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A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

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trauailing to the place of Gods worship n Psal 84 6 10 passed throgh many dangers endured much heat and suffered many wants in the wildernes for the pleasure that they took in his seruice The profit they reaped did swallow vp the tediousnes of the paines the loue to his court● did mittigate the greatnes of the labor This made thē say A day in thy Courts is better then a thousand other where I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of my God then to dwel in the tabernacles of wickednes Where is this zeale to be found among vs Who sheweth this forwardnesse to Gods seruice Or whom can a man single out to say of him that no want or weather doeth hinder him from the exercises of godlinesse Wee are growne vnto that loathing of the heauenly Manna that albeit it fall in the middest of our Campe and round about our habitations yet wee will not steppe out of the doores to see it nor open our mouthes to taste it nor stretch out our handes to gather it either the blasts of winde do trouble vs or the feare of raine doth hinder vs or the heate of Summer doth burne vs or the colde of Winter doth pinch vs or a Lyon in the way doth stay vs and euery trifle stoppeth our iourney If our heart were in the house of God it would quickly moue our feet to carry vs thither But where the heart is not euery member is heauy and hardlie drawne to do their dutie The Deuils do the will of God by constraint and against their wils it must be otherwise with vs. Where the heart is there is our delight The Prophet describing the flourishing estate of the Church sayth o Psal 10 2 3 The Lord shall send the rod of thy power out of Sion bee thou Ruler in the middest of thine enemies thy people shall come willingly at the time of assembling thine Armie in holy beauty the youth of thy wombe shall bee as the Morning Dew Where he sheweth that the people of God were wont to come to the hearing of the word to the partaking of the Sacrifices to the receiuing of the Sacraments and to the exercises of Religion they assembled and gathered themselues together freely and of their owne accord to present themselues before the Lord. This duty is required of vs we must come willingly to Christ to heare him speake vnto vs. It is one vertue to come into the house of God but to come chearfully and comfortably as to a feast is a double vertue and that which giueth life vnto her comming If we come vnwillingly and be drawn to our duty on the Lords day either by shame of the world or by fear of law we come as dead men that are without working of the spirit or desire of profit or feeling of comfort or encrease of Faith or bettering of obedience If the danger of law did not more compel thē then the conscience of their duty or the loue of religion allure them many among vs would sildome or neuer keep the Lords Saboths nor attend vpon his ordinances they com to them as willingly as the Beare goeth to the stake as chearfully as the malefactor passeth to the place of execution Hence it is that some come to this place once a month others once a quarter others only vpon high daies solemne feasts more I think to shew themselus then to labor to saue their souls Such was the zeale of our brethren to the gospell in the daies of persecution that they went more willingly to the fire flame then these men in the dayes of peace com to the hearing of the word and to the house of prayer They were more chearful in suffring of death then these are in seeking the means of life Hence it is that some linger so long before they come are afraid they shall be there too soon Others when they are present giue litle attention not at al regard to profit themselues Others are ready to depart and be gone before the assembly is dismissed and think they haue learned enough These are they that think they are at liberty to do what they list to go and com when they list They make no conscience to begin end the exercises of religion together and so profit accordingly hauing litle more knoledge then brute beasts Vse 3 Thirdly this confuteth the common aduersary which ascribe al to the work done regard nothing at al either the mind of the doer or the maner of doing as their blind distinction de congruo condigno teacheth They hold that the bare presence at the sacrifice of the Masse without any good intention of the mind is meritorious in the sight of God This is their opus operatum the which is indeed the cutthroat of al true religion For admit once into the worship of God an outward resting in the worke done who wil regard the reformation of the hart But this fitteth wel enough the new Roman religion which consisteth wholy in externall obseruations in delighting the eye in pleasing the eare the other senses but requireth nothing aright which may not be performed of a Reprobat God is a spirit p Iohn 4 24. they that worship him must worship him in spirit truth so that whatsoeuer religion resteth teacheth men to rest in ceremonial and carnal obseruations is a false religion inuented by the deuil This also is the error of the ignorant people that wil not be accounted Papists yet are as ignoraunt as they in their practise and as superstitious in their deuotions and as corrupt in their opinions They neuer looke to their harts to purge them nor to their affections to order them aright when they come to the seruice of God If they can say oh we haue heard the worde we haue bin at the church we haue prayed to God they think al is well and that God can require no more at their hands They dreame the whole seruice of God to stand in outward things only as though they were the things wherein the Lord delighteth and not rather the truth and vprightnesse of the hart This is it for which the Prophet Esay reprooueth the people in his time and compareth them to the Princes of Sodom and to the people of Gomorra notwithstanding a zealous obseruation of the outwarde ordinances that they practised God commanded q Esay 1 11 12 13. What haue I to doe with the multitude of your Sacrifices I am full of your burnt offerings and the fat of Rams I desire not the blood of Bullockes Goats and Lambes when you come to appeare before mee who required this at your hands Bring no oblations in vain Incense is an abhomination vnto me I cannot suffer your New-Moones nor Saboths nor solemne assemblies I am weary to beare them because your works are euill But wash you make you clean take away the euill of your works from
of the safety of the whole Family It is a great profite and aduantage to do a thing in season On the other side it is the note of vnwise and wicked Women to drawe their Husbands to all wickednesse and outragiousnesse to further them in impiety and vngodlinesse and consequently to hasten their owne and their Husbands ruine and destruction If there be any sparke of godlinesse they are as water to quench it in their Husbands An example hereof we haue in Iezabell when Ahab longed after the Vine-yard of Naboth and could not obtaine it so that he came to his house heauy and in displeasure did she perswade the Kinges heart to bee content Did she tell him he had enough or moue him to suffer Naboth to enioy his possession in peace No as if hee had not beene of himselfe mad enough she pricketh him forward shee saith vnto him h 1 Kin. 21 7. Dost thou manage the Kingdome of Israell Art thou fit to be a King I will giue thee the Vineyard vp eate Bread and be of good cheere The like we see in the Wiues of Salomon that were Heathen they turned away his heart from God and prouoked him to set vp Idolatry When Mordecai refused to bow downe to Haman and to giue him the honor that was due to God i Ester 3 5. 5 14. he was full of wrath so that the glory of his Riches the multitude of his children the fauour of the King the greatnesse of his honour the aduancement of his Name did nothing auaile him so long as hee saw Mordecai the Iew sitting at the Kinges Gate Did his Wife perswade him to be patient Did shee shew him that fauour is deceitfull that wealth is vncertaine and that honour is as a blast of winde yea lighter then vanity it selfe No shee moueth him to set vp a tree of fifty cubits high and to speake to the King that Mordecai might be hanged thereon It is great meanes to goodnesse to delight in good company It is a great allurement to wickednesse to follow euill company A day-companion is strong to draw men to all impiety but the Night-companion is stronger and preuaileth farther and oftentimes bringeth to the hight of all iniquity Vse 3. Lastly as the consideration of the Name beeing made to bee Helpers putteth Wiues in minde of theyr dutie so it teacheth all men two thinges First they must remember that it standeth euery one vpon to haue a care in his choice and match to get such as may brooke their Names and be indeed Helpers and not hinderers vnto them It is the greatest calling that wee can enter into and a band neuer to be broken Therein standeth the comfort or discomfort of our whole life It is is our duty to be carefull to marry in the Lord that Christ may bee bidden as one of our Gueste and not shut out of our meetings It is a prophane marriage where he is not entertained and wee can looke for no blessing to come vpon such assemblies The Apostle teaching That the Wife is k 1 Cor. 7 39. bound by the Law as long as her Husband liueth and that her Husband being dead she is at libertie to marry with whom shee will he addeth onely in the Lord. The same Apostle chargeth vs Not to be vnequally yoaked with the vnbeleeuers l 2 Cor. 6 14 15. because there can be no fellowship betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse no communion betweene light and darkenesse no concord betweene Christ and Belial Such vnequall marriages between the Sons of God and the Daughters of men m Gen. 6 1 2. brought an vniuersall floud vppon the Earth How greatly God detesteth this the Prophet Malachi declareth Cha. 2. 11. Iudah hath transgressed and an abhomination is committed in Israell and in Ierusalem for Iudah hath defiled the holinesse of the Lord which hee loued and hath marryed the Daughter of a strange God This condemneth such matches as are sought out for beauty for riches for honours but no mention made of godlinesse or of Religion The chiefest things to be respected are not wealth and such outward things of the world for a man may be aduanced in his estate this way and yet in the end be cast downe to hell Secondly such as haue receiued by the blessing of God such helpers and comforts of their life must learn to loue and delight in such wiues as in those companions that God hath sent them This dooth Salomon n Prou. 5 19 20 21. teach Reioyce with the Wife of thy youth let her be as the louing Hind and the pleasant Roe let her breasts satisfie thee at all times for why shouldest thou delight my Son in a strange Woman or embrace the bosome of a Stranger For the waies of man are before the eyes of the Lord and he pondreth all his paths Where he teacheth that the delight that the married folke ought to take one in another is a notable preseruatiue to keepe them from vncleannesse They must confesse that it is God that hath knit them together in such wise that the one should not desire to be separated from the other The Apostle writing to the Ephesians o Eph. 5 25 28 29. willeth Husbands to loue their Wiues as Christ loued the Church and gaue himselfe for it and sheweth that men ought so to loue their Wiues as their owne bodyes So that hee which loueth his Wife loueth himselfe for no Man euer yet hated his owne Flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it euen as the Lorde dooth the Church And to Archippus our Fellow-Souldier c. Hitherto of the two first persons to whom the Epistle is sent to wit Philemon and Apphia the Husband and the Wife Now followeth the third person who was the Pastour of the Church described by his propper Name Archippus and by his Office a Fellow-Souldier True it is all Christians in this life are Warriours and fight the battels of God against sinne the world and the Deuill and so may bee called Fellow-Souldiers in as much as they are members of the Militant Church yet the Ministers of God are in a peculiar and speciall manner so called because they are as it were the Captains Standart-bearers to go before others and to order the battell This Title to be called a Souldier is a borrowed speech for their Weapons are not carnall and importeth great labour and much trouble it signifieth the necessity of the calling and pointeth out the danger and opposition that is made against it Doct. 7. The calling of a Minister is a painfull needfull and troublesome calling The Doctrine from hence is this that the calling of a Minister is paineful most needefull and a troublesome calling resisted and opposed against by Sathan and wicked men When Christ saw the people scattered abroad and dispersed as Sheepe without a Shepheard he had compassion vppon them and saide to his Disciples p Math. 9 37. The Haruest indeede is great
helpfull and seruiceable to Gods people shall finde them as their remembrancers to God who will not forget the labour of their loue and the duty of their seruice This ought to bee a notable encouragement vnto vs not to deale niggardly toward the Saints nor to withhold from them the fruits of our loue seeing nothing shall be lost that is bestowed vpon them but we shall receiue an hundred folde into our bosome grace for grace loue for loue blessing for blessing mercy for mercie For this comfort and consolation will arise to them that doe good to Gods people they shall haue fauour with God they shall gaine a good report with the world and they shall purchase the sweet sauour of a good name as of a precious oyntment among the Saints and shall stirre them vp to intreate Gods manifold mercies for them Iehoiada that good High-Priest was so honoured of the people for suppressing the tyranny of Athalia for setting vp the kingdome of Ioash and for restoring the true religion of God that he was accounted a common Father of the Countrey and they gaue him the burial of a King r 2 Chron. 24 15 16. for they buried him in the Citty of Dauid with the Kings because he had done good in Israell and toward God and his house So the apostle Paul declaring that Onesiphorus had done him great seruice prayeth vnto God for him ſ 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord giue mercie vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when he was at Rome he sought me out diligently and found me The Lord grant vnto him that he may finde mercy with the Lord at that day Whereby we may gather that the benefites bestowed vpon the Saints shall not perish although they themselues cannot requite thē for though they want ability to pay them yet they want not harts to pray for them yea the Lorde will not onely haue pitty of them that take pitty of his people but he will shew mercy to their housholds because when Paule praiseth the bountifulnesse and zeale of Onesiphorus he wisheth well for his sake to his whole family The blessing of God shall not rest onely vpon the head of the iust but it shall descend into his whole house such is the loue of God toward those that be his If the consideration of this great promise and rich recompence of reward doe not pricke vs forward to exercise the workes of loue and fruits of compassion we are more then blockish and brutish On the other side such as haue beene not helpfull but hurtful not industrious but iniurious not seruiceable but vnprofitable to Gods people when God shall visit them either with publicke calamities or priuate iudgements their owne Consciences shall gall them and gnaw vpon them when they remember their owne works which shall prouoke men to speak euill of them cause them to pray against them and constraine them to call vppon God to worke their confusion This we see in Paul the Apostle in the latter end of the same Epistle t 2 Tim. 4 14 Alexander the Copper-smith hath done me much euill the Lord reward him according to his workes Thus doeth the Prophet Dauid deale oftentimes in the Psalmes u Psal 74 2 3. Thinke vpon thy congregation which thou hast possessed of old on the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this mount Syon wherein thou hast dwelt lift vp thy stroakes that thou mayst for euer destroy euerie enemy that doth euil to the Sanctuary Thus wee see the people of God haue from time to time prayed against the malicious enemies of the Church that sought the ruine and destruction thereof Their prayers are of great force enter into the eares of the Lord of hostes whether it bee to obtaine mercies vpon the friends of the Church or to draw downe vengeance vppon the aduersaries thereof that oppresse it with cruelty and blaspheme the name of God which is holy throughout all ages and generations There is no greater honour that we should desire or delight in then to be called the friends of God and the seruants of the Church If we be the seruants of God wee must also account our selues the seruants of the Church The Prophet Dauid did esteeme the faithfull that were in Ierusalem as his Brethren So on the contrary side there cannot a greater dishonor and reproach befall vs then to be reputed the enemies of God and his people For if wee set our selues against his people that are his portion and inheritance hee will no otherwise deale with vs then with his enemies If God come against vs as his enemy we shall not be able to preuaile we cannot stand before him but shall be as stubble in the fire and as chaffe before the winde Vse 4. Lastly seeing God requireth seruice to his Church at our hands to do all good to them by all good meanes it is our dutie to enquire and learne the estate of the distressed Church that we may knowe and bee informed where and when and how it is afflicted How many are there that neuer thinke vpon the people of God to do them good but forget their affliction and oppression The Butler of Pharaoh did not remember Ioseph but forgate him and the kindnesse he shewed toward him when they were prisoners togither who had said vnto him x Gen. 40 14 23. Haue me in remembrance with thee when thou art in good case and shew mercy I pray thee vnto me and make mention of me to Pharaoh that thou mayst bring me out of this house So when Zachariah the sonne of Iehoiada whom we mentioned before was for preaching the truth and denouncing the iudgements of God from his mouth oppressed with enuie and ouerborne by the might of the Rulers the King woulde not deliuer him out of their hands y 2 Chron. 24 21 22. but commanded him to bee stoned with stones and remembred not the kindnesse that his father had done to him but slew his son This is the common course and current of the world wee will not see the afflictions of the poore Saints but turne away our eyes from them or if wee cannot choose but see them we quickly forget them as if wee had neuer eyther beheld them or knowne of them This is one misery of the faithful that men do not regard them when they are in misery The Lord hath determined that there shall be alwayes some obiects offered vnto vs and set before vs to exercise the fruits of our Faith and Loue. He hath saide that the poore wee shall alwayes haue with vs and such as stand in need of our helpe and comfort It is in easie thing to boast of Faith and Loue but if we will be assured that we haue true Faith indeed we must shew it by our workes which are the fruites whereby it is knowne We must not turne away our
suam They will dislike either the person or the matter or the stile or the allegations or they know not what and care not what so it be somewhat The proofes vsed are too many the Reasons too large the Vses too vehement yea nothing can please them that please them-selues in their owne conceits If I should craue pardon for my slippes in this Exposition or for my boldnesse in this Dedication I should therein also open the mouths of many to tax me of vanity and reproue me of folly For when Albinus who wrote an History of the Roman Offices in the Greek tongue requested the Readers in the Praeface to beare with him if they found any imperfections and wants in his worke M. Cato the Censor answered when he read it e Plut. in the life of Cato Doubtlesse he had deserued pardon indeed if he had bin forced to write his Story but he is a Trifler that had rather aske pardon for his fault then to be without fault For men are wont f Macrob. Saturn lib. 1. in Praefat. to desire forgiuenesse either when they erre at vnwares or when they commit a fault by constraint compulsion from such as haue authority ouer them whom they cannot or dare not deny Such seuere and sharpe Iudges I am like to light vpon who will demand the question of me what I meane to plead for pardon For who compelled mee to make the fault for which I craue fauour And why I did not rather keepe my selfe from offending then desire the forgiuenesse of the offence Wherefore leauing these rash and rigorous Censors of other mens doings I come to declare the causes that haue induced me to offer the exposition of this Epistle vnto you and to passe it vnder your Worships name For to whom doth a Treatise of Godlinesse more fitly agree then to him that professeth Godlinesse and hath the power of it dwelling in his heart Or to whom should I commend the Patronage of the truth better then to him that is a fauorer and louer of the truth and of such as fauour and loue the trueth Besides as I haue heeretofore tasted of your kindnesse and bountifulnesse toward me which I euer esteemed as a debt lying vpon me so I haue beene desirous to leaue a perpetuall Testimony to others of a thankefull heart I am not able to recompence like for like but may rather say with the Apostle g Acts 3 6. Siluer and Gold haue I none but such as I haue I giue vnto you and so much the more I will alwaies be ready to follow the example of Paul who when he had receiued mercy at the hands of Onesiphorus he praied vnto God to render backe into his bosom the fruits of his loue bestowed vpon him h 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord shew mercy vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when he was at Rome he sought me out very diligently found me The Lord grant vnto him that he may find mercy with the Lord at that day c. So my ernest prayer to God euen the Father of all mercy and God of al consolation is euer shal be to shew mercy for your mercy loue for your loue to preserue you vnto his heauenly kingdom And I beseech you oftentimes to Meditate vpon the 71. Psalme which as it was composed by the Prophet in his latter time so he oftentimes craueth of God to be with him to keepe him safe now that his head was hoare and his haires gray i Psal 71 5 9 17 18. Thou art my hope O Lord God euen my trust from my youth cast me not off in the time of age forsake me not whē my strength faileth And afterward O God thou hast taught me from my youth euen vntill now therefore will I tell of thy wonderous workes yea euen vnto mine old age and gray head O God forsake me not vntill I haue declared thine arme vnto this generation and thy power to al them that shal come For a man may fall away from God as well through the doting of age as through the lustes of youth Be faithfull vnto the death you shal receiue the crown of life continue vnto the end so shall you be safe The Wise-man teacheth that the daies will come when we shall say wee haue no pleasure in them k Eccle. 12 3. when the keepers of the house shall tremble that is the hands which safegard the body from iniuries shall shake as in a palsie The strong men shall bow themselues that is the legges which are as a strong Staffe or as a firme Piller to sustaine and beare vp the weight of the body shall begin to faile and waxe feeble The Grinders shall cease that is the teeth appointed to chew the meate eyther waxe loose or else are lost They waxe darke that looke out of the windowes that is the eyes of the body which are as the Windowes of the house to giue light l Liuy lib. 5. in the Oration of Licinius Caluus Pliny lib. 7. cap. 50. shall decay and grow weaker and weaker that they cannot behold the brightnesse of the Sunne The doores shall be shut without by the base sound of the Grinders that is the Lippes which are as two Doores or Gates shall scarce bee able to open themselues being become stiffe He shall rise vp at the voyce of the Bird that is the least noyse shall be able to awake him he that while he was young slept soundly so that the sound of a Trumpet coulde hardly mooue him is now by the crowing of the Cocke or the chirping of a Bird raised and disquieted All the daughters of singing shall be abased that is the eares and other Instruments of Musicke shall be so weakned and dulled that they shall take no pleasure nor delight therein m 2 Sa. 19 36. as Barzillai confesseth vnto Dauid also They shall be affraid of the high thing that is when once they grow crooked with age euery plaine way will seeme rough and euery stone a Mountaine vnto them And the Almond tree shall flourish that is their head shall be renowned with the comely ornament of white haires as the beautifull Blossomes of an Almond Tree c. Thus doth the Wise-man describe the discommodities and difficulties of old age which approacheth vnto vs all and will in the end ouertake vs to the end we should learne to remember our Creator in the dayes of our youth The Lord God Almighty who is the ancient of daies deliuer you from euery euill worke and blesse you and yours more and more with al spirituall blessings in heauenly things that as you beare the Image of his Eternity so you may be partaker of eternall Glory Amen Yours to commaund WILLIAM ATTERSOLL To the Reader IT was well said a Plini secund Epist 6. lib. 1. that the first duty of a Writer is that
please the tast of a well-affected stomacke I confesse the fault is in the Cooke that hath prepared and dressed it I would therefore entreat thee to accept of these three Dishes and to consider the person that was the writer the person to whom he writeth and the person for whom he writeth The person that penned it was Paule the Apostle the person to whom it was written was Philemon the Maister the person for whom hee wrote was Onesimus the Seruant Vpon these three as on certaine pillers stand the maine drift and purpose of this whole Epistle heere expounded Touching the first o The person of the Writer of the Epistle which is Paul the Writer he doth not stile himself in this place as commonly he vseth An Apostle of Iesus Christ but The Prisoner of Christ and declareth that he begat Onesimus to the Faith in Prison It is honourable to the Saintes to suffer for the truthes sake The Apostles reioyced that they were p Actes 5 41. Iames 1 2. Counted worthy to endure afflictions and troubles in a good cause They endured imprisonment as Martyrs not as Malefactors as Preachers of the Gospell r 1 Pet. 1 15 not As Busie-bodies in other mens matters as doers of good not as euill doers neuer ceasing to further the saluation of others euen when their bodies were restrained of libertie and yet in this want of enlargement they were mighty in deede and word to worke the conuersion of such as resorted vnto them verifying the saying of the Apostle 2. Tim. 2. 9. ſ 2 Tim. 2 9. I suffer trouble vnto bondes but the word of God is not bound Whiles he pleaded his cause in Chaines t Actes 16 28 hee had Almost caught Agrippa in the Chaine of the Gospell and wonne him to the Faith When he was come to Rome he would not be idle u Act. 28 17 23. but called the chiefe of the Iewes together and then expounded vnto them the way of Saluation testifying the Kingdome of God and perswading them those thinges that concerne Iesus both out of the Law of Moses and out of the Prophets from morning to night Thus doth one say most truely of him When he was bound he was stronger then they that bound him when he was a Captiue he was freer then they that kept him and when his Iudges examined him he examined them and set them at libertie that were vnder the thraldome of sinne and Sathan It is truely said of the Wise-man x Prou. 11 30 Dan. 12 3. He that winneth Soules is wise and shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and such as turne many to righteousnes shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer This wisedome is no where to be found no where to be sought no where to be learned but in the Word of GOD which is the wisedome of God and the power of God So then we see it is not the punishment that maketh a Martyr but the cause Some are punished as Malefactors some dye as Martyrs Ioseph was cast into the same y Gene. 39 20 and 40 3. Prison with the Butler and Baker of King Pharaoh They suffered imprisonment in the same place but the cause was not one for which they suffered Iosephs Maister tooke him and put him in Prison in the place where the kings Prisoners lay bound and there he was in Prison but because it was in a good cause and for a good conscience the Lord was with him and shewed him mercy and got him fauour in the sight of the Maister of the Prison The like we might say of Paule and Sylas who were not onely beaten with Rods but clapped vppe in close Prison with Malefactors but they were not without comfort in their sufferings z Actes 16 25 For At midnight they prayed and sung Psalmes vnto God so that the rest of the Prisoners heard them They suffered a 2 Tim. 2 9. As euill doers but not for euill doing And albeit they were Prisoners yet they were Christian Prisoners and when the body was ready to be offered and the time of their departure drew neere forgat b August ser de Sanct. Cypr. not their Apostolicall care of the Churches and watchfulnesse ouer the Lordes Flocke yea we see Paule in this place forgetteth not a base Seruant as shall bee shewed afterward Touching the second point c The person to whom Paul writeth we are to consider the person to whom Paule writeth which is to Philemon crauing at his hands the fruit of Christian Equitie and Moderation to forgiue him that had offended him according to the doctrine of the common Maister of them both Iesus Christ Luke 17. d Luk. 17. 3 4 Take heede to your selues if thy Brother trespasse against thee rebuke him and if hee repent forgiue him and though hee sinne against thee seauen times in a day and seauen times in a day turne againe to thee saying It repenteth mee Thou shalt forgiue him It is a great vertue in thee if thou e Isidor lib. 2. soliloqu wrong not him of whom thou art wronged It is great Fortitude if when thou art wronged thou remit it It is great Glory if thou be willing to spare him whom thou hadst power and ability to hurt As Christ taught forgiuenesse to others so he practised his owne Doctrine and f Luke 23 34. prayed for those that were his persecuters Philemon had bin greatly wronged by his false and theeuish seruant yet Paul craueth pardon for him vpon his repentance toward God and his submission toward his Maister It is the Doctrine of the g The doctrine of the Nouatiā Heretickes Nouatian Heretickes to deny hope of fauour and forgiuenesse to such as are fallen against whom Cyprian hath written a learned Epistle h Cypri ad Nouatian haeretic whereby they go about to kill whereas they should cure them that are wounded and to swallow vp them in despaire whom they ought to raise vp with comfort For they alledge that Christ threatneth k Math. 10 33 Whosoeuer shall deny him before men them will he deny before his Father which is in heauen But he vnderstandeth such as perseuer in it without repentance denying him vnto the end and forsaking him vnto the death such indeede he will disclaime and deny in the kingdome of his Father which plainely appeareth by the contrary in the opposite Member going before l Math. 10 32. where he promiseth that Whosoeuer shall confesse him before men them will hee also confesse before his Father which is in Heauen whereby hee meaneth such as continue in that confession and are faithfull without starting backward Peter being in the High-priests house did deny his Maister that chose him not only to bee an Apostle but to bee an elect vessell to preach the Gospell both to Iewes and Gentiles he denied him that bought him and redeemed him in word with an Oath with Cursing and Execration
doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing our owne soules we must l Iam. 1 21. Lay apart all filthinesse and superfluity of maliciousnesse and receiue with meekenesse the word that is grafted in vs which is able to saue our Soules Now we haue in this Epistle m Illyr arg in hanc Epistol a most worthy example of receiuing them that are fallen of forgiuing the penitent of the pardoning of iniuries of ioy for the conuersion of a Sinner Yea we learne not onely to be louers of peace but to be makers of peace as Paul doth betweene the Maister and the Seruant Our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed n Math. 5 9. That are Peace-makers for they shall be called the Children of God We are charged not onely to seeke peace our selues but to make peace with others whereby we beare the liuely Image of God who is called the God of peace we are made like vnto Christ who is our peace and hath reconciled vs vnto his Father Vse 5. Fiftly we are taught to take heede we doe not rashly sit in iudgement vpon any This euill Seruant had picked and purloyned from his Maister and when he had done ranne his waies yet GOD found him out and gaue him repentance when he sought not after God It is a common Prouerb He runneth farre that neuer returneth Christ Iesus calleth some at the leaueth houre as hee did the Theefe that hung with him vpon the Crosse The Apostle chargeth that o 1 Cor. 4 5. We iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hidden in darknesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God And in another place p Rom. 14 4. Who art thou that condemnest another mans seruant He standeth or falleth to his owne Maister All men are in the hand of God and all times and seasons are disposed by him The Husbandman Tilleth the ground and soweth his Corne but it doth not by and by gtow vp The Disciples of Christ heard many things of his mouth which seemed buried and forgotten but the precious fruit thereof appeared plentifullie afterward Let vs not limit vnto God his times and seasons nor goe about to teach him knowledge Paul was a Persecuter of the truth a Blasphemer of God an oppressor of the Church yet in the end he was called by the voyce of Christ Let vs therefore condemne no man nor iudge any rashly least we be iudged Vse 6. Lastly we see euidently as in a Glasse in this Epistle that all that are elected of God to eternall life shal in Gods good time be called effectually to the knowledge of the truth God hath made all things in number waight and measure As no more shall be saued then he hath appointed so not one of them shall bee lost that he hath prepared to be heires of glory God hath many waies to pull them out of the fire whom he will haue saued So many as belong to him he will at one time or other send them and offer them the meanes of their saluation yea when we least of all seeke our owne good and intend our owne conuersion it pleaseth God to call vs and to gather vs into the bosome of the Church The Parable q Math. 20 1. of the Housholder hiring labourers into his Vineyard teacheth that he calleth at all times and houres of the day We see it in the example of Paul when Christ Iesus called vnto him from the Heauens he thought nothing of his owne conuersion but of the Churches subuersion Wee see it in the Penitent Theefe in Manasseth in Mary Magdalen and many others VVe see it in Onesimus in this place Who would haue imagined that this man playing the vile Runna-gate and the false Theefe and departing out of the religious House of godly Philemon which is honoured with the Name of a Church would euer haue turned a new leafe and come to the acknowledgement of the truth who would haue thought that the prodigal Son r Luke 15 24. going from his Father forsaking his Brother wasting his patrimony and spending his strength and wealth vpon Harlots would euer haue seene his owne folly and that it should be said of him My Son was dead and is aliue againe he was lost but he is found This is that which is set downe in the Actes of the Apostles Å¿ Acts 13 48. When the Gentiles heard it they were glad and glorified the word of the Lord and as many as were ordained to eternall life beleeued God is able to make a way for the execution of his purposes and knoweth how to accomplish his decrees Thus much of the circumstances of time and place as also of the Argument of this Epistle Now let vs come to the words 1 Paul a Prisoner of Iesus Christ and Brother Timotheus vnto Philemon our deare friend and fellow helper 2 And to our beloued Apphia and to Archippus our Fellow-Souldier and to the Church that is in thine House The order of the words and interpretation of them In this Epistle we are to consider two thinges First the Praeface in the three first verses Secondly the substance and matter of the Epistle in the rest The Praeface or entrance containeth the inscription or Title in these two verses sundry prayers in the foure verses following The inscription remembreth both the parties writing to wit Paul and Timothy and likewise the persons to whom the Epistle is written Philemon Apphia Archippus and the Church that was in Philemons house These persons as well writing as written vnto are not barely and nakedly set downe but are described by their seuerall notes and titles giuen vnto them wherein are contained seuerall Arguments of perswasion to mooue Philemon to that whereunto he exhorteth and intreateth him And first for himselfe a Captiue and Prisoner hee mooueth him to respect his suit in regard it was the suit of one vnder persecution bound in chaines and kept in thraldome whom he ought to pitty especially seeing he was a Prisoner of Iesus Christ that is not for any bad cause but for the professing and Preaching of the glorious Gospell of Christ Secondly he ioyneth in this suit with him Timothy a Brother nay more then a Brother a famous Euangelist whose commendation was thoroughout all the Churches who with him intreated for his Seruant Moreouer concerning those to whom this Epistle is written first Philemon himselfe is mentioned with whom he presumeth to preuaile both because there is mutuall loue between them louing one another in the truth and Christian Faith and because he is a fellow-helper seeking to promote and further by all good meanes the course of the Gospell in both which respects there should be a neere familiarity and speciall interest one with another Secondly to him he ioyneth Apphia which seemeth to be his Wife both because she hath the second place after Philemon and
meanes we can bee pursued after It is not enough to doe good thinges but we must doe them in a right manner we must bee forward and feruent in the doing of them So dooth Paul in this place set vpon Philemon and omitteth nothing that may serue his present purpose Great was the a Exod. 32 19 20 22. zeale of Moses for Gods glory against the Idolatry of the people and afterward for their pardon and forgiuenesse The first Table requireth our loue to God b Math. 22. Withall our heart with all our soule with al our strength and the second Table requireth vs To loue our Neighbour as our selfe so that whether wye performe the duties of the first or of the second Table we must performe them heartily sincerely and earnestly The Prophet Dauid had a zeale as hot as fire c Psal 96 10. So that the zeale of Gods house did eate him vp When we call vpon the Name of God d Rom. 12. Wee are commaunded to be feruent in Prayer In the high work of the Ministery e 2 Tim. 4 2. we are charged to Preach the word in season and out of season to improue rebuke and exhort with all long suffering and doctrine In hearing the word wee are willed to be swift to heare In all the workes of Sanctification we are f Gal. 6 10. warned while we haue time to doe good to all men and to redeeme the time because the daies are euill The Apostle noteth of himselfe touching his owne practise g 1 Cor. 9 19. That to the Iewe he became as a Iew that he might winne the Iewes To the Gentiles he became as a Gentile that he might win the Gentiles to the weake he became as weake that hee might win the weake and he became all thinges to all men that by all meanes he might saue some All which testimonies and consents prooue directly that we must follow after good things diligently Reason 1. The Reasone remaine to be considered First God is delighted with diligence and earnestnesse in our callings and is wont to yeelde a blessing vnto it He promiseth that such h Pro. 2 3 4. As cry after knowledge and search for wisedome as for Siluer and desire it as a Treasure shall vnderstand the feare of the Lord and finde the knowledge of God Earnest Prayer alwaies preuaileth and auaileth much with God Luke 18 2. Iam. 5 16. Feruent zeale addeth wings and maketh it mount vp on high and pierce the Heauens where Lip-labour is lost labour and bringeth nothing but returneth empty to him that made it like the Dew that being raised vp in the day by the beames of the Sunne falleth downe againe in the euening Reason 2. Secondly earnestnesse and zeale are of great waight and force to prouoke others to imitation We must bee examples to them and seeke to draw them to follow vs. This should comfort and encourage vs vnto well doing insomuch as we shall stirre vp other to be like vs and to walke in our steppes This is the reason which the Apostle teacheth writing to the Corinthians i 2 Cor. 9 2. I know your readinesse of minde whereof I boast my selfe of you vnto them of Macedonia and say that Achaia was prepared a yeare agoe and your zeale hath prouoked many Reason 3. Thirdly mens hearts are hardned and their affections frozen they shut their eyes they stop their eares and they turne away their hearts from the truth and therefore in regard of this Iron or Brazen age into which wee are fallen all meanes that can be taken and all occasions that can be vsed are too little though most earnest to worke vpon such tough and rough Mettall This doth the Apostle prophesie of long age when perswading Timothy to wait with all diligence vpon his office hee addeth this as a reason k 2 Tim. 3 4. For the time will come when they will not suffer wholesome Doctrine but hauing their eares itching shall after their owne lusts get them an heape of Teachers and shall turne their eares from the truth and shall be giuen vnto fables Seeing therefore the earnest doing of good thinges bringeth downe a blessing from God prouoketh men to an imitation and seeing many are hard-hearted that they will not easily bend and yeeld it followeth that we are bound to do all good duties that belong vnto vs diligently not carelesly forwardly not faintly feruently not coldly Vse 1. Let vs now see what good Vses may necessarily be concluded from hence First we learne that zeale and forwardnesse is a grace and guift of the Spirit to be commended honoured and magnified in the Seruants of God The Lord himselfe commended and blessed the zeale of Phinehas The Apostle l Gal. 4 18. saith It is a good thing to loue earnestly alwaies in a good thing This reproueth those that reproach it and cannot abide it in others They scorne and scoffe at the Seruants of God for doing their duty and so make themselues culpable of an horrible sinne But let not vs be ashamed of the taunts and reproches of them that hate vs and deride vs because we desire to serue the Lord in the vprightnes of our hearts The time will come when we shall receiue the ioy and they the shame We haue a notable example hereof in Michall Sauls Daughter and Dauids Wife When she not able to comprehend the inward motions of Dauids ioyfull heart leaping and dancing before the Lord bringing home the Arke with shouting of voyce with sound of Trumpet and with gladnesse of heart despised him in her heart and came out to meete him and said m 2 Sam. 6 20 O how glorious was the King of Israell this day c. Then Dauid said vnto Michall It was before the Lord which chose me rather then thy Father and all his House and I will be yet more vile then thus and will be low in mine owne sight Where we see it is and euer hath been the lot of Gods Seruants to be branded and vpbraided for their zeale it was neuer liked of cold and carelesse men that are neuer earnest in any thing but in wickednesse nor forward but in following the prophanenesse of their owne hearts While they delight themselues in the pleasures of sinne and walke in their owne corrupt desires they are earnest enough but when they should practise the duties of godlinesse and shew by their godly conuersation whose Seruants they are there appeareth no life of Gods spirit in them they remaine as dead and sencelesse men Vse 2. Secondly negligence and coldnesse in Religion and in performing the duties of Christianity are great sinnes which wound the Soule and procure the wrath of God The Prophet pronounceth those accursed that doe the worke of the Lord negligently The Church of the Laodicea is seuerely threatned to be Spewed out n Reuel 3 16. of the mouth of Christ because it was neither hot
but they blush not with brazen faces and Iron fore-heads to breake out into all prophanenesse Let these take heede y Math. 10 33 least Christ bee ashamed of them when he commeth into his kingdome If wee be ready to confesse him and to professe his truth he will acknowledge vs before his Father which is in Heauen Obiect 2. Some say it is a note of hypocrisie to performe these duties and condemne them as Hypocrites that teach their Families These are euill Seruants that out of their owne mouthes may bee iudged Let them pray to haue their stony hearts taken away and new hearts giuen vnto them z 1 Ioh. 3 20. For if their hollow and hypocriticall hearts doe condemne them God is greater then their harts and knoweth all thinges And let them take heede they sit not in iudgement vpon others least with the same measure that they mete it bee measured to them againe Let them iudge nothing before the time but reserue iudgement to the Iudge of the whole world Obiect 3. Others say it will let and hinder their Seruants worke wee must haue so much praying that we shall haue little working These men can alot and alow no time for the Lord but thinke euery houre lost that is not spent in businesse of the World and affaires of this life These are like to prophane Saule who when the Philistims pressed toward him and hee was to aske counsell of the Lord a 1 Sa. 14 19. Hee commaunded the Priest to with-draw his hand that is he saide vnto him the season serueth not to seeke vnto GOD wee cannot spend the time in calling vppon him let vs goe vnto the battell and fight against our Enemies These men are like to wretched Pharaoh when Moses called vppon him b Exod. 3 4. to let the people goe into the Wildernesse to serue and sacrifice to the Lord he is charged to make them idle and to cause them to surcease from their workes These men are like to couetous Iudas c Iohn 12 4. who when Mary annointed Christes feete complained of the wast and said Why was not this Oyntment solde for three hundred pence and giuen to the poore Wherefore our Sauiour answereth such in his reply to Martha who was much troubled and cumbred about much seruing d Luke 10 41 One thing is needfull Mary hath chosen the good part which shall not be taken away from her Nay to be instructed in true Religion and to set out a time for calling vpon the Name of God is so farre from hindring our Seruants worke that it shall further it and giue a blessing vnto it We are commaunded to meditate in the Law of the Lord day and night e Iosh 1 8. that so wee may make our way prosperous and haue good successe in the workes of our hands And the Prophet teacheth That except the Lord builde the House and watch the Citty the labour of the Builder and of the Watch-man is in vaine Obiect 4. Others say they shall bee mocked taunted and scorned by the World they shall be tearmed Precisians they shall be called Puritans But wee must not seeke to please men by running into the displeasure of God For oftentimes it falleth out through the iust iudgement of God that whilst we hunt after the pleasure and fauour of men against God wee haue the fauour neither of God nor Men. The Apostle saith of himselfe writing to the Galathians f Gal. 1 10. If I should yet please Men I were not the Seruant of Christ It was the lot of Christ it hath beene the portion of all true Christians to bee scourged by the viperous and venomous tongues of vngodlie men that care not for God nor regard any Religion We are faint Souldiers not worthy to beare the Name of Christ if wee fly out of the fielde for euerie idle word and taunt of the tongue cast out against vs. Wee must prepare our selues against greater encounters g Ephe. 6 11. and arme our selues against wordes and Swords we must buckle both with the Deuill and with Deuilish men hand to hand except we will yeild him both our bodies and Soules to our destruction Obiect 5. Some say they cannot bring the vnlearned to knowledge and that youth are stubborn they wil be youth still and we were once youths they should hardly keepe any Seruants if they should strictly tye them to this order nay they should fly the Parish rather then beare this yoake I aunswere first let vs remember that GOD giueth the knowledge of his Mysteries euen to the simple and lowly minded that feare him Secondly consider that young men are commanded h Eccle. 12 1. to remember their Creator in the daies of their youth and shall giue an account of all thinges vnto God As for their stubbornnesse the word of God is the best remedy to bend them and make them pliable vnto all goodnesse so that the Prophet saith i Psal 119 9. Wherewith shall a young Man redresse his way In taking heede thereto according to thy word But if they bee so stiffely and stubbornely minded that they will not be reclaimed and reformed their roome is better then their company If admonitions will not winne them they are to bee auoyded thy house is better without them then with them Neither are we to feare their flying away and departing to another place for if this course of instruction were taken in hand euery where the Obiection were answered and their mouths stopped For whether would they goe to escape this training vp in the principles of Religion It is certaine they could turne themselues no whither but it would meete with them in all places Obiect 6. Others obiect our Fathers did well enough without obseruing any such order I trow you will not condemne them Why should wee make ourselues wiser then they They troubled not themselues or their Children with learning of Catechismes and wee see men doe well enough prosper in the World yet busie not their heads about this I answere if they meane those forefathers and Ancestors whose steps we should follow as Adam Abraham Isaac Iacob Iosua Dauid and diuers others which were indeede our Fathers then we may bee assured out of the word of truth that these busied and bestirred themselues this way they taught their Children they instructed their families they reformed disorders they remooued the disordered If they meane our forefathers that liued in latter times when darkenesse couered the earth no maruell if they were not vrged thereunto themselues or that they vrged not others for then they liued at the dyet of the Prelats and nothing pleased the Prelats better then the ignorance of the people k Math. 15 14 they were the blinde Leaders of the blinde they could neither enter into the Kingdome of heauen themselues nor suffer those that would enter Notwithstanding we will not meddle with condemning our forefathers neither will
vs and the Gulfe of his wrath ready to swallow vs we shall cry out for one drop of Grace for one drop of Faith for one drop of comfort to refresh our pining Soules and to deliuer vs from the shaddow of death Now is the time to desire and seeke after grace if we let slip the present occasion offered vnto vs we shall afterward cry out for it and complaine of the want of it and yet shall neuer attaine vnto it Thus was it with the rich Man when he entreated Abraham to haue mercy on him and to send Lazarus that he might dip the tip of his Finger in Water to coole his tongue beeing tormented in that Flame Abraham answered Sonne remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore hee is comforted and thou art tormented Thus was it with the foolish Virgins who slumbred and slept and regarded not to procure and prouide Oyle h Mat. 25 10 11. for their Lampes for when the Bridegroome was come and had shut the Gate they cryed in vaine Lord Lord open vnto vs who receiued their answere Verily I say vnto you I know you not Thus it shall be with those in the last day which shall say i Math. 7 22. Lord Lord haue we not in thy Name prophesied And by thy Name cast out Deuils And by thy Name done many great workes For then hee will professe vnto them he neuer knew them depart from me ye workers of iniquity So shall it be with those that haue neglected the time and passed ouer the opportunity k Luke 14 25 26. who begin to say Lord open vnto vs we haue eaten and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our Streets to whom he shall say I know you not whence ye are Let vs all be wise and beware by their examples that we do not delay the time from day to day Let vs craue this guift of God that we may haue it in time of neede and in the houre of tentation If now while we haue time we shall desire and labour to obtaine grace wee shall not neede heereafter to stand in feare of Death or to cry out through horror and despaire O that I had one drop of Faith O that I had one drop of Grace Vse 2. Secondly seeing grace is in the first place aboue and before all other blessings to be desired and required at the handes of God let vs learne the high-way and enter into the beaten path that leadeth to this Grace and when wee haue learned it let vs walke in it in a constant and setled course Now the steppes l Three steps leading vs to finde Gods grace that wee must make to trace it and finde it out are these The first degree or steppe is to dislike our selues and to bee in disgrace with our selues Euery man naturally is in loue with himselfe and his owne shadow But wee must cast off this selfe-loue that cleaueth so fast and hangeth on and learne to know our selues and to hate our selues No man can magnifie Gods mercy sufficiently vntill hee attaine to the knowledge of his owne misery Daniell a man gratious and dearely beloued of GOD acknowledged this in his prayer and as it were ascendeth into the presence of God by this steppe m Dan. 9 7 8. O Lord righteousnesse belongeth vnto thee and vnto vs open shame as appeareth this day to our Kings to our Princes to our Fathers and vnto euery Man of Iudah because we haue sinned against thee This was the course that the Prodigall Sonne tooke and the way that he entred g Luke 15 21 Father I haue sinned against Heauen and before thee and am no more worthy to bee called thy Sonne Thus did the poore Publican insinuate himselfe into the grace of God and departed iustifyed in his sight he smote his breast saying h Luke 18 13 Lord be mercifull to me a Sinner To be proud and puffed vp with our owne righteousnesse and to trust in our owne wisedome is the fore-runner of a fall The second step to obtaine grace is after we haue felt this want and misery in our selues wee must not rest there but earnestly desire and inwardly hunger and thirst after the loue and fauour of God in Christ aboue all earthly thinges First we must feele our selues empty before our Soules can haue this hunger Our Sauiour describing true blessednesse to his Disciples and shewing wherein it consisteth contrary to the iudgement of the World hee saith i Math. 5 3 6. Blessed are the poore in Spirit that is that know themselues poore that feele themselues poore and voide of righteousnesse and then he addeth Blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be filled We must k Iohn 6 27. and 4 14. hunger after the meat that neuer perisheth wee must thirst after that Well of Water which springeth vp vnto euerlasting life If wee neuer hunger after grace we shall neuer haue grace The whole desire l Math. 9 12. not the Phisition but they that are sicke They m Iohn 9 41. which thinke they see are made blind and their sinne remaineth Lastly it is required of vs to lay hould by the hand of a true Faith vpon the grace and mercy of God in Christ Iesus offered vnto all of vs in the promises of the Gospell generally and learne to apply them to our selues particularly Christ calleth those n Mat. 11 28. that are weary and heauy laden promising to ease end refresh them In the last and great day of the Feast Iesus stood and cryed saying o Iohn 7 37. If any man thirst let him come vnto me and drinke He teacheth p Mark 16 16 That he that shall beleeue and be Baptized shall be saued These are generall promises these require particular application Wee cannot receiue them into our hearts and make them our owne except we lay houlde of them by a speciall Faith This liuely Faith bringeth Christ home to vs and openeth the doores of our Soules to entertaine him If then we feele our owne miserie if we hunger after mercie and if wee apply the promises of the Gospell to vs particularly we shall be assured to finde the grace of God and tast plentifully and abundantly of his loue So many as truely desire grace must looke to attaine it by these meanes and climb vp to the top of it by these steps and degrees as by certaine staires Vse 3. Thirdlie seeing grace is first of all to bee craued it directeth vs to obserue and keepe a good order in seeking and crauing thinges at the hands of God We are taught first to seeke his grace and fauour as the roote and Fountaine and then peace welfare and other blessings He that will receiue fruit from the tree must come to the roote and body before he can come to the braunches so if we would haue peace health
contrary to the Doctrine deliuered by himselfe contrary to the rest of the holy Scriptures and contrary to the Articles of our Faith Contrarie to himselfe because he teacheth i Rom. 10 13 14. that we cannot call vpon any whom we do not know out of Gods word and beleeue to be both able and willing to help vs saying Whosoeuer shall call on the Name of the Lord shall be saued how then shall they call on him on whom they haue not beleeued Where he reasoneth thus that we must beleeue onely in God and therefore pray onely to God Hee should be contrary to other Scriptures because we are k Heb. 4 16. taught by them To come with boldnesse to the Throne of Grace therefore the inuocation of Saints is vaine and needlesse seeing we haue a free accesse and bold approching vnto God through Christ againe they are l Ier. 17 5. Curssed that trust in man and make flesh their Arme and so with-draw their heart from the Lord. Christ calleth vs vnto himselfe and commaunded m Iohn 16 20 vs to aske the Father in his Name for the Father himselfe loueth vs. He should be contrary to the Articles of Faith wherein we are taught to beleeue onely in God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost Againe such as are not obstinately blinded and peruersely disposed may easily distinguish the Apostles words and see that he referreth not Faith both to Christ and the Saints but Faith to Iesus Christ and loue to the Saints For after that he had commended Philemon for two chiefe guifts of God Faith and Loue in both which consist the perfection of a Christian man he assigneth to eyther of them their propper subiect namely that Faith is in our Lord Iesus Christ and Charity is toward all the Saints which distinction and diuerse Relation may appeare by the Latine Interpretour and by their owne Rhemish Translation altering the preposition and reading it thus n In Iesu Christo in omnes Sanctos Loue and Faith in Iesus Christ and toward all the Saints Thirdly the Apostle else-where hauing occasion to mention these two graces of God he doth describe them distinctly by their seuerall obiectes and expresly referreth Faith to Christ and loue to the Saints o Ephe. 1 15. Col. 1 3 4. as writing to the Ephesians he saith Therefore also after that I hear of the Faith which ye haue in the Lord Iesus and loue toward all the Saints I cease not to giue thankes for you making mention of you in my prayers So in the Epistle to the Colossians We giue thankes to God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ alway praying for you since we heard of your faith in Christ Iesus and of your loue toward all Saints Compare these two places with the words of Paule in this place and wee shall see they serue as a Key to open this and doe vtter that plainely which here is spoken more darkely Thus we see by the way that the Scripture is the best Expositer and Interpretour of the Scripture p August lib. 2 de doctr Christ cap. 6. and that which is spoken obscurely in one Book is made euident and manifest in another Fourthly it were not hard to produce and alledge sundry authorities and testimonies of elder times thus distinguish the words as we doe and auouching that no Faith and confidence is to be put in any of the Saints q Theodoret Ambrose Theophylact as if the Apostle had saide I know how great Faith thou hast reposed in our Lord which hath saued vs and with how great Charity thou hast releeued them that are the Seruants of God and esteeme godlines Lastly Faith in the Saints cannot bee prooued and inuocation of them established and grounded from hence because the Apostle speaketh of the Saints liuing not departed in the Church Militant not Triumphant the Saints on Earth not in Heauen For the Saints on Earth want our help and craue our releefe to be extended toward them but they that are in glory and haue receiued their Crowne doe not stand in neede of our comfort and refreshing and therefore this is a weake foundation to builde the Popish Faith and beleefe in Saints that are dead and departed out of this life seeing the Apostle vnderstandeth it of one sort and they take it and stretch it to another The third question answered The third question is this why the Apostle restraineth Philemons loue to the Saints whereas loue is a common debt that we owe to all men as the Apostle saith r Rom. 13 8. Owe nothing to any Man but to loue one another for hee that loueth another hath fulfilled the Law Seeing therefore loue should not be restrained to the Saints as though we ought to shut vp our bowels of pitty and compassion from others and seeing we are not to despise our owne flesh but honour the Image of God engrauen in our Nature how is it that his loue which ought to comprehend all mankind and enlarge it selfe to all others is onelie mentioned to haue beene toward the distressed Saints and Members of the Church The reason is they which are of the Houshold of Faith are tyed to vs by a stronger and straighter band of friendship and familiarity and God commendeth them vnto vs more particularlie and so they ought to challenge the first place in declaring the fruits of our loue The Apostle doth direct vs to this point when he saith Å¿ Gal. 6 10. While we haue time let vs doe good vnto al men but especially to them which are of the Houshold of Faith We are charged to loue all but we must loue the Saints with a peculiar and speciall loue euen as heires with Christ and Members of the same body with vs. God requireth of vs to loue al men as his Creatures but the godly as his Children Though therefore our loue should be common and extend it selfe farre and neere into all the world yet there should bee certaine degrees and an order in our loue should be obserued We are commaunded to loue all but we are not commaunded to loue all alike We are bound to loue the godly and vngodlie but we are not bound to loue the vngodly as the godly the Reprobates as the elect the Vessels of wrath as the Vessels of honour the Children of Belial as the Children of God We are therefore heere directed whom we are most neerely and deerly to loue euen those that haue Christ dwelling in their harts and grace shining in their faces Contrary to the practise of worldly Men who onely loue such as are of this World their loue is like themselues prophane men a prophane loue carnall men a carnall loue they loue euill men for their euill because they partake with them in euill they hate the godly for their godlinesse because they are vnlike them and will not runne with them into all excesse of ryot t Psal 38
light of his countenance from vs yet he will restore vs to the ioy of his saluation as we see in the example of the Prophet he could not in his trouble receiue any true comfort m Psa 77 5 11 for howsoeuer hee did thinke vppon the Lord he was still troubled and though he prayed vnto him yet his spirit was full of anguish the helpe then which hee found in his present distresse was this Then I considered the dayes of old and the yeares of ancient time I called to remembrance my song in the night I remembred the workes of the Lord certainly I remembred thy wonders of olde So when we feele not that comfort and delight in praying that wee felt we must not wax faint giue ouer we must continue in the Prayer of faith though not of feeling Making mention alwaies of thee in my Prayers This is the second circumstance whereby the Thankesgiuing of the Apostle is amplified wherein hee witnesseth that he vsually prayed for Philemon and others Doctrine 3. It is the dutie of the faithfull to pray one for another In this practise of the Apostle we learn that the faithful are to pray one for another It is a duty required for al of vs not only to pray for our selues but to pray for others especially for those whose piety is knowne vnto them This we see plentifully prooued and confirmed in the example of Abraham he prayed for the Sodomites that they might be spared he prayed for Abimilech that he might be healed When the people desired Samuell to pray for them he saide a 1 Sam. 12 23 God forbid that I should sinne against the Lord and cease praying for you This Paule performed for the Romaines b Ro. 1 9 10. God is my witnesse whom I serue in my spirite in the Gospell of his Sonne that without ceasing I make mention of you alwaies in my Prayers beseeching that by some meanes one time or other I might haue a prosperous iourny by the will of God to come to you Heerunto we are directed by that forme of Prayer which Christ taught his Disciples and left vnto his Church directing vs to say Our Father giue vs forgiue vs lead vs not deliuer vs Not My Father giue me forgiue me lead me not deliuer mee So the Apostle shutting vp what Armour a Christian must vse against his spirituall enemies hee saith c Ephes 6 18. Pray alwaies with all manner Prayer and supplication in the Spirite and watch thereunto with all perseuerance and supplication for all Saints and for me that vtterance may be giuen vnto me that I may open my mouth boldly to publish the secret of the Gospell So hee d Colos 1 3. and 4. 3. prayed for the Colossians alwayes since hee heard of their faith in Christ and of their loue toward all Saints and hee required the Prayers of the Colossians againe for himselfe that God might open to him the doore of vtterance to speake the Mystery of Christ for which he was in bonds Thus the Apostle Iames doth teach vs to deale one toward another e Iames 5 14. Is any sicke among you Let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray for him and annoint him with Oile in the name of the Lord the Prayer of Faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp All which examples and Commaundements serue to guide vs to the performaunce of this speciall dutie that we are charged and commaunded to pray one for another and to be mindfull one of another in our best thoughts and most serious Meditations Reason 1. The Reasons heereof being rightly waighed will easily gaine our affections to yeeld to this truth For first the Communion and fellowship that is among the Saints requireth our Prayers one for another We beleeue that there is one body one head one company one inheritaunce one Brotherhood f Ephes 4 3. as we see Ephes 4. Endeuour to keepe the vnity of the spirite in the bond of peace there is one bodie and one spirit euen as ye are called in one hope of your vocation there is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all which is aboue all and through all and in you all Now what Communion were this among the members of Christ vnlesse we were straightly tyed to pray one for another and to performe this mutual dutie one for another So that the want of it is a plaine argument that we are not members of the same body seeing we desire not the good of them Reason 2. Secondly it is a most forcible weapon put into our hands whereby we are made able to helpe our selues and the rest of our Brethren which are fellow-souldiers with vs all of vs fighting vnder the same Captain Iesus Christ Their fighting is our fighting their retyring is our retyring their victory is our victory their loosing of the field is our loosing of the field For euerie one is not a Soldier by himselfe but wee are all ioynt-souldiers together wee ouercome together and we are put to the foyle together For euen as souldiers do not onely stand vpon their seuerall guards but vnite their forces togither whereby it commeth to passe that they who being seuered assunder and scattered abroad might easily be ouercome hauing ioyned their forces are vnconquerable and vnresistable so if we doo not onely looke to our selues and our owne footing but ioyne in Prayer with other they for vs and wee for them our spirituall enemies shall not be able to confront vs or confound vs but we shall make them turne their backes to vs and their faces from vs. The Apostle g Ephes 6 18. naming the Armour which we must all put on to defend our selues and our Brethren and to offend our enemy doth set down Prayer as a chiefe meanes to obtaine Gods assistance for our selues and others Reason 3. Thirdly Prayer is a Medicine to heale all maladies and a Plaister to cure all sores What Physition is it that hath such a receite What Chirurgion that hath such a salue The Maisters of that Art haue seuerall remedies for sicknesses and diseases that come of contrary causes but this Medicine will take away all our spirituall greefes and infirmities yea albeit they proceede of contrary causes So then it must needs be a soueraigne Salue that serueth to such seuerall purposes This is it which the Apostle Iames pointeth out vnto vs h Iames 5 16. Acknowledge your faults one to another and pray one for another that yee may be healed for the Prayer of a righteous man auayleth much if it bee feruent Seeing therefore wee are as a body standing of many members and seeing prayer is a weapon to defend vs and a medicine to heale vs it followeth that we must vse it one to helpe and succour another Vse 1. Now let vs see what are the Vses First we learne that the vse
