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A73031 Certain godly and learned sermons, preached by that worthy seruant of Christ M. Ed. Philips in S. Sauiors in Southwarke: vpon the whole foure first chapters of Matthew, Luc. 11. vers. 24. 25. 26. Rom. 8. the whole, 1. Thess. 5. 19. Tit. 2. 11. 12. Iames 2. from the 20. to the 26. and 1. Ioh. 3. 9. 10. And were taken by the pen of H. Yeluerton of Grayes Inne Gentleman Philips, Edward.; Yelverton, Henry, Sir, 1566-1629. 1607 (1607) STC 19854; ESTC S114640 484,245 625

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shall want the Rauens shall feed him yea hee will make the wicked an instrument to prouide for his chosen as Zedekiah to command that Ieremy be fed in the prison as long as there is any bread in the City Ier. 37.21 which ought to teach vs not to compasse any thing vnlawfully or to dig vs cisternes out of the policy of the flesh but to relie vpon the Lord who can and will send vs reliefe from the vttermost parts of the earth and when we least looke for it and when it shall be most welcome as he did heere to the mother of Iesus For the sixt generall circumstance namely for the oracle giuen these Wise-men to goe home another way learne first how the Lord disappoints the purposes of tyrants and wicked men which bend their bowes whet their swords and make their arrowes keene to pierce the sides of the godly Psal 7.14 that it fals out they are but concerued with vanity and trauell of iniquity and bring foorth a lie For when Herod meant to haue glutted his bloudy minde vpon the report of these Wise-men then are they of the Lord sent another way And when Act. 23.12 the Iewes had bound themselues with a curse that they would neither eate nor drinke till they had killed Paul then the Lord sent into the heart of the chiefe Captaine so to intrench him about with souldiers as he was kept safe from their fury So when Senaherib the King of Ashur had thought to haue swallowed vp Ierusalem Esay 36.33 then the Lord said and performed it that he should not so much as shoot an arrow nor cast a mount against it Thus doeth the Lord alwaies preuent the dangers intended against his children Psal 91.5.6 that neither the plague that flies by day nor the pestilence that walkes by night nor the snare of the hunter can once intrap them but his eares are open euen to the praiers of Ionas c. 2.2 to deliuer him out of the Whales belly and his eies are so bent vpon Daniel c. 6.22 as the Lions haue no power to hurt him but he is as a shadow against the parching heat and as a shield against the blustering cold which may inco●●age vs still to lay hands vpon him as our succour to behold him as our deliuerer to flie to him as our comforter to waite vpon him as our guide and to commit our soules vnto him as vnto the best keeper Secondly heere learne by the not returning of these Wisemen to Herod according as they were commanded that an oath or a vow taken and made against the bond of charity and tending to the hurt of our brother is not to be performed but being vndertaken vpon weakenesse is to be discharged vpon conscience and therefore rash was the vow of Iphtah Iudg. 11.31 to promise to the Lord without limitation a sacrifice of that he should first meet when he came home For though the Apostle Heb. 11.32 commendeth him for his worthy enterprise in deliuering the people yet by this rash vow and wicked performance of the same his victory was much defaced For we must make no haste with our mouthes to pronounce any thing but set a watch before our lippes that they may hedge in our tongues from speaking euill of our brethren and yet if we hap to slip in this wee must keepe in our hands from executing what vnaduisedly we vttered For first we are so farre from being bound to derect them when their liues or bodies are sought for as wee are to counsell them to hide them as Eliah 1. Kings 17.3 was counselled of the Lord to hide himselfe So did Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.42 make his fathers fury knowen to Dauid that hee might hide himselfe and therfore cursed be the Ziphims 1. Sam. 23.20 that promised Saul to deliuer Dauid into his hands and cursed be Irrijah Ier. 37.13 that staid Ieremy and brought him to the Princes as a fugitiue when hee was going to the land of Beniamin Secondly if they cannot hide themselues wee must doe it for them So did Obadiah 1. Kin. 18.13 in the court of Ahab hide a hundred Prophets from the cruelty of Iesabel So did Rahab Iosh 2.1 in great zeale to God and loue to his seruants hide the spies with the danger of her owne life So did the Disciples Act. 9.21 let downe Paul in a basket when his life was sought for by the Inquisition Thirdly if they be apprehended we must be so farre from accusing them as we must countenance and defend them to our powers So did Ebedmelech Ier. 38.9 when he came to the King in the gate and told him Ieremy had wrong to be imprisoned and so did Ionathan 1. Sam 20.32 defend Dauid against his owne father for it is not the commandement of a King that ought to make vs giue vp the sonnes of God into their hands nay the Lord himselfe in this place teacheth vs otherwise that would not suffer these Wise-men to obey Herod wherby the babe might haue beene exposed to his butchery Lastly in the departure of these Wise-men obserue that God both in the beginning and in the end will blesse all courses and actions enterprised and done in his feare and in a holy obedience as he did blesse and prosper the iourney of these Wise-men giuing them both a direction which way to come to Ierusalem and which way to goe from Bethlem which must make vs if we expect any blessed successe of that we vndertake not to begin but with the warrant of a good conscience nor to proceed but with a reuerent and resolute obedience as to the commandement of God and as aiming at the aduancement and promotion of his glory and the furtherance of his seruice MATH chap. 2. vers 13 14 15. verse 13 After their departure behold the Angell of the Lord appeareth to Ioseph in a dreame saying Arise and take the babe and his mother and flie into Aegypt and be there till I bring thee word for Herod will seeke the babe to kill him verse 14 So he arose and tooke the babe and his mother by night and departed into Aegypt verse 15 And was there vnto the death of Herod that the might bee fulfilled which is spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Aegypt haue I called my Sonne THE Euangelist as before hee shewed the glorious and blessed beginnings of our Sauiours birth who though borne in basenesse had testimony giuen him of his maiesty by the starre in heauen and in earth by the Wise-men of Persia so now he setteth downe a matter of great discomfort that this same babe euen from his cradle should begin to bee crucified in himselfe and his members Wherein generally there be three points set downe first the commandement of the Angell secondly the obedience of Ioseph thirdly the fulfilling of a prophesie In the commandement consider first the circumstance of the time that it was after the departure of the Wise-men how long after is not
hardly escape they with their liues than harlot is faine to make a lye to saue them and to couer them with the stalkes of flaxe that they may not bee found Paul tha● had before an earth-quake to vnshackle him hath at another time Act. 9.25 no other way to preserue himselfe but by being let downe in a basket So Ieremy to flesh and bloud 〈◊〉 most basely deliuered for being cast into the dungeon Ebelmelech Ier. 38.11 obtaineth of the King to bring him ou● and then with a company of ragges and old worne clouts boun● together as with a cord he draweth him foorth and is glad 〈◊〉 send him away So fared it with Dauid 1. Sam. 19.12.13 fo● Michol perceiuing he could hardly escape the fury of Saul fir●● shee lets him downe at a window and then shee puts an image●● the bed as if some sicke man had beene there And thus did th●● Lord prouide for his sonne after the basest manner that his parents must take their heeles to preserue his life he could haue se●● a kind of madnes on Herod as he did on Nebuchadnezzar D●● 4.29 and haue spoiled him of all his kingly royalty and seuer● him from the company of men and made him feed with beasts he could haue made his Angell haue strucke him as hee did 〈◊〉 nephew Act. 12.23 or haue raised vp his sonnes to ha●● slaine him Esa 37.38 as he did to Senaherib or haue caused him to ha●● hanged himselfe in a desperation of the kingdome hee coul● haue astonished them when they had come to kill him as he did Ioh. 18.5 when they came to take him that they sho●● haue killed another as did the Madianites Iudg. 7.21 Psal 83.9 But it was the will and pleasure of the Father that he should beginne his life in misery as he should end it in ignominy and hee worketh not by miracles for the deliuery of his Sonne For first as yet there was no time for the manifestation of miracles for then he might haue beene thought not to haue beene true man Secondly it was to fulfill a prophesie that out of Egypt his Sonne might be called intending heerein a proportion betweene the head and the members that as the Israelites were caried out of Egypt Exod. 12.31 so also should Christ the head of his Church be Thirdly in this was praefigured the casting away of the Iewes and the calling and cariage of the Gospell among the Gentiles Fourthly that another prophesie might be fulfilled that for his sake should the children of Bethlem bee slaine Fiftly that the cruelty of Herod by this meanes might bee the more disappointed Sixtly to giue warrant to vs that in the time of danger and persecution wee may lawfully flie Seuenthly that we may not thinke the crosse too base for vs since the Lord of glory did thus beare it Further it is wonderfull to see that the Lord will haue his Sonne thrust out of Iuda and from among the Iewes to whom specially hee was promised and whom principally hee should saue and to bee entertained in Egypt a place of all abominations and which hated God But thus did the Lord aduance Ioseph in Egypt Gen. 41.40 when his brethren would haue killed him in Israel and thus did he prouide for Daniel in Babylon Dan. 6.3 where diuels were worshipped and aduanced him to bee the second person in the kingdome Achis King of the Philistims 1. Sam. 21.10 receiued Dauid when Saul persecuted him Eliah when he could not be fed in Israel 1. King 17.15 is cherished by a poore widow of Sarepta in Sydon an heachenish country And Ieremy the Prophet Ier. 39.12 is better entertained by Nebuchadnezzar King of Babel then by Zedechia the Priest Thus can the Lord stirre vp the hearts of the heathen to bee better to his seruants then their owne brethren and that Saul shall prophesie when he intendeth to persecute 1. Sam. 19.24 to comfort vs that euen our greatest enemies shall nourish vs if we be cast out of our country for the profession of the Lord Iesus yea Egypt shall be a resting place● for Ioseph if the babe be with him though it be grieuous and tedious to Ioseph to want the sacrifices and to lose the comfort 〈◊〉 hearing the law of God expounded And when Paul can haue 〈◊〉 preaching place at Hierusalem the Citie of God then shall hee preach two yeeres without contradiction in Rome Act. 28.30 a place of all persecution For the third circumstance how long Christ should stay in Egypt consider first that Ioseph is heereby assured he shall no● stay euer which doth somewhat ease and refresh his anguished soule for when he considered the iourney hee was to take was tedious the place whither he was to flie barbarous the tendernesse of the child he must take with him that hee must be absent from the publike exercises of religion that his dispatch was so sudden as he had no time to take his leaue of the godly of Hierusalem no doubt his heart was much astonished and his spirits of life much appalled therefore to comfort him the Lord bids him stay till he calleth him implying that there shall bee a time wherein he shall be deliuered In which we learne that affliction shall not alway last and that the rod shall not euer rest vpon the backe of the godly but we shall haue beauty for ashes the oile of gladnesse for the garment of heauinesse Psal 104.15 and our captiuity shall be like the Summer riuers and they that goe foorth with a little seed shall come home with full sheaues Heere also note tha● by saying he must not come but abide there till the Lord doe call him that it is as much as to haue said Come not of thy selfe no not vpon any exigent or sheights whatoeuer though thou be neuer so villanously intreated and by setting downe the time of his abode indefinitely he doth it to trie his obedience that he may with patience attend the Lords pleasure Wherby we learne that we must not prefix any set time vnto the Lord how long he shall exercise vs vnder the crosse Ioseph must stay in Egypt til he be called foorth and let this be Iosphs hope in Egypt hee shall not alwaies be but he shall returne againe to Hierusalem and the scourge of the vngodly shall not alway claspe about the loines of the righteous Now for the fourth circumstance which is the reason of the commandement Learne first how the Lord releeueth our weakenesse and tendreth our infirmitie that though a bare commandement had beene sufficient for Ioseph to haue addressed himselfe for this iourney yet the Lord taketh pity vpon him and will not tempt hm aboue the measure of his faith but fully satisfieth him not onely commanding by authority but euen perswading by reason that he may obey with the greater cheerefulnesse For Herod saith hee goeth about to destroy him Otherwise did the Lord deale with Abraham Gen. 22.2 according to his strong faith
hee shall be hold his destruction Exod. 14.28 in the red sea How oft 〈◊〉 Saul thinke and how sore did he thirst for the life of Dauid 〈◊〉 he misseth of his purpose and slaieth himselfe 1. Sam. 31.4 〈◊〉 make way for Dauid to the kingdome And such shall be the ●●cesse of all that conspire against the Lord and his Christ to fall 〈◊〉 to the pit which themselues haue digged and to make the w●●ked a ransome for the godly For the maner of Herods death though it be silenced by the Euangelist yet the Ecclesiasticall stories make mention of it as Iosephus and Eusebius which though it command not the conscience to beleeue yet the more to magnifie the Lord it is not vnfit to consider it He had a great swelling in his legs woonderfull rottennesse in his whole flesh his breath did so stinke as he could not be accompanied with he had such a disease in his parts of shame as wormes did crawle about them he was greedie of meat hauing the appetite of a dogge not to be satisfied his whole race was accursed after him hauing eight children within an hundred yeeres there was not any of their loines lest Archilaus heere spoken of was banished to Vienna and there died a beggar Antypas that beheaded Iohn Baptist and whom Christ called Foxe Luke 13.32 was banished to Lions in France and there died a most miserable abiect Agrippa the son of Aristobulus the sonne of this Herod an insolent and proud man was eaten vp with lice most shamefully Act. 12.23 The sonne of this Agrippa that would haue put Peter to death liuing till the destruction of Ierusalem there had his end Thus did the wrath of God rest vpon the familie of this cruell persecutor of Gods Church who was blasted in himselfe and his posteritie And thus did the Lord 1. Kings 14.10 sweepe away the house of Ieroboam as a man sweepeth away dung till it bee all gone and 1. King 21.21 did cut off the posteritie of Ahab for their prouocations wherewith they had prouoked him to teach vs to feare and tremble before his face and if we will be blessed in our selues and in the fruit of our bodie to looke vnto our paths that we lay not our hands to wickednesse Note further that we are not to feare what Princes can doe vnto vs for they liue no longer then they haue some seruice to doe for Gods glorie as it is said Col. 1.16 All things are in Christ and for Christ And Saul could not Acts 9.1 breath out threatnings against the Church of God had not the Lord some speciall purpose in it either for the exercising of his Saints or the waiting for his owne repentance Neither could Pharaoh so long ●●ie his rodde vpon the Israelites were it not as S. Paul saith Rom. 9.17 that the Lord stirred him vp to shew his power in him For now when Herod had executed the children whereby God is glorified in their innocent death and his owne malice fully manifested then he dieth himselfe which may teach vs patience against the time of trouble knowing that the wicked are but as the weapons of the Lord to set an edge on our affection● which otherwise would creepe vpon the earth and make vs forget our maker whereas by this meanes we oft times cast our 〈◊〉 on our deliuerer which is in heauen Further learne that though tyrants appoint vs as sheepe to the slaughter and in the malice of their hearts doe purpose to fleece vs yet sometime the butcher wanteth his knife and the sheepe in the shambles do escape therefore we need not to be afraid of them that haue not so much power as to kill the bodie vnlesse the Lord giue vs vp into their hands as Dauid saith Psal 7.12 speaking of the wicked hee hath bent his bow and spread his net and hath conceiued mischiefe but shall bring foorth vanitie and the euill intended shall fall vpon his owne hairy scalpe For the diuell that is stronger then man yea that a●meth the malice of men cannot stretch foorth his hand vpon the goods of Iob Iob. 1.12 much lesse touch his body without the permission of the Almighty Herod shall die and Christ shall escape if not the worst that flesh and bloud can doe is but 〈◊〉 send vs with the children of Bethlem into heauen for the Lor● is our shield and we are as neare deare vnto him as the apple of his eie yea he is our secret place and vnder his shadow we can not but be safe For the second point containing the obedience of Iosep● by his example we learne not to runne before Gods promises but patiently to waite vpon them for as hee is alwaies a sure deliuerer of his people so then especially when his mouth ha●● spoken it and vpon this Ioseph relied not stirring till he was called Moses was sure to bring the people of Israel out of Egypt Exod. 3.10 yet hee must staie for it fortie yeeres as if the Lord had forgotten to what purpose hee had appointed him Noab 〈◊〉 the Lords commandement entreth into the Arke and comme●● not foorth till by the same commandement Gen. 8.16 he 〈◊〉 called foorth though by the not returning of the Doue he kn●● the waters were abated from the earth Dauid was sure to be king after Saul yet he waited so long as in his haste he said Psalm 116.11 All men are liers thinking that Samuel had abused him to tell him hee should be King which we must beware of for the cause why the Lord staieth many times is because his seruants crie not out vnto him nor presse him with importunity as Luk. 18.5 the widow did the Iudge or for that our curst heares will not come downe so as he is faine to vse the wicked as rods to chastise and humble vs. Heere also learne that as Christ commeth out of Egypt so the Lord draweth the Gospell out of the fire and giueth it some Sun-shine out of the darkest persecution yea and that as it is said Act. 12.24 in the time of the most ambitious and Lordly tyrants it shall grow and multiply exceedingly for so it hath pleased God that the hotest persecutors as was S. Paul haue embraced it and that kings haue submitted their scepters to the foolishnesse of preaching Which noteth vnto vs that the ignominy that lighteth vpon the crosse is not nor ought to be any occasion to disswade vs from it for the proceeding of Christs kingdome is aboue nature and the perswading to it is cleaue contrary to the custome of the world For saith Cyrus if a Lacedaemonian will serue mee if hee bee a foot-man I will make him an horseman if a horse-man I will giue him a Chariot if hee haue a Chariot I will giue him a Castle if a Castle a Citie and he shall receiue his gold not by tale but by waite But now in the groweth and age of a Christian it fareth otherwise for this is the condition of
the Lords followers to be betrayed of their owne fathers and to be entangled with sundry afflictions to bee banished into Egypt and if thou beest called backe againe yet neuer to haue but a steppe betweene thee and death as Dauid saith 1. Sam. 20.3 But for all this we may not be dismaied for in all these wee shall bee more then conquerours through Christ The third point is in what state Ioseph found all things in Indaea not quiet but still troublesome where we see how God exerciseth the faith and patience of this his seruant shewing heerein as in a glasse the state and condition of the godly how one trouble succeedeth another as if they were thornes folded one within the other Ioseph long expected his deliuerie out of Egypt and now in his returne he is as much grieued at the raigne of Archilaus as he was comforted at the death of Herod which the Lord doth not to presse him downe but to giue him the greater occasion to praise his name in the experience of his many deliuerances Iob 5.19 As Iob saith Out of six troubles the Lord will free me and the seuenth shall neuer come neere me And this is the vse which all Gods children ought to make of the varietie of their dangers the more to strengthen and confirme their hope that Gods hands shall euer be stretched foorth to send them deliuerance from his tabernacle as they were to Dauid Psal 32.6 and as they be in this place to Ioseph who riddeth him likewise out of this second feare Heere also we learne not to be negligent and secure when the Lord hath taken awaie one enemie of his Church for though the principall Doeg be gone that through flatterie abused Saul and that none is like to succeed him that shall haue such grace with the king yet still to keepe vs awake after Herods death comes Archilaus that beareth the same heart and the same affection that Herod did though he hath not the same power and though this be some comfort that hee shall neuer be crowned And thus did the Lord subiect his people still vnder the hand of some succeeding Pharaoh that they might cast vp their hearts to him and bewaile their wants and powre foorth their soules vnto the Almightie And thus shall the forrest neuer be without some Bore or other that would destroy the vine but if we be rooted into Christ and may beare him about vs as Ioseph did he will teach vs to watch or at least if we sleepe he will awake vs as he did his drowsie disciples Mat. 26.40 when danger was at hand For the fourth point how in this perplexed feare an Angell was sent vnto him we learne first wholly to depend on Gods prouidence seeing that in the seuerall extremities of Ioseph the Lord sent him seuerall comforts For first in the suspition and iealousie of his wife an Angell was dispatched from the heauenly palace to resolue him then the same messenger warned him of the imminent persecution and now releeueth him in his distresse And thus will the Lord deale with all his seruants that walke aright if they be not either too forward through hope or too backward through feare Secondly as this was one cause of Iosephs turning into Galiley namely to be succoured in his feare so in this the Lord had another end vnknowen to Ioseph which was the fulfilling of a prophesie that his sonne should be called a Nazarite that is one set apart vnto the Lord by speciall sanctification of nature which was praefigured by Sampson and others vnder the Law Where we learne how the Lord executeth his will both by his seruants and his enemies when as they meane nothing lesse then to doe it Thus did not Dauids father know when he set his sonne to keepe sheepe that he should fight with a Lion 1. Sam. 17.34 nor Sauls father know or once dreame that his sonne should bee anointed king when he sent him to seeke his Asses 1. Sam. 9.16 nor Mary when shee went to Bethlem to be tasked that therein the Prophesie of Michah should bee fulfilled that out of Bethlem should come the gouernour of Israel Michah 5.2 nor Herod in the cruell massacre little thought of performing Ieremiahs prophesie A voice of lamentation Rachel weeping for her children Ier. 31.15 nor the chiefe Priests when with the 30. peeces of siluer which Iudas brought they bought a potters field neuer dreamed of the prophesie of Zachariah chap. 11.13 that for so much should Christ be valued and therewith should such a field be brought But such strength hath the Lord and such power ouer the hearts of men as he can secretly moue them to be executioners of that himselfe hath appointed shall come to passe MATH chap. 3. vers 1 2 3 4 verse 1 And in those daies Iohn the Baptist came and preached in the wildernesse of Iudea verse 2 And said Repent for the kingdome of heauen is at hand verse 3 For this is he of whom it is spoken by the Prophet Esaias saying The voice of him that crieth in the wildernesse prepart yee the way of the Lord make his pathes strait verse 4 And this Iohn had his garment of Camels haire and a girdle of a skinne about his loi●es his meate also was Locusts and wild hony NOW the Euangelist goeth forward and passeth from the infancy of Christ vnto his manifestation to the world when hee was to be inuested into the office of his Priesthood before whom as before a mighty Monarch was to goe a harbinger to the vp lodging for his Lord in the hearts and consciences of men which was this Io●● Baptist. In the words consider first the time when this fore runne● did preach which being by this Euangelist set downe indefinitely is precisely declared by Saint Luke chap. 3.1 Secondly the place where hee exercised his ministery in the wildernesse Thirdly the summe and effect of his Sermons Repent and change your minds and amend your liues for the great King that shall open the doore of saluation vnto all is now at hand Fourthly by what commission he was warranted and authorized to doe this namely by Esay chap. 40.3 who had prophesied this long before Fiftly is described the wonderfull precisenesse and strictnesse of his life by his garments and diet whe● by all the people cast their eies vpon him admiring his austeritie For the first circumstance which is the time we must not vnderstand an immediate successiuenesse that Iohn began to preach as soone as Christ was brought to Nazareth but that it was while Christ liued there which was some 25. yeeres after for this Iohn was stirred vp that hee as the day-starre might goe before the Sonne of righteousnesse Saint Luke setteth it downe to be in the fifteenth yeere of Tiberius and Christ was borne in the fifteenth yeere of Augustus so as Christ was about thirtie yeeres of age when he began to preach Out of which learne generally that we must
life yea scarce possible to abide his smell then Christ by the speaking of a word could doe it when Luk. 15.20 the prodigall sonne had wasted all and was reiected of all then the father receaueth him home againe when Ionas was Ionah 2.2 in the whales belly and as the text saith in the belly of hell that hee thought himselfe cast out of Gods sight then did the Lord bring vp his life from the pit and deliuered him when Daniel was put into the Lions den Dan. 6.22 to be made a pray for beasts then the Lord shewed his power by stopping of the Lions mouthes that they hurt him not when the three children Dan. 3.23 were cast into the fornace seuen times hotter then it was wont to bee because they would not consent to idolatry then did the Lord restraine the nature of the flames that it rather cooled then scorched them when Dauid 1. Sam. 23.26 was compassed on euery side by Saul and his company that he had no way to escape then God sent a messenger to the King to tell him of a power comming against himselfe whereby they left persuing him when the Isralites had the red Sea before them the mountaines on each side them and the Egyptians behind them Exod. 14.21 then did the Lord by a meanes to man impossible prouide for their safety The vse whereof is to our exceeding comfort that if we be closely imprisoned the Angell can vnloose vs when all doe forsake vs then will the Lord gather vs vp Psal 27.10 If we bee ready with Peter to sinke into the sea if we cry but Lord saue vs we shall be safe if we be as dead as the dry bones Ezek. 37.4 the Lord can and will put life into vs the slauery that the Pharaohs of the world can put vs to nor the bondage they can hold vs in is nothing to the Lord with whom nothing is impossible which if we could but once beleeue we would be lifted vp in what misery soeuer for the Lord 〈…〉 ●s from ●ell it selfe so as we are the cause of our ●●ne miseries and of our discomforts in our miseries because we are so incredulous therfore let vs pray to the Lord to increase our faith that wee may neuer distrust in his power for that hee worketh not till it bee impossible hee is moued thereto by our pride lest if he should doe it by meanes wee might attribute it to the second causes and not to his prouidence and so rob him of his glory and on the other side if wee haue no meanes then we distrust his prouidence and so despaire as men without God in the world whereas our affiance in him should driue out all trembling distrust whatsoeuer for hee that hath thus prouided for our soules when they were mouldring away in our sinnes how can we feare but our bodies which with the soule make the whole man shall bee as deare and pretious to him also For the second which is the person sent it is the sonne of God wherein our vnworthinesse appeareth the more that vnlesse Christ had beene sent wee had not beene saued and this wil the more appeare by considering what we are without Christ euen heires of condemnation subiect to euerlasting curse and if we would haue a description of our selues without Christ before we were borne we deserued that the mid-wiues should teare vs and rend vs out of our mothers wombe and cast vs not into water as Pharaohs mid-wiues should haue done to the Israelites Exod. 1.17 but into the fire which might in some sort prefigure the heat in hell and that the first swathing-band should haue beene the chaines of darkenesse to bind vs fast to the diuel and that the first fire to warme vs at should haue beene that that burneth by the breath of the Lord● and that the first milke to cherish vs should haue beene poison to choke vs and that the first garment to cloath vs with should haue beene the wrath and vengance of God for we are so deformed in our conception as the Lord cannot discerne that euer any part of our image came from heauen so polluted in our liues as if the Diuell were let loose among vs yea for our sakes all the creatures both in heauen and earth are accursed except the Angels elect and the diuell who was accursed from the beginning and that ceremoniall leprosie in the law Leuit. 15. prefigureth and 〈…〉 morall vncleannesse and leprosie of our soules for in the law the chaire he sate on the bed he lay on the basen he washt in was vnclean the meat he eat yea the company he kept was so also now in regard hereof God sent his sonne to make that possible which was in vs impossible to make his worth answer our vnworthinesse that since his eie could not indure the sight of our vncleannesse it might delight in the beholding of his holinesse and that the hand that could not bee staied from being auenged on vs might through the obedience of his sonne be tied and fast bound from striking vs and that the violes of vengeance which were opened to bee powred forth on vs might through the pleasure he tooke in his sonne be stopt and diuerted from vs. Secondly it was necessary Christ should be sent for our sinnes being against the maiesty of an infinit God deserue iustice of the same nature which iustice must haue either infinite satisfaction or infinit punishment therefore God being both infinitely iust and infinitly mercifull there must be presented to him one of the same nature who by being infinite may reconcile both these if we should present our selues besides that we are but finit we must needes taste of iustice for what haue we but figge-leaues to couer our shame If we could offer the Angels for our attonemet it were too low a price for they are in themselues finite being at the first created and for this their creation they stand indebted to the Lord and the satisfaction they can giue is but their obedience which is their duty therefore the price of reconciliation must bee the Sonne of God who is infinite aswell as God himselfe equall with him in maiesty in power and in purity and he hath infinitely satisfied his infinite iustice and ioyned him in infinite mercy to vs that as Dauid saith Psal 32.10 we are now compassed about with mercy and we know whatsoeuer compasseth a man there is nothing can come vnto him but it must first come through that doth so compasse him so as wee being through Christ compassed about with the Lords mercy there can no sorrowes come neere vs but either mercy will keepe them out or if they come in they must come through mercy and proceed from mercy and not from iustice nor displeasure 〈…〉 ●●●rd in what manner he was sent In the similitude of ●●●●full flesh Out of which learne that God could not be satisfied for sinnefull flesh but by flesh not by the similitude of flesh but of
was a type of the Messias 1. Sam. 15.28 it was begun in Dauid onely for Saul though he was king before yet was he no type of the Messias And for this second order which is all of Kings we shall see if we peruse the booke of God that Christ came of some as wicked kings as euer were for where from Salomon to the captiuitie there were 19. kings 13. of them were most wicked and some of them had such speciall blemishes spots vpon them as it is doubted whether they be saued or no Salomon had great enormities but there is no doubt of his repentance witnessed by his booke of retractions called Ecclesiastes Asa began well but in his old age he imprisoned the Prophet that told him of his sinne and in his sicknesse trusted more to the Physitian then to God 2. Chr. 16.10.12 Iehosaphat did the woorst act that could be 2. King 8.18 to marrie his sonne Iehoram to Athaliah the daughter of Iezabel whereby manie prouocations were committed and yet these were the best Iehoram he caused all Iuda to commit idolatry so as the Lord forsooke him and 2. Chro. 21.15 he died a miserable death his guts falling out of his belly not all at once but day by day which was more grieuous Ahazia his sonne was slaine 2. Chro. 22.9 by Iehu in the field and neuer any reuenged his blood Ioash his sonne 2. Chron. 23.3 was mightily preserued by Iehoiada the Priest from the hands of Athaliah Yet when the Priest was dead 2. Chron. 24.78 when the Prophets came to tell him he was a bused and misled by his Princes to idolatry he caused them to be slaine in the temple and himselfe Vers 25. was afterward killed by his owne seruants Amaziah his sonne fell to Idolatrie after a victory obtained of the Edomites and 2. Chro. 25.27 was traiterously slaine by his owne subiects Azariah his sonne 2. Chro. 26.21 because he vsurped vpon the Priests office was immediatly smitten with the hand of God that he came to be a Leper but some of those last Kings are not heere named by S. Matthew because hee meant to make a proportionable and euen number that should consist on foureteenes For Ahaz hee made all the altars like the altars of Damascus and 2. King 16.3 made his owne sonne passe through the fire according to the sacrifice and abhomination of the Heathen Iehoiakim hee contemned the threatnings of the Lord and caused the roule to be burnt Ier. 36.23 which Baruch had writ from the mouth of Ieremie he was therefore buried like an Asse as was prophecied by Ieremie 22.19 euen drawne and cast foorth without the gates of Ierusalem And for Zedechiah hee imprisoned the Prophet Ieremie and contemned the Lord therefore were his eies put out by the king of Babel Iere. 39.7.8 and he bound in chaines and led like a slaue into captiuity Out of which obserue that there is no priuiledge in the Princes chaire to keepe them from sinning neither yet that the maiestie of their places can protect them from the Lords vengance Vnderstand these words touching Christs descent legally as Deu. 25.5.6 and pag. 8. line 29. but that if their hearts bee lifted vp against God his hand shall fall vpon them to their distruction for the grace of the Lord must season their palaces else doe they stand but in slippery places And though our Sauiour Christ vouchsafed to come out of the loines of such wicked Kings it was not at all to giue an●e countenance to their offences or to embolden them in their sinnes but onely to open the fountaine of mercy to vs that wee may know he is able to sanctifie the vilest sinner Now for the third order which is of them who were caried away into captiuity note first the cause of the captiuity secondly the cruelty of it thirdly the mercy of the Lord in their deliuerance For the first which is the cause that Gods owne children and them of the blood royall should be caried into slauery it is set downe 2. Chro. 36.12 to be first for that the king rebelled against God and humbled not himselfe before Ieremy the Lords Prophet Secondly for that both Priest and people trespassed wonderfully set downe in two things principally First they polluted the house of the Lord with the abhominations of the heathen Secondly they mocked and misused the messengers of the Lord and despised his words vntill the wrath of the Lord rose vp against them and that there was no remedie but he was enforced to giue them to the bloud-thirsty Babylonians Wherein obserue what a fearefull thing it is to fall into idolatrie after our eies haue once beene opened and how nothing prouokes the Lord so much as the contempt of his embassage For if hauing once seene the goodnesse and power of God we decline from him and lay holde on other helpes and contemne the face and speech of his Ministers whom he hath made acquainted with his secrets and that wee waxe strong in our selues we doe but as Vzziah did 2. Chron. 26.16 lift vp our hearts to destruction and force the Lord to take his cuppe of indignation in his hand and to holde it as well to the mouth of the king as to the people for where all conspire to worke mischiefe all shall be ouerwhelmed with the same madnesse as Ieremy speaketh chap. 25.18 For the second which is the miserie they sustained being captiues it is to be seene first in their vsage before they came to Babylon set downe 2. Chr. 36.17 they tooke both young and old men and women and though they fled to the Sanctuarie for succour yet were they there stabbed with daggers they burnt the house of God and tooke the precious vessels of it to abuse in their superstition when they come to Babel Now to see the temple on fire and yong and old slaine without mercy had beene enough to haue rent their hearts in peeces to see the worship of God thus defaced and themselues reserued but as an after pray to the enemy But now secondly comming thither namely to Babel to behold such grosie idolatry and to heare such high reproches as no doubt were giuen against the God of Israel as Psal 137.3 Come sing a song to the God of Iuda that hath forsaken you and Beholde heere be the people whom the Lord hath spued out besides the bondage wherein themselues were kept how could they but straine foorth teares of bloud and send foorth deepe sighes from a mournfull spirit Yea their case was so desperate and miserable as Ezech. 37.11 their raising vp againe and restitution was made of the Lord as great a matter and as hard as to put life into a company of dead bones for their the Lord saith These drie bones are the house of Israel neither yet did this their captiuity last but a while but they were wintred and sommered there full 70. yeeres as was foretold by the Prophet Ieremy chap. 25.11 that
