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A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

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doctrine were soundly vrged thorough euery commandement it would ransacke the hearts of carnall men and then manifestly let them see the vanitie of their false and wilde presumption of ciuilitie and Gods liking of them and their honest meanings It is true they dare not say with their tongues there is no God but is there not such talke in their hearts or could they not wish there were no God They worship not Sunne Moone nor Starres but is there in them that warmth of loue to the true God that they can loue him with all their hearts and all their soules where is that liuely knowledge of God where is that trembling feare of God where is that glorying in God where is that cleauing vnto God doe these men euery day commit their wayes and their workes vnto God These men vse to wonder at Hereticks but what formes of God do they conceiue in their heads euery day They will not blaspheme God to his face t is true but will they not murmure from day to day at the worke of his hands They place no diuinitie in the signes of heauen but will they not feare them neither yet this is condemned as well as the other It is true popish Images are gone out of their sight in the Churches but are the pictures of the Trinitie gone out of their houses They thinke indeed it is too bad neuer to come to Church or to giue God no worship but do they make conscience of cold seruice of God or luke-warmnes and continued hypocrisie For may it not be truly said of them their hearts almost neuer come to Church sure their soules will be indited in the day of Christ and conuicted too for obstinate Recusants witchcraft coniuring and charming is naught they say but is going to witches and coniurers and charmers naught too in their opinion To forsweare a mans selfe they hold it somewhat vile if it may be discerned but what conscience make they of swearing in their common talke especially by petty othes and that which is not good They dare not curse God but they dare curse the creatures of God by the name or iustice of God they dare not talke directly against God but they dare vse Gods titles without reuerence They say they know all comes from Gods blessing but doe they daily seeke the sanctification of their callings and the creatures by the word and prayer We all say the Sabbath must be sanctified but who makes it his delight we condemne labour on the Sabbath but where are those Nehemiahs that will restraine this monstrous abuse in the Citie of hyring laborers on the Sabbath Though for many Sabbaths one after an other they trauell hither many hundreds of all sorts from all parts round about and fill the streets almost with tumults on the Lords day from the morning till neere the euening yet none seeks the reformation of this matchlesse abuse or if any would restraine it how are they opposed The Lord giue repentance to those that haue sinned this way and lay not the toleration of this damned abuse to their charge Men say at length it is naught to keep open shops or ride to Faires on the Sabbath day but who repents of the idle and fruitlesse spending of the Sabbath wee doe somewhat in publike duties but who cares for the priuate duties in the family on the Sabbath Men will not openly raile on Magistrates but how licentious are mens tongues in priuate or when doe men affectionately pray for their superiors where is a well ordered Familie to be found Say that men forbeare bloud fighting doe they forbeare anger enuy frowardnesse bitter words They auoide whoredome but doe they shun filthy speaking and lust Some men shun drunkennesse but doe they shun drinkings Open stealth is abhord but secret fraud and deceit is common Couetousnesse is condemned but in worldlinesse men are drowned and see it not Gaming for pounds and hundreds is easily censured but for crownes and shillings it is no offence Men make some conscience of false witnesse in Courts but at home they make no conscience of euill speaking or suspitions or censures It may be men would be loath to be found guilty of raysing slanders but yet men loue lies if any body else will inuent them and they will goe about with tales and spread them they will discouer secrets they will slaunder by scoffing or iesting they will report part of mens words but not all or not in their sense and for euill thoughts and worlds of contemplatiue wickednesse these men neuer care for Obiect But some may say what neede all this adoe it is precisenesse to be so curious Answ. It is true it is precisenesse and wee are commanded to walke precisely for so the word is Eph. 5.15 And besides there is that necessitie of it that vnlesse our righteousnesse exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises who yet lead a ciuill life wee cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Obiect But we see the most men and those too men of great place and learning do not fauor such stricktnesse Answ. What then such is the calling of a Christian that not many mightie not many wise not many noble c. wil be drawne to deny themselues that they may be saued But yet we must enter into at that streite gate that fewe finde Obiect But there is none can do as you require Answ. In many things we sinne all but yet Gods children do endeauour after the holinesse required confessing their faileings and no sinne hath dominion ouer them but now other men allow themselues in these euils and thinke all is well and haue no desire or indeauor to shew their respect to all Gods commandements but venture all to Gods mercie yea they will not forgo such sinnes as they can leaue if they list they will continue in sinne that neither bring them pleasure nor profit Obiect But might some one of the better sort say what are wee bound to respect all Gods wills and to be perfect and full and to stand so too who is able to beare it is it not a heauie yoake Answ. It is true that all this is required and heereby we may see whether sinne hath bought vs and what impotencie is now in vs It is true also that a mortall condition is a hard condition Our Sauiour meant some thing when he said striue to enter into the straite gate Yet a Christian needs not faint for it is all good worke and he is to obey no worse a will then Gods will and for no worse an end then his owne good and with no worse company then all the Saints Obiect But the multitude of my former sinnes troubles me that I cannot with that comfort addresse my selfe to vndertake this strickt course Answ. This is thy comfort that in Christ there is a propitiation
places Thus of the subiect also The degrees of grace in the third estate are 1. vocation 2. faith 3. remission of sinnes 4. sanctification of vocation chap. 3.15 of faith chap. 1.4.23 2.12 of remission of sinnes chap. 1.14 2.13 of sanctification in both parts both mortification chap. 3 5.8 and viuification chap. 2.13 3.10 Thus of the estate of grace The fourth and last estate of man is the estate of glorie which stands of three degrees 1. resurrection 2. the last iudgement and 3. life eternall of resurrection chap. 1.18 of the last iudgement and eternall glorie chap. 3.4 And thus of the first part of the patterne of wholesome words and that is faith now followeth the second and that is loue Loue comprehends all the dutie we owe to God or men as being the bond of perfection which ties together all holy seruices Loue must be considered both in the adiuncts and in the sorts of it The adiuncts are constancie wisdome zeale care to auoide offences and the like of loue in generall chap. 1.4 2.2 3.14 of constancie ch 2.6 of zeale chap. 4.13 of wisdom and care to auoide offences ch 4.5 thus of the adiuncts The sorts of works comprehended vnder loue are two chiefly 1. works of worship 2. works of virtue The workes of worship are either internall onely or externall and internall also The internall are the acknowledging of God the loue of God the feare of God the trust or hope in God and which floweth from thence patience of the acknowledgment of God chap. 1.9 10. of the loue of God chap. 1.8 of the feare of God chap. 3.22 of the hope in God chap. 1.5 of patience chap. 1.11 The workes of worship that are both externall and internall are prayer and thanksgiuing of prayer chap. 4.2 3. of thanksgiuing chap. 3.17 Thus of works of worship Workes of virtue either concerne our selues or others the works that concerne our selues are chiefly two the studie of heauenly things and temperance Temperance concernes chastitie and sobrietie in the vse of all sorts of earthly things of the studie of heauenly things chap. 3.1 2. of chastitie ch 3 5. of sobrietie ch 3.2 Thus of vertue that concernes our selues Works of virtue towards others are chiefly nine Mercie curtesie humilitie meeknesse long-suffering clemencie peaceablenes thankfulnes and iustice of the first eight of these chap. 3.12 to 16. Now Iustice is either publike or priuate publike Iustice is in Magistrates of which chap. 2.5 priuate Iustice is either commutatiue in bargaining or distributiue in giuing that which is right to euery one according to his degree and so distributiue Iustice is either ciuill or oeconomicall Priuate Iustice in ciuill conuersation with men abroad is either to Magistrates of which chap. 2.5 or to all men and so consists of truth and faithfulnes with sinceritie and obseruance oeconomicall Iustice is that which concernes the houshold and so containes the dutie of husbands and wiues children and parents seruants and masters of which chap. 3.18 to the end with the first verse of chap. 4. And thus also of Loue. Thus I haue shewed the excellent compleatnes of this worthy scripture it remaines that I declare some of the reasons that haue emboldned me to make choise of your Honors names for the dedication of my exposition vpon this scripture Three things swaying godly men in like case haue compelled me protection obseruance and thankefulnesse the preaching of this doctrine as by the mercie of God it wrought abundant consolation and comfortable reformation in many hearers so did it seldom rest from the assaults and calumnies which one while prophanenesse another while enuie powred out vpon it great cause there is therefore that it comming out now to a more publike view should seeke shelter and of whom should I seeke it or hope for it sooner then of your Honors who are pleased by your daily countenance to assure me a iust patronage For the second to omit the high reputation which the religious eminencie of both your ancestors hath set your Honors in and the praises of many singular endowments and gifts in which you doe worthily excell there are two things wherein your Honors daily winne a great increase of obseruance the one is pietie towards God the other mercie towards the poore the loynes of the poore daily blesse your Honors and their mouthes daily pray for you your pietie is many wayes exprest to omit my vndoubted proofes of it your Lordship hath much confirmed the perswasion of your religious disposition by your daily and affectionate respect of the word of God and prayer in priuate since the Lord hath made you lesse able to resort more frequently to the publike assemblies And Madam what thanks can we euer sufficiently giue vnto God for that rare and worthy example with which your Ladyship doth comfort and incourage the hearts of many in your care of Gods sabaoths and in your neuer-failing attendance vpon the ordinances of God with the congregation morning and euening not only in your owne person but with your whole familie For the third I doe ingenuouslie professe before God and men that I hold my obligation vnto your Honors in the iust debt of seruice and gratitude to be so great as the labour here imployed is no way answerable to a meete discharge no though it had been taken onely for your Honors vse for to omit the debt which I am in for a great part of my maintenance and that singular incouragement I reape daily in your Honors respect of my ministerie what thanks can euer be sufficient or what seruice can euer be enough for that incomparable benefit which I haue and shall euer esteeme the greatest outward blessing did euer befall me and which Madam by your Honors singular care and furtherance after an admirable manner I obteined I meane the clearing of my reputation from the vniust aspersions of my aduersaries and that by the mouth and pen of the Lords Annointed my most dread Soueraigne whom the God of heauen with all abundance of royall and diuine blessings recompence in all earthly felicitie and eternall glory And the same God of Peace and Father of mercies sanctifie your Honors wholy that your whole spirits and soules and bodies may be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ faithfull is he that hath called you who also will doe it And I doubt not but God that hath inriched your Honors with the true grace that is in Iesus Christ will daily winne vnto you increase of honor from your perseuerance in well-doing so as thanksgiuing for your sakes shall bee abundantly giuen vnto God by many Thus in most humble manner crauing your Honors acceptance and patronage of this worke I end and shall reioyce to remaine Your Honors Chaplaine to be commanded in all seruice NI BYFIELD THE ARGVMENT OF this Epistle to the COLOSSIANS THere are foure principall Parts of this Epistle 1. the Proaeme 2. Doctrine of
lessons and directions and encouragements to holy life and neuer did he conceiue a greater hatred against his sinne then when his reynes taught him secondly hee shewes that hee had them in the night that is when hee was alone and with-drawne from companie and the things of the world and worldly occasions Fourthly his last signe is that hee did set the Lord alwayes before him hee could be content to walke euer in Gods presence and to haue him the witnesse of his actions hee was not carefull onely to approue himselfe to men as wicked men may doe but his chiefe care was to walke in all good conscience before God Lastly in the four●● of Esay the Prophet fore-tels of men that vnder the Gospell should be called holy or Saints and these hee describes by their happinesse they shall be written among the liuing in Ierusalem and by their holines which will discouer it selfe by these signes first they are not acquainted with the damnable and hatefull extenuations and qualifications of sinnes they are not heard to say it is a little sinne a small fault no their sinnes in their eyes are filthinesse and bloud Secondly they are men that haue felt the power of God in the practise of mortification they are new creatures they are washed and purged Thirdly the Spirit of God in them hath beene a Spirit of Iudgement and a Spirit of burning a Spirit of Iudgement not onely in respect of knowledge and illumination but also because it hath kept an Assize in the soule of the sinner hee hath beene arraigned indicted and hath pleaded guiltie and beene condemned a Spirit of burning both in respect of the inward purifying of the heart from the drosse that cleaues vnto it as also in respect of zeale and order for the glory of God And thus farre of the first thing giuen vnto the people of God they are Saints Now followeth the second Faithfull This word is diuersly attributed in Scripture It is giuen to God and God is said to be faithfull in the accomplishment of his promises It is giuen to Christ and he is called faithfull and true It is giuen to the Sunne in the Firmament because it keepeth his certaine course It is giuen to the Word of God so as whatsoeuer it promiseth or threatneth men may certainely binde vpon it for heauen and earth may fayle but one iot of it shall not fayle Lastly it is giuen to Men especially and most ordinarily to such men as are true beleeuers and walke in all good conscience both before God and Men and as it is thus taken the words of the holy Ghost Prou. 20.6 may be taken vp Many men will boast euery one of his owne goodnes but who can finde a faithfull man These are they that Dauid so earnestly searcheth for and hauing found them doth so stedfastly set his eyes vpon them and entertayneth them into his Court Psal. 101.6 The names of these we doe for the most part take vpon our selues but the signes of these are but sparingly found amongst vs. That wee may examine our selues I will consider what is required of vs that wee may shew our selues faithfull The Christian mans faithfulnesse ought to shew it selfe first in spirituall things secondly in temporall things vnto faithfulnesse in spirituall things fiue things are requisite First faith in Christ to get sound reasons from the Word and Spirit of God and a sure euidence for the particular perswasion of the heart that God in Christ is graciously reconciled with the sinner He cannot be a faithfull man that hath not a iustifying Faith all that time of a mans life onely receiueth hee this honour to be accounted faithfull when aboue all things hee trauels after the sense of Gods fauour in the forgiuenes of his sinnes Secondly faithfulnesse stands in the performance of all those Promises Purposes and Vowes which men in their distresse inward or outward doe make vnto God And therefore the Israelites are charged not to be faithfull because when the wrath of God turned vpon them and the strongest of them were slaine and their chosen men were smitten and that their dayes did consume in vanitie and their yeeres hastily then they cry vnto him and seeke him in their distresse they returne and seeke him earely they acknowledge that God is their strength and the most high their Redeemer but when the Lord had beene mercifull vnto them forgiuen their iniquities so as hee destroyed them not and called backe his anger then they retu●●ed and prouoked the Lord againe they flattered him with their tongue they tempted God and sinned still and therefore they are censured thus Their heart was not vpright neyther were they faithfull in Gods Couenant Thirdly it shewes it selfe in constant sinceritie in Gods worship when men will worship God according to the rules of his reuealed will without mixture of mens inuentions or the customary sinnes of prophanenesse and hypocrisie And thus Iudah is said to be faithfull with Gods Saints because as yet the worship of God was preserued amongst them in the auncient puritie in which the old Patriarkes and Saints did sincerely worship the God of their Fathers hee is a faithfull man that will worship God no otherwise then the Saints haue done that is precisely according to his will reuealed in his Word Fourthly faithfulnesse is exercised in the conscionable imployment of the Gifts Graces and Talents receiued in our generall calling to Gods glory the increase of our gifts and the inriching of our soules with true spirituall gaine And thus hee is said to be a good Seruant and faithfull that hauing receiued fiue Talents hath gained with them fiue moe or two Talents and doth gaine two moe and this we doe when hauing receiued Knowledge Faith Loue Hope Patience Spirit of Prayer c. wee doe by a constant and daily practise bring them out into exercise for our selues and for others Thus doing two commodities wee shall reape first it is a signe of our faithfulnesse secondly the gifts will increase and to him that hath such gifts to vse them shall be more giuen Lastly faithfulnesse shewes it selfe in mens sinceritie diligence constancie and care to promote and further the causes of God and the Church with the conscionable discharge of all such duties as belong vnto such seruice Thus Timothy is praysed to be faithfull in the Lord 1 Cor. 4 17. And thus the Apostle and Apostolicall men were faithfull when they could doe nothing against the truth but for the truth and thus men are faithfull that can patiently beare and willingly take vp the Crosse of Christ and that daily so as they may further the building vp and edification of Gods people Those then are not faithfull that doe the worke of the Lord negligently that set their hands to the plough and looke backe that minde their owne things honours pleasures profits and
shew at our pleasures but they are necessary such as if they be wanting a sin is committed nay grieuous sins euen against the commandement of Christ Ioh. 13. As I said to the Iewes whither I go can ye not come so to you also I say now a new commandement giue I you that ye loue one another euen as I loued you He shews here that whereas they might be grieued that they should loose Christs bodily presence he had appoynted them a course for their solace and that was instead of Christ as fellow-members in Christs absence in the world to striue by all means to delight themselues in louing society one with another And this Commandement he calls a new Commandement not in respect of the matter of the duty for that was alwayes required but in respect of the forme of obseruing it for the old generall rule was That thou shouldest loue thy neighbour as thy selfe but now that forme as I haue loued you hath in it something that is more expresse and for the incomparable sufficiencie of the president is matchlesse and more full of incitations to fire affection Againe the person that giues it and the time is to be considered I now giue this commandement Men are vsed that haue any sparks of good nature in them to remember and carefully to obserue the last words of their dying friends especially if they charge not many things Why these are the last words of Christ the night before his death euen this one thing he doth especially charge vpon vs Namely while we abide in this flesh and are hated of this world and want those glorious refreshings would come by the presence of Christ to vnite our selues in a holy bound of peace and loue to be kept strengthned by mutuall indeuors in the performance of all the duties of holy affection and that till Christ shall gather vs vnto the glory that he hath with the Father The third Motiue may be taken from the benefites that may be gotten by loue and these are diuers First there is much comfort in loue the Lord doth vsually and graciously water the society conferences prayers and other duties performed mutually by the Saints with the deaws of many sweet and glorious refreshings by which they are daily excited inflamed and incouraged to a holy contentation in godlinesse Secondly Loue is the fulfilling of the Law not only all the duties belonging to humane societies of which he there intreates are comprehended vnder loue as by that great band that tyeth all estates and degrees but also is the fulfilling of the Law by effect in that first it causeth abstinence from doing euill to our neighbour Secondly it causeth men to make conscience of fulfilling the Law and that which is there generally spoken if it be applied to the loue of the Saints may haue his speciall truth in this that there is nothing in outward things doth more fire the heart of a man to the loue of and labour after a godly life then a daily louing societie with Gods children in whom we see godlinesse euen in an experimentall knowledge not layd before vs in precept but described vnto vs in practise with the rewards and fruits of it Yea loue may be said to be the filling vp of the Law as the word seemeth to import in this that it clotheth the duties of the Law with the glory of a due manner and seateth them vpon their due subiects with the vnwearyed labours of constant well-doing Thirdly the due performance and daily exercise of the mutuall duties of loue would be a great testimony and witnesse vnto vs for the satisfying of our consciences in the knowledge of such great things as otherwise are exceeding hard to be knowne as first it is not euery bodies case to haue the Spirit of grace or when they haue it to discerne it yet by this loue it may be discerned for it is one of the inseperable fruits of the spirit Secondly many men follow not Christ at all and among the followers of Christ a great number are not true Disciples Now by loue may all men know that we are Christs disciples Thirdly the winde bloweth where it listeth And that which is borne of the flesh is flesh and therefore great Masters in Israell and Teachers of other men may be ignorant of regeneration yet thereby may wee know that we are borne of God and doe rightly know God if we loue one another Fourthly if wee would seeke God to finde him behold If wee goe to the East hee is not there if to the West yet we can not perceiue him if to the North where he worketh yet we cannot see him he will hide himselfe in the South and we cannot behold him How much more is the way of God in the heart of man vnsearchable And yet though no man hath seene God at any time if we loue one another God dwelleth in vs. Fiftly the election of man before time is like a bottomlesse gulfe and the making of man blamelesse and holy in heauen is a dreadfull mysterie and yet those two glorious branches whereof th one sprowts forth euen beyond time and thother reacheth vp to heauen nay into heauen are both fastned vpon this stocke of loue in respect of one way manner of comming to know them To conclude Saluation it selfe euen our owne saluation is knowne by the loue to the brethren as is cleare in diuers other places of that Epistle Lastly the day of the Lord is a terrible day a day of trouble heauines the strong hearted man shall then cry bitterly then the heauens being on fire shall be dissolued and passe away with a noyse and the elements shall melt with heate the Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a showt and with the voyce of the Archangells and with the trumpet of God then shall all the kindreds of the earth mourne and they shall see the Sonne of man come in the cloudes of heauen with power and great glorie And who shall be able to stand in that great and fearefull day euen all such as haue finished their course in the loue of God and his children as certainely as wee now finde loue in our hearts so surely shall wee haue boldnesse in the day of Iudgement The fourth Motiue may be taken from the miserable state of such as finde not in themselues the loue of Gods children First it is a palpable signe they abide still in darkenesse and vnder the bondage of the first death and in danger of the second death Secondly a man can neuer enter into the kingdome of Heauen without it for euery man can say a murtherer shall not be saued so continuing Now it is certaine God hates a man that loues not his children aswell as he doth murtherers he that loueth not his brother is a man-slayer and wee know that no man-slayer can
