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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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3. There is not couetousnes or the loue of world there 1. Ioh. 2.14 Iam. 4.3 he vseth the world but hee admires it not His taste in earthly things is lost Hee sauours them not as hee was wont to do Romanes 8.5 And as in these things hee is new so in the furniture of his heart hee is in many things new for First hee hath a new minde hee is renewed in the spirit of his minde which appeares first by his capablenes in spirituall things Hee that lately could not perceiue the things of God 1. Cor. 2.14 now heares as the learned hee sees in a mirour hee lookes and wonders The vaile is taken away that before couered him 2. Cor. 3. Secondly by the transcendencie of the things hee knowes he can now looke vpon the verie Sun hee knowes God and Iesus Christ and the glory to come and the excellent things giuen of God which the heart of the natural man neuer perceiued Iohn 17.3 1. Cor. 2.9 10. Thirdly by the instrument by which hee vnderstands hee sees by faith and not by Reason in many things he is fully assured in diuers Mysteries where sense and reason can giue-in no euidence Secondly hee hath newe affections I will instance but in two of them sorrow and loue He is another man in his sorrowes which appeares both in the causes and in the remedies of his sorrowes For the causes hee was wont neuer to be sorry for any thing but his crosses now hee is seldome sorry for any thing but his sinne And for the remedies he was wont to driue away his sorrowes with time sleepe and merry company but now nothing but good words from God will ease him his loue may be tryed by the obiects and so whom hee can loue truely or whome hee doth loue vehemently Hee can loue his very enemies which hee could neuer doe before And hee doth loue Iesus Christ though he neuer sawe him 1. Pet. 1.9 and so feruently as hee accounts all things in the world which hee was wont so much to dote vpon but as losse and dung in comparison of Iesus Christ Phil. 3.8 9. Fiftly hee hath a new behauiour with him hee is wonderfully altered in his carriages which appeares in diuers things First in respect of the rule of his life hee walks by rule Gal. 6.16 Hee commeth daily to the light to see whether his works be wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 This is a signe giuen by our Sauiour Christ in that place Hee is carefull to order his behauiour by the warrant of the word Phil. 2.15 16. Secondly in respect of the meanes hee vseth for the ordering of his conuersation And so hee taketh presently hold on Gods Sabbath hee is carefull to keepe the Sabbath honouring that day aboue all others and esteeming and desiring it for the imployment thereof Thus the Lord of the Sabbath saith that it is a signe by which hee knowes the people whether they bee truly sanctified or not Exod. 31.13 Esay 56.2.6 Thirdly in respect of the things hee imploies himselfe in hee chooseth the things that please God Esay 56.4 his desire is now in all his waies to do such things as might bee acceptable to God Whereas before hee was most carefull to please men or to satisfie his owne lusts Fourthly in respect of the manner of his conuersation In which foure things especially shine first humility hee shewes that the great opinion of himselfe is taken downe in him hee is lowely and meek which hee hath learned of Christ Math. 11.29 Secondly affectionatenes Hee loues the name of the Lord and to bee the Lords seruant Esay 56.6 Hee doth good duties with good affections Thirdly contempt of the world hee can deny his profit pleasure ease credit or the like Hee is no more worldly or eaten vp with the cares of life He doth not esteeme of earthly things as hee was wont to doo and shewes it in his carriage Fourthly sincerity for now hee hath respect to all the Commandements of God hee desires to bee sanctified throughout he is not mended in many things as Herod was but is in some degree mended in all things and besides hee is carefull of his waies in all places and companies hee will obey absent as well as present Phil. 2.12 and there is no occasion of offense in him 1. Iohn 2.8 He is wonderfull wary and carefull to prouide that he may not bee an offense to any body and withall hee is not found to striue more for credit than for goodnes or more ready to iudge others than to condemn himself Iames 3.17 If this description be throughly waighed it will bee found to contain the most liuely and essentiall things that distinguish true Conuerts from all othermen Nor may the force of any of these bee weakned because many that seem true Christians doo shew the contrary to some of these for many that seem iust to men are an abomination to God and besides these things may be in the weak Christian in some weak measure though not so exactly Thus of the third doctrine Doct. 4. We may hence note that there is a peculiar time for the keeping of this visitation of grace All the times of mens liues are not times of visitation there is a speciall day of visitation called in Scripture The day of saluation the accepted time the due time the season of God's grace 2. Cor. 6.2 That this point may be opened first we may consider of the acceptation of this word Day It vsually notes a naturall day that is the space of foure and twenty houres Sometimes it notes the artificiall day of twelue houres from the morning to the euening so Iohn 11.9 Sometimes it notes time generally as in such Scriptures as say In those daies the meaning is In those times Sometimes it notes some peculiar season for the dooing or suffering of some notable thing as the speciall time when God plagues wicked men is call'd their day Psalm 37.13 Iob 18.20 So the time when Christ declared himself openly to bee the Messias is called his day Iohn 8.46 So it is heer taken for that speciall part of our time of life wherein God is pleased to offer and bestowe his grace vpon vs to saluation Now this cannot be the whole space of a man's life for it is euident that many men for a long time of their life haue not at all been visited of God in this visitation of grace they haue sate in darknes and in the shadow of death and this time is called night Rom. 13.13 Again others are threatned with the vtter losse of God's fauour if they obserue not a season as Heb. 3.6 c. Luke 19.41 42. Yea some men haue liued beyond this season and for not obseruing it were cast away Pro. 1.24 28. The very tearm heer vsed shewes it for when he saith The day of visitation he manifestly by the Metaphor of visiting proues a limitation of the time for all the yeer
must beseech the Lord to quicken them Psal. 119.37 and to inlarge their hearts verse 32. especially to giue them vnderstanding verse 34. and to open their eies to see the wonderfull things of his law verse 18. Thirdly they must chuse an effectuall Ministery to liue vnder it such as is executed with power and demonstration to the conscience 2. Cor. 4.2 Fourthly they must remember the Sabbath day and that they doo when they empty their heads and hearts of all cares of life which might choak the word diligently dooing their owne works on the six daies and finishing them that they may bee free for the Lords work on the seuenth day The cares of life choke the word Matthew 13. Fiftly they must conuerse much if it be possible with affectionate Christians For as iron sharpneth iron so doth the exemplary affection of the tender-hearted whet-on the dull spirits of others Sixtly they must purge often They must bee frequent in the duties of humiliation by solemn fasting and praier and sound confession striuing when they feel fulnesse to growe vpon them to disburden their hearts and to quicken their spirits more forcibly to the loue of Gods name and word Quest. But what must such doo as haue gotten some affections to the word that they neyther lose them nor be vnprofitable in them Ans. They must look to diuerse things First they must hate vain thoughts take heed of those secret vanities of imagination and that delightfull contemplation of euill in the minde Psalm 119.113 Secondly they must try all things and keep that which is good They must hear with judgement and make speciall account of such parcels of doctrine as do most fit their particular needs labouring by all means that such truths run not out 1. Thes. 5.21 Thirdly they must take heed of itching eares For where mens desires are still carried after new men they are in great danger of fulnesse or of declining and which is worse of being carried about with diuerse doctrines and at length to be a prey to deceitfull mockers Fourthly they must preserue by all means the fear and trembling at Gods presence and humiliation of minde For so long as wee can dread the presence of God in his ordinances we are in no danger of losing our loue to the word Psalm 119.120 Lastly in Esay 55.1.2.3 wee may note diuerse things that GOD requires in such as haue the same thirst 1. They must come to means 2. They must buy and bargain with God by praier and vows 3. They must eat that is they must apply it to themselues 4. They must bee instructed against merit in themselues and bring faith to beleeue success though they deserue it not they must buy without money 5. They must harken diligently 6. They must eat that which is good that is they must apply effectually that doctrine they feel to haue life in it 7. Their soules must delight in fatnes that is they must be specially thankfull and cheerfull when God doth enliue his promises and sweeten his words to their tastes 8. They must after all this incline their ear and come to God They must make conscience to striue against dulnes and distractions and seek God in his word still or els their affections may decay and then if they doe this they shall liue and enioy the sure mercies of Dauid by a perpetuall couenant Question But what shall such godly persons as are afflicted with melancholy do in this case of affections Answer They must attend these things First they must be perswaded to see the disease in the body which extends the oppression of it to the very affections Secondly they must remember times that are past and iudge of their estate by what it was before Thirdly they may be infallibly assured that they are in a right way because they desire to liue vprightly and to forsake the corruptions that are in the world Fourthly they must know that it is a greater glory in faith to beleeue now when they feele not then to beleeue when the hart abounded with ioy Fiftly They may iudge of their affection to the word by their preparation before they com and by their only liking of such as loue the word and by their constant frequenting of it and by their sorrow for their dulnes and vnprofitablenes Hitherto of the duty to which hee exhorteth The motiues follow and they are fowre First ye are new borne babes Secondly the word is sincere milk Thirdly ye may thereby growe Fourthly ye haue tasted the sweetnes of the bounty of God in his word already The first reason tels what they are The second what the word is The third what they shall be The fourth what the word hath been As new borne babes These words are taken in diuers senses For properly they signify infants while they are tender and vnweaned from the breast Sometimes they signify vnable men and such as haue no fitnes for their callings so Isai. 3.4 Sometimes they signify such as be weake in faith and in the gifts of the spirit whether they be newly regenerated or lying in sinne 1. Cor. 3.1 Heb. 5.13 and so it is taken heer And so the words are a reason to induce them to an affectionate desire after the word Inasmuch as they are so weak they can no better liue without the word then the child in nature can liue without milk Diuers things may be from hence noted First that grace is wrought in Christians by degrees Christ is reuealed in vs by foure degrees First as a child or little babe new formed and borne Secondly as a yong man in more strength and vigour and comeliness and actiueness Thirdly as a father or old man settled with long experience these three are in this life and mentioned 1. Ioh. 2.14 Now the fourth is when Christ shall appear in vs as the Antient of daies like God himself in a maruelous glorious resemblance of the holiness and properties of God And this shall bee in another world The vse should bee both for thankfulnes if Christ bee formed in vs to any degree and to incite our industry in all the meanes appointed of God seeing wee receiue gifts by degrees and not all at once Secondly that true grace may stand with many weaknesses A childe doth truly liue and yet it is very ignorant infirm weyward fit for little or no imploiment such may Christians be for a time such were the very disciples of Christ for a time such were the Corinthians 1. Cor. 3.1 and the Hebrewes Heb. 5.13 The vse should bee to restraine censuring of others because of their infirmities to haue no grace at all Whereas we should rather bear with them and beleeue all things Rom. 15.2 1. Cor. 13.5 And besides those that are distressed in minde should comfort them selues with this they may bee full of weaknesses and very vnprofitable and yet haue the true life of Christ in them Thirdly that the most
wildernes of this world Philip. 2.15 Secondly it was their office to blow in the siluer trumpets and that vpon foure occasions as you may see Num. 10. First The one was to assemble the congregation or the Princes to the tabernacle Secondly The other was to giue an alarum when there was any remoue of the campe Thirdly The third was in the time of Warre when they mustred to battaile Fourthly The fourth was for ioyes sake at the time of solemne feasts and for thanksgiuing to God and in all these we should be like the Priests We should be as trumpets to call one vpon another to goe vp to the house of the Lord Esay 2.2 Secondly We should euery where proclaime mortality and signify that the whole hoast must remoue we must cry All flesh is grass 1. Pet. 1.23 Thirdly We should also blow the trumpet of defence and arme our selues in the spirituall warfare and call vpon God to saue vs from our enemies and stir vp one another prouoking to loue and good workes 1. Pet. 4.1 2. 2 Tim. 2.3 4. 2 Cor. 10.4 5. We should cry alowd like a trumpet in reproouing the transgressions of men and opposing the sinnes of the time Esay 58.1 Ephes. 5. Lastly we should trumpet out the praises of God for all the goodnes he hath shewed vnto vs we should blow as in the new moon Psal. 81.3 But then in all this we must remember that we blow with a siluer trumpet that is with all discretion and sincerity c. Thirdly a speciall work of the Priests was to blesse the people and to put the name of God vpon them The former whereof is prescribed Nam 6.22 23 24. and so should we all learne the language of Canaan or the language of blessing we must blesse and not curse for we are thereunto called 1 Pet. 3.9 Lastly their principall work was to offer sacrifices of which in the next words The Vses follow First For reproofe For there are many faults in Christians whereby they transgresse against their spirituall Priest-hood as 1. When men are yoaked with vnnecessarie society with the wicked for heereby they forget their separation to God c. 2. When men neglect the finishing of their repentance and assurance they looke not to their anointing 3. When men are scandalous of their indiscretions and faults they forget that such as haue any blemish must not offer the bread of their God and forget their washing from their old sinnes 2 Pet. 1.7 4. When men are barren of good workes or are vncheerefull and dull they leaue off the Priests garments of innocency and gladnes 5. When the liues and behauiours of men sauour of vanity and worldliness they remember not the blood of sprinkling 6. When men are ignorant and idle seeke not knowledge or doe not teach and instruct and admonish How doe the Priests lips preserue knowledge or how doe they beare about the Arke of the Lord 7. When Christians are fearfull and irresolute and colde and not frequent in the praises of God how doo they blowe in the siluer trumpet 8. When Christians are bitter-hearted and accustomed to euill-speaking how doo they forget their duty of blessing To omit the neglect of sanctifying till I come to handle it in the next place Vse 2. Secondly for consolation to all godly and mortified and inoffensiue Christians they should be wonderful thankfull to God that hath made them partners of this holy Calling howsoeuer the world conceiues of it God promiseth it as a great mercy to his children that they shall be called the Priests of the Lord Esay 61.6 and the Church is wonderful thankful for it to God Reu. 2.6 and 5.10 And the rather should we reioyce in it because God hath promised to take vs to himself as his portion and peculiar treasure Exod. 19.6 And it is his promise also to satiate the soules of his Priests with fatnes Ierem. 31.14 And what a priuiledge is it to haue accesse vnto the Lord and to stand before God daily which the Priests not onely might but were tied to it by their office But then for conclusion of this point let vs all bee sure wee haue our part in the first resurrection Reu. 20.6 and be carefull to be like the Priests for obedience and sanctity Exod. 19.5 6. and to get knowledge plentifully into our hearts Col. 3.16 and in the cause of God to blow the trumpets of zeal and resolution carrying our selues with all humility and readinesse to doo good and so becomming instruments of blessing to the people And which I had almost forgotten we must remember to be like the Priests for teaching and confuting and reprouing and informing our Familiars and friends as wee haue fitnes and occasion Thus of the Priest-hood of Christians in generall In particular hence is further to be considered first their work secondly their honour Their work is To offer vp spirituall sacrifices their honour is Acceptation and high account with God through Iesus Christ. First then of the work of Christian Priests which is To offer secondly what they must offer viz. sacrifices thirdly the difference of those sacrifices from those in the Law of Moses they are spirituall which word notes both the substance of Christian sacrifices viz. that they are such sacrifices as were not according to the Letter but according to the mysticall significations of the sacrifices of Moses Law and withall the manner how they must be offred vp viz. spiritually or after a spirituall manner The main thing heer intended then is To auouch that Christiās haue their sacrifices which they must offer and that in a spirituall manner Now for the cleerer opening of this doctrine two things must bee distinctly considered of First what sacrifices can remain to Christians since the Law of Moses is abrogated and secondly what things are requisite to the offring vp of these sacrifices For the first There are diuers sorts of sacrifices among Christians Some are proper to som Christians onely some are generall to all The sacrifices that are proper to some Christians are such as three sorts of men must offer First Ministers secondly Martyrs thirdly rich men First Ministers haue their sacrifice which they must with all care offer to God and their sacrifice is the soules of the hearers Thus Paul was to offer vp the Gentiles to God Rom. 15.16 And thus it was prophecied that in the time of the Christian Church the Elect should be brought in as an offring to God out of all Nations Esay 66.20 Ministers sacrifice their people either in this life or at the day of Iudgement In this life in generall when they perswade them to their attendance vpon the House of God and breed in them a care to come before the Lord in Ierusalem Esay 66.20 In particular when they work repentance and true conuersion in their hearts and when they make them go home and mortifie their sinnes and tender their vowed seruice to God And
