorders and who can blame them but they must beginne by giuing religion a roome in their owne houses and hearts else shall they neuer see that they desire their eies may behold Who euer saw whole Churches
but no commandement hath a speciall promise annexed but the fifth and therefore the Lord looketh it should more especially be respected 4. the taking vp of this dutie will be a way and meanes to wipe away the future teares and griefe of their parents in their own ruine yea a foundation and ground of the glorie of their father and the ioy of their mother and besides a seede of the obedience of their owne children to themselues if in time to come God shall vouchsafe them any for it is iust with God that lewd children who haue bin the rottennes of their parents bones should themselues be plagued with rebellious and lewd children 5. Looke vpon examples Salomon bowed to his mother though he was a king and aboue her in the throne yet he set her at his right hand nay the true Salomon Christ himselfe is said to be obedient to his parents notable was the obedience of Isaac even to the knife in the hand of his father and a liuely type of Christ who was obedient to his heauenly father and that vnto the death Whereas on the contrarie disobedient children neuer escaped vnpunished as in the examples of Cham Absolom Reuben Ophni Phineas Abimelech and many others as we might plentifully explane And looke what dutie the Lord requireth to naturall Parents the like also is due to those who are in stead of fathers and mothers as stepfathers tutors masters Ruth loued Naomi her mother in lawe and claue vnto her as vnto her owne mother the sonnes of the Prophets obeyed their masters as their owne fathers Elisha spake of Eliah my father my father 2. Kin. 2.12 this lesson if it were so heedefully regarded as it might would be of speciall vse in this place aboue all other in the land besides wherein so many youth miscarrie euen for this because they cast off the yoke and willingly knowe no dutie nor subiection to superiours tutors and those who are in stead of parents vnto them The second point here to be noted is that the cause of lewdnes of sons is for the most part the indulgence or other want of gouernement in the parents for this the Apostle implyeth when he measureth the fitnesse of the fathers gouernement by the carriage of the children for can fathers let their reine loose to libertie and licentiousnes and the sonnes feeling the reine in their neckes not runne riot at their pleasure and fling out and kicke like a colt in a fat pasture knowing neither owner nor feeder and doe not many fathers deserue to haue their eies plucked out by their children who for want of gouernement cause their childrens eies to be picked but by the rauens of the valley some neuer had the feare of God themselues and cannot teach their children the wayes of God nay many hate Gods feare in themselues and in their children and in all Gods children whence by a secret iudgement of God it is that as they taught them no dutie towards their heauenly father so they denie all dutie not seldome to their earthly pa●ents Others may not displease their children and so either are fond and loose their authoritie not chastening thē while there is hope or else they pamper them as men do the beasts they would feed vp and not seasonably breake them or else by mild reproofes they rather cocker and beare them in their sinnes then correct them as Eli did or else if they be but crept out of childishnesse oh then they are past the rod Parents must haue their children counted men when they are but boyes and neuer so fit for the schoole and discipline by all which meanes they bring in the ende mischiefe on their children and shame vpon themselues this indulgence in Dauid was the ouerthrowe almost of all his children but especially noted in the fall of Adoniah his father would not displease him from his childhood to say what hast thou done Yea but parents say what would you haue vs doe they be but young and youth must haue a time and we may not euer be dulling them with correction their owne rodde will beate them well enough in time and soone ripe will be soone rotten To whom I say I would haue you to consider the state of your children and the great measure of follie that is bound vp in their hearts which the rod of correction only can driue out 2. To knowe that if children get head while they are so they are likely to hold it when they are stronger note the speach of Salomon Euen a child maketh himselfe knowne in his works whether his worke be good and pure that is you may reade and gesse in a child how his course is likely to prooue afterwards we reade of good children that became good men seldome or neuer of wicked children altered it is not more commonly then wickedly said young Saints old deuils but truer it is that seldome doe young deuills become old Saints 3. That it is the note of a fleshly minde in thee to loue nothing but thine owne flesh in thy children and to carrie no loue to their soules nay it is not loue but hatred which spareth the rodde or call it loue if thou wilt it is a cruell loue cruell I say 1. to thy child 2. to thy selfe 1. to him because thou neglecting his timely correction the Lord either causeth him to fall into the hand of the Magistrate the father of the countrie or else takes him into his owne hand to controll or else cut off whereas thy rodde might haue giuen him wisdome and thy timely rebuke might haue deliuered his soule from hell that is his life from the graue 2. to thy selfe for we seldome read but that the darling child was the sorrowe and shame to the parents according to that of the wise man a child let alone to himselfe shameth his mother and God hath most crossed his children in their children best beloued to teach them to loue all of them in good measure Neither in all this would I haue parents to prouoke or exasperate their children as Saul did Ionathan 1. both by an vniust commandement to deliuer his friend and an innocent to death as 2. by an vndeserued reproach calling him the sonne of an harlot and 3. by a furious action of casting his dart at him to slay him which made Ionathan rise and leaue him Neither yet doe I here exact the forfeyt of euery offence in the child as neither the Lord doth of his children knowing that the child is the fathers owne bowells and that the parent after a sort suffreth with the child and sometimes God himselfe threatneth and forbeareth and warneth his owne children as Exod. 32.34 But yet this precept enioyneth parents so seasonably to breake their childrens corrupt desires as that they be farre from disobedience to God or themselues and therefore that is a worthy precept of Salomon to euery parent read according to the best translation
lusts of it 3. After the inward disposition vse outward helpes as 1. auoide occasions as chiding contentions multiplying of words which though they be winde yet doe they mightily blow vp this fire 2. depart from the companie of the contentious as Iacob from Esau and Ionathan avoided the furie of his father by rising vp and going his way 3. driue away with an angrie countenance whisperers tale-bearers flatterers who are Satans seedesmen by whom he soweth his tares euery where and his bellowes by whom he bloweth vp these hellish sparkles desirous to bring all things into combustion and confusion 4. Pray for strength and grace against it especially for the contrarie vertues of humilitie meekenesse loue and a quiet spirit which is of God much set by and hauing obtained strength and victorie against the assaults of it forget not to be thankefull but breake out into the praises of God as Dauid when he was turned backe from his rash vowe of destroying Nabals familie could not containe himselfe but testified the gladnes of his heart in these words Blessed be the Lord which hath sent thee this day to meete me and blessed be thy counsel and blessed be thou which hast kept me this day from comming to shed blood Not giuen to wine In this precept the Apostle prohibiteth a vice which is as great a let vnto ministeriall duties as any other namely the drinking of wine and strong drinkes for vnder one kind all the sinnes of that kind are forbidden Wherein all vse of wine is not inhibited the Minister it beeing a good creature of God and pure vnto the pure and in w●●kenes of the bodie or griefe and heauines of heart permitted to his chearing and 〈◊〉 〈…〉 vnto them that haue griefe of heart and let him drinke that he may forget his miserie And Timothie himselfe may and must drinke a little wine for his health sake yea and besides this case of necessitie it is not vnlawfull for a Minister sometimes to take his more free libertie herein for his honest delight and pleasure as in Christian and religious feasting at marriages or other meetings of friends seeing Christ himselfe at a mariage feast not onely not prohibited vse of wine but by his first miracle of turning water into wine furnished the same with great plentie and abundance But here these rules must be obserued 1. this free and delightfull vse must not be ordinarie and customable 2. the heart must alwaies be watched that it be not oppressed nor made heauie to godly duties Luk. 21.34 3. Iosephs affliction must not be forgotten Amos. 6.6 The thing therefore condemned in the precept is when a minister is giuen to the wine a quaffer or a wine bibber one that sitts at it with pleasure swilling in wine or strong drinke and such a companion as the Prophet speaketh of who continueth at the wine or beere til it inflame him A vice which in common men hath many woes denounced against it in the Scriptures but most hatefull in a Minister as it is also the greatest let to the faithfulll performance of ministeriall duties both which the Lord himselfe hath prooued true in that one strange iudgement inflicted vpon Nadab and Abihu vpon occasion of which the Lord maketh a generall lawe that seeing they as some thinke in their drunkennes had offered strange fire and were burnt with fire whosoeuer therfore should come to minister before the Lord should vpon pain of death carefully avoid all lets and hinderances whereby they might be vnfitted vnto their dutie and seruice all which by Synechdoche are comprehended vnder that one kind of wine strong drink as those which most disturbe the minds and senses of men frō their duties And where our Apostle affirmeth that Gods steward may not be giuen to wine nor a striker what else doth he then second that of our Sauiour in the parable teaching that of all men the steward may not sit with drunkards nor smtie his fellow seruants Reasons 1. To be addicted to the wine or strong drinke taketh away the heart Hos. 4.11 that is troubleth the vnderstanding confoundeth the senses and equalleth a man to the bruit beast without vnderstanding and thus disableth the man of God in all the practise of his calling As the wise man therefore saith Prou. 31.4 It is not for kings to drinke wine nor Princes strong drinke least he drinke and forget the decree and change the iudgement of the children of affliction so much lesse is it for the Minister and Pastor set ouer Gods people least he forget Gods decrees change his iudgements as Aarons sonnes did And hence is it that the Lord deliuereth a double reason of that former lawe both to the same purpose 1. From the end Aarons sonnes might not drinke wine or strong drinke that they might be able to put difference betweene the holy and vnholy cleane and vncleane and so rightly discerne of the seueralls of their charge 2. that they might teach the children of Israel all the statutes of the Lord herein implying that if they did not carefully abstaine from wine they could not but be interrupted in both these To the same purpose may we obserue howe aptly the Apostle ioyneth these two precepts together vnderstand what the will of the Lord is and be not drunke with wine for commonly such as giue themselues ouer to this lust are by the Lord giuen vp to sottishnes that what gifts they haue had are withered and taken from them of which examples are too frequent Secondly this sitting at wine calleth him from the duties and meanes of his fitnesse vnto his calling he cannot attend to reading exhortation doctrine which is straitly enioyned euerie Timothie 1.4.13 Thirdly such a man is so farre from performance of any faithfull duty that he cannot but become rather an enemie to those that doe For the manner is that when the seruants of God call men to sackecloth ashes mourning these invite to the pots bankets still strengthning the hands of sinners when God by his Prophets calleth to weeping mourning baldnes sackcloth these call to ioy gladnesse s●aying oxen killing sheepe eating flesh drinking wine eating and drinking and saying to morrowe we shall die Such Priests we read of Isay 56.9.12 when the Lord calleth all the beasts of the field to deuoure and spoile what say these fellowes Come we will bring drinke and fill our selues with strong drinke and to morrowe shall be as this day Thus the loue of wine makes them faile in vision and the sitting at wine lulleth them a sleepe euen on the top of the mast as Salomon speaketh of the drunkard that in times and places of most present and desperate dangers they see none nor feare any 4. It disableth all the duties that such a one in his most sobrietie can performe suppose them neuer so commendable seeing he hath made himselfe and calling so contemptible for what authoritie can
the poore members of Christ amongst our selues If a stranger who is cast out of house and home for the profession of Christ ought to be releeued much more our owne suffering in good causes whether bonds or imprisonment losse of liuing banishment or whatsoeuer they suffer if for keeping good conscience And the like is to be said of our aged feeble and impotent poore who haue beene in many places of the Land pittilessely neglected and despised so farre as notwithstanding the wholesome lawes prouided in that behalfe some of them haue beene suffered to pine and die in the streets for want of harbor and releefe The Lord lay not this sinne among other vnto our charge Now when we call rich men to reserue some portion of their wealth to such godly vses oh no they will cast their bread on no such waters and they finde no abilitie to doe any thing this way this were to weaken their estate and to straine themselues so as they should not be able to hold out Which no doubt were the reasonings of the Corinths whom the Apostle that he might stirre them vp to beneficence and liberalitie towards the Saints wisheth them to consider what Christ had done for them he strained himselfe and was content when he was rich to become poore for them Christ weakned another manner of estate for vs then any man can for him he left all his glorie for vs but how few will leaue their shame their trash their couetous and voluptuous lusts for him and to such as aske where they should haue to hold out if they should be so readie to distribute he answereth in the 9. chapter following the same argument that the Lord findeth seed to the sower and he maketh men rich to all liberalitie vers 10 11. Others obiect and say but such a one hath offended me or I know this or that by him or he deserueth no such thing at my hands Answ. But take heed this be not a churlish Nabals answer to Dauids iust request spoken out of partiall couetousnes rather then as the truth of the thing is Againe let the person be what he will looke thou on Gods image in him this offends thee not iniuries thee not is not vndeseruing of thy loue and the fruite of it and if thou giue not to the man giue to manhood in him and consider that he may be a partner in the grace of life with thee Reasons 1. Hereby thou art like God he sparseth abrode he vnweariably giueth good to good and bad straine thy selfe so thou expresse this vertue of his 2. What thou giuest to Christian men thou giuest to Christ himselfe If Christ were on earth againe doubtles rich men would send to know his wants and store him with presents Now we haue not himselfe with vs but the poore we shall alwaies haue to shew our affection to Christ in who hath said in that yee doe it to one of these little ones that beleeue in me yee haue done it vnto me 3. An hard man had rather lend to one that is able to repay him then giue to such an one as is not If thou wilt not giue any thing to Christ by giuing to the poore lend vnto him and he will become thy pay-master 4. Because many would giue vnto others but for feare of wanting themselues marke the promise of blessing Prou. 11.25 The liberall person shall haue plentie and he that watereth shall haue raine and vers 24. There is that scattereth and is more encreased on the contrarie he that spareth more then right commeth to pouertie and he that turneth his eare from the crie of the poore himselfe shall crie and not be heard and iudgement mercilesse belongeth vnto him that sheweth no mercie I would to God all this would bring on our rich men who will doe nothing for the honour of God but halfe the way that the Macedonians were come vnto who bestowed to the vse of the poore Saints to their abillitie yea euen beyond their abillitie but till men learne to giue themselues first to the Lord and then to his Ministers as they did it will neuer be done that is till they giue vp themselues to obey God teaching them such duties in the mouthes of his Ministers A lover of goodnesse Hauing exhorted to the doctrine of beneficence and liberallitie to the poore Saints Now the Apostle perswadeth vnto the ground from whence that must rise for otherwise it will prooue rather a shadow or carkase of a vertue then a vertue or true grace it selfe which perhapps may profit another but not ones selfe This ground is true Christian loue of which the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 13.3 If I giue all my goods away to the poore and want loue it profiteth me nothing and therefore I thinke it is rather to be read a louer of good men seeing the word in the originall beareth well either reading True it is that these two are neuer to be abstracted one from another for good men are to be loued for their goodnes and whosoeuer loueth goodnes loueth good men as he that hateth good men hateth goodnes it selfe yet of these two the context seemeth to fauour and carie vs to the latter For as the Apostle would haue the Minister harberous so would he haue his house an harbour not for idle and voluptuous much lesse vitious persons but for good men and besides there is another word more fit to expresse the former sence as Beza obserueth By good men are vnderstood those vnto whom the Lord hath imparted and communicated his goodnes not generall goodnes which he extendeth ouer all his creatures but his speciall grace in Christ whereby he embraceth a small number in comparison of the whole masse of mankind whom of the children of wrath he chuseth to the adoption of sonnes on whom he stampeth his owne image and so maketh them both louely to himselfe and worthy to be loued of vs also Now for the better vnderstanding of the precept two questions are to be resolued 1. Whether good men only are to be loued and not euill Answ. As God is good vnto all Psal. 145.9 but especially to Israel and those of a pure heart Psal. 73.1 yea as he loued vs when we were enemies but much more now beeing reconciled by the death of the Sonne so is the commandement directed vnto vs to loue and doe good vnto all but especially to the houshold of faith Gal. 6. Besides this word seemeth to eye such an inward affection as draweth into the fellowship companie and conuersation of another in whom for some goodnes appearing it delighteth and vnto whom it would still draw some degrees nearer Whence thus we may fasten the dutie more surely vpon our selues I am indeed bound to loue all men in respect of Gods image humanitie and common nature and the common law of nature seeing I my selfe were I neuer so bad would be loued of all yea and in regard