of the 7. Verse Out of the 8. Verse I obserue diuers things First from the word declared as it is here vsed and applyed to reports I note that those things are to be reported and spoken that may giue light to the hearers A good mans report tends to cleare things in the mindes of them that heare him there should be light and a Lantherne in our words To this end wee should vse wisedome and truth and meeknesse when wee speake Wisedome by preparing our selues to speake Truth to report things as they are and Meekenesse to auoid passion for anger is a great darkener Wee should also take heede of diuers sinnes in both Tables that greatly corrupt the hearers not onely in the generall but in this that they greatly darken and make muddy the vnderstanding of man As in the first Table discourses or disputes of Atheisme against the Word Religion or Ordinances of God Apologies for Idolaters or Idolatrous Religion in whole or in part the very naming of vices or Idols without disgracing or hating of them Impatiencie or murmuring against God and such like And in the second Table flattery tale-bearing false accusing rash iudgement answering of matters before they be heard are great darkeners of the vnderstanding Secondly in that Epaphras intending to complaine of them for their corruptions in opinion and worship doth here first declare their prayses and graces of Gods Spirit It shewes that it is a worthy grace to be apt to expresse others iust prayses especially when wee are to speake of their faults for that will shew that wee are free from enuie ostentation or disdaine and that wee seeke not our owne things that wee are not suspitious nor thinke euill nor reioyce in euill Loue in the spirit Loue is eyther in God or in man in God there is the personall loue of Christ the loue of the Creature the loue of man and the loue of goodnesse or good men In man there is both the loue by which hee loues God and the loue by which hee loues man I take it here it is meant of whatsoeuer loue the Spirit worketh in man Of Loue I haue spoken at large before here onely I note briefely two things in generall First the necessitie of Loue secondly the tryall of it both in the negatiue For the first If the true loue of God and Gods children be not in vs we haue not faith nor the Spirit of God for Loue is the fruit of the Spirit nor the Seale of our Election nor a pure heart or good conscience nor strength to hold out against errours And for tryall first of our loue to God Wee must know that hee loues not God that will not come to Christ for life that keepes not his Commandements that is ashamed of the crosse and profession of Christ that loues not the word so as to hide as precious treasure in his heart the instructions and comforts of the Word that is not inflamed and inwardly constrayned to an ardent desire of holy duties in that place God hath set him in that serues the lust or loue of his profit sports and carnall delights And for tryall of our loue to men hee loues not his neighbour first that cannot doe it in the Spirit that is in spirituall things and from his heart according to the direction and motions of Gods Spirit secondly that doth or worketh euill to his neighbour thirdly that wilfully will offend his brother in a thing indifferent fourthly that will not pray for his neighbour fiftly that is not prone to shew mercy Quest. But how must I loue my Neighbour Ans. As Christ loued vs and that hath foure things in it For Christ loued vs first and though wee were his inferiours and for our profit and with an euerlasting loue so should wee first wee must loue with a preuenting loue secondly wee must loue though they be meaner persons in place or gifts then we thirdly wee must loue them for their profit and good not for our owne and lastly we must loue continually and feruently Verse 9. For this cause we also since the day we heard of it cease not to pray for you and to desire that ye might be fulfilled with the knowledge of his will in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding Verse 10. That yee might walke worthy of the Lord in all pleasing being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God Verse 11. Strengthened with all might through his glorious power vnto all patience and long-suffering with ioyfulnesse THese words are the second part of the Preface wherein he sheweth that hee prayed for them which hee both generally affirmes and specially declares The generall Affirmation is in these words For this cause wee also since the day wee heard of it ceast not to pray for you The speciall Declaration is in the words that follow And to desire that yee might be fulfilled with the knowledge of his will and so forward to the end of the 11. Verse In the affirmation are three things first an Intimation of a reason for this cause secondly the Notation of time since the day wee heard of it thirdly the Matter affirmed wee cease not to pray for you In generall wee may plainely obserue that the desires of our hearts and endeauours of our liues ought not to be imployed for our owne good onely but for the good of others Wee are neyther borne nor borne againe for our selues Sanctified and holy men haue beene full of constant and ardent affections and desires after the good of Gods Children The manifestation of the spirit is giuen to euery member to profit withall Religious Loue seeketh not his owne things wee should not seeke our owne things as many doe but that which is Iesus Christs viz. that which tends to his glory and the profit of his members yea Christians should serue one another by loue hee is not of God that hath not holy affections to promote so farre as in him lyeth the good of Gods Children Herein are the Children of God and the children of the Diuell vsually knowne certainly that which any man is in Religion hee is relatiuely if not fit to serue the body then not fit to be of the body he is not a Saint that seekes not communion of Saints This may serue First to shew the misery of such as haue no inflamed desires after the good of Gods Children Secondly it may giue vs occasion to examine our selues what good the body of Christ reapes by vs. If any Christian of lesse power gifts and meanes in the world aske what good can I doe to Christians I answere if thou canst doe nothing else thou canst pray to God for them and desire their good reioyce in their prosperitie and mourne for their miseries neyther let this be thought a meane and vnprofitable seruice to the body for wee see
that the life of Christians ought to answere their profession knowledge and the meanes they inioy In the inlarging hereof I consider foure things 1. The Motiues to excite vs to an holy endeauour after innocencie 2. The Reasons why so many men in the visible Church inioying the meanes haue attayned to so little innocencie 3. What we must doe that wee may thus walke 4. The Benefits would be gotten by a holy care of Christian Innocencie The Motiues are such as these 1. Wee are not in our owne power to liue to our selues but are tyed to liue to him that dyed for vs 2 Our soules and bodyes are destinate to incorruption in the Heauens and therefore wee should set our selues so to liue for this short space in this world as wee might deliuer them vp vndefiled in the day of the Lord. 3 Haue wee euer found vnrighteousnesse in God shall wee then serue Sathan that neuer did vs good and forsake the Lord our God When our hearts are tempted to sinne wee should say Shall I thus requite the Lord for the innumerable benefits hee hath bestowed vpon me 4 The long night of sinne and ignorance and hellish darknesse and danger by the light of the Gospell by the meanes of Christ our Sauiour is past and a short season remaines vnto vs to glorifie God and worke out the assurance and fruition of our owne saluation Shall wee not then arise from the sleepe of sinne and now cast away the workes of darknesse Is it not now time to arme our selues against the sluggishnes of our owne Natures and the corruptions that are in the World to walke honestly as becomes this day of grace and fauour 5 The miserable euents of seruing the flesh might moue vs. If wee haue the meanes and make a shew and yet liue carnally and scandalously vvee may deceiue our selues but God will not be mocked wee shall reape as wee sow if wee sow to the flesh wee shall of the flesh reape corruption And for these things the wrath of God commeth vpon the Children of disobedience And therefore let no man deceiue vs with vaine words and if Ierusalem will not be instructed my soule saith the Lord shall depart from her and shee shall be desolate as a Land that no man inhabiteth And contrariwise if wee would sow to the spirit and neuer be weary of well doing nor faint or faile in due season wee should reape reape I say of the Spirit euen life euerlasting 6 We should be much moued by the dreadfull relation wee stand in to God to Christ to the holy Ghost and to the Church to God for wee are his Seruants and therefore ought to be holy as hee is holy we are his Children and therefore ought to proue it by our obedience To Christ for he hath washed vs in his bloud and shall wee pollute our selues againe hee was in his owne practise a perfect patterne of innocencie and shall wee not learne of him wee are his Members shall wee shame and dishonour our Head our Sauiour is in Heauen and shall we be buryed like Moles in the loue of sensuall and earthly things or rather ought not our affections and conuersations to be where Christ is euen in heauen at the right hand of the Father To the holy Ghost wee are his Temple and shall wee defile Gods holy place To the Church which is the Citie of the holy God which hee hath consecrated to himselfe and therefore were it not wickednesse to prophane it with impuritie Let vs liue as the Citizens of God Lastly in the 1 Thes. 4. I finde an Exhortation to holinesse and it is inforced by fiue reasons first it is the will of God Vers. 3. Secondly a holy life is an honorable life Vers. 4. Thirdly they are Gentiles not Christians that liue prophanely Vers. 5. Fourthly God is a certaine auenger of all vnrighteousnesse Vers. 6. And finally we are called vnto holinesse Vers. 7. Secondly if it be asked how it comes to passe that such multitudes of people liuing in the bosome of the Church are touched with so little care of holinesse of life I may answere diuers things 1 The Vayle of Ignorance lyeth vpon their hearts and grosse darknesse still couers those people Though the light be come and the glory of the Lord Yet for the most part these men abhorre the light and therefore are their wayes darke and slippery 2 Mens hearts goe after their eyes and mens senses are made Maisters of their liues and therefore are their affections onely stirred with carnall things they take their directions from their owne flesh and walke in the way of their owne lusts 3 Many times their brethren deceiue them I meane they are misled sometimes by their owne mistaking and misapplying of Gods promises and sometimes by the sinfull dawbing of wicked Teachers that set themselues to strengthen the hands of the wicked and discourage the hearts of the righteous crying Peace and safetie where there is no peace Vngodly men these are that gainesay the doctrine of those faithfull men that would cure this sinfull generation by a meete seueritie of doctrine 4 The most men see no necessitie of the restoring of their soules they cannot be perswaded of the necessitie of Regeneration and conuersion by the Word and when they come to the meanes they seeke not to God to lead them 5 Men are double-hearted and diuide one part to the flesh and the world and another to God the more open part of their liues some pretend to direct with some respect of holinesse but the secret and inward part is full of all rottennesse and yet men will not see that God and Sinne God and Riches God and the Flesh cannot be serued both of one man at one time 6 They are incorrigible will neyther be heal'd by the word nor be forced by the workes of God They will not vnderstand though all the foundations of the earth be moued Thirdly that wee might attayne vnto this holinesse of Conuersation 1 Wee must grow out of liking with our owne wayes and our present carnall course and forsake that way and returne from it 2 Wee must get out of the way of sinners for hee that walketh with the vngodly will be like them 3 Wee must mightily labour for knowledge and be much in contemplation and to this end exercise our selues in Gods word day and night and dwell in Gods house Coherence with Verse before and Psal. 1.2 Prou. 8.20 and 2.11.12 Psal. 84.4.5 Esay 2.3 yea wee should by conference aske the way one of another 4 Wee must get into Christ for hee is the way and till wee labour our ingrafting into Christ and settle our selues to seeke a Sauiour euen vnto vs by faith all our workes are in vaine 5 That our conuersations might be more holy and vnrebukeable wee should first labour
to get holinesse into our hearts for if grace be within duties will be without if corruption be mortified in the Soule which is the fountaine it will haue no great sinne in the life which is the streame which flowes from the heart first we should guide our hearts into the way for thereout commeth life 6 Wee must submit our selues to Gods corrections learne obedience by the things we suffer obey the checkes of our conscience and be contented to eate the bread of affliction beare the words of rebuke and admonition for he that refuseth correction will certainely goe out of the way of life Lastly we should commit our way to God and by constant and daily prayer beseech him that hee would shew vs the way and lead vs forth and then that hee would stay our steps in his pathes that our feete doe not slide and to this end that he would remoue out of our way all impediments and euery lying way and that he would daily quicken vs in the way against the sluggishnesse of our owne Natures and bend our hearts to his holy feare but especially euery morning we should beseech God so to assist vs and guide and strengthen vs to doe the duties of the day and that he would see to and defend the thing of the day in his day by the vertue of Christs intercession and his words which are neare vnto God day and night Fourthly thus doing and endeauouring our selues to know and doe Gods will 1 The Lord would know vs by name and take notice of our wayes euen with the knowledge of approbation 2 Our liues would be full of Ioy and chearfulnesse yea they that haue tasted of the ioyes of a Crowne shall leaue the Throne and Pallace to seeke the sweet delights of the faithfull and to sing their songs 3 God would walke in the middest of vs 4 Yea hee would keepe his Couenant and Mercy with vs 5 Wee should be protected against all hurtfull troubles being eyther preserued from them or in them if wee walke in the day we shall not stumble yea though we went through fire and water yet Gods holy presence and strong arme would be with vs yea wee might dwell with euerlasting burnings that is within the knowledge of Gods terrible presence and sight of his great iudgements when the hypocrites of the world would be afraid 6 Or if there were sorrowes and griefes vpon vs in this world yet heauen shall come and wee shall rest in the beds of eternall ease whatsoeuer betides vs wee shall not lye downe in sorrow 7 Thus to liue is to rule with God and to be faithfull with his Saints 8 Thus shall wee scape the vigor of the Law and the flames of Hell Lastly if we continue faithfull to the death there is laid vp for vs a crowne of life Thus of walking or holy conuersation in the generall now in particular that wee might walke in an holy eminencie three things as is before noted are here vrged First that wee should walke worthy of the Lord. That is so to know and consider the singular mercies of God in Christ as to endeauour to expresse our thankefulnesse in the obedience of our liues in such a measure as might become the mercies of God Before I open the words further I consider in the generall two things 1 That the obedience of the faithfull is raysed by the contemplation of the mercies of God which should teach vs as we desire more to abound in good fruits so to be more in the assurance and often meditation of Gods loue to vs more knowledge of this kinde would worke more obedience and a confused knowledge of Gods mercy is vsually accompanied with an vnconstant obedience Besides this reproues the dangerous and sinfull abuse of Gods mercies in the common people that vse to pleade their safetie notwithstanding their sinnes by the alledging of the mercy of God to sinners whereas it is most certaine that the right knowledge of Gods mercy would make men afraid to sinne There is mercy with thee that thou maist be feared saith the Psalmist and it is the infallible signe of a true conuert that hee doth feare God and his goodnesse euery man can feare God and his Iustice especially in some kindes of iudgements but a childe of God doth neuer more tenderly feare God then when he hath greatest taste of Gods mercies 2 The Papists would finde merit of workes in this Verse both because holinesse of life is so much vrged as also because here is the word worthy vsed as if the Apostle should grant that they might be worthy of and merit the blessings of God My answere is First that merit cannot be founded vpon Scripture and secondly it cannot be founded vpon this Scripture For the first we cannot merit for many reasons in Scripture first we are not our owne men we are so tyed vnto God that gaue vs beeing in Nature and Grace that when wee haue done all wee can doe our owne mouthes must say wee are but vnprofitable Seruants Secondly all our sufficiencie to doe any good is of God not from our selues Thirdly God gaines nothing by vs If thou be righteous what giuest thou to him or what receiueth he at thy hands Fourthly men talke of their well-doing but what shall become of their sinnes If the Papists will first goe to hell for their sinnes and stay all that eternitie there then afterwards if God create another eternitie they may haue hearing to relate what good they haue done the curse of the Law will be first serued the punishment of Adams one sinne barred the plea for any reward for former righteousnesse Fiftly what comparison can there be betweene the glory of heauen and our workes on earth Sixtly it is worthy to be obserued that it is mercy in God to set his loue vpon them that keepe his Commandements Ezod 20. Command 2. Seauenthly we are so farre from meriting that wee are taught to pray God to giue vs our daily bread we haue not a bit of bread of our owne earning Eightly the Sanctification of the most righteous is but begunne in this life Lastly vnto all these Reasons adde the further Testimonie of these Scriptures Dan. 9 9. Rom. 4.5 and 11.9 1 Cor. 4.4 Phil. 3.8.9 Secondly this place hath no colour for merit for to passe ouer that reason that the Scripture requireth good workes therefore our workes merit as a most false and absurd argument the words worthy of the Lord cannot be applyed to merit by any meanes for in as much as the Lord had bestowed many of his fauours already vpon them and giuing his hand and writing and seale for the rest they cannot by any workes afterwards be said in any colour to merit what is past They are vrged Mat. 3. to bring forth fruits worthy