their secret offences Thus Achan gaue glory to God Iosh. 7.19 And thus the penitent sinner glorifies God when hee cares not to abase himself in the acknowledgement of his owne vilenesse that God may be magnified in any of his attributes or ordinances by it Ier. 13. 16. Mal. 2.2 Fourthly When the prayse of God or the aduancement of his Kingdome is made the end of all our actions This is to doe all to his glorie 1. Cor. 10.31 Fiftly when wee beleeue God's promises and wait for the performance of them though we see no meanes likely for their accomplishment Thus Abraham gaue glory to God Rom. 4. Sixtly when wee publikely acknowledge true Religion or any speciall truth of God when it is generally opposed by the most men Thus the Centurion gaue glory to God Luke 23.47 Seuenthly when men suffer in the quarrell of Gods truth and true Religion So 1. Pet. 4.16 Eightthly when on the Sabbath men deuote themselues only to Gods worke doing it with more ioy and care then they should doe their own worke on the weeke dayes refusing to prophane the Sabbath of the Lord by speaking their owne words or doing their own willes Thus Esay 58.13 Ninthly when men do in particular giue thanks to God for benefits or deliuerances acknowledging God's speciall hand therein Thus the Leper gaue glory to God Luke 17.18 so Psal. 113.4 Tenthly by louing praysing admiring and esteeming of Iesus Christ aboue all men For when we glorifie the Sonne we glorifie the Father Iohn 1.14 11.4 Eleuenthly when wee account of and honour godly men aboue all other sorts of men in the World and so these Gentiles doe glorifie God in that they prayse the Christians aboue all men whom before they reuiled This is one way by which the Gentiles glorified God Thus of the second way of glorifying God which is by acknowledging his glory The third way of glorifying God is by effect when men make others to glorifie God conceiuing more gloriously of him or in praysing God and his wayes Thus the professed subiection of Christians to the Gospel makes other men glorifie God 2. Cor. 9.13 So the fruits of Righteousnesse are to the glory of God Phil. 1.10 So here the good works of Christians do make new Conuerts glorifie God so euery Christian that is God's planting is a tree of righteousnesse that God may be glorified Esay 61.3 so are all Christians to the prayses of the glory of God's grace as they are eyther qualified or priuiledged by Iesus Christ Ephes. 1.7 Vse The vses of all should be especially for instruction and humiliation it should humble vs if we mark the former doctrine in that it discouereth many deficiencies in vs for besides that it sheweth that the whole world of vnregenerate men lieth in wickednes and that as they haue all sinned so they are all depriued of the glory of God and altogether delinquent in each part of making God glorious I say that besides the discouery of the generall and extreme corruption of wicked men it doth touch to the quick vpon diuerse persons euen the godly themselues to giue instance In the first way of making God glorious How meanly and dully doo wee for the most part conceiue of God! How farre short are our hearts of those descriptions of GOD made in his Word Wha● strange thoughts come into our mindes at some times Oh! how haue we dishonoured the most High in our vnworthy conceptions of his Iustice Power Eternity Wisdome and Mercy For the second way of glorifying God What heart could stand before his holy presence if hee should examine vs in iustice 1. For our language What man is hee that hath not cause to mourn for his want of language daily in expressing of the praises of God! When did we make his praise glorious haue our mouths been filled with his praise all the day long 2. For our extreme vnthankfulnesse when we meet with GOD himself we haue been healed with the nine Lepers but which of vs haue returned to giue glory to God in the sound acknowledgement of his goodnes to vs It is required we should in all things giue thanks and yet wee haue scarce vsed one word of praise for a 1000 benefits 3. Our slight acknowledgements of sinne our backwardnes to search our waies our carelesnesse when wee knowe diuerse grieuous faults by our selues either auoiding God's presence and making confession for fashions sake neither out of true grief for our sinnes and in a speciall manner doo we fail in those cases of trespasse or sinne that come to the knowledge of others Do we knowledge our sinnes one to another Oh how hard it is to bring vs to bee easie to giue glory to GOD heerin 4. What man is hee that liueth and hath not failed of the glory of GOD about the Sabbath Doo we delight in God's work Haue wee consecrated that Day as glorious to the Lord Haue not our mindes runne vpon our owne waies After what an vnspeakable maner haue we slighted God in his Ordinances Lastly what shall we answer to the Lord for our neglects of Iesus Christ Haue wee glorified the Son or rather haue wee not shamefull wants still in our faith Which of vs can say that he liues by the faith of the Sonne of God and are not our affections to the Lord Iesus extremely dull and auerse Where is the longing desire after him and the ●eruent loue of his appearing And for the last way of glorifying God by effect How vnprofitably and vnfruitfully doo the most of vs liue Who hath praised God in our behalf Whom haue we wonne to the loue of God and the truth Where are our witnesses that might testifie that our good works haue caused them to glorifie God But especially wo be to scandalous Christians that haue either caused wicked men to blaspheme or God's little ones to take offense and conceiue ill of the good way of God if they repent not it had been better for them they had neuer been born And as for wicked men that are openly so to giue a touch of them and their estate they haue reason to repent in sackcloth and ashes if their eies were but open to see what terrour is implied in this doctrine and how God will auenge himselfe vpon them both for their not glorifying of him and for changing his glory and for the opposing of his glory 1. In not glorifying God They haue spent their daies without GOD they haue either not conceiued of him at all or in a most mean and vile manner they haue not honoured him in his ordinances or in his Sabbaths they neuer loued the Lord Iesus in their hearts c. 2. In changing the glory of God they haue done shamefully Some of them haue turned Gods glory into the similitude of an Oxe or a Calf that eateth hay Some of them haue giuen his praise to Images and the works of their hands Some of them haue fixed the glory of their
and soundly grounded in our particular assurance of Gods fauour in Iesus Christ and our owne eternall saluation Heb. 6.11 Col. 2.6.7 And for the exercise of faith wee should striue to learn euery day to liue by faith in all the occasions of our life spending the remainder of our liues in the faith of the Sonne of God holding fast our confidence and not withdrawing our selues Heb. 10. Gal. 2.20 Yea wee should striue to bee examples one to another in our faith in GOD 1. Tim. 4.12 Thirdly wee should abound in loue one to another and towards all men This the Apostle praies earnestly for and this we should shew by all diligence in preseruing peace and vnitie amongst ourselues so as there should be but one heart minde amongst vs. To this end bearing and forbearing supporting one another we should grow also in the tendernes and hartines of our affections one after another longing one for another and delighting one in another yea our loue sholud grow euen in seeking to enlarge our acquaintance with such as feare God but especially in the labour of our loue to doe good to such as feare God should we grow c. Fourthly we should grow in mercy and that both in the bowels of pity and in the abundance of the fruits of mercy Col. 3.12 2. Cor. 8.2 7. and 9.11 Iames 3.18 Fiftly we should grow in patience and meeknes and lowlines of minde Patience should haue his perfect work and it wonderfully would become vs if we could increase in the image of Iesus Christ for meeknes and lowlines To be free from passions and pride oh how it would adorne vs It is that one grace Christ so much vrgeth vpon vs and was most eminent in himselfe Math. 11.29 Iames 1.4 Sixtly We should grow in praier and the gifts that concerne our communion with God wee should labour to be mighty and powerfull in prayer able to wrastle with God himselfe and ouercome him as Iacob did and to this end wee should pray alwaies and learne to pray all manner of praiers in all things making our requests knowne to God with supplication especially we should striue to abound in thanksgiuing to God in all things giuing thanks This is the greatest honor we can doe to God 1. Thes. 5.18 19. Philip. 4.7 Psal. 50.23 Col. 1.11 Ephes. 6.18 2 Cor. 4.15 Seuenthly We should grow in the contempt of the world and the lesser estimation of the things of this life we should striue more more to expresse a mortified conuersation vsing the world as if we vsed it not setting our affections on the things that are aboue and hauing our conuersation in heauen confessing our selues to bee strangers and pilgrims and with all eagernesse embracing the praises of a better life Hebrewes 11.13 Philip. 3.20 in nothing being carefull Philip. 4.6 hastning to the comming of Iesus Christ 2. Pet. 3.11 Eightthly We should exceedingly striue to grow in the holy reuerēt vse of gods ordinances striuing to come with more feare and sence of the glorious presence of God This is a wonderfull hard lesson and little heeded of the most Oh that we could get it to serue the Lord with feare and to reioyce but yet with trembling Oh blessed is the man that can feare alwaies and work out his saluation with feare and trembling Ninthly There is another gift we should grow in and it is maruelously necessary and comely and yet extremely neglected and that is vtterance of which the Apostle makes mention in his short Catalogue 2. Cor. 8.7 vtterance I say to be able to speake one to another with profit and power in the things of the kingdom of God This is an admirable grace and such as attaine it and grow in it how precious are they amongst the Saints Tenthly In that 2. Cor. 8.7 you may see two other things we should increase in The one is in all diligence we should more and more euery day cast about how we might take more paines to doe good and be more profitable to others and for our owne soules we should increase our paines Eleuenthly The other grace we should grow in there mentioned is the loue to our teachers as God abounds towards vs in the profit of their paines so we should grow in affection to them till we get that singular loue of them which the Apostle speaketh of 1. Thes. 5. Twelfthly Now ther is one thing more which being added would make vs wonderful compleat Christians glorious shining lights in the world that hold forth the life and power of the word in the midst of crooked peruerse multitudes of men and that is contentation Oh the gaine of godlines if we were settled and contented with that we haue and could learne of the Apostle in all estates to be content To haue the skill to want and to abound and yet by Christ to doe all things This would finish the glory of the whole frame of godlines and be like a crown to all other gifts and graces 1. Tim. 6.6 7. Philip. 4.11 12 18. Now for the third point namely the rules to be obserued That we may grow They may be referred to these heads First We must be diligent and conuersant in searching the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in the name of Iesus Christ as the chief cornerstone and then the promise is that our harts shall be so sweetned and seasoned with these diuine knowledges that God himselfe shall be with vs and dwell in our hearts as a holy temple and we grow more and more in acquaintance with God Eph. 2.20 21. Secondly We must bring so much sincerity to the grace of Christ and the vse of the meanes as to resolue to seek growth in all things as well as one setting our hearts wholy vpon the kingdom of God we must not goe about godlines with a diuided heart we must grow vp in all things or else in none we shall not prosper if we be false-harted in any part of Gods seruice Eph. 2.15 Thirdly We must in all things depend vpon God and seeke to him by daily prayers for a blessing vpon our desires and the meanes and our endeuours For else Paul may plant and Apollo may water but it is God that must giue the increase 1 Cor. 3.6 Fourthly We must be carefull to imploy the gifts we haue and to practise as fast as we heare For to him that hath for vse shall be giuen but from him that hath gifts wil not vse them shall be taken away that which he hath Math. 13.11 Fiftly We must get an humble heart and preserue in vs the sence of our owne vilenesse and a lowly minde and conceit of our selues accusing our every-euery-daies euill waies before the Lord. For Gods promise is to giue more grace to the humble Iames. 4.7 Sixtly It is a great occasion of increase when a man doth Gods work with as much cheerefulnes as he can God loueth a cheerfull giuer and
