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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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the Lawe is immutable and eternall and therefore I came not to destroy it First here obserue that the Law of God is made perpetuall and vnchangeable If any man aske how this can be seeing the Apostle faith The Lawe is changed Answer The Law is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall as hath beene said now that place is principally to be vnderstood of the Ceremoniall law which indeede is abrogated in regard of the obseruation of it in Gods worship but in the scope and substance of it which is Christ crucified with his benefits whom it shadowed out it remaineth still and is now more plaine then euer it was As for the Iudiciall law though it be abrogated vnto vs so farre forth as it was peculiar to the Iewes yet as it agrees with common equitie and serues directly to establish the precepts of the Morall lawe it is perpetuall If it be said that Christ changed the Morall law in changing the Sabbath day from the seauenth day to the eight I answer Christ did so indeed by his Apostles but that is no change of the substance but of the ceremonie of the Sabbath for the substance of that law is the inioyning of a seauenth daies rest vnto the Lord. Now though the seauenth day from the creation be not kept yet a seauenth day is kept still If it be further said that the Law it selfe is abrogated for that euery one that breaketh the Lawe is not accursed according to the sentence thereof Deut. 27. 26. Answer Wee must knowe that the Law is but one part of Gods word and the Gospel another reuealing another part of Gods will besides that which the Lawe made knowne for it addes a qualification to the Law moderating the rigour thereof after this manner Hee is accursed saith the Law that faileth in any commandement except saith the Gospel he bee reconciled againe in Christ and in him haue the pardon of his transgressions And yet the Morall law remaines for euer a rule of obedience to euery childe of God though he be not bound to bring the same obedience for his iustification before God Againe this propertie of the Law in beeing vnchangeable and for euer to be kept sheweth that no creature may dispense with the Law of God Mens lawes may be abrogated and changed but Gods Law euen in the least parts thereof must stand for euer till it be accomplished to the full but if it might be dispensed with then not onely iots and titles thereof but whole lawes might bee abrogated This shewes the blasphemous impietie of the Popes of Rome who in their Canons be authorized to dispense with the lawes of God yea in the last Councell of Trent hee is priuiledged to dispense with some of the lawes of Consanguinitie against nature flatly forbidden in the word of God which is most horrible rebellion and a great disgrace vnto God Thirdly from this propertie of the Law we may obserue that it is not likely that any whole booke of Canonicall Scripture is lost for not one sentence of the Law shall passe till all be fulfilled much lesse then can whole bookes perish Sundrie men do thinke that whole bookes be loste but that opinion cals into question the fidelitie of the Church and Gods own prouidence in preseruing his word neither can it stand wel with this text that saith no title thereof shal faile Those that seeme to be lost were either humane writings as bookes of lawes and Chronicles such as our books of statutes or Chronicles be or books of philosophie such as Salomon writ or else some of them are in the Canonicall Scripture for the bookes of Samuel and the Kings were written by diuers Prophets and therfore we may more safely hold that no part of holy Scripture is lost neither shall euer faile For howsoeuer after the last iudgement the vse of the word written shall cease yet the substance thereof shall remaine in mens hearts and be kept for euer Fourthly this immutabilitie of the Law containes a matter of great terrour woe vnto al impenitent sinners for howsoeuer they may flatter themselues with a presumption of Gods mercie yet the curse of Law which is against them shall stand for euer and therefore while they goe on in sinne they haue iust cause to houle and crie for Gods iustice in that his Law is inuiolable neither will gold or siluer pacifie Gods wrath for though a man by his power and wealth were able to ouerturne heauen and earth yet that would not helpe him though heauen and earth be brought to nothing yet euery part of Gods Law must stand for euer and be fulfilled And therefore whosoeuer doe lie in any finne must in time repent humble themselues forsake their sins and betake themselues vnto Christ that he may fulfill the Law for them or else the cuise thereof shall certainly be fulfilled in them and they shall there lie howling vnder it eternally where is nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth Fiftly this immutabilitie of the Law and so proportionably of euery part of Gods word as it prooueth the Scriptures to be the word of God so it is a most excellent ground of comfort for all Gods seruants to stablish their hearts in the assurance of all his promises A Christian heart is subiect to receiue many doubtinges of the truth of Gods promises especially in the time of triall and temptation but this must be remembred for euer that the whole word of God is immutable though mans promises may faile and their lawes be abrogated yet no iot or part of Gods word shall passe vnfulfilled and therefore they must constantly waite for the accomplishment thereof for in due time it shall be fulfilled Sixtly we are hereby taught to put on patience in afflictiōs for they come by the speciall appointment of our God who saith in his word That through many afflictions we must enter into the kingdome of heauen now euery part of Gods word must be accomplished and therefore Christ bade Peter to put vp his sword when he would haue rescued his apprehension for saith he I could pray to my Father and hee would send more then twelue legions of Angels to helpe me but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled which say It must be so Matth. 26. 52 53 54. Seauenthly our Sauiour Christ in this propertie of immutabilitie giueth vnto the whole Law and vnto euery sillable and letter thereof his proper force vertue and sense so as there is nothing in it not so much as one letter vaine or idle for euery commandement reueales the perfect iustice of God and euery letter serues to expresse the same comaundement And herein the Law of God differeth from mens lawes for in them bee many vaine and idle words yea oftentimes whole sentences but in the law of God it is not so Prou. 8. 8. All the words of my mouth are righteous there is no
by Christs comming and therfore repent and amend and Math. 11. 12. from the time of Iohn hitherto the kingdome of heauen suffereth violence So then the meaning of this first conclusion is this Whosoeuer breaketh one of these least commandements of the Moral law which afterward I shall expound and teacheth men so to doe he shall be contemned and not counted worthie to bee a member of the Church of God in the new Testament In this conclusion in the practise of the Iewes Christ setteth forth two notable corruptions of an hollow heart towards God The first to set little by the commandements of God esteeming no more of them nay lesse then of mens lawes and traditions but Saint Iames saith he that breaketh one commandement bee it neuer so little is guiltie of all though hee make shewe of keeping all so likewise hee that maketh light and base account of one commandement contemneth all though he seeme to honour the rest neuer so much Though Herod heard Iohn gladly and obeied his doctrine in many things and so seemed to make some account of some commandements yet because he would needs liue in incest against the seauēth commandement he did in effect contemne and breake them all so at this day there are many who professe religion and giue testimonie thereof by hearing the word and receiuing the sacraments and herevpon they would be counted louers of Gods lawe yet in the course of their liues and in their particular callings they will not sticke to oppresse the poore and to deale vniustly for their aduantage to prophane the Sabbath for a little profit or pleasure and to sweare and curse when they are a little prouoked Now howsoeuer such persons may make a glorious shew of profession outwardly yet by these and such like particular actions they shew plainly that they haue but Pharisaicall hearts which indeed make little or no account of Gods commandements Let vs therfore euery one looke into our waies and search in our owne hearts whether this corruption be in vs or no and if it be let vs repent and forsake it and labour to become like Dauid who had respect vnto all Gods commandements and so shall we not be despised in the Church of God The second corruption of an hollow heart noted likewise of Christ in these Iewes is to place the ceremonies rites and traditions of men aboue the commandements of the Morall law Herewith he doth expresly charge the Iewish teachers Matth. 15. 3. Why doe ye transgresse the commandements of God by your traditions And this is also the practise of the Church of Rome at this day they account eating flesh in Lent and on their fasting daies a deadly sinne yet they will dispense with threasons murthers of Christian Princes they allow of Stues they permit and pardon Sodomie and yet vtterly forbid mariage in some estate which the holy Ghost calleth honourable among all men In these and many moe they preferre their owne traditions before the most holy commandements of God yea many ignorant persons among vs are tainted with this corruption for be not some feast daies appointed by the Church as Christs natiuitie all Saints and such like obserued by them with greater conscience and reuerence then the Lords owne Sabbath Though the memorie of Christs natiuitie may be celebrated yet the Lords day should haue the speciall honour Now for the reforming of this corruption we must labour to haue the same minde that was in Dauid who grew into admiration with Gods commandements and thereupon invred himselfe to the obseruation of them We must therefore labour to haue an high estimation of the lawes of God and this will be a notable meanes to drawe vs to a reuerend feare and obedience towards to the same one cause why men do not so highly aduance the law of God as they ought is because they doe not sufficiently waigh the dignitie thereof In euery commandement therefore we must first deepely consider the waight thereof then labour to vnderstand it aright thirdly learne to admire the wisdome and iustice of God therein and lastly endeauour to yeeld loyaltie and obedience thereunto Secondly in this Rule our Sauiour Christ puts a difference between a false Prophet and a true The false Prophet breakes the commandements of God in his owne person and also by his doctrine teacheth others to doe the like But the true Prophet and seruant of God in the Ministerie endeauoureth the aduancement of Gods glorie as well by integritie of life as by soundnesse of doctrine Thirdly in the punishment of a false Prophet here set downe wee haue good direction for our iudgement touching the present Church of Rome namely that shee is not worthie to be esteemed a part of Christs Church on earth by the sentence of our Sauiour Christ because shee breakes Gods commaundements and teacheth men so for whereas the second commandement forbiddeth the worshipping of Images yea and the making of Images to resemble God the Church of Rome doth not onely allow the contrarie against this commandement but teacheth others so to doe saying that it is lawful to resemble the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost in Images either painted or carued and to worshippe them therein yea and to worshippe the very Images of Christ and of Saints as also the Saints themselues with religious worship Againe they plainely breake the tenth commandement which forbiddeth the first motions vnto sinne with delight though without cōsent of wil by teaching that concupiscence after baptisme is no sinne And as they deale with the commandements so deale they with the Prophets who giue testimonie vnto Christ for first they destroy his manhood by their forged transubstantiation secondly they ouerturne his kingly office by making the Pope the head of the Church and giuing him power to make lawes to binde the conscience Thirdly they ouerturne the Priesthood by their massing Priesthood wherein they daily offer vp an vnbloodie sacrifice for the sinnes of the quicke and the dead Fourthly they rob him of his propheticall office in giuing liberty to the Pope to make new Laws to expound the Scriptures as supreame iudge these things they teach therefore that Church is not worthy to be counted a member of Christs Church But seeing God in great mercie hath vouchsafed vs this fauour in this land that we should receiue and embrace his holy word to publish and teach the same and so esteemeth vs worthie to be accounted a member of his Church wee are therefore to reioyce in this mercie and to praise God vnfainedly for this vnspeakable blessing and to shewe forth our thankefulnesse not onely by teaching and receiuing the truth of his word but also by yeelding obedience in all things thereunto yea our earnest and daily prayer must be because it is so great a blessing to be counted worthie of his kingdome that
Againe in the new Testament the Apostles ordained that in euery Church there should be Deacons that is men of wisdome and discretion who were to gather for the poore and likewise to dispose of that which was giuen according as euery man had neede in which very order of prouision for the poore the Lord forbids all wādring begging II. These wandring beggers are the shame and reproch of the people where they are suffered for it argueth want of care of good order in gouerners and want of mercie in the rich that they gather all to themselues without regard how the poore should liue III. In releeuing these wandring beggers there is this double want in the giuer he cannot tell what to giue nor how much because he knowes not the state of the partie that beggeth Now in almes deedes there ought to be a double discretion the giuer ought to know both his owne abilitie and also the necessitie of the receiuers IV. Common releeuing at mens doores makes many beggers and maintaines a wicked generation for these wandring beggers are for the most part flat Atheists regarding nothing but their bellie separating themselues from all congregations and from begging many fall to stealing or els they take such pleasure therein that they will neuer leaue it no not for a yearely rent This is knowne to be true by experience All which things duly considered must moue the Magistrates and euery other in their place to see that better order be obserued for the poore then doore-releeuing to all that come And sith good lawes are made in this behalfe men ought in conscience to see the same obserued and kept neither can any man without sinne trāsgresse the same Indeede if good order were not prouided for the poore it were better to releeue them in their wandring course then to suffer them to starue for so dealt Christ his disciples with the poore when good order failed among the Iewes they releeued them in the high waies streetes VII Point At what time must Almes be giuen Ans. Hereof the Scripture speaketh little yet this may be gathered thence First that releefe must be giuen when present occasion requireth therfore Salomon saith Say not to thy neigbour Goe and come again to morow if thou now haue it Secondly that the Sabbath day is a fit time for the giuing of releefe for the poore for the Apostle commanded the Corinthians that each one should lay aside vpon that day according as God had prospered him the weeke before that which he would giue for the poore where by the way it may be obserued that daily giuing at mens doores was not allowed by the Apostles Also touching Trades-men this may be added from this that the Apostle makes contribution for the poore a Sabbath daies worke that wheras they vse to imploy part of the Lords day both morning euening in seruing their customers for their own priuate benefite this can not be ●arranted onely this they may doe vpon the Sabbath they should sell vnto none but to such as buie of necessitie and then they may not make a priuate gaine of their sale but must turne that worke to a worke of mercie for the poore either selling without gaine if it be a poore bodie that buies or giuing the gaine of that which they sell to the rich for the releefe of the poore This indeed will hardly be obtained at trades-mens hands but yet they must know that the whole Sabbath day is the Lords wherin he wil be worshipped with delight neither ought men to doe therein their owne workes nor seeke their owne wills nor speake their owne words Isa. 58. 13. VIII Point In what manner must Almes be giuen Ans. Hereof more is to be spoken in the chapter following yet from this text these things may be obserued First that Almes-giuing must be free the giuer must neither looke for recompence at the hands of man nor thinke to merit any thing thereby at the hands of God That Popish conceit depriues a man of the true comfort of the spirit in this worke of mercy none but Christ by his obedience could euer merit at Gods hands Secondly our hearts in giuing must be touched with charitie and the bowels of compassion we must giue with cheerefulnes for without loue all that we giue is nothing 1. Cor. 13. 3. and the Lord loueth a cheerfull giuer 2. Cor. 9. 7. now if we consider the poore as our owne flesh and see Gods image in them this will mooue vs to pitie Thirdly in the person of the poore we must consider Christ Iesus and giue vnto them as we would giue vnto Christ. This will mooue vs to giue and that chearefully for in the day of iudgement Christ will make it known that he comes for releefe to the rich in the person of the poore to the mercilesse he will say In as much as ye did it not to them ye did it not to me but to the mercifull thus In as much as ye did it vnto one of the least of these my brethren ye haue done it vnto me Fourthly our almes must be giuen as a pledge of our thankefulnesse vnto God for the blessings we enioy for all we haue commeth from God and of his hand it is whatsoeuer we giue now he professeth that when men doe good and distribute to the poore he is well pleased with such sacrifices Hauing seene what this dutie of Almes-giuing is and how it must be performed we must now stirre vp our selues to put the same in practise and to mooue vs hereunto consider the reasons following I. We all desire to be counted religious now if we would be such indeede we must visit the fatherlesse and widowes we must doe good and giue almes to the poore for this is pure religion and vndefiled before God as Iames saith To come to the Church and heare the word and to receiue the Sacraments are good things but without mercie to the poore they are not regarded but hated of God Isa. 1. 13 14 15. II. If a man should offer vnto vs a peece of ground to manure and till for our owne reaping we would take it kindely and bestowe both paines and seede vpon it behold the poore are sent of God to the rich as a peece of ground to be tilled and when they giue to the poore they sowe vpon the ground now as Paul saith in this case looke as a man soweth so shall he reape we therefore must sow liberally that we may also reape liberally III. Prov. 19. 17. He that hath mercie vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lord we would easily be mooued to lend if we had an honest man to be suretie vnto vs for returning of our owne with aduantage well the Lord offers himselfe to the rich to be suretie for the poore who then will feare to lend hauing so good a debter