the Deuill and man and they are by the prouidence of God not effectiue but permissiue Yet so as there is operation in foure respects about the sinnes of the world for first Christ is the Authour of the Motion in generall though not of the euill of the Motion Secondly Christ worketh in that he withdraweth grace being prouoked thereunto Thirdly he worketh in determining or setting a measure vnto sinne that it passe not his bounds Fourthly he worketh in conuerting the sinne to a punishment of the sinner or in working thereout an occasion of humiliation and of grace in the penitent Secondly Consisting notes the continuance together of the Creatures for by the prouidence of Christ it is that no substance in Specie that was at first made euer ceased but there are still as many Creatures as euer were and the very singulars of euery sort doe consist in Indiuiduo as long as pleaseth Christ and the like may be said of the essentiall qualities of all the creatures Thirdly Consisting notes the Cooperation of the Creatures so as by the prouidence of Christ all things worke together for his glory and all things are ready at Christs will and commaund by ioynt mouing c. Fourthly Consisting notes immutabilitie in the prouidence of Christ. Thus of the Doctrine the Vses follow And first the meditation of the prouidence of Christ serueth for great reproofe of wicked mens securitie in sinne who carelesly adde sinne vnto sinne so it may be hid from men as if they were of the minde of those that thought God did not see or had forsaken the earth and the care of mens actions below But seeing all things consist in Christ wicked men cannot stirre but Christ discouereth them as plainely as any thing that is in his owne heart Yea seeing all things consist in Christ it checketh the doubtfulnesse and mistrustfulnesse that is in the hearts of Gods Children as if in their crosses God did not care for them or that they should be helpelesse This is at large reproued in these places Esa. 40.27 49.14 c. 54.7 c. Secondly seeing all things Consist in CHRIST it should teach vs to trust in Christ and not in the second causes and it should make vs lesse carefull for our preseruation neuer asking what we shall eate or what we shall put on yea seeing he rules all things let vs willingly subiect our selues to his Scepter and let him be our guide vnto death Qu. But what must we doe that it might go well with vs by the prouidence of Christ Ans. First we must be Saints if we would haue Christ to keepe vs and preserue vs that is such men as hide not their sinnes but confesse them and forsake them and liue innocently Secondly true prosperitie must be learned out of the Word we must be taught to profit And the next way to get Christ to blesse vs in our Houses is to waite vpon his direction in his House for all prosperitie depends vpon Gods promise and if wee would prosper we must doe such things as are of promise Thirdly wee must in true humilitie and sence of our owne vnworthinesse rest vpon the prouidence of Christ. It is iust if I prosper not in my estate if I will not trust God with it Fourthly we must pray God to direct the workes of our hands continually Fiftly wee must take heed of crueltie and despising and backbiting of Gods poore afflicted Seruants Lastly if all things consist and are preserued in CHRIST then much more the righteous are preserued with a speciall preseruation and in a peculiar safetie In the 37. Psalme this point is excellently and at large handled both by direct proofe and by answere to all the vsuall Obiections against their safety That they shall be preserued is affirmed Vers. 3.17.23.25.28 The Obiections answered are many Obiect 1. Wicked men flourish Sol. a righteous man should neuer grieue at that for they shall soone be cut downe like the grasse and wither as the greene hearbe Vers. 12. Obiect 2 Righteous men are in distresse Sol. Vers. 6. The night of their aduersitie will be turned into the light of prosperitie and as surely as they can beleeue when it is night that it shall be day so surely may they be perswaded when crosses are vpon them that comfort and deliuerance shall come Obiect 3. But there are great plots laid against the righteous and they are pursued with great malice and their intended ruine is come almost to the very issue Sol. Verse 12.13 14.15 The Lord sees all the plots of wicked men and laughes at their spightfull and foolish malice while they are busie to destroy the righteous and hope to haue a day against them the Lord seeth that their owne day is comming vpon them euen a day of destruction a day of great iudgement and eternall miserie their Bow shall be broken and the Sword that they haue drawne shall enter into their owne heart Obiect 4 But the Iust haue but small meanes Sol. Vers. 16.17 A little that the righteous hath is better then the riches of many wicked for the armes of the wicked shall be broken and the Lord vpholdeth the iust Obiect 5. Heauy times are like to befall them Sol. Verse 19. They shall not be ashamed in the euill time and in the day of famine they shall haue enough Obiect 6. But the wicked waxe fatter and fatter and they preuaile in vexing the righteous Sol. Verse 20. Indeed the wicked are fat but it is but the fat of Lambes their prosperitie shall soone melt and as they be like smoake in vexing the godly so shall they be like smoake in vanishing away Obiect 7. But the righteous doe fall Sol. Vers. 24. Though hee doe fall yet he fals not finally nor totally for hee is not vtterly cast downe and besides there is an vpholding prouidence of God in all the fals of the righteous Obiect 8. Wee see some wicked men that doe not so fall into aduersitie but rather are in prosperitie to their dying dayes Sol. Vers. 27. Though they doe yet their seed shall be cut off Obiect 9. But some wicked men are strong yet and in their seed spread also Sol. Verse 35.36 Note also that those spreading Bay-trees many times soone passe away and they and their houses are sometimes vtterly cut off Obiect 10. But vpright men are vnder many and long crosses Sol. Vers. 37. Yet his end is peace Obiect 11. But no body stands for the godly when they come into question Sol. Verse 39.40 Their saluation is of the Lord hee is their strength he will helpe them and deliuer them c. But if wee would be thus deliuered obserue 1. That wee must not vnthankefully fret at Gods prouidence verse 1. 2. We must trust in the Lord and doe good vers 2.3 3. We must delight our selues in the Lord and not place our contentment on earthly things verse 4. 4. Wee must
heires of the Kingdome They are truly rich men though they be neuer so meane in the world 2. Let vs all looke to our selues that we despise not this riches of the bountifulnesse of God when in the Gospell it is offered vnto vs though wee may goe on with the hardnesse of our not repenting hearts yet if by speedy repentance wee preuent not our ruine we shall heape vp wrath against the day of wrath euen the day of the declaration of the iust vengeance of God vpon such obstinate and secure sinners 3. Let not worldly rich men glory in their riches but rather vse their outward riches as helpes to further them vnto this true treasure else their riches shall not shelter them in the day of Gods wrath against the woes denounced against them Lastly would any man know some sure way how to thriue with great successe in these spirituall riches let him then amongst other things especially remember to pray hard for the Lord is rich to all them that call vpon him Thirdly CHRIST is in the faithfull hee liues in them hee dwels in them but that this doctrine may be more fully vnderstood I propound fiue things 1. How Christ is conceiued into the soule of the faithfull 2. By what effects he discouereth himselfe to be there 3. What they get by his comming 4. What intertainement they ought to giue him 5. Who haue not Christ in them For the first there is this order First God secretly giues Christ to the beleeuer and the beleeuer to Christ then Christ begins to manifest himselfe riding in the Chariot of the word The word that before was a dead letter receiueth life by the presence of Christ and that both in the Law and the Gospell The law being made aliue attacheth the particular sinner and playeth vpon him the part of a Sergeant accuser Iaylor or Iudge And the sinner putting in baile the Law brings him to Christ and will not let him goe to another then the Gospell gets aliue and crucifies Christ before his eyes and propounds varietie of sweet promises The sinner being beaten and wounded almost to death before hee would yeeld to the arrest of the Law seeing now whither he is brought laments with vnspeakeable groanes his owne sinnes and the horrible torments hee sees the Sonne of God put to for his sake and at the same time the spirit of the Sonne working faith a wide dore is opened Christ enters in with vnvaluable ioyes wrought in the heart of the sinner Now if you aske by what effects Christ discouers himselfe to be there I answere there is a light when Christ comes in that giues the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ And being rauished they behold as in a mirrour the glory of God and are transformed into the same Image the spirit of God making them suddenly new Creatures 2. The conuert now findes a sauour of the things of the spirit and his heart is bowed to be subiect to the law of God 3. Hee is baptized with the fire of zeale and holy affections and desires 4. There appeares a battell and combat in the soule and much Iusting on eyther side the spirit resisting with teares and strong cries 5. In this combat Christ vndertaking the battell sends out by his ordinances his arrests and apprehends one by one euery imagination that rebelliously puts it selfe forward in the opposition and exalts it selfe and will not leaue till it be brought in subiection so as the obedience of Christ may haue the vpper hand 6. The spirit of the Sonne discouers himselfe as a spirit of supplications by which the tender infant beginnes to learne with holy desires and secret incouragements to speake in Gods language and by prayer to make knowne his griefes and wants in the best manner vttering his affiance in God as a Father 7. The loue of God and of Christ and of Gods Word and Gods people is shed abroad in his heart and it now constraineth him to holy duties 8. The body growes dead in respect of sinne and the spirit is life for righteousnesse sake resolution more and more increasing both for reformation of sinne and new obedience 9. Hee findes himselfe proclaimed free the prison doore set open his fetters knocked off his wounds made by the law healing apace his debts paid and himselfe in a new world inioying a true lubile 10. Hee liues thence-forward by the faith of the Sonne of God for Saluation for Iustifica●ion and for preseruation 11. The heauenly dewes of spirituall ioyes often water and refresh his heart in the vse of the meanes with delightfull peace and tranquilitie in his heart and conscience Lastly in a holy couenanting with God his daily purposes and desires are to cleaue vnto God deuoting and consecrating himselfe and his vowed sacrifices vnto God in the mediation of Christ. Thirdly the benefits he hath by the inhabitation of CHRIST are such as these 1. GOD is in Christ reconciling him not imputing his sinnes 2. Christ is made vnto him Wisedome Sanctification Righteousnesse and Redemption 3. All the promises of Christ are to him Yea and Amen hauing the earnest giuen in the spirit and the same sealed by the same spirit 4. Hee is not destitute of any heauenly gifts but hath the seeds and beginnings of all sauing graces 5. The grace of Christ shall be sufficient against all temptations by the power of Christ that dwels in him and as his outward afflictions doe abound so shall the consolations of Christ abound also 6. Paul is his and Apollo is his yea all things are his as he is Christs hath his interest in all the means of saluation 7. God hath giuen him Christ how shall hee not with him giue him all other things also Finally eternall life is the gift of God in and with Iesus Christ For the fourth if you aske what you must doe when you finde Christ in your hearts I answere if you liue in the spirit walke in the spirit let olde things passe and all things be new for if you be in Christ Iesus you must be new Creatures the olde conuersation in times past will not now serue turne but the olde man with his deceiueable Iusts must be cast off Now thou must learne also to liue by faith and not by sence and carnall hopes as thou hast done For CHRIST keepes his residence in our hearts by faith for in that wee henceforth liue in the flesh wee must resolue to liue by the faith of the Sonne of God that liueth in vs being assured that in him are all the treasures of holinesse and happinesse And to this end thou must pray constantly to God that thou mayst be able to discerne the length bredth depth height of this loue and louing
euery man to import that the word hath not a particular quarrell at some one man but will finde out the sinnes of all men c. Wee see by experience that this is the sore in many mindes that eyther the Preacher should meddle with no body or not with such as they hee must not meddle with great men or not with Schollers and learned men c. In all wisdome These words may be vnderstood eyther of the subiect matter taught or of the instruments the Teachers or of the effect in the hearers For the first the word of God is well called wisedome eyther as it is the patterne or Image or resemblance of Gods euerlasting wisdome which from all eternitie in his counsell hee had conceiued or as it portrayeth out Christ who is the naturall wisedome of God or as it vnfoldeth the depths of Gods wise prouidence especially in his Church or comparatiuely with all the formes of Doctrine conceiued by the wisest of the Gentiles or any carnall men For the second these words may be referred to the Teachers and then the sence is they must teach in all wisdome They are called wise men and that they may teach in all wisdome first they must be sure they teach truth and not errours neither errors of Doctrine nor errours of fact It is a grieuous shame for Preachers out of the Pulpit of purpose to disgrace some kinde of men to report of them things vtterly vntrue especially to fayle often or vsually this way Secondly they must labour to expresse the power of the spirit as well as a sound forme of Doctrine Thirdly they must make vse of all opportunities and aduantages to worke vpon the people when a doore is opened To preach wisely is to preach seasonably Fourthly they cannot preach in the wisedome of God if they hunt after and effect that which the Apostle cals the wisedome of words or excellency of words Fiftly there is a speciall wisedome in fitting doctrine to the state of the heaters to giue euery one his owne portion Thirdly it may be said to be in all wisedome by effect in the hearers as being such a preaching as tends to worke true wisedome in the hearers as well as other graces a wisedome I say by which they vnderstand their owne way and denie their owne reason in the things of God becomming fooles that they may be wise and know their dayes of peace and accordingly gather in Summer euen in the seasons of Grace while it is yet called to day walking with the wise preferring spirituall things aboue all earthly as things that are truely excellent carefully watching ouer themselues and with all precisenesse or circumspection auoyding euen the lesser euils redeeming the time with all discretion labouring to auoid all occasions of iust offence and lastly considering and prouiding for their latter end Quest. But can all wisedome be attayned Ans. Hee saith all Wisedome eyther comparatiuely with the knowledges of the heathen or carnall men or else by all wisedome hee meaneth all necessary to saluation or else hee meaneth wisedome of all kindes though not perfect in euery kinde That wee may present euery man The hearers are said to be presented to God by their Teachers in diuers respects First as they gather them out of the world into the profession of the Faith of Christ. Secondly by framing and working vpon the hearts of their hearers fitting them for Christ euen in the presence of Christ in his ordinances Thirdly by forcing men through the strength of terrour or comfort to runne and present themselues to God Fourthly they may be said to doe it in respect of their prayers carrying the suites of the people vnto God Fiftly they shall present them at the day of Iudgement when euery Teacher shall say Here Lord I am with the Children thou hast giuen mee This should teach the people so to order themselues towards their Ministers that they might haue incouragement to goe to God either for them or with them To this purpose they should honour them maintaine them obey them shew their hearts and states to them c. And woe is vnto them that despise Gods Ministers or discourage them that hate their doctrine or shun their societie howsoeuer they account of them yet these are the men should haue made way for them to Christ they are of his Priuie Chamber and the dust of their feete shall witnesse against contemners yea the time shall come when they would be glad to haue them excuse them to Christ but it shall not be graunted And Ministers also may from hence both be comforted considering the honour Christ hath done them and instructed to looke carefully to their Flockes and to goe to God for them and by all meanes to carry themselues so as they that must once giue an account for their People Perfect The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not in the Text in some Copies but Stephanus hath it in and it is acknowledged of the Translators and Expositors both old and new and therefore perfection cannot be denyed onely the sence must be inquired into The faithfull are said to be perfect first comparatiuely with wicked men or the Gentiles vnconuerted Religion will make a man perfect in comparison of that which by nature man can attaine vnto secondly they may be said to be made perfect that is to want nothing that is absolutely necessary for saluation thirdly in righteousnesse there is perfection and so they shall be absolutely perfect at the day of Iudgement and are already perfect in respect of Iustification yea this word here vsed is giuen to the sanctification of the faithfull and that two wayes first as to be perfect notes nothing else but to be a strong man in Christ so Heb. 5. vlt. Secondly as to be vpright is accepted with God for perfection by the benefit of the Couenant of Grace and the Intercession of Christ Thus I thinke the very word is vsed in these places 1 Cor. 2.6 Phil. 3.15 Iames 1.17 Heb. 6.1.12.13 Thus there is perfection is Doctrine Heb. 6.1 In Faith Iames 2.22 In Hope 1 Pet. 1.13 In Loue 1 Iohn 4.18 Iohn 17.23 In Vnderstanding 1 Cor. 14.20 Quest. But who is a strong man in Christ or a perfect man as here Ans. First hee that is a strong man in Christ can forgiue his enemies and pray for them and doe good to them Mat. 5.48 Secondly hee doth finish his worke hee doth not beginne sleightly and worke for a spirt but perseuers The word vsed in that sence Iohn 17.4 Thirdly he doth hold a constant amitie and holy communion with Gods Children 1 Iohn 4.12 Iohn 17.23 Fourthly hee hath renounced the world denyed himselfe and consecrated his life to God Rom. 12.12 Fiftly he will not be carryed away with euery winde of Doctrine but will acknowledge and follow the truth with all constant vnmoueablenesse
feete or palme of sinne But certainely though ●his kinde of buriall be somewhat difficult yet it is the true buriall place of Kings the most noble funerall that can be Thus of the first effect The second is in the next words In whom ye are raised vp together Christ is said to raise men vp diuers waies 1. When he awaketh men out of their naturall Lithargie or spirituall sleepinesse and securitie in matters of religion thus Ephes. 5.14 2. When hee brings forth the minde of man out of the dungeons of ignorance and shewes ●hem the light Esay 60.1.2 3. When he cures men of discouragements and ●iscomforts vnder their crosses Psal. 41.10.6 4. When he recouers the Church from securitie or relapses either ordinary or extraordinarie Cant. 2.10.11 c. and 5.3.5 Pro. 24.15.16 5. When he incourageth men to holy duties Cant. 7.12 but principally there is a fourefold resurrection The first is out of desperate crosses Esay 26.19 The second is the lifting of men vp to some speciall callings in the Church Math. 11. The third is the resurrection of our bodies at the last day And the last is the resurrection of the soule vnto holy graces and duties this is called the first resurrection and is meant here in this place and Rom. 6.4 but most vsuallie wee say there is a twofold resurrection the one from the corruption of the flesh the other from the corruption of sinne this latter is here ment and this belongeth to viuification Now this first resurrection must be considered either in it selfe or in the vnion or relation of it In it selfe and so there is a double resurrection First the resurrection of graces secondly the resurrection of duties For the first there are certaine graces which are not in the heart of man by nature which by the mightie power of Christ are wrought in the hearts of such as are trulie conuerted and are actuallie the members of Christ As first a holy inquirie after God Hos. 3.5 Ier. 50.4 Secondly a holy wisedome in spirituall things Iam. 3.17 Thirdly a liuely 〈◊〉 in the fauour of God in Christ. Fourthly a holy delight and meditation in the word of God Psal. 119.10.11.128 and 27.4 Fiftly a liuely hope of an eternall inheritance 1. Pet. 1.3 Sixtly a holy loue of Gods children 1. Ioh. 3.14 such as is required Rom. 12.9.10.11 Seuenthly godly sorrow for sinne 2. Cor. 7.10 Eightly vnspeakable and glorious ioy euen in affliction Rom. 5.2 1. Pet. 1.7.8 Ninthly a holy contempt of the world and sinne and sinnefull persons Psal. 15.4 1. Ioh. 2.19 Tenthly a holy reuerence and feare of God and his goodnesse Hos. 3.5 Eleuenthly a holy zeale and feruencie of affections especially in the seruice and worship of God Twelfthly a holy loue euen of enemies And lastly a holy desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ. Now for the effecting of these the spirit of Christ is called in respect of his wonderfull working the spirit of God and of glory the spirit of power of loue and of a sound minde The spirit of praier or deprecations And the spirit of reuelation Thus of resurrection of graces Now concerning resurrection of duties We must know that there are diuers duties which the naturall man will neuer be brought vnto in which lieth the very power of godlinesse and the experience of all sound and sauing consolation Now these duties may bee three waies considered 1. As they respect holy life in generall 2. As they respect pietie to God 3. As they respect righteousnesse to men For the first there are foure things wherein the liues of Gods children differ from all others 1. In the manner 2. In the matter 3. In the meanes 4. In the ends of holy life For the manner 3. Things are eminent 1. That they a●e deuoted and consecrated to holinesse 2. That they delight and loue to be Gods seruants 3. That they haue their conuersation in simplicitie and godly purenesse For the matter they haue respect to all Gods commandements and do indeuour after inward holinesse as well as outward besides they liue by faith in some measure which is a way of holinesse altogether vnknowne in the practise of wicked men And for the meanes of holinesse the godly haue a recourse to athreefold fountaine of sanctitie with such a sinceritie and constancie as no wicked man can attaine it viz. the Word Praier and the Sabbath And for the end of their obedience their praise is of God and not of men hauing a maine respect alwaies to exercise themselues so as they may haue a conscience voide of offence towards God or towards men Thus of holinesse of life in generall Now in respect of pietie to God it is a very resurrection through the power of Christ to bring a man to acknowledge God and his truth and glory against reason profite or pleasure to make a man walke with God setting the Lord alwaies before him to bring the will of man to a holy subiection to Gods will in crosses temptations wants c. But especially to create in man that sinceritie of worshipping God in spirit and truth without hipocrisie And as for righteousnesse in that part of it that concernes either mens owne soules or the soules of others how is all the vnregenerate mankinde dead it is the worke of a godly man only to serue the brethren by loue Only the members of Christ can in their calling denie profit and pleasure and make the particular calling serue the generall but especially in the combat against concupiscence only the godlie doe make conscience of it And howsoeuer in the matter of holy duties there are strange imperfections in the very godly yet their desire prayer purpose and indeuour is to approue themselues to God herein and they do attaine to it in some comfortable beginnings and they go on with a holy increase both of strength and desire Whereas it is euident by diuers Scriptures that wicked men are dead men in the former respects as would appeare if we should examine particularly for they seeke not God They respect not the word of God aright Nor can they loue the brethren Though they be smitten yet they will not sorrow after God And for the most part they are lukewarme without true zeale Their mindes are couered with a vaile They are without hope Neither haue all these men faith And for the want of holy duties It vsually seems euill vnto them to serue the Lord. They are strangers from the life of God They call not vpon the name of God with a pure heart neither take they heede of Gods sabbaths But it were too long to runne to particulars in matters of dutie seeing the scripture euery where paints out the ill liues of all wicked men In whom Doctr. The vertue by which Christians are raised is from Christ.