may be obserued is that Christ is the main Fountain of all grace and holinesse It is he that fils all in all things Eph. 1. vlt. All the treasures of wisdome and grace be in him in whom the God-head dwels bodily Col. 2.3 9. It is he that is made vnto vs of God wisdome righteousnes sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 10.30 He was long since acknowledged to be the Lord our righteousnes Ier. 23.6 The knowledge heerof may both inform instruct and comfort vs. First it may inform vs concerning the grieuousnes of our disease The nature of man is so farre past cure that vnlesse the Sonne of GOD sanctifie himself with vnspeakable holinesse we can neuer be sanctified Iohn 17.19 yea the Word it self is not auaileable without the grace of Christ as it appears in that seuenteenth of Iohn where both the Word and Christ are intreated of Secondly it may teach vs first to ascribe glory to Christ who in this respect is most worthy to be acknowledged the Head of all Principalities but especially the Head of the Church from whom commeth influence of all grace and goodnes Eph. 21 22.23 Secondly it should teach vs aboue all gettings to labor to get Christ crucified into our hearts It is Christ in vs that must be our riches and our hope of glory Col. 1. 27. yea this will bee vnsearchable riches to vs we should determine to knowe nothing saue Iesus Christ and him crucified 1. Cor. 2.2 Thirdly let him that glorieth glory in the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 1.4 7. And therefore God forbid I should reioice in anything but the Crosse of Christ whereby I am crucified to the world and the world is crucified to me Gal. 6.14 Thirdly it should bee a great comfort to the Godly both in respect of their vnion with him in regard their Head is so infinite in holinesse as also in respect of that supply and help that they may continually haue from him against all their infirmities and defects and lastly in respect of the hope of the full confirmation of their holinesse in the day of Christ. And thus of the generall Doctrine The first thing in the exhortation to bee considered is the Proposition in which two things are to be marked First what Christ is secondly what the Christian must bee in respect of Christ. There are fiue things in the description of Christ. First he is a gracious Lord that is imported in the first word To whom that is which gracious Lord mentioned in the end of the former verse Whereby the Apostle applies that to Christ which was before spoken of God generally as hee that is God with the Father and as that person in whom the Lord shewes his graciousnes to men Secondly hee is a liuing stone Thirdly hee is in respect of the world and the base respect and vsage of him once disallowed of men Fourthly he is elect of God Fiftly he is precious Now that which Christians must be and doo that they may receiue holinesse from Christ is that first they must come vnto him Secondly they must bee liuely stones Thirdly they must be built vp in him Fourthly they must become a spirituall house Fiftly they must bee a holy priesthood to offer vp spirituall sacrifices vnto God such as may be acceptable in Iesus Christ. For it is to be noted that the word Are built vp may be rendred Be ye built vp howsoeuer it bee read The intent is to perswade them thereto Ye are built vp that is if you bee right that is a thing must not be wāting so the sense is the same First then of the description of Christ. And therein the first point of doctrine that offereth it self to our consideration is that Christ is a gracious Lord. He is a Lord and Master to all true Christians and such a Lord and Master as neuer men serued for wonderfull graciousnes That he is a Lord to the faithfull is euident by other Scriptures also 1. Cor. 1.2 He is said to bee a Lord to all that call vpon him in euery place Thus Dauid cals him My Lord Psalme 110.1 And great Apostles confesse themselues to bee his seruants Rom. 1.1 Iude 1. 2. Pet. 1.1 And that hee is most gracious the Apostle shewes when hee tels that all Ages haue cause to wonder at the maruellous kindnes that God hath shewed to men in Christ. The vse may be both for information instruction and consolation First we may hence be informed that Christ is God with the Father For the which the Prophet Dauid Psalme 34 whence the words of the former verse are borrowed Giue to God the Apostle applies heer vnto Christ and the reason of the application may in the second place inform vs that God is gracious to men onely by Iesus Christ. It is impossible euer to feel or taste of Gods graciousnes but in his Son And thirdly we are heer told as it were that Christ is God visible God is made visible and sensible to men by Iesus Christ This is that mystery of godlines God is manifested in the flesh Secondly Is Christ our Lord and Master then these things will follow 1. That we must liue and die vnto Christ Rom 14.7 8 9. we are not our owne men wee must liue to him that died for vs 2. Cor. 5. vlt. The loue of Christ must constrayne vs and all old things must be passed and all things must become new vnto vs. If Christ be our Lord where is his seruice he must rule vs and rule ouer vs. If we walke in the vanitie of our mindes according to the deceiueable lusts of our old conuersation we haue not yet learned Christ nor the truth that is in Iesus Eph. 4. And therefore let vs euery one looke to his waies as he that must one day giue account of himselfe vnto Christ which will bee Iudge both of quick and dead Rom. 14. 2. That euery knee must bow at the name of Christ and euery tongue must confesse his soueraignty to the glory of God Philip. 2.1 Rom. 14. We must all take notice of his supreme authority and forme in our hearts all possible reuerence toward him 3. We must not iudge one another For what haue we to doe to iudge another mans seruant He stands or falls to his owne Master Rom. 14.4 9. Thirdly it ought to be the singular ioy of our harts that wee serue so glorious a Master Neuer seruāts serued such a Lord as may appear by the enumeration of diuers particular differences As First other masters are not wont to die for their vassals Christ shed his blood for vs one drop of whose blood was more precious then all the bloods of all the men in the World and this he did onely to ransome and redeeme vs that wee might bee a peculiar people vnto him Titus 2.13 Secondly neuer Master had such power to prefer his seruants Christ hath all power in heauen and in earth Mat. 28. and all that to
deuote our selues vnto godlinesse that thereby we may proue what this good and acceptable will of God is Let vs try Gods acceptation and wee shall certainly finde it shall go well with the iust Rom. 12.1 2. Yea wee should from hence gather much encouragement to imploy our selues in piety and mercy It is enough if God accept of vs. Quest. But what should we doo that we may be sure our sacrifices be accepted of God How shall we knowe when God doth accept our seruice in any holy duty Ans. That a mans conscience may be soundly established in this point of God's acceptation we must look to three things First that the person be sanctified None but Priests must approach to offer sacrifice to God They that are in the flesh cannot please GOD Rom. 8.8 The sonnes of Leui must bee purified and refined as the siluer is refined before their offring will bee pleasing Mal. 3.3 4. When the Lord reiected with so much disdain the sacrifices of the Iewes hee shewes what they should haue done to please him they should haue washed themselues by true repentance and put away the euill of their works Esay 1.11 16. Onely the works of the penitent cannot bee accepted if the person be not in fauour the works are hated For they are sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Secondly that the manner of performing our seruice bee right there are diuers things in the manner are hatefull and diuers things pleasing The things specially hatefull are first beloued sinnes secondly hypocrisie thirdly malice and fourthly luke-warmnesse The sacrifice is lothsome if it be blinde or lame or blemished that is if men bring to Gods seruice the loue of any foule sinne the seruice is lothsome Malach. 1. So if mens hearts be carried away with continuall distractions that seruice is lost this is To come neer to God with our lips when our harts are farre from him Hypocrisie is leauen as beloued sin is hony both forbidden Again when a man comes to God's work and hath not forgiuen his brother hee keeps the Feast with some leauen his Passeouer is defiled nor can his own sinnes be forgiuen because he forgiues not Mat. 6. 1. Cor. 5.8 Finally luke-warmnesse is like a vomit to God when wee are neither hot nor cold They are lothed like the Laodiceans Reuel 3. There are other things wonderfull pleasing to God as First when a man doth whatsoeuer he doth in the Name of Christ this is the Altar that sanctifieth the gift and the sacrifices are heer acceptable through Iesus Christ Heb. 13.15 Col. 3.17 Secondly when our works are soundly powdered with salt that is when we soundly confess our owne vnworthinesse and giue all glory to God in Iesus Christ. Thirdly when wee loue mercy and piety accounting it our delight to doo God's will and thinking our selues greatly honoured to bee admitted to doo this seruice Mic. 6.8 2. Cor. 8.5 Fourthly when we can bring faith that is a heart well perswaded of God so as wee can beleeue all good of him and his mercy Without faith no man can please God Heb. 11.6 and God takes no delight in him that withdraweth himself through vnbelief Heb. 10.36 37. Fiftly when it is our every-euery-daies work Sacrifice will please God if it be continuall Hebrewes 13.15 Thus of the second thing Thirdly wee may knowe that our sacrifice is accepted if the Lord burn it to ashes with fire from heauen Thus God did put a difference between the sacrifice of Cain and Abel by some visible signe and though wee may not limit God and expect he should answer vs by visible signes yet God hath not left vs without testimony of his fauour For by his word of promise and by his Spirit bearing witnes to our spirits hath hee manifested euen from heauen his acceptation and in particular when the beleeuer stands before the Lord with his sacrifice duely offered when the Lord doth ●uddenly fill his heart with the cloud of his presence or warm his soule with the ioyes of the holy Ghost what is this but the signe of his acceptation Question What if we be accepted in our seruice of God what great thing is that to vs Answ. When God accepts thine offrings thou maist be assured of three things First that all thy sins bee forgiuen thee God hath purged away thine iniquity he hath receiued an atonement in Iesus Christ Psal 65.2 3. Secondly God is exceedingly delighted in them Thy sacrifice is a sweet smell vnto God he reioyceth ouer thee with ioy Phil. 4.18 Thirdly it is a pledge vnto thee that God wil supply all thy necessities out of the riches of his glory in Iesus Christ our Sauiour Phil. 4.19 Verse 6. Wherfore also it is contained in the Scripture Behold I put in Sion a chief corner-stone elect and precious and hee that beleeueth therein shall not be ashamed HItherto of the proposition of the exhortation The confirmation follows where the Apostle giues reasons why wee should make our recourse to Christ to seek holinesse of life from him and the reasons are two The first is taken from the testimony of God verses 6 7 8. The other is taken from the consideration of the excellent priuiledges of Christians vnto which they are brought by Christ verses 9 10. The testimony of God is both cited verse 6. and expounded verses 7 8. In the testimony of God obserue first where it is to be found viz. In Scripture secondly how it is there It is contained there thirdly what is testified Now the matter testified concerns either the giuing of Christ for the good of the Church or the safety of the Christian that by faith receiueth Christ. The giuing of Christ is exprest in these words Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner stone elect precious the safety and happinesse of the Christian that receiueth Christ in these words And hee that beleeues in him shall not be confounded First of the place where this testimony is found viz. in the Scripture By the Scripture is vsually meant all the Books of the old and new Testament written after an extraordinary manner by inspiration of the holy Ghost But heer he means it of the Books of the old Testament but yet so as the word doth agree to all the Books of both Testaments Now this very word giues vs occasion to consider of the nature of these Books and of their vse and of their excellency and of their harmony These Books are called Scripture because they contain in writing the whole will of God necessary to be knowne of vs they are the Treasures of all truth The doctrine which was before deliuered by tradition for 2000 yeers was afterwards written down and explained in these Books so as nothing needfull was left out or omitted Secondly this word imports the excellency of the Bible aboue all other bookes because it is called Scripture as if no other writings were worthy to be mentioned in comparison of these The Scripture exceedes
a righteous nation may enter in Esay 26.1 2. Men may deceiue themselues but God will not be deceiued For he hath his fire in Sion and furnace in Ierusalem Hee will try euery man and make his count onely by righteousnes Esay 31.9 Rom. 9. and therefore the sinners in Sion haue reason to be afraid Esay 35.14 And if yet wee would haue signes more particular wee may trie our selues by these that follow First Sion is a Virgin and all the Godly are the Daughters of Sion and so the chiefe Daughter of a chiefe mother Now this is a true vertue of a true member of the Church that his loue is vndefiled towards Christ Hee is not enamored with other things Hee will haue no other God but one Hee accounts all things but drosse and dung in comparison of Christ Hee harbours no beloued sinne but denieth the inticements of it with detestation and griefe that hee should euer be so assaulted Secondly God knoweth his owne in Sion by this signe that they are they that mourn in Sion that are farre from making a mock of sinne The Lord himselfe is their witnes that their hearts are heauie by reason of their sinnes and they knowe no griefe like to the grief for their sinnes Esay 61.2 Thirdly thou maist knowe thy estate by thy subiection to Christ and his ordinances For God hath set his King in Sion Now if thy Soueraigne bee in Heauen and thou canst bee willing to be ruled by his ordinances this will bee a comfortable testimonie to thee as contrariwise if thou dislike his gouernment and wouldst faine cast his yoake from thee so as this man may not rule ouer thee thou art of the number of the people but not of Gods people Psal. 2.6 Thus of the second vse Thirdly wee should bee carefull to celebrate the praises of God yea and therefore carefull for all the goodnes he shewes vnto vs in Sion Praise should waite for him The Lord is great and greatly to bee praised in Sion the Cittie of our God Psal. 48.1 Psal. 147.12 Esay 51.16 All that serue the Lord in Sion and are refreshed with the comforts of his presence should get large hearts both for admiration and celebration of his goodnes Psal. 134. the whole Psalme Come say the godly Ierem. 31.10 let vs declare the worke of the Lord in Sion c. Fourthly since Sion is the place where the Lord keepes house and giues entertainment to all his followers wee should call one vpon another to goe vp to the Lord in Sion wee should run thither to the bountifulnes of the Lord and in all our wants shew our selues instructed in this point by making our recourse vnto Sion as the place where God is pleased most readily to declare his shining mercies Ierem. 31.6 12. Fiftly we should be stirred vp to much praier for the accomplishment of the building of God in Sion Our hearts should long to see this work prosper Oh that the saluation of Israel were come out of Sion Psal. 14.1 For Sions sake wee should not hould our peace Esay 62.1 but still beseech the Lord to doe good to Sion and build vp the walls of Ierusalem Psal. 51.20 Sixtly we should especially be greeued if we see that Sion prospers not Of all iudgements we should most lament the desolation of Sion The whole booke of Lamentations is spent vpon this subiect Wee should hang our harpes vpon the willowes if we remember that Sion lieth waste and there be none to build her vp Psal. 137. Seuenthly the especiall vse should be for consolation If the Lord doe vs good in Sion wee should account it a maruelous felicitie if the lord admit vs to be members of the true Church in places where Gods work prospers The Lord giues this promise in Esay to comfort them against all the miseries were outwardly to fall vpon them This work should make amends for all other troubles If God build vs vp in spirituall things hee giues vs double for all outward crosses we should striue with our owne hearts to be exceedingly affected with the happines of our owne condition on earth when we know our interest in Sion wee should liue without feare yea euerlasting ioy should bee vpon our heads and sorrow mourning should flee away Esay 31.10 and the rather if wee consider the prerogatiues of Sion aboue all the world besides for First the Lord dwells there It is the Palace of his residence on earth as hath beene shewed before Secondly the fauor of God shines there Hee delightes in his people and ioyes in all the members of Sion He reioiceth ouer them with ioy Zeph. 3.15 16 17. Psal. 86.2 Thirdly in Sion we are loosed from our fetters and bonds It is a place where the Captiues goe free The Lord turnes back the captiuitie of his people Psal. 14.7 Fourthly in her Palaces God is knowne for a refuge in all distresses Psal. 48.3 There is wonderfull safetie there The Lord doth mightily preserue and defend his people wee are safe if wee be members of the true Church and haue true grace the greatest aduersaries labour in vaine and seeking see and maruell and haste away Psal. 48.11 12. They shall certainly be confounded and turned back that hate Sion Psal. 129.5 Vpon euery place of mount Sion shall be defence Sion is a quiet habitation God hath his yeere of recompence for the controuersies of Sion and his day of Vengance Esay 34.8 Fiftly the Lawe comes out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem There we haue directions for our life and for eternall life Esay 2.3 It is Gods foddering place there hee giues vs shepheards to feed vs Ierem. 3.14 Sixtly the inhabitants of Sion haue all remission of sinnes and the healing of their infirmities as the Prophet shews in these words excellently The inhabitant thereof shall not say I am sick the people that dwell therein shall bee forgiuen their iniquitie Esay 33.24 Seuenthly all the good newes is there to bee had we are naturally Athenians we loue to tell and heare newes if we were spiritually so Oh! how would we reioice in Sion whose spirituall glory is to bring good tidings Esay 40.9 and 41 27. and 52.7 c. Eightthly If the Lord bee displeased with Sion yet it is but for a moment hee will returne in euerlasting compassion It is a sure thing The Lord will yet haue mercy vpon Sion Psal. 102.14 Hee will againe comfort Sion and make his wildernes like Eden and his Desart like the garden of the Lord Esay 51.3 Lastly and specially we should reioice in Sion because the Redeemer comes to Sion and to them that turne from their transgressions in Iacob Esay 59.20 Yea saluation only comes out of Sion Psal. 14.7 In Sion onely hath God placed saluation for Israel his glory Esay 46. vlt. And therefore we should labour to walk worthie of so great mercies of God and liue with all contentment whatsoeuer our