much more giue food and raiment for their preseruation Seeing God giues the greater we need not to doubt but he wil affoard the lesse In this reason Christ teacheth vs to make right vse of our creation namely by the consideration of it to learne confidence in Gods prouidence for all things needfull to our naturall life Iob. 10. 8. Thine hands haue made me and fashioned mee and wilt thou destroy me where Iob Perswades himselfe of preseruation because God created him 1. Pet. 4. 19. Let them that suffer according to the will of God commend their soules vnto him in wel-doing as vnto a faithfull creator because God is a faithfull creator therfore in death we must relie vpon him Experience teacheth vs that euery workeman is carefull to preserue the worke of his owne hands if it lie in his power why then should we doubt of this in our creator who is almightie Verse 26. Behold the fowles of the heauen for they sowe not neither reape nor carrie into the barnes yet your heauenly father feedeth them Are ye not much better then they These words containe Christs second reason to disswade his Disciples from distrustfull care for things needefull drawne from the consideratiō of his prouidence ouer baser creatures then they were for needfull prouision the reason standeth thus If God prouide for the foules of heauen then much more will he provide for you But God prouideth for the fowles of heauen and feedeth them therefore much more will he prouide for you The first part of this reason is here confirmed two waies First because the children of God haue meanes of prouision which the fowles of the heauen want they sowe not neither reape c. Secondly Gods children are better then fowles and therefore he will not suffer them to lacke sith he prouideth for baser things then they be both which are so sensible and familiar that they may induce any man to depend vpon Gods prouidence without distrustfull care Christ in propounding this reason bids vs Behold the creatures that is take a serious view of them looke vpon them wishly with consideration as the word signifieth whereby wee may learne that euery childe of God ought seriously to consider the works of God for that which we must doe to the fowles of heauen we must do to al the works of his hands therein labour to behold the wisdome iustice goodnes loue mercy and prouidence of God This is Salomons lesson Eccl. 7. 15. Behold the worke of God Iob. 36. 24. Remēber thou magnifie the worke of God which men behold Why did God make the creatures distinctly one after another in sixe seuerall daies and take a particular view of thē all after he had made them with approbation of their goodnesse and also sanctifie the 7. day for an holy rest both by his own example expresse cōmandement vndoubtedly among other causes this was one to teach vs to consider distinctly of al the works of his hands among other holy duties to meditate on the sabbath day on the glorious works of our creator This was Dauids practise for Psal. 19. 1. c. he resembles the heaue●s to a great booke wherein a man may read the glorie of God and in the contemplation hereof did he exercise himselfe vpon the Sabbath daies as we may see in the Psalme which he penned for the Sabbath Psal. 92. 4 5. I will reioyce in the works of thine hands O Lord how glorious are thy workes And they which are negligent in this dutie are here called to attendance by our Sauiour Christ. But what must we behold in the foules of heauen How they neither sow nor reape nor carie into barnes c. that is they vse not the meanes of prouision that man doth which shews they haue not that care which man hath Man may lawfully be carefull to vse these meanes for God ordaineth them for mans prouision but the fowles of the heauen goe not so farre to haue care of any meanes And this priuiledge of man to the meanes doth strongly enforce Christs disswasion against distrustfull care for the fowles wanting such meanes are free from that care Quest. How then are they prouided for Ans. They expect for foode at Gods hand Iob 39. 3. The birds crie vnto God wandring for lacke of meate Psal. 104. 21. The lyons ro●ring after their pray seeke their meate at God Psal. 145. 15. The eyes of all waite vpon God and he giueth them meate in due season Psal. 147. 9. He giueth to beasts their foode and to the young rauens that crie But how can vnreasonable creatures crie to God Ans. They doe not vse praier as man doe but yet they are said to crie to God and to waite on God because by a naturall instinct giuen them by creation they seeke for that foode which God ordaineth for them and are contented therewith so that by these phrases God would teach vs that they depend vpon his prouidence wholly for prouision and rest contented therewith Here then we are to obserue that the vnreasonable creatures made subiect to vanitie by the sinne of man doe come nearer to their first estate and better obserue the order of nature in their creation then man doth for they seeke for that which God prouideth for them and when they receiue it are content but man is deepely fallen from the state of his creation in regard of his depending on Gods prouidence for temporall things though he haue the vse of meanes which the fowles of heauen want yet his heart is full fraught with distrustfull care whether we respect the getting or keeping or imploying of earthly things This sheweth that man is more corrupt then other creatures and more vile and base in this behalfe then bruit beasts which should humble euery one of vs deopely vnder the serious consideration of our sinnes that haue so depraued our nature that we are more rebellious to the law of our creator and more distrustfull in his prouidence then the bruit and senslesse creatures And yet your heauenly father feedeth them In these words is couched a forcible reason whereby Christ would perswade his disciples and in them all beleeuers to depend vpon Gods prouidence without distrustfull care God saith he is your father yea your heauenly father and you are his children therefore depend vpon him for if earthly fathers will prouide and giue good things to their children much more will your heauenly In this reason also is couched a meanes and way whereby a man may come to rest vpon Gods prouidence In the word of God there be two kind of promises some of euerlasting life and saluation by Christ others of inferiour gifts and blessings concerning this life Now if we would relie on God for temporall blessings we must first labour to lay hold by faith on his spirituall and eternall promises get assurance of thine adoption in Christ and labour to know and feele
quietly alone to put his mouth into the dust and to giue his cheeke vnto the nippers Doth blessednesse belong to meeke persons hereby then wee are admonished to labour for the moderation of all our affections especially of anger hatred and reuenge and to beware of all hindrances to this blessed vertue as choller hastinesse grudging impatience vnder wrongs with all rayling reuiling chiding and brawling and all such threatning speeches which come too oft in practise that wee may forgiue but we will neuer forget yea in Action we must auoyd all quarrelling fighting contending and going to law on euery light occasion for true meekenesse admits none of all these to take place with Gods children And to induce vs hereunto consider first Christs precept and example bidding vs learne of him for he is meeke and lowely Againe consider Gods owne dealing with vs we daiely wrong him by our offences and yet he beares with vs shall we then bee so vnlike our heauenly Father that we will straight reuenge the wrongs that others doe vnto vs See Colloss 3. 12 13. As the elect of God holy and beloued put on the bowels of mercie gentlenesse lowelinesse of minde meekenesse long suffering forbearing one another and forgiuing one another if any man haue a quarrell against another euen as God for Christs sake forgaue you so doe yee Lastly the fruition and practise of this grace hath the promise of blessednesse belonging to it and therefore as we would bee happie so we must get the spirit of meekenesse into our hearts and expresse the vertue and power thereof in our liues Obiect I. Here some will say If I put vp all iniuries I shall be coūted a dastard and a foole Ans. In this case learne of Paul to passe little for mans iudgement but be carefull to get and 〈…〉 this grace of meekenesse and then Christ will pronounce thee ●●●ssed which ought more to preuaile with thee then all mens estimatiō in the world and so it will vnlesse thou loue the praise of men more then the praise of God Ioh. 12. 48. Obiect II. Again it will be said The more I vse to put vp wrongs the more shall I haue still done vnto me Ans. That is onely so ●●th wicked men for who else will wrong thee if thou followe that which is good Yet say they doe thy patient suffering is praise-worthy with God and he will take the matter into his hand yea Christ Iesus who iudgeth not by the sight of the eie he will rebuke aright for all the meeke of the earth Obiect III. But yet thou saist this is the way to loose all that a man hath and to be thrust out of house and harbour Ans. Nothing lesse for Christ here saith the meeke shall inherit the earth doubt not but Christ will make good his word and therefore if thou respect these outward things labour to get and exercise the spirit of meekenesse II. Point Wherein doth this blessednes of the meeke consist namely in their inheriting of the earth And this is a great happinesse for a man to be Lord of the whole earth But how can this be true sith many of Gods dearest seruants haue beene strangers on this earth thrust out of house and land and constrained to wander in mountaines and desarts afflicted and miserable yea destitute of conuenient foode and raiment Heb. 11. 37 38. Ans. The meeke are here called Inheritors of the earth not for that they alwaies haue the possession thereof but first because God giues a meete and conuenient portion of the earth either to them or to their posteritie thus hee dealt with Abraham Isaac and Iacob they had sufficient for themselues and a promise of great possessions which their posteritie did enioy Secondly if it fall out that meeke persons die in want or banishment yet God giues thē contentation which is fully answerable to the inheritance of the earth so Paul saith of himselfe and other Apostles they were as men hauing nothing and yet possessed all things meaning through contentation with the peace of a good conscience Thirdly the meeke haue this inheritance in regard of right being the members of Christ who is Lord of all Hence Paul saith to the beleeuing Corinthians all things are yours whether it be Paul or Cephas or the world things present or things to come all are yours and ye Christs Fourthly the meeke are made kings by Christ and after the last iudgement they shall rule and raigne with him for euer 〈…〉 ●eu 5. 10. And in these two last respects the meeke are more properly said to be the inheritours of the earth Obiect Yet here it will be said againe that wicked and carnall men are oftentimes the greatest Lords of the earth as Nimr●d in his time and the Turke at this day Answ. The right vnto the earth is two-fold Ciuill and Spirituall Ciuill right is that which stands good before men by their lawes an●●ustomes and in regard therof men are called Lords of such lands as they haue right vnto in the Courts of men and so the Turke at this day is a mightie Lord of a great part of the whole world Spirituall right is that which is warrantable and approoued with God himselfe and such right and title had Adam to all the world before his fall which he lost by his sinne both from himselfe and all his posterity but yet in Christ the same is recouered to all the elect And of this right Christ here speaketh when hee calleth the meeke inheritours of the earth in regard whereof the Turke all vnbeleeuers and vngodly persons are but vsurpers of those things which otherwise ciuilly they doe lawfully possesse Here then is an excellent priuiledge of all the true members of Christ that in him they be Lords of the earth whereby first wee may see how farre most men doe ouershoote themselues in seeking earthly possessions for the manner is without all regard of Christ to hunt after the world but this is a preposterous course these men set the Cart before the horses for seeing all our right to the earth was lost by Adam and is onely recouered by Christ doubtlesse till we haue part in Christ we cannot with the comfort of a good conscience either purchasse or possesse any inheritance vpon earth In regard of certaintie men desire to hold their lands in capite that is in the Prince as beeing the best tenure but if wee would haue a sure title and hold aright in capite wee must labour to become true members of Christ and hold our right in him for he is the Prince of the kings of the earth and Lord of all the world and till we be in Christ wee shall neuer haue an holy and sanctified right to any worldly possessions Secondly this serues for a bridle against all immoderate care for the world for if wee
and duties of religion were abomination vnto the Lord because their hands were full of blood and because they had no mercie therefore they were led into captiuitie as we may see at large Ier. 5. 28. Euck. 9. 9 10. and Zach. 9. 12. Now we beeing in the same case with them for vnmercifulnes and crueltie haue no doubt deserued long since the same punishment euen that the Enemie should depriue vs both of Gospel and peace and of all our prosperitie and wealth what then shall we doe surely we must humble our selues by praier and fasting vnto the Lord if not publikely yet priuately euery man and euery familie apart euen for this one sinne of vnmercifulnesse and withall in this humiliation begin to practise mercie by bestowing that vpon the poore which we spare frō our bodies in the daie of our fast Verse 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God These words containe the sixt Rule of Christ touching true happinesse wherein as in the former obserue two points the persons blessed and wherein their blessednesse consists The persons blessed are thus qualified they are pure in heart This is diuersly expounded By pure in heart some vnderstand those that are chasse others those that are simple hearted voide of guile and deceit But the words will beare a more generall sense betoken such as are holy in heart hauing their hearts purged from the defilement of their sinnes and be in part renued and sanctified by the holy Ghost and that they are so to bee taken may appeare Psal. 24. 4. whence these words are borrowed where also the Prophet expoundeth the pure in heart to be such as haue not lift vp their minde to vaine things to which purpose the Author to the Hebrewes saith Follow peace with all men and holinesse without which no man can see God Againe the intent of our Sauiour Christ in this place was no doubt to crosse the Pharisaicall conceipt of those times whereby men did content themselues with outward holinesse as sufficient to true happinesse and therefore he saith Blessed are the pure not outwardly but inwardly in heart Further by heart we are to vnderstand the soule with the parts and faculties thereof that is the mind the conscience the will and affections And that wee may yet conceiue more clearely of this point we are to search out two things first in what maner then in what measure the heart is made pure For the first the purifying of the heart is by a two-fold Action of the holy Ghost first by creating in the minde a sauing faith which vnites a man vnto Christ as an hand applieth Christs puritie that is his obedience to the heart so Peter speaketh of the Gentiles in the Councell at Ierusalem that by faith the Lord purified their hearts Secondly when a man is in Christ the holy Ghost purgeth and sanctifieth the heart inwardly by mortifying all the corruptions in the minde will and affections and by putting into it inward holinesse whereby the image of Christ is renued therein And this our Sauiour Christ expresseth Iohn 15. 2. when hee saith that the father purgeth every one that bringeth forth fruit in him Now vnto these the holy Ghost addeth an excellent grace of Christian Resolution whereby a man hath a constant purpose not to sinne against God any way either in thought word or deede but in all things to please God continually so as if at any time he-sinne it is against his holy resolution Now for the measure of this purification it is onely in part in this life for the grace of sanctification is not perfect till death as the Apostle saith we receiue but the first fruits of the spirit that is not the Tenths but as an handfull of corne to a whole field the soule is freed from the punishment and guilt of sinne and in some sort purged from corruption but not wholly This wee must obserue the more diligently because the Papists teach otherwise to wit that after Baptisme and regeneration sinne is so taken away that there is in man nothing that God can hate but experience in euery childe of God shewes this to be false The chiefe ground of their opinion is this that if sinne properly called should remaine in the regenerate then God should repute a man to be iust which is a sinner But we answer that God neuer reputeth an impenitent sinner iust but onely the repentant and regenerate which are by faith in Christ and so in effect are no sinners because though corruption remaine in them in part yet it is not imputed to their persons Besides in the acte of their conuersion corruption hath receiued that deadly wound whereof it shall neuer recouer but daiely die till it be quite abolished and therefore doth it not raigne in them And thus we see in what manner and measure the heart is purified whereby the pure in heart may be thus described They are such as beleeue the pardon of their sinnes in Christ and be in part renewed in their soules by the holy Ghost hauing their naturall corruptions mortified and abolished in some measure and the graces of Gods image repaired in thē and a godly resolution wrought in their hearts not to sinne against God in any thing Considering that the pure in heart bee blessed wee must search our selues and see whether our hearts bee qualified with this grace As in former times so at this day inward puritie is much neglected The ancient Iewes stood vpon their legall puritie and righteousnesse and the Pharises after them relied vpon their outward holinesse and the holy Ghost foretold that in the latter daies should come perilous times by reason of sundrie sinnes wherof this is one that men should content thēselues with a shadow and shew of godlinesse and in truth denie the power thereof And doth not experince shewe this to be true among vs for the pure heart is so little regarded that the seeking after it is turned to a by-word and a matter of reproach Who are so much branded with vile tearmes of Puritans and Presitians as those that most indeauour to get and keepe the puritie of heart in a good conscience Againe the generall ignorance that euery where abounds doth plainely argue the want of this grace for what can bee in the heart but impuritie and iniquitie where there is no knowledge of the will of God in the minde And for such as haue more knowledge then the rest generally they are not answerable vnto it in practise for take a view of all the markets in the land and you shall hardly find a man that is to sell his graine that will be brought to abate one iot of the highest price no not vnto the poore that stand in extreame neede which as it argueth a bloodie and cruell heart so it sheweth our times to be euill da●es wherein men professe much and doe nought which sinne
sinnefull conception al which our Sauiour Christ was free from for at the very time when hee bare our sinnes hee was in himselfe more holy then all men and all Angels Fourthly it is said that if Christs righteousnesse bee made ours then wee are made Sauiours Answer It followeth not for Christs merits and righteousnesse are conuaied and applied vnto men not as they are in Christs person in whom they are sufficient to saue ten thousand worlds but as they serue to saue and iustifie that particular person onely to whom they are imputed so that this remaines an vndoubted truth that that righteousnesse which brings saluation is Christs righteousnesse onely Here some may say How is Christs righteousnesse made ours and wee assured of it Answ. It is made ours by sauing faith which the holy Ghost creates in the heart and soule as an hand whereby wee may laie hold on Christ and applie his righteousnesse vnto our selues as hee is offered vnto vs in the promises of the Gospel Some obiect that if Christs righteousnesse be made ours by our beleeuing it to bee ours then if a man beleeue his neighbours house to be his it is his also and so for any other thing Answer There is not the like reason in these things for it is a meere fancie and imagination for a man to beleeue his neighbours house to be his hauing no ground for it besides his owne conceit but when a man beleeueth Christs righteousnesse to be his he hath Gods commandement and promise for his warrant and assurance that it shall be imputed vnto him and withall that faith so grounded maketh Christs righteousnesse as truely his as any thing a man hath is his owne beeing giuen him of another Now this sauing faith laying hold on Christs righteousnesse for mans iustification is neuer seuered from sanctification by the spirit with the fruits thereof whereby the old man beeing mortified and the new man in Christ renued according to his image in knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse the whole person is turned vnto God and made carefull to please him both in thought word and deede and hereby doe wee receiue assurance of our iustification for true sanctification is the earnest of the spirit of adoption in our hearts whereby we are sealed vnto the day of our redemption Doth that righteousnesse whereby we must be iustified and saued in the day of our Lord come from Christ onely and not from our selues then we see what iust cause we haue to humble our selues and to acknowledge our great vnrighteousnesse and want of all goodnesse in our selues and when wee can doe this vnfainedly wee haue gone one steppe in the way to true happinesse Secondly we also must hereby learne to esteeme all things as drosse and dongue with the Apostle in respect of Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse for he it is that brings vs to heauen and therefore wee must honour him aboue all and value his righteousnesse as that most pretious iewel which when a man hath found hee will sell all that he hath to get and keepe it Matth. 13. 46. Thirdly we must hunger and thirst after Christ and his righteousnesse for it is the fountaine of all blessednes and without it we are most miserable yea though wee had all the world beside yet without it wee loose our saluation Now what will it profit a man to winne all the world if he loose his soule Fourthly seeing Christs righteousnesse is made ours by faith we made assured of it by sanctification of heart and life wee must labour for true faith whereby our hearts may bee inwardly renued we must not content our selues with an outward holinesse for that will neuer bring a man to heauen but our endeauour must be for inward holinesse whereby we shal be preferred with God aboue all the Pharises in the world and get assurance of eternall happinesse And this faith wee must shewe forth in all holy exercises as when we heare the word wee must lend the inward eare of the heart with the bodily eare and when we fall downe to praier we must bowe the knees of our hearts and in fasting from meate wee must abstaine from sinne yea in all things wee must be carefull to serue God in spirit and truth for which cause wee must pray with Dauid Lord renue a right spirit within me that so feeling Christ to liue in vs by grace wee may bee assured that Christs righteousnesse shall bring vs vnto glorie Verse 21. Ye haue heard that it was said of olde Thou shalt not kill for whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement Our Sauiour Christ hauing laid downe his Preface doth here begin his interpretation of the Law beeing indeed the onely true doctour of his Church and herein especially hee doth meddle with the second Table beginning first of all with the sixt Commandement touching Murther In the handling whereof hee obserueth this order First hee setteth downe the false interpretation of this law by the Scribes and Pharises in this verse Secondly hee sheweth the true meaning of it v. 22. And lastly hee propoundeth rules of concord and agreement betweene those that be at variance verses 23 24 25 26. For the first The Exposition Ye haue heard that is you Iewes which now heare mee whether Scribes Pharises or others you haue heard that it hath beene said of old that is by your auncient Teachers the old Scribes and Pharises who haue expounded this law vnto you and that this phrase must be vnderstood of the ancient Iewish Teachers may plainely appeare because in the next verse hee opposeth his owne teaching thereunto and would haue these his hearers that before had learned a false interpretation of this law from their old Teachers now to learne of him the true exposition thereof The Law is this Thou shalt not kill The exposition of the ancient Iewish Teachers was this for whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement that is whosoeuer laieth violent handes on another to take away his life for they knew no other murther neither did they extend this commandement to forbid any sin but actual murther shall be culpable of iudgement that is shall be held guiltie of murther both in the courts of men and also before the iudgement seate of God where hee shall receiue the deserued punishment thereof This was the interpretation of the Iewes Here first obserue that Antiquitie is no infallible marke of true doctrine for this exposition of this commandement was ancient received from ancient Teachers and yet Christ the doctour of truth reiecteth it as false and corrupt and therefore the argument which the Papists vse for the stablishing of their religion drawn from Antiquitie is of no effect Secondly by these words of Christ ye haue heard it hath beene said of olde wee may easily gather after what manner the Scribes and Pharises expounded the law namely they left the Scriptures and followed