they should be an astonishment and serue the king of Babel so many yeeres For the third which is the Lords mercy in their deliuerance they be the words of his owne mouth For thy sake O Israel I will not doe it for thou art filthy Ezec. 36.22 but for my owne sake I will that they may know I am able to doe it and for Dauid my seruants sake I will not vtterly put out the light of Israel Hence learne generally that there is no nation so free but the Lord may captiuate and if they decline and leaue their first loue the Lord may and will abandon them For if any people might haue presumed it was this who had the promises and a more peculiar presence of God then any nation vnder heauen yet were they vile and did stincke in his sight for abusing his kindenesse and setting at nought his Ministers Howbeit neuer were they more scorned then in these daies wherein either men make themselues deafe that they will not heare or heare but there is a noise of vanity higher and louder in their eares Heere then is the same cause of captiuity why should wee not feare the same iudgement We see it is our selues can doe vs the greatest hurt for when wee once giue our selues ouer to loosenesse of life and to distaste the word the Lord then disarmes vs both of policie and strength that euen a weake enemy may soone surprize vs. Let therefore euery man amend one albeit these times bee so mischieuous as it is to be feared lest many of vs be as willing to returne to Babylon for religion as euer were the Israelites to come foorth Secondly obserue the cursed and hard-harted disposition of the enemies of God that they thinke no torment nor cruelty too exquisite nor too sharpe for his people for Zedechia and Ahab did the King of Babel burne in the fire Ier. 29.22 and the rest were slaues to him and his sonnes 2. Chro. 36.20 With which malice the diuell hath poisoned and filled their hearts because they cannot be auenged of the Lord himselfe for euen at him doe the proud Nimrods of the world point their fingers Gen. 11.4 and against him doe they lay their siege to plucke him out of his seate for the Babylonians were more fierce to the Israelites then to any other whom they subdued onely because they were the chosen and beloued of the Lord. Lastly obserue in their deliuery the compassion of the Almighty that he will not be angry for euer and the truth of his promise that he will at the length visite his people in mercy when they thinke the clouds so thicke as they cannot be ouerblowne for now when Israel was euen rent to ragges he harboured Ier. 29.11 the thoughts of peace and not of trouble and gaue them an end of their fainting hope euen a mighty deliuerance by the hand of Cyrus king of Persia 2. Chro. 36.22 Where it is said Iechonias begat Salathiel obserue that Salathiel was not his naturall sonne but ouely succeeded him in the kingdome by legall succession as next heire for Iechonias had no sonnes but the house of Salomon ended with him as appeareth Ier. 22.30 Write this man that is Iechomas destitute of children So also Ezec. 21.26.27 the Lord speaking of Salomon I will ouerturne saith he repeating it thrice the diademe of this king and neuer shall any out of his loines weare it vntill he come whose right it is that is the Messias and I will giue it him To prooue also that Salomons line must cease and that Christ must not come of him lineally appeareth by the prophesie of Isaiah 2. King 20.18 that there should not one bee left of the house of Iehoiakim which could not be so vnlesse the line of Salomon were vtterly extinguished and for Salathiel he came of Nathan the second brother as Saint Luke setteth it downe chap. 3.31 which nothing disagreeth from this of Saint Matthew for he was but to shew the line of the Kings and not naturally of whom Christ came but whom hee should succeed in the kingdome Where note the wonderfull prouidence of God that Salomon who had so many wiues and children hath not now any left to sit vpon the throne to teach vs that Salomon was to bee punished for his many wiues so as the Lord would not haue Christ to come of him naturally but of his yonger brother Whereby all nobility may bee swallowed vp in the glory of the Lords progeny and generation that drowneth all nobility that since Salomon in all his glory wanteth naturall heires that they stand not vpon these outward shewes and dignities but seeke to continue their posterity by liuing in a cleane and holy course of life for the Lord will wash away the vnholy seede and serape out their names from vnder heauen that seeke to establish their house in filthinesse and to pollute the mariage bed Further in that Christ is said to come of Ioseph the poore Carpenter heerein are the ancient Prophecies fulfilled Esay 53.2 that Christ should come and no man regard him and that he should grow vp as a roote out of the drie ground without forme or beauty and as Esay 11.1 that the should come as a rod out of the stocke of Ishai the Yeoman 1. Sam. 16.3 whereby we obserue that when things are most desperate then the Lord recouereth them and now when the kingdome was come to a poore Carpenter then Christ was borne to teach vs that in the greatest exigents and extremities we must neuer distrust nor seeke to extricate our selues out of any sorrow the Lord hath brought vs to but still to waite vpon him for as Dauid saith Psalm 32.7 The Lord is our secret place that is he hath many priuie deliuerances wee know not of and as Psalm 4.3 will strengthen vs vpon the bed of sorrow as he did Dauid who when Saul with his armie was euen at his heeles and hee no doubt much anguished yet the Lord had his secret deliuerance for him and turned Saul on the sudden another way 1. Sam. 23.27 Euen so heere when it had beene night with the Israelites a long time and that their enimies thought they should neuer recouer their sight againe then ariseth Christ like they day-starre and restoreth the beauty of their kingdome to greater glory then before let vs therefore waite with Simeon for the saluation that shall come Now remaineth to shew the difference in the recital of Christs pedegree by Saint Matthew and that of Saint Luke chap. 3.23 and it standeth in three points first Mathew doeth descend from the first to the last from Abraham to Ioseph Luke ascendeth from the last to the first from Ioseph to Abraham Secondly Mathew was to fetch his pedegree so as he might proue him to be the Messias of the Iewes and to come directly from the feed of Abraham Luke deriueth him not onely from Abraham but from Adam that he might shew him to be
that he is able by his power to disappoint the decree of God which is the nature of all Atheists to challenge absolute dominion vpon the earth thinking God to be shut vp in heauen but he that sitteth there laugheth them to scorne for Herod thought to haue had the life of the babe but the babe had his when the measure of his sinnes were fulfilled For the second generall point which is the obedience of Ioseph learne how willingly he takes vp his crosse he might haue thought himselfe a miserable man to haue maried such a wife as he might not accompanie with and the babe which was borne to be the cause of these vnseasonable troubles for these no doubt were the suggestions of flesh and bloud but he laieth aside consulting with the old man and fixeth his eie vpon God and casteth his care vpon the highest that as he had giuen the temptation so he knew he would likewise giue the issue like Abraham Gen. 22.8 who answered his sonne saying God will prouide a sacrifice and like this babe himselfe who afterward in his conflict of death Mark 14.36 though most tedious and grieuous to the flesh did yet submit himselfe to his fathers will So as the obedience of Ioseph is here commended by this that he presently dispatcheth not standing reasoning with the Angell nor waiting for the comfort of the day for cursed is he that doth the worke of the Lord negligently He knew this babe was the Lord of glory and that all the world could not murder him as yet because he had a worke to doe for the King of heauen yet seeing there is at this time no other doore of escape but flying hee is neither negligent nor carelesse but he accounteth all haste too little and in the night trusseth vp all he had whereby we may thinke he was exceeding poore and maketh no delay Where we learne that though we be sure the Lord will defend vs yet if we be in danger and the Lord hath opened a window for our deliuerance that we vse all possible dispatch Dauid was sure Saul could not surprise him because the Lord had promsed him the kingdome yet 1. Sam. 24.1 he hideth himselfe in caues and flieth frō one place to another to auoid his fury because though he had Gods oth that he should be king yet he would not tempt God by exposing himselfe to danger So Ioseph though he had the babe of life in his hands yet flies which is a matter of no distrust but of singular obedience because he is willed so to doe For the third point which is the fulfilling of the prophesie The Prophet Osea ch 11.1 after he had set downe the sinnes of the Israelites and had brought in God threatning them with his iudgements and with this iudgement as the greatest that he would distinguish the light of Israel by taking away his sonne which was their glory then hee is sent from God to comfort them againe after this sort that although they had beene rebellious whom the Lord had chosen in his couenant though they had not profited by his corrections and though it might agree with the Lords iustice to depriue them vtterly of his sonne yet forasmuch as Israel is his childe though he hath sent his sonne into Egypt that thereby they might consider their owne vnwoorthinesse yet for his meere mercy sake he will bring him forth againe and restore him vnto them Where we learne first that though we breake our couenant with God yet hee is faithfull that hath promised and will neuer breake his couenant with vs for his thoughts be not like our thoughts but he is the same for euer howbeit if the Lord do beare vs in his armes as he did Ephraim Osea 11.3 and leade vs with the bands of loue Iam. 1.17 if he take the yoke from our iawes and yet we will not acknowledge by whom wee are healed and in whom we are eased we shall wander in the desert of our owne lusts and languish as it were in torment of conscience before the Lord will vnfold the brightnesse of his Sunne and discouer the light of his countenance vnto vs. For though Christ shall be called out of Egypt at the last yet many sorrowes shall runne ouer the hearts of the Israelites before they shall see him Secondly in this prophesie obserue that there was neuer any thing shewed should come to Christ which was base but it was foretold before that when it came it might not seeme strange nor men might not be offended at it as heere is foretol● his flying into Egypt and his basenesse that no man would vouchsafe to looke vpon him was foretold by Esay chap. 53.2 So was it foretold that not many mighty or noble should be called for as S. Paul saith 1. Cor. 2.8 none of the Princes of the world haue knowen the wisedome of God to the end we may not be offended with the base professors of the Gospell but may be as S. Paul calleth them 1. Cor. 4.10 fooles for Christ his sake So was it foretold that in the latter daies there should be scarse faith found vpon the earth as S. Paul speaketh 1. Tim. 4.1 that we may not be discouraged with the profanenesse of the world but that wee may labour to bee of the number of those fooles to whom the riches of the Gospell is reuealed and in the company of those few whose lampes shall bee found burning and whose faith shall be found grounded vpon the perswasion of Gods loue in his sonne MATH chap. 2. vers 16 17 18 verse 16 Then Herod seeing that he was mocked of the Wise-men was exceeding wroth and sent foorth and slue all the male children that were in Bethlem and in all the coastes thereof from two yeeres old and vnder according to the time which he had diligently searched out of the Wise-men verse 17 Then was that fulfilled which is spoken by the Prophet Ieremias saying verse 18 In Rhama was a voice heard mourning and weeping and great howling Rachel weeping for her children and would not bee comforted because they were not NOW followeth the persecution it selfe the perswasion of the Angell being like a flash of lightning before a clap of thunder wherein the Euangelist deliuereth three generall points First by what occasion Herod was so set on fire and exasperate to beethinke himselfe of these murthers namely because hee thought himselfe abused Secondly the execution of this massacre with the circumstances first of the place it was in Bethlem and the townes adioyning to it secondly of the persons they were children of two yeeres old and vnder Thirdly the Euangelist noteth the fulfilling of a prophesie anciently foretold that this comming to passe they might know it was no small matter and withall that the sonne of God was sent not to raigne as a Monarch but to be persecuted vnto bloud For the first Herod thought himselfe mocked not that he was so but onely deemed himselfe so Where
we learne that Princes thinke them selues abused and that disparagement is done to the state royall if men will not be executioners of their bloudy complots and euen sell their soules for the effecting of their designes Herod is mocked because the Wise-men will not relate the certainty of Christs birth that he may murder him and Saul 1. Sam. 22.17 thinketh himselfe contemned because his footmen would not slay the Priests of the Lord that had their hand with Dauid Secondly in that he tearmeth it mockery note that the wicked can father that vpon others whereof themselues are most guilty for the Wise-men they meant simply but that they were interdicted of God to returne to the court but Herod he mocked with the Lord for though hee knew that this new-borne King was to be set vp and that hee must raigne in the hearts of men yet in despight of God he though either by policy to circumuent it or by power to withstand the ordinance of the Lord scorning at the Oracles of the Prophets and complaining of cousinage when himselfe would haue cousined the almighty like vnto Fimbria of Rome who hauing dangerously wounded one the next day entred an action against the party grieued because hee had receiued but part of his blade into his bodie and not all And is it not strange when Pharaoh shall call Moses hard hearted when the Wolfe shall accuse the Lambe the Serpent saie the Doue is too subtle and Herod exclaime vpon the Wise men for mockerie when himselfe nourished so foule a vice against the highest No doubt he was wroth but not simplie because the Wise men returned not but for his owne sottishnesse that hee had not sent some man with them to haue seene what had become of the babe But thus when Princes make league and band themselues against the Lord and contribute toward the affliction of his saints hee insnareth them in their owne inuentions and infatuateth their deuises and destroieth the counsell of Achitophel Psal 18.26 2. Sam. 17.14 for as the Psalmist saith With the froward the Lord will deale frowardly For the second point which is the execution of this butchery we see to the end that if it were possible he might haue the bloud of the babe among the multitude he spareth none and the stories report in this massacre was killed his owne sonne whereupon Augustus the Emperour said in detestation of his cruelty that he had rather be Herods hogge then his heire By which we learne that the diuell possessing the heart of a tyrant makes him execute any thing tending to the maintenance of his state though the nature of man abhorre it as the effusion of bloud or though they be checked and amated by their owne hearts for Herod knew if Christ were borne he must raigne yet against his owne conscience he endeuours by counsell if he be able to deceiue or by crueltie if he be able to supplant the decree of God Thus did Pharaoh Exod. 8.4 seeke to crosse the commandement and purpose of the Lord in the deliuery of his seruants though by many immediate testimonies and wonders from heauen hee saw it as it were written on the walles that the Israelites must depart And thus did Saul seeke the life of Dauid though he was told by Samuel 1. Sam. 15.28 that the Lord the strength of Israel that could not lie had rent the kingdome from him and giuen it to his neighbour Secondly obserue hence that when one way succeedeth not to these Atheists then they straite attempt another Pharaoh at the first doth but exact further and greater labour of the Israelites but after he dealeth with the Midwiues Exod 1.15 to kill them that should be borne and after his malice breaketh foorth more fiercely into an edict or proclamation vers 22. that the male borne should be cast into the riuer So Saul confessing that he knew the Lord would establish the kingdome in the throne of Dauid yet first he sought to insnare him by his daughter 1. Sam. 18.17 Onely saith he fight thou the battels of the Lord and thou shalt haue my daughter but after his hypocrisie is discouered c. 19.1 making solemne proclamation Who haue I among all my souldiers that will do thus much for me to kill Dauid So as he that could spare Agag would pierce Dauid So Herod when he saw he was preuented of his first purpose by the not returning of the Wise men he still trauelleth with the same mischiefe and whereas before hee sought but the life of the babe onely now he is so enraged as he doubleth his crueltie and will haue the life of many innocent babes such a fire is sinne to double and increase the heate by burning and the deferring of their cursed attempts which should be as water to quench them is as oile to inflame them this being wrought by the malice of the diuell who throweth in fresh poison into our hearts that if wee bee preuented in our resolution of murdering the Lord Iesus we will be like the Dragon Reu. 12.12 to send foorth whole flouds of waters out of our mouthes to drowne and destroy his members Thirdly obserue that there is no edict or proclamation so cruell or execrable against Gods Saints which some wicked men will not execute at their Princes commandement If Iesabel would haue Naboths vineyard and cannot obtaine it without his life 1. King 21.11 she shall haue gouernors to serue her turne that will so one follow her cursed counsell When no man will fall vpon the Priests at the words of Saul 1. Sam. 22.17 then will Doeg take the sword and do it and Herod heere can no sooner mention a murder but his seruants will execute it Where further consider that if hell be prepared for the commander so is it likewise for the executioner though his act bee warranted by authority Is it in the power of the Prince to bring in a religion against God or may they doe what they will God forbid If the Prince should command mee to burne the Bible I ought not to doe it for a thing is not of God because she commands it but because it is of God therefore ought shee to command it Cambises king of Persia inflamed with incest consulteth with his Wise-men whether he may lawfully mary his sister they answer they find no such law to warrant it but they finde another law that the King of Persia is without all law And thus doe Princes counsellers feed them in their humors nodding at whatsoeuer Augustus will haue done And euen so miserable are these times that men doe wait at their Princes mouthes and performe their decrees not scanning whether they be grounded vpon the law of God which ought to bee the rule whereat Princes should leuell their commandements and by which subiects should square their obedience For it is not enough to slay Amnon 2. Sam. 13.29 at Absoloms commandement neither shall Rabshaketh excuse himselfe Esay 36.16 for railing on
iudgement that hee knew not all that pertained to his calling and ministery yet addeth a reason why he did this I can giue but water but thou canst giue the spirit to purge the conscience Christ seeing his modesty bids him leaue off to intreate of his excellency and his owne basenesse that he was as the Sonne and Iohn but as the day starre Let this goe saith Christ for thou and I both must labour to doe that God hath appoi●ted it is thy calling to baptize and mine to require it professing himselfe to bee in the number of repentants Iohn seeing that Christ shewed this actiō to be a part of that righteousnesse should be fulfilled did receiue him whereupon after Christ had been● drenched in the water a miracle was seene the heauens to open the holy Ghost to descend a voice from his Father that this Sonne was principally beloued and for his sake all others should be beloued So as the Sauiour of the world was first baptized and then miraculously consecrated to be that great monarch of heaven and earth In the words there are two generall parts to bee considered first that Christ was baptized from vers 13. to the latter end of vers 15. secondly what-testimony was giuen from heauen for his consecration to the Mediatorship In the first there be these circumstances set downe first that Christ tooke paines himselfe to come secondly that Iohn at first refused him giuing a reason why he did so thirdly Christ replying vpon him with a reason added why he required it and why Iohn may not deny it For the first of these consider two circumstances first at what time Christ came secondly whence he came then the word shewes a continuance of the story then when Iohn had prepared a people by his ministery to receiue Christ and when the fulnesse of time was come and the time of his present prinate life expired Heere generally consider that God determineth the times and seasons of mens priuate and publike callings Moses was forty yeeres of age before God told him he should bee the delinerer of his people and after hee had discontinued and walked priuatly forty yeeres more then hee was called of God to that office Act. 7.23 Exo. 3.10 So Iohn was thirty yeeres old before hee began to execute his ministery So for Christ it might seeme tedious to his parents that hee should so long containe himselfe in their priuate house and albeit he was destinated and ordained from the wombe to this great office and worke yet he must expect his fathers pleasure before hee offer himselfe to goe forth of Galile It is true of all men which Ieremy speakes of himselfe ch 1.5 God called me saith he and sanctified me to be a Prophet from the wombe yea before I was fashoined So Paul Gal. 1.15 saith he was separate from his mothers wombe to preach the gospell yet they must both wait and attend for a reall calling The vse that is hence to be gathered is that as Christ contented and satisfied himselfe with a priuate life when by comming abroade he might haue come to great renowne in the world so much more are we to satisfie our selues with that place wee haue and leaue it to Gods wisedome who in fulnesse of time will call if he haue any imploiment for vs so as no man may beg or buy a calling or thinke all his graces buried if he enter not presently into the broade way of worldly fame for God will in time if he haue set him apart for his husbandry prouide him a place and meanes for his lawfull entrance and such an admittance as may secure his conscience For the second whence he came from Galile where may be demanded why Iohn went not to him he being but the seruant● the reason is first because Iohns ministery was appointed to be exercised in the wildernesse secondly it was to set forth the maiesty and to preserue the dignity and worthinesse of the ministery for in as much as Christ was to be baptized hee was to come thither as one that was to partake of some fruit of his office Which example and prefident shewes that no man ought to thinke himselfe too good to come to Iohn that is to the Minister of God in whose mouthes heehath put the words of reconciliation and in whose hands are the distribution of his seales And this condemneth all those that seeke to bring the Temple into their house or wait that the Arke should come to them Dauid we see though a King of high glory and renowne Psal 84 2.3 complaineth and mourneth that he could not haue accesse to the church of God and thought the birds happier the● he that sate and sung within the Temple And if the King of heauen the Lord Iesus did humble himselfe to goe to Iohn much more ought flesh and bloud to striue to ioyne themselues to the publike place where the ministery is exercised The second circumstance is Iohns forbidding of Christ to come to his baptisme Out of which place appeareth that Iohn acknowledged him to be the Messias though he was cloathed with sinfull flesh for he saith he had need to receiue the holy Ghost of him which none can giue but Christ Now how knew he this for by the wisedome of God it was wrought that they neuer saw nor met before therefore hee must needs know it miraculously euen as miraculously Luke 1.41 hee leapt in his mothers wombe when she first heard of Christs conception And if the signe to know him be the Doue as some would haue it how knew he him before It must be answered that God gaue him a secret reuelation to himselfe to discerne that this was the person in whom dwelt the God-head bodily Coloss 2.9 and after for further confirmation which was a signe a posteriori there was this exhibition of that token a Doue descending on him According as Exod. 3.12 Moses was told he should bee a deliuerer of the people of Israel and this was his signe that when he had done it he should sacrifice to God in the mount that is it should further confirme him for he knew it before when he went forth of Egypt with the people Where we may learne that if we walke simply as in the sight of God and make a conscience of our calling wee shall haue if need require an extraordinary presence and help of God to instruct vs and we shall be taught of him the secrets and wonders of the Lord. Further learne in this refusall of Iohn to baptise Christ that although a man may be an excellent Minister yet hee may erre concerning some chiefe point of his office and this to bee no disparagement to him euen as Iohn failed in this duty So as we draw out of this particular example this generall instruction against such as except against Ministers being of another iudgement then others be for if he be faithfull in the greatest duty of his calling and his end be
against the expresse commandement of his maker to haue approched vnto God without the suffering and crucifying of the flesh of man in Christ Iesus neither had this punishment sufficed had not Christ in our flesh by his obedience recompensed our breach of this law of God And yet because this is the anchor of our hope the ground of our faith and the security of our happinesse heereafter the spirit doth more neerely bond it selfe to our capacitie teaching vs this heauenly mystery by seuen earthly comparisons First Rom. 13.14 It is Saint Pauls precept to put on the Lord Iesus Christ wherein he compareth Christ to garment which hath two properties first to couer our nakednesse secondly to keepe vs warme thus as we put on our apparell to couer the shame and to hide the nakednesse of our bodies so wee should put on the robes of Christs righteousnesse to couer the deformity of our sinfull soules and as by our garments our heat is kept within the body whereby our life is preserued so by our putting on of Christ we that otherwise should be frozen in our dregges receiue a spirituall warmth wherby the life of our soules is kept in and maintained and as while our garments are on vs wee are said to bee in our clothes but being cast from vs wee are euen ashamed of our selues and vnquiet till we haue got some other couering of place to hide vs in so while we are couered with Christ we are said to be in Christ but if we lay him aside then are we laid open to the shame of the world to the age of Satan to the tyranny of sinne and to the wrath of God Hence arise many fruitfull meditations for our particular instruction First that we thinke it a matter of more necessitie to be clothed with Christ then with our carthly garments and that we are neuer fully apparelled till wee haue put him on For by how much the soule is of more value then the body so much ought our care to be increased rather for the furnishing of the one then of the other in this respect also that the soule is the defence of the bodie that if we be sound and sincere within and haue spiritual heat at the heart there are no outward discomforts of pouerty reproch or persecution that can at all dismay vs. This Dauid hath taught vs out of his owne experience 1. Sam. 17.38.45 who went against Goliah not in the kings raiment though that was offered him but clothed himselfe with armour of better proofe the name of the Lord of Hosts who closed his enemy in his hand of farre greater strength than himselfe Naie to perswade and prouoke vs vnto this wee haue example euen in the time of Christ Matt. 14.36 that as manie as touched but the hem of his garment were made whole of bodily diseases and if there were such vertue in his apparell how much more strength and power is there in himselfe to cure all spirituall diseases of the soule and to keepe the body from sicknesse also vnlesse by sicknesse and infirmitie we shall thriue and prosper toward God Secondly when thou puttest on Christ be sure thou wearest him as thine vppermost garment both on thy body and on thy minde for that that is aboue the rest is best seene and let the world thinke of thee as it will it shall be thy true glorie to haue Christ seene in thy attire that thou goest comely and not vainely and garishly to haue him seene in thy speech that it be not wanton and blasphemous but such as may giue grace to the hearers and tend to edifying to haue him seene in thy behauiour and in all the actions of thy life that others by thy light may bee drawen out of darknesse that glory may bee giuen to thy father which is in heauen for if thou shalt think to weare Christ as we say next the skinne and shalt put any garments ouer him thou deceiuest thine owne soule and couerest thy selfe but with the lusts of the flesh and the pride of life which will lead thee to destruction for as Paul saith Col. 3.9.10 wee must put off the old man with his works and put on the new which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him Thirdly when thou puttest on Christ thou must take heed thou puttest him not vpon thy head or vpon thy hands or vpon any one part of thy body but he must be so put on as hee couer thy whole body from the head to the foote for if the diuell finde any part vncouered hee will possesse that therefore S. Paul Ephes 6.11 bids vs put on the whole armour of God that wee may be complet souldiers for if we be vnarmed in any part we may receiue a wound in that part which may be dangerous to the whole body so as if wee weare Christ onely in our mouthes that wee can talke religiously and haue him not in our feete to keepe vs from running astraie to wickednesse or haue him onely in our thoughts and not in our actions or in some of our actions and not in all then are wee not couered with Christ at all for saith the Apostle Ephes 4.15 wee must in all things not in some grow vp into him which is the head that is Christ Fourthly when thou hast once put on Christ thou must neuer lay him aside nor put him off againe for he is a garment that neuer weareth he is yesterday to day and the same for euer and his yeares shall not faile Hebr. 1.12 thou hast the same need of him and vse of him in the night as in the day in thy rest as in thy labour in thy health to prosper thee as in thy sicknesse to comfort thee in temptations to strengthen thee as in peace of conscience to secure thee for there being no time free wherin we are not subiect to fal we can at no time want his grace which must be our stay and sufficiencie 2. Cor. 12.9 Peter may well teach vs the vse of this lesson by the danger himselfe was in Matt. 26.70 by shaking off this garment in the high priests hall for he would needs before them all denie double it by an oth that he knew not Christ so as if Christ in mercy had not stucke close to him and kept himselfe on Luk. 22.61 by turning backe and looking on him wee see how euen in a chase and when there was no eminent persecution ouer him Peter had cast him aside as if hee had neuer receiued any former good by him which must make vs feare and tremble to giue such a guest no better en●●●tainement and such a garment no safer keeping since onely in the robes of Christ wee receiue our blessing and for his sake alone are beloued The second comparison is 2. Cor. 13.5 Know yee not that Christ is in you or dwelleth in you except yee be reprobates Where Christ is compared to our dwelling
grace of God the second is the matter of instruction and this is to be considered two waies first by shewing what things we are to forbeare which is twofold first vngodlinesse in respect of religion secondly worldly lusts as furtherers to prophannesse Secondly by shewing what things we must incline vnto which be three first sobrietie of life secondly to liue righteously toward men for the duties of the second table thirdly to liue religeouslie in respect of the worship of God Last in verse 13 there is propounded an effectuall meanes whereby we may be the better affected and more earnestly prouoked 〈◊〉 follow this counsell which is an expectation or hoping for of a more excellent glorie which shall be giuen at the appearing of the Lord Iesus for hardly can a man throughly mortifie himselfe vnlesse he propound to himselfe a more excellent reward in the life to come For the first that is the grace of God which is the teacher this that is so called heere may be iudged and resolued to be the Gospell or the doctrine of the Gospell by the end of the tenth verse that yee may saith the Apostle adorne the doctrine of the Gospell which is called grace by the effect it worketh in the hearts of men namely because it bringeth vs to the grace of Christ through the remission of our sinnes in his precious bloud And therefore Paul Rom. 1.16 calleth the Gospell the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth whatsoeuer he bee Iew or Grecian and Eph. 1.13 sheweth how that by trusting and beleeuing in the word of truth the Gospel of our saluation we are sealed with the holie spirit of promise And 2. Thes 2.10 the reason is giuen why men are reiected and cast from Christ because they receiue not the loue of the truth that they might be saued For as S. Peter saith 1. Pet. 4.17.18 Where shall the vngodly and the sinner appeare and what shall be the and of them that obey not the Gospell Secondly this grace of God doth perswade vs thus to liue as is heere prescribed by this token that it bringeth saluation so as obserue he doth not say simply The grace of God hath appeared and teacheth vs c. but that grace which bringeth saluation doth beseech and teach vs to reforme our liues because saluation is already purchased Euen so Christ and his forerunner Iohn Baptist Matt. 3.2 preached amendement of life for remission of sinnes because the kingdome of God was at hand that is the Gospell so called because none shall enter into that kingdome that hath not first entered into the kingdome of grace So Paul when he had folded and enwrapped all vnder sinne and had taught the points of our predestination Rom. 9.10 in the 12. chapter and 1. verse he beseecheth them by the bowels of the Lord Iesus to be renewed in their mindes and reformed in their liues And Rom. 6.12 he exhorteth them that sinne may not raigne nor haue dominion ouer them because they are called to the grace of the Gospell to bee iustified in the blood of Christ So Peter 1. Pet. 1.17 from our redemption draweth an exhortation to new life If saith he yee call God father passe your time in feare and Paul 1. Cor. 6.20 exhorteth to glorifie God in our members because we are his and not our owne being bought with a great price So as this is the most effectuall persawsion that can bee ● Cor. 7. ● because we are alreadie washed to keepe ourselues cleane Further obserue that the Gospell being brought in heere not simply perswading vs to purity cleannesse of life but as bringing saluation with it that as all benefites may perswade so there bee three sorts of benefites especially that may perswade most of which saluation is the greatest The first kind of benefite to perswade by is deliuerance from some great extremity the second is an aduancement from a base estate to some high dignity the third is a benefite that ioyneth both these together and this is most forcible How farre the first of these may preuaile Dauid sheweth 1. King 1.29 who when hee would assure Barsheba his wife that Salomon should succeed him in his kingdome to giue the best security he could he protested As the Lord liueth that hath deliuered my soule from aduersity thy sonne Salomon shall raigne after me as if he should say as hee was to bee thankfull and obedient to the Lord for these his deliuerances so he would pledge and gage this to her vpon the certainety of Salomons succession For the second sort when from a base condition a man is aduanced to some speciall preferment and how this preuaileth appeareth in Ioseph Gen. 39.8.9 who by the force of this argument beateth backe the assaults of his Ladie and Mistresse for he bearing in minde the speciall benefites of his master towards him reasoneth thus I Ioseph by my masters fauour am now the greatest in all his house being at first a bond-man there is nothing but he hath committed to my charge onely thee hath he reserued to him selfe how is it possible then I should commit such a villany to so kinde and bountifull a master making his owne aduancement as a bulwarke to driue backe the siege of his mistresse incontinency thereby euen to stoppe her mouth by appealing to her owne conscience that weighing how his master had dealt with him there could bee no excuse for him if hee should commit such a villany For the third wherein both these concurre what heart can bee so vngratefull as not to bee perswaded to yeeld obedience to him that hath performed both these If a man committing some criminall offence and when the stroke was euen ready to be giuen in that very instant of his anguished minde as for death it selfe so for so shamefull a death the King should send him a pardon and after aduance him to some honorable office therby to grace him for his former indignitie and to cleare him of his former blemish if this man should haue any suite recommended to him from his King which sute should carry with it some remembrance of his deliuerance were it possible for that man but to execute this commandement and to further this suite with great loyaltie Surely hee could not but doe it Let vs see then how farre the Gospell may preuaile with vs since it hath brought saluation which implieth and presupposeth that there was damnation before for wee were the heires of Sathan without Christ without light wrapped in the chaines of darknesse ordained not to the execution of the gibbet but to bee iudged after the passing of a few da●es in trouble and vanity to be tormented eternally with the damned from this hath the Gospell brought vs therefore when we are tempted to sinne we should say vnto our selues As the Lord liueth that hath deliuered my soule from death I will not doe it and haue this suite commended vnto thee not to wallow in the