godly by giuing vs a roome in their hearts causing them to loue vs and honour vs euen for Christ onely whom they discouer in vs by our loue to Christ and faith in his name and imitation of his vertues Secondly and hee graceth vs also amongst the wicked by protecting and acknowledging vs in times of greatest distresse and by washing out the blemishes which our own indiscretiōs at any time brought vpon vs by cleering our innocencies from their vniust aspersions The vse may be first for confutation of their folly and madnes that account it a course of abasement to follow Christ and leaue the vanities of the world Godly courses are honourable courses No man euer lost honor by cleauing to Christ and liuing so as might become the faith and loue of Christ. Secondly and withall wee may hence be informed that all the honour that is without Christ is but obscure basenesse no man can bee truely honourable without the faith of Iesus Christ in his heart Thirdly we should hence be resolued to make more account of the Godly because Christ is to them al honour they are the only excellent ones in the world Fourthly wee should labour also to bee an honour vnto Christ and to the faith and profession of his name and seruice wee must remember that he is our surety to God for vs and hath vndertaken for our good behauiour and therefore for that reason wee should be carefull of our duties and besides wee see that the disorders of great mens seruants leaue an imputation on their master and so it is with vs and Christ. If wee liue righteously and soberly and religiously wee honour Christ our Master but otherwise if wee bee scandalous wee dishonour Christ and therefore had need to looke to our waies And lastly we shold account Christ sufficient honour to vs and not regard the scornes and reproaches of the world but rather with Moses esteeme the reproaches of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Aegypt Thus of the consolation to the godly The terror to the vnbeleeuers is exprest first partly by charging vpon them their offence secondly and partly by describing their punishment Their offence is disobedience To them that are disobedient All vnbeleeuers stand indited of disobedience and that in three respects For first they are guilty of Adams disobedience For by the disobedience of one man many are made sinners Rom. 5.19 Secondly they are guilty of disobedience against the morall Law which they haue broken by innumerable offences and in respect thereof are liable to all the curses of God Deut. 28. Thirdly they are guilty of disobedience against the Gospell For there is an obedience of faith Rom. 1.5 and the Lord complaines that they obeyed not the Gospell Rom. 10.16 and for this disobedience God will render vengeance in flaming fire at the Day of iudgement 2. Thes. 1.8 Now men disobey the Gospel not onely when they are bewitched to receiue false opinions in religion Gal. 3.1 But also and chiefly when they beleeue not in Iesus Christ but liue in their sins without repentance Vses The vse should bee for humiliation vnto impenitent sinners they should take notice of their inditement make haste to humble themselues before the Lord lest Sentence come out against them and there be no remedy and the rather because God will aggrauate against them their disobedience Now there are many waies by which a sinner may take notice of the aggrauations of his disobedience as First by the number of his offences if he consider that he hath made his sinnes like the haires of his head To bee guilty of treason but in one particular should occasion feare but he that is guilty of many treasons hath great reason to bee extremely confounded in himself and this is thy case Secondly thy disobedience is the more grieuous because thou hast receiued abundance of blessings from God who hath by them wooed thee to repentance and this will heap much vpon thee Rom. 2.4 Esay 1.3 Thirdly thou must consider all the meanes thou hast had of amendment God hath planted thee in his garden the Church he hath commanded his vine-dressers to bestow the paines and apply the meanes of growth to thee If now thou be not fruitfull this will be pleaded against thee which art still a barren figtree Luke 13.6 Fourthly it increaseth thy disobedience that thou hast beene guilty of diuers hainous and fowle euils as if thou haue beene a drunkard a filthy person a blasphemer of the name of God a man of blood or the like Fiftly the continuance in sinne thou hast long abused the patience of God and this heapes coals of further indignation against thee Rom. 2. 4 5. and the rather because thy heart hath beene to sinne euer for there is in the heart of vnregenerate men a desire to sin for euer and it is a griefe to them to thinke that at any time they should not be able to liue in sinne still Sixtly thou hast offended against thine owne vowes and couenants and the promises thou hast made to God both in baptisme and the communion and in other passages of thy life Seuenthly it increaseth thy offence that thou hast dealt wickedly in the land of vprightnesse Esay 26.11 There thou hast offended where thou hast had the example of the godly to shew thee a better course It is ill to sinne any where though in Babel but it is worse to transgresse in Sion or Ierusalem euen in the glorious Churches of Iesus Christ. Eightly thy incorrigiblenes addes to the heap of sinne though the Lord hath afflicted thee yet thou hast not learned obedience by the things thou hast suffered but thou hast made thy heart like an adamant so as thou wouldst not returne Ierem. 5.2 3. Ninthly it is yet more that thou hast beene so farre from reforming thine owne life that thou hast scorned and reproched the good conuersation of the godly thou hast spoken euill of the good way of God Thus and many other wayes may the sinner charge his owne heart and thereby prepare himselfe to returne to the Lord while there is yet hope For if thou wouldest returne with all thy heart and take vnto thee words and confesse thy sinnes and pray for forgiuenesse and mourne before the Lord and turne away from thy owne wickednesse the Lord would shew mercy and the obedience of Christ would heale thy disobedience and God would loue thee freely and the bloud of Christ would cleanse thee from all thy sinnes Hosh. 14. Isaiah 55.7 1. Ioh. 1.7 and while it is yet to day the Lord sendeth to thee and beseecheth thee to be reconciled 2. Cor. 5.19 21. Consider that God hath been with thee all this while hauing sent many others to hell for their sinnes and there is hope of forgiueness the Lord hath receiued great offenders to mercie as the Israelites that often fell away from him Iudges 10. and Mary Magdalene and Peter and Dauid and
and yet become grieuous to men by their vile offenses Thirdly vnfruitfull Christians which lie in a continuall barrenness whose ground is alwaies fallow haue but little consolation from hence for though they are better than the former in that they are not openly wicked yet they fall short of their duty heer because they do not more effectually shew forth the graces of Christ. And that there may bee a healing of this error they must mend first their ignorance and pray to GOD to teach them to profit secondly their slothfulnesse rowzing vp themselues to more zeale of good works and care to answer the opportunities of well-doing Vse 2. Secondly for instruction All that loue the Lord Iesus should hence be perswaded to increase in all care of well-dooing and study how to shew forth the light of their workes before men and the rather because 1. They haue receiued such singular mercy from the Lord. 2. They shall heerby glorifie their heauenly Father and make Religion to be well-spoken of Phil. 2.15 16. 2. Thes. 3.21 and put to silence the ignorance of the foolish we should be as tender of the honour of our profession as of our owne honour 3. They shall heerby wonderfully establish their owne harts in the assurance of their calling and election 1. Iohn 1.5 6. 2. Pet. 1.5 to 10. and much increase their owne contentment and joy in the Lord 1. Cor. 15.58 4. They shall haue a full and plentifull reward in the day of the Lord Rom. 2.7 8 9 10 11. 5. The hearts of their Teachers shall bee heerby filled with ioy when they see they haue not laboured in vain Phil. 2.16 2. Cor. 3.1 2 3. Of him that c. In the third place it may bee heer considered of why those vertues shewed forth by Christians are yet called the vertues of Christ. For answer whereunto we may be informed that they are the vertues of Christ in diuers respects First because they are such vertues as are had onely by such as bee in Christ by effectuall calling for all the Wicked are strangers from the life of God Secondly because they are receiued from the Spirit of Christ of his fulness we haue all receiued these graces Iohn 1.14 Eph. 1.21 Thirdly because they are shewed forth for his glory All our gifts and seruices are deuoted to the glory of Christ as they are in him so they are for him Lastly I think they may be called the vertues of Christ because they resemble his vertues as the picture of a man is called by the name of the man himself And the consideration heerof should the more incite vs to the care of these vertues seeing wee are heer to follow no worse a patterne than the example of the Lord Iesus himself and withall we should be the more humble when wee haue had and done all we can seeing we haue nothing but what we haue receiued And since all should be for his glory we haue reason to say at the best Wee are vnprofitable seruants And withall it should comfort vs against the sense of our infirmities to consider how weak soeuer wee haue been yet our gifts are acknowledged for the vertues of Christ himself and by the benefit of Christ's intercession are accepted of God as if they had bin found in the person of Christ himself Thus of the third point He that hath called you The fourth thing to be noted is this Periphrasis heer giuen of Christ. In stead of saying the vertues of Christ hee saith the vertues of him that called you which he doth of purpose to exalt the praise of the gifts of God in our calling and partly to shew that we enter vpon the possession of the former prerogatiues the most of them when we are called by the grace of Iesus Christ and partly thereby guiding vs to the knowledge of that work of God which may assure vs of our interest in the former prerogatiues All which shewes that we haue great reason seriously to study the doctrine of our calling by Iesus Christ. Calling is either personall or naturall or spirituall or supernaturall The personall calling is to some office the naturall to the exercise of some morall vertue the spirituall or supernaturall is to Christ calling vs to seek happinesse and blessednes in him This is heer meant And so the calling of a Christian is to bee reckoned among the gifts or endowments God bestowes vpon his people which that wee may distinctly vnderstand according to the order of them there are seuen gifts of God First vocation by which he calls men out of the world into the Church Secondly iustification by which he forgiues the Called their sins and clothes them with the rich Robe of Christ's righteousnes Thirdly sanctification by which he qualifies their nature with all heauenly gifts necessary for their saluation Fourthly adoption by which hee acknowledgeth and receiueth them for his sonnes and heirs Fiftly Christian liberty by which hee frees them from all things that might hold them in bondage or in a seruile condition as from the rigour and curse of the Law from the dominion of sinne from the burden of Moses ceremonies and humane traditions and from those seruile fears in God's seruice bred by the spirit of bondage Sixtly consolation by which he keeps them in this happy condition which hee performeth three waies 1. By defending them against all aduersaries 2. By deliuering them out of their many troubles in their militant estate 3. By bestowing vpon them the gifts of perseuerance to the end and for euer Seuenthly temporall blessings by which hee furnisheth them for this present life The six first of these are gifts principall the last is but accessary The three first are the chief gifts and the three next are such as arise out of the first Now this work of calling men into the church is either externall or internall By the externall men are called into the visible Church by the internall men are cald into the inuisible Church And that we may conceiue of this distinctly in respect of calling all men may be cast into foure companies First some are not called at all any way by the Gospell as many of the Pagans c. Secondly some are called onely externally as those in Mat. 20. Many called but fewe chosen Thirdly some are called internally onely as the thief on the Crosse. Fourthly some are called both internally and externally so the Elect of God for the most part and ordinarily It is the last sort of men that are vnderstood heere Now that this work of God calling vs may in the order of working bee more cleerely vnderstood we may conceiue it thus The first cause is Gods loue of men his kindnes and loue to men as the Apostle calles it Tit. 3.4 First that God conceiues in himself a compassionate loue of man lying in his extreme naturall distresse Secondly Christ then as Mediator laies the ground of this calling and
respects there is and in some respects there is not It is true that in respect of the ignorance yet vpon godly men in this life they may say as it is in Iob 19.8 God hath set darknes in our paths and fenced vp our waies or Iob 37.19 Teach vs what wee shall say vnto him for we cannot order ourselues because of darknes sometimes in their afflictions they may say as aforesaid But yet not withstanding there is great difference betweene the state of the godly and the state of the wicked for First the godly are deliuered from vtter darknes altogether Secondly for their darknes in this life it is true they may bee subiect to such darknes as cloudes may make or an Eclipse but the night is cleane passed with them Rom. 13.12 Thirdly though they haue darknes yet they are not vnder the power of darknes Col. 1.13 He that beleeueth cannot abide in darknes but is getting out as one made free and set at liberty Fourthly their darknes is not a grosse and palpable darknes they can see their way and are all taught of God It is no darknes can hinder their saluation Fiftly though their afflictions may increase vpon them yet God will not forsake them but wil shew them great lights the Lord wil be light vnto them for comfort for the present and will send them the light of deliuerance in due time Sixtly they haue their Patent drawn sealed and deliuered them wherby they are appointed to enioy vnspeakeable light and an absolute freedome from all darknes They are children of light and are borne to singular priuiledges in that respect the time will come when there shall be no ignorance no affliction no discomfort any more Thus of their misery and so of the estate from which they are called Now followeth to bee considered their happines to which they are called exprest by the metaphoricall tearme of light and commended by the Epitheton of maruelous Light Light is either vncreated or created The vncreated light is the shining essence of God infinitely aboue the shining light of the Sunne Thus God is light and dwels in that vnapprochable light 1. Iohn 1.6 1. Tim. 6.16 The created light is that which is made and begotten by God whence he is called The Father of lights Iam. 1.17 and this created light is either naturall or spirituall Naturall is the light of the Sunne in the firmament The spirituall light since the fall was all collected and seated in Christ. As God gathered the light of the two first daies and placed it in the body of the Sunne as the originall vessell of light so did the Lord collect and gather the light together after man had falne and placed it in Christ that hee as the Sun of righteousnes might bee the fountaine of light vnto the spirituall world And thus Christ is said to be light Iohn 8.12 the light of the world that lighteneth euery man that commeth into the world Ioh. 1.9 The beams of this light in Christ are diffused all abroad vpon men and so the light communicated from Christ is either temporall or eternall Temporall light is either the blessing of God in Christ making the outward estates of God's seruants glorious and prosperous Iob 29.3 Hest. 8.16 Or else it is that light that shines vpon the soules of men which must bee distinguished according to the instruments of conuaying or receiuing it The instrument of conuaying it is outwardly the Law and the Gospell and inwardly the Spirit of Christ. The instrument of receiuing it in respect of the general will of God is the vnderstanding or in respect of the promise of grace it is faith The Law is a light Pro. 6.23 of the light of the Gospell 2. Tim. 1.10 2. Cor. 4.6 Knowledge is light Acts 26.18 and of the light of faith Iohn 8.12 Eternall light is the light of heauen where the inheritance of the Saints lieth Col. 1.12 Reuelat. 18.19 It is the spiritual light vpon the soules of men the light of knowledge and faith is heer specially meant which is conuayed and increased by the Gospell Doct. The point then hence is cleer that God's seruants in comparison of their former condition are brought into great light The spirituall light shineth vpon euery one that is to bee conuerted Acts 26.18 God hath promised light to euery penitent sinner Iob 33.28 30. Esay 42.16 And Christ was giuen to bee the light both of Iewes and Gentiles Esay 42.7 and 49.6 Hence it is that Christians are said to be the children of light Luke 16.18 Iohn 12.36 yea light it selfe Eph. 5.6 the lights of the world Phil. 2.15 And thus they are so by reason of the light of Iesus Christ shining in their harts through the knowledge and belief of the Gospell All the world is like vnto Aegypt smitten with darknes and the Godly are like the children of Israel in Goshen Vse The vse may bee first for instruction to the Godly since they are called to such light by Christ they should 1. Beleeue in the light since they see now what they do they should establish their hearts in the first place in the assurance of God's loue since his shining fauour sheweth it selfe in the Gospell 2. They should doo the works that belong to the light they may now see what to doo and therefore ought not to be idle but to work while they haue the light 1. Iohn 2.8 And to that end they should daily come to the light that it may bee manifest that their works are wrought in God Iohn 3.21 And they should now abound in all goodnes and iustice or righteousnes truth Eph. 5.8 9. prouing what that acceptable will of God is verse 10. 3. They should therefore cast away the works of darknes and haue no fellowship with the children of the night but rather reprooue them Eph. 5 7. to 14. For what fellowshippe between light and darknes 2. Cor. 6.17 4. They should in all difficulties and ignorances pray to God to shew forth his light and truth seeing they are called to light Psalm 43.3 Vse 2. Secondly godly men should hence be comforted and that in diuers respects First though they may haue many distresses in their estates yet light is risen to their soules though they may for a season suffer some eclipse of their comfort yet light is sowne for the righteous and ioy for the vpright in heart Psal. 97.11 And the more they should bee glad of their portion in light when they behold the daily ruines of vngodly men The light of the righteous reioiceth when the lamp of the wicked is put out Pro. 13.9 In 2. Cor. 4.4 6. there are three reasons of consolations assigned First the light we haue should comfort vs if we consider how many men haue their mindes blinded by the god of this world and of those many of them great wise and learned men Secondly if we consider what darknes we haue liued in God