must be opened namely what is Adulterie here forbidden Adulterie properly is the breach of wedlocke by such parties some one whereof at the least is either maried or espoused I call it the breach of wedlocke to note the propertie of this sinne which is not in any other sinne vnlesse it be of this kinde though the sinne bee farre more grieuous Idolatrie is a more hainous sinn● then Adulterie beeing a breach both of the first and second commaundement of the first Table and yet it comes short of Adulterie in this qualitie of breaking wedlocke for wedlocke may bee kept of those which are Idolaters Secondly I say betweene any parties if one bee maried meaning the husband as well as the wife to confute the opinion of some Iewes and by some lawes also maintained that the man hath a priuiledge aboue the woman so as hee breaketh not wedlocke when he goeth in to another woman besides his wife which is false for though he haue a prerogatiue ouer his wife in beeing her head yet hee hath no priuiledge to free him from matrimoniall fidelitie but is as much bound to keepe himselfe vnto his wife as she is to keepe her selfe to him The preheminence of superioritie cannot free the husband frō the bond of mariage the husband is bound to the wife as much as the wife is to the husband and shee hath power ouer his bodie as much as he hath ouer hers 1. Cor. 7. 4. Thirdly I say or espoused because Adulterie is not onely committed by such parties whereof one or both be fully maried but also by them whereof one is single and the other contracted onely and therefore is the same punishment alotted to both for contract in right is mariage Thus wee see the sinne here directly forbidden according to the letter of the Law Now though the Lord vnder this one includes all the sinnes of the same kind as we shall anone perceiue yet the Pharises tooke this litterall signification for the whole meaning and taught that the sinne here forbidden was bodily adulterie onely and so made the adulterie of the heart to be no adulterie which exposition Christ here confutes First here obserue the fraud and cunning of these Pharises they would seeme faithfull interpreters of the Law in that they keep themselues so close to the words that they will not passe one iot beyond the litterall sense but yet in the meane time they omit the full meaning and true vse of this Law The like hath beene the practise of heretiks in all ages as the Arrians who denied that Christ was God stucke fast to these words of Scripture the father is greater then I and to such like And the Papists to vphold their breaden God by transubstantiation will needes keepe tke litterall sense of these words of Christ This is my bodie whereby they ouerturne the nature of that sacrament And the like might be shewed by sundrie examples in all ages whereby we are taught not to stand vpon the proprietie of the words of Scripture onely but to labour to haue the true spirituall sense ioyned with them Secondly here obserue how grieuous a sinne Adulterie is in that Christ by name doth expresly forbid it among all the sinnes of this kind yea the very Pharises doe euery where condemne it for though they would easily dispense with disobedience to Parents yet the woman taken in Adulterie must be put to death Iohn 8. 4 5. The greatnes of this sinne might be shewed by many arguments for if he be worse thou an infidel that careth not for his familie then farre worse is the Adulterer for he destroyeth his familie Salomon we know maketh Adulterie worse then theft and yet theft is a notorious sinne greatly hated and seuerely punished of all nations Againe Adulterie destroyeth the Seminarie of the Church which is a godly seed in the familie and it breaketh the couenant betweene the parties and God it robs another of the pretious ornament of chastitie which is a gift of the holy Ghost it dishonoureth their bodies and maketh them the temples of the diuell and the Adulterer maketh his familie a Stewes for as Dauid dealt with Vrias so his owne sonne Absalon dealt with him and lastly it bringeth Gods vengeance vpon the posteritie and therefore Iob calleth it a fir● which shall deuoure vnto destruction yea the greatnesse of Gods punishment vpon Adulterers partly in this life and principally after death may plainely shew the greatnesse of this sinne for this and other sinnes God in his wrath ouerthrewe Admah and Zebomi Sodome and Gomorrah with five and brimston●● from heauen and the place where they stood it made a poole of poysoning water vnto this day And although the Lord doe not shew such extraordinary reuenge against sinne yet his wrath is a consuming fire against whole families townes and kingdomes for this sinne though Dauid repented of his Adulterie yet for that very sinne the sword must not depart from his house for euer And for the life to come Adulterers and wh●rem●ngers God will Iudge Againe neither fornicators nor adulterers c. shall inherit the kingdome of God they may indeed repent and so bee saued but then they cease to be adulterers Now if Adulterie be so grieuous a sinne worser then theft c. then we must wish that in all places it were as seuerely punished as theft is so would families be reformed and become good Seminaries both for Church and common wealth Secondly the grieuousnesse of Gods wrath against this sinne must admonish euery one to beware thereof for it brings the besome of destruction to sweepe all away both in Church and common wealth Verse 28. But I say vnto you that whosoeuer looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adulterie with her alreadie in his heart Here our Sauiour Christ laies down the true sense of this commandement and as we see hee speaketh as the Law-giuer and Prophet of his Church who hath absolute power to giue lawes and to expound the same But I say vnto you The Pharises said there was no adultery but that which was outward and bodily but Christ plainely confuteth that and saith he that looketh on a woman to lust after her that is either in looking on her lusteth or by looking lusteth after her that is desireth to increase his lust he hath committed adulterie with her alreadie in his heart Here then our Sauiour Christ setteth down two things touching the interpretation of this law First the occasion of adulterie which is looking to lust Secondly that the ●ust of the heart that is the motion and inward inclination of the heart vnto this sinne is adulterie before God though it neuer come into action For the occasion To looke vpon a woman is not sinne but may bee done lawfully yea thereby a man or woman may glorifie God as the Queene of Sheba by beholding Salomons person and hearing his
last words of this answer when he saith Let your communication be yea yea For this is a Rule to be obserued in the interpretation of Scripture that things generally spoken must particularly be vnderstood according to the circumstances of the present matter in hand as when Paul saith he became all things to all men if it should be taken generally we might say that with blasphemers he became a blasphemer c. but that speach must be restrained to the vse of things indifferent in all which he yeilded to the weaknes of all that he might winne some and so here Sweare not at all must be restrained to the Iewish custome which was to sweare by the name of God in their common talke and by other creatures both which Christ doth vtterly forbid Here first we learne that ordinarie swearing is vnlawfull either by the name of God or by other creatures This is the common sinne of our age in all sorts and degrees some sweare by their faith others by their troth before God by the crosse of the coyne hauing money in their hands by the fire that is Gods angel as they vse to speake others by bread drinke and looke how many occasions men haue offered vnto them so many oathes haue they framed vnto themselues Secondly here is condemned all minsed oathes as by my ●ay maskins and yea mary for the ground thereof was this Popish oath by Marie Thirdly here are condemned all grosse oathes by the parts of Christs bodie as by his heart blood sides and such like Yet men haue their excuses for common swearing as first that they sweare the truth and nothing els But the truth of their oath cannot dispense with the commandement of God forbidding all swearing in ordinarie communication Others that be more simple say they sweare by good things But that makes their sinne the greater for the goodnes of a thing doth aggrauate the offence in the abuse thereof Others say that they can not be beleeued vpon their bare word Answ. But Christs commaundement must not be broken to winne credit to our speeches that credit is deare bought which is got by pauning the soule to the deuill God must be obeied for the matter of our communication though no man will beleeue vs. Others as Souldiers yong gallants vse to sweare to testifie their courage and gentrie these men shew that they loue the praise of men more then the praise of God But that will be found in the ende but sorie reputation which is gained by transgression their glorie will be their shame and their ende damnation Philip. 3. 18. nay their base minds and cowardlinesse are herein euident that they glorie in their slauish bondage vnto sinne and Satan These excuses will not free men from the guilt of condemnation at the day of iudgement for common swearing is a shamefull taking of Gods name in vaine now the Lord hath said that he will not hold them guiltles that take his name in vaine These therefore that haue this way offended must betime repent of this impietie and learne to feare the name of God making conscience of an oath and let their communication be yea yea and nay nay as Christ commandeth The wicked fact of Iezabel couering bloodie impietie vnder hypocrisie in proclaiming a fast when shee would haue Naboth slaine for blasphemie shewes that the custome of those times was to haue publike humiliation for such sinnes least the wrath of God should come vpon the land And when good king Hezekias heard the grieuous blasphemie which Rabshak●h vttered against the Lord he fell to his prayers and to humble himselfe before God shall this good King doe this for an other mans blasphemie and shall not we doe the like for our owne but continue in swearing without all remorse Our common swearers are deuills incarnate yea rather worse then the deuill himselfe for the deuills beleeue God and tremble but they teare God in pieces and are neuer mooued If men abuse earthly Princes in their name and titles they are imprisoned banished or hanged and that iustly now shall this be done to them that impeach the dignities of mortall men and shall not Gods wrath be hot against that people who liue in the continuall blasphemie of his name Let vs therefore feare to open our mouthes in any kinde of common swearing though it be by the basest creature that God hath made for the least creature is better then we can be allowed to abuse by our oathes Lastly here is forbidden all cursing of our selues in our common talke as when men say If it be not so I would I were hanged I would this bread might be my ba●e and such like for euery imprecation is a part of an oath as we may see in the oathes specified in Scripture 1. Sam. 25. 22. So and more also doe God to the enemies of Dauid c. and 2. king 6. 5. If I doe not so and so then God doe so and so to me now as we are not to sweare in our common talke so neither ought we to s●e imprecation therein for beeing part of an oath it ought not to be the matter of our common speech Here two questions must be skanned first when may a man lawfully sweare and when not for Christs speach forbidding ordinarie swearing seemes to graunt that there is a time wherein a man may lawfully take an oath There be two times and cases wherein a man may lawfully take an oath First when the magistrate ministreth an oath vnto a man vpon a iust occasion for the magistrate hath the power of God in this case and therefore when he iustly requires it of man then may he lawfully sweare Secondly when a man 's owne calling generall or particular necessarily requires an oath and that is in foure cases I. when the taking of an oath serueth to maintaine procure or winne vnto God any part of his glorie or to preserue the same from disgrace In this regard Paul mooued with a godly zeale vseth an oath in sundrie of his Epistles for the confirmation of his doctrine that the Churches to whome he writ might be stablished in the truth and so glorifie God the more II. When his oath serueth to maintaine or further his owne or others saluation or preseruation in soule or bodie in this case Paul calls God for a record vnto his soule that he came not to Corinth to spare them And Dauid to further himselfe in the way of saluation bound himselfe by an oath that he would keepe Gods commandements III. When the oath serues to confirme and stablish peace and societie betweene partie and partie countrey and countrey kingdome kingdome Thus did Abraham and Abimelech sweare each to other Gen. 21. 23. and Iacob and Laban Gen. 31. 53. and by vertue hereof doe subiects bind themselues by oath in allegiance to their Princes and soldiers to their Gouernours IV. When a
our hearts the hatred of any mans person and striue to shew forth louing vsage euen towards our enemies though it be against our nature both by speaking well of them vnto others and shewing kindnesse vnto them both in word and deed we must pray for them and goe so farre in all good duties towards them that by our well-doing we may heape coales of fire vpon their heads that is cause their consciences like a fire to burne within them accusing them of their ill dealing towards vs and not suffering them to rest till they laie away their enmitie and malitiousnesse against vs. Fiftly this commandement of louing our enemies in word and deed shewes it to be vnlawful for any man to vtter euill speeches of another at any time vnlesse the occasion bee iust and hee bee lawfully called thereunto for loue couers a multitude of sinnes but disgracing specches are fruits of hatred Though Saul were Dauids professed enemie and sought his blood yet Dauid neuer reuiled him and wee ought to follow his good example Verse 45. That ye may be the children of your father which is in heauen for he maketh his sunne to arise on the euill and the good sendeth raine vpon the iust and vniust Because it is against mans nature to loue his enemie therefore our Sauiour Christ inforceth his Disciples hereunto by the benefit they shall reape hereby in manifesting themselues to be the children of God for he spake to those that were Gods children thus perswading them to loue their enemies That which will make you knowne to be Gods children that you must doe but by louing your enemies you shall make it manifest that you are Gods children this he prooueth in the words following because it is a propertie of God so to doe for he maketh the sunne to arise on the euill and on the good c. Here first obserue a true note of the childe of God namely to imitate God his heauenly father in louing his enemies and expressing the faine by all kinde vsage both in word and deede praying for them and releeuing them in their necessities And because it is so blessed a thing to be the childe of God we must therefore hereby stirre vp our selues to the conscionable performance of this dutie Secondly from the ground of this reason we are taught that wee ought principally to imploy our selues to those things by the doing whereof we may get assurance that we are the children of God as also to shunne the doing of all such things at declare vs to be the children of Satan that is all sinnes which are indeed workes of darkenesse and of the deuill In the euill day whether it be of death or of affliction when no man can comfort vs this will be an onely ioy vnto our hearts which will swallow vp all feare that wee know our selues to bee Gods children for then the Lord will acknowledge vs for his owne but if by sinne we be like the deuill God will refuse vs and so wee fall wholly to the deuill Let vs therefore practise those things whereby this ground of comfort may be treasured in our hearts Thirdly note here the style and title of honour which Christ giueth vnto God he calles him not onely their father but their father which is in heauen this hee doth to stirre vp reuerence in his hearers towards God and so haue Gods children done Dan. 9. 4. before that holy prophet powres out his praier vnto God for his people hee sets out the Lord with most glorious titles O Lord God great and terrible which keepest couenant and mercie c. And Ieremie praying vnto God spends three or foure verses in setting out Gods great power and Maiestie Chap. 32. 17 18 19. So Hezekias in his praier for the people calles the Lord the good God which no doubt he did to stirre vp reuerence in his owne heart and in the people towards God Whereby we are taught when we haue occasion to mention the name of God to doe it with all reuerence and to vse some titles of honour therewithall to stirre vp our selues and our hearers to a gratious awe of heart towards Gods maiestie But lamentable is the practise of the world in this behalfe for euery where the name of God is tossed in mens mouthes like a tennis-ball some in the middest of their laughter vse O God O Lord for breathing words but others spare not to make Gods glorious name the ensigne of their rage and furie in bloodie and blasphemous oathes but void of grace are all such For he maketh the sunne to rise on the euill and on the good and sendeth raine on the iust and on the vniust Here Christ propounds the propertie of God in doing good and shewing kindnes to his enemies to prooue that by so doing we shall shew our selues to be his children Wherein first obserue the manner of Christs speech he saith not Hee hath caused the sunne to rise and hath sent raine c. but speaking of the time present he doth now cause the sunne to rise and sendeth raine so likewise Iohn 5. 17. My father yet worketh and I worke together with him In which phrase is expressed a notable worke of Gods heauenly prouidence namely that after the creation of all things whereby God gaue beeing vnto the creatures and power and vertue to doe the things for which they were created he doth by his prouidence still preserue that beeing and so in euery particular creature It is God that gaue beeing to the sunne at the beginning and it is hee that euer since continueth the beeing of the sunne with the light and vertue thereof the same is true of all creatures and of ourselues for in him we liue moone and haue our beeing hee is not like a Carpenter who buildes a house and then leaues it but still he preserues the things hee hath created Herein we may well be compared to a spring or fountaine which causeth the riuers to flowe while it sendeth out waters but when it is stopped they are dried vp euen so while God continueth the beeing and vse of creatures so long they are but if hee with-hold his hand from them they cease to bee and the vse of them continueth no more Thus it is with vs both in regard of our soules and bodies with the faculties powers and graces thereof for what hast thou that thou hast not receiued from him who beareth vp all things by his mightie word Now hence we must learne these duties First to seeke to know him that is daily about vs and preserueth vs in soule and in bodie from houre to houre Secondly to cleaue vnto God with our hearts and to set our affections of loue feare ioy and hope wholly vpon him because he is the author and continuer of our beeing what euer it be Thirdly to obey our God in all things for shall he giue beeing to our bodies