would not mary her as by the law he might haue done and after haue put her to death Deu. 22.21 if she could not haue shewed the tokens of her virginity but he would haue put her away priuily and resigned his interest to him who as he suspected had abused her Wherein we learne that iust men are to take all things at the best and not to seeke occasions of others hurt or meanes to wreake their malice on them that haue in sort abused them for loue must couer and religion must passe by offences If Nabal be so churlish as to deny refreshing to our seruants 1. Sam. 25.10 we may not be so impatient as Dauid to vow their destruction but with the mildenesse of Abigael we must leaue them to the Lord. A patterne of this also we haue in Ioseph of Egypt who though he was sold by his brethren in the depth of their malice yet neuer vpbraided them with their fault but gently passed by it freely forgaue it accounting it as the hand of God that had sent him thither Gen. 45.8 And this indeed ought to be the affectiō of all Gods children Gal. 6.1 not to blaze but as as S. Paul speaketh to support one another in their infirmities and not to shame them when the actiō committed may in some sort be wel construed Further obserue that this example of Iosephs in making the best of his wiues honesty is no warrant for husbands to keepe their wiues that may publikely be conuinced of adultery but they may safely releeue themselues by the law of the Magistrate so as their end in prosecuting the matter be not to defame them but to reforme them for the sword is a notable meanes to bring vs to repentance And though Ioseph complaineth not it doeth not prooue that others should be silent for the cause is diuers First Ioseph seeing her defloured did abhor to accompany with her Secondly knowing her great piety and singular modesty he wondred how it came he could not accuse her for an adulteresse for it might be the act was done before they were betrothed Now in this perplexity he staieth his thoughts and recommendeth it to God and so this was of a matter altogether doubtfull therefore not like to that where she is publikely conuinced of such shameles filthines Againe in this of Iosephs the whole case was extraordinary and the Lord had the full stroke in it for he suffered Ioseph to be abused by the errour of his iudgment and restrained Mary from speaking one word to her husband how all this matter was wroght whereas he louing her to entirely and being fully perswaded of her piety and thereby halfe induced not to make suspition of her chastity he would haue rested contented with her relation but the Lord stopped her mouth that as this action proceeded immediatly from God so Ioseph should be satisfied only by the oracle of God and therefore this is not to be matched resembled to that where women shamelesly breake then vow which they made to God and man as we may see 1. Cor. 6.15 Mal. 2.14 where the Prophet bringeth in the Lord as a witnesse betweene man and wife and vrgeth this as a reason why the one should not trespasse against the other because out of the abundance of his spirit he hath made them one Now for the second part which is the satisfaction Ioseph receiued and the meanes whereby his thoughts were appeased while hee was musing of this euent we must consider three points first what messenger God dispatcheth namely an Angell secondly at what time when he was euen vpon the resolutiō to haue put her away thirdly what message was brought while he was thus reasoning with himselfe and was anguished with blinde discourses which containeth seuerall parts first that which is set downe in the very first words as much as to say as Thou hast not done amisseto take such a moderate course in this matter but feare not she is a virgin Secondly a confirmation of this That which is in her is of the holy Ghost Thirdly he declareth the blessed condition of the child fore-prophesying of this name Fourthly a reason of his name He shall saue his people Fiftly because the Angel know Ioseph prepossessed with preindice and therefore yet there might rest some scruple in his mind he allegeth an ancient record of the Prophet Esay 6.7.14 written 800. yeres before which expressed as much as the Angel now told him by this testimonie concurring with his speech he doth absolutely resolue him for an angel speaking according to scripture is not to be doubted For the first the messenger that is dispatched from the heauenly palace being so excellent as an Angel let vs learne to be caried into an admiration of the Lords loue that the Angels elect shal be messengers ministers for his chosen Hereupon Dauid Psa 8.4 being confounded with the Lords goodnes breaketh forth saying O Lord what is man that thou shouldest be so mindfull of him and shouldest thus exalt him for thou hast made him little lower then God not that the Angels in themselues are baser in nature condition then we for as it is Esa 6 2. as they haue two wings to hide their face from the glorie of God so haue they two wings to hide their feet because we cannot behold them in their excellencie for the seruice they do is not to vs for our owne sakes but they do it as to Christ their head as is prefigured by Iacobs ladder Gen. 28.13 wheron the Angels ascended and descended Ioh. 1.51 this ladder being Christ and Christ vouchsaffing vs this honour to sit with him at his table the Angels minister to vs as owing all dutie to him Now this ministerie of Angels is so deputed as euery particular member elect hath not one but many continually attendant on him as Psal 91.11 Hee hath giuen his Angels charge to beare vs in their armes lest we should dash our feet to hurt them not that the Lord is vnable to rescue vs or insufficient to support vs from any danger but he doth it onely to prouide a remedie for our infidelitie who must euer bee held as it were by the hand Mat. 14.20 or else we crie with Peter in the least temptation Lord helpe vs we perish Euen as a man desiring safe conduct out of the realme should receiue of the Prince not onely his letters but his royall guard to wait vpon him which were a matter ex abundanti that by this meanes he could no way doubt of quiet passage so lest we should distrust the Lord or bee too much confounded with his maiestie hee hasteneth to helpe vs by more familiar meanes and hath giuen vs as it were his royall name to guard vs that we may be sure as Sathan hath manie waies and laieth many snares to entrap and to hurt vs so hath the Lord pitched his tents about vs and compassed vs with fenced souldiers to preserue
when they came to their iournies end set downe by fiue circumstances First that they went when they were resolued Secondly that the starre appeareth againe and goeth before them Thirdly that it stands vpon the particular place where the babe lay Fourthly their exceeding ioy Fiftly how comming thither they find the babe in a base place yet they are not discouraged but reuerence him and giue him gifts For the first it is shewed that they went alone not one with them though this was the King specially borne for the saluation of the Iewes Wherein wee may admire their ingratitude and the impiety of the Scribes that pointed the way to others and yet vouchsafed not themselues to goe one foot to enquire after Christ Thus may Preachers be as Mercuriales statui set vp a● directors of others shewing the way to heauen and yet goe themselues to hell Perhaps they feared the cruelty of the king that if they should haue beene caried with an affection of seeing him it might haue cost them their liues or at least their honours Though it were so yet doth it not excuse their vngodlinesse to preferre the feare of a King that could but kill the body and touch the goods Mark 8.36 before the feare of the great King of the heauens that can destroy both body and soule For though the disciples and Apostles Act. 4.18 bee commanded that they should teach no more in the name of Iesus yet if the burden of the Lord be vpon them they may not but speake vers 20. the things which they haue seene and heard And though Micaia● the Prophet 1. King 22.13 doe know what message will please the King yet though he be smitten on the cheeke and cast into prison hee must deliuer the counsell of the Lord. For as Saint Paul saith Gal. 1.10 If in these things I should please me● I were not the seruant of Christ. In that none of the people accompanied these Wise-men obserue their dulnesse and Atheisme that they all stay at home and yet they kept an outward shew and deuotion in seruing God and offered sacrifices which vnlesse they knew that they praefigured the death of Christ what made they of their temple but a butchers shambles Yet by their idlenesse that they would not steppe one foot to see him is perceiued that of the Messias spiritually they knew nothing Which is likewise to be feared of vs in these daies that we onely rest our selues within the reach of the Gospell for that it hath brought vs peace which peace hath purchased for vs profit and promotion but if the state might stand in quiet though Christ were banished from vs or if we might gaine more by Diana of Ephesus Act. 19.24 then by the God of Israel it is to bee doubted Christ might lodge long enough at Bethlem before we would goe to visit him Further obserue if these Wise-men had not left Herod to his canuassing of the matter the Scribes to their speculation the people to their trades if they had respected the example of the mighty or of the learned or considered the danger that it was a matter of treason if it had so beene taken they had not had this glory and honour to haue seene the Messias but they are glad to goe alone though they would be desirous to haue company Whereby we learne that to embrace religion and to ioyne our selues with the congregation of the Saints it is good in going if wee can get company for the greater blessing fals vpon a multitude howbeit we must haue this resolution to go what danger soeuer may befall and not to stay vntill others goe for thou shalt neuer see the Lord Iesus if thou stay till all Hierusalem doe goe with thee to Bethlem These Wise-men might haue said with themselues Wherefore should we goe see him since his owne people will not as Iudas asked Christ Ioh. ● 22 Why doest thou shew thy selfe to vs and not to the world but they take no occasion of stay but are resolute to goe alone Now if these heathen men were so earnest as to admit of nothing which might hinder them from beholding Christ in the flesh how much more ought wee to bee eager to heare Christ in his word and to see him in the Sacrament The Queene of Saba shall rise vp in iudgement against vs that came so farre to heare the wisdome of Salomon 1. Kings 10.1 and yet as Christ speaketh Mat. 12.42 a greater then Salomon is heere yet are we negligent in attending the voice of God Now for the second circumstance namely that the starre went before them consider the wonderfull wisdome of God that he doeth so qualifie and moderate the trials and afflictions of his seruants that euen to the greatest temptations if they mistrust not he giueth a most blessed issue for it might haue stricken these men with a strange astonishment and driuen them into great perplexity that they being of speciall reputation in their country and comming this tedious iourney and hauing such colde entertainment both in the Kings court and of the meaner people and hauing lost their direction the starre being vanished these things might greatly haue dismaied them not to haue gone any further yet they proceeding forward in their obedience the light that was quenched was againe of the Lord reuiued and with this they were comforted greatly seeing the resolution of the Priests concurring with the dumbe message of the starre Wherein also marke that the starre guided them to the particular place where the babe lay for if they had come to Bethlem it is likely none there knew it Christ his birth being a thing not dreamt of and he being a babe vnregarded and so much the more because he comes of the house of Dauid And if they had enquired of wicked men for such a thing they would but haue scorned them or else sought to haue intrapped them if of good men they had indangered themselues by discrying it Therfore not to need any helpe the Lord from heauen pointeth out the place vnto them wherin for our further instruction learne that God in euery good purpose doth goe before vs by his grace to make vs willing Phil. 2.13 as Saint Paul speaketh and with the same grace doth follow vs and confirme vs in the first worke that we shall neuer wash our hands in vaine but that as we are by his direction come to Ierusalem to seeke after Christ so wee shall by the same direction go strait to Bethlem where we shall see him as Dauid saith Psalm 25.12 They that feare the Lord shall know how to choose the right way For their reioycing at the sight of the starre appearing againe it implieth they were strangely discomforted at the losse of it Where note that if the Lord doe at any time quench the light of his spirit in vs or change the pleasure and eclipse the ioy of his countenance if sometimes wee cannot apply to our soules the sweet
comfort of the scriptures yet the Lord after he hath sufficiently humbled vs if we goe on with a simple heart and perseuere as these Wise-men did in their iourney in a time vnlooked for he will kindle in vs the former light and take away that foggy mist that obscured the Sunne of righteousnes and it shall clearely shine vpon vs and our ioy in the holy Ghost shall bee multiplied and the Lord will ease that heart that was before troden downe with the burden of sinne Now in that it is said they found the babe lying in a cratch we may consider how strangely and strongly the Lord did exercise the faith and perswasion of these Wise-men that after the former discouragements passed ouer they find the babe lying in this base place which had beene enough to haue made them repent their long trauell in the end to see no other sight then this but such was the quicke sight of the eye of faith and the speciall instigation of the holy Ghost as they were not dismaied with the basenesse of this King Heere they find neither guard to defend him nor resort of people to see him neither Crowne on his head nor Scepter in his hand but such a child as for outward beauty they might haue seene many a thousand equall and farre beyond him in their owne countrey without this great trauell Where learne that for the beleeuing of the promise and to be resolued of the truth the Lord doeth so incline the heart and bend the conscience that whatsoeuer doth seeme contrary doth nothing offend them for these Wise-men doe beleeue that this base child laied in this base manner is the King of heauen and earth Heereupon it is that Sara must beleeue being a dead woman that is spent by nature and ouergrowen with yeeres that so many children must come from her as there bee starres in the firmament Gen. 17.19 So Abraham Gen. 15.18 must beleeue that he and his posterity shall bee inheritours of the land of Canaan though they be not to haue actuall possession of it foure hundred yeeres after So Dauid 1. Sam. 17.15 comming from the sheepe must beleeue that he shall be a king yet he seeth Saul so furious against him 1. Sam. 19.1 as he proclaimes it saying Let me see if I haue any that will kill Dauid Heere is open conspiracy yea hee is driuen into caues and holes he is as a stone that euery man refuseth yet his faith may not faile him but he must perswade himselfe hee shall be crowned though Saul bee euen at his heeles to dispatch him and it shall be performed Ioseph hee had a dreame that the Sunne and Moone and eleuen starres Gen. 37.10 should tall downe and worship him when he was in the pit ready to be slaine in the malice of some of his brethren hee beleeued this yea being sold into Egypt and after by the false accusation of his mistres Genes 39.20 cast into prison where he could see neither Sunne nor Moone yet he fainteth not but perswadeth himselfe of the truth of his dreame and it fell out accordingly So Ezechiel being brought into the field of the Lord Ezec. 37.4 must beleeue that of a company of dead bones there shall rise vp armed men for those dead bones were the house of Israel Yea faith must be so quicke sighted as to beleeue that in prison there is liberty in persecution comfort in life death in the Crosse a Crowne and in a manger the Lord Iesus Heere also learne by the example of these Wise-men not to be offended at the basenesse of the Gospell for if they had beene offended at the basenesse of Christ in the flesh they had not had the blessing of seeing the Messias Therefore howsoeuer the diuell in Christs time broached this argument to with draw men from the Gospell Iohn 7.48 see whether any of the Scribes or of the famous learned men follow Christ onely a few rascall company flocke vnto him yet wee must not thinke that the kingdome of Christ standeth in any outward pompe or glory for so much did Simeon Luk. 2.34 insinuate to his mother Mary that she should not expect any glorious acceptation of her sonne no not in Israel confirmed by the Prophet Esay chap. 8.14.28.16 but that he should be as a white set vp in a but whereat euery man would shoot some bolt Such therefore shall bee blessed who as himselfe speaketh shall not be offended at him for we must obserue Math. 11.6 that as the proceeding of his kingdome is aboue nature so the perswading of vs to his kingdome is most contrary to nature and that either in a generall opposition of the world which is caried away with the affectation of honour and an vtter hatred of falling into the extremities of contempt pouerty and persecution or else to euery mans particular heart which is forcible to disswade him from suffering in the flesh or for casting the anker of his affections vpon the basenesse of Christ and of his Crosse True it is if an Orator should vse an argument contrary to art he could not preuaile but if hee should frame his argument of that the people were most in hatred of it were a fruitlesse labour and a vaine hope to expect his purpose so if a Physitian should apply a medicine contrary to the disease he could neuer hope to cure it but if the medicine were also contrary to the complexion of the party then were it most vnlikely to haue successe But such is the miraculous power of the Almighty that as hee can make something of nothing so he can also make of a thing contrary such as hee would haue it as hee hath vanquished the crownes of Monarks by the Crosse whose triumphant seates are most contrary to the Crosse he hath ouercome the pride of the world by pouerty and the wisdome of the flesh by the foolishnesse of the spirit yea he hath wrought submission in the hearts of these heathen men that though Christ lay in a cratch void of all dignity yet they take no offence at it which thing is onely proper for the spirit of God to performe who hath both the tongue the heart and the knee in his power In that these Wise-men offered gold and other gifts vnto the babe obserue how gratiously the Lord prouided for the pouerty of Iesus parents that euen now immediatly before the persecution came hee sends them gold from the East for their reliefe and comfort And thus doth the Lord deale with all that depend vpon him neuer suffering them to fall into extremity or to be too much distressed with pouerty as Dauid saith Psal 37.25 he neuer saw the righteous begging their bread but the Lord supported them by his power and will make the stones to yeeld bread the rockes water the heauens Manna rather than his children shall be vnprouided For if Eliah be forced to hide himselfe from the knife of Iesabel 1. King 17.4 rather then he
certainely set downe but it is probable and likely that it was not till Mary had recouered the weaknes of her child-birth Secondly heerein consider the substance of the message containing these foure things first that Ioseph must take the babe and his mother hee doth not say his wife for the Angell had before satisfied him for that matter Secondly the place whither he must goe to Egypt the worst of all other Thirdly the time he should stay there set downe indefinitely till hee was called away Fourthly a reason of this commandement expressed to releeue the weaknesse of Ioseph though the commandement it selfe had been sufficient because Herod sought to destroy the child Out of the first circumstance of the time learne that God giueth and alloweth no long time of peace and truce to his seruants whom he will make mirrors of patience but hee sendeth one trouble in the necke of another that though the life of man be but as a tale told yet the estate of a Christian soule hath many fractions and interruptions before it can passe like the weauers shuttle through the web so as the breathing time which they haue had is but to enable them to further strength for that which succedeth Heere being in this place set downe how the Lord mingled the sweetnesse of the gifts brought to this babe by the men of Persia with the bitternesse of an immediate persecution by the hand of Herod the King to teach Ioseph and in him all of vs that when we haue had honour together with the profession of the Gospell we may not flatter and perswade our selues of the continuance of this but bee armed to stand to the truth and to the acknowledgement of the Lord Iesus both in honour and dishonour For Mary as she had this comfort to see the babe her sonne honoured and worshipped of these Wisemen so had she this sorrow and discomfort mixed therewithall in the night to trusse vp her furniture and to flie Thus fared it with her sonne at another time who Mat. 21.8 comming riding on the Sabboth to Hierusalem had acclamations and cries of the people Hosanna to the Sonne of Dauid blessed be he that commeth in the name of the Lord yea had the greatest glory that euer happened to any earthly Prince to haue garments strawed in the way for him to tread on thereby the more royally to entertaine him yet after all this within fiue daies he is exclaimed on and tumultuously they crie Crucifie him crucifie him his bloud be vpon vs and our children To teach vs that neither prosperity puffe vs vp nor aduersity cast vs downe knowing that it is the Lords will and pleasure that there should be an interchangeable course of these things As Simeon prophesied Luk. 2.35 that a sword should pierce Maries soule which euen now was fulfilled being commanded to take her heeles to teach her that she should not expect any great state in this life though she was the mother of the King of glory but that euen shee should be fashioned after her owne Sonne to come to a crowne by the crosse Heere then is condemned the daintinesse of those professors that will waite no longer at the Lords table then they may be fed from his trencher and which doe loue the practise of the Gospell onely for the peace of the Gospell For Ioseph may not bee discouraged though he bee driuen to flie with the Lord of life in his armes but heereby may he be secured of safety hauing his Sauiour with him And on this may we all rest that 〈◊〉 wee bee driuen to flight for the cause of Christ our feet shall 〈◊〉 leade vs to the wings of Christ where we shall be cherished euen in Egypt a place of darknesse and disdaine to the truth 〈◊〉 God For the second circumstance which is the place wither they must flie it cannot be thought but Ioseph was distracted and wearied with sundry cogitations yea and perplexed with deepe sorrowes to see that this King of glorie must bee forced to flie from the cruelty of Herod and to such a place as was alwares an enemy to the Church of God Howbeit heerein wee may obserue how sometimes the Lord sheweth but a sparkle and portion of his power in the deliuery of his seruants though at other times hee openly sheweth himselfe for their protection in great glorie and maiesty as in the case of Eliah 2. King 1.9 when the souldiers came to him and scoffed him saying Man of God come downe presently the arme of God was made naked and fire came downe and consumed them So did the Lord deale with Elisha 2. King 6.18 who hauing discouered the secrets spoken in the King of Syriahs chamber the King in indignation sends foorth against one man hauing but Gehezi to wait on him and hoast of armed men to compasse the place where hee was and when they came thinking to haue caught him they were smitten with sudden blindnesse and Elisha in a holy zeale of Gods glory leadeth them to a city where but for him they had beene all slaine So Daniel chap. 6.7.22 he is put into the Lions denne sealed with the Kings owne signet as escape out he could not which since it is so the mouths of the Lions are shut that they cannot hurt him heere is maiesty but now Iesus his owne sonne he must flie and shall not be rescued by any immediate hand of his Father heere is a diuerse dispensation The children in the fire Dan. 3.22 though it consumed them that cast them in yet doe not their cloaths so much as smell of it and shall wee thinke that the hand of the Lord was now shortned or his power abated that hee could not haue wrought as mightily for the safety of his owne sonne God forbid Peter we see is cast into the gaole Act. 12.8 but the Angell of the Lord openeth the doore and bids him preach with confidence and ●hen hee was condemned the next day to bee executed lying ●ound with two great chaines the Angell with one blow vnloo●eth them both bringeth him through the souldiers and an iron gate flieth open to giue him passage So Paul Act. 16.26 he is deliuered by an earth-quake that shakes the prison and the gouernours are faine to intreat him to go foorth Thus can the praiers of Gods seruants obtaine the ministery of Angels to disarme the power of Sathan and to frustrate the malice of the wicked Howbeit on the other side how the Lord suffereth as it were his power to bee blasted vnder a wonderfull kind of infirmity wee haue equall examples in the Scripture We see Eliah 1. King 19.3 that before could command fire from heauen must now flie from the face of Iezabel and is driuen to such an exigent that hee cries out vnto the Lord euen to take away his life So the spies that came to see Iericho Iosh 2.4 and were sent from Ioshua the Lieutenant of God to take possession of the land of Canaan so
commanding that which flesh and bloud most abhorreth and giueth no reason of it namely to bee the butcher to his owne sonne But heerein shall our condemnation be the more iust because the Lord hath giuen so many calles and yeelded so many reasons why we should flie from sinne and why we should turne to him not for feare of any bodily destruction by the hand of Herod but for feare of that spirituall thraldome wherein Satan laboureth to keepe our soules the Lord hauing discouered vnto vs early and late that hee is an old and a subtill enemie armed not onely with darts but euen with fiery darts to sting vs vnto damnation Let vs therefore with Ioseph embrace the sweet kindnesse of the Lord who mildly exhorteth vs to haste as it were out of Sodome and let vs with him resolue without any fleshly discourse with our selues to bee gone at the first call for his word is truth and the danger he foretelleth will follow Secondly heerein obserue that the Lord knoweth the secrets of mens hearts for Herod pretended adoring but intended the murthering of the Lord Iesus And his crafty and concealed purpose is heere named by the Angell that we may feare to deale doubly with our owne soules and may abhorre all hypocrisie because the Lord casteth his eie not only vpon our actions but watcheth euen ouer our very thoughts and will in time discouer them to our great shame This is it Dauid praieth against Psalm 32.3 that the Lord would free him from guile of spirit not to deceiue himselfe nor to dissemble his sinne for his dealing doubly with God and his soule in that his sinne with Barsheba had so distempered his conscience that vntill he had fully mastered his hypocrisie he could finde no rest in his bones Yet such is the simplicity or rather the frowardnesse of our harts that though wee know all things to bee naked and open before God we still runne on in hiding and cloaking of our sinnes which is as auncient as our first fathers fall who after the eating of the fruite forbidden had his eies opened indeed that is he then by experience perceiued and by checke of conscience saw what euill he came into and what good he had lost being conuinced of his owne misery he takes fig-leaues to couer his shame a small couer to hide it from the eies of God Beside marke his sottishnesse he couereth but his shame whereas the principall instruments of his wickednesse were his eies his eares and his taste and these were more filthy for the other part actuall had not sinned Now when he heard the voice of God the winde carying to his eare such a voice as he had not heard before then hee flieth among the trees thinking if fig-leaues would not serue yet the shadow of trees would sufficiently hide him alwaies when the Lord summons vs seeking shelter that wee may not come to reprehension And when this voice of the Lord could not bring him to a confession of his sinne nor pierce his heart enough the Lord calles him with his owne mouth Why does● thou hide thy selfe Marke now his wonderfull hypocrisie crept in so soone after his fall Adam assigneth two causes of the hiding of himselfe both false and omitteth the true cause that is his sinne the one because he heard God speake which is most false for he had heard him speake often before and that most comfortably The second cause because he was naked and yet this was no cause for it is said in the text they were both naked and were not ashamed And by the malignity of his nature in this hee secretly chargeth God to be the cause of his sinne who in his originall creation had made him naked whereas hee himselfe was the cause of the shame of his nakednesse God goeth further with him Hast thou not eaten of the fruit which I forb●● thee Now the Lord names the sinne and in his answer marke his hypocrisie and guile of spirit worse then before The woma● saith he which thou gauest●●e gaue me of the tree and I did eate As if he should say it was thine owne ordinance so as he impudently faceth out the matter and la●es it vpon his wife whereas it was his owne ambition and not her suggestion only that prouoked him to the sinne and in the whole story yee shall not finde one word of confession So the woman shee transfers from her selfe to the diuell the cause of her fall the Serpent indeed blew the coles but the fire was in her owne heart and she would not confesse that shee abused her selfe to bee seduced by the Serpent so as both of them felt the punishment of their sinne but would not iudge of the cause of it in eating the forbidden fruit By which examples as by the naming of Herods sinne conceiued but in heart and by the traducing forth of Adam for his sinne that brake foorth into his hands we must learne to hedge in our thoughts that they harbour not so much as an euill inclination for sinne is of a forward brood and will soone bee hatcht and though as it is Psalm 50.21 the Lord hold his peace that is forbeare with patience for a time whereby wee thinke him like our selues that is as in the Hebrew a good fellow like our selues yet saith the Lord I will lay thy sinne before thee that is as it signifieth in the Hebrew either set them in order before thee like dishes on the table or write them in a role and make thee reade them in despight Thirdly in that it is saied Herod will seeke to destroy him it sheweth what hearts the wicked beare toward the godly and what purpose they haue but that it shall bee frustrate for it is said Herod would kill him not he shall kill him Thus though we be all sheepe appointed to the slaughter in the malice of the enemy yet we are not so in the purpose of God For the Dragon Reu. 12 4. like a bloudy mid-wife standeth ready to deuoure the child whereof the Church should bee deliuered but the Lord prospereth her in her trauell and assumeth the child into heauen that he may be free from the cruelty of the beast Whereby we are taught euery day to take vp our crosse for if wee will liue godly in Christ there is a necessity of persecution and we must all suffer either the sword of Esau or the frumping of Ismael Gen 27.1 Gen. 2● 9 Act. 23.31 And this may be our comfort Herod may trauell with mischiefe but he shall neuer bring it foorth the Iewes may vow and sweare the death of Paul 1. King 17.5 but they shall be preuented Iesabel may make hue and crie after Eliah but the Lord himselfe shall hide him What did Herod thinke God to be an idoll or to haue cast off all care of his Sonne he knew by the Prophets that God had set him vp to raigne ouer his people and yet he vainly thinkes
the liuing God though he had the warrant of the King of Ashur to doe it but in these and such like sinnes they hazard and aduenture their owne soules therefore let euery of vs keepe the ground that Balaam at first stood vpon Numb 24.13 not for a house full of gold to passe the commandent of the Lord yet I doe not say rebell but obey not Let Saul himselfe fall vpon the Priests if he will haue them slaine and let not vs assist him Let Iesabel her selfe sit in iudgement vpon Naboth but let not vs condemne him we are bound to do good to the saints of God much lesse to persecute them And it is said in the Gospell hee that clotheth a poore prisoner Mat. 35.36 clotheth the Lord Iesus Now what shall we say then of him that standeth vp like Tertullus against Paul Act. 24.5 to plead against him and to reproch him with the name of a pestilent and seditious fellow For if they shall bee condemned that haue not ministred to the necessity of the saints Luke 16.25 but haue been ashamed of their bands If Diues shall hang in hell for not refreshing Lazarus at his gate what shall become of them that take the bread from Lazarus and put Paul into bands or else enforce crimes against him to retaine him in bands Looke Iudg. 5.23 Cursed be Meroz because they helped not the Lord nor stood in defence of his truth A double curse then shall light vpon them that oppose themselues against the truth Obediah against the expresse edict of Iezabel 1. King 18.4 hideth the Prophets and Rahab Iosh 2.3 ventureth her life to preserue the spies Exod. 17.12 Psal 106 23. And what better spies can there bee then Preachers which stand in the gap betweene God and vs as did Moses which watch ouer the soules of the people and shew vs the way to heauen Ionathan being often incited by his father to kill Dauid 1. Sam. 20.2 protesteth Dauids innocencie though Saul perswaded him that Dauids glorie could not bee without Ionathans ruine and would not be drawne to doe it And if hee would not compasse such a mischiefe at the commandement of Saul which had a threefold force in it first as proceeding from his Father secondly from his Soueraigne thirdly being ioyned with the temptation of a kingdome much Iesse ought we to gratifie the State with the affliction of Gods Saints for we must rather Act. 4.19 obey God then man yet disobey not the Prince for his commandement standeth on these two feet either to doe the thing or to sustaine the punishment for not doing it Fourthly obserue that assoone as Christ is borne there is trouble and commotion ciuill and forren warres yet is not Christ the cause of it but the wickednesse and peruersenesse of Herods heart for righteousnesse must not yeeld to iniquity and Christ must be borne and being borne must raigne though the diuell rage and the world swell neuer so much Certaine it is no Gospell teacheth so much peace as this of Christs for it teacheth peace betweene God and man betweene man and man yea betweene man and his inward soule and maketh the wolues to become lambes and the Lyon to lodge with the Beare But Herod would haue the Gospell abolished and Christ murthered which cannot be Shall Dagon 1. Sam. 5.3 yeeld to the Arke or the Arke to Dagon Shall the ten Tubes go to Iuda or Iuda to them Ishbosheth to Dauid 2. Sam. 2.16 or Dauid to him Herod loues not Christ therefore hee murthers the children and Dauid especially being king must not yeeld to Saul house nor Iuda goe to the ten tribes nor Christ giue place 〈◊〉 Herod but if his Crowne cannot stand with the gouernment of Christ well may he harbour murther in his thought against him but iudgement shall fall on his owne head for God will wate● ouer his owne sonne and fight for his owne truth So as whe●● religion hath beene granted by Parliament and suppressed by priuate commandement there may the subiects stand on the part defensiue to ward the blow being smitten but if it hath not beene established by publike authority then may they not take vp armes to set it vp Out of the murther it selfe gather that though there be many flaine yet Christ escapeth and that in the greatest persecution yet Christs religion shall neuer bee abolished For heere is great bloudshed yet Christ liueth great persecution yet the Gospell flourisheth When Iezabel thought she had had her hands full of bloud and that she had rooted out all the Lords Prophets you and when visibly there was no face at all to be seene so as Eli●● thought himselfe onely to be left then the Lord 1. King 19.18 reserued seuen thousand to himselfe that had not bowed the●● knees to Baal And when by scattering the sheepe and smiti●● the shepheard the diuell thought himselfe flush and that 〈◊〉 Christ sleepe in the earth he had vtterly stung him to destruction then was his resurrection most glorious and then did the Churches of God increase daily For such is the nature of the Gospell that the more it is troden downe the higher it riseth the more it is maligned the broader it spreadeth and wh●●● seemeth to be dead then is there most life in it For the third point which is the prophesie Ieremy chap. 13.15 to declare the greatnesse of Gods mercy in the deliuery of the Iewes sheweth them that they were like to the Be●●●mites or Israelites that is vtterly destroyed and caried away insomuch that if Rahel the mother of Beniamin could haue ri●●● againe to seeke for her children shee might haue wept 〈◊〉 want of them but she should haue found none remaining Th●● doth the holy Ghost bring in heere as a butchery foretold 〈◊〉 the end that none might either wonder or be offended at it for it might haue beene said Is this the consolation of Israel nay he is the discomfort and destruction of Israel his birth hauing kindled such a fire as neuer was the like before leauing so many sad hearts for their lost children And how may we hope he shall be our Sauiour when his beginning is with this bloud And the more to increase the cruelty of it the holy Ghost speaketh excessiuely bringing in Rachel dead many yeares before howling and wringing her hands at the rufull spectacle of this bloudy tragedy as if the calamitie of the liuing might seeme to touch and affect the dead That therefore this might not seeme strange the spirit of the Lord recorded it long before that when it came to passe they might digest it as a thing foreseene in the wisedome of God necessary to fall out MATH chap. 2. vers 19 20 21 22 23. verse 19 And when Herod was dead behold an Angell of the Lord appeareth in a dreame to Ioseph in Egypt verse 20 Saying Arise and take the babe and his mother and goe into the land of Israel for they are dead which sought