is brought vnto them in the reuelation of Iesus Christ And since they are in so happie an estate they should alwaies reioice and let their moderation of minde be knowne to all men being in nothing carefull but in all things making request vnto God with praiers and supplications and giuing of thanks so should the peace of God that passeth all vnderstanding keepe their hearts and mindes And for our carriage towards others first we should for euer in all places acknowledge such as are borne againe of God Secondly we should exhort one an other and prouoke one another to loue and goodworkes and not forsake the fellowship of the Saints praying one for another that God would fulfill the good pleasure of his will and the worke of our faith with power that wee might abound in loue and be established in holinesse before God in the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ with all the saints Thus of our quickning only we may obserue that he saith we are quickned together with him which is true diuers waies men are quickned together 〈◊〉 Christ 1. Because we are quickned aswell as he 2. Because being quickned we are vnited vnto him 3. Because we are quickned by the same spirit ●nd power that raised him from the dead All which may increase our consolation in this gratious worke and confirme vs vnto the end Forgiuing you all your trespasses First for the meaning of the words the word forgiuing as it is in the originall signifieth to acquit them gratis and as a free gift of his grace to send them the newes of their pardon the word rendred trespasses vsually is vnderstood of actuall sins But yet we must not thinke that originall sin is not forg●●en for either it is a Senecdoche and so one sort of sinnes is named in steede of all or else he speakes according to the feeling of many of the godly who 〈◊〉 after forgiuenes are maruellously troubled with the flesh and the wicked ●●oanesse to daily sinnes But for the matter it selfe we may here note 1. That God doth certainly forgiue men their sinnes when he giues them ●●pentance and conuerts them by his word 2. That where God forgiues our sinnes he heales our natures too therefore quickning and forgiuing are here ioyned together and herein Gods pardons differs from all the pardons of Kings Men may forgiue the treason or fellony but they cannot giue a nature that will offend no more but now it God forgiue a man he will certainely giue his good spirit to mend his nature and clense him from his sinne 3 That howsoeuer iustification go before sanctification yet it is sanctification first appeares therefore quickning first named 4. That it is a singular happinesse to obtaine of God the forgiuenesse of our sinnes 5. That if we were vsed according to our deserts God must neuer forgiue vs it is his free grace The vse of all may be first for great reproofe of the generall carelessenes of the most men that will take no paines at all to get the pardon of their sinnes but wholie neglect the seeking of the assurance of it Now this monstrous neglect of so admirable a benefit comes first from ignorance men know not their wofull miserie in respect of their sinnes 2. From the hardnesse of mans heart and their hearts in this point of neglect of remission of sinnes are hardened both by the effectuall working of Satan and by the example of the car●l●sse multitude and by the entertainment of false opinions about it as that it need not be sought or cannot bee knowne or hereafter will be time ●nough to inquire or else men are conceited in false acquittances either they rest in this that Christ died for them or that God makes promises of forgiuenesse in scripture or that their ciuill course of life or their workes of mercie or pie●ie will make God amends c. Againe this neglect ariseth from the forgetfulnesse of mans latter end if men knew the time of the day of the Lord they would get their pardon confirmed if it were possible least it should come vpon them vnawares Lastly this comes from the loue of sinne men are loath to leaue their sinnes and therefore not carefull to seeke forgiuenesse of them 2 Here is a confutation of merit of workes for if we pay the debt then it is not forgiuen vs and if it be forgiuen vs then certainly we pay it not besides the word notes that it is freely done as hath been shewed before 3 Shall we not be stirred vp to seeke forgiuenes of sinnes Quest. What should we doe that we might be confirmed in the assurance to obtaine forgiuenesse of sinnes Answ. 1. Thou must forgiue men their trespasses 2. Thou must acknowledge thy sinnes 3. Thou must pray and get others to pray for the forgiuenesse of thy sinnes 4. Thou must often receiue the sacrament of the Lords supper for this is Gods seale of forgiuenesse of sins 5. Thou must bewaile thy sinnes and begge the witnesse of the spirit of adoption in the intercession of Iesus Christ till those vnspeakable ioyes of the holy Ghost fall vpon thee and seale thee vp vnto the day of redemption And thus farre of the thirtenth verse VERS 14. Blotting out the hand-writing of ordinances that was against vs which was contrary to vs and tooke it out of the way nailing it to his crosse This Verse and the next containe the seuenth reason of the dehortation it is laid downe in this verse and amplified in the next The argument may stand thus If the ceremonies were a Chyrographe or hand-writing against vs when they were in force and if now Christ haue cancelled that writing then we ought not to vse them againe but such they were for they were a hand-writing against vs and Christ hath remoued them by fastening them vpon the crosse therefore we ought not to reuiue them againe or thus it the debt be paid and the obligation cancelled then is it a fond course to cause the obligation wilfullie to be of force againe Hand-writing This hand-writing is by diuers diuersly referred for some thinke it is to be referred to the couenant with Adam all mankinde in him was bound to God this obligation he brake and so the forfeiture lay still vpon our necks till Christ paid the debt and cancelled the obligation Some referre it to the law of Moses in generall and say the people did binde themselues vnto it Exod. 14 by the rites there vsed This bond was forfeited by the Iewes and lay vpon them Some referre it to the morrall law in speciall and therein we did enter into bond which was called the couenant of works the rigor and curse of this law lieth vpon all mankinde and when God sues out this bond men are carried to prison euen to the prison of hell Some referre it to the conscience of men and say that an euill conscience is a
is inuocation praying to them which likewise is contrary to scripture for how shall we call on them on whom we haue not beleeued and we are exhorted to go boldly to the throne of grace with the help of our high Priest to obteine mercie and finde grace to helpe in time of need for Christ is the propitiation for the sinnes of the whole world why then should we giue his glory to any other and inuocation is a part of the forbidden worship of Angells as well as adoration In humblenes of minde It was the practise of Satan and pretence of false Teachers to thrust in this corruption of Angell-worship vnder this colour that it tended to keep men in humilitie and to make men to know their duties to the great maiestie of God and to acknowledge their gratitude to the Angells for their seruice this hath been the deuills wont to hide foule sins vnder faire pretences and vice vnder the colours of vertue This may serue notably for the confutation of the Papists about their Saint and Angell-worship for is not this their smoothest pretence to tell vs by comparison that men will not goe to great Princes directly with their suites but will vse the mediation of some Courtiers and so they say they must doe to God This you see was the old deceit in the primitiue Church and therfore worthily we may say to the people let none of the popish rabble defraud you through humblenes of minde Againe is the deuill ashamed to shew sinne in his owne colours doth he maske it vnder the colour of virtue Then where shall those monsters appeare that declare their sinnes as Sodom and are not ashamed of open villanies and filthinesse Such are they that will constantly to the alehouse and neuer be ashamed of it such are our damned swearers such are those filthy persons that know they are knowne to liue in whoredome and yet neuer blush at it nor learne to repent such are these in this Citie that liue in open contention who care not against apparant right to maintaine continuall suits and wranglings though they know all men detest almost the very sight of them for their wicked profanesse and vniust contentions yea though the hand of God be apparantly vpon them and they know not how soone the Lord may turne them into hell Such also are the open and wilfull Sabbath breakers and many more of all sorts of presumptuous offenders Againe if vice masked in virtues colours can so please and allure men how much should virtue it selfe rauish vs If counterfeit humilitie can be so plausible how should true humilitie winne to the admiration and imitation of it Lastly this may warne men to auoide counterfeit gestures and all pretended insinuating shewes of deuotion such as are open lifting vp of the eyes to heauen sighing and all pretended tricks that are vsed onely to pretend what is not And thus of their hypocrisie their ignorance followes Aduancing themselues in things they neuer saw Two things are here to be noted First Their ignorance in things they neuer saw And secondly vaine-glorious selfe-liking which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expresseth For the first there are some things cannot be seene with mortall eyes while we are on earth as the nature of God Angells and what is done in heauen 2. There are some things we ought not to see though we might therefore he prayed Lord turne away mine eyes from seeing vanitie 3. There are some things we may and ought to see as the glory of God in his works 4. There are some things we may and so ought to see as it is a great curse if we see them not as the fauour of God and spirituall things in respect of which to be blinded in heart is a miserable iudgment of the first sort are the things done in heauen There is a contrary waywardnes in the nature of wicked men somtimes men are wilfull and will not be perswaded euen in the things which yet they see sometimes men are stiffe hearted and will not be remoued in opinions about things which they neuer saw and so here Ignorance is of diuers kindes There is a naturall ignorance and that is of two sorts For there is an ignorance of meere negation and so Christ knew not the day of iudgment and so it is no sinne in an Husbandman if he be ignorant of Astronomie or Phisicke c. There is a naturall ignorance which is of corrupt disposition as to be blinde in our iudgments in spirituall things from our birth this is sinfull but not here ment There is a profitable ignorance and that is likewise of two sorts For it is either profitable absolutely and simply or but only in some respects It had been simply profitable and good for the Iewes if they had neuer knowne the fashions of the Gentiles so it had been good for Sampson if he had neuer knowne Dalilah But it had been profitable for the Pharisies but in some respects not to haue seene or to haue had so much knowledge So the Apostle Peter saith it had been good for Apostataes if they had neuer knowne the way of truth c. There is a willing ignorance and that is of two sorts of frailtie or of presumption Of frailtie when men neglect the meanes by which they should know either in part or in some respects Thus men faile that see a wide doore set open for comfort and direction and yet through carelesnes or willing slacknes neglect great riches of knowledge which might haue been attained if they had made vse of oportunities Presumptuous ignorance is when men not wittingly only but wilfully contemne true knowledge They will none of the knowledge of Gods waies Presumptuous ignorance is likewise of two sorts 1. When men refuse to know Gods reuealed will needfull to their saluation 2. When men wilfully imbrace fancies and superstitions in opinion especially in such things as they neither doe nor can vnderstand and such is the ignorance here condemned But the maine doctrine is That it is a great sinne and a hatefull vice to be rash and aduenturous to venture vpon opinions in matters of Religion either that concerne worship or practice where men are not first well informed in iudgment by true grounds of knowledge Hence men are aduised to take heed how they heare and to try the spirits and to be wise to sobrietie and to beware of fables This condemnes the strange coyning of opinions without all warrant of the word in the Papists that so confidently tell vs of the roomes in hell and of the Queene of heauen and how many orders there be of Angells c. And withall it may restraine such as professe the feare of God and reformation of life to be well aduised in their opinions and not pitch resolutely vpon opinions in things the word doth not warrant Blinde zeale hath no more allowance then superstition hath to coyne
of hauing is a prodigious madnesse Thirdly the hauing of all these things makes not a wise man bet●er then a foole what wants a poore man if he know how to carrie himselfe with the wise Fourthly all cannot make thee cease to be mortall For it is knowen man cannot striue with him that is stronger than he In the seauenth Chapter there is this reason A man may spend all his daies before he can come soundly to know after many trialls what is the best vse to put these earthly things to And for honor in the eighth Chapter three things are worthie noting First a man is not Lord of his owne spirit to keepe himselfe aliue in his honor Secondly many men rule to their owne ruine Thirdly men after death are quickly forgotten They that come backe from the holy place remembreth them not long Yea a man may be quickly forgotten in the City where he hath done right And in the ninth Chapter two reasons more are added First no man can know the loue or hatred of God by these things Secondly they are not gotten alwaies by helpe of meanes For the race is not alwaies to the swift nor the battell to the strong nor riches to men of vnderstanding nor fauor to the wise which makes the Atheist and Epicure conclude that time and chance commeth to all things The summe of all that Salomon can say is vanity of vanities all is vanity And now that we haue heard Solomon let vs in the next place heare a greater than Salomon Our Sauiour Christ in the sixt of Mathew diuides the care of earthlie things into two sorts For either men are greedily transported with the desire of getting treasures that is abundance and superfluities or else they toile their hearts with distrustfull and distracting cares about necessaries as what they shall eat and what they shall put on From the first kind of care he disswades with foure reasons First all treasures are subiect either to vanity or violence Either the moth will eat them or the theefe will steale them Secondly these things bewitch and steale away mens hearts Thirdly the minding of these things darkneth the eie of the soule with greater darknesse then can be exprest Fourthly a man cannot serue God and riches From the second kind of care he dehorts with eight reasons First the life is more worth then meat and the body than raiment And if the lord haue giuen the greater why should he not be trusted for the lesse Secondly God prouideth for the very foules that haue not such meanes as man hath and will he not prouide for man Thirdly all thy care will not adde one cubit to thy stature but if thou wouldst swelt thy heart out t is God only must increase thy strength or health Fourthly this care is a signe of little faith Fiftly t is for Gentiles that know not God nor the couenant of his grace and mercy in Christ to seeke after these things T is a grosse shame for any Christian to be so heathenish Sixtly doth not your heauenly father know all that you need If he be a father hath he not will and if he be in heauen hath he not power to helpe Seuenthly you haue a flat promise that if you seeke the kingdome of heauen and the righteousnesse thereof which should take vp your chiefest care all these things without such carking so farre as is needfull shall be cast vpon you Lastly hath not euery day his euill and is not the griefe of the day great enough why then dost thou distract thy selfe for to morrow assure thy selfe the time to come will afford thee matter of griefe and trouble enough thou needst not disquiet thy selfe before hand The consideration of all this as it may be a comfort against all wants and crosses about these base earthly things so it may greatly reproue those that burie their talents in this earth that is spend al their gifts about earthly maters But especially we may hence learne diuerse lessons And first since we haue heard Salomons opinion after long discourse that all is vanity we should learne of the same Salomon therefore to feare God and keepe his commandements for this is the whole of man and the end of all Secondly let the place of the sanctuarie where we may get the best things for our soules be as glorious throne exalted Thirdly let vs vse this world as if we vsed it not Let them that reioice be as if they reioiced not and they that weepe as if they wept not and they that buy as though they possessed not Fourthly if the lord giue vs but a little portion in these things let vs esteem his mercy and liue with contentednesse resoluing that better is a handfull with quietnesse then two handfulls with labour and vexation of spirit And fiftly we may hence be confirmed to take the more liberty to vse these earthly things for our owne ioy and refreshing they are none of the things the Lord would haue vs with such a doe keepe but he allowes vs To eat and drinke and delight our selues with the profit of our labours Lastly we should improue them and vse them as meanes to doe what good we can with them in this life I know saith the wise man there is nothing good in them but to reioice and do good in his life And to this end we shold cast our bread euen vpon the waters for after many daies we may find it and giue our portion to seauen and also to eight The best vse of these riches is to be rich in doing good with them Thus of the illustration The confirmation followes Vers. 3. For ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God In this verse and the next the exhortation is confirmed by two motiues The one taken from the condition of the faithfull in this world the other taken from the consideration of their estate in the reuelation of the glory of Christ in the last day The first is in this verse the later in the next verse There are two things in the condition of the faithfull on earth which should make them little to mind earthly things or desire to continue long in the world First that in respect of distresses they are as dead men while they liue Secondly that the happinesse they haue which is the life of their liues doth not appeare but is hid with God in Christ. For ye are dead The faithfull are dead three waies while they liue For first they are dead to sinne in respect of mortification Secondly they are dead to the law by the body of Christ in respect of iustification so as now the faithfull doe no longer waite vpon the law for righteousnesse but vpon a second marriage they haue it from him that was raised from the dead for them
he was without forme and despised among men Thirdly his life was hid in the graue Fourthly it was hid in respect of the horrors he felt in his soule the Lord as it were hiding his louing countenance from him for the time Fiftly his glory in Heauen is hid from the world and the Saints on earth haue but a glimpse of it All this may comfort vs seeing nothing can befall vs but what hath befallen our head and if the world will not acknowledge our glory and the beauty of the profession of sincerity it matters not it could not see the excellency of Christ when he was on earth In God our life is hid in God either in respect of obiect because it principally consists in the vision of God or causally as God is the first cause to beget it and still to preserue it or els with Christ in God that is with Christ who incomprehensibly rests in the bosome of the Father Or lastly in God that is apud Deum in the power of God to dispose of it at his pleasure which should comfort vs seeing none hath power ouer our life but God and teach vs to commend our spirits into his hands Ver. 4. When Christ who is our life shall appeare then shall yee also appeare with him in glory These words containe the second motiue to perswade to the meditation of heauenly things if men would consider of the certaine and glorious appearance of the Lord Iesus Christ when hee shall come to take account of all the actions of all men and put an end to all the earthly felicities which man hath with so many inuentions sought and withall but thinke how vnauailable all earthly things will be at that day either to deliuer from the terror of the Iudgement or the horror of the euerlasting misery will certainely follow if men bee not more carefull to prouide for their soules beforehand by following the study of better things but especially if men would consider the great gaine and profit that godlinesse at that day will bring and the incomparable glory that all heauenly minded Christians shall then bee exalted vnto The thought of these things daily and truely layd vnto mens hearts would much excite and stirre vp to a constant care of preparing our selues against that day and would greatly weane vs from the cares and delights in these transitory and earthly things heere below that will so little auaile the owners in they day of death and will be of so little vse in that immortall estate vnto which after this Iudgement the godly shall be translated So that these words offer two things to be intreated of First the glorious appearance of Christ. Secondly the glorious appearance of the Christian in the day of Christ. But before I enter vpon the particular and full discourse of those two glorious appearances some things may be briefly and generally noted 1 That the knowledge of those last things is not a curious or vnprofitable knowledge but contrariwise ought to be searched after as exceeding vsefull in the life of man 2 That the doctrine of the glory of Christ and Christians in that last day is now but little knowen or discerned and that the word appeare imports so as the fulnesse of Christs Maiesty or of the Christians glory will not appeare till the very Iudgement day the better sort know but in part and the worser sort are so blinded by the diuell and besotted with sensuality and the loue of earthly things and withall are so conscious to themselues of the euils they are guilty of that they haue no desire to discerne or to be taught to know the doctrine of Christs comming 3 Those words which is 〈◊〉 yo● are not to bee altogether passed ouer they plainely a●●irme that Christ is our life and this is an honor that the Lord challengeth to himselfe and therefore as he would be acknowledged to bee the way and the truth so also he addeth I am the life and to to this end hee came that men in him might haue life And with great reason is Christ sayd to be our life for he formed vs at first when we were not and quickned vs when we were dead and hath prouided a better life for vs and doth preserue vs vnto eternall life and daily renew life and power in the hearts of his people and will raise our bodies at the last day The consideration heereof may both teach vs and trie vs it may teach vs as to acknowledge that we haue receiued life from Christ so to dedicate what remaineth of our life to the honour and seruice of him that is the Authour and sole Lord of our liues and withall to runne vnto him for the daily preseruation and renuing of life and louelinesse in vs. And it may trie too For till we can trulie say out of feeling and experience Christ is the life of our liues we shall hardly finde reason of comfortable hope in our appearance before him at the last day And they onely may truely professe that Christ is their life that first can liue by the faith of Christ accounting themselues to haue enough if they may see comfort in Gods promises made in Christ and feele the ioyfull fruits of Christs fauour and presence howsoeuer it goe with them for outward things Secondly that doe continually sacrifice and deuote vnto Christ their best desires and endeauours and that with resolution to cleaue to his seruice all the dayes of their life And thirdly that can bewaile his absence or displeasure as the most bitter crosse so as they could feele and out of affection say of such times and such a condition that the true life of their life was absent or remooued from them Now I come to the appearance of Christ. I haue not heere to doe with the appearance of Christ as it is considered in the fore ordination of God before the foundation of the world but of the accomplishment of it and so christs appearance is of diuerse kindes For first he hath appeared vnto the whole world as the true light that made the world and lightneth euery man that commeth into the world and thus he appeared in the light of nature Secondly he appeares to the whole Church consisting both of good and bad by the genenerall light of doctrine and Scripture but many receiue not his testimony Thirdly he hath appeared corporally in the daies of his flesh once in the end of the world to put away sinne by the sacrifice of himselfe and to dissolue the worke of the diuell then was fulfilled that great mystery God was manifested in the flesh Fourthly he hath and doth daily appeare in the hearts of all the faithfull by the manifestation of the spirit of grace whereby hee doth not onely shine but also dwell in them Fiftly he hath and doth appeare in the day of death by the