that they may participate with me in the same grace of life but how much more then such as are not men only but good men who haue Gods image renewed vpon them Saints by calling such as excell in vertue how should not all my delight in comparison be set vpon these If I must manifest my loue to all men these may well challenge brotherly kindnesse see 2. Pet. 1.7 2. Quest. Whether this precept belongeth only to Ministers or no Ans. It is here directed vnto the Minister and commended to his practise in the first place as a speciall both helpe and ornament to his calling and person both to shew himselfe a freind and familiar companion of all them that feare God for such as a mans companion is such is himselfe as also to confirme encourage and whet vp himselfe and others in all the waies of God not only by his publike Ministerie but in his priuate course and conuersation For by this meanes Pastor and people would not liue estranged but by mutuall conuersing together and receiuing mutuall knowledge one of anothers course gifts and wants might receiue also mutuall admonition instruction strength And thus the worke of God would thriue in all their hands And what an encouragement would it be to pietie and vertue if publike persons would cherish those who are comming forward Surely if the Magistrates eie be on them that are faithfull in the land as Dauids was Psal. 101. and if the Minister be a companion of all them that feare God as euerie Timothie ought to be we should see men flie as clowds for multitude and as the doues for swiftnes vnto the windowes of the Church But yet this commandement beeing no other in the owne essence then that old generall commandement giuen to the whole Church from the beginning as also that new commandement that is renewed by Christs appearing by which although many lawes were antiquated and reuersed yet this lawe of loue of the brethren was reuiued and diuersly enforced it of necessitie belongeth to euerie one that professeth the Lord Iesus in the most inward closet of his heart and affections to carie such as are members of the bodie of Christ sonnes of God temples of the holy Ghost and heires of the kingdome of glorie Now the reasons enforcing it vpon both Ministers and people are these 1. Because the Lord hath deerely loued such as here he commendeth to our loue for these he hath giuen his onely beloued Sonne vnto these he hath giuen his spirit for these he hath prepared glorie and imortalitie he walketh with them protecteth them prouideth for them in a word will not be in heauen without them 2. There is no man so vile but he professeth he loueth God now it is certaine that whosoeuer delighteth in God he delighteth in his image wheresoeuer he see it for he that loueth him that begat cannot hate him that is begotten and he that loueth not the brethren knoweth not God is in the darkenes and not in the light and in saying he loueth God he lyeth and the truth is not in him neither can a man cleaue any otherwise to the bodie of Christ then by loue to the brethren 3. Consider how louely the societie and fellowship of the Saints is In their meetings a man may be hol●en forward in knowledge faith and obedience and depart thence wiser and better he may haue the vse of all the graces God hath bestowed vpon them his owne grace is preserued with increase his inward peace and ioy more setled here is the communion of Saints which is the beginning of heauen it selfe Vse 1. Many Ministers herein faile who beeing men of corrupt minds and affections oppose themselues against good men if there be any in their parishes more carefull of their waies more conscionable more forward in religion then other these are as beames in their eyes the obiects of most bitter invectiues in the meane time they giue their right hands of fellowship vnto loose and base fellowes who ought to be as vile in their eyes as they are in themselues whom I wish timely to consider that it was alwaies noted for an infallible propertie of a false prophet to strengthen the hands of sinners cast downe such as they ought to haue spoken peace vnto from the Lord. 2. Although the Lord hath by most straite iniunctions prouided for the welfare of his children not onely in regard of their safetie but their louing entertainement also in the world with acknowledgement of all such offices of loue done vnto himselfe and of which himselfe will become the rewarder yet notwithstanding according to the prophecie of the Lord of the holy Prophets In the world good men doe and shall sustaine affliction their good shall be returned with euill to the great affliction of their soules and the world which knoweth not but to loue her owne taketh no notice of such but to hate them and hated they are and shall be of all men almost for the name of Christ. Hence haue such in all ages were they Prophets Apostles or Christians of whom the world was vnworthie beene thought burdens vnworthie to be borne or liue in the world Here one Caine casts down his countenance vpon him whose works he seeth better then his owne he cannot giue him a good looke An other wagges his head at such a man as the Iewes did against Christ in derision of him An other is readie to burst for anger and rage as those wicked ones against Steuen Sometimes superiours breath out slaughter and threatning as Saul against the Church Sometimes equalls yea and inferiours trie them by scornings and mockings so as Ieremie himselfe shall heare the reuilings of many against him Nay the base multitude shall tell Christ himselfe that he dealt with a deuill And Satans mallice is so like it selfe in his instruments that if it be laid in their power they proceede to drawe the sword and stretch out their hand as Herod against Iames to take away their liues and euen in killing them thinke they doe God good seruice But how good were it for them to haue nothing to doe against such iust men for who deale they against or against whom doe they rise vp against simple men no surely but against God himselfe him they persecute him they blaspheame the apple of his eie they poare in Now who euer rise vp against God and prospered or who euer kicked against such prickes and bruised not himselfe Is not he eternall to outliue all his enemies Herod the Archenemie of Christ dyeth but the enemie of Christs enemies is euer liuing And is not his wrath the messenger of death cannot his power grinde his enemies to powder or shall not his right hand finde them out Againe thou art for the present a cursed man that louest not good men marke the terrible threatning I will curse them that curse thee so as what thou intendest against them shall fall vpon thine owne
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
is euerie where a reproach but here besides that it marreth such a necessarie dutie and hardeneth the person vniustly reprooued against a iust reproofe for time to come it carrieth many blots with it For 1. it argueth him to be a busie bodie who especially if a priuate person pryeth into other mens actions that he may catch matter of reprehension whereas it is not the part of a prudent Christian to seeke out the sores of others but wisely to heale those which beeing in his way and calling he meeteth withall 2. It argueth want of loue to receiue hastily reports against such as we professe freindship vnto with whom a rent is made where none was nor needed to be iustly taking themselues iniured when they see themselues discredited in our hearts causlesly or else their names not sufficiently tendred of vs. 3. It argueth want of wisedom and great indiscretion rashly to reprooue that wherof either the partie knoweth himselfe innocent or else is done secretly now that is secret to vs which albiet it be knowne to others yet is not sufficiently knowne to vs the note of a foole saith Salomon is to beleeue euery thing and of a slanderer to discouer secrets Prov. 10.19 Quest. But what if I heare a report of my neighbour and I haue a vehement suspition and some presumptions that it is true may I not vpon those reprooue Ans. In this case obserue two rules The former in Deut. 13.14 Thou shalt rather seeke and make search and inquire diligently and if it be true and the thing certaine then thou maist safely reprooue 2. If thou canst not be certaine then reprooue not but vpon supposition thou canst not here say directly as Nathan to Dauid thou art the man For such a plaine reproofe implieth the certaine knowledge of a sinne which we must not suffer vpon our brother Leuit. 19.17 Sharpely It will heare be demanded what is this sharpe reproofe here mentioned Ans. To know it the better we may consider it either in the person of euery Pastor or that which is in the seuerall Churches The former belonging to euery Pastor standeth 1. in the enlargement of sinne knowne to be committed that it may appeare vnmasked and in it owne face that thus it may appeare more ougly and odious both to the vnderstanding and iudgement of the sinner 2. In following it with the curse of the law denouncing out of the word those plagues of God which shall surely ouertake such a partie if he faile of vnfained and seasonable repentance that thus there may follow a renting of the heart a breaking vp of the fallow ground and seeing one measure of sorrow fitteth not all sinnes such a measure of sorrow in the soule of the sinner as the degree of the sinne deserueth The latter kind of sharpe reproofe is that whereby the Church seeketh to recall offenders Neither is this that of the ciuill sword but is spirituall and respecteth the soule alone and standeth in three things 1. Admonition with denuntiation of iudgements 2. In suspension from the Lords table 3. In excommunication whereby the obstinate offender is giuen vp to Satan for the humbling of the flesh and sauing of the spirit as by a desperate remedie The error will not be great to vnderstand either of these in the precept but if either more then other I encline rather to the former namely that Titus is here directed how to carie himselfe toward these vaine people through the course of his doctrine rather then in exercising the censures of the Church whereunto both the words before and the verse following seemeth to encline Doct. According to the nature of sinnes and sinners we must set an edge vpon our reproofes and sharpen them for all sinnes are not of one size nor all sinners of one straine but some sinnes are more enormious then other and some sinners are more obstinate then other Some sinnes are of ignorance some of malice some secret some open some sinners are as waxe to worke on some are stonie and stifnecked some haue here and there their freckles and frailties on them others are spotted all ouer like the leopards or like the Ethiopian they neuer change their hew no washing doth them good Now we must wisely put a differnce betweene both Compassion must be shewed vpon some and others whom loue cannot allure feare must force some must be saued by loue and some be pulled out of the fire some sores need but a gentle lenitiue some a sharper drawer some require but the pricke of a needle to open them others a more painefull lancing and cutting and some a cutting off Obiect 2. Tim. 4.2 Reprooue with all long suffering how can that stand with this precept of sharpe reproofe Ans. Some which commit these two places together would reconcile them againe by considering the persons to whom the Apostle writ them the one Timothy who they say was seuere austere and therefore is exhorted to patience and meeknes the other Titus who was gentle and meek of nature and therefore spurred vnto sharpnes and seueritie But the context applieth it selfe fitlier to their answer who draw the difference from the people ouer whome they were set The Cretians were hard and re●ractarie full of bad qualities as here we see the Ephesians among whom Timothy was sent were of some better temper and disposition and therefore were more mildly to be delt withall Besides more mildnes was to be vsed with such as yet had not beleeued then those who hauing professed the faith in word and yet departed from it againe as the Galatians and these Cretians with whome Paul was so sharp and this difference also some of the auncient put between these two peoples of Ephesus and Candy But howsoeuer the places are easily accorded for euen to the worst much patience and lenitie must be vsed till it be dispised and till it be cleare that no meeknes will serue to winne men but then it is high time that seueritie should terrifie those who by lenitie would not be allured according to the example of God himselfe Rom. 2.4 Vse 1. As all Christian duties so this much more ought to be ordered by Christian wisedom and therfore Ministers especially must labour for the gift of discerning to iudge aright of persons and sinnes Of persons which are of Hagars seede and which are free borne of Sarah which men need the rodde and which the spirit of meekenesse Of sinnes which be greater for which the wounds may be the deeper which be larger for which the sorrow may be enlarged and in a word which are hard knots which need hard wedges 2. With wisedome and loue euery Minister must ioyne zeale and conscience yea in some case vehemencie seueritie in their reproofes dealing as the Lord himselfe doth often in setting the sinnes of men in order before them If he be to deale with Heli●s sonnes the sonnes of Belial it will not serue the turne
to say What is it that I heare my sonnes doe so no more for this is rather a saluing and too hastie a skinning ouer of a rotten sore the fester of which quickly breaketh out againe with more rage and danger but here he must put on the zeale of God yea a iust and holy anger gounded vpon the loue of God and godlines wherein he hath Iohn Baptist Matth. 3.5 and the Sonne of God himselfe going before him Math. 23. It is thought great wisdome in men so to carie their doctrine as no man is offended at it whereas howsoeuer all meeknes and patience in our owne matters is a Christian and commendable vertue yet zeale in the matters of God may not be wanting and were all men Saints or sinners but penitent we might by tendernes and compassion raise them but some are in the fire and must be pluckt out many are fooles to whose backs stripes belong many are festred in their sinnes and must haue corrasiues and fretting waters to make them smart at the quicke in which cases if any of our patients cha●e and storme and grow neuer so impatient it will be no wisedome in such as haue the ordering of them to let him haue his owne will in his desire to be let alone but still make incision search further the depth of the wound and send in taints to the bottom for such louing wounds must go before applying of salues to sound healing 3. Let all godly hearers learne to make manifest their patience and obedience by suffering themselues to be launched and pricked euen to their hearts by those whom God hath sent as his surgions to cure mens soules otherwise by sinne wounded to death as knowing that the hurt of the daughter of Gods people is not healed with sweete words but as the bitterest pill is fittest to purge and worketh kindlier then the sweetest potion and as the thunder and lightning more purifie the ayre then the calmest sunnshine euen so gall and wormewood is the portion which the Lord hath tempered for many to take off the pleasant tast of their sweet sinnes As for vs we take no pleasure in your smart or iudgement but that without it you cannot be cured You cannot but confesse that when sores are ripe and raging the next way to cure is launcing suffer vs then a while and trie whether we are not as readie with the good Samaritan to powre oyle as wine into your wounds so it make to your soundnes But all will not come vnto the supper by entreatie some must be compelled and if we bring a true word and handle it truely it cannot but deuide betweene the marrow and the bone yea betweene the soule and the spirits and the ioynts c. Heb. 4.12 And can all this be done and a man feele no smart nay surely if our Ministrie worke no smart it worketh no cure That they may be sound in the faith Doctr. The sharpest rebukes in the Church ought to ayme at this end the recouerie of diseased Christians to soundnes in religion both in iudgement and practise Which appeareth in that the greatest ordinarie censure in the Church is not mortall but medicinable For as a surgeon cuts off armes and legges that the bodie and heart may be saued so in this bodie parts and members are cut off that themselues may be saued as well as the whole bodie Paul excommunicateth the incestuous person that his spirit might be saued Himineus and Philetus were cast out to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme Those whom Iude wisheth to be pulled out of the fire by violence must be saued thereby If any obiect against this that in 1. Cor. 16.21 If any man loue not the Lord Iesus let him be had in execration to the death and therefore edification and saluation is not the ende of this censure I answer It is one thing for the Church to excommunicate another to curse and execrate the one is an ordinarie censure the other verie extraordinarie and rare the one against those who may be freinds of the Church the other only against desperate enemies and open and obstinate Apostates euen such as Iulian whom the Church iudgeth to haue sinned the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore execrateth and accurseth So as that place nothing impeacheth the truth of the doctrine Vse 1. Much more ought Ministers in their sharpest rebukes aime at the conuersion of men what a sharpe reproofe was that of Peter to Simon Magus Act. 8.21.25 Thy mony perish with thee and thou art euen in the gall of bitternesse and yet he addeth repent therefore and pray vnto the Lord c. So is it the part of all Peters successors to whom the care of the Lords flock is committed so to reprooue not as those who would shame mens persons but disgrace their sinnes neither as insulting ouer mens euills nor delighting in their falls nor despayring of their rising but as imitating good Surgions who whilest they seare or cut or cut off still shew compassion and gently entreate the patient euer perswading him that this rough course will make to his health and soundnes 2. While Ministers thus dispense Christian seueritie in their reproofes and denunciation of iudgements the bearers must not mistake them as many doe and much lesse say vnto them as Corah and his company to Moses and Aaron yea take too much vpon you or as the Egyptian to Moses who made thee a iudge who gaue you the keyes of heauen to open and shut it vpon whom you please when did God make you of his counsell to foretell my damnation c. conceiuing that in our menacies and threatning we quite cut them off from all hope of mercie and that we take vpon vs to shut the doore of grace vpon them and to shorten the arme of the Lord that he cannot saue them Whereas the truth is while we thunder out damnation against the sinner which verie many desperately rush into while they auoid the mention of it in our mouthes it is not that we despaire of your saluation or would haue you so to doe nor we doe not admonish you to shame you but you must if you will be saued by the word we preach conceiue with vs that we desire your soundnes of faith and therefore we deale with you as with sickemen who commonly will take nothing to doe them good but what is forced vpon them which if you doe not we are not in your hearts the Surgeons of your soules but rather your executioners 3. This reprehendeth those whose rebukes tend altogether to discourage godly courses in their people and bring them from soundnes in the faith making heauie the hearts of them to whom the Lord speaketh peace 2. Those that malitiously thunder their bolte of excommunication against those that professe Christ sincerely Thus did the Iewes excommunicate whosoeuer durst confesse Christ as that blind man Ioh. 9.34 so the