Borrowers and whatsoeuer we enioy it is not ours onely but ours and the poores they haue their share and portion with vs. A Christian man though hee bee the freest man vpon the earth yet hee is a Seruant to all especially to the Church of God A Christian man is only a Free-man for he hath Christian liberty belonging ●o him a Iohn 8. 36. And he whom Christ maketh free he is free indeed He is freed b Rom. 8 1. Col. 2 16 20. Rom. 6 14. from ●he curse of the Law from the bond of perfect righteousnesse from the burden of Ceremonies from the bondage of sinne He hath a freedome in the voluntary c Luke 1 74. worship and seruice of God in the d T it 1 15. free vse of al the Creatures of God to come to the throne of grace e Rom 5 2. Ephe 3 12. with assurance to be heard for Christs sake and to enter into the Kingdome of glory after this life On the other side a wicked man is the greatest slaue and bondman that can be He is in bondage vnder sinne He is subiect to all punishments temporall and eternall He is in bondage vnder the Deuill f 2. Tim 2 26. who keepeth all impenitent sinners in his snares to do his his will He is in bondage vnder the wrath of God But to let this passe howsoeuer the faithfull are free men yet they are not onely the seruants of God but the seruants of men especially of the poore but most especially of the godly We are not to seeke our owne thinges but to referre the labours of our calling and the blessing of God vpon our labours to the common good of the Church whereof we are members This condemneth two sorts of men First such as seeke for nothing but to settle themselues and maintaine their owne estates to enrich themselues that they may liue in ease and wealth like the rich man mentioned in the Gospel these make no conscience of swearing forswearing lying dissembling oppressing and such like vnfruitfull workes of the flesh Th●se men may alleadge and pleade for themselues what they will but in truth they neuer yet knew what the Communion of Saintes meaneth The Apostle giueth this precept to all the Church g Phil 2. 4. Gal. 6. 2. Looke not euery man on his owne thinges but euery man also on the thinges of other men And in another place Beare yee one an others burden and so fulfill the Law of Christ So the Apostle Iames teacheth h Iam. 4. 3. that we often aske and receiue not because we aske amisse that we might consume the same vpon our pleasures Secondly it reproueth such as wast and consume the good creatures of God in riotousnes in drunkennes and in all excesse and when they are in brotherly loue and Christian compassion admonished do by and by answere what haue you to do with my spending I spend nothing but mine owne I spend none of yours Yes thou spendest that which is thy wiues thy Childrens thy families euen that which is Gods for which thou shalt giue an account at the great and dreadfull day of iudgement For when Christ shall come with thousands of his Angels to make an end of all thinges and say vnto thee i Luke 16 2 Come giue an account of thy Stewardship for thou maiest be no longer Steward wilt thou answere to the Iudge of all the world and to Christ that shall sit vpon the Throne thou hast wasted none of his goodes and abused none of his Creatures Thine owne heart and thine owne conscience as a thousand witnesses will giue in euidence against thee that thou hast taught thy tongue to lie They haue forgotten they are the Lords Stewards and shall giue an account to him as certainly of the bestowing of their substance as themselues take an account of their seruants of that portion of their goods which they haue committed vnto them Vse 3. Lastly seeing we are debters to all men but specially to the faithfull it reproueth such as shew the chiefest fruite of their loue and charity vpon the vngodly and prophane whom it were many times more charity to see punished then releeued and corrected then maintained Many there are among vs that haue no care or compassion of the poore Saintes though they see their wants and necessities yet they can shut their eyes and passe by them k Luke 10. 31. 32. as the Priest and Leuite did by him that was robbed by Theeues and lay halfe dead of his woundes But they will oftentimes be bountifull and shew their beneuolence vpon such as a great deale worse deserue it We see that our collections and distributions are made many times amisse and such as are most prophane are best prouided for Such as are idle Drones beastly Drunkards filthy Harlots and their gracelesse bastardes are more regarded and respected and haue better experience of our Almes then such poore as are godly minded heires by grace Saintes by calling and sonnes by faith This is an inuerting and ouerturning of the order that God hath set and setled to remaine among vs for this is his ordinance which he hath left with vs l Gal. 6. 10. While we haue time let vs do good vnto all men but specially to them that are of the houshold of Faith So the Apostle praieth for the Thessalonians that the Lord would encrease them and make them abound in Loue one toward another and toward all men First it must extend to such as are members of the Church and afterward to all others 1. Thes 3. 12. Loe heere is an Ordinance of God perpetually and inuiolably to be kept as a Law of the Medes and Persians which could not be altered we must do good to the distressed Saintes and poore seruants of God before others and more then to others God indeed is good to all m Psal 125. 9. and his mercy is ouer all his workes but in a speciall sort he n Psal 73. 1. is good to Israell and gratious to them that are pure of heart He saueth man and beast in body but he saueth the soules of his elect for euer He doth not onely preserue them temporally but he will glorify them eternally From hence such as are poore and haue godlines laid vp in their hearts must learne to beare the heauy burden of pouerty with patience seeing that howsoeuer they are neglected of men in the daily ministration yet they are highly respected of God and he vouchsafeth to leaue speciall direction for them aboue others to be sustained The greater our pouerty is the greater should be our piety that the more miserable we seeme to the world the more honourable we may be in the sight of God and of all good men True godlines will sweeten the bitternes of the Crosse which hath the promises of this life and of that which is to come But a poore estate ioyned with a prophane life
the Apostle set forth the fruits of Philemons loue most effectualy This is to be obserued of vs concerning the method and meaning of these words which are thus much in effect If thou wouldest more fully know the cause of my giuing thanks and the remembrance of thee in my praiers surely it is this that as God in mercy hath bestowed vpon thee a true sauing faith so my earnest desire and humble request is vnto him that the offices fruits and duties of thy faith may bee more and more communicated and fitted to the benefit of the poore Saints that so whatsoeuer good thing is to be found in thee through the grace and working of Iesus Christ may bee acknowledged manifested and published abroade to the glory of God the comfort of the faithful and the prouocation of others For indeed thy loue giueth me great occasion of much ioy because thou my brother dost not only cheere the Saints and reioycest them but cause their very harts and bowels euen their secret and inward parts to be refreshed reioyced Diuers points to be obserued out of these Verses But before we handle the doctrines arising in this diuision it shal not be amisse a litle to examine the force of the words and the maner that Paule hath obserued in the penning of them First obserue that he saith not simply thy faith may bee made effectuall but The fellowship of thy Faith that the fruit thereof might redown and returne to many Secondly he saith not barely That his Faith might be knowne but Euery good thing that is euery grace that was in his heart because when Faith is made knowne to others and brought into sight open light many other guifts of the Holy-Ghost are made knowne as Loue Patience Liberality and such like For the grace of Faith is neuer alone in the heart but is garded with a troope and company of all other vertues and when it commeth as it were out of the doores it commeth abroad with a band and traine of all other graces Thirdly he declareth the author and cause of all these blessings from whence they proceed to wit from Christ that we shold learne not to thinke or speake of any benefite without making mention of Christ Fourthly he draweth an argument or reason why hee prayed for the efficacy of his Faith from the former experience of his Loue which was as effectuall as his Faith teaching that the experience of grace already giuen should mooue vs to begge and craue the encrease of that Grace and a perseuerance and continuance in that grace and therefore wee must not bee so simple or sencelesse to imagine when we see grace bestowed vpon any man that we haue no more neede to pray for the encreasing and growing of that grace For wee must know that there are degrees of grace there is a first Grace there is a second Grace Now that Grace may bee multiplyed and a continuall encrease and accesse to it may be added we must make daily praiers we must pray that we may haue Faith and when we haue it we must not be secure but pray that it may be effectuall and working by loue Last of al in the commending of Philemons liberality x Theophil in hunc locum he dooth not nakedly say that he gaue to the poore but To the poore Saints for all that are poore are not poore Saints many are poore that are wretched and vngodly and haue no part of sanctification neither doth he say onely that he gaue to the Saints but he refreshed them and not only that he refreshed the Saints but the very bowels of the Saints Now let vs come to the Doctrines That the fellowship of thy Faith may bee made effectuall Heere the Apostle remembreth the matter and substance of his prayer what it was that hee besought and requested of God where we see hee affirmeth that it consisted in this that the fruits of his Faith might be encreased continually augmented Doctrine 1. It is our dutie to stirre vp our selus others to increase in good things We learne from this place that it is the duty of all men earnestly to desire wish and procure the good of others and to stirre vp our selues others to encrease in the graces of Gods spirit The growing and proceeding of our brethren in the best things should be sought for of vs. When Moses had word brought vnto him that som in the host did prophesy that is had receiued notable gifts of the spirit for the guiding and directing of his people he saide a Num. 12 29 I would to God that not only these but that all the Lords people were Prophets and that he would poure out his spirit vpon them The Apostle writing to the Thessalonians saith b 1 Thess 4 1. Furthermore I beseech you Brethren and exhort you in the Lord Iesus that ye encrease more and more as ye haue receiued of vs how yee ought to walke and to please God They had encreased already exceedingly they had gained in the Faith and were growne to a perfect age they receiue this Testimony and commendation c 1 Thess 1 6 7 8. 2 13. 5 1 2. 4 9 10. 3 10 11 that they became followers of the Apostles of the Lord They receiued the word in much affliction with ioy of the Holy-Ghost They were as ensamples to all that beleeue in Macedonia from them sounded out the word into al quarters they receiued it not as the word of men but as it is indeede the word of God which worketh in them that beleeue Touching the times and seasons he had no neede to write vnto them because they knew perfectly that the day of the Lord should come as a theef in the night Touching brotherly loue they had no neede he should write vnto them for they were taught of God to loue one another yet he prayeth to God still to encrease them and make them abound in loue one towardes another and toward all men yea he desired exceedingly night and day that he might see their face and might accomplish that was lacking in their faith Heereunto tendeth the exhortation that Paule giueth to Timothy d 1 Tim. 4 14 15. Despise not the gift that is in thee which was giuen thee by prophesie with the laying on of the hands of the company of the Eldership these things exercise and giue thy selfe vnto them that it may be seene how thou profitest among all men When the writer to the Hebrewes had reprooued the sluggishnesse of that people hee addeth e Heb. 6 1. Therefore leauing the Doctrine of the beginning of Christ let vs be led forward vnto perfection not laying againe the foundation of repentance from dead-workes and of Faith toward God All these places of Scripture serue to teach vs the truth of this Doctrine that we must all labour to perfection that wee may be perfect as our heauenly Father is
of God wee send our selues we are not sent of him We are our owne Messengers to doe our owne Message not the Embassadours of the eternall God But when hee hath put his worde in our mouths wee must goe to those that he hath sent vs d Ier. 1 7 8. and whatsoeuer hee commaundeth vs that wee must speake So when God had stretched out his hand and touched the mouth of the Prophet Ieremy hee sayde Bee not affraide of their faces for I am with thee to deliuer thee sayth the Lord. Thus hee speaketh to Ezekiell e Exek 3 8 9. I haue made thy Face strong against their Faces and thy Fore-head harde against their Fore-heades I haue made thy Fore-head as the Adamant and harder then the Flint Feare them not therefore neither bee affrayde at their lookes for they are a Rebellious house Secondly it teacheth them not to loose their Authoritie and so to shame their Calling and their Mayster that hath put them in that Calling bringing them-selues and their Ministry vnder the subiection and slauerie of others The Apostle by all meanes seeketh to magnifye his Ministery and to beautifie his Calling Hence he saith f 1 Cor. 9 1. Am not I an Apostle am not I free This reprooueth those that serue the lustes and pleasure of others and dare doe nothing to displease such as are in high place Thus Aaron in the absence of Moses offended who was at the commaundement of the people g Exo. 32 1 4. when they saide vnto him Make vs Gods to go before vs he receiued their golden earings and fashioned it with the grauing toole and made of it a Molten Calfe The like we see in Vriah the Priest h 2 Kings 16 2 10. when Ahaz who did not vprightly in the sight of the Lorde but walked in the way of the Kings of Israell saw the Altar that was at Damascus he sent vnto him the paterne of the Altar and the fashion of it and all the Workemanship thereof and hee made an Altar in all points like to that which the King had sent from Damascus This departing from the Commaundement of God to please the humour or honour of mightie men must be farre from vs. We haue a plaine way set before vs wee ought to walke in it wee must not decline eyther to the right hand or to the left hand We must not make marchandise of the word of God but deale faithfully with God and his people The Prophet Micah complaineth of such Prophets in his time as flattered the people in their sinnes i Mich. 2 11. And Prophesied vnto them of Wine and of strong drink and in such Prophets the people delighted The Lord chargeth Ieremy k Ier. 1 17. to trusse vp his loynes to arise and to speake to the Children of Israell all that he commaunded him not to bee affraide of their faces least he destroy him before them Let vs beware of such smooth tongues that flatter with their lippes and bring vs in danger of destruction Salomon teacheth vs l Prou. 29 5. That a man which flattereth his Neighhour spreadeth a Net for his steppes declaring thereby that as a Birde which is taken in the Net is in daunger of death so they which beleeue flatterers fall into great perilles of Soule of Bodie of Goods of good name of life Thirdly it teacheth the Ministers to take heede they abuse not their Authority and turne it into tiranny but employ it vnto edification not to the destruction of the Church or any member thereof This the Apostle plainly teacheth concerning himselfe m 2 Cor. 10 8 Though I should boast somwhat more of our authority which the Lord hath giuen vs for edification and not for your destruction I should haue no shame And in another place n 2 Cor. 1 24 Wee haue not Dominion ouer your faith but we are helpers of your ioy for by Faith ye stand We must remember and consider that we are vnder Christ we are his Substitutes and Lieutenants He is the cheefe Shepheard of the Sheepe We must not beare our selues o 1 Pet. 5 3. as Lords ouer his heritage but as ensamples to the flocke Christ himselfe testifieth that he was among them as one that p Luke 22 27 Math. 20 28. serued For the sonne of man came not to bee serued but to serue and to giue his life for the ransome of many Let vs haue the same mind in vs that was in christ Iesus let vs behaue our selues as Stewards not as Lords as Officers not as Princes as Ministers not as Vsurpers as Stewards not as Maisters of the house Vse 3. Lastly it serueth for instruction of the people that they despise not the Ministry of the word but alway readie to heare it with reuerence For wheresoeuer there is authority in the speaker there should bee feare and reuerence in the hearer They are Embassadors sent not from Man but from God they speake not in their owne names but in the name of God they publish not their owne Dreames or deuises but the Doctrine of God and therefore ought reuerently and obediently to be regarded Thus the Prophet teacheth vs to reason q Mal. 2 7. The people must heare the Lawe at his Mouth for hee is the Messenger of the Lerd of Hoastes True it is they are men that bring it but they are Messengers sent of GOD they are subiect to the same passions that wee are but God hath put his word in their hearts and in their mouthes and therefore both they and it must bee receyued with all reuerence and entertayned with the inwarde obedience of the soule Hence it is that our Sauiour Christ sayth r Luke 10 16 Hee that heareth you heareth me and he that heareth you heareth him that sent mee The Prophet teacheth that their feete are beautifull that bring gladde tydings of peace and bring glad tydinges of good things They are saide to be worthy of double honor and to teach the way of saluation If a man had lost a precious Iewell and Rich Pearle which was all the riches and substance of his house and beeing in this case should meete with a man that can tell him who robbed him of it where it is and how hee may come to haue it againe how would hee respect him and reward him A godly Minister is such a one vnto thee Å¿ Perk. of the Ministr who when Adam had lost himselfe and all his posteritie and that peerlesse Iewell of righteousnesse the whole wealth of our soules can truely tell vs who did steale it away from vs and how it is to bee recouered againe The Deuill is the Theefe Christ doth restore it Faith applyeth Christ the Word of God worketh Faith the Minister preacheth the word whereby we beleeue How well doost thou account of that Physitian and how highly doest thou esteeme of him who when thy health is lost and sicknesse falne vpon thee
truth of the word of God or not One man defending a truth is to be preferred before an hundreth others holding and vpholding an error or heresie and we are rather to beleeue z Luther lib contra Henr. Octa. Panormitan T it de elect can Significasti a poore and silly man grounding himselfe vpon the scriptures before a thousand Doctors building vpon humane Traditions and vnwritten verities If these men that are blinde themselues and looke vpon all things through other mens spectacles had liued in the daies of Eliah Micaiah and Ieremy when the truth of God was so often contradicted and ouerswaied by multitudes of men a 1 King 18 19 and 22 6. when for one true Prophet of God there were fiue hundreth false Prophets whom would they haue beleeued whom would they haue receiued whom would they haue condemned It would haue gone hard with the truth and beene euill spoken off by the euill mouths and malicious tongues of these partiall Iudges They would haue said Eliah is but one the Prophets against him are many are not they liker to see the truth then he Thus the faith of Christ and pure Religion is not waighed in the ballance of the Sanctuary nor measured with a iust Ephah and a true Hin but with false waights and deceitfull ballances which are an abomination vnto the Lord. In all causes and questions that rise the word of God must iudge Vse 3. Thirdly this giueth comfort and contentment to the meanest smallest of Gods Saints and putteth them in remembrance not to be discomforted and out of heart for their meane calling or for their low estate for they are nothing the lesse regarded of God or to be esteemed of his Church They haue as great an interest in all Gods blessings as the richest sort and many times a greater they haue as great a portion in Christ as the mightiest men and many times a greater For God b Luk 1 52 53. hath put downe the mighty from their seates and exalted them of low degree he hath filled the hungry with good things and sent away the rich empty What grace of God what meanes of saluation is hidden from these poore little ones so accounted off by the men of this world They haue interest in the word and Sacraments they haue free accesse to come into the glorious presence of God to pray vnto him and to poure out their supplications before him as well as they that swell with riches and abound in earthly thinges When God had made a couenant with Abraham and planted his Church in his family he gaue Circumcision as a signe and seale thereof not onely to Abraham but to all his house and commanded him to Circumcise c Gen 17 26 27. not onely himselfe and his seed but all the men of his houshold both borne in his house and bought with money of the stranger Whereby we see that the lowest of his seruants and bondmen that belonged vnto him haue as great right to the Couenant and as good a Title to the promises of God as he had in asmuch as they were assured by the commandement of God that the visible signe that was in their flesh was not in vaine The like we see in the Apostle writing to the Corinthians d 1 Cor 10 1 2 3 4. Moreouer bretheren I would not haue you ignorant that all our fathers were vnder that Cloud and all passed through that Sea and were all baptized vnto Moses in that Cloud and in that Sea and did all eate the same spirituall meate and did all drinke the same spirituall drink for they dranke of the spirituall Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ This people was a great body standing of many members some of them were the Elders of the people and the heads of the families others were of the lower sort and of inferiour degree yet they had alike priuiledge in the Sacraments and the Apostle fiue times remembreth that all of them were partakers of them This is it that e 1 Cor 7 21. 22. made him say in another place Art thou called being a setuant Care not for it for hee that is called in the Lord being a seruant is the Lords free-man likewise also he that is called being free is Christs seruant We see this in the members of our natural bodies some members are more high and honourable then others yet none are contemned We haue a care not onely of the head and hart of the hands and liuely parts but of the least and smallest that belong to the body e 1 Cor 12 22 23 24 25. Yea much rather those Members of the bodie which seeme to be more feeble are necessary and vpon those Members of the Body which we thinke most vnhonest put wee more honestie on and our vncomely partes haue more comlinesse on for our comely parts neede it not but GOD hath tempered the bodie together and hath giuen the more Honour to that part which lacked least there should bee any diuision in the bodie but that the Members should haue the same care one for another So ought none that belong to Christ Iesus to bee neglected Hee contemneth Christ himselfe whosoeuer contemneth the least member that belongeth vnto him This Christ our Sauiour sheweth f Math. 18 6. Whosoeuer shall offend one of these little ones which beleeue in mee it were better for him ehat a Mill-stone were hanged about his Necke and that hee were drowned in the depth of the Sea As this causeth contentment in the poor so it worketh Humility in the rich considering that their Honour Wealth Authoritie and such like priuiledges of the flesh cannot commend the more to God or to the Saintes but their soundnesse in Faith and sincerity in life according to the saying of the Apostle Iames g Iam. 1 9 10 Let the Brother of low degree reioyce in that he is exalted Againe He that is rich in that he is made low for as the flower of the grasse shall be vanish away The poorest man that is of base account and reckoning in the World hath as great and as good a Title to Christ as the greatest men that be They haue not so great a portion in outward blessings but they haue as great a part in Heauenly Graces Hee that hath Christ is a Rich man hee bringeth with him all thinges else for in him are hidde all treasures which we are bound to seeke after He that wanteth Christ h Reuel 3 17. is a poore begger if he had his house full of Siluer and Gold and possessed Mountains of Pearles and precious Stones The Apostle teacheth i Gal. 3 29. that If we be Christes then we are Abrahams seede and heyres by promise so that the poorest person that is in the Church if hee beleeue in Christ is in the place of Abraham and succeedeth him in the inheritance of the Kingdome of Heauen which is a greater Honour
He had compassion vpon them and shewed great loue toward them We see how Christ applyeth this to the Conscience of Peter e Iohn 21 15 16. willeth him to try his loue toward him by feeding his Sheepe and Lambes thereby assuring him that if he perswaded himselfe to loue Christ Iesus and yet was not carefull to teach his people he deceiued himselfe and lyed to the Holy-Ghost who would finde him out in his sinne This serueth to reproue sundry corruptions and to meete with many abuses in the Ministers that make them vnworthy of the name of Fathers and testifie that their hearts are empty of this vnfaigned loue that ought to bee in them towards Gods people whom they should affect as deare Children First f What Non-residency is it condemneth the wilfull and ordinary absence of the Pastor from his flocke that is committed to his care and charge whereby the duties of teaching and example of life in his owne person are neglected True it is there may iust and lawfull causes of the Pastors absence sometimes fall out so that the Church be not endamaged but as farre as is possible be sufficiently prouided for as sickenesse g Concil Mogunt Can. 25. August epist 138. Tripart hist lib 6. cap. 22. of body whereby he is restrained Church affayres whereby hee is hindered Persecution whereby he is enforced to flye Priuate affaires whereby he is necessarily constrained for a time to be absent but a wilfull long and continued Non-residency from that particular Congregation enioyned him to feed is euidently conuinced by many Reasons grounded vpon the word of God and the practise of the Church of Christ The Scriptures of the olde and new Testament do directly forbid it The Lord saith by his Prophet Esay h Esay 61 6. Ezek. 44 8. Zac. 11 16 17 I haue set Watchmen vpon the walles O Ierusalem which all the day and all the night continually shall not cease ye that are mindfull of the Lord keepe not silence and giue him no rest till he repaire and till he set vp Ierusalem the praise of the world The Prophet Ezekiell is plentifull in this argument who speaking of vnfaithfull Leuites saith Ye haue not kept the ordinances of mine holy things but you your selues haue set others to take the charge of my Sanctuary So the Prophet Zachary setteth downe this as a great iudgement of the Lord I will raise vp a Shepheard in the Land which shall not looke for the thnig that is lost nor seeke the tender Lambes nor heale that which is hurt nor feede that which standeth vppe but hee shall eate the flesh of the fat and teare their Clawes in peeces It is noted of Salomon i 1 Kings 6 10 1 Chro. 28 11 12 13 19. when hee builded the Temple to bee the place of preaching and Prayer which he did according to the word of God he also builded Houses and Chambers round about the Temple ioyned vnto it to teach the Priestes and Leuites that they should bee neere vnto their charges For this cause also it is expressed k 1 Sa. 1 9 12 That Eli the Priest of God sate at the doore of the Tabernacle to espy the manners and to aunswere the doubts of those that came and resorted vnto him And the Apostle Paul expressing the Priests function saith l 1 Cor. 9 13. They did minister about the holy things and did wait at the altar He m Prosedreuontes vseth a word of great force and strength that bindeth them to a continuall residency and sitting at their charge If wee come to the New Testament we shall see sundry directions importing and implying the Pastours presence with his people The Apostle speaking to the Elders of Ephesus n Act. 20. 28 29. saith Take heed vnto your selues and to all the Flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made you Ouer-seers to feede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne bloud for I know this that after my departing shall grieuous Wolues enter in among you not sparing the Flocke The Apostle Peter likewise exhorteth the Elders o 1 Pet 5 2 3 Feede the Flocke of God which dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind The Apostle to the Hebrewes warneth the Church p Heb. 1 3 17. To obey them that haue the ouer-sight of them and submit themselues for they watch for their Soules as they that must giue accounts It is a great wonder that negligent Pastors reading these places and considering these charges laid vpon their shoulders can so easily shake them off or so slightly passe them ouer or so soone forget them They may seeme more then sufficient to conuince them of want of loue of abundance of couetousnesse of excesse of idlenesse of hardnesse of heart of contempt of the word which they should teach to others A great and heauy iudgement of God is vpon them that can passe ouer this duty without feare and trembling that can see neyther the daunger of their owne soules nor the danger of the peoples Soules through want of instruction Againe the Titles giuen to the Ministers vnder the Gospell as also to the Prophets and Priestes vnder the Law doe vrge diligence faithfulnesse and carefull attendance and consequently the personall presence of the Pastor They are called q Ephe. 4 11. Shepheards r Ezek. 33. Watch-men Å¿ Luke 12 42. Stewards t Heb. 13 17. Captains u 1 Cor. 3 9. Builders x 2 Cor. 5 12. Embassadours and such like so that though they teach oftentimes by themselues and continually and constantly by others they are not excused The office of the Minister is set forth in the Picture of a Shepheard who by reason of the multitude of rauenous Wolus other hurtfull Beasts keepeth watch day and night ouer his flocke He is a Watch-man set in his Watch-Tower to discry the enemy and to giue warning of the danger He is a Steward to prouide for the Family and to giue them their portion of meat in due season He is a Captaine of the Lords Hoast to lead them into the obedience of godlinesse and to goe before them in example of life He is a Builder to frame them and fit them to be stones in the Lordes building He is an Ambassadour to deliuer the will of him that sent him and to speak being called as the words of God These comparisons as they serue to teach diligence and continuance in preaching so they are forcible to presse him to attend vpon his charge that attendeth vpon him Thirdly the Apostle speaking of the office of the Minister saith y 2 Cor. 2 16. Who is sufficient for these thinges When he hath done all he can and imployed himselfe to the vtmost of his power yet he shall come farre short of his duty how much more when hee is ordinarily absent from his charge