other men But the maine point is that God's people are the only people in the World None worthy to be called a people in comparison of them No subiect in any gouernement so happy as Gods people vnder his gouernement in Christ and therefore to bee made the people of God here is reckoned as a condition beyond all comparison Now that Gods people excell all other Subiects in the World may appeare many waies First in respect of the loue of God that hee beares to his people which hath foure matchlesse prayses that no King on earth can afford to his Subiects For first it is an euerlasting Loue when all the fauor of the Princes on earth is both mutable and mortall Secondly it is a particular loue to each Subiect All the people are loued and by name Deut. 33.3 The Lord counteth when he reckons his people he was become their God Psal. 87.5 6. Thirdly it is a free loue There was no desert in vs whereas Princes looke at somewhat that may pleasure themselues euen where desert is lesse Fourthly it is a tender Loue and therefore Gods people are said to be married to their King and God Hosh. 2.19 and therefore God is said to account his People to be his Portion Deut. 32.9 Secondly they are an elect People which hath a twofold consideration in it For first they are elect from all eternity and so euery one of the People hath a particular act of Parliament to assure his right Rom. 11.2 And secondly they are elect in time that is they are separated and culled out of all the people of the World Thirdly all Gods People haue a generall pardon giuen them for all offences Ierem. 31.34 He saues his People from their sinnes and this pardon is grounded vpon a sufficient atonement made by a most faithfull high Priest for them Heb. 2.17 Who also sanctified all this People with his own blood Heb. 13.12 Christ is giuen for couenant he is their surety for them their witnes Esay 42.6 55.5 Who also redeemed them with his blood All a People of Purchase Fourthly all Gods People are qualified with new gifts aboue all the people in the World their natures be amended they are all washed and clensed from their filthinesse there is not one vile person amongst them Ezech. 36.25 37.23 c. He hath formed them for himselfe and his owne seruice Esay 43.22 Fiftly all Gods Subiects are adopted to bee Gods sonnes and so can no Prince on Earth say of his they are as it were the fruit of his womb Psal. 110.3 Sixtly the Lawes by which they are gouerned are the perfectest in the whole world For the Law of God is perfect Psal. 119.8 Seuenthly all Gods people liue in his presence and see his glory Exod. 33.16 Leuit. 26.11 12. Zach. 1.10 11. Psal. 95.7 Other Kings haue many subiects they neuer saw and few that haue that preferment to liue in the Kings presence or neere about him Eightthly God feasts all his subiects and that often and in his owne presence and with the best prouision of the world Esay 25.8 Esay 65.13 14. Ierem. 31.14 Kings would soone consume their treasure if they should doe it often or almost once c. Ninthly no people so graced of their King in hearing requests and receiuing petitions For all Gods people may cry and bee heard and at all times and in all suites which no King on earth can grant to all his subiects and seldome or neuer so much as to any one Esay 30.19 Iohn 14. Whatsoeuer they aske in the name of Christ shall bee granted vnto them Tenthly they are the longest liued of any people As the daies of a tree are the daies of my people saith the Lord They may endure many a storm but they are fast rooted still Mine Elect shall long enioy the works of their hands Esay 65.22 For first they onely haue the promise of a long life in this world and it is limited onely with that condition If it bee good for them And secondly if that God take away some of his people and that quickly out of this world yet that shortens not their life or dependance vpon God For when they dye a bodily death they are said to bee gathered to his people or their people and there receiue eternall life instead of it Death doth not put them out of seruice or depriue them of the Kings presence but remoueth them onely out of one roome into another whereas they stood below staires before they serue now aboue staires and are all of the Presence and Priuie-Chamber to God Eleuenthly they are the wealthiest people in the world none better prouided for For first for Spiritual gifts and rich fauours from the King of kings they are not destitute of any heauenly gifts 1. Cor. 1.5 Eph. 1.3 And for outward prouision God hath taken all the chief creatures and bound them to serue them with prouision in whatsoeuer they want The heauen the earth the corne c. all are bound for the supply of their wants Hos. 2.21 22 23. Twelfthly they excell for protection Whether we respect their preseruation or the reuenge is done vpon their enemies For their preseruation though the earth and the heauens should bee shaken yet God will be the hope of his people Ioel 3.16 and as the mountaines are about Ierusalem so is the Lord about them that feare him and therefore they cannot bee moued Psal. 125.1 2. and if the rod of the wicked doe enter vpon them yet it shall not rest vpon their lot v. 3. of the same Psalme And for vengeance It is certaine the Lord will auenge their quarrell vpon all their enemies though they be vnable to right their own wrongs and because God would haue it done throughly hee reserues the work of vengeance to himselfe to make the recompence Heb. 10.30 Rom. 12.20 Vses The vse may bee both for Consolation and Instruction For it should exceedingly comfort Gods children considering what singular happines they enioy by the gouernment of Iesus Christ. Oh! blessed are the people whose God is the Lord Psal. 33.12 and 144.15 Moses admires a little before his death the wonderfull felicity of the godly considered as they are God's people Israel is happy none like to God's people or this people nor is there any like vnto the God of Ierusalem For God rides vpon the heauen in their help the eternall God is their refuge and vnderneath are the euerlasting Armies He wil thrust out their enemies before them and say Destroy them Israel alone shal dwel in safety The Fountain of Iacob shal be vpon a land of corn and wine and his heauens shal drop down deaw They are a people saued by the Lord who is the shield of their help and the sword of their excellency Their enemies shal be found liers to them Deut. 33.26 to the end And this excellent estate is the more comfortable to be thought vpon 1. Because people of
any nation may be admitted to this estate and the Lord without respect of persons will blesse them with the blessing of his people as the Prophet excellently shewes Esay 2.19 and 19.24 25. The Gentiles haue come to reioice amongst his people Rom. 15.9 10 11. They were hard times when the Lord's dominion was in a manner confin'd in the Kingdome of Iudah and Israel 2. Because it is so great and glorious a work on God's part to make vs his people for hee doth as it were plant the heauens and lay the foundation of the earth that hee may say vnto Sion Thou art my people Esay 51. verse 16. 3. Because in the hardest times that can befall the godly the Lord will haue them plead this priuiledge and they may go to God and he will acknowledge them in all their distresses and sanctifie their afflictions and deliuer them at the voice of their cry Esay 64 9. Zach. 13.19 4. Because they shall yet enioy a farre more excellent estate in another world than now they haue Reu. 21. They are now but as the children of Israel in Goshen or in the wildernesse Vse 2. Secondly diuers things may bee hence obserued for instruction as 1. Such as liue in the Church and yet haue not the marks of God's people on them should awake and look about them and labour to get into the number of God's people These fooles among the people as the Prophet Dauid calleth them should vnderstand and these euill neighbours vnto Israel should bee perswaded to learn the waies of God's people and so they may bee built vp in the midst of Israel Ier. 12.16 And it should bee their daily praier vnto God to grant them this one request namely to blesse them with the fauour of his people Psal. 106.3 4. 2. The penitent sinner that feels his heart called by the voice of Christ should hence bee moued to enter into the couenant of God and speedily to take the oath of subiection alleageance binding himself with all his heart to God and his diuine seruice deu 29.10 11 12 13. Ier. 50.5 3. Such as haue taken the oath and are acknowledged for true Subiects should for the rest of their time study how to carry themselues as becomes the people of God and so In generall they should remember two things 1. To giue eare to God's Law and hearken what the Lord will say vnto them from time to time Psal. 78.1 Esay 51.4 2. To lead a holy life and conuersation for therefore hath God seuered them from all nations that they might bee holy to him Leuit. 20.26 All God's people are righteous Esay 59.21 and 62.12 And Christ hath redeemed them from all iniquity and purified them that they might be a peculiar people vnto him zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 They must therefore bee no more polluted with their transgressions nor bee fashioned to the lusts of their former ignorance Ezech. 14.11 and 36.25 c. In particular they should 1. Giue God thanks for euer for blessing them with the blessing of his people Psal. 79. vlt. 2. They should humble themselues to walk with their God Mic. 6.8 being humbled at his feet to receiue his Law Deut. 33.3 bowing down with all reuerence to worship him Psa. 95.7 For God is a great God aboue all gods and a great King aboue all kings 3. They must auoid needlesse society with the wicked 2. Cor. 6.16 and take heed that they learn not the manners of other nations Leuit 20.24 4. The Law of GOD must bee in their hearts For they should be a wise and vnderstanding people aboue all men and this is the signe of God's people Esay 51.7 Deut. 4.6 And it is God's couenant to write his Laws in their harts Ier. 31.33 5. They must auoid Idols and keep Gods Sabbath this God requires perpetually Leuit. 26.1 2 3 11 12. and graciously accepts when hee findes this care Esay 56. with protestation against those that will not keep his Sabbaths Ier. 17 c. 6. They must walk confidently in the trust vpon God's goodnes and couenant with them as the godly resolued Mic. 4.5 All people walk in the name of their god and therefore we will walk in the Name of the Lord our God for euer and euer resoluing to cleaue to God in a perpetuall couenant Ier. 50.4 5. 7. They should approoue themselues to bee God's people by their language their language should bee a pure language not speaking lies a deceitfull tongue should not bee found in their mouthes and their words should be gracious such as might minister grace to the hearers Zeph. 3.9 13. Eph. 4. Col. 4. 8. They should be patient in all aduersities as being of Moses minde that it is better to suffer affliction with God's people than to enioy the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11 25. 9. They should obey according to all that God commands them shewing a respect to all God's Commandements seeing they serue God and not men and that all dissimulation will bee open before his eies Ieremie 11. verse 4. And thus of the second way of comparison In the last words of the verse their estate is considered in relation from God to them And so in the state of nature they were not vnder mercy but in the state of grace they are now vnder mercy Not vnder mercy Doct. All the time that men liue without repentance for their sins and faith in Iesus Christ they liue without the mercy of God they are not vnder mercy God loues them not nor regards them they are children of wrath Eph. 2.3 and the wrath of God abideth on them Ioh. 3.36 Yea though the Lord be exceeding mercifull in himself and to the faithfull yet by no meanes will he cleer the guilty Exod. 34.6 Num. 14.18 Now this not beeing vnder mercy imports diuerse things First that their sinnes are not forgiuen or pardoned Secondly that their soules are not healed of their originall diseases but they liue still in their blood Thirdly that they are liable vnto all sorts of iudgements and those which are vpon them came from the wrath of GOD which hateth them c. Fourthly that they are in danger of eternall condemnation in generall that they liue and lie vnder the forfeiture of the couenant of works and haue no part in Christ or the couenant of grace Vse The vse should be therefore to teach wicked men to take heed how they presume of Gods mercy they may deceiue themselues but God will not be mocked Gal. 6.7 For such things as they are guilty of the wrath of God comes vpon the children of disobedience Eph. 5.5 They that liue after the flesh shall die Rom. 8.13 For the more distinct vnderstanding of this point foure things would be considered of First that wicked men are exceeding apt to plead Gods mercy thogh it belong not to them and doo not beleeue that God will deale so with them as they are threatned Secondly that God directly