himselfe with sackcloath all his life fast fortie daies if he can or rather neuer eate meate neuer touch mony neuer marrie wife he shall neuer find the kingdome of God in these beeing things which God neuer required at his hands and yet these precepts of mans braine are the rules of all his religion But yet here is a goodly shew of wisedome what is it not profitable to abstaine from flesh euery fryday and all lent that by the one the flesh may be tamed and by the other our Lords sufferings remembred and must not the Minister who is to deliuer the blessed bodie of the Lord be vnlike other men yea farre more holy then they and therefore must not he liue single at home and be seene in hallowed garments abroad But where is the word of the Lord to free these from beeing fables The Lord looketh not to what we are bent or can pretend for our owne deuises but requireth that his will should be our rule Oh that we could acknowledge the truth in accounting our deliuerance from this Popish Egypt and Romish blindnes the next blessing of God to the gift of his Sonne seeing in the body of their religion there can be no soundnes of faith if any faith at all the best of it beeing a disease and rotennes if we may not more truly say it hath a name to liue but indeed is starke dead Doctr. 2. It is a grieuous sinne and iudgement to be turned away from the truth and yet this is the fearefull fruit of humane deuises For the Apostle would here note a iudgement of God vpon such persons as were addicted vnto fables and humane precepts the which iudgement is a wofull and heauie stroake of Gods wrath whether a man estrange himselfe from it before or after he haue receiued it much more For what a plague is it for a man to hate the truth and in it God the author of it who is truth it selfe the light of comfort and direction of it as also the happie fruit of it which is saluation seeing all they are damned that rereceiue not the loue of the truth whereby they might be saued What a wofull delusion were it that a condemned person for high treason going to execution should refuse a pardon offered nay be so farre from accepting it as that he abhorres to heare of it will not turne his eies to behold it yea treadeth it vnder his feete and yet such a spirituall frenzie possesseth all such as turne away from the word of truth and when God calleth them runne another away For seeing if the Sonne set vs not free Ioh. 8.32 we remaine in bondage vnder sinne and damnation and are euery day drawing to execution in the meane time as condemned persons beeing reserued in bolts and chaines till the time of execution Now in these bands of death the Prince of peace our Lord Iesus offreth a gratious pardon the partie offended seeketh to the delinquent entreateth and wooeth him to accept of a pardon procured by his own blood and sealed by his death Now wretched men cannot abide neither the message nor the messengers but in contempt tread vnder their feet that blood wherewith they should be sanctified and scorne the Princes clemency shall not the very consciences of these men in the Lords iudgement accuse themselues as worthy of ten thousand deaths yes surely and shall iustifie the Lords righteousnes when he shall bring vpon them that great condemnation of a great part of the world who the light being come and shining on their faces yet loued darknes rather then light But much more miserable is it after the embracing and knowledge of the truth to turne away from it a great witcherie it is to beginne in the spirit and end in the flesh an vnworthy man is he of Gods kingdome that setting his hand to the plow looketh backe after washing to returne to the filthines of the world and to waxe weary of weldoing is farre worse then neuer to haue known to do well this is properly called a reuolt when men depart from the gratious calling of Christ the relaps we say is farre more dangerous then the first disease and the end of the Apostate is farre worse then his beginning the deuil that hath bin once cast out and entertained againe bringeth seauen spirits worse then himselfe so as better were it for a man neuer to haue knowne the way of truth then after the knowledge of it to depart from the holy commandement Vse If men were perswaded of the greatnes of this sinne it could not be they could be so indifferent in such a maine matter so nearely concerning their finall and euerlasting estate of whom many receiue not the truth at all others turne away and fall from their first loue after they haue once receiued it Did euer the world abound as at this day with Worldlings Libertines Atheists Newters and Epicures and was yet the truth euer more glorious and shining then at this day Was there euer such coldnes loosenes deadnes heauines drowsines and earthlines in professors and if that added to the equitie of Pauls reproofe of the Galatians reuolt that Christ was described plainely and crucified before their eyes Gal. 3.1 may it not much more gall vs among whom notwithstanding the cleare euidence and brightnes of the truth it is yet refused of the most and slenderly entertained of the best The which what argueth it either in one or other but that the former would herein hold their wonte which hath beene generally to change and turne their religion with the times as though the truth to saluation were not the same but variable and alterable as the times are and that the latter haue in no small measure turned themselues from that truth in the which they haue formerly found much more sweetnes then now they do that delusion hath possessed both the one in whole the other in great part Obiect But it is not thus with vs we come to heare the truth and loue it and hope to hold it vnto the end Ans. Yet this detracteth not from that truth laid downe For 1. how many will not grant the Gospel their presence their bodies their eares no man will gainsay but that these are turned away or if any should the pitifull ignorance and the fruits of it would conuince it 2. How many be there which heare and yet in their iudgements intertaine not the truth and these are thus farre worse then the Iewes themselues who could acknowledge that Christ taught the way of God truly Men will not beleeue that the way to heauen is so straite as we out of the word of God describe it nor that God is so rigorously iust as to cast away those that meane well nor so straite laced as to exact the forfeyt of euery offence neither that can be the truth to saluation which so few embrace and so many contemne what doe none know or go the way to
hereticall seducers vnder this title seeing they tread the s●me steps of the old Puritane heretikes the memorie of whom let it be accursed for euer No no the beleeuer is ●aught daily to pray Lord forgiue vs our debts with the Publican Lord haue mercie on mee a sinner he accounteth his owne righteousnesse as a stained clout well knowing that if he should challenge righteousnesse from himselfe that his owne cloathes would defile him yea let them take much snow and nitre yet of themselue● can they neuer be cleane but that Christ becommeth as purging fire and fullers sope vnto them Now if any yet thinke it vnreasonable to ascribe both puritie and impuritie to the same soule the answer is the Scripture hath taught vs how to conceiue it 1. Ioh. 1.7.8 The blood of Iesus Christ purgeth from all sinne yet if any say he hath no sinne he deceiueth himselfe It is indeede Gods grace and fauour to account the beleeuers his doue and vndefiled and in regard of that perfect robe of righteousnesse he couereth them withall to adde that there is no spot in them but it is grace in them to acknowledge and vtter of themselues that which Christ did of his disciples ye are all cleane but you had neede haue your feete washed seeing that this purging is not wrought all at once in vs but by degrees and that in this life there remaineth alwaies some impuritie to be purged Vse 1. Let none dare to scoffe at the godly vnder this title or any other which the Lord vouchsafeth them hearest thou the Lord accounting his Church as pure as the sunne and perfect and vndefiled in their way calling them his holy ones and saints and thinkest thou this a sufficient ground to scoffe at them or doest thou shewe thy selfe one of this number or rather is it not the part of an Ismaelite and a cursed wretch to scoffe at the sonnes of blessing for the blessings sake nay rather seeing the Lord thus honoureth his seruants and testifieth his loue in passing by all their imperfections as though there were none let such as haue taken occasion to scoffe at Christians from that which is their onely approbation before God euen ioyne themselues to the people of God that as the liberties of Gods people in Persia made many of their enemies become Iewes so those that haue been enemies and readie to offer them violence seeing the fauour of God towards them may be mooued to become friendly vnto them 2. If the deuill doe raise any scoffing Micholl to scorne our sinceritie while we solace our selues before the Lord and if the sonnes of men will not cease to turne our glorie into shame Let not those that feare God be daunted nor giue ground much lesse flie backe for any tearmes of contempt but account this their priuiledge before God a badge of Christs profession and their honour before all the world and thus encourage themselues to striue on to further puritie both of heart and life 1. Of heart because the inside must first be made cleane and 2. of life for when the soule is purified it must worke in the life in obeying the truth through the spirit Thus the Christian man beeing like a cleare chrystall glasse with a light in the midst which must needes appeare through euery part of it hauing within him the light of grace holdeth it forth although in the midst of a froward and wicked generation The reasons to mooue vs hereunto are sundrie 1. In regard of Gods account and estimation of such as shall choose such cleane paths to walke in as we haue heard what neede a man care if all men condemne him so God iustifie and approoue of him and his wayes 2. Hereby onely a man becommeth capable of Gods graces who powreth not his gratious liquors into any fustie or filthie vessell but if any man purge himselfe he shall be a vessell vnto honour sanctified and meete for the Lord and prepared vnto euery good worke 3. All the promises of God are made only to such Dauid breaketh out into a resolued conclusion Psal. 73.1 Surely God is good to Israel to the pure of heart Let his trialls be what they will let his person be neuer so meane let his name be neuer so reproched the Lord respecteth him that is of an holy conuersation there is no difference between Iew and Gentile rich and poore with God so the heart be purified Such are only fit to approach God in prayer who can lift vp pure hands and so offer that cleane offering prophecied of to be lifted vp in euery place God heareth not sinners saith the blind man And the exhortation is let vs drawe neare God with true hearts in assurance of faith sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Heb. 10.22 Nay more the studie of puritie hath the promise of blessednesse of the blessed vision of God for who shall ascend into the mountaine of the Lord and who shall stand in his holy place Euen he that hath innocent hands and a pure heart Seeing then that without it no man shall see God and that all vncleane persons shall be kept without the gates of the Citie let this consideration added to the expectation of such pr●●ises mooue vs to cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God 2. Cor. 7.1 4. This course is a note of a true beleeuer who as in other things so herein is made conformable vnto Christ in purging himselfe as he is pure the scope of the place is to shew this to be a marke of our adoption when knowing our selues subiect to sinne yet we desire and endeauour by all good meanes to cleanse our selues daily propounding herein before vs Christ as a patterne of imitation 5. Lastly let vs be prouoked to a greater care of holines seeing the Lord hath not beene niggardly in affoarding vs meanes aboue many by the which we might be clensed He hath giuen vs his word plentifully wherby faith might be wrought vs to the purifying of our hearts He hath sent out his Sonne whose blood through the eternall spirit offred without spot by himselfe vnto God purgeth our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God he hath giuen vs of his spirit to renew vs by whose blessed dewes we might be besprinkled as with pure water so as we might be iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God He hath sent out his chastisements and afflictions in such greeuous manner as our Fathers neuer saw the like by which as by rubbing and beating and wringing many might be purified and made white He hath sought to purge his floore by sundrie fannes of afflictions by plague and pestilence famine and dearth violent and vnseasonable winds and weathers and by the angrie distemper of
Triphena Triphosa and Persis laboured much in the Lord. And the author to the Hebrews after he had heaped vp a number of the fruits of faith in men and women he commeth againe to commend the faith of sundrie women who receiued their dead to life alluding to the widow of Sarepta who had her sonne restored by Elias his prayer and the Shunamite hers by Elizeus In a word let all women seriously meditate 1. That one thing is necessarie euen to Martha 2. That all other things are vile in comparison of this one thing or if necessarie it is but so farre as they helpe vnto it 3. That all the diligence in the particular calling is accursed if abstracted from diligence in this generall calling of Christians 4. All comforts will faile in time of distresse but this Isa. 38.3 Remember Lord how I haue walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Now we come to the behauiour of the elder women which the Apostle doth not in speciall prosecute but in general would haue it wholly squared by this one rule namely whether it be such as becommeth holinesse that is whether it be a witnesse of the holynes of the heart and such as adorneth the holy profession of Christ. Wherein we must consider 1. That euerie Christian must take out the same lesson here read and that the holy Ghost knowing all our diseases directeth this counsell to elder women especially that they might come to take knowledge of an excessiuely proud disposition in themselues to offend against this precept and the other particulars farre aboue others Secondly that the Apostle holdeth it not sufficient for women outwardly and abroad or for a start or fit as in the Church market or other places of meeting to take vp a shewe of holy or demure behauiour which many doe who in priuate can be lasciuious loose and wanton enough but by the word an inward habite and constitution beseeming holinesse For by this word Phisitians properly expresse a constant state of bodie or health or a sound constitution which from them is here translated to the minde to betoken that a Christian woman is still one and the same and her holy behauiour the same as well at one time as an other in one place as an other still bounding her selfe in all her carriage within the limits of holynesse neither doth she force her selfe hereunto but it freely issueth frō an inward principle which is an habit of holines 3. That seeing the disposition of the inner man is principally manifest 1. in the countenance 2. in the speach 3. in the apparell therefore the behauiour may be tryed by these whether it be according to holynesse or no. And for our better direction herein First the countenance vnder which is comprehended the gate gesture and lookes is beseeming holynesse 1. when it expresseth the inward humilitie of the heart the humble heart must set an humble looke and gesture Dauid when he would prooue the humilitie of his heart saith I haue no proud lookes On the contrarie the Lord accusing the daughters of Sion of pride he prooueth it by the stretching out of their necks and minsing of their feete 2. When the countenance gesture lookes testifie the chastitie of the minde for chastitie must be seated as well in the countenance as in the heart to dash all lightnesse Peter speaketh of eies full of adulterie and the daughters of Sion are charged with wandring eies the children of the Church must resemble their mother who hath doues eyes and is both beautifull and comely to allure her owne as also terrible to quell the purposes of vaine and wicked men Secondly the speach which carrieth with it an holy comelinesse is such as bewrayeth the wisedome grace and modestie of heart as when a woman is wise to silence as well as speach especially where men are present and in speach not pra●ling like busie-bodies of other mens matters nor vnsauourie nor contending nor audacious hardening the face to speake any thing but opening her mouth with wisedome with modestie with conscience of the presence of womanly infirmitie and neuer otherwise Quest. What no libertie no not in our gossepings and womanly meetings Answ. No the Apostle giueth no leaue at any time to lay aside this part of Christian behauiour there is no time wherein Christian women professing holynes may come so neare the guise of the harlot who is described to be babling and loud which were it well obserued many that carrie away all the speach in meetings would be struck mute not beeing able or willing one word thus ruled Thirdly that apparell is fitted vnto this Apostolicall rule when by the outward ornament of the bodie the inward beautie of the soule is expressed called by the Apostle the hidden man of the heart And this is 1. when the matter of it is not stately or costly which must be measured partly by the abilitie our selues haue and partly by the condition of life which God hath set vs in and partly by the sober and graue example of such as God hath sorted with vs in age degree and condition of life whom we may not striue to exceed but euen in the matter of our apparell our owne sobrietie modestie yea and frugalitie must be made apparant vnto others 2. When the forme or fashion is not wanton strange curious or odde sauouring of pride lightnes vanitie or singularitie as when women will haue a fashion by themselues contrarie to the common and comely fashion of others all which is a disgrace to the profession and the sinne of most women whose behauiour expresseth little holynesse Vse Whereas many will not be perswaded that we can giue them rules out of the word for this or that guise word looke fashion c. and require particular and expresse words of Scripture why we should dislike one fashion more then another or approoue of one aboue another we see hence we haue generall rules whereby euery particular is to be squared as 1. Cor. 10.31 If it make to the glorie of God Phil. 4.8 whatsoeuer things are true honest of good report and here whatsoeuer is beseeming or vnbeseeming holines whereby the whole behauiour must be examined Not false accusers Well saith one that a man of an euill tongue is a beast in the forme of a man himselfe is a serpent and his tongue his sting but here the word teacheth vs that he is worse euen a Deuil in the shape of a man for by this one vice of the tongue he so liuely resembleth the Deuil and plaieth his proper part that he hath also his name put vpon him as the Iewes were said to be of their father the deuill because they did his worke That this vice of false accusation is the deuils worke appeareth in that it was first practised by him who be●ing from the beginning a deuil that is one that goeth betweene two with tales to cast