which requireth his ordinary presence Fourthly it is against the order of Nature the rule of reason and the law of Iustice to take wages for that worke which he doth not performe and to eate where he doth not labour It is a great wrong and iniury done to those that labour in feeding the Flocke to bee denyed to eate of the Milke of the Flocke to do the seruice and another to receiue the reward to take the Corne and to giue others the Straw to sow spirituall things and to be depriued of temporall thinges to beare the burden and to endure the heate of the day and other to come and take away the penny and price for which they couenanted It is a kind of theft to eate without labour and to feed themselues without taking paines Fiftly the danger is very great that groweth both to the Pastors and people by this sin of absence and want of attendance For if any of the Soules which belong vnto their charge doe perrish through their negligence and starue through want of foode they shall be arraigned as guilty of their death and destruction The Prophet Ezekell setteth downe the threatning of God z Ezek. 33 8. When I shall say vnto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt dye the death if thou dost not speake and admonish the wicked of his way that wicked man shall dye for his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Heereunto accordeth the saying of Christ a Math. 15 14 If the Blind lead the Blind both shall fall into the Ditch The losse of the b Ierom. epist ad Furiam flocke is the reproach of the Shepheard and the peoples destruction shall be the Pastors confusion And when the Pastor is absent the people wil soone decline from zeale to coldnesse fall from vertue to vice turne from the worship of God to Idolatry reuolt from the workes of piety to damnable security Let a man with-hold his hand and cease from sowing good seede or vnder-sow his ground by sparing his Corne Thistles and Weedes will spring vp in stead thereof Let a man haue food withdrawne from him and abstaine from nourishment that feedeth the body he shall be filled with winde and fall into weaknesse When Moses was absent from the Children of Istaell but forty daies while he was talking with God in the Mountain c Exod. 32 1. they committed horrible Idolatry and turned the glory of God into the similitude of a Calfe that eateth hay Iehoash the King of Iudah d 2 King 12 2 3. 2 Chro. 24 17 did that which was good in the sight of the Lord all his time that Iehoiada the Priest was with him and taught him but after his death both King and Princes people left the house of the Lorde God of their Fathers and erected Groues and serued Idols so that wrath came vpon them because of this their trespasse This also experience taught the Apostle in the Church of the Galathians while he was present e Gal. 4 18 20. they kept the Faith they turned neither to the right hand nor to the left they did cleaue to the Doctrine of Christs Gospell but when he was gone the false Apostles entred and tooke occasion by his absence to sow Tares among the Wheat and to corrupt the truth with Leauen of false Doctrine When the Shepheard is gone the Wolues may safely enter into the Sheepefold not sparing the Flocke When the Watch-man is gone or fallen asleepe the Enemy may enter and sacke the Citty When the Husbandman that sowed good seede in his fielde is departed f Math. 13 25 the enuious man came and sowed Cockle and Darnell among the Corne. While the people haue the presence and residence of their faithfull Pastor to feede them and to goe in and out before them both in Doctrin and example yet such is the weaknesse of Flesh the corruption of Nature the strength of sin the subtilty of the Enemy the vanity of the world the vnconstancy of humane thinges that they are ready to fall and to giue ouer albeit I say that he be with thē and conuersant among them and remain in the midst of them If then much euill be done while the Ouer-seers are present much more will be committed while they are absent while there is none to stay them while the Bridle is cast in their owne neckes Thus Moses proueth that the people would corrupt themselues and turn from the right way after his death because they had beene rebellious and stiffe-necked he being aliue Deut. 31 27 29. I g Deut. 33. know thy rebellion and thy stiffe-necke behold I being yet aliue with you this day ye are rebellious against the Lord how much more then after my death Sixtly the necessity of hauing the presence of the Pastour continually to call vpon the people appeareth heerein because the danger of the Wolfe is continuall and therefore the vse of the Shepheard is continuall The Apostle telleth the Elders of Ephesus h Acts 20 29. That he knoweth this that aftcr his departing grieuous Wolues would enter in among them not sparing the Flocke Besides Sathan is busie in tempting subtile in vndermining crafty in deceiuing malicious in spoyling and cruell in destroying he compasseth the earth too and and fro and walketh vp and downe in it Now the more diligent the spirituall enemy is the more violent and watchfull ought the Pastour to be If the good man of the House knew at what houre the Theefe would come to rob and to steale doubtlesse he would watch and not suffer his house to bee broken downe Hence it is that Peter saith Be sober and watch i 1 Pet. 5 8 for your aduersary the Deuill as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may deuour And surely this is the cause that in some places the people are defiled with all abhominations in other places they are peruerted and seduced by Iesuits and Seminary Priests and in all places grow cold and carelesse in Religion because they want meanes to guide them and stay them in the right way they haue not zealous Pastours to stirre them vp to godlinesse and to driue away the Wolfe farre from them Seuenthly it is of euill report a note of couetousnesse or euill suspicion of it and giueth great offence to the Church of God For where there is an vnnecessary absence of the Minister from his cure and charge hee giueth occasion to suspect that he rather desireth to feed vpon them then to feed them to seeke theirs then them to prey vppon them then to pray with them to possesse their goods then to win their Soules We are commanded to abstaine from all appearance of euill And the Apostle approoueth his Ministery to the consciences of the Corinthians by this k 2 Cor. 12 14 That hee sought not theirs but them Eightly the inconuenience is great that commeth by this absence it is the cause of a Vagrant
beseech you Brethren that ye acknowledge them that labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you that ye haue them in singular loue for their workes sake The fift Commaundement calleth and comprehendeth all Pastours vnder the Name of Parents to teach vs to know those that haue begotten vs vnto the Lorde and to note the time the meanes and the person that hath brought that blessing vpon vs. It hath beene an old and ancient custome for men to celebrate their birth-day n Math. 14 6. as we see in Herod who vsually made a great Feast at it much more oughtest thou to make thy New-birth day wherein thou was borne againe and made the Childe of God a day of solemnity neuer to be forgotten and to reioyce therein aboue all thinges and times in the World This reprooueth those that regard not to heare them nor care to attend to their Doctrine For as God condemneth the absence of the Pastour from his owne people so he reprooueth the absence of the people from their owne Pastour Some hold of Paule some of Cephas some of Apollos and delight more in the guifts of a Straunger then in the Ministerie of him whom the Lord hath placed ouer them Obiection But may wee heare none but our owne Pastours What if they be vnapt to teach and vnable to instruct Answere I answere we may heare others and prooue many Spirits but we ought not willingly to bee absent from our owne assemblies where our presence and company is especially required I am no Patron of vnpreaching Prelats I wish them eyther reformed or remooued eyther amended or depriued If a man want foode at home he may lawfully aske Bread and take releefe abroad but when a man is plentifully stored or at least competently and conueniently prouided for at home it is a shame to take the Bread that is appointed for others Be it that other Pastours haue greater guiftes of learning of zeale of vtterance then our owne yet wee are bound to heare them to pray for them to attend vpon them as they attend vpon vs. He hath commanded euery o Prou. 5 15. Man to eate his owne Bread and to drinke the Water of his owne Cesterne contenting himselfe with his own estate not enuying the better estate of another Wee see how mercifully the Lord dealeth with those of the lower and poorer sort who haue little and the same homely prouision of fare in comparison of others that are full fed and fare deliciously euery day and are charged with many Children to bring vp yet p Deut. 8 2 Dan. 1 13 15. both they and their children are as healthfull in body and as strong in their Limbes as comely in countenance and as well graced in their outward persons as they that abound in Wealth and their Cuppes ouer-flow in all the dainties and delicacies of the World So we may be well assured that the Lord will much more prouide for our Soules and blesse that prouision that he hath appointed for vs albeit it be but meane and simple When a man is sicke in body he will preferre that Phisition which knoweth best the state of his body who is most likely to doe him most good although perhaps some other be better learned and deeper skilled Thus ought it to be with vs our owne Pastour which is the Physition of our Soules knoweth best our estate seeth whereof wee haue neede vnderstandeth the Nature of our disease and consequently is best able to restore vs to health againe He that hath more learning may profit by him that hath lesse may profit I say euen in knowledge For the Lord speaking by the mouth of his Minister whom hee hath in some measure furnished with guifts many times teacheth the wise by the simple and the great learned man by him that is inferiour to himselfe The Lord Iesus q Iohn 1 29. was oftentimes present at the Sermons of Iohn The Prophets that were extraordinarily called disdained not the Ministery of the Priestes r Hag. 2 11 12. but were content to learne the law of them This is the Lordes doing to aduance his owne glory and to humble the highest Teachers of the Church The Apostle hoped to profi● by the Romaines as ſ Rom. 1 12. they should by him Euery Congregation or Parish should consist of so many Christians as can meet at one assembly The Apostles directed by the Spirit of God were the Authours of this diuision and distinction who hauing conuerted many to the Gospell separated them and ordained them Elders not onely according to the number of their Citties t Reasons why the people should attend their owne Pastours but also according to their seuerall multitudes which are called Churches For euen as God hath distributed the Ciuill State of the World into Kingdomes Prouinces Shires Citties and other Dominions and hath ranged them into seuerall meetings so he hath diuided his Church into certaine and seuerall assemblies for the better ordering and edifying of them and therefore the distinction of particular Churches is not of humane inuention but of diuine institution Hence it may be concluded and inferred that one Pastour cannot be ouer all assemblies nor all assemblies vnder one Pastour Euery Shepheard must haue his owne Flocke and euery Flocke must know his owne Shepheard There is a neere band and mutuall coniunction betweene these two The Minister is charged with his owne people by the ordinance of God he must attend the Flock committed to his care and Cure ouer which the Lord hath made him Watch-man and Ouer-seer This is the knot that tyeth the people fast to their owne Pastour Euery one in the Ciuill State knoweth his owne Citty and to what company he and his whole house doth belong Euery Company in the Citty knoweth to what iurisdiction he belongeth So it ought to be in the Church of Christ euery particular Christian should be annexed vnto one certaine assembly and bee there enrolled as a member of that society to liue vnder the Ministery and gouernment thereof For where shall we rather hope to receiue good then vnder that Ministery which the Lord hath set ouer vs Or from whom rather shall we expect the blessing of God then from him whose labours he hath promised to blesse Hence it is that the Apostle saith u Heb. 13 17 Obey them that haue the ouer-sight of you and submit your selues for they watch for your Soules as they that must giue accounts that they may doe it with ioy and not with greefe for that is vnprofitable for you Heere he addeth many reasons as it were vpon an heape to vrge vs to this duty If they watch for our Soules we also ought to waite vpon them If that they must render an account for our Soules we must also render an account of their labours bestowed vpon vs. If they must doe it with ioy and not with greefe we are charged by our obedience
Ministry as forcible and powerfull to his own soule as euer he perceiued the Ministry of another The threatninges of God denounced by his owne mouth in the name of GOD haue made him shake the consolations that he hath pronounced haue entred into his soule and refreshed his bowels And of this we haue from time to time to our owne comfort a blessed experience Besides if the Lord would blesse other wayes and means to the Minister who is necessarily restrained by the commandement of God the discharge of his calling from the hearing of others what is that to the people who are charged to heare the Law from their mouthes and no way hindred from the performance of this duty so that they must followe the way that God hath left vnto them that is to attend to the ordinance which hee hath chalked out vnto them Obiection 4. Fourthly it may be saide that Christ appointed reading to be an ordinary meanes to beget Faith when he sendeth out his Apostles into the world to i Math. 28 14 teach all Nations which includeth a commaundement to teach them by writing as well as by worde and consequently implyeth that the people should be taught as well by reading their writings as by hearing their preachings to come vnto faith Heereupon it is that Christ willeth the people to search k Iohn 5 39. and 20 31. Luke 16. the Scripture because in them they thought to haue eternall life they did testifie of him And the Apostle Iohn saith These things are written that yee might beleeue that Iesus is that Christ that sonne of God and that in beleeuing ye might haue life through his name So Abraham saide to the rich man They haue Moses and the Prophets let them heare them Answere I aunswere the commandement giuen to the Apostles concerneth principally the preaching of the Gospell by word of mouth and liuely voice vttered in the hearing of the nations and therefore some of them wrote more some of them lesse some of them nothing at all But if the commandement had beene as general for writing as for preaching none of the Apostles would haue omitted it nor could haue stayed their pennes without a manifest breach of their owne duty and Gods commandement Now so farre as their writing was one kind of teaching and included in that word the meaning is for confirmation preseruation of that truth which they deliuered preached among them Thus the Apostle speaketh to the Corinthians l 1 Cor. 15 1 2 I declare vnto you the Gospell which I preached vnto you which ye haue also receiued and wherein ye continue whereby ye are saued if ye keepe in memory after what manner I preached vnto you except ye haue beleeued in vaine Likewise writing to the Romaines m Rom. 15 14 15. I my selfe am perswaded of you my Brethren that ye also are full of goodnesse filled with all knowledge and are able to admonish one another neuerthelesse I haue somwhat boldly after a sort written vnto you as one that putteth you in remembrance thorough the grace that is giuen me of God So the Apostle Iohn saith n 1 Iohn 2 21 I haue not written vnto you because ye know not the truth but because ye know it that no lye is of the truth Whereby we see that they wrote to those to whome before they had preached to confirme them in the truth which they had imbraced and receiued They did not write to them that were wholly ignorant of the truth and had neuer heard the Gospell but to such as they hadde taught to the end that either standing in it they might be established or being falne from it they might be recouered and reclaimed Thus he commendeth o 1 Thes 3 12 the Thessalonians because they had kept all the ordinances and traditions receiued from him and thus he telleth the Galathians p Galath 1 6. That he maruailed much that they were so soon remoued away vnto another Gospell from him that had called them in the grace of Christ It remaineth therefore to answere such testimonies as are alledged to iustifie the sufficiency of reading and to make it an ordinary meanes of saluation Touching the place Iohn 5. commanding the searching of the scriptures Christ Iesus in the same referreth them to the Scriptures or worde written to correct their iudgements touching himselfe his person and offices For whereas they beleeued not the Sermons of Christ and the Lord Iesus could not safely referre them to the chaire of the Scribes and Pharisees who were grossely deceiued and maliciously blinded in that Mystery there remayned onely the reading and searching of the Scriptures that thereby they might learne the truth of his Sermons Againe where the Apostle saith These things were written that ye might beleeue Iohn 20. it is to be vnderstood of the Myracles of Christ wrought for confirmation of his Doctrine and for strengthning of faith as appeareth in the words immediately going before q Iohn 20 30. Many other signes also did Iesus in the presence of his Diseiples which are not written in this Booke And that this is the true and right end of Myracles apeareth by the Apostle to the Hebrews where he sheweth that the Gospell began first to be preached by the Lorde and afterward was confirmed vnto vs by them that heard him r Heb. 2 4. God bearing witnesse thereto both with signes and wonders and with diuers Myracles gifts of the Holy-ghost according to his owne will Lastly where it is saide They haue the Bookes of Moses and the writings of the Prophets let them heare them Luke 16. This is the summe of all our Sermons and preachings we preach nothing out of the Law and the Prophets but both Moses and the Prophets must bee expounded and applyed The Eunuch f Act. 8 30 31 sitting in his Chariot had Moses and the Prophets and read them as he sat yet when Phillip came to him and asked Vnderstandest thou what thou readest He answered How can I without a guide Furthermore the reading of the Scriptures is not heere opposed against the preaching of them but against Visions and Apparitions of the dead as the Prophet speaketh t Esa 8 19 20 When they shall say vnto you Enquire of them that haue a spirit of diuination and at the Soothsayers which whisper and murmure should not a people enquire at their God From the liuing to the dead To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Obiection 5. Fiftly if the word preached bee the ordinary meanes of bringing vs vnto sanctification and so to saluation then where it is not there is not ordinarily saluation and consequently no Church visible where no Minister is Heerby we shall condemne many particular Congregations to be no visible churches because they want the publicke preaching of the word
danger of thy life it may be taken from thee and thou from it which maketh it to bee but a shadow of true gaine But the profit of godlinesse is of a contrary Nature if once we haue gotten this Pearle the Theefe cannot steale it the moth cannot corrupt it the Sea cannot drown it the rust cannot fret it the Land cannot loose it the length of time cannot consume it the greatnesse of danger cannot take it from vs the vnfaithfulnesse of seruaunts the subtlety of enemies the fraud of false Brethren the force of the mighty the violence of the Oppressor the partiality of the Iudge the wresting of the Lawe can neuer depriue vs or debarre vs of this benefite yea b Cicer. pro Archia poeta that which an Heathen man saide once of humaine learning may more truly and iustly be spoken of godlinesse which indeed is true learning the which whosoeuer wanteth what Ornaments of Nature and Art soeuer otherwise he hath is vtterly vnlearned nay a starke foole It will follow vs as a sweete guide abroad to solace vs it will stay with vs a pleasant companion to delight vs at home it will lye with vs as a bed-fellow in the night to teach vs whereon to meditate it will sit downe with vs as a guest at the Table to direct vs it wil bee with vs as a skilfull Physitian in sicknesse to comfort vs it will sticke and stand to vs in prosperity to humble vs it will cleaue fast to vs in aduersity and in the euil day to refresh vs it will waite vppon vs in death it will descend with vs into the graue it will ascend with vs into heauen and alwayes follow vs from place to place as the shadow doth the body This made the Apostle Iohn say Blessed are they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Reuel 14 13. To conclude therefore so often as wee thinke of true Religion or remember the day of our conuersion we must think with our selues that we made the most blessed change that euer was made and hold this for a firme and sure principle that no gaine is like to this gaine no profit like to this profit Vse 2 Secondly seeing Christian Religion planted in the heart of a man maketh him good and helpfull to others who before was vniust and vnprofitable let euery one proue his effectuall calling and true conuersion by earnest seeking after the good of others and by a carefull abstaining from hurting troubling and wronging of others It is to be chosen as a better thing to suffer then to offer wrong to receiue then to requite to take then to giue Obadiah liuing in Ahabs Court is commended for the manifestation of his Faith by his Workes as the Tree that sheweth what it is by the fruites hee hid c 1 Kin. 18 13 the Prophets of God from the sword of the persecutor and fed them in the Caue in the time of famine The Prophet affirmeth and assureth that such shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the Lord and rest in his holy mountain as make much d Psal 15 4. of those that feare the Lord and honour them whome God hath honoured To this purpose the Apostle setteth this downe as a certain signe of our adoption that God accepteth vs as his sonnes and daughters to wit our loue to the Saints e 1 Ioh. 3 14 We know that we are translated from death to life because we loue the Brethren Euery one must be able to shew the soundnesse of his faith and the truth of his conuersion by the fruits of his calling f Math. 3 8. and by the workes of regeneration and amendment of life An iniurious man that loueth himselfe but not another that hath no care to doe good to his Brother but to himselfe onely is not yet truely conuerted to God nor deliuered from the bondage of sinne nor made a member of Christ nor engrafted into the true Church nor endued with the grace of sanctification he is yet in the flesh and not in the spirit he is yet in death not restored to life he is the bondslaue of Sathan not brought into the liberty of the sonnes of God For where there is no change in conuersation there can bee no assurance of true conuersion The meditation of this point must enter deeply into our harts teach vs to try our selus whether as yet we born again by water and the spirit or not Whosoeuer can say thus I haue beene in bondage to sin now I am set free I haue beene the prisoner of Satan now I am at liberty I haue liued vnprofitably to God vnprofitably to my selfe vnprofitably to others now I haue learned to lead my life to the honour of God to the benefite of my brethren and to the comfort of mine owne soule whosoeuer I say can say thus may be assured of his conuersion and turning vnto God and that God hath begun his good worke in him which hee will finish at the appearance of Iesus Christ Let vs all therefore know and consider that it is required of vs to repent of sinnes to turne to God to chaunge our hearts and to amend our liues that so we may bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse and expresse our obedience to the Gospell To be without the fruits of the Gospel is to denie the Gospell and to be without godlinesse of conuersation is to be without Christ and to bee without an heart inwardly sanctifyed and without a life outwardly regenerated is to be without faith It had beene better for vs that we had neuer had the Gospell offered vnto vs then to haue it to contemne it It had beene better we had alwayes remained in darknesse then to haue light come among vs and not to walke in the light It is a worthy exhortation that the Apostle maketh to the Thessalonians g 1 Thess 5 5 6 7 8. Yee are all the Children of light and the children of the day we are not of the night neither of darkenesse Therefore let vs not sleepe as others do but let vs watch and be sober for they that sleepe sleepe in the night and they that bee drunken are drunken in the night but let vs which are of the day be sober putting on the Brest-plate of faith and loue and of the hope of saluation for an Helmet It is not euery h Math. 7 21. one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of heauen but he that hath an earnest and carefull endeuour to do his will It is not enough for vs to bee called a Christian to beare the name of a Protestant to renounce the name of a Papist to make shew of the true Religion and to be an hearer of the word we haue learned better things and must giue an account of a farther dutie Obiection We will say peraduenture we hate and detest all the blinde and erroneous
from whence he came Doctrine 5. The Gospel doth not abolish or diminish ciuil ordinances and distinct degrees among men Heereby we learne that the Gospell of Christ doth not dissolue or abolish but confirme establish ciuill ordinances distinct degrees and politick constitutions among men as between Princes and Subiects Parents and Children Husband and Wife Maister and Seruants Superiors and Inferiors This appeareth in many places of the worde where the seuerall and distinct duties of n Rom. 13 1. seuerall and distinct callings are mentioned and required by the Apostle Heereunto commeth that which he setteth downe Rom. 13. Let euery soule be subiect to the higher powers for there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordained of God Likewise o Ephes 5 22 25. 6 1 2 5 9. Col. 3 18 19 20 21 22. writing to the Ephesians he chargeth Wiues to submit themselues vnto their husbands as vnto the Lorde he willeth Husbands to loue their wiues euen as Christ loued the Church and gaue himselfe for it he requireth of Children to obey their Parents in the Lorde for this is right he commaundeth Fathers not to prouoke their Children to vvrath least they be discouraged but to bring them vppe in instruction and information of the Lord he prescribeth vnto Seruants to be obedient vnto them that are their Maisters according to the flesh with feare and trembling in singlenesse of their hearts as vnto Christ and he setteth downe the duties of Maisters that they should deale iustly with their seruants putting away threatning knowing that euen their Maister also is in Heauen with whom there is no respect of persons In like manner when he writeth to Timothy he saith p 1 Tim. 6 1. Titus 2 9 10 and 3 1. Let as many Seruantes as are vnder the yoake count their Maisters worthy of all honour that the name of God and his Doctrine be not euill spoken of And Titus 2. Let Seruants bee subiest to their Maisters and please them in all things not answearing againe neither pickers but that they shew all good faithfulnesse that they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things for that grace of God that bringeth saluation vnto all men hath appeared The like exhortations and establishing of ciuill ordinances we see in Peter q 1 Pet 2 13 14 and 3 1 2 7 Submit your selues vnto all manner ordinance of man for the Lordes sake whether it bee vnto the King as vnto the Superiour or vnto Gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him for the punishment of euill dooers and for the praise of them that do well So likewise hee chargeth the Wiues to bee Subiect to their Husbands that euen they which obey not the word may without the word hee won by the conuersation of the wiues while they beholde their pure conuersation which is with feare And the Husbands he teacheth That they should dwell with them as men of knowledge giuing honour vnto the woman as vnto the weaker vessell euen as they which are heyres together of the grace of life that their prayers be not interrupted Christ our Sauiour willeth vs to r Math. 22 21. Giue vnto Caesar the things that are Caesars and vnto God the thinges that are Gods The Apostle hath heaped together manie such precepts vnto the same Å¿ 1 Cor. 7 3 5 10 11 12 13 20 21 22. purpose 1 Cor. 7. Let the Husband giue vnto the wife due beneuolence and likewise the wife vnto the Husband defraude not one another except it bee with consent for a time vnto the married I commaund not I but the Lorde let not the wife depart from her Husband and let not the Husbande put away his wife If any Brother haue a wife that beleeueth not if shee bee content to dwell with him let him not forsake her and the woman that hath an Husbande which beleeueth not if hee bee content to dwell with her let her not forsake him Let euerie man abide in the same Vocation vvherein hee was called Bretheren let euerie man wherein hee was called therein abide with GOD. All these rules and commaundements serue to teach vs this truth that howsoeuer the gospel doth make vs al as brethren and ioyne vs together in one body yet it doth not abrogat and abolish the difference betweene man and man and bring in an Anarchy and confusion but setleth a distinction betweene Prince and subiect betweene Maister and seruant betweene high and low Reason 1. This Doctrine of the gospel will better appeare if we marke the reasons For first God is not the author of confusion and disorder but of peace and order Look vpon al the creatures of God in heauen earth on high and beneath and we shal be constrained to cry out with the prophet t Psal 104 24 O Lord how manifold are thy works In wisedom hast thou made them al the earth is full of thy riches Al tumult and sedition al disorder and insurrection commeth from the deuill he is the author thereof For he first brought in sin and sin brought in disorder Hence it is that the apostle saith u 1 Cor. 14 33 40. Colos 2 5 God is not the author of confusion but of peace as we see in al the churches of the Saints He commandeth that al things be done honestly and in order he commendeth the goodly order that is obserued among the faithfull and therefore he teacheth not any disorders nor alloweth them where they are Reason 2. Secondly Christ came not into the world to abolish the Lawe but to establish it x Mat. 5 17 18 as he testifieth Mat. 5. Thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them for truely I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iot or one title of the Law shal not escape till all things be fulfilled Now we know that the moral Law commandeth the honor of Father and Mother that is of all superiors who beare a part of his image If then the end of his comming were to ratifie the Law then it followeth that the Law making a difference betweene superiors and inferiors remaineth and shall remaine in his full strength power and vertue Reason 3. Thirdly the Gospell commaundeth hearty obedience as vnto God and therefore doth not dissolue or disanull true obedience nay it is a praise and ornament to the Gospel when all sortes walke in the duties of their seuerall Callings and specially such as are the obedience of others Seruants are the lowest condition in the Church and yet the Apostle teacheth that by vprighnesse of their life and obedience to their Maister for Conscience sake y Titus 3 10. 1 Tim. 6 1. they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things and on the other side by the euil life stubbornesse and disobedience of seruants that professe