as intreat of the resurrection last Iudgement and the glory of heauen proue it Now for the other sort that confesse the life of the Soule after the last Iudgement but deny that the Soule liues after death till then there are diuers Scriptures against their opinion As First the former Scriptures The Soule cannot be killed at all Math. 10. And God was presently the God of Abraham as then liuing and for eternal life it is not said He shal haue but He hath eternall life that beleeueth Secondly Christ said to the theefe This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise not at the last day Thirdly Rom. 8.38 Death cannot separate vs from God in Christ as it would if the Soule were dead or a-sleepe and did not enioy God Fourthly the dead that die in the Lord are forthwith blessed Reuel 14.14 Fiftly the soules of Abraham and Lazarus were in ioy and aliue after death so was the soule of Diues in hell Sixtly Iohn saw vnder the Altar the soules of them that were slaine for the testimony of Iesus and they cried with a loud voice O Lord how long c. Reuel 6. Seuenthly the soules of the wicked die not but are kept in prison and are now in prison too 1. Pet. 3.19 Before I leaue this point of the immortalitie of the soule it is profitable briefly to answere certaine obiections which may bee brought out of some words in the Scriptures as Ob. 1. The Soule that sinneth shall die Ezeth 18. Therfore it seems the soule is mortall or at least for sin it must die and the rather because it was threatned in Paradise That day that thou eatest therof thou shalt die the death Sol. The Scriptures euidently shewe that since the fall and sinne yet the Soule doth not die as the places before alleaged proue But the answere is that this death threatned or inflicted is not the destruction of the being of the Soule but the depriuing of it of the grace and fauour and presence of God Ob. 2. Eccles. 3. It is said that there is one end of the man and of the beast As dieth the one so dieth the other Sol. These are not the words of Salomon but of the Epicure who is here as in other places of that booke brought in declaring his minde of things For Salomon himselfe concludeth euidently that the Soule returneth vnto God that gaue it as in the last Chapter The other obiections are the obiections of the dreamers that is of such as imagine that the Soule lieth a-sleepe till the day of Iudgement and perceiues nothing and is without operation which is to say it is dead seeing life is nothing else but the continuall motion and action of the Soule Ob. 1. It is said that man when he dies that he sleepeth as Christ said that Lazarus He sleepeth and Stephen slept in the Lord Iohn 11. Act ●7 Sol. Other Scriptures adde another word viz. in the graue or in the dust Iob 7.21 and Psalme 78. sleeping in their graues but it is euident that the Soule cannot sleepe in the graue but the body onely And Stephen deliuered his Spirit to Christ. Ob. 2. Paul saith that if the body rise not we are of all men most miserable That it seemes canno● be true if the Soule enioy blessednesse without the body Sol. The immortalitie of the Soule and the resurrection of the body are conioyned For the Soule without the body can be for euer because it is the forme of the body though God for the time do by his power and grace prouide for the Soule in glory yet it is not at full happinesse till it be ioyned to the body againe For without the body it hath no vse of vegetation or sences but onely of reason But for the Argument of the Apostle it holds good of that part of man which is in question which is the body of man For the bodies of Godly men are more miserable then other men kept vnder and exposed to many restraints and paines eyther by mortification or persecution which the bodies of wicked men are not exposed vnto Ob. 3. It is said of the spirit of Princes that it returneth to his Earth and in the day of death his thoughts perish So the Soule thinkes of nothing after death till the day of iudgement Sol. The place is corruptly alleaged two waies One in the Words the other in the Sence for the text doth not say That his Spirit returneth to his earth but thus his Spirit returneth viz. out of his body to God and he not it returneth to the earth viz. in respect of his body for the other these words his thoughts perish must not be vnderstood of his vnderstanding after death but of his proiects while hee liued For men are exhorted not to trust in Princes For they may die and then all their promises and proiects will bee of no vse and come to nothing Obiect 4. It is said that the dead cannot praise God Psal. 88. and 1 13. and 30. Sol. That the soules of the godly in heauen doe praise God is manifest Reuel 5.11 13.14 and 19.1 Now the Scriptures cannot bee contrary one to another and therefore the places in the Psalmes must not bee taken simply but onely in some respect The dead doe praise God but not as the li●ing did in their liues their praises cannot prouoke other men to beleeue in God or serue him as in this life they might Thus of the immortality of the soule The next thing to bee inquired after is about the originall of the soule and about this point in seueral ages diuers men haue breathed diuers and strange conceits erring because they knew not or regarded not the Scriptures First some conceiued so highly of the soule as to think it was no creature but vncreated and eternall without beginning but this must needes bee false 1. Because then the soule should bee God and infinite too For God onely is vncreated 2. Because then the soule had vnderstanding and thoughts and willed from eternity whereas till it was in our bodies it did not work and to imagine it should bee as a dead lump all that while is monstrously absurd Secondly others haue conceiued that when men die their soules goe into the bodies of other men that be borne and so our soules heeretofore were the soules of some men that bee dead This was the opinion of diuers of the Philosophers and it is apparant that diuers of the Iewes were infected with it for about Christ they said some that hee was Elias some that he was Ieremias and some one of the Prophets and some Iohn Baptist. Now they saw that his body was not theirs and therefore they thought that his soule was the soule of some of them Now this opinion cannot bee true 1. Because no Scripture giues any notice of it For in that place the conceit of the Iewes is told with dislike 2. Because the soules that were deliuered out of the miseries
of good workes wonderfull eager and desirous to inrich our selues that way Tit. 3.1 2.14 yea we should hereby shew that we are indeede wise Christians and well skilled in the vse of our Religion Iam. 3.13 and not men onely but women also should be forward in good works 1. Tim. 2.10 It is their best apparel w hc should be a speciall motiue to them that are so carefull of their attyre indeed good works are to be desired and laboured for as the best apparell of any Christian yea they are his armour too Rom. 13.13 Yea they are a principall way for his inriching and preferment 1. Tim. 2.20 so as it is a great curse vpon a Christian to haue no minde to do good workes to be reprobate to euery good worke Tit. 1. vlt. Thirdly since there are so many things necessary to the constitution of a good worke Christians should in stead of prying into the liues of others euery one trie his owne workes and turne often to the light that it may be indeede manifest that his works are wrought in God Gal. 6.4 for one day euery mans works shall be tried in the fire when times of tryall by great afflictions either vpon mens Consciences or otherwise come that man's works that neuer seeme glorious and praise-worthy will bee reiected and cast away euen by our selues as vile and vnprofitable Besides at the best in our prosperity if the most of our workes be tryed by the fire of these rules of God's Word it is much to be doubted that our workes will burne though vpon our repentance for the euill that cleaues to our best workes our selues may bee saued in the day of the Lord. Let Christians therefore be careful that they lose not the things which they haue wrought Now a Christian may lose his workes diuers wayes First if he be but a Christian in shew hee may nay hee shall lose all hee doth The Pharises lost all their workes because they were done in hypocrisie Secondly the Christian that hath some kindes of heauenly gifts and temporary grace by falling away in the time of temptation loseth all that hee had wrought before God requires patient continuance in well-doing Rom. 2.8 Thirdly the true Christian may lose what hee wrought if he doe his works without respect of these Rules If it be not manifest that his workes are wrought in God they are lost to him so many of his works as are so wrought Besides he loseth the comfort of all that hee hath wrought and the sense of it if he fall into grosse sinne after calling for so long time as he continueth in sinne without Repentance Thus of good works Which they shall behold It is manifest from hence that good works may and ought to be so done as that men may see them It is not true that all good works must be hid from the view and beholding of other men this may seeme strange because the Pharises were blamed for doing their works to be seene of men but yet it may be easily and plentifully proued I will first proue it and then explane it for proofe our Sauiour Christ requires that the light of mens good works should shine that men may see their good works Mat. 5.16 Christians in respect of their practice should be as shining lights in the midst of a froward and crooked generation Phil. 2.15 16. They must maintaine good workes Tit. 3.8 They must shew their Faith by their Workes and so they are iustified before men by the workes which they behold Iam. 2. They are the expresse words of S. Iames also in the third chapter verse 13. Let him shew by good conuersation his works And the Apostle Paul saith If there be any praise think on those things that may get praise Phil. 4.8 Yea some Christians are charged to be paterns of good works Tit. 2.7 Now for explication of this point I would consider first what works may bee shewed and then secondly what works may not be shewed For the first I will onely now instance in the Apostle's catalogue in the second of Titus Ould men may safely shew sobriety grauity temperance soundnes of their faith loue and patience Ould women may safely carry themselues in a holy behauiour and bee teachers of good things especially to the younger women Young women must shew their sobriety loue and obedience to their husbands discretion chastity care of their children and houshold affairs Young men may shew that they bee sober-minded Ministers offend not by teaching vncorrupt doctrine with grauity and sincerity nor when in conference they speak soundly and things that cannot be iustly taxed Seruants offend not by shewing obedience to their masters and all good faithfulnes and desire to please them well in all things For the second the shew is condemned in diuers sorts of works as 1. Secret duties of what kinde soeuer must not bee done to the beholding of others thus to pray or fast that others may see or hear is not lawfull Mat. 6. 2. Such works as are done deceitfully are iustly taxed for the shew of them as when Ananias and Saphirah will make a shew of bounty which was not performed as they pretended Acts 5. 3. All works that are done with affectation when the praise of men is simply and only sought are Pharisaicall and ill done 4. All the works that are done about the vse of the means of godlinesse if practice bee not ioyned with them are reiected of God and the shew of them is condemned Thus to make a shewe of hearing Sermons reading the Scriptures frequent and long praiers strict obseruing of the rest of the Sabbath and the like when there is not a sound care of a holy life are not good works nor is the shew of them commended Esay 1. Mic. 6. 5. To shew care of lesser duties and liue in the carelesse and manifest neglect of greater and more necessary duties is likewise Pharisaicall and condemned Mat. 23. Thus of the beholding of good works They may glorifie God To glorifie GOD is in the etymology of the word to make God glorious Now the glory of God is the excellency of God aboue all things as is by way of exposition added Esay 35.2 The question then is How can God bee made glorious or excellent seeing his excellency is as infinite as his nature is and to that which is infinite nothing can be added For the resoluing of this question wee must vnderstand that if Gods nature be cōsidered in it self it is so excellent as nothing can bee conceiued or done that should bring glorie to it But when the Scripture speakes of glorifying of God it meanes it of such an excellency as to our capacity by reflexion and resemblance some way expresseth the similitude of Gods excellency which wee call his glorie And so God is glorifyed by himselfe or by vs. God hath made diuers impressions of his owne excellency and set it out by way of
water as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 6.6 Fourthly especially when men are shamelesse and impudent in offending Ier. 6.15 and 8.12 Vse 2. And therefore men should be instructed and take notice of their condition and danger and foresee this day and vse all meanes to preuent it for if men would turne vnto God speedily and repent with sound sorrowes for their sins the Lord would perhaps bee intreated and forgiue the punishment of their sinnes Ier. 6.6 Thus of the visitation of iustice The visitation of mercie followes The visitation of mercie is when God comes amongst men to shew some speciall mercie and so hee visits either about temporall or about spirituall things In temporall things hee visits either in the case of blessings or afflictions In respect of temporall blessings hee visited Sarah Gen. 21.1 when he gaue her a sonne In respect of afflictions God visites first when hee sends such crosses as doe trie the innocencie and sinceritie of his seruants so Psal. 17.3 Secondly when hee lets his people knowe that he takes speciall notice of their distresses sorrowes so Exod. 4.3 Thirdly when hee sends his seruants speciall deliuerances and so to visit is to deliuer Thus of the visitation in temporall things which is not heere meant The visitation in spirituall things is the gracious prouidence of God reuealing his marueilous and euerlasting mercies vnto his Elect and so hee visits man either by Christ or by the Gospell Hee visited his people when hee sent his Son to redeem them Luke 1.68.78 and 7.16 And so hee doth when hee sends his Gospell by his seruants to this end to reconcile the world to himselfe in Christ and thus God visited the world when hee sent his Apostles vnto all Nations preaching the Gospell And thus hee doth visit a Nation when hee sends the Gospel thither or a congregation when by the preaching of the Gospel he gathereth a people to himselfe There is also a personall and particular visitation when God singles out this or that man from the rest and conuerts him And so in this place to visit the Gentiles is to gather out of the Gentiles a people to his name as in the case of this Apostle is said Acts 15.14 Which place may well expound this So that the day of visitation if wee respect whole congregations is the time when God sends them the powerfull preaching of the Gospel and doth thereby muster and presse a people to himselfe And if we respect particular persons it is the day when God effectually calls them and conuerts them Six things may bee obserued here concerning this visitation of grace First that till God doe visit wicked men with his grace from heauen there will bee no sound reformation in them Their naturall conscience the shame and punishment of men with the Lawes of Princes or Churches may restraine somewhat of the excesse of sin but it is God's visitation onely that can work a sound and thorow reformation There is little hope these Gentiles which speake euill of Christians will euer cease till the day of this visitation and the reason is plaine because the lawes and punishments of men cannot giue a new nature to the offenders which God in his visitation doth The vse is therfore to confirm the patience of the Saints They haue endured and must endure the euill words of wicked men and if any bee wearie of their iniuries they must pray earnestly for their conuersion The Wolfe doth not alwaies deuour nor the Fox alwaies deceiue nor the Dog alwaies bark but yet so long as they keepe their natures they will occasionally discouer themselues And therefore also Christians should learne discretion not to trust worldly men ouer-farre vpon newe pretenses Doct. 2. Secondly hence we may note that God hath his time wherein hee will certainely visit his people Hee hath his day of visitation All that God hath giuen vnto Iesus Christ shall bee gathered in Gods due time That which was beleeued concerning the gathering of the Israelites out of Egypt into Canaan that God would surely visit them bring thē out Gen. 50.24 25. is much more certainely to bee beleeued of the spirituall gathering of the elect out of this world into the Canaan of God And the reason is because their conuersion depends vpon Gods eternall decree and the foundation of God remaineth sure and hee knoweth who are his 2. Tim. 2.19 And not one of them shall bee lacking in the season of their calling Ier. 23.3 4. The vse may bee for the confirmation of our faith concerning the calling of such Iewes Gentiles or Christians as yet sit in darknes and want the meanes of their Calling God hath his day and he wil prouide for the calling of all his Elect how vnlikely soeuer the worke seeme to vs. Doct. 3. Wee may hence note that when God hath visited a man with his grace hee is suddenly become another man hee is wonderfully altered from that which hee was before The vse should be for tryall No Christian can haue comfort that they are visited with the grace of God if old things be not past with them and all things become newe for euery man that is visited with true grace First hath a newe Master Hee will no longer serue any strange Lord For hee hath couenanted firmly with God to work righteousnes Rō 6.16 18 Secondly hath newe acquaintance He that was wont to walk onely in the way of the wicked is now a companion onely with them that feare God all his delight is in them Psal. 16. and 26. Thirdly hath a new Language he speakes not as he was wont to do For first his Mother-toūg he hath vtterly forgotten Hee cannot curse and lye and sweare and raile and speak bawdily as he was wont to doe which the coherence shewes here Secondly in diuers things he is furnished on a sudden with Language he could neuer speake before as in the gift of prayer hee can now speak to God and discourse with him that before was dumbe and opened not his mouth Zephany 3.9 Fourthly hee hath a newe heart Zach. 36.27 Which appeares in what hee hath not which was wont to bee in his heart and in what hee hath which was neuer there before And for the first branch there is not in him any of these things following By the way vnderstand that these things are not in him as they were wont to bee that is they raigne not or they lie adying and so 1. There is not guile there his spirit is without guile Psal. 32.2 Which hee shewes in that he auoydes lesser sinnes aswell as greater is as good in secret as well as in companie and serues God in his spirit aswell as his body and is more desirous to bee good then to seeme so 2. There is not malice and passion there Esay 11. His outrageous and boisterous passions are subdued of a Lyon he is become a Lamb.