an honest and peaceable man he cannot preach indeede but he liues as well and doth as much good as if he preached we would not change him for the best preacher of them all But where is this harmonie of doctrine and life in such a one know we not that the best liues of the best men are but seruants and attendants to their doctrine and like the miracles of Christ which serued to prepare confirme prouoke and condemne but conuerted not the beholders this is the worke of the Gospel in the ministerie of it which is the power of God to the saluation of euerie beleeuer Was it euer heard that a dumbe Minister by his life conuerted a soule to God and what is his life but a liuing out of a lawfull calling an iniurious robbing men of their goods which he before God hath no right vnto and a cruell murthering of their soules for want of knowledge And if the question were made to me whether good doctrine or good life might better be spared in a minister I should answer readily that to preach well and liue ill were farre better and more eligible then to liue honestly and not to preach seeing the former bringeth ruine vpon himselfe alone this latter both vpon himselfe and his people Secondly as there must be good doctrine so there must be good life too for a Minister may not thinke he hath done enough when he hath taught others if himselfe yet remaine vntaught like some statue which pointeth the way to passengers but it selfe standeth a stocke still and mooues not but he must first be a good man and then teach others so to be In the old Testament the Priest must first be cleansed himselfe and then cleanse others first wash himselfe and then sprinkle others first sanctifie himselfe and then others so in the new we must first become lights our selues and then enlighten others first approach neere God our selues and then bring others before him for this is the propertie of a good sheepheard to goe before his sheepe that they may followe him But all this while we may not thinke that the authoritie of the word standeth vpon the good or bad life of men which hath a better bottome of his owne to stand vpon but yet it is a further seale of the truth of it vpon the simple and that sundrie wayes which I will not stand vpon These two make a sweete harmonie especially within a mans owne conscience when he can appeale vnto his fellow-ministers as Paul to Timothie and say you haue fully knowne my doctrine my manner of liliuing c. and vnto the consciences of Gods people calling them to witnesse both of his painfull preaching 1. Thess. 2.9 as also of his holy and vnblameable behauiour vers 10. yea euen vnto Gods tribunall with much comfort at the ende of his dayes as Paul did Act. 20.19.20.26 Which two as they must conspire so the minister is to be an example in both 1. Tim. 4.12 be an example in word conuersation c. The Apostles were as lights vpon hills as starres in the heauens Pastors are called to be patternes to their flockes the great Pastor of the sheepe our Lord Iesus set himselfe a coppie vnto all Christians both in holy doctrine and in blessed example of life Great is the force of godly example especially in the Pastor both to the beleeuer to prouoke him and to the vnbeleeuer either to bring him to a liking of the religion of God or to condemne him who hath both seen heard yet hath not beleeued euen as Noah condemned the old world by making of the Arke which are the reasons why the Lord hath euer scattered some of his children here and there a saint or two euen in Neroes house a Lot in Sodome and as a lilly riseth vp sometimes among thornes so doe the sonnes of God in the midst of a froward generation that they might shine as purer lights in the darkenes of the world round about them Vse 1. These are true notes to discerne a true Minister by pure doctrine and holy life If you consult with a Papist he will decypher you one of his Priests by his mitre crosyer staffe copes and other garments by his oyntings shauings c. which indeede are markes of the beast but not a word of life and doctrine whence we know them to be theeues not entring in by the doore but by the window to robbe and steale 2. This requireth the presence and residence of the minister with his flocke for if hee be ordinarily absent how can he be an example vnto them Thirdly it proclaimeth woe vpon them who by contrarie practise to their preaching giue occasion of stumbling to the people as Elies sonnes did better it were that such had neuer beene borne then so to strengthen the hands of sinners besides that by his owne mouth he shall be iudged Fourthly it stirreth vp the men of God to care of their liues to which we in this calling might be mooued by sundrie other strong reasons 1. We stand before God and therefore we must put off our shooes wash and cleanse our selues Ier. 15.19 If thou turne thou shalt stand before mee 2. We shall be better enabled to our duties both because God teacheth his secrets to his seruants the Prophets as also the doctrine shal be more acceptable and lesse excepted against Herod heard Iohn because he was a good man 3. We else pull the sinnes of many vpon vs and harden a number in the same sinnes the wicked Iewes could alleadge the Priests examples for their Idolatrie Ier. 44.17 and Ioh. 7.48 Doe any of the Rulers and Pharisies beleeue in him 4. He that diuorceth godly life from pure doctrine shall be the least that is haue no place in the kingdome of heauen Fifthly it teacheth all hearers to take benefite by the examples of their teachers who labour faithfully in the Gospel among them for must we studie to shew our selues examples in vaine Philip. 3.17 Brethren be followers of me and 4.9 The things which yee haue heard and seene in me those things doe Heb. 13.7 Remember them that haue the ouersight of you whose faith follow considering what hath beene the end of their conuersation The examples of the godly are called a cloud of witnesses to put vs in minde that as the Israelites were mooued as the cloud mooued so should it be with vs cast our eyes vpon the cloud of the faithful pastors especially to follow thē so far as they follow Christ which who so refuse to doe they haue three feareful witnesses against them the word of God their owne consciences the Ministers liues And here we must be put in mind to go one step beyond ordinarie for many cast their eyes vpon the examples of their Ministers to spie if they can obtaine some libertie to the flesh through their frailtie but if they cannot the most thinke it sufficient that they can commend
iudgements vnto Israel he dealt not so with euery nation neither haue they knowne his waies But now in this last age of the world this couenant of grace and life at least for propounding is made common to all people now euery man is inuited vnto repentance the partition wall is broken downe the vaile is rent and the mysterie which was kept secret from the beginning of the world is published to all nations Rom. 16.26 Vse 1. This place thus rightly interpreted yeeldeth no patronage to that deuise of Vniuersall election which they draw from the vniuersall vocation of men to the knowledge of the Gospel But many are called not euery particular man and the greatest part of the world haue alwaies bin out of the couenant besides of them that are called few come so as all to whom this grace is published participate not in it Vse 2. Note the extent of this couenant farre aboue the other whence it is fitly called by Iude the common saluation as in regard of the ends and meanes of it so also in respect of the subiects called vnto it so in the former Chapter vers 4. it is called the common faith not onely in regard of the kind and obiect of it but also of the subiects persons of all kinds beeing called thereunto which consideration should stirre vp our reioysing in that the barren and desolate hath more children then the married wife that the place of the tents of the Church is so enlarged and the courtaines of her habitation spread out as we are exhorted Isa. 54.1 Vse 3. Note that the kingdome of Christ admitteth no distinction of men it is not of this world which accepteth of men for their place countrie calling but all countries and callings are alike vnto God in euery nation and calling he that feareth him is accepted of him he neither accepteth the person of the Prince nor of the poore for they both are the worke of his hands he calleth the Gentile the seruant the poore and these receiue the Gospel Where againe we who are Gentiles and were Lo Ammi and Lo Ruhania may reioyce that we are receiued to pitie and that the wing of Gods mercie is stretched ouer vs who iustifieth the circumcision of faith and the vncircumcision through faith Hence may the poore beleeuer be he a thrall a seruant and base in the world raise his heart to comfort that euen he whom men despise is called and that effectually to see the grace and saluation of God euen he who is perhaps a seruant to some meane man is a free citizen in Gods kingdom euen he that hath neuer a foote in earth is become a purchaser in heauen Here is no complaint that the prodigall sonne is entertained and the seruiceable sonne neglected The Enunch need not say I am a drie tree nor the sonne of the stranger the Lord hath surely separated me from his people but whosoeuer cleaueth vnto the Lord to loue the Lord and serue him them he will giue a name better then of sonnes and daughters euen an euerlasting name that shall not be put out Vse 4. This meeteth also with a wofull delusion among many Protestants to whom when we call for conscionable walking in a Christian course What say they did not Christ die for all men and is not heauen as open for mee as for others would not God haue all men to be saued is he not mercifull will he condemne for such and such things which what is it else but from the abundance of grace to make their sinnes superabound and thus they plainly shew that they were neuer yet effectually called and that although they haue bin called to the supper yet haue they refused to come Hath appeared The Gospel is compared to a great light shining out brightly and gloriously 1. a light in that 1. it dispelleth a manifold darknesse which before occupied the minds of men 2. in regard of direction 3. comfort which it bringeth to the beleeuing soule And 2. a great light wherein is a fourth difference from the old Testament in which all things were more darke and obscure through the vaile of figures and ceremonies so as their light was but like the obscure light of the sunne before the rising not that the substance and scope of their doctrine was not the same with ours but that in the manner of deliuerie it was farre lesse lightsome But now the light is risen vp in glorious sort shining not as before almost to none but Iewes but to the Gentiles also so as according to the Prophets foreshadowing hereof the sunne is not only risen and in our midheauen but the light of it is seauen fold bigger then it was before And the reasons are sundrie 1. Many were the types and predictions of the old Testament which must be knowne to be accomplished in the new which for this cause must as farre excel the other in light and brightnesse as the bodie the shadow or the thing it selfe the figure and picture of it truely to this saith one that the exposition must be more cleare then the text 2. The promises made to the Church of the new Testament were many moe and farre more ample then to the old as that from the least to the greatest all should know the Lord that the mountaine of the Lord should be lifted vp vpon the toppe of the mountaines that all the earth should be filled with the knowledge of God as the waters couer the sea the which if they be fulfilled then this great light hath appeared 3. The generalitie of the doctrine confirmeth the same For all nations were to be called to the embracing of it Gentiles Arabians Barbarians and the rest euen of the most barbarous Heathens much light therefore and perspicuitie was to be required in such a doctrine as should acquaint all nations not only with it selfe but all that doctrine also which was formerly deliuered in all ages to the Church of God and this latter most full and clearely explaned in the former This light in this regard is growne like that cloud from an handbreadth to couer the whole heauens and is indeed that water running vnder the threshold of the sanctuarie which is risen from the ankles to a riuer yea a sea couering the earth 4. The exhibiting of Christ in fulnesse of time who came from his fathers bosome to reueale things there secretly reserued from the beginning of the world and the plentifull powring out of the spirit long before promised and 50. daies after Christs ascension accomplished to the Church of the new Testament doth certainely seale vp this same truth besides those expresse places of Scripture which might be alleadged to this purpose In 2. Cor. 3. Paul affirmeth that the ministration of the spirit is farre more glorious then that of the law which he calleth the ministration of death of which he affirmeth that yet it was so glorious that it made
nor concealed thy mercie and truth And surely whosoeuer hath his heart filled with God and sence of his goodnesse cannot not onely himselfe but reuerently speake of him but also bring others to a feeling and loue of him such a one I say cannot but bring men to confesse the Lord and make his workes known vnto the sonnes of men Vse 1. Which condemneth all the trifling vse of the name of God and Christ the which no man shall guiltlessely lift vp in vaine whether in a vaine matter or in a vaine manner for it is not said that he that taketh it vp malitiously or falsely or blasphemously but vainely shall not be guiltlesse and much lesse these other 2. Euen many of our selues are iustly reprooued who seldome or neuer haue broken out into the prayses of Gods power loue iustice c. or Christs greatnesse grace or saluation by him the law of grace is not vnder our lippes and therefore our hearts ●ndite not such good matters as these dumb spirits seeme to possesse men and hold their tongues from speaking of God and good things and when they speake it is without sence or feeling without reuerence and grace in their hearts or for fashion least they shou●d seeme to be that which often they are indeed meere Atheists without any true tast and feeling of God 3. This doctrine occasioneth vs to resolue neuer hereafter to take the name of God or Christ vp into our mouthes but when either our owne hearts glorifie and reuerence him or else to stirre vp our selues or others to take benefit by the same 4. In the reading of these titles in the Scriptures labour to obserue and draw out the speciall vse either concerning God or our selues which the place aymeth at and so in the conscionable reading of them we shall come to a conscionable speaking of them as this Apostolicall example enioyneth vs. Vers. 14. Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie and purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes In this verse our Apostle vseth another forceable argument to vrge the deniall of vnrighteousnesse and practise of the former vertues of sobrietie iustice and pietie for the Gospel not onely teacheth these things which while we professe it we must adorne but also if we looke for any benefit by the death of Christ we may not like ●iuen vessells let this doctrine slip for to what other end did Christ so willingly giue himselfe to death for beleeuers in his name but that they should reape the double fruit of it mentioned in the verse First redemption from sinne and secondly sanctification the which 1. inwardly purgeth beleeuers to become the Lords owne peculiar 2. causeth them outwardly to shine out in the zealous practise of good workes Well knew our Apostle how close sinne sitteth vnto vs and how heauie our frailtie is vnto that which is good in Gods eyes and therefore whereas if we were wise to doe well one word were inough he forceth and presseth vs with diuerse arguments and those so waightie as euen in mans iudgement and much more in Gods he is iudged vnworthy of life that shall despise them For suppose there be such gracelesse men as by the appearing of grace cannot be mooued or will not he be taught when he heareth that the Sonne of God himselfe came downe from heauen to deliuer the blessed doctrine of saluation vnto his Church let such see rather then heare an argument more weightie let them cast their eye vpon the death of Christ who willingly suffered such torments as are vnconceiueable and all to abolish sinne and raise sinners out of their graues of sinne and death vnto the life of grace and glorie And though some may be found so gracelesse as they will haue nothing to doe with this reaching of grace yet seeing none is so desperately gone as to refuse his part in the death of Christ let this be a motiue vnto such as with whome any thing in the world can preuaile to the timely taking vp the practise of the former precepts of which we haue spoken at large In speaking of this argument seeing the Apostle hath cast it into so excellent an order to our hands we will accordingly followe the branches laid downe and they are two First the fact of Christ who gaue himselfe for vs secondly the fruits of it which are two 1. redemption that he might redeeme vs 2. sanctification and purge vs to be a peculiar people c. The meaning of the particulars we will giue as we come vnto them In the former part of the verse containing the fact of Christ are three points to be noted 1. the giuer who 2. the gift gaue himselfe including all that passion to which he gaue himselfe 3. the persons for whom for vs. First the giuer is noted in the words immediately going before to be Iesus Christ our Sauiour Obiect But God the Father gaue Christ for vs and therefore he gaue not himselfe Ans. God the Father gaue his Sonne and Christ the Sonne gaue himselfe by one and the selfe same will and one ioynt and inseparable operation of them both together with the holy Ghost Ioh. 5.19 whatsoeuer the Father doth that same doth the Sonne Obiect But Iudas the Iewes and Pilate gaue Christ for vs to passion and therefore not himselfe Answ. They did indeede concurre in the same action with the Father and the Sonne but in a farre diuerse manner and ende they in malice but these in admirable loue they not for vs but Pilate for feare Iudas for couetousnesse the Iewes to please their Priests and rulers but these gaue him for vs and for our saluation neither had any of them any power to haue giuen Christ to the least part of passion if it had not beene giuen them of the Father and of himselfe who had power to lay downe his life and none could take it from him Secondly but the gift will better manifest the giuer he gaue himselfe the which that we may the better vnderstand we must withall consider vnto what Christ gaue himselfe for so the consequent fruits shall be better discouered and that I say in one word was vnto passion The which passion must not be restrained to the time of his death but extended vnto the whole course of his life as namely the laying downe of his maiestie and glorie wherein he was equall vnto his father to become man and beeing man whereas he might haue vsed heauenly qualities of soule and bodie his mind free from sorrowe feare greife his bodie from hunger thirst wearines c. and at least haue beene like Adam before his fall yet he tooke our nature subiect to all infirmities since the fall only sinne excepted hence was it that he was borne in a stable laid in a manger of poore parents that had but a paire of turtles to bring for his redemption brought vp by the labour of his