whereby Christ enforceth the former commandement and it hath two parts the first is drawne from a speciall propertie in God to see in secret the second is frō his bounty in rewarding openly For the first the words are thus in the originall and thy father which is a seer in secret for the word there vsed signifieth a discerning seer whereby Christ would teach vs that God sees and beholds things that no man can see euen the secret thoughts and desires of mans heart Hence we must learne three things I. to examine our selues strictly not onely of our grosse open sinnes which all the world may see but also of our most inward and hidden corruptions and when we cannot see them yet we must suspect our selues of our secret wants for though men know them not no nor we our selues yet God the secret seer beholdeth them II. Neuer to hide our sinnes within our selues but freely to lay them open before God to our owne shame yea to confesse our vnknowne sinnes we must not like Adam sew fig-leaues together to couer our nakednes or flie from God thinking to hide our selues from his sight for he discerneth in secret III. To be carefull not only to doe good works but also to doe them in an holy manner frō good groūds and to a right end for God seeth secrets and will not be shifted off with false shewes Dauid saith I haue kept thy precepts and thy testimonies because all my waies are before thee And the rather must we be mooued hereunto because God knowing what is in mans heart doth oftētimes prooue men with temptations that he may discouer the guile of their hearts therfore that we may escape the iudgements of God due vnto hypocrisie we must labour to doe all good duties in singlenes of heart The second reason drawne frō Gods bountie vnto thē that in singlenes of heart doe good works is in these words he will reward thee openly wherin he preuenteth this obiectiō which some of his hearers might make against his former precept If I may not do good works to be seen of men then shall I loose my labour Christ answereth Not so for God the father will reward thee openly if thou doe goods from a single heart onely respecting the praise and honour of God in mans good If it be asked how this can stand with that saying of Christ Ioh. 5. 21. that the father iudgeth no man but hath committed all iudgement vnto the sonne I answer that in regard of deliberation of authoritie consent the last iudgement shal be executed by the whole Trinitie but yet in regard of immediate execution the father iudgeth not but Christ onely for he alone giueth the sentence both of absolution and condemnation This second reason teacheth vs sundrie things concerning praise First that God himselfe is the sole author of true praise Paul saith he which praiseth himselfe is not allowed but he whome the Lord praiseth where he compareth the world to a Theater wherein men are Actors and men and Angels be spectators but God alone is the Iudge who giueth praise and good name to euery one that deserueth it not onely in this life but in the world to come in regard whereof we must endeauour our selues so to doe all our good works that God himselfe may approoue thereof to seeke the praise of men is a fond thing seeing that not man but God is the author of true praise yea this must teach vs not to depend vpon man for praise and commendation for the good things we do but vpon God himselfe from whom all true praise commeth Secondly that God as he is a father is the sole author of true praise for Christ saith your father will reward you Now God is our father onely in Christ and therefore our vnion with Christ is the ground of all true praise He is a true Israelite saith Paul which is one within and the circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God This then discouereth the errour of the world in seeking after praise and reputation for some seeke it in the comlines of their bodie some in apparell and some in learning c. but all these are wrong meanes the right way to get true praise is to be in Christ to haue an humble and sanctified heart set purposely to keepe Gods commandement Psal. 119. 22. Dauid praied God to remooue from him shame and contempt because he kept Gods testimoneis as though the keeping of Gods commandements had beene the onely meanes to auoyd contempt and to procure true praise and fame Thirdly that the life to come is the onely time of true praise for Christ here saith he shall reward thee openly that is in the last day 1. Corin. 4. 5. When the Lord shall come then shall euery one haue praise of God This must teach vs not to care for the contempt of the world which followeth our profession so that our conuersation bee godly but to rest patiently contented because it is the lot and portion of Gods children and our sins deserues greater reproach alwaies remembring that the time of our praise is yet to come Yea hence we must learne not to aime at our owne praise in the things of this life but wholly to seeke the glorie of God in all things for if we seeke his glorie now the time will come when he will glorifie vs. Fourthly that the praise that God shall giue his children in the ende of the world shall be op●n and manifest before all men and all angels both good bad when they shall stand to be iudged by Iesus Christ this is true praise which shall neuer haue ende whereunto the praise of men is not comparable we count highly of applause and reputation with earthly princes and all men honour him whom the Prince commends how much more then shall they be aduanced whom God himselfe shall vouchsafe to praise and commend vers ● And when thou pra●●st be not as the hypocrites for they loue to stand and pray in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streetes because they would be seene of men verely I say vnto you they haue their reward In this verse and the rest to the fourteenth Christ intreateth of the dutie of prayer wherein he dealeth as in the former point touching Almes-giuing for first he forbids a twofold vice in prayer hypocrisie and babling and then teacheth the contrarie vertues and the right practise of praier The vice of hypocrisie in prayer is forbidden in this fift verse and the contrarie vertue inioyned in the next The Exposition When thou prayest To pray properly is to intreate of God the gift of some good thing concerning our selues and in this sense it is onely one part of that holy worship of God which is called Invocation for 1. Tim. 2. 1. the Apostle maketh
name and mediation of Christ for in our selues we are sinners our iniquities make a separation betweene God and vs so that wee cannot haue accesse vnto the father saue only by the mediation of Iesus Christ. If we would come with boldnesse into the holy place it must be by the new and liuing way which Christ hath prepared for vs through the vaile that is his flesh 5. In praier we must haue faith wherby we beleeue that the thing we aske shall be done vnto vs Mark 11. 24. whatsoeuer ye aske in praier beleeue that ye shall haue it and it shall bee done vnto you now the ground of this faith must be Gods commandement and his promise which I mentioned before The duties after praier are chiefly two 1. Wee must call to remembrance the praier wee made to God if one man talke with another he will be so attentiue that as neere as may be he will remember the words that passed betweene them and much more ought we so to doe when we talke with God now we must thus meditate on our praiers for this ende that we may the better doe the thing wee aske as we craue in praier the pardon of our sinnes so wee must after praier indeauour to leaue the practise of them What a horrible shame is it for men to begge at Gods hands the pardon of sinne and when they rise from praier to fall againe to the practise of it This is with the dogge to returne to his vomite and with the desperate thiefe to stealing after he hath intreated fauour of the Iudge 2. After praier wee must bee carefull to be as plentifull in thanksgiuing for blessings receiued as wee were in petition to craue them This indeede may bee done in the beginning of our praier though here I mention it last but omitted it may not be Ordinary men haue this humanitie that where they find friendship they will be more plentifull in rendring thankes then in making new requests and if we deale thus with men shall wee not much more doe it with God with whom true thankfulnesse for one blessing is a speciall meanes to procure many moe Now this thankfulnesse must not be onely in word but in deed testified by due obedience in life and conuersation and these are the duties whereby a man shall auoide all carnall ostentation in praier and approoue his heart vnto God therein By this description of the true manner of praier we may learne three things First that the Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practise the dutie of praier aright they pray not in knowledge for they pray in an vnknowne tongue and allow of ignorance as the Mother of deuotion they commend doubting by speaking against assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience they praie not in humilitie for mercie for their sinnes for they thinke to merit by their prayers and which is worst of all they direct not their praiers to God only in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the virgin Marie their Mediatresse yea they pray to the wooden crosse which is most horrible Idolatrie Secondly that our common people come farre short of their dutie in this part of Gods worship for their praiers consist chiefly in the bare repetition of words which is onely a lip-labour they pray without knowledge and feeling so must needes faile in many other duties Now this bewraies the manifold wants that be in the praiers of the best Christians for besides their ignorance of many duties in praier their doubting and distrust their dulnesse and deadnesse of heart and their by-thoughts doe all shew that their hearts are not wholly taken vp with Gods glorie as they ought to be Lastly hereby we may see the grosse ignorance of our common people about spels and charmes because they consist of good wordes and many strange things are done thereby therefore they thinke them to bee good praiers but herein they are deceiued through ignorance in the right forme of praier for they that make them and vse them are either gracelesse persons that haue societie with the deuil or grosly deluded through palpable ignorance and they cannot set themselues before God to approoue their hearts vnto him in this action nay the worship that is done herein is to the deuill and the cure that is wrought thereby is his worke for these charmes are his watch-word to stirre him vp to such exploits Furthermore in this clause Pray vnto thy Father which is in secret that is an inuisible God is couched a reason to induce men to the obedience of this commandement to this effect He to whom thou praiest i● an inuisible God therefore thou must endeauour to approoue the hidden man of thy heart vnto him Hence I gather first that it is an horrible thing to make an image to represent the true God or to worship God in it for God is inuisible The second commandement condemneth thē both as Moses himselfe doth so expound it Deut. 4. 15 16. Ye saw no Image in the day that the Lord spake vnto you in Horeb therefore corrupt not your selues by making you a grauen image or representation of any signe Secondly that there should be no outward pompe in prayer either for gesture or for garments for praier is made to an inuisible Father This ouerthrowes the whole worship of the Popish Church which stands in outward shews of carnall pompe if there be any pomp it must be inward in the graces of the heart among which humilitie is the first ornament Thirdly that all places are alike in respect of Gods presence and of his hearing for hee is a God in secret wheresoeuer a man hath occasion to praie there God is which confuteth them that make the Church a more holy place for praier then other-where and therefore reserue all their praiers till they come thither for now difference of place in respect of Gods presence is taken away God is as well in the fielde and in the priuate house as in the Church and yet Churches are ordained and vsed in a godly policie because a congregation may more conueniently there meete to their mutuall edification in the publike exercise of the word and praier otherwise priuate houses were as good places for Gods worship as Churches if they were so decent and conuenient for edification for in all places men may lift vp pure hands vnto God as the Apostle teacheth And thy father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly These words containe a two-fold reason wherby Christ perswadeth his hearers and in them all others to the carefull practise of the former dutie of sinceritie in praier The first reason is drawne from Gods All-seeing propertie the second from his bountie Gods all-seeing propertie is set out in these words the father which seeth in secret that is though the father himselfe be inuisible yet when thou
praiest in secret that is as though thou wert in secret intending onely to approoue thine heart vnto God in praier then thy father seeth thee he knowes thine heart and heares thy praier This is verefied by the example of Ionas who was heard praying in the Whales bellie of Daniel praying in the Lyons denne and of Moses who is said to crie vnto the Lord when as he praied onely in heart The vse of this point is manifold 1. It serueth to admonish vs that when wee pray wee must in singlenesse of heart bring our selues into Gods presence and heartily and truely put vp our requests vnto God so as we may approoue vnto him both our hearts and our prayers for there is nothing in our prayers that can be hid from God and therefore we must not content our selues with the thing done but labour so to pray that God may be well pleased with the manner thereof Secondly hereby we are taught to make conscience not only of our doings and speeches but euen of our very thoughts and that in secret places for though we may conceale the same from men yet we cannot couer them from the eies of God he is inuisible and yet all things are naked before him Thirdly this prooueth that no prayer can lawfully be made to the virgin Marie or to any other Saint departed for he alone is to bee called vpon in praier who sees in secret but God onely sees in secret neither the virgin Marie nor any other of the Saints can see in secret and therefore praier is to be made to none but to God alone The Papists answer that Saints departed see in secret though not of themselues yet by God and in God but that is false the Angels before their fall saw not their own future fal nor the fall of man The blessed Angels in heauen know not now the time and day of the last iudgement yea the Saints departed lie vnder the Altar crying how long Lord beeing ignorant of the time of their full redemption and therfore the Saints departed see not in secret The second reason drawne from Gods promised bountie is in these words shall reward thee openly that is shall repay thee for thy praier in the day of iudgement before the Saints and holy Angels as we expoūded the same words in the fourth verse This is a notable reason to induce men to pray in a true and holy manner wherein we may see the endlesse mercie of God vouchsafed to them that pray aright if any subiect put vp a supplication to his earthly Prince he takes it for a speciall fauour if the Prince vouchsafe to admit him to his presence behold here the King of Kings will not onely vouchsafe vs accesse vnto the throne of his grace when wee put vp our supplications vnto him but if we pray aright he doth hold himselfe indebted vnto vs for the same and promiseth one day to reward vs openly This far●e exceedes the loue of all creatures in heauen and earth no Prince is so kinde and gratious to his best subiects as the Lord is to all that call vpon him in spirit and truth From this place the Papists would gather that prayer is a worke that merits at Gods hand eternall life for thus they reason Where there is repaying by way of reward there is something done which meriteth but vnto prayer there is a repaying therefore it doth merit at Gods hand Answ. Reward is due to man two waies either by desert or of free gift and promise now in this place God will reward man for his prayers not for their desert but of his owne free will and grace because he hath promised so to doe That this is so may thus appeare If a Begger should aske an almes of any man it were absurd to say that the begger by asking did deserue the almes and so stands the case for the merit of our prayers thereby we beg things at Gods hands and therefore can no more merit thereby then the begger can deserue his almes by asking nay rather we may gather hence that Gods rewarding them that pray proceedes from his owne free grace alone for prayer properly is a worke of man vnto God wherein man giues nothing vnto God as the Iewes did in the sacrifices or as is done in some other spiritual sacrifices of the new Testament but onely asketh and receiueth some thing from God and therefore cannot hereby merit any thing at Gods hands And by this may all other places be expounded where reward is promised to mans worke Lastly note the phrase here vsed he shall reward thee openly that is at the last day whence I gather that till the day of iudgement no seruant of God shall fully reape the fruite and benefit of his praiers This must bee well considered of all that haue care to call vpon God vnfainedly for many times after long and earnest praier we feele little or no comfort whereby we may be brought to dislike our estate as though God had no respect vnto vs but we must know that God doth often long deferre to reward his seruants that praie vnto him not doubt but Zacharie and Elizabeth prayed for 〈◊〉 in their yonger age and yet they were not heard till they were both olde● and Dauid saith his eies failed for waiting on God when hee would accomplish his promise made vnto him this we may also see in the petitions of the Lords prayer for they be all according to his will yet the full fruition of the benefits there asked is reserued to the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ Verse 7. And when you pray vse 〈◊〉 vaine repetitions a● the heathen for they thinke to be heard for their much babling Our Sauiour Christ hauing de●lt against hypocrisie in prayer doth here come to the second vice which hee intends to reforme therein namely babling consisting in the outward forme of praier The words containe two parts ● commandement and a reason thereof The commandement When ye pray vse n● vaine repetitions a● the heathen doe where first we must know th●● Christ reproues not repetition in praier simply but needelesse repetitions only for Psal. 51. Dauid doth sundrie times repeat his requests for the pardon of sinne and for sanctification also Moses El●● and our Sauiour Christ praied fourtie da●es together and in these long praiers no doubt vsed many repetitions much lesse can we pray one day together without many repetitions Here then by vaine repetitions is meant babling that is a desire and affectation to vse and speake many words in praier and vnder this one vice are condemned all sinnes of the same kind that is all superst●ous multiplication of words in praier as the heathen that is such as were not the people of God but al●●ns from the common wealth of Israel and strangers from the couenant of promise In this commandement are condemned many abuses in the manner of
sonne as the Lord our God is towardes all his children in Christ Psal. 103. 13. As a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on all that call vpon him Luk. 11. 13. If you that be euill can giue good things to your children much more shall your heauenly father giue the holy Ghost to them that aske him and hence it is that Christ saith Whatsoeuer you aske the Father in my name he will giue it you Ioh. 16. 23. Of these two must euery one be perswaded that praies aright euery one will graunt that God is able to heare and helpe but of his willingnesse thereunto none can be assured but he that is the child of God who knoweth God to be his father Yet here must none deceiue himselfe to thinke that whatsoeuer he askes on his owne head God will graunt it for if we aske amisse we shall not receiue and therefore we must carefully marke and obserue the direction of Gods word both for the things we aske and for our manner of asking Halowed be thy name Thus much of the preface here begin the petitions which are sixe in number whereof the three first concerne God the three latter concerne our selues Againe of those which concerne God the first concernes Gods glorie it selfe the other two the meanes whereby Gods glorie is manifested and inlarged among men for Gods name is the● glorified among men when his kingdome doth come and his will is done Now this petition for the glorifying of Gods name is rightly set in the first place for Gods glorie is the absolute end of all things Prov. 16. 4. The Lord made all things for his owne sake yea euen the wicked for the day of euill and therefore it must be preferred before all things before life it selfe yea before saluation which is life eternall Ioh. 12. 27 28. our Sauiour Christ preferres the glorie of his fathers name before his owne life And Paul preferres it afore his owne saluation for he professeth that for Gods glorie in the saluation of the Iewes he could wish himselfe separate from Christ Rom. 9. 3. In this petition as in the rest we are to obserue this order first shew the meaning of the words then propound the vses I. The meaning Name The word ascribed to God is here taken generally first for God himselfe as Psal. 20. 1. The name of the God of Iacob defend thee that is the God of Iacob defend thee Rom. 10. 13. Whosoeuer shal cal vpon the name of the Lord shal be saued i. vpon the Lord. Secondly it here betokens any thing whereby God may be knowne as men are by their names and thus it comprehends ● his diuine attributes as Iustice mercie power wisdome c. II. his word the holy scriptures which reveale to mē the true knowledge of God III. Gods Iudgements publike or priuate for thereby he makes knowne his presence his power and iustice IV. his workes and creatures for all these beare a stampe of Gods name and in them may the inuisible things of God be seene Rom. 1. 20. Halowed or sanctified To halow Gods name is to glorifie Gods name as Ioh. 12. 28. and this we doe when we giue vnto him the highest honour that may be the highest I say because there are two kinds of honour First the honour of religion when we giue our hearts to God louing him fearing him trusting and delighting in him aboue all which we testifie by all outward adoration prescribed in Gods word this is the highest honour of all Secondly there is the honour of societie which passeth betweene man and man in common wealths and it consisteth in the acknowledgement of preheminence and superioritie in another either by word or gesture ciuilly thus Subiects honour Princes and Magistrates and inferiours their superiours This is due to the creature the former to the Creator onely and that is the honour wee here pray for That we may yet the better vnderstand the meaning of this petitiō we must know that Gods name is halowed or sanctified of vs 2. waies either in God himselfe or in his works In himselfe by 3. actions 1. whē we conceiue of God in our mindes and acknowledge him as he hath reuealed himselfe in his word to wit creator gouernour of al things most holy most wise iust mercifull c. 2. When we sanctifie the Lord in our hearts that is when we loue him aboue all feare him aboue al put our trust in him in him in all estates 3. When we praise and laud the name of God for his goodnes yea though we should neuer taste of his special fauour yet for his generall mercie iustice and most wise prouidence we ought to extoll the Lord with our mouthes Gods name is halowed or sanctified in his creatures by three speciall actions 1. When we acknowledge the wisdome of God his powerfull hand in euery creature 2. When we haue a reuerend estimation of the creatures and vse them in Christian sobrietie in regard of the stampe of Gods power and wisedome which appeareth in them 3. When wee sanctifie our moderate vse of them by the word and praier as God requireth 1. Tim. 4. 5. See the practise hereof in the word of God which is his owne solemne ordinance whereby he makes himselfe knowne vnto his Church Therein we sanctifie and halow Gods name I. when we acknowledge the wisdome mercie power of God in it II. when we haue a reuerend estimation of the word in regard of the glorious Image of God which appeareth in it III. when we vse it in a sanctified and holy manner comming vnto it reuerently with prepared hearts hungring after the graces of God which are wrought thereby and giuing our selues in heart and life to be framed and ruled thereby And thus we sanctifie God in afflictions for they are his worke when we labour to see the hand of God therein in iustice mercie and great wisdome chastening vs when we haue a reuerend regard to the hand of God appearing in them and labour to be humbled thereby for the increase of our repentance and the exercise of our faith and patience Thus then in this petition we desire in minde in heart and life to glorifie God both in himselfe and in his works and the meaning of it may be thus expressed O Lord open our eyes that we may know thee aright and may discerne thy power wisdome iustice and mercy and inlarge our hearts that we may sanctifie thee in our hearts by making thee our feare loue ioy and confidence and open our lippes that we may blesse thee for thine infinite goodnesse yea O Lord open our eyes that we may see thee in thy work● and strike our hearts with reuerence of thy name appearing in them and graunt that when we vse any one of them we may honour thee in our sober and sanctified vse thereof The vses I. Wants to be