Lord The order of the words IN the words going before we haue already handled the remoouing of the first Obiection which ariseth from Paules sending of Onesimus back againe to his Maister The next Obiection is touching his departure from his Maister mentioned in these two Verses wherein hee both aunsweareth the Obiection maketh a newe reason and seeketh to extenuate the displeasure that Philemon hadde conceiued against him The Apostle aunswereth heere in this place that Obiection which might bee made and mooued from the former matter of this suit Hee hath intreated Philemon as we haue heard to receiue Onesimus he might hereunto haue said But why should I receiue him Shall I entertaine a Runna-gate Seruant a base Varlet that hath wasted and purloyned my goods and sought to vndoe me If hee were well with mē why did he depart from me If not well why will he returne to me againe Hee that is once euill is alwaies presumed to be euill Answere This is the Obiection whereunto the Apostle maketh a double answere as he did before first by way of granting and yeelding to Philemon secondly by a kind of correcting his former grant The granting is I confesse and acknowledge willingly that hee departed from thee and would not tarrie with thee The correcting is though he did depart it was not for euer it was but a very short time as thou seest So then the answer is from the adioynt of time he went from thee for a little season which is not barely set downe but with an illustrastion added vnto it from the ende That thou shouldst receiue him for euer which also is enlarged by a comparison from the greater Not so much as a Seruant but as more then a Seruant The latter part of this enlargement being the second part of the comparison is declared by the speciall A beloued Brother more then a Seruant for a Brother carryeth with it a better respect and a farther regard then the name of a Seruant This also is enlarged by a comparison from the greater to the lesse especially to mee which comparison also is amplified by another from the greater how much more to thee which is farther strengthned by a diuision or distribution of the Subiect shewing wherein he was more bound to Philemon then to Paul himselfe Both in the flesh and in the Spirit Thus we haue seene the resolution of these Verses The meaning of the wordes and the order which is propounded in them Now let vs see what are the points that require interpretation First he saith He departed he vseth a kind of diminution called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a qualification of his fact and fault committed against his Maister For he vseth a more gentle and friendly word to lessen the offence that it might not appeare to Philemon so great as it was calling his running away a departure from his Maister Now the Apostle saith It may be that he departed or peraduenture he departed The word vsed in this place is also found Rom 5 8. where he saith a Rom. 5 8. Doubtlesse one will scarce dye for a righteous man but yet for a good man it may be that one dare dye Properly b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifieth quickly or speedily or hastily but that signification cannot fitly agree to these places and therefore it must be turned and translated It may be he departed Where the Apostle doth not speake of this secret worke of God precisely and peremptorily but with an exception or limitation warily and reuerentlie least offence should be taken and encouragement giuen thereby to the committing of euill For if he had said simply and absolutely he departed for this end and he fled away that he might be conuerted other Seruants might haue beene emboldned in wickednesse and haue pretended the same cause and haue runne away from their Maisters who beeing asked the cause why they tooke them to their heeles would readily answere It was that I might be conuerted to the Faith as Onesimus was hee ran away from his Maister and was saued I ranne away also that I might be saued So then the Apostle by this word noteth out the speciall prouidence and meere goodnesse of God ordering and gouerning this Fact which is not to bee drawne into a generall practise In the next place he addeth For a season the word signifieth for an houre that is for a small time euen so much as Onesimus was trauailing from Colosse to Rome from his Maister to Paule by whom being conuerted he was immediatly sent backe which was no long time but a very little while euen as it were an houre in comparison both of the time that he before had beene with him and of the time hee was like to stay with him hereafter Wherein also he seeketh farther to lessen his fault offence by the circumstance of the time as if he should say If he had beene from thee any long time or that thou hadst missed him many yeares thy wrath might be harder to be appeased but he hath beene from thee a small time it is but as it were one houre and therefore haue patience toward him especially considering by his absence thou shalt gaine this that he shall neuer depart from thee hereafter but remaine faithfull profitable vnto thee many yeares Thou maist well beare the lacke of him one houre seeing thou shalt thereby get the aduantage of many months and yeares Therefore he addeth That thou shouldst receiue him for euer that is all the dayes of his life vnto his death Thus the phrase is taken in sundry places of the Olde Testament c Gene. 17 7. when circumcision is called an euerlasting Couenant the Passe-ouer is commaunded to bee kept holy by an ordinance d Exod. 12 14 for euer whereby hee meaneth a long time euen vnto the comming of Christ in the flesh So if a Seruant would not go away from his Maister because he loued him and was well with him the Maister should take an Aule and pierce his eare through against the doore and he shall be his seruant e Deut. 15 17. for euer that is to the yeare of Iubile So in this place the Apostle saith Philemons Seruant should remaine with him for euer that is a long time euen so long as hee should liue vpon the face of the earth Lastly when Paule saith hee must be beloued In the Flesh and in the Lord he meaneth both in thinges appertaining to this life and the life to come In the Flesh in regard of his seruice which he shall performe to his Maister in matters belonging to this Mortall life In the Lord in respect of the common faith in Christ This is the meaning of the words in this diuision wherein as we noted before howsoeuer the Apostle doth purposely answere an obiection yet in this answere also he propoundeth two new reasons to moue Philemon to receiue his seruant One is in the 15. verse taken
thine holy Sonne Iesus whom thou hast annointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israell gathered themselues together to doe whatsoeuer thine hand and thy counsell had determined before to be done So then albeit they wickedly intended nothing but to shew their hatred and testifie their enuie in the death of Christ yet God brought another matter out of their mallice and made his endlesse mercy to man appeare in his worke of Redemption God would haue him dye Caiphas would haue him dye Pilate would haue him die Iudas and the Iewes would haue him die but God for our Redemption they for other ends as Iudas for couetousnesse and the Priestes for enuy The History of Iob is a plaine and direct proofe of this point that now we haue in hand he was robbed of his goods depriued of his Seruants and Children through the rage and couetousnesse of his Enemies and by the crueltie of Sathan the p Iob 1. and 2. enemies intended heerein to satisfie their owne couetousnesse the Deuill purposed to bring the Seruant of God to dispaire neither of thē aimed at any good to Iob but God that ouer-ruleth and ouer swaieth all had another end to try his patience to make knowne his Faith to try his obedience and to giue the deuill the foile ouerthrow Thus then we see that all things whatsoeuer they be are ordered and disposed by the prouidence of God to the good of those that belong vnto him euen then when they doe not intend it Reason 1. The reasons of this Doctrine are apparant to settle our hearts and consciences therein The first is the infinite wisedome and vnsearchable power of ●od who as the Apostle teacheth q 2 Cor. 4 6. bringeth light out of darkenesse worketh by contrary means such as men count foolishnesse r 1 Cor. 1 21. as to saue men by the foolish preaching of the Gospell that is which is esteemed among the wise men of the World no better then foolishnesse When Christ would make a blind man see and restore his sight vnto him ſ Iohn 9 6 7. He spat on the ground and made Clay of the spittle and annointed the eyes of the Blinde with the Clay A naturall man would thinke this had beene a way and meanes iudging by humaine reason rather to make a man that seeth to be blind then a man that is blinde to see Christ was able to haue healed him with a word or to haue giuen vnto him new eyes but he chose rather to vse these weak means that in themselues had no power or strength in them Thus was Naaman the Syrian cleansed of his foule Leprosie whereas he imagined the Prophet would come t 2 Kings 5. forth vnto him lay his handes vpon him and call vpon God for him it pleased God to worke by other meanes and to cleanse him by washing seauen times in Iordan We see this in nothing plainer then in the glorious worke of our Redemption The Lord Iesus u Hebr. 2 13. By death ouercame death by humbling of himselfe beneath all x Phil. 3. he was exalted aboue all By making himselfe poore he made many rich By suffering himselfe to be condemned he hath brought vs to be iustified and saued Thus he also dealeth with his owne Children hee bringeth men to Heauen by Hell he leadeth to immortalitie by corruption he guideth them through fire and water to set them in a wealthy place He worketh not by ordinary waies by extraordinarie so often as it pleaseth him When hee would comfort he terrifieth when he would raise vp he casteth downe when he would reuiue he mortifieth when he would exalt he bringeth low when he would make a man rich he maketh him poore This it is which Hannah setteth downe in her Song of Thanks-giuing y 1 Sam. 1 6 7 8. The Lord maketh poore and maketh rich bringeth low and exalteth the Lord killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the Graue and raiseth vp This also the Prophet z Esay 28 21. Esay signifieth The Lord shall stand as in Mount Perazim he shall be wrath as in the Valley of Gibeon that hee may doe his worke his strange worke and bring to passe his Act his strange Act. This is one of the workes of the strange workes one of the actes of the strange actes of God when he turneth euill into good and ordereth the wicked actions of men to the glory of his Name and the good of his Children Reason 2. Secondly it is the pleasure of God to confound the wisdome of Man that cannot attaine to great matters but by great meanes For x 1 Cor. 1 27 God hath chosen the foolish thinges of the World to confound the wise and GOD hath chosen the weake things of the World to confound the mighty things And vile thinges of the World and things which are despised hath God chosen and things which are not to bring to naught things that are that no flesh should reioyce in his presence God disposeth of all things as pleaseth him and oftentimes crosseth the deuises of men They intend one thing but God bringeth to passe another they purpose one end but he will haue another come forth to teach mans wisedome to be but foolishnesse Reason 3. Thirdly he expresseth his wonderfull loue making all things that fall out in the world to serue his Church True it is the Church of God is beset with many enemies that as wilde Boares seeke to roote it out of the Earth as the Deuill which is the Captain of this Army vnder whose Banners are gathered together the wicked world the flesh hell death sin all which multitude as a great hoast muster together to work the vtter ouerthrow thereof yet God that sitteth in heauen maketh all their endeuours and enterprises further the saluation of his Church This the Apostle teacheth y Rom. 8 28. We know that all things worke together for the best vnto them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose He blesseth their troubles and afflictions and worketh in them patience vnder the crosse humility in suffering and experience of his mercies and maketh them confesse that it was good for them that they haue been afflicted We see this euidently in the example of Iobs troubles and torments that he endured there were many work-men set on worke to wast his goods to destroy his Children to kill his Seruants to afflict his Body to torment his Soule all ayming at this to bring him to despaire and all these Wheeles were set to moue by the Deuill but the Lord out of their sinnes wrought his great good z Iames 1 3 4 Rom. 5 3 4. Making tryall of his Faith to bring forth patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed So then seeing God is able to work and doth work both aboue and contrary to means that men imagine seeing he
thou shalt be a blessing I will also blesse them that blesse thee and cursse them that curse thee and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed If then he will restore that which he hath taken away and make vp the breach that his hand hath made we cannot doubt of his liberality toward vs. The poore widdow had but an handfull of Meale in a barrell and a litle Oyle in a Cruze but they were encreased not wasted multiplyed not diminished vnto the time that the Lord sent raine vpon the earth 1 Kings 17 14. Whether therefore wee consider that the losse sustained for Christs sake and the Gospell is rather a sowing then a loosing and a laying vp rather then a scattering abroade or whether we consider that God is rich in mercy and the most bountifull rewarder of his seruants in both respects we conclude that lesser blessings are sometimes taken from vs that we may haue greater supplied vnto vs whereby our gaine is made better then our losse Vse 1 This Doctrine being duly waighed will be very profitable both to comfort such as are in trouble and to instruct such as are ignorant and to direct such in their obedience as wander out of the right way First let this be our comfort when we sustaine any losses or feele any wants though they be neuer so great though we must depart from lande and life yet in this case it shall be a gaine and aduantage vnto vs. For to gain and saue where we ought not is a certaine losse This gaine is little but the losse is great it is to enioy temporall things and to loose eternall it is a getting of the earth and a loosing of heauen a getting of substance and a loosing of the soule Miserable is this gaine and wretched is the lucre that is thus dearly bought purchased On the other side to bee content to forsake and renounce all for Christs sake shall in the end bring with it assured and perpetuall riches For what is it that we haue not receiued It is God that hath made vs not we our selues it is he that hath enriched vs and not we our selues and whatsoeuer we haue whether it be much or little we haue it not of our selues and therefore we hold all of him as Tenants at will he may re-enter and dispossesse vs of them when it pleaseth him so that we must render them vp into his hands when he calleth for them and be resolute to leaue them when he demandeth them of vs. Let vs not therefore shrinke backe for feare of trouble and persecution but set before vs the example of Christ who hath gone before vs f Heb. 12 2. he for the ioy that was set before him endured the Crosse and despised the shame and is set at the right hand of the throne of God The seruant must not be aboue his Maister nor the disciple aboue his Lord. Wee must account it an honour to beare about vs the markes of Christ Iesus in our body If we bee partakers of his afflictions and patience we shall also be partakers with him of his glory This is it which he exhorteth vs vnto vnto Math. 16. If any man g Math. 16 24 25 26. wil follow me let him forsake himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me for whosoeuer will saue his life shall loose it and whosoeuer shall loose his life for my sake shal finde it for what shall it profit a man though he should win the whole worlde if he loose his owne soule Or what shall a man giue for recompence of his soule Whosoeuer is not thus perswaded and resolued for the profession of the Gospell and the faith of Christ and the witnessing of the truth to endure tribulation and to suffer persecution is not yet a Christian in deed but in name not in heart but in shew So then howsoeuer we be afflicted and made sorrowful for a season yet the time will come when our soules shall be comforted and we haue our heads lifted vp which blessed day wee ought to attend with all patience and desire with earnest Prayer Vse 2 Secondly seeing God sometimes depriueth his dear Children of outward and earthly blessings but rewardeth them with heauenly it serueth notably to instruct vs in the right meaning and vnderstanding of the reason annexed to the fift Commaundement where such as h Exod. 20 12. Ephes 6 2 3. Honor Father and Mother haue a promise of a special blessing made vnto them that they shal liue long vpon the earth Where we see that godly Children haue the promises of this life made vnto them For Godlinesse i 1 Tim. 4 8. is profitable vnto all things and hath the promises both of this life and of the life to come And on the other side the fearefull Iudgements of GOD are oftentimes vpon rebellious and disobedient Children The Wise-man sayeth k Prou 30 17 The eye that mocketh his Father and despiseth the instructions of his Mother let the Rauens of the valley pick it out and the yong Eagles eate him Obiection But we see it come to passe many times otherwise then hath bin spoken of and some wil obiect that wicked persons disobedient Children liue long and contrarywise good men obedient Children do oftentimes die quickly they prolong not their dayes to old age but depart hence in the prime of their youth Answere I answere first touching the vngodly then concerning the godly The vngodly indeed do continue long vpon the earth and die ful of daies but it is to their farther vengeance and to heape vp wrath against the great day of the fierce wrath of God and to fill vppe the greater measure of their sinnes that God also may fill vnto them the greater measure of his Iudgements This we see in Caine who was tormented with feare of punishment and gripings of Conscience and horror of hell and feeling of sinne which was worse vnto him then many deaths It had beene a great benefit to him if he had died so soone as he had bin borne for then he had not sinned so horribly then he had not murthered his natural brother so shamefully then he had not offended God so outragiously but now the longer hee liued the more sinnes he committed and the greater iudgements he deserued and the heauier tormeats he endured This we may say of all the vngodly who commit sin with all greedinesse and consequently liue to their heauier punishment But concerning the godly l The reasons why the godly oftentimes die quickly hee calleth them many times out of this present life betimes vnto himselfe and prouideth far better for them then if he had giuen them a long life For he taketh and translateth them from the miseries of this world to the ioyes of eternall life And it is often good for vs that the Lord take vs soone from hence for as thereby he bringeth vs to a better
place so we reape a double benefit First we are kept from the corruptions of the world for liuing in a corrupt aire we are readie to gather infection and to take the scent as quickly as flax is apt to take the fire But by taking vs from hence into a sweeter dwelling we are preuented kept from many sins which otherwise we wold fall into This is it which the Prophet Dauid sheweth m Psa 125 3 4 The rod of the wicked shall not rest on the lot of the righteous least the righteous put forth their hand vnto wickednesse do well O Lord vnto those that be good and true in their harts He knoweth wherof we are made he seeth our infirmities how prone we are to decline after euil examples that are set before vs so that it is a benefit vnto vs to goe hence before we haue corrupted our hearts and defiled al our waies Enoch liued in a most dangerous time when wickednes began to couer the face of the earth but because he walked with God he was taken away that mallice should not change his heart This is n 1 Cor. 11 30 31 32. it which the Apostle Paul testifieth For this cause many are weak and sicke among you many sleep for if we wold iudge our selues we should not be iudged But when we are iduged we are chastned of the Lord because we should not be condemned with the world Secondly God dealeth mercifully with his people in remouing them out of this life that they should not feele the present miseries nor see the iminent calamities which hee knoweth hang ouer them and is determined to bring vpon the sons of men and be ouerborn and swept away by them with others This we see in the example of Abijah the son of Ieroboam that made Israell to sin who is branded with this note of reproch in sundry places of the holy history o 1 Kin. 14 16 That he did sin made Israel to sin the Prophet said of this one onely good son of this wicked father that he should die being a child and al Israell should mourn for him he onely of Ieroboam should come to the graue because in him there is found some goodnesse toward the Lord God of Israell in the house of Ieroboam God in great mercy toward him took him away being a child that he shold not be infected and afflicted For if he had liued to see the white hairs of his old age he had bin in great danger of the fearful sins of his fathers house bin in great afflictiō to behold the horrible iudgments that were to fall vpon that godlesse and gracelesse family The like might be said of p 2 Kin. 22 20. good Iosiah he was gathered betimes to his fathers and was put in his graue in peace that his eies shold not see al the euil which the lord would bring on the land He took him out of this world before his wrath fell vpon the vngodly This is it which the Prophet Esay telleth vs q Esay 37 1 2. The righteous perisheth no man considereth it in hart merciful men are taken away and no man vnderstandeth that the righteous is taken away from the euil to come Peace shall come they shal rest in their beds euery one that walketh before him Lastly God calleth away his children out of this transitory life to make them partakers of a blessed life r Reuel 14 13 Seeing they are blessed that die in the lord they cease frō their labors their works follow them Neither do the godly lose by this bargaine neither doth God falsify his word but is better then his promise For if he take away a short frail life and reward with a long and eternal life the promise faileth not but changeth for the better Change as we commonly say is no robery but this change is a commodity If a man promised yard of cloth and perform an ell if he promise siluer and pay gold if he promise to giue a cottage and put him in possession of a Pallace if he promise little and performe much he breaketh not his promise but performeth it with aduantage thus doth the Lord deale with vs who is not as man that he shold lie nor as the son of man that he should deceiue who ofttimes granteth more then we ask and bestoweth more then we beg but neuer denieth that which he promiseth If any farther reply how then is God true in his promises that promiseth long life in this life I answer that al Gods promises concerning earthly blessings must be vnderstood with a condition namely so far forth as he shall see them to be expedient for his glory and our saluation But so far as long life shal be a benefit vnto vs so far he wil giue it but if in his all-seeing and al-serching wisedom he know it to be better for vs to dy then to liue to be gathred to our fathers then to continue with our children he taketh vs away and recompenseth the want of temporal life with a kingdom of eternal glory This is it which the Apostle expresseth ſ Ephe. 6 2 3 who repeating this blessing to come vpon them that honor father mother doth not only say That thou maist liue long on earth but addeth That it may be wel with thee and thou maist liue long vpon earth So then long life is not alwaies a blessing for somtimes it is better to leaue the world then to liue in it to depart out of it then to inioy it The vngodly man the longer he liueth the greater is his sin and his condemnation for sin This the wiseman setteth down t Eccl. 8 12 13 Thogh a sinner do euil an hundred times God prolongeth his daies yet I know that it shal be wel with them that fear the Lord do reuerence before him but it shal not be wel with the wicked neither shal he prolong his daies he shal be like a shadow because he feareth not before God Heerunto agreeth the Prophet Esay u Esay 65 10. There shal be no more there a child of years nor an old man that hath not filled his daies but he that shal be an hundred years old shal dy as a young man but the sinner being an hundred year old shall be accursed Thus then we see how to expound the promise of long life which God performeth really or if he take away such as are godly and obedient hee recompenceth it more fully with a better life and so he bestoweth a great deale more then he taketh away and granteth a better measure then he with-held from them Vse 3 Lastly we learne for our obedience when we suffer losses not to be vexed through impatiency nor to break out in storming fretting and fuming maner against God but to rest our selues vppon him beeing ready to blesse his name not to cast away al hope confidence
friends The delight that men take in these is vaine and of no value nay it bringeth in the end Gall and Wormewood and biteth as a Serpent If thou delight in thy Wife Children Seruants Friends and Familiars in the flesh in a worldly and wicked manner and neuer considerest from whence thou hast them nor receiuest them as the guiftes and blessings of God that thereby thou mayest haue sound ioy and true happinesse heaped vpon thee it is extream folly and madnesse What was the end of Ahabs ioy in his wife in his sonnes in his posterity They were at the last thogh multiplyed exceedingly cut off from man to beast and none of them left to water a wall How many are there that being free and at liberty to make choise of Friends of Wife of Seruants of Companions do neuer set the Lord before their eyes who hauing little grace in their owne hearts make an election of such as are most vngracious and gracelesse They desire not to be Companions of such as loue the Lord and his Law but respect riches or beautie or honour or such outward Ornaments as perish with the vse and cannot cleanse the soule Wherefore let all superiors know and vnderstand that it is a duty and instruction belonging vnto them to delight themselues and set their hearts vpon such as are religious and vertuous and to shew their anger and displeasure against those that are faithlesse and feare not to offend the Lord with their wicked liues and vngodly behauiour For this shall bee our praise and commendation in the choise of our frends and in the gouernment of our houses to follow the example of God our Creator who is the most prudent and perfect Gouernour His fauour doeth embrace and his goodnesse compasse on euery side such as faithfully serue him and sincerely worship him but his wrath and angry countenance is fierce against those that walke rebelliously in the contempt of his Lawes and liue licentiously in the profession of his seruice Thus ought it to be in his people that gouerne in his feare such as they see feare God they must honor they must commend they must encourage they must countenance but such as are stubborne against themselues and stiffe-necked against God they must reprooue and reiect they must discommend and discountenance by all meanes they can For all such as suffer disorders and misbehauiour in their charges without checke and controulement shall finde the faultes of their Inferiours turne to their owne reproach and reproofe The Wiseman teacheth m Prou. 14 34 that sinne is a shame to a whole people and to a great company much more then shall it turne to be infamous and ignominious to a house and to the Maister of the house as we see in Eli and his sonnes Secondly it reprooueth such as hate and abhorre those that shewe the seeds of Faith and the sparkes of grace and the fruits of the spirit to bee in them It is an euill as we heard before not to preferre and make choyse of such as are good but it is a great deale worse to loath and dislike such as are godly when they haue made choise of them and brought them home into their owne doores They that haue obtained this mercy to finde grace with God do bring the blessinges of God with them into the house they come not empty and alone but full fraught and furnished with great Treasures if that we had spirituall eyes or hearts to discerne it A Religious and a vertuous Wife is n Prou. 31 10 11. a great Iewell her price is farre aboue the Pearles for she will do her Husband good and not euill all the dayes of her life and yet many repine and murmure that their wiues haue so much knowledge and that they are too zealous in the truth They neuer thinke they bring them to much riches and substance but if they labour to be rich in God which is the true Treasure they thinke a little to be too too much They neuer complaine that they are in fauour with great men from whom they may reape a commodity but if they seek to be in fauour with God from whom euery good giuing euery perfect guift proceedeth they make a scoffe and a mock at it They ought to encourage them and stirre them vp to good things and not hinder them in their course They ought themselues to teach and instruct them not discourage them from learning of others Thus it is also many times with many Fathers that pretend a loue to their children but it is in the flesh not in the spirit in the world not in the Lord in earthly things not in heauenly If their Children haue embraced the Gospell in sincerity and seeke after the meanes of their saluation with diligence they thinke they are too forward and feare they wil proue too praecise and so make more account of others that are more loose in life and prophane in conuersation This fault was in good Isaac who preferred his son Esau hated of God before Iacob that was loued of him So do the Fathers of our times delight themselues most in their Children that are most lewd and shew least fauour to such as most deserue it And thus it fareth with many Pastors Teachers of the people who ought to go before them in soundnesse of Doctrine and vprightnesse of life and by all meanes to bring forward such as are comming on to spurre and stirre vp such as are sluggish to comfort such as are carefull and zealous and to discountenance such as are open or secret enemies But how many are there that would be called and accounted faithfull shepherds and true Teachers sent of God who are affraid their hearers should bee too forward like enuious Maisters that are loath to haue good Schollers repine at it to haue any profit too much vnder them Thus they nuzzle them in ignorance that are blinde they strengthen the hand of iniquity they encourage euill doers and discourage those that would faine walke in the wayes of godlinesse It was the earnest desire of Moses o Num. 11 29 That all the Lordes people were Prophets and that the Lord would put his spirit vpon them If wee haue this spirit let vs neuer reproach those with learning too fast that are vnder our charge who ought to be our comfort in this life and shall be our crown in the life to come Vse 3. Lastly seeing it belongeth as a speciall duty vnto vs to shew our greatest affection to such as haue in their harts most religion it serueth as a comfort and encouragement to al callings euen the lowest that are among men to labour after good things and to seeke to serue and feare the Lord seeing such as are the meanest and of basest reckning with many are respected and recompenced of him This is a notable encouragement to consider that God taketh care of vs and requireth of men to do vs good The
least member of the body is honoured and not despised cherrished and not contemned tendered and not abhorred of vs. So it ought to be in the members of Christs body which are all deare to him which hee bought with an equall price and therefore ought to be deare vnto vs if wee beleeue our selues to haue our part and portion in his body Notwithstanding if thorough the pride contempt disdaine and vnthankfulnesse of men we finde our selues little regarded made as a foot-stoole for men to tread and trample vpon as a ball to spurne at with all reproach and so scorned for our well dooing let vs not be dismayed with this dealing but consider that the poor seruants of God haue tasted of the like measure that haue gone before vs so that wee are not the first that haue beene thus vsed and we are not like to bee the last that are in this sort to be abused Marke a little how it fell out with Ioseph one that performed the best seruice and yet one that receiued the worst recompence When he was broght downe to Egypt and bought and sold as a slaue p Gen. 39 1 2 4 5 20. or as Oxe in the Market from one to another at length he came vnto the hands house of Potiphar whom he serued faithfully so that the Lord was with him and made all that he did to prosper in his hand his Maister put all that he had in his hande and made him Ruler of his house neuerthelesse not long after thorough the false suggestion of his Mistris and the hasty and ouer-rash credulity of his Maister his good seruice was forgotten he is cast in prison and lyeth bound in setters The like wee might say of Iacob who serued for his wiues in the house of Laban Who could do better seruice or who could shew himselfe a more painfull and profitable seruant then he had done Hee speaketh it before Labans face and doth not whisper it behinde his backe hee auoucheth it before him that he might take exception to it if he had ought to obiect against it q Gen. 31 39 40. Whatsoeuer was torne of Beasts I brought it not vnto thee but made it good my selfe of mine hand didst thou require it were it stolne by day or stollen by night I was in the day consumed with heate and with frost in the Night and my sleepe departed from mine eyes This duty and diligence did he perform and yet what was the wages of the woorke and the recompence of his labors It followeth in the next wordes r Verse 41. I haue beene twenty yeares in thine house and serued thee fourteene yeares for thy two daughters six yeares for thy Sheepe and thou hast chaunged my wages ten times Thus we see how good and gracious seruants haue bin serued in former times before vs and what hard measure hath bin rendred and repayed vnto them The examples of the Israelites is fit to be thought vpon and worthy to be considered in this case when they soiourned and serued in the land of Egipt according as the Lord fore-shewed vnto Abraham Å¿ Gen. 15 13. Know for a surety that thy seede shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs foure hundred yeares and shall serue them and they shall intreat them euill They neuer plotted any rebellion or attempted act of hostility against them but serued their taske-maisters that oppressed them and laboured in making bricke and gathering straw and finishing their taske yet they were blamed and beaten and laden with many sorrowes Let vs therefore by all these examples be encouraged and know that nothing can happen vnto vs which hath not fallen out to others that haue liued before vs who haue done as good and faithful seruice to their superiors as we haue done or can do and yet haue beene euilly entreated and wrongfully pursued and cruelly handled and vniustly rewarded Let vs not suffer for euill doing t 1 Pet. 4 15 16. 2 19 20 and as euill doers but let vs suffer as Christians that so God may be glorified and we not ashamed of our afflictions For this is thanke-worthy if a man for Conscience toward God endure greef suffring wrongfully it is acceptable before him is respected of him albeit among men it go away vnrewarded We herd before of the good seruice of Iacob of Ioseph of the Iewes of Iacob toward Laban of Ioseph toward Potiphar of the Iewes toward the Egyptians and how euilly they were rewarded and recompenced of their cruell and couetous Maisters But they knew they serued a better Maister in Heauen who would not suffer them to want the fruite of their labors nor to loose the worke of their hands Hence it is that he encreased Iacob in substance hee brought Ioseph out of prison he gaue the Israelites fauour in the eyes of the Egyptians that gaue them Iewels of Siluer and of Gold and sent them not empty away Thus will God deale with vs if we suffer with patience and will honor them that are carefull to honor him Aboue a Seruant euen as a Brother beloued We heard before howe the Apostle commendeth Onesimus to his Maister that he was to be receiued of him not so much as a seruant as one that was more then a seruant that is not an Infidell but a Christian This point is in these words declared by the speciall or by a word of Relation a beloued Brother which was more then a simple seruant For if he had any vnbeleeuers that were not of the houshold of Faith either borne in his house or bought with his money they were his seruants but they were not beloued Brethren But this man conuerted to the Faith was aboue the ranke and degree of such persons hee was both a Seruant and a Brother True it is there was great difference betweene Philemon and Onesimus betweene the Maister and Seruant in things of this life one was Superior the other Inferior one was to command the other to obey one was to rule the other to be subiect in the Lord yet wee see how the Apostle in this place is not affraide to call Onesimus his Maisters Brother and would not haue the Maister ashamed to acknowledge it in words to shew it in his practise This is not spoken as if they were naturall Bretheren in the flesh and descended of one Father according to the common generation of the rest of the sonnes of men but they were Brethren in Christ partakers of the common Faith equall in the participation of heauenly graces alike in the fauour of God one not dearer to him then another Hence it is that the Apostle before Verse 7. and afterward verse 20. calleth Philemon his Brother in Christ though he were his sonne in the Gospell because hee had begotten him vnto God by the immortall seede of the word u Verse 19. as wee shall see in the words following where he challengeth as his own and as a