all which cannot redeeme one soule 3. By opening the doore of the heart purified by faith to entertaine him while he offereth himselfe with all his merits in the word and sacraments and this not as a stranger by giuing a nights lodging but as our husband and head neuer to be departed Consider that now Christ standeth at the doore of thy heart and knocketh and vseth reasons as once he did Cant. 5. from the great paines and sorrowes which he vnderwent to come to thee he wayted when it will once be that for thine owne good thou wilt open vnto him that he may bring his father with him to suppe with thee and impart vnto thee knowledge sanctification and the rest of the graces which accompanie saluation Oh therefore neuer aduenture to trie what a fearefull thing it is that he should depart in displeasure or that thou shouldest not know the day of thy visitation but receiue him whilest he is neare that thou neuer know what an heauy thing it is to seeke repentance with teares perhappes too late or how vncomfortable a thing it is to seeke him when he is greeued at thy vnkind delaies and will not so easily be found Thirdly if Christ haue giuen himselfe so willingly to such a cursed death for vs we must also in way of thankefulnesse giue our selues vnto him He gaue his bodie his soule his glorie and all for vs we must not thinke much to part with bodie goods name libertie or life it selfe for his sake when he calleth vs vnto it the lawe of thankefulnesse requireth that we should part with such things as in comparison are but trifles for him who thinketh not his dearest things too good for vs and the rather because when we haue done all we can we can neuer be sufficiently thākfull for this greatest gift that euer was giuen to the sonnes of men wee can neuer speake sufficiently of it nor euer wade deepe inough into the ocean of that loue that presenteth vs with such a gift as this is Howsoeuer therefore the sight of the blood of bulls and goates would more affect many then this most pretious blood which they tread vnder their feete yet let those that looke for part in it vnto saluation account this pretious yea and their glorie and reioyce that the wisedome of God hath left them meanes by the word and Sacraments wherein Christ is daily crucified before their eyes to reuoke it into their memories let them conscionably vse these meanes to this ende that this gift running euer in their mindes and memories they may bethinke them what they may acceptably returne for so great receits and when they heare their hearts called for they may giue heart and hand head and feete will and affections vp to the perpetuall seruice of so good a benefactor Fourthly If Christ haue giuen himselfe for vs then there is no other satisfaction for sinne If angels or men liuing or dead masses or merits could haue satisfied the iustice of God Christ might haue spared himselfe but nothing can be giuen to God nothing accepted of God in way of satisfaction of mans sinne but the person and merits of Christ himselfe for if any thing belonging to our persons could goe for paiment then might he haue retained his glorie in heauen and neuer haue left it for our sakes If any Papist stand out here and say that Christ taketh our workes and dieth them in his blood and then offereth them to his Father who accepteth them as meritorious not for our sakes nor their owne but onely for Christ. I answer that Christ indeede dieth the workes of the godly in his blood and so presenteth them vnto his Father and his Father accepteth them at his hands but no way in respect of any satisfaction of sinne or merit of saluation but onely as testimonies of our thankefulnesse and dutie and not otherwise That he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie In these words is contained the former fruit or ende of Christs giuing himselfe namely to redeeme his Chu●ch from all the bondage and slauerie of sinne For by sinne we became bound 1. to the seruice of it 2. to damnation the stipend of it both which the Apostle includeth in that he saith that sinne raigned vnto death where is both the raigne and command of sinne and the wages of it which is death Now the Lord Iesus redeemed his Church out of this captiuitie two wayes 1. By paying the price of redemption vnto his father euen the most pretious blood of the sonne of God for so by communication of properties it is here said that the mightie God gaue himselfe to redeeme vs that is the life of that person who was God went for our ransome whereby our debt is freely in regard of vs discharged the bill cancelled and the hand writing against vs fastened vnto his crosse 2. By conquest for he bound the strong man that had vs in his power spoyled principalities and powers ouer whome he gloriously triumphed and thus partly by price and partly by power redeemed and rescued his people Quest. But how could Christ by giuing himselfe for so small a time redeeme all his Church from such infinite euills Answ. We must here consider three things 1. The dignitie and excellencie of the person who performed this work who was not a bare man but 1. the Sonne of God by eternall generation 2. his onely Sonne 3. his beloued Sonne And to shewe vs that these be the respects which make the worke so meritorious in it selfe and so acceptable vnto his father the Scriptures euery where giue him such titles as declare him to be most deare vnto God his Father so Ioh. 1.14 the onely begotten sonne of the Father full of grace and truth and 18. the onely begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of his Father and Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne and Rom. 8.32 who spared not his owne Sonne now if the person be so gratious the worke cannot but be acceptable Secondly consider the sufficiencie of the worke beeing so admirable as neuer was the like for it was no simple action neither of God alone nor of man alone and so neither meerely diuine nor meerely humane but as Diuines speake th●andrike the operations of both these natures which concurre to one person concurring to the effecting of the same worke Wonderfull then is this worke which could neuer be performed by a me●●e creature man or angel but by a person that must be both God and man Thirdly the largenes and extent of the price most absolutely satisfying whatsoeuer was required and that in all voluntarie obedience both actiue and passiue Actiue for he fulfilled all righteousnesse and perfectly performed and fulfilled the whole lawe in our stead Passiue for he suffered a most shamefull and cursed death both visible standing in the separation of soule and bodie and invisible suffering for a time euen the verie
blood of Christ by often meditating and applying vnto himselfe his death and merits which are the onely purging ●ire and fullers sope without which although he take much sope and nitre yet can he not be purged this is the onely fountaine opened to the house of Dauid for sinne and vncleannesse this is the onely lauer of the Church 2. He laboureth in the encrease and strengthning of his faith which as an hand apprehending the former purifieth the heart 3. He diligently and reuerently frequenteth the word and Sacraments as the outward meanes appointed by God for the effecting and encreasing of sanctification 4. When he heareth Christ say If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee he reuerently falleth downe at his feete in feruent prayer Lord not my feete only but my hands and my head wash mee throughly euen from toppe to toe Thus he knowes he can onely become cleane and by these same meanes he seeth he can only be kept cleane he dare not neglect these meanes as the foule monsters of the world that had rather be wallowing in the dung of the earth and bathing themselues in their dirtie and sinnefull sports and delights then frequent the places where these pure waters streame in most pleasant abundance but their cards dice bowles boules vnprofitable companie idle solitarines which as so many draynes carie with them all vncleannes the which they powre on the heads of wicked men with full buckets chaine them with chaines of darknes that they cannot so much as desire these cleane waters which the spirit powreth on those which thirst after them The second point is the motiues to become purged and to labour in sanctification 1. Because hereby wee resemble the Lord himselfe by which reason we are often in the Scripture mooued to the study of holines Leu. 19.2 and hence we become deare vnto God when he spieth his owne image vpon vs for euen naturall fathers loue their children best who are likest vnto them 2. Hereby we are not only conformable to his image but to his will for this is the will of God that euery man know to possesse his vessell in holinesse and in honour 1. Thess. 4.3 3. Hereby we distinguish our selues from the profane Esaus of the world whereas by nature we are as foule as they 4. We attaine to the end of our redemption and haue an argument that Christs death is effectuall to vs because we see the power of the deuil and sinne destroied in vs. 5. All legall purifications are resolued into nothing but euangelicall sanctimonie which may not be neglected vnlesse we will come behind those who were directed by shadows types whereas we haue the truth substance 6. Without puritie of heart and life no man shall see God Blessed and holy are they that haue part in the first resurrection the second death shall not hurt such for only those that are slaine by the first death are hurt by the second and the second resurrection only profiteth those that haue part in the first Without shall be dogges and whatsoeuer is filthy and vncleane and know we not that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6.9 What meane men then to feare least they should be too pure and too holy and to reproach others as beeing so What a fearefull delusion is it for men to flatter themselues as most doe that there need no such strictnes or precisenes but to come to Church and receiue Sacraments according to law and do as other men do and sometimes as their leysure suffers to read or pray alone and heare a sermon extraordinarie But alas what will it profit a man to be a sundaies Saint and a work-daies Deuil Or what great good can good moods do are we not exhorted to the following of holines to cleanse our selues from all filthines of soule and bodie to an heauenly conuersation to haue no fellowship nor touch any vncleane thing On the other side are we not vrged to continuall prayer In all things to be thankfull to meditate day and night in the law of the Lord to make the word our marke to aime at and in all things with full purpose of heart to cleaue fast vnto the Lord And now dare any flesh except and say but if I shall doe thus it is more then need and I should become too precise and too pure and so are they that do so we serue a God of pure eyes that will not be thus dallied withall To be a peculiar people vnto himselfe In these words is set down one end why Christ vnderwent such paines not only to iustifie but also to sanctifie his Church namely that it might become impropriate vnto himselfe and applied vnto his owne best purposes For as vncleane vessels can neuer be vsed vnto any good purpose vntill they be washed and sweetned no more can sinnefull men euer become vessells of honour reserued vnto the Lords owne vse before they be washed by the blood of Christ and those pure waters of the spirit before mentioned The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifieth something on which a man for some excellencie in it setteth his affection more then other and therefore layeth it vp and reserueth for some speciall vse and purpose and will not at any hand part with it as if a man should laie vp some bright and bewtifull peeces of gold which he will not suffer to see the sunne as we say or be brought out scarce in extreame necessitie Thus although all the earth be the Lords who beeing the God of nature and grace hath all power and libertie to conferre where he pleaseth grace aboue nature yet his good pleasure was to choose Israel to be his cheefe treasure aboue all people and an holy nation that vnto them he might shew his wisedome and glorie and his loue and mercie vpon them But that was but a type the thing it selfe is specially apparant in the Church of the new Testament euen the true Church of God in all ages since vnto which all those titles iustly belong which Peter giueth to the beleeuing dispersed Iewes A royall pr●●sthood a chosen generation an holy nation and a peculiar people Now the Church may be said to be a peculiar people by the Church vnderstanding the true and essentiall members of the Church 1. Because beleeuers are the most precious of men euen the most noble persons of the earth descended of the blood of Christ in which regard they are the dearest of men and nearer vnto God because more noble then the rest Thus Salomon describeth the Church as though it were a stately court where are none but of the blood royall Kings Queenes Lords and Ladies and hence are beleeuers called sonnes of God brethren of Christ and heyers vnto the crowne of heauen Secondly In regard of God they are a peculiar people distinct from others by his grace of election by which they are chosen
speake let him speake as the word of God and the embassadors of Christ must speake his message euen as himselfe would vtter it 2. The soule of the word is the presence of the spirit which euerie Minister must striue to make demonstration of for else it is but a dead letter or sound it is the spirit that quickeneth it and maketh it liuely and mightie in operation it is not the demonstration of the person nor manifestation of the man that getteth authoritie to the word but when out of good conscience a man faithfully striueth to make it appeare to the consciences of others that not he but the spirit of God speaketh in him that when simple men shall perceiue the secrets of their hearts made manifest they may fall on their faces and worship God saying God is in this man indeede 3. The Prophets and Apostles haue gone before vs as presidents in this behalfe Micha 3.8 I am full of power by the spirit of the Lord and of iudgment and of strength to declare Iacob his sinne and Israel his transgression Before Isai was sent on his message his lippes were touched with an hote coale from the altar The Apostles accordingly were not sent to witnes of Christ vntill the spirit had descended vpon them and that in the forme of fierie tongues to signifie that themselues beeing kindled with zeale and feruencie in the Lords businesse they should also by their doctrine enflame others and that their speech should not light any where but it should kindle and enflame the hearts of the hearets But the most perfect patterne of imitation herein we haue in the cheife doctor of his Church who not onely after his resurrection could and did make the hearts of the disciples burne within them euen in his ordinarie talke but all the time of his humilitie it is truely verified of his whole doctrine that he taught with authoritie and not as the Scribes Indeed neuer man spake so nor can speake by the confession of his verie enemies for neuer man spake so in his owne name verily I say vnto you neuer man confirmed his speaches with such powerfull and proper miracles neuer man spake with such peculiar grace zeale libertie and command of the spirit in the conscience but yet all his Ministers are to imitate him in zeale in power in libertie of speach and spirit for the glorie of God and come as neere this copie as they can Vse Ministers must take heede of coldnes in their ministerie of liueles and spiritles preaching of powerlesse and a frozen manner of deliuering the word alwaies preseruing a fire of zeale and conscience in themselues mettals we knowe will not worke without fire no more will the steely and stonie heart of man melt or soften without the spirituall fire taken from the altar And yet here I must not be vnderstood as condemning all coolenesse or moderation of speach for doctrine may be ponderous and weightie where the speach is calme and treatable still waters often runne the deepest and Salomon saith that a man of knowledge spareth his words but yet it followeth that he must be of an excellent spirit so there must of necessitie be at the least a soft fire in these distillatiōs But the thing iustly condemned is when men by their owne default beeing giuen ouer either to pride sensualitie or worldlynesse haue benummed their spirits and are become frozen without power or life in their ministerie and so bring forth their doctrine as many women doe their children stil-borne teaching as the Scribes onely of forme without zeale or conscience or experience of that they speake And before I leaue this point it must be knowne that whereas I require heate and authoritie in the deliuerie of the word that therefore euerie heate should be warrantable for some is iustly condemned as 1. all heate of humane affection proceeding from perturbation and passion 2. all inconsiderate heate of youth 3. all heate not well guided although in good men full of godly affections but suffered to boyle ouer so farre as a man looseth his memorie and interrupteth his doctrine and whole discourse 2. A flattring Ministrie is an enemie to this authoritie for when a Minister must sing placebo and such sweet songs it is impossible for him not to betraie the truth 3. To withstand this authoritie or to weaken it is a fearefull sin whether in high or low and the Lord will not suffer his messengers feet to be cut off 4. Hearers must 1. pray for their Teachers that they may deliuer the word with authoritie with boldnesse and with open mouth Ephes. 6.19 Coloss. 4.4 2. Not deeme this authoritie in Ministers humor or anger or bitternes and much lesse madnesse with Festus and least of all to cast them in prison as men rauing as Ieremie was cap. 29.26 3. Not to refuse to yeeld subiection vnder this authoritie nor be angrie when it beateth down some practise which they are loth to part with seeing it is iust with God to reprobate put out the light of such as refuse the conuiction of the light offred The third and last precept of this Chapter and verse Let no man despise thee teacheth two things First how people and hearers should entertaine the Ministers sent them of God seeing they cannot without great sinne despise them for seeing the Lord who could by himselfe worke the saluation of men yet is pleased to vse as his helpers herein weake and base men whom he assumeth into fellowship with himselfe to become coworkers with him although not in the act of conuersion yet in the Ministrie of it who dare despise such whom the Lord so farre honoureth and therefore calleth them his white horses horses in that he vseth them in his battailes against sinne Satan the world and wicked ones and white for the puritie of their doctrine and integritie of their liues yea his Angels namely such as by whom he reuealeth his good pleasure vnto vs and his owne voyce by whom he beseecheth men to be reconciled Secondly how carefull is the Lord to preserue his Ministers from contempt when he affirmeth that such as despise them despise himselfe that sent them In which sence we read that the posteritie of Caine contemning the preaching of Noah dispised and contended against Gods spirit so Israel murmuring against Moses and Aaron Moses saith he hath heard your murmurings against the Lord for what are we that yee haue murmured against vs. Thirdly how vnnaturall a part were it for children to despise their Fathers and what seueritie hath the Lord shewed against it in his law but godly Ministers are the Fathers of their people I am your Father saith Paul and Onesimus yea and Titus here begotten by him vnto the faith he calleth his sonnes Let no cursed Cham presume to scorne them which is not so hurtfull to them as dangerous to themselues beeing the next way to bring themselues vnder