ministery of his angels to translate the blessed soules to their place of peace rest and ioy And lastly hee shall appeare in the end of the world in glorious Maiesty to iudge all men and Angels and this is the appearance heere mentioned There is noted to be a threefold Iudgement The first Iudgement and that was accomplished on man and Angels at their first fall then there is a middle Iudgement and so God iudgeth the wicked and the righteous euery day And there is a last Iudgement and that is this Iudgement about which Christ is heere sayd to appeare The doctrine of the last Iudgement is in a manner onely to bee found in the Church They were darke and vncertaine things the Philosopher could see by the light of nature And the Lords messengers haue in all ages from the first beginning till now mightily vrged the terror of this day to awaken the secure worlde Henoch prophesied of it so did Moses and Dauid and Solomon and Daniel and Ioel 〈◊〉 ●●lachie so did Christ himselfe and Paul and Peter and Iohn and Iude Neither is the assurance of the Iudgement to come waranted by the words of Gods seruants onely but the Lord hath left many works of his owne as pledges that he will once at length for all iudge the whole world for sin The drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the destruction of Ierusalem were assured foretokens that the Lord would not put vp the infinite iniquities of the world but will most seuerely punish for sinne the pleading of the conscience foretels a iudgement to come the sentence of death pronounced in Paradise and renewed with such terror on Sinay did euidently assure that God meant to call men to an account The lesser Iudgements in this life are but foretypes of that last and greatest Iudgement to come And lastly the dragging of men out of the world by death is nothing else but an Alarum to Iudgement Yet as there is a necessary vse of the knowledge of this dreadfull and glorious doctrine So there is a restraint to be layd vppon vs this is one of the things wherein we must be wise to sobriety We must represse the itching of our eares and be content to be ignorant of what is not reuealed this is a doctrine to be inquired into more for vse of life then to feede the curiosity of contemplation Concerning the Iudgement to come if any aske Who shall iudge I answer that in respect of authority the whole trinity shall Iudge but in respect of the execution of that Authority Christ onely shall iudge and that as man it is true that the Apostles and the Saints are sayd to iudge the tribes of Israel and the world but they ony iudge as assessors that is they shall sit as it were on the bench with our Sauiour Christ when he iudgeth And if any aske in the second place Whom Christ shall iudge I answer hee shall iudge the euill Angels for they are reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day He shall iudge also the man of sinne euen the great Antichrist that hath made such hauocke in the Church and seduced the nations with the wine of his fornications euen him shall he consume with the brightnesse of his comming He shall iudge also all reprobates men women and children of all ages nations and conditions for though he shall not know them in respect of approbation yet he shall iudge them and make them vnderstand he knew their transgressions Further he shall iudge the very Elect though it shall be with a different Iudgement For we must all appeare before the tribunall seat of Christ that euery one may receiue the things which are done in his body Lastly in some sence it may be sayd he shall iudge the whole world for the heauens and the earth that now are are kept by the word of God reserued vnto fire against the day of condemnation and of the destruction of vngodly men and the Apostle Paul sayth that the feruent desire of the creature made subiect to vanity by man waiteth for this reuelation of the sonnes of God at the last iudgement for they are subdued vnder hope and shall at that day by the sentence of Christ be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Thirdly if any aske where this iudgement shall be I answer that seeing the Lord hath not determined it it is curious to enquire and more curious to assigne the very place as some haue that wrote it should be in the valley of Iehoshaphat or as others would haue it on Mount Sion whence he ascended This we know it shall bee neere the earth in the clouds of Heauen where Christs throne shall be set and further then this we need not enquire There haue beene also many opinions about the time when it should be Some thought that as the world was sixe dayes in creating and then the Sabaoth of rest came So the world should last 6000. yeares reckoning a 1000. yeares as one day and then should come the eternall Saboath Others distribute the times thus 2000. yeere before the Law 2000. yeeres vnder the law and 2000. yeers after the law and then comes the iudgement Others thought the world would last after Christ so long as it was to the flood from the creation and that was as they say 1656. yeers Others thought it should be as long to the iudgement after Christ as it was from Moses to Christ and that should be 1582. yeers this experience hath proued false Other say Christ liued 33. yeeres and the world should continue for 33. Iubilies after Christ. What can be said of all or the most of these opinions and such like but euen this that they are the blind fancies of men For is there not a plaine restraint laid vpon men in this question when the Lord Iesus said it is not for you to know the times and seasons which the father hath put in his owne power And of that day and hower knoweth no man no not the Angells of heauen but my father only And the Euangelist S. Marke addeth that the sonne of man himselfe knoweth not the day and hower Not that simply Christ is ignorant of the time of the last iudgement but he was said not to know because he kept it from our knowledge Or else he knew it not as he was man or rather in his estate of humiliation and in his humane nature he did not precisely know it But that hinders not but that in his estate of exaltation as he is now in heauen and hath all power and iudgement committed vnto him he may and doth fully vnderstand it But letting these things passe the principall things for vs to be informed in is concerning the
day of iudgement and this last appearance of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ are these three First the signes of his comming Secondly how or the forme of the iudgement it selfe when he doth come And lastly the vse we should in the meane while make of the doctrine of the last iudgement For our better remembrance the signes of Christs comming to iudgement may be briefly reduced into this Catalogue Some signes goe before and are fulfilled before he appeare Some signes are conioined with his appearing The signes going before are more remote or more neere The more remote signes are these First the vniuersall preaching of the Gospell to all nations Gentiles as well as Iewes Before the end come saith our Sauiour This Gospell of the kingdome shall be preached throughout the whole world for a witnesse to all nations Secondly most cruell persecution Euen such tribulation as was not from the beginning of the world Thirdly a generall falling away or apostasie of the Churches in Antichrist Fourthly warres and rumors of warres famine pestilence and earthquakes in diuerse places Fiftly false Prophets and false Christs which shall deceiue many The signes more neere are First the preaching againe of the euerlasting Gospell Secondly the detection and fall of Antichrist and the spirituall Babell Thirdly the calling of the Iewes after the fulnesse of the Gentiles is come in Fourthly coldnesse and security in the world as in the daies of Noah Fiftly the shaking of the powers of heauen the darkning of the Sunne and Moone and the falling of the starres c The signes conioined are especially two First the wailing of all the kindreds of the earth Secondly the signe of the sonne of man Which what it shall be I cannot describe And thus we are come to the very time and execution of the iudgement And therein consider First the preparation Secondly the iudgement it selfe Thirdly the consequents of the iudgement The preparation is two fold First of the Iudge Secondly of the iudged Vnto the preparation of the Iudge may be reserred these things First his commission or that singular power giuen him of the father to execute iudgement vpon all the world And this shall be then made manifest to all men Secondly the cloathing of the humane nature with a most peculiar and vnsearchable maiesty and glory most liuely expressing and resembling the forme and brightnesse of the father Thirdly the attendance of thousand thousands of holy Angels in the perfections of their splendor Fourthly thē choice of a place in the clouds of heauen where he will sit Fiftly the erecting of a most glorious white throne which what it shall be who can vtter yet without question it shall visibly then appeare And thus of the preparation of the Iudge The Iudged shall be prepared foure wai●● First by citation Secondly by resurrection Thirdly by collection Fourthly by separation First they shall be cited to appeare The word is three times cited First by the Prophets and fathers before Christ. Secondly by the Apostles and ministers of the Gospell since Christ. And the last summons is this here meant which shall be performed by a shoute from heauen and the voice of the last trumpe And this shall be the voice of Christ the Archangell of God and ministred by Angells For that it shall be Christs voice is plaine the dead shall heare his voice as he saith in Iohn And the Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a shoute with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpe of God That the ministery of Angells shall be vsed is manifest by the Euangelist S. Matthew who reporteth Christs words thus And he shall send his Angells with a great sound of a trumpet Secondly vpon this voice shall a resurrection follow which may bee two waies considered First euery man in his owne body whether he hath done good or euill shall reuiue and rise vp out of the graue or other places of the earth or sea or aire without any losse of any part that so euery man may in his very body receiue what he hath done whether good or euill Secondly the liuing shall be all changed in a moment in the twinckling of an eie at the last trumpet And this change shall be in stead of death and a kind of resurrection Not a change of substance but of qualities Our corruptible shall put on incorruption Thirdly then shall the Angells gather and collect and bring into one place from the foure winds of heauen that is from all the foure parts of the world all that are quicke or dead now raised or changed elect or reprobate and such is the●r power that they will be able to driue in the mightiest wickedest vnwillingest yea though they were neuer so many millions of them Lastly when they are thus brought together there shal be made a separation For the sheepe Gods elect shall all be put on Christs right hand And the reprobate or goates shall be compelled to his left hand And thus of the preparation The iudgement it selfe followeth In the iudgement it selfe I consider three things First by what law man shall be tried and iudged Secondly by what euidence Thirdly what the sentence shall be For the first the Gentiles shall be iudged by the law of nature The vnbeleeuing Christians in the visible Church shall be iudged by the word or law writ or preached to them According to that of the Apostle they that haue sinned without the law shall perish without the law and they that haue sinned vnder the law shall be iudged by the law And our sauiour saith He that refuseth me and receiueth not my words hath one that iudgeth him the word that I haue spoken it shall iudge him in the last day And the faithfull shall be iudged by the Gospell euen by all those comforts and promises contained in or belonging to the couenant of grace applied to them in this life and must fully then bee confirmed and accomplished For the sentence at the last day shall be but a more manifest declaration of that iudgement the Lord in this life most an end by his word hath past vpon man For the second the euidence shall be giuen in principally by the opening of three bookes The one is the booke of conscience and the other the booke of life and the third the booke of Gods remembrance The booke of conscience is that word which is kept within euery man of all sorts of actions And that conscience may at that day giue in fuller euidence it is certaine that after the resurrection it shall be almost infinitely extended by the power of God to expresse this last testimony both in the good and in the euill The booke of life is Gods sacred and eternall record of all those persons that
to the sort or kinde of all creatures and that shall be done to the creatures then found in their seuerall sorts The fourth consequent of the Judgement shall be the possession of the glory of Christians appointed by the sentence of the Iudge but of this afterwards in the end of this verse The fift consequent of Iudgement shall be the deliuering vp of the Kingdome to the Father and so the laying downe of Christs office For when Christ hath finally and fully subdued Sathan death and wicked men and hath fully reconciled the elect to God then will there be no word of any such gouernement in Heauen as was on earth He shall not neede any longer to rule them either by ciuill Magistrates or by his need and discipline or by any other way which onely did agree to the times of the Churches warfare and pilgrimage but he shall neuer cease to liue and triumph with them in all Perfections of happy contentment and glory Thus of the consequents of Iudgement And thus also of the doctrine of Christs last appearance The vses follow The consideration of the doctrine of the last Iudgement may serue for three principall vses First for terrour Secondly for comfort Thirdly for instruction First this is iustly a wonderfull terrible doctrine to wicked men that heape vp wrath against this day of wrath and by their wilfull impenitency prouoke this glorious Iudge How can it but be terrible when the holy Ghost giues warning that the Lord Iesus will then shew himselfe from Heauen with his mighty Angels in flaming fire to render vengeance on all those that knowe not God and haue not obeyed the Gospell How can it bee but terrible when wicked men shall be punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power how can it but be terrible when they shall feele their conscience exquisitly griping them and gnawing vpon them and when they shall see the diuels to torment them and hell to deuoure them when they shall see the world burning about them and the good Angels forcing them away and all both men and Angels applauding their Iudgement and knowing all their sinnes they must not thinke that the Iudge will deale then as he doth now Now he iudgeth them secretly euery day but it is many times insensibly or with lesser plagues but then hee will most openly poure vpon them the full vials of his wrath Heere they are iudged that they may be amended but there their iudgement shall be that they may be confounded for there will be no place of repentance Deceiue not thy selfe Christ will not come the second time as he came the first he came then to be iudged but now to iudge he shall then be seene with terror that was before looked vpon with contempt he shewed his patience in his first comming but now he will shew his power he appeared then in the form of a seruant but now he will appeare in the forme of a King greater then all kings Then hee professed not to iudge any man but now hee proclaimeth hee will iudge all men It was commonly thought if any man saw God he should die alas alas how then shall these wofull wretches doe that must see him in the vnutterable fiercenesse of his irefull indignation if the powers of heauen shall be shaken at his pleasure oh how shall the miserable heart of the guilty sinner be rent into a 1000. peeces with vnmedicinable sorrowes if Foelix tremble to heare tell of iudgement what will poore Foelix doe when he must feele iudgment both in the sentence and execution if the word of Christ on earth had such power as it had in the garden to strike stubborne hearted men to the earth what power thinke we will it haue when he speakes as the Lord from Heauen When Ezechiel Daniel and the Apostle Iohn and others sawe but one Angell in a lesser manifestation of his glorie comming as a Messenger of good tydings they fall downe and are full of singular feare if the sight of one Angell bee so terrible what will the sight of all the thousand thousands of Angels be especially when they come clothed with all their brightnes of glory and if good men that had good consciences were so frighted what shall become of euill men with their euill consciences and if the messengers of good tydings doe so amaze how shall the executioners of a most terrible sentence compasse them about with confusion both of face and heart if the drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the opening of the earth to swallow vp Dathan and Abiram and such like iudgments haue so much horrour in them how then can any tongue expresse or heart now conceiue the horror of this day when all the millions of wicked men shall be deliuered vp to those eternall and remedilesse torments if it bee such a shame to doe pennance for one fault in one congregation where men will pray for the offendour What a shame will it be when all thy faults shall be discouered before all the whole world without all hope of pitty or helpe Nor is it possible for them to escape this fearful Iudgement the Iudge will not be vnconstant nor will he take reward he will not be ouerlayd with confusion of businesses he will no way be corrupted in iudgement Not to appeare is impossible and to appeare is intollerable heere will be no respect of persons nor will the Iudge care how it be taken nor will he be deceiued with colours and circumstances He hath tarried so long he cannot be charged with rashnesse nor can there be a hiding of any particulars from him Euery inclination thought desire word and worke shall surely come to Iudgement And lastly there can be no impediment to hinder execution But heere a question may arise Viz. Who are they that are in danger heerof I answer All impenitent sinners But yet there are some kinde of sinners that are expressely named in Scripture and therefore if thou bee any of that number preuent thine owne ruine by repentance or else thou shalt certainly perish I vndertake not to reckon all it shall suffice to mention some of the chiefe sinners that Christ will be sure to remember at that day The Beast and the false Prophet and all that worship his Image and renew his marke shall then be cast aliue into the lake that burnes with fire and brimstone False teachers which priuily bring in damnable heresies or speake euill of the way of truth haue their condemnation long since determined and agreed vpon All Atheists that make a mocke of religion the comming of Christ shall haue a principall portion of the fierce fury of Christ All couetous worldlings and greedy rich men shall then be in a wofull case For the very rust of their cankerd gold and siluer shall witnesse against them and shall eate their flesh as it were fire All
mercilesse men shall then haue iudgement without mercy All whoremongers and adulterers and all that defile the flesh God will be sure to iudge a fearefull looking for of Iudgement and violent fire shall deuoure all those Apostataes that sinne willingly after they haue receiued and acknowledged the truth How sure doe ye suppose shall his punishment be that doth despight the spirit of grace by which he was sanctified all those that haue troubled Gods seruants shall beare their condemnation whosoeuer they be O man thou art inexcusable that iudgest another man wherein thou art guilty thy selfe For the Iudgement of God must needs be in truth against such as commit such things especially if men grow masterlike in censuring it will increase to greater condemnation all gotes or vnruly Christians that will not be kept within Gods fence that is will not be ruled by Gods ordinances and ministers shall be separate in that day from Gods sheepe and as a people accursed to be cast into an vnauoidable fellowship with the diuell and his angels all hypocrites that say and doe not or doe all their worke to be seene of men and take Gods couenant into their mouthes hate to be reformed how shall they escape the damnation to come all wicked men with their scant measure and deceitfull waights and wicked ballances shall neuer be iustified in the day of the Lord. what shall I say it were too long to proceede to reckon all and it is a short labour to conclude with the Apostle no wantons nor drunkards nor railers nor extortioners nor theeues nor wrathfull persons nor gluttons nor idolaters nor iesters nor filthy talkers nor fearfull persons nor liers nor any that louelies shall be able to stand in the day of Christ but shall be shut out of the Kingdome of Heauen and cast into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone And thus of the vse for terror Secondly vpon the meditation of this last iudgement diuerse lessons for our instruction are inforced First it should restraine vncharitable iudging and censuring one of another for lesse matters especially for things indifferent Who art thou that iudgest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne master Christ is the Lord of quicke and dead And therfore why dost thou condemne thy brother or why dost thou despise thy brother for we shall all appeare before the iudgement seat of Christ ' In as much as the Lord Iesus Christ will iudge the secrets of all hearts and giue a iust triall to the actions of all men why should we forestall his iudgement or in doubtfull matters arrogate to our selues this honor of Christ if we could consider that we shall then euery one giue accounts vnto God for himselfe we should find worke enough to doe to looke to our owne score Let vs not therefore brethren iudge one another any more Secondly are there any matters of difference amongst vs let the saints iudge them and end them God will be contented to put his cause to them at the last day for we know the Saints shall iudge the world and therefore why should we refuse their arbitration Thirdly it should order and moderate our sorrowes for our dead friends We should not sorrow as people without hope seeing we beleeue that all that sleepe in Iesus God will bring with him We shall meet together againe in that day and afterwards liue with the Lord together for euer And therefore we should comfort one another with these words Fourthly this summons to iudgement giues a dreadfull warning and admonition to the world euen to all men euery where to repent Inasmuch as God hath appointed a day wherein he will iudge the world in righteousnesse by the man whom he hath appointed wherof he hath giuen an assurance in that he raised him from the dead Woe will be vnto vs if that day come vpon vs vnawares before we haue made our peace and humbled our selues before God and by vnfained repentance turned from all our euill waies It is an vnsearchable compassion that God shewes when he offers vs this mercie that if we will iudge our selues we shall not be iudged of the Lord in that day And it will on the other side excessiuely incense his wrath when hauing such grace offered we neglect it and death and iudgement find our sinnes both vnremitted on Gods part and vnrepented on ours Fiftly Seeing all these things must be dissolued how should it fire vs and daily quicken our dead and drowsie spirits to a constant care of all possible holy conuersation and godlinesse vnles we would discouer our selues either to be Atheists that mocke at the iudgement to come or men giuen to a spirit of slumber that in soule sleepe it out and will not consider our latter end Seing we are all Gods stewards let vs arme our selues as they that must then giue accounts of our stewardship And since we haue all receiued some of Gods talents and gifts in our seuerall places let vs be carefull to approue our selues to be good seruants and faithfull such as can returne them with aduantage least the portion of the seruāt that hid his masters talents in the earth fall vpon vs. Lastly since the day of iudgement is the day of our full and finall redemption and since he shall come as a thiefe in the night euen in the hower that we thinke not let vs therefore watch and be ready alwaies carefull and diligent sighing and groaning longing and praying hasting to and looking for this glorious appearance and reuelation of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ. Thirdly this may be a singular comfort to all mortified and penitent christians they may lift vp their heads and reioice with ioy vnspeakable and glorious For the Lord shall then come to be glorified in his saints and made maruellous in all them that beleeue Ob. But the terrour of the day may amaze a christian Sol. There is no sparke of terror in this doctrine to a godly mind For what should he feare if he either consider the fauour of the iudge or the manner of the iudgement For the Iudge is he that hath beene all this while their aduocate to plead their suits by making intercession for them And therefore when he comes to sit in iudgement he cannot goe against his owne pleading He is their brother and caries a most brotherly affection and will he condemne his owne brethren he is their head and hath performed all the offices of a head vnto them and can he then faile them when they haue most need of him nay it is he that hath been iudged for vs on earth and will he iudge against vs in heauen what shall I say he died for vs to shew his vndoubted loue euen that he might redeeme vs as a peculiar people to God and will he faile vs in the last act