bewayled I. Here we are to call to minde our wants and to humble our soules for those sinnes whereby we haue hindred Gods glorie or prophaned his name And these especially are foure I. Pride of heart a vile affection whereby we seeke our owne praise and glorie and not Gods This is naturall and so the more hardly discerned but while it is nouri●hed Gods glorie is neglected and therefore when we desire to glorifie Gods name we must acknowledge and bewaile this inward corruption II. Want of zeale coldnesse of heart towards God This is an inward corruption which debaseth the Lord in our hearts and takes away that high esteeme of God which ought to be in vs. This causeth vs to omit to glorifie God and to defend the causes of God and the honour of his name when wicked men disgrace and reproch the same he that hath any insight into his owne estate may perceiue this in himselfe now it mightily hinders the glorie of God and therefore we must vnfainedly bewaile it in our own hearts III. Hardnesse of heart whereby we are hindred from the true knowledge of God in his word and from discerning his wisdome power iustice mercie c. in his works though we haue them before our eyes hence it comes that ei●●er we neglect the word and passe by the workes of God without consideration or if we vse them yet it is without glorie to God or profit to our soules Mark 6. 5. Christs owne disciples considered not the matter of the loaues because their hearts were hardened they discerned not or at least remembred not the power of God in that miracle though themselues were instruments about it and they might perceiue the foode to increase in their hands IV. Prophanenesse and impietie in life for God is glorified when we bring forth the fruits of grace Ioh. 15. 8. and our good workes cause others to glorifie God Math. 5. 16. And therefore our prophane life is a reproach vnto the Lord and causeth others to dishonour and blaspheme his name Rom. 2. 24. Now this prophannesse appeareth either in mens speach by blaspheming the name of God abusing his tides attributes his word his creatures or any worke of his prouidence or in their conuersation when they dispose the whole course of their liues to wrong ends seeking themselues and not Gods glorie These are the speciall sinnes against Gods glorie which we are to see and to bewaile in our owne hearts if we see them not in our selues our case is the worse and we must suspect our selues the mor● if we porceiue them in vs we must be humbled for them yea ashamed and confounded in our owne hearts thinking euill of our selues by reason hereof and then shall we be able to say with some truth of heart O Lord halowed be thy name And indeede till we be inwardly humbled for these corruptions in some measure the heart can neuer speake these words as a sonne and daughter of God ought to doe 2. Use. Graces to be desired Secondly this petition teacheth vs earnestly to desire of God those spirituall graces whereby we may glorifie his name in our selues and others The graces enabling vs hereto are these especially I. The true knowledge of God as he hath reuealed himselfe in his word and in the workes of his power and prouidence for he that knowes not God cannot possibly glorifie his name II. To sanctifie God in our hearts by louing fearing and tru●ting in him aboue all This makes greatly for his glorie when wee depende vpon him in soule and bodie for all good things III. The calves of our lips which is a sacrifice of praise to God for all his mercies Psal. 50. 23. He that offereth praise shall glorifie me IV. To see Gods hand in all his workes how mightie wise iust and gratious the Lord is V. To reuerence the workes of God for his iustice mercie power c. appearing in them VI. To vse all his creatures reuerently sanctifying the same vnto our selues by the word and praier These graces we must hunger after and labour to haue a liuely feeling of in our owne hearts and so shall we sanctifie Gods name and honour him in all his workes And hereby we shall know our selues to be the sonnes and daughters of God we may indeede belong to God in his secret counsell but without these sanctified affections and holy actions we are not effectually called and so indeede not actually become Gods children 3. Vse Duties to be practised Thirdly whatsoeuer we aske of God in prayer we must vnfainedly endeauour to practise in our liues as therefore wee pray that Gods name may be halowed so wee must be carefull to sanctifie the same in our conuersation For this ende we must haue regard to three things I. That our liues be vnblameable not tainted with any sinne that as Paul said of earthly seruants They must count their masters worthie all honour that the name of God be not euill spoken of so the same may be verified in euery one of vs towards the Lord our master in heauen Away therefore with all Idolatrie blasphemous oathes and cursed speaking with Sabbath breaking and all other sinnes against the second table for a prophane life brings great reproach vpon the name of God which men professe II. We must propound the right ende of our life euery day in our calling and conuersation to wit Gods honour and glorie and not our owne praise wealth pleasure or dignitie III. When God offers occasion by any worke of his prouidence we must endeauour therein to glorifie and magnifie God example say God sendes a gricuous dearth and famine of bread among vs or the plague of pestilence as he hath done sundrie times then must we striue herein to glorifie and praise Gods name first by labouring to see the hand of God smitiag vs for our sinnes secondly by reuerencing the worke of God esteeming it as his hand vpon vs thirdly by humbling our selues vnto God and renuing our repentance for our sinnes that haue brought Gods iudgements vpon vs. Thus should we glorifie God in his Iudgements but alas such is our blindnesse and securitie that though Gods hand be vpon vs yet few lay it to heart where is he that saith What haue I done nay though God himselfe call vnto weeping and mourning And to girding with sacke cloath as the Prophet speaketh yet behold ioy and gladnesse eating and drinking so as Gods name is dishonoured in his iudgements So when Gods blessings are vpon vs we should glorifie his name by labouring to see his hand of mercie and esteeming of them reuerently with praise and thanksgiuing to God that is the giuer but herein also men dishonour God by poaring vpon the meanes praising their owne witte and industrie and so sacrifice to their nets as the Prophet saith Now because this dutie is of great waight and importance I will adde some speciall reasons to
stay his hand nor say vnto him what doest thou Gods speciall kingdome is that whereby hee ruleth his elect and chosen people working his will not onely by them as he doth in his generall kingdome by the deuils themselues but in them also by his holy spirit and it is called speciall because it is not exercised ouer all the world but onely ouer the elect whom hee hath ordained to eternall life This speciall kingdome of God is two-folde either of Grace or of Glorie The kingdome of grace is a spiritual estate wherein God makes men willingly subiect to his written word by his spirit I call the kingdome of grace a spirituall estate both because it is principally exercised in the conscience and also because this regiment in the conscience is by the spirit of God Secondly I shew wherein it consists namely in a voluntarie subiection of the whole man in soule and bodie and spirit to the will of God reuealed in the word Psalm 110. 3. Thy people shall come willingly in the day of assembling thine armie in holy beautie And this subiection stands in three things in Righteousnesse Peace and Ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17 18. In Righteousnes that is First in Christs righteousnesse imputed and secondly in the righteousnesse of a good conscience the ground whereof is sanctification by the spirit which Christ giues to them whom he doth iustifie In Peace that is peace of conscience towards God and peace with Gods Church yea with all creatures so farre forth as is needfull for them Now vnder peace we must comprehend loue and all duties of loue for as righteousnesse concernes the person in soule and bodie so peace respects all duties and actions of the life Righteousnesse is the root from whence springeth this peace with euery action thereof for when the heart is sanctified the life is reformed Lastly in ioy in the holy Ghost this is a fruite of both the former respecting especially the state of affliction for when a man is iustified and sanctified and hath peace towards God then ariseth in his heart a spirituall delight in God in all estates yea though great afflictions light vpon him for Gods cause yet he beareth them with inward ioy and delight knowing that the spirit of glorie of God resteth vpon him and that he shall be glorified with Christ if he suffer with Christ which things while he compareth together hee little esteemeth the afflictions of this life in respect of the glorie that shall be reuealed for the light affliction that is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and eternall waight of glorie These are the branches of this spirituall subiection which whosoeuer hath is a good subiect in the kingdome of grace as the Apostle saith in the next verse he that in these things serueth Christ is acceptable vnto God and approoued of men The kingdome of glorie is the blessed estate of Gods elect in heauen whereby God in Christ becomes all things vnto them immediately 1. Cor. 15. 28. This estate of glorie is a subiection also but yet such a subiectiō as is indeed a glorious regimēt for there we raigne with Christ in whom and through whom God himselfe becomes honour peace health foode raiment and all things needfull to the perfection of felicitie Now these two beeing Gods kingdome differ thus The state of grace is the beginning and entrance to the state of glorie and the state of glorie is the perfection of the state of grace This state of glorie is the citie and the state of grace as it were the suburbs of it In this life wee liue in the kingdome of grace but the kingdome of glorie is reserued for the life to come and this speciall kingdome of God in both these estates doe we here pray for Thy kingdome This imports that there is another kingdome euen the kingdome of Satan which is a kingdome of darkenes full of all disorder and confusion through sinne which greatly hindereth annoyeth Gods kingdome of grace especially Come That is to vs men in the world and then it commeth when God doth erect establish the same in their hearts now vnto perfection it comes by 5. degrees 1. When God giues vnto men the outward meanes of saluation wherein he doth reueale his grace fauour in Christ as the Gospel preached which is therefore called the word of the kingdome Matth. 13. 19. And so Christ hauing relation to his preaching which he confirmed by miracles among the Iewes saith The kingdome of God is come vnto you Luk. 11. 20. and beeing demaunded by the Pharisies when the kingdome of God should come he tels them it was among them Luk. 17. 21. meaning that it was brought vnto them by the ministerie of Iohn Baptist of himselfe and of his Disciples although indeed it were without profit to many of them 2. When the word preached inlightens the minde so as a man knowes and vnderstands the mysterie of the Gospel which is the law of this kingdome 3. When a man is thereby regenerate and so brought into this kingdome for by regeneration we haue effectuall entrance into the state of grace wherein Christ rules in vs by his word and spirit and wee yeeld subiection vnto him 4. At the ende of this life when the bodie goeth to the earth but the soule to God that gaue it beeing translated to the ioyes of heauen in the glorie of this kingdome 5. At the last iudgement when body and soule beeing vnited againe are both made partakers of the glorie of this kingdome and this is the full and perfect cōming of it So then our request to God in this petition is to this effect O Father let thy kingdome come to vs that be pilgrimes and strangers here on earth prepare vs for it and enter vs into it that be yet without renue vs by thy spirit that we may be subiect to thy will confirme vs also in this estate that our soules after this life and both soule and bodie at the day of iudgement may be fully glorified yea Lord hasten this glorie to vs and to all thine elect The Uses 1. Wants to be bewailed The wants we are taught to bewaile in this petition either concerne our selues or others First we must lament and mourne for our owne miserable estate by nature whereby we are the seruants of sinne and so in thraldome and bondage vnder Satan sinne leads vs into bondage for he that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne and where sinne raigneth there the deuill hath dominion And hence it comes that wee rebell so much against the kingdome of God and refuse to stoop to the scepter of his word Indeede this bondage is weakened in Gods children but none is wholly freed from it in this life as Pauls complaint declares Rom. 7. 14. The law is spirituall but I am carnall sold vnder sin The naturall man is dead
in sinne and feeles it not wee therefore must labour to feele in our selues this spirituall bondage vnder sinne and when we feele it we must bewaile it and so shew some life of grace to be in vs. This Paul did Rom. 7. 24. O. wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Looke as the prisoner feeles his bolts and fetters so sensibly should we feele the chaine of sinne wherewith our soules are kept in bondage and till we feele it and bewaile it the kingdome of Christ doth not come vnto vs wee must therefore euery day crie vnto Christ our Lord that he would shew himselfe to be our Redeemer by breaking the fetters of sinne wherewith our soules are kept in bondage and giuing vs that free spirit which may fully erect his blessed kingdome in our hearts for where the spirit is there is libertie 2. Cor. 3. 17. Secondly wee must bewaile the sinnes of all the world in the transgression of Gods law whereby God is dishonoured and his kingdome hindered and the kingdome of darkenesse furthered 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. Iust Lot vexed his righteous soule with the vncleane conuersation of the wicked of his time 1. King 19. 10. When Elias saw the children of Israel forsake Gods couenant breake downe his altars and slay his Prophets with the sword then he became very zealous for the Lord of hosts Psal. 119. 136. Mine eies saith Dauid gush out with riuers of water because they keepe not thy Law Vers. 139. My zeale hath euen consumed me because mine enemies haue forgotten thy law Mark 3. 5. Christ mourned for the hardnesse of the hearts of the people and Luke 19. 41 42. Hee wept ouer Ierusalem for that they knew not the day of their visitation Now looke how these were affected with the raigning sinnes of their times so must we also mourne for their sinnes that raigne among vs as Atheisine and profanenesse contempt of Gods word blasphemie sabbaoth breaking oppression crueltie and pride all good subiects are grieued much when they see forraine enemies displaie among them banners of victorie how much more then ought the godly to grieue when they see impietie practised with an high hand which is as it were a flagge of defiance in the kingdome of Christ and a speciall ensigne of Satans triumphing in the increase of his kingdome of darkenes When the deuil sees one that hath liued in sinne but cast a looke toward the kingdome of Christ hee rageth greatly and labours by all meanes to turne him backe and when we see those that haue made profession of religion returne againe to the lusts of their former ignorance O it should grieue our soules and cause vs to pray thy kingdome come Doe we perceiue the Turke or Pope or any instrument of Satan either by subtiltie or tyrannie to hinder the Gospel preached which is the scepter of Christs kingdome and the aime of God whereby hee puls men from the kingdome of darkenesse O then we should mourne Or doe we see the want of Gods ordinance in preaching sacraments and discipline which serue for the furtherance of Christs kingdome or the Lords people committed to ignorant or idle Ministers to scandalous teachers either for life or doctrine In all these we haue cause of mourning and they should stirre vp our hearts to crie vnto the Lord Thy kingdome come Use 2. Graces to be desired As we must mourne for the wants and hinderances of Christs kingdome so we must hereby learne to haue our hearts inflamed with spirituall desires after all helpes and furtherances vnto Gods kingdome both in our selues and others as First for the preaching of the Gospel and all other diuine ordinances whereby Gods kingdome is erected and maintained our hearts desire to God must be that these may bee set vp and continued where they are wanting and that God may blesse them where they are vouchsafed Secondly that God would enlighten the eies of our minds that we may see the wonders of his Law as Dauid did that so the Lords ordinance may be blessed vnto vs. Thirdly that we may be wholly subiect vnto Christ and that of conscience not onely in our outward behauiour but in minde and heart in will in all our affections wee must make sure this holy desire bee in vs indeede and therfore must denie our selues and subiect our selues wholly vnto God as a willing people to serue him and none but him and then we may be sure his kingdome is come vnto vs. Fourthly we must desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ in the kingdome of glorie for this end that we may make an ende of sinning and become more obedient subiects vnto Christ yea wholly ruled by him though for the good of others we must be content to liue Fiftly that Christ would come in iudgement when all things shall be subdued vnto God and all his obedient subiects shall be fully glorified This wee may desire in heart though we must leaue the time to Gods good pleasure still waiting for it by faith in his promise Sixtly that God would inlarge his sanctuarie here on earth gather his elect more and more and still defend and maintaine his Church in euery place in the world when these desires affect our soules then doe wee truely say Thy kingdome come 3. Use. Duties to be practised Whatsoeuer we aske in praier that must we endeauour after in life and conuersation else we mocke God saying well and doing nothing First therefore as we say Thy kingdome come so must we seeke to meet it striue to enter into it for this end God giues vs time to liue in this world that here we might enter the gate of grace and wait for the fruition of glorie and therefore we must diligently frequent the suburbs of this heauenly Ierusalem euen the preaching of the word and therein labour both for true humiliation and conuersion or else wee cannot enter into this kingdome Math. 18. 3. Iohn 3. 5. First we must haue the pride of our hearts pulled downe and become as little children beeing humbled in our selues through the knowledge of our sinnes and the feeling of that miserie which is due vnto vs for them yea wee must confesse them vnto God and crie vnto him for mercie and by this meanes lay aside this burden which hinders our entrance into the gate of grace Secondly we must bee conuerted and changed by the renuing of our mindes our hearts must cleaue vnto God and we must carry therein a resolute purpose not to sinne when these things be in vs we enter into Gods kingdome but till we endeauour after them in some truth we say in vaine Thy kingdome come Secondly wee must bee carefull to bring forth the fruites of Gods kingdome for therefore doth he send it among men and for want hereof doth he take it from them Matth. 21. 43. Now these fruits are Righteousnesse peace