is the danger of this sinne which cannot but attend it vnlesse we conceiue no danger in breaking such expresse commandements as we haue Leu. 19.16 Thou shalt not goe about with tales among thy people and Iam. 4.11 speake not euill one of an other brethren for this saith he is not onely to breake but condemne the lawe that is as not sufficient or worthy to guide him in all the particulars of his life The defence of many a man is I speake nothing but truth and so long I may speake it But if that thou speakest be a tale true or false as it is if without a calling thou playest the pedlar and settest to sale the name of thy brother these commandements cast and condemne thee Others thinke it is a fault indeede but not so great a fault to speake the thing we knowe by an other but looke vpon it not as it may seeme in thine eie but in the penaltie the Scripture hath set vpon it Psal. 15.3 it hindereth the entrance into the holy mountaine of God and 1. Cor. 6.10 raylers and reuilers shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen and therefore it is no such small matter as many take it for Others reply what are words but winde and God is not so strait-laced if a man should goe to hell fo● euerie word who shall come to heauen This indeede is an auncient ●aturall conceit that outward profession and ceremonie will carrie a man to heauen although in the particulars of the life the power of godlinesse be neuer expressed But marke how the Lord answereth such vaine conceits Psal. 50.19 20. Thou giuest thy mouth to euill and speakest against thy mothers sonnes these things thou doest and I held my tongue and thou thoughtest me like thy selfe But I will reprooue thee c. God hath his time then to call vpon old reckonings and then thou shalt not thinke words winde but knowe to thy cost that life and death was in the power of thy tongue Others yet see no such danger or if any be it is farre off But this sinne beside the iust hire of it hereafter carrieth a secret plague with it for the present for look as thou dealest with an other mans name so shal thine be dealt with and with what measure thou meatest to others shall men measure to thee againe But I must speake my minde and then I haue done no thou hast done thy speech but thy speech hath not done with thee thou maist as well say hauing stabbed a man to the heart I gaue him but a blowe and I had done but the blow hath not done with thee thou must before the iudge for all that and then see if that plea wil hold Let professors therefore humble themselues for this sinne which is so dangerous and so common as that it is the english of our tables of our beds of our publike and priuate meetings to rippe vp this or that olde slippe or iniurie done by an other the deuill doth so sit in the lippes of a number of men that no other talke can proceede from them but such as is like arrowes to wound those that are farre off or hammers to knock him in the head to whom such tales are told or swords wounding his owne soule to the death Beware also for time to come of the subtilties of Satan who that he may not appeare an accuser or a deuill as he is or so blacke as he is hath taught his nouices in this art to vse diuerse prefaces as it were to get attention by and then is the sinne most dangerous and hath most Satanicall subtiltie in it Sometime yee shall haue some that will beginne with the praise of the partie he telleth a tale of he is an honest man one that I haue cause to loue well and one of verie good parts c. and yet thus will he wound an honest man he spareth not his friend but as a flie followes his sores Sometimes the talebearer beginneth with the profession of friendship to the partie to whome hee would vent some mischeife and insert some seeming care of the others credit you are my friend and let it be spoken betweene vs and goe no further tell none that I told you But would he haue a word against his neighbour die with an other and cannot let it die with himselfe or would he shut another mans mouth euen in opening it he hath also his friend to communicate it vnto and so it goes from hand to hand fretting secretly like a cank●r Sometimes againe we shal heare slanders breathed out in a certaine commiseration as taking pitie of such a one that as Salomon saith the words of the talebearer are like the words of the wounded that is are lamentably vttered but yet they go downe into the bowels they giue a deadly stroke and hurt him worse then he was before Many will say it is great pitie of the man I speake it with griefe but the series and tenor of the speach sheweth it a merciles pitie These speaches are farre off from saluing vp the matter or licensing thee to speake thy pleasure nay commonly they argue a bad cause and a guiltie conscience accusing for that euill from which yet thou desistest not and whatsoeuer thou maist premit for pretence or defence of thy course thou cariest thy selfe liker those vermines which rise and feede of venome excrement and poyson then a Christian who wert thou possessed with Christian loue thou couldst not reioyce in euill 1. Cor. 13.6 Loue reioyceth not in euill but reioyceth in the truth The third thing to be considered is the meanes to auoid this sinne of euill speaking which may be reduced to fiue rules First looke to thine heart for if it beeing the fountaine be corrupted the issues and streames cannot but be bitter and if thou giuest thy selfe leaue to thinke euill of any man as accounting the thought free thou canst not but one time or other vtter it Purge well thine heart therefore 1. of pride which maketh a man speake disdainfully of those who want the things which themselues seeme to haue and liberally take vp any language if he can make the detraction of another a ladder for himselfe to climbe vpon 2. Of enuie which greeuing at the graces and good things in another seeketh to darken them as Satan enuying Iobs prosperitie said hee serueth not God for nought 3. Of flatterie which for fauour or reward will tune the tongue to any eare Of anger and displeasure mallice we say neuer spake well but there lyeth a secret grudge of reuenge hid in it which quickly setteth the armes on worke in the strong and the tongue in the weake Banish betimes these nurces and midwiues of this mischeefe and contrarily get into thy heart the loue of God and of thy brethren which will not hastily discouer but carefully hide and couer euen a multitude of trespasses and sinnes Excellent to this purpose is that
sinne vnlesse it be for trifles or of reuenge so Paul appealed to Cesar and helped himselfe by the benefit of law 4. It is lawfull for euery Christian in defect of the Magistrates aid in the lawfull defence of themselues liues and goods to become Magistrates vnto themselues in which case they may without sinne both strike and slaie so as desire of reuenge and intent of blood-shedding be absent 5. Neither is domesticall discipline excluded by this precept whereby fathers and masters may if the fault require put on seueritie in their iust corrections of their seruants and children But the sinne here condemned is when men suffer their lusts so farre to sway as they not only not follow the things which make to Christian peace but are enemies vnto concord and brotherly loue men of such violent affections as are readie not only to returne iniurie with iniurie but with seauentie ●old reuenge right Lamechs and rough Ismaels whose hand is against euery man men of a word and a blow fitter for the camp then the congregation of Christian men Now what an hatefull thing is it that a Christian should be endited at the Lords barre for a common barrater and quarreller How vnlike should he be to God who is a God of peace and loueth peace and the sonnes of peace how farre from hauing any part in the merit of Christ who hath dearely by his precious blood bought the reconcilement of all things how vnanswerable were it vnto this profession of Christianitie which cannot become a kingdome deuided against it selfe how preiudiciall to Christian duties both interrupting prayers and withstanding the acceptation of them when the gift is brought without a reconciliable mind How doth this course in Cains way violence all bonds both of nature and of grace signing a man to be out of the communion out of the naturall fraternitie in the first Adam and much more out of the spirituall in the second yea arguing such feirce men to be rather of the serpents and crocodiles seed betweene which and man God hath put an enmitie then of men seeing they haue put off all respect of creation of adoption of flesh and of faith But because many thinke they haue some reason to looke bigge and carrie resolute stomackes and high spirits in their breasts and as bigge words in their mouth let vs looke a little into their pretences First some conceiue that it is the way to get credit and become esteemed to proclaime contempt of euery man and to come into account by making account of no man hence is it that lawles wretches and masterles miscreants thinke themselues in sufficient credit when they haue scorned their betters impudently ouercrowed their equalls and by a rude behauiour made shew that they care for no man But how often for surenes hath the Lord threatned that with the vile shall be contempt and that the froward of heart shall be despised both of God whom they haue before hand despised and of men also for they shall meete with Ismaels recompence euery mans hand shall be against them whose hand is against euery man And who can be wonne to giue them any credit for such swaggering and contemptuous courses men of vnderstanding discerne their follie and pittie them men of ciuill behauiour discouer their vanitie and condemne them yea euen those who are next to themselues I meane to the worst in their hearts despise yea and deride them and here is Gods iustice crossing such lewd conceits Secondly Others stand vpon their manhood and are loth to be counted no-bodies or spiritles or esteemed cowards which they cannot auoid if they should not returne like for like and this is the sensuall wisdome of the flesh that he is accounted but a foole that will suffer euery man to ride him and tread vpon him and not turne againe But our Sauiour setteth himselfe against this Pharisaicall doctrine for they taught that a man in priuate reuenge might take an eye for an eye a tooth for a tooth a limb for a limb But the Christian rule is resist not euill namely with euill nay turne rather the other cheeke and who art thou that darest reuenge thine owne wrongs seeing the law prohibiteth euen purpose of reuenge and the voice of the Gospel is dearly beloued auenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath and the wisedome of God telleth vs that it is the glorie of a man to passe by offences and that the manhood of a Christian is to ouercome himselfe and master such vngodly lusts and yet if we further marke the ends of these braue spirited fellowes euen they will shew how odious such a savage course is vnto the Lord for of those who are readie to receiue euery word with a stabbe or whose second word out of displeasure is the pointing of the feild the former seldome goe to their graues in peace and the Lord saith Dauid scattereth the people that delight in warre and suffereth not the bloodie man to liue out halfe his dayes and for the latter who in time of peace must be out in the feilds their ●state is miserable euery way for if he kill he hath shut himselfe out of heauen and cut himselfe from off the earth hauing so polluted it as it cannot be purged but by his owne blood and vntill Samuels sentence against Agag be passed vpon him that as his sword had made another mans mother childles so should his mother be made childles by the sword of the Magistrate or if a man in such a fight be slaine how fearefull is the death of such a one who euen in thirsting after another mans blood hath shed his owne how can we but conceiue of the iustice and truth of that speach the seeker of vengeance hath found it both of them haue taken the sword vncalled and both haue iustly perished therewith Thirdly others say why he shall doe me no wrong I will not be crossed by him I haue my passion aswell as he he shall know that I haue a stomacke and can be angrie aswell as he and that I can make my partie good inough with him c. But this is no other then to giue place to the deuill who inspireth such carnall pleas for so mostrous a sinne as is an enemie to all humane societie Where is now the wisdome which is from above it is pure it is peaceable it is hardly incensed Where is now that vnderstanding of a man which Salomon saith maketh him long-suffring and if thou professest thy selfe a naturall man only why hast thou so long professed thy selfe a Christian which if thou art thou must seeke peace and pursue it pocket wrongs and passe by iniuries Obiect But I should neuer be quiet if I should put vp euery wrong But is it the way to tame thy aduersarie to become like him The way to haue thine enemie to become thy freind is to feare God and take his way that thy waies
beast in this point vntill he went into the sanctuarie The third propertie is fooles are indocible and incorrigible so the naturall man put him to schoole he learneth nothing by the booke of the creatures nor of the creator in the Scriptures Let God the great schoolemaster whippe him and bray him in the morter of his iudgments ●e is a foole still he leaueth not his old wonts The fourth propertie fooles are so wise in their owne conceits as they will abide no counsell the naturall man is wiser in his owne eyes then seauen men that can giue a reason tell him sinne is a dangerous edgtoole he maketh a mocke of sinne he iesteth and playeth the foole with firebrands and deadly things so wish him to forsake and denie his owne wayes of sinnefull pleasures vnlawfull profits to take vp his crosse and followe Christ no he hath an easier and broader way he liketh no such precise courses In all these regards may we not truely say of euery vnconuerted man vaine man would be wise though man newe borne is like a wild asse colt for of such Zophar spake the truth though he wrong applyed it vnto Iob and too much of these follyes are bound vp in the hearts of Gods children themselues vntill the rods of correction driue it out Vse We are hence taught how to deeme and iudge of the estates of men look into their courses if they be wise for their soules and life eternall making that their maine scope and end then are they truly wise indeed Wise Merchants they only are that sell all to buy the field and the treasure hid in it wise virgins only are they that make sure of oyle of grace in their lamps and that in due time whatsoeuer come of other things True it is that men esteeme these of all other silly creatures and simple men void of all prudence and forecast in their affaires that conteine their thoughts within compasse and dare not stretch their wits and consciences for gaine as others can and do but yet they haue chosen the better part they haue gotten Christ who is made their wisedome in whom they haue all their debts discharged and all comfortable supplies yea such treasures as the richest Indian mines afford not treasures of wisedome of grace of life and happines euerlasting Oh thrice blessed is that Christian soule who hath attained this wisedome happie is that man that can say I was once vnwise but now with thankfulnes I cannot but acknowledge the good hand of my God vpon me in whose light I see light 2. Let this perswade euery man to breake from the bands of his own folly and vse the meanes to come by this wisedome get wisdome once thou hast gotten inough begge wisdome of God with Salomon thou shalt haue wisedome and wealth and euery good thing more then thou askest for riches and glorie are in her left hand and length of daies in her right and all her pa●hes are prosperitie and hauing once attained this wisedome lay her in thy bosome and make much of this deare daughter of God And as for those who want it be a meanes if thou canst to communicate it vnto them at least by godly example and prayer and forget not our Apostles scope suffer with meekensse the contrarie minded and wayte when God will vouchsafe them the knowledge of his truth Doctr. 2. Out of the second degree of the corruption of mind we learne that it is a marke of a m●n out of Christ not to beleeue and assent to the word but rather to stand out in reasoning against the euidence of it for so soone as euer a man is become the sheep of Christ he cannot but presently heare his voyce And hence Christ himselfe prooueth the carping Pharisies not to be of God because they could not abide to heare his sayings and who be they to whom the Gospel is hid euen they that perish and if we would haue a more euident marke to know them by it is added that they be such as the eyes of whose minds the God of this world hath blinded wherein is implied a wilfull ioyning with Satan to blind themselues further by their mallice then they were by corrupted nature Quest. But are there any so monstrous as will resist the word of God it were pittie that any such should liue Answ. Yea many moe then will be acknowne of and let vs looke a little nearer the thing and we shall find too iust occasion to pronounce against many in our congregations that which Stephen did of the Iewes that they were resisters of the holy Ghost For 1. whose words be these to the almightie Depart from vs we will not the knowledge of thy waies and who is the almightie that we should serue him Oh these be blasphemous speaches you will say and we abhorre them in our hearts But howsoeuer men would be loath to let such speaches passe the doore of their lippes yet the thing sticketh closer vnto them then to be so easily wiped off for how many of vs who heare the word receiue the Sacraments and goe for Christians resolue yet not to leaue our sinnes till they leaue vs nay the obstinate purpose of our hearts is to practise them still and what is this else but with the seruants in the parable to send word into a farre countrie after the King that we will not haue him to rule ouer vs but our owne lusts shall still prescribe laws vnto vs 2. Who be they that say the word and doctrine of the law and Gospel is foolishnesse this you will say was and is the conceite of the Iewes and Heathen ones but we are Christians and hope to be saued by it But how comes it to passe then that Christians hearing their personall sinnes daily reprooued and the terrible curses of the law denounced against them yet hide and hold them as so many sweet morsells vnder their tongues and will not let them goe do they not plainely manifest that they assent not to the word that either their sinnes are so haynous or hell so ho●e as the word speaketh Be they not Christians that make leagues with hell and death and say when the sword passeth through the land I shall be safe and out of gunshot be they not Christians that thus blesse themselues in their iniquitie for how hath the Lord both denounced and executed his iudgements and made them as cleare as the light and yet euery man cryeth peace to his soule We seeme in denouncing them from the Lord as Lot to his sonnes in law euen as if we mocked and therefore the Lord taketh our part and executeth as fast on the other hand and yet no man setteth the iudgement vnto his heart a fearefull forerunner of the whole lands desolation if timely repentance preuent it not They be Christians also at least in name that account the gladde tydings of their deliuerance by Christ as the Israelites reputed their