when he should once for all accomplish his redemption for vs besides he hath already promised to acquite vs in that day and it hath been often confirmed both in the word and the sacraments and praier he hath left many pledges of his loue with vs and therefore it were shamefull vnbeliefe to doubt his terror What though he be terrible to wicked men yet by iudging in seuerity he hath not nor cannot loose the goodnesse of his own mercy what should we feare him iudging in his power when we haue felt saluation in his name besides the manner of the iudgement shal be in all righteousnesse and mercy Thou shalt not be wronged by false witnesses nor shalt thou be iudged by common fame or outward appearance the iudge will not be transported with passion or spleen nor will he condemne thee to satisfie the people and besides there shall be nothing remembred but what good thou hast sought or done And not the least goodnesse but it shall be found to honor and praise at that day And if it were such a fauour to a base subiect if the King should take notice of him to loue him and should in an open Parliament before all the Lords and commons make a long speech in the particular praises of such a subiect what shall it be when the Lord Iesus in a greater assembly then euer was since the world stood shall particularly declare Gods euerlasting loue to them and recite the praises with his owne mouth of all that hath been good in thy thoughts affections words or works throughout all thy life or in thy death especially if thou adde the singular glory he will then adiudge thee too by an irreuocable sentence And so we come to the second appearance viz. the appearance of christians in glory Then shall ye also appeare with him in glory The glory that shall then be conferred vpon Christians may be considered either in their bodies or in their soules or both The glory of their bodies after the resurrection is threefold For first they shall be immortall that is in such a condition as they can neuer die againe or returne to dust For this mortall then shall put on immortalitie Secondly they shall be incorruptible That is not only free from putrefaction but also from all weaknesse both of infirmitie and deformitie For though it be sowen in weakenesse yet it shall be raised in power though it be sowen in dishonor and corruption yet it shall be raised in honor and incorruption Thirdly they shall be spirituall not that our bodies shall vanish into ghosts or spirits but because they shall be at that day so admirablie glorified and perfected that by the mighty working of Gods spirit they shall be as able to liue without sleep meat mariage or the like as now the Angells in heauen are and besides they shall be so admirably light and agile and swift that they shal be able to go abroad with vnconceiueable speed in the aire or heauens as now they can goe surely on the earth The glory vpon the soule shall be the wonderfull perfection of Gods image in all the faculties of it Then shall we know the secrets of heauen and earth And then shall our memories will and affections be after an vnexpresseable manner made conformable vnto God The glory vpon both soule and body shall be those riuers of ioies and pleasures for euer more And thus shall the man be glorified that feareth the Lord. The consideration of this glory may serue for diuerse vses First let vs all pray vnto God vpon the knees of our hearts from day to day that as he is the father of glory so he would giue vnto vs the spirit of reuelation that the eies of our vnderstanding might be enlightned to know in som comfortable measure and that we might be able with more life affection to meditate of the exceeding riches of this glory and inheritance to come Our hearts are naturally herein exceeding both dull and blind maruellous vnable with delight and constancie to thinke of these eternall felicities and this comes to passe by the spirituall working of sathan and the deceitfulnesse of sinne and too much emploiment and care about earthly things But a christian that hath so high a calling and hopes for such a glorious end should not alow himselfe in that deadnesse of heart but as he gaineth sence by praier in other gifts of grace so should he striue with importunity and constancy wrastling with God without intermission so as no day should passe him but he would remember this suit vnto God till he could get some comfortable ability to meditate of this excelling estate of endlesse glory Secondly this should make vs to be patient in tribulation and without murmuring or grieuing to endure hardnesse and temptations in this world For they are but for a season though they be neuer so manifold or great and the afflictions of this present life are not worthy of the glory to be reuealed though we might be dismaied while we looke vpon our crosses and reproaches and manifold trialls yet if the Lord let vs haue accesse vnto this grace to be able soundly to thinke of the glory to come we may stand with confidence vnapalled and with vnutterable ioy looke vp to the glory we shall shortly enioy when the trial of our faith being more pretious then the gold that perisheth shall be found vnto honor and praise through the reuelation of Iesus Christ Yea what were it to loose not some of our credits or our goods but euen our liues seeing we are sure to find them againe with more then a hundred fold aduantage at the time when Christ shall come in the glory of his father to giue vnto all men according to their deeds Besides we must know that there is no talking of sitting at Christs hand in glory till we haue asked our selues this question whether we can drinke of the cup he dranke of and be baptized with the baptisme he is baptized with And then if we can suffer with him we shall raign with him and shall be glad and reioice with exceeding ioy when his glory shall appeare And in the meane while the spirit of glory and of God resteth on you Thirdly seeing Christ will receiue Christians into such glory it should teach vs to receiue one another into both our hearts and houses Why shouldst thou be ashamed or thinke it much with all loue and bounty and bowells of affection to entertaine and welcome the heires of such eternall glory Oh if thou couldst but now see but for a moment how Christ doth vse the soules of the righteous in heauen or will vse both body and soule at the last day thou wouldst for euer honor them whom Christ doth so glorifie and make them now thy only companions whom thou shouldest see to be appointed to liue in such felicity for euer Fourthly
the thought of this glory should win vs to a care to be such as may be capable of it Qu. What must we doe that we may haue comfort that we are the men shall partake of this glory and speed well in the day of Iesus Christ Ans. First Euery one that would haue this hope must purge himselfe as Christ is pure we must be much in the duties of mortification For no vncleane person can enter into the kingdome ●f glory And vncleane we are all till we be washed in the blood of Christ by iustification and bathed in teares of true repentance by mortification It hath been obserued before that if we would not haue the Lord to iudge vs we must iudge our selues And if we would not haue Christ to take vnto him words against our soules we must take vnto vs words against our sinnes to confesse and bewaile them in secret Secondly we must labour for the assurance of faith T is faith that is the euidence of the things not seene T is faith that shall be found to honor and praise in the reuelation of Iesus Christ It is faith to which the promise of eternall life is made Thirdly we should labour to get vnto our selues the benefit of a powerfull preaching ministery for thereby our hearts may be wonderfully stirred vp to see the glory of sincerity on earth and it will open a wide dore to behold as in a mirror the glory to come with an open face changing vs into the same image from glory to glory by the spirit of God I say not that this is of absolute necessity as the former are but it is of wonderful expediency Fourthly we must be circumspect and watchfull in speciall manner attending to our owne hearts that we be not at any time oppressed with the cares of this life or voluptuous liuing if euer we would be able to stand in the day of iudgement and escape the fearefull things that are to come especially we must looke to our selues in these things least that day come vpon vs at vnawares Fiftly Doe we looke for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ into eternall life then we must as the Apostle Iude sheweth edifie our selues in our most holy faith praiyng in the holy Ghost and keepe our selues in the loue of God we must be afraid of whatsoeuer may estrange the Lord from vs or any way darken the sence of his loue For we may be assured if we haue his fauour and walke before him in the sence of it we shall haue glory when we die Likewise praying in the holy Ghost with constancy and frequency doth maruellouslie enrich a Christian both with the first fruits of glory euen glorious ioy on earth and with the assurance of fulnesse of glory in heauen Sixtly the Apostle Iohn seemes to say if loue be perfect in vs we shall haue boldnesse in the day of iudgement As if he would import that to be inwardly and affectionately acquainted with Christians on earth is a notable meanes to procure vs gracious entertainment with Christ in heauen especially if we perfect our loue and grow to some Christian ripenesse in the practise of the duties of loue in a profitable fellowship in the Gospell It is good discretion to grow as great as we can with Christians that so we may winne the fauour of Christ. Lastly the Apostle Paul shewes in the second to the Romanes that they that seek glory and honor and immortality and euerlasting life must be patient in well doing For they shall be rewarded according to their works And to euery man that doth good shall be honor and glory and power to the Iew first and also to the Grecian For all that haue any tydings of saluation in the Gospell or looke for that blessed hope and appearing of that glory of the mighty God must liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world Without holinesse no man shall see God And therefore wee should be abundant in the worke of the Lord forasmuch as we know that our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord And thus far of the glorious appearance both of Christ and Christians And thus also of the first rule of life namely the meditation of heauenly things Verse 5. Mortifie therefore your members which are on earth fornication vncleannesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse which is idolatrie Th●se words with those that follow to the tenth verse containe the second principall rule of holy life and that is the mortification of euill These euills to be mortified are of two sorts for either they are vices that concerne our selues most or else they are iniuries that concerne the hurt of others also Of the mortification of vices he intreats v. 5.6.7 of the mortification of iniuries he entreats v. 8.9 In the first part viz. the exhortation to the mortifying of vices I consider first the matter about which he deales and the reasons The matter is in verse 5. and the reasons v. 6.7 In the fift verse there are two things First the preposition of mortification in these words mortifie therefore your members that are on earth Secondly a catalogue of vices to be mortified or the enumeration of certaine speciall sinnes a Christian should be carefull to keep himselfe from viz. fornication vncleannes c. The generall consideration of the whole exhortation to mortification should imprint this deeply in our hearts that vnlesse we doe repent of those sinnes haue been in our natures and liues and be carefull to flee from the corruptions that are in the world we shall neuer haue comfort that we are accepted with God We should bring to the particular opening of all the verses a mind resolued of the generall And to quicken vs a little the more to the respect of this doctrine and to enforce the care of parting with our sinnes I will briefly touch by the way some few reasons why we should be willing to entertaine all counsell that might shew vs any course to get rid of sinne First our vices are the fruits of our corrupted nature They arise not from any noble or diuine instinct but are the effects of base flesh in vs. And we should carry the thoughts of it in our minds when we are inclined or tempted to vice we should say within our selues this euill proceeds not from any thing that might declare greatnesse or true spirit in a man what is passion or lust or couetousnesse but the base worke of the filthy degenerated flesh Secondly our vices are the only things that defile vs and make vs loathsome before God and men T is not meane cloathes or a deformed body or a poore house or homely fare or any such thing that makes a man truly contemptible no no it is only sinne can defile and bring that which is true contempt Thirdly the bond and forfeiture of the law
or couenant of works lieth vpon the backe of euery man that liues in sinne without repentance For the law is giuen to the lawlesse and disobedient as the Apostle shewes to vngodly and sinners to whoremongers and liers and to all that liue in any sinne contrary to wholesome doctrine Fourthly are not strange punishments to the workers of iniquity is not destruction to the wicked what portion can they haue of God from aboue and what inheritance from the almighty from on hie the hearts of holy men that haue considered the fearefull terrors of God denounced in scripture against the vices of men haue euen broke within them and their bones haue shaken for the presence of the Lord and for his holy word Fiftly Christ will be a swift witnesse against all fearelesse and carelesse men that being guilty of these vices or the like make not speed to breake them of by repentance Lastly know ye not that the vnrighteous shall not enter in to the kingdome of heauen be not deceiued for these things the wrath of God commeth vpon the children of disobedience Now I come to the words particularly Therefore This word caries this exhortation to something before If it be referred to our rising with Christ v. 1. then it notes that we can neuer haue our part in Christs resurrection till we feele the vertue of his death killing sinne in vs. If it be referred to the meditation of heauenly things then it notes that we can neuer set our affections on things that are aboue till we haue mortified our members that are on earth The corruption of our natures and liues are the cause of such disability to contemplate of or affect heauenly things And as any are more sinfull they are more vnable thereunto If the word be referred to the appearance of Christ in the former verse then it imports that mortification is of great necessity vnto our preparation to the last iudgement and will be of great request in the day of Christ. Mortifi● To mortifie is to kill or to apply that which will make dead The Lord workes in matters of grace in the iudgement of flesh and blood by contraries Men must be poore if they would haue a kingdome men must sorrow if they would be comforted Men must serue if they would be free And here men must die if they would liue Gods thoughts are not as mans but his waies are higher than mans waies as the heauens are higher than the earth Which may teach vs as to liue by faith so not to trust the iudgement of the world or the flesh in the things of God But the manifest doctrine from this word is this that true repentance hath in it the mortification of sinne And so it implies diuerse things First that we must not let sinne alone till it die it selfe but we must kill sinne while it might yet liue It is no repentance to leaue sinne when it leaueth vs or to giue it ouer when we can commit it no longer Secondly that true repentance makes a great alteration in a man Thirdly that it hath in it paine and sorrow men vse not to die ordinarily without much paine and sure it is sinne hath a strong heart it is not soon killed it is one thing to sleep another thing to die many men with lesse adoe get sinne asleepe that it doth not so stirre in them but alas there must be more ado to get it dead by true mortification Fourthly true repentance extinguisheth the power of sinne and the vigour of it It makes it like a dead corps that neither it stirs it selfe nor will be stirred by occasions perswasions commandements or st●oaks It is a wonderfull testimony of sound mortification when we haue gotten our old corruption to this passe and constancy in prayer and hearing and daily confession and sorrow for sin will bring it to be thus with vs especially if we striue with God and be earnest with spirituall importunity watching the way of our owne hearts to wound sinne so soone as we see it beginne to stirre Yet I would not be mistaken as if I meant that a Christian could attaine such a victory ouer sinne that it should not bee in him at all nor that hee should euer bee stirred with the temptations or entisements or occasions of euill But my meaning is that in some measure and in the most sinnes a Christian doth finde it so and in euery sinne his desire and endeauour is daily to haue it so And his desire is not without some happy successe so as sinne dieth or lieth a dying euery day But heere a question may arise Did not the Apostle grant they were dead before and if they were dead to the world they were without question dead to sinne also how then doth he speake to them to mortifie sinne doth it not imply they had not beene mortified before I answer the Apostle may well vse this exhortation for diuerse reasons First many of them perhaps were dead but in appearance they professed mortification but were not mortified Secondly it might be some of them had begun to vse some exercises of mortification but had not finished their mortification sure it is and we may see it by daily experience that many being wonne by the word and smitten with remorse haue sometimes the pangs of sorrow for their sinnes but quickly are a weary of seeking sorrow in secret for sinne they giue ouer before they haue soundly and sufficiently humbled their soules But may some one say how long should we continue our sorrowes or how long should we iudge our selues in secret for our sinnes I answer thou must not giue ouer thy sorrowes First till the body of sin be destroyed That is till that generall frame of sinfulnesse be dissolued till I say thou haue set some order in thy heart and life so as the most sinnes thou diddest before liue in be reformed Secondly it were expedient thou shouldest still seeke to humble thy soule till thou couldest get as much tendernesse in bewailing thy sinnes as thou wert wont to haue in grieuing for crosses till thou couldst mourne as freshly for peircing Gods sonne as for losing thine owne sonne Thirdly thou must sorrow till thou finde the power of the most beloued and rooted sinnes to bee in some measure weakened and abated Fourthly thou doest not well to giue thy sorrowes ouer till thou finde the testimony of Iesus in thy hart that is till God answer thy mournfull requests of pardon with some ioyes in the holy Ghost and the dewes of heauenly refreshings But will some one say must we lay all aside and do nothing else bu● sorrow till we can finde all those things Ans. I meane not that men should neglect their callings all this while or that they should carry an outward countenance of sorrowing before others or that they should all this while afflict their hearts
with discontentment or the like For when the Apostle willes men to pray alwayes he meanes not that they should doe nothing but pray But he would haue them to keepe a set course of praying euery day and besides to watch to all the extraordinary occasions or opportunities of prayer which being done a Christian may be truely sayd to pray continually though otherwise he follow his calling diligently The like I say of sorrowing alwayes But that I may expresse my meaning distinctly I thinke till thou canst attaine the former things thou must obserue these rules First thou must lay aside thy recreations and carnall reioicings for this the Apostle Iames imports when he sayth Let your laughter be turned into heauinesse and your ioy into mourning Secondly thou must begge sorrow at Gods hand euery day constantly in the times set apart for prayer till the Lord giue thee rest to thy soule by granting the things before mentioned Thirdly thou must not neglect the times of speciall fasting and humiliation if the Lord call thereunto Lastly thou must vse speciall sobrietie in the restraint of thy liberty in earthly things and be watchfull to make vse of all opportunities of softning thy hart These things being obserued thou mayst seeme vnto men not to sorrow and mayst follow thy calling seriously and yet be truely sayd to sorrow alwayes Thus of the second reason why the Apostle exhorts still to mortification Thirdly the dearest and humblest seruants of God may be called vpon to mortifie their members that are on earth though they haue truly and soundly repented of sinne before by reason of the euils of euery day with daily and a fresh euen after calling breake out in their hear●s and liues and for which they must still renew their repentance For their first repentance onely deliuers them from sinnes past they must renew their mortification as their corruptions are renewed Members It is certaine by members on earth the Apostle meanes sinne and that fitlie For first actuall sinnes in relation to originall sinne are as so many members that grow from it Secondly by a Metonimie of the subiect sinne may be called our members because it is brought into action by the helpe and seruice of our members Thirdly if the Apostle had spoken to wicked men hee might well haue called sin their members because they loue sinne as they loue their members and therefore to take away their sinne is to pull out their eies or to cut of their hand or feete as our Sauiour shewes Fourthly sinnes in the Colossians and so in all the faithfull may bee heere called members comparatiuely with the bodie of sinne mentioned Col. 2.12 as if the Apostle should say the body of sinne is already cast off and destroyed in you by your former repentance but yet there remaines some limmes of sinne some members of it these resist and in this sence we may heere note a liuely difference betweene sinne in wicked men and sinne in godly men For in wicked men there is the whole body of sinnes that is all their sinne vnremitted and vnrepented But in godly men the body of sinne euen the greater number of their sinnes they haue abandoned onely some few members of their sins remaine which euery day molest them But before I passe from these words two things are further to be noted First that he saith your members Secondly he addeth which are on earth Your the Apostle sayth well your members for indeed properlie our sins are our owne and nothing else Which are on earth they are also well sayd to be on earth because they are signes of the earthly man and because they tend onely to earthly pleasures and contentments and because men with these vnrepented of are not admitted into Heauen Thus of the generall proposition Now followes the catalogue of sinnes to be mortified before I enter vpon the particular consideration of them something may be learned from the Apostles order First he teacheth men to reforme their owne personall vices then orders them for mortifications of iniuries to other men sure it is that euery filthy person will bee an iniurious person and till men repent of their lusts and other such like personall corruptions they will neuer cease to be iniurious to other men And ordinarily men that are notable for malice or blasphemy that is cursed speaking and such like sinnes as the Apostle after names they are exceeding vitious persons otherwayes Instance but in such as reproach Gods seruants marke it both in citie and country who are they that raise and vent all slanders and strange reports concerning such as preach or professe the Gospell of Iesus Christ in the truth and sincerity of it I say marke them particularly for my owne part in my little obseruation I haue found them alwayes either to bee papists or superstitious persons or drunkards or notable whore-masters and filthy persons or people guilty of other notable crimes indeed sometimes their abhominations are not so commonly and publikely discoursed of because either they are men of greater place or else their vices are more couered ouer and gilded with cunning pretences yet seldome fals it out but their wickednesse is commonly knowen and many times Gods children that are vniustly touched could vpon sufficient grounds detect strange abhominations in their aduersaries and this was vnto Dauid vsually a strong argument of comfort that his aduersaries were men whom he knew to be workers of iniquity And thus much from the order of these catalogues The sinnes heere reckoned vp are sinnes either against the seuenth commandement Viz. fornication vncleanenesse inordinate affections or against the tenth commandement euill concupiscence or against the first commandement couetousnesse which is idolatry First of the sinnes against the seuenth commandement I might heere obserue in that they are placed in the first place that God would haue Christians to be especially carefull to preserue their chastitie For this is one thing principall in the will of God concerning our sanctification that we should abstaine from fornications and that euery one should know how to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour And to this end hath the Lord giuen vs so many precious promises that we might resolue to cleanse our selues from all filthinesse both of flesh and spirit now in the handling of these sinnes against the seuenth commandement heere mentioned I will keep this order First I will particularly entreat of the nature and effects of each of these three sinnes and generally make vse of all together and therein shew the remedies against all sins of vncleanenes Fornication There is fornication in title onely as when victualers were called by the name of Harlots Secondly there is a metaphoricall kinde of fornication or allegoricall So wicked men are sayd to bee bastards and the Iewes were borne of fornication Thirdly there is spirituall fornication and so idolatry is fornication and so vsually tearmed both by