of our nature whereby we are discontent with our estate murmure with the Israelites if we haue no more but Manna but we must striue against this corruption and say with Dauid Lord incline my heart vnto thy testimonies and not vnto couetousnes Psal. 119. 36. Secondly we must hereby also learne to practise sobrietie and moderation in diet apparell and all other things appertaining to this life vsing them so as we may be the fitter for our callings and the seruice of God and so bettered thereby and not made worse Thirdly this must teach vs contentation with that place and state of li●e and measure of wealth which God giues vs for we must aske bread onely that is things necessarie and therefore if God giue vs things necessarie we must be therewith content and our corrupt mind must not be iudge herein but what God bestowes vpon our sober vse of lawfull means within our calling that must we iudge to be our portion 1. Tim. 6. 8. If we haue food and raiment let vs therewith be content This was Pauls practise I can be abased I can abound euery where in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungrie to abound and to haue want The Israelites in the wildernes were not content with Manna but would needes haue flesh to eate and God gaue them their desire but while the flesh was in their mouthes his wrath fell vpon them therefore let vs lust after no more then God giues vpon our sober vse of lawfull meanes least in seeking more we draw Gods curse vpon vs. But alas few are content with their estate the yeoman wil be like the gentleman in attire and diet and the gentleman like the noble man and hence comes vsurie oppression iniustice and much vngodlines hence it comes that Gods iudgement in dearth is increased vpon the poore because men make no conscience of the meanes so they may benefite and inrich themselues and get aloft but beware of Gods curse with thine aduancement vnlesse God change thine estate rest contented with that which is present and be thankefull for it for better is a little with the feare of God then great treasure and trouble therewith Prov. 15. 16. now what trouble like the wrath of God and therefore be content with that which God sendeth in the vse of lawfull meanes Fourthly must we aske of God euery bit of bread we eate then away with all chance and fortune and let vs learne to acknowledge Gods prouidence in all things Fiftly must Gods children aske of God their daily foode and receiue it as a gift of mercie from the hand of their father then away with merit by mans works for if bread be of mercie life euerlasting cannot be of merit on mans part Lastly this petition ministreth vnto vs a notable ground of contentation against distrustfull care for that which Christ bids vs aske God vndoubtedly will giue because it is according to his will and therefore the child of God may assure himselfe of things sufficient for this life in the sober vse of lawfull meanes and looke if temporall blessings faile for a good supplie in spirituall graces Here a question may be asked seeing we aske of God but breade onely that is things necessarie for this life whether may we vse the creatures of God for our delight Answ. We may vse the outward blessings of God for our honest delight Eccles. 5. 17. Behold what I haue seene good that it is comely to eat and to drinke and to take pleasure in all his labour wherein man trauelleth vnder the sunne yet three caueats must be remembred lest we abuse our libertie in this delight I. we must see God to giue vs not onely things necessarie but for delight II. in our delight and pleasure we must so moderate our affections that they be not taken vp with these earthly things nor hereby withdrawen or hindred from thinges heauenly and spirituall III. Our principall ioy must be in spirituall foode euen in Christ crucified and in our true communion with him in his body and blood all our delight must stoope to this and out of Christ we must count nothing ioyous II. Point What bread daily bread The word in the orginall signifieth bread put to our substances day by day that is such bread as serues to preserue health and life from day to day this Agur calls bread or foode conuenient for him Prov. 30. 8. The vse In this second point we learne two things First that it is lawfull to aske temporall blessings at the hands of God for he is our mercifull father and bids vs so to doe which serueth to confirme the former exposition of this article Secondly that we ought to haue a moderate care to preserue our bodily life and health in the diligent vse of all lawfull meanes for what we pray for we must endeuour to doe The sixth commandement saith Thou shalt not kill wherein the Lord inioyneth vs by all good meanes to preserue our owne and our neighbours life And this we must doe for two causes especially first that we may doe all the good we can to that Church Commonwealth and family whereof we are members secondly that we may haue a sufficient time to prepare our selues for heauen for death will come and the day of iudgement and after death there is no wisdome nor counsell worke nor inuention therefore now must we prepare our selues for God that we may be readie to receiue him at his comming and he that is prepared for the Lord hath liued well and long enough but without this our life is spent in vaine III. Point Whose bread doe we pray for our owne not other mens But how doth bread or any other temporall blessing become ours Ans. First when we haue true right thereto before God secondly when we haue lawfull possession thereof before men Our right before God is needefull for we lost all in Adam and haue recouerie of our right in the creatures onely in Christ Iesus when by saith we become his members 1. Cor. 3. 22. All things are yours you are Christs And yet for all this the child of God may not vse all things as his owne though he haue right thereto in Christ vnlesse by Gods prouidence he haue also lawfull right thereto or possession thereof before men as by lawfull gift purchase labour or such like Indeede right in Christ is the chiefe title but yet right before men is also necessarie for Christian libertie doth not abolish good orders in ciuill estates but establish them rather Christ is no enemie to Cesar and therefore the Scripture inioynes euery man to eate his owne bread 2. Thess. 3. 12. that is such whereto he hath right in Christ by faith and also inioyeth by Gods prouidence in some honest meanes alowed of men for by good orders established among men we are put into
imploy them as we will but for his glorie who is our absolute Lord now his direction is to this effect that first we should glorifie God with our temporall goods imploying them for the maintenance of his worship and of true religion Secondly that we should imploy them for the common good in the releefe of the poore and other necessarie duties for the common-wealth Thirdly that we should prouide for our owne especially them of our family that we may liue in peace and quietnes and so the better prepare our selues for the life to come VI. Point From whom must we looke to receiue our bread namely from God for we say vnto him that is our father in Christ Giue vs which teacheth vs that though we be his children and so haue right to temporall blessings yet whatsoeuer wee haue we must know it comes from God and must receiue and vse it as from his hand And this we shall doe if we sanctifie the creatures of God vnto our temporall vse for euery creature of God is good if it be sanctified in his vse Now the creature is sanctified not as man is when the spirit of God worketh in him abolishing corruption and renuing grace nor yet as the elements in the sacraments are sanctified which are set apart by God to an holy and spirituall vse to be seales and pledges of grace but when it is made fit to our temporall ciuill vse which is done by the word and prayer 1. Tim. 4. 4. Where by the word is meant first the word of creation whereby God in the beginning fitted the creature for mans vse and gaue him power and soueraigntie ouer it secondly the word of restitution whereby after the fall and after the flood he graunted vnto man the vse of his creatures Gen. 9. 3. thirdly the word of the Gospel concerning our Christian libertie wherein he hath inlarged our vse in the creatures of God Act. 10. 15. And by prayer we desire God to giue his power vnto the creatures and his blessing vpon them to serue for our good and comfort as also to giue vs grace to receiue them as from his hand and to vse them to his glorie If we could learne and practise this dutie we should haue more comfort in the creatures then yet we haue yea it would restraine vs from fraud oppression crueltie and from pride and vanitie in getting and vsing all Gods blessings for if we were perswaded that all temporall blessings came from his hand how durst we sinne against him either in getting or vsing of them Secondly in that after our labour and diligence in our callings we must still pray to God to giue vs bread we must learne to obserue that order of causes which God hath set in the producing of all temporall blessings for his life for not onely foode and rayment but our labour and diligence thereabout are secondarie causes depending vpon the blessing of God which is the first cause of all disposing and ordering all things vnto goodnesse for it comes from God that meate doth feede vs and cloathes doe keepe vs warme If he say vnto stones become bread they shall feede vs Matth. 4. 4. yea in the want of bread he can preserue strength for many daies Exod. 34. 8. and 1. king 19. 8. yea if he speake the word poyson shall become bread and nourish vs but without his blessing nothing can doe vs good Psal. 127. 1 2. Except the Lord build the house they labour in vaine that build it wee therefore must learne to relie vpon Gods prouidence for a blessing on all our labour and studie and waite for his blessing in all the meanes we vse for our good and comfort for he is our life our health and preseruation vers 12. And forgiue vs our debts as we forgiue our debters I. The Coherence Christ hauing taught vs in the former petition to pray for temporall blessings and for grace to relie vpon Gods prouident dispensation for the things of this life doth in this petition and the next direct vs to aske spirituall blessings for our selues to wit remission of our sinnes and strength against temptation and the reason of this order is this Christ makes the former petition a steppe vnto these for a man must rest vpon Gods prouidence for the preseruation of his bodie that will relie vpon his mercie for the saluation of his soule he that can not be perswaded that God will giue him bread will hardly be resolued that hee will forgiue him his sinnes Where first we may note what is the faith of worldlings they doe not trust in God for foode raiment and other temporal blessings how then can we say that their faith is sound for eternall mercies Isa. 28. 16. He that beleeueth will not make hast but will stay Gods leasure waiting for his blessings whereof he stands in neede But is this the practise of the world no verily for let a crosse come and men will not sticke to vse vnlawfull meanes for their deliuerance and so they deale when hope of gaine is offered making little conscience of fraud lying oppression c. and so making hast to be rich they ouerrunne the prouident hand of God that would lead them by ordinarie lawfull meanes Secondly hence we learne how to enioy and vse all temporall blessings foode raiment such like namely as helps and meanes to draw vs towards Gods mercie in Christ. Thus did Iacob Gen. 28. 20. 21. If God will be with me and giue me bread to eate and clothes to put on then shall the Lord be my God Ioh. 6. 27. Christ bids those whome he had fed miraculously when they sought him afterward for outward things that they should not labour for that foode which perisheth resting therein but for that which endureth vnto euerlasting life leading them from bodily care and labour to that which is heauenly and spirituall To come to the petition wherein we will handle first the necessitie of it then the meaning and lastly the vses For the first This petition may seeme to be needlesse for they that make it are Gods children who haue all their sinnes forgiuen them both past present and to come Ans. This indeed must be the daiely petition of all Gods children in this world and the necessitie of it is great for howsoeuer in the purpose of God all sinnes are pardoned to true beleeuers yea all sinnes past repented of are so forgiuen that they shall neuer be againe imputed yet sinnes present and to come are not actually pardoned till they be repented of This experience teacheth for who can feele the assurance of mercie for any sinne committed before he haue repented of it and though true repentance once had set vs for euer in Gods fauour yet it must bee daiely renued for our daiely falls or els we cannot know it to be true Hence it is that Paul intreats the Saints of God in Corinth though they had
this petition for here we are taught to call to mind our sinnes euery day praying for the pardon of them Secondly here we see whereon we must relie and setle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it selfe namely on the meere mercie of God in Christ by faith in his blood for the pardon of our sinnes Looke to the prayers of all the Saints of God in Scriptures and we shall finde that they made this their rocke and ankor of stay in all distresse Dan. 9. 18 19. O Lord heare and behold not for our owne righteousnesse but for thy great tender mercies deferre not for thy owne sake oh my God This we must obserue to arme vs against the damnable doctrine of the Church of Rome for they will graunt that in his first conuersion a man must relie onely on Gods mercie in Christs blood but after a man is made the childe of God he may rest vpon his owne good merits so it be in modestie and sobrietie But this is the right way to hell flat against this petition for how can wee dreame of any merit when as we must euery day aske mercie and forgiuenesse for to aske mercie and to plead merite are contraries now by our daily sinnes we adde debt to debt and so must still plead mercie and not merit euen after we are conuerted and sanctified euer praising God that hath deliuered vs from the slauish bondage of that proud Synagogue Thirdly here we see what we must doe in respect of our daily sinnes whereunto we fall we must not lie in them but renue our-estate by true humiliation and repentance Also if thou be crossed in the things of this world the way of comfort and deliuerance is to be learned here for as thou doest daily aske bread so thou must aske forgiuenesse for thy sinnes and when they are pardoned thou hast title and interest to al Gods blessings Now this daily humiliation stands in three things 1. in examination of our selues for our debt vnto God by sinne 2. in confessing our debt vnto our creditour yeilding our selues into his hands 3. in humbling our selues vnto him crauing pardon and remission earnestly for Christs sake as for life and death herein the children of God are presidents vnto vs Psal. 32. 5 6. Dauid in great distresse found no release while he held his tongue but when he humbled himselfe and confessed against himselfe then he found mercie and ease whereupon he professeth that he will be a patterne to euery godly man for their behauiour in the time of distresse Fourthly here we haue a notable remedie against desparie wherewith the deuill assaults many a child of God when through infirmitie they fall into some grieuous sinne or commit the same sinne often which greatly wounds the conscience for here Christ bids vs aske forgiuenesse of our daily sinnes whatsoeuer they be or how often so euer cōmitted And no doubt he that bids vs forgiue our brethren that sinne against vs though it were seauen times in a day if they seeke it at our hands will much more forgiue vs. This must not embolden any to sinne presumptuously for the Lord hath saide He will not be mercifull vnto that man Deut. 29. 19. but if any fall through infirmitie hereon he hath to stay himselfe from despaire Fiftly hereby we see that no man possibly can fulfill the law for the Apostles themselues were commanded to aske pardon of sinne euery day whereby it is plaine they could neuer fulfill the law and therefore much lesse can any other Sixtly that which we pray for we must in all godly manner endeauour after And therefore as we pray for pardon of sinne euery day so must we daily vse the meanes wherein God giues assurance of remission to his children as heare the word receiue the Sacraments and pray vnto God publikely and priuately endeauouring to resist all temptations and to glorifie God by newe obedience for it is grosse hypocrisie to aske the pardon of sinne and still to liue in the practise of it Lastly here we see we must pray not only for the pardon of our own sinnes but of our brethrens also Forgiue vs whereby Christ would teach vs to be carefull of the saluation of our brethren and neighbours the good estate of their soules should be deare and pretious vnto vs and if this were so happie would it be with the Church of God but alas men are so farre from care of the saluation of their neighbours that men of the same family are carelesse of one an others soules masters regard not their seruants nor parents their children indeede they will prouide for their bodies and outward state but for their soules they haue no care wherein they bewray themselues to be cruell and mercilesse hauing more care of their hogges and bruit beasts then of their children and seruants for when their hogges haue all needefull prouision their children and seruants soules shall want instruction As we also forgiue our debters These words are here propounded as a condition of the former petition and they include a reason thereof as Luk. 11. 4. Forgiue vs our sinnes FOR euen we forgiue euery man that is indebted vnto vs. And this Christ addeth for waightie causes euen to crosse the fraud and hypocrisie of our corrupt hearts who would haue forgiuenesse of God and yet would not forgiue our brethren nor yet leaue off the practise of sinne our selues But this condition imports that we must exercise mercy towards our brethren and so breake off the course of our sinnes if we looke for mercie at Gods hands Now the words here vsed are comparatiue betokening a likelihood and similitude betweene Gods forgiuing and ours which must be rightly vnderstood because our forgiuenesse is mingled with much corruption through want of mercie and therefore we must not vnderstand it of the measure of forgiuenesse nor yet of the manner simply but especially of the very act of forgiuing for thereto sometimes must similitudes be restrained as Mat. 9. 29. According to your faith be it vnto you And the force of the reason stands in the circumstance thus If we who haue but a drop of mercie doe forgiue others then doe thou who art the fountaine of mercies forgiue vs but we forgiue others therfore do thou forgiue vs. Touching our forgiuing others three questions must bee scanned I. How can any man pardon a trespasse seeing God onely forgiueth sinnes Answ. In euery trespasse which one doth to his neighbour be two things the losse and dammage whereby man is hindered in bodie goods or name and an offence against God by a practise of iniustice against his law Now as a trespasse is a damage vnto man so may a man forgiue it but as it is a sinne against God in the transgression of the morall law so God onely pardons it as when a man hath his goods stollen that dammage done to him a man may
feruently to call for mercie and for this cause the Scripture many times ioynes prayer and fasting together IV. Point The causes or occasions of a religious fast which may iustly mooue vs thereunto and they be seauen First when we our selues haue fallen into any grieuous sinne or sinnes whereof our conscience accuseth vs and whereby we procure the wrath of God against vs then to resonne our selues and to escape the wrath of God we had neede to giue our selues to prayer and fasting 1. Sam. 7. 6. The Israelites hauing fallen to Idolairie put away their strange gods and turne vnto the Lord with weeping and fasting and when they kept the feast of Expiation which was a type of their forgiuenes by the Messias then they humbled themselues in fasting before the Lord Leuit. 16. 29. Secondly when some among vs fall into any grieuous sinne though wee our selues bee cleare from it yet then wee must fast because for the sinnes of others Gods iudgements may iustly fall vpon vs. Hence it was that Paul blames the Corinthians because they sorrowed not for the sinne of incest committed among them And in this regard euery godly person ought to humble himselfe because of the grieuous sinnes of Atheisme blasphemie oppression c. which abound among vs. Thirdly when the hand of God in any iudgement lies vpon vs so did the Israelites when they fell in battell before the Beniamites and so ought we to doe for many iudgements of God that haue laien long vpon vs. Fourthly when the hand of God in any fearefull iudgement lies heauie on others among whom we liue though we our selues be freo in this case Dauid oft times humbled himselfe not onely when his child gotten in adulterie was sicke 2. Sam. 12. 16. but euen when his enemies were sicke he fasted Psal. 35. 13. Fiftly when Gods iudgements are imminent as it were hang ouer our heads so did I●hosaphat when his enemies came against his countrie and in this regard we ought to humble our selues for the professed enemies of Gods grace are daiely plotting our subuersion Sixtly when we stand in need of some needfull blessing of God especially such as concerne saluation thus Cornesius besought the Lord in prayer and fasting when he desired true resolution concerning the Messias and so ought we to doe to get assurance of our recōciliation with God in the pardon of our sinnes Seauenthly for Gods blessing and good successe vpon the ministerie of the Gospel so did the Church for Paul and Barnabas when they sent them to preach Act. 13. 3. and so ought we to doe at this day These be the iust occasions of fasting mentioned in the word whereto wee may referre the rest and when any of these befall particular persons families congregations cities countries or kingdomes then they ought to humble themselues in fasting before the Lord U. Point The time of a religious fast this now is free in regard of conscience Indeede in the old testament they had a set time of fasting to wit the tenth day of the seanenth moneth but in the newe testament there is no set time which bindes the conscience onely men must fast as iust occasion is offered If it be said that diuers reformed Churches haue set times of fasting I answer those fasts are set for orders sake and not to binde conscience and they are ciuill fasts and not religious for the Church may al●er them at her pleasure The time of a religious fast is the time of mourning which is vncertaine vnto any Church and therefore the time thereof cannot be set which must bee marked because the church of Rome doth herein erre in that they bind mens consciences to their set times of religious fasts Tollet instr Sacerd l. 6. c. ● UI. Point The kinds of a religious fast and they are two priuate and publike A priuate fast is that which is performed priuately either by one man alone for some of the forenamed occasions peculiar to to himselfe as Cornelius did Act. 10. 33. when he desired to know the true Messiss or by a priuate familie vpon peculiar causes mouing them thereto and so did Hester fast with her maides Hester 4. 16. This fast was foretold by Zacharie The land shall bewaile euery familie apart the familie of the house of Dauid apart and their wines apart c. A publike fass is that which is performed publikely by diuers families assembling in one or in many congregations and this publike fast is appointed partly by the Church partly by the Magistrate the Church must iudge of the time and occasion thereof and the Magistrate must authorize and proclaime it Againe a religious fast may be distinguished otherwaies in respect of the time of continuance and manner of abstinence therin for sometime a religious fast is onely from one meale for one day as Iudg. 20. 26. sometime it is from one meale for many daies together as 1. Sam. 31. 13. they fasted seauen daies together for Saul and Ionathan abstaining from their dinners and taking some refreshing in the euening and so Daniel fasted for three weekes of daies that is each day from morning till night Dan. 10. 3. And sometime it is from all kinde of sustenance for many daies together so Hester and her maides fasted three daies Hest. 4. 16. Now the two former may be vsed of vs as occasion serueth but this last is very dangerous for it is not with vs in this regard as it was with the Iewes they liued in hot countries and so had colde stomacks by reason whereof they might fast three daies without any great inconuenience but wee that liue in colder clymates haue hotter stomacks and so haue neede of more and oftener refreshing then they had neither can we fast so long without endangering life or health now fasting must bee to humble and afflict the body but not to destroy it Thus much of fasting in generall now I come to Christs doctrine of fasting here propounded And first of his reformation of the abuses thereof then vsed among the Iewes When ye fast looke not as the hypocrites c. Quest. How doth this agree with the commandement of God Ioel. 1. 13 14. where hee bids them howle and crie in their fast which cannot be without a mournfull countenance and indeede in a true fast rightly celebrated the sorrow of the heart must needes be testified by some conuenient signes and gesture in the bodie Ans. Christ doth not here simply condemne a sorrowfull countenance in fasting when as iust occasion of sorrow therein is offered for Nehemiah looked sad but onely the hypocrisie of the Pharisies who when they fasted had a sad countenance without a sorrowfull heart for all their heauie lookes they had no broken spirits this therefore Christ saith carrie not a sad and heauie looke when thou hast no sorrowfull mourning heart mind not thy outward