pretenses or excuses or delayes shal auaile vs. Then shal the poore begger appeare without his rags the rich Glutton without his Robes Couetous Indas without his bagges Crafty Gehazi without his money Proud Haman without his Honor Aspyring Absolon without his Ambition Murthering Caine without his Weapon Cunning Achitophell without his Pollicy The Kings of the earth must lay downe the glory of their Crownes and the dignity of their Scepters the Nobles must renounce the Ensignes of honor and all persons must set aside outward respects of honor and dishonor of glory and shame of fauor and contempt Neuerthelesse it is to be obserued that albeit these men must stand before the throne of God without these respects that they made their chiefest felicity yet they shall not appeare without their cruelty bribery treachery blasphemy couetousnes such like impiety for their euill works shal follow them cleaue fast vnto them Let vs therefore neuer think to escape when we shal com naked before the eternal Iudge as euer we came into the world more naked then we departed out of the world for wheras some haue their Coffins to couer them others their Tombs to beutify them and all men their winding sheets to wrap their Carkasses in whē the Lord shal descend with thousands of his Angels they shal not haue a rag or a poore fig-leafe to hide their shame Let vs seek while we haue time to put on Christs righteousnesse as a Garment that we may be able to stand before the sonne of man and receiue the glory prepared for vs before the foundations of the earth were laide Specially to me how much more then vnto thee both in the flesh and in the Lord. We haue heard how the Apostle accounteth and how he would haue Philemon account of Onesimus to wit aboue a Seruant euen as a beloued Brother In these words he vrgeth him farther and sheweth that hee had more cause to respect him and greater reason to loue him then himselfe had because he was ioyned to him by more bands whereof two he nameth one of the flesh as being his seruant the other in the Lord as being his brother Paule was mooued to respect him onely in regarde of the common fayth and therefore he saith if he were not so much a Seruant as a Brother to him much more hee ought to bee so to his Maister not because hee was his seruant as other seruants are but because he was the Lords seruant so that hee was bounde to loue him both for the Lordes sake and for his owne sake Doctrine 6. The more bands reasons are giuen vs to care for any the more we are bound to care for him Heereby there is offered to our considerations this Lesson to bee learned that the more bandes and reasons are giuen vnto vs of God to care for anie the more wee are bound to care for him and to respect him A professor of the Gospell is more to be regarded then he that is wirhout One of the same Nation more then a stranger one of our own Kindred more then another farther from vs a Neighbour more then one that dwelleth manie Miles from vs one of a mans house more then him that is out of his house a Kinsman conuerted to the faith becom a true and perfect Christian more then a Kinsman not conuerted A Child that hath the sparks of grace in him more then a Childe voyde of them a Seruant fearing God more then a Seruant in the same family that doth not feare God nor regard his worde nor make Conscience of the meanes of his saluation Abraham loued Isaac the sonne of Promise hauing more graces in him f Gen. 21 9 10 14. 25 5 6. more then Ishmael the son of the bond-woman and a scoffing wretch and more then all the Sonnes of Keturah to whom he gaue guifts and sent them away Wee see this in the dealing of Abraham toward Lot his Nephew he would suffer no contention to rest among them and when he heard he was taken prisoner he would not haue stirred for the wicked sinners that dwelt in Sodome but hee armed his seruants to recouer him out of the hands of his enemies This is it which Salomon teacheth g Prou. 27 10 Better is a Neighbor that is neere then a Brother farre off The Apostle teacheth this truth when he giueth this precept While wee haue time let vt do good to all men h Gal. 6 10. but especially to them which are of the houshold of faith And in another place i Tim. 5 4. If any Widdow haue Children or Nephewes let thē learne first to shew godlinesse towardes their owne house and to recompence their Kindred To this also we are directed in the fift Commandement when we are commanded to Honour Father and Mother Wherby appeareth the truth of this doctrine that it standeth with Gods ordinance to haue the most care of those and to shew the greatest fruits of loue vnto them to whom wee are bound in the greatest and neerest bands Reason 1. The Reasons being wisely considered will make this plainely to appeare vnto vs. It is a generall sentence deliuered by Salomon in the booke of Ecclesiastes k Eccl. 4 9 10. Two are better then one and a threefold Cord is not easily broken Wheresoeuer there are stronger Cordes to tye vs and moe bandes to ioyne vs together our Loue ought to bee the more greater one towardes another Manie stickes make the greater Fire and many stringes the better Musicke Reason 2. Secondly it is a thing verie well pleasing in the sight of God to consider what meanes he hath affoorded to encrease mutuall loue and societie one with another This is the reason vrged by the Apostle to perswade the Children and Nephewes of poore Widdowes to take care for their Parents according to their ability l 1 Tim. 5 4. Because that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Now we are bound vnto them by many effectuall Reasons as it were with barres of Iron and bandes of Brasse to nourish those that haue nourished vs that haue fedde vs that haue cloathed vs that haue begotten vs and brought vs into the world so that wee must acknowledge it both right and reasonable Reason 3. Thirdly such as breake these bands cast away these Cords from them do set themselues against the Doctrine of Christ and may be sent to schoole to the Infidels nay to the brute beasts which are not voide of a certaine naturall affection This the Apostle teacheth m 1 Tim. 5 8. If there be any that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith is worse then an Infidell For howsoeuer they professe the Faith in words yet in deede and in truth they deny it But God is delighted with our workes not with our words and looketh vpon the substance not the shewe of our Religion
distaste and dislike al the rest of Gods mercies o Gen. 41 4 7 Euen as the euill-fauoured and leane-fleshed Kine did eate vp the well-fauoured and fat Kine or as the thin and blasted eares of Corne deuoured the rancke and full eares in the dreames of Pharaoh Let vs not therefore burne with a desire of an higher estate but labour to finde our hearts and mindes throughly setled in that large and liberall portion which we haue in present possession by the good hand of God toward vs. Fourthly that the Lord doth not alwayes actually bestow vpon his Children the riches and wealth of this World but nurtereth them vp to depend whollie vpon his faithfull promise who hath giuen them his word that hee will not leaue them nor forsake them And in the meane season he worketh in their hearts a patient bearing of the wants and necessities of this life but in the end he will bestow vpon them eternall blessings that neuer shall haue end and heauenly graces that neuer shall decay Fiftly that one drop of Gods fauour toward vs is better worth and more of value then this whole World that is but vaine and transitory If wee cannot rest in this fauour of God in the want of outward thinges it is most certaine we haue not yet learned truely to prize and rightlie esteeme the fauour of God Such as cannot bee content to forgoe and forsake earthlie things neuer truelie felt the forgiuenesse of sinnes Let vs learne to rest in the least tast and touch of the grace and fauour of God whatsoeuer it bringeth with it whether wealth or want whether plenty or pouerty whether prosperity or aduersity Lastly we must remember that Nature is content with a little so that if we haue food and raiment we ought to be content as we noted before This was the vow of Iacob when he went from his Fathers house while he was in the way to Haran p Gen. 28 20 21. If GOD will be with me and will keepe me in this iourney which I goe and will giue me Bread to eate and Cloathes to put on so that I come againe vnto my Fathers house in safetie then shall the Lord be my GOD. There are two pointes of mans life his entring into the World and his going out of the world the space comming between both these receiueth many changes and alterations many differences and diuersities Some are poore and some are rich some noble some vn-noble some high and some low The beginning of all is equall the end of all also is equall touching this life for as we brought nothing into this world so we can carry nothing away with vs We came q Iob 1 21. naked out of our mothers womb and naked we shall return thither The time betweene our rising and falling our birth and death is of short continuance and therefore we ought not to be carefull to heape vp Riches r Psal 49 17. For as much as we shall take nothing away when we dye neyther shall our pompe descend after vs. If a Man haue neede of one onely Pot or Pitcher of Water it is small wisedome and great vanity to try to draw vp a whole streame If a little prouision will serue for the iourney and voyage that we vndertake it is a needelesse and bootlesse thing to hoard and heap vp great store of furniture for a small occasion Let vs therefore take heede of all excesse and content our selues with the moderate vse of outward blessinges enioying such thinges as we haue with cheerefulnesse and thankfulnesse bearing the want of such thinges as we haue not with patience and meekenesse depending vpon GOD for his blessing in all thinges that any way concerne and belong vnto vs. To loue Riches is a token of a base and abiect minde to couet and desire them when we want them is a signe of a wretched and miserable minde to vse them well to our priuate commoditie and the publike vtilitie when we haue them is a Testimonie of a commendable and contented mind Vse 3 Lastly we learne from this Doctrine to take good heede that we do not abuse our propertie and dominion of those guiftes that God hath giuen vs bestowing them onely to our priuate vse and with-holding the comfort of them from others to whom they ought of right to be imparted and imploied For albeit the possession of them bee ours yet there is an vse of them belonging to the Saints the property of goods and the communion of Saints standing together Whensoeuer we haue these outward thinges we must not with-hold them when they may profit the Church and refresh the Saints We must not be couetously and corruptly minded like Naball who when Dauid and his Men were in necessitie in the Wildernesse saide Å¿ 1 Sam. 25 11 Shall I take my Bread and my Water and my Flesh that I haue killed for my Shearers and giue it vnto Men that I know not whence they are Hee challengeth all as proper to himselfe his Bread is his his Water is his his Flesh is his all is his he hath nothing for Dauid nothing for his Seruants nothing for others This we see in the dealing of Laban toward Iacob he saith vnto him These Daughters are my Daughters these Sons are my Sonnes these Sheepe are my Sheepe and all that thou hast is mine He challengeth all to himselfe he leaueth nothing to Iacob Gene. 31. 43. The Apostle Iames teaching vs to prooue our Faith by our workes saith t Iam. 2 15 16 If a Brother or a Sister be naked and destitute of daily foode and one of you say vnto them Depart in peace warme your selues and fill your Bellies notwithstanding ye giue them not those thinges that are needfull what helpeth it Whereby we see that mercifulnesse to our poore and needy Brethren is commaunded so that as we beleeue a communion to be among all true professors so we are charged to be as the Cloudes that drop downe the sweete shewers vpon the Hearbes as liuely Fountaines of Water that flow out plentifully to the vse of others as fruitfull Trees bringing forth store to feed others We must consider that we are but Stewards of our goods that are lent vs for a time for which wee are to giue an account and of which wee are to giue a yearely rent to the cheefe Lord which his poore Children are appointed to receiue at our owne handes whom we are bound to releeue with our goods He hath saide u Math. 26 11. The poor ye shall alwaies haue with you but me ye shall not alwaies haue This duty is oftentimes required and beaten vpon in the word of God This appeareth in the practise of Iob who being accused falsely of his three friends to be an Hypocrite is compelled to boast after a sort of his workes as the fruits of his Faith and the assured Seales of his vnfained profession x Iob 29 12 13. I
Calamity of the times and the necessitie of our Brethren haue cryed out vnto vs for mercie Wee may see a great number that lye in wait and ambushment as skouts and espials nay as Theeues and Robbers for their prey who suck the blood of thetr poore Brethren out of their veines and draw the Marrowe out of their bones What persons are to be releeued sooner then the poore And what times and seasons are there to shew mercy better then of Dearth and Famine Yet then doe mercilesse men as Horsse-Leaches pull what they can from the poore to enrich them-selues albeit it bee with the ruine of others They are glad of such times they are most welcome vnto them whereas in verie deede they shoulde then especially open their bowelles and breasts to shew Compassion to such as are in necessity Their mindes are onely bent to enrich themselues they praise it as a faire and fat yeare for them-selues albeit it bee a leane and lamentable yeare for all others This is a most wretched desire this argueth a small regard towardes the poore which haue much adoe to maintaine them-selues euen when they are helped and succoured Wee see how the prizes of all things encrease of Meat of Drink of Bread of Houses of Lands of Cattle and other Commodities but the earnings and wages of poore folkes doe not encrease but rather decrease so that such as haue beene able to liue and to maintaine their families in reasonable sort are now driuen to begge and go behinde hande and liue by Almes If in the generall rising of all other things if in the raising or rather racking of Rents if in the inhancing of the prizes of such wares as the rich men haue to vtter the hyre also of the Day-labourer were augmented and encreased it would be more easie for them to maintaine an hard and poore life and by the sweat of their labour to keepe their Wife and Children But this seemeth to be corrupt and vnconscionable dealing against the Lawe of God against ciuill Equity and common Humanity and to threaten the decay of many mens estates that all commodities should alter to extraordinary prizes and yet the poore haue only his ordinary allowance for the day and bee made euen a common Drudge or Packhorse to beare the burthens of others vpon his backe The Law of loue requireth that the more we see any man distressed so much the more wee ought to spare him vntill he may recouer his estate If we see him willing to paye vs and grieued in himselfe that hee cannot pay vs and vse all good meanes to his vtmost power to pay vs let vs beare with him and not shewe rigor toward him If we should see a poore Cripple halting and scars● able to draw his legges after him and another instead of reaching him a staffe to stay him or his hand to helpe him would cut his sinnewes in sunder or smite his Hamstrings that he should be able to go no further would not all men condemne him of cruelty and inhumanity In like manner when wee behold our poore Brother in great necessity hauing much ado to maintaine himselfe and sustaine his life if we thrust him downe altogether how dwelleth the loue of God in vs Shal not his pouerty cry vnto him for vengeance Let vs therefore beware of adding affliction to such as are already in misery and know that the sparing of the poore is an acceptable seruice sacrifice vnto God wherewith he is exceedingly well pleased Vse 2. Secondly this Doctrine serueth for reproofe First against wretched Vsurers and extreame Creditors that will neither spare nor forbeare their poore Debters any time albeit their necessitie be neuer so great albeit their losse be neuer so ineuitable albeit their desire bee neuer so earnest to make them satisfaction yet they will extort and exact the vtmost farthing to the vtter ruine of them and of all that belong vnto them To these men the Apostle Iames saith a Iames 2 13. There shall be condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy and mercy reioyceth against condemnation For in the last day when they shal stand at the iudgement seat of Christ they shal find him as rigorous to them as they shew themselues hard-hearted toward others The rich man in the Gospell that suffered Lazarus to lye at his gate without releefe and compassion b Luke 16 24. would haue giuen an whole world if hee had had it for one droppe of water to coole his tongue that was tormented in that flame but when he most of all wanted comfort it was denied vnto him The seruant in the Parable that would not refraine his anger nor forbeare his fellowe that fell downe at his feet and craued respite but went and cast him into prison till he should pay the debt hath the same measure measured vnto him again c Mat. 18 32 33 34. for his Lord did call him vnto him and saide vnto him O euil Seruant I forgaue thee all that debt because thou prayedst me oughtest not thou also to haue had pitty on thy fellow-seruant as I had pitty on thee So his Lord was wroth and deliuered him to the Tormenters till he should pay all that was due to him It is laide to the charge of the Iewes that notwithstanding their outward profession and shew of Religion they were indeede irreligious and voide of true piety in that they refused to shew mercy toward the poore For the Prophet Esay Chapt. 58 3. or rather the Lord by the Prophet saith They will draw neere vnto God saying Wherefore haue wee Fasted and thou seest it not Wee haue punished our selues and thou regardest it not Behold in the day of your fast you will seeke your will and require all your debts Where the Prophet reproueth the hypocrisie of this people that gloried in the obseruation of the Ceremonies and yet they shewed no pitty to their Neighbours but delighted rather to fleese and flawe them to the vttermost Is is wisely said of Salomon Prou. 22. e Prou. 22 16. He that oppresseth the poore to increase himselfe and giueth vnto the Rich shall surely come to pouerty Seeing therefore we ought not to pull out the throats or grinde the faces or grieue the hearts of the poore that are not able to pay vs but to shew all mildenesse and moderation toward them it condemneth their practise that are hot and hasty in pursuing their right and in persecuting such as beare honest minds to pay euery man his owne Hence it is that the Prophet pronounceth him happy and blessed that considereth wisely and thinketh charitably of such as are in pouerty and distresse abilite they want power to help them albeit to releeue them means to direct them and counsel to comfort them f Psa 41 1 2 3 Blessed is he that iudgeth wisely of the poore the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble the Lord will keepe him and preserue him
to come it belongeth vnto vs greatly to reioyce and inwardlie be comforted The practise heereof we may behold in Iethro when Moses told him all that the Lord had done vnto Pharaoh and to the Aegiptians for Israels sake and all the trauaile that had come vnto them by the way and how the Lord deliuered them e Exod. 18 9. Iethro reioyced at all the goodnesse which the Lord had shewed to Israell and because he had deliuered them out of the hand of the Aegiptians The like appeareth in the Virgine Marie Luke 1. 39. f Luke 1 39. She arose in those daies and went into the Hill Countrey with hast to a Cittie of Iudah she entred into the House of Zacharie and saluted Elizabeth They had both tasted of Gods great mercie and had experience of his mightie power Elizabeth conceiued in her olde age Marie conceiued being a Virgine and One of them reioyced with the other in a mutuall feeling not onelie of the goodnesse of GOD toward themselues but of his louing kindnesse toward each other The same we see afterward g Luke 1 57 58. When Elizabeths time was fulfilled that she should be deliuered shee brought foorth a Sonne and her Neighbours and Cozins heard tell how the Lord had shewed his great mercie vppon her and they reioyced with her The same affection did the Angell fore-shew to Zachary to be at his birth as appeareth in the former part of the same Chapter Luke 1. 14. h Luke 1 14. Thou shalt haue ioy and gladnesse and many shall reioyce at his Birth The Apostle Iohn testifyeth that He reioyced greatlie when he found the Children of the elect Ladie i 2 Iohn 4. walking in the truth So the Apostle Paule writing vnto the Thessalonians one of the most excellent Churches that euer was planted k 1 Thes 2. calleth them His Ioy his Crowne his Glorie By all these examples wee may see that men ought greatly to reioyce and bee glad when they behold any good to befall their Brethren Reason 1 The Reasons are very plaine For first we ought to be of like affection one toward another as members of the same bodie If wee doe draw nourishment from Christ our head we must yeeld mutuall help one to another Thus the case standeth in the Members of our naturall bodies and this we are put in minde of Rom. 12. 16. l Rom. 12 16 Be of like affection one toward another be not high minded c. Wee haue many members in one Bodie and all Members haue not one office so we being many are one bodie in Christ and euerie one one anothers Members Seeing then we are so neerelie coupled together our ioy ought not to bee priuate to our owne selues but mutuall Reason 2. Secondlie true loue worketh hearty ioy for the good of him whom we loue Where there is no true loue there can bee no ioy but enuy at the good estate of another Euery good and godlie thing that we see vpon them will bee iudged to be too much and euery crosse that we see vpon them will be iudged to bee too little But if wee doe indeede loue them and haue our hearts ioyned vnto them we will reioyce and be glad in their good as in our owne This is it which the Apostle Paule speaketh as we haue shewed you before 1. Corinth 13. 6. m 1 Cor. 13 6 Loue reioyceth not in Iniquity but reioyceth in the truth So then forasmuch as we are members one of another and that wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer true loue is to bee found there will also follow a reioycing in the good thinges that befall vnto him whom we loue we may well conclude that when wee see God any way good and gratious to our Bretheren whether it be in matters of this life or in thinges belonging to the life to come we ought to reioyce and to be glad thereat Vse 1. Let vs now proceed and passe to the Vses and so apply this to our selues First of all seeing we are to reioyce at the good of our Bretheren as at our owne good it is our duty to be sad and sorrowfull at the hurt and losse that commeth vnto them This is that vse which the Apostle deducteth from the contrarie Rom. 12. Reioyce with them that reioyce n Rom. 12 15 and weepe with them that weepe This serueth to reprooue such as are dull and senselesse that they cannot reioyce at any grace or blessing bestowed vpon their Brethren they are not affected at it they care not for it they delight not in it they are not comforted by it This deadnesse of Spirit turneth vs into the Nature of Beastes nay maketh vs worse then brute Beasts who are not wholly without naturall affections It is made a note of a ve●… wicked and vngodlie Man o Rom. 1. 30. To be without naturall affection and to be mercilesse The Apostle chargeth vs p Rom. 12 10. To be affectioned to loue one another with brotherlie loue If a Man should bee smitten and wounded haue Pinnes or Bodkins thrust into him and yet neuer stirre or mooue or wagge at it all men would conclude he were past feeling and without life and approaching to death So is it with vs if we can behold the miseries of our Bretheren and neuer be touched at it nor troubled with it we are as dead men and as rotten members Secondly if it make against them that are as stockes and stones and are neuer a whit mooued or cheered at the prosperous estate of their Christian Brethren then they are much more to be reprehended that reioyce at the ruine and downefall of others reproaching them insulting vpon them laughing them to scorne These men haue no sparke of true humanity but are destitute of all Charitie which ought to abound in vs toward those that are in miserie These are farre from beeing greeued at other mens troubles that after a sort feede vpon them and make a sport at them If we were in trouble and any should thus deale with vs that is not pittie vs but make a pastime of vs not comfort vs but deride vs not mourne with vs but scoffe at vs we would thinke our selues greatly abused and iniured at their hands That which we could not haue men offer vnto vs that we ought not to doe vnto them according to the rule of Christ our Sauiour Math. 7. 12. q Math. 7 12. Whatsoeuer ye would that men should doe to you euen so doe you to them for this is the Law and the Prophets This is the substaunce of the second Table And thus farre did diuers of the Heathen see They saw this to be a very great crueltie and a sauage and brutish vsage of men to throwe them downe that are readie to fall and to cast them flat on their faces that beginne to stumble If these Men did but consider that all troubles are of GOD and that no troubles befall
to others but are incident to the Nature of Man and may come vpon our owne heads it would be an effectuall meanes to hold vs backe from iesting and scorning at others in as much as it bringeth the wrath of God vpon vs and our posterity Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is our duty to be glad thereat when any good things befall our Brethren it standeth vs vppon to search and enquire in loue after the condition of the Saintes in particular and of the Church in generall For how shall we reioyce and be glad at their good if we be not carefull to know in what state they are and how they fare This dutie wee may see practised in the holie Scriptures by Abraham Lot Nehemiah Dauid and diuers others who were both carefull to succour and releeue such as were in distresse and watchfull to informe themselues of the wantes and necessities of their Bretheren And thus wee may see how one Church prouideth for another as the Church of Antioch of Macedonia and of Corinth q 2 Cor. 8 9. for the poore afflicted Members of Christ that were at Ierusalem This reproueth such as albeit they see the troubles of the Church with their eies and heare the complaint of the poore with their eares yet shut their eyes and stop their eares and passe by them as the Priest and Leuite did when they saw him that fell vpon Theeues lie wounded and halfe dead These shal finde as little mercy at the hands of God as they shew to their afflicted and distressed brethren If then we would find mercie in time of need let vs shew mercy and comfort in the time of calamity when our Friends our Neighbors our Kindred are in trouble And albeit we neuer see our Bretheren lie in their affliction nor ouer-whelmed with sorrow that we should succor them yet are we not thereby iustified and discharged vnlesse wee also haue bin carefull to enquire of others how they do what they want and wherein they stand in neede of our helpe It is recorded of Abraham and Lot that while they offered their seruice to entertaine strangers r Ge. 18 19 Heb. 13 2 3. Nehemiah ● they receiued Angels into their houses at vnawares When Nehemiah met with some of his Brethren that came from Ierusalem he tarried not vntill they made relation of the estate of the Church to testifie his zeale to Gods worshippe his loue to the poore Saints his desire of the prosperity of the faithfull but hee preuented them and asked earnestly of their welfare Thus did Dauid remember the kindnesse betweene him and Ionathan and forgat not to shewe it to his posterity and to the house of Saule and albeit hee had dealt graciously and mercifully with many yet he called for more and left none of them vnregarded Let this affection rule in vs and draw out of vs this testimony of a louing heart Many there are that will seeme to bee friends of the Church and to regard the good thereof and when helpe is craued of them will not bee behind hand to deale liberally toward the releeuing therof This is a good beginning and a commendable vertue which is to be cherrished in them for there are hundreds and thousands that neuer come so farre nor proceede to this steppe but declare themselues either open enemies or sencelesse Newters that looke onely to them-selues but haue no feeling of the estate of others Neuerthelesse if God haue giuen vnto vs a bountifull hand wee must not rest there and stand at a stay wee must learne a farther lesson and ascend vp higher and shew more loue to the Church then to giue to them that aske and to succour such as we see in necessity for we must giue an account of a farther duty euen vse our tongues that God hath giuen vs to enforme our selues in the knowledge of their condition that we see not that are absent from vs that are vnknowne vnto vs. We see how desirous and greedy men are of newes and to enquire of Trauellers the estate of places and persons that they may seeme to bee ignoraunt of nothing and in this they are very Athenians ſ Acts 17 21. who gaue themselues to nothing else but eyther to tell or to heare some newes But this desire of nouelty argueth the vanitie of our minds or serueth to the delight of the outwarde man or at the farthest bringeth with it onely a momentary pleasure and slender profite If we would know such newes as may delight our selues and others and bring great pleasure and greater profit both to our selues and others let vs inquire how the poore people of God do let vs aske of their welfare let vs vse all meanes to know their estate this shall be well pleasing to God comfortable to our selues profitable to the Church and auayleable to stir vp others to follow our example Vse 3 Thirdly if it be required of vs to bee touched with a feeling of the good things that come to our Brethren then it followeth that wee ought much more to be moued to reioyce at our owne good He will neuer bee glad at the benefit that befalleth another that is no way affected at the good that befalleth him-selfe When wee haue the meanes of instruction offered vnto vs and wee beginne to bee conuerted vnto the faith there is matter of exceeding great ioy and gladnesse set before vs. It hath beene an old ſ Herod in Clio. custome for men to celebtate and solemnize their birth day the day wherein they were borne and brought forth into the world and we haue one example of it in the Gospell of Herod t Math. 14 6. Marke 6 21 who when his birth day was kept made a Banquet to his Princes and Captaines and chiefe estates of Galile If this were vsed among the Heathen to retaine in memory the rememberance of that time wherein it was saide A Man-child is borne into the world how much more ought we that are Christians to make the day of our new byrth a day of ioy and gladnesse a day of mirth and delight a day of feasting and reioysing in the Lord wherein we haue beene borne againe and made the Children of God For the first birth is vnto death the second is vnto life The first birth giueth vs a being the second giueth vs a good being in God the first birth is to condemnation the second birth is to saluation By the first birth we are made the vessels of wrath by the second wee are made the heyres of the heauenly kingdome The first birth u Ezek. 16. 1 2 is in vncleannesse the second birth is in righteousnesse and in true holinesse By the first birth we beare the Image of the first Adam by the second wee beare the Image of Christ the second Adam By the first birth we can do nothing but euill x Gen. 6 5. inasmuch as the immaginations of the thoughts of our heartes are onely