the babes life verse 21 Then he rose vp and tooke the babe and his mother and came into the land of Israel verse 22 But when he heard that Archilaus did raigne in Iuda in stand of his father Herod he was afraid to goe thither yet after he was warned of God in a dreame he turned aside into the parts of Galiley verse 23 And went and dwelt in a citie called Nazareth that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophets which was that he should be called a Nazarite NOW followeth the returne of Iesus out of Egypt after the cruelty executed by Herod vpon the children and the iudgement of God manifested on Herod striking him with death 〈◊〉 which words there bee foure generall points to be considered first the commandement of the Lord by the message of an Angell vnto Ioseph as the foster-fathe● of this babe whereby he is aduertised to returne hauing securitie giuen him that he need not doubt namely that Herod and the rest were dead which sought the life of Christ Secondly the obedience of Ioseph turning neither to the right hand nor to the left but as he staid till hee was called so he staied not when he was called Thirdly in what feare Ioseph stood finding suc● troubles in Iudaea and into what perturbation of minde he●● cast when he heard that Archilaus raigned knowing him to be Cockatrice hatched out of a Serpents egge and how the L●sent an Angell to releeue him in this perplexity Fourthly 〈◊〉 Ioseph minding no such matter by his turning into Galile th●● is an ancient Oracle fulfilled that this babe should bee call●● Nazarit Out of the first learne the faithfulnesse of Gods pro●●● that he is a God of his word for in this is his first prom●●● complished as appeareth now by the effect that he wou●● his sonne out of Egypt and that the same Angell that br●●● the heauy tidings vnto Ioseph of his flight from Bethle●● Egypt the same Angell brings him this glad tidings of 〈◊〉 turne from thence into the land of Israel And thus m●●● consider of all the promises of God as of his couenan● Noah Genes 9.11 that the world shall no more bee dro●● his promise to Israel that they shall be his chosen for ho● euer the Lord withdrawes his fauour from his saints for a●● yet at the last he will release them and in compassion will 〈◊〉 vpon their afflictions And well may the mountaines fall the course of nature change but Gods promise shall 〈◊〉 faile 1. Thes 5.24 for as Dauid saieth Psalme 32. though their ●●lations bee many yet the Lord will deliuer them out of And though this pregnant security of returning be not expresly giuen to euery prisoner as it was heere to Ioseph yet all that feare God haue this to comfort them that hee hath giuen his word hee will make them blessed Mat. 5.4 and that as hee hath drawne them to the profession of his name so hee will neuer leaue them till hee haue brought them to the possession of his glory and that whether they die in Egypt vnder the fornace of affliction or come forth of Egypt all shall worke for their saluation And this his wisedome hath not onely disposed of the generall end which is his glory but of the meanes also how hee will bring euery one of vs to his kingdome And though it bee thorow the riuers of waters what skilleth it if wee haue the crowne at last Iob. 5.18 The same hand that woundeth shall bind vp the wound againe and the same hand that smiteth shall heale and the same God that layed vs before in the ashes shall giue vs oile to make our faces cheerfull Psal 104.15 Act. 12.8 by a warrant from heauen discharge Peter of his chains when in the eie of his enemies he stands condemned and make Ioseph returne out of that barbarous nation Egypt wherein God was so much dishonored to exercise himselfe in the seruice of God in Galile And though wee haue no certaine promise of this yet let vs be affected like Dauid who wandring 2. Sam. 15.25 through the mountaines in great di●●●esse his griefe being increased because hee was banished by his owne sonne and supplanted by the subtilty of Achitophel his ●hiefe counsellor when he saw he could not haue the Arke with ●im bids it should be caried againe into Ierusalem saying If I ●aue found fauour in Gods sight he will bring me thither againe but if hee haue no delight in me let him doe as seemeth best to ●im for either in the time of our trouble we shall be gathered to God in peace Psal 56.13 or else he will let vs see his goodnesse in the light of the liuing Now the cause why it is safe for Ioseph to returne is because Herod is dead where we learne to our comfort that tyrants shal ●ot liue euer and when they perish and fall away then is the Church deliuered and comforted for this death of his was no doubt as cheerefull to Anna and Simeon at Ierusalem as to Ioseph and Mary in Egypt and Rachel that before was brought in weeping ouer the innocent bloud of the poore children as if the graue had felt such barbarous and beastly cruelty may now be thought to breake forth into exceeding ioy that such a rakehell was taken away as Herod was that sought the life of Christ How we ought to bee affected at the fall of the wicked appeareth Psalm 52. where although Doeg had got great authority with Saul so as he boasted in his power trusted in the strength of his malice his tongue being as the sharpe razor alwaies cutting or as the coales of iuniper alwaies raising contention against the Saints yet the Lord shall destroy him and though hee thought to haue built his neast in the heauens yet shall the Lord cast him downe and the righteous saith he shall see it and reioyce the wicked being blind neuer beholding the iudgement of God and they shall laugh not in reuenge but to see God mercy in taking part with the godly And not onely the righteous shall ioy at this but as Iob. 20 26. saith The tongue of the ●●per shall slay them that is the very wicked shall curse them 〈◊〉 Princes that want religion soone slip into tyranny and want●●● conscience to moderate their desires and affection to looke vpon their subiects they will soone resemble Rehoboam 1. King● 12.10 in making the yoake heauy and correcting them 〈◊〉 Scorpions Further from hence learne that God doth often so disappoint the plots and purposes of cruell tyrants that when they intend to execute others they die first themselues and sometime Haman Ester 7.10 is hanged on his owne gallowes th●● he prepared for Mordecai Herod had thought to haue kill●● Christ but he is faine to take the paines to die himselfe If M●ses come any more into Pharaohs sight he shall surely die Ex●● 10.28 Well Moses will see his face no more but
be satisfied and rest in so much as is reuealed so as wee are not curiously to enquire what Christ did while he liued a priuate man in Nazareth for since the holy Ghost hath not disclosed it we must be wise according to sobriety Rom. 11.3 as Saint Paul speaketh and not seeke to learne where the Lord hath not taught or to open where he hath shut Onely Saint Luke chap. 2.46 reports that about twelue yeeres of age he disputed with the Doctors in the temple and confounded them and astonied such as heard him And this is enough to comfort vs that so much is recorded of him as hath ransomed vs from the indignation of his Father Secondly in that it is said Iohn came and preached note that the first ministery of the new Testament was a preaching ministery so as whether we speake of men sent mediatly or immediatly from God alone or from God by men we shall neuer finde any ministery commanded or practised nor any messenger sent that was not qualified with gifts and graces from aboue to diuide the word and this is impregnable not to be resisted that no man ordinarily can hope or looke for the power of saluation without preaching which is euident Rom. 10.17 Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word preached and this preaching cannot be as some would haue it bare reading as appeareth 2. Tim. 4.2 Preach the word be instant improue rebuke exhort which importeth some further matter then literall reading Besides if reading should be preaching and sufficient to beget faith then hath not the Lord forsaken the Iewes nor the Turkes but they remaine still the Church of God for they haue the Bible and doe reade it howbeit none will say but these are out of the Church Againe when Esay and the rest of the Prophets cried out against blinde guides did they meane they could not reade And Paul when he saith Wo t● me if I preach not the Gospell 1. Cor. 9.16 doth he meane that this wo shall light vpon him if he reade not No for there be many weake Christians that must be fed with milke others with strong meat but the word read is of the same sound to all and as bread set before the hungry but they want strength in their teeth to breake it for it is fruitlesse to reade if wee vnderstand not and the Eunuch Act. 8.31 could liberally and religiously confesse hee could not doe it without a guide whereupon as the text saith vers 35. Philip preached vnto him Iesus So as it is a most determinate truth that there is no man lawfully and rightly called to the ministery that is not enabled with the grace of preaching and expounding the Scripture and euery place must labour to recouer if they haue lost or to obtaine if they want such a man as may goe before them in this wildernesse both in life and doctrine and diuide the word aright vnto them that they may be able to spie out the armour of their aduersary Heb. 4.12 and to preuent his assaults not but that the Lord extraordinarily may saue by bare reading yea and without reading for hee can knocke when he list and open when he list he can make corne to grow without sowing as he did in Hezechtahs time 2. King 19.29 For the second circumstance which is the place where hee preached namely in the wildernesse we learne that where the holy Ghost placeth a man there hee is to abide and to content himselfe not excepting against the rudenesse of the people as to be too grosse and base for their excellencies to instruct or against the place as to be too priuate or too vnwholesome and that their Pulpit must onely stand at Hierusalem and their anditorie must be great men Iohn Baptist we see how hee was content to exercise his message in a most solitary place the Wildernesse for this was by the assignation and appointment of the Lord. True it is Hierusalem had been more fit for state and celebritie and this might haue seemed more plausible to Iohn as a meanes whereby hee might sooner haue beene more famous but because the Lord had tied him to this place hee obediently keepeth it Much more are they then to bee reprehended that purchase liuings like farmes one for Summer another for Winter and not content with this put ouer their people to milchlesse nurses which as the Pope saith is like a harlot that puts forth her childe that she may the sooner returne to her lust Howbeit by the wildernesse he must not vnderstand a place not to be inhabited but onely a place not so well frequented as the fruitfull valleis of Iudaea Heere the Iesuites because wildernesse in the Greeke is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 note Iohn Baptist to be the father of the Hermites men whom they faine to bee deuoted to religion to bee familiar with the Gods and to haue the contemplation of heauenly things hauing their soules freed from passions and their bodies humbled in diuine seruice To which wee answer First if Iohn preached in a wildernesse and in a bare solitarie place as they imagine how is it that their hermitages are built neere great cities Secondly the calling of Iohn was extraordinarie being immediate from God and his office extraordinarie being to denounce the comming of Christ Admit he were an Hermite yet when he had run his race his office did cease Thirdly of all liues there is none so contrarie to the societie of man and to the communion of Saints as this of Hermites for first God in Adams integritie saw Gen. 2.22 he could not bee without a companion much lesse can we now And to this is answerable that of the Preacher Wo to him that is alone Eccles 4.10 and amongst the Philosophers he that abandoned company was esteemed either a god or a beast Secondly if any be qualified and beautified with any speciall good grace and vertue then ought hee to supply the wants of others and being such a candle as they would haue him he ought not to be hid vnder a bushell and if there be defect in him then ought his want to be supplied by the fulnesse of others Thirdly if neither he need others nor others want him which cannot be in this life yet if there were nothing else then the beholding of the beautie of the house of God and the comfort of the participation of the Sacraments Psal 84.3 as Dauid saith and wished rather to bee a sparrow that built her nest in the temple then to be banished from the congregation of the Saints saying Psal 42.1 That as the Hart braied for water so did he for the contemplation of the Arke wherein the Lord did sit This were sufficiently forcible to disswade from this vnsociable life besides that Iohn liued not alwaies heere but staied till he was called to the Court of Herod where he lost his head for his boldnesse Mat. 14.10 For the third point namely the summe of
his Sermon wee must weigh and consider two parts first the exhortation Repent and change your minds Secondly the reason perswading to embrace this exhortation For the Kingdome of heauen is a hand For the first the word Repent it signifieth an alteration both of iudgement and of affection not onely by a displeasance with ones selfe and a checke of conscience for the euill he committeth which cannot bee staied no more then the panting of the heart or the bearing of the pulse but also an vtter loathing and detestation of all manner of sinne so as all repentance though it be proper to the minde and the fountaine of it be in the heart yet it is both inward and outward the visible shew of amendment being a declaration of the inuisible thought of sorrow for a thorne cannot grow vpon a figge-leafe and if any man will iudge of his repentance let him manifest the fruits of it What can a cursed mouth shew but that the heart is virule●● and full of poison or garish attire but that the minde is not humbled for where there is no reformation of action there is no alteration of affection Secondly repentance is noted to be either generall for all men for all sinnes for all times or speciall for some men for some sinnes and for some times For special● men that euery man repent him according to his disposition and place as Saint Iohn sheweth Luke 3.11 exhorting the rich men if they haue two coates to giue one to the poore the customers to require but their due the souldiers to bee counte● with their wages For as euery man hath a seuerall calling so hath hee speciall sinnes attending and waiting on his call●●● which must bee repented of Now for our infirmities wh●● hourely breake foorth of vs generall repentance is required but if we be stained with any peculiar sinne that must haue a repentance by it selfe Dauid Psal 32.3 cannot be healed of his adulterie by a generall confession but he must peculiarly taske his soule for that sinne and so much Paul expresseth 2. Cor. 12.21 I feare saith he lest when I come I shall bewaile many of them which haue sinned and haue not repented of the vncleannesse fornication and wantonnesse which they haue committed for for such sinnes it is not sufficient to finde a remorse of conscience but for adulterie profaning of the Sabbaoth oppression of the poore and such like he must haue a speciall humiliation and may not thinke to obtaine the comfort of Gods countenance by blurting out a short praier that passeth out of the mouth like gunshot as Lord I haue sinned which though the words be good auaileth not because the heart is naught fraught with hypocrisie Such then as will be true repentants must bee of the number of them Christ speaketh of Mat. 11.28 that are inwardly wearie of the burden of sinne which excludeth three sorts of people first such as be not wearie of their owne righteousnesse but desire to applie the plaister of their owne workes to cure their wound secondly such as bee not weary of the pleasure of this life which profane-sensuall men will neuer be such as Paul speaketh of Philip. 3.19 that make their belly their God and with Esan Gen. 25.30 will for a messe of pottage sell their birthright thirdly such as be onely cast downe with some hard exigents in the world for many be weary of the world that are not wearie of themselues or of themselues that are not wearie of their sinnes wishing to be deliuered from the burden of their distresse but not with Paul Phil. 3. from the body of sinne Rom. 7 2● for none of these sorts can thriue in the course of repentance but such onely as be ●amed from their naturall rebellions by the afflictions of this life that haue their spirits broken to dust and euen brought to confusion that will confesse no good thing dwelleth in their flesh but are cast as it were into a burning feuer of desperation and doe feele in a maner hell in their soules such will the Lord ●●●fort such doth he call and enable to repent For to whom is the commission giuen Esay 61.1.2 to preach good tidings but to the poore deliuerance but to the captiues so as he openeth no prison except thou confesse thy selfe to bee chained in the irons of Satan neither canst thou repent except thou thinke thou hast beene a runnagate from the Lord Iesus and what need he to giue thee the water of life except thou feele a drowth in thy soule like the drowth of Summer True it is the Lord comforts none but the abiect seekes none but the lost makes wise none but fooles iustifies none but sinners so as vnlesse we finde these wants in our selues the Gospel was neuer preached to our comfort and this exhortation is vainly deliuered that we should repent Howbeit since repentance and wearinesse is of such necessitie for Christians we must enter into a three-fold examination of our selues first of the knowledge of our sinnes secondly of the sorrow for our sinnes thirdly of the amendment of our sins First for the knowing of thy sinne thou must not examine it according to the law of thine owne heart that will glorie in hanging vp the Lord Iesus and in getting letters to Damasc●s Acts 9.2 to persecute the Church of God for thine heart will make things lawfull by thy abuse vnlawfull and things vnlawfull by the flattering of thy selfe in too much libertie lawfull but it must be done according to the commandement of God raising vp his tribunall in thy soule and setting before thee the curse that resteth on thee for thy sinne Neither must this be a generall acknowledgement that thou art sinfull but thou must walke in the steps of Dauid in the bitternesse of the soule to say O Lord they are so many as they run ouer my head and so hea●y as they presse me downe and in the 2 Sam. 24.10 I haue not onely sinned in numbring the people but sinned exceedingly O Lord take away the trespasse of thy seruant for I haue done very foolishly so as for particular sins thou must keepe the circumstance of time and place and aggrauate the degrees of it 〈◊〉 thy soule And because thou art not able to remember the whol● catalogue of thy sins and perhaps flatterest thy selfe in some 〈◊〉 as Naaman did 2. King 5.18 who protested hee would serue the Lord and yet bowed himselfe in the house of Rimmon thou must craue pardon for thy secret sins and those which thou ha●● passed ouer as no sinnes and neuer rest thinking of them till they haue forced thee to Christ which is euer accompanied with a perswasion that the sinne is pardonable which is no small comfort Then when thou art come to a sight of thy sinne the second point is sorrow for thy sinne such as is expressed Zach. 12.10 as that when we consider how wee haue pierced God with our sins and that euen my sinnes
were the nailes that fastned Christ to the Crosse wee must weepe and cry as one mourneth for his onely sonne and first borne and there must be such a compunction of the spirit as to crie with the hearers of Peter Act. 2.37 What shall we doe and with Dauid Psal 6.6 to wash our bed with teares and so to mourne as if we heard the Lord summoning vs to iudgement for our sinnes are not lighter then Dauids that our sorrow should be lesse then his And when we haue attained to this to be pierced to the soule with sorrow not for any discomforts in this life but for that we haue offended God and haue exercised our selues in this not as in a pang that shall perplex vs for the time but that wee haue daily ripped and laied our hearts naked before the Lord then from hence springeth forth the third fruit amendment of our sinnes and repentance for them which standeth in two parts first in the forsaking of the old sinne secondly in inclining to the contrary vertue for the repentance of an vlurer is not restitution only but with Zaccheus Luke 19.8 to restore and to be mercifull to the poore as before he was vnmercifull for drunkards not onely to leaue the combat of their cups but to forsake that company and to obserue all kind of abstinence whereby he may be more fit for his calling and in iudgement to condemne it and in affection to abhor it both in himselfe and others so as briefly to repent is not to be as thou hast bene but to be in Christian duties that thou hast not beene For the second point which is the reason of the exhortation by the word Kingdome of heauen vnderstand the manifestation of the Messias which as a ●●ately monarch shall rule in the hearts of men such as shall bee gathered by the Gospell with a wonderfull spirituall maiesty by his word and graces first leading them by the Gospell to haue their conuersation in heauen while they liue heere whereupon gather there is a double kingdome first of administratory prouidence which is that wherby the Lord ruleth ouer all euen the diuels secondly of royall preheminence in his church which is threefold first in their beginning by imperfect sanctification when men translated drawen from the power of sin are brought to the obedience of the Lord Iesus the second confirmed by perfect sanctification in the soules of the saints already departed the third fully to be accomplished when wee shall bee crowned of the Lord both in soule and body with perfect and perpetuall glory when God shall raigne in his Sonne his Sonne in his Church and his Church triumph in them both for euer Now this spirituall maiesty of Christ setling and inthronizing himselfe in the hearts of men is far more magnificent then any earthly throne prescribing vs lawes within which we are to bound our selues for in a kingdome there are foure things requisite first a King to gouerne secondly subiects to obey thirdly lawes to keepe in awe fourthly authority to execute them Now in this kingdome of light Christ is the King the faithfull be the subiects the word of God the lawes the power of the spirit the authority to execute them so that if by our subiection to the word the little flocke of Christ be increased the workes of the diuell bee destroied the enemies of God be subuerted and sinne bee subdued in the strength thereof then 〈◊〉 being gathered into this first kingdome which consisteth in the regeneration of the spirit may assuredly waite for the expectation of the other kingdome which standeth in the perfection 〈◊〉 all glory And we may the better vnderstand this by weighing the diuersity of Kingdomes which the diuell hath these being double first on earth secondly in hell On earth the reprobate being his subiects their corrupt affections their lawes 〈◊〉 their being giuen ouer of God to follow those wicked waies being the power to execute them So as in all those places b●● they neuer so well polished to the eye which haue not suffici●●● power of the Gospell to saue them ●or which haue it notat●●● or which haue it in a counterfet manner and measure or wh●●● hauing it sincerely Mat. 7.6 doe flie like dogs to rend them in peeces th●● bring it in these is the kingdome of darknesse set vp and sauing for the elects sake which shall bee taken out of them by the manifestation of Gods grace it were but a cage of filthy birds and the Synagogue of Satan For the second which is in hell it is that wherein vnmercifull Diues now lieth Luk. 16.24 and cannot haue so much refreshing as to coole his tongue and wherein after this life the wicked and impenitent shall bee tormented with endlesse paine The consideration whereof may driue vs to the meditation of the Lords bounty that hath prepared another place for vs if we follow the counsell of Iohn Baptist to amend our liues and to reforme our waies euen such a place wherein we shall behold and enioy the beauty of his glorie for euer Further obserue though Iohn Baptist willeth them to repent and amend yet it proueth no ability or naturall inclination in a man to doe this no more then when Christ saith Mat. 11.28.29 Come vnto me and take vp my yoake it argueth no power of our selues to come for so much himselfe setteth downe in another place where hee saith No man can come vnlesse my Father drawe him But the end of this is Iohn 6.44 not that the commandement is giuen to meet with our power to performe it but as Rom. 3.20 that thereby might come the knowledge of sinne for when wee see our weakenesse that we cannot doe it and our wretchednesse that we haue done the contrary as that where we should haue repented of our sins we haue rather increased them it leads vs to seeke grace in Christ pardon for the sinne and power of his spirit to forsake it So as in the commandement know thou oughtest to doe it in the correction of the Lord know thou hast not done it in not doing it know thy condemnation in praier and faith thou knowest where to haue it in thy conuersion thou knowest where thou hast receiued it and in thy perseuerance know by whom thou doest retaine it And albeit all commandements are of three sorts first such as command our first conuersion secondly that command our obedience to the Lord after our conuersion thirdly that command our perseuerance after wee haue begun obedience yet we shall see the strength of all these commeth from the Lord. For the first Zach. 1.3 there is a commandement giuen to turne to the Lord and Ioel 2.12 this is more particularly set downe that it must be a turning with all the heart But how shall this be wrought Obserue Ephraims speech to the Lord Ier. 31.18 Conuert thou me and I shall be conuerted So Deut. 10.16 Moses commandeth that the people should circumcise the
Psal 58.6 and Psal 59.6 So Paul calleth false teachers dogges snarling against the preaching of the truth sometime they are called swine to disgrace the filthinesse of mans nature sometime for their cruelty to Beares robbed of their whelpes sometimes for their boldnesse to Wolues as Mat. 10. Christ saith I send you as sheepe among Wolues which vers 16. he expounds to be among men sometime to Buls Psalm 22. The fat Buls of Basan seeke to deuoure me sometime to wild Boares as Dauid praieth O Lord set a hedge before thy vineyard for feare of wild Boares Psal 80.13 they are so full of rage sometime for the subtilty they are tearmed Foxes as Christ saith Gord that Fox speaking of Herod that I will preach to day and to morrow Luk. 13.32 sometime to horse-leaches Prou. 30.15 which haue two daughters that crie bring bring they are so full of cruelty so Psal 22. those that persecute and afflict the Church are called Vnicornes and heere the Pharisees are named Vipers that would eate and deuoure the Church and yet they would come to heare which made their sinne so much the heauier that they would come to so holy a place with so vnholy harts Thus do●● sinne strangely change vs and thus are men when the Lord h●●● giuen them ouer that they haue not the property of one beak but of all beasts for they are as malicious as Apes as enuious as Serpents and as venimous as Adders and yet they dare come and state the Lord in the face in his congregation hauing neuer communed with their hearts before This is that the Lord complaineth of Ier. 7.9 Will you steale and commit adultery auburne incense vnto Baal and come and stand before me in this house where my name is called vpon Nay the Lord abhorreth all such manner of worship and sacrifice as himselfe protesteth Esa 66. The sacrifice of a sheepe in this sort I esteeme as the bloud of a m●● For though the meanes to auoid the wrath to come be by conming to Gods ordinance of preaching yet to come with a pharisaicall heart doth but increase the vengeance and hasten thy destruction Now for the instruction Bring foorth therefore fruits c. Marke how plainly and precisely Iohn doth stand vpon an open declaration of repentance by amendement of life for euery one may say he meaneth well which if he doe he will not be ashamed to bring it foorth So as if we will be trees of righteousnesse engrafted into Christ we must shew foorth the fruits and not the leaues of righteousnesse by the operation of his spirit for thou canst not be one flesh with a harlot and one spirit with the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 6. and charitie ought not to make mee beleeue him to be Christs sheepe that heareth not his voice So as marke that the Lord measureth the flowre of our hearts by the fruit of our lips for Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh and men may see our hearts through our hands Since then the Lord requireth that wee should approoue our faith to men and manifest our reconciliation with God in heauen by the works of loue shewed to men on earth let vs weigh our steppes that they may be straight watch ouer our words that they may be gracious passe nothing through our fingers that shall be entangled with the hurt of our neighbour but measure out our actions by the rule and square of religious loue And say not with your selues c. This is the second point before deliuered namely the godlie and graue exhortation Iohn made vnto these false hearted Pharisees and Sadduces containing two parts first what they should do Amend their liues Secondly what they should not doe that they should not presume vpon the externall priuiledge they had of being circumcised as the children of Abraham For this was the error of their iudgement that the whole seed of Abraham by generation of the flesh were within the couenant of grace to be saued And this is the obiection implied and answered by S. Paul Rom. 9.6.7 namely that if the Iewes were cast away then the word of the Lord was fallen away because it is said I will be thy God and the God of thy seed for euer which is confuted there by the Apostle by a distinction of a double seed There is an Israel in the couenant and an Israel out of the couenant So as there is a double election in the house of Israel first generall that all that came of the loines of Abraham should haue this dignity to be accounted within the couenant to partake of the word and seale of circumcision The second is a speciall election out of the former that out of the seed of Abraham one seed onely should be saued as it is Malach. 1.2 Is not Esau Iacobs brother yet haue I hated Esau and loued Iacob Whereby appeareth there is a speciall election out of the generall so as the grace of the couenant was offered to all Israel and all Israel differed from the vncircumcised nations yet the promise was effectuall onely in the elect Whereupon gather that if these Pharisees had not beene blinded and bereaued of the spirit of truth they would neuer haue stood vpon any externall priuiledge for the promise being made indefinitely had beene fulfilled if ten onely had beene saued for the Scripture goeth onely thus farre I will be the God of thy seed not of all thy seed And this the Apostle proueth in the place before thus If all the Iewes were within the compasse of the promise and the couenant of grace by vertue of the outward seale of cutting the foreskin of the flesh then it was necessary the first borne should bee and that he might challenge this assoone as any to be saued But this was not so for in Ismael the eldest was not the promise but in Isaac shall thy seed be called so as God declared his purpose by distinguishing them at first when the couenant was but new made while Abraham himselfe liued and when he had but two sonnes And lest this particular example might bee excepted against by reason of the disparagement in their birth Israel being borne of the bond-woman Take saith the Apostle Esau borne of the same wombe begot of the same father yea borne at the same time almost and if there were any prerogatiue it was Esaus for he was eldest both of them circumcised yet did not the promise pertaine to Esau as is proued by two testimonies of Scripture Gen. 25 23. The elder shall serue the yonger and Mal. 1.2 I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau his seruitude in the flesh being ioyned with the hatred of God vpon his soule So as the difference betweene the children of Abraham according to the flesh onely and according to the flesh and spirit also standeth in these two things first in Gods secret purpose whom to glorifie and whom to reiect secondly in the effects of faith and