and pleasant to vs till we finde this precious treasure hid therein II. Dutie Hauing found this treasure we must highly prize and value it euen aboue all that we haue or can get nay more worth then all the world besides So did the man in the parable Matth. 13. 44. esteeme the treasure hid in the field aboue all his goods And Paul so esteemed of Christ crucified that he counted all things losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ and iudged them as dung that he might winne Christ. This high esteeme of Christ is needfull if euer we meane to lay him vp for our treasure and then haue we made good progresse in this heauenly purchase when we truely value Christ in our hearts at so high a rate and therefore we must endeauour our selues hereunto and labour so to frame our whole conuersation in speaches and in action that they may testifie at how high a rate we value Christ. And because the word of God reueales Christ Iesus vnto vs in which regard it is called a treasure therefore it also must be highly valued euen aboue all carthly things Thus Dauid did Psal. 119. 72. The Law of thy mouth is better vnto me then thousands of gold and siluer verse 127. I loue thy Commandements aboue gold yea aboue much fiue gold hereof wisdome saith my fruite is better then gold euen then much fine gold and my reuenues better then ●ine siluer It were happie for vs if wee did thus value the word of God Many hold there is but one truth and so that be knowne it is no matter whence it is learned whether out of Gods word or the writings of men but they are sarre deceiued for the Scriptures of God onely are that truth which is according to godlinesse and they alone discouer vnto vs this heauenly treasure and therefore they must haue the preheminence in our hearts and be esteemed farre aboue all the writings of men which if we would doe we should feele that power and comfort of the word in our hearts which naturally we lacke III. Dutie Hauing found out and rightly valued this true treasure we must seeke to get it for our selues and make it our owne so did the man in the parable Matth. 13. 44. when he had found the treasure hid in the field and so Christ here commandeth lay vp treasures for your selues Now that we may get this treasure to our selues we must conscionably vse such meanes as God hath appointed for this purpose to wit I. heare the word of God preached with all reuerence care and diligence labouring to mixe it with faith in our hearts II. receiue the Sacraments with all reuerence and due preparation III. pray to God in faith earnestly and constantly for the pardon of our sinnes and the fiuition of this treasure The reason hereof is plaine for the word and Sacraments are as it were the Lords two hands wherewith he reacheth out this heauenly treasure and all spirituall blessings vnto vs and our faith is the hand of our soule wherewith we receiue them now by our praiers we testifie this faith and sanctifie vnto our selues the two former meanes IV. Dutie Hauing gotten this treasure we must labour to make it sure vnto our selues And to this purpose we must follow Pauls counsell and charge to rich men 1. Tim. 6. 17 18 19. Charge the rich men in this world that they be not high minded neither trust in vncerten riches but in the liuing God that they doe good and be rich in good workes laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come that they may obtaine eternall life where marke how by trusting in God and by liberalitie and bountie we are exhorted to lay a good foundation What will some say must we be saued by our Almes-deedes and good works Ans. Not so for the ground of our saluation is Gods election and loue in Christ which he himselfe hath laid vp in heauen for vs. But the foundation which wee must lay vp for our selues is in our owne consciences for our assurance in Gods foundation and this we lay by our good works of loue mercie and iustice all which be fruits of faith and beeing done in faith and with singlenes of heart to Gods glorie they are sure testimonies of our portion in the true treasure Iesus Christ for hereby we know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren 1. Ioh. 3. 14. V. Dutie Hauing got this treasure sure to our selues we must vse it as a treasure Hereunto three duties are required I. we must haue our conuersation in heauen for there Christ our treasure is and where our ●reasure is there will our hearts be and if our hearts be on Christ in desire in ioy and delight it cannot be but our liues will be holy and heauenly though our bodies be here on earth but let vs beware that our affections be not set on things below for then is not Christ our treasure at all II. We must turne our earthly goods into heauenly treasures This we doe by imploying them in works of mercie for he that giues vnto the poore lends vnto the Lord Prou. 19. 17. so that the mercifull man hath the Lord for his debter for the Lord sends the poore mā as his messenger vnto the rich to borrow of him such things as the poore man lacketh and the Lords returne of paiment is in heauenly blessings and therefore Christ himselfe as it were explaning this point bids sell that ye haue and giue almes make you bagges which waxe not old a treasure that cannot faile in heauen where no theefe commeth neither moth corrupteth This then is the Lords owne direction for this happie exchange of earthly goods for heauenly treasures then which who can wish a better increase III. We must rather part with all that we haue then with Christ Iesus friends goods countrey libertie nay our owne life and deerest hearts blood must all goe for this treasures sake so doth the good purchasser part with all he hath for to ●●ie the field in which this treasure is Matth. 13. 44. but if we will rather part with Christ then with some or with all of these then wee vse not Christ as the true treasure Thus we see how Christ becomes our treasure let vs therefore make conscience to practise these fiue duties so long as we liue for when Christ becomes our treasure marke what will follow we shall finde in our hearts such sweet content therein that neither prosperitie shall lift vs vp too high nor aduersitie cast vs downe too low nothing shall daunt vs while we haue this treasure sure no kind of death no not the day of iudgement Thus much of the commandement now followeth the particular reason thereof where neither moth nor canker corrupteth c. This reason is drawen from the vnchangeable certentie and safetie of this
say there is a God and this God is to be worshipped to be loued and feared and that we must loue our neighbour as our selues and liue wel they seeke no further and yet if a man were brought vp in the wildernesse he might see all this by the light of nature the wicked eie seeth thus much but we must not content our selues herewith for if there be no more the life is full of darkenesse still and the soule may goe to vtter darkenesse with all this We therefore must remember to get the single eie else we are no schollers in the schoole of Christ. Indeed some plead that Preachers can say no more in effect but this Loue God aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe but these men know not what they say blessing themselues in their ignorance they must know that grace must be put to nature and sanctifie it and spirituall knowledge ioyned with naturall or else we remaine with the wicked eie If wee haue no more but a generall confused knowledge in moral points that serues not to saue vs but to make vs without excuse at the last day Againe another common fault worthy reproofe is this that men content themselues with naturall reformation they will graunt that God is to bee worshipped and loued that we must liue wel deale iustly and loue our neighbours but the blinde eie seeth thus much The meere ciuill man will goe thus farre and yet his life is nothing but darkenesse all this reformation is but naturall We therefore must labour for renued hearts by the spirit of God and reformed liue● according to the Gospel for howsoeuer a ciuill conuersation may commend vs vnto men yet it will not saue vs in the day of the Lord. Thirdly is this euill eie in euery one by nature then beware we bee not wise in our selues and from our selues in matters of saluation herein the word of God must be our wisedome Deut. 12. 8. 11. Ye shall not doe euery man that which seemeth good in his owne ●ies but that which I command you Farre be it therefore from vs to appoint to our selues how we will worship God or how we will be saued and yet such is our blinde presumption that wee will bee our owne masters in these things The Turke hath his religion the Iewe his and the Papist his all swaruing from the truth of God and yet euery one of these look to be saued in their religion each one of these haue a different manner of worshipping God and all swaruing from the true worship and yet they all perswade themselues that God is well pleased with their seruice And thus it goes with naturall men among v● though otherwise sufficiently wise for worldly things they resolue vpon their own course for the saluation of their soules let the preacher say what he will some thinke if they repent at their ende and then commend their soules to God it is sufficient others looke to be saued by their wel-doing and others by their faith as they call it but in truth by their owne good meaning and intent to liue well for what faith haue they that knowe not Gods word and promises Thus by their owne wisedome wil men be saued and hereby the deuil destroyes many a soule but let God bee wise and euery man a foole and let vs submit our selues in the things of God wholly to be ruled and guided by his written word lest Iewishly and Popishly we going about to stablish our own conceits in the matters of saluation doe plunge our soules into the pit of destruction Fourthly is the eie of the minde naturally corrupt then must wee labour for a better eie that is the eie of faith by which we relie on Gods mercie for our saluation and on his prouidence for all needfull things in life and death This eie makes supply to that which is wanting to naturall knowledge hereby we discerne rightly of God and of our selues this enables vs to see afarre off yea hereby we see things inuisible for it is the euidence of things which are not seene Heb. 11. 1. hereby Abraham saw the day of Christ and was glad Ioh. 8. 58. and all the Patriarkes saw the promise of God afarre off Heb. 11. 13. This will inable vs to walke in their steps towards the heauenly ci●ie and therefore let vs get this faith that so becomming children of the promise we may be counted for the seed And thus much for the wicked eie The third kind of eie is the blinde eie which is set out with the fruits thereof in these words Wherefore if the light that is in thee bee darkenesse how great is that darkenesse For the better discerning of the state of man with this blinde eie we must see what is meant by light and also by darkenesse By light is meant that knowledge of God of iustice of good and euill which is in the minde by nature now though this cannot be quite put out for the most wicked wretch and the veriest Atheist that liues hath some conscience remaining which is a worke of this light yet it may be so buried and couered that no light shall appeare nor any vse be made of it and then is it said to be darkenes which is the state of those that are giuen vp to a reprobate sense as when a man denies there is a God or that the Scriptures be the word of God or such like in these men naturall light is become darkenesse And the cause of this change in them is their corrupt will and rebellious affections which ouer-ruling naturall knowledge and conscience cause men to giue themselues to actuall sinnes whereby at length they come to commit sinne greedily and without remorse yea euen against conscience and the light of nature and so burie them both in such sort that they haue no more vse of them then if they were quite put out Now where the light of nature is thus put out the fruite of it is most palpable darknesse How great is that darkenesse that is there is nothing in that mans life but brutish confusion in hellish actions of pride couetousnesse enuie blasphemie and vnnaturall vncleannesse as Rom. 1. 27 29 c. The Use. Considering the light of nature may be thus put out wee must hereby be admonished First to enter into a serious consideration of our owne vilenesse for naturally wee haue in vs euen the best of vs all such rebellious lust and damnable desires as vnlesse they be restrained or renewed by grace will darken and as good as put out the light of nature This should make vs vile in our owne eies that nourish such corruptions and esteeme so of sinne which wil put out that light which yet Adams fall left in vs. Secondly hereby we are admonished to haue speciall care to mortifie our corrupt desires and our vnruly affections that else wil exstinguish in vs the light of nature Before the fall the
shall be giuen you seeke and ye shall finde knock and it shall be opened vnto you In this verse and those which follow vnto the twelft is laid downe the third part of this chapter concerning praier and it consisteth of two branches a commandement to pray and effectuall reasons to perswade vs thereto The commandement is propounded in three seuerall teannes Aske seeke and knocke each whereof hath his promise annexed thereto Ye shall haue ye shall find and it shall be opened vnto you Now for our better vnderstanding of Christs meaning herein two rules must be obserued I. That Christ here speakes not of euery kind of asking in praier but of that onely which himselfe commandeth and alloweth for we may aske and not receiue because we aske amisse as S. Iames saith but he that asketh according to Christs direction in this place shall receiue Now in all acceptable praier to God foure conditions must be obserued I. We must aske while the time of grace and mercie remaineth for if the day of grace be once past we may aske seeke and knocke but all in vaine this is plaine by the fiue foolish virgins who asked sought for oyle but found none yea they called and knocked but it was not opened vnto them Matth. 25. 8. 9. 12. Now the time of this life while God offers mercie vnto vs in his word is the acceptable time and the day of grace 2. Cor. 6. 2. and therefore herein must we aske seeke and knocke II. We must not aske as seemeth good vnto our selues but according to Gods will and as his word alloweth The sonnes of Zebedie were denied their request because they asked they knew not what Matth. 20. 22. But this is our assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs 1. Ioh. 5. 14. III. We must aske in faith that is beleeue that God will graunt vs those things which we aske according to his will Iam. 1. 5 6. If any man lacke wisdome let him aske of God but let him aske in faith and wauer not for the wauering minded man shall receiue nothing of God therfore saith Christ Whatsoeuer ye desire in praier beleeue that ye shall haue it and it shall be done vnto you Mark 11. 24. IV. We must referre the time and manner of Gods accomplishing our requests to his good pleasure It was the sinne of the Israelites that they limited the holy one of Israel by prescribing him what they would haue for their prouision and when they would haue it Psal. 78. 41. we therefore must waite on God as Dauid did Psal. 40. 1. I waited patiently for the Lord and he enclined his eare vnto me and heard me God deferres the graunting of our requests because he would trie the affections of his children Cantic 3. 1. The Church seeketh Christ but cannot finde him that is where and when shee will And indeede herein doe we shew forth faith when we referre the time and manner of receiuing our request to the good pleasure of God for he that beleeueth will not make hast Isa. 28. 16. The second rule to be here remembred concerning prayer is That these promises are not made directly to the worke of prayer but to the person that prayeth and yet not to him simply as he doth this good action of praier but as he is in Christ for whose merite sake the promise is accomplished and therefore Christ here speakes to them whome he takes for graunted to be the true members of his mysticall bodie which is his Church This rule must be remembred for the right vnderstanding of the promises of God concerning prayer for hereby it is plaine that our prayer is not the cause of the blessings we receiue from God but onely a way and instrument in and by which God conuayeth his blessings vnto his children for a true praier is a fruit of our faith in Christ in whome alone all the promises of God are yea and amen that is sure and certen vnto vs. Now hauing found Christs meaning let vs come to such instructions as are to be gathered hence First obserue that Christ doeth not barely propound this commandement to pray but repeates the same by a kind of gradation in three distinct words Aske seeke and knocke whereof the latter imports more vehemence then the former And this he doth to checke the slacknesse and coldenesse of our prayers and to stir vs vp to feruent zeale and diligence in this duetie both in publike and priuate And to mooue vs to godly zeale and diligence in this dutie consider the reasons following I. Christs owne example which in morall duties is a perfect rule Now though he had little need to pray in respect of himselfe for he did neuer sinne yet how often and how long and with what feruencie did he giue himselfe to this dutie he spent whole nights in prayer Luk. 6. 12. and in prayer in the garden he swet water and blood We haue also Moses example who spent fourtie dayes and fourtie nights in praier and fasting for the people when they had sinned Deuter. 9. 18. 19. If he were thus feruent in prayer for their sinnes how earnest would he be for his owne And Daniel humbled himselfe many dayes and prayed feruently for his people Dan. 9. 3. 4. c. Dauid prayed seuen times a day and rose vp at midnight to giue thankes to God Psal. 119. 164. 62. And Paul willeth the Romans that they would striue or wrestle with him by praier to God Rom. 15. 30. All these are worthie examples vnto vs and if we compare our selues with them we shall see we haue much more cause so to doe for our sinnes abound aboue theirs and therefore we had need to pray for the preuenting of Gods iudgements which our sinnes call for against vs. Also we come far short of them in grace and therefore had need to pray for supply thereof against the time of neede for our dayes of peace will not alwayes last wee haue enioyed it long and therefore must looke for dayes of triall for the state of Gods Church is interchangeable II. Reason All of vs must come to deale with God both in the day of death and at the day of iudgement at both which times all worldly helpes and comforts will forsake vs and by no meanes can wee shunne that accompt therefore it will be good for vs while we liue often to set our selues before the Lord that so we may make our selues familiar and acquainted with him against that day But if now we estrange our selues from God in regard of this exercise of prayer then at our ende wee shall finde the Lord to be strange vnto vs and to professe that he knowes vs not which will be woe vnto vs. III. Reason Euery good thing we haue or stand in need of comes from the mercie and bountie of God in Christ and prayer is an