euill continually by the second birth we are enabled and strengthened by the spirit to do good and to walke in the wayes of God that are well pleasing in his sight so that this ought to bee much more esteemed of vs then the former and to comfort vs aboue all thinges and times in the world We see this in the example of Zaccheus y Luke 19 6. who at his newe birth was comforted exceedingly he receiued Christ Iesus ioyfully he acknowledged him as the Father that begat him willingly hee made a great feast for gladnesse and gaue great guifts to the poore with al alacrity The like appeareth in the Iaylor recorded in the Acts of the Apostles z Acts. 16 32 33. Who being conuerted at the same time he tooke his two Fathers Paule Silas and washed their wounds he set meat before them reioysed greatly with all his houshold We ought therefore to know them that haue begotten vs in the Lord and haue bin Instruments of our conuersion These examples serue as a reproofe against those that neuer had knowledge either of the time when or of the place where or of the maner how or of the person by whom they were conuerted and begotten againe as new borne babes in Christ that neuer had the feeling of this grace of regeneration This is a wretched condition and a fearfull signe that they sauour stil of the flesh and lie in the corruptions of the old Adam and knowe not what a second birth meaneth Thus it was with Nicodemus a Iohn 3 1 3 4 a man of the Pharisies a Ruler of the Iewes and a Teacher of Israel when Christ had taught him That except a Man be borne againe he cannot see the Kingdome of God hee answered How can a man be borne which is olde Can hee enter into his Mothers wombe againe and be borne We see in al Churches there is an order appointed and to good purpose that a note should bee taken and a Register kept of our birth and the birth of our Children If there bee a good vse of this much more benefit and comfort shal we find by the recording of our second birth of our life in God and our dying to sinne by remembering the time the place the party other such like circumstances to the euerlasting peace of our owne Consciences by whom we haue beene brought to this life And indeede it is vnpossible that euer we should reioyce at the conuersion of a sinner except wee haue learned to conceiue great ioy and gladnesse when our hearts are opened and softned to receiue the Graces of God into them Vse 4. Lastly seeing we are to reioyce at the good of our brethren wee must from hence be drawn to an higher and farther duty Namely to giue thanks to God for them as for the blessings bestowed vpon our selues It is our duty to craue of God such thinges as they want and to giue him the praise for such things as he hath bestowed vpon them Our ioy must not be carnal but our reioysing must be in the Lord. If then we order our ioy and gladnesse aright it will lift vs vp to behold and consider from whence al good things proceed We oftentimes receiue at the hands of God many good guifts but neuer remember to returne vnto him the praise So it falleth out that diuers will seeme ioyful and glad at the prosperity and happinesse of their brethren who neuerthelesse are tongue-tied neuer open their mouths to giue glorie to the giuer and granter of them We must therefore know that it is our duty to render thankes to God for his benefits vouchsafed to his people And this is a notable signe and token whereby we may try and examine what our mirth and gladnesse is and whether it bee rightly ordered and disposed or not If it be Spirituall and not Carnall Holy and not Prophane Heauenly and not Worldly it will stirre vs vp to cast vp our eyes and hearts to the Father of Lights acknowledging al to come from the seat of his holinesse The Apostle directing the Church what their ioy ought to be saith Phillip 4 4. Reioyce in the Lord alwaies againe I say reioyce This vse which now wee vrge of this Doctrine is expressely confirmed and concluded in the practise of Iethro as we see Exod. 18 10 11. before remembred vnto vs so soone as he had testified his reioysing at all the goodnesse which the Lorde had shewed to Israell immediately he saide Blessed be the Lord who hath deliuered you out of the hand of the Egiptians and out of the hand of Pharaoh who hath also deliuered the people from vnder the hand of the Egyptians now I knowe that the Lord is greater then all the Gods for as they haue dealt proudly with them so are they recompensed Thus Moses declareth that the great workes and wonders that God had shewed to Israell wrought great ioy of heart in Iethro his Father in Lawe but he rested not there nor stayed in an outward reioysing his ioy did end in thankesgiuing which sanctifieth all our mirth and gladnesse For if our mouths be filled with laughter and our tongue with ioy and yet God bee shut out of our minds there is nothing in vs but pride and prophannesse of hart Then is our mirth true mirth and our ioyfulnesse true gladnesse when God is al in all when we acknowledge him to bee the author of it This appeareth in the people b Ps 126 1 2 3 when God brought againe the captiuity of Syon They were like them that dreame and became very ioyfull Then said they among the Heathen The Lord hath done great things for them the Lord hath done great things for vs whereof we reioyce Where we see that their ioy of heart was accompanied with giuing of thankes The like wee might say of Melchizedek King of Shalem and Priest of the most high God who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the Kinges and blessed him saying c Gen. 14 19. Blessed art thou Abram of God most high possessor of Heauen and Earth and blessed be the most high God which hath deliuered thine enemies into thine hand This reproueth those that know no ioy but that which is fleshly like vnto themselues who as they are carnall so they reioyce in nothing but that which is carnall The end of this ioy is heauinesse It is the faithful onely that are of God in Christ Iesus that can truly reioyce and be merrie from the heart as for the ioy of others it is but from the teeth and tongue outwardly it commeth not from the inward parts This the Prophet teacheth Psal 32 21. and 33 1. Be glad ye righteous and reioyce in the Lord and be ioyfull al ye that are vpright in heart Thereby declaring that the vngodly and prophane men of the Worlde haue nothing to doe with this gladnesse whereof wee speake their ioy is not in the Lorde but in the
Flesh it is not accompanied with thankefulnesse but with all loosenesse excesse and riotousnesse Verse 21. Trusting in thine obedience I haue written vnto thee In these words the Apostle excuseth that hee hath hitherto beene so earnest with Philemon declaring that notwithstanding his exact and effectuall manner of handling the matter he doubted not of his receiuing of him into his fauour againe So then his drift is to shew his good opinion of him that he would not sticke to forgiue him but yeeld readily to euery honest reasonable request Hee knew not certainly what Philemon would doe hee knew what wrongs he had receiued and what losses he had sustayned at his Seruants handes yet we see how grounding himselfe vpon the former triall of his Faith and Obedience he hopeth the best he doubteth nor the worst he trusteth in his obedience he feareth not his deniall Doctrine 4. Men ought alwayes to hope well and to thinke the best of their Brethren From hence wee learne that it is our dutie alwayes to hope well and to thinke the best not to suspect the worst of our brethren This appeareth to haue beene in Iacob towards his Children when they had sold their Brother and dipped his Coate in a Kids blood and brought it to their Father Albeit he knew they hated Ioseph whome he loued exceedingly yet hee would not suspect them for the murthering and making away of his Sonne but saide Gen. 37 33. It is my sonnes Coate a wicked Beast hath deuoured him Ioseph is surely torne in peeces The like appeareth in Ioseph who was betrothed to Marie the Mother of Christ when he saw that she was with Childe d Math. 1 19 hee concluded rather that it was by committing Fornication before the contract then by committing adultry after her betroathing When the matter was vncertaine and vnknowne vnto him he iudged the best Thus dealt Ionathan who was faithfull toward Dauid he perswaded himselfe and his friend the best of his Father For when Dauid said e 1 Sa. 20 1 2 What haue I done What is mine iniquity And what sinne haue I committed before thy Father that he seeketh my life He saide vnto him God forbid thou shalt not die Beholde my Father will doe nothing great nor small but he will shew it me and why should my Father hide this thing from me He will not do it There was more Charity in the sonne then there was piety in the Father for he iudged better then Saule deserued Likewise when the Apostle Peter had reprooued the Iewes for crucifying Christ the Lord of glory and deliuering of him into the hands of sinners he exhorteth them to repentance saying f Acts 3 17 19 Now Brethren I know that through ignoraunce ye did it as also your Gouernors amend your liues therefore and turne that your sinnes may bee put away when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. He hopeth the best of them and doth not keepe or hide in his heart any hard conceite against any of them In like manner the Apostle writing to the Hebrewes and denouncing a sharpe and seuere threatning against those that fall from God deny his trueth and renounce his Religion he addeth g Heb. 6 9. But beloued wee haue perswaded our selues better thinges of you and such as accompany saluation though we thus speake Whereby he mittigateth and asswageth al that he had said hoping better of them to whom hee writeth All these Testimonies taken both out of the old new Testament do serue to teach vs that we are bound to iudge the best and charged not to nourish any hard conceits against our brethren Reason 1. The Reasons following will make it more plaine if any thing can yet bee plainer First it is a property of loue to be charitably affected as the Apostle testifieth in his description of it 1 Cor. 13 5 7. Loue thinketh not euill Againe he saith It suffereth all things it beleeueth all things it hopeth all things it endureth all things The Wise man also teacheth h Prou. 10 12 That loue couereth a multitude of sinnes So then where Christian Loue and Brotherly kindnesse is there is the best opinion and iudgement one of another Reason 1. Secondly it is a fruite of a righteous man to hope the best and to iudge charitably of his Brother The best man doth hardly suspect others to bee bad It is saide of Ioseph Math. 1 19. that being a iust and righteous man he was not willing to make the Virgin Mary that was betrothed vnto him a publicke example but was minded to put her away secretly Whereby we gather that the reason why he would not pursue his right with extreamity but conceyued the best according to the rule of Charity was because hee was a iust man ready to giue to euerie man his owne On the other side it is a note of a wicked man to thinke or immagine the worst of men It is a common Prouerbe A man doth muse as he doth vse as himselfe vseth to do so he immagineth of another He that iudgeth lewdly of another by meere suspition or supposition is commonly lewd himselfe For such as are wicked do thinke others as wicked as them-selues and such as are Hypocrites themselues are most forward to tax others of hypocrisie Seeing therefore to be charitably minded is both a property of loue and a fruit of righteousnesse it followeth that we ought to hope the best of all our brethren Vse 1. The Vses remaine to be considered First this serueth to reproue sundrie abuses that are crept in among vs and are too common in our practise directly condemned in the ninth Commaundement which tend to the hurt of our Brothers good name as all hard conceits and euill surmizes all vncharitable opinions and suspitions against them The good name of a man is very precious yet it hath many enemies If then we be charged to conceiue the best in doubtfull cases one of another the capitall sinne of Calumniation or slander is heerby condemned as the chiefe opposite to a mans estimation and credit This hath many branches that are breaches of the Law all of one kinde and Kindred and all enemies vnto the good Names of our Bretheren In this number are ranged these three as Companions one of another the Tale-breeder the Tale-bearer and the Tale beleeuer The first beginner of all the mischiefe is the Inuenter and Deuiser of Tales who forgeth them in the fire of hell who hammereth them vpon the A nuile of malice and enuy who venteth them abroad and letteth them flye vpon the wings of fame and report thereby maliciously intending the disgrace and damage of his Brother There is no sinne maketh a man so resemble the Deuill as this doth inasmuch as he hath his name from slaundering and backbyting These men the Lord doth greatly detest and wil shut them out of his kingdome Secondly heereby is reprooued the Tale-carrier
when he entertained beleeued false Ziba against his faithful subiect Neither ought we to be hard of beleef to belieue nothing that is told vs though neuer so constantly and certainly as appeareth in Gedaliah who would not beleeue m Ier. 40 14 16. Iohanan and the Captaines of the hoast that certified him that Ishmael was sent to slay him But this his want of beleefe he bought with the losse of his owne life Againe as we are to construe things in the best sense and beware that we wrest nothing contrary to the meaning of the speaker considering that they are heinous sinners that n Rom. 1 29. take al things in the worse part so we are also bound to shew a louing heart a tender affection and a Charitable compassion toward our brethren in seeking to defend and maintaine his good name when we hear him slandered and his good name impaired If we heare a malicious enemy broach his malice by speaking lies and vttering slanders against our brethren ought not we as their friends in loue to open our mouths in the cause of the dumb shewing our dislike of their euill reportes and testifying our good affection toward their persons and relating the truth in their defence For wee must know that we may be slanderers as well by silence and holding our peace as by discrediting them by our tongues He is a false witnesse that hearing his neighbor falsely accused doth not labour to cleare him when he is able by giuing Testimony vnto the truth When Ionathan by his owne knowledge perceiued that the reports were false which flatterers had deuised and Saule had immagined against Dauid being then misled and misinformed he could not holde his tongue o 1 Sa. 20 32. but spake in his defence in the cause of the innocent saying Wherefore shall hee die What hath he done The like we see in Nicodemus when he saw the malice of the Scribes and Pharises to haue bin so great that they woulde haue condemned Christ absent and vnheard he stood vp in the Counsell said p Iohn 7. 51. Doth our Law iudge a man before it heare him and know what hee hath done This ought to be an example vnto vs how to behaue our selues when wee heare good and godly men reuiled and rayled vpon wrongfully accused and vniustly slandered we should not be tongue-tied but open our mouthes in their defence It is a firme testimony of our loue both to their person profession Lastly we are to shew the griefe sorrow which we conceiue when soeuer we heare a true report of any faults and sins committed by them that haue bin a blot and blemish vnto him We see this q Nehemiah 5 Esra 9. Phillip 3. in Nehemiah in Ezra in Paul and many others So then such as are ready to iudge the best of their brethren wil be careful to make the best of euery thing to defend their good name from slanders and reproaches and to testifie their greefe for such euils as breake out of them Vse 3. Thirdly albeit we are to hope the best of others and to iudge charitably of them yet we must know that it is our duty to admonish one another and seeke to conuert one another from going astray● Heereby we shall saue a soule cleare their good name and couer a multitude of sinnes For it is most certaine we can neuer conceiue a good Opinion of them nor haue them in any estimation nor entertaine a Charitable Iudgement of their dooings vnlesse wee shew our selues forward to exhort and admonish them when wee see they walke not with a right foote nor tread in the steppes that leade vnto eternall life When Paule sawe Peter dissemble with the Iewes he r Galat. 2 14. reprooued him to his face so did Nathan the Prophet Dauid after hee had sinned It is a witnesse infallible of our loue in that we admonish our Bretheren and suffer not sinne vpon them It shall bee a precious balme that shall not breake their heads On the other side as we are to iudge the best of others and to admonish those that fall and offend so we ought not to thinke that they hate vs that shew vs our faultes or that they are our enemies that reprooue vs. A sharpe reproofe is more hardly digested then a bitter pill is swallowed We desire for the most part to be soothed and flattered in our sinnes and to haue soft pillowes sowed vnto our Elbowes that we may sleep in sinne without controulment and so runne into destruction without trouble and with much ease Neuer were there more miserable times then these ate in the which wee liue Hee that reprooueth maketh himselfe a prey and he that is reprooued stormeth and rageth at the matter as if hee had receiued a great iniurie and as if men had gone beyond the bounds of their Calling But if there be true Wisedome in vs wee must regard those that do admonish vs in the Lord. Vse 4 Lastly seeing it is our duty to hope and esteeme the best one of another let this be acknowledged and confessed of vs that we must iudge of no man before the time we must take heed of rash iudgement according to the rule of Christ ſ Math. 7 1 2. Iudge not that ye be not iudged for with what Iudgement yee Iudge ye shall be iudged and with what measuee you mete it shall be measured to you againe Likewise our Sauiour in the parable of the Housholder which went out at the dawning of the day to hire Laborers into his Vineyard signifieth That God calleth at all houres and times of the day some at one time and some at another according to the good pleasure of his owne will We must despaire of no mans saluation but hope the best of them that God will giue them repentance to come out of the snares and subtleties of the Deuill whereby they are holden captiues to do his will This offereth vnto vs these three Meditations First it is a comfort to those that at the last are brought to repentance No man is excluded from grace in this life and from glory in the life to come that turneth vnto God with all his heart The Theefe vpon the crosse was receiued to mercy they that were called at the eleuenth houre and laboured but one houre had their peny It falleth out oftentimes t Math 19 30. and 20 16. That the last are first the first are last Let none despaire through the greatnesse hainousnesse and multitude of his sins but rather make hast delay not the time to put off from day to day considering how ready the Lord is to imbrace him to receiue him to forgiue him Secondly albeit the gate of mercy be set wide open for all penitent persons yet this ought not to harden mens hearts in carelesnesse and securitie For the vngodly that continue in their sins haue no defence for themselues and their presumption
in Gods Mercie by the example of those that were called at the last houre of the day Marke that so soone as the theefe and Laborers were called u Math. 20. 7. by by they repented the reason why they turned from their sinnes no sooner was because grace was no sooner offered vnto them but when God spake they heard his voice when God called they answeared without delay whereas these impenitent persons haue had the meanes oftentimes offered vnto them and yet refuse the calling of the Lord. Thirdly we are to hope the best of our brethren to commend them vnto God to pray for their conuersion There cannot be a greater iniury done vnto them then to passe the sentence of condemnation vpon them and as much as lieth in vs to blot them out of the booke of Life Hence it is that the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 4. x 1 Cor. 4 5. Iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who will lighten thinges that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God The secrets of God belong vnto him wee are not to search into them but to adore them Knowing that thou wilt doe euen more then I say This is a confirmation of the former conclusion drawne from a comparison of the greater to the lesse in this manner I doubt not but thou wilt receiue him because thou art ready to perfourme more then I require at thy handes which is amplified and enlarged by an humane testimony I know it well enough Heere then wee may see the good opinion that Paule had conceiued of Philemon that he was willing not onely to graunt whatsoeuer he craued of him but to yeeld more then he required Doctrine 5. The Faithfull being moued to Christian duties haue yeelded more then hath bin required of them The Doctrine arising from hence is this that righteous men being mooued to Honest Charitable Iust and necessary duties will yeeld more then men can well request and require them to doe The people of God haue from time to time shewed themselues ready not onely to do what they haue beene commanded but to practise more then hath beene charged vpon them This we see in the Children of Israell when they were required to bring their Offerings y Exod. 35 5 36 5 6. to the Lord with a willing heart they brought too much more then enough for the vse of the worke and the building of the Tabernacle They were not slacke and backward in furthering the seruice of the Sanctuary but zealous and forward in promoting the glory of God and the place of his worship so that they prepared and presented more then was looked for at their handes When Dauid saw that the plague was stayed and the hand of God remooued from him and his people he was willed to go vp and reare an Altar vnto the Lord in the threshing floore of Araunah the Iebusite where the Angell stood being commanded to stay his hand which he desired to buy with his money but Araunah said vnto Dauid z 2 Sam. 24 21 22. Let my Lord the King take and offer what seemeth him good in his eyes Behold the Oxen for the burnt Offering and Chariots and the Oxen for Wood all these thinges as a King he gaue vnto the King True it is Dauid would not accept of this kindnesse nor offer a burnt offering vnto the Lord his God of that which cost him nothing so that he boght the threshing floore the Oxen of him at a price notwithstanding it sheweth the readinesse willingnesse and forwardnesse of this good man to doo more then was required at his hands And as we saw the free-heartednesse of the people at the building of the Tabernacle so we may see the same in preparing for the building of the Temple for when Dauid prouoked thē by word and example to offer freely and said a 1 Chro. 29 20 21. Who is willing to fill his hand to day vnto the Lord The Princes of the families and the Princes of the Tribes of Israell and the Captaines of thousands and of hundreths with the Rulers of the Kings worke offered willingly and they gaue for the seruice of the house of God fiue thousand Talents of Gold c. and they with whom precious stones were found gaue them to the Treasure of the house of the Lord c. So that among them they brought more to the helping forward of the building of the Temple then Dauid looked for The like we see in the practise of the Churches of Macedonia who prouided for the Saints of Ierusalem not onely as they were able but beyonde that which they were able for though themselues were brought to great misery and extreame pouerty yet they fainted not but became so forward that he saith of them b 2 Cor. 8 3 4. I beare them record that to their power yea and beyond their power they were willing and they prayed vs with great instance that we would receiue the grace and fellowspip of the Ministring which is towardes the Saints The Apostle craueth of them a little and they performe much hee beseecheth them to do according to their power and they bring vnto him beyond their power By all these examples as by a Iury of many witnesses it appeareth that the faithfull will not hang backe but be ready to performe and practise more then is required of them they will not do lesse but more then is looked for at their hands Reason 1. Though this truth be plaine in it selfe yet it will bee made much plainer by reasons First of all the obedience of the faithfull will super-abound because they set before them the example of God and delight to come neere vnto him They haue experience of his bountifull dealing toward them he is ready to graunt not onely what they aske but more then they aske They finde him not onely willing to heare them when they pray c Psal 21 3. But forwarde to preuent them with his blessings before they pray When Salomon desired a wise heart to go in and out before his people he gaue him Wisedome Riches Honour Seeing therefore the godly do feele this vnspeakable liberality of God toward them that he heareth before we call and granteth before wee aske and answereth before we request wee ought to resemble our heauenly Father and to put on his Image that we may shew our selues like vnto him in yeelding more at the suite of our brethren then can be required of vs. Reason 2 Secondly the Children of God haue a free and willing minde and seeke to walke before him with a perfect heart And what will not a willing heart do Will it not striue to attaine to perfection When Moses setteth downe the forwardnesse of the people in offering to the Lord for the worke of the Tabernacle of the Congregation he maketh this to be the cause d
when he saith I hope through your Prayers c. it argueth that the Churches of the Gentiles did pray vncessantly vnto God for the deliuerance of Paul out of Prison as we see in the Actes of the Apostles when Herod had killed Iames and put Peter in Prison d Actes 12 5. earnest Prayer was made of the Church to God for him So that we see he had the Prayers of the faithfull and that he did acknowledge the benefit necessity of them that they should preuaile with God Lastly when he addeth I shall be giuen vnto you We must vnderstand that the word which the Holie Ghost vseth in this place signifieth to bee freely and frankly giuen noting thereby that when he should be deliuered and finde the effect of their Prayers it should be through the free grace and mercy of God and not merited by the Saints So then according to this order of the words and interpretation of the Text the reading of this Verse is to this effect Hauing now ended my suit mooued vnto thee touching Onesimus I am in the next place to sollicite thee for my selfe namely that as thou art inclined in loue to all the Saints of God so that thou prepare thy selfe to entertaine me at thy house with all the fruits of hospitality For although I be in bonds and kept fast in hold yet my hope is that by reason of the continuall and effectuall Prayers of the Saints I shall ere long through the free mercies of God be giuen vnto you and to the other Churches for their further edification in Christ Iesus our Lord. General obseruations pointed out in this verse Thus much touching the meaning Now follow certaine generall obseruations which I will onely point out and not stand vpon at large First of all obserue the different manner of the Apostles dealing heere and in the former words When he entreateth for another he is large and earnest but when he commendeth to him his owne cause and priuate businesse he dealeth in a word he dispatcheth it breefely he toucheth it by the way as if it were a thing impertinent or from the matter This sheweth that he had more respect and a greater regard to obtaine his suit for Onesimus and to further his saluation then to speed in his owne suit which pertained to the supporting and supplying the necessities of this present life This teacheth vs to be more earnest in another mans cause then in our owne but especiallie all Pastours that haue the charge of Soules committed vnto them to bee more earnest for the sauing of Soules then to procure their owne ease and that they seeke the benefit of others rather then the profit of themselues according to the rule of the Apostle 1. Pet. 2. e 1 Pet. 5 2. Feede the Flocke of God that dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind This affection if it be found in vs shall minister exceeding comfort to our hearts when we remember that we haue imployed our guifts and labours to gaine a people to God and haue not sought theirs but them On the other side woe vnto idle Shepheards that feede not the Flocke but feede themselues Such as are to worke in the Lords Vineyard must be Labourers not Loyterers they must be able to feed not to fleese they must blow the Trumpet and not hold their peace Secondly the Apostle doth not assure himselfe or the Churches of God that he shall be deliuered but he hopeth to be set free as if he should say I haue conceiued an hope not vaine and foolish without ground of reason but I trust in Gods mercy to be set in safety that I may serue the Church and profit you in the Gospell a long time Now whether the Apostle being deliuered out of Prison euer came among the Colossians and tooke vp his lodging in the House of Philemon it is vncertaine and not to be found in the holy Scriptures The like hope he conceiueth in other places of his Epistles as when he writeth to the Phillippians Chapt. 1. f Phil. 1 24 25 To abide in the flesh is more needefull for you and this am I sure off that I shall abide and with you all continue for your furtherance and ioy of your Faith And in the Chapter following g Phil. 2 23 24 I hope to send Timothy as soone as I know how it will goe with me and I trust in the Lord that I also my selfe shall come shortly The like wee see in the Epistle to the Hebrewes if that were Paules Chapt. 13. h Hebr. 13 23. Know that our Brother Timotheus is deliuered with whom if he come shortly I will see you Obserue in this place that his hope is not absolute but condicionall not simply purposed but limited I hope in the Lorde This is expressed by him in the first Chapter of the Epistle to the Romaines i Rom. 1 10. I make mention of you alwaies in my Prayers beseeching that by some meanes one time or other I might haue a prosperous iourney by the will of God to come vnto you Wee must therefore know that all our steppes are directed of God they are not in our owne power to be ordered at our owne pleasure We must also beware of all vaine confidence and presumption in our selues and in vnder-taking our businesse and affaires of this life seeing the successe is vnknowne and our life is vncertain Whatsoeuer we take in hand we must depend vpon the prouidence of God and rely vpon his will Hence it is that the Apostle Iames reprooueth them that say k Iames. 4 13 14 15. Goe to now ye that say to day or to morrow we will goe into such a Cittie and continue there a yeare and buy and sell and get gaine and yet ye cannot tell what shall be to morrow For what is your life It is euen a vapour that appeareth but a little time and afterward vanisheth away For that ye ought to say If the Lord will both we shall liue and we shall doe this and that God is the cheefe Ruler and Moderatour of all persons and actions nothing is guided and gouerned by Fortune nor falleth out by Chance he sitteth as it were at the Sterne and ordereth al things to his owne glory and the good of his Church Thirdly he putteth them in hope and comfort that he should be deliuered and come vnto them as a matter that would be welcome and profitable vnto them Which teacheth that the company fellowship and presence of the faithfull Seruants of God is much to bee desired and looked after and much to be reioyced in Thereby they receiue mutuall comfort one in another and bestow mutuall graces one vpon another and likewise by hauing the fellowship one of another they whet and sharpen one another We are ready to grow dull as an edge-toole that is quickly blunted and turned Now the communion
18. 13. who beeing in distresse and feare of his life said to Eliah Was it not told my Lord what I did when Iezabell slew the Prophets of the Lord how I hid an hundred men of the Lords Prophets by fifties in a Caue and fed them with Bread and Water These men we see found great comfort to their owne Soules in the practise of this duty If the same fruit of Faith and testimony of loue be found in vs we shall not be left comfortlesse when we desire comfort of God Nay if this entertainement of the Saints whom the profession of the faith in time of trouble hath made Strangers be among vs and doe abound it will make vs that we shall be neyther idle nor vnfruitfull in the acknowledging of our Lord Iesus Christ And that we may yet haue farther comfort and encouragement heerein we must vnderstand that whatsoeuer comfort and compassion we shew to the Seruants of God that are harbourlesse and succourlesse the Lord Iesus doth account it as done vnto himselfe For Christ is oftentimes left without help and harbour in his poore members and in them he wandreth vp and downe from place to place to seeke releefe Thus he shall say in the end of the World ſ Mat. 25 35 40. I was a Stranger and ye tooke me in vnto you I was naked and ye cloathed me I was in Prison and ye came vnto mee for verily I say vnto you inasmuch as yee haue done it vnto one of the least of these my Brethren ye haue done it to me Let this comfort and refresh vs let this encourage vs to loue Strangers and to performe all duties of loue toward them considering that Christ Iesus will aboundantly reward our well-doing and accept it farre aboue the worthinesse of the work albeit it be shewed to the poorest and simplest soul that belongs to his Body On the other side this serueth as a great terrour to those that are without naturall affection and spirituall compassion to consider wisely of the poore Strangers to whom Christ shall say I was a Stranger and ye tooke mee not in vnto you sicke and in Prison and ye visited me not for verily I say vnto you in asmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me This serueth to encrease their sinne and to make the iudgements of God to enter into their bones considering that they haue not to doe onely with men but with Christ and the contempt is offered not onely to a base stranger but to our blessed Sauiour He that striketh and woundeth the hand or the foote maketh paine and greefe to arise in the head inasmuch as one part is touched with a sympathy of the others misery The faithfull are all the members of Christes body whereof he is the head if then any of them be afflicted hee suffereth with them he is greeued for them he is hurt through them Let all the enemies of the godly therefore take heede vnto themselues least they kicke against the truth of God and hurt the least of the professors thereof considering that he that toucheth them toucheth the apple of his eye yea toucheth and pierceth Christ himselfe of whom wee may truely say x Math. 21 44 Whosoeuer shall fall on this stone he shall be broken but on whomsoeuer it shall fall it will crush him in peeces Who is it that dareth breake out into this blasphemy to professe that he wisheth to wound Christ to reproach him to defie him to turne him out of doores to suffer him to perrish and to shut vp their compassion frō him But whiles we are ashamed of our poore Brethren we are ashamed of Christ whiles we deny to stretch forth our handes to help them we passe by Christ and looke awry or a squint vpon him Would we haue the Lord of life and glory deale with vs as we deale with them and behaue our selues toward them We liue if not in the persecution yet in the necessity of the Church and Children of God we cannot but see many want If the enemies of the Gospell hate them for the truths sake shall not we loue them for the truths sake If we desire to finde comfort in the great day of the Lorde let vs now shew comfort as God hath blessed and inabled vs according to our abilitie Hee will neuer bee wanting to them that consider wiselie of the wants of them that feare him If wee doe not deny our comfort to them he will neuer deny to minister comfort to vs in time of neede But if our harts be hardned and our hands full of crueltie we deceiue our selues if we looke for any comfort at the handes of God The Rich man and Miser that had Lazarus at his Gates y Luke 16 19 21 24. Clad himselfe in Purple and fared deliciously euery day yet shutting his eyes from beholding the misery and stopping his eares from hearing the cry of the poore himselfe was cast into torments and cryed with a great cry and a bitter and was not heard nor regarded Then his sumptuous fare could not refresh him then his gorgeous apparrall could not comfort him then his resort and retinue could not reuiue him but he continued in endlesse and remidelesse tortures and tormentes If wee follow his example let vs feare his ende and if wee practise his sinne we must looke to feele his punishment If we behold the troubles of the Ministers and Professours of the Gospell driuen out of house and home and cast out of Land and Liuing and we cannot affoord them a good word nor giue them any thing to supply their wants when God hath giuen vnto vs this worldes good wee our selues shall cry and not be heard We shall all stand in need of the mercie of God If we were rich noble if were Kings and Princes if we haue had thousandes that haue required and receiued mercy from vs yet a time shall come when we shall stande at the Iudgement seate of the Almighty and call for mercy at his hands The Lord in that day shall recompence vs according to our workes Haue we delighted in the deeds of mercy and shewed pitty to the poore wandering Saints Let vs be of good comfort wee shall not finde God a seuere Iudge but a mercifull Father and Sauiour vnto vs we shall receiue the fruite of our Labours in due time gather as we haue scattered and reape as we haue sowed On the other side haue we seene the Saintes of God sicke and not visited them Strangers and not harboured them Hungry and not fed them We shall hang downe our heads in that day when we would giue all the world for one drop or dram of mercy to come neere vs z Iames 2 13. For there shall be condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth not Mercie and Mercie reioyseth against Iudgement Let vs consider these things whiles we haue time It was too late for the Rich man