giuen vp Rom. 1.24 to serue their owne lusts that profited not by that one light of nature whereby they were constrained to acknowledge a superiour power that made that excellent frame of heauen and earth If the Pharisees were thus sharpely charged and reprooued for not amending their liues at these few sermons of one Iohn Baptist much more may wee feare lest wee be swallowed vp of present destruction that haue had so many sounds of the Lords trumpets and yet haue not retired from our owne waies that after so much dressing and pruning and lopping haue brought foorth nothing but briers that haue deuoured so many full yeares of peace and yeeres of preaching and plentie and yet continue leane and ilfauoured in the course of our liues for now at the time of the Gospel as we see heere beginneth iudgement Secondly learne how faithfully Iohn executed and performed his ministery which stood in two parts as was foretold by Malachy chap. 4. to preach mercie and iudgement both which he performed in this one sermon Heere the Iesuits take occasion to say that we should dehort men from euill for feare of hell and exhort them to doe well in hope of heauen We say with Paul who is our patterne and forerunner that we haue weapons for all those that shall despaire after the obedience of Gods Saints fulfilled but we preach not onely to worke well in hope of heauen for as we are seruants we deserue nothing but as children wee are receiued to an inheritance bought for vs before we were so we striue not that men should keepe themselues from sin onely for feare of hell for the Lord will neuer account of such a soule as will doe nothing but for feare of the whip for hee loueth a free giuer and hateth constrained subiection and it is not the horror of damnation but the commemoration of the Lords mercie shewed toward vs in giuing his owne Sonne to so ignominious a death to ransome vs from that curse wee had incurred This is that containes vs within the bounds of obedience for if the heart bloud of the Lord Iesus will not make thy heart to relent and thy hands to tremble to put them forth to wickednesse then art thou in a desperate case Shall the feare of the gibber or the ghastly shew of death make one that was a traitor and now pardoned and aduanced vnto high place by the meere mercie of his Soueraigne shall this make him afraid to commit treason againe and nothing else nay the grace of his Prince shall rest alwaies before his eies and shall most forcibly perswade him to perseuere in his loialtie For this is the most effectuall of all others to mooue vs in the bowels of the mercies of Christ to keepe our selues cleane and washed because wee are already purified in his bloud and not for feare of falling into the pit againe Thirdly note that if any man will escape and auoide damnation he must of necessitie liue wel for he must be a tree bringing foorth good fruit Where first consider what is good fruit which is implied in the text it cannot bee good except the tree be good as Christ saith If the casting out of a diuell be a good worke why am not I a good man Matt. 12.28 Ioh. 7.21 So as first the person must be accepted before the worke be accepted and no person can please without faith that purifieth the heart and there is no such heart where religion dependeth not vpon the true worship of the law of God and by consequent there is no good faith where the heart is not cleansed by the spirit of God Since then a man must first be good before he can doe good it is impossible that anie man erronious in religion should produce a good worke Externall righteousnesse and the morall vertues of the Papists is a vizard that bleares manie mens eies and wee say that they are honest as well may we say it of them that hanged vp the Lord Iesus thinking he had spoken blasphemie because being but a poore wretch to see to he challenged himselfe to be the Sonne of God and in this doing they thought they had done God an excellent peece of seruice And for Paul before his conuersion who could except against his life nay as he testifieth of himselfe Philip. 3. ● hee walked according to all the ordinances the law prescribed yet after hee was called he accounted all his morall righteousnesse but as the excrement of a dogge And if religion do not distinguish betweene men the heathen shall condemne both vs and them who by the meere instinct of nature liued in the hatred of grosse sinnes and walked soberly without exception and yet are they already damned For first we must be good by grace and being adopted into Christ then we doe good and of all the trees of the forest as Ezec. 15.3 there is none but is better then the vine if it beare not grapes for the oake is good for timber and euerie tree may serue for some good vse but the farments of the vine if it be not clustered is fit for nothing but for the fire The Papists are good as okes to build monasteries and to set vp houses and places of religion but an vnfaithfull and vnfruitfull Protestant and Professor is good for nothing being but a rotten bough or branch of a fruitlesse and barren vine but to be burned So that to iudge a worke to be good it must bee good both quo ad fontem quo ad finem proceeding from an honest heart and driuing to a right end the glory of God to whom I owe honor Further to come to the true knowledge of good fruit let vs know what bad fruit is which is double first sinnes in substance such as are contrarie to the expresse commandement of God as adulterie is absolutely a sinne in Dauid as wel as in any other secondly sinnes by circumstance as giuing of almes Matt. 23.5 onely when the trumpet sounds to be seene of men or to come into the sanctuarie with a purpose to pray and presently to returne to his vomit againe for the Lord abhorreth what himselfe commandeth Esay 66. if it be not do●● with that heart he commandeth The sacrifice of a sheepe is 〈◊〉 his sight as the bloud of a man not that he hateth the action but the hypocrisie in the action which staineth the whole a Hagg. 2.13 if an vncleane person touch the holy flesh the flesh it selfe is vncleane but holie flesh maketh not other flesh holy which was not so before Further obserue where it is said Euery tree that bringeth 〈◊〉 foorth good fruit shall be hewne downe that it is not enough not to doe euill but it is damnable not to do good for he doth not say the tree that brings foorth no fruit but that brings not forth good fruit For it is not enough for Zacheus Luk. 19 after his conuersion to be no poller or robber of
agonies not doubting but hee will compassionatly respect vs because hee in this flesh of ours knew and felt the hard encounter according to that is said often in the old Law to the Israelites Remember thou wert once a seruant in Egypt experience of afflictions making men more mercifull and as it is said Heb. 5.2 he is meet to haue compassion on vs that are out of the way because that he also was compassed with infirmity and Heb. 12.3 the Apostle draweth his argument thus that the consideration of the sufferings of Christ should perswade vs not to bee wearied nor to faint in our minds both because hee by his sufferings learned obedience and also because hee in our sufferings will bee a bearer of the weight lest it ouerpresse vs that we also might be consecrated through afflictions And this also is a second comfort to vs that as Christ ouercame by flesh so shall wee also victoriously conquer through him if with patience we perseuere for heerein hath Christ recouered what Adam lost who receiued concupiscence by Sathans temptations but Christ hath ouercome the diuell in as great temptations as euer Adam was ouercome Further in that Christ is led by the sprit and the diuell tempteth him consider what the purpose of them both are since being opposite one to the other they both ioyne in this one action We must learne that temptations are diuersly spoken of in the Scripture first the diuell tempteth therefore when we are moued to anger giue not place saith the Apostle to the diuell Ephes 4.27 for he bloweth the coales to kindle thy wrath which is murder two waies first either in the vniust matter of it secondly or in the immoderate measure of it and in all things hee as an externall instrument worketh vpon the corruption of our hearts Secondly one wicked man tempteth another as it is said in the Prouerbes Come lay thy lot with vs and we will take a purse Prou. 1.14 alluring others by their example to the participation of the same sinne and these are two causes of temptations without our hearts But Saint Iames chap. 1.14 goeth to a third cause Euery one saith he is tempted of his owne concupiscence as speaking of the inward cause that another prouoketh vs by and Sathan worketh vpon namely our owne pronenesie and pregnancy to sinne and the fire that burneth in our breasts so as euer we must charge and challenge our selues for our sinnes and euery temptation is either from an outward prouocation or inward instigation or both Fourthly God tempteth not onely to trie what strength we haue to vse prosperity with sobriety and aduersity with patience for this is not enough though by this he doth manifest what is hidden in the inward minde but these other inward solicitations come not without God yet doth hee not tempt Iames 1.13 as it is euill but vseth the ministerie of Sathan two waies first toward the elect then toward the reprobate toward these to giue them vp into an euill minde that sinnes past may bee the punishments of sinnes to come and the deserts of punishments that are to come which the Lord doth as a iust reuenger and not as any euill author for to punish sinne by sinne is but iustice with God As God willeth that Absolon shall plague his father by committing incest 2. Sam. 16.22 to bring Dauid to repentance for his adultery not that he willeth it as adultery but as a iust plague to him that did it and to conuert his seruant Dauid Now for the elect the Lord letteth the raines loose that thereby he may manifest their strength and his owne power in their weakenesse And by this was made knowen what excellent graces Iob had receiued Iob 2.10 when by his extremities and anguishes hee was not consumed but refined which otherwise had beene hid euen as the Pilot cannot shew his cunning but in a storme nor a man his valour but in a combat So Dauid was by affliction brought low Psal 32.3 that the Lord might shew the richer mercie in his recouery that all his children might bee assured to finde the same mercy though they fall into the same sinne if they follow his steppes of repentance So as temptations are sent of the Lord to discouer his graces in them or their owne wants if they relent partly to heale their pride partly to teach them to repent of some sinnes which before were not thought of and that the Church of God might bee comforted knowing that in the extremity of a bleeding heart the Lord sendeth compassion Sathan tempteth Adam to proue God a lyer and to bring him to dishonour and to bee the instrument of mans damnation Adam tempted himselfe to tast of that which as hee thought should make him God God tries him by this meanes to make a way for his iustice in thereprobate and for his mercy on the elect for if there had beene no fall God had beene neither iust in condemning some nor merciful in sauing others So heere Christ is caried to be tempted The purpose of God in this is to confirme it vnto Christ that he should be of power to destroy and extinguish the power of the diuell but Sathan fully intended to haue destroied the head by this meanes to haue hindred the saluation of the members For the fift circumstance which is the aduantage sathan tooke by Christs fasting vnderstand first that it was not the purpose of God nor of Christ himselfe to commend vnto vs his abstinence for it is no commendation to forbeare when he hath no appetite to eate but it was to commend his miraculous power for he was qualified with such diuine vertue as hee was for the time like an Angell not subiect to humane desires The Papists from hence doe draw the institution of Lent saying that all things are written for our instruction therefore as Christ fasted fortie daies so must we It is true that all things are written for our instruction but not for our imitation for he was borne of a Virgin conceiued of the holy Ghost Mat. 17.2 transfigured in the mount hee had a confirmation of his doctrine by diuers miracles came into the house the doores being shut Iohn 20.26 Mark 6.51 commanded the winds walked on the waters and must we be like him in these things No for all these taste of his Diuinity But his obedience his patience his loue to giue his life for his enemies his meeknesse not to breake a bruised reede his willingnesse to suffer all kind of affliction these things let vs imitate for these be fruits of the spirit only but to fast forty daies and forty nights is no more imitable for vs then it is to be borne of a Virgin Yea but say they it is good by this to take occasion to exhort to abstinence We answer it is no reason that because Christ fasted hauing no stomacke therefore we should abstaine hauing stomake Againe in all this time
me to haue me vse my liberty in this place but I discerne thy subtilty and to doe this thou requirest should be no glory to my Father nor any confirmation of doctrine heereafter therefore I will not cast pearles before Sathan The words containe two parts first the suggestion or temptation secondly the beating backe of the temptation In the first consider first the occasion sathan tooke to tempt him namely his hunger secondly the matter wherewith he was tempted For the first he tempts him in a matter of food being hungry Where learne that Sathan espieth all aduantages where and when he may finde vs best and he vseth our present infirmities or conditions of life as the fittest coales to set vs on fire withall For the rich man is neuer assaulted with the temptation to steale because he hath enough nor beggers to purchase because they want nor priuate men to peruert iustice because they sit not in place but there bee some temptations on the right hand and some on the left some are tempted by sickenesse to impatience by health to forget God by youth to embrace liberty and by age to loue riches by fulnesse to lift vp their heele against God some by penury to distrust him as if hee had cast off all care of them some are moued to reuenge by being disgraced and some to worke mischiefe by being flattered therefore we must correct such imperfections whereunto by nature wee are most inclined and not to giue the least aduantage vnto Sathan lest vpon our vnwatchfulnesse we be surprized for euery one shall finde that in something hee is not left vntempted and since temptations come on both sides wee must arme our selues with weapons on each side For the second which is the matter of the temptation we obserue a double drift in Sathan first to driue Christ to doubt that he is not Gods child because of his present exigent and want secondly vpon this to driue him to vse a preposterous miracle against Gods glory and whereby hee should haue graunted the diuell that he could not haue liued without bread and by this meanes to haue lost the glory of the triumph For the first of these leauing the particular of Christ the head let vs see whether the members bee not afflicted with the same temptations Psal 73.13.14.15 The greatest man the Prophet Dauid was mightily shaken with this when he saw Gods children liue so miserablie and the wicked so prosperously The Prophet Ieremy ch 12.1 desireth to reason with the Lord about this matter and bursteth forth with wonder Why doeth the way of the wicked so prosper why are all they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse They are planted and they grow where as the godly leade a life fraught and full of sorrow And this was the argument of all Iobs friends that being so strangely afflicted he must needs be Gods enemy Iob. 8.20 Indeed if the Lords loue should be measured by outward blessings the vngodly had farre greater cause to boast for they weare pride about their neckes as a chaine and are couered with extortions as with a garment their faces shine saith Ieremy and their plants are safely rooted yea not onely their persons but their children are like flockes of sheepe in the pleasant field and like oliue branches at a furnished table they see their houses established before their faces and are comforted with the sight of their childrens children Nay all things fareth well with them their Cow calueth and casteth not their hear●● come in and out with daily plenty so as with them euery thing prospereth by a proportionable kinde of happinesse And as they are happie in their liues so they haue a great priuiledge in the time of death for they die like lambes and passe away farre men comfortably to the eye then Gods children for they die not languishingly or as the prisoners of death but they goe to the graue sodainly yet their wickednesse is such and their hearts so full of poison as Iob describing their cogitations saith they regard not chap. 21.15 the Almighty but say what is the Lord that they should serue him And Dauid Psal 7.5 she●●● that their mouthes speake blasphemy against the heauens and their tongues walke freely through the earth not fearing m●● Whereas on the other side 1. Pet. 4.17 the iudgement of God beginner a● his owne house and they drinke the dregs of the cup of sorrow they are but wormes scarce worthy to creepe in respect of the magnificence of the wicked they eate the bread of care and quench their thirst with the water of affliction they are for their bodies poore for their credit despised and for their consciences they haue many combats the terrors of death doe oft so fight against them as they are shaken in the foundation of their faith so as they doubt besides these miseries they sustaine heere they shall be adiudged to death in the life to come yea they are hated of those by their name that neuer saw them by their face And besides this amid these waues of their miseries they are tempted yet by Sathan as that they are but grashoppers abiected of the world ouerwhelmed with sinne which woundeth their soule to death and yet they take themselues to bee heires of heauen and fellow-heires with Christ These seas of miseries should neuer ouerflow thee which sting thy conscience nor these disgraces outward should neuer ouerthrow thee which touch thy body if thou wert Gods child for then should his eye watch ouer thee to ease thee Such is the portion allotted to Gods Saints so as Dauid was caried so farre in perturbation of spirit that had hee not entred into the sanctuarie of the Lord he had vtterly condemned the generation of the godly Howbeit when we are assaulted on this sort let vs not bee dismayed but let vs know that herein is wrought our conformity with the Lord Iesus let vs learne the same defence that he vsed not to seeke to wind out our selues by our owne power or policy but to rely wholly vpon the Lord for the hath many secret waies to rescue vs if it please him to shew the power of his prouidence and by this trouble and depth of sorrowes we are plunged into we may the rather assure our selues that there shall be a generall restauration of all things because they are now so out of frame whereas if the wicked should heere bee punished and the godly prosper we might more call in doubt the comming of the Lord to glory But now seeing things in such a lamentable confusion euen this nay perswade vs with Saint Paul that there shall come a daie of vengeance for them that liue wickedly 2. Thess 1.7.8 and for them that are now distressed a day of comfort for if euery thing should be caried with an euen hand we might well doubt of an immortalitie For the second drift of Satan which was to vrge Christ vpon this his distresse to worke
subtilties as it will be hard to keepe him out Whereas God doth this to exercise his seruants in praier and to make them more diligent in searching and not that we should turne it to a matter of security and idlenesse these men not being so deuout as they that worship the Sunne and Moone Reu. 12.4 for they haue some conscience We must know that Sathan is able to pull starres from heauen as it is in the Reuelation and hee doth not alwaies speake with the mouth of a Dragon therefore in these perplexities wee must approch to God Mat. 7.8 whose promise we haue Seeke and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened and Iohn 7.17 if any man haue an honest heart and good inclination to liue well I will shew him saith Christ from whence my doctrine is And the Lord hath promised to be a Schoole-master to the humble they being not prepossessed with preiudice and he will giue plentifully and neuer vpbraid O most bountifull inuitation of our gracious God whereby wee may bee assured that asking the truth hee will not giue error Luke 11.12 and desiring to be conducted in the right way he will not leade vs into by-paths no more then asking bread hee will giue vs a Scorpion but he will vphold vs in the most dangerous temptations whereas others hauing no desire at least in a single affection for their malice and preiudice may be iustly damned 1. Thess 2.16 But what shall we doe shall we make them like waxe flexible to euery impression or like bels tuneable to the eares of the heater What resolution is there for the conscience the text cannot speake It is written saith Christ It is written saith the diuell if they be written they are both true and must needs be contrary being cited by enemies We answer it is true the letter printed cannot speake and they that writ it are in heauen The Church therefore hath prouided certaine meanes whereby a man not preiudicate may know the truth which bee sixe first praier with Dauid that the Lord would open our vnderstandings and shew vs the light of his statutes Psal 25.12 and the way that wee may choose whereby our steps may be assured Secondly wee must vnderstand the words of the place in the originall tongue of the old Testament in the Hebrew of the new in the Greeke for this was the instrument sanctified to that purpose Thirdly we must consider the words what they be by themselues and what they bee together ioyned with others whether they bee to bee taken properly or figuratiuely which shall bee knowen if either they be not proportionable to the analogie and rule of faith or not agreeing with the circumstance of the place Fourthly to examine the drift of the place what went before and what followeth as Christ to one asking him how hee should get eternall life answered by keeping the commandements Luk. 18 2● not meaning thereby that wee must come to it by our workes as the Papists gather Luke 10.26.29 but he speaking to one that iustified himselfe by keeping the Law spake after that sort to shew him his wound namely that that was not the way vnlesse he fulfilled all Fiftly by comparing and conferring of places one with another the true sense of the Scripture against the Scripture abused as Christ in this place doth and as else-where Loue couereth the multitude of ●●nes 1. Pet. 4.8 conferre with this Prou. 10.12 Hatred stirreth ●peontention but loue couereth all trespasses loue being taken ●or the loue of men whereby things are qualified and the best made of the worst and not for couering of sinnes before God ●s the Papists would haue it but inding it before men So A●raham was iustified by faith faith Paul Rom. 4.3 by works saith ●ames chapt 2.21 Saint Iames dealing with them that denied ●orks altogether S. Paul with them that stood too much vpon ●●em the one speaking how aman might approue himselfe before men to be iustified the other how men are iustified before God Sixthly approue of no interpretation nor accept of any scripture which is not proportionable to the analogy and agreeable to the rule of faith which is threefold first the tenne commandements secondly the Lords praier thirdly the Creed of the Apostles As when it is said This bread is my body I must not take it for the very substantiall body of Christ as it was on earth because it is against my Creed which teacheth me to beleeue he is in heauen Againe if we eate him in the bread flesh and bone it crosseth a commandement Thou shalt not kill for it is cruelty so to rend his flesh betweene our teeth Oh but how shall vnlearned men doe this Let vs know that God is the teacher of the vnlearned and he wil not giue a stone if we aske food but he will instruct the humble and in compassion will bring them foorth of darknesse if they will confer with the learned as the Eunuch did with Philip Act. 8.31 and if they will frequent the word preached with the same hearts that the men of Beroea did heare Pauls sermons Act. 17.10 comparing then with the verity of the word written For the second how truely Sathan applied the Scripture he brought the place is taken out of Psal 91.11 and though his purpose was to abuse Christ hauing no promise of protection going out of his waies yet in this he saith truely that hee applied the pomise especially to Christ the naturall Sonne of God though it extend to all the faithfull for Christ is that ladder of Iacob Gen. 28.12 whereupon the Angels ascended and descended and so much did he himselfe tell Nathaniel of 1. Iohn 51. that he should see the Angels ascend and descend vpon the sonne of man for they are seruiceable properly to him as the sonne of God and of him it is principally true that the Angels do attende● for though they serue vs it is but for his sake not that they are inferior to vs in themselues but God hauing for his sonnes sake made vs heires of glory and Christ vouchsafing vs to bee companions with him in his kingdome they minister vnto vs and by that ladder doe descend vnto vs hauing of our selues nothing Further note that the diuell doth know that Christ and 〈◊〉 Gods children must haue sufficient security from God th●● walking in their calling and in the waies prescribed them they shall be guided by the prouidence of the most high which is our comfort that neither the pestilence that walketh by night Psal 91.5.6 nor the arrowes that flie by day neither the dragon nor the aspe the open furious nor the secret malicious tyrant shall once hurt vs for Sathan knowes and doth heere testifie that we dwell in the secret of the Highest and vnder his shadow that shall shelter vs from stormy blasts and boiling heate and no more shall wee need to feare Gen. 11.4 then did the heauens when
is with you and as Iohn 5.35 for a season to reioice in this light but that is onely spoken of the elect which is Malac. 4.2 that vnto them that feare the name of God shall the Sunne of righteousnesse arise and health shall be vnder his wings And as it is in the Prophet Esay The Sunne shall neuer go downe Esay 66.23 nor the Moone be darkned that is their light shall neuer be put out Againe the reprobate may conceiue and retaine a knowledge of reconciliation but it is a confused knowledge but the elect hath a more particular knowledge that he can receiue it to apply it to the reforming of his life whereas the other haue it onely to make them vnexcusable or to make them burst foorth into some confession of their sinne without repentance Examples here of we haue Esau Gen. 27.38 losing the blessing wept and Peter Luke 22.62 losing Christ by his denials wept bitterly Heere are teares alike but not in trueth alike So Math. 27.3 Iudas betraying Christ saith I haue sinned and 2. Sam. 24.10 Dauid numbring the people against Gods commandement said I haue sinned here is repentance in both the worke alike but the faith vnlike So as the reprobate haue a common beginning with the children of God vnder the veile and couering of hypocrisy but they can neuer come to that height wherin the elect do stand as 2. Cor. 3.17 to behold the Lord with open face or to be transformed to his image or as Reu. 1.7 to haue receiued that true cie-salue as to see Christ comming in the clouds with comfort or as it is said in the Prophet Ieremie that true anointing of the Lords grace which neither wasteth with time nor decaieth in vertue The second grace which is diuers in substance is adoption which no hypocrite can perswade himselfe to haue in such measure as the elect may for indeed this spirit of adoption is alwaies denied them And this may bee knowen by two parts that are to bee performed first by praier to GOD secondly by affections towards GOD. For the first it is impossible for an hypocrite to praie aright hee may babble or vse the externall gesture in prayer as the Pharisee did in the open streetes yea Sathan may suffer him to vtter some words without feeling sometime so farre as to condemne his owne sinne Mat. 27.4.5 as Iudas did his selling of Christ but yet his conscience neuer disalloweth it for this is an inseparable marke set vpon the praiers of the elect Rom. 8.26 Neither haue any this sanctified spirit to pray as they ought but they which are of God And as Galath 4.6 For that assurance in praier whereby wee crie Abba Father the reprobate cannot possibly haue nor feele that force in praier for as the Apostle there saith it is proper onely for the sonnes of God The reason is because the reprobate want the second grace which accompanieth and waiteth vpon the spirit of adoption that is good affections toward God for hee doth but dissemble his loue of God that hee might still continue as a bay●rec euer florishing the reuerence that he yeelds him is but in hypocrisie Iames. 2.19 and the obedience that he giueth him is but constrained as is the diuels Howbeit with the elect it fareth farre otherwise for their praiers are auailable because they are taught of God and their affections are good because they are changed by his spi●●e and they can come to God as children to a father only loking to speed in the name of father for this sheweth reconcilement after our first enmity and setteth foorth more sound loue than nature can affoord And this his loue draweth our feare to oftend and our care to please and we doe lift vp our voice with an assurance we shall be heard Ioh. 5.15 because we humble our selues in a detestation of our sinnes and with a resolution to be obedient to his commandements which the reprobates cannot doe for though the Lord doe often euen shew mercy to them in their praiers and other Christian exercises so as they may thinke they haue their sinnes forgiuen as he did to Ahab 1. King 21.27.29 who hauing solde himselfe to worke wickednesse in the sight of God vpon the iudgement pronounced against him sitting but within the shadow of praier and fasting was spared that the euill should not fall in his daies yet can they not possibly loue the Lord of heauen but in a confused sort nor come before him but with a slauish feare But it may be said If the Lord sheweth mercie to hypocrites and yet their praiers nor auaileable it may be thought the Lord is deceitfull No for the hypocrite is taken with the sweetnesse of the Lords mercy but he not apprehending it as hee should in obedience it proueth to him but a decaying sweetnesse Neither yet doth this any whit proue the will of God to be changeable though after his mercy disclosed he doth withdraw it from them for they relie onely and stay themselues vpon the present mercy not seeking further euen as Esau Gen. 25 34. who so he might presently haue to fill his belly cared not for his birth-right whereas the elect ground themselues vpon Gods mercy in all maner of tempests and doe gather together as many remembrances of it as they can in any of their afflictions after the example of Dauid who 1. Sam. 17.37 armeth himselfe against Goliah vpon the remembrance of the Lords mercy formerly shewed him in deliuering him out of the paw of the Lion and of the Beate Neither yet doth the spirit of God at all deceiue the reprobate for the Lord did not so extend his mercy as to take them to bee his and keepe them as his but did cast that seed into them to make them without excuse and to double their damnation Mark 4.5.6 in that they loued darknesse more than light so as for their ingratitude it was taken away Now for the second difference which is betweene the elect and the reprobate which is discerned by the working of this spirit it is to be obserued that it worketh more effectually in the elect than in the reprobate for the grace offered them doth but puffe them vp with a dexterie of wit and volubility of speech that they can conceiue and speake something of the Lord as the Pharisees could in Christ his time but this grace worketh farre otherwise in the elect and by no comparison for the Lord doth not onely enlighten the iudgement of his chosen to make them know his Gospell but changeth also their affections to make them worke foorth their saluation with feare and trembling And as it is Ezechiel 18.31 they shall haue a new heart giuen them to walke in the commandements of the Lord and as Danià speaketh Psal 40.6.7.8 they haue a new song put into their mouths and the Lord hath so prepared their eares as they can say Here I am O Lord I desire to
felt most suggestions and yet hath resisted them may assure himselfe that Sathan is cast out for flesh and bloud cannot bee cured but by temptations as Paul witnesseth of the Churches of Macedon 2. Corinthians 8.2 whose ioy abounded in their great triall of affliction And as the same Apostle testifieth of himselfe 2. Corinthians 12.7 lest he should be exalted aboue measure the messenger of Satan was sent to buffet him which though Satan doth it of malice yet the Lord doth it to humble vs for if he should at once cast Satan out of vs then the wild beasts of pride and of not feeling the infirmities of our brethren would deuoure vs euen as Deut. 7.22 the Canaanites were rooted out but by little and little from among the Israelites lest the beasts of the field should haue increased vpon them I will returne c. and when he commeth he findeth c. This is the third point set downe in this parable that setteth foorth the enlightning of hypocrites to their most iust condemnation namely the meanes and the fit occasion Sathan espieth to surprise againe that man out of whom he was cast There be two set down here the first swept the second garnished and the third is supplied Mat. 12.44 He findeth him empty that is void of the graces of God and fitter to receiue Sathan after his enlightning then he was before It is a metaphor or translated speech taken from trauellers or guests that desire to be entertained with clenlinesse For so it is with Satan that when thou art filled with all bitternesse gall of heart and hypocrisie then art thou a clean habitation for him and the fuller of sinnes the fairer and fitter not that Sathan doth delight in cleanlinesse but that thou art to him most neate and handsome when there is in thee the superfluitie of all wickednesse and when thou art become a most excellent and perfect hypocrite as th●● thou canst pray at Church cousin at home pretend kindnesse to thy brother and yet eat him thorow with vsury the sweeter dwelling is there for Sathan in thee Hence let vs obserue for our comfort that this cannot bee meant of the true children of God for it is impossible that Sathan can find the soule of a Christian empty that is depriued and void of the whole grace of God For an abatement of the spirit of God must not be taken for an emptinesse as Ephes 4.30 it is said the spirit may be grieued and 1. Thess 5.19 it is said it may be quenched and many of the graces of God in his children may be empty that is there may bee no feeling of them for a time but the chosen of God cannot cleane fall away not the image of God be cleane defaced in them for then could they not be brought home againe vnlesse Christ should suffer againe which cannot be Heb. 10.10 Againe in the greatest sins when men haue deserued the greatest punishments yet we presume they haue some of the good spirit in them as Paul did of the incestuous person 1. Cor. 5.5 whom he willed to be separated for a time that his flesh might be tamed which sheweth the Apostle had some hope he had the spirit for if all in him had beene flesh then should he not haue beene excommunicate by the censures of the Church but wholly cut off from the Church and accursed Dauid Psal 51. praieth to haue a cleane heart created in him vers 10.11 not to haue it taken away which shewes he felt it therefore hee praieth not there for the holy Ghost simply but for some graces of the holy Ghost as for a stable spirit that he fall not againe for that grace he had not before and after he praieth Lord giue me peace so as hee had not the peace of conscience before and when he saith Take not thy spirit from me that is though his sinne had deserued it euen as wee praie Lord be not farre from vs not that the Lord is at any time absent from his Saints but that wee feele it not at that time so comfortablie as wee desire so Dauid praieth Lord giue me a free spirit that is that hee might praie more seruently then he did before for except he had had indeed the heat of the spirit it is impossible hee should haue yeelded obedience to the chasti●●ment of God or for Peter to haue wept in his heart at the rebuke of Christ except hee had some seedes of the spirit of God in him Mat. 26.75 Howbeit we may not be drawne by this to presumption to thinke it maketh no matter how wee liue for as the children of God haue the inuisible marke of the earnest of the spirit so must they also beare the visible marke of zealous profession and honest conuersation For if wee doe not cherish the spirit of God by good emploiment and spirituall gaine that wee grow from faith to faith it is a signe that the spirit of trueth is not in vs so that we must not flatter our selues because there cannot bee indeed an emptinesse but with Saint Peter 2. Peter 1.5 we must ioine vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance c. For if we stay at the first staire we shall neuer be able to ascend to the Saints of God and if growth and increase be not in vs we are but idle and vnfruitfull in the acknowledging of Christ The reason is because being elect when wee receiue grace of God wee receiue withall grace to employ and vse it that it may abound alwaies excepted the storme and tempest of an afflicted conscience for that time for the Lord if he see vs prosper with one grace hee will giue vs more and if we thriue not with a graine of faith Mat. 25 16. he will take all from vs so as though thou canst praie yet vnlesse thou canst praie better with more feruent zeale and powre out thy soule more fully before the Lord than before it is nothing for the first grace to pray onely was but giuen thee as an hypocrite to make thee vnexcusable Further obserue hence that Sathans fittest garniture and best entertainment is hypocrisie to make thee pretend holinesse when thou intendest nothing but wickednesse and this hypocrisie standeth in two things first in not doing that which God hath commanded secondly in doing it otherwise than God hath commanded If thou fallest into the first thou shewest thy selfe rebellious if thou slip into the second thou discouerest thy thy selfe against the law of the Eternall If he tell thee thou shalt not eate of the forbidden tree thou oughtest not so much as to looke on it lest the lust of thine eie betray thy heart and the desire of thy heart doe beguile thy taste If he prescribe thee a rule and a course wherein thou shalt walke thou must not as Numb 22.18 for a house full of gold go beyond the word of the Lord to do more or lesse And therefore