not when Christ will call vs hence Luk. 12. 40. Be ye also prepared therefore for the sonne of man will come at an houre when ye thinke not II. Point As there be two diuers estates in two distinct places so there be two seuer all waies that lead thereunto the one the way of life verse 14. the other the way to destruction vers 13. First I will speake of the way of life and thereby shall we see what the way of destruction is in which regard it stands vs all in hand to know what is the way of life Now none hath better noted it out vnto vs then the Prophet Habaccuk chap. 2. v. 4. in these words But the iust shall liue by faith in which place he foretells the afflictions of the Iewes by the Chaldeans whereupon the Iewes might say whereby then shall we stay our selues he answers by faith The iust man liues that is leadeth his life by faith Some giue this meaning to the Prophet The iust by faith shall haue life euerlasting but the Apostle expoundeth it otherwise Gal. 3. 11. So then to walke in the way of life is to lead our liues by faith in Christ as Heb. 10. 39. Here two points must be considered I. what faith that is by which men must liue in this world namely true iustifying faith the very same by which they are to be saued in the day of the Lord. I liue by faith saith Paul in the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me Gal. 2. 20. where he doth notably expound this text shewing that faith in Christ our redeemer is that faith whereby we must lead our liues in this world for they which will be saued by their faith must first liue by their faith he that beleeues well liues well and that faith will neuer saue the soule that cannot guide and order the life many men thinke it is sufficient to saluation to beleeue the promise of life but faith hath a further worke in them that it saueth for it also causeth them to liue thereby Now a man liues by faith when he rests himselfe on God and suffers himselfe wholly to be lead and guided by Gods written word Example hereof we haue in Abraham Heb. 11. 8. who by faith for sooke his owne countrey and at Gods cōmandement went be knew not whither More particularly a Christian mans life is twofold spirituall and temporall both which he must liue in this world for heauenly life beginnes before we die and both these kinds of life must be preserued by faith The spirituall life of a Christian is that whereby he hath true fellowshippe with God this beginnes in this life and it stands in reconciliation with God wherein a man is accepted to the right of eternall life This reconciliation is life and it is held by faith and faith onely in Gods word and promise in Christ alone is it that makes vs lay ●old of receiue and keepe this our reconcillation We must giue God this honour to beleeue his promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting in Christ and vpon our faith God vouchsafeth vnto vs remission of sinnes and life euerlasting Here some may aske whether euery thing that we beleeue be made ours as riches honour and such like Ans. No but onely that which God promiseth in the Euangelical couenant of life euerlasting vpon our faith Here also some will say If this be all I am well for I beleeue Gods promise But herein many deceiue themselues beleeuing the promise falsly True faith is this men must seeke the pardon of their sinnes and in seeking beleeue it but they that beleeue without vsing the meanes deceiue themselues seeing God hath ioyned his promise to the meanes We offend God daily and therefore must daily re●ue our repentance and by faith beleeue the pardon of our daily sinnes Further this spirituall life hath his fruits It is no dead life for he that hath remission of sinnes liues in Christ and this life shewes it selfe in the fruits of good workes as mercie loue goodnes and in euery good worke we must liue by faith for to the doing of any good worke there is a double faith required first a generall faith whereby we are perswaded that the worke is allowed and required of God secondly a speciall faith whereby we are perswaded that the particular worke done is accepted of God In the acceptation of the worker God first accepteth the person in Christ and then the worke in and for the person Yea we are mooued to euery good worke by faith for it brings to minde Gods loue mercie and goodnes to vs and so mooueth vs to performe the like duties of loue and mercie towards our brethren Thirdly spirituall life shewes it selfe in resisting and enduring temptations for euery child of God hath many and gricuous assaults so as the righteous shall scarce be saued and in all and euery one of these we must liue by faith and thereby relie on Christ not on our selues Example hereof we haue in Christ vpon the crosse who euen then when he felt the wr●th of God vpon him and his indignation against him did yet crie vnto him as to his God My God my God and Iob in grieuous temptation and affliction said vnto the Lord Loe though he slay me yet will I trust in him Iob 13. 15. and so must we euen then lay hold on Gods mercie when we feele no comfort in our selues so did Dauid when he felt no comfort yet he did cleaue to God in his meditation Psal. 77. 7 8. 10 11. In disputations in schooles it is a fault to sticke alwaies to the conclusion yet in this combate with Satan it is no fault but a good practise of true faith Temporall life stands in the practise of some particular calling and some men be of one calling some of another and euery one hath or ought to haue some one lawfull calling or other wherein to leade his temporall life Now the workes of a mans particular calling they must be practised by faith euen the duties of the bas●st calling that is as of the shepheard And that a man may doe the duties of his calling in faith he must first haue a grounded conscience that his worke is allowed of God and accordingly he must doe his worke Againe euery man in his calling must haue a care of his owne life and of those that belong vnto him to prouide for them things necessarie as meate drinke and cloathing and this care must be ruled by faith that is a man must vse the lawfull meanes to get these things and yet so as he leaue the issue and euent vnto Gods blessing we may prouide for necessaries but we must goe no further but vse the lawfull ordinarie meanes and sanctifie them by prayer leauing the blessing vnto God Cast thy workes on God saith Salomon Prou. 16. 3. and S. Peter bids vs cast all our care on
is to repent of our sinnes and this is a fruite of faith In true repentance there be two things the beginning and the nature of it The beginning of it is a godly sorrow when a man is greeued properly and directly because by his sinne he hath offended God who hath beene vnto him so louing a father in Christ. This causeth repentance vnto saluation not to be repented of 2. Cor. 7. 10. and it ariseth not so much from the feare of punishment as from the consideration of Gods mercie making a man displeased with himselfe for offending so louing a God who hath beene so gratious and bountifull vnto him in Christ. The nature of repentance stands in the change of the minde when any person laies aside the purpose of sinning and by Gods blessing and grace taketh to himselfe a new purpose neuer to sinne more This is properly to repent and if this be in truth hence will follow the change of the will of the affections and of all the actions of the life It may be said that an hypocrite may repent as Iudas did Matth. 27. 3. and therefore this is not a good note of doing Gods will Answ. Iudas did repent hee was indeed grieued for his fact wishing with all his heart that it had neuer beene done but this was nothing his sorrow was onely worldly causing death as the Appstle calleth it 2. Cor. 7. 10. arising from the horror and feare of punishment not from consideration of Gods mercy it was without true hatred of sin committed without hope of mercie or purpose to glorifie God by new obedience and so was no true repentance The third worke wherein consisteth the doing of Gods will is new obedience and it is the fruite of both the former whereby a man beeing indued with faith and repentance doth according to the measure of grace receiued indeauour himselfe to yeeld obedience to all Gods commaundements from all the powers and parts both of his soule and his bodie and this I call newe because it is a renuing of that in man whereto hee was perfectly enabled by creation But here it will bee said that many who shall neuer bee saued haue attained to reformation of life and therefore this is not a true and sufficient note of him that shall bee saued Answ. True it is many hypocrites haue reformation of life but yet they faile two waies First their reformation is onely outward not inward their thoughts wills and affections still remaine wicked and corrupt Secondly their obedience is partiall onely to some of Gods commaundements not to all so Herod he would heare Iohn gladly and doe many things but yet he would not leaue his brothers wife But true obedience which proceedeth from true faith hath these heads and branches First the partie must pro●ue what is the good will of God Rom. 12. 2. Secondly he must restraine his life from outward offences which tend to the dishonour of God and scandall of the Church 1. Thess. 5. 22. 1. Pe● 2. 11 12. Thirdly he must mortifie the inward corruptions of his owne heart Fourthly he must labour to conceiue new motions agreeable to the will of God thence bring forth and practise good duties so performing both outward and inward obedience vnto God and by these may a man discerne the truth of his obedience and thus we see what professors they be which shall be saued Uses 1. Now considering that saluation is promised to them that ●e doers of Gods will we must hereby be exhorted to become more chearefull in doing Gods will by faith repentance and new obedience and to further vs in this dutie we must vse these helpes I. We must labour for a true perswasion of Gods mercy in the pardon of our sinnes and for the saluation of our soules this beeing truly conceiued will vrge a man to true obedience whereby he may shew himselfe thankefull to God for so great a mercie II. We must consider that we are the temples of the holy Ghost which is a wonderfull dignitie to a sinfull man and in regard hereof we must stirre vp our selues so to liue that we make not sadde the spirit of God which dwelleth in vs. III. We must consider the blessings of God bestowed vpon vs both in soule and bodie one by one and this will mooue vs to loue God which loue we shall shew in keeping his commandements for this is the loue of God that we keepe his commandements 1. Ioh. 5. 3. IV. Let vs consider the threatnings of God against sinne and his iudgements vpon thē that liue in sinne for euery place is full of Gods iudgements and these will helpe to restraine our corruptions that they breake not forth into action V. We must meditate on the word of God vse feruent praier vnto God for his grace for by this meanes Dauid did notably stirre vp himselfe to faith repentance and new obedience as we may see at large in the 119. Psalme II. Use. In that many hauing faith and repentance and outward reformation of life in some degrees shall neuer be saued we must labour to goe beyond all hypocrites in these graces in faith we must not content our selues with a generall perswasion of Gods mercie but we must labour to conceiue the same to be true and sound touching the remission of our sinnes and the saluation of our soules we must looke that it haue a sound beginning good fruits and stead fast continuance And for repentance we must labour to see that our sorrow arise from the consideration of the goodnes of God whome we haue offended that it breed in vs a change of our minds in the purpose of not sinning whereto must be conformable the will and affections and the whole man And for new obedience we must be as carefull in minde will and affections as in the outward actions of our life and to doe the will of God and than in all Gods commandements III. Vse Many there be that thinke their case good because they liue a ciuill honest life without wronging others openly or wittingly which thing indeed is commendable but yet farre short of that which is required for saluation therefore they must no● trust to these broken st●●es of outward and common honestie though they be good things in their kind for many there be that shall neuer come in heauen which haue had farre more in them then these things are and therefore whatsoeuer these persons be they must not rest till they find some portion of true grace in their hearts by vertue whereof they may plainly see themselues gone beyond all hypocrits in the things that concerne saluation vers 22. Many will say vnto me in that day Lord Lord haue we not by thy Name prophesied and by thy Name cast out deuills and by thy Name done many great workes 23. And then will I professe to them I neuer knew you depart from me ye that worke iniquitie In these two verses
deale with a broken ioynt wil handle the same very tenderly and so must they be dealt with in reproofe that sinne of humane fiailtie Example of this mildenes in reproofe we haue in Nathan who reprooued Dauid in a parable and so brought him to condemne himselfe the Apostle Paul reproouing the Co●inthians in the beginning of the first Epistle doth include himselfe Apollos in the same reproofe as though they had bin guiltie of the same crime 1. Cor. 4. 6. And giuing direction to Timothy how to carrie himselfe in the Church of God though he allow him to vse rebuke reproofe 2. Tim. 4. 2. yet he bids him Exhort an Elder therein giuing good directiō for admonition if the partie be an Elder though reproofe be not vnlawfull yet it is not so fit as exhortation and the like mildenesse must be vsed toward all those that sinne of humane frailty But if the offence proceede from wilfulnes and obstinacie then the iudgements of God must be denounced against them to driue them to repentance 4. Euery one that is to correct another must consider himselfe and his owne estate knowing that of himselfe he may fall into the like offence So Paul bids them that are to seeke the restoring of such as are fallen to consider thēselues Galat. 6. 1. 5. Brotherly correction must bee deliuered with Doctrine and instruction 2. Tim. 4. 1 2. I charge thee before God to reprooue exhort and rebuke with all long suffering and doctrine He that will admonish must first himselfe be resolued that the thing done is a sinne then he must propound it to the partie as a sinne out of Gods word and deliuer the reproofe not in his owne name but in the name of God so as hereby the partie may know himselfe to haue offended and also say that he is reprooued of God himselfe rather then of man This ought all superiours to practise in correcting and admonishing their inferiours they must not goe thereto in rage but in long suffering nor rudely but with doctrine that the partie offending may see his fault And thus much for this dutie of brotherly correction Vers. 6. Giue not that which is holy vnto dogs neither cast yee your pearls before swine least they tread them vnder their feet and turning againe all to rent you Hitherto the Euangelist hath set down the seuerall heads of Christs Sermon more at large but from this verse to the ende of the Chapter he handleth briefly the points which follow This verse dependeth not vpon the former but herein our Sauiour Christ laies down a new point of instruction directing his Disciples and in them all ministers vnto that Christian discretion which ought to be obserued in the dispensation of the word of God And his direction is here propounded in a prohibition of giuing holy things to dogs or casting pearles before swine which is enforced by a double reason least they tread vpon you c. Now for the better vnderstanding hereof first I will speake of the words because they are hard and difficult and then come to the doctrines In the words foure things are to be sought out 1. What is meant by holy things 2. What is meant by pearles 3. What is meant by dogs and 4. what is meant by swine For the first by that which is holy we must vnderstand first and properly the word of God written in the bookes of the old and new testament in his right and holy vse that is read dispensed and preached and consequently by holy things are meant the Sacraments and Christian admonition Gods word is called an holy thing for sundry causes but principally for these two first because it is holy in it selfe and secondly in effect operation It is holy in it selfe because it is set apart by God to be in the Church in stead of his owne liuely voyce vnto his people for the reucaling and determining of all things to be beleeued and done in his Church In the old testament God himselfe spake by a liuely voice vnto the Patriarkes and after the giuing of the Law hee gaue answer to the high Priest at the Mercie-seat yet we are not inferiour to them though we want that liuely voice for we haue the written word in stead thereof which is answerable euery way thereunto for looke what the written word saith is as much as if the Lord from heauen should speake by a liuely voice and so consequently it is to vs in stead of the Arke of God a pledge of his presence And thus it is holy in it selfe Secondly Gods word is holy in regard of operation for it is the instrument of the spirit set apart by God himselfe to be the meanes whereby he sanctifies and reformes the hearts and liues of his children And consequently the Sacraments are holy things for they are the word made visible so likewise is Christian admonition grounded ●pon Gods word From this doctrine sundrie dutie 〈◊〉 to be learned First we are oft commanded in Gods word to drawe neer● v●●o God to seeke him to feare him and to walke before him in his pr●●●nce how shall wee doe these things seeing God is inuisible and in glory and maiestie is in heauen Surely we must consider the word of God which is that holy thing set apart by God to be in stead of his owne liuely voyce therefore we neede not seeke for him that is inuisible but wee must haue recourse vnto the word labour to haue it present with vs in our hearts in our liues and consciences Enoch walked before God not onely in regard of his infinite maiestie which though it bee inuisible is euery where present but principally in respect of his word setting that before him wheresoeuer he was When we are commanded to feare God wee must know that that is done not onely when wee stand in awe of his glorious maiestie but principally when wee feare to offend God commanding vs in his word The Apostle saith that the holy Ghost dwels in our hearts which must not be thought to be meant of that infinite substance of the holy spirit but of the dwelling of the word which is made effectuall by the holy spirit for saith euer hath relation to the word beeing beleeued it dwels in the heart makes the spirit which workes by the same word present also In which regard Paul saith Now I liue not but Christ liues in me which he expoundeth after saying I liue now by faith in the son of God because the word of Christ was present with him and the grace of saith that liues by that word Secondly seeing the word of God is of this holinesse we must learne to vse the same publikely or priuately with all reuerence carefully sanctifying our selues thereunto When the people came to receiue the Law in Mount Sina they were sanctified three daies before the same preparation for substance ought we to
make before we heare the word of God First we must wash our hands in innocencie and then compasse the Altar of the Lord the word and sacraments are holy in thēselues but not so to vs out of their holy vse and therefore if we would reape profit to our selues by them we must prepare our hearts therevnto Thirdly whereas the word is vnto vs the voice of God the means of sanctification we may learne that in the congregatiō of Gods people ordinarily the pure word of God alone ought to be heard without the mixture of the words of men be they neuer so holy for it is not said of the words of any man that they are that holy thing The Lord himselfe alone had the appointment of the making of the holy oyle which was to anoint the Kings and Priests vnder the law neither might any man adde any thing thereto though it were neuer so pure and good nor make any oyle like vnto it so likewise the trumpets that serued for the Tabernacle to assemble the people the Lord himselfe alone had the appointment of them and none might vse any other though it were made of most pure gold Had the Lord this care ouer his Sanctuarie vnder the law to take the appointment of these things to himselfe alone and shall we thinke that the trumpet of his holy word which now by his appointment soundeth in the congregation of the Saints may admit a mixture with the words of men humane or diuine be they neuer so holy The ancient Church was farre from this mixture and therfore forbade the publike reading of the Apocrypha which yet are more excellent bookes then the writings of men published since the Apostles But it is saide that they onely finde fault with this kinde of preaching which cannot attaine vnto it I answer it is no point of the greatest learning to vse the sayings of Fathers and Poets in preaching and they which vse it not refraine therefrom not because they cannot doe it but because they dare not mingle the sayings of men with the word of God which is that holy thing seruing in stead of Gods owne glorious voice in all matters that concerne our faith and obedience and beeing the onely sufficient instrument of our sanctification and therefore it were to be wished that in the congregations of the Saints the pure word of God might sound alone vnto Gods people that as they are begotten alone of this immortall seede so they might be fedde alone with this sincere milke II. Point What is meant by pearles Ans. The wholesome doctrines and instructions of Gods word contained partly in commandements and partly in sweete and heauenly promises so Matt. 13. 46. the Gospel preached is compared to a pretious pearle And further we are to note that these wholesome instructions are called your pearles Christ speaking to his Disciples and other hearers now they are so called in two respects First in regard of the Apostles and other Ministers their successors because they are the Lords stewards to dispense the word and the doctrine thereof to Gods people Secondly in regard of all true beleeuers and seruants of God that haue care to know and to obey the word of God for euery beleeuer hath a speciall right vnto Gods word aboue other men to which purpose the Lord saith Bind vp the testimonie seale vp the law among my disciples Isa. 8. 16. that is commend cōmit my word vnto my disciples there giuing a special right and interest vnto them in the word of saluation● for they haue the true iudgment and meaning thereof they keepe it in their hearts expresse the power of it in their liues they haue the vse and benefit thereof in euery estate in this world and vnto their eternall saluation in heauen From this that the doctrines of Gods word are our pearles first wee are taught to place all our riches in the word of God for that is our Iewell and our principall treasure of this Salomon saith Her merchandise are better then merchandise of siluer and the gaine thereof better then gold In the valuing of this pearle Dauids practise is notable who made the testimonies of God his heritage and the very ioy of his heart Psalm 119. 111. and esteemed them aboue gold yea aboue most si●e gold vers 127. Secondly we must hereby learne to content our selues in all casualties and calamities of this lise with this pearle of the word of God for though we loose friends health goods or good name yet this pearle of good doctrines and sweete promises is not lost if that were taken away with the losse of outward commodities then there were some cause of discomfort but seeing this iewell remaines with vs in all estates therefore herewith we must stay and comfort our selues as Dauid did counting Gods promises his comfort in trouble Psal. 119. 50. his songs in his pilgrimage v. 54. Thirdly this must teach vs to vse the doctrines and promises of Gods worde as pearles wee must looke them vp in our hearts and haue them in faithfull keeping in our memories A man that hath an earthly iewell that is of any worth will bee very carefull to looke it vp in the surest chest he hath how much more care ought wee to haue of these true pearles of heauenly instructions As the Holy Ghost speakes of Deacon● they must bee such as keepe the mysterie of faith in good conscience so must euery one of vs bee carefull keepers of this heauenly pearle This was Maries practise Luke 2. 51. Shee powdered the sayings of Christ in her heart and Dauid hidde the word of God in his heart that he might not sinne against the Lord. Psal. 119. 11. IU Instruct. The doctrines and promises in Gods word are the pearles of the Apostles and ministers therefore they aboue others in all ages and times ought to haue speciall care by all good meanes to preserue the puritie of doctrine in the Church of God This is Pauls charge to Timothie keepe that which is committed vnto thee that is that whole some doctrine which thou hast learned of me this neerely concerneth ministers at this day that as by the good meanes of others they haue receiued true doctrine purified from the dregges of Popery so they should preserue keepe the same frō all ●int of corruption to their posteritie The third and fourth things to be considered are touching dogs and swine where these three points are to bee handled I. What are here properly meant by dogs and swine II. Who must giue iudgement of men to be dogs and swine and III. Where they are to be found For the first By dogs and swine wee must vnderstand the enemies of Gods word yet not all enemies for so euery sinner should be a dog a swine but onely such as are malitious obstinate enemies manifestly conuicted of their enmitie to Gods word doctrine of whose