in hand teacheth that there is an assurance a seale an earnest of saluation on which a man may assuredly settle his inward peace and his hopes shall neuer make him ashamed Yea further that this assurance is no blind perswasion nor bold presumption grounded vpon any thing of our owne but founded vpon the worke of God in vs changing vs daily renewing the image of God vpon vs the which good worke wheresoeuer it is begunne shall be perfected vnto the day of Christ. Cold is the comfort which this doctrine can minister to a number of men Christians by profession who neuer knewe this change in themselues the word hath beene too light to lift them vp to a newe life but they rotte away in the same sinnes and corruptions wherein they were borne and haue since confirmed vpon themselues and cannot say truely I am changed or yet am in the state of saluation Vse 3. See hence the blessed condition of men conuerted and begotten to God that we may neuer rest or be in quiet vntill we haue attained this grace of conuersion for they are alreadie possessed of their blessednesse and saluation which standeth in pardon of sinne couering of iniquitie freedome from the curse libertie from the raigne of sinne as also in the purchase of victorie ouer sinne and death of peace of good conscience of ioy in the holy Ghost in the certaine fruition of God himself and all those pleasures which are at his right hand for euermore The worldling seeth no part of this present happinesse and saluation of the Saints and therefore knowing no better he neuer accounteth himselfe so blessed as when he is drowned in carnall delights when his corne and wine and oyle is encreased vpon him when his cup runneth ouer when all men flatter him when his mouth is filled with laughter and yet in the mean time his bones are filled with the sinnes of his youth and age are likely to be laid downe together with him in the dust as Iob speaketh Nay more euen our selues who haue our blessednesse in our hands often see but a smal part of it that it is no meruaile if others can determine against our present happines when our selues are at such demurres in the matter especially when we see the world hating vs the earth expelling vs bonds prisons receiuing vs our countrie scarce acknowledging vs our kinsfolkes not knowing vs our friends forsaking vs our enemies killing vs dangers so assayling vs as we can scarce be safe in any corner nay sometimes our owne holds are taken that we cannot feare more warre abroad then we finde at home not meete with lesse peace without then within But now would it be an high wisedome to espie and know our blessednesse which with this change we firmely hold whatsoeuer our outward condition be or can be If now we suffer for righteousnesse it withstandeth not but maketh to our happinesse If all men speake all manner of euill against vs for Christs sake it hindereth not but furthereth our saluation If earth refuse vs heauen approoueth vs if men condemne God will iustifie if our friends denie vs Christ our husband will confesse vs In any miserie we shall haue assured felicitie in sorrowe and heauinesse matter of true ioy in outward trouble inward peace in temptation assurance of euasion In nothing all things in death and coruption life and immortalitie Thus our happinesse must not be mistaken which is inward spirituall and heauenly not depending on man but God by whose assured word and pledges it is bestowed nourished and perfected in vs. Now if any would trie whether he hath this happinesse in his hands or no let him come to this touchstone 1. Canst thou finde in thy soule a godly sorrow for sin which proceedeth on to repentance causing thee to loath thy sinne and loue righteousnesse constantly and canst thou loue him that dealeth sharpely against thy dearest sinnes 2. Dost thou finde thy heart which was a mansion of the deuill to be nowe a Bethel a temple of the holy Ghost in which thou worshippest God daily in spirit and truth presenting him with thy morning and euening sacrifices as the sweete incense of thy soule 3. Findest thou thy whole conuersation to be now a constant practise of righteousnes and holynes perceiuest thou thy selfe more heauenly minded then euer thou wast earthly and couetous more vpright in dealing with men then before vniust more pure and sober in word deede thoughts lookes then euer thou wast vncleane or intemperate Take all these together with thee and go on as cheerefully as happily thou art a blessed man alreadie and not all the gates of hell can hinder thee of thy saluation A second point to be learned in that it is said that then God saued vs when his bountifulnesse appeared is That before this reuealing of our saluation by Christ this loue and bountifulnesse of God was hid with himselfe and could not be reached vnto by the most peircing vnderstandings or industrie of man or Angel only God could inuent our cure onely God could manifest the same and make it appeare vnto vs. True it is that it was giuen in the wise counsell of God before the world was and shall be consummate and perfected when heauen and earth time shall be no more But if we enquire the proper time and manner of the happie appearing of it to the sonnes of men then we must answer that it was at the reuealing and appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ namely partly more darkly by the preaching of the Prophets vnto the auncient fathers and beleeuers as Abel Noah Abraham Moses Dauid who with the remnant of Israel enioyed the same promises and precious faith with vs and partly more clearely by the incarnation of the sonne of God which was the glorious rising of this Sonne of righteousnesse who both by his owne doctrine and miracles life and death and the doctrine of his Apostles and Pastors hath brightly shined vpon all vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come according to that prophesie of Malac. 4.2 The sunne of righteousnesse shall rise adding also that he bringeth health vnder his wings For before we sought not our health we our selues could make ou● wound wider and grow more desperately ouergrowne in our deadly diseases but could not dreame of a Phisician but now the father putteth forth his loue sendeth forth his beloued Sonne in him setteth liking vpon vs couereth vs with his skirts adorneth vs with his graces fitteth vs to our glorie and so daily by degrees draweth vs nerer him in fellowship then euer we were in the state of our innocencie To this purposeth is it said that Christ brought life to light whereas else Adam and all his posteritie had for euer laid vnder death and darknesse for when Adam little thought of saluation yea when he was running from God and hiding himselfe in his thickets then Christ brought life to light in
in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie and cap. 11.35 who gaue vnto him first that he should recompence Hence 1. vve conclude that if God should choose to saluation for any thing in man it could not be but man should be the first in his owne election and God should come after him yea it would ouerturne all the order of God in his most wise proceeding and would place his second grace before the first for whereas the first grace namely the election of such as the Father is to giue vnto the Son by him to be saued in all good order should precede the second whereby such as are elected before all time are in time giuen to the Sonne called iustified graced glorified and so saued The Popish doctrine of Gods foresight of faith or workes placeth this latter in Gods counsell before the former Secondly election is of grace Rom. 11.5 There is an election of grace but if it were of foreseene workes it were at least partly of desert and then should it follow 1. that it could not be of grace any way because not of grace euery way ver 6. 2. that all our owne reioycing should not be excluded Rom. 3.27 3. that if the Apostle should aske againe who separated vs our answer might be we partly separated our selues Thirdly our Apostle Eph. 1.4.5 affordeth vs three grounds more 1. from the time of our election which is before the foūdation of the world before we had done either good or euill or were in the world to doe it 2. In that he maketh our workes effects of election and therefore cannot be causes of it he hath chosen vs in him not because he foresaw that wee would be holy but that we might be holy and vnblameable as in cap. 2.10 we are his workemanship created to good workes and because it might be said that yet God might foresee who would receiue grace and who not and consequently who would vse the same aright in ordering their liues The third conclusion in the 5. verse affirmeth that God respected nothing out of himselfe or in vs past or to come but according to the good pleasure which he purposed in himselfe as Beza readeth it he choosed vs to partake of his grace Fourthly I would aske a Papist whether if the Lord did foresee any thing to bring vs to saluation by whether that was not the couenant of grace rather then the couenant of workes by the which neuer was or could any man be saued 2. In case God did foresee any worke which should be answerable to either of those couenants of grace or workes whether himselfe should not be the bestower of that grace and worke so as still not the worke if there were any but his grace shall be the first moouer 3. Whether God should be mooued if by workes by those before conuersion or after if they say by those after conuersion euen these saith the Prophet are as a stained clout If by those afore which their doctrine seemeth to tend to affirming that our vnregenerate wills haue a power to consent and coworke with Gods will and to prepare themselues to iustification then our text controlleth them which saith there was no such works at all which could mooue the Lord to take any pleasure in vs. Nay we were sinners saith Paul when God chose vs and such sinners as are described in the former verse blinded in mind rebellious in will and disordered in our whole conuersation Which shal serue for the ouerthrowe of all workes either preparatorie or foreseene or which any other way may obscure the free grace of God in our election and saluation Vse 1. To be sober minded and wise to sobrietie in the matters of Gods counsell inquiring into no reason further then his will which is euer iust although the thing may seeme strange and dazle our weak eyes the which one point would cut off many controversies and needles questions of sundrie diuines who in their platformes of election and reprobation will allowe the Lord no further libertie then themselues can deuise reason of for one the foresight of some good for the other of some euill which cannot but bring in an vniuersall reprobation because all are the sonnes of wrath by nature and God seeth them not out of this condition in themselues besides that the Lord shall be tied to conditions whereas he will haue mercie where he wil and whom he will he will harden 2. This doctrine is a ground of true humilitie for when all saluation from first to last is acknowledged to be of grace altogether out of our selues it shutteth all presumptuous mouthes who would gladly be sacrificing to their owne nets And this seemeth to be the Lords end in stablishing his free couenant that his people might remember and be ashamed and neuer open their mouth any more How carefull is he to take all such arrogant speaches out of their mouthes Deut. 7.7 and 9.5 Say not because of mine owne righteousnesse hath the Lord giuen vs this land and much lesse the heauenly Canaan and telleth them plainly that they were the least and worst of all people before the Lord put the difference betweene them and others And the whole Scripture sheweth how he hath set his affection on such as were still the most vnlikely and in all outward respects least commendable the youngest for most part when the first b●rne seemed to carrie away all the priuiledge Abel before Caine Iacob before Esau Ephraim before Manasseh Ioseph and Dauid before the rest of their elder brethren his manner was alwaies and is to hide that from the wise which he would reueale to babes by foolish things to confound the wise and by weake things the mightie and why 1. in regard of himselfe because his good pleasure was such no other reason but his owne will mooued him 2. in regard of vs that no flesh should reioyce before him 3. Hence we haue also a ground of thankefulnesse when we heare of such a free choise and that the Lord enquired not what we were or what we were worthy of but loued vs before we were or the world was when nothing could be conceiued either preuenting or meeting this goodnes of God And indeede neuer can we come to see the bottomelesse sea of this grace vnlesse we behold it in this gl●sse which our Apostle setteth before our eyes of our free election and saluation meerely by grace the which once if we come to behold how can we but magnifie his grace confesse his name feare to offend him tender all obedience vnto him yea in way of loue and thankefulnesse giue vp our selues to liue and die in his seruice who hath so freely so highly advanced vs vndeserued loues are great binders It is in the mouth of euerie man towards them of whome they haue receiued vndeserued good turnes I can neuer make such a man amends for such or such fauours and yet this boundlesse loue
deserued or good things which we would abuse or els positiue and these either generall and more common as giuen to elect and reprobate such as the gift of tongues learning prophecie miracles c. or more speciall whereby onely they that are to be saued are distinguished As namely that first and eternall grace of election and that second grace whereby such as are elected and giuen to the Sonne are in due time by effectuall vocation iustification and sanctification lead vnto glorie and saluation All these are of his grace whome Peter calleth the God of all grace But there is yet another grace of God which is no gift infused into vs but resideth in God himselfe which is his free fauour and grace by which he loueth and accepteth his elect in Christ his beloued and this is the first and cause of all other subsequent graces Which is both to be distinguished from the former because the Scripture doth alwaies distinguish them in the doctrine of iustification Rom. 11.6 If of grace then not of workes and more plainly chap. 5.15 much more the grace of God and the gift by grace hath abounded to many As also must be applied to this text not only 1. because it is the proper sense of the word in all such places as treat of the iustification of a sinner before God but 2. because the Apostle by mentioning of grace againe secludeth all that prevision of works formerly mentioned which might be motiues vnto God for the bestowing of his grace that all causes and occasions of the free grace of God out of God might be excluded and 3. to free the text from that corruption which by Popish doctrine is fastned vpon it For how doth the Papists wind themselues when they meete with this and such like places that with them they may hold their blasphemous doctrine of iustification by workes and humane satisfactions you shall haue the latter Iesuites affirme the same thing verie confidently with the Apostle that we are iustified freely by his grace as though they were of his minde and of ours and as if no difference were betweene vs in this maine matter which I dare say if we were agreed in we should not long dissent in any matter of great moment but they speake in their owne sence and retaine a tricke of their mentall reservation which both destroyeth the text and ouerthroweth the foundation of religion For 1. by Iustification they meane not that compleat righteousnesse of Iesus Christ which the Lord imputing vnto vs accepteth vs in but a kind of righteousnesse which God putteth into vs to make vs iust which is nothing else but a physicall change of the heart from euill to good or a motion from iniustice to righteousnesse at the first imperfectly begunne and needeth a second iustification to eke it out 2. By Grace they meane nothing lesse then this fauour of God in Christ accepting his elect but certaine gifts of grace bestowed of fauour or habituall graces of faith hope and charitie which are daily perfected by the daily exercise of them And what is this els then to say that we are iustified that is made iust before God by the inherent righteousnes which he bestoweth vpon vs the which righteousnes not of Christ but of our owne infused into vs not imputed vnto vs doth formally iustifie the sinner in the sight of God But this evasion 1. offereth great violence to the text wherein as we haue heard the Apostle opposeth these two grace and good workes as his vsuall manner is in all those places where he handleth this doctrine as in the seat of it and it is to be marked that what the Apostle here calleth grace he giueth three titles vnto it in the former verse all of them without our selues and peculiar vnto God himselfe 1. bountifulnesse 2. loue 3. mercie and not only this place but sundrie such paralel places shew plainely that by grace cannot be meant any thing infused into vs but only a free fauour in God accepting vs as righteous 2. Tim. 1.9 Who hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes marke by the way that exclusiue but according to his owne purpose and grace giuen vs but when before the world was Let now any man of common sence say whether this grace whereby we are saued be any gift of grace infused vnto vs vnlesse it could be infused before the world was or we were in it Secondly this conceit confoundeth two distinct things namely our iustification and sanctification which the Apostle distinguisheth 1. Cor. 6.11 and Rom. 5. are noted two things which befell vs by Adams sinne 1. the guilt of that sinne 2. the natiue corruption or pronenesse and propensitie to any other sinne as a iust punishment of the former and accordingly he distinctly noteth two things that by the second Adam are restored vnto vs the former is freedome and absolution from that guilt which is our iustification before God and the latter is the repairing of Gods image which is called regeneration which is here imperfect but shall be hereafter raised to that legall righteousnesse from whence we fel implying vnto vs that as we must retaine the distinction betweene the guilt and corruption of sinne so also must we betweene the freedome from the one the other which this popish interpreattion confoundeth Thirdly this interpretation of the phrase by the Romish teachers maketh the iustification of a sinner faile against those two maine rules which in Scripture are ascribed vnto it 1. whereas the righteousnesse of God is made manifest without the law Rom. 3.21 this shall be false for the law reuealeth that righteousnes which is by inherent qualities gifts of grace or the habit of loue 2. whereas the iustification of a sinner is by a righteousnesse which satisfieth the iustice of God such a righteousnesse as this cannot doe so for our best inherent righteousnesse is mingled with corruption is verie imperfect farre from that which the lawe requireth and 〈◊〉 from that which God accepteth who neuer accepteth but such as bring perfect righteousnesse either of their owne or of the Mediators All which I haue propounded for the right interpretation of this phrase because it nippeth in the head all that Popish deuise of iustification by workes so derogatorie to this Apostolicall iustification by grace as they can no sooner be reconciled then can fire and water light and darknesse and that abandoning such tricks of mens braines we might come to conceiue the truth of this fundamentall doctrine as the Scriptures haue taught vs to conceiue of it Doctr. The righteousnesse of a sinner before God is not any qualitie in the beleeuer but that which the Lord imputeth and accepteth through his sonne For 1. the Apostle here speaking of renewing of beleeuers inwardly and in truth yet ascribeth not their righteousnesse thereto but attributeth it wholly vnto grace And if we speake of the righteousnesse of a