man deceiue you he beginneth with a preoccupation to possesse their minds before hand He that doth righteousnesse saith he is righteous not he that can discourse and talke of righteousnesse and therefore one saith truely Tace lingua loquerevita talke not of a good life but let thy life speake This the Apostle there proueth by the contrary for he that committeth sin is of the diuell that is he that committeth f●●●● the world doth and doth not purge himselfe for the Apostle opposeth sinning to purging and he that is of the diuell cannot please God For therefore was Christ sent to destroy the workes of the diuell so as if these workes be not destroyed in thee and his building pulled downe Christ was neuer sent vnto thee Againe he proueth it by the contrary He that is borne of God doth not sinne for he hath the seed of the spirit therefore it is as if he should say when such wicked men shall bee saued the diuell shall be saued This is further proued by the words which Christ himselfe spake in the flesh Ioh. 8.34 He that so sinneth as to make a trade of it he is the seruant of the diuell vers 44. and if no chastisements nor benefites can reclaime you ye are the diuels for the lusts of your father ye will doe Lastly adde to this that of the new couenant made with Israel and so with vs Ier. 31.31 I will write my law in their hearts vers 33. And I will be their God and they shall bee my people So as if God pardoneth any hee doth promise him grace to amend his life and if that grace be denied him he neuer couenanted to saue him The couenant then implieth thus much If thou hast not grace to abstaine from grosse sinnes thou shalt be damned and if thou hast the grace of sanctification giuen thee thou shalt be saued But if ye mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the spirit c. This is the second proposition which the Apostle layeth downe namely that a good course of life leadeth to a good end Wherein first is questionable whether it standeth in the power of the heart of man to subdue the corrupt desires and affections of his nature as well as it doth to fulfill the lusts of the flesh for 2. Tim. 2.20.21 Paul shewing how that in a great house there be vessels some for honour and some for dishonour some for base and some for higher seruices which house he meaneth to be the Church of God saith that if any man purge himselfe hee shall be a fit vessell for Gods house and 1. Ioh. 5.18 He that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe from that wicked one which is the diuell that he touch him not Which places may seeme to attribute the purifying and cleansing of our selues to our selues by our owne inclinations and wils but it must be vnderstood that the Scripture in these and such like places setteth not downe the cause of this cleansing but the execution of it For the cause of this our mortification appeareth Ezech. 36.26 I saith the Lord will giue you a new heart and a new spirit so as there it must be had euen of God but it must be in vs otherwise we pertaine not to the Lords election Hereupon the Scripture vouchsafeth vs that honour to say we do it because notwithstanding the reforming of our iudgements and the changing of our affections is wrought by the supernaturall power of the holy Ghost working in vs yet this holy Ghost doth worke in vs as the subiects and by vs as the instruments as when it is said I will write my law in your hearts the spirit writes but the heart is the place and whatsoeuer is written in our hearts is ours To make this more plaine by a naturall proportion As a man that rectifieth and guideth the hand of a child to write the writing is said to be the worke of the child and not of him that directed him though without such direction the child could not haue done it euen so the Lord doth guide vs in all things we doe well and what doth hee guide but our wils so as the worke proceeding from our wils is ours yet without the guide of the spirit we could not doe it And in this working there is not a double effect one of the holy Ghost and another of our selues but we doe it euen as before there were not two writers though the child was directed but the child onely writ it Secondly where it is said If ye mortifie c. ye shall liue it may be demanded whether by the same reason we deserue saluation by this mortifying of our flesh● as by walking in the flesh we deserue damnation It is certaine vnlesse we doe well we can not be saued yet the holy Ghost sheweth that there is not the same perfection to doe well in our natures as there is in vs agilitie and dexterity to follow wickednesse For by our fall we are throughly corrupted as the Prophet Esay speaketh chap. 1.6 From the sole of the foot to the top of the head there is nothing but wounds and swelling but by our regeneration in this life we can neuer perfectly bee renued It sufficeth we haue obtained the blessing of Iacob Gen. 32.28.29 to haue such power from God as to be lame in sinne all our life long So Paul Rom. 6.23 saith The wages of sinne is death but the gift of God is eternall life through Christ whereby appeareth that the contraries themselues are not perfect for sinne of it selfe deserueth death but being good of it selfe deserueth not life for it is the gift of God and so the consequents of these two cannot be perfect and agree together Againe it is one question to aske who shall be saued and another to aske how we shall be saued for true it is that none shall be saued but they that mortifie themselues if they liue and for children they are changed in a moment by a supernaturall power of the Lord. As it is said Esa 33.14 Who shall dwell with the deuouring fire He that walketh in iustice and speaketh righteous things refusing the gaine of oppression shaking his hands from taking of gifts stopping his eares from hearing of blood and shutting his eies from seeing of euill And Dauid Psal 15.1 asketh the question and bringeth in the Lord to answer it Who shall dwell in thy tabernacles He that walketh vprightly he that taketh no reward against the innocent and such like as it followeth there as if the Lord should say Such and none else for the words haue an exclusiue nature So if it be asked who they be that shall be set at the right hand of God in heauen Mat. 25.34.41 it must be answered They that visite the members of Christ in affliction and leade their liues answerable to their religious profession And if Who they be that shall be set on the left hand the answere is They that refuse to releeue the
behold the Sun-shine of the Lord in full measure which is the Sunne of light and of life yet we haue such a glimpse as wee cannot bee perswaded but it shineth vpon our soules And as the child in the mothers womb stirring neuer so weakly yet euen by that feeble motion she is assured that it hath life so the least light of the Sunne of righteousnesse is most sweet comfortable vnto vs. Which doctrine as it ministreth and bringeth consolation to a weake soule so must it be as a sharpe spur vnto vs that this righteousnesse may be encreased and that this spirit of God may delight to dwell in vs that we being grounded and growing daily in a perswasion of Gods loue towards vs it may enforce vs to loue him more and more and the strength and perfection of this loue may and ought to make vs resist and shunne all contrary means whereby our encrease and growth in faith may bee hindered And because this spirit of the Lords adoption is inward and can not be perceiued that many be deluded by Sathans subtilty and forgerie foisting and thrusting in another deed than euer God gaue vs especially working vpon the weake heart of man which being fraught and full of selfe-loue is easily perswaded of any good to it selfe therefore we must learne how to discerne whether it be the true euidence of Gods spirit or no which we haue within vs. And for that the Apostle here setteth down one effect and fruit of this spirit for all that is that there is a confidence of any good conscience to come boldly before the Lord as a child before his father to preferre our suites vnto him and to offer vp our praiers vpon the golden altar Reuel 8.3 that is the mediation of Christ by whose meanes and through whose obedience and suffering they shall sauour before the Lord as a sweet incense and the Lord shall put into them daily a new incense by the spirit assuring vs more and more of his louing fauor● and we shall not hide our selues and run away when we are called Gen. 3.8 as Adam did but being disburdened of that which doth presse vs downe from the presence of God we shall come cheerefully before him and ioy our selues in that the Lord will looke so pleasingly vpon vs Other effects of this spirit and yet arising from the former are these If the spirit worke in vs the same affection towards God that nature doth produce in children toward their parents as first to loue God secondly to feare him thirdly to reuerence him fourthly to be obedient to him fiftly to be thankfull to him all which vertues be in good children who do alwaies acknowledge all they haue to proceed from their father as the speciall instrument from God and if we haue beare these affections to God our father as to loue him for his mercies to feare him for his loue to reuerence him for his goodnesse to obey him for his greatnes and to be thankfull to him for his kindnesse then may we assure our selues that we haue the spirit of adoption sealed vp in vs for our saluation In that we crie Abba Father learne that no obstinate or resolute sinner persisting deliberately in his sinne and his heart deliting in it can once open his mouth to pray nor neuer did pray The like whereof may be said of the hypocrite for though they may falsely perswade themselues that offering vp a few words in forme of a praier it is sufficient to purge the vncleannesse of their liues and that impudently and in presumption they may call God Father when their harts be impure and vncleane yet Iohn 8.44 Christ calleth them the children of their father the diuell And though Sathan may perswade an obstinate and wilfull sinner as he did Houah Gen. 3.4.5 that doing such an euill and wicked thing they shall not hang in hell alwaies threatening where God promiseth and promising where God threatneth vntill he take them in the lurch at the time of their death and then he ouerreckneth them yet it is certaine he cannot pray vnlesse he haue this spirit and this spirit none hath if they delight and sauour of sin so as though they cry Peace peace to their owne conscience and seruing the diuell will neuerthelesse vaunt themselues to bee the sonnes of God it is the Lords iustice that permitteth Sathan so to blinde them that they cannot see their sickenesse to the death for 1. Iohn 3.8 it is said He that committeth sinne is of the diuell Can the poison of Aspes and the sacrifice of praier proceed both from the same tongue No. Grapes cannot grow of thornes nor figs of thistles and Esay 66.3.5 the Lord saith that he that offereth sacrifice without trembling that is without reformation of life it is as if he killed a man which is most vnsauory to the Lord. So as lawfull things and things commanded be an abomination to the Lord when the soule and conscience is not answerable to the action and to the outward profession Howbeit things simply forbidden are sinnes both in the regenerate and vnregenerate and the prayers of these men that thus can lie on their beds and imagine mischiefe and yet can open their lippes by way of conference and speech with God are no better then those of the rebels in the North who when they had published all their mischiefe which tended to the ouerthrow of our dread Soueraigne yet ended and concluded their proclamation with God saue Queene Elizabeth Now concerning hypocrites that they cannot pray but by imitation of Christians as Parots looke vpon the rule of Dauid Psal 66.18 If I regard saith he wickednesse in my heart the Lord will not heare me that is if I delight in sin my praiers shall not come neare him so as make what shew thou wilt if thy heart be not vpright it auaileth not For as it is said Iohn 9.31 God heareth no sinners that is no malicious and deliberate sinners which intend and compasse mischiefe in their inward parts howsoeuer in hypocrisie they dissemble it And it is certaine it is as impossible to pray without this spirit as to vnderstand without a soule Further obserue how this spirit begets in vs such peace of conscience that makes vs confident in crauing our wants at Gods hand as from the spirit of adoption cōmeth faith so from faith issueth and streameth inuocation and calling vpon God by praier This faith grounded vpō the loue of God in Christ doth assure vs that whatsoeuer is good in heauen or in earth God wil bestow it vpon vs then steppeth in praier and according as the soule is burdned either with a desire to be deliuered from danger or with an affection to haue some wants supplied or to declare and expresse our thankefulnesse it doth take the present occasion and for sloweth no time to enter into the sanctuarie of Gods presence and there to lift vp our weak hands and to send
to reprooue vs no more which is the next steppe to damnation or else our conscience will pursue and follow vs with Hue and Crie as not to leaue vs till wee bee taken for resistance and withstanding of our conscience is a cloud not easily ouerblowen a fire not easily to be quenched and an inditement hardly to be trauersed but our sinnes shall stare vs on the face and crie for vengeance Now if our conscience bee brought asleepe by our custome in sinne either we shall die in this benummednesse and dulnesse of heart a most fearefull signe of reprobation and after death it shall weepe it fill in hell or else if the Lord do shew vs mercy after the sense and feeling of sinne so long discontinued he doth it as it were by the burning feuer of desperation for that is the cure of a Lethargy and doth so presse vs downe vnder the weight and burden of sinne as that horror shall be without and terror within yea wee shall seeme to be cast into the deepe of deepes and euery small sinne shall seeme accompanied with the huge hammer of the Lords wrath to bruise vs in peeces Further obserue as the Lords spirit alone cannot bring vs that heauenly security and blessed assurance of our eternall peace we hope for nor our owne spirits alone cannot do it so it must be the testimonie of both these concurring and meeting together For some are merely morall without religion thinking by a ciuill cariage of themselues to winne the sight of God others haue either a true zeale of a false religion as Paul had before his conuersion Rom. 7.9.10 or else they may be religious in shew hauing a counterfeit zeale of a true religion as the Laodiceans had Reuel 3.15 and yet both these thinke in their conscience they shall be saued when in truth they are as farre from the thing it selfe as they are neere to the conceit of it Another sort there is that deceiue themselues most grossely ●●●ken of Prouerb 30.11 There is a generation pure in their owne eies and yet they are not washed from their filthinesse that is from their open and enormous sins So as besides the opinion we must haue of our selues that we stand in Gods fauour wee must shew the seale of the Lord that is his spirit or else there is no sound ioy or any comfortable security that we shall be saued 1. Iohn 5.10 And for our actions euery of which must haue the allowance of our conscience wee must marke that a good intent will not make a good action for they that condemned Christ did it because he made himselfe equall with God Iohn 19.7 Iohn 5.18 which was expresly against the law written and therefore thought they had in this done God high and honorable seruice but Christ crieth Luk. 23.34 Father forgiue them they know not what they doe So Peter when Christ foretelleth of his death had an earnest desire to aduise his master to spare himselfe and therefore Mat. 16.22 he tooke Christ aside rebuked him but Christ vers 23. looking backe with an angry countenance bids him get him behind Sathan as being onely worldly wise and not vnderstanding the things that are of God So as we must know to the performance of a good worke the allowance of the heart and the warrant of the word of God must go together Verse 17. If we be children we are also heires euen the heires of God and heires annexed with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him This is inferred by direct consequent to that that went before as vers 13. where the Apostle exhorting to reformation of life doth it by a double contrary so as they insue and follow one another thus They that mortifie the deeds of the flesh are led by the spirit by being thus directed by the spirit they are assured that they are the sons of God by being his sons that they shall haue an inheritance therfore they that liue a holy life must needs be saued And because it might be ouestionable how this title of being Gods children is giuen vnto vs he hath resolued it befo●● vers 15. by a double argument because the Lord in the Go●pell doth offer vs such grace as we may come freely and boldly to him as to a father and we stand not now in that terror that was in the deliuery of the Law but we are freed from that bondage The second argument was vers 16. because the spirit doth seale this euidence vnto vs that as our heart doth know what is in vs so doth the spirit also and this spirit doth witnesse that we are children and being children then we be heires which is the scope the Apostle driueth at in this 17. verse When the Apostle saith We are hei●●s of God he setteth down what manner of inheritance it is that we shall haue heereafter not an earthly but a kingdome and a possession of eternity as that the Lord will neuer leaue vs till he hath lifted vs vp to that celestiall place where Christ himselfe sitteth Psal 84.10 It had been great fauor if we might haue been as Dauid speaketh but doore-keepers in the kingdome of heauen nay it might well haue satisfied vs if only our sinnes had beene pardoned or if we had been but the Lords friends or of his acquaintance so as any way hee would haue respected vs considering our rebellion but besides all this to be restored to our former honour nay to haue greater priuiledge then euer Adam had in his first integrity and to be aduanced to the Lords owne throne if all the hearts of men were one heart the full measure of this ioy and the depth of this the Lords loue could not once enter in nor be conceiued And fellow-heires with Christ This is to set forth the certaintie of the place of our inheritance God hath life for he is the fountaine of it but he dwelleth in fire Esay 33.14 and in a place not to be attained vnto therefore the Apostle setteth downe heere he●● we come to it namely in Christ as it is 1. Iohn 5.11 God hath giuen vs eternall life and that life is in the Sonne and by his mediation is conueied to vs. Secondly in that we are fellow-heires with Christ note the excellency of the Lords fauour not only to giue vs life and to place vs with Angels but euen with his owne Sonne Whereby we see that his eare was open to the praier of Christ which he made ●●ttle before his agony Iohn 17.20 I pray saith he for all that thou hast giuen me that thou wouldest Father 〈◊〉 them with the same loue thou louest me and crowne th●●● with 〈…〉 glory thou crownest me 〈◊〉 of this ariseth two comfortable priuiledges which the ●●●t ha●e first if wee be heires with Christ in heauen much more are we heires of the transitory blessings of this life and being heires with him wee haue
complaining by grones and cries with the eies fixed vpon the mother this doubleth the compassion maketh her verie bowels to yearne with pitie Euen so the Lord more kind then a mother lendeth his louing and tender eare to our bitter complaints but being astonished with griefe that we cannot but onely crie out in hope and expectation of some help and we lie pained not able to expresse it this doth more enlarge the bowels of his compassion and then he gathereth our reares into a bottle and wipeth our eies and putteth his hand into our side to heale vs and regardeth as preciously such maner of speechlesse vtterance as any praier vttered in feruencie and vehemencie of words Which is a most singular comfort for Gods chosen that the clouds of affliction can neuer be so thick but a heartie sigh will scatter them yea come what will no time can be so euill nor tyrant so bitter or cruell that can stay vs from groning though through weight of torment they may stop vs from speaking as Dauid saith Psal 38.9 I powre O Lord my whole desire before thee and my sighing is not hidden from thee for none can refraine the heart from sobbing Yet must wee not abuse this comfortable doctrine to our fleshlie libertie to make vs sluggish in praying to the Lord and thinke onely a mentall prayer or a desire conceiued though not vttered to be enough for this speechlesse prayer is onely permitted in the bitternes of the heart and when the venime of affliction hath seized vpon the outward man in such a case and in such a time if we cannot speake with Anna 1. Sam. 1.13 we may with her wag our lips bee wee neuer so old Otherwise wee must say with Dauid Psal 57.8 Arise my tong and then arise vp my glorie for there is no instrument so fit to set foorth our wants and it is no excuse for thee to say the Lord knowes thy heart for so doth he know thy wants also before thou aske and by that reason neither the panting of the heart nor the paines of the lips should be requisit For the third point that is for the effect and efficacie of our prayers that they comming from the spirit must needs speed haue good successe obserue when it is said The Lord knowes the meaning that there is a speciall propertie of this word to be vnderstood for knowing is taken here for approuing as Rom. 7.15 What I do I know not that is allow not nor approue that Ido so Mat. 7.23 Depart from me I know you not that is approue you not for he knew them well inough So Psal 1.6 The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous that is approueth it and in the same sense is it taken in the Prouerb 12.10 The righteous man knoweth the soule of his beast that is approueth it Why then this is the lesson that if our prayers haue an allowance and approbation with God we may be sure we shall reape the fruit of our lips and that our requests shall not returne emptie vnto vs but shall be as the doue that brought an Oliue in her mouth signifying that the flouds are ceased and that we may walke on the drie land The reason why our prayers must needs speed is because the same spirit that maketh vs pray doth make vs onely to pray for those things that stand with the Lords glorie therfore must of necessitie be granted for God cannot denie himselfe he and his glorie are inseparable 1. Ioh. 5.14 And this is witnessed by S. Iohn This is our assurance that if wee aske any thing according to his will hee heareth vs and we know that we haue the petitions we desired of him So that it is not the worthinesse of our prayers that draweth Gods bountie to vs but the bounds and compasse wherein our prayers are limited and circumscribed that is ayming at nothing else and referring all to the will and pleasure of God which wee may be sure shall come to passe Euen as Iacob said Gen. 32.11.12 Thou wilt deliuer me O Lord from my brother Esau for thou hast said thou wilt do me good and 2. Sam. 7.21 Dauid saith O Lord I know thou wilt blesse my house because of thy word for thou hast spoken it Many there bee will say I haue prayed often and cried incessantlie for the increase of faith and yet I finde it as weake and my flesh as sinfull as it was before And thus Sathan perswadeth thee thou prayest not according to Gods will for if thou hadst bene his and hadst belonged to him he would haue giuen thee faith at thy first request But thou must beate backe this temptation which is but to lull thee in securitie by this answer that thou must thinke thy lot and thy portion to be no better then Dauids who Psal 69.3.4 brake forth saying O Lord I am wearie with crying and mine eyes faile while I haue waited for my God for the Lord will haue thee to continue in prayer not to wearie thee but to trie thy patience how long thou canst wait so as if thou speakest and the Lord seemeth not to heare thee double thy prayers vpon him for he maketh himselfe deafe to make thee more quicke and feruent If he listen to thee and yet thou obtainest not perseuere and continue for at last the Lord will incline to thy petition and from his throne will he send thee a chearefull message In Saint Luke we haue an example of one that asked but three loaues Luk. 11.8 and by his importunitie got as many as he would So may the p●●ore widow bee our paterne Luk. 18.5 who by her multiplying of her sure wit● many words obtained right of the vniust Iudge and therefore much more shall we by our instancie with the Lord obtaine what in faith we shal desire for out of the very words of the Apostle here we may learne first that it is certaine we shall haue it though it be vncertaine when it shall be cast vpon vs for Christians must endeuour to striue to this to haue Iacobs spirit and resolution that though the Lord fight with vs and would faine shake vs off yet not to let him goe till we haue forced a blessing from him and haue our petitions granted And we must haue the strength of the womans faith in the Gospell Mat. 15.22 as not to feare three denials of Christ hand to hand for her constancie and perseuerance were rewarded double first with the commendation of her faith secondly with the health of her daughter which was the thing she craued And euen so at length shall our prayers bee requited with the perfect cure of all our infirmities Secondly marke and assure thy selfe that if thy prayers made now be not presently heard thou shalt be rewarded in a time thou least lookest for and when thou art vtterly out of hope of that thou didst craue as we may see Luk. 1.13 Zachary and
Elizabet no doubt prayed in their youth for the fruite of their bodie but they were not then heard for the Lords time was not yet but when Zachary as priest was exercising the publike ministerie of the Church and both he and his wise striken in age then the Angell comes and tels him the Lord had heard his prayers and that his wife should haue a child Which may be a great encouragement to vs to grow perfect in this exercise and that the worke of praier may bee easie to vs because there is not a word falls to the ground but either it rebounds presently vpon vs againe with a blessing or that blessing is reserued for a better time when it trebles the ioy in receiuing an vnexpected benefit No doubt Iacob had fetched many a sigh for the losse of his sonne Ioseph Gen. 37.34 but if Ioseph had presently returned to his father before he obtained the honour in Egypt it had nothing so much cheared Iacobs heart Gen. 45.27 as it did when he saw the chariots sent to fetch him that he might see him in his state and dignitie So for the Lord to cary in his remembrance and to keepe as it were a booke of our prayers alwayes open before his eyes and either to heale vs when we are past cure as he did Dauid when he heard him out of the deepe of deeps or in his good time to put vs in mind of our owne prayers by the fruit doubled in our bosome when we thought our haruest past can not but exceedinglie stirre vs vp to magnifie his goodnes and to employ all the powers of our soule to please him Thirdly we pray for many things which we cannot obtaine and yet we must pray for them for if we cannot haue our desire here it shall be fulfilled in the life to come as when wee pray that Gods kingdome may come that we may be deliuered from temptation and that wee may not sinne which onely shall be performed in the life to come for God according to his owne disposition of times hath ordained that we his creatures should apply our selues vnto and therefore hath taught vs by his spirit as well to pray for the end as for the meanes Faith in this life being the foundation of our hope and our hope being perfited in the life to come through the loue of Christ so that as here we pray to haue our faith strengthened our infirmities cured our sins pardoned and Gods graces renewed in vs daily which be apples of such a tree as we taste of in this life so here we pray also that sinne may be abolished the number of Gods elect gathered and the worke of our sanctification perfited which is the end and perfection of the former and which is reserued for a better life when both our owne prayers and the intercession of Christ for vs also shall cease Fourthly obserue that God so heareth thy prayers that though he do not graunt formam the forme yet he graunteth finem the end of thy prayers Euen as Christ when he prayed in the garden Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me now shall wee say that Christ euer prayed and was not heard Mat. 26.39 God forbid and yet the cuppe did not passe from him yet was hee heard as the Apostle to the Hebrewes saith in that he feared for though hee was not deliuered from death Heb. 5.7 yet was hee freed from the horrour of death for an Angell was sent to comfort him 2. Cor. 12.8 So Paul when he prayed to be deliuered from the buffetings of Satan he had his desire thus farre the Lord graunteth the end of his prayer that is strength to abide it exempted he could not be but this was it the power of the Lord should be in him so much the greater as his temptations and afflictions were increased so that none must be discouraged nor grow cold though their first or second voice in praier be not heard for by this we learne first to continue in praier and in this doth the Lord secretly heare vs that wee breake not off Secondlie the Lord doth for a time withdraw his eares from the words of our mouth that we may know the deliuerance praied for comming from God we are not to appoint him the houre Thirdly we stay a time before our hands be filled with our requests to exercise our patience that our desire be not like the longing and fainting of a woman Fourthlie that by this small absence of the Lord in not hearing our praiers at the first we may learne to depend vpon his prouidence Fiftlie that we may vse them the better when we haue them and receiue them with the greater thankfulnesse because things wished for as they are gratefully receiued so are they carefully preserued ROM chap. 8. vers 28. verse 28 Also we know that all things worke together for the best vnto them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose HEere the Apostle proceedeth to open another fountaine of exceeding comfort to the faithfull which is all things worke for the best to those that loue God but euery faithfull man is assured he loues the Lord therefore to him all things worke for the best and if all things then afflictions He proues it by this reason to those that be predestinate all things turne to the best but they that loue the Lord are predestinate therefore to them all things turne to the best And to proue this he setteth downe a reason vers 29. Those that be called in the eternall purpose of God them hath he predestinate to be like the image of his Sonne Heb. 2.9 that as he passed by the crosse and from the crosse to glory so shall wee being children of the same Father and who are borne and bound to resemble Christ our elder brother in this point chiefly To declare how afflictions worke for the best in Gods children we must vnderstand that afflictions be of two sorts either remedies to correct our corruptions and heale our infirmities or els exercises of Gods graces in his children that he may try them how much they will suffer for his sake For the first kind of afflictions we cannot doubt but they do worke for the best whether we consider them as chastisements for sins past or as preuentions of sins to come For sins that are committed the rod is necessary for he is a bastard that is not corrected that wee may see and loath the cause of our affliction that is our corruption as it is said 1. Cor. 11.32 We are chastised of the Lord because we should not be condemned with the world And to Dauid the Lord saith Thy sonnes I will correct for their sinnes but my louing kindnesse shall neuer depart from thee for the punishments of these our sinnes are pardoned in the sacrifice of Christ but so is not the chastisement for this proceedeth from the loue of God and Christ
onely satisfied the wrath of God That it commeth from the loue of God appeareth by the example of Dauid to whom when the Lord had sent Nathan the Prophet to tell him his sinne was pardoned 2. Sam. 7.15 yet withall part of his message was that the sword should neuer depart from his house which fell out in his daughter Thamar that was rauished and in his sonne Absolon that was desperatly hanged and in the child begotten in adultery that presently died And this was only to awake him out of that securitie Sathan had cast him into for it is certaine where the Lord smites not there the Lord loues not and therefore 1. Sam. 2.25 it is said that because the Lord had a purpose to slay the sonnes of Eli therefore they obeyed not the mild voice of admonition vsed by their father Now for those afflictions that be sent as preuentions of sinne as pouertie ignominie restraint of libertie shutting vp the wombe and such like they also turne to the best in Gods children for many do let themselues bloud before they be sicke for feare of sicknesse and the superfluous spreads of a vine are cut off that it may bring foorth better fruite And thus doth the Lord mint and diet his children lest by riches they should grow proud by fame become insolent by libertie wax wanton and kicke against the Lord when they be full and lest by hauing children they should make idols of them to cocker them vp to damnation the Lord scanteth them in these blessings Looke vpon Dauid who confesseth he had gained much by affliction See what difference there was euen in Nabuchadnezzar before hee was pulled out of his seate and after he had fed with beasts before in his prosperitie the strength of his hand and the power of his maiestie had built Babel Dan. 3. and 4. but after he had bene cooled in the wild forrest then he lifted vp his eyes to heauen and praysed and honoured him that liueth for euer Such is the stomacke of flesh and bloud that it will breake out into many insolencies against God against his church and children vnlesse he cut as it were out teather short that we haue but litle roome to feed in and therefore in great mercie he suffereth vs oft times to want lest we should was proud with abundance and changeth our oyle of gladnesse into a countenance of heauinesse because we could not before tell how to vse our mirth Secondly consider how those afflictions turne to our good which are sent for the exercises of Gods graces in vs namely beerein to trie how farre wee loue God whether wee loue him when hee dealeth with vs roughly aswell as when hee dealeth mildly and liberally with vs and this is called the fierie triall wherein we shall not be consumed like drosse but refined like gold And this affection appeared in Iob when he cried Iob. 13.15 O Lord though thou kill me yet will I loue thee for many times the Lord sendeth his arrowes against vs and the venime of his wrath lieth for a time in our bones and hee setteth vs vp as markes to shoote at vnto whom if we willingly submit our selues the power and danger of his shafts shall be appeased before they hit vs and the poison of his indignation shall be cleansed away before it rankle in vs. Gen. 22.2 Thus fared it with Abraham whom the Lord did not simply afflict for his sinne but for the triall of his faith and feruencie of his zeale toward God to see whether hee loued Isaac the sonne of the promise better then God the Father of the promise And behold to the comfort of the children of Abraham in a resolution of three dayes iourney he fainted not to execute the Lords commaundement trusting the Lord with his owne saluation for hee knew if his sonne Isaac should haue been sacrificed himselfe should haue been damned whose obedience when it was thus thoroughly tried the Lord saith Since thou hast done this I will make thee the father of the faithfull which was a confirmation of the promise was made before But there is another speciall kind of affliction that searcheth more narrowly the corners of our hearts and trieth more fully our obedience and loue toward God namely when the Lord vouchsafeth vs that honor to suffer for the crosse of Christ In this hee exerciseth our cold prayers and varnisheth our rustie hope and stirreth vp our dull meditations to thinke how precious in the sight of God is the bloud of his Saints when they die not onely in their holinesse Psal 116.15 but are put to death euen for their holinesse And therefore Christ giueth this counsell Luk. 6.22.23 When ye are hated of men and persecuted for righteousnes then reioyce and be glad or as the Greeke word signifieth skippe at that day like fat calues because our reward is great in heauen So as these afflictions that leade to death further and hasten vs toward the life to come and euen for this life they turne to our good as Mat. 10.29 He that forsaketh father or wife or riches for my names sake I will giue him an hundred fold more in this life that is in that base estate and condition of persecution wherein he standeth for the profession of my name I will giue him an hundred times more comfort more contentation and more peace of conscience then he should haue had in an hundred wiues of such as were neuer so deare vnto him in an hundred fathers of such as were neuer so kind vnto him and more perfect ioy then he should haue had in all the treasures of the world be they neuer supleasing and precious vnto him So as obserue though the Lord promiseth not a requitall of thy losse in quantitie and in number yet he doth it in the good will and blessing of God wihch is the spec●all qualitie that maketh such things wee enioy permanent and comfortable vnto vs. This Dauid had found in his owne experience Psal 127.1 and therefore teacheth vs to know that except the Lord doe builde the house in vaine doe the workmen bestow their labour and vnlesse hee keepe the citie as good set open the gates for the watch without him do nothing Witnesse the prison doores that flew open and the chaines wherewith Peter was fettered that flew off when the Iaylor had done the best he could Act. 12.10 And this is that Amos laboureth to perswade the people in his Prophesie that let the spring be neuer so forward Amos 4.6 nor the bread which is our food neuer so sauorie if the Lorde doe but blow vpon it it cannot nourish vs. So Paul saith 1. Tim. 4.12 that godlinesse hath euer the promises of this life that is religious prosperity the hand of blessing from aboue and it hath the promises of the life to come that is to bee translated from this dimme light of Gods fauour which we finde here into the full