eies by bowing downe the knees and such other gestures as testified the sequestring of all their thoughts from the earth and earthly cogitations and the bringing of all their mind to the meditation of heauen and heauenly things Secondly we haue need in prayer of perseuerance continuance Wee must not giue ouer and wax weary It pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to defer to heare to helpe vs not that he neglecteth vs or forgetteth vs or wisheth our hurt but to exercise our Faith by delaying Wherefore all rash presumption ought to be far from vs which dareth to prescribe vnto God either the time or the maner of our deliuerance and of granting our requests It is our duty to wait patiently vpon the Lord and to refer vnto him the meanes and maner of helping of vs. The woman of Canaan n Math. 15 22. is a notable example to teach vs to continue in prayer euen then when wee seeme to haue the repulse and deniall The Widdow in the Gospell is a o Luke 18 1 2 worthy president to this purpose to moue vs to this perseuerance and not to giue ouer Lastly we must beware that we aske no more then God giueth vs leaue to aske in his word We must require those things that are fitting vs to craue and beseeming God to grant Many men neuer consider these things but are rash and heady in their petitions regarding neither what he in goodnesse and Iustice can giue neither what is profitable for themselues to receiue Some craue riches to spend in lust and riot other wish for strength to be reuenged of their enimies p Rom. 12 21 whom they ought to receiue with goodnesse Others are not ashamed to ask foule and filthy things which one would blush to aske of a mortal man which the Heathen q Pers Satyr 2. themselues haue condemned These are the causes why our prayers are not heard because we aske amisse and do not submit our willes to his will Our wils are carnall and corrupt his will is pure and holy and the rule of all righteousnesse The 3. thing required in prayer The third point to be obserued in prayer is that it proceed from an humble and contrite heart If pride do compasse vs as a Chain and an high conceit of our selues possesse vs we are deceiued if we suppose to obtaine anie thing at the hands of God A proud Begger is hated of God and scorned of men There can nothing be seene more deformed and despised then a poor man that is proud There is nothing can worse sort together then a proude heart and a beggers purse God euer-more resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble and lowly The Prophet Dauid declareth this Psal 51 16 17. Thou desirest no Sacrifice though I would giue it thou delightest not in Burnt Offerings The Sacrifices of God are a contrite spirite a contrite and a broken heart O Lord thou wilt not despise We must learne therefore truely to feele our owne pouerty and misery let vs consider that we neede all things that we aske and so ioyne an earnest and feruent affection and desire of obtaining Indeed wee cannot alwayes haue a like feeling but wee must alwayes striue against deadnesse of heart and dulnesse of spirit Let vs shake off all vaine-glory and pride and giue all the glory to God as the poore Publican did in the Gospell Thus haue the faithfull done r Psal 143 2. Dan. 6 17. Esay 64 5. Ier. 14 7. as appeareth in Dauid Daniell Esay Ieremy We must not bee like the proud Pharisie ſ Luke 16 11. that stood vpon his owne righteousnesse and condemned other of wickednesse and prophanenesse Let vs also come with Repentaunce not onely crauing pardon for sins past and making an humble Confession of faults present but desiring grace to be strengthned in time to come Lastly let not our prayer be a lip-labour for forme and fashion sake but earnest and feruent When Saneherib inuaded Iudah and besieged the strong Citties and thought to win them for him-selfe Hezekiah and the Prophet Esay with him t 2 Chr. 32 20 cried to heauen Thus doth the Prophet Ieremy speake u Lam. 2 19. Arise cry in the night in the beginning of the Watches poure out thine heart like water before the face of the Lord lift vp thine hands toward him c. Heerunto accordeth the Apostle Rom. 8 26 27. The spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not how to pray as we ought but the spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sights which cannot be expressed but he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the meaning of the spirit for he maketh request for the Saints according to the will of God Thus it appeareth out of the practise of the Prophets Apostles what kinde of prayers God accepteth True it is they auaile much howbeit they must be feruent Cold prayers turne into sinne and neuer bring with them any blessing We will seeme to drawe neere to God and to honor him howbeit it is only with our mouths and lips which is a vaine woorshipping of him We will needs cal vpon his name but our prayers freeze betweene our teeth and are vttered without zeale These are they that pray but it is in such sort as if they neuer meant to speed If a Child should craue any thing of his parents in that manner they would take them-selues to bee abused The fourth thing required in prayer The 4. thing expressed in the former description of praier is that it must be put vp in the name of Christ Iesus He is the Mediator of the new Testament he standeth between the wrath of his Father vs he maketh continuall intercession for vs. If then we would haue our prayers accepted we must come in his name he is the High-priest of our profession he offereth them vp vnto his Father who accepteth them not for their woorthinesse but for his worthinesse not for their merits but for his merits as wee shall shew farther in the Doctrine following In his Name did the Fathers come to the Throne of Grace and presented their prayers before God assuring themselues to bee heard for his sake This is manifest in the prayer that Daniell maketh Chap. 9. 17. Now therefore O our God hear the Prayer of thy seruant and his supplications and cause thy face to shine vppon thy Sanctuary that lyeth wast for the Lords sake He acknowledgeth Christ Iesus to be the heire and Lord of all things in whom and through whom God would accept his praiers This we might farther ſ 1 Sam. 3 21. 2 Sam. 7 21. shew by other examples yea it is taught vs by the mouth of Christ himselfe t Iohn 16 23. Verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye sha●… aske the Father in my name he will giue it you As no man can come to the Father but by him so no man can obtaine any thing but by him
for themselues but for the precious merits of their Sauiour Christ I except not the blessed Virgin Mary his Mother but as once shee reioyced in God her Sauiour so now she triumpheth in Christ her Redeemer and is accepted through the deserts of her sonne To conclude this point let vs remember the saying of the Apostle Iohn k 1 Iohn 2 1. If any man sinne we haue an Aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the reconciliation for our sinnes Where we see he ioyneth these two together to bee an Aduocate and to make reconciliation and appropriateth them both to the person of Christ If then the Saints be our Aduocates that wee should present our prayers vnto them they to Christ and Christ to God they must also make reconciliation for our sinnes and appease the wrath of God the father which is vnpossible for them to do and blasphemous for vs to affirme It is our duty therefore to repair resort vnto God the father through the merits of his son Iesus Christ The Prophet complaineth l Psal 20 7. That some trust in Chariots some in horses So in time of troble some seeke to Saints Angels m Leuit. 19 31 Esa 8 19. 17 8. 44 17 18 others flye to Witches Idols but we must remember the name of the Lord our God But of this point we haue spoken before more at large Thirdly it reproueth such as see the want of many blessings in themselues and others feel great iudgements and publick calamities vpon themselues others and yet pray not at all to haue the one bestowed and the other remoued These are like to brute beasts that rore cry out for their prey when they want meat but they neuer consider from whence they receiue it and as the swine that eat the Mast in the woods but neuer look vp to the tree from whence it falleth or as the dog that biteth the stone that is cast at him but looks not to the hand that threw it So do these men they can mourne and murmure when they sustaine any losse feele any plague or finde any want but they haue no knowledge to search out the cause or the meanes how Gods blessings should be obtained or his iudgements be preuented Hence it is that the Prophets complaine of this sencelesnesse and want of feeling of Gods mercie and our owne misery as we see in Ezekiell and in other places n Ezek. 22 30. Esay 59 16. 63 5. I sought for a Man among them that should not make vp the hedge and stand in the gappe before the Land that I should not destroy it but I found none It is a vaine thing for a Physician to know the Disease and not to apply the Remedie so likewise is it a great folly for vs to knowe our owne wantes and yet to want Wisedome to take a right course to redresse the same What deadnesse of heart hath entred into vs that we haue forgotten the commandements of God and cannot remember the examples of his seruantes that haue obtained great things at his hands and cannot be encouraged by his manifolde and mercifull promises that he hath made vnto vs Let vs then bee prouoked to this dutie and not be wanting vnto our selues but respect our owne good and benefit in seeking vnto the Lord daily in calling vpon him earely and late The seruants of Naaman reproue him in that being commanded an easie and ready way to be cured and clensed of his Leprosie yet hee hung backe and would not vse the remedy o 2 King 5 13. If the Prophet say they to their Maister hadde commanded thee a greater thing wouldest thou not haue done it How much rather then when he saith to thee wash and be cleane So may it be said to vs to shake off our drowsinesse and to worke forwardnesse in vs to practise this duty If the Lord in our present wants should require at our hands any hard and difficult thing ought wee not to obey him and to performe his Commandement How much more then when hee respecteth our weakenesse and saith onely Aske and you shall haue seeke and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you We shall not need now to say in our owne hearts Who shall ascend into Heauen or descend into the deepe to bring his blessings vnto vs from thence The remedie is at hand the meanes are neere euen in our mouth and in our heart this is the prayer of faith which auaileth much if it be feruent It teacheth vs the way to the Lords treasures to put our hand into his Cofers to take such benefits as we want and to put vp the arrowes of his wrath into his quiuer which he hath drawn against vs to shoot at vs. Vse 3. Thirdly from hence ariseth great comfort to all the faithfull that call vpon the name of God For are the prayers of good men auayleable for our good Do they procure blessinges and stay iudgements Then haue wee great cause to reioyce and matter of great ioy offered vnto vs in the diligent practise of this duty We are assured that the Lord will not defraud deceiue vs but giue vs those things that we desire and he knoweth what we want Is our Faith weake He will strengthen vs. Are we ignorant He wil enstruct vs. Doe we want the Graces of his spirit He will supply them Is our Loue cold He will quicken it Is our Repentance vnperfect Hee will perfect it On the other side are his Iudgements among vs He will remooue them Are we in distresse He will haue mercie vppon vs. Doe our sinnes trouble vs He will discharge vs. Are we in sicknesse He wil restore vs. p Iames 5 13 14. Are we in any misery He will deliuer vs. If the consideration of this gracious dealing of God and the performance of his precious promises doe not put life into our dead hearts and assure comfort to our feeble spirits and raise vs vp when we are cast downe what weapon can be of sufficient force to pierce our hearts and to driue vs to the Conscionable practise of this duty If we had not a blessed experience of Gods goodnesse towards vs wee should haue the lesse sinne to doubt thereof But seeing there is no faithfull Man or Woman who hath not found the Lord readie to heare him in time of his need and that we are compassed about with so great a Cloude of witnesses let vs comfort our selues and one another in these things and bee stirred vp to call vpon his name Vse 4 Lastly are the Prayers of the faithfull profitable to all things and auaileable to make vs partakers of Gods blessinges and to stoppe the course of his Iudgements Then we must remember that it is our dutie to praise his name when hee hath heard our prayers and graunted our requestes either for our selues or our brethren It is
to his fauour and power h 2 Chron. 20 26 27. For they assembled themselues in the Valley of Berachah and there they blessed the Lord then euery Man of Iudah and Hierusalem returned with Iehoshaphat their head to go againe to Ierusalem with ioy for the Lord had made them to reioyce ouer their Enemies The like we might say of Hezekiah The example of the Prophet Dauid is plentifull in this Argument he oftentimes prayseth the Lord because hee had heard the voyce of his petition as Psal 65. O God i Psal 65 1 2. and 98. 1. and 115 1. praise waiteth for thee in Sion and vnto thee shall the vow be performed because thou hearest the Prayer vnto thee shall all flesh come And Psal 98. Sing vnto the Lord a new song for he hath done maruellous thinges his right hand and his holy arme hath gotten him the victory And Psal 115. Not vs ô Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy Name giue the glory for thy louing mercy and for thy truths sake And heereby we may discouer a deepe deuise a dangerous plot and a deceitfull pollicy of the Deuill He laboureth by all meanes to keepe vs from Prayer he cannot abide that we should call vpon the name of our God He will tell vs of k How Sathan worketh to hinder vs from praying the fearefull Maiesty of God to dismay vs hee will suggest our owne basenesse and vnworthinesse to discourage vs he will obiect that others pray not at all yet do well enough that they liue in all abundance and want nothing yet are not so deuout he will tell vs to make vs secure that God knoweth whereof we haue neede before we aske that he needeth not to be put in minde of his mercy and that he cannot forget the couenant that hee hath made with vs. These are subtile baites to intrap vs and mighty stumbling blockes to trip vs and strong tentations to slay vs and by these he oftentimes preuaileth in the Children of disobedience If he cannot obtaine his purpose of vs at the first yet he will not giue ouer but follow vs hard at the heeles till hee hath subdued vs and marke our foote-steppes till he hath ensnared vs. He will say vnto thee when thou preparest thy selfe to pray what needest thou pray at this time Thou art now vnfit thou art without feeling thou hast other businesse to goe about another time will serue as well or better then this when thou mayest be better fitted to this worke For if thou pray without feeling and zeale thou sinnest and thy prayer is abhominable wherefore take heed thou pray not least thou sinne against God Thus he preuailed with Saule when the Priest brought the Arke of God to aske counsell of him what he should doe l 1 Sam. 14 19 Saule said vnto him Withdraw thine hand as if he should say Let vs pursue our enemies I haue no leysure to stand asking counsell of God If he preuaile with vs to neglect this duty at one time he will take aduantage of it so that if he see vs ready to pray afterward he will alledge what needest thou pray yet Thou omittedst it at such and such a time and thou speddest well enough thou hadst no euill or hurt by it why then wilt thou now beginne It will but trouble thy Conscience to be alwaies praying it will hinder thy businesse and cause thee to neglect thy calling yea when thou hast done all thou canst thou shalt get nothing by it but shalt make thy selfe a laughing-stocke and a gazing-stocke to the whole World wherefore it were much better for thee to doe as many other of thy good and honest Neighbours that are not so curious and precise in these matters who are beloued in the World and looke to come to heauen as well as thy selfe Moreouer he will not forget to tell thee that if thou betake thy selfe to this strict course of life it will bring thee into many melancholy dumps and so cast thee downe that thou shalt neuer be merry at the heart This is the Deuils Logicke and Language or rather his sophistry and subtilty and thus he doth discourse and dispute with vs to draw vs away from this duty For well doth he know that prayer is a principall part of our spirituall Armour whereby we are safe garded from him and all other enemies and the most effectuall meanes to kindle in vs the sauing and sanctified Graces of Gods Spirit and therefore when wee cease praying God will stay his hand from blessing vs he will with-holde his graces from vs he will giue vs ouer into the power of our spirituall enemies and renounce vs from being in the number of his Children How Sathan poysoneth our prayers to make them voyde But if he cannot thus farre preuaile with vs but that the conscience of Gods commaundement and our owne dutie will stirre vs vp to this practise then he worketh in vs another way and creepeth vpon vs after another manner Hee will after a sort close with vs and ioyne in the acknowledgment of the necessity of daily exercising our selues in making Prayer vnto God but withall he will foyst in a false finger and tell vs that by deuout Prayer we shall merit saluation and that the moe our Prayers are the greater shall be our merits Thus he mingleth and tempereth rancke Poyson with Prayer so that albeit we vse it we doe abuse it so that it is all one as if we vsed it not Thus he sheweth himselfe to be ready at our Elbow to puffe vs vp with pride and to tell vs that we pray oftner then others better then others with greater feeling then others with greater faith then others with greater zeale and assurance then others Thus he preuailed with the Pharise mentioned in the Gospell n Luke 18 11 12. he stood and prayed thus with himselfe O God I thanke thee that I am not as other men Extortioners vniust Adulterers or euen as this Publican I fast twice in the weeke I giue Tithe of all that euer I possesse o Math. 6 5. I loue to pray in the Synagogues and in the Corners of the streetes p Math. 23 14 but vnder a colour of long Praiers they sought the praise of men and the enriching of themselues and therefore were to receiue the greater damnation And as in the former times of the Church when he could not keepe them any longer in Fornication and vncleannesse as if it were a thing indifferent he taught chastity thereby to destroy chastity and vnder a false praise of single life brought in the detestation of marriage and the practise of incontinency so doth hee perswade Prayer thereby to ouerthrow Prayer For to mooue to pray thereby to merrit and deserue is to corrupt Prayer and to make it of none effect It is the duty of the Minister of God to preach the word it hath the promise of blessing and of great reward but
the holy Scriptures that Peter was euer at Rome Whereby we learne that the Popish Religion is a doubtfull and vncertaine religion their Faith is vncertaine their Hope is vncertaine their Heauen is vncertaine For the supremacie of the Pope and subiection to him is made a fundamentall point of Religion and the beleeuing of it necessary to saluation Bellarmine a Cardinall of Rome q De Ecclesia militante lib. 3. cap. 2. defining the Church maketh it to be a Company of men professing the faith and partaking of the Sacraments vnder the iurisdiction of the Byshop of Rome so that such as hold no Pope are iudged and censured to build vpon a false foundation and therefore to be no true Churches no sound Catholickes no right Christians The cheefe Controuersie betweene vs and the Papists is for the Popes Monarchy and Authoritie ouer the Vniuersal Church which is maintained by many of them as a materiall point and necessarie for euery one to holde that looketh to be saued Which is an Opinion both absurd and ridiculous and vnreasonable The Church Triumphant in Heauen is not subiect to the Pope of Rome The Church of the Old-Testament was neuer subiect to the Pope of Rome The Church of the New-Testament which was when Christ liued vpon the earth was not subiect to the Pope of Rome The Primitiue Church that was in the dayes of the Apostles was not subiect to the Pope of Rome For during all this time there was no Pope of Rome at all and yet there was during al this time a Church or else they must say that the Triumphant Church the Iewish Church and the Christian Church are no Churches at all Moreouer the necessity of subiecting euery soule to this supposed supremacy and pretended primacy doeth blot out of the number of Churches the East-Churches and the South-Churches and leaueth onely the Roman Church to whom the Title least of all belongeth or at least as little as to any of the rest Besides at the death of euerie Pope and in euery vacancie of that Sea which sometimes hath beene no small time the Church should faile and fall for how should the faithfull then bee subiect to the Byshop of Rome when there is no Byshoppe of Rome at all in the World Furthermore when there falleth out a Schisme so that there are two or three Popes that are together by the eares for the Popedome and Prelacie the people are vncertaine to which of them to cleaue and whether of them to obey Lastly it is false that the members of the Church must be subiect to the Pope seeing he is no better nor no other then that Antichrist which the Scripture hath fore-shewed time hath discouered and the faithfull haue felt and suffered Thus then we haue seene that howsoeuer the Romanists make it a principall matter of faith to put our heades vnder the Popes Girdle to bowe our knees to kisse his holye feete and to feare the Thunderbolts of his wrath yet all his iurisdiction is besides the Scriptures nay contrary to the Scriptures seeing Peters Byshopprick and being at Rome is verie vncertaine To say no more If then it be vncertain whether Peter were euer at Rome then it must also be vncertaine whether hee were Byshop of Rome and if it be vncertaine whether he were euer Byshop of Rome then it must also be vncertaine whether the Pope bee Byshop of Rome and his successor in that Sea and if the Popes succession and Dominion ouer the Church be vncertaine his Triple Crowne shaketh and beginneth to totter all which waighty burthens do hang by a twines-thred of Peters beeing at Rome which hath no foot-step or foundation in the Scriptures True it is we dare not directly and peremptorily say that he was neuer at Rome wee know how hard a thing it is to prooue a negatiue yet it is more likely and probable that he was neuer there then that he was euer there the Scriptures being Iudges Who would willingly trauaile in a blinde and vncertaine way where he cannot be assured whether he goe right or wrong But such is the iourney that the popish passengers enter into they walke in vnknown pathes and tread the Mazes of many doubtfull steps The Popish Writers cannot agree r Bellar. lib. 2. cap. 6. de pont Roma in what yeare Peter came to Rome One hath assigned one time Another pointeth vnto another time They agree Å¿ Onuph in Annot post petr not how many yeares he stayed there when he departed from thence how long he sate t Bellar. de pontif Rom. lib. 2. cap. 5. Byshop there who succeeded in his place immediatly after him whether Clement or Linus or Cletus or Anacletus It is made of absolute necessitie by them to receiue the Saeraments yet by their Doctrine no man can certainly know whether he be partakers of them or not inasmuch as they teach that all standeth vpon the Priests intention which can be knowne to none but to God and himselfe Thus we see how weak and wofull a Religion the Romish Religion is and vpon what silly and sandie foundations it resteth Let vs leaue these vncertaine by pathes and tread in the beaten way of the Scripture which cannot deceiue let vs build our faith vpon the rocke which cannot be shaken and forsake that Church that goeth a way she knoweth not and leadeth her Children shee knoweth not whether and teacheth them to receiue she knoweth not what and beleeueth those things which she cannot proue Thus much for the generall Obseruations There salute thee Epaphras my Fellow-prisoner c. These Verses doe containe mutuall salutations with kinde and Christian wishes one toward another This is the winding vp of the whole matter wherein hee reporteth the friendly greetings of the faithfull which they sent to Philemon This we see to be verie common in the beginning of euerie Epistle Doctrine 1. Courteous speeches louing salutations are beseeming the seruants of God From hence we learne that courteous speeches and friendly salutations are to bee vsed of one Christian toward another whether present or absent All kinde and courteous dealing ought to be shewed mutually toward each other When Melchizedek met Abraham hee blessed him Gen. 14. When the Angell came vnto Gideon he saluted him thus t Iudg. 6 12. The Lord be with thee thou valiaunt Man When Boaz in haruest time came among his Reapers u Ruth 2 4. he said vnto them The Lord be with you and they answered him The Lord blesse thee that is so soone as he saw the Labourers that reaped his fields hee beganne kindly to salute them and to wish them well they likewise returned the like answere backe againe as an Eccho vnto him The Angell Gabriell being sent of God vnto the Virgin Marie he saide vnto her Luke 1 28. Hayle thou that art freely beloued the Lorde is vvith thee blessed art thou amongst Weomen When Christ sent out his Apostles and gaue them Commission
the little light of Grace and spark of Faith that was in them did so shine and breake out into such a flame that they were not ashamed to professe themselues to be his Disciples when the rest forsooke him they begged his body of Pilate they wrapped it in linnen cloaths with Myrrhe and Alloes and sweet Odours and bestowed the honour of buriall vpon him Thus it falleth out oftentimes that they which are first are last and the last are first We know not what stormes and Tempestes hang ouer our owne heades and what perillous times may come vppon vs we know not what weaknesse wee shall shew in them howe great the Rebellion of the Flesh will be and what comfort wee shall want our selues The Prophet pronounceth him l Psal 41 1. Blessed that iudgeth Wisely of the poore and promiseth that the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble If wee haue any feeling of this happinesse or haue anie Faith in our hearts touching this promise let vs make it manifest by seeking the good of our weake Bretheren It is an hiddeous and horrible cruelty and out-rage by our want of mercy and of feeling their infirmities to hinder the saluation of any one for whom Christ died Hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom. 15 2 3. Let euerie man please his Neighbour in that which is good to edification for Christ also would not please himselfe but as it is Written The rebukes of them that rebuked thee fell on me It cost a great price to Redeeme a soule and to bring it from Death to Life from Hell to Heauen and therefore we must vse all meanes wherewith the Lorde shall enable vs to comfort such as are Comfortlesse by the Comfort where-with wee our selues are comforted of God There is no Man but desireth to finde Peace and Comfort in him-selfe What is this life of ours without it If a man should liue many thousand yeares vpon the face of the earth and haue experience of nothing but sorrow anguish misery and vexation of Spirit so that hee could feele no quietnesse no rest no consolation no tranquility in these daies of his Pilgrimage would he not desire to be out of such a life and preferre death before it Do we then wish for peace And would we finde comfort The greatest comfort in the World that can come vnto vs and refresh and cheere vppe our Soules is to winne and saue Soules Blessed are we if we haue beene Instruments to gaine but one Soule vnto God It is the greatest gaine it is the best Traffique it is the sweetest Marchandize It shall be said vnto vs in the last day Thou good and faithfull Seruant well done thou hast beene faithfull ouer little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter into thy Maisters ioy Let vs set this before our eyes and consider before hand the price of the reward when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Vse 3. Lastly seeing God hath such a care of them that are weake that he would not haue them cut off but cared for of all men this ought to serue as a notable encouragement vnto them to labor to grow in Grace and to encrease more and more that they may proceede from strength to strength and so come to a perfect man in Christ Iesus True it is there are degrees of Faith all haue not one measure of Grace and yet the least measure if it be but as a graine of Mustard-seede is of power to saue our Soules If there be wrought in vs by the sanctifying Spirit of God the beginnings and seeds of Faith to wit an humbling of our selues vnder the burthen of our sinnes an acknowledgement and feeling that we stand in neede of Christ an hungring and longing desire to be made partaker of Christ and all his merrits and a flying to the Throne of Grace from the sentence of the Law troubling the conscience trembling vnder the same if these preparations as it it were ploughings vp of the furrowes of our hearts be found in vs God will not cast vs away but make this weake measure of Grace to be effectuall to saluation This is a sweete comfort to all saint hearts that are euery foot like to sinke downe and as it were to giue vp the Ghost This ought to be a forcible meanes to work thankfulnesse in them when in the examination of their hearts they shall finde the least measure of Grace setled in them and know their mercifull Father willing to acknowledge it to accept it and to reward it Not that we should flatter our selues in our wantes or content our selues in our weakenesse to stand alwaies at one stay but heereby to be brought forward in well-doing and to runne the race with all cheerefulnesse that is set before vs. This a notable signe of a true and sincere hart when we feele our strength to come euery day vnto vs and an accesse to be added to our former course For if we desire to be better and better and deale as men that runne in a race who stand not still in the mid-way but presse with might and maine to the marke this is an infallible note of a sincere heart This is it which the Apostle testifieth Phil. 3 14 15. Bretheren I count not my selfe that I haue attained to it but one thing I doe I forget that which is behinde and endeuour my selfe vnto that which is before And follow hard toward the marke for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus It is the goodnesse of God to accept the small measure of Faith that we bring vnto him This graunteth not liberty vnto vs to doe nothing to stirre neither hand nor foote or to content our selues that we go not backward For we must all know and vnderstand that the beginnings of grace are deceitfull and counterfeit vnlesse there be a growth and encrease The kingdome of Heauen is like to q Math. 13 31 33. a graine of Mustard seed which at the first is so small and little that it is scarse discerned but after that it is cast into the ground of a prepared and purified heart it rooteth deeply it groweth speedily it spreadeth exceedingly It is like vnto Leauen which a woman taketh and hideth in three peckes of Meale till all be Leauened The Maister deliuering his Talents vnto his seruants that he had called saith vnto them Occupy vntill I come he doth not bid them hide them in the earth Luke 19 13. Hereunto commeth the exhortation that Paule giueth vnto Timothy who had greatly profited in godlinesse and was brought vp in the vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures from a childe Chapter 1. r 2 Tim. 2 6. I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre vp the gift of God which is thee by the putting on of mine handes The word is a borrowed speach from the fire which must bee euermore kindled and kept with a new supply from going out