is not the time of visitation among men but some certain season onely Quest. But how may we knowe when this season of grace is Ans. It is then when God sends the Gospell to vs in the powerfull preaching of it when the light comes then comes this day when the doctrine of saluation is comne then the day of saluation is comne and God offers his grace then to all within the compasse of that light God keeps his visitation at all times and in all places when the Word of the Kingdome is powerfully preached the time of the continuance of the means is the day heer meant in a generall consideration But if we look vpon particular persons in places where the means is then it is very hard precisely to measure the time when God doth visit or how long he will offer his grace to them onely this is certaine that when God strikes the hearts of particular men with remorse or some speciall discerning or affections in matters of Religion and so bringeth them neer the Kingdome of God if they trifle out this time and receiue this generall grace in vain they may be cast into a reprobate minde and into incurable hardnes of heart and so God shuts the kingdome of God against them while it is yet open to others Mat. 3.12 Esay 6.10 compared with Mat. 13.14 15. Vse The vse is for the confutation especially of the madnes of many men that so securely procrastinate and put off the time of their repentance as if they might repent at any time neuer considering that the means of repentance may bee taken vtterly from them or that they may bee cast into a reprobate sense or that death may suddenly preuent them or that the times are onely in GOD's hand it is he that appoints and beginnes and ends this day of visitation at his owne pleasure yea he doth not allow to all men in euery place the like space of time for the continuance of the means This day lasteth in some places to some men many yeers whereas in other places the Kingdome of God is taken away from them in a short time as when the Apostles in the Acts were driuen from some Cities after they had been in some places but a yeer or two in others but a month or two in others but a day or two If men obiect that the thief on the Crosse did delay and yet found the visitation of grace at his last end I answer foure things First that the thief was by an vnexpected death preuented of a great part of that time he might haue liued by the course of nature and therefore his example cannot patronize their resolution that think they may safely put ouer all till their last end and yet suppose they may liue the full age of the life of man Secondly what can the example of one only man help them seeing thousands haue perished at their later end going away without any repentance or grace Why rather doo they not fear seeing so many millions of men are not visited in their later end yea at the very time the other thief repented not so that that example can shew no more than that it is possible that a man should finde grace at the end it doth not shew that it is probable or vsual Thirdly they should shew the promise of grace not such men as wilfully neglect the present means and put all off to their later end What can bee concluded from an example when God's promise cannot be shewd If any obiect that they haue a promise for the Scripture saith that At what time soeuer a sinner repents himself from the bottom of his hart God will forgiue him I answer that this sentence doth contain no such promise for it only promiseth forgiuenes to them that repent at any time but it doth not promise that men may repent at any time when they will Besides the words in the Prophet Ezechiel are onely In the day that he turneth which import nothing to proue that a man may repent in any part of his life when hee will Fourthly the conuersion of the thief was without means miraculously by the diuinity of Christ and is recorded among the works of wonder such as were The raising of the dead the trembling of the earth the darkning of the Sun and the like and if men dare not be so foolish as to expect that at their pleasures these other wonders should bee done then neither may they in that of so late conuersion without means If others say that Men were hired into the vineyard at the eleuenth houre and were allowed and rewarded as well as they that went-in at the third houre I answer that The drift of the parable is onely to shew that men that had the means later than other men may yet bee saued it cannot bee stretched to so large a sense Besides being a parable it may illustrate but cannot prooue without some other Scripture to which it serues as an illustration But my speciall answer is this that those men were neuer hired before the eleuenth houre they went in so soon as any came to hire them And so it is true that if men haue liued till extreme old age and neuer had the means till then they may haue as much hope as they that had the meanes in their youth but that wil not warrant the presumption of such as being called the third houre will not go in till the eleuenth houre Vse 2. And therefore the second vse should bee for instruction to perswade all that minde their owne good to walk and work while they haue the light while it is yet to day before the shadowes of the euening be stretched out as our Sauiour exhorts in the Gospell we should bestirre our selues to make all the profit we can of the present meanes God affordeth vs for the night may many waies come vpon vs ere wee bee aware For first who knowes how soon the night of death may come vpon any of vs and then if we haue no oile in our lamps it will be too late to go to seek Secondly the night of restraint may come vpon vs the means may be taken away wee are not sure how long the Candlestick may continue before it bee remooued God may take away good shepheards and suffer idle shepheards to succeed in the room of them Besides a mighty storm of cruell persecution may surprise vs. Thirdly the night of temptation may come and so for the time frustrate the life of the means for either God may hide himself from vs and then the Sunne will bee set to vs euen at noon day or God may hide the power of the Word from vs euen when it is of power to others as Dauid imports Psal. 119. when hee saith Lord hide not thy Commandements from mee or the Lord may restrain the spirits of his seruants that speak vnto vs for the hearts of the Apostles themselues were
all patience instruct men and call vpon them and perswade them to saue their soules Doct. 7. Wee may yet further from hence obserue that before calling the very Elect of GOD may bee as bad as any other as heer till God visited those elect Gentiles they were railers as well as others so were the former sinnes mentioned 1. Cor. 6.9 found in the very Elect as the eleuenth verse sheweth This appears by the example of Manasses Marie Magdalene Paul and the thief on the Crosse see further Tit. 3.3 And the reasons may bee easily assigned for first the very Elect before calling haue the same corruption of nature that other men haue and so all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God so as there is not one of them doth good no not one Secondly they haue the same occasions to sinne from the Deuill and the world Thirdly and were their natures somewhat better then other mens yet they would haue beene leauened as they were a part of the lump of infected mankinde This may both inform vs teach vs in diuers things It may inform vs in three things viz. about our election and our iustification and about the Gospell as the means of our vocatiō For election this point proues it must bee free seeing there was no goodness in the very elect more then in the reprobate in the estate of nature And for Iustification the Apostle Paul vseth the consideration of this doctrine in the third Chapter to the Romans to prooue it cannot be by workes And for the Gospell wee may here see the mighty power of it it may well bee called the Arme of the Lord and his power to saluation that can thus mightily and suddenly change men And it should teach vs also diuers things as it concernes either our selues or other men or God 1. For our selues it should teach vs to walke both more humbly all our daies seeing wee haue beene vile as well as others and also more watchfully seeing wee carry about vs a nature that hath beene so rebellious against God and besides wee should resist the beginnings of sinne in vs as hauing knowne by experience whither sinne will lead vs if wee giue way to it and dally with it 2 For others not yet called it should teach vs both compassion of their miserie it hauing beene our owne case and a care to shewe all meekness to all men in wayting for their conuersion and patience in bearing their wrongs 3 For God how can wee euer sufficiently loue him that hath shewed such loue to vs euen when wee were his enemies Yea wicked men that are smitten with terrors for the hainousnesse of their sinnes should hence confirme themselues against despaire seeing they may hence learne that as great offendors as they haue beene conuerted and saued 2. Tim. 1.15 There is one thing that from hence men must take heede that they doe not learne that is that they abuse not these examples to confirme themselues in sinne for there is matter to daunt them and fright them from this presumption For first not all that haue liued licentiously but some few onely haue beene saued the rest perished in their owne wickednesse Secondly of those that were saued none were saued without amendment of life and regeneration and therfore so long as thou liuest in thy sinne so long their example fits thee not Doct. 8. The last Doctrine that may from hence be made is in particular concerning the sinne of speaking euill of the godly and the point is That Gods gracious visitation doth cure that disease exactly Hee will neuer raile any more that is truly gathered vnto God in his day of visitation It is possible Christians may speake euill one of another in particular and it is lamentable when they doe so but that is vpon supposall of particular faults in those of whom they speake euill But that a man should speake euill of godly men in generall because they are godly with desire he might finde them euill doers is a vice not found in such as are truly called And therefore let such as are guilty of that sinne of speaking euill of good Christians because they follow goodnesse know That their day of visitation is not yet come Verse 13. Submit your selues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether to the King as superior FRom the 13 Verse of the first Chapter to the 9 Verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all Christians and hath beene set downe from the 13 Verse of the first Chapter to the end of the 11 Verse of this second Chapter Now those words and those that follow to the 9 Verse of the next Chapter containe speciall exhortations which concerne some Christians onely namely subiects seruants wiues and husbands Of the duty of subiects he entreats from Verse 13 to Verse 18 Of the duty of seruants from Verse 18 to the end of this Chapter of the duty of wiues in the seuen first Verses of the third Chapter and of the duty of husbands in the eightth Verse of that Chapter So that the Apostle hauing taught all Christians before how to behaue themselues in their generall calling hee now vndertakes to teach some sorts of Christians in particular how to order themselues in their particular callings and so hee teacheth them in some things that concern the Politickes and in some things that concerne the Oeconomickes Vnto order in a Common wealth belongs the duty of Subiects and vnto houshold gouernment belongs the duty of Seruants Wiues and Husbands From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole exhortation diuers things may be noted before I breake open the particulars of the Text. 1 The Word of God must be the warrant of all the actions of our life it not onely giues order about the businesses of Religion but it prescribes matter of obedience in all our conuersation it tells vs what to doe in our houses and in the Common wealth as well as what to doe at Church which shewes vs the perfection of the Scripture Theologie is the Mistresse of all Sciences it perfects the sound knowledge of the Ethicks Politickes or Oeconomickes and it should teach therefore in our callings whether generall or particular to seeke warrant from the Word which warrant we may finde either expressed particularly or else implied in generall directions and withall we should take heed that wee make not more sinnes in any estate of life then are made in Scripture and so not affright or disquiet our selues with vaine fears that way 2 The Apostle would haue Christians in a speciall manner careful that they offend not the lawes of the Princes of this world this appeares in that hee enioynes them the duties of Subiects first and in that they doe teach them the duty of submission both in this and other Scriptures with great force and
praise as well as such as do euill dispraise Vse 2. Secondly it may much condemne the corruption of heart which appeares in many men in this point in sinning against the iust praises of others either by speaking euill of them and blemishing their good names which is to steale their riches from them or by withhoulding due praise which is to withhold the good from the owner thereof It should much affright such as are guilty of this fault that our Sauiour Christ measures our loue to God by our readines to praise for the Works of God done by another Iohn 5.41 42. It is a signe that men loue not God when they loue not goodnes in others which sure they doe not if they commend it not Doct. 5. Weldoing ought to be esteemed whersoeuer it is found in a subiect as well as a Prince in a seruant as well as a Master in all estates and conditions of men For God doth so as may appear Ephes. 6.7 8. and grace and goodnes is alike precious wheresoeuer it is in the like degree which serues to rebuke that secret corruption in the natures of men that are apt to obserue and praise good things in greater persons but withhold the incouragement is due to other men onely because they are poore and because they are worser Iames 2.1 2 3. You may now by this doctrine try whether they be good themselues For it is a signe of goodnes to obserue and loue goodnes wheresoeuer he seeth it in a seruant as well as in a frend and in a poore Christian as well as a rich Doct. 6. It may bee yet further obserued that if men would bee praysed they must doe well praise is onely due to weldoing Rom. 2.10 2. Tim. 2.20 21 1. Thes. 4.4 Rom. 13.5 And therefore it is a poore praise that men raise to thēselues for other things all that fame which is raised for any thing but weldoing is externall vain and therefore they are greatly deceiued that rest in the report that is raysed from their wit or beauty or birth or preferment or sumptuous buildings or the like Those may cause a great fame but onely well-doing can cause a good fame Secondly it shewes that hypocrites that haue gotten reputation onely because they are thought to bee good haue but built in the sands For when in time it shall appear that their owne works doe not praise them they shall find that the praise of men will not last It is not saying well that works a durable good name but doing wel It is but complementing at the best to professe and promise great care of practice and praising and yet bee barren and vnfruitfull Vse 3. Thirdly this shewes the great corruption of their nature that so vnquietly seek after praise and complain how much they be neglected and yet their own consciences know how idle and vnprofitable they are and which is worse that they not onely doe not well but manifestly doe euill and sin daily in pride and enuy in passion and wilfulnes or other open transgressions This thirst after respect aboue others is a signe of a great strength of hypocrisy when they are more desirous to be thought good then indeed to be so and more carefull of the praise of men then of God Fourthly they sinne shamefully that praise the wicked and iustify him that God condemneth but Salomon hath set a note vpon those persons that they are naught themselues For hee saith that they that break the law praise the wicked Prou. 28.4 and 24 25. Psal. 10.3 Fiftly they are yet worse that glory in their shame that seek praise for the excesse of wickednes committed by them either against God or men as they doe that would bee commended for their cost bestowed on Idols or for their worshipping of Saints or Angels or for their reuenges and wrongs done to men or for their mightinesse to hold out in drinking wine or for their filthy acts of any kinde or for their excesses in strange apparell or for the raysing of themselues by vnlawfull meanes or for their deliciousnes in their fare or the like As those glory in their shame so their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 Lastly this doctrine should beget in men a great desire to liue profitably and to doe good and in a speciall manner to apply themselues to such works as are most praise-worthy Quest. Heere then ariseth a question What things in particular doe most aduantage a mans iust praises Ans. The answer is that there are diuers things will make a man to bee much praised as First to honour God hee hath promised to honour those that honour him Prou. 8.17 Now to honour God is to seek his Kingdom first and to confesse his name before men though it bee in euill times Secondly humility and a lowely carriage with meekenes For the humble shall bee exalted and the proud brought low Luke 1.14 20. Thirdly mercy to the poore This made the Macedonians famous in the Churches especially to shew it liberally and readily 2. Cor. 8. Fourthly diligence and exact carefulnes to discharge the labours of our particular calling with all faithfulnes this made the good woman famous mentioned Prou. 31.27 28 29 30 31. especially if wisdome and prouidence bee ioyned with diligence Fiftly to liue in peace and stand to bee quiet and meddle with our owne busines and to be a peace-maker winnes a great deal of praise 1. Thes. 4.11 Math. 5.9 Sixtly to bee exactly iust in mens dealings and true in his words and contracts this wil make men abound with blessings The word is praises as it is in other places translated Prou. 28.20 Seuenthly to bee courteous is to bee amiable so as it bee done without affectation and not directed for thy owne ends and not done with dissimulation Eightthly to doe good to our enemies to bee not onely ready to forgiue but to pray for them forbeare to wrong when it might be executed and to shew all willingnes to ouercome their euill with goodnes Rom. 12.20 21. Ninthly a care in all things strictly to submit our selues to the iust Laws of men auoiding transgression for conscience sake as the coherence in this place shewes And thus of the sixt doctrine Doct. 7. It may yet further bee obserued from hence that God doth require Magistrates in a speciall manner to looke vnto it that they doe all they can to praise and incourage Godly men and such as do good in the countries where they liue Rom. 13.5 This is the end of their calling Iob 29.25 This wil proue heauy one day for those prophane Magistrates that in the places of their abode disgrace men more then such as are godly and countenance none more then such as are most dissolute and lewd of life The iudgements of the Lord wil be terrible against these vnrighteous men Lastly the Antithesis is heere to be noted For when hee saith that such as doe well should be praised he doth not say