fruition of Gods glorie which we shall possesse heereafter Looke vpon the poore widow of Sarepta though she had but a little oile 1. King 7.14 yet had shee more then the rest when Eliah came to her for theirs consumed and hers through the secret blessing of God serued her turne wasted not Dan. 6.17 So Daniel in prison fared better with bread and water by reason of Gods chearfull presence with him then did the king with al his sumptuous and princely diet And in our naturall iudgements we can say that hee hath more that hath but a bottle of wine that runneth by droppes then he that hath a whole cesterne full that is broken for the prouidence of God neuer leaueth those that be his and his eie is vpon their wants to supplie them And as Paul saith Colos 1.16.17 By Christ all things were created he is before all things and in him all things consist that is haue their being for his glorie for no man can complot or contriue anie secret snares for our life no man can breath out any threatnings against Gods Church as did Saul Act. 9.1 Matt. 14 1● not execute any crueltie vpon the forerunner of Christ as did Hero● but Christ hath his full glory in it Let vs therefore k●●● our persecutors can doe vs no harme for as our being is for Ch●●●● to must our bodies be yeelded vp to Christ wee stand in him and his power in these afflictions is seene in vs so as when they hate vs and reuile vs torment vs they are but as A pothee●ies to make drugges to heale our infirmities they are but as Masons to hammer and polish vs in the quarry of this world that we may be fit stones for the heauenly building yea they are but as fire to refine vs being of our selues drossie as furbushers to varnish vs being through fleshly ease rustie as scullions in the Lords kitchin to scoure the vessell of his houshold lastly they are those that haue receaued a commission from God contrarie to their owne intention to doe vs good for when they are come to the perfection of their tyranny they can but kill the bodie whereby they hasten our blessednesse in the soule Heere may be demanded if all things worke for our good whether the infirmities that be in vs do vs any good or no. The answer is Yes many waies but principally three waies First they remaine in vs to subdue the pride and presumption of our hearts that would aduance it selfe against God if it were not humbled by the sight of it owne corruption as Paul must haue a buffeter lest he grow insolent 2. Cor. 12.8 For the Lord will trust vs no more with perfection since Adam lost it in Paradise and therefore he exerciseth vs with infirmities lest wee should steppe into our mother concepit to thinke our selues Gods This is proportionablie to that spoken of Deut. 7.22 That the Lord would roote out the Canaanites from among his people by little and little Psal 59.11 not all at once lest the wild beasts should grow in vpon them These Canaanites bee our infirmities the wild beasts are self-loue pride of life and such like which would waxe strong within vs if we were throughly purged from our weaknesse And thus we see the Lord cureth poison by poison keepeth out grosse sinnes by keeping in naturall infirmities euen as the best treakle is made of poison and the skinne of a viper is the best cure against the sting of a viper Secondly these our infirmities serue to cure our ingratitude for if the Lord should bestow vpon vs all his benefites at once we would soone forget him We see how the Lo●● 〈◊〉 vp the red sea to make passage for the Israelites Exo. 14. ●● which one would haue thought should haue bee● as 〈◊〉 sigh● on their finger alwaies in their sight and yet Psal 106.7 ●●●t is said 〈◊〉 the Hebrew phrase they made haste to forget it though it was so miraculous a worke For this cause Dauid praieth Psal 59.11 O Lord do not destroy the enemies of thy Church that is slay them not together lest the people forget thee but do it by little and little that the people may often come vnto thee yea Dauid himselfe in many places confesseth that the prolonging of the Lords mercies giue as it were an edge and sharpnesse to this spirit of thankfulnesse And such is the nature of man to wait no longer in humility then he hath hope of benefit The lost sonne had no sooner fingred his portion Luk. 15.13 but his fathers house was vnsauoury to him and he must needs ruffle it in another countrie For as willingly we would wait no longer on the Lord then he is giuing so when hee hath giuen vs somwhat wee would bee out of his sight while we spend it And this maketh him more scant in his blessings then otherwise he would be because he will teach vs to depend vpon him both till we haue them and while we vse them and that employing them in a spirituall kinde of trafficke to gaine credit to the Lord he may furnish vs afterward with better store Thirdly our infirmities serue to restraine our spirituall sluggishnesse and securitie of the flesh for where no feare of the enemie is there the weapon rusteth so as we are sifted and tempted by Sathan that we may finde our infirmities to be relieued by the Lords power and that wee may pray for his gracious strength to withstand him in Christ to ouercome him and that by our experience in fighting with Sathan we may become wise and watchfull for we doe not praie to bee deliuered from temptations but not to bee left in them Our infirmities indeede are the fuell that Sathan laieth and they are as it were the coals hee bloweth to consume vs. Now euery Christian when hee feeleth such a fire of enmitie within him against God and his law bestirreth himselfe and striueth by a cleane contrary blast of the spirit to quench these coales and entreth such a comba●● 〈◊〉 ●●seth in death which wee would not doe if there we 〈◊〉 not so●● ski●● of sinne and some remnant of corruption left 〈…〉 vs but wee would fall asleepe like idle seruants and hide 〈…〉 that is the strength of Gods graces in vs. Iob Iob 13.15 though he were neuer 〈◊〉 painefull a Christian yet neuer more commended the power of God in him then by his fight hand to hand with the diuell in resisting and keeping off such blowes of blasphemie and despaire as Satan would haue had him cast at God and would haue had to sticke in himselfe Paul when he fought with bulles at Ephesus neuer obtained such a victorie as when he left Satan in the lurch and left himselfe persecuting of the Gospell nay after his conuersion there was left a sting in his flesh lest either he might wax sluggish or become proud And therefore it pleaseth God to honour
nature but this is onely spoken in way of comparison by a figuratiue or borrowed speech speaking that of the dumbe creature which is onely to be applied to vs of vnderstanding for if there be such a feruent desire a longing a sighing and a mourning in these senselesse creatures for our deliuerance from this bondage of corruption vnder which wee are now held how much greater then should our desires willes and affections our sighings and mournings be who are sensibly and feelingly to be made partakers of this heauenly glorie and to this end is their feruencie brought in to stirre vs vp to the like or greater as a thing more neerely concerning vs. The like phrase of Scripture attributing life sense desire and affections to dumbe creatures is vsed in many places as Psal 114.3.4 When Israel went out of Egypt the sea saw it and fled Iordan was driuen backe the mountains leaped like rams and the hilles like lambes and vers 7. The earth trembled at the presence of the Lord the Prophet bringing in the creatures magnifying and reioicing at the maiestie of God in the destruction of his enemies and at his mercy in the deliuerie of his Saints that since these sensilesse creatures in their obedience in their kinde seemed to see this glorie and triumph at it much more should the people themselues that visibly saw it and sensibly felt it be rauished as it were with ioy at the so powerful presence of the Lord in making the sea as the drie land for their escape and rescue from the sword of their enemies After the like maner doth Dauid Psa 148.2.5 bring in the creatures in course as they were created praising the Lord in their kinde not in any forme or phrase of speech but the beautie of the Lord appearing in them by their obedience in obseruing that course wherein they are set heereby inuiting and stirring vs vp that haue sense feeling reason and vnderstanding to be more mindfull in our praise and thankesgiuing to God who are filled with greater plenty and haue a more spirituall and diuine beautie shining in vs than they haue So Esay the Prophet chap. 14.7.8.9 in derision of the tyrannie of the king of Babel bringeth in the whole world singing for ioy the firre trees and the Cedars of Lebanon reioicing and hell it selfe mooued at the death of so gold-thirsty an oppressor as he was as if it feared lest hee would trouble the dead as he did the liuing teaching vs by this that if the insensible creatures doe seeme to spread their boughes and bud foorth their flower at the destruction of tyrants as bringing rest and quiet to them how much more should we be affected at it that taste the smart of their crueltie and are kept but as a spoile and pray to saciate their bloudie and butcherly desires So Ionah 3.7 sackcloth must be put vpon the beasts and they must be kept from feeding as if they sorrowed for the affliction hung ouer their land not that they had sinned or could haue any affection of griefe in them but by this that the people might the more acknowledge their vnwoorthinesse as deseruing iustly not onely to be plagued of God in their persons but euen to be depriued of the vse and beenfit of the creatures whereby their present life was maintained And thus are the creatures brought in heere by the Apostle as inwardly smitten with sorrow for the sin of man and for his pollutions on the earth and longing after the aduancement of the sonnes of God to glory to set the sharper edge on vs who are to taste as it were the full cup of the Lords bountie and glorie in the highest heauens who will thus exalt the horne of his Saints Further vnderstand that by Creature in this place is meant all the creatures in the world as appeareth vers 22. where it is said that euery creature comprehending all doth grone with vs howbeit there are two sorts of creatures heere exempted namely Angels and men both elect and reprobate for the Angels elect they wait not as groning vnder vanity otherwise they desire it for the reuelation or triumph of Gods Saints in heauen because they alwaies stand before the Lord behold his glory Mat. 18.10 It is true indeed as Lu. 15.10 That the Angels of God reioice at the conuersion of a sinner because more glory is brought to God by his saluation but they need not this affection of groning or sighing heere spoken of because they are in paradise before the throne of God already Neither can it be meant of the reprobate Angels the brood of the diuell for first they wait not for vs vnlesse it be as Ren. 12.4 the dragon waited for the deliuerie of the woman to destroy vs neither doe they waite vpon vs vnlesse it be as Matth. 4.1 the tempter waited vpon Christ in the wildernesse Secondly they waite not for themselues for they feare nothing so much as the perfecting of Gods elect in number because that is the time of the perfefection of then torment at which they tremble Lames 2.19 the diuell euer thinking that Christ hasteneth too fast and commeth before his time to torture him Now for men it is not ment in this verse of the elect as appeareth by the words themselues for the waiting is not by them but by the creatures for them till they shall be restored to their libertie in glorie and so much is plainly set foorth vers 23. And not onely the creature but wee also that haue the first fruits of the spirit do sigh c. bringing the elect their waiting in by themselues not folding them vp in the general word creature Concerning the reprobate it is not meant of them for they are but of two sorts the one such as Peter speaketh of 2. Pet. 3.3.4 There shall come mockers which shall walke after their lusts and say where is the promise of his comming thinking because the Lord hath beene patient so long therefore the day of iudgement is but a tale to keepe men in awe So as these men cannot waite for Christs comming since they denie it and deride it the other are such as know there shall be a day of reckoning but feare it and put it farre off as loth to see it as their father the diuell because then they shall receaue according to that they haue wrough●● the flesh which at that time shall turne to their sighing and groaning because they denied to themselues sorrow and griefe in the flesh So as all creatures but men and Angels are meant heere where we see the concordance and agreement as it were of the whole frame of heauen and earth not ●arring but ioining in one that they might be at the end of their labour and vanitie by their dissolution and change of their subiection into immortalitie Where it is said When the sonnes of God shall be reuealed we may vnderstand it fiue waies First that it is spoken in this
sense that all the sonnes of God are not yet reuealed for part are in heauen part in earth and part of them not yet borne Secondly touching the sonnes of God on earth they are not all yet reuealed in regard that the Lord calleth daily and maketh as it were a fresh addition to his church by the power of his word as he did in the Apostles time Peter by one sermon Act. 2.41 conuerting three thousand soules to Christ Thirdly they are not all yet reuealed on earth because the wicked cannot discerne them for as Christ was visible heere with vs yet was not knowen to the Scribes and Pharisees their eies through ignorance and malice being so shut as they could not see him euen so though the members of Christ are visible in themselues yet to the malitious and vngodly they are inuisible because they haue not the eies of faith to spie them out Fourthly the sonnes of God here on earth are not yet reuealed to the children of God for Elias 1. King 19.14.18 thought there had beene none left but himselfe to serue God when the Lord vnknowen to him had reserued seuen thousand that had not bowed their knees to Baal Fiftly there are many hypocrites among vs in which respect the sonnes of God on earth are not yet reuealed but at the latter day when the Angell shall come to make a separation then shall the fish be knowen from the frogges the sheepe from the goats and the sincere professor from the dissembler for then there shal be two in one bedde the one receaued the other refused who before were so linked in fellowship as it was vndiscernable that in their deaths they should haue such seuerall ends Howbeit the better sense for these words When the sonnes of God shall be reuealed is this When the sonnes of God shall be receaued vp to glory for then shall they know as they be knowen and then shall the restitution come when the sea and the graue shall yeeld vp all their dead and all the creatures receaue as it were their first robes of puritie and goodnesse wherein they were created Now vers 20. the Apostle setteth downe the reason why these insensible creatures doe thus waite for mans glorious libertie because they themselues are subiect to vanitie wherein wee are to consider two things First to what they are subiect Secondly by whom they are made subiect That the creature is subiect it is not to be stood vpon because it is granted of all men but this is no willing nor voluntarie subiection but by force and constraint for the horse must haue his rough rider or else the snaffle will not hold him in and the oxe must haue his yoke on his necke and his goad in his side or else he will not draw well and the mule as Dauid saith Psal 32.9 must haue his mouth bound with the bitte and bridle lest hee come neere thee with his heele Now that which the creature is subiect to is heere saide to be to vanitie and vers 21. to the bondage of corruption that is to a vanishing and fleeting estate and they are said to be so in three respects First in respect they haue lost their first comelinesse and order their first beautie and their first perfection in which they were created for as there is great difference betweene that gold that hath beene tried seuen times in the fire and that which is taken out of the veines of the earth mixt with other mettals betweene that sword that is newly varnished and that which hath line so long by as it is eaten through with rust betweene the shining of the sunne in his brightnesse when it is eclipsed or shineth in a gloomy day so is there as great or greater difference betwixt the heauen and earth all the host therein which then were made for the furnishing of Gods house toward the entertainment of Adam his sonne in paradise and the heauen and the earth which now are left vnto vs poisoned by the curse of God for Adams sinne with thornes and thistles barrennesse and vnholsome smels that the very corruption in the aire killeth both them vs. Secondly they are subiect to vanity in regard the wicked do enioy them and the godly oftentimes abuse them for the rust of the money which the vsurer hoordeth vp crieth in the eares of God because it is deteined by the vniust owner the gay apparell of the proud and ambitious do fret as it were themselues that they should hide the shame of them that are so shamelesse to snatch at the maiestie of God to shake his seate by their sinne the wine which is swilled in by the drunkards doth boile as it were in wrath that it was pressed out of the grape to heate their stomacks that deserue only to be inflamed by the fire of hell yea and euery morsell that falleth into the mouths of gluttons and wicked persons the Sunne that shineth on the vniust and the raine that lighteth vpon the fields of the oppressors and all creatures else that come within their fingring are grieued and doe wait with feruencie for the end of all flesh that they may no longer be forced to serue and sustaine the enemies of their maker for the sinnes of the wicked are so heauie and burdensome and their abuse of the creatures so intollerable that the earth groneth that it cannot swallow them vp as it did Korah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.32 or otherwise bee disburdened of them though to her owne desolation as it was in the vniuersall floud Gen. 7.21 And againe if we that are sanctified vse them otherwise than they are ordained of God as that the Sunne should giue vs light to wander out of the way of holinesse that we should otherwise be clothed then as becommeth Christians or any further refreshed by recreation then to make vs the fitter for the ranging of our selues within the compasse of our callings heerein do we also make them subiect to vanitie because wee should vse the world as if we vsed it not with such moderation and comelinesse as not to snatch at any of them or to profane them for it is against the law of truce when we are at league with any either to surprise them or abuse them and wee through Christ are at league and peace with all the creatures as Iob saith Chap 5.23 Thirdly they are subiect to vanitie in regard those shal die which haue life in them and the rest shall be cleane melted and dissolued for this heauen and earth we now see shall heereafter be abolished as it is said Esay 65.17 I will create new heauens and a new earth and the former shall not be remembred nor come into mind and Psal 102.25.26 The foundation of the earth and the heauens are the works of thy hands saith Dauid to the Lord they shall perish but thou shalt endure they shall waxe old as doth a garment and Reuel 21.1 I saw saith Iohn a new
him in spirit and in truth Now if any be so audacious and bold to aske why God was so sharp in smiting his creatures for the sinne of man Answere first with S. Paul Rom. 9.20 O man who art thou darest plead with God and call him to an account for his doings his secrets are too high for thee and his wayes past finding our Secondly if the creatures had not been punished with man and that he by his particular sin had not procured a generall curse then could not man in his weaknesse haue made any vse of the creatures in their innocencie vnlesse they had fallen with him for they had not been subiect to vanitie to haue been slaine and deuoured of men if in themselues they had not been accursed Thirdly God did not punish them in respect of themselues but in respect of vs for we know the children are punished for the reason of their parents not for any fault committed in their persons but for that the parents haue so highly transgressed the Princes lawes for by this he hath forfeited to the King what should haue descended to his children and this we thinke no hard part in an earthly Prince vnlesse it be in the case of Ahab who tooke the eschete of Naboths vineyard by a false plotted accusation of a supposed blasphemie against God and the King 1. Kings 21.13 then must we needs thinke that the King of heauen who cannot but giue righteous iudgement hath not dealt hardly in punishing and subduing the creatures to this subiection Adam hauing in his creation the rule giuen vnto him ouer them as a father hath ouer his child howbeit the Lord in this gaue no principall or set blow to them but only stroke them as it were through the sides of man that after that fall we might be punished euen oft times in the vse of them If any aske againe why God should thus proceed in making our wound the wider by punishing vs in his creatures since before the curse pronounced on them Gen. 3.15 the Lord had pardoned the guiltinesse of the sinne by the promised seed of the woman Answere This was the wisedome of the Lord in two respects first in respect of his elect secondly in respect of the reprobate for in regard of the elect they are not punishments for sinne the bloud of the womans feed hauing by vertue of Gods promise washed away the guilt of it but because there is yet a remnant of corruption there being much filth Iohn 13.10 hanging on our feet therefore they are as chastisements to increase the measure of our sanctification and the labour in purging and keeping our selues cleane by repentance and a holy life but now to the reprobate they are tokens and forerunners of Gods iustice and of the sword of vengeance which they shall feele heereafter among the damned so that when wee see the heauens made brasse aboue vs and the earth yron beneath vs the one withholding the raine the other not yeelding her fruits but suffring it to die in her wombe this is to vs but a chastisement for some passions vnsubdued or for some sinnes vnrepented of but it is a scourge and reuenge vpon the reprobate mingling his reioycing with repining and his store with grudging that the want of that he seekes may be as a fretting canker in his soule to fill vp the greater measure of his sinne verifying those speeches of Iob Chap. 8.14 His trust shall be as the house of the spider and Chap. 11.20 his hope shall be sorrow of mind For as for them that loue the Lord he vseth foure speciall remedies to make them fit for heauen first his spirit to guide them secondly his word to instruct them thirdly his chastisements to reclaime them fourthly death it selfe to end them and therefore when he correcteth vs in his creatures it is to see whether he can recouer vs as it were by the sight of another beaten before vs making them vnfruitfull that we might remember the want of our owne works mustering oft times the clouds together as if raine should fall yet staying it in the brest of the aire to put vs in mind of the hardnesse of our hearts and of the drinesse of our eyes that doe not weepe sufficientlie for our owne sinnes nor abundantly for the sinnes and abominations of the land it being as wee read Ezech. 9.4 an vndoubted marke of election set by the finger of God in the fore heads of his Saints to mourne and crie for the corruption and crueltie that is in a citie Againe we hauing formerly noted the seueritie of Gods iustice against sinne that we might auoid it so on the contrary we are to obserue his exceeding rich mercy both to the elect and to the reprobate that heereby we may be prouoked to follow him 〈◊〉 to what straites soeuer he shall cast vs his mercy to his chosen 〈◊〉 ●●eth in this that though he hath laid such a curse vpon his 〈◊〉 ●atures whereas they may lay the curse on vs as the cause and 〈◊〉 they knew their owne strength would deuour vs the Lord in ●oue to vs and in power to them hiding it from them yet doth he force them to serue vs the vse of them all being sanctified and restored to vs in Christ and we being through him made owners and possessors of them for as Adam after his fall being secluded from the tree of life was thereby excluded from all the meanes that might maintaine life so Christ hauing by our vnion with him brought vs againe into the paradise of God where that rree groweth we are thereby endowed and inriched with all the creatures both in heauen and earth these being for his sake waiters and artendants on vs yea the very little ones that be elect as Christ saith Matth. 18.10 haue their Angels in heauen to defend them and as Dauid faith Psal 34.8 The Angell of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him Now his mercy to the reprobate is manifested in this that hee by his especiall hand and Commandement doth binde and restraine the creatures from rebelling against them for the heauens would fall vpon the whoremonger if God by his power did not chaine them vp the Sunne that shineth would scorch and burne the Vsurer if his force were not bridled by the finger of God the waters from aboue would fall like a sea vpon the blasphemer if they were not shut in by the patience of God yea all lewd profane and wicked persons should be melted by the heat stifled by the aire swallowed by the earth deuoured by the beasts choaked by their bread and euery creature would be auenged on them for the subiection brought vpon them if God by his prouidence did not restraine them for if they might haue their own wil they would surely do it Who is it saith God Ioh. 38.8 that hath shut vp the sea with doores that her proud waues cannot passe oner but I It is the Lord Iob. 39.12
to her wallowing in the ruire Some will say True it is the spirit may bee quenched in 〈◊〉 hypocrite but neuer in the elect as 1. Iohn 3.9 Hee that is borne of God sinneth not And whom God loued once hee loueth alwaies This is true but then looke that thou stand vpon good and sound euidence when Sathan troubles thee for thou knowest how the burning lampes went out how the seed in the blade came to nothing and it is certaine that a man illuminate may sinne against the holy Ghost and therefore see that thou hast good title and groundest vpon good interest when thou shalt bee vexed with temptations For Rom. 8.13 if wee liue after the flesh wee shall die and as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God and who hath this spirit looke 1. Iohn 3.14 We are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren for hee that hath a soule must needes breath and he that hath the spirit must needs fulfill the fruits of the spirit Secondly albeit the elect haue receiued an euerlasting spirit whereof the Lord can neuer repent and which can neuer vtterly be quenched yet let vs feare and tremble for in the elect it may so bee obscured and ouerwhelmed that some of the graces of Gods spirit nay most of the graces yea the chiefest of the most nay all almost of Gods graces may in them be quenched as Dauid praieth Psal 51. Lord create in me a new spirit and yet he had it in him for in the same place he saith Lord take not thy spirit from me So as this exhortation not to quench the ●●●rit hath a double fruit in the hypocrite to make him vnexcusable in the elect to make them more circumspect and carefull in their conuersation for we must not be secure in as much as albeit the spirit of God in those that be his cannot bee absolutely quenched and wholly put out yet there may bee a great abatement of the spirit as not to be recouered without great touch and terror of conscience For first while a man feeles the presence of this spirit there is giuen him such ioy and with that a singular peace in the inward man and such securitie of his saluation that he feeles the loue of God spiritually to do him as much good as his meat and vpon this assurance he doth as it were behold the heauens open for the Lord to embrace him liuing or dying and he knoweth himselfe to be sealed vp in the blood of Christ vnto eternall life Now if this spirit be gone absenteth it selfe in spirituall operation together with this is our former ioy abated and the foundation of our hope begins to be shaken and being weake of our selues we are surprised with many feares and suspecting our selues to bee cast from the feare of God and our sinnes arising and flying vp like smoake in our eies we almost are brought to the case of Cain Gen. 4.12 to thinke that whosoeuer meeteth vs will slay vs. Secondly as vpon the enioying presence of the Lords spirit there springs an vnspeakable ioy and comfort in our hearts and we find that the Lords loue breedeth in vs an heauenly assurance of eternall peace and filleth our hearts with a mutuall and reciprocall loue of God our loue streaming and flowing from the well head of the Lords loue then it followeth that the lesse we feele the Lords loue toward vs the lesse we loue him againe and then we droope and languish in our selues our praiers be faint our meditations cold and when we should watch we with the Disciples fall asleepe and we feeling not the life of the spirit Mat. 26.43 we are greatly abated in our loue of holy and Christian exercises and we then only keepe a generall course in our profession and performe euery good thing as it were tedious vnto vs like Eutychus Act. 20.9.10 who came to heere Pauls sermon but was ouercome with sleepe Thirdly when the spirit is abated by the diminishing of the Lords loue towards vs and the withdrawing of our loue from him then because we haue grieued the spirit the Lord suffereth vs to fall into fearefull and presumptuous sinne as hee did suffer Dauid to fall into the sinne of whoredome with Bathsheba aggrauated with the murder of Vriah wherein hee lay frozen by Satans subtilty nine monthes at the least before he confessed it to God for it appeareth 2. Sam. 11.27 that the child was borne before Nathan the Prophet came to him and howsoeuer no doubt he could no more escape the pricke of conscience then he could stay the panting of his heart yet before that time not a word to God of any serious humiliation for his adultery So as neuer any of Gods children sinned more grieuously then he Mat. 26.70 except Peter who was not so much kindled at the fire of the high Priest as he was cold in his soule for first he lied in that he said hee knew not Christ secondly burst foorth into swearing and thirdly gaue himselfe to the diuell if it were he that was with Christ which the Lord most iustly suffered to befall him as a great chastisement since he neglected the louing forewarning of his master and though hee was neuer so much elect yet would the spirit neuer comfort him till he had with drawne himselfe to bewaile his sinne bitte●● All which is liuely expressed Cant. 3.1 In my bed by night saith the church I sought him that my soule loued I sought h●●●●●t I found him not I went and rose and walked about the citie and by the stree●s and by open places I sought him but found him not thereby to declare that when the Lord once withdraweth his face from vs how hardly we shall win his fauour againe Fourthly when the Lord hath suffered vs to fall thus farre as we shall euen seeme to be swallowed vp of hell already though in the end he will restore thee yet first he will suffer thee to beare the shame of thy sinne in this life Gen. 9.23 1. Sam. 15.14 as Noah for his drunkennesse to be a scorne to his owne children and Dauid for his adultery to bee thrust out of his kingdome by his owne sonne which was such a griefe to him as all the ioy of his sonnes life did not so much comfort him as the sorrow of his death did wound him he mourning for Absolon 2. Sam. 19.33 as if he had doubted of his saluation But happy is hee that hath the thornes in his sides in this life and that is afflicted heere for though the Lord will neeuer take his louing kindnes from thee yet he will scourge thee not for any satisfaction of his iustice for Christ hath paied all but onely for a chastisement Lastly besides all this when the spirit is gone and abated it shall be such a terror to thy conscience such smart and vexation to thy whole minde as thou wert better bee almost
in hell then feele this great want and sustaine this great torment of recouering it againe For first when thou considerest the losse of thy former paines which thou spentest in the mortifying of thy flesh that secondly when the spirit is abated Mark 9.18 the power of Satan is increased and that he cannot be dispossessed without great violence and euen rending thee in peeces as appeareth by the dumbe man in the Gospell Thirdly that if thou die at this time as Ezech. 18.24 all thy former righteousnesse shall not be remembred but thou shalt die in thy present sinne and fourthly that as a man dangerously sicke and somewhat recouered and after by misgouernment falling into a relapse it doth exasperate and increase the disease and as a wound halfe healed to come to a new incision cannot be without greater paine then before and for a man halfe in his iourney to returne backe againe when hee must needes goe thorow cannot bee but a great discontentment So when thou remembrest the great conflicts thou hadst at first when thou didst enter thy name into the schoole of Christ and considerest that now thou must abide greater it shall be halfe a hell to thee to be brought seriously without guile of spirit from the detestation of thy sinne as we may see Psal 32.4 before Dauid could be brought to confesse his sinne of filthinesse and of murther hee saith that very care had eaten his bones not but that in his priuate chamber hee had confessed it to the Lord but before he could come to taske his conscience and to set it as it were vpon the racke to bee rent in peeces by his confession of it before men and to abide patiently the shame of the world for it hee seemed to bee plunged into the deepe of deepes as himselfe saith Out of the deepes O Lord haue I cried vnto thee Euen so when the spirit of the Lord is abated in thee thou shalt finde it will not bee regained by some sleight worke and ssubbring vp a short praier as Lord haue mercy vpon me but thou must come to the case of Dauid euen to pine and wast away and to haue the moisture dried vp within thee yea consider his tedious trauell before he could repent suddenly And if he was beaten thus farre of the Lord with Scorpions of whom the Lord had protested that he was a man after his owne heart shalt thou thinke by a pang of deuotion and superficiall praier to recouer that sweet comfort thou hast lost in the Lords spirit Nay know that if thou temptest the Lord so farre as to withdraw his spirit from thee it shall cost the deere before thou canst inioy it againe and if thou breake foorth into sighes and grones which fill the heauens euen in this doth the Lords mercy greatly appeere for hee might giue thee vp into hardnesse of heart and neuer trouble himselfe to restore his spirit againe vnto thee But thy sorrow must be so great thy praiers so feruent and thy sighes so many as to crie out with Dauid Psal 51.8 Heale the bones O Lord which thou hast broken Let vs beware then how we distemper our selues spiritually for feare the arrow-head of the Lords wrath should rankle in our sides and let vs take heed with the Apostle how we greeue this spirit for if Adam might haue had the whole spirit taken from him in respect of his Apostasie who was perfect in his creation how much more may wee that haue receiued but the earnest of the spirit and the first fruits thereof in Christ Iesus Howbeit as the euill spirit in an hypocrite may be cast out and yet hee may returne to his vomite againe 2. Pet. 2.22 and his casting out was but in regard of his enlightening for the time and he was not gone out indeed so in the elect the spirit and the working of the spirit may be interrupted for a season but it cannot cleane be taken away Againe consider where it is said Quench not the spirit that all Scripture commandeth alwaies the contrary to that it forbiddeth as 2. Tim. 1.6 the contrary vertue to this heere spoken of is commanded I charge thee saith Paul to Timothy that thou stirre vp the graces of God which bee in thee the word in Greeke signifieth To keepe the fire burning giuing vs to vnderstand that this spirit is a flame kindled by the holy Ghost which Satan the flesh and the world labour to blow out so much the more carefull therefore must wee bee to foster it and maintaine it that it neuer go out Heere then must be considered the sleights of Satan-to blow it out and alwaies by the cleane contrary wee must labour to keepe it in for as the flesh lusteth against the spirit so must the spirit likewise against the flesh The first motion therefore Satan stirreth vp in vs to quench the spirit is to lust after euill not to lust after nothing which temptation he threw into the eies of Dauid as hee walked vpon the roofe of the Kings palace 2. Sam. 11.2.3 to lust after Bathsheba Vriabs wife As earnestly then as the flesh lusteth after euill so earnestly and more must the spirit lust after good things as to say with the Prophet Dauid I am ready vpon euery occasion to do thy will O God neither yet must we not deceiue our selues for euery lusting after good things is not of the spirit for it is easie to doe many good things wherein thy affections are not strained and to abstaine from many euill things to which thou art not tempted but thou shalt know whether the spirit do fight against the lusts of the flesh by this if any thing do directly oppugne the affections of the flesh if thou take part with the spirit and crosse thy affections in this thou maintainest and dost cherish the spirit As Dauid 1. Sam. 25.13 vpon a churlish answer giuen by Nabal in a passion of anger was resolued to kill him but vpon the intreatie of Abigail Nabals wife hee was pacified and entred into consideration of the greatnesse of the sinne of murther and blessed the God of Israel and the counsell of Abigail that had kept him from shed ding of blood Secondly if Satan cannot get vs lust for euill he will striue to get vs either doe nothing or else to spend our time in trifles and in pastimes to driue away dumps with vaine delights which may sometimes bee vsed for recreations to make vs more fit to walke in our callings but if we play to play that is suffer our hearts to be stollen away and snared in the pleasures of this life then the Lord will iudge vs as vnthrifty seruants that haue not gained by our talents Our labour therefore must be on the contrary since euery man hath his taske set him and God is our ouerseer though presently not our reuenger that wee fall not asleepe with new wine but according to the Apostles rule Ephe. 5.16.18 that we redeeme