part past feeling and many of them deliuered vp to a reprobate sence as ascourge of other sinnes and and foule vices which abound in them these are the shame of our assemblies and many times visited with secret and horrible Iudgements Inordinate affection the originall word notes internall vncleannesse especially the burning and flaming of lust though it neuer come to action or the daily passions of lust which arise out of such a softnesse or effeminatenesse of minde as is carried and fired with euery occasion or temptation this is the lust of concupiscence and howsoeuer the world little cares for this euill yet let true Christians striue to keep their hearts pure and cleane from it for they were as good haue a burning fire in them Secondly those lusts fight against the soule they wound and pierce the conscience Thirdly the diuell beginnes the frame of his worke in these hee desires no more liberty then to be allowed to beget these lusts in the hart He is not called the father of lusts for nothing he can by these inordinate thoughts and affections erect vnto himselfe such strong holds was nothing but the mighty power of God can cast downe Fourthly the Apostle sayth lust is foolish and noysome and drownes men in perdition Fiftly they hinder the efficacy of the word that 's the reason why diuers men women are euer learning are neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth euen this they are carried about with diuerse lusts Sixtly they greatly purge vpon faith and hope they hinder or weaken the trust on the grace of God brought vs by Iesus Christ and therefore the Apostle Peter counsels Christians not to fashion themselues according to the lusts of their former ignorance Seuenthly those monstrous crimes mentioned in the first to the Romans grow originally from these lusts The vses of all these together now follow And first wee may hence see great cause of thankefulnesse if the Lord haue deliuered vs and kept vs from these monstrous abhominations and especially if the Lord haue made vs sincere to looke to and pray against and in some happy measure to get victory ouer those base lusts of the heart and euill thoughts if there were nothing else to breake the pride of our natures this should to consider seriously what monstrous diuelish filthinesse Sathan hath wrought others too and if God should leaue vs might bring the best of vs to But especially this should teach vs to vse all possible remedies against these or any of these vncleanesses The remedies are of two sorts First for such as haue beene guilty of any of the former vncleanesses Secondly for such as would preserue themselues against them that they might not be defiled with them There are two principall remedies for the vncleane person The first is marriage or the right vse of it if it be in single persons they must remember the Apostles words it is better to marrie then to burne and if they be married they must know that the loue of their husbands or wiues is the speciall helpe to driue away these impure pollutions for such is the counsell of the holy Ghost in the fifth of the Prouerbes to them that are infected with these vicious and predominant inclinations and if they finde as it is certaine euery vncleane person doth finde want of loue to their owne husbands or wiues then must they begge affection of God by daily and earnest prayer But in the second place vnclean persons must know that marriage alone will not serue turne but they must adde repentance for lamentable experience shewes that marriage without repentance abates not the power of lust And therefore such as would deliuer their soules from the vengeance to come due vnto them for vncleannesse whether inward or outward must seeke to God and with many prayers and teares begge pardon they must bee washed from filthinesse by the bloud of Christ and the teares of true repentance Neither let men deceiue themselues a little sorrow will not serue turne for these pollutions and therfore the Apostle vseth the word washed to note the repentance of the Corinthians from these and such like sinnes Now there can be no washing without water neither will a drop or two serue turne Secondly that those that are not guilty may be preserued against vncleannesse these things are of great vse and profit First the word of God and the sound knowledge of it for sayth the Lord in the second of Prouerbs If thou wilt receiue my words and hide my commandements within thee if thou callest after knowledge and criest for vnderstanding if thou seekest her as siluer and searchest for her as for treasures then shall counsell vnderstanding preserue thee deliuer thee from the euill way and from the strange woman which flattereth with her words and forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth the couenant of her God and heereunto agreeth Dauid for propounding this question by what meanes a young man might cleanse his heart hee answereth by taking heed to the word So Saint Iohn speaking to the young men sayth the word of God abideth in you and ye haue ouercome the wicked one Secondly meditation is another great preseruatiue wouldst thou remoue wickednesse from thy flesh euen all the vanities of youth then thou must remember thy creator in the dayes of thy youth Thou must much and often think of the Lord God that made thee not that thou shouldest wallow in the mire of these swinish pollutions Besides it is profitable to force thy hart to the often meditation of thine owne mortallity that the thoughts of thy death may be a kind of death to thy lusts this the Apostle Peter implies when he sayth as strangers and pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lusts manifestly importing that if we did seriously thinke that we are heere but strangers and pilgrims it would tame the violence of these hatefull lusts Also we should much ponder vpon the examples of such as haue sinned and the Lord hath fearfully visited them both for and in their sinne for all those things came vnto them for ensamples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come The third preseruatiue is daily earnest and constant prayer vnto God against them And if we feele the beginning to rise in vs we should labour for speciall sorrowes euen with griefe of heart to racke and crucifie them Lust will not vsually out of the soule if it get any footing till it be fired out with confession and godly sorrow And therefore the Apostle vseth the phrase of crucifying the lusts of the flesh And that praier is a remedy the Apostles ownly practise shewes for when sathan buffeted him he praied vnto God and that thrice that he might get the temptation to depart from him The fourth preseruatiue is to walke in loue
dote on it with his heart Thirdly the nature of couetousnesse it will neuer be satisfied and how should it for the desire of the couetous is not naturall but against nature Naturall desires are finite but vnnaturall desires find no end And therefore cannot be filled with the finite things of the world Besides earthly things are vaine and empty Now the vessell that is only full of wind is empty still for all that So is the mind of the couetous His heart will be no more filled or satisfied with gold then his body with wind Hereupon it is that a couetous man is alwaies poore and hath not what he hath But hath his wealth as the prisoner hath his fetters viz. to inthrall him Fourthly the nature promise and prouidence of God He is a heauenly father is he a father why then do we doubt of his willingnesse to helpe vs and is he a heauenly father why then doe we question his all sufficiency to prouide what we need besides hath he giuen vs life and and will he not giue vs food to preserue life doth he daily prouide for thousand thousands of foules that are base creatures and will he not prouide for man whom he created after his owne image and made him Lord of all creatures doth he cloath the grasse of the field which is to day and to morrow is cut downe and will he not cloath man oh the weaknesse of our faith Besides is not the Lord engaged by promise neuer to leaue vs nor forsake vs Fiftly the condition of the couetous All his care cannot adde a cubit to his stature And besides the poore and the vsurer meet together in many things One God made them both One sunne lights them both One heauen couers them both and one graue of earth shall hold them both Sixtly the gaine of godlinesse it is bet●er thrist to couet after godlinesse For it hath the promises of this life and the life to come And who can count the gaine of godlinesse seeing God is the godly mans portion and his exceeding great reward The third preseruatiue is the daily practise of piety If we would seeke the kingdome of God first both in the first part of our life and in the first part of euery day of our life as well in our houses as in Gods house these religious duties constantly performed would be a great and continuall helpe against worldly cares they would cleanse our hearts of them and daily prepare our hearts against them But how can it be otherwise with a man then it is they must neeeds liue and die the drudges of the world seeing they haue no more care of holy duties at home or abroad they liue like swine without all care of any thing but rooting in the earth The fourth preseruatiue is the due preparation for Christs second comming For when our sauiour Christ had dehorted men from the cares of this life he adioines this exhortation let your loines be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto them that waite for their master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall find waking c. One great reason why couetous men doe so securely continue in the immoderate cares for this world is because they do so little think of death and iudgement Whereas on the other side Christians doe with some ease withdraw their hearts from the world when they haue inured themselues to die daily by the constant remembrance of their latter end and by holding fast the euidence of faith and hope waiting when Christ will call for them The fift preseruatiue is to shunne the meanes and occasions of couetousnes And to this end it is good not to conuerse much with couetous persons or to get our selues liberty to conceiue the hope of any long prosperity and rest in the world and generally we should labour to obserue our owne hearts and other mens liues and what we find to be a meanes to kindle or inflame couetous desires that we should auoide and betimes set against it or mortifie it And thus farre of couetousnesse and thus also of the catalogue of sinnes from which he doth disswade The reasons follow Ver. 6. For the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the the children of disobedience Ver. 7. Wherein ye also walked once when he liued in them These words containe two reasons to enforce the exhortation in the former verse Th one is taken from the euill effects of the former sinnes ver 6. The other is taken from their owne experience while they liued in the estate of corruption ver 7. in laying downe the reason from the effect two things are to be noted First what sinne brings viz. the wrath of God Secondly vpon whom viz. vpon the children of disobedience Before I come to intreat of the wrath of God a part I consider of it as it stands in coherence with the former reason For in these words we are assured that man liuing and continuing in filthinesse and couetousnesse shall not escape Gods wrath For they incurre both his hatred and his plagues both which are signified by the word wrath And if any aske what plagues filthy persons and couetous persons shall feele I answer briefly and distinctly that neither of them shall scape Gods wrath as the Scriptures plentifully shew The filthy person brings vpon himselfe Gods curse temporall corporall spirituall and eternall temporall for whoredome and any kinde of vncleanenesse brings vpon men many temporall plagues in their estate the fire of Gods iudgements consuming many times their whole increase as hath beene shewed before Corporall for God many times meetes with the sinnes of the bodie by iudgements vpon the body so that many filthie persons after they haue consumed their flesh and their body by loathsome diseases which follow this sinne in the end say with the foolish young man Oh how haue I hated instruction and despised correction now I am brought almost into all euill in the middest of the assembly Spirituall for vncleanenesse breeds in many a reprobate sence and finall impenitency Many also for their filthinesse are pursued with secret and fearefull terrours of conscience and sometimes frensie and desperate perturbations Eternall for the adulterer destroyes his owne soule and is shut out of the Kingdome of Heauen As hath beene also before declared Neither let the couetous person thinke he shall speed any better For God hates him wonderfully and therefore the Prophet Ezechiel sayth that the Lord smites his fists at the couetous which is a borrowed phrase to expresse most bitter and sharpe threatnings Now least the people should obiect that those were but great words the Lord would not do so they would deale well enough with the Lord. He preuenteth it and sayth can thy heart endure or can
thine hands be strong in the dayes that I shall haue to doe with them I the Lord haue spoken it and will doe it Let couetous persons without further enquiry assure themselues that couetousnesse is a maine cause of all the euils are vpon them or theirs and besides they may be assertained that all the seruice they doe to God is abhorred and meere lost labour it were to no purpose if they would bring him incense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre country their burnt offerings would not be pleasant nor their sacrifices sweet vnto him Ob. But couetous persons are of most men so well furnished that there is not that means to bring them to any great hurt Sol. The Prophet shewes that God can lay a stumbling blocke before them and father and sonne together mayfall vpon it and neighbour and friend may perish together The Lord means enough when men little thinke of it to bring downe rebellious sinners Ob. But we see couetous persons and wealthy worldlings scape the best longest of many others Sol. The Prophet Amos sayth the Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iacob will neuer forget any of their workes Though the Lord may deferre yet certainely he will neuer forget and therefore they are not a iot the better for scaping so long But howsoeuer they might escape outward iudgements yet they may be infallibly sure they haue sinned against their owne soules and that they shall know in the day of their death their riches shall not then profit them when the Lord taketh away their soule he that is a great oppressour shall not prolong his dayes for he that getteth riches and not by right shall leaue them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a foole How horrible then shall that voice be Thou foole this night shall thy soule be taken from thee and thus far of these words as they concerne the coherence with the former words now I consider them as they are in themselues And first of the wrath of God Wrath of God It is apparant that wrath in God belongs to his Iustice. And Iustice may be considered as it flowes from God foure wayes First as he is a free Lord of all And so his decrees are iust Secondly as he is God of all and so the common works of preseruing both good bad are iust Thirdly as a father in Christ so by an excellency he is the God of beleeuers and thus he is iust in performing his promises infusing his grace and in bestowing the Iustice of his sonne Fourthly as Iudge of the world and so his Iustice is not onely distributiue but correctiue And vnto this Iustice doth wrath belong Anger in man is a perturbation or passion in his heart and therefore it hath troubled Diuines to conceiue how anger should be in the most pure happie and bountifull nature of God And the rather seeing affections are not properly in God Neither is their declaration full enough that say it is giuen to God improperly and by anthropopathie for I am of their opinion that thinke anger is properly in God First in such a manner as agrees to the nature of God that is in a manner to vs vnconceiueable Secondly in such a sence as is reuealed in Scripture The wrath of God in Scripture is taken sometimes for his iust decree and purpose to reuenge sometimes for commination or threatning to punish So some thinke it is to be taken in those words of the Prophet Hosea I will not do according to the siercones of my wrath that is according to my grieuous threatnings Sometimes it is taken for the effects or punishments themselues as in the Epistle to the Romans is God vnrighteous which bringeth wrath it is well rendered which punisheth The wrath of God is distinguished by diuerse degrees and so hath diuerse names for there is wrath present and wrath to come Present wrath is the anger of God in this present life and is either impendent or powred out wrath impendent is the anger of God hanging ouer mens heads ready to bee manifested in his iudgements and so wrath hangs in the nature of God and in the threatnings of his word and in the possibilities of the creatures Wrath powred ●●t is the iudgement of God fallen vpon men for their sinnes by which they prouoked God and so there was great wrath vpon the people in the destruction of Ierusalem and thus he reuealeth his wrath from Heauen vpon the vnrighteousnesse of men Wrath to come is that fearefull misery to be declared vpon the soule of the impenitent at his death and vpon soule and body at the day of iudgement in the euerlasting perdition of both But that we may be yet more profitable touched with the meditation of this point I propound sixe things concerning Gods wrath further to be considered First the fearefulnesse of it Secondly what it is that works or brings this wrath vpon vs. Thirdly the signes to know Gods wrath Fourthly the meanes to pacifie it Fistly the signes of wrath pacified And lastly the vses of all For the first The fearefulnesse and greatnesse of Gods wrath or anger for sinne may appeare three wayes First by Scripture Secondly by similitude Thirdly by example That Gods anger for sinne is exceeding terrible and fearefull I will shew by one place of Scripture onely and that is the first of Nahum the Prophet for he sayth God is iealous and the Lord reuengeth the Lord reuengeth where the repetition shewes the certainty of it that God will be as sure to reuenge as euer the sinner was to sinne but this is more confirmed when he sayth he is the Lord of anger as if he would impart that his anger is his essence as if he were all made of anger and that he is the authour of all the iust anger that is in the world and if the drops of anger in great men haue such terror in it what is the maine Ocean of anger which is in God himselfe and to assure vs yet further of the terrour of his wrath he addeth the Lord will take vengeance on his aduersaries which signifieth that the Lord will account of impenitent sinners as a man accounts of his worst enemies and therefore the Lord will shew his displeasure to the vttermost of their deserts and his Iustice. And therefore if any doe obiect that they see it otherwise for the plagues of wicked men are not so many nor so great as their sinnes he answereth that and sayth that the Lord reserueth wrath for his enemies he hath not inflicted vpon them all they shall haue there is the greatest part behinde the full vials of his fury are not yet poured out And if any should reply that they haue obserued that wicked men haue prospered long and scaped for a great while without any
securly sinne and wallowe in all filthy abhominations they shunne Gods house for the most part and liue without any conscionable subiection to any ministery Such was the prodigall sonne and such are our common swearers drunkards and vncleane persons nay they goe further for they speake euill of their fathers house and slander their owne mothers sons Now the other sort liue in their fathers they come to heare and receiue the sacraments they are there at bed and bord but yet they will doe what they list They will not bee perswaded by the word spirit or seruants of God And so they are children of vnperswadablenesse they will not beleeue their fathers threatnings or promises and so they are children of incredulity they will not conforme themselues to their fathers will and so are called children of disobedience Now the estate of both these sorts of disobedient children is that the fearefull wrath of God is vpon them no father can so plague and cast off a wicked sonne as they are sure to be plagued and cast off of God As they are children of disobedience by their owne stubbornesse so are they children of wrath by Gods iustice And if they continue thus they may proue children of perdition Qu. But how may the children of disobedience be knowen Ans. We may gather signes either from the consideration of these words or from other scriptures From these words two waies first he is a child of disobedience that is led and ruled and hath all his thoughts and affections and his actions as it were framed and begotten and nursed vp by the corruption of his nature arising from the disobedience of the first man or by the temptations of sathan the Prince of all darknesse and disobedience It is one thing to sinne by infirmity to fall by occasion into a sinne and another thing to be led and ruled and to frame ones life and imploiment after the rules and proiects that are hatched by the flesh or sathan To be a child to sinne that is to be ruled and mastred and led by it to be as it were at the command of lust and corruption that is not in a child of God standing in vprightnesse Secondly the word here rendred disobedience imports vnteachablenesse such a disobedience as is wilfull when a man sinnes and will sinne and will not be perswaded either by Gods words or Gods spirit or Gods people that would aduise or admonish him To be of an incurable or inteachable disposition is a ranke signe of a child of disobedience Further if we marke the coherence in the second Chapter of the Epistle to the Ephesians v. 2. compared with the first we may easily discerne that a child of disobedience is dead in trespasses and sinnes His soule can he at rest though he be guilty of neuer so many sinnes Cast a mountaine on a dead man and he will not complaine or aile any thing and sure it is a notable signe of a child of disobedience to be guilty of a multitude of sinnes and yet to be sencelesse vnder them to be able to goe from day to day and week to weeke and month to month and neuer to aile any thing for any sound remorse he finds for his sinne Especially when men are at that passe that the Prophet Ieremie complained of that though God strike them yet they are not grieued yea though the Lord consume them they refuse to receiue correction and make their faces harder then a rocke refusing to returne Qu. But may not the wrath of God come vpon his owne children Is God neuer angry with his owne seruants Ans. God may be angry with his owne people For when the Prophet Dauid saith his anger endureth but a moment he implies that God then will be angry And in the 89. Psalme though the Lord saith he will not take away his goodnesse and his mercie yet if they keep not his law he saith expresly he will visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes And thus he is angry with them sometimes for their couetousnesse sometimes for their carelesse worship sometimes for vnworthy receiuing sometimes for their losse of their first loue but generally euery grosse sinne angers God by whomsoeuer it be committed But yet there is great difference between Gods anger towards his owne children and that wrath that commeth vpon the children of disobedience and that principally in three things First wrath comming vpon the faithfull is not eternall but temporary and in this life only For they are deliuered from the wrath to come for there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus they are already past from death to life But so are not wicked men For God is so angry with them in this life that his anger may continue for euer and not be extinguished in their very death And not only so but Gods anger with his own children euen in this life is not for all their daies but only a very short time of their life For as Dauid saith his anger endureth but a moment weeping may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning And in another place he saith he will not alwaies chide neither wil he keepe his anger for euer And the Lord witnesseth by the Prophet Esay that he forsaketh but for a small moment he hideth his face in a little wrath but he hath mercy with euerlasting kindnesse When a child of God falleth he is sure he shall rise but it is not so with the vngodly Secondly as Gods wrath differs in the continuance so it differs in the measure it is milder towards his children then it is towards the children of disobedience Which appeares to be so two waies For first Gods anger as it is manifested in outward iudgements vpon his owne people is euer proportioned to their strength he doth not consider what their sinne deserues but what their spirits are able to sustaine He will not suffer them to be tempted aboue that which they are able but will giue issue with the temptation that they may be able to beare it And the Prophet Esay sheweth that the Lord hath great care least by contending ouer long with his people the spirit should faile and the soule which he hath made And the Prophet Dauid shewes that God deales not with his people after their sins nor rewards them after their iniquities But as a father pittieth his children so the Lord pittieth them that feare him But now with the wicked it is much otherwise For the Lord neuer askes what strength they haue to heare it or how they will take it but what sinne they haue committed and how they haue deserued it Besides the affections of Gods children are sweetned with many mercies for though the Lord be angry for their sinne yet if they will seeke God and work righteousnesse they may hold out to beare