that worke about nothing more then he things of this life Luke 16.13 Thirdly all vnprofitable Christians that liue and doe no good will doe no work but spend their daies in spirituall idlenes and vnfruitfulnes making no conscience of the meanes or opportunities of wel-doing Math. 25.26 28. Fourthly all backward and dull Christians to whom it seemes euill to serue the Lord that account all religious duties to be tedious irksome and neuer from their hearts consent to obey but doe what they doe vpon compulsion from the lawes of men or feare of shame c. They are Gods seruants no otherwise then the diuell is For the diuell is forced to doe God some worke sometimes but it is alwaies against his will that God hath any glory by it Fiftly all ignorant Christians that are so farre from doing good workes that they vnderstand not Gods will nor are carefull to redeeme the time that they might get knowledge Sixtly all hypocrites that haue the forme of godlines but deny the power thereof promise to doe much worke but do it not These especially so many of them as know their Masters will and doe it not shall one day feele the weight of Gods hand Seuenthly all quarelsome contentious Christians that make diuision and cause offences contrary to the doctrine of Gods Word These the Apostle saith serue not the Lord Iesus but their own belly and by smooth pretences deceiue the simple Rom. 16.18 Vse 4. Lastly since Gods people are Gods seruants they are to bee much reproued that take liberty to iudge and censure other men for infirmities or things doubtfull or indifferent for what haue they to doe to iudge anothers seruant They are Gods seruants and must make their reckoning to him and therefore stand or fall to their owne Master Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. Secondly we may hence learne that it is an excellent freedome to be Gods seruant They are all freemen that serue God as the coherence shewes No freemen can enioy better priuiledges then Gods seruants doe and neuer were there any seruants that enioyed such prerogatiues as Gods seruants doe and this may appeare many waies for First all sorts of men are Gods seruants All his subiects are his seruants Psal. 135.14 yea all his sonnes are seruants yea Christ himselfe Esay 42. all his elect are seruants yea his friends are his seruants so Abraham that had the honour to bee the friend of God accounted it no desparagement to bee Gods seruant the Kings of the earth accounted it to bee the best part of their title to bee Gods seruants Psal. 36.1 All which proues that it is a most free and honourable estate to be seruant vnto God else those eminent persons would neuer haue sought them out such a seruice and this is the more euident because God accepteth not of persons but the poorest Christian may bee as well intertained of God as any of those States Gal. 3.28 Col. 3.11 Secondly Gods seruice may become any freeman in the world if we consider what kinde of intertainment God giues his seruants For First all his worke is faire work It is no disgrace for any man to doe it and hee requires no more of the meanest seruant hee hath then hee doth of the greatest Prince on earth after he hath retained him to be his seruant Secondly if it fall out that they endure any hardship or be put to beare any inconuenience it is no more then what the Master himselfe doth or hath endured Math. 10.25 Thirdly and that the difficulty of this worke may not dismay thee he powres out his owne spirit vpon his seruants Ioel. 2.29 and guides them so that in effect hee doth all their worke for them Esaiah 26. Psal. 90. Fourthly when they endeuour themselues to doe his worke in sincerity he accepts their seruice maruelous graciously hee is so well pleased with them that his countenance doth shine vpon them Psal. 31.16 yea he boasts of their seruice Iob 1.8 and 2.3 Fiftly if through ignorance or infirmity they misse it sometimes and so marre his work if they but come to him and confesse it hee is ready and easie to forgiue and plentious in mercy Psalm 86.4 5. Esay 44.20 21. Mal. 3.17 Sixtly no men are kept and entertained more comfortably than they are hee doth not onely finde them food but giues them gladnes of heart where a thousand of other men that haue meanes enough haue so many sorrows among that they bear their names as a very curse Esay 65.13 14. Seuenthly if by wilfull ignorance or carelesnes they offend him yet hee will correct in measure Ier. 30.10 11. and will quickly repent himself of his Iudgement concerning them Psalm 135.14 Hee neuer puts away any seruants Esay 41.8 9. If they should at any time runne away and be lost he will neuer cease seeking them till hee finde them and bring them home again Psalm 119. vlt. Eightthly he giues great wages none like him all his seruants haue a great reward Psalm 19.11 And in the end he bestowes vpon them great inheritances besides what free-holds he bestowes vpon them in this life Psalm 126.22 1. Pet. 1.3 Ninthly hee takes pleasure in the prosperity of his seruants Psalm 35.27 It is a ioy to him when they doo well and thriue Tenthly besides what they get for themselues they get great sutes for others also they beg many a pardon and obtain any of them yea great sutes Iob 40.5 Iohn 15.15 16. Eleuenthly when any thing ailes them his mercifull kindnes is a wonderfull comfort to them Psalm 119.70 And if they should fall into danger in respect of the debts of other men God becomes surety for them and sees all discharged Psalm 119. verse 122. Twelfthly no men haue such protections Their aduersaries are sure to come to confusion the men that striue with them shall certainly perish Esay 41.11 12 c. The hand of the Lord shall bee knowne towards his seruants and his indignation towards his and their enemies Esay 66.14 Thirteenthly they shall not lose what they haue wrought but God will establish their work hee will neuer forget them and their works shall bee had in euerlasting remembrance Esay 44.20 Psalm 90.16 17. Lastly God doth not onely thus extraordinarily prouide for his seruants but hee takes order and prouides also for the seed of his seruants which few or none of worldly masters doo Psalm 69.37 Vses The vse should be threefold First it should teach Christians to liue with contentation and in all things to giue thanks and to say alwaies with Dauid O Lord thou hast dealt well with thy seruant according to thy Word Psalm 119.65 Secondly it should make them take great delight to doo his work they should loue to bee seruants to such a Master Esay 56.6 Thirdly they should euery where speak of Gods praises that entertaines them so gratiously they should open their mouthes all the day long with the praises of such a
good Conscience and the other is that a man runnes onely blindefolded so long till death and hell may seaze vpon him Thus of the effects of an euill Conscience The meanes how Conscience may bee made good follow That an euill Conscience may bee made good two things must bee looked into First that wee get a right medicine to heale it Secondly that we take a right course in application of the medicine First the medicine for the curing of an ill Conscience is onely the blood of Christ the disease of Conscience is of so high a nature as all the medicines in the world are insufficient nothing but sprinkling it with blood will serue the turne and it must bee no other blood then the blood of the immaculate Lambe of God as the Apostle shews Heb. 9.14 The reason of this is because Conscience will neuer bee quiet till it see a way how GODs anger may bee pacified and sinne abolished which cannot be done any way but by the blood of Christ which was powred out as a sacrifice for sinne Now vnto the right application of this medicine foure things are requisite First the light of knowledge Secondly the washing of regeneration Thirdly the assurance of Faith Fourthly the warmth of loue First knowledge a man must haue both Legall and Euangelicall For they must knowe by the Law what sinnes lie vpon the Conscience and trouble it and they must knowe by the Gospel what a propitiation is made by Christ for sinnes And for the second an euill Conscience will neuer bee gotten off vnlesse our harts bee sprinkled and washed from the filth and power of the sinnes which did lie vpon the Conscience Heb. 10.22 1. Tim. 1.5 Now vnto such remouing of such sinnes from the hart two things are requisite First that by particular confession wee doe as it were scratch off the filth of those sinnes that foule the heart and trouble the Conscience Secondly and then that wee wash our harts and dayly rinse them with the teares of true repentance and humiliation before God for those sinnes Thirdly assurance of faith is necessary to the cure of an ill Conscience because faith is the hand that laies on the medicine A man must apply the sufferings of Christ to himselfe and beleeue that Christ did satisfy for those sinnes that lie vpon the conscience and must accordingly all to besprinkle the conscience with that blood of Christ and then of an euill Conscience it will presently become good but men must looke to one thing and that is that their faith be vnfayned For Conscience will not be satisfied with the profession of faith they must beleeue indeed and with their harts and with sound application of the promises of the Gospell concerning the bloud of Christ or else Conscience will not bee answered Heb. 10.22 1. Tim. 1.5 Fourthly the heate of loue must bee added a man must so apply the blood of Christ as that his owne blood bee heated in him with affection both towards God and Christ and Christians Christian loue doth put as it were naturall heat into the Conscience and makes it now receiuing life by faith to bestir it selfe in all the works either of seruice to God or duty to men 1. Tim. 1.5 Heb. 9.24 Knowledge bringing it light Mortification making it cleane Faith curing it and putting life into it by sprinkling it with the blood of Christ and loue infusing or rather inflaming it with the heate of life All these things are requisite though I stand not vpon the precise order of the working of euery one of these Thus how conscience may bee made good Now I might adde a direction or two how Conscience may doe her worke aright that is a good Conscience and not doe ill offices in the soule Two things I say are of great vse for the guiding of a good Conscience First that in all her proceedings shee must follow the warrant of Gods word Secondly that shee doe not mistake in iudging of particular actions she must bee sufficiently informed about our Christian liberty For vnlesse the conscience discern that we are freed from the malediction of the Law and from the rigorous perfection of obedience and haue restored vnto vs a free vse of all things indifferent and the like shee may bee ouer-busy and troublesome disquieting the hart and restrayning the ioyes should refresh and support a man Thus of the meanes how Conscience may bee made good the signes of a good cōscience follow First by the opposition it makes against the remainders of sinne in the godly It maintains a constant combating against the law of the members hauing at command the law of the minde It doth not onely resist grosse euils but euen the most secret corruptions in the heart of man This Paul discerned in himself Rom. 7. of doing God seruice Secondly by the manner of exacting of obedience for a good Conscience First doth incline a man to doo good duties not by compulsion but a man shall finde that he doth them by force of an internall principle in himself Secondly it cannot abide dead works a good Conscience abhorres all cold and careless or luke-warm or counterfet seruing of God it puts life into all good duties it exacteth attendance vpon God in doing them Heb. 9.14 Thirdly it more respecteth GOD than all the world or the man himself and therefore wil compell a man to obey against profit and pleasure and liking of the world 2. Cor. 1.12 Fourthly it requires an vniuersall obedience it would haue all God's commandements respected and therefore Paul saith I desired in all things to liue honestly Heb. 13.18 The allowing of one sinne shewes the deprauation of the Conscience if it be a knowne sinne and still tolerated As one dead flie will spoyle a boxe of pretious oyntment I say one dead flie tho many liuing flies may light vpon a boxe of oyntment and doe it no great hurt So a godly man may haue many infirmities and yet his Conscience bee sound but if ther be one corruption that liues and dies there that is such a corruption as is known and allowed and doth by custome continue there it will destroy the soundnesse of the best Conscience of the World and doth vsually argue a Conscience that is not good Fiftly a good Conscience doth require obedience alwayes Thus Paul pleades I haue serued God till this day It doth not command for God by fits but constantly Act. 23.1 A third signe is that a good Conscience is alwaies toward God it still desires to bee before God it seekes God's presence it reckons that day to be lost and that it did not liue as it were when it found not the Lord or had no fellowship or conuersation with God A good Conscience is like a good Angell it is alwaies looking into the face of God Act. 23.1 Thus of the signes The benefits of a good Conscience are many and great for First it is the best
man in earth doth so much as in true desire forsake all sinne There bee some corruptions hee knowes that hee would vpon no conditions part with To desire and endeuour to bee rid of all sinnes is an infallible mark of a childe of God Doct. 6. Mortification makes a man dead onely to sinnes it doth not make him of a dead and lumpish disposition in doing good duties Heb 9.14 nor doth it require that it should destroy his nature or naturall temper or the parts of his body but his sinne onely nor doth it kill his contentment in the creatures of God and the vse of lawfull things nor doth it destroy his liberty in lawfull delights and recreations it kils his sinne onely Might liue vnto righteousnes These words containe the second effect of Christs death and passion viz. the raising of vs vnto a righteous life His death makes vs liue and liue righteously Diuers doctrines may bee hence obserued Doct. 1. First that men truly mortified shall liue happily These dead men will liue there is no danger in great sorrow and the other works of mortification It kils sinne but the soule liues by that meanes Hee is sure to liue that is dead to his sins Rō 8.13 Esay 26.19 1. Pet. 4.6 Eze. 18. Ho. 14.2 The reasons are First because God hath promised comfort to such as mourne for sinne Math. 5.4 Pro. 14.10 Secondly Christ hath a speciall charge giuen him to looke to those mourners that they miscarry not Esay 61.1 2 3. Thirdly they are freed from eternall death they cannot be condemned 1. Cor. 11.31 32. Iob 33.27 28. Fourthly because the fruit of the lips is peace to these they are euer after interessed in the comforts of the Word Esay 57.15 18. Fiftly the nature of godly sorrow is onely to tend to repentance It is worldly sorrow that tends to death 2. Cor. 7.10 Sixtly they that are conformed to the similitude of Christs death by mortification shal be conformed to Christs life by the resurrection from the dead The vse may be first for confutation of such as think that mortification is a way full of danger and makes many men come to great extremities wheras they may heere see there is no danger in it Hellish terrours and despaire and some kind of diseases may make strange effects in some men but neuer was any hurt by godly sorrow for sinne if wee will beleeue the Scriptures and therefore it should incourage men to fall to work soundly about searching their waies and confessing their sinnes and iudging themselues in secret for their sinnes Iames 4. chapter 7.2 Cor. chap. 7.10 11. But heere men must looke to some fewe rules First that they see the warrant of the course in the Word and know the places that require these duties that they lay vp such promises made to the duties of mortification as may vphold their hearts in the practice of them Thirdly that they refuse not consolation but when they haue found true humiliation for their sinnes and comfort from God in his ordinances that they turne their sorrow into ioy and their praiers into thanksgiuing and spend their daies alwaies reioycing in the Lord. Doct. 2. It is not enough to die to sinne vnlesse wee also liue to righteousnes It is not enough to forsake our sinnes but wee must spend our daies in good works wee are so charged to cease to doe euill as withall wee are charged to learne to doe well Esay 1.16 we must bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life as well as confesse our sinnes Math. 3.8 A man will cut downe his fig-tree for want of good fruite though it beare no ill fruit Luke 13.6 It will not please any husband-man that his Land beare no thornes nor briers nor weedes if it beare him not good graine It is not enough for a seruant that hee doe his Master no hurt but hee must see to it that hee doe his Masters worke For first obedience and good fruits are required at our hands in the Law of God besides the prohibition of sinne Secondly Christ died to this end that wee might liue righteously as well as die to sinne Thirdly because all the gifts of the Spirit bestowed on vs in our regeneration are giuen to profit withall not to lay them vp in a napkin 1. Cor. 12. Fourthly because wee shall bee iudged at the last day according to our works Rom. 2.6 Vse And therefore this shewes the dangerous folly of such carnall people as think if they come to Church and liue ciuilly and doe no body no wrong they are out of al question in a right course And besides it should awake carelesse and sluggish Christians to looke to their gifts and remember what accounts they will giue to God for their vnprofitablenesse and vnfruitfulnesse 2. Pet. 1.8 Doct. 3. It is from hence euident that the onely liuing is to liue righteously Hee is worthy to bee said to liue that liues to righteousnes a religious life is the best life And these are the reasons First because it is the most honorable life For to liue to righteousnes makes a man highly in the fauour of God Psal. 11.7 Prou. 15.9 and it shewes that a man is borne of God 1. Ioh. 2.29 and besides it helps a man to the best and most blessed memoriall Prou. 10.7 and the fruits of righteousnes are the best meanes of glorifying God Phil. 1.11 And therefore Salomon said well that The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Prouerbs 12.26 And Dauid saith They are the onely excellent Ones Psal. 16. whereas euery wicked man is lothsome and a sinnefull life is a shamefull life Prou. 13.5 and 14.34 Secondly because it is the most profitable life and the most gainfull for blessings are vpon the head of the righteous Pro. 10.6 The wicked worketh a deceitfull work but to him that soweth righteousnes shall be a sure reward Pro. 11.18 And righteousnes is both the best riches and the most durable Pro. 8.18 19 20. And it hath the promise of this life as well as the life to come 1. Tim. 6. Iob 8.6 And the profit of righteousnes will help a man when he is to die when the treasures of the wicked will profit nothing Pro. 10.2 Yea a good man lacketh not an inheritance for his childrens children and the wealth of the sinner is many times laid vp for the iust Thirdly because it is the safest and quietest life He that walketh vprightly walketh surely Prouer. 10.19 and the fruit of righteousnes is peace Iam. 3.18 For God's promise is that No euill shall happen to the iust whereas the wicked shall be filled with mischief Pro. 12.21 And God's blessing makes them rich and hee mingles no sorrow with it Pro. 10.21 and 15.6 And righteousnes is reckoned as an impenetrable armour 2. Cor. 6.7 And God doth mark euery one that doth righteousnes and solaceth his heart Esay 64.5 And the very doing of good is sweetnes to the soule