present euen as the time of our life is for Gods children most bee like the rod of the Almond tree spoken of Ierem. 1.11 which in those countries where it groweth is the first that blossometh yea we must not onely giue the first fruits as vnder the law but euen all the fruits of our liues to the Lord for God often punisheth the want of his fear in our youth with the want of wisedome in our age if our godlines be not present he oftentimes cutteth vs off before we can see the time to come Neither yet must we thinke it sufficient to cherish godlinesse in our hearts no not in our chambers but it must be as a light set vpon a hill that not onely Gods children may see it for their direction but that euen the world may see it for their condemnation as Christ saith to his disciples I haue sent you to walke in the midst of a froward and crooked generation yet must they walke still for by this open profession of godlinesse we shew whose liuerie we weare and that we are not ashamed of the crosse nor abashed at it Howbeit this course of godlinesse which we must liue in is no more nor no lesse then an absolute resignation and giuing vp of all things in respect of God which standeth in three things first in giuing vp our reason secondly in denying our affections thirdly in framing our mind to a moderation in what estate the Lord shall set vs in For the first wee must resigne vp our reason to religion in two respects first for that it is an incomprehensible mysterie which is vnsearchable secondly for that the ignominie thereof is vnsufferable in our reason as to thinke that he is blessed that is hungrie they vnhappie that bee rich and that the Lords correction is loue For the second which is the giuing vp of our affections it will teach vs so to walke and so to deale as in the presence of God it will make vs plough vp those furrowes of pride and vaine-glorie which lie so deepe in our hearts and when by the instigation of our affections we are mooued to riot or voluptuousnesse it will make vs abstaine because we haue giuen our selues to God For the third to haue a willingnesse to suffer what the Lord sendeth will make vs resigne vp those inordinate cares of getting wherewith wee are oftentimes perplexed and to content our selues with that portion the Lord hath shared out vnto vs so as by religion and a godly life we shall learne to say with Dauid O Lord thou hast done it therefore I hold my peace and not only to beare an outward contentment in worldly things but euen in all calamities to rest vpon the mercifull hand of God IAMES chap. 2. vers 20.21 verse 20 But wilt thou vnderstand O thou vaine man that the faith which is without works is dead verse 21 Was not Abraham our father instified through workes when he offered Isaac his sonne vpon the altar THe word of God hath two parts in it first it is a word of wisedome secondly it is a word of knowledge by knowledge to reforme the iudgement and to conuince the conscience by wisdome to perswade the affections to the obedience of that we haue truly learned Saint Iames here indeuoreth to perswade that none could be saued without works and he proueth it by a double example of Abraham and of Rahab Wilt thou vnderstand c. as if he should say If that set downe before cannot sufficiently take root to affect thee and to perswade thee that without the workes of a holy life thy faith is no better then a diuels faith take this example of Abraham for all thou wilt grant that Abraham was an excellent person and had true faith and that the couenant was so made with him that none should be saued vnlesse they were of his seed either according to the flesh and spirit or at least according to the spirit And since the couenant was made with him and he was saued by faith so must all we be saued by his faith that is by a faith of the same kind that his was for there is but one faith though there be diuers measures of it Now Abraham had an approued faith as it is proued by this one act and worke of his for all because it was the principallest of all in that he staied not nor demurred vpon the Lords commandement in offering vp his fonne the greatest worke that euer flesh and bloud did except his that was more then flesh and blood namely Christ And because the Iesuits as hardened enemies against the truth haue strangely peruerted this place we must vnderstand a difference betweene these speeches Faith without workes is dead and Faith that is without workes is dead for by the first speech may bee thought that works giue life to faith which is most false but the second speech is true workes being a necessarie consequent of faith and an infallible signe that faith hath gone before euen as in these speeches to say The body is dead without breathing and the body that is without breathing is dead for if wee affirme and attribute the cause of life to breathing it is false for the soule is the cause of life in the body but the other speech is true for the body that hath no breath in it is dead● and where breath is it is a signe there is life So to say the tree that is without fruit is dead is true but not to say the tree without fruit is dead for the tree that standeth in the ground is not fruitfull we may well say is dead at the root but when the sap lieth at the root we may well say there is life in the tree though there be no fruit on the branches Now the aduersaries argue thus No dead faith can iustifie faith without workes is dead therefore no faith can iustifie without workes as if they should say Christ Iesus neuer raised vp himselfe without his humanity therefore his humanity helped in raising vp his flesh which is most blasphemous Howbeit Christ separated from his humanity was neuer raised vp this is must true So they in their former argument referre iustification to workes which is most false but if they had concluded therfore faith that is without workes cannot iustifie they had done well for thereby had been proued that works had been inseparable from faith but not that they concurre for faith is alone euer in iustifying but neuer alone in the person iustified euen as the eye alone of all the parts of the bodie doth see but the eye that is alone separate from the other parts of the body doth not sece at all but is a dead eye Was not Abraham c. Heere consider two points first in what sense this is true secondly why this worke aboue the rest is commended and registred for a proofe of Abrahams faith The words heere set downe are directly contrary to the
wel-head or to bee good without God for where there is no zeale there is no faith where no faith no conscience where no conscience no loue and shewing our loue not for conscience we may for our charitie go to the diuel for a man must first be good before he can doe good and good he cannot be without God 1. Sam. 6.17 The workes such a man doth may bee perhaps like the Emeraulds of the Philistims varnished ouer with gold that is make a faire shew in the sight of men but if they proceed no further that is to haue the testimonie of the spirit that they bee wrought by his hand they are most abominable before the face of God Wilt thou set a face as if thou wroughtest well because thou wilt not take the penaltie of an obligation and yet thou wilt prosecute a matter against a preacher for a superstitious ceremonious beggerly element What good worke is this to speake well of all men and yet at euerie word to wound to bloud to heart the holy one of Israel What is it not to hurt thy neighbour to be a friend to thy friend and yet to be an enemie to the friend of God What great worke is it not to beate false witnesse and yet priuily to suggest against him thou darest not reproue to his face So as vnlesse our doing of good arise from religion wee may easily straine at a gnat and swallow a Camel heare Iohn Baptist gladly for a time Mat. 6.20 and chop off his head afterward as Herod did Matth. 14.10 Now as for moralists and such as transforme themselues according to the times they are as Iude 13. tearmeth them the raging waues of the sea foaming out their owne ●●me as the wind serueth and like the wandring starres of the ●●●ament vnconstant and vnsteddy void of faith for sides must be firma non ambulatoria we must haue a standing not a walking faith and as without faith they cannot please God so except they please God they shall not be saued She tooke them and sent them away Where learne it is not enough for vs not to hurt a man that professeth religion but wee must doe him good euen as this harlot wrought not enough in receiuing the spies and then to haue left them to their owne hazard but as in obedience she did receiue them so in faith she must safely send them away Yea we are bound by praier by purse by person by credit by countenance to releeue them not onely to thinke well of them and to like them so farre must we be from vexing them For if Obadiah 1. King 18.4 had onely hid the Prophets of God and had not fed them it bad beene but halfe a good worke Heereupon is it that in the last day in the sentence of the reprobate shall neuer be mentioned what euill they haue done as that they haue bitten by this vsury or polluted their bodies by that whoredome but there shall be recited onely the good they did not as Mat. 25.41 for not clothing the naked for not visiting the sicke for not releeuing the poore brethren for Rahab must not onely conceale and hide the spies but shee must send them away safe And if the sentence of iudgement drawne in this forme cannot affect vs let vs further know that though euill is the absence of good yet good is not the absence of euill for Rahabs worke is but lame if she doe but harbour them and if she doe not finish it by letting them foorth it shall neuer bee registred as a worke of faith For looke Iudg. 5.23 Cursed be Meroz that came not to helpe the Lord against be mighty not because he did persecute the Lord or did him any hurt but because he helped him not And wee see Rahab vpon this least knowledge of God ●entred her life to saue them Besides we shall read in the Gospell that the greatest torment of the glutton is Luk. 16.25 that he gaue La●aru● no water not that hee was an extortioner or that hee spurned the poore man from his doore By all which examples we are taught that where religion is opp●●sted by all meanes and in all things we can to releeue the Gospell for the good we haue omitted and the euill we haue committed shall come to iudgement Lastly marke the words Rahab the harlot which reprochfull speech must not bee referred to the present state of her conuersion but to her former conuersation as if hee should say Rahab that once had beene a whore for none truly conuerted can remaine in their former sinne but if hee doe after his conuersion fall into some grosse sinne as Dauid did in killing Vriah 2. Sam. 11.17 the Lord will scourge him as hee did Dauid And to bee raised vp of the Lord after such a relapse must not bee by slubbering vp our repentance but we must so be humbled as to feele drinesse in our bones with griefe as Dauid did Psal 32.4 And we shall neuer receiue comfort vntill wee haue soundly and seriously repented Whereupon we gather that the Lord regardeth not what sinnes we haue committed before our regeneration so that after our conuersion we walke worthy of our calling for many that were whores and wicked were conuerted As Luk. 7.37 she that washed Iesus feete with the teares of her eyes and heart and wiped them with the haire of her head had beene a whore but wee read not that after that she was any more so So Zaccheus Luk 19.5 was an extortioner before Christ called him from the tree but we reade not that he euer tooke peny vsury after And Mat. 20.20 such bee inuited to the supper as bee patched and lame to expresse our spirituall beggery but after we are come thither wee must haue the wedding garment of a good conscience For Saul was a persecutor of the Church before hee was called Act. 9.2 but wee nerer reade that he was so after his conuersion For if we continue in a sinne looke what followeth euen in this life 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is a professor be a whore-monger eate not with him that is forbeare thy priuate familiarity with him so then being conuerted wee must shew our repentance from those sinnes wherein before we were fallen as the repentance from vsury is liberality the repentance from pride is bumility from whoredome chastity for repentance is the leauing of thy sinne and the cleauing to the contrary vertue and it is no repentance to leaue thy sinne when it must or hath left thee as vpon thy death bed to re●e●● thee of thy vsurie when thou canst take no more or in thy age to repent thee of thy lecherie when thou canst satisfie it no more but to repent from thy sinne is as 1. Peter 4.1 to suffer in the flesh to suffer in the flesh is to cease from sinne and to cease from sinne is not onely to leaue thy sinne but to spend the rest of thy time
he must sauour of death which cannot be proued by this The wisedome of the flesh is enmitie to God but he that is borne of God cannot be Gods enemy on the other side hee that walketh in the wisedome of the flesh obeieth not the law of God and by consequent saith the Apostle cannot but sinne Whereupon it followeth that they that liue after the inclination of the heart of man cannot please God and so cannot bee saued now hee that is in Christ cannot but please God because he cannot but performe his will Another reason that being a true Christian a man cannot but amend his life is taken out of Rom. 6.5 Whosoeuer is made partaker of Christ is made partaker of the death of Christ then is he dead to sinne proued thus Christ by his death deserued not onely remission of our sinnes but also to haue the holy Ghost in those that bee his to mortifie their sinne and this spirit cannot bee idle but worketh and his worke is to d●●troy o●●●nemie that is sinne Lastly it is proued thus Whosoeuer is in Christ hath the spirit of Christ he that hath this spirit liueth in the spirit for the life of the spirituall man is the Lord Iesus euen as the life of the bodie is the soule and hee that hath a soule must needs breath and walking Galat. 5.24 in the spirit hee cannot fulfill the lustes of the flesh for the flesh and the spirit bee contrary And vers 24. it is said They that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections thereof and who these bee appeareth 1. Peter 4.2 such as suffer in the flesh and these be they that cease from sinne Now then for thee to say thou art flesh and blood is not a shelter pleadable when thou art reprehended for sinne for he that is a good Christian cannot but forbeare it and if thou art all flesh and blood then hast thou not the spirit of God which is proued 1. Corinth 6.16 Do you not know how he that coupleth himselfe with a harlot is one flesh with her and hee that is one flesh with a harlot cannot bee one spirit with Christ Iesus Euen so for wrath toward thy brother thou saiest thou canst not loue him Consider that if the Lord should iudge thee out of thine owne mouth thou couldest not bee saued Thou wilt say the iniury is so great as no man can put it vp but hee that is more then a man can doe it and if thou beest all man Christ Iesus will neuer put vp thy name among the Saints Looke 1. Ioh. 5.3 Hee that is borne againe counteth all the commandements of God light so as if thou be of God it is an easie matter to forgiue the brother If he repent not of the wrong done vnto thee leaue the vengeance to God Rom. 12.20 and heape thou coles of fire on his head and if he do repent and seeke reconcilement it is the easier to forget it and flesh and blood doth pity the case of the suppliant For the third point which is the way how to assure our selues to be the sons of God wee must learne that there is no so certaine a marke to discerne a man to be of God as holinesse of life not but that Gods children may fall most grieuously and blemish their profession most foully but that if Sathan happe to blindfold them that they goe astray yet with the lost sonne they will returne with double sorrow and vnfold to their shame their owne sinne Example w●●ere ●f wee haue in Dauid who though he was ingaged to the Lord by his many benefites that tooke him from the sheepe-hooke and g●●e him a Scepter that by his protection had made him escape the snares of his enemies and by his mercy had freed him from many tribulations yet did he fall into great vncleannesse euen the sinne of adulterie 2. Sam. 11.4.5.6.7 which by the law of God deserued depriuation of this humane life When he had done this hee glauered and flattered with the womans husband and bad him goe home to refresh himselfe with his wife seeking thereby to father the bastard on him When this succeeded not he thought to make him drunke that he might thereby bee more irritable to lust and so to haue gone to his wife And though Vriah answered hee could not doe it because the Arke of the Lord was in the field which had not Dauid beene desperatly sicke in his soule how could he haue beene so forgetfull of the Lord as to haue dealt so with him that was no Iew but a conuert to religion heereby to make the name of the Lord euill spoken of Yet when this preuailed not hee went further and vnto adultery hee added murther that hee might make his sinne knowen and his vnholy life to appeare both to God and man and carry as the greefe of it in his heart so the shame of it in his fore-head And in this hee wrought worse then Iesabel for hee made Vriah the instrument and messenger of the letters for his owne execution yea hee sent them to Ioab who had himselfe beene a murtherer which might harden his heart in that sinne seeing Dauid that was the King not onely a fauourer but the cause of such bloody actions And after what manner should this be done namely that hee should fall by the sword of the vncircumcised a most ignominious and shamefull and grieuous death for so Christian a Gentleman and that hee should so murder him as to colour the grieuousnesse of his fault not hee alone but many other should die innocent and that hee should continue senslesse in this sinnefull course by the space of a yeere yet when it pleased God to cure his disease of hypocrisie and to cleare his eyes that hee saw not his sinne but his chaine of sinnes be●●●●●im then he calleth himselfe not a man of blood but of blo●●● ●nd then ●is conscience is open to grieue for it and then with his teares he washeth away his vncleannesse and wall●●●●●s a man cleansed and purged from his filthinesse So as if a●y bee a whoore let her remember the teares of Mary M●g●alene if a persecuter of the Saints let him repent with Pa●● Luk. 7.38 Gal. 1.15 Mat. 26.75 if a murtherer let him soundly confesse his sinne with Dauid and if he be Apostasied weepe with Peter for these be the workes of righteousnesse whereby they are knowen to be of God And seeing others deliuered from the pit wee must learne as Dauid saith Psal 56.3 to feare and to trust so as wee must alwaies feare to fall into the sinne before being fallen we can trust to bee deliuered for this is one part of the righteousnesse of Gods children to tremble at the sight of sinne and then shall wee neuer swallow it without remorse Secondly from hence learne that a man may know in what state another man is If I see thee a despiser of religion a profaner of the Sabbath a butcher to the poore and an vncleane liuer what shall I beleeue thee to be but the child of the diuell for this may I know by thy fruites Why but loue biddeth you hope the best 1. Cor. 13.7 and beleeue the best True it is loue biddeth me beleeue all things but not a sow to bee cleane wallowing in the mire or a dogge not to bee filthy that is regorging vp his stomacke Mar. 6.44 or that grapes can grow vpon brambles or that mercy can bee found in the heart of an vsurer or that thornes may bee touched and will not pricke For as loue bids mee not to determine too soone so not to bee abused too late and God bids me looke vpon the tree to iudge of the fruite I may say thou art in the state of damnation for by thy snarling I know thee to bee a dogge Mat. 7.6 and I see thy heart through thy hands but whether thou shalt be finally damned I leaue thee there for the Lord may haue mercy on thee vpon thy repentance I may come to the tree and say heere is no fruite or here is small fruit or heere is bad fruit but I cannot say Neuer fruit grow on thee heereafter as Christ did Mark. 11.13 And it is not the commers to Sermons but the doers of Sermons
S. Iohn to an Eagle because hee flieth aloft and beginneth with the eternall generation of the Sonne of God according to his Diuinitie It it is true indeed their beginnings are as before but their comparisons are too curious for as the finger of God directed them so did they write and such was the Lords loue to his church as not to suffer vs to be vnfurnished of any thing that might further vs in the course of our saluation but from time to time to raise vp instruments and pen-men to set downe his will that seeing the way wherein to walke we need not nor cannot pretend ignorance The whole chapter diuideth it selfe into two general parts first is set downe the lineall descent of Christ secondly the maner of his natiuitie from the eighteenth verse to the end In the first part note three members first a generall comprehension of the matter in the first verse secondly the large narration of it from the second to the seuenteenth verse thirdly the conclusion in the seuenteenth verse In the first of these obserue two parts first what matter he will intreat of secondly of whose pedegree namely of Christs the great King of immortality In that it is said the booke of the Generation it is not to be taken as a title prefixed to the whole booke but it is meant according to the Hebrew phrase that it is a Catalogue or recitall of such a stocke as our Sauiour Christ came of For the second which is the narration it is distributed into three members euery one by equall proportion hauing foureteene persons the first of the Patriarkes the second of the Kings of Dauid the third of the Captaines and inferior Gouernors which had onely some fragments left of the roiall regiment after the transportation and carying them away into Babylon Now the cause why the Euangelist diuideth them thus into three foureteenes is not onely that the number and the story might the better be borne away but principally because he is to proue that Christ came lineally from the Iewes he setteth downe the threefolde estate of the Iewes and wherunto they were subiect till Christ came who should raigne in the hearts of men shewing how at the first the Tribe of Iuda increased greatly till it was established and setled in the kingdome of Dauid then the greatest excellency thereof was in Dauids sonne Salomon and then the abatement and greatest diminution that could be which was in their cariage away into Babylon and that a Carpenter should be right heire to the Crowne sheweth the great eclipse whereunto it was fallen so as in the Patriarkes it was like the Sunne dawning in Salomon like the Sunne in his full glory and afterward like the Sunne set and gone downe leauing the right of the kingdome as in a darke place namely in Ioseph a poore Carpenter of a base trade and meane condition nothing at all respected Now further in the narration the Euangelist as we may see in the old Testament reckoneth vp some that liued before the going downe into Egypt some that were borne and died in Egypt and some that returned out of Egypt and were led as slaues into Babylon In that it is said Iudas begat Phares and Zara of Thamar obserue that our Sauior Christ did not disdaine to debase and disparage himselfe so farre as to come of the line of such as were borne of an incestuous generation that we might be rauished and astonished with his loue who refused not to come out of the family of grosse sinners that he might saue the sinfull soules of beleeuers And whereas in the blazing of Christs armes by this Herauld the Euangelist there are but foure women named euery one of them hath their seuerall blemish and reproach left behind them in the booke of God The first Thamar incestuously abused by her father in law Gen. 38.18.29 The second Rahab Iosh 2.1 by nation a Cananite as vile as to be a dogge by profession an idolater Iosh 6.17 by city of Iericho a place so cursed as that no soule should escape thence aliue in trade a victualler and in conuersation a whore yea the place she dwelt in so cursed that who so should build it vp againe should do it in the bloud of all his family and yet this woman must be put in the roiall descent of Christ The third is Ruth who came of that nation that was begot in incest and caused the children of Israel to sinne in fornication Numb 25.1 so as it is said for the Edomites the Lord esteemed them no more then as an old shooe and Moab should be but as a chamber-pot and as appeareth in her owne booke Psal 60.8 Ruth 2.3 she was poore gleaning after the reapers the eares of corne For the fourth which is Vrias wife she was the worst of all of her Salomon was borne 2. Sam. 12.24 whereby the holy Ghost doth insinuate the adultery committed before his birth and consider Salomon borne of such an infamous woman that he should be heire and yet not the eldest sonne it was meerely of Gods mercy and not of any merit and by reason of this woman Dauid not onely committed adultery to haue made a bastard to haue inherited the Crowne but to this added bloud 2. Sam. 11.4.17 the death of her husband and of many others and such a death as to die by the sword of the vncircumcised which was most reprochfull that now the holy Ghost should direct the pen of the Euangelist to draw Christs linage by name from these not to deriue him from Sara Rebecca that were excellētly famous and that Dauid the type of the Messias should be such a bloudy man may be a consolation to al bleeding christians may teach vs that though our sins be neuer so hainous in respect of the qualitie of them or neuer so many in respect of the multitude of them yet if at any time we be wearie with a full detestation of them Mat. 11.28 and a resolute purpose to amend them Christ will refresh vs and will scatter them before him euen as the dust before the winde and the greater is our condemnation if hauing so much mercie we repent not Secondly obserue in that it is said Iesse begat Dauid and Dauid Salomon wheras Dauid onely is named king being the last of the first fourteene that the estate of the Patriarkes was now changed into kings and though Iuda had some preheminence before that the kingdome fell to them yet this was the greatest glorie that it should be such a kingdome whereof the king that should be borne should be God the Son which may teach vs that the highest honor that can befal a family or a cuntry or a Christian is to haue the Lord to dwel with them for all other titles are folded vp in time that perisheth but the presence of the Lord bringeth comfort that decaieth not Howbeit we must note that as this kingdome of Iuda
our infirmities with the courage of fighting and by them to keepe vs waking that we may discerne the storme when it commeth and cast our ank or on Christ where it shall neuer be vnloosed Here the craft and wilinesse of flesh and bloud will so one take occasion of licenciousnesse as to say if our infirmities serue to do vs good and turne to Gods glory because by this meanes we see our weaknesse then it is good to make much of them euen as Porphyrius commendeth the treason of Iudas against Christ because by Christ his death saluation is brought to many But miserable and blasphemous is this opinion for this were to turne the grace of God into wantonnes for though our infirmities doe further vs many waies to saluation yet in it owne nature sinne is alway sinfull God can make Satan a Physitian to cure Paul yet is he euer Satan that is an enemie God can make the tyrannie of Pharaoh as a trumpet to stir vp the Israelites to crie to him for helpe Exod. 2.23 yet doth this nothing diminish from his malice to Gods people Luk. 22.47 Iohn 17.12 God can make Iudas by a kisse the executioner of his decree yet doth he continue the child of perdition So as we must striue against our infirmities because they be in themselues simplie euill though qualified and tempered with the Lords hand they turne to our good Adulterie it was a horrible sinne in Dauid though it was made profitable for his soule in bringing him to such a low degree of humiliation as is set downe Psal 32.6 For the heauens to be brasse as not good in it owne nature but it is a vengeance of we want the first and latter raine whereby to ripen the fruits of the earth yet at the praier of Eliah 1. King 17. and Iames 5.16 it rained not on the earth for three yeeres and six monthes that the Lords mercie and power might the more be seene yea the Lord can create light out of darknesse yet darknesse is alwaie darknesse Adams fall it was good in that end God had ordained it namely Gen. 3.14 to prepare the waie to raise vs vp a Sauiour of the seed of the woman but it was a most damnable sinne as Satan and Adam meant it for they did it in rebellion against God Further we must consider how the persons be qualified to whom all things turne to the best it is to them that loue God which is the most excellent and Christian commendation that can be this our loue issuing and streaming from that fountaine of the loue of God Euen as all waters come from the sea as from the well-head and returne thither againe boiling out of the veines of the earth so God sending forth the streames of his loue into our hearts it must euen from the very bottome of our hearts returne to him againe for wee haue nothing but what wee haue receiued Now there was neuer any Senacherib nor Iesabel but said they loued God therefore this true Christian loue of God that it may bee seene not to be counterfeit is accompanied with six properties first with a care to keepe his commandements for such is the rule of Christ If yee loue mee keepe my commandements which wee must doe so much the rather because the Lord hath giuen and forgiuen vs much hauing made vs of enemies friends as Abraham was tearmed to bee the friend of God hauing brought vs home when we wandred in the wildernesse of sinne Luk. 1● 2● as he did the lost sonne hauing fed vs when wee wanted and had no meanes to succour vs as hee did Eliah 1. King 17.6 hauing clearelie set off the debt which we did owe and cancelled the hand-writing which was against vs. If wee should not performe obedience to such a God and weare his commandements as a frontlet before our eies our condemnation could neuer be too heauy nor our stripes too many Howbeit euerie blasphemer sieth against his owne soule that dare say euen in the height of his wickednesse he soueth God for can a woman prostitute her bodie to a varlet and mingle her flesh with his strange flesh and yet trulie say she loues her husband it is not possible no more can anie man trulie call himselfe the child of Abraham if hee doe and performe the workes of the Diuell Secondlie Iohn 8.44 this loue of God must breed in vs a base estimation and account nay rather a contempt of these earthlie things in respect of Gods loue To such a passe had Paul brought his iudgement and his affections to Philipp 3.8 when he esteemed all things but as dung in comparison of the treasure of the life to come and that he might win Christ So Moses refused the pleasures of sinne in Egypt in respect of the assurance of Gods loue manifested in his afflicted seruants Exod. 2.11 and Peter and other of the Disciples were so rauished with ioie at the call of Christ Math. 4.20 that they left their nets and forsooke the world to follow him And this is that indeede which wee shall all finde at the last to bee the truest comfort for riches are transitorie and will beguile vs honour is slipperie and will deceiue vs the world is moth-eaten and weares awaie at least wee our selues are but claie and soone perish but the loue of God in Christ endureth for euer Thirdlie this our loue of God is accompanied with a feruent zeale of his glorie and more delight wee take heerein then in the enioying the wiues of our youth This was the commendation of the Church of Thy atira Reuelat. 2.18 and by this was their loue of God discerned by their increase in the workes of charitie faith and patience and by their zeale of Gods glorie that they profited and went forward in religion more at last then at first This kinde of loue is described Cantic 8.5.6 to bee stronger then death the coales thereof to bee fierie to expresse the zeale and vehemencie of it whole flouds of affliction cannot drowne it neither can anie treasure buie it Such was the loue of Paul and of Moses that wished themselues accursed to saue their brethren Rom. 9.3 Exod. 32.32 because they thought it more glorie for God to saue many then to saue one Fourthly this our loue of God must make vs presently hate all things whereby God is openly dishonored This was it that so fiercely inflamed the wrath of Moses Exod. 32.19 that when he saw idolatrie set vp by the peoples dauncing before the calfe he broke the Tables of the Law and burned the calfe and strewed the powder of it on the waters and in detestation of their superstition made the children of Israel to drinke thereof Hereof commeth that Ezech. 9.4 that they that haue the marke in their foreheads that is such as are sealed vp to saluation doe mourne and crie for the iniquitie of the times And such was the affection of Dauid
when hee said Mine eies gush out teares because men dishonour thee O Lord and in another place he protesteth that he doth hate them with a perfect hatred that loue not the Lord and againe that no notorious and incorrigible sinner should dwell with him Now fiftly as wee must hate Gods enemies so must we loue his friends as 1. Ioh. 3.14 it is said We are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren Mat. 25.34 and Christ setteth downe a plentifull reward for a cup of cold water giuen to a distressed brother Now who these brethren bee Christ setteth downe to be such as do the will of his father so as it is not the affinitie in the flesh but the bond of the spirit that must vnite vs. And on the other side we must hate none in respect of his creation but in respect he peruerteth the vse of his creation for they beare the image of God which is louely but they deface and scratch it out to their owne damnation So as wee must hate not virum sed vitium the wickednesse of the man and not the wicked as he is a man Sixtly our loue of God must draw vs into the field for defence of his Maiestie for by this shall the master know his seruant loueth him if hee cannot digest to heare him euill spoken of yea by this shall it be knowne whether our way be to Canaan or no if we aske where it lieth in the wildernesse and if our bloud rise to heare Ierusalem euill spoken of and to heare the Lord who is the keeper of that citie reuiled and blasphemed Such were the spirits of Eliakim Shebnah and Ioan 2. King 18.37 that they rent their clothes when they heard Rabshakeh raile vpon the liuing God and Ezechiah when he heard it was grieued at it and spread himselfe before the Lord to call for a holy reuenge of that furie And so must euery true harted Christian esteeme the name and credit of God farre more tender then his owne and learne of Moses to be milde in ouerlooking an iniurie done to our selues Num. 12.3 Exod. 32.19 but to be iealous and zealous in recompencing seuen fold to them that teare in peeces the glorious name of the Lord Iesus Now we of that hath gone before must inferre the contrarie that is as all things worke for saluation to them that loue God so all things worke for damnation to them that hate him All which may be drawne and reduced into these two things first those that concerne this life secondly those that concerne the life to come and these may bee reduced into these foure First the graces of Gods spirit so much as they receiue of it is onely to make them vnexcusable for they shall surely perish though they be in the blade neere to ripenesse the reason is because when the holy Ghost hath giuen them as it were a purge to worke vpon them setting before them good and euill they not as weake stomached but as curst hearted doe cast it vp againe like beastly dogges Secondly the doctrine of saluation which hath this singular vertue to bruise and mollifie the flintie heart onely hardeneth theirs and maketh them rage like the dragon for Christ Iesus is but a rocke of offence vnto them preaching is but foolishnesse and the word a fauour of death vnto them and in the Sacraments they doe but crucifie Christ againe Thirdly the benefites of this life doe make them drunke that they can not see their miserie for in their fulnesse they doe neigh like horses and in their hearts they say there is no God they eate and drinke and rise vp to play making their life but as a May-game Fourthly the miseries of this life though therewith they bee sometime mollified as Esau was when be lost the blessing yet this is but like the iron put into the fire and so softned for a time but being taken out is made by that more hard then before Now for the reason why afflictions turne to the best to such as loue God it is because by his eternall purpose they are called to be saued so as the cause why God ordained some to the inheritance of his glorie was onely his purpose and pleasure that it should be so for Christ as Mediator is not the first cause of saluation For the Scripture saith So God loued the world Ioh. 3.16 that he gaue his Sonne whereby is euident and apparent that hee first loued it before he gaue his Sonne for first Gods purpose was to saue some this in time he executeth by creating man and woman in such estate as they might fall by their owne will hee nothing inforcing it nor compelling them thereunto Now when they were fallen then was there need of a reconciliation and now God bethinkes him of a Mediator so as in the order of causes the attonement which is in Christ must be after the fall for the foresight of the good or euill in a man is no cause for God either to saue or to damne any so as no man can determine the cause why God loued Iacob and hated Esau to be because of the goodnesse of the one and the wickednesse of the other and yet it is true that Esau was damned because hee was euill but why he was appointed to damnation rather then Iacob no cause can bee giuen but the Lords eternall and inuiolable purpose For otherwise Paul would neuer haue cried out Rom. 9.20 against the reason of man that he should not pleade with God who hath the power to forme the vessell after what fashion he pleaseth for if the foresight of good or euill had been the cause it had beene easily sounded and the Apostle would soone haue set it downe Hereupon we must gather an argument that saluation is meerely of mercie for whatsoeuer is the cause of the cause is the cause of the thing caused as the Sunne is the cause of the fruitfulnesse of the earth and God is the cause of the Sunne therefore God is the cause of the fruitfulnesse of the earth so through the righteousnesse of Christ we are all saued but Christ is made righteous meerely of the Lord therefore of the Lord we are all saued But this is to be vnderstood of God as of the first cause not as of the neerest cause So that to conclude this point euery man may giue a reason of his saluation namely because he is beloued in Christ but why hee was apappointed to be beloued in Christ no man is able to assigne or set downe a reason but wee must all bow in humilitie and resort onely to the purpose of God heere spoken of by the Apostle ROM chap. 8. vers 29. verse 29 For those which he knew before he also predestinate to bee made like to the image of his Sonne that he might be the first borne among many brethren THe Apostle heere proceedeth to proue that all things euen afflictions worke for the best to