the crosse for the Lord will meet them in the vse of the meanes to the great ease and ioy of their hearts Excellently speaketh the Prophet Dauid vnto the Lord acknowledging this point when he said Thou answerest them O Lord our God thou wast a God that forgauest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inuentions And the Prophet Micah seemeth to say that while Gods people sit in darknesse yet the Lord can be a light vnto them For their God will heare them And herein also the Lord reserueth his mercies from the wicked So as when they fall they haue no assurance of rising nor is the Lord carefull to lighten their darknesse I meane they haue no promise for it For if the Lord shew them fauour if they repent not it will make them more vnexcusable and their iudgement the heauier Thirdly it differs in the end For the end of Gods wrath on his owne seruants is their good and saluation They are iudged that they might not perish with the world And they are whipped by the father of spirits that they may bring forth the quiet fruit of righteousnesse In a word Gods iudgements are as medicines to heale them But on the other side wicked men are vessells of wrath and all tends to the ●itting of them to destruction The Lord comes not to them to trie but to consume not to better them but for their wilfull impenitency to declare his iustice vpon them All these their differences are notably exprest by the prophet Esay in his 27. and 28. Chapter For he sheweth that the Lord is a carefull and wi●e husbandman and the husbandman in nature hath this discretion that he should not plow all day to sow so is it with the Lord hee doth not continue still plowing with long furrowes vpon the backes of the righteous When he hath plowed vp the fallow ground of their hearts he will not still goe ouer them to breake the clods that remaine but hauing once made himselfe a furrow he will sow and not plow And for the second the Prophet seriously expostulateth with such as should any way incline to think that the wicked and the godly were smitten alike Hath he smitten him saith the Prophet as he smote those that smote him as if he shold aske hath the Lord plagued Israel as he plagued those that were enemies vnto Israel and then he shewes this difference that when the Lord came to visit Israel he contended with him in measure and smote him in his bunches whereas when God smites at a wicked man he smites at the root and after many blowes he will continuly haue him downe And for the least difference the Prophet shewes further that by this shall the iniquity of Iacob be purged and this is all fruit to take away his sinne As if he would plainly affirme that God meant so to cast Israel into the furnace as nothing should be left but the drosse his purpose was therefore to afflict him that he might medicine him against his sinne And thus of the sixt verse Verse 7. In which ye also walked sometime when ye liued in them These words containe the second reason to inforce the mortification of vice and it is taken from their owne experience as if he would say ye haue liued a long time in these corruptions sinnes therefore it is sufficient that you haue spent the time past in these lusts of the Gentiles it is high time now to abandon them besides you should remember the misery you liued in by reason of sinne and from thence learne to confirme your selues in a constant course of resisting and striuing against the occasions and beginnings of those sinnes From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole verse diuerse things may be briefly noted First that the knowledge and meditation of a mans misery by nature is a good medicine to kill lust and couetousnesse The Apostle like a wise physition vseth here the counsell hereunto as a principall part of his direction For in that he puts them in mind of it it shewes that they should mind it by themselues much more For not only it will shew that these sinnes did then abound but the very thought of such a wofull estate will beate downe kill by degrees the vitious inclinations of nature vnto such sinnes Secondly in that the Colossians can beare it to be told of their sinnes past it giues vs ocasion to take notice of this for a truth that where a man hath soundly repented of any sinne he can easily beare it to be touched with the remembrance of it and with lowlinesse doth endure the needfull discourse concerning i● It is a notable testimony that a man hath not truly repented of sinne when he is so impatient and vnquiet in the mention or remembrance of sinne If a man haue a wounded arme while it is vncured the least touch of it makes a man start and crie out but when it is whole you may gripe it hard and yet he aileth nothing at all So is it with our consciences in matters of sinne They are but in a miserable case that rage and fre● and reuile when the sinnes they haue liued in are by publike doctrine disgraced or threatned But may some one say to what end doth the Apostle so often put them in mind of their sinfulnesse and misery past I answer he doth it for great reasons For the more men thinke of their misery by nature the more it quickneth to a sence and admiration of Gods mercy that hath drawen them out of such a wretched estate Besides it is a notable meanes to keepe a Christian humble and to make him watchfull ouer a nature that by lamentable experience hath been so prone to sinne and it serues to stir vp Christians to a more eager desire and diligence in vsing the meanes to aduantage them in knowledge and grace T is now time to redeeme the time that hath been so long lost And it will make a child of God industrious in Gods work seeing he hath spent so much time in the seruice of the diuell the world and the flesh And further it helpes a man to some measure of patience and meeknesse and compassion in dealing with the sinnes of other men considering that he himselfe hath been vnwise disobedient seruing the lusts and diuerse pleasures c. And lastly as was before noted it serues to kill the daily lusts that may bud and sprout out after calling Now concerning the remembring of the sinnes of others we must know the Apostle had a warrant by his calling and commission to rehearse the sins of others For Gods ministers are enioined to shew Gods people their sinnes But a like liberty is not lawfull to euery priuate man Priuate men may remember others of their estate past if it may stir them vp to thankfulnesse or if it may further them in humiliation for new
things to glorifie God for this is right thanking of God when men do not onely praise God in words but in obedience Some thinke in these words is lodged a reason of the former as if he should say glorifie God in all your actions and seeke to God by praier in the name of Christ and ye shall bee sure of singular blessings and grace and comforts from God and in the assurance thereof when ye prouide to pray or practise prouide thankes ready also for God will not faile in the successe Some thinke these words to bee an inlarging of the former rule by wishing them whatsoeuer falls out to bee thankefull so as neither prosperity puffe them vp nor aduersity deiect them but I take it to be a distinct rule from the former and so heere is to be noted 1 The duty required viz. Giue thankes 2 The explication of it 1 By the obiect to God euen the Father 2 By the efficient cause by him Giuing thankes Concerning our thankefulnesse to God I consider 1. the necessity of it God will not dispense with it therefore in Ephes. 5.20 the former rule beeing omitted this is specially vrged and 1. Thes. 5.18 this is charged vpon vs as the will of God in Christ Iesus Secondly for what wee must giue thanks viz. for Christ as the fountaine of all fauour hence the Sacrament ordained to that end for all the comforts of Gods election and loue for all graces and meanes of grace coher for our liberty in Christ euen vnto outward things for any successe or victory ouer our corruptions of nature in short for all things whatsoeuer 3. How viz. not like the Pharisie with pride of heart and selfe-liking with opinion of merit or with ostentation but with obseruation of 4. rules 1. If we blesse we must blesse in the spirit 1. With vnderstanding and feeling in our hearts 2. When we giue thanks we should do it with such tendernesse that our praises should awake the graces of Gods spirit to make them get life and grow Our praises should stirre vp faith in Gods promise loue to Gods glory feare of Gods presence hatred of our sinnes ioy in the holy Ghost 3. With a deepe sence of our owne vnworthinesse and thus the 24. Elders are said to cast downe their crowns and fall on their face when they praised God Reuelations 4.9.10 and 7.12 Luke 17. 4. By all meanes Wee must praise God by Psalmes praier celebration of the Sacrament works of mercy and obedience 4 How long that is answered Eph. 5.20 Reuel 7.12 alwaies if we must pray alwaies then we must praise alwaies wee may no more neglect thankesgiuing then praier Nay when praier shall cease because all mortall infirmities and wants shall cease yet thankesgiuing must go with vs within the vaile and liue with vs for euer in heauen Vse 1. to inflame vs to the holy practise of thankfulnesse daily and alwaies watching heereunto preseruing sence not forgetting Gods mercies euen making it our daily sacrifise 2. To humble vs vnder our vnthankefulnesse for grace knowledge the word fellowship in the Gospel and al kinds of blessings yea we sinne greatly in not giuing thankes for our successe in our callings yea many are not yet instructed to giue thankes for their food Let those remember that men are said then to eat to God when they giue thankes Rom. 14.6 to whom then doe they eat that giue not thankes certainely not to the Lord. Finally if the poore Gentiles were so punished for vnthankefulnesse Rom. 1. 21. that had but the glimmering light of nature to guide them and read their lessons onely in the booke of Gods workes what shall become of vs in the day of the Lord that haue the light of Scripture of the Gospell of the Spirit of the Sacraments and so many incomparable fauours bestowed vpon vs vnlesse we repent of our vnthankefulnesse we shall perish with a worse destruction then Tirus and Sidon or Sodom and Gomorrah To God euen the Father These words are to be vnderstood not diuidedly but conioynedly and so declare who is our God euen hee that hath proued himselfe a Father in Christ louing vs in him and accepting of vs and heaping many blessings vpon vs two sweet words He is a God there is his maiesty he is a Father there is his loue and therefore great incouragement to go to him with all suites and praises With all suites he is God and therfore able to help and Father and therefore willing to helpe With all praises hee is God and therefore meet to be worshipped he is a Father and therefore will accept the calues of our lippes not according to what we bring but according to what we desire to bring and all this should make vs both to hate it to praise men or Angells or sacrifice to our nettes and also to honour him with the affection of children and with the feare of creatures By him these words may be referred 1. To singing of Psalmes in the former verse and so they note that all ioy is vaine without Christ yea these spirituall and better sorts of delight are vaine vnlesse Christ be ours How miserable art thou when thy tongue sings Psalms and Christ dwells not in thine heart many men sing the word of Christ that haue no part in the word Christ. 2. To the word Father next before to note that God hath shewed himselfe a Father in bestowing many mercies vpon vs by Christ and so the consideration of Gods mercies by Christ should breed thankefulnesse 3. To the word thanksgiuing and so they note the efficient helping cause and teach vs that as Christ brings downe Gods graces and blessings to vs so he carrieth vp our praises to God and as we must pray in his name so our praises will not be accepted vnlesse they be made in his name and presented in his intercession Thus of the generall rule Hitherto also of the first maine part of the information of holy life viz. the information of our life in generall Hitherto the Apostle hath taught vs what to do in our generall calling as Christians now from ver 18. to v. 2. of the next Chapter he showes vs what we must be in our particular standings or thus hitherto he hath giuen morall precepts now he giues oiconomicall or rather thus hitherto he hath set downe the duties belonging to all Christians now he informeth vs in the duties speciall as they are wiues husbands parents c. Vers. 18. Wiues submit your selues to you Husbands as it is comely in the Lord. Vers. 19. Husbands loue your wiues and be not bitter vnto them Before I come to the particular consideration of these words I must obserue some thing from the coherence and generall consideration of all the verses together d It is plaine that men are to be taught how to gouerne themselues in their houses aswell as in the duties of their generall calling this is
for all thy sinnes past and now that God calls for this obedience he will accept thee as righteous by forgiuing thee all former accounts Obiect But if all were forgiuen me yet I cannot do all that God requires of me in his law Answ. Thou art not vnder the law but vnder grace thou art freed from the rigour of the law so that thou extend thy desire and indeauor to all the will of God thy perfection is but vprightnes Obiect But in my best seruices there is much euill Answ. Christ makes request for thee and by the vertue of his intercession the euill of thy good workes is hid and couered Obiect But I am so weake I cannot finde strength almost to do any worke of God much lesse all and to hold out too Answ. As weake as thou haue subiected themselues to all Gods wills of which some now sleepe in the Lord who from small beginnings grew to great abilitie in Gods seruice what may not grace like a graine of mustard seede grow too in short time besides Gods ordinances are mighty through God to fulfill our obedience and God will shew his power in thy weakenes yea it is his couenant not only to require all his will but to giue vs his spirit to cause vs to do them Obiect But if I were set in neuer so good a case and had for the present neuer so good successe yet I feare falling away Answ. God will keepe the feete of his Saints Obiect But I haue tried a great while and I haue great helpes and yet I finde not any such graces or fulnesse or any such likelihood to stand Answ. It is one thing what is and an other thing what thou feelest 2 Consider whether thou hast not desired to do all Gods will and endeauoured it as thou knewest it and that with desire to do all perfectly certainely the will study care desire is accepted with God 3 Consider whether God hath no● let thee see all this while that thou art accepted as full and perfect what sinne hast thou begged pardon for and not obteined it what dutie or grace is it that thou hast praied for constantly and God hath vtterly denied to answere thee if God haue accepted thee why dost thou charge thy selfe falsly Obiect But I know not all Gods wills much lesse can I do them Answ. It shall be to thee according to what thou hast and not according to what thou hast not increase in knowledge that thou maiest increase in grace what shall I say Consider but the recompence of reward God will reward euery worke and should we not then doe all his wills though the taske be hard and labour great yet the pay and gaine is exceeding great if we had so many waies to thriue in our estates we would refuse no labour Oh why should we not seeke the gaine of doing euery will of God Thus of the twelfth Verse Vers. 13 14 For I beare him record that he hath a great zeale for you and them that are in Laodicea and them in Hierapolis 14 Luke the beloued Phisition and Demas greet you In the 13 Verse the zeale of Epaphras which is the fourth thing is described First by the testimony of Paul I beare him record Secondly by the quantitie of it a great zeale Thirdly by the persons for whom for you c. The Apostle vseth all these words to set out his zeale because he was desirous to haue him in great respect with his hearers for hee knew if he were once contemned or suspected his doctrine would be vnfruitfull and his hearers made a prey to false Teachers Besides perhappes he found the people inclyning to grow to haue ynough of him or to suspect him or to lessen their regard of him I beare him Record Note 1 That the witnesse of one Apostle is a sufficient testimony and infallible which should incourage vs to studie their writings seeing we are sure to finde nothing but truth there 2 That the best testimony is not our owne record of our selues let thy neighbour not thine owne mouth praise thee 3 Godly ministers should be readie and forward to preserue the same of their brethren and in particular willing to giue record for them but if wee would haue record from others we must not beidle or ignorant or corrupt or scandalous Oh the miserie of these times how are insufficient or wicked Ministers written for to the Patron to the Bishop to the congregation concerning whom there can be no sufficient testimonie in the day of Christ and happie were it if no Church men had their hands in such records the Lord pardon and purge the sinnes of the sonnes of Leuie Zeale D. Zeale is needfull in a Minister now his zeale is two fold either for God or for Gods people a Minister should shew his zeale for his people by praying for them 2 Painfull preaching to them in season and out of season 3 By protecting them against the reproches and scornes of the world striuing by doctrine not only to comfort them but to wipe away the aspersions cast vpon them 4 By earnest rebukes and admonitions he must crie aloude and not spare not suffering them to sinne 5 By suffering either with them or for them The Vse is to excite zeale in Ministers and to awake them out of that coldnesse or deadnesse especially in teaching it is a wonderfull scourge to the people and a dishonor to the glorious doctrine of God where the teacher is without life or spirit in the enforcing of his doctrine And is zeale good for a Minister then sure it is good for the people too indeed it is of exceeding praise in all sorts of men of what degree soeuer neither will it be a misse heere a little to consider more seriously of zeale seeing there is much neede of it in the world and there is much mistaking about it Now if men will be rightly ordered in their zeale let them looke to these things 1 Let it not be a pretended zeale as in Ioash 2 Nor a superstitious zeale as in Paule 3 Nor a passionate zeale only for a fit as in Iohn at his first entrance 4 Nor a malitious zeale as in persecutors that thinke they doe God good seruice in vexing men wrongfully 5 Nor a wrong intended zeale such as is the zeale of merit-mongers 6 Nor a contentious zeale such as theirs that make needlesse rents in the Church 7 Nor a secure zeale that is a zeale not raised by godly sorrow or that is carried without care or feare of falling away 8 Nor an idle zeale that is all words without workes the word is rendred labour sometimes and it is certaine true zeale is spent about good workes 9 Nor an ouercurious zeale shewed either by sticking too much to the letter of scripture or by prying into or harsh censureing of the lesser faults of others 10 Or a bitter
wisedome and circumspection Quest. How should they shew it that they did remember his bondes Answ. 1 By praying for him to God 2 By shewing like patience vnder their Crosses 3 By constant profession of the doctrine he suffred for 4 By a care of holy life that they might striue to be such as he need not be ashamed to suffer for them 5 By supplying their wants 3 As any haue been more gratious so they haue beene more streitened and opprest by the wicked 4 The actions of great men are not alwaies iust a worthy Apostle may be vnworthily imprisoned 5 The people should be much affected with the troubles of their teachers and therefore they are farre wide that insteed thereof trouble their teachers Grace be with you By grace he meanes both the loue of God and the gifts of Christ as he began so he ends with vowes and wishes of grace which shewes 1 That in God we haue wonderfull reason continually to exalt the praise of his free grace and loue 2 That in man there is no greater happinesse then to be possest of the loue of God and true grace it is the richest portion and fairest inheritance on earth When he saith be with you It is as if he said three thinges 1 Be sure you haue it be not deceiued nor satisfied till ye be infallibly certaine ye haue attained true grace and Gods loue 2 Be sure you loose it not neuer be without it matters not though ye loose some credit or wealth or friends c. so you keepe grace still with you 3 Be sure you vse it and increase it imploy it vpon all occasions be continually in the exercise of it Thus of the whole Epistle There followeth a postscript or vnderwriting in these words Written from Rome and sent by Tichicus and Onesimus There is difference about the reading some coppies haue not Tichicus and Onesimus in some Lattin coppies read Missa ab Epheso But the greeke coppies generally agree that it was from Rome But it is no great matter for the certainty of the reading for the Reader must be admonished that the postscripts are not part of the Canonicall Scripture But were added by the Scribes that wrote out the Epistles If any desire to be more particularly informed herein he may peruse a learned Tractate of this argument published by Mr Rodulph Cudworth vpon the subscription of the Epistle to the GALATHIANS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS The substance of all Theologie exprest briefly in this Epistle as is manifested by instance The Precepts of life The Epilogue Verse 1.2 Verse 3. Verse 4.5 Verse 5.6 Verse 7.8 Verse 9.10.11 Verse 12.13.14 Verse 15 16.17 Verse 18.19.20 Verse 21.22 Verse 23. Verse 28. Verse 29. Verse 1 PAVL an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the will of God and Tim●theus our Brother Verse 2. To them which are at Colosse Saints and faithfull brethren in Christ Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord IESVS CHRIST Verse 3. Wee giue thankes to God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ alwayes praying for you Verse 4. Since wee heard of your faith in Christ Iesus and of your loue toward all Saints Verse 5. For the hopes sake which is laid vp for you in heauen whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospell Verse 6. Which is come vnto you euen as it is vnto all the world and is fruitfull as it is also among you from the day that yee heard and t●uely knew the grace of God Verse 7. As yee also learned of Epaphras our deare fellow seruant which is for you a faithfull Minister of Christ. Verse 8. Who hath also declared vnto vs your loue which yee haue by the Spirit Verse 9. For this cause wee also since the day wee heard of it cease not to pray for you and to desire that yee might be fulfi●led with knowledge of his wi●● in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding Verse 10. That yee might walke worthy of the Lord please hi● in all things being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God Verse 11. Strengthened with all might through his glorious power vnto all patience and long suffering with ioyfulnesse Verse 12. Giuing thankes vnto the Father which hath made vs meete to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Verse 13. Who hath deliuered vs from the power of darkenesse and hath translated vs into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne Verse 14. In whom wee haue redemption through his bloud that is the forgiuenes of sinnes Verse 15. Who is the Image of the inuisible God the first borne of euery creature Verse 16. For by him were all things created which are in heauen and which are in earth things visible and inuisible whether they be Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him Verse 17. And he is before all things and in him all things consist Verse 18. And hee is the head of the body of the Church hee is the beginning and the first borne of the dead that in all things he might haue the preeminence Verse 19. For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnes dwell Verse 20. And by him to reconcile all things vnto himselfe and to set at peace through the bloud of his Crosse both the things in earth and the things in heauen Verse 21. And you which were in times past strangers enemies because your mindes were set in euill workes hath he now also reconciled Verse 22. In the body of his flesh through death to make you holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight Verse 23. If ye continue grounded and stablished in the faith and be not moued away from the hope of the Gospell whereof yee haue heard and which hath bin preached vnto euery creature which is vnder heauen whereof I Paul am a M●nister Verse 24. Now I reioyce in my sufferings for you and fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my ●lesh for his bodies sake which is the Church Verse 25. Whereof I am a Minister according to the dispensation of God which is giuen mee vnto you ward to fulfill the word of God Verse 26. Which is the mystery hid since the world beganne and from all ages but now is made manifest to his Saints Verse 27. To whom God would make knowne what is the riches of this glorious mystery among the Gentiles which riches is Christ in you the hope of glory Verse 28. Whom we preach admonishing euery man and teaching euery man in all wisedome that we may present euery man perfect in Christ Iesus Verse 29. Whereunto I also labour and striue according to his working which worketh in me mightily A Description of the Author of this Epistle Phil. 3.5 Acts 23.6 Acts 22.3 Phil. 3. Titus 1.12 Phil. 3.6 Gal. 1.13.14 1 Tim. 1. Acts 8.9 Act 22.26 1 Tim. 2. 2 Cor. 6.