iustification of the person himselfe before God but of the faith of the person before men for if any worke iustifie before God of necessitie it must bee a perfect worke and proceede from a person perfectly iustified and sanct●fied as Abraham himselfe when he offered his sonne was not the true meaning of that place is this Abraham was iustified by workes that is he restified by his workes that he was by faith iustified in the sight of God Vse 2. We learne hence further where our righteousnesse is laid vp for vs Isai. 45.24 In the Lord I haue righteousnesse and strength the whole seede of Israel shall be iustified and glorie in the Lord. Of ou● selues we are desperate bankrupts and haue not one farthing to make straight withall which the Lord seeing he dealeth with vs as with those two debters who had nothing to pay he forgiueth vs all Behold then the Sonne of God set out thy propitiatorie Rom. 3.25 get the lintels of thy soule sprinkled with the blood of this immaculate lambe and thou shalt escape the stroake of the reuenging angel cast away thine owne ragges and if euer thou wouldst get the blessing wrap thy selfe in this garment of thy elder brother and when thy father shall sauour the smell of thy garments he shall bless● thee and say Behold th● smell of my sonne is 〈◊〉 the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed feare not to be compleat in him this long white to be needeth no eeking ne●deth no pa●ching say with that holy Martyr and liue and die with it in thy mouth onely Christ onely Christ. Vse 3. Seeing here falleth to the ground whatsoeuer can be ioyned in the worke of iustification with the merit and obedience of Christ as any matter or meanes demeriting the sauour of God we must beware of euer ioyning with the Popish religion who by their doctrine of merits and humane satisfactions abrogate the death of Christ and are abolished from him see Gal. 5.2.4.11 If we can any way iustifie our selues or satisfie for our selues the death of Christ was vaine It is therefore as safe ioyning with the Turkish religion as theirs If it be said the difference is not so great as you make it I answer that we differ not in circumstances but in such a fundamentall point as if the Apostle may be iudge one of vs must needes be fallen from Christ and haue no part in him what then will it availe to professe the articles of faith and to be the Church of God vnl●sse that can be a true Church which is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Should be made heires according to the hope of life eternall In these words is laid downe the second ende of that newe condition into which beleeuers are brought In which for the meaning two parts must be considered 1. The right and priuiledge of beleeuers who beeing once iustified by faith are made heires of life eternall 2. their present tenure of this their inheritance by hope For the former The word heire in the first and proper signification betokeneth a lot and is vsed sometimes in the new Testament with allusion vnto the twelue tribes whose portions were deuided and distributed vnto them by lot as Eph. 1.11 whence that people was more peculiarly called the lines and heritage of the Lord as whom himselfe made partakers of all the good things of that land and by proportion those also who by faith laid or shall lay hold vpon his couenant for all those spirituall and eternall good things shadowed out thereby But commonly it signifieth those who after a mans death succeed him in his goods and possessions especially children whose right it is to inherit their fathers lands and possessions and thus must we become heires by becomming the sonnes and children of God Now whereas children are either naturall or adopted our title to this inheritance commeth in by the grace of adoption seeing Christ is the onely naturall sonne as we confesse in our Creed and the phrase of the text is obseruable which saith we are made heires but not so borne so as this inheritance belongeth properly vnto Christ the naturall sonne the heire and first borne of many brethren and consequently through him communicated vnto vs who are sonnes by adoption Ioh. 1.12 whosoeuer receiued him to them he gaue power that is right title prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God Now if we would distinctly knowe the manner and meanes of our title in a word this it is All the right of our sonneship is by Christ for the foundation of it is Gods loue embracing men in his beloued who beeing the naturall sonne of God must become our brother by taking our flesh that therein we beeing vnited vnto him might also after a sort be vnited vnto the Father and the blessed spirit the which vnion because it could neuer be knit so long as our sinnes were in sight necessarily in our flesh must the Sonne of God giue himselfe vp vnto the death to satisfie the iustice of his Father to remooue all the guilt and curse of our sinne and to giue vs beleeuing in him perfect righteousnesse that thus beeing iustified we might become heires no otherwise then if we had beene borne of God himself and that thus by Iesus Christ beeing set againe into the liberty of sonnes the inheritance might as certainely belong vnto vs as it doth to himselfe beeing the naturall Sonne Thus we see how we come to be heires now if we would knowe of what we are heires the text telleth vs of life eternall which what it is because it standeth in immediate fellowship and coniunction with God we are not able to conceiue for it neuer entred into the heart of man This we know of it that beeing the state of the elect with God hereafter that beleeuers haue a right vnto it yea and by faith haue entred into some part and degree of it alreadie hauing receiued as it were a turfe to assure them of the possession of the whole It is called life which is the most pretious thing a man can desire farre aboue goods and lands or any other comfort Satan said that skinne for skinne and all that euer a man hath will he giue for his euen naturall life And eternall Heb. 9.15 of the eternall inheritance 1. Pet. 1.4 an inheritance which is immortall vndefiled it hath indeede in regard of the godly a beginning but it hath no ende for it fadeth not away but is reserued in the heauens neuer was there such an inheritance vpon earth for as it falleth not by the death of our father as others doe so it faileth not vs by our owne death but wee are thereby rather put into more full state of it And because if it were an vncomfortable life the continuance of it were the greatest miserie of it therefore elsewhere the Scripture calleth it Paradise a place of all delight and pleasure yea where the Saints
of their owne displeasure and sometimes out of their sonnes misdemeanours doe disinherit their heires but the Lord cannot growe into such displeasure with his children as ●ue● to cast them out whome in his Christ he hath once admitted into his house If his sonnes sinne against him he will visit their sinnes and scourge them with the rodds of men but his mercie and truth will he neuer take from them Now of the tenure by which we hold life eternall namely of hope I haue spoken twise before in this Epistle at large chap. 1.2 2.13 to which the reader may looke backe onely in a word note that it is a mark of a man set into this new condition to hope and wait for the blessed inheritance in heauen 2. Cor. 5.2 We sigh desiring to be clothed with our house from heauen 2. Tim. 4.8 the description of the godly to be those that loue the appearing of Christ. And if all creatures groane with vs for the time of their deliuerance how ought we much more for whom such things are prepared Hence it followeth 1. that it will not stand with a conuerted heart to linger after the things of this life or to make his heauen vpon earth or to haue equall affection to earth as heauen 2. nor to neglect the meanes whereby this hope is confirmed whether outward offring as the Gospel ministerie word Sacraments or inward receiuing as faith vnfained working in obedience Ver. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou shouldst affirme that they which haue beleeued in God might be carefull to shew forth good workes The first words of this verse beeing as it were a finger pointing to some excellent matter some take to be a preface making way and winning attention to the sequel of the verse others thinke it to be an epiphonema or graue shutting vp of that matter which immediately goeth before as giuing consent and acclamation vnto the most weightie and necessarie doctrine of free iustification by the grace of God in Christ which doctrine because the Apostle by the spirit of prophesie did foresee would be most strongly opposed he purposely by a vehement asseueration strengtheneth as also the doctrine of Christian hope which although it be not of things seene yet is it of things so faithfull and firme in respect of the promise as the Christian soule may without wauering and doubting relie and leane it selfe vpon the faithfull accomplishment of it But I take it the words may not vnfitly be referred to the whole doctrine propounded both before and after there beeing the same scope of both for what new thing is the Apostle to teach which he had not taught and vrged before and what particular is expressed in the verse which formerly hath not beene deliuered to young and old men and women servants and other all which estates after their conuersion vnto the faith are in speciall called to readines in euerie good worke vers 1. and to what other ende are those large descriptions of our twofold estate but to strike on the same string that howsoeuer we could not in the former attaine to any fruitfull conuersation yet now in the latter it were a shame not to adorne our profession and calling and what other end learned we of the appearing of grace but that vngodlines and wordly lusts beeing denied we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world So as I say the Apostle setteth a seale vnto his whole doctrine that it is true and faithfull most vndoubted and certaine in it selfe and most worthie of all our credit and faith seeing nothing can be truelyer spoken nothing more profitably beleeued nothing more comfortably practised then the truth here deliuered vnto vs. Quest. But are not other doctrines true and faithfull yea as true as this and is not all Scripture of diuine inspiration Answ. Yes neither doth our Apostle oppose the truths of Scripture as though one were more or lesse true then another but in more necessarie or more questionable truths he setteth here and there a marke or pointng hand both to vrge the authoritie and necessitie of the one and also to force men more easily to yeeld vnto the truth of the other Example hereof we haue 1. Tim. 1.15 in such a fundamentall point as is saluation onely by Christ to be opposed by so many hundreth heretikes it is no maruell if we see some starre set by it or a light held ouer it that none may passe by it vntill they haue diligently waighed and fully resolued vpon the truth of it In like manner beeing to entreat of the difficult labour care and work of the ministerie from which women as not beeing capable of it are interdicted and of the excellencie of the function which no man might either rashly take vpon him or negligently execute beeing lawfully called and beeing further to set downe a certaine rule vnto which all the lawefull callings in the Church are to be conformed In such a waightie matter as is the preseruation of the Church and pietie he prefixeth a worthie preface 1. Tim. 3.1 This is a true saying if any man desire the office of a Bishop he desireth a worthie worke But where the Apostle doth all these things as in this place he could with lesse reason depart from his ordinarie manner Doctr. The Ministers of God must teach euerie truth reueale the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe but some truths must be dwelt vpon and more auouched then others and namely such as are either more necessarie or more contradicted This is the wisedome of the spirit of God himselfe who by his penmen distinguisheth of truthes and hath neither prefixed Behold in the beginning of euerie sentence nor affixed his Selah in euerie ones ende but onely in truths more observable and remarkeable then the rest Which point may receiue a generall confirmation from this obseruation that the penmen of Scripture beeing to write the historie of things past because they were of facts more vndeniable as things running into the sences of men they stand not so much vpon ratifications and asseuerations yea a number of historicall books there are the authors of which are not known to the church But when they come to write prophesies of things to come and things in reason more improbable then the authors name his kinred his calling with other circumstances of time place and persons seruing to confirme and conuince the truth of prophesies are registred And if these truthes were either more necessarily then ordinarie concerning the Church or more liable to opposition and exception then was much more caution and confirmation vsed To avoide multitude of examples whereby this point might be strengthened I will onely insist in that prophesie which more neerely concerneth vs that liue now in the newe Testament namely of the Reuelation The which booke because it describeth the state of the Church from the time of Iohn the last of the
the first condition of any good worke that the worker must be a beleeuer in Christ. For 1. make the tree good and then the fruit will be good he must be a man that hath learned by the doctrine of the Gospel to doe a good worke as the words of the verse imply 2. the heart the fountaine of all actions is naturally corrupt with originall sin and the members are weapons of vnrighteousnesse and therefore before the heart be purified by faith the best actions passing through our vnderstandings wills affections and parts can no more auoid tainture and pollution then can the sweetest water running through a muddie channell or the purest liquor standing in a fustie vessell 3. He that being an vnbeleeuer hath not the sonne neither hath the spirit of the Sonne and consequently cannot send forth any fruites of the spirit the Sonne hath not set him free but he is bound hand and foote and not able to mooue in any one action of spirituall life 4. Hee that cannot pray by the spirit cannot bring forth any worke truely good nothing can be done without prayer the Lord must giue strength the will and the deed he must teach vs to worke set vs in and hold vs on in working he must giue it successe and blessing and make it fruitfull to our selues and others and without the prayer of faith nothing of this is obtained 5. Without faith it is impossible to please God for to euery good worke are required many actions of faith For 1. generall faith must make and warrant it good in the matter and know it to be commanded or allowed in the word for that is a good work which God will haue done and good intentions if they roue without a word make nothing good 2. Speciall faith must know the action to be good in the worker renewed in part and accepted in Christ who couereth the spots and imperfections of the worke for the Lord first respecteth the person and then the worke first Abel and then his sacrifice 3. Faith looketh that the worke be good in the endes of it a bad end spoileth the best action Now the right ends of a good worke are 1. Gods glorie for as all riuers goe out of the sea and returne againe into the sea so all good actions as they come from God so they tend vnto him againe be they the least and lowest euen eating drinking or what soeuer else all must be done to the glorie of God 2. The good of our brethren and edification of men for this end Christians must make their light to shine abroad before men and the whole law is fulfilled in this one word Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe 3. The exercise of our owne graces by doing our owne duties to God and man not selfe-pleasing profiting praise feare shame or such other sinister ends as sway with the vnregenerate but as is the end of the commandement so must it be of our obedience which is loue out of a pure heart and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 4. Faith will prouide that good actions be compassed by good meanes we may not doe euill that good may come of it It was Rebecca her sinne to draw the promised blessing vpon Iacob by deceit and Lots infirmitie to seeke deliuerance from the Sodomites by prostituting his daughters And though sometimes bad meanes succeed and the Lord by an ouerruling power bring light out of darkenesse yet is there alwaies iust matter of mourning and humiliation 5. Faith will haue respect to good circumstances as times places persons c. the fayling wherein often blemisheth most bewtifull actions and cause them to miscarie and prooue vnsuccesfull In a word faith in the heart is most carefull to doe good things well and because it knoweth that when it hath done the best it can yet all that seruice is vnprofitable it claspeth fast hold vpon the righteousnesse of Christ and will be found in that righteousnesse which is by faith in him Phil. 3. And therefore as for all other so for this good worke of beneficence and loue to the Saints the Apostle wisheth Titus to goe to beleeuers with whom he might be bold as who had receiued a spirit of effectuall faith working in obedience to God and loue to Gods people and could not suffer them to be either idle or vnfruitfull in the worke of the Lord. Well knew the Apostle that to haue sent him elsewhere on this errand it had bin but the losse of both their labors here he knew he should speed or no where So as we may conclude this point with that speach of Augustine where faith is not no good worke can be The third point in the precept is that these good works must be shewed forth for necessarie vses why Christians should shewe forth good workes I haue formerly shewed in handling the 8. verse of this Chapter and therefore will come to declare what are the necessare vses in generall of such good workes as are here called for And here we must know that the Romish Church hath not more boldly then blasphemously pretended many necessarie vses of good workes which the Scriptures neuer intending to set them vp in the place of Christ are far from acknowledging a tast whereof I haue giuen in a fewe positions which are stiffely defended by the pillars of that Church As 1. That good workes prepare a man to his iustification whereas the former point shewed that a man must be a iustified person before he can doe a good worke 2. That they doe iustifie the person of the worker before God notwithstanding the Apostle saith that by the workes of the Lawe no flesh can be iustified 3. That they make men more iust by a second iustification which distinction of the first and second iustification is a dreame of their owne not grounded in the Scriptures nor once heard of in the Church at the least fourteene hundred yeares after Christ and his Apostles 4. That they satisfie Gods iustice for temporall punishment 5. That they merit heauen yea a greater degree of glorie in heauen 6. That they purge away sinnes 7. That they apply Christs merit to purge them 8. That they merit at Gods hand for ones selfe and others 9. That they free from purgatorie paines 10. That a man may raise his trust in God from them All which with many other blasphemous tenures of this kind directly thrust Christ from his throne and make him but halfe a Sauiour at the most and consequently no Sauiour at all It would draw this point further then would well fit a commentarie to dispute here these positions with them and therefore intending our busines in hand and taking the mention of such hereticall blasphemies in this auditorie to be no small refutation we come to those necessarie vses which are warranted by expresse Scripture yea and thence commended vnto vs both in regard of 1. God 2. our neighbour 